u
Youth In Its
Golden Prime.
A calf under a year old took tba
eh:- pionship in the ladlTldaal steer
Jam at the last International lire stock
bow. A few years ago only the steer of
mt u.l weight would bare figured
anu.iig the possibilities in such a con
te. ; -B::b.v beef" has become fa
miliar phrase. The "light hog" has
pu ..d It way to the front "Hothouse
lai " Is no longer a great rarity.
T'.iis rising feeling for the things of
yo ill. the striking off Into a new path
In limal production, may at first ap
pear just a turn of the wheel of change,
be behind the seeming fancy of the
producers is solid reason. With the
br niug up of the ranges the small
farmers are tackling the meat produc
In. --Dpos tion with vigor in the east
and south as well as the west, and In
ai: : it appears to be proved that
the gains in weight are made at the
least expense on the young animal.
t cotch fashions, too, are now popu
lar in beef circles, and Justly, for the
Be tch farmers are notable feeders of
animals for beef. From the standpoint
of -luility and flavor Scotch fed beef
holds a leading position In the most
cr . c"al meat markets of the world.
Scotch breeders of beef cattle encour
age ? oung stock to develop early ma
turing qualities, particularly in Aberdeen-Angus
and Shorthorn districts.
As these breeds are bred almost en
tirely for beef production the tendency
to take on flesh rapidly and mature at
an early age Is regarded as the most
Important point to be considered.
Champion Young Angus.
' The cut, original in the Breeder's
Gazette, Chicago, shows the champion
yearling steer Andy, an Aberdeen-Angus,
exhibited by the Minnesota col
lege at the last international live stock
how. Concerning the display of the
Aberdeen-Angus at that time the Ga-
CHAMFION YEABIiINO STKEB.
zette remarked that, whether the long
line of two-year-olds Is considered or
the yearlings or the rare lot of calves,
there was a fleshiness apparent in all,
a maximum of beef and a minimum of
waste, that presented ready explanation .
of the favor in which the breed finds
itself among the buyers for slaughter.
Best Breed For Baby Beef,
Why do we breed Aberdeen-Angus
cattle? A firm of Delaware breeders
have explained their reasons for so
doing as follows in Rural New Yorker:
We first began cattle breeding with
registered Holsteius, but at the same
time we put in the pasture one Angus
bull and heifer and through the grass
season gave no grain or feed of any
kind. When we took them in for win
ter our llolsteins were thin and poor,
while the two Angus were fat and in
fine shape for beef. We did not desire
to go in the dairy business, as the ex
tra work would interfere with our oth
er work, but we did desire to keep
cattle, for we must have manure to
improve the soil. We found we could
keep about two Angus to one Ilolstein
on the same acreage and have them
in good beef shape almost any time In
the year. We decided this was the
breed we needed, disposed of our Hoi
steins and settled down on the Aber-deen-Angns.
the best breed of baby
beef cattle in the world, we believe.
We nrc breeding them for stock to sell
for breediug purposes' to be used either
in pure bred herds or for grading up to
a blsh standard the common cattle.
We ulso find many dairymen who sell
their calves for veal consider it profit
able to use an Angus bull, as it will
add abwt $3 profit on every veal calf
at eight weeks old, no matter how
small or common the cow. The small
est Jersey cow will bring a calf worth
f5 mere if sired by an Angus bull.
A Live Stock Center.
It is rumored that an attempt will
be made to make Worcester, Mass., a
center for the sale of New England
cattle. According to New England
Homestead, C. W. Wood, a large cattle
breeder, says there are today within a
radius of fifty miles of Worcester fully
1,600 head of Ilolstein cattle, and he
Would favor Worcester as a central
dealing point for breeders. J. B. Mar
con, an extensive breeder, is quoted to
the effect that Worcester is the best
place to hold live stock sales in New
England, where something of this char
acter is sadly needed as an Impetus In
improving live stock. Many of the
farmers are too poor to buy the best
in competition with the wealthy farm
ers of central New York and the mid
dle west.
Curing the Tongue Twister.
' When a young horse persists In get
ting his tongue over the bit take a piece
of sole leather seven inches long, cut
it diamond shape so the center will be
two and a half Inches wide have the
saddler stiff 'a it tight around a com
mon bar bit. with points of leather ex
tending up over the tongue, and yon
will not be troubled, long about the
ihorse gettirt his-tongue over the bit
It is impos lbrc- to buckle a bit high
enough in c horse's mouth to prevent
this Uahit when once fonri&d, for I
think that is all it is. M? ' rjBrantner
in Breeder's Gazette, Chlcaga
KONEY WITH SHstEP.
Cray sf Plump, Scum! Lmh Tenet
Bring Long Price.
TbU to bow we bare made the most
money with sheep on Woodland Form:
The ewes hare been selected for their
mnirinff properties, and have been bred
early to good mutton rams of the
short legged, early maturing type.
They have had the ran of the pasture
all winter and a good warm shed or
barn basement to run in at night They
bare been watched, so that when their
lambs came, if it happened to be cold,
they have been given attention. Small
pens bare been provided them in
which Iamb and mother might be
placed for a day or two while they
bare been getting acquainted with each
other, especially if we happened -to be
busy. Their mothers have been well
fed and not overfed. They hare been
fed on the right kind of food. That
means something cheap and home
raised and full of milk. That means
alfalfa hay, of coarse. Well, these
ewes, eating alfalfa hay, with a very
little grain, are fall of milk, and the
Iambs thrive from the start The sur
plus of milk is taken away by band
right at first so that they will not suf
fer from engorgement
Starting the Lambs.
Soon they are plump, playful little
rascals and wishing something to nib
ble with their own teeth. Then they
are Inducted Into their own special
apartment where, right close to their
mothers, they find troughs filled with
grain with oats and corn and clean,
fresh bran, and with little racks of
fresh alfalfa or red clover hay. These
troughs are cleaned out every day and
the surplus Is given to the mothers.
Thus they thrive like weeds until grass
comes In the spring. When grass first
comes they are kept shut away from
It until after It getsstrong and sweet
Then they are turned out and the grain
is fed out of doors. Sometimes we
have made the fattest lambs on grass,
throwlLj ear corn out on It as we
would to the pigs. Of course, we have
to fence a corner where the lambs can
get the grain and the ewes cannot
We like to put out rollers In the creeps,
so that the lambs may squeeze through
and . not hurt themselves, and pretty
soon the shorn ewes are nearly aa
small as their lambs. i
Selling the Lambs.
Managed In this way,, we have sold
our crop of lambs in three lots. One
In April, and they averaged eighty
pounds and brought a long price; the
younger ones going again In May, and
weighed above eighty pounds, and the
very latest and the culls went in June,
and they also averaged above eighty
pounds and also brought good price.
W. B. Wing In Farm and Fireside.
THE SHEPHERD.
When fed In large flocks the sheep
should be driven from the feed yard
during the time the racks .are being
filled; this will overcome the tendency
to overcrowding and prevent injury to
the sheep from the wagon and team.
The quantity of silage to be fed should
be governed largely by the appetite
of the flock, but it is not usually ad
visable to feed over three pounds per
head daily. For sheep weighing 125
pounds about 2.5 pounds of silage and
1.5 pounds of hay will be ample; and
if one-half pound of grain or bran be
fed slightly less hay will sufllce. If
grain Is fed it is not a proper plan to
mix it with coarse feed, as the sheep
are inclined to root out and waste this
feed in their efforts to get the grain.
In Western Oregon.
Sheep husbandry in western Oregon
Is conducted on lines that would be a
revelation to many farmers. In the
matter of pasture, land Is plowed and
sown to wheat about Oct. 1, and, in a
normal season, by the following Feb
ruary a luxuriant pasture will be fur
nished for the ewes and lambs or for
fattening sheep.
It Gives Vital Tone.
The effect of salt on the health of
the sheep is not generally understood.
Its effect is to give tone to the organ
Ism. The ash of the blood of a healthy
sheep contains about '60 per cent salt,
and the ash of urine 33 per cent.
The scarcity of such an important
constituent in the blood means a re
laxation of vital energy.
Lambs For Early Market.
Corn meal is an excellent feed for
young lambs that are to be fattened
quickly. After this comes bran. Lin
seed meal may be fed in small quanti
ties. The Sheep's Foot.
Don't neglect to trim off any over
growth of the horny part of the foot
Manure and filth will accumulate and
trouble likely follow later. While ex
amining the feet don't fail to have
sharp shears at hand to trim off the
tag locks that are an annoyance to the
sheep and mean a loss of wool.
Hog Cholera.
So far as I am able to learn, the
farmers in our state as well as the
farmers in other states have not as
yet secured any remedy which will
cure hog cholera, says Professor Wj J.
Kennedy of Iowa in Rural New York
er. Personally I do not think vthat
such a thing exists as a remedy which
will, cure without fall all cases of hog
cholera. We have had a little experi
ence on the College farm with hog
cholera, and we always used preven
tive measures to overcome the same.
I think that when hog cholera is in the
neighborhood It Is a very wise policy
for every farmer who owns hogs to
use disinfectants very freely. He
should' divide up his hogs into small
lots and feed them on rations of a
thin, sloppy order. ' Skim milk is very
good at this time or a thin slop made
of water and wheat shorts. By all
means avoid the heavy feeding of corn.
HUNTING THE WALRUS.
The CUMrae ef the MeraJ Are She. ff
Rest Killed With Axes. , -
Whalers begun to turn their at
tention to valroa catching about
the year 1868. During the first part
of every season there is but little
opportunity to capture whales, they
being within the limits of the icy
barrier. As a result much of the
whalers' time during July and Au
gust was devoted to capturing wal-
ruses. ' !
Men would be landed on the Alas- .
fca shore in June and left to watch
for the aimftla to haul up on the
9
beach at certain points. According -
to the government reports, the wal
rus must either come ashore or get
on the ice to sleep. When a herd
is well ashore one or two old bulls
are generally left on watch.
The best shot among the hunters
now creeps up and by a successful
rifle shot or two kills the guard.
Owing to their very defective hear
ing the noise made by the rifle does
not wake them. The gun is then put
aside and each hunter, armed with
a sharp ax, approaches the sleeping
animals and cuts the spines of as
many of them as possible before the
others become alarmed and stam
pede for the water and escape.
The white hunters rarely make
use of anything but the two long,
curved tusks with which the animal
is equipped and which average
about five pounds to the pair. If
time permits, however, the flesh is
boiled and the oil saved. To many
of the Eskimos, especially on the
arctic shore, the walrus is almost a
necessity of 'life, and the devasta
tion wrought among the herds by
the whalers has been and is yet the
cause of fearful suffering and death
to many of the natives.
The flesh is food for men and
dogs. The oil also is used for food
and for lighting and heating the
houses. The skin when tanned and
oiled mates a durable cover for the
large skin boats. The intestines
make waterproof clothing, window
covers and floats. The tusks are
used for lance or spear points or are
carved into a great variety of useful
and ornamental objects, and the
bones are used to make heads for
spears and for other purposes.
In addition to hunting the wal
rus themselves the whalers also pur
chase from the Eskimos the tusks,
or ivory, that they haxe secured.
New York Sun.
Not Infallible.
Harriet Martineau, the English
author, was shrewd and practical
and had what men are pleased to
call a "masculine intellect." But she
was not always correct in her de
ductions, a fact 1 illustrated by the
following anecdote, told in her
"Memoirs," by Sir Charles Murray,
who was then the English consul
general in Egypt:
One afternoon we met at the
villa of my old friend, S. W. Lark
ing, on the banks of the Mahamou
dieh canal. In the course of our
stroll through the garden we came
to a small gate, the pattern of
which was new to Miss Martineau,
who was walking in front.
She stopped and, looking at the
gate in an attitude of intense ad
miration, exclaimed:
"How truly oriental ! What won
derful taste these easterners have
in design!"
She went on, and as Larking and
I followed through the gate he
whispered to me, "I got it out last
week from Birmingham."
Queer Ideas of Beauty.
The amiability of Moorish wom
en strikes me greatly, writes an
Englishwoman in Morocco in the
National Eeview. I visited some
the other day, and they were full
of kindly interest. They liked my
fair hair, they liked my clothes.
One old crone suggested how lovely
I would be were I to paint my
cheeks a brilliant red, stain my un
der lids coal black, adding three
black vertical lines on my forehead
and one in the middle of my. chin;
also stain my teeth with walnut
juice, my hands with henna! ' I
therefore rubbed my cheeks with
my handkerchief till they turned
crimson. That amused them high
ly, and they laughed and said 1
needed no paint, but did need hen
na and blacking! Another woman
gazed at my waist and groaned, ex
claiming she would be ill had she a
waist as small as mine. ..-
No Benefit.
A well known actor, lying on his
deathbed, '"according to the. physi
cians, was approached by a . brother
Thespian, who said : "Blank, old
man, you. are long for this world
yet. ' We are going to get up a -benefit"
The dying man of . tragedy
lifted himself up by hi left elbow
and, shaking his long index, finger
of the right hand in the visitor's
face, hissed: "Benefit! - Benefit!
Benefit! Oh, Shakespeare! Now
indeed do I know that; death is at
hand. My time is . come. A bene
fit! Goodby,--oldbpy., See that I
am decently buried. But no bene
fit!" New YoBk Preesr
Died, Saturday morning, Oct.
19th, 1907, at their borne one
mile east of Monroe, Thomas
Ellsworth, the little son of Mr.
and Mrs. R. . Brabham, aged 5
months and 18 days. Born Mav
tst, 1907.
Thoo'rt gM to the grava, bat we win
not deplore tbeo;
Though sorrows and darkness neompaaa
the tomb, -
Tba Bavfetir baa passed through its por
tals bate thee,
ad tba lamp ef hia love is thy guide
through tba gloom.
Thoo'rt gene to tba grav, we no longer
bekoldthee.
Nor tread tba rough path of the world by
tby side;
Bat the wide arms of mercy are spread to
enfold thee.
And sinners mar hope since the Sinless
has died.
Thou'rt gone to the grave, but 'twere
wrong to deplore thee,
When God was thy ranaon, tby guardian
and gnide:
He gave tbee, and took the, and soon
will restore tbee,
Where death baa no sting, sines the
Saviour has died,
A Friend.
Philomath Snapshots.
Mrs. O. White has been em
ployed as the fifth instructor in
the Philomath public school.
The new letter heads for the
schools have quite a business
like appearance. School is pro
sjiessing nicely.
Arthur Reynold, who visited
with his brother, Rev. Walter
Reynolds tor several davs last
week returned to his home at
Salem Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hunter
have purchased the Methodist
church property io Philomath.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Heckle
went to Portland n Wednesday
of last week returning home Sat
urday. Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Bryan,
iwo of our 6d and highly esteem
ed pioneer citizens are visiting
relatives in Marion county.
Last Friday, October 18, Miss
Ora Gibbon was surprised by a
number of her friends, who cong
regated to the number of
seventeen at her home in
Philomath, the occasion being
her seventeenth birthday. A
merry and enjoyable evening was
spent by all. Those present
were: Misses Sadie Mason, Hazel
Merryman, Hazel Caldwell, Julia
Boyle, Bessie Pugsley. May
Jenkins, Anna Miller, Esther
Henderson, Ora Gibbons and
Blanche and Nellie Moses; Messrs
Roy Scott, Eddie Merrick, John
Crabtree, Fred Jones and Glenn
and Scott Gibbons.
OUR NATIONAL DANGER.
Time to Call a Halt Before a Pan
ic Comes.
The business spirit is crushing out the
sweeter element of home life. We are in
danger of a great commercial decline, be
cause men, as a whole, think only of get'
ting wealth.
There are thousands, both men and
women, who do not take time to eat prop
erly. They rash through life, and as a
result we have an- age of indigestion,
nervousness, irritability, sleepless nights
and morose dispositions.
With the discovery of Mi-o-na tablets,
there is no longer any excuse for one to
have ill health from stomach weakness.
Mi-o-na strengthens the walls of the
stomach, stimulates' secretion of the di
gestive juices, regulates the liver amd re
stores muscular contraction to tbe intes
tines and bcwels, so no laxative is need
ed. Sick headaches, palpitation, bad taste
in the mouth, . yellow skin, irritability,
coated tongue and melancholy are a few
of the many distressing results of indiges
tion. Mi-o-na never fails to dispel all
these troubles.
(Graham & Wells sell Mi-o-na in 50-cent
boxes, and guarantee to refund the money
if the remedy does not give complete
satisfaction. 89 91
Real Estate Transfers.
Carrie Blain to John F Bain,
20 acres near Albany; $1600.
A B Clements to W H Wor
rell, ro acres near Albany; $500.
Emma B Thompson to Mrs.
B C Williams, lot 9 bl. 27 Av
ery's and addition to Corvaliis;
$10. '
D D Berman to E F Berman,
lot 3 and part of lot 2 bl. 14,
County ; addition to Corvaliis;
$1300.
XV Flint to M E Abbott, lot
7. 8, and 9 bl- a County addition
to Corvaliis; 10.
' Corvaliis Ixige No. 14, A P
& A M to Melva McKinney, lots
208 and 306 in Crystal Lake
Cemetery; $10.
A J Hodges to School District
No. 74, 19. too acre near Albany;
$1.
A J Hodges to School District
No 74 55 100 acre near Albany;
$1.
Harnett Healy to C Land
Mary M Copple v lots 5 and 6 bl.
2 County addition to Corvaliis;
45-
J W and J Mills to E McLen
nan, lots 1 and 2 bl. 32, Job's
addition to Corvaliis; $10.
United States to J B Bamhart,
18 53 acres north of Corvaliis.
Marmadoke Hall to R A Has
kell, part of lot 3 College Hiil
addition to Corvaliis; $1900.
Lewis Hartley to D L McKay,
40 acre west of Ph ilomath; $10.
Marmadnke Hall to John H
Hall, part of lot 3, College Hill
addition to Corvaliis; $100.
F L Mnlvanv to B B Mulvany,
3 acres near Wrens; $125,
E A and B E Prather to G W
Gove, lots 7 and 8 bl. 2, Chase's
2nd addition to Corvaliis; $10.
An Apple Affair.
There is au old saying that
"there is nothing new under the
sun," but there is, and the
people of Yamhill county have
tound it. A dispatch from there
ells of it as follows:
A suggestion is made that tbe
women of the apple raising fam
ilies of the county be asked U
give an apple banquet to the
editors of the county papers who
have so loyally boosted so many
fairs and functions held in tbe
country. The barquet will take
place at noon Saturday, Novem
ber 2, and will consist of all
manner of "apple fixings," ao
ple pie, apple dumplings, apple
cobbler, apple salad, apples bak
ed, scalloped, fried, stewed, roast
ed and in, every way in which
apples have been used as food,
and in new and tasteful dishes
that may be invented and all
washed down with apple cider.
It is proposed to entertain edi
tors and their wives tree. Others
will pay 50 cents, and will be
presented with a souvenir dish
and fork and 10 ballets. They
will be requested to taste any and
all dishes at the banquet . and
vote one ballot each for the 10
best articles entered for the con
test. Big prizes will be given to
the ladies who furnish the best
dishes, according to the votes cast.
This section. long known
as "the land ot big red apples
and pretty girls," will give the
public exhibits of these two pro
ducts mixed, fcr, more correctly
speaking, of the one mixed by the
other.
Printer Wanted.
In the Corvaliis Gazette office a good,
all-round, thoroughly experienced print
er. Most be industrious, steady, free
from all stimulants and able to produce
profits. A young or middle aged mar
ried maa preferred. State age, experi
ence, references, wages desired and all
other necessary information. Address
Corvaliis Gazette, P. O Box 26, Corval
iis, Oregon. 89tf
The Best Quality of
PIANOS and ORGANS
At the Store 'of GRAHAM & WELLS'
Corvaliis. Oregon
CUSTOMERS
Are requested to call and see them be
fore purchasing elsewhere.
THIS OLD RELIABLE HOUSE will
sell their FINE-TONED INSTRU
MENTS FOR REASONABLE PRICES
instead of charging you extra to make j
up for'high city rents, railroad fares and
hotel bills for traveling salesmen.
Music Loving People ..
Can purchase these reliable goods in
their home town. . If there is anything
you do not understand you will find the
sellers near your home.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
Tiie Kind You Hays Always Bought
Signature of fZ
Hettkw tor FaMleattaa,
Vetted State Lend OflkM,
Boaebura;, Oregon, Jal Se, ttoT, '
Hottee Is kenfcT sea that In etwebaacevMk)
the prorisioee ol the Act 0 Consrtae ef Jneet,
I878, ntltM "An Act lor tbe sale of timber hues ka.
the tetca ol California, Oregon, Nevada, sad Weak,
tnrtcw Territory," a extended to all PubUe Lao
States by act of Aujraet a. lass, Lrdta J. Hawla of
am, vamwy oi nenton, state ot tmm, a led at
tola office on April , 1907. bar more atetmncnt No.
Met for tba purdnaa of the Bonttrweat quarter ef
Section No. 1 in Townahip No. 16, Booth of Raof
No. 8 Wast W St., Ore., and trill offer proof 1
that tba land eoafht ia more valuable lortte ttaaba
or atone than lor acri cultural purports, and to aa.
toboah bar claim to aak) land before wTV. Calk toe.
U. a ConunlaalnnaT. at lifa omce In Eoeana. Qranav
on Monday, tbe 4th day of November. ItoT.
Sbenaneaaa witneeaam: LaonMaa H. Hawleyef
Monroe, Orofon, and Sam Bowen, Alfred TtjiiiXt
and M. r. Kycraft, all of Alaea, Oreo.
Any and all peraooa dalming adrenaly tba above
deeeribad lands are requested to tie their claims in
tola office on or before aaid 4th day ol November.
IS07.
BENJAMIN L. EDDT, aWglatao,
Julius Caesar
W11 Ban of nerve, but sickness left
its bi rk end be became aged before hia
time. SickaeM i often canted by a tor
pid liver. Herbine will repnlate your
liver and rive yon bealtb. Mia. Carria
Anstin, Holloa, Kartaa. write : "I con
aider Herbine tbe beet medicine I ever
beard of. I am never without it." Sold
by Gnham A Wortham.
Notice to Creditors,
Notice is hereby given that tbe ondereifrred baa
been duly confirmed and appointed executor o
tbe r.aet Will and Tertumept and estate of Mary
A. Moore, deceased, by the county Court of tbe '
State of Oregon lor Benton County, eittira; In
probate. All persons having claims against aaid
estate are required to present the same, duly verU
tied, to me at my residence in Corvaliis, Oregon,
or at the lav office of E. Holgate in Corvallia, Ore
gon, within six months from the date ef thefirat
1 ublicatlon of this notice.
Dated at Carvallis, Oregon, this 24th day ol
September, 1907.
TBtf Minor Ewick, Executor,
Lest We
Forget Baby ie restless, can't sleep at
nivht, wrn't vat. crips erarmodicelly.
A bottle of V bite's Cream Veimifuce
never fails to cure. Evpry mother sVould
five ber baby White's Cream "Vprniiupe.
So many times when the baby is pale
and fretful, the nr other doee not know
what to do. A bottle oftlis medicine
would brine color to his cheeks and
lanebter to bis eyes. Give it a ttiaU
Bold by Graham & Wertham.
Jersey Bull For Sale.
Descended frcm Grard Coin srd Gold
en Glow; imported ccw tfstine 18 lb,
batter fat, in 7 days, with first calf, ad
dress, M. S. IVooecoc'K, Corvaliis,; Ore
gon. 72t
Notice of Fleet Settlement.
Notice is hereby given that the undersigned bsa
filed in the County Ct-urt t i Etntcn Countj. Ore
gon, his final account pa sr'n in'Mratcr cf Ihe es
tate of Alcxp.rder Btr.nctt. df cesM-d. and tbftt Sat
urday, tbe nh dry of "otn ler. Ipc7. t Ihe hour
of 11 o'clock in the forcrorn of said t'a.v has been
fixed and aprointtd 1 y said Cotrt ap the time and
the County Junge's off'ce in the County Court
House in Corvaliis in caid County and State aa the
place for hearing objrrtions, if any, to Sftjd account
and the settlement 11 ' reof. All persons interested
and desiring to object thereto are rotificd to file
tl eir obiecUons thereto in writing with the Clerk
of said Court and appear at said tine and place.
E. Bekht-tt,
As Adminfetrator of the eBtate of Alexander
Bennett, deceased. Sfttf
AJGood Trade.
Every boy, no matter how rich or bow
poor bis ancestry, should learn thorough
ly some good trade, bo that if bis circum.
Btances become reversed at any time he
could immediately do service at his trade
and start again on a successful road to
prosperity. . The printing trade is not
only artistic when completely learned,
but it is also highly educational in every
particular, and one of tbe best trades that
anyone can learn, as opportunity for
labor is ever ready each working day in
the year.
There is one of the best opportunities
in a'l the land for a young man cf ste'ady
habits, good principlfs, well educated
having a will to work and excel, to learn
tbe printing trade in the Gazette office
Proper explanation will be given on ap
plication. 6ftf
Notice lor Publication.
Department of the Interior, Land Office at Port
land, Oregon, Octobei 19, 19O7.
Notice is hereby uiven that Wiiliom H. Graham
of Corvaliis. Oregon, has filed notice of his inten
tion to make final five year proof in support of his
claim, viz: Hoii.estead Entry No. I4545 made Sept.
9, I9O2, for the Lot No. 1, Section 25, Township IS
south. Range 5 west, and that said proof will be
made before the Cleric of Benton County, at Corval
iis, Oregon, on November 29, I967.
He names the following witnesses to prove hie
continuous residence upon, and cultivation of, the
land, viz: John Bcett of Corvaliis, Oregon; Lee
Newman of Corvaliis, Oregon; Harper Mechlin of
Corvaliis. Oregon, and Thomas R. Graham of Cor
valiis, Cregoa.
88-98 Algfrson s. Dresser, Register.
A IrlostrVortBy Article.
'When an article bes been on tbe mar
ket for jean std gains friends every
year, it is safe to call this medicines
worthv one. Such is Ballard's Bore
hound Syrnp. It positively cures coughs
and all Pulmonary diseases. One of tbe
known rj erchants in Mobile, Ala., says:
"For five years my ftmilv has rot been
troubled with the winter ccugbp. We
owe this to Ballard's Horehourd Syrup.
I know it has saved my children from
many sick spells." Sold by Graham &
Wortham.
Farmers.
'Bead tbe "Weekly Oregonian" of Port
land and the "Corvaliis Gf zette" for the
general news of the world, also for in
formation about Low to obtain the best
results in cultivating tbe 'soil, etcck rais
ing, fruit raisin?, etc.
You can secure both of these excellent
papers for one year by payirg to the
: 'Corvaliis Gt zett6" the scm of two dol
lars and fifty cents, in advance. Btmit
.'.the money by postoffice order or bank
draft and these most valuable papers will
be promptly mailed to you. 83tf