9 Leading Corrallis Newspaper. Best Advertising Medium. Vol. XLIV. Corvaijjs, Benton Couivty, Oregon, - Friday. Nomveber a lOOT. NO. 92 FttJRS:IHIDB2E m , , M.f. iin kk more money for von to Hip Haw run ana jnaa o usuw w ?T. ??.!!!? ?.,?S7.iTMikJt?Mrt. ShiDDinu Tags, and about our HUNTERS'&TRAPPERS'GUIDES5? 0 pce. leather boand. Best Ulinr on the mWret OT written. IHurtratiat U FurAmm. All rtouTr.ppers- Secret.. DecoM. Trap.. Quo. bn. J Ki where to trjp. .Jid to become -raSfoltnipper. If. . retol.r Encyclopedia Priee. . To onr coMomere. T . Hrfe. teimed into Sde.andrartouandetluilie.tnrio Aadenck. Bras., Jtefft. Tl. Ml.nf. poll., Minn. .fid SFENCER'S Hair Invigorator And Canrfrtff ErsrffcEicr 3 5 Yi FavWsafSutHiauT: - or. a. - S s 1 ST 3 Price, - Fifty Celts' Manufactured by The Vegetable Compound Company Corvallls, Oregon Ot rtVVrSNwvaawVajavawwyajaa )l.VawMlwi BELT BUCKLES, BACK COMBS and BRACELETS. ..AS! Styles and Pricss m PRATT, The Jeweler and Optician. Swell Line of Wall Paper and New Wicker Chairs AT 0. J. BLACKLEDGE'S Furnure store You Take Mo Chances When You Buy Groceries g At This Store All our goods are guaranteed to comply with the Pure Food Law We have the best and nothing but the best. We Want Your Business Modes Grocery Printer Wanted. In the Corvallis Gazette office a "good, all-round, thoroughly experienced print er. Must be. industrious, steady, free from all stinulanta and able to produce profits. A young or middle aged mar ried mu preferred. State age, experi ence, references, wages desired and all other necessary information. Address Corvallis Gazette,' P. O Box 26, Corval lis, Oregon. " S9lf There Is no Reason. Whv yonr baby should be thin, nd fretful during the night. Worms are the cnuee of thin, sickly babies- It is natur al that a healthy bshy shonld be fat and sleep well. If yenr bahy does not retain its food, don't experiment with colic cures snd other medicine, but try a bot tle of White's Cream Verniifugj, and yon will soon see jrour babv have color and laugh as it should. Sold by Graham & WortLun. A Good Trade. Eviry boy, no matter how rich or how tour bis ancestry, ehould 'earn tborough- ly Bome pood trade, bo that if hia circum stances become reversed at any time he could immediately gjj service at hie trade and plait again on a pveef Bsfn road to prosperity. The printing trade is not only artistic when completely learned, hut it is 1bo highly educational in every particular, and one of the best trades that anyone can learn, as opportunity for labor ia ever ready each working day in the year. x There is one of the best opportunities in a'l the land for a young man cf steady habits, good principli s, well educated having a will to work and excel, to learn thb printing trade in the Gazette office Proper explanation will he given oh ap plication. 67tf The Gazette for Job Work. Help Him Now, Say the kind word and don't wait till he's dead. It may help him t ow in the struggle for bread; The grave is beyond the reach of hot air And hunger don't knock on the doors over there. When you've said the kind word, just add the kind deed. Don't wait ti;l yonr brother's in actual need ; It may be too late to give him the Tift When his courage's all gone and his soul ia adrift. Put bim in line to irel hold of some cash When he's Reeling the sting of poverty's lash: Don't hand him a lemon in place of a peach With all the world's luxuries cut if his reach. Ex, PATHETIC ENDING. Of Young Life Mother and- Babe Dead The Funeral. - . Mrs. Janie Newton-Brown, whose home is at Oakesdale, Washington, died at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Newton, near Philomath, Tues day morning, about 7:30. An infant child is sleenng the quiet sleep of death by her side, which tells the sad, sad story of blasted hopes,- a home made desolate, nd many hearts filled with bitter anguish. Janie - Newton was born in Benton county 33 years ago the 19th of last March. Three years aeo on Thanksgiving day fhe'l was married to Robert Brown ol Oakesdale, Wash., and went to that state with her young husband to make her home. The husband, the parents, three married sisters, Mrs. Diana McCoy of Washing ton, Mrs. Mary Slayton of Idaho, and Mrs. George Cooper of Ben ton county; two brothers, Emery J. Newton, recorder of Benton county, Alva Newton, and an unmarried sister, Miss Cora New ton, besides a host of friends, are lett to mourn the death of one who was ever a loving wife, daughter, sister and friend. Deceased had been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church since early childhood, and the funeral services will be conducted by Rev. D. H. Leech of Corval lis, at the Plymouth church, this afternoon at two o'clock. A large number of relatives and friends will attend the services and follow the re mains to thei: last resting place in Newton cemetery. The sincere . sympathy ot the entire community is extended 'to those bereaved. x- Building the "Y.' 1- According to a rumor that has been going the rounds this week, the C. & E. depot wilt become a union depot for all passenger traffic coming into Corvallis, and the old S. P. will be used as a freight depot. While those who are supposed to know are not giv ing out details of the proposed plans, it is known positively .that men and teams have been em ployed this week at the C. & E crossing north of town, grading and laying track for a "Y" on which the S. P. trains will be transferred to the C. & E. tracks and thence brought into the latter depot in this city. It is knowa also that a new timetable goes into effect on the 10th and the story is that the change will be come effective on that date. - Corvallis has long needed a union depot, as tne transter or freight from one depot to the other has been most annoying to the traveling public. Whether the new arrangement will bf permanent, or whether it is only a preliminary step looking to greater and better things is not known; but at any rate it is a step in the way of improvement ot depot facilities and as such will meet with hearty approval from the public. Help It Along. But few readers, we imagine, ever give a thought to the value of this paper to the community. The .home paper has an nSuence for good that is hard to overesti mate. It molds public opinion ; it does well its part in protecting and preserving the government. It takes the place of a standing army in guarding the liberties of the people; it teaches your chil dren morality, truth and powei ; it brings many rich blessings to the homes it visits with but little financial reward for its labors; and in too many instances not any. The home paper is the mirror in which those at a dis tance see us, says an exchange. It is the plain duty cf all who" are interested in our town to take personal interest in the town's paper ann ss' in eveiv way possible in m-kin it a true rep resentative of intelligent and hospitable people, as well as Our enterprising and ravidly devi . -ing little citv. Send the paper to your friends, bring us the news and do otir duty by vcur home paper and v will meet, you more than haf way. When on help yonr hrm.. paper von help the town and in directly help yourself, for we a-e all equally int rested in our town and commuDitv Oregon News Notes. Governor Chamberlain has ap pointed delegates to the Trans Mississippi Commerical Congress to be held at Muskogee, Oklaho ma, November I9'h-22nd. Hon. Arthur F. Francis,, secretary of the Congress, requests every com merical organization in Oregon to name delegates and report to him immediately at Muskogee. The advance of Oregon and the Pacific Northwest in live stock will be spleudidly illustra ed at the hoTse show in Portland on the 7th, 8th and 9th of this month. Entries have alteady surpassed expectations and a large attendance is anticipated. A great deal ot interest is be ing manifested in the Oregon State Good Roads Convention to be held at the rooms of the Port land Commercial Club November I4th-i5. Hon. John H. Scott, of Silem, President of the State Association, urges the appoint ment of delegates and asks for a large attendance. There will be present a number of able speakers who have given years to practical road-building. The county judges and county commissioners o? Oregons are especially respon- 'sTuie tor the success "or-tnis'meel ing and are urged to send dele gates. The same is true with re gard to commercial, industrial, agricultrial, and horticultural societies, reporting a list of same at once to President Scott, at Salem. Checks :payable only through clearing house" get the money just the same as the old fashioned kind for necessary purposes. This little hesitation in the stream o'. financial wealth, when Oregon is producing for the good year 1907 a lumber product of $30,000,000, live stock and wool worth $20; ooo.oco, poultry 'and eggs worth $3, 000,000, a grain crop worth $15,00,000, and a fruit crop of $5,000,000, and erecting building worth $20,000, oco, seems just a little queer, and things will right themselves. Oregon banks have plenty of money, our people are out of debt, our mortgages are paid, and a little cool judgement and optimism will bring us out all right The Sweetest Girl in Dixie' Wins Praise in Portland. Monday's Oregonian has the following to say regarding "The Sweetest Girl in Dixie" which is playing a week's engagement in Portland : Patterson's companies from Chicago have been so far this season among the best on the road. "The Sweetest GirJ in Dixie" is without question one of the cleanest and most enter taining comedy-dramas seen at the Empire in many a day. The atmosphere of the play is good to take into the system, and it leaves no bad taste in the month. With anyone who has been in the beautiful Southland and mingled with the warm-hearted people the other side of the Ohio River, this play creates a feeling of bomesicKuess; and those who never knew the delights of a resi dence or visit to that enchanted land are sure to have a desire te go after witnessing "The Sweet est Girl." The company is even ly balanced atsd all cf the parts well played." top tlx coiatfa ssd boaZs lungf ADAM RADiR. Buried Yesterday Something of His Life Told in Brief. THe funeral ' the lnte Adam Radi', wbodi-V at his home in this city Tur(sd-v night at nine o'clock, occurrrd from the Epis oapal churrh yt-terday afternoon it two o'clock, Uiev services be ing conducted bv Rev. Arm strong, rector. The remains were interred in Crystal Lake cerretery beside those of his wife who died last January. Mr. Radir had been very, ill for two months with Brights dtsease and during that time was unable to lie down- A week ago he was confined to his bed and death came to his relief Tuesday night. u ceasea was Dorn at lirossbie btrau, Germany, July 29,-830. He learned the blacksmith" trade at which he worked until he entered the army, serving three vears in the barracks and on the field. He was a very successful master mechanic, and believing that greater opportunites awaited him accross the water he sailed for the United States in 1852, becoming acquainted on the ocean voyage with Miss Margaret Lieson, a native of Irland, to whom he was married in 1876 in Pittsburg. Mt. and Mrs. Radir later came to Oregon, purchasing 181 acres ot land one and a half miles east of Corvallis, known as the Radir homestead. They acquired other property in later years, the place now comprising 293 acres. The survivors are three daugh ters, Mrs. Richard Graham and Mrs. Millie Smith of Corvallis, and Mrs. Stephen Whitmore of Pennsylvania. ' Mr. Radir was an honorable citizen, and that he was of a gen erous, kindly nature was shown in the grief of numerous little children who mingled their tears with those of their elders over the passing ot their friend Adam Radir. Famous Play Coming. One of the events of the theat rical season will be the appearance of "Under Southern Skies" on November 14th. The play is in the author's most delightful vein 'and when it is remembered that Lottie Blair Parker, who wrote Under Southern Skies, also wrote Way Down East, much may be expected: "Under Southern Skies" is full of life, light and gaiety, and fills the audience with the spirit of youth and romance. The great beauty of the. scenic set tings, the dainty costuming, the many amusing and diverting characters and incidents, the absobing love story, the Hal lowe'en celebration and pumpkin dance, all go to make "Under Southern Skies" one of the most delightful and satisfying enter tainments now before the public The company is very.large num bering in all twenty-three acting people, the unusual number ot 11 ladies appearing in good paits, The reserve seat sale opens Tues day morning at 8 o'clock. Piice? 35 to $1.00. Those who want goods seats had better secure them early. H -zing. There was a hazing n' '. great University of California the other day. Tnere the editor of the college publication dared to criticise the use of cigarettes by the co-eds and a crowd ot stud ents inveigled him from his bome, overpowered him by force of numbers and heaped upon him the crowning outrage of a college hazing. In "commenting editorally on the matter the Portland Journal throws another, "booquet" to OAC in the following paragraph: "The Berkeley incident recalls the late manly action ot the stud ents at the Oregon Agricultural college, who seized upon a similar occasion to set the seal of their condemnation upon hazing as a discarded relic of an uworthy K aee. The big California institu tion can, if it tries, learn a whole some lesson in ordainary ethics from students of the less pretent ious Oregon college." "The Sweetest Girl in Dixie ' Monday Night. "The Sweetest Girl in Dixie" is full of heart interest, clean and wholesome throughout.. The steady march of commercialism is fast driving romance from us, but the South will be slow to yield to the invader, Jfor it is the home oi chivalry, the home of fair women and brave men, the place where the sun shines bright est, where the women speak soft est, and the men love strongest thats "Dixie Land." "The Sweetest Girl in Dixie" one of the best attractions of the season will be seen at the opera house next Monday night. Seats now on sale. Prices 35, .so and 7. Additional Local. A chicken pie supper always "draws" like a porus plaster with the Corvallis public, which is the reason that has cansed the ladies of the M. E. church to give such a "spread" at the church a week from tomorrow night. Watch for advertisements. i'lE. F. Wiles of Albany was a visitor In Corvallis, yesterday. The OAC boys had sold 650 tickets ts Eugene, up to yesterday morning. Don't miss it. Help them out by going along and shouting for the "Aggies." Arthur Berman arrived home thia week from Eastern Oregon, where he had been employed in a drugstore. "n " aseera'oly Vedneeday "noon, C, T. Hurd gave a splendid fifteen minute address on the value of ora tory, debate and literary society work in college life, and President Kerr offered a few pertinent re marks on the same subject. H. E. Cooke and Fred Pox gave brief talks along the same line, and the session was then given over to ar rangements and discussion of the trip to Eugene tomorrow. Today the entire drill period is to be de voted to the practice of songs, yells and further discussion of the big event of tomorrow. The usual services will be held at the Congregational cnurch, Sunday morning and evening. You will be welcome. J. E. Fowella, who has been coo--fined to his bed with illness for the past two weeks, is slowly improv ing. W. J. Kent has arrived home, after an absence of several months in the vicinity of Portland. White Sewing Machines. We have secured the agency fot the celebrated White Sewing Machines. Mrs. Schnbert demonstrates in our Ladies Ready-to- Wear department. 87-98 J. M. Nolan &;Son.J Own YourHomo THE. First - National - Bank of Corvallis . has some TOWN LOTS Near the JState Agricultural College which you can buy on the INSTAIyI MENT PLAN or for cash. Save Ten or Twenty Dollars per month and pay the same on a town lot Thereafter BUILD YOUR HOME on the lot and continue to make these small monthly payments on the home and you will soon have it paid for and have no more rent to pay. For information address W-ZH. SAVAG- Corvallis, Or