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About The Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1899-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1903)
Weekly Eugene Guard, i Mu»t Not Set Fire» Sherar 4 Shorts have been sued . ..____ I In accordance with section 1787, aii<i their property attache«! at Ellens 17», 17», 1790, 191 ami 192 of Beilin- [ burg, Wash, But the crtiditors cau’t ' JULY 11 SATURDAY ............ gers and Cottou's Annotated Code take Bburte's shirt». They are ex I aud (Statutes of Oregon, Governor empt. Wauuamaker say* that to stop one's Ubamberlaiu has issued his annual advertising iu the dull season i* like Pope Leo with the burden of eighty proclaniutiuu referring to the protec taking down one’* aigu. I tiou of timber und other property three years upon him says, “1 am We could have (done without that from fire. The law provide* that this tired and glad to go." The last rain. Btill it will be beneficial to proclamation nhall be issued by the word* of Keat, the poet, were, “I *m gra«« and late-sown grain. | Governor on or before the fir«t day tired; let me rest. ” of July of each year, aud Governor Hop dealers are figuring on the hop The Southern Pacific railroad uses Chamberlain complied with the kw yield of Oregon; as if anyone could ten thousand barrel* of crude oil daily yesterday, the substance of which tell with any oertainty at thia aeasou in locomotives. And only three proclamation follows: of the year. thousand barrels of this amount is ob “If any person shall maliciously, tained from its own wells. Evansville, Indiana, is the last with intent to injure any other per place to indulge in the costly luxury son, kindle a fire on bi« own laud or The grave illness of the Pope calls of a race riot. The negro (does not the land of any other persen, and by attention to the simplicity of his liv means of such fire the buildings, know how to use his liberty. ing. For instance Lis private bed fence«, crop«, or other personal prep- , Mark Hanna la about out of busi erty or wooded timber land* of any chamber, where he lies ill, ha* but ness. His money aud ability to raise other person shall be destroyed or one window. It overlooks St. Peter’s money for political purpose« though injured, be shall, on conviction, be | cathedral. will keep him in politic*. punished by a flue not les« than f2u A Russian subject just returned Our Fourth of July had a close call nor more than I1U00, or by imprisen- from mysterious Thibet says wages this time. Hut one day between it tuent in the county jail not less than are small in that Central Asiatic I ami rain that would have been darnp- three mouths, nor more than 12 country. Men get but tw«j to three months, according to the aggravation uer in more senses than one. cents a day while women serve for of the offense. I their “keep." A priest gets but ten Our iron and steel import« for the “If any^persou «hall without malice for a whole day’s prayers. flsc*l year ending July 1st reached kindle any fire in any field, pasture, cents There are many monasteries, in one of fifty million dollars, nearly double inc loan re, forest, prairie, or timber which alone there are nearly sixty that of the preceding year. land not his own, without.tbe consent thousand men, women and boys, aud of the owner, and the same shall Delaware is a rather small state, even gray bearded patriarchs, studying spread and do damage to any build but it has lieen making good head theology. The women do the mer ings, fences, crops, cordwood, bark, way in trying to outclass many of cantile business exclusively. or other personal property not his the big ones in the negro-burning own, or to any wood or timber land contest. We elect ninety men to pass laws not bis own, he shall, on conviction, for the state, and courts to set them It la an impressive event at Rome, tie punished by a fine of not less than aside. Here is a Portland circuit the dying of the aged pontiff who has *100 and costs, according to the :ig- judge who holds that the initiative done so much to bring his church gravation of the offense, and shall and referendum amendment to the into line with modern religious stand committed until the fine and constitution was not legally passed. costa are paid. liberal tendencies. Somewhat strange considering the “Any person who shall enter upon number of probably as good lawyers Hot weather all over the east, with the lauds of another person for the in the legislature as the Portland cir not a few fatal cases of sunstroke and purpose of hunting or fishing, and cuit judge aud the study and thought from beat prostration. This favored shall, without the consent of the that hail been bestowed on the amend Pacific Northwest entirely escapes ex owner of said lands, kindle any tire ment, discussion thereof having beeu tremes of weather, hurricanes, thereon, shall be puuisbeil by a fine thorough. cyclones and kindred ills which affect not less than $1 nor more than 9100; our eastern brethreu. and if such fire lie kindled malicious Last year's Fourth of July celebra ly, and with the intent to injure suy tions made a record of twenty-one Jewish rabbis met in conference at other person, such offender shall lie killed in the effort to make a big Detroit the other day and declared it punished by a fine of not less than 920 affair of the day. This year breaks self in favor of maintaining the his nor more than 9250, or by imprison that record with thirty six deaths torical Sabl>atb. And juHt the same ment iu the County Jail not less than reported up to Sunday morning, their people will go on working and three months, nor more than 12 with probably two thousand people doing business on that day like other months. • maimed and wounded. Over a hun- people. Business liefore pleasure, or “Any person or persons wbo shall dred were hurt by explosions of gas-- religion either. willfully set fire to any wiaaied coun pipe cannons, Why should people be try or for««at belonging to the state or so unthinking as to ram a charge of The Lebanon Criterion says too the United Htates, or to any person powder in such a weak receptacle many men and boys in this genial or jx«rsons, shall be deemed guilty of and touch it off? Yes, why? clime have imbibed the idea that the a uiisdenienoar, and upon conviction world owes them a living. The boys liefore a court of competent jurisdic Honorable Marcus Alonzo The find out their mistake though when tion shall l>e punished by a fine not Hanna of Ohio and the United States, supporting parents are no more. The exce««ding 910*X>, or imprisonment not waves off the suggi*stion of a second tramp profession is always opeu for exceeding one year, or both such place on the ticket with Roosevelt in those disinclined to work. fine and imprisonment; Provided, 1904. “Make me take it?" he laughs that nothing hereiu contained stall in derision. “Why! You couldn't do The Pope objected yesterday to apply to any person who iu good that I” The place was fairly forced having the oxygen luhaling apparatus faith Bets a lisck tire to prevent the on Roosevelt in 1900—chiefly a continually under his nostril*. The extension of a tire already burning. piece of delib»'rat<« imposition by his “Upon any prosecutiou under this political opponents in the party— doctors got out of the difficulty by impregnating the air of the room with act, one half of the tine imposed but note how fate changed the pro th«« vital* elemeut of the air we shall b«< paid to the p«>rs< n who first gram and where that landed the pro breathe. “That is much better," gives iufornmtiou thereof to the testing Theodore. It would be a very ■aid the agetl pontiff. "Before I felt District Attorney for the district iu strenuous life, to be sure, between which the offense is committed, and Hanna and the presidency, and the aa though 1 had lost my lilierty." the other moiety shall be paid into Roosevelt luck is something phenom Htatistloa prove to the satisfaction the county treasury for th«« bene einal; but Hanna has uo doubt taken of the Oregonian that Port land ha* fit of the common school fund of much bigger chances than that many a more people than Seattle. And the county iu which said tine is «.ol- time.—New York Commercial. Neattie |«a|«er* use statistic* to prove 1acted. Portland the smaller city. Great are “It is hereby made th«« duty of the The enormous increase in the num- figures when properly manipulate«! I Governor of this state to issue a ber of immigrants will be letter ap And the moat honest man is not averse proclamation on the flrtt day of July preciated when it is known that in to ursing them to prove his owu con of ««ach year, calling public atten one day during the month of April, tention. tion to the piovisiona of thia act, 1903, 12,784 people Innde 1 at ¡Ellis and warning all persons against vio island. The New York correspondent Tourists hare denude.! the moun lating the same. It is also nisdo the for the St. Louis Republic says that tains of 8w It rar land of their l«e*utiful duty of t«ach Circuit Judge of thia ‘‘so congested has tbe’port of entry plants till it has I «ecu me necessary to state to read the provisions of this become with the pauper hordes of protect them by legislation. A decree act to ««ach Grand Jury, when charg Europe that the facilities for examin has l«en |<asaed prohibiting the up lug them aa to their duties." ing each iudivMnal 'considered ade rooting or plucking Howers of the "Now, therefore, I, lieorge E. quate one year ago have lieen bo over eidelweias, the iwautiful is-e orchis, Chaiul>erlsiu, Governor of the State taxed that the unusual procedure of the blue thistle, the Alpine clematis, of Oregon, do hereby dir««ct the at inspecting steerage passengers at the silver geranium, mountain rhododen tention of th«« public to the provis pier was reported to." Ellia Island's dron!, gentian and arnica. ions of the sections heiein liefore re- capacity for handling immigrants Reports from St. Petersburg are to ferreti to, aud warn all persons has been found to be eight thousand the effect that Russia is apparently •gainst the violation thereof." a day. but, according to the Republic on the eve of a gigantic upheaval of correspondent, the island is now so existiug condition*. The revolution th rouge, i with immigrants that there The Klondike couutry must I* a ary movement seems to l«e spreading is hardly room to move around Offi in every direction, and reaching disappointjnent to many. A *t««amer cials of the immigration bureau say regions hitherto free from radical at Seattle front Skagway the otberday that th«- year I'.MW will provide the agitation, leaflets directed against brought oui *eventy-thr*e ivondikers high record mark, for statistic*. the existing condition of Russian wbo reported one hundrvd thousand home affaire and demanding revolu* dollars in ail. An average of about JuUifiablc Sarcasm. tionary change* were circulated broad 91,300. Of course some of t hem i Salem Journal. ) cast duriug 'the month of May In had more that and other* nothin«. T «a Eogene blister says-lohn liar- thirty four cities and towns of the The latter prolmbly were glad to get rvtt is one of thè forvinosi citilens empire. Serious street disturbance* t«ck »lire. of thè Pacific coast; if so may thè have occurred at various pla."es sweet halm of pity be ponred in gen- erous fltHsIs npou thè tali soderà. The Wesley». The Woodmen Camp. The bicentenary of John Wesley, The ever enterprising Woodmen of which has just beeu celebrated in the World uie working the Elmira Methodist circles, has drawn atten territory with a view ot org mizit’g a tion to the family of this remarkable Woodmen camp [there. A. G. Wood man. 1 cock, who was iu Eugene managing He was the founder of Methodism the May festival, has charge of the and also the father of nineteen chil affair. They will organize there next Saturday evening with a membership dren, umong them Ix-ing Charles Wes of about 25. ley, the writer of some six thousand hymns of more or less merit, that are familiar wherever Methodists do congregate. We desire to extend our heartfelt The mother of this numerous thanks to all our friendB who tallied family, Susanna Annesley, was the around us with their thoughtful as daughter of a preacher. The nine- ! sistance and tender sympathy during teen young Wesleys were brought up our recent bereavement. Mr. and Mrs. I. E. Ernest in the fear of the Lord by their and family. strenuous parent. They were a talen ted lot from the youngest to the eld The big papers cannot refrain from Card ol Thanks. Warehouse Licet». Al liar y Democrat; Und.«» n pa»;e<I by the l„..f l ’ application licenst s but«. | , 8’ 0|b) issued to the fclUwjl t 1 , r bonds for tbe amounts üaü..j i.»t«HÌ by the uiuouut of bu*n ’ f**1 liy the applicants ; ’ 04 dina, Albany Farmers Comi.ai r s- A. Wilhelm 4Son,95000;G Aw : gate, All,.my, 92090; Sterling ers, Brownsville, 91500; M v k Halsey, 9.500; Martin Thou,¡ - , 'T2' ton Mills, 91000; A. \\ p.’ .'*• Peoria, 94000; May 4 Seudeis h risburg, 95000. ’ Card of Thanks. On I “i** Cyclot!e «e». Company . we desire _ _ to extend —J our sin. cere thanks to Mrs. W. C. G - — '‘fore and Miss Ada Christie for decorating' o“? est, writing poetry as naturally as using some ot their stuff which they ! hose cart and other courtesies aud / they talked, aud giving to the world have been holding in readiness to use the yoqug men who kindly Volu many polemical religious works of 1 in the event of the death of Pope Leo. : leered to .take the place of member. The Oregonian today uses a page of great merit. As fast as the little stuff evidently prepared for Bun , who were unable to be in the p8rade on the Fourth. army arrived at the estate of men and day's issue. C fiarles Evaua, women they ceased writing poetry 1 Henry Turner, a widower aged Bert Barry, and sorrowing over the sius of tL* about 40 years, mysteriously disap Committee. world for a brief period,and bestowed peared from Grant’s Pass on June serious thought ou the married rela 19th, and no trace of him has yet tion as a scriptural obligation with j beeu discovered. He is the third man who has disappeared from there in the result that the whole nineteen— The monthly report of the superin the past six weeks. with two exceptions—contracted un teudent of the state insane asylum 4 A bandfull of tacks were picked up Salem for June shows an increase iu happy alliances that rendered the off the street yesterday. Whether remainder of their lives miserable. they were placed there maliciously or the number of patients from 13u2fo 1324 during the mouth. The p«, Had she lived and labored at the __________ _ is not known. Janitors accidentally capita coat of maintenance was 910.13 present «lay Madame Wesley could report that tacks in the hallways are per month, or 34 cents a day. Ths have wrapped herself in a mantle of , uo* infrequent. . They are not the best I general health of the patients hug things in the world for wheels. been good. complacency, sent a letter to the The rains have cleared away the ' president showing what she had done NO PITY SHOWN. last threat of a drouth. The old “For years fate was after me con to avert “race suicide,’’ and have re Oregonians are never afraid of a tinuously" writes F. A. Gnlledg, ceived as a reward of merit thereof a drouth “The Verbena, Ala. “I had a terrible in this country. fine unframed photograph of Mr. weather always happens, as one man (case of piles causing 24 tumors put it. Failure never conies. While When all failed Bucklin’s Arnie* Roosevelt. cured me. Equally good for some of the down valley hay is short Salve Only i burns aud all aches aud pains % it ,is all good and the bulk of the 25 cents at W. (L. ^DeLano's drug store. crops are in a good way. More insane Patients in June. A Great Achievement. The world today heaps encomiums on the man whose wealth has made it possible to circle the globe with the subtle electric current. Clarence Mackay's millions laid the cable across the vast Pacific, the connecting link of telegraphy arouud the world, and a big one too, with its nearly nine-thousand miles of wire, nnd on the Fourth himself and President Roosevelt, one in New York and the other at a New Jersey coast resort, exchanged the compliments incident ou the successful completion of the great work. And those compliments did not pass over the hundred or so miles that separated the two, but across the United States, under the great Pacific, across Asia and Europe and back under Atlantic waters. Wonderful, most wonderful! The miracles of former days seem but ordinary in comparison. FAINTING. fa it Only a Fa. ’.ionable Feminine Accomplishment? In the novel* of a generation or so back, fainting seems to be generally re garded as an accomplishment of a fash ionable woman, whenever there was an awkward situation to be covered the woman discreetly and decorously fainted. It is also insinuated that place as well as time had to be considered in the fitting exercise of this accomplishment. There must be a convenic nt couch to lie on and ■till more there must be a pair of manly arms to support the limp burden as it swayed and slipped to the ground. Women did not as a rule exhibit this accomplishment for the benefit of their own sex, but only when some observant male was at hand to see and succor. The heroines of the modern novelist are not given to fainting. The “ accom plishment ” seems to have gone out with the working of samplers. Weakness was once a woman's weapon. Now she Blinded Royalty. It is strange that royalty cannot see things as other people. There was Emperor William of Gtrmany the other day responding to a speech of the American ambassador during the presence of the American squadron at Keil, in which he referred to the “hopes for a better mutual under standing between our two countries through the personal intercourse which my brother, Prince Henry, was able to hold with your countrymen.” despises weakness, and all it* symptom*. Absolutely absurd! It may be Uken for granted therefore The emperor should not be so blind that now-a-day* if a woman faints it is because of genuine weakness that she as not to see that «he few American cannot conceal. Instead of wanting male citizens who looked upon his brother observation she avoids it and despises herself for her own frailty. bad no other feeling than curiosity, WHY WOMEN PAINT. while the masses cared no more for ,. general women who faint are more his “personal intercourse with our liable to do so at some special period* than at others, and the liability to faint is people^’ than if he bad been a Hotten generally increased with the recurrences tot. Over here on«« nan is as ot the periodic womanly function. From this fact alone it might be fairly argued good as another, sometimes a little that there is a close relation between local womanly weakness and the physical lietter. weakness which cause* women to faint. Womanly ailment* surely undermine the Rentrai health. Irreruiahty, auppres- Death Chamber at the Pen. non, profusion, unhealthy draina, inflam Under the law passed by the last mation, ulceration, and female weakness, are the diseases which drain the vitality Oregon legislature, providing for the and weaken the general health of women ,Uble other execution of condemned criminals at hmg* to "fainting spell*.- Cure the the state peuitentiary, a death chain local womanly disease* and there is at l>er is to l>e constructed at the insti once a gain in the general health Miw /l’ueLme *7?* P1*““«.’ writes tution, the contract for which has Co K r °f /“"«town. Guilford C ", to thank Dr Pierce for the been let, along with other improve F*« K«»1 received from the use of ments. Six steel cells for condemned MnltaîTS1* Pr*’c?Pt‘°n ’ and ‘ Golden t^tJ?TOVWT 1 b“1 ’uffpre’1 for prisoners will l>e put in also. It TLwii “ore .t monthly period* If the verdict of the trial jury i* hac^ ,nd «o®xch. I could not set aside and the senteuce of the Tn. ***«•* ’"thout Wnt- trial court i* not repudiated by the cu*;d whE*“ up V1 hope of ew when one of my friend* insisted supreme court, the first execution to cured, »pon my trying Dr. Pierce’. Favorite take place in the death chamber will *,tb but H,tl* frith I SSL V teh I Uken half ‘ he that of W. P. Peacock, convicted wd .let h*4 “PPeti*. of the murder of Alexander Kerr, at bmtlW^T ‘ °’«1 h*” two havortte I'rew-npticn ’ and Parker Station, on May lHth lMt. MD<1 *eiiteiK-e«i to hang on August 7th. whak women made strong . Doctor Pierce’s Favorite Prescriptiog makes weak women strong and sick women well. It does not matter how great is the weakness or how chronic the sickness, "Favorite Prescription" may oe used with the utmost confidence and assurance that it will cure and strengthen if the disease lies wt n the bounds of i medicinal cure. In many a case where local physicians have said there was no aid in medicine and pointed to a hazard ous operation as the only alternative to a life of suffering, the use of Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription has resulted in a perfect and permanent cure. It is «uch cures as these which have given " Favor ite Prescription” pre-eminence among medicines for the cure of woman's diseases. " I suffered for twelve years with female trouble,” writes Mrs. Milton Grimes, of Adair, Adair Co., Iowa, "which brought on other diseases—heart trouble, Bright's disease, nervousness, and at times would be nearly paralyzed. Had neuralgia of stomach. I can freely say your medi cines (nine bottles in all, five of ‘ Favorite Prescription,’ four of 'Golden Medical Discovery ' and two vials of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets), have cured me. I can work with comfort now, but be fore I would be tired all the time and have a dizzy headache, and my nerves would be all unstrung so I could not sleep. Now I esn sleep and do a big day's work, something I had not done for over eleven years before. "You have my consent to publish this testimonial, hoping it will be the means of helping some other in valid.” WOMEN ARK THE WITNESS». It is the women who have acclaimed Dr Pierce's Favorite Prescription as the greatest and best medi cine for the cure of womanly diseases. The witnesses to its power are the men it ha* cured, are hundr of thousands of There__ ______ healthy women to- y who have been restored by " Favorite Prescript'on " to * happy, useful life after year« of suffer ing, and years of u»eless medical treat ment. If you are suffering from any disease peculiar to women there is every motive for you to try Dr. Pierce'* F»- vorite Prescription and every encourage ment to expect a complete cure. So matter how severe the disease, the won der will be not that " Favorite Prescrip tion ” cure* you, but that it should ful to do so. Its cures are so uniform, *° reliable, that if it did not cure you, yon would stand alone, a wonder and a mar vel, a solitary exception among hundred* of thousand* of weak women wh«« bar* been made strong and *ick women who have been made well by the use of thi* great remedy. " Favorite Prescription • estebhsbe* regularity, dries weakening drains, he*-* inflammation and ulceration, »nd cure* female weakness. A* a tonic and nervio* for weak, worn-out, run-down women, it is without an equal. It promote* the appetite, tranquilize* the n*r\ es and in duces refreshing sleep. . If you are Ted to the purchase o "Favorite Prescription" became of remarkable cures of other women, * not accept a substitute which ha* o°c' of these cure* to it* credit A HELF FOB WOMEN. "I received the ‘ Medical Adviser' am much obliged for it," writes M Elmer D. Sheare. of Mount Hope. caster Co., P*. "I would net p»« it if I could not get another in iu ; a*it is a help every woman should»*’* Dr. Pierce's Common Ser.se Me ■ Adviser, containing more than » sand large pages and over 700“ tion* i* sent frrt on receipt of pay expense of mailing oa/v. t one-cent stamps for the volume cloth, or only st stamp* for the »5 _ paper cover* Addr—. Dr. R. V Buffalo M. V.