Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About Eugene semi-weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-190? | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1904)
I CU.JOUS CULLINGS. CANTORIA The Kind Yon Have Always Bought Ik* Bears the Signature ■ motes ihi’estion.Chem 7"! sânii.’L'St.Contains neiii.^ im.Morpliine nor Mineral <T N ah cotic . tf Í^.SAMVEL HTUlUf fany- ' Ax Saul' 4U ' *Wy- A bja . . ..-<•«/ * * Äh Hint r favor I I trfecl lii iu '.ily I'orConslipa , Sour Slouiach Diarrtt. > niis.i ■nvit’ :i iis.Fevcris: Willi ac .DSSOF SI.EEI*. i ture of NEW YORK. CASÏORIA (ACT copy OF WRAPPER. T Secret Service Girl [Original.] w yearn after the close of the ■ ar l visited my comrade, Cap- olllns. He had been married, bad remained a bachelor. While 4 for dinner we talked over old men are the worst enemies we o meet in war,” I said. “If I general, ¡’<1 have a corps of wo i defeat the schemes of women of posite side. Men are no match m.” isey, Collins protested, “you were ' a a woman hater. The stories of )Uth*'!*n women on rrled informa-' e h B rubbish. 1 never saw nor ■ of any of it. I married a south- I.” xperlenved It,’’ I went on. "it i the early summer of 1862. I en a second lieutenant of caval- on duty at Pulaski, Tenn., with t guard on one of the turnpikes northward. We were stationed ¡ve miles out of town on a crest, I could look either back to town the pike, of course I had orders no one go through except those ad passes Well, one morning. 4 back to Pulaski, 1 saw a wag- alng loaded with furniture, and •u it reached me I noticed that a a, a very pretty young woman, . Ivlng It. The major was in com- of that part of the picket line ippened to bo at our post at the m going no'th.’ said the lady. T’tn of this war country. I’m a no'th- uau anyway, and I'm going to .y friends In Ohio.’ -et me < your pass,' said the ma- I aren't any pass; didn't know I'd o get one.’ u can’t go on without n pass.' as standing directly behind the and t'.ie woman was looking over him to me. She was little than 11 girl, and I sympathized icr. I didn't see any reason why I des should be added to the Jour- I f a northern woman trying to get ( the south. I gave lier the wink 'udilenly pushing forward, threw it' ins nr. • d her neck and kissed exclaiming: V liy, Alice, who would ever have '.it of meeting you here?’ •I e twig cd at imw and received my r with >nt making :.:y fuss. Then 1 led an Intnsluced my cousin. Al- C'.irfichl This lived matters The not i ly passed her through, but e me r rials <lon to accompany tier e distance up the pike. I rode by sue thanking me with the sweetest :-ds and the most honeyed smiles ivlng her the trouble of going for I r pass. 1 asked her nt what In Ohio I cr people lived, but she ’ic’d n 'er been then- herself ami t see 1 to know much about It. vplam •! this by saying that she'd I in the south over since she was r-irs old il. We 1 • riding through a wood 1 I lie.: 1 v'.nttt ring of the hoofs ay her- We I mh ’ oiup accustom nail things in war. and • stand how the mining Hi » h It must bo made no • hir 1 .on alw ax s w or»' ( when ' ■ • xi.ci in th»» wagon wliip- it a ! Ivor and called on mo to up y Imi'-’ [ \\[is too late ly, f ♦’ o <t»p - ts were right on » 1 o’> • lier order. •’hen tl « troupers rame up, it turned hut <;• o ral John Morgan, the evl- »'<1 Ouf-Mlernte part Un n hauler tn cm- .1.and. |¡c otT i (A* In Use For Over Thirty Years I Ì I Recently in Machias. Me., the roof of a house caught tire from sparks from a burning chimney, and the unique method of tiring snowballs to put it out was successfully used. The pc - le of the United States spend $111.6 0.660 a year in adulterated foods wh ch are cla ss’«! ns having "poisonous and otherwise noxious in-1 gradients" by the government analyst. A physic I examination of candidates I for the !>■ '!> force at New Haven, Conn., s'l > , •• 1 that two candidates had stuck car.,boards on their he*!» rrA then ptille on their stockings to meb the requis te height. Just for the fun of the thing, a North Danville (N. H.l housewife the . other day tried her hand at ice cutting. She did so well that lier husband of fered her a cent a cake, and she work ed the livelong day. earning 81 cents. The clerk of a parish In England when reading the third chapter of Dan iel, wherein the names of Shadrucb, Meshack anil Abednego are three times repeated, after speaking them once, called them, during the remain der of the chapter, "the aforesaid gen tlemen.” One dark nljflit, while Grant's lines were Investing Petersburg, a Federal force cup.'jrrd a Confederate outpoet, and no eoouer were tlie prisoneni brought in than one of them proved to Infar.tn and Children. be the double of a private in a New York regiment. The name of the Confederate was Wakefield, while that of the E'ederal I Was Thomas. The former belonged to a Louisiana regiment. tVlien placed side by side they seemed to be twin brothers. Each was about twenty-two i years old; each was about five feet five inches high; each weighed 140 pounds Their eyes and hair were of the same color, and even their voices were tlie same except that tlie southerner had a little more drawl. The pair were as much astonished as the officers and surgeons who were called to look them over. You will not be surprised that advan tage was taken of this curious coinci dent to send Thomas into the Confeder i ate lines. As a preparatory step he i was given a i week in which to pump Wakefield. The prisoner did not know | the object, and. being of a garrulous i disposition. he was ready to talk on I any subject, Thomas got from him his GOWN GOSSIP. family history complete, then the name I of the town from which the man ball Leng handled parasols are promised ed. with Incidents of people and streets; considerable vogue this season. then the names of Ids officers and com- In ribbons melon shades, resembling ■ rades, with Incidents of campaigning. the interior of a muskmelon, ure much The Federal had been an actor before favored. | enlisting and had cultivated a wonder- Linen belts with small gun metal | ful memory. When he had stored up a clasps will be worn as much this year : thousand different things in his mind | he bought the uniform worn by the as they were last. Veils with ribbon edge and others i Confederate and was ready to set out showing a single thread of gold are ’ on his mission. I One night Thomas was taken down among the season’s leaders. If we are to Judge by the quantity | to the front and made a bolt for it i In other words, it was made to appear and the beauty of the sash ribbons of | that one of the Confederate prisoners fered in the shops there is to be a re- , was making a dash for liberty, and the vlval of this fashion on an extensive ( picket opened a sharp tire, but took scale. We lire growing so fastidious that I care not to aim at the running man. I On reaching the Confederate lines real lace blouses are worn almost as | Thomas was sent to the headquarters commonly ns collars and handkerchiefs o the girl ill tlie wagNi, with whom I of General Malione. The general seem were of old. Nothing but real lace col ed a bit suspicious, and Thomas, play lars is worn by careful dressers.—New he was evidently well acquainted. “ ‘For heaven's sake,’ he exclaimed, ing the part of Wakefield, asked that York Post. what are you doing with all that fur I his captain be sent for. It was a cou- • pie of hours before the officer arrived, CURRENT COMMENT. niture?’ “The girl laughed. ‘I tried hard to and the general at once said to him: In five years you wouldn’t know it “Captain, this man who has come get a pass to come out to meet you, but I had ever happened.—Baltimore Amer the Y’anks were too smart for me, so I Into our lines tonight claims to be a ican. played the northern woman trying to member of your company. Is he or Is When the newspapers call a man be not? ” go home. This gentleman helped me “He certainly is, sir,” was the prompt a pyromaniac people are driven to the through by owning me for his cousi.. slang of firebug.-Philadelphia Ledger. But. general, there’s a Yankee wagon reply. Radium, you may have observed, is “What’s hls name?” train nt I’uliiskl, and I’ve taken al! now guaranteed to do all those things “John 'Wakefield, sir.” tills trouble to come out and tell you. that liquid air was going to'do a few That settled it. There’s a small guard, and you can After three or four days and under years ago.—Washington Post. easily capture the whole kit.’ Trobably Mr. Wyndham is correct In “‘General,’ I said, ’take nie south, pretense of visiting a cousin in a Vir please, somewhere, anywhere, where ginia regiment Thomas covered the hls calculation that the Irish question I'll not see my comrades again. I’d front and had a look at guns and forti can scarcely !•<• settled in fifty years rather go to Libby than meet one of fications. When he returned to camp, It belongs to the perpetual motion calculating to take the first opportunity class.—Boston Herald. ’em.’ When Russia accuses England of “The general laughed, hut 1 was to escape, lie was at once put under It appeared that Wakefield toadying to the United States it must obliged to go with him back to I’nhiski. arrest. The girl left her household effects in n and some of his comrades bad raided shock a number of fashionable Britons farmyard on the road and, mounting a a store of a lot of eatables, and the who have fancied all these years that horse, rode back with us, guying m ■ proprietor had ascertained their names It was the other Way.—Washington St*’, r. and now demanded their punishment. pleasantly all tlie way. When the merchant and Thomas "That was the way John Morgan THE MOVING WORLD. came to know of the wagon train being were brought face to face tlie latter at Pulaski. lie drove off the guard and declared that Thomas was not the man be represented himself to be. Why he A Swiss watchmaker has invented after helping himself to wlint supplies should have made such a declaration an electric watch which will go to- he wanted burned the rest.’’ “By Jove!” exclaimed Collins. “She I is a puzzle, but lie seemed to be guided fifteen years without being rewound. by intuition. He was ridiculed and Formetal is a now chemical com was a plucky girl, wasn’t she?” “Yes, and there were plenty more of I laughed at. but he stuck to bis assertion bination of metals invented to meet the same sort In the south. I have of , and even denounced Thomas to Gener the need of automobile builders for a ten wondered if the girl ever married : al Malione. As stated after tlie war. material which will withstand severe Her busband might expect to wake lip ' the general had felt doubts of Thomas twists anil will not corrode. The sinking of shafts through wet any night with the cold muzzle of ■ i from the first, which may again be set I down to the sense of intuition. ground has recently been successfully revolver on his temple.’’ At that moment Mrs. Collins entered | I The name of the merchant who had accomplished by the aid of artificial and Iler husband rose, as I did also, t i ; [ been despoiled was Saunders, and he freezing. The ground is hardened in Introduce me. I started, and Mrs. Coi was of an Implacable nature. Being this manner to prevent a sudden in Uns looked at me sciaitlnlzingly. She put on his mettle by the sneers and rush of water. ridicule, he determined to prove his was the girl who had tricked me. With the assistance of the latest ma- "Colonel Kinsey, my dear, lias been case at all costs As the accuser he chlnesgi piece of leather can be trans had the general ask hundreds of ques formed into a pair of boots in thirty telling m;' a cock uuil a bull story tions. lie knew the town and the peo four minutes. In which time it passes about”— "It's all true,” she said. “1 was rhe ple from which Thomas as Wakefield through the hands of sixty-three per woman, and I’ve never forgotten tl ■ claimed to hail and in the course of the sons and through fifteen machines. gentleman's kindness. I never told yo’ day had trapped him a dozen times the story for feai oi incurring ye" over. As nn offset all the officers and COLLEGE AND SCHOOL. privates of the company asserted that prejudice, bitt now that It's all out Thomas was Wakefield and that there will inijiit I l ave a t ontederate menu Of the public school teachers in the for the secret s a ice work I did on tlw was no room to doubt. He went at It United States 27 per cent are men. and related every incident of camp life I occasion ' M.ITti’t- TOVNS’INI • In English schools three hours a week i tor a year past and told of things which are given to needlework; In New York It seemed impossible for a stranger to (Li «* nt u 11»->. schools but one. know Chemulpo, tin- poll of Seoul, the e. p Dr. Simeon Bel) of Rosedale. Kan. Genera I Mabone was clearly puzzled ital of K neu. looks oui over n va-' has given the University of Kansas over the case and took two days to shallow bay. where the tide rises tldr” $25,060 in Mis.-.ejri binds. think it over. At the end of that time fwt. The teachers of three French public Thomas was escorted back to find a soldier In Federal uniform in the gener ■chools In Normandy report that 75 I InffmwInK Toe Xnilw. per cent of the girls in them take A Riicc“*.sful mctlhxl <»f treatment foi al's tent, and there were also two civil brandy in their coffee st breakfast Ingrowing toe nails is to ape aw.¡3 ians In waiting. It was a little surprise the thickened part of the nail with a for the spy. The man in Federal uni •mall fih . keep it well greased st» ns to form claimed to have known Thomas •often it and insert a pledget of wool as a Federal soldier under the name of beneath the nail so that it may grow Bniwu, and the two civilians claimed that he had never been a resident of properly. their town Thomas reallzed that the pinch had The Same Elly. The name of the Illy comes from the | come, and he braced himself to make a Celtic w. rd •‘II.” signifying white, this ! tight for Ills life General Mahon” flower having always been regarded as treated him In the fairest manner, and. j acting as hls own counsel, lie went at It an emblem of purity. and soon had the supposed Federal sol 11«»w the Roruan* Ate. tiler all twisted tip and out of the run The Remans took their meals lying ning Then he taekk-d the civilians, and upon very low couches, and It was not they proved to be as easy game. In until at ’tit the time of Charlemagne stead of being conienal up he cornered that a stand was used, around which his accusers, and it was so well done guests u re seated on cushions, while that he was complimented by the gen the tabl made its appearance in the i rill. W! . u the ease bad been conclud middle a es, and with it came benches ed. Malione leaned back and looked at with ba- the prisoner for a long minute and then said "Wakct‘ Id. everything is in your fa Dentn: ■• vor. and I am going to dismiss the mense « charges. age < There I« no doubt that In time the Im Ita n ( » posit.->n would hav been exposed and that be would hav ended his life on I on<lnn. the tallow«, but n no night during a ter- Two ctficc * « f the Salvation rihlc tlitlnderstm with a row going m’ n recently ’ »uu ’ a girl on between the pickets at the same A hi y r . • . . • qj; V ! h -i' .• I id time, he made » c xd in; twit and fortunately phA si n reach d the Federal lines In safety. M QUA»« For H ■ (Copyright. 1903. by C. B. Lewis ] | I MALARIA Germ Infected Air. Malaria is not confined exclusively to the swamps and marshy regions of the country, but wherever there is bad air this insidious foe to health is found. Poisonons vapors and gases from sewers, and the musty air of damp cellars are laden with the germs of this miserable disease, which are breatiied into the lungs and taken up by the blood and transmitted to every part of the body. Then you begin to feel out of sorts without ever suspecting the cause. No energy or appetite, dull headaches, sleepy and tired and completely fagged out from the slightest exer tion, are some of the deplorable effects of this enfeebling malady. As the disease progresses and the blood becomes more deeply poisoned, boils and abscesses and dark or irellow spots appear upon the skin. When the poison is eft to ferment and the microbes and germs to multiply in the blood. Liver and Kidney troubles and other serious complications often arise. As Malaria begins and develops in the blood, che treatment to be effective must begin there too. S. S. S. destroys the germs and poisons and purifies the polluted blood, and under its tonic effect the debilitated constitution rapidly recuperates and the system is soon clear of all signs of this depressing disease S. S. S. is a guaranteed purely vegetable remedy, mild, pleasant and harmless. rite us if you want medical advice or any special informa tion about your case. This will cost you nothing. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLAHTA, GA. | J.W. Quackenbush & Sons | DEALERS IN- ■- f Hardware J Implements. $ Eugene Oregon. lîzâSt 9th Òli CCb, J THE BIGGEST SALE OF THE SEASON 3500 Yards Eiulrcidery from 3 inches to !6 inches wit , values up to 50c per y..rd, Wednesday and Thursday Only Per yd No Limit to the Quantity You Shall Buy. SEE SHOW WINDOW. Sale Commences at 8 a. m TOLMIE & TRAVER Best, Woven Wire Mattress made Ash Bedroom Set Fir Bedroom Set Co nr $16.00 12.50 DAY &, HENDERSON S FORÍYOUR Fish'«,g Tackle Hardware, Tinware Guns Ammunition Bicycles and Bicycle Repair ing go to Second-Hand Bicycles Ç* f Mail/wL Traded For Wood. VHldl 513| Wilta nette St.