Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1907)
THE EUGENE WEEKLY 6ÜÀRD aN INDEPENDENT PAPEIt r.l'lRD PRINTING CO.. INC. 01 publishers published every Thursday.Eugene.Or "Subscription price. $150 per year II paid in advance; $2.00 at end of ’’Entered at the Eugene, Oregon, postuSce aa second-clast matter. -------- Agt-uia tor Tbe Guard. The following are authorized to and receipt for subscriptions or iins*' > otb‘‘r buBlne“ ior Tbe Daily , Weekly Guard: Cotta«« Grove—W. C. Conner. Creiwell-J- L. Clark. Coburg—Geo. A. Drury. THURSDAY. JULY 11 ------ Ol B PREMIUM OFFERS Notwithstanding that the Guard has been enlarged and the cost of publication materially increased tho Guard Printing Co. makes a »pedal offer to every new or old subscriber. Ml who will pay one year in advance for tbe Weekly Guard at only $1.50 a year will be given their choice of tbe Twice-a-week St. Louis Repub lic or the "Oregon Agriculturalist,” absolutely free for one year. Tbe Republic is one of the largest »nJ best family papers in America an(1 the "Oregon Agriculturist” is one ef the best and most practical farm, fruit and stock papers in the Wisconsin third. Pennsylvania fourth and Arkansas fifth In the value of 'products, however, the five leading states were Wisconsin. Washington. Michigan, Minnesota and Pennsyl- j vania. A comparison of the figures for ¡1905 with those tor 1900 shows that growth in the Industry sines 1900 has been most rapid in the Scinti i western states and in certain of the j Pacific Coast states, while a substan tial and, with respect to most of the Items, uniform decline characterizes [ the Lake states as a group. That logging Is relatively declining in the ¡Central states is also clearly indi cated, and this is due, of course, to J the practical exhaustion in those states of merchantable timber in con tinuous bodies. Does the Willamette Valley com pany intend to build the electric line from this city to Springfield? i If so, they have done nothing yet to Indicate it, having received no steel for that purpose, or made the slightest preparation for bridging the Willamette river, which is the most difficult part of the construc tion work. After a year of promises It is up to the company to get to work or ship away their few carloads of sjeel and abandon the field. The people want capitalista to invest their money here but they desire that class who will make good their agreements and keep faith with the public, Most persons have come to regard any statement regarding electric road work given out by the Willamette Valley company In the light of a joke—if they give it any consideration at all. SOLDIERS LEAVE TO EXAMINE THE SCIENTIST LEADER SATURDAY (From Friday's Guard ) Companies A and C, First Separate Batalion, O. N. G.. will leave tomor row morning at six o'clock for Fort Stevens, at the mouth of the Colum bia river, where they will receive in structions in the operation of the big coast defense guns. This is in lieu of the annual encampment where only infantry tactics are usually prac ticed. This year will be something new for the boys and they ape look ing forward to the trip with great anticipation. Everything was in a bustle at the armory all day today, the members of the two companies getting their accoutrements to gether for the trip. . The members of the companies who will take the outing, as far as learned this afternoon, are as follows: Company A. Captain C. C. Hammond. Lieutenants Raymond Babb and J. M. Rennie. Sergeants O. A. Faust, E. A. Pry- or, J. L. Furnish. Corporals R. C. Riley. R S. Hus- ton, W. W. Branstetter, Cecil Hen- derson, T. B. Harris, R. L. Perdew. Artificer Clarence Henderson. Cooks, H. L. Gibbs and C. H. Sell ers. Privates C. Adkins, H. Bower, V. D. Callison, J. M. Clark. H. S. Cox, O. D. Drain, L. C. Evans, F. U. Fuller, D. Gilkey, J. O. Harris. N. D. John son, E. E. Jones. D. D. Knox, W. B. Love, A. L. Morris, H. R. Oldham. J. C. Parker, P. J. Patterson, E. E. Perdew, W. W. Purdy, E. A. Robne, R. L. Spong, R. G. Walker, H. West, W. G. White, W. T. Zinn. STANDARD OIL MAGNATE TAKEN TO THE CIRCUIT COURT SAYS HE KNOWS LITTLE ABOUT TRUST’S AFFAIRS Concord. N. H J< !y 6 Dr. Geo. F. Jelly, a specialist In mental dis eases, and Dr. G. A. Blummer .of Providence, R. I., ver* today ap- pointed co-master*- with Judge AI drich, of Llttletou, S’. H.. to deter- mine the competency of Mrs Mary Baker G. Eddy, founder and head of the Christian Science faith, to trans act business and care for her own in terests. The juries In the ease of the city vs. W. C. Gay and W. R. Gue. charged with selling liquor In violation of the city’s prohibition ordinance re turned verdicts of guilty Wednesday evening and each of the defendants was fined $200 by Police Judge Dor rls this morning. The cases were at once appealed to the circuit court on a writ of review by the attorney. L M. Travis. Jay Woodruff, the "spotter." who was arrested for giving and selling liquor, was discharged from custody this morning by Justice of the Peace Bryson, in whose court the case came up. i IMMENSE TIMBER DEAL REPORTED MAY BRING MORE LOGGERS HERE Chicago, June 6.—John D. Rocke tion. accompanying It with an x- feller's appearance in Judge Landis' tended statement attacklnx tbe real court room today was th«> occasion pu.pose of Judge l^andls* question o fa great cram of people in the court ing, and declaring the government room and in the corridors of the has a purpose” In this Investigation. I.andls stated for the defense's in court building, hundreds of people assembling to catch a glimpse of the formation that the government has Standard Oil magnate, and William nothing to do with the inquiry; that Rockefeller and the other witnesses Is solely to euable the court to find summoned to answer Judge Landis' out the wealth of this corporation. Rockefeller could not say whether questions regarding the financial and other affairs of the Standard the Standard Oil owned or controlled Oil Co., of Indiana. The crowd was other companies, though it might. so Intense and at times so insistent He said the dividends of the New In its efforts to get into the court Jersey company were about 40 per room that the police were obliged to cent in 1905. and that Archibold or almost use force to maintain reason Pratt were the officers of the com pany who could give the information able quiet. sought, as to the earnings in 1904- The Standard Oil case was called It 1905. at 10:27 by Judge Landis, and after, Other \t It/iewscH Testify. a brief statement of the facts in the' ease by District Attorney Sims, conn- ' C. M. Pratt was next called After sei for the defense announced that being questioned regarding the divi Rockefeller and the other witnesses dends of the Standard Oil Co. of New summoned by the court were present Jersey, Pratt testified that this com and prepared to answer the questions 1 pany owned a large proportion of the asked by the court. stock of the Standard Oil Co of In Fred A. Wann, former general diana and of the Union Tank line. freight agent of the Alton railroad, He could not recall the exact amount. E. M. Stanton, of the car depart was the first witness. He testified that he had no personal recollection ment of the Alton railroad, was called of being given instructions to route and asked If he could tell what mon oil between Chicago and East St. eys were paid the Alton by the Stand ard Oil and Union Tank companies. Louis via Whiting, Indiana. H. E. Felton, president of the Un He said he could not. A long discis ion Tank line, testified that his com sion then occurred regarding rates pany paid three-quarters of a cent a and tariffs, following which Judge mile on loaded and empty cars. Ask Landis asked if tho Jefense desired ed If he sure paid it on empties, he oluf Line etalon »hrdlu cmfwyp vbg Introduce any evidence la this ease. said that this was his recollection. | to Counsel at first answered "absolute- He declared that a major part of the ! ly nothing." and the court suggested stock .of the Union Tank line Is own ed by’ the Standard Oil Co., of New that the defense take every care to see that such evidence as may seem Jersey. of importance to the defense be sub John D. Knows Little. mitted, as he desired to extend every John I>. Rockefeller was the next , facility to the defense. Counsel then called. At the same moment the : said they would .take the suggestion Standard Oil attorneys clustered under advisement until Monday around Judge Landis' desk and whis mornlug. This ended the Investiga pered conversation that stretched into tion. minutes occurred. Finally an under Fine May Be Millions. standing was reached and the attor Judge Landis said after adjourn neys resumed their seats. ment that the Investigation was con "John D. Rockefeller," again call cluded so far as be was concerned ed Judge Landis, and the president I and the witnesses were discharged. of the Standard Oil Co. left his Heat The case at Issue Is the government and walked slowly to the witness I against the Standard Oil Co., of ln- chair and was sworn. (diana. After a stubborn trial the In answer t o questions. Rockefel ¡oil company .was found guilty on ler said he was president of the 11,462 counts of having received re- Standard Oil Co., but the position > 'r | bates from the Alton. Judge Landis the past eight or ten years had been , <s empowered to fine the defendants purely nominal. He said the out- i count, ___ _ or _____________ a maximum penalty of $29.- standing stock of the Standard Oil i from $1,000 to $20,000 oti each Co. is about $100,000,000, but he'240,000. The capital stock of the was unable to go Into details regard- ’ Indlat a coiupany Is but $11,000,01)0 Ing its business. As It had been a ' and the supreme ceurt might deem the dozen years since he was actively re I maximum fine as falling In the class lated with Its affairs and tor ten of cruel and unusual punishment pro years past had not even been to the hibited by the const it ntlQB. If office at all. Judge Landis asked If it is shown, however, that the Indi th Standard Oil of New Jersey Is In ana company Is merely a subsidiary terested in the Standard Oil of------- to the New Jersey concern, with capi Counsel Miller for the defense tal of $100,000,000, no such appeal broke in with the customary objec could be made. Current rumor has it that the C. A. Smith Lumber company, which is now constructing a mill with a capac ity of 250,000 feet daily on Isthmus Slough, a tributary to Coos Bay, is about to purchase the Gardiner Mill Some of the loggers up the river company's holdings in Douglas coun ty, says the Coos Bay Times. The fear that the recent abandonment deal, if consummated, will be one of of the camps on Puget Sound and the biggest transactions ever carried the Columbia will flood the Willa through in this section of the coast mette camps with loggers, which will bring the wages down lower. They country. Along the Umpqua and Smith riv say that once a logger always a log ers the Gardiner Mill company con ger, and that the men discharged trols thousands of acres of rich tins- there will not do anything else. As perhaps 20,000 men were ber land with the present holdings in Coos county the new purchase will thrown out of employment, there give the C. A. Smith company almost seems to be plenty of justification a comer on the timber supply in this for the belief that there may be an overflow of men in the Upper Willa section. A. Mereen. general superintendent mette logging enterprises West. Though, it is said, that these men for the C. A. Smith company, when Subscribers, old or new, may take asked regarding the report, said he will not go to work in the harvest their choice of either paper as a pre was unaware of any deal. He ad fields or do railroad work, it is bound ConiiHiny C. vised that C. A. Smith be asked re to crowd out those who are not con Captain J. M. Williams. mium. The habit of indulging in the use Lieutenants Geo. Willoughby and garding the matter. Mr Smith will firmed loggers, and will help to fill Those who (ailed to get the prom be in Coos Bay on the Breakwater the ranks of laborers In Lane county. of profane or obscene language is Henry Hunter. ised premium magazines will be giv Sergeants W. B. Dillard, N. A. about July 3. His presence at this one of the most nonsensical habits time gives color to the story of the NEWS EKOM DEERHORN en their choice of either of these pa a human being ever acquired. No Barrett, Fred Kerr and C. W. Evans. reported sale. and upper M c K enzie Corporals Walter Stafford. Ben pers in place of the magazines with man or youth ever raised himself Gardiner and W. G. Williams. out further cost by sending their i in the estimation of saint or sinner OREGON NEWS I Special Correspondence.) Musician Lloyd Stafford. IN BREVITY FORM Deerhorn. Or.. July 3.—N. L. Fitz- names and addresses to this office. ¡ by the use of foul language. Purity Cbok D. E. Marshall. henry, in company with a party of Privates John A. Baker, Chas. M. So far we have been unable to com of thought and speech are valuable Governor Chamberlain will orate guests from Chicago, are at the Bel Barnard, E. J. Bertsch, Robert Bid at Jacksonville July 4th. pel the Eastern publishers to keep virtues. knap Springs this week. And yet, its our honest dle, Paul G. Bond, Lloyd 1. Bonney, An irrigation plant is to be oper their agreement in regard to the opinion that the man who unwitting Wilshire Bristow. Nason P. Crooker, Robert Hays and John Hastings ated on the O. A. C. farm under the stopped here for dinner on their way magailnes, and feel the disappoint ly "cusses” a little now and then, Jas. B. Chamberlain. Roy L. Combs, direction of A. P. Stover, of the U. to Al. Montgomery's ranch, wber« ment as keenly as our subscribers. is not half so big a sinner as the Ray Fountain. Lenn E. Goodman, Eu S. government service, who himself they will do some prospecting in the The Weekly Guard Is still clubbed fellow who continuously thinks evil gene Hurlburt, William Kolm, Chas. will Live charge of the plant near neighboring mountains Marsh. Eugene Matlock. Harry C. Rennie Cooer and the Ixjnsberry with the Semi-Weekly Oregon Jour and speaks evil of hiB neighbors, and Mitchell, Louis W. Miller. Jos. E. Albany. Now it transpires that the white Bros, have gone to Portland for th* nal. at $2.25 a year for both papers. refuses to pay his honest debts upon Russell, Van Svarverud. Alfred W. girl found in the Chinese den In Port- purpose of celebrating the Fourth of Mail all remittances and communi the theory that "Jesus paid it all, all Senilen, Oscar O. Shearer, £ecil W. land, was there voluntarily, the wife July. Yarnell, Geo. E. Wood, Elmer Wlll- Will o fa Celestial, and she wants to stay. John Montgomery, who has been cations to the debt I owe.” If the pulpits of iams. The first newspaper accounts of It suffering from stomach trouble the GUARD PRINTING CO.. the land would "go after” the fel were very yellow, evidently manu last ten days, I b thought to be Im- Eugene, Oregon. lows who refuse to pay their honest factured. proving. State Game Warden J. W. Baker debts and -to love their wives and Mr. Louis, the foreman of the B. has eight children. Last Sunday by K. logging camp here, has granted a LUMBERING INDUSTRY. their fellow-men—"go after” them prearrangeinent they tendered Mr. week's lay-off to his employes. A bulletin Ju3t issued by the de as vigorously as they go after the and Mrs. Baker a surprise, all going J. M. Deeds was in this locality the partment of commerce and labot fellows who "cuss and chew tobacco” home to roost but Mrs. W. 8. Me- first of the week doing some ad. post farland, of Marshfield. Besides the I (census bureau) contains a statis —the true reformation of the race ing. Norfo lk, Va., July 3. Five hun home children Mr. and Mrs. Ifalpli Miss Mabie Hulery, who has been tics! report on lumber and timber might be nearer at hand. dred soldiers, members of the Second Baker and Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Miles, 1 visiting her uncle at Pendleton, Ore., products by Jasper E. AVhelchel, ex South Carolina and First Kentucky of Portland, Mr. and Mrs. Walter arrived home yesterday. You never can tell who’ll develop in camp at the Jamestown exposition, Baker, of near Cottage Grove, and pert chief of the division of manu Wm. Price and wife returned home factures. and an article on the tim a case of ingrowing sensitiveness. ran amuck there, interfered with the Mr. and Mrs. Claire Baker and son of t' >ita ■. concessionaires and attempted ta take Albany, were present, fifteen sitting M. G. The carpenters that Dr. Leaburg ber regions of the United States by Here’s First Assistant P. possession of several shows on the down to a fine dinner baked by the Henry Gannett, geographer of the Hitchcock abandoning a proposed of "War Path," and when the Pohat- Bakers, everything in season accord has employed have just finished building the largest ferry boat that Inked States Geological Survey. ficial tour, because of newspaper ton guards interfered, a riot followed, ing to law.—Albany Democrat. is now in operation on the upper Mc several men being injured. Earlier The bulletin was prepared under the charges that, like his recent southern Kenzie, and are working on the plans in tbe night some of the soldiers If Dr. I of an up-to-date residence. supervision of William M. Steuart, trip, it was to be principally devoted who had been drinking became dis GENERAL NEWS IN BREVITY’ FORM Leaburg has no delay In getting ma I thief statistician for manufactures. to practical politics. orderly and were repeatedly cou terial it la possible he will have the poned by the guards. Later, when Among other Information the fol Hon. James R. Garfield, Secretary building completed within three The state railroad commission has their number had been increased to of the Interior, and party will spend months. lowing is given: about 300, they threw aside restraint Saturday, July 13th. in Portland. Rastus Crump has shut down his At the census of 1905 the number ' decided to run the Southern Pacific and proceeded to "do the War Path, They will be the guests of Dr. Henry logging operations and put his crew on time. of sawmills reported was 18,277, and trains through Oregon ignoring tbe door-keepers, declining Waldo Coe for a drive over the city of men at work in the hay field. He their combined capital was $381,621,- This news must be a source of con to pay admission fees and refusing to and luncheon at his residence and is lucky to have men who will work for a banquet at the Commercial on the ranch, as most lumber Jacks 184 They furnished employment siderable satisfaction to the railroad leave the building. After several soldiers bad been ar regard farm work as a disgrace. in the average to 22 3,674 wage- officials who have been trying to do rested, they retaliated by hurling Club in the evening Vice President Fairbanks will be Mr. Neal, a former merchant of eerners, paid $100,311.891 in wages, it so long without success. Toklo, July 5. The report from theoretically worked out In advance rocks at the guards, and a lively riot th** guest of the Astoria Chamber of Leaburg, stayed a few days this week Washington attributing tbe proposed by the naval general board. ensued, until soldiers from the camp But consumed materials costing $2 63,- Commerce July 15th, with banquet at Kennerlv's hotel. The Cuban Solomon who says all reinforced the guards and restored at Seaside. We learn that Mr. Johnson and sending of 1 6 battleships to the Paci these details are necessarily subject 166,101, and manufactured products the island needs is education and order. Portland business men have In wife have gone to Mapleton, where fic, according to Admiral Dewey's to constant change resulting from to the value of $491 ,524,662. contemplation sn excursion covering they will visit relatives and friends private plan, 1.« generally disbelieved the withdrawal of battleships from immigration must be related to the here. The United States Is not active commission o n account of hav In this industry Wisconsin ranked' about tweny-flve points in North at their former home chap who once said that with ice known to possess naval bases In the ing been declared antiquated or In first according to the value of pro western Oregon and Western Wash Alf. Walker is in this vicinity this water and good society an unmen July 24th-28tb. week, working in the interests of thi Pacific ocean adequate for such pur need of repairs ar.d the substitu ducts, Washington second. Michigan I ington poses and the tmpresaktn prevails tion of other ships, just now going tionable place might be turned luto if the other clubs bick down Mult Willamette Valley Co. third, Louisiana fourth, and Pennsyl nomah Club will send her champion Mr. Brown and wife have gone to that the | sending of so large a Into commission and fresh from tho a summer resort. vania fifth. In 1900 Wisconsin was There Is at the li the Eugene, where they will stay the rest squadron where a sufficient rendez builders’ hands. men to the Jamestown fair. F" vous does no exist would simply mean navy department today scarcely any We are not certain whether this second, Washington sixth, Michigan "lub sends four men they will of the week. the vessels would I m * easy prey to I D. Hensill is completing plans one authorized to afford any Infor be Dan J. Kelly, sprinter; For- Charley Rossman Is home, having first, Louisiana eleventh, and Penn talk about Harriman's resigning his for Y. a fine _______ torpedo boats and destroyers. Should mation as to the contemplated fle*t new modern residence for railroad presidency and going to Eu F. E. Chambers, the hardware mer rest Smithson, sprinter and hurd- been for the last ten days on business the 16 battleships be so employed ax movement. The opinion o fofflcers sylvania third. ler; Henry McKinney, discus and on the lower McKenzie. A classification of the mills ac rope for an indefinite stay, is a feel- chant, to be built on the site of his shot man, and Zacharias, shot and Prof. Holmes and O. L. Stacy pass to disprove this Impression, a record on duty is that the route most feas just present residence on West Sixth hammer-thrower. Three of the four ed a very enjoyable day fishing in breaking naval feat will have to be ible for the big ships an* the straits cording to the quantity of lumber er, an attack of cold feet, or street between Lincoln and Charnel men are from tbe University of Ore- the McKenzie, near the fish hatchery, accomplished. of Magellan. The route through the cut indicates that between 1900 and an ordinary lie. ton. It will be two stories high with gon track team. Mediterranean sea and the Suez ca yesterday. They say the catch was MOVEMENT OF RIO FLEET 1*4» the capacity of’the average mill nal Is open to the objection that It PANTHER ITEMS good; the largest redslde weighed lost an artificial stone basement and will It's much easier to restore BEING WORKED Ol ’ T Mills cutting cost completed between $5000 and will bring the big ships almost Into materially Increased. 2% pounds. last $6000. Te contract will be let #lth- youth than it is to renew a Japanese waters, and the movement (Special Correspondence.) Several of the sports of this neigh 1.046.600 feet or I more annually and fn a short time and the building will Panther, July 1.—Weather fair; borhood are in receipt of a shipment Washington, July 5.— Details of might conaequently be regarded as a formed 33.3 per cent of the total year's Interstate railroad pass, be completed by fall. The residence everybody happy. of wet hardware that had been or the vast movement of the Atlantic menace, which Secretary Metcalf »umber In 1905, as contrasted with it’s easier to walk than to do either. now on the lot will be moved to the All the farmers are rushing their dered as a special feature for tomor fleet to the Pacific waters has been has stated was never conttrnplated. 14.6 per cent in 1900. lot adjoining. haying In order to get through be row's amusement. .' ~ 1 - - ... . » While all this constitutional ar - - — fore It rains, while the weather man At the home of Mrs Emil Meyer, | The principal products of the saw- gument is going on, why is "Joe Is composedly preparing to give a st 10 a m. yesterday. Justice Gallls- I mills, with their values, were as fol- SPRINGFIELD ITEMS Bailey, once widely heralded as a pie performed a solemnizing cere OF GENERAL INTEREST "soaker" on tbe 4th of July. Rough lumber $435,708.084; Last Friday evening a dance was mony. The contracting parties were [»‘«(les. $24,009.610; hoops, $3.- constitutional sharp, so quiet? Born—jo Mr and Mrs. Geo. Per given by Mr and Mrs 0. D. Coreyell Roy Peters and Pearl Meyer. After In honor of Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Barr, the ceremony the happy pair Invited '•*•973; staves $19,082,641 ; head- Here's hoping that Andy Carnegie kins, Saturday, June 22. at Luding of Stockton, Cal. The occasion was the guests to retire to the dining j*n®s. $7,436,259; and lathe $5,435,- may succeed in doing the peace con ton. Mich, formerly of Springfield, a enjoyed by everybody present. Fifty- room where an elaborate dinner was 941. daughter. There was only the rela ference, at The Hague, without get The carpenter work on the new ad five people responded to the Invita served. The increase in the average value tives of the bride Invited, yet her dition to the Christian church and tions sent out. ting Into a scrap. Miss Rose Crenshaw,, who was host of friends extend to Mrs. Peters all lumber was from $11.14 per the remodeling of the old building has been completed and now the hurt last week by being thrown out and her husband a hearty congratu MORCOLA items ’!x>usan<l feet in 1900 to $12.76 at San Francisco. July 4.—Bill St. Louis, July 5.—Advices were painters and paperhangers are at o fa buggy, was able to be at church lation and many years of pleasure in ’•'t census of 1905. or 14.5 per cent. last fiord's Day. the coming future. They left this Squires, the much-heralded champion received today from Bismarck, Mo., (Special Correspondence.) work putting on the finishing touch YV advance extended to all species h-x 1 and church servi» es of Australia, succumbed to the blow Bible morning for Coburg, where they will Marcóla. July 3.—The rain yester es. New pews have also been added, 75 miles south of here, that two dis of a Canadian at Caloma today, after tinct earthquakes were felt yester ’’ both conifers and hard woods, day was a great help tc th<* gardens, which is a much-needed improve are being successfully carried on. reside. Ixird's Day there were twenty he had been In the ring two minutes "THE NATIVE. ” Last day. The vibrations shook buildings Dedication services will be pad in the case of several of them if it was an injury to the hay that | ment. with Tommy Burns. The men who and rattled windows and dishes. No nine present. One confession. not in the barn. ; held on Sunday. July 21. large. Among the conifers, yel- was witnessed the brief meeting between damage wns done. The new church of Marcóla which , Marshal Shahan, after a little ex Tlw Charming Woman tbe two pugilists were charitable •°w p^e advanced from $8.59 per is nearly finished, is to be dedicated I citement put the crippled horse trad is not necessarily one of perfect form enough not to call hl ma "dub. ' They pbnaaand feet to $10.10; white pine, Sundav afternoon. ! er in the city lock-up last Saturday General Manager J. P. O'Brien, of Marcóla is quiet now. as nearly night ’■"»i 812 72 to $14.92; hemlock, Monday morning when he and features. Man ya plain woman . the 8. P. Co., has notified ail Oregon designated him a "false alarm," who PETEK PAN WINS who could never serve as an artist si should have been pitted against a ANOTHER EASY’ VICTORY' fpm $997 to $11.91; Douglas fir, everybody has gone to Eugene to went to the Jail after his prisoner, model, possesses those rare qualities agents, including the Eugene agent. fourth-rate fighter rather than any spend the Fourth of July. he found he had made his escape. New York. July 4.— Before a crowd $8.67 to $9.51; spruce, from Mr. J. B. Cox has moved to Spring Some one had passed some rocks that all the world admires: neat I that hereafter all information con punilist with the slight i t pretension of 35,000 persons, James R. Keene's 11 26 to $14.03; and cypress, from field. where iie will build a house on through the bars and they had been ness, clear eyes, clean smooth skin cerning railroad wrecks and accidents to ring skill. As soon as the gong sounded Burns Peter Pan. the 3 to 2 favorite, easily K»4 to $17.50. used is a hammer to breskjhe bolts and that eprlxh’Kne-a of step and In connection with them, will be Oak Increased his lots there. action that accompany good health made public and given to the press landed on Squires’ jaw and floored won the $15,000 Advance stakes, ono At the good roads meeting ,a’"* off 'the door, “ thus ' letting \ 916.02 per thousand feet to “ " him “ make A physically weak woman la never at once. This Is a broad policy which Mm. He was up In four seconds. mile and three furlongs, at Sheeps- ’17 51; Poplar from $14.22 to $18.- night it was unanimously voted to his get-away.—News. attractive, not even to herself. Elec- will commend Mr O’Brien to the Referee Jim Jeffries then separated head Bay today. The vlcotry of the lew a tax to build roads. Heretofore them In a clinch, and Burns knocked Keene colt waa a popular one, and he trie Bitter» restore weak women, press and public alike. r*: ®*Pls, from $11.83 to $14.94; Te boys of Marcóla are organising A Wonderful Happening. give strong nerves, bright eyes, railroad men have been regular clams his opponent down again. He got on was loudly cheered when he flashed "ttoaw .-xj, froni |10 j- to $14.92; a brass band. . ‘ „ . ___ Port v Byron, New York, has ***" by order of the management, and It his feet again but Burns deliberately under the wire. The favorite never School was out yesterday In the. n^sed one of the most remarkable smooth, velvety skin, b'autlful com r' ' - , |14 4-,. and Guaranteed at W. L. De has been almoat Impossible to aeevure landed on his jaw and put him donw was In trouble and won by three Parson Creek district for the last rasw! of healing ever recorded Amos plexion Information. ' Now I t is the business and out. The fight lasted two mln- lengths. *'®' fron> $9.75 to $10.87. Lano, druggist 50c time, as there Is to be a large Buck- of the local agent and tbe men under iitea and eight seconds. 11 the amount of production. graded school built In Marcóla foir F King, of that place, says: len's Arnica Salve cured a sore on TOTlI A. him to give every Information pos r*11 ** accurately tneas- the two districts which are now con- my leg with which I have suffered sible. IM Lai Y« Hist Will Stf)»s was up from Portland over 80 years. I am now •l«ht£ t by the number of thousand consolidated. yesterday visiting his mother, Mrs. J. „„ ' Guaranteed to cure all sores of MV pigs produced. Washing- Subscribe (or the DAILY GUARD. 8. Stiles Mrs. Rebecca Scobert has gone to by flve^ W. L. DeLano, druggist. 2»C. I I I tMked first, Louisiana second. Dallas on a visit. I SOLDIERS RON AMUCK AT JAMESTOWN FAIR JAPAN THINKS PACIFIC OCEAN AT HER MERCY F. E. CHAMBERS WILL BUILD FINE HOUSE EARTHQUAKE ON SQUIRES EASY VICTIM FOR JULY FOURTH PUGILIST BURNS IN MISSOURI «