Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910, July 18, 1907, Image 12

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    *
e—
Friendly’s July
Clearance Sale Big
Bargains
Just as we adv'sed you in last week’s paper in our page ad. that the bargains we would
offer were all from our own stocks, the choicest paternsof the season, we have been busy
as bees since this sale opened, hundreds of mail orders have been filled.
We are glad
so many of our out-of-town customers have taken advantage of this buying opportunity.
Friday and Saturday of this week we offer some exceptional values in wash goods,
hosiery and underwear and ready-to-wear garments for women, men and children.
Our money back policy protects you. Any article you buy that is not as represented
or just what you want can be returned and your money refunded.
$12 Black Eton Tailored Suits, $7.75 $3.00 Ladies* wash dresses $1.75
$18 Black Eton Tailored Suits, $ 1 LOO $7.50 Ladies* wash dresses $3.75
$35 Black Eton Tailored Suits, $16.50 $14.75 Ladies wash dresses $7.00
14 ladies Black Eton jacket-tailored Suits, full pleated
skirts, jacket trimmed in plain black and Persian braids,
lined with good quality silk, three-quarter sleeves and
the materials are Panama and serge. This is a buying
opportunity not to be overlooked. Plan to be here early
and get the best values. All colored and white tailored
suits and white tailored coats and there is a very nice
assortment of them, to be closed out at
$18.00 Silk Eton Jackets each
18c
$5.00
Fancy Cotton Batiste 5c a yard
35c Linen Suiting 17c a yard
White Embroidered Belts 9c each
$1.50 Ladies’ Shirtwaists 68c each
$1.00 Ladies* Parasols 50c
15c
Eugene’s Foremost and
Best Store
42 Suits altogether, sizes 32 to 40, made
of fine white lawn, neatly trimmed in Va­
lenciennes lace and insertion, two-piece and
Princess effects, low neck, very full skirt,
and the less expensive ones made of lawn
chambra and printea madras in plain colors
and shepperd checks, plaids and figures.
Take Advantage of This Sale. If You Can’t Come,
Send by Mail
$10.00 Men's Suits $4.85
$6.00 Boys* Suits
15c Men*s Hose
35c Men*s Underwear 25c each
$1.50 White Duck Skirts $1.00
S. H. FRIENDLY
Your Money’s Worth or
Your Money Back
DELANO DRUG
STORE SOLD TO
A. W. KU YKENO ALL
CHURCH BUILDING
rkmit Pert,
(From Thursday’s Guard )
A deal for the sale of W. L. DeLa-
POSING EDIFICE BEING COM­ no’s drug store to A. W. Kuykendall
was completed last evening and the
PLETED BY ARCHITECT HUN- new owner took charge of the busi-
___
ness this morning. Mr. Kuykendall
ZR’KER.
has sold his interest in the Yerington
& Kuykendall drug store on East
Ninth street to his partner. Geo. Yer­
Will Be Built of Stone at Corner of ington, who Is now sole owner.
Mr. Kuykendall, who is on experi­
East Tenth and Pearl Streets— enced druggist, will conduct the De-
Plans Will Be Ready for Contrac­ Lano store alone, keeping in his em­
ploy the present force of efficient
tors in Two Weeks and Building clerks. It is learned that he has
I leased the north room of the Pratt
Will Be Finished in Fall
block, now occupied by Quiner &
‘ Learned’s millinery store and Mc­
Dougall’s tailor shop, and will move
Architect John Hunzicker is com- the store there some time in the near
I pleting the plans for the new house future The First National Bank
of worship to be erected by t,he Cen­ owns the building where the drug
tral Presbyterian church at the cor- store is now located, and as before
I ner of East Tenth and Pearl streets, stated by the Guard, will enlarge its
I and if adopted by the congrega­ banking rooms and utilize the build­
tion they will be ready for the con­ ing for that purpose some time in the
tractors to figure on In about two future.
MISS ANNIE HENORtN.
Mr. DeLano, who has been In busi­
weeks. The building will be com­
ness
for
many
years,
will
take
a
much
pleted some time this fall.
1S8 ANNIE HENDREN^
The church will be far the costliest needed rest, although he will not re­
and the moBt commodious in the city. tire permanently from the business
M ash., writes:
It will be built of stone and will cost j life of the city.
“1 fesl better than 1
f
$18,000 or over. It will seat ap­
four years. 1 have taken «vMBlbol.
proximately 1100 people, which is
of Peruna and one bom. ot Mlai /
I a hundred or more greater than the
"I can now do all my work loti
I seating capacity of the largest church
house, milk th« cows, take rare ot,,
building In the city at present.
I The new edifice will be Gothic in
milk, and so forth. / think Plruiu„
design, a general description of it
most wonderful medicine
being as follows:
The dimensions
“1 believe 1 would be m bed
over all will be 80x110 feet. The
J. W. Geary post, G. A. R., of this I had not written to you (or
'
| auditorium will have a seating capa- cjty, has adopted the following reso- bad taken all kinds of median« t.
city of 380, seven Sunday school I lutlons:
none did me any good.
j rooms adjoining the auditorium and
Whereas, The patriotic organlza-
"Peruna has made me « »e/i,.
i which are connected with it by fold-i t|on known as the Sons of Veterans, happy
girl. 1 can never ,.y lOu
ing doors, will seat 350 and the gal-1 United States of America, is com- I tor Peruna.”
“
lery on three sides ot the auditorium posed of the sons and grandsons of ’ Not only women of rank and lenu
will seat 340. There will be rooms the men who fought to a successful
for parlor and study and in the base­ conclusion the war for the preserva­ praise Peruna. but the industrwu. a,
ment there will be a kitchen, a dining tion ot the American union, and in ful women engaged in honest toil» 5I
room, storerooms, boiler rooms, etc. whose veins flows the fiery spirit of ; not be without Dr. HanmM',
The building will face east, with en­ patriotic devotion that inspired in | renowned remedy.
trances from that direction and from the hearts of their sires the courag • Th« Doc tor b as preseri bed 11 for mui
the north. In the northeast corner to endure, the loyalty to sustain, and . thousand women every year and b
there will be a Gothic tower. After the patriotism to suffer and die, that j never falls to receive a multitude oils
the plans are completed a more our country might remain undivided, ter« like the above, thsnkmj him ?
minute description of the building and our flag be maintained, unsullied
can be obtained but suffice it to say. in the blue canopy of heaven, and his advice, and especially for the »<»
It will be very handsome and an or­ that peapce, plenty and happiness derful benefits received from Parana.
nament to the city.
mighe be the portion of our beloved
countrymen forever;
Whereas,' The Sons of Veterans are MISSOURI RIVER STANDS
ABOVE FLOOD PQffl
to be the true successors to the Grand
Army of the Republic when that
. great patriotic organization shall
Kansas City, July 16.—The Xii
have been swept into final and glo­ souri river at Kansas City is station
rious extinction, and the duty shall ary at 21.5 feet, halfafootabw.ii
be theirs to continue and -carry for­ flood point.
Scobert & Dodge have sold their ward the grand lessons of patriotism,
NEWS NOTES
general store in the Hovey block at and loyalty to home, country and
the corner of West Eighth and Olive countrymen, by both precept and ex­
ample,
as
has
been
carried
forward
From 2 % acres planted to lie
streets to R. J. Moses & Son, who
now conduct a large store at Phil- by their sires through all these years; ries a man near The Dalles brough
Whereas,
There
is
a
camp
of
the
omath, Benton county, and were for­
into market 415 crates of as fine be:
merly In business in Corvallis. They Sons of Veterans in Eugene, known ries as can be found in Oregon.
as
General
McKenzie
Camp,
No.
31;
will taxe charge of the place about
Here’s a Reedville man’s »«out
Resolved, That J. W. Geary post I of 4 0 hens for six months: Gro«
the 1st of September and will put In
a $10,000 stock of goods, The in- No. 7, department of Oregon. Grand ‘cash received, $69.02; cash paid tn
terior of the store will be remodeled Army of the Republic, through its feed, $15.70; net profit, I’ 1.32
and greatly improved and the new membership, pledges to said camp
At Black Diamond, Wash., fa
firm will conduct a strictly first- every encouragement, assistance and ; Grozek, a Polish miner, shot ul
class place. Moses & Son were at- support that is in the power of this j killed Bakass Dieago and serioaalr
traded here by the excellent school post to give in the furtherance of wounded Joe Frankie. N'o piwe
advrntages, and have been negotiat­ its noble objects and to build up Its | tion whatever for either deed.
ing for the purchase of the store for membership and In every possible ,
No more blanket covering of p*
several months. They are good vit- way strengthen their hands in their ernment public lands taken up tor
izens and the Guard welcomes them patriotic and charitable effore;
homestead purposes will be abov-4
Resolved, That a copy of these res­ | by the general land office, accordili
to Eugene.
E. Dodge, of the firm of Scobert olutions be presented to General Mo- to a statement made by Commissi»
fc Dodge, has located in Portland, but Kenzie camp No. 31, Sons of Veter­ j er B. A. Ballinegr yesterday ul
Mr. Scobert will continue to make ans, and a copy of the same be fur­ ' claims will be held from final prX
Eugene his home. As soon as he nished the Eugene press for publi­ only where legal evidence can «
gives up the store he will take a va­ cation.
shown that the holder is guilty d
cation and afterward go to Woodburn
C. H. BAKER.
making false affidavits in refuO
to look after the firm's hop crop,but
Commander.
his claim.—Ta|egram.
when it is harvested he will return to L. PHETTEPLACE, Aujt.
Eugene. The firm has made a suc­
A Peeriess tee cream treePi vI
cess of the business and the new pro­
freeze cream hard in three miaut«
prietors of the store will no doubt
They turn easier than others. *'
enjoy the same excellent trade.
can tell you why, also other gw«
I
points.
CHAMBERS HARDWARE CO.
OREGON NEWS
PLANS FOR HANDSOME AND IM­
M
G. À. R, PASSES
RESOLUTIONS
CHANGES OWNERS
being four stories, wings three. It
will contain 135 guest chambers,with
private bath and toilet for each. The
main lobby will be 60 by 80 feet, a
lady's lobby on the second floor 30
by 80 feet. It will be heated by steam
and lighted by electricity
it is to
have a double front, one facing the
While matrimonial societies as a
ocean and the other Tillamook bay,
rule are an excellent thing for the
100 feet above high tide. It is pro­
bringing
of two lonely hearts to-
posed to make It the finest seaside
gether, sometimes they do not always
resort hotel on the coast.
bring happiness and content to those
Boston, Mass., July 16.—Of the
Mill City people are excited over a
(From Tuesday's Guard.)
who are members. The case of Geo.
thirteen survivors of those injured rich discovery of copper ore at that
Mrs. Elizabeth Shannon, one of the \V. Dow. who was granted a divorce
by the explosion on the battkiahlp city. Jack Hammel, who returned state’s earliest and best known pio­
Georgia yesterday in Cape Cod bay, from there last evening, reports a neers, died at her home at 54k Law­ this afternoon by Judge William Gal­
trree will probably die. When the rich discovery In that city. In re­ rence street In Eugene this morn"g loway in the circuit court. Is an In­
Georgia arrived here yesterday she moving some dirt for the extension of at 1 o’clock, after a short Illness stance of where things did not turn
out as planned, says the Albany Her­
carried the corpses of six of her crew the store of the Curtis Lumber Com­ from paralysis.
She was stricken
and two more died In the hospital pany some ore was struck which Sunday and remained unconscious ald.
In his testimony on the witness
last night.
provod to be valuable tn copper. The until her death.
stand Mr. Dow related his matrimo­
One of these was the son of R.utr- ledge was traced across the river In­
Mrs. Shannon, whose maiden name nial Infelicities at length, and assert­
Admiral Goodrich, Lieutenant Cas­ to Linn ctunty and ta thought to be was simmons, was born in Randolph
ed that because his wife forgot to
par Goodrich. The admiral and his very extensive and remarkably rich county, Indiana, March 30, 1
__________
_ out of the
1830, _______
take her ___
ad __ tor
a husband
wife made a hurried trip from Brook­ Albany Democrat.
In six weeks more the colonist making her age at the time of her paper after she had married him, she
lyn, arriving at the hospital just bo- >
77 years, 3 months and 16 became acquainted with a Mr. Chris-
fore their son passed away.
rate to Oregon will be In effect again, death
days. P’-------------
—2------------- the tensen, also a member of the matri­
|’a,m* to "
Oregon^across
The dead are:
continuing for sixty days. In order plains She
from Illinois with her father, monial society, who lived in Blynn,
Lieutenant
Casper
Goodrich. to get the full benefit of them, every Samuel Simons, In z3i6, and set­
Brooklyn; died at 11;34 tonight af­ commercial organization should get tled In that year In what Is now Washington, and through correspond­
ence previous to and after his mar­
ter being landed.
busy with their corrtM»|M>ndence with Marion county.
She was married
Midshipman
Faulkner
Goldth- prospective settlers During thia va­ July 15, 1847, to Wesley Shannon, riage to her, the two decided to mar­
walte, Kentucky.
cation period the boys and girls have who, with Elijah BrlBtow, erected ry. and therefore on February 2 7,
William .1. Thatcher, chief turret the time to write their friends "back the first building ever put up by a 1907, Mrs. Dow left her husband,
captain, Wilmington, Del.
East," and tell them about the Ore­ white man in Lane county. He died and went to Blynn. Washington,
where she was married to Mr. Chris­
William Joseph Burke, seaman, gon country. As an Illustration of In
Eugene some ten or twelve years
Quincy, Mass.
what can be accomplished by this ago. They lived at Salem and in tenson, only 13 days after her leaving
George G. Hamilton, ordinary sea­ means, the school children of a single Marlon county a good many years this city.
The plaintiff, who is white haired
man. South Framingham, Mass.
district In one of our coast counties I
they were married, coming to and about 75 years old. said that he
No Difference.
In siz months the secretary of state I
George E Miller, ordinary seaman, doubled the school population of that after
Eugene
about
thirty
years
ago.
Mrs.
No distinction is made
Brooklyn, N Y.
district merely through correspon­ Shannon has lived here ever since, had gone to Blynn and met Mr. has turned Into the state treasury
(Continued from Page One.)
kind of piles that Dr. Lew ‘
$9,-058.30, which under the old sys-'
William M Thomas, seaman, New­ dence. necessitating the construction She possessed a fine farm In Marion Christenson.
Hem-Rold cures.
.
“Have you a family?” queried Mr. tern would have been pocketed by the [
port, It. I.
of an additional school building.
county
and
a
great deal of property Dow of Mr. Christenson on the oc- secretary, indicating that the office know who fired the first shot in
The names, internal. «t’r •
William Pair, Brooklyn
Oscar 8. Strauss, secretary of the in Eugene.
I
bleeding, blind, itching, suppr»«
casfon of their meeting.
was good for about $18.000 a year.
except from hearsay.
Many others were injured, of department of commerce and labor,
Mrs. Shannon was a woman of
“I have a wife,” replied the latter. The state thus saves about $13,000 a
Sackett admitted he helped to "es­ etc. are simply names of th» a<
whom eight are likely to die.
will arrive In Portland about the noble character and was loved by
“What’s her name?” continued year by the change.
_____ ____
cort’’ out of Telluride
the __________
members ent stages through which eve”.-
middle of next week. The United all who knew her. She was a mem­
Portland has a woman for a health I of tl)e union who were recognized as will pass If it continues long
States tender Heather will leave Asto­ ber of the Congregational church. Dow. who was unknown to Christen­
OR14GON NEWS (¡LEANED
son.
Piles are caused by
,
officer. Dr. Esther C. Pohl, who was agitators and prevented peaceful clt-
FROM KX<T<ANGI<H ria for Victoria, H. C . today to meet The funeral will be held at Salem
"Before I married her it was Min­ appointed to the place this morning ¡sens from going to work.
Some stagnation of the blood In •‘,p
the distinguished official and bring tomorrow, the remains leaving Eu­
nie Dolan."
by the health board, succeeding Dr. | men were deported who should not bowel, and it takes an interns,
Plans are being drawn for a $150,- hint to this city. He Is due in Victo­
TA— Pohl V. has
.. . been _ I huvo
n
_ allowed
_»»_ » to re- 1 dy to remove the cause
"Well, j you've
*
.
married my wife. I WVlXXolkb»«
Wheeler raaiannrl
resigned. Dr.
have hnnn
been, and
were
000 hotel at Tillamook
It Is to be ria from Montreal Monday. Satur­ gene on the 6 o'clock train in the
morning. The funeral services will (then.
Dr. Leonhardt’s Hem-Rojd » (
**•'•*• ” said
z»x,w. iu
<< luuh <«
in» « a member
uivtri ui
d Dow.
In telling
of the
of luv
the inictiu
board ui
of neaiin
health ior
for turn- uc
He saiu
said they naa
had triea
tried to ob-
ob-1
170 1-4 by 170 feet, the main part day’s Portland Telegram.
be conducted by her old pastor. Rev. case on the witness stand, the plain-1 the past two years, and was given tain the interference of the courts for tablet taken internally. ■' . (
P. 8. Knight.
tiff did not
seem to be very down the new position by her colleagues, years, but was unable to do so, and permanent cure. Money M „
fails. Price J 1.00 at druggiA* ■
hearted over his wife's desertion and Dr. George F Wilson, Dr. A. J Giesy the deportations followed.
People returning from Newport tell ■ marriage to another man. and smiled 1 and Chief of Police Gritzmacher.__
~
‘
Y., proprietors
Rebuttal
Finished.
of some lively times there with vio­ throughout the time he was testify- (Journal.
Sold by Hull’s drug -
___
Thomas
M.
Stuart,
the
last
witness
lators of the local option law. Judge Ing The defendant Is 50 years oid
in
rebuttal
for
the
state,
was
called
McFadden had been over there and and formerly lived in Eugene. The Stale ot Ohio, City <?î Toledo, Lucas th**, af,ernoon.
CONTEST NOTK'E.
fi
made things pretty tropical, a way plaintiff resides In Albany and is a
Department of the lr- -r:-
’w
Stuart
was
one
of
the
men
beaten
County,
ss.
the judge has
A Corvallis young cooper by trade.
States Land Office. Rose^r»
and
maltreated
by
the
union
mineral
4
man furnished the evidence, and of.
gon, June 18 1907
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that during the troubles In Cripple Creek
course Incurred the enmity of the i
♦ ♦ he is senior portner of the firm of in 1903. He said he went to work in I A sufficient contest »;n,13.rOj
*,
liquor people Gene Williams, John ♦
♦ F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the Golden Cycle mine. After his ing been filed in this <’
Porter and Charles. Winant pleaded ♦
cont >s:ant,
BORN.
♦
work was done he went home and pear Wilcut,
guilty before a Newport justice and ♦
« the City of Toledo, County and State was
homestead entry No.
visited
by
a
dozen
men,
includ
­
were each fined $100. Gua Olsen’s
♦ < aforesaid, and that said firm will pay ing Steve Adams, Sherman Parker, October 4, 1for Range
' • » W I |
ease was in the circuit court at Tole­
sec. 24, tp. 17 S
do and he got $200. Besides these I
At Creswell. July 10, 1907, to Mr the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL­ Minister and Campbell, who ordered Ernest Talior conn
LARS for each and every case of Ca­ him out. He refused to go. He was
there are two Indictments each and Mrs. Hager, a daughter.
is alleged that s
1*1
against Williams. Porter and Olsen,
tarrh that cannot be cured by the use dragged out and beaten with guns never made settlen
•
”
°2r7<rf *
and fnally Campbell shot hornI
which will be tried later.
In Eugene, Ju
11. 1907, to Mr. of Hall'« Catarrh Cure.
through the back as he lay on the he made no fmpr
and Mt «. Ralph Hall, of Falls Cl y» ft
THE MOU1.D
FRANK
J.
CHENEY.
ground. He was In the hospital for kind, and he ha- e
daught
said land and liv
si
Sworn to before me and subscribed three months.
It's a little world In which to hide.
On cros -examination he said that that said ab^nce «
City
Engineer
Waggoner
this
af-
in
my
presence,
this
6th
day
of
De
­
When foolish men do wrong and
he had not sworn out warrants for his ployment in the :
ternoon began the work of surve; ing cember, A. D., 1886.
.,1 frate« 1» d*
flee;
assailants until sixteen months ago, service of the I nit
z*
for
the
street
pavement,
and
it
will
It’s a narrow place, a foot-worn __ piare
___
having de Isyed proceeding because of war. saK parti'-
(Seal)
A. W. GLEASON.
not
be
many
days
before
the
actual
For him who tries to leave dis­
the authorities could not find evi­ fled to appear. r<
work begins. The forms for the ce­
Notary Public. dence
grace
evidence touching
to "back him up.”
ment
curbings
«re
now
being
built
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken inter­
Behind him and conceal hla face and the cement work will begin at
. ■Af - 15 Senator Borah announced 10 o’clock a m on
From those who In tueir righteous once The tearing up of the streets nally, and acta directly on the blood that the state rested in rebuttal.
before W Wr. f'alkins', r,,—»’-
pride
r
for the paving materia] and for the and mucous surfaces of the system
,?5ne-i Richardson announced sioner at his office a. '
Frown down on hls depravity.
gon.
and that final_b
that the defense might have some
street
railway
tracks
will
follow
and
Fend
for
testimonials
free.
It'i 's a big wide world for those who
held at 10
1 o’clock a
the first of next week will see great
F. J. CHENEY A CO . Toledo. O witnesses in sur-rebuttal.
7. before the . K __,
”
try
30. U07.
activity
in
that
line,
although
we
To do whzt righteous deeds they
ted a
I n ited»
Sold by Druggists. 75c.
See our McDougal kitchen cabinets. Receiver at t the Vo
will
not
hazard
another
guess
as
to
may;
Office in
Ronebnrg. <’■ M.
m Miweuuie.
’ t J i
Take Hall’a Family Pm, for coo. They save women steps.
Oh. myriads are the ways that the time of the beginning of the ■tlpat ton.
The said
17J*
CHAMBERS HARDWARE CO,
work.
wind
proper affidavi’, f - d , ,Mt iM
Through scenes where men mav
"e guarantee our work in every
jH
J oat reci
----- - a new line of Jewel set forth facts which «ì
‘
cetved,
find
partlcnlar.
Eugene Steam
f/K’>’’era,ib« gasoline stoves. It is due diligence per
Each day new chance« to be kind
< orka.
notice can not b<
handy and as safe as gas.
It' • an endless world tor tho««' who
ordered and diri
17-19 E. 9th SL. 537 Willamette SL.
g
CHAMBERS HARDWARE CO.
vie
tire be given by due an<i
in cieariug wrong ana W(V a way.
Iication.
P
J?.
rrh
an
‘
1
,awn
(urnnnre.
1 boys and
CHAMBERS HARDWARE CO.
SIX ARE DEAD
AND THREE MORE
CANNOT SURVIVE
MRS. ELIZABETH
SHANNON DIES
OF PARALYSIS
GOT TWO HUSBANDS
STATE GLOSES CASE
LAST WITNESS TESTIFIES
I KOOH-I-NOOR I
ICE CREAM
5
Made From Pure
Sweet Cream
I
I
«
I Cream Packed in any Quantity and
Delivered.
I
____
I
I Hull’s Drug Store I I
g
’ -Ji
" « ’J