........*• ’ • •
' •
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’
Vi.
THS EVüteXhi WEEK1.Ï UVAKD, THIRHDAY. UAA 7, 1»<*
■S* ..... -
i
j
------- t---------------- "•* ■"
Oil Stove
fire was burning.
The character of the boAotn of the
creek at the mouth I, gravelly and
slightly muddy, but II wa« »aid. that
further up it became very rocky. An
other resident said that in summer
ti»U creek is warm,
and
become,
■lightly tainted from vegetation.
INSPECT CREEKS
ÜP THE M'KENZIt
When warm days
and the kitchen fire
make cooking a bur
den—then is the time
to try a New Perfection
Wick Blue Flame Oil
Cook-Stove.
Marvelous how this
stove does away with
kitchen discomforts —
how cool it keeps the
room in comparison with
conditions when the coal
The quick concentrated heat of the
RITI HIE,
REM
.JOIIXHO.X
«REER»
El (.EX I
KIT« HIE
AND
Kltchte Creek.
creek side.
_
t
,
Ritchie creek was next visited, the
Forrest Creek proved a beautiful ,
ascending
system, with about 1,000.000 gallon»
members of the council
This per day flowing into the McKenzie
its bed for over a half a mile.
the
largest
,
during the spring season.
It se ni-.f
strea mseemed to be far
of the three, and the visitors ex to be in a position where its waters
press'd themselves in admiration of could most easily be Joined xvltk
its crystal wat rs, which fell toward those of a Ritchie creek pipe line
the river with great rapidity.
The,
Plenty of Prv*»ure.
bed is deeply shaded by trees, which
,
...
_
The McKenii« at Ritchie creek is
promise to keep the water cool in __
any
by an
summer.
One estimate L.
— engin-i about 240 feet above dhe base 'of the
The lower reservoir
eer present gave the number of gal court house.
lons running down per day as 2,000.- here is in the neighborhood of ISO
000. Councilman Garrett visited the feet above the same base, and the
stream during Its lowest stage last higher and larger about 271. For
year and expressed the belief that it tunately. however, by going up any
was net then one-third less than at one of the three creeks, at least a
present. The < stlmates of engineers, 4oO-foot head above the courthouse
the opinions of residents in that sec base can be obtained, supplying suf
water ficient fall, in the opinions of the
tion, and the purity
of the
seemed to point to this creek as the engln.-ers in the party, to send the
water into either reservoir on the
best of the three..
Lugging has ;•■ en conducted in the ' butte.
I (MA-
EXAMIXED
BY
I’.IKTY
SEEMED
TO
«Aitili
MOKE
TH AX
NEW
AI’.E
At < OMI’XXILD
BY
SIA-
Mi Al.
I’llRMEX AXD OTHERS
Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove
( From Huterday's Dally Guard )
oeveii members of the city council,
(teconipauled by fourteen other indi
goes directly to boil the kettle or bake the bread, and none
viduals, went to Is aburg yesterday
diffused alxiut the routu to overheat it. Thus using the
| ' and invsstigated the creeks in that
'vicinity, Poking Into the adrisabil-
•‘New Perfection" is real kitchen comfort, Made in three
lty of iMttalling a gravity waft r sys-
sizes and fully warranted, If not with your
i tern with one or more of the streams
dealer, write our nearest agency.
as the source of supply.
The creeks
1 lnvestlgaied were Johnson creek, a
quarter of a mile above Leaburg,
Ritchie creek, about the same dis
tance above the little McKenzie vil
lumT«
The
lage. but across the river, and For
every on«
rest creek, on the same
side us
wants—handsome enough
Ritchie creek, but a mile and one-
for the parlor; strong enougli for the kitchen, camp
half below
Water was Tumid ug-
or cottage; bright enough for every occasion. If
' gregatlng in the
neighborhood
of
not with your dealer, write our nearest agency.
."i.OOb.ooo gallons a day at the pres
STANDARD OIL COMJ*ANY,
ent time and of the best quality.
Johnson creek first’ came under
(Incorporated)
the eyes of the couucUmen.
There
was a good supply of pure and cold
water.
The flow,
from
estimates
made in the past, and in comparison
with other streams, must lie at this
'season slightly
2,«HHI,<»<••» gal
y under 2,t>00,000
lons a day. From
loni estimates made last
MAKE YOUR OWN STOCK FOODS BY USING
October, at the lowest stage.
stage, there
flowed down its bed something like
i 1.4 011,000 gallons per day. The meth-
Crush and mis in feed or salt. Proper dose in tablets
, od wits by weir, the most accurate
MAKES YOUR STOCK LOOK LIKE TIIE TOI* PKICE 1 known to hydraulic engineers. Ear-
| Her in the season a meter estimate
« ___ ________ ,_____ _____ r____
__
Contain
no Sawdust. Ashes. Chop Feed or Bran. Auk for and trv one«—SKIDOO Condition showed several hundred
thousands
Tablet«, Worm. Kidney.Chicken Cholera. Bliater, Heave. Fever. Hog Cholera tablet«. Loua« Powder,
gallons additional, bnt this method
Spavin Cure, Barb Wire Linunent. Puik Eye Diateniper. Colic or Bone Stiitener Tablet».
I is generally inaccurate for final con
clusions.
The stream, according to
the statement of a resident, is about
three miles in length, heading on
Mount Nebo. The source springs are
protected by a heavy growth of tim
ber, but it seems that through the
A«k (or and try once BLUE BELL Cou<h Syrup. Pile Remedy, Man « Pain Liniment, or middle of tile watershed of the creek
BLUE BELL* Stomach Tablets, Diarrhoea, Croup, Nerve, Cungh. Hay Fever and Catarrh. Blood,
General Tonic, Bright Sunshine, Heart, Worm. Kidney, Headache, Summer Complaint, Soothir^ there is a comparative open country.
Tile land near the mouth of the creek
Tablets lor Children, Liver, Female Regulator or Quinsy Tablets.
Is timbered, though logging
opera
tions are now being conducted there.
For sale by Hull'll Red Cross Drugstore.
past near the creek, but it is not
now bring done.
From views of the
watershed obtained. It has been part
ly burned over a long
time
ago.
Opinions of several people seemed to
indirale that very t w cattle ranged
upon the Ritchie watershed, but that
quite a number stayed in the vicin
ity of the Johnson creek and For
rest creek head waters.
The stream
Is said to be about three miles long,
but with water equal in quality to
any in the country,
i
is
Lamp
THE SKIDOO HORSE AND CATTLE TABLETS
TAKE THE BLUE BELL LINE TO HEALTH
THEY MAKE YOU FEEL LIKE A BLACKSMITH
I*.
4
O
d
|
i
I
1
i
In case the three streams should
I ever become insufficient on account
of the growth of population, other
creeks with similar flows could be
added to the supply by pushing the
pipe line a few more miles up the riv
er.
M m ihii »h
atieam was running
during the low stage 1.300,000 gal
lons per day by the Weir method.
From figures obtained by meter, Eu
gene has used 1,000,000 gallons of
wateT in a day through the present
pumping system in the season of ir-
Much of this undoubtedly
rigal ion.
is waste which may be avoided. Or-
dinarily •including waste, City Eu-
gineer Waggoner thinks that 300,-
000 or • 400,000 gallons a day are
used.
A great deal of this he classes
as needless waste, the present Eu
gene system being notorious for Its
extravagance of water.
Some of the
members of the party thought twice
'
as much is wasted in Eugene as ac
1
tually goes through the faucets. This,
of course. Is but opinion.
The en
gineers of the party could give no ac
curate figures of the waste in a
twenty-two mile pipe line, but seem
ed Inclined to think that it would net
lie great, thus making it appear that
Ritchie creek would
amply supply
the present needs of the city.
Forrest Creek.
In the case of a further demand
the waters of the other creeks could
In low ’
me run into the pipe line,
water it is estimated that Forrest I
ENGINE BLOWN-’?
IN BUHL WITH
AND A WOMAN'S WOil
LOSS OF LIFE
NATURE
and known as Deerhorn, would give
something like 400.000 gallon« per
day
From the view point of the
engineers. Johnson creek may easily |
be emptied into the same pipe line at
a comparatively small cost, which
gives still other possibilities *>y fun-:
ning It across the river to the Ritchie |
p ui’e. May 2.—The remains of En-
giiKcr Charles Bussy, killed by the
l.-ast when the Burlington eastbound
• xpress was dynamited last night,was
found under the engine this morning.
Daylight found a large force of dep
uty sheriffs, railway detectives, police
and ranchers on hand but no clue to
the perpetrators or motive was se
cured.
Carl Ming, a hobo, who carried a
carpenters’ union
card
issued at
Sheridan, Wyo., died of his injuries
today.
Fireman Ehle is progressing
satisfactorily at the hospital.
The first tangible clue was secured
when the detectives traced the pow
der used to a mine about a mile from
the scene of the explosion.
Forty-
fiv ■ sticks of giant powder had been
stolen from
this
mine
after 10
clock last night. It is believed now
that the entire charge was used, as
the engine, one of the largest used
in the mountains, Was demolished.
It is learned this afternoon that
Ming was
a
resident of Council
Natnre and a woman's work nnm
billed have produced the
remedy for woman's ills that L«
world has ever known.
In the gmxl old-fashionetl davsd
our grandmothers they relied ujon
the roots and hems of the ti»dd to
cure disease and mitigate suffering.
The Indians on our Western
Plains to-day can produce root« and
herbs for every ailment, and cm»,
diseases that battle the most skilled
physicians who have spent years in
the study of drugs.
From the roots and herbs of the
field Lydia E. Pinkham more than
thirty years ago gave to the women
of the world a remedy for theirpe.
euliur ills, more potent and efh£
cious than any combination of drugs
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Comrxtund is now recognized as the
stanoard remedy for woman's ill«.
Mrs. Bertha Muff, of 515N.C.SL
Louisiana, Mo., writes;
Bluffs, Iowa.
Ehle, the fireman, took a turn for
the worse and will probably die. Both
he and Ming were burned internally
by steam.
The Northern Pacific will offer a
reward of $5000.
The Intake at any of the creeks is
a comparatively small
matter, the
situation being favorable.
From the
observation on the road up and back
there will be but little difficulty in
building the line along the south
bank of the McKenzie river.
One
man made the suggestion that the
line might be more
cheaply
con
structed by building the pipe line
across the McKenzie near the jvoint
of intake, and recrossing the river
at the McKenzie bridge, because the
road extends along the north side of
the river a largo part of the distance,
and materials couiJ more easily be
handled there.
Butte, Mont., May 1.—En«tbound
Burlington train No. fi. due in Butte'
at 11:3b o’clock t night, was dyna-’
mited about a mile west of the Nor- ;
them Pacific station at 11:37 last'
night, The explosion caused the first
or helper engine to leave th- rails
but it (lowed along for a few’ hun-
The
dred feet without turning over,
second engine crashed into the bank
south of the track a few car lengths
from where the explosion occurred.
Trainmen Suffer Worst.
Every person on the train has been
accounted
for
excepting Engineer
Bussy, of the s cond engine, who is
supposed to be burled under is loco
motive.
Carles Ming, who was rid
ing on the blind baggage, had to be
taken from the mass of timbers tin
der which he was buried.
His arm and leg were broken. Fire
man George Ehle, of the second en
gine. was badly scalded.
Pleusunt Trip.
The party of twenty-two men left
Eugene at 5:45 o'clock in the morn
ing. arriving back at 7:30 last even-
Mavor Mat-
Ing, thoroughly tired.
lock did not accompany the party on
account of his absence in Southern
Oregon, and I. N. Harbaugh, a mem
ber of the council, was also unable to
The members of the council
Ko.
were well pleased with the trip and
now have a more thorough knowl-
The allure-
edge of the situation.
ments of fishing did not tempt them
seriously, one giving in to his lusty
love of the rod for an hour, during
which he caught one insignificant
redside, and another member of the
party landed three brook trout af
ter a couple of hours’ exertion in
creek, on the old Major
Forrest
place, now owned by N. L. Fitzhenry ■ Ritchie creek.
Dinner was served by the famous
cook. Mrs K<nnerly, the meal being
the best that had teased the finicky
appetites of
the
city fathers for
many a week.
Chief of Police Far-
rington, accompanied by several self
i"r
appointed deputies, mad“ a vigorous
search for a Kentucky "moonshine"
still, of which they had heard some
reports, but failed to discover any
law-breakers.
•• Complete
restoration to hei'.A
means » • n? icb to me that for the sake
oi other »uttering women I am willing
to make iny troubles public.
“For twelve years I had l>een suffer
ing with the worst foriosof h male ills.
During that time I hiui eleven different
physicians without help. No bingis
cun tell what I suffered, and at times!
could hardly walk. Alasut two year*
ago I wrote Mrs. Pinkham for ad»ice.
I followed it, and can truly say that
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound and Mrs. Pinkham's advice re
stored health and strength. It u
worth mountains of gold to suffering
women."
OREGON DELEGATES
PLEDGED TO TAI T
Portland.
April
30.—Jonathan
Bourne's pia
to send an uninstruct-
ed delegat'or. to the Republican na-
tional convention at Chicago from Or-
egon was opposed by members of the
What Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege.
tabic Conqxmnd did for Mrs. Muff
it will do for other suffering woniea
WT-4.
IT
The Eugene Daily and Weekly Guard will have
the SECOND ANNUAL BARGAIN DAY
this year on
a., y
Anyone who will pay in advance for the paper on or before that date,
whether an old or new subscriber, will receive the Guard at the following
prices:
Daily Guard, by mail, $2.75 per year
Weekly Guard, by mail, $ 1.00 per year
These prices apply only to mail subscriptions, and will positively be
withdrawn after May 11th, 1908.
This Bargain Day offer is made solely for the purpose of putting our sub-
scribtion list on a cash basis, the postoffice having ruled that no paper
can be sent through the mails at second class rates upon which. there is
due one or more years subscription.
The Weekly Guard is a big 12-page paper containing a full local and general
news report, court proceedings, real estate tranfers, neighborhood corres
pondence and a serial story full of interest.
The Daily Guard prints eight pages daily, with complete Associated
Press Report.
w-w-
If you want the TWICE-A-WEEK JOURNAL »end 75c extin
ORIENTAL
TOILET POWDER
Those who made the trip were:
Councilmen
Berger, Garrett,
Wil
liams. Gilbert, Fisher, Moon and
Roach. Chief of Police Farrington,
City Engineer Waggoner. Engineers
C. A. McClain and Joe McArthur, of
the engineering firm of McClain &
McArthur.
Engineer Simon
Klov-
dahl. F. B. Davis, an engineer from
Portland, Judge J. J. Walton, Geo.
Hein. Sam Taylor. John Bovard. In-1
structor in biology at the Cnover-
slty, P. J. Kolker. a brother-in-law
of Mr. Berger. Otto Gilstrap, of the
Register, and Earl F. Strong, of The
Guard.
The party was transported
in tw’o big stage hacks under the care1
of veteran drivers.
QI T ET M XY Did
IX
XEW
Boston. May 1.—May day
in New England, which is us
ually a day of industrial dis
turbance. was this year one of
the most peaceful on record.
About one hundred thousand
textile operatives are idle or
working on short time, and
about forty per cent of the
machinery Is idle.
Business
has improved about fifteen
per cent since January, but
the cotton cloth business con
tinues poor, About forty per
cent of the spindles are stop-
ped.
♦ ♦ ♦
dr TF eux G ourauo
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
A pure, antitep*
tic Toilet Powder
for infants and
ail ults.
Eiqui*
sitelv perfumed.
Renders an excel,
lent complexing
and keeps f he skin
clear, soft and
velvety. Relieves
skin irritation and
should be used
freely after bath
ing and shaving,
giving a delight
ful and refreshing
effect.
At deal
ers or ly m»h.
cents Box. Pre-
pared by
FERD.1T HOPKINS, N.Y. CITY,
ENGLAND
Proprietor of GOURAUD’S ORIENTAL CREA»
fob SALE AiiD BECOMMENDED BV
THOMAS J. HEFLIN.
Alabama congressman who is uuder
bond for having shot a negro iu a
street car row iu Washiujtou.
Republican
stafe central committee
That the state central
committee
is
hostile
to
Senator
Bourne and will
...___
_
not ____
accept
his UIV
dfeta-
!l°n J.Î ,hp 8?,t<',|on pf delegates to
the ( nieago convention is apparent
from the fac; that a resolution was
adopt-d unanimously
and
without
discussion endorsing Secretary Taft
f"r l’r
and recommending that
the Republican state convention s nd
to Chicag. a tWegatfon pledged to
his supp. r-t. The record of Senator
Fulton was approved, and recent at
tacks on the senior senator were d -
" J’nT'ed
■
untrue and un
manly.
The -ante resolutions warm-
H. M. Cake for sen,tor.
and p.edged the Republican nominee
■ ■
' »! ’"I'Port ot the committee in
i ■ rand dacy. The committee effe-t-
C'
1 rginixa ¡-»n by electing \V
M
' tkn as I’hairman and Otis Pa’tterl
ofn-‘rJLrJnt P0,secretary. Both
leers were selected unanimously.
<■ yesterday,
+
♦
+
♦
♦
+
♦♦♦♦♦♦+ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ + ♦
I'RENIDEXT signs
FTI.TOX IIINol.l TION
Washington. April 30
The pres-
! Ident today Signed the Fulton land
j grant resolution.
The house public lands committee
| today discussei Mondell's latest land
. grant resolution, which was Intended
| to follow the Fulton resolution
In
I view of the bad faith of the lumber
men. the committee was overwhelm-
| Ingly opposed to reporting the meas.
ure. especially If the same end can
b-» accomplished without legislation
The committee instructed Chairman
Mondell to confer with the attornvx-
general as to the advisability of Issu
ing an official statement proclaiming
It to be the purpose of the govern
ment to allow the present holders of
granted lands to continue in po.sses-
[ slon of them and use them pending
’ the deaermlnation of legislation, and
also as to the advisability of warn-
tng all intending settlers that the
I land is not open to settlement, for
i filing, while suit is pending.
At these bargain prices the Daily and Weekly Guard are the cheapest papers
printed in Oregon. Send in your subscription on or before
Monday, May 11, 1908.
BARGAIN DAY COMES BUT ONCE A YEAR
Dr. T. Felix Gouraud’s
attui ,!, DITI I Assilli
TOMMY Slf.IJVXX
r lisi'um, San Francisco. April 30
ToTmt
°",cllrpd-
Brooklyn
sorr-
hS"l!,Van- of St
made a
j
I
I
I
’
• •«•••»•••••A**
Siillic n L ’ and "'"Pl’vd the fight
Are’.
knocked out. >
• 1 took th? lead at th? v?rv
-"li,
~”"S "•
STOWE'S
d*^ton,hat ,fle C°nte’t was °f ahort
tion
Dr Sc*lteaw*aa,telr¿ *ropa,a-
the case
T
the »«rgeon in
HEAVE
DR<**
Greatest known remedy lor hrivn
Highland. Or.. Oct. 31.'*2-
This is to certify that I g»vr f
mare one bottle oi "S' -c • Hn»«
Lfrops” and cured her ot r tvo-
This was last winter and ,
• ‘‘
not been aftec ted since— G «’>*>*
LP.S.QSrO'
'
Ot-
*aV”to
l*<sïmnn^nâin<t°n had onp «<
gene h
d V''*,',r,*a7 *t the En-
a g-, .7721
h” h**n troubled
‘síív her nhl T
,lmb and «
Imparts a pleasing softness
and delicacy to the skin
•md restrains the ravages o’
sun, wind and .«ne
ts continued application elim
nates sunburn, tan and freckles and
renders imperceptible annoy-ojl
minor blemishes and sallown««- I
It
It possess*»
possesses *
a dainty,
dainty, clinging
clinging odor
odor I
exclusively r its own and is tn
m every
way a perfect toilet luxury Pnce
SO cents. Ask your druggist tor n. U
rHOYTCHIMIML CO-lffe.]
American”
'l’n*11' »«'»« the
X AHcit
perw’-l*ht champion,
fourth
‘ ' s’,1,,Ta“ »uccumbed tn the
th e’ tm,,,,nd' W?en hp »“ noored
into th'
P°"rp jnn’P*d
whenever h« p’eaLrf*
Salem. Mar 1 —The damage .,)it
fir JSMi». hroueb- »gains’ T'nited
States Senator Charles W Fulton by
J 8 Smith, was dismissed by Judge
Burnett today because of the failure
of Smith to file an amended mm-
• plaint after a demurrer had been
, sustained
Fulton was also adjudg
ed coats amounting to |3o
A DELIGHTFUL
jJ<2U!pF4C{
POWDER
a
Foe sale by all drujiF
__
•
• •••••••••••••**