Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1908)
EIGENE XX'EKKI X GT ARD THVRRDAY, AVGVBT 30. lt»ON 11 limit of this weigh I « nt :..... fig- KXGENE S GROWTH and received proper pare As It is. to the 1 ix oxi.x ruo XI XRS the supply of really marketable fruit iuous amount INDEPENDENT PAPER I Áx [^1 I t’Ea«-»ta« ’ • «... —-w 1 tons t< does not often exceed the demand • square f>. - building 1st 200 B« ’ore the en J —'CHARLES H. P1SHKR thv prese As land becomes more valuable and feet square. « hich is about the Editor and Publish«*»*. year Eugene farming more intensive and scientific. leted . crowded downtowi ils- real skyscr. this condition i will gradually pass r “ ; . - lay at Eugeue, , i trio. thia will mean a maxi al point of view J" Oregon. O 1 away. The co immunities which make I height of 200 feet. Beyond thh Subscription price, $1.50 per year, Fellows' build ng the greatest 1 progress in th«* use of ft j . very nature o f the city's base wil paid in advance; $2.00 at end of ligh above th« : he st re< ft. the best meth.ds of growing and a halt. Other factors, however , divided into i and on- marketing fruits will in time take Entered at the Eugene, Oregon, , likely to step in before such a limit is structed of b : nd-class iua’ter. sed the business of raising fruit for mar- i reached. for on a 200-square foot ! brick. Such this, with ket from the districts where th«* rat« I plot the 20UU-foot-high edifice would | Ag< nt- for The Guard. five miles of hard surface street pav of progress is slower.” I Tie folio* itig are authoried to cost $60,000.000. It w iuld Weigh, Lie sad rec< ipt lor subscriptions or according to present estimates, 516.- ing. over tkr«*e mi w of u.v,Jern trol- It was in Germany that th«* fireless fessact other buainMa for The Dally 1 ley lints In operattaa, and modern 000 tons, or more than twice the ton Eg Weekly Guard: railroad yards and depots, lift Eugene 1 cook-stove was perfected, and now nage of the present navy. Moreover, out of the country towu class aud <omes n«*s from a special consular | Crsswell- J L. Clark. I Coburs O bo . A. Drury. the wind pressure on any of Its walls I places It in the city list. agent that the Germans are making I Address all remittances and com- would be more than 6000 tons Al- Few of our people realize Just how a fireless railroad locomotive. It is L.: 10 gether such a monstrosity is made al | fast we have been growing the past | equipped with a boiler after th«* man r «CARD PRINTING CO.. I Eugene, Oregon most impossible by Vs physical condi two years, and a still smaller numb« r ner of other locomotives, but the tions, and it hardly seems pr«,bable have any real conception of the water in It 1» h«ated tv the neces pgiTtl. ALGl'ST 30. I »ON that any New York skyscraper will changes that will take place in the sary temperature from a stationary r"“ PKI'MII M PAPERS. exceed 1000 fept; provided, however, next two years. Eugene Is clearly fn plant. Enough power can b«* stored that the present bulldin ; laws are the 10,000 population class now in it to operate it four hours for I We ar- again «(Bering either the not so restricted as to make the and we have just begun to grow. switching purposes In a railroad yarl. Ip- . turlat < r Ami every luboeriber who tooth-pick office-building out of the and it do < not take more than fif question. L tion to the w is thi : soil <.i\ ixo oct ? teen minutes to charge it. Now, if r..: : • O'1' ‘0 ■■ F. somebody will g t to work aiul Invent K off« 1 »¡I»®r «nd kitchen «eta Ml NKÌPXI. o\\ XEKSHII* American soil is losing its fertility, a fireless cigarette, there will be lit L »em« nt on thia page DEPENDS OX VOTING according to James J. Hill. The tle more to ask for in this world, for I . • m while thl > Of NEW BOND ISSI I f Address, great railroad magnate ought to most property loss through th«* ac — I Guard Printing Co. know, for he has studied the subject of careless -nmkers will b«* prevent d. Eugene. Ore. Some days ago The Guard stated carefully. | that the XX illamette Valley Company Records for the amount of lumber The yield in wheat, for instance, | had a definite scheme on foot in op- ho« MINKTPAL has fallen off heavily, says Mr. Hill. sawed from one tree, from on«* acre | posing the issuance of bonds to con OWNERSHIP MAY While Minnesota soil yielded 13.12 and from t« n acres have been shat YET BE SECURED struct a gravity water system; that bushels to the acr«* on th«* average tered by the cut made from a ten- for no other reason would the cor during the first five years of the past acre tract on the north shore of Pu The water question has at last re- poration have set its newspaper or decade, during the last five the aver get Sound. The log scale shows that aired itself into a definite issue. gan at work misrepresenting facts age was 12.18. In New York th«* fig 5,100,766 fen were obtained from F bonds of the city having been and distorting the truth; that Its em ures are 18.4 and 17.4, while In 561 trees in a ten-acre tract, or an Ljrcted on a.count of legal techni- ployes. stockholders and henchmen Kansas there has been a drop from average of 5 10.076 f«*et to the acre, Llities. the deal for the purchase of were engaged in a campaign of vini 15.14 to 13.18 bushels. Similar find according to the Seattle l’ost-lntel- [> Willamette Valley Company's fication and misrepresentation be- ings are made in other states llgencer. The record acre of the ten Lant will have to be déclarée off. caus>- they had received orders from Mr. Hill makes his point clear by yielded just 585,048 feet, as compar fcns will leave the situation just headquarter::. citing the averag«* yield in Denmark ed with a normal average of 25,000 The object of the corporation has —60.19 bushels, which he saj/s is feet to the acre, On this particular ■bere it was some three years ago. Lben the agitation for municipal developed in the past day or two and due to scientific cultivation and en acre a single tree scaled 22,1 45 feet, is now positively known. It is sim richment of the soil. Although the or less than 3000 feet under the av- Jwnership was begun. I There can be no hope of improve ply this: The purchasers of the lat land has been tilled for centuries. It erag«* yield of an acre of ground. ment of the supply, extension of the est bond issue have notified the may has five times the yield of the prac It is to be hoped that the reports int or ownership by the people un- or and city attorney that they have tically virgin soil of America, simply of the illness of Secretary of State t n the election of October 1st is found a fatal defect In proceedings because the Danish farmer looks af Benson are exaggerated. No tnan in ■wried in favor of the bonds. Oth- leading up to the election, that the ter the soil instead of leaving it to public life in this state has more Brvise the private ownership crowd bonds are Illegal and they will not chance and the elements to see that warm friends than he. and none the ■ii! have scored a complete victory. buy them. This being the case it does not run down. more richly deserves them, A quiet, Bid all the work for a betterment of Willamette Valley Company will al- The intelligent among American unassuming man bas who bus been ■editions will be worse than wasted so decline to accept its $140,000 of farmers are learning and the less in faithful to his trust in many public the issue and refuse to turn the plant Because the constant succession of telligent will learn, that the prodigal positions, courteous and obliging to fclires will no doubt tend to dis- over to the city. Then if the new- exhaustion of large holdings of soil all alike, be owes his advancement to Bourage future effort. Municipal bond issue is beaten on October 1st, Is not th«* most profitable methotl of the large personal following that such Bmership is up to the people now on the city will be powerless to buy the agriculture: the intensive cultivation qualities are sure to attract. plant, or even pay for the engineer of small farms, scientifically cared I direct yes or no proposition. B The Guard w ants to suggest that ing work already djne on the grav for and periodically fertilized, is Kentuck's maiden moonshiner ■ the bonds are voted at the coming ity system. Th«* whole question will what the American farmers must who def ated a raiding posse of de ■- tion a different policy should be be back where it was when the agita come to if they want to get the most uties in a pitched battle, seems to b Buriued. Haste has been responsl- tion for municipal ownership began the soil has to give. . ,.d want the more familiar with the workings o; Be for most of the mistakes of the over three years ago, with the Wil soil to keep giving it. a Winchester than with Cupid's bow Bi-' with no p; rticular person or lamette Valley Company in absolute When speed madness reaches th I’ROSPERITX OX ITS XX XX' Hirsi ms to blame for it. The people control of th«* situation. Ther** will reckless stage, as it is bound to d be no municipal ownership, no hope ■ere envious for immediate results there is always trouble frequenti; of improvement or ext nsion of the Claiming that improved business death, Kd In deference to that sentiment the And this applies to oth< r plant and no gravity system. The conditions justify them in their Hnr.ctl has gone ahead and taken things than running automcbiles. company will hav«* scored a complete course, all of the big lumber mills eg that have ended disastrously. victory all along th«* line. along the Gulf A- Ship Island Kailroad After looking over the notorious ■hat should be done after the next With these facts befor ■ them the will be re-opened In the next week board walk. Rev. John XV. Hoag, of ■tie is voted is to have a friendly kit brought that will test the legality people < f Eugene can see why the or two with a full forue. About 5,- LaCrosse, Wk., declined a «all to corporation has rallied all Its forces 000 men w ill be re-employed at once. ar. Atlantic City church, because "I ■ the bonds in the supreme court, for one desperate, last ditch fight Thirty-one hundred more whole feel that tie atmosphere of Atlantic ■ce that tribunal has declared them not to oppose th«* construction of a sale orders for shoes and rubbers City might not b- the best for me." ■al. there will be no difficulty in gravity system, but to defeat the at w< re received by Selz. Schwab A Co., And now the hotels are preparing ■urine purchasers, and the city tempt to bring about municipal own of Chicago, in June this year than for an unprecedented rush, for of ■II not be at the mercy of the bro- Brs. since investors will bid direct- ership of the water plant in any in June a year ago, although In that such Is the kingdom of advertising. form. Only by the voting of the bonds year It gained nearly two million if there is no danger to be appre- in Octob r can the people block this dollars on the sales of 1906, which C. W. Bethel, of Lincoln county. Hnded from adverse court decisions, latest plot of the corporation to place 1.1 turn were $1,875,000 ahead of Washington, Is entitled to the medal ■is course was recommended by ex- as the most considerate man. He the fetters of monopoly u¡ion them 1905. ■ty Attorney Allen in reference to placed big signs on the fence around for all time to come. The National Cash Register Com ■e last issue, and the present "Cherries all pany reports that In the month of his orchard, reading: By attorney is strongly in favor of The corporation paper prints this June it shipped more cash registers gone, No use to tear y .tir pants in B as the only sure plan to secure morning its platform on the water than in any other month in its hls- climbing through the barbed wire Byers, most of whom are wary of until the pears are ripe." Says he question, but somehow we d >ubt its tcry. Hr, basing as long, as there is a lo- remembers when he was a boy. authenticity because it is not signed These are only three of the favor- B fight on, making it certain that and approved by A. Welch, of tile able news items that fill the market H technicality w ill be overlooked to Dr. Hamilton E. Wright, one of Willamette Valley Company; also it reports every day. It all goes to Bcat the will of the people. lacks the official seal of the compa show that, if pros|>erity is not back the three United Stat«*« commission ■If the people of Eugene stand ny. Even If it were official we do again already. It is at least on ita ers to the International Opium Con ■®l.v by their own interests and not think the people will endorse it gress, to nu»f In S langhai next Jan way. Be the bonds asked for by the coun- uary. may find that he stirred up a because they have had alxiut all th« Ba.-.J fn turn that body will profit hornet's nest when he said; “Pro- experience with wells ami pumping ■ the experience of the past, we may i plants they care for. Best! s. th« hlbltlon drives men and women to Beet in a few months to see the way The Eugen«* Guard has placed an the use of drugs." hop«* of « ‘ mancipation from t B*red for municipal ownership and order for a Mo b l 4 linotype machine. I of the XX'illamette X’allcy C The Charleston N“ws and Courier e cost price to lit* $4000 laid down | (ffsvlty system. Then if the Wil- ■»Tvity out Is altog that is held that city. It is the new double-' I seems to think that the sur«*st way Biettc Valley alley Company Company does not ck ty|>e that gives t'.ie operator the to elect Br; ■h (0 , •1 its plant — it Is doubtful definite to b alluring, Bryan would be to kidnep e of four different fonts of type ■they will ever get another chan e stalling the city's own "Sunny Jim" Sherman rind exhibit thout changing the magazine, puri>oses ns Yet there are men who dare ■ sell it f r $140,000—the city will for pumping lat is a sample of progress in the him. ■»-1:.. sible.” which. reading wspaper line the Statesman likes to doubt the loyalty to llryan of the funds to gt> ahead and In- hear alniut.— Salem Statesmin. means when the I editor of the N. and (’. V 1 * ysteni independent of the lines, •p And with the installing of this Bdir.x- X’alley Co. Is willing to bf the private corporation. nf w machine many other additions job. Further along It In the elections held of late, most- 1 B ut <> i the plant will be made that will ly primaries, candidates suspected of t» foreign bond! HEIGHT * able The Guard to print a thor- relations with the interests" have OE skX M KAPERN $ 1 6 0,000 ghty up-to-date dally newspaper, been swatted hard, which Indicates can be found of which will be Im- that voters are not so forgetful as n ew Y irk will never have an office in a hurry. ” Th E Ir.r a **<l In ke ping with some men would like to have them upon the cr< s mile high, in spite of all it »elate the be. lk 111* it talk to that effect. In- now has th« tbe at ■m he O1 the ood edness per ca wlll never have one half a iteri Civilization will not stand for the ♦eni| ther 1. unless the present build- Northwest, or n head hunting of savage trlties. and lib* a> » The ls > xpanded instead of con- de has almost siirreeded in abolishing pubi,, whirr ha. <1 of t » the present architectural it, but civilization never bats an eye h step |: issible van it y mands. says a magazin magazine D a at the far more cruel sport of bunt id • late article. For the lim- a H Ing and killing character. iht of any building in New a inn tba k li ow absolutely fixed at 2000 Y*t another Innovation n I'ei • bout two-fifths of mile, that every spellbinder I * of the present outcry "shadowed," and that th< he latest I skyscrapers, it to get plenty of applai ■tain that the 1 limit not only man? :::• d _VM t- II be lucre »as'd. hut shortly 1 Imlnlshed. The reason that Pen Th* w fl * t never wl III ’ hav? any cf the t « building* HE EUGENE WEEKLY GUARD DO YOU GET rr NEWS FROM LABOR WORLD KiJncv Trouble Makes l'ou Miserable. Heb rew painters and paper hang- a tract of five huiulred » ers of Boston are reforming their old Fort Scott. Kas.. upon wh uulou. eate th«* Institution. Th«* St, Paul Typographical The San Francisco Building Trades Cc urn I has organized an athletic as- lias decided to make a label exhibit at the Minnesota state fair this year sociation. Th. girls empk yed in an Xd«*la:de. and will ask th«* Minneapolis union tn Aus rails, clothing factory went on a join with It. Last year th«* St. Paul strike to resist a reduction of wages. union hade a highly creditable label display. Steam engin«H*ra of Cleveland. O.. The National Brotherhood of Op are making strong efforts to intro erative Potters has voted to fix an duce eight-hour shifts In packing ag«> limit for all apprentices entering houses in place of 12-hour shifts. the trade, Resolutions were adopted White and negro longshoremen at which will hereafter make It neces- New Orleans have signed a five-year sary for all new apprentices to be six- contract with the stevedores and teen years or over. steamship agents, establishing a In New York state a bill which scab*. takes from the health boards of the A seceding organization from th«* first-class cities the Inspection of Brotherhood of Railroad Employes mercantile establishments and place« has taken th«* name of the Brother it In the hands of the labor depart ment was passed and will go into ef bool of Railroad Station Employes. The next conventkn of th«* Inter fect on October 1. On* of th«* principal matters and national Brotherhood of Bookblml the next ers will be held «luring th« second most important features week in June, 1910, at Cedar Rapids eonvintl 'n of the I'nitel B ltherho I of Cari »enters and Joiners, w! 1 .1 la. I'll«* book and job scale of the San will nre ■et in Salt Lak«* City. s< ;>• m- Francisco Typographical I'nion lias ber 15, Is th«* plan to start an old- hat of the lx < n increased from $22 to $24 11 ig«* pension, similar t week. Ail «* in pl->y *ra ha ■ ■ ipted International Typographical Colon. It has been announced that the the new scale under an agreement Th«* telephone service at Sheboy well-known English labor leader, J. can. Wis . was tied up for l" hour Weir Hardie, who Is also n member r« ently by a strike of th«* girl op if parliament, Intends to attend th** I 'nventkin of the Trades ami Labor orators, who demanded a w ek's va- ■ ation with pay, and obtained the Congress, to be held at Halifax, N. S. on September 21, nn«l that he concession. Twenty-five hundred children's n 1'1 also attend a meeting of miners Jacket makers, who went on a strlk* a Springhill. Representatives of the Glassb'ow In New Yprk a few weeks a ' >. to r1*-1 sis’ a reduction of wages, have won • ■rs of America won a notable victory their strike in all but a few sh ps on the final day of their recent wage and have returned to work at their conference with the manufacturers <f glass bottles, which was held at former wages. The railway trackmen are pla’i- Atlantic City. N J., when they ob ning for a th«* establishment of a tained a wage scale nt the same fig home for their aged and indigent ure as last year, with th«* same members. It is proposed to acquire working hours. w n I I O 1 in that letter i word*. le news- mderful by Dr. Swamp- Root, the great kid- v, liver and blad- :r remedy. It is the great med ical triumph or the nineteenth century ; di-e<ivered after years of scientific research I ■. I H Kilmer, the eminent kidney and bladder «¡»eeialist. and is woiderfully successful ill prom;*' ■tlv curing lame back. uric acid, catarrh of the bladder an«i Bright's Disease, which is the worst form of kidney Double. Dr. Kilmet s 5»anip-Root is not rec- omiueiided for ev et »thing but if von have ki<lnev, liver or bladder trouble it will be found just the remedy you need. It has Veen tested in so many ways, in hospital v K and in private practice, and has ! loved so s.iccessfn. in « very case that a special arrangeinei.t has Ixen made by which all readers o’ tins pajH-r, who have not alteuily tried it, n:.»> have a sample bottle scut fi« c by mail, also a Ixsiktell- ine more als»ut S»vamp-Root, and how to tindoul if von have kiduev or bladder trou ble. Win n waiting mention reading this generousoffer in this pajier undsend your address to I)r. Kilmer Co., Bingh miti'ii, I N V. I'lu- re-uli" tifly-cent ami one- dollar si,«* bottles are Came <*t solil l v nil g«xsl druggists. Ikm't make any linstak« . but omember the name. Swamp Root, Dr. Kilmer's bwamp-Root, and the address, Bnighaiuton, N. Y., ua «very Imttle. I* XX loll PUKING HX XX EIGHT METHOD Isaac K. Skeeters, the first white Salem, Or.. Aug. 15. At a meet ing of the Hop Growers' Association man to view the wondrous beauty of | of Marion county It was unanimously Crater lake, died at his home on 1 voted that th«* growers pick by weight Jackson street, in this city, last night The end came peace 1 and that the price for picking b«* 80 at 10 o'clock fully. following an Illness extending ¡cents per hundred pounds. The price Is much lower than for over the past eight or nine months, several years, the price being paid due to general debility, brought oil « Pacific Horw Liniment is prewired in former years being 50 cents a box by old age and the undergoing of an expressly ter the needs nf horsemen and of $1 per hundred pounds Not a operation which consisted of the am ranchmen. It 1« a powerful sad peno- voice was raised against the step and putation of his left limb above the lrstln( liniment, a remedy for emergen it was discussed by a large number al.kle joint. .Mr. Skeeter celebrated his 84th cies. A soothing embrocation for the of growers. Th<> following resolu- birthday on December 19. He was relief el pein, and the best liniment lor tiorts were adopted: Hardin county, Kentucky, sprain* and soreness.* I mqualed ler XX’hereas. It is the sens«* of this born in He came across th«* plains caring the wound* and Infwries of meeting, after a full and thorough li 1825. by a team and wagon, land- BARBED WIRE and lor healing cut*. discussion of conditions comparing In 1852 In Jacksonville the same year, | abrasions, sore* and bruise* Pacilk / them with horticulture, lumber and ing has resided In Jackson county I Horse Liniment i* fully guaranteed. other Industries, where wages rang«* He 1 No other I* *0 good or helpful in so many for women from 75c to $1. children for 4 4 years, having spent ten yeurs | we; *. If it fails to satisfy. *e authorize s low as 50 cents a day and labor In Josephine county. In June. 1553. with a party of 22, « all dealer* to refund the purchase price ers for heavy work as low as 5$ 1.50 Mr Skeeters left for a prospecting eiT«a casee ee«tue nm estrrs to $1.75 and realizing hop pickers trip and while gone discovered Cra- . rn from $2 to $4 a day, and that H oyt C hxmical Co, we»«»«#. lake Medford Tribune i* -e than half the crop has been ter booklet rare * d at a loss to growers for t hr«'«* ( * ♦ ♦ ♦ V years past; therefore be It A Resolved, That th«* pile«' for pick - ♦ ♦ ling th«* crop of 1908 be 80 cents per * ♦ r 5 hundred, And that field laborers be ♦ ♦ ♦ ;al<1 $2 a day. ♦ San Francisco, Aug 17.— Signed: F. W. Durbin. Wm. H ♦ ♦ The case In which- Whang ♦ E.z.in, J. C. Wolf. ♦ Chang« accused of the mur ♦ der of Durham White Stev ♦ .It X< T'lOX NOTI S. ♦ ens, former advisor to the ♦ Korean government, tame up ♦ Mrs. Grace Broadhead and sister, A ♦ today before Judge Conley, ♦ Miss Daisy Savory, who have been ♦ sitting In Judge Cook's de ♦ the guests of the family of S. L. ♦ partment of the superior ♦ Moorhead fur the past ten days, re ♦ court, and was set for trial ♦ turned north Thursday. They may ♦ September 21. ♦ conclude to locate In the valley but « have not yet determined on a loca ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ tion. Dr Parks and Hon Leon spent the NOTE XND < OMMP.NT past week In camp on the shores of Triangle Lake. Grants Pass, Or., people ar«> anx .Mrs. Anna Fortmiller and children ious to buy out th«* water company of Albany, are the guests of Mrs. of that city because of high rates und Fortmiller's parents. Dr. and Mrs. poor service. La • French physicians have Sandy Pe'erson and John Tower new and, they say. Infallible remedy returned from Lake Creek Satur for sunstroke. It Is chloroform. PORTLAND. ORE. J day. They report killing a number Richard Croker, former boss of of d«*er. Tammany, announces that he will re A valuable mar«* belonging to Jeff turn to America next month In order Campbell was kicked on th«* leg Sun Ito assist In th«* election of Bryan. 1 - , < nt mid day and broken In two places. She The Baldwin dirigible balloon per- crii**« *. Î<JUOK was shot and put out of misery. : formed Its endurance test of remaln- I.C( H.. Wt M D. Lingo dropped a threshing I Ing two hoiira In the air Saturday af i»$y »ne rxprcM. machine the other day and mash'*«; ternoon Th«* machine. In fact, was \V$ h tiauy (•< the end of his big aeeond • ‘ toe. He He afloat two hours and five minutes. I nce List. that This fete now completes all the re- did not permit a little thing .............. like . to prevent him from continuing at oulr«*u'ent« for th«* acceptance of th«' . IRTIMQ CC. ORLGOri work. Baldwin airship. The ship in its ev »ta rs - O« >0<MU the Bert Cheshire has received olutions approached Washington and contract for building a cottage for clrcl«‘d freely at various speeds while Mr. Clayton on the lots north of his p< form ng the tests. »Colon* I BaId- residence. wln will now be entitled to th«* mon Born — August 7, 1908, to Mr and ey offered by the government. $10«),- Mrs Frank Bryant, a son. Thp baby 000, for a successful balloon. The re died shortly afte** birth. mains were interred in Franklin cetn- If you take Kodol In the beginning etery Sat unlay. the bad attaches of dyspepsia will be Hugh Herron, a pioneer citizen avoided, blit If you allow these little A PERFICr of Irish Bend, died at his residence attacks to go unheeded It will take LAXATIVK _____ • r_______ 1 Friday morning aged 69. lie had Kodol a longer time to put your been a suffer er from cancer of the stomach In good condition again Get stomach since last March, Mr. II r- a bottle of Kodol today. Sold by all ron came to Oregon In 1862, and druggists. took up a donation claim on which he lived until the time of his death. Arthur Hendershott r«*ttirnc<| from He was a highly esteem •*<i citizen l.nui an! ««■ „,m«r<lai »«irw« ► In all hr* nun ' H m *. and enjoved the confid«*n< *e and es- Newport yesterday and report I the ■ <*, Miai !«•■•'toa »l» . ail L«.r-.| ib» weather there now as delightful, lie- Fr»ssn •<!*»»<•. la» unb tbat baa «r*at.-*r teem of all those with who « -n an 1 *. «rioa Vai.rlR»« . -ir- Ing much warmer than formerly fn contact. • ' . • ■ ' Funeral services were held st Mc- From now on, he says. Is ’he be« AIBANY COLLEGE, ALBANY, flEtGOM Farland 'ha|x*l Sunday afternoon by time of the year to go to tne beach. Rev, Me ausland, of the South .Meth- odist church. The Immediate survivors are the widow and the following children. Em« rv Herron. South Bend, XX'ash.; Robert, who Ilves on a part of the old horn« i«la«x: : Clayton Clayton, who occu ne; Mrs. C. A. Bush- pies th° old heme; Miss nell. of Seattle, . Wash Wash.; ; an and I res with her mother Margaret wh •ron home. Another Tenih and Morrison. Portland. Oregon A. I*. Armstrong. LL.B.. Prirtcipsl th« k<' *. Is a«W »asad d a 11 *ht t 2. 1908, to Mr. and C/.Ve occupy two floors 65 by too feet, have a jo . oco equipment, Dole, a son Times. F employ a large faculty, give individual instruct; a. re r ve more calls G olden ; W est > COFFEE TEA SPICES' BAKING POWDER' EXTRACTS ' } JUST RIGHT II CLOSSET a DEVERS z Kod> i bds if they bad xo>x1 jiidcment WITH A LAME BACK? 1 Kod by i* Hl KM Itftil yiU THE Gl I HI» for office help than we can Beet. Our s.i.' 1 adm te«11y le ids all au institution. y attend others in quality of instruction. It pa an thorough S lid a BasiaeM tian: “Keep tvnnk ty of initruc- work. It will win out in the end.** Na«d *u i< tn the Northwest.’* tion given in your school makes it tha stvn I Catalogue free, CjJpen all the year. Students admittt 1 tnau in Pur tUnA ar. y buailtM Relereuceai Any bank, any newspaper,