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About Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1908)
THE EIGENE WCE a LT Gl'ARI), THURSDAY. OCTOBER 13, 190« 4 CENTENARY OF UNIVERSITY SENIORS NUMBER HISTORICAL COLLEGE IS ORSERVED SIXTY-TWO A I I <.l XI BALLOON ST. LOUIS LOST IN NORTH SEA ♦ 4- + ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ + + ♦ ♦ Berlin, Oct. 13.—A wire less message from Arnold, conductor of the St. Louis balloon In the Gordon Ben nett cup race, reads as fol lows: “Lost everything In North Sea last night.” Another dispatch i the St. Louis sank North Sea and that pants were rescued schooner. l!Es| I >1 ,X< T! STREET The senior ciass at the University .numbers sixty-two individuals, ac cording to figures given out at the registrar's office. The junior class numbers approximately ninety-one, and the sophomore class 112. Fig ures obtained some time ago show ed th • enumeration r>f the freshmen ‘ a be 23". There are a number of special students H-r—ett This Evening John Barrett w'1’. r -ea.< tb!« even ing pt 7-ir ■’ ' It'-i nail to the 3.adepts and townspeople, His sub- ject will be "What the Pacific Has In Store for the State of Oregon and Her People.” Mr. Barrett has ad- dressed the University before and will receive a hearty welcome. Pr > essor Glen will sing a solo be fore the lecture. Varsity News Walter Eaton has returned to col lege. Registration is now 510. The Oregon Weekly Is contemplat ing issuing a semi-weekly paper Rooters' canes will be on sale in a short time. Practice in the mud last night was a new experience to some of the Cal-, ifornia men. Wabash train charged with desert ing his wife, a daughter of the late General John A. Logo. Colonel Tucker was sick and could not be taken from the train, but agreed to return without requisition papers, He was accompanied by a woman for whom he is alleged to San Francisco, Oct. 13.—United have deserted his wife, and with States Curcuft Judge Morrow today him a nurse and two men servants. affirmed the decree of the circuit court In the appeal of Elizabeth M. McGilvra et all agalr ‘ W. Ross, as state land commissioner or the state Detroit, Oct. 13.—Good weather of Washington et al. The action prevaled today for the fourih game was brought to restrain Ross and of the world's basebayy champion others as officers of the state of ship series. There was a great crowd Washington from nlottine a”d sei'-1 presoo* v'HH •«.<«., ->nv of th., shore lands of Lake LOWER CULRT AFFIRM D GENERAL NEWS Charlottsvllle, Va., Oct. 14.—The University of Virginia is planning for next an International celebration January of the centennial of the birth of Edgar Allen Poe. Everett. Wash Oct 14.—A con- LETTITI TO PRESIDENT ROM GOA ER NOR II VsKl 1,1. <as City, Mo., Oct. 13. -Gov- Charles N. Haskell, of Okla- arrived here today to consult orneya In reference to his pro- suit against William R. Hearst, charging the New York editor with libel. Just when the suit will be filed, he 1 h unable to say, as the mat- t r Is in the hands of his attorney«. This action Is the outcome of the publicity of the Standard Oil story, the controversy over which led to Haskell resigning uh treasurer of the democratic national committee. Statement Iw>u<-«1. Kansas City, Mo.. Oct. 13.—Has- I ell gave to the Associated Press a signed statement addressed to Pres ident Roosevelt contributing another chapter to the controversy arising over the leasing of 580,000 acres of Osage Indian oil lands. "I shall," says Governor Haskell, "Insist upon 1he cancellation of this lease In the interest of the cltlsens of our state, or that congress take action to de clare this Improvident and unjust lease void, and secure for the Osage nation the Just and reasonable com pens.-itlon that other owners are re- reiving t In his letter Haskell points out to one Foster in 1896 for ten years on a ten per cent royalty basis was all right at that time, being a specula tive movement before the develop ment of the field, but that the re newal of the lease of 680.000 acres to the Indian Territory Illuminating <•11 Company, which had absorbed Fester's lease and which Is known I t > be a Standard Oil proposition, f >r I ten dollars an acre and one sixth! royalty, was far below average paid «it her owners, many of whom re ceive I cash bonuses of from fifty to « tie hundred dollars an acre with heavy royalties, Haskell says th • records a^ be f re t 'ic io , ■ I. nt ;lnd t i at Ht is n-arcel.v possible, with these records before you, you failed to notice that ten dollars an acre and one sixth royalty was much below the uverage compensation.” Haskell refers to the lease granted by th«> president to the Prairie Dll and Gas Company as a Standard Oil proposition, and says "In this one transaction you gave the Standard OH Company a dona tion from the property of th«> Osn.-o Indians more thin enough to pay t e famous 124,000,000 fine." Emittsburg. Md , Oct. 14.—A score of church dignataries and hun dreds of Catholic laity throughout the country gathered here today to participate on a two days’ celebra tion of rhe centenary of Mount St. i> y's C illege, America's most his- t ria Roman Catholic higher institu tion of learning. The town, as well as the college, is in gala attire in honor of the occasion, and during the two days of the celebration there will be a succession of banquets, speeches, musical and dramatic per formances by the students, and other features of interest. The celebration was formally open ed today with a pontifical mass of thanksgiving. The sermon was de livered by the Rev. Dr. Cunningham of Pittsburg, who graduated from Mount St. Mary's in the class of '78. Among the eminent prelates in at tendance at the mass were Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore and Arch bishop Falconio. the apostolic del egate at Washington. Tomorrow night the celebration will conclude with a banquet at which Richard M. Reilly of Lancaster, Pa., will deliver the oration, and the Rev. Patrick L. Duffy of Charleston, S. C., will recite an ode composed for the occasion. Mount St. Mary’s is justly enti tled to the honors now being paid her. The college is known as the "cradle of bishops” from the fact that so many of America's bishops have been students here. Among the noted prelates who studied here were Cardinal McCloskey. America's first cardinal; Bishop Boute. the “guardian angel of the mount”; Archbishop John Hughes of New- York, who toiled as a gardener dur ing his first year to pay his tuition; Archbishop Purcell and Bishops Laughlin. Elder, Chatard, Gilman, Watterson and Spaulding. Those of the laity who later brough lustre to the name of the college include Attorney General Bo naparte, Justice White of the Su preme court; George Miles, the poet, and General Thomas Anderson, the first American commander at Ma nila. Mount St. Mary’s is the pioneer secular college. Since the establish ment of the college there have occu pied its presidential chair many clergymen who, like its founder. Fa ther John Dubois, later rose to high places of hor"r in the church. ACCIDENT TO JUDGE TAFT'S TRAIN + + + + + + ♦ ♦ <■ ♦ + Sterling, O., Oct. 13.—An accident to Taft's train oc- curred today by the front trucks leaving the track just as the train came to a stop owing to spreading rails on a new piece of track. No dam- age was done, but the speak- Ing schedule of the candidate may be disarranged for to- day. + + + + + + + ♦ + + + ♦♦♦♦+♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦* for both sides, but of these the local Washington or Lake Union, Ivlng In Dont of the lands owned by the fans were in a large majority. an.i plaintiffs. Brown Batteries ("‘'ago. and -Summers Kling Petri Schmidt. First Inning— Chlcago, 0; Detroit 0. Second inning Detroit, 0; Chica go, o. "Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured the Third Inning- two worst sores I ever saw. one on go, *2. try hand and ones on my leg. It is Chi i,or*h more than a gold mine Fourth inning Detroit, V; I cago, 0. would not he without It if I had to Filth inning Detroit, 0; Chicago, mortgage the farm tn g»t W.” Onij 0. 25 cents at W. A. Kuykendall's J rug Sixth In ui ng Detroit. 0; store. 0. Chica- inning Detroit, Hamilton & Van Drdstrand hav • th la:.In : »-Detroit, 0; Chi a- s- I I the Eugene Grocery on West Eighth street near Chart. P'n to E. .sota. MInnes Inning Detroit. li; China L. Dorr, recently from who has taken ■■hiu'ge of the basi va n Messrs. Hamilton and score Chicago, 3; Detroit nes's. Ordstrand have been In business here several years an I have built up a good trad»1 by honest methods of business and square dealing to all. Their sucee sor is a man experienced In the business and will doubtless ucceed here. BIBLE UNIVERSITY _ _ _ _ _ DEDICATEDISUNOAY vention of the Puget Sound district. Order of Ben Hur. met here today with an attendance of fifty delegates representing twenty local courts of The new building of the Eugene the order. Billie University , which is now al most completed, will be dedicated Shamokin, Pa., Oct. 14.—The next Sunday, Oct. 18, at 2:30 p. m. ennsylvania State Sunday School Rev. Morton L. Rose, a former pas ssociation is holding Its annuel con- tor of the First. Christian church of gentian here with an attendance of this city, now pastor of the church delegates from all over the state. at North Yakima. Wash., will de Work A three days' program will be car liver the principal address. is being rushed on the interior of ried out. the building to have everything com pleted by the time of the dedication Nashville, Tenn., services. annual convention division of United < erans met ill this gathering '■’g call. T abernac' General SEVERE EARTHQUAKE SHUCKS ARE FELT Goldsb -co, N. C.. Oct 1 t Favor able conditions attended the open ing hero today of the twelfth annual convention of the North Carolina division. United Daughters of the Confederacy. Mrs. I. W. Fenton, president of the division, presided over the opening session. Shelbyville, III., Oct 14 A wed- ding of note here today was that of Miss Mary Frances Headon of this city and Dr. Edwin Lyon Draper, son of Dr. Androk S. Draper, state com missioner of education of New York The ceremony was performed in the First Baptist church and was fol- lowed by a large reception at the home .of the bride's parents. + ♦ ♦ +• ♦ 41 E 4- + ' ' ’ r \ r - quake was recorded on the in- struments of the University ■ I tab here last 10:22. It was violent for about twenty minutes There were secondary shocks an hour and a half later. + ♦ + ♦ + + ♦ 4 + George Taylor has just completed a well 324 feet deep at the residence of F. P. Close, on College Hill, and found a splendid flow of water. A pr vlous well sunk in the same yard during the summer reached a depth of 310 feet, but not a drop of water was found. Salina. Kas., Oct. 14.—The Kan- sas Grand Lodge. I. O O. F.. met In annual session here today, together with the state assembly of Rebekahs. The attendance of delegates and vis itors Is large and the session prom ises to bo one of the most success ful ever held by the order in Kan sas. Tin» vregon Electric yesterday re sumed tracklaying on the Forest Grove extension, and steel will be laid to the east bank of Dairy creek, where it will be necessary to wait three weeks far a big fill across the bottom. With this fill completed the rails can be laid into Forest Grove. I.umber Is now on the ground for the Atlanta. Gs.. Oct. 14 The corner Hillsboro depot. s’one was laid today for the Wesley <'a«<-asw<'<•!, the well known rem Mete, aria] church, the great memorial Instit ution to be erected by the Meth- edy for babies and children, will odi*'« « In this cltv. Bishop W* arren quiet the little ones in a short time. Chandler presided over the < ■ ere» The ingredient* are printed on the mor and the principal address s was bottle. Contains no opiate*. Sold ■<l bv Bishop Eugene R Hen- all druggists. Kansas City. •.il entering 1 reaSinieu at the I vershy of Calif ornla this ■jrear ■c. R L. (Jet. 14 brine made pets of rln«A acrut by the medical department invertL n h*” Cot swsb* are taken from the thr oats i ,I.XL IX’MMIIH III I II 11 III 11 D.Xt and If’ - r rxam ined mi'r.w *O ’»d wl the bacilli < la or other arrt prrarnt. Tn cal department t o pick out imen m would I m * detrinlental to th Janie« Morri*, of Florence, is in nf the unlverait y and give e hca them the city for * few «lay*. leave of absence One summer moonlight night I was by the waves. I would rather be near | them on moonlight nights than at any other time, especially when broken clouds give the sky and the waters I variety, I never go to the hotels g- j* f r away from them as I ■ an. ■«upping usually at some fishernrin’s On this occasion I had cottage, pitched a tent on the beach and in habited it alone. I was lying under aiy canopy, the flaps thrown aside that from my Led—blankets only—I could look out on the «jeean. There This woman sav. t . was the sky. light clouds slowly drift Pinkham’s V. get able I lug across the face of the moon, the save«! her life.* Reid h’« line of the horizon dividing the llghtei Mrs. T. C. Willadsen. of m ' from the darker hemisphere. The ocean Iowa, writes to Mrs. plane met the path of moonlight broad “ I can truly say that Lydia v ening toward me from afar, the waves hams Vegetable Compound lazily rolling In and bursting on the life, and I cannot express shore. I have wondered, since If the music — ~ wxzanv XUrmi Of f»m.l " of the waters put me to sleep and I plaints, continually doeto“-"* awakened or whether 1 did not sleep. At any rate, my attention was ar rested by something white, at least , E. l'n.xham’s VegetableCompuladÏÏ lighter than the sand, down near the , it ha« restored !ae to pe-tauT“4 verge. I watched it There was an Had . ; not been for ro? 1 occasional fluttering about it. like a been ,n my grave to-day. ] 7 woman’s skirts gently moved by a suffer: ng woman would try it." breeze. It appeared to be about the FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN height of a hutaau figure, though really For thirty years Lydia £. Pink In my perception of it there was no hams Vegetable Compound,^ such thing as size, and was gently | from roqte and herbs, has Cn swaying like a very young tree shaken I standard remedy for female a by the wind. and has positively cured thousand Presently it moved. Then I was con scious that It was coming toward me. women who have t>een troubled Hi displacements, inflammation, ulcem I had no superstitious fear. I was s..n- tioii, fibroid tumors, irregularity ply curious. As the thing approached “ periodic pains, backache, that ‘t«S bw it came gradually out of nebula into ing-down feeling, flatulency, ind®,. the form of a woman. There was a tion,dizziness,or nervous prustix-™ certain grace of movement, a lightness Why don’t you try it ? which, mingled with a slight rising and Mrs. Pinkham invite« all falling, was confusing. Had the figure appeared on the water surface 1 women to write her for advit* She has guided thousands u should have thought my eyes were health. Address, Lynn, Maa. transfiguring a sail that was rising and falling on the waves. It was only when It came neat that I distinguished the outline of a girl’s figure—not a summer visitor, one of plainer mold, doubtless a fisher las A report comes to The Guard from sie. She stopped a few yards from Blue River Boy mine me, turned and looked out on the which was that the Lucky . ......... „ recently sold at referee'« ocean. Then, turning again without sale, will be operated again soon, uil appearing to notice or care who was in that preparations are now beiag the tent, she asked: made to begin the work of gettiag the plant in order. An expert iron "Is that a boat out there?" “What are you doing out here at this Portland is there now looking ore time of night? Do you know what the property to see what repairs and alterations are necessary. It 1.5 re time it is?” ported that a load of concentrates is “No.” I now on the way to Eugene ,o be I drew my watch from my vest shipped to the Tacoma smelter. As pocket. 1 slept in my clothes. “It's English syndicate now has eontrvl of the property and they are repre half past 1.” “Is it?” She manifested no interest sented by the Sunstake-Lyman Cos- at the hour. She stood looking out at pany, of Portland. It is said that sea, apparently watching for another the new- company will furnish electrie power and light to the other mins sight at the boat owners in the district, sometbaj “There it is. Heavens, how they that the old company would not do. bend to the work!” This will be a great thing for the dis I raised myself on my elbows and trict and will be a means of develop-] strained my eyes to discern if I could Ing it faster, as heretofore the Lucky see what the girl saw. Surely there Boy people controlled practically nil the power and the smaller ownen was no boat out where she was look were handicapped on that accout ing. The dark face of the ocean was expressionless except where the moon- T. S. Tingley has sold his half > light trailed over it terest in the business of Moon 4 Tis- gley to N. J. Blais, who resides tar “I see no boat” I said. “It's in the trough of the sea now.” Irving. “There is but a slight trough. Even Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Grove tel If a boat were lost to sight between turned this noon from a visit S the waves it would reappear in a few Goshen. moments.” She stood peering out on the ocean. A cloud floated over the moon. She said with a moan, a note of despair, rather, it s«>emed to me: “Oh. how black!” The cloud was denser than any that hail obscured the moon before. The last words I heard spoken by the girl were, "They’re coming," and she began to move toward the ocean, fading away In the shadow of the «loud, When it passed I looked for her, but site was nowhere to be seen. I lay thinking, wondering, for awhile, then, lulled by the waves, fell asleep. When I awoke the sun was rising FOR FALL WEAR out of the ocean, while the waves were plashing languidly. The first thing 1 are made by the celebrated thought of was the girl of the night house of before I drifted between many opin ions. Possibly I may have dreamed It all. But never before had I dreamed about one a stranger to me whose face and figure I could remember, while hers I remembered distinctly. Was Tliev have quality, sty« she not some girl who had t>een de and fit, and will look l^e mented by misfortune? 1 went to breakfast at a fisherman's a suit made to order. - cabin. It was a rude place, the only so you will find them rty decoration Ireing a lithograph of the 5 lrgin Mary, but I got there plenty of sonablv priced. Coinea^ sea food. The fisherman was prepar look at them before buy ing to go out in hi* boat while liis wife ing elsewhere. waited on me. I was full of my dream, or whatever it was. and related ft. The man stopped his preparations and listened with a look of horror, We carry a complete- making the sign of the cross, while his of furnishing goods« wife turned and covered her eyes with her hands. cannot be excelled* I looked nt them wonderlngly. It the city, and ourpn was plain that I had struck some will be found lowert blight In their lives. Should I probe It by questions or spare them? What many of our compel had I to gain by forcing a recital that tors can would give them infinite pain? If there was any connection between for. W them .and my apparition it needed no store ai strong Imagination to replace it. to p; Lying tn my tent during that day 1 wove the story. I saw a ship out on with the liar, the waves beating furiouslr against It. The shore was lined with people. Presently a boat was lowered and a crew from the wreck made .a attempt for their Ilves. It rose and fe on the wares. Its bow now point to the sky. Its stem now sliding do out of sight. Then It hung for < Instant on the seething line of foam and was hurled bottomeupward. Perhaps It contained the girl's lover F A. MITCnEL. Our Hand Tailored Suits Michaels, Stern (Sb Co