2 * THE EUGENE WEEKLY GUARD, THURSDAY. JULY 22, 1909 ADVISES WAR AGAINST THE PESTIFEROUS FLY Editor Guard' Now that it has been conclusively established that flies convey disease, let us wage a j war against these repulsive Insects I nd take steps as far as possible to ex- i elude them from among ua. i no cam- I paign should be begun at once, for l | the fly is now In full force, and there I I can be but little doubt that If every- body did their boat to help exterml nate th«1 fly a very distinct advantage* to public health would be gained, and Washington, July 17.—President Taffs emphatic declara a most Interesting example afforded of the lesson which progressive medi tion late yesterday that he regarded the Republican platform cine teaches It Is not always possi as meaning and the sentiment of the whole people demanding, ble to trace the origin of illness, but it is easy enough to give valid rea “revision downward,” eclipsed in interest ail minor and specif sons why the fly can be the Introduc ic details of the tariff struggle here today, and is looked upon tory agent. Purely medical aspects apart, the fly Is not particularly virtually as an ultimatum. Many read into the statement a scrupulous as to Its environment. It barely concealed threat on the part of the president that if the alights at one time on a most offen sive material and at another It Is on bill reaches him in a form which he regarded as unfaithful to the food In the kitchen and at the ta ble From experiments made It has the promises of the party and disobedience to the sentiment of been demonstrated that they can car the mass of the people, he will veto it. ry on th'elr feet all kinds of germs, and It has been for some time thor- Few of the prominent members of either house of congress oughlv demonstrated that the insect would discuss the statement for publication, and most of the Is one of the chief agencies in the spread of a number of diseases, es- utterances intended for quotation were of a perfunctory char peciallv of typhoid fever. Asiatic acter. But in the conference many talked freely and some of cholera, consumption and summer «II- orrh«»ea In children It has been os- the conservatives very bitterly. Some went so far as to say the tlmateit that over 7009 children die president's stand meant nothing less than the defeat of the bill. annually in New York from diarrhoea diseases, a large per cent of which One man said: Now the standpatters will become insur are due to contamination of nil Ik and gents. The lines will have to be reformed and nobody can fore other food to» flies. Th«' Important question remains how best to get ri«l cast the outcome.” of the fly. On«> of th<> best extermi nating agents Is a weak solution of formalin In water. 2 teast»n«»nfiils tn Washington, July 17 The con- ns extreme In the direction of free «he pint, placed In shallow plates It »’»nears that fifes ar«» attracted by femes of the two houses are adjusting raw materials its Is feared by those this solution, which thev drink. To their differences with reasonable rap Interested, will be encountered In the conclude I will quote what the Chi idity. They have been In session about senate, where the raw material states .1 week and have made quite as much have better proportionate representa cago department of health says: progress as the more conservative of tion and where there la no cloture Don’t allow- flips In your house Don't permit them near your food, them ha<i expected The best of feel rule While the beat of personal good ing prevails at the conference and feeling between the White House and especially milk. Don't buv foodstuffs where flies It Is evident If the members of the capitol exists, the Interests Involved conference are left to themselves they are so large that It Is evident that are tolerated. Don't eat where flies are allowed will be able to bring about a bill at congress will not yield readily and It no distant day. la v«-r» doubtful If the president could to crawl on the fond. The greatest difficulty of meeting got free raw material If he should de F. W. PRENTICE. the president's demands. If they are mand H City Physician. AROUSES UNEXPECTED INTEREST New York, July 15.—The Outlook today has an article from •x-President Roosevelt entitled “Give Me Neither Poverty Nor Riches," in which the former president says: “It is to be wished that some of those who preach and practice a gospel of more materialism and greed, and who speak as if the heaping up of wealth by the community or by individual was in itself the be-all and end-all of life, would learn from the most widely read and oldest of books that true wisdom which it teaches, that it is well to have neither great poverty nor great riches.” He goes on to say the movement to secure adequate su pervision and effective taxation of great fortunes is a healthy one, and that “the multi-millionaire is not per se a healthy de velopment in this country. If his fortune rests on a basis of wrong doing, he is a far more dangerous criminal than the or dinary type of criminals can be. If his fortune is the result of the great service he has rendered, well and good; he de serves respect and reward for such services. EVELYN TESTIFIED STRIKE RIOTS HARRY SAID HE ARE STOPPED BY STATE TROOPS the Night Many Persons Wife ODDCses Effort to Release During Were Shot or Her Husband From Beaten ✓ Asylum » Many Foreigners Are Wounded in the Strike Dis orders Butler. Pa.. July 17. — In the riot- 1 ing at the plant of the Standard Steel Car Company at Lyndora. Pa., near here today several foreigners were injured, one seriously. More trouble is feared and the sheriff has directed urgent messages to Harrisburg asking for the state constabulary. The foreign workmen struck for higher wages, necessitating a general suspension of the warka affecting sev eral thousand Americans who opposed the strike. Th* American worknieu were assaulted as they entered the plant this morning. The salons are closed MARBLE HALLS ARE RESERVED Portland, July 15 District f »re caster E. T Allen has just received telegram stating that the president has signed a proclamation whereby one square mile of Itnd surrounding the entrance to the famous Oregon caves or "Marble Halls of Josephne county” lr reserved from any form of d:si»ositlon and is set aside as a national monument. These wonderful caves are located w ithin Siskiyou national forest, about 30 miles south of Grants Pass. Or . in Cave mountain, which is one of the i>eaks of the Graybark range. The mountain rises to an elevation of about BOOO feet and is of limestone formation. The main oppetiings to the caves ar«' at an elevation of about 4000 feet. The entire mountain side for five or six miles shows caverns of various sizes and it is believed Mia' 1* White Plains. July 15.—Evelyn Nesbit Thaw took the stand at the afternoon session today in the hear ing of Harry K. Thaw s mental con dition. Mrs. Thaw appeared as a wit ness for the state, which is opposing the release of her husband from Mat tevan asylum. Answering questions regarding the alleged threat to kill her by Harry Thaw, during a conversation at Mat- tewan asylum. Evelyn Thaw testified that Thaw had made such a threat. Dr. Otto Meyer, of New York, testi fied to several conversations with Thaw, in one of which Thaw told him he feared he was going to have typhoid fever, and suggested that his rooms at the jail be cooled off with twenty tons of ice. TAFT AND DIAZ MEET IN OCTOBER ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ Washington. July 15.—The meeting of Presidents Taft and Diaz, of Mexico, is prac tically assured for the middle of October, and the president and his cabinet are giving some attention to the ar rangements for carrying out such an unusual and notable event. Taft, it is said today, took the initiative in express ing a wish that the executives of the two great republics might come together. Pittsburg. July 15.—The situation at the Pressed Steel Car Company's plant at McKees Rocks, adjacent to this city, where 3500 men are on strlhe. is quiet today, Fallowing a night of disorder in which thirty persons were shot or beaten, a de tachment of Pennsylvania state con stabulary arrived early today and soon afterward the rioting stopped. Strike Is Spreading Pittsburg. July 15.— Between 25,- 000 and 30.000 workmen, coal min ers. tin and sheet plate workers, members of the various steel crafts, are on strike tod?^ though Western Pennsylvania. Eastern Ohio and West Virginia. At the expiration of their wage scale tonight three thousand work men. members of the Tin Plate Work ers’ Protective Association, will walk out of the tin plate plants at Newcas tle. Penna., and join the strikers of the Amalgamated Association of Iron & Steel Workers. The trouble is the result of the ■‘open shop” polij declared by the American Sheet and Tin Plate Com pany. UNCLE SAM WILL BUY NO GOODS FROM THE TRUSTS Washington, July 17.—Sec retary of War Dickinson has issued a new rule in the pur chase of supplies for the ar my. He has directed Briga- dier-Ger.eral Sharpe, commis sary general, to enter into no con’ract with any corporation which is a party to any trust or combination in restraint of trade, or their agents. ♦ ♦ ELLA GINGLES NOT AS INNOCENT AS SUPPOSED ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ « ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ PROSPERITY IS MEETS DEATH Conclusive evidence of the long-looked for improvement in the lumber trade is in the hands of the Booth-Kelly Lumber Com pany, of this city, in the shape of orders from Eastern car build ing companies for material for over 4000 cars which are shortly to be built in St. Louis and McKees Rocks, Pa., for the Harriman lines. This order is the largest single order for car material ever placed with one company in the Northwest, and it is entirely fit ting that it be placed with the Booth-Kelly Lumber Company, who are the largest rail shippers on the coast, and the placing of this order is indicative of the confidence placed in this com pany by the largest buying interests in the East. Such an attractive order coming at this time is very gratify ing to all interested in the lumber industry, as the purchase of so many cars by a man so astute as Mr. Harriman shows that a strong revival in business conditions can be confidently expected, and with this revival the lumber business, taken from a payroll standpoint, will regain its normal condition and the results will be immediately evidenced in every line of the trade. Judging from recent Eastern reports of market conditions, every other line has improved more rapidly than the lumber bus iness. Now, however, this industry, the first to feel a depres sion and the last to revive, is being quickened to a marked de gree, and well-posted lumbermen confidently predict an imme diate improvement in the demand, and a decided increase in price. Chicago, July 14.—With tears streaming down her cheeks Miss Ag nes Barrett denide the charges made against her by Ella Gingles. the girl whom she accuses of stealing lace from her. when she testified today at the girl's trial. the interior is honeycombed with •tv-1 *T will simply ask you,” said Mr. like those which have alreadyj I erns Bhort. "if you ever attempted to sell been explored. this girl into ‘white slavery,’ if you The caves were discovered in 1K«4 ever abused or assaulted her in the Arthur E. Dean, the Eugene man by Elija Davidson* while bear hunt- Wellington hotel, or had any knowl Who ran away with another woman ing. As far as known they have I edge of any of these thinks?” and went to Ix>s Angeles, where he never Ix.-en carefully explored, They “No, sir,” replied Miss Barrett, was arrested a few days ago charged appear to be made up of a series of tears streaming down her face. “It's with adultery and brought back to galleries rather than roomy taverns, a falsehood from beginning to end.” Eugene this morning by Sheriff although many beautiful rooms have Miss Gingles’ testimony was seri Bown. was sued todav by his wife. been disc'vered. There are thon- ously impeached by three witnesses Carrie O. Dean, for divorce and ali •ands of passageways leading In all whom the state brought from Cana mony. together with the care and directions, many of which are partly da. The testimony of a Canadian custody of their minor children. closed by stalaetit.es. Small streams photographer was in downright con i Mrs. Dean names a Mrs. Marshal! are found at diferent elevations, and tradiction of the testimony given by as co-respondent in the suit. She al large bodies of running water can be Miss Gingles. He told of how Miss leges in her complaint that her hus heard In pits, the bottom of which Gingles earns to him. giving the band committed adultery w-|th this have not yet been discoverei. It is nom« of “Miss Wilson,” and had him woman at the home of the plaintiff fhouxht this tunning water accounts take a picture of her in a lace gewn. and defendant at the corner of for the currents of wind which In fa her direct testimony Miss Ginglee Twentieth street and Oregon avenu«- some of the galleries blow so hard declared It was a reproduction of a In Eugene on February 10.1909. and as to extinguish an open light. Mineola, July 17.—A flight of 24.7 photogrnnh taken in Ireland. The at several other times Iman left the The lime deposits take many beau picture showed her in a dress belong plaintiff, she alleges, with the Mar-| tiful forms; massive pillars, delicate miles in 52 minutes and 30 seconds was made today by Glenn Curtis in ing to her employers’ wife. Mrs. D. 8. »hall woman and has since neglected stalactites of alabaster whiteness his aeroplane over Hempstead Plains. Thornton, of Belleville. Ont. I to provide for the plaintiff, leaving from the points of which suspent the Few people saw the flight, but of her in Jesiltute ercum»tan<-es. They crystal drop of water «arryng its mi have the following children-, whose I nute deposit of ¡¡me front which they those that did not one but was satis Ralph ‘ are formed., and broad sh»«ets re fied with the control of the operator custody Mrs. Dean asks for: *-1 11; 1 î, | , sembling drapery with graceful cur over the machine. He did not, how E-. ag«*d 1!': Hobart M. aged | ves and waves that seem to have ever, get back to the starting point. Anna M.. aged 13 years, G. 1 Myron. ____ aged 9 years, and Ross R., aged fi ; been made by varying currents of Medford, Or., July 15.—Governor years. wind. Benson, upon petition, today issued Mrs. Dean prays tor a decree of an order, the fir-t of llts kind lr. this the court granting her the sum of Corvallis Gazette: Last night a state, directing Crctiit Judge Coke, S3150 which the defendant has I ■ of Coo«- county, to t-y the condemna his possession and whish Is hers, also party of four young la«ll«-s Ruby tion suit at Medford Judge Hanna, for S300 suit money. $50 a month and tVilda Starr, Ethel Harpole and of the district >n which Medford is durng the pendency of the sut and Elsie Davis, of Eugene, left Corval Chicago, July 17.—Suicide and situated, refused to hold an extra for a fixed sum each month fcr the lis for a tramp over the mountains to murder rather than confinement In Yachats. They were accompanied by term of court to try the case, because support and education of the chil an institution for the feeble-minded, Mrs. Starr, who Is driving a team of was the choice of Mrs. Annie Schen- it would cause a postponement of his dren. horses. The first, stop was made Ac'-ording to Mrs.Dean's complaint summer vaca'ion. The city of Med kle, whose body, with those of her ford alleges that M E. Hanley, living they were married In Marlon county, this side of Philomath. At that time two sons. Harry and Carl, aged seven | the young ladies were fresh as dai near Medford, is endeavoring to hold Kan . on Oct. 3. 1 882. W. G. Martin and eleven, were found In a gas-filled up the city for $25.000 for a-rlght-of- and F. H. Greenman are her attor sies. having made the eight miles In room in her home at 232 North Fifty- 1 good time. The young ladies are way for a pipe line for a new water neys In the case. first court today. dressed in khaki uniform and are as avstem. construction of which is now "natty" as anything one ever sees In The land owners between Eugene delaved until the court decides the Salem is a well-behaved town; matter. The city further sets forth and Junction have secured a proposi pictures. If they should happen to that if the case is not decided at once tion to have an Irrigation canal con meet any bears on their seventy-mile there were practically no drunks, and it will cause a heavy loss in revenue, structed provided they will subscribe jaunt those bears are certain to suc very little boisterona conduct during besides creating a menace to the for and sign up water right contracts cumb to the charming femininity in the whole three days of the cherry fair, boasts the Statesman. vading their haunt*. for ten thousand acres of land. health of the community. MRS. DEAN SUES HER RECREANT HUSBAND FOR DIVORCE,AND ALIMONY IS SUCCESSFUL i X Flies Over Twenty-two Miles in Fifty-two Min utes GOVERNOR COMES TO MEDFORD'S RESCUE PREFERRED DEATH TO CONFINEMENT IN AN ASYLUM Charlie McKee. Aged About 13 Railroad Magnate Says Great Years. Drowned While Boom Is Nearly in Swimming Here Washington. July 13. "As soon as the tariff la out of the way," said Jam»*» J. Hill, the railroad magnate, who yesterday visited President Taft, "this country will enjoy a pros|>erlty which will nt least equal If It doea not surpass that which It knew under the McKinley administration " Mr. Hill said freight rars would be at a premium In a few weeks, that th»’ crops In th»* West will lie heavy and th«' faire'■ satisfied with prices an«l conditions Thousands of Acres of Value less Land to Be Made Productive lu order to dispos« ,,f th„ .. . of the Sluslaw National f<„, #ll(1 learn the propio method "t rsfonat- ln<. Dexter Hoynolda. ’••> n»..r|y of Montana. I. 41. t'oikcroft "f ' »Ufar- nla. and Carl II Young............ ”r ibi» ally, are making what are known ■ litania" taf tila» Hi il ».I i* w f... ‘ mapa" of the Hiuslsw forcai" .. y;»»r* National forest on the Ibu-lflr Is being ttvated In the s.iiue ruahjoy Th«« Th<> work In lu Ilie the Hluslaw t. ,,-,,,. grui In June and will i„. ■>iii?lrts4 the lütter pari of August Huitervaior t'ahimii de-, ribes the work aa vury Importuni •’•pec'sllj, for tho commi «llstrlct of iir ' ■' ■» A "type" tiia|> glves an umiritt« tlon of the land In the f«u« ‘ 1 nn<| of thè cover. Tiil» map will teil by eòi*, or and legend, us well H» b» prlnted word, the kltid uf lau«!, wbrthet agri cultural. mineral niountalnou» llr level alni mi forth. and Ihr nature of thè cover. w hat ape, |,-» whethrr brusii, young Umber just »tT'iutla« twn or Ihre«« Inches thlck. a f«s>t or Take Place of I'rtiUrrs The maps will I m > valuable for rrf. eretico Ill <-UH«' of Inti-ad'-J I'llrr111», ora It will »how distinctly «h<*r«tb» timber Is. and h<>* much ih« r«< |> to th ' acre For Instance, in »orna Io caliti««* timber six Inch««« through |» worth something an«! In ulniost .»ay place where trans|M>rtntlon «an u got'en that a foot or a root un<| a half through I» good for piling and telo graph pole« Thu» the- i"i'i < || have n crular of all th,- tltnlo-r of th» government Perhaps th«« most Impor ant rila» of the map will lw> In rrcl latna’ioa wot k, w hlch It w III |>ri" wk Scc'log after ‘"'«Ion of 1un«l In the t << <>Mt dis- trlct, from Tll|im«>«»l tn Cn n«». Muri h of this bnu been burned over has grown up In bro«' hb k that It I» lmi’o»slbla for timber b> t »¡«riot up, first bi« .ill»«' th"r«' :«r ■ Ilo W«*d trews near, an«l «••« md !»••«- «'.»II«« ill sprouts are acttmlly atnoi ' h«-ri-d Is death by the bushes The map will show the < th» brush district*, ami by the »u|»erv|iw«r can plan to the district. At the present Is conducting experlmeniR to the t»e»t method of accomplhhlng thia purpose Sometimes hl* men min luilld fir* lines iiround n brush patch and burn the land followed Immediately by \t others sowing with timber seed where too much' young Umber ti ready «'Xlats.or the dang er Is tea great to standing timber ■ -n«»U clearing can I m « made In the br uh As ths and planted t«> forest tree» they liai it rally tree* grow up back the bu»h>-s. and I* drive This smother them out turn priM-esa Is tedious and slow »nd I» therefore not practhnl S«i|>erlnten- d««nt Cahoon says that the reclMi*« tlon of forests will pay the gover*- nient evi'ntunlly about tin ■ i" « rent on the estimated Worth of th«' land and the expen»«« n«l<!«««1 together. five o’clock, near Junction City. A nunilier of boys were In th«‘ river swimming and most of them had dressed and gone up the stream. Charlie McKe«- and Bennie Butler. uge«l about thlrten. played in the water. Charlie waled out a short distance and the current took him into deep water and he was drowned Tie Butler Iwiy cried tor help an«l St«>ele Morehead and James McClaren who wrere a short distance above, Iniportaiif to l.ai>«- t'ouufy came to the rescue but it was too late! This feature of th«’ coast for«««ti as the body had alr«a«iy d I.sap pea red < Is (»«’rhaps th«' most Import.mt lotta» Word vaa brought t » town and a Thouundl people of tain«« county large part» went out to search for nn«l thousands of u«-r< ■« of land that his body. It was found In about ten The doctors of Eugene, and In fact 1,1 TH- feet of water a short distance beyond; all the world, have !••«» to do tn the arc now absolutely worth laniook. Lincoln, Lane and Ininxlas where he was last seen. summer time than In the winter, ac counties will be made a revenus The b|«dy was grasped with a hook ..rament attached to a fish pole and was cording to a local physician. The rea ylelder tua only brought to the undertaking parlor* son seems to be sunshine wholly. but for the people. Every piece ,,r ani prepared for Interment. The; People also live more sanitary lives timber taken from lite national fur; funci.il was n«-l«| at th«- t'hrl- lati In summer than In winter, because est has to l>«* sawed up an«l "Id an* church Friday afternoon at 1:3««' the temperature Is warmer, giving exi»orte<l just like that b»'l«>ngi*S 1° o’clock. Rev Emmons, of Sprlngflehl1 them Incentive to «»pen windows and private corporation» breathe fresh air. that Is absolute!.» That reforesting Is practical tb«r» officiating. aoi'tita to lie m> r«ui»onable doubt. Ger Charles McKee was the sen of necessary for healthful life. Though certain class»'« of diseases many handles It» lami In n mor* **■ Clark McKee who Is now in Alaska Ills mother was here at the tint«' al Increase during the summer, owing pensive nn«l thorough way. yet It though sh«' makes h«T home Is to flies and the consequent spread of finds thnt It pa»s. Th«1 big r#*,r(»M Salem. Charlie was a bright Ito). dangerous bacteria, the decrease In companies that own large quantltws «•«teemed l>.v all his playmaies and I other forms of disease more than off of land arc also re foresting and »*’ beloved by his teacher, l>oth In day! set» the raise Sunshine kills almost perltnenflllg. . and Sunday sohool. He was a mem any kind of dangerous germs, or so "The timber timi pin be-' In ber of th«' Christian church and has acts upon them that they do not re coast district I» th«- Dougla- lu M gone to his reward. Junction City produce rapidly. A. E. Cahoon, head of th«« Sail«’»*' In winter time, with little sunshine forest. "Rut this •peel«’» I" dlffef" Times. the bacteria reproduce rapidly In the «•nt from the cedar, or th«' li«'mlocg. houses People then frei|tiently «it It will only grow In pure mineral *>11 off nil ventilation In trying to keep and also requires light from over out the air, which further Increases head. The young «hoots ar»« <',H0’’“J* the germs and bacteria. The physl-j i ceptlbln to heat, and ar«« • • -Hl clan says: I To reforest th«' Mattonai w«"d» ' Some people delay Operations un Two hundred and fifty former resi til autumu. rather than have them | this kind of a tree reqttlr« t great r,re dents of Kansas spent a happy day in performed In the heat of summer. land study. For this reason the <’>*' recalling old memories and associa But the great decrease tn the prac ernment foresters ar«' with hlr,g n* tion to the picnic nnr th«- end of tice of doctors Is due to sunshine. growth under every kind “f «'«tndi- the carline yesterday. The program The rule holds In the Orient as In tlon. In the Rocky Mountains I' *P" pear* to be a stunted tret« compare“ was rendered just as printed in the th«' temperate zone. to those In Western Oregon, shi’f» papers the day before. "Mere air la also h i-,. preventative to . .nd,!,. «has liN Its best (iPVPiopmeni- development. In my ex- ä The organization chose officers as many kinds of dangerous g.rm*. Te-« périment» |n the Slualaw for- <t I h»»* follows: William llempy, president; I tanus la a moat common kind. r.;.,t nmt|Home »mull niirserl«'» At oth««r piare* James Working, vice president; W. C. Hazelton, second vice president; only becomes really serioua when the I hav»' sowed It bromic*»* ever l|lir ' air does not enter a wound, as In a «><1 soil, and at others In th«1 hr»’“' Paul Merrill, secretary, and Gertrude puncture, it is the germ that causes All of these are tabulated ami Hamble,* treasurer. lockjaw.” ,-t for f“' veyc«l. nn<! the records 'n- k»'J»t ture use. I Every ...... , few nmntlis I nt*1 ■ ” conclu- examinations and reconl - th alona." DOCTORS HAVE LITTLE TO DO IN SUMMER KANSAS PEOPLE RECALL MEMORIES AND ELECT OFFICERS NATRON LINE BODY OF A. A. TO BE COMPLETED FORD ARRIVES HERE WITHIN TWO YEARS MRS. SEISER BUYS Th«- body of A. A. Ford, who per ished from exposure and starvation In I FRAKES’ LADIES Superintendent I,. R. Helds, of the the mountains tn the vicinity of |>r. • ’ I’ lines In ()r«'gon, who was In FURNISHINGS STORE J. Christie's mining claims In the Cas Roseburg Tuesday, stateil to a Review reporter that upon his return to Port land he would recommend to the gen eral manager the constru« tlon of an addition to the freight depot tn Rose burg. Owing to the great amount of other Improvement work either In progress or planned on the line. Hr Fields had no Idea when his recom mendation would be acted upon. Mr. Fields will also advise some needed Improvements nt th«> depot In Oak I Tn the circuit court case of Dr. B. land Ho stated that local business M. Weller vs. Dr. J. Christie, seeking Is growing to such an extent that to enjoin the latter from practicing Rosebnrg and other towns south of veterinary surgery In Lane caunty, i hngene will not noil««' the nmruint of Judge Harris has decided In favor of rjifflc thnt will b<* dlvprtod two ypnr« Weller and has perpetually enjoined1 hence over the change tn the main Christie from practicing in this coun "n« hr way of Natron ami Klam-i ty. ath Falls. I cades on April 28, ami who was bur led there by th«’ searching party that found his b««dy on May 20. will arrive in Eugene this evening, It having been exhumed at the direction of Jay Ford, a son. The funeral will be held to morrow afternoon under the atispl«-«-» of the G. A. R ami the body Interred In the old soldiers' lot In the I. O. O. F. cemetery. The Frakes' ladles' rnl"hl"5* store, recently establlwhe«l • Cherry Brothers' block at Sixth Willamette streets has Iteen >' «•haw« I by Mrs. E. 8. Sels««r. wli<> been acting In lite capacity «'I ager of the pise«' for the «' since It was opened two nr *' "kK HP: ,iu.t th» Mrs. Hels«»r annoiinnn I«»' _ store will be furnished In n> , Myle ami none hut •U" . ral- most. trp-lo-dale g«>«>'l* will a rled. A larg«« new sun k 4» cx| the last <rt the week. |a The new pr«>prlet-«r of tnc* ’ recently from Denver, where % had several years' experience similar establishment.