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About Eugene weekly guard. (Eugene, Or.) 190?-1910 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 12, 1909)
THE EUGENE WEEKLY GUARD, THURSDAY, AUG. 12, 1909 CAMPS LOCATED POWER SITES ALONG LINE DOWN AND KILLED BY AUTOMOBILE Spokane, Aug. 9.—Swarming around the great net-covered cage at Coeur d Alene, Idaho, hundreds of eager men and women Portland. Aug. 5.—Mrs. May Real, this morning waited for pretty little Helen Hamilton’s eyes to be a widow, was killed early this morn blindfolded that she might plunge her hands into the great heap ing by being struck by an automo of 106,000 yellow envelopes and draw out the name of the lucky bile on the 1.Innton road. Mra. Real man who had won the right to first choice of the fifteen hundred was one of a party of five or six per allied by Alf Walker, of this sons whose automobile had broken returned yesterday fiom a trip homesteads and timber claims on the Coeur d'Alene Indian res down, and while repairs were being 1 route, mad" tor thu purpose of ervation. made Mrs. Real aud several compan •‘ k up ih" purchase of a small Isador Selig, of Myrtle Creek, Oregon, drew No. 1. No. 2 ions walked up and down the road of land left <>vur when the nite went to John Hedmark, of Spokane; No. 3, Charles C. Cornell, to keep warm, the early morning air being <■ hilly. Suddenly a big red tour Spokane; No. 4, Herman Neubauer, South Tacoma; No. 5, Ella ing car rushed down upon them at T. Maloney, Spokane. Others of the first fifty names drawn fol frightful speed, and before Mrs. Real could get out of the way she was low in rotation: knocked thirty feet and killed. (lidie», theti'by datiiiizlng ih" pialli The drivers of the red car put on William Atkinson, Troy, Idaho; Maude Sharpe, Martinsville, la riiCh lawtance t<> thè »uni <>l more power, and were soon out of Ill.; Peter Weiderbach, Butte, Mont.; Paul B. Rising, St. Paul, sight, and the police are endeavoring trt lorated lt I h allegri thnt they 4efrii<l* n t » lire resi rnlnel trulli Minn.; Michael Theis, St. Mary's, Idaho; O. H. Kemmerer, Spo to identify the owners. bulldltiK Ihe propo»« d power diteli«-- kane; Lewis Kemper, Washington, Mo.; G. R. Masters, Spokane; they wlll l>" lrr<-|iiirul>ly damaged SIUSLAW PEOPLE md thvir l"Kglng operutloaa wlll I mi Leonard Fidler, Seattle; James F. Westcott, St. Paul, Minn.; Is blBd«l*d un i delayed. NOT DOWNCAST An Inlutictloti I h a»k"d agnini«' rael J Thompson, Adena, Ohio; F. J. Grayman, Seattle, Wash.; .«•th of thè dvfandant». togethi'r wlth camps. While Lawrence Ryan, Spokane; Amelia M. Thompson, Coeur d'Alene; ,,M0 dnniagra frurn "ach Will Go Ahead With Harbor pr. Ku>k< n<lnll nnd thè Pacific Charles F. Martin, Fairfield, Wash.; John A. Stemach, Seattle; Uglt nnd l‘< wit <"»> b'Mh fili«» on Work Despite Adverse H. A Warren, Walla Walla; Charles W. Simonds, Chehalis, •iter power altea III thè sanie locai- Report Triangle Wash.; Rudolph Klein, Spokane; Anna Grielenberger, Spokane; Ity i(o ami ca<-h ha Reuben Holden, Florence, Mont.; A. T. Norberg, Malden, Wash.; The Siuslaw people are not feeling Both arc tlon wor X on th* uni II ninnili«' John G. Underwood, Wheaton, Ill.; Elsie F. Dore, Spokane; R. F. downcast because the government en-| who 'ia»«> ari* Mi*' I ¿an Albrecht, Kalispell, Mont.; Albert B. Conkling, Seattle; Roscoe glneer did not see fit to report in fa HUBERT LATHAM AND MONOPLANE IN WHICH HE TWICE ts n buylng up largo tm< ta <>f tluibcr HOME FROM LITTLE vor of the harbor Improvement at TRIED TO CROSS CHANNEL. In ths eoa •< mountain« for thè pani R Fullerton, Olympia, Wash.; John S. Wendig, Colfax, Wash.; this time. The general sentiment is in a «trai »« ara. Notwithstanding his two unsuccessful attempts to rty across the Engllsh NORTH FORK MINES W. G. James, Hilyard, Wash.; F. E. Parker, Oklahoma City, favor of expending the »100.000 rais channel, Hut»ert l.athani declares he will try again. At his first attempt Okla.; Charles Lamoureux, Spokane, Wash.; Mary Louise Teall, ed by tne people and If tne govern- Igitham fell into the water ten miles out from Calais. Wnile Latham was CUTTING AFFRAY Drs Bartle and Scaiefe Inspect ment should still refuse to grant us repairing his monoplane for a second trial Louis Blériot stole a march on Colfax, Wash.; Henry Sherlock, Sinclair, Minn.; Teresa Bow an appropriation then to raise some him and performed the feat of flying from Calais to Dover In thirty-thran OVER FAMILY AFFAIRS Their Properties—Road man, Spokane; B. L. Thompson, Everett, Wash.; W. F. Slimkaid, more ourselves. minutes. Latham then undertook to fly from Calais to London, bet fail The steamer Robarts. owned by again, this time only two miles out from Dover. for Machinery Rosalia, Wash.; F. W. Bowman, Tacoma, Wash.; Frank Grant, William AT JUNCTION CITY Kyle & Sons, which has been Spokane; James W. Miller, Tc penish, Wash.; 0. A Simpkins, lying at their wharf for a year or Sheriff Harry H<»*n was called to Drn. Bnrtle and Scinefe have re- so past, has started out on a new ca Jot .40 Citv .terdO) to Jnvestl- turned from their mine, located <m Wood Hill, Or.; Elizabeth B. Lindsley, Sterling, Kas.; Horace A. reer of usefulness. The owners have tiK a «mall cutting affray. Wil the Little North Fork, und report the Harman, Ellensburg, Wash.; John F. Goldberg, Fargo, N. D.; again put a crew in charge of the ves liam Parsons, n blacksmith. well- showing on the Nightingale cJalm to sel. and will use it to bring in their <onsn In Eugene, stnbbed Charles far exceed anything they have ever Ray McCarthy, Emmettsburg, Iowa; John Dindinger, Gelienople, supplies and merchandise for the Rl** proprietor of the hotel therr seen. Dr Christie, who Is superin Pa. cannery, and to carry out the sea with a pocket knife. Inflicting a < At* tending the work. Intends, when he •light wound In his side. Ran was gets to the hanging wall of the upper taken tn th<* Harrisburg hospital again«! 1>ls will, as the wound Is not at all serious. The affray was the result of fam By troubles. No one was w IHI iik to prosecute Parsons. Rae not even de wiring to have him arrested. Bar* Mtn was requested by the sheriff to eome to Eugene, which he did. but tt Is probable that the matter will b» dropped YORAN VISITS LODGES ON COOS BAY I> E Yoran. of Eugene, grand vice rbanrellor of the Knights of Pythias, la tnzklng a regular visit to the lodge« in Cooa county. He Is also boosting the sixteenth annual •ihlbl lion of the Second Southern Oregon Irtstrlrt Agricultural Society, which will open nt Eugene September 7 Thia was held here last year, and the •vent promlM-a to be n greut success Mr Yoran wan greutly pleased with the development« that have taken place here since his last visit He ’lilted the Myrtle Point lodge Thurs day night, will visit North Bend to night. and will visit Bandon nnd Co- lullie lodges Mondny and Tuesday ♦venfngn nnd the Marshfield lodge Bay Wednesday evening. — Coos Tinies. WOODMEN HAD PICNIC AT COTTAGE GROVE Cottage Grove. Or.. Aug 8 A Woodmen of the World harvest picnic ’*« given Saturday in the city park In honor of the official visit of the h"a«l officers of the lodge. I I Bonk, fl Tlehenor, Thomas Robinson. James StenhouM and S. B. Ilaneke. M»ny visitors from Roseburg anil oth •r towns were In attendance. At S «dock there was a parade and fire works. followed by Initiations at the Woodmen's hall. LAND SELLS FOR MORE THAN WORTH son’s pack from the cannery. They are also negotiating for a contract for SELIG A PROSPEROUS MERCHANT 1500 Drawn Today Spokane. Aug. 9,—Fifteen hundred names are to be drawn today and fif teen hundred more tomorrow. Af ter the first few envelopes had been eltooea two other little girls, Harriet Post, daughter of a prominent Spo kane attorney, and Christine Donlan, of Missoula, assisted little Miss Ham ilton. daughter of the mayor of Coeur d'Alene. Wednesday will be the day for checking up the work, aud on Thursday the scene witnessed today I ALFRED OEAKIN. Andrew Fisher having resigned ■» prime niihlster of Australia because of his defeat In parliament. Alfred Den kin, who Is aa much of a dictator ns thnt emnnHinwenllh permits. han form cd n new cabinet, with himself at the head. A new office, thnt of minister of defense. was also created lode which he is now cross-cut* ting, to sink a winze to water level, then to commence a working tunnel ut ihe base of the mountain, which will be 600 feet long and reach thu ore body nt a depth of 5t>0 feet, There are five ledges, all true fis- sure veins, running parallel with each other and all cross-cutting the slrat- It lent Ion In the neighborhood of tit) feet apart, and should the values hold out according to present Indications, It Is a big thing. It Is thu Intention of the company to build a wagon road to the mine, so they can transport machinery as early as possible. Dr. Christie will leave again in a few days with more men and provis ions, and w ill push the work as rapid ly as possible. fk'sft],'. Aug 9. larkr Union shore l»ti'ls. two-thirds of which nre snb- xiirgiMi. and with nn appraised vnlii- tition of not more than »20,000. sold WOODCRAFT OFFICERS 0|> the courthouse steps at public RAISE THEIR SALARIES •uctlnn Saturday for $1 00,0<><> Four ■UBdred men nnd women, wlldlv nnx- Portland. Aug. 8. Salnry-raislng buy the property, which be longed to the state, bld many times was the work of the afternoon session amount of the appraised valua yesterday of the Women of Wood craft convention The salary of Mrs. Hon. C C. Van Disdilli, grand guardian, was raised to $400 per month, that of DENVER CLOUDBURST (¡rami Clerk Wright to »350. and that (lie grand banker to »125. The WILL COST ABOUT $150.000 of compensation of the five grand man agers was Increased from »7.50 to . ^•fver, Aug. 9.- -It Is eatlmated »10 a day, ami tbet of the grand dele at the damage resulting from the gates from »5 to »7.50 a day during 'HidluirstH Saturday nnd Sunday nf the grand session. crnoohK. which sen tgre.it walls of At tlie morning session the com ^M'-r riiM),|n< through West Denver, mittee on ritual offered a number of *'ll reach »150,000? There was no amendments covering the wording of °*" of Ilf«* mi fur as is known. the ritual, which were voted upon and adopted. Other measures voted August thn< tens on ttio nerves, on were the clauses limiting the right it that uplritno ambition fool- of social members to vote on grand J '>e quickly altered by Inking officers, th«- safeguarding of benefit "at. h known to druggists every- applications from misrepresentation, Whi? "* r>r- Shotapa Restorative. requiring the authority of the grand tthin 4s hours after beginning tn guardian to disband the grand circle, • the restorative Improvement will and measures to be used with mem Uf course, full health bers engaged in prohibited occupa »nt return Immediately. The however. will quickly follow tions. » ' '* nil, You will realize and J, W. Bray has established a non . Tour strength and ambition as sectarian mission Sundnv School In i" returning. Outahte Influence a building which he has fitted up on the th. tn** "Inside ins'ne nerves" nerves Cheshire street, between Lawrence win ?!" heart and kidneys and Washington. Yesterday he had »’itnlly fall, Strengthen thesf u"nerves with Shoop’s 35 pupils. Dr. quickly hs.uv*1'’® an<* how R. W. Martin, of Donna, waa in the Cl a? i*111 ,>fl y°ura again. Sold by city over night. dealers. X THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY Myrtle Creek, Aug. 9.—Isadore Selig, who drew No. 1 in the land drawing for the Coeur d'Alene reservation this morning, is a prosperous merchant of this town. He also conducts a store at Canyonville. He is about 40 years old and in nationality is a Jew. Farmer, Crawling Weyerhauser Interests Prepare Yoncalla Through Brush, Mistaken to Give Employment to for Deer by Companion a Thousand Men I WILLARD FLIES WITH CURTIS MACHINE AT HIS OWN PLEASURE Minneola. N. Y., Aug. 9.—His sixth successful flight with the Cur tiss aeroplane was made today by C. Foster Willard. Flying dose to the ground. Willard made five long curv ed flights at high speed. The aero plane seemed to be very fast and sta ble. Old in years, new in methods, admittedly the high-standard commercial school of the Northwest. Open all the year. More calls for help than we can meet—position certain. Class and individual instruction. Bookkeeping from written forms and by office practice. Shorthand that excels in every respect. Special penmanship department. Write for illustrated catalogue. will be repeated, with Miss Donlan as the little lady to pick out the first of the winners among the 87,000 appli cations for land in Montana's great Flathead reservation. Three days will be allowed for this drawing, and then on next Monday Miss Post will be the selector of the first envelopes containing the appli cations for land in the Spokane res- ervation. where 500 names will be drawn, although it is doubted if more than forty good quarter sections are left for the white settlers. M. D. FERGUSON, LOGGING CAMPS HUNTER, KILLED TO TAKE ON LIFE Vancouver. Wash., Aug. 9.—The Weyerhauser logging camps in the Yacolt district of this county, which have been idle for some time, partial ly It is said because of the unsettled condition of the tariff, will be in op eration within the next 60 days. This will give employment to upward of 1000 men. Preparations are now being made to open the camps. Supplies are being ordered, foremen are leaving for the timber belt, and within a week or so It is expected that a part of the camps will see activity. According to semi official information, all the compa ny's camps in this county will be opened. During July the Weyerhauser con- cerns sold in excess of »100,000 worth of.logs to the mills of Port- land and vicinity, the demand being unusually good for that time of the year. Tenth and Morrison, Portland, Oregon 8 8 A. P. Armstrong, LL.B , Principal Roseburg. Or.. Aug. 8.—The first fatality of the season in this region due to a hunter's mistaking a man for a deer occurred yesterday morning at 8 o'clock, when M. D. Ferguson, a i Yoncal!« farmer, was shot and in- stantlv killed In Elk Head canyon. I near Yoncalla, by a companion nam- ; ed Bacon, of Cottage Grove. Ferguson was killed just eight miles east of the place where Herman Westenhelser was killed by the acci dental discharge of his own rifle on June 15. Ferguson and Bacon were accom- panled on their hunting expedition , by two men. Lefleur and Brumfield. of Cottage Grove, When they reach ed the canyoa at Elk Head they adopted the common method of hunt ing. One man stationed himself at the head of the canyon while the oth- j er three started t-o beat the brush, where the deer are apt to be conceal ed. While making his way down the ' opposite side of the canyon Bacon saw Ferguson crawling through the brush ' and taking deliberate aim. he sent a I bullet through his body. He hasten ed across the canyon to secure his supposed game, and found his com- ' panion in a death struggle. Fergu son died as Bacon reached his side. Ferguson came to Yoncalla about : a year ago. He was middle-aged | and leaves a wife and six children. NEW BUSINESS COLLEGE TO OPEN NEXT MONTH ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ M. G. Cleaver, a member of the faculty of the now business college, ♦ arrived here Saturday night to open ««♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ up the fall term early in September. liny Fountain and Miss Helene Associated with him is R. R. Miller, Holmstrom were married in Salem j and n well-known business college Sunday before a number of their | educator, who will come here soon friends and relatives. Mr. Fountain from Portland. The new school will be in the Hall Is a student In medicine in Chicago. | and is a graduate of the University building. All departments of a bus- of Oregon. While he was here he | Incss education will be taught, The was one of the most popular and best- i system of shorthand In the school 1» known students. His bride was for the Chartier. Bookkeeping is anoth several years head nurse at the Eu er specialty. gene hospital, nnd has numerous Battery A, O. N. G., arrived at Sea friends in Eugene. They are on n trip to the Siuslaw on their honey- side Friday and was taken to Holla day station. They are camped near moon. Seaside House. The weather is de Misa Gladys Croner is visiting in lightful. and a successful encampment !e expected. Jacksonville. MARRIED l»UUUl CLARENCE J. SHEARN. Mrs. Howard Gould's attorney. Clar ence J. Shearn. is considered one of the leading members of the New York bar. although he is only thirty-nine years old. He was the candidate of the Independence party for governor of New York last year and ran for the office of district attorney of New York in 1905. towing with the steamer after their own freighting is done. A new logging engine for Birby Brothers, of Indian Creek, arrived here Monday on board the schooner Sausalito. It was transferred to a scow and taken up to Mapleton Tues day, and will be hauled from there to Indian Creek. The boys have had a crew of men at work all summer cutting timber, and now have about three million feet of logs ready for hauling. Mr. and Mrs. Rhinehart of Eugene, accompanied by the lady’s father, Mr, Totten, and by Mr. Rhinehart. Sr., of California, camped In Florence Mon day on their way to Heceta to breathe the ozone from the ocean for a few days. The remains of Mrs. Carrie Linds- ley, who died at Corvallis last win ter, were brought here on board the Condor last Sunday and interred in the Masonic cemetery, beside the grave of her husband. Mrs. Salmon Young came in on Saturday’s stage from Eugene to spend some time with her daughter. Mrs. A. O. Funke. Mrs. Young was one of the pioneer women of the low- er Siuslaw. The Washcalore came down the river from Acme Friday evening load ed with lumber, and Saturday crossed out over the bar, bound for San Francisco. Dr. R. L. Willoughby, a well- known dentist of Eugene, arrived on Wednesday to spend a short time with his family at their summer home on Tsiltcoos Lake. The gasoline boat Condor, of Wald port. arrived here Sunday from the north with a full cargo of merchan dise. She sailed again on Monday. The schooner Sausalito arrived on Monday from San Francisco nnd load ed with lumber nt the Acme mill. Aubrey Bond left Monday for Eu gene, where he will join a surveying party to work during the summer.— Florence West. The man who flourished a pistol at Drs. Pollard and Barr on the McKen zie road a few days ago was brought to Eugene last evening by Special Deputy Sheriff Kennerly. He gives his name as C. E. Farro. He is in the county jail awaiting an examina tion before the justice of the peace. KASPARILL^ »'’Tiis sterling 1. usehold remedy is most «ULCessfully prescribed for a "world of Tonbles.” For derangements of the di- Uj»uve organs it is a natural corrective, operating directly upon the liver and ali mentary canal, gently but persistently stimulating a healthful activity. Its beoeticial influence extends, however, to every portion of the system, aiding in th« processes of digestion and assimilation of food, promoting a wholesome, natural appetite, correcting sour stomach, bad breath, irregularities of the bowels, con stipation and the long list of troubles directlv traceable to those unwholesome conditions. Kasparilla dispels drow^ ness, headache, backache and desponu ency due to inactivity of the liver, kidneys and digestive tract. It is • strengthening tonic of the highest value. If it fails to satisfy we authorize all i -alers to refund the • ihase price, i, U ovt C hemical C * i i n-' Oregon YOU GET WHAT WE GET MoWW Our books are open for your inspection. L name given if wanted. We not only _ _ _ _ —g®t top prices, but you can satisfy yourself MOGS absolutely at any time that you get what we nurnizr-uc PROMPT CJ8H RETURNS Gif f VillL/Vw Ship your produce to us. Write to us now for coops, tags, etcu _ SOUTHERN OREGON COMMISSION CO. W. H. M c C orouooale , Faor. 85 F rost St., F orturi , Ouata ■ to «kip Ra* Fir ■port. Snippins T'