THE EUGENE WEEKLY GUARD, THUR8DAY, OCT. 14. 1909
J
Suit Causes
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STANLEYS
PRICE CUTTERS
*
612 Willamette St., Eugene, Oregon
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An immense shipment of Suit Cases arrived this week direct from the New York factory, and are
offered by Stanleys at Money Svaing Prices.
Leather Suit Cases
Cowhide Suit Cases
Linen lined. Corbin lock
and snaps, each
Lines lined with shirt fold,
Corbin lock and snaps ____
Rubber Cloth Suit Cases
$6.00
Very durable, and the price is as
low as the canvas telescopj_____
I
Imitation Alligator Suit Case
$1.50
will stand rough usage,
our price
$1.95
Dozens of other Numbers in Suit Cases at $2.00, $2.25, $3.00, $3.50, $4.50, $5.00, $6.50, $7.50, $10.00 and $15.00
Post Cards One Cent Each
Oregon Views. Eugene Views. Floral Cards Comic Cards, Birth-
dav Cards, Scenic Cards, Reproductions of Famous Paintingt,
Davidson Bros. Real Photo Cards and thousands of others.
WE PAY POSTAGE TO ANY ADDRESS IN THE UNITED STATES ON ORDERS FOR 25 CARDS OR MORE
i
Men’s Shoes
We are loaded with all that’s good and servicable in Men’s Footwear.
Men’s Dress Shoes at $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.25, $3.45, $3.50 and $4.00.
Men’s Work Shoes at $2.00, $2.50, $3.00, $3.50.
Men’s High Cut Shoes at $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, $5.00, $6.00 and $7-00.
Every pair of Shoes that leaves this store bears our own personal guarantee to give absolute satisfaction.
We have our own shoemaker and do all kinds of repa;r work.
We sew rips and make all repairs free on shoes that were bought of us.
We have shoes for every member of the family, and we’ll save you at least a third of the purchase price on the same quality of goods
We se’.l a hi di-^rade work sine for Men at $3.50—another store in this town sells the same shoe at $5.00.
■OQKOI
■MUSI
—5
Sin Ftnncla-o, Oct. la
Rejoicing
over It» rehabilitation, after It* al-
BitMrt complete deatructkiti by vartri-
quike and fire, Sati Francisco 1» mak
log merry l day with guest. summon-
*4 from all the world to participate
In the f. stlvltiea of a carnival week.
Oltenslbly the celebration la to com
nivmniorute th« discovery of Sail
trimisio Iley by Dm Gaspar de Por
tola, but the celebration 1* really
niore in honor of those who have te-
n'lllt a greater city on the rulna of
the old.
The warships of five nations Joined
•Ith •
(,f f|H> United States In
’«kontlng Portola < n his arrival to-
<!•>'. an.) he wu greeted on shore by
nunj t'i usan Is of citizens of nil
lands,
for five days the carnival spirit
bathe the city in a great flood of
light.
Governors and distinguished men
from nearly all of the western states
I and official representatives from for
eign nations are here and are being
entertained with true San Francisco
hospitality. The visitors will have no
reason to complain of neglect or cold
treatment, as did some of t tie foreign
representatives at the Hudson-Fulton
celebratb n In N.v York.
Miss Vergllfa B >gtie. whom
the
celebration comuilttee decided to be
will reign and day and night the town
the most beautiful girl in California,
a III lie given IIP to pleasure.
President Taft sent a message of is the queen of the festival. She is
congratulation and good will, and all the daughter of Virgil C. Bogue, the
over the world lnose who admire the distinguished engineer who built the
Railway in F’eru. the famous
plu< k am' ene-gj of S-m Franciscans Aroya
railroad am >ng the clouds in the An
In reclaiming th Pacific coast me
tropolis from tin' wreckage left by the des. said to be the greatest engineer
ing project ever undertaken. At pres
enri Quake and fire are toasting the ent he is directing the engineering
city and Its future welfare.
works on the Western Pacific. Miss
From the opening pageant of the Bogue is 23. and as beautiful as she
entrance of Portola to the city, I he Is accomplished.
She has written
cerenionle- attendant upon the pre- two books, and the latest, entitled.
Mentation of the golden key of tha "The Strength to Yield," is said to •>«
city and the Intreduction and recep eVen more startling than “Three
tion by the quia-n to the final merry Weal "
It is a most sensational
making on Saturday night, San Fran novel, even to to the point, of dauger,
cisco will be ell fete aild every hour although It does end right. An Ital
of the day and night will be crowded ian artist with an American wife, are
with Incident and nilghtl.v spectacle-. the leading characters, and their
A cloud of flags and bunting give the tropical love-making, according to
city a gay astsict today, and at night those who have read the story. Is in
ati unprecedented Illumination will keeping with the Mediterranean at-
mosphere of the setting.
EXPONENT OF THE WORLD'S
TREATMENT
LEBANON-CRABTREE
EXTENSION RUSHED
Lebanon, Or., Oct. 19.—Work on
the Lebtinon-Crabtree extension of
the Southern Pacific railroad is pro
gressing rapidly. About two miles
of grading has been completed and
more pien and teams are being added
l dully.
|
At the Hayden Bros.’ camp, on
the Qlaypool farm, about 160 horses
and mules and 60 men are nt work;
, at the Dollarhlde entile there are
about 100 horses and mules and 40
men.
Fifty horses, with two engines and
a number of teams, are preparing to
construct the huge steel structure,
i which will be when completed one of
the largest and longest bridges In
tills part of Oregon.
Two camps were established Sun
day, one just inside the city limits,
which w ill begin grading from the
river to the present terminus of the
road, and the other on tin- Cham
berlain farm. Just across the river,
w li«re a big cut w ill bo made. The ex-
c .alien lor the piers is progressing,
ji d work Is expected to begin on the
..-titre pier next Monday.
his
run
has
ex-
Consultation free. Parlors. Plymouth R oms. 466 Willam-
et<c street, Eugene, Or. Call and gel a free booklet. Dauy, 9
a< to 8 p. mi
,T. T. Kirk came down from Cot
tane c-"'— -- -• •
FOOTBALL GAME
THISAFTERNOON
that I would hesitate to put my
horse there. Yet these worn benches
and desks are as carefully preserved
as the gold of a bank vault. Such is
also the condition of the dormito-
ries. The rooms occupied by Emer-
son, or Lowell, or Rufus Choate are
said to be uncomfortable and incon
venient, Yet the rent on these rooms
is high, merely because of the asso-
ciations.
“This appears to be the spirit of
Harvard, and it is not such a bad
thing, for while a proper price is put
on most things, one cannot but re
member that there are things of more
consequence than gold or silver or
precious stones.
“if you take law for your profes
sion, or medicine, come to Harvard.
The graduate departments are as
good as the country has. But Oregon
undergraduate life seems as profita
ble as that of Harvard, judging from
the samples I have seen.”
The University freshmen won over
the Eugene High school football team
this afternoon, but not without some
hard work, and not before the High
school lads Showed the freshies a few
tricks in the art of football.
The freshmen kicked off and after
a series of fumbles the freshmen
made their first touchdown
after
five minutes of play by line bucking.
Score 5 to 0. High schoj-1 kicked to
the freshmen's 15-yard line, and the I
ball was carried to the center of the
field and on toward the High school's
goal, the High school getting the
ball on their own 15-yard line where
they failed on an on-side kick. The
High school received) t'he ball on a
forward pass, then drove through
North Bend, Or., Oct. IS.—The dis
the freshmen line for five yards and patches published in the newspapers
made yardage by line bucking. They revealing the game being played in
were forced to punt and the ball was townships 24-9 and 24-10, in Coos
carried back to the High school's 30- and Douglas counties, whereby some
yard line. The High scthool got the one is preparing to cinch the most
ball and made yardage. High school valuable timberlands in the state by
punted and the Freshmen returned placing fake settlers in corporation-
the ball to the 20 yard line, and fin
ally broke over the line for the sec built cabins, created a sensation here
ond touchdown, but failed to kick today among those who have taken
goal. Score: Freshmen 10; High claims in township 25-10.
This is an equally rich township,
school. 0.
In the second half the score was which the mysterious Daniel McDon
8 to 0 In favor of the freshmen, ald now seems to threaten.
A number of these intervenors to
maaing a total of IS to 0.
day declared their intention to erect
cabins on land upon which they had
filed.
The Intervenors have received no
tice from Farrln & Farrin. their law
yers at Marshfield, to erect cabins on
their land as soon as possible. S. C.
Winsor, the cashier of the Bank’of
Former Guard Employe and Oregon,
Is urging immediate action,
advising the intervenors to act in un
University Student Tells
ion. Township 2 5-10 has been filed
of Old College
on almost entirely by North Bend peo
ple.
Enrl F. Strong, who graduated
if McDonald tries to erect cabins
from the University last June, and on these lands he will have his hands
who was employed as reporter for full, for hfs right to build cabins will
The Guard for two or three years, be fought to a finish. Nothing new
writes to a friend from Harvard Col has developed as to whom McDonald
lege as follows:
represents.
It is rumored that he
“Harvard appears to be all that was at one time president of the Wes
tradition has made it be to the mind tern Federation of Miners, and has'
Yet many been the chief agent in settling sever
of this Western lad.
things here are strange strange be al important strikes.
yond recounting. When the football
The story that he represents the
team got s on the field the students Southern Pacific Company is not
and spectators clap, but do not yell. credited ns much as that ho repro-,
I have not heard a college yell in ser.ts a b,g lumber syndicate. A
Cambridge yet.
The grounds are unique theory is that he represents a
beautiful and so are the buildings, federation of nn'otts and is playing al
but not from an architect’s or artis big game against capital.
tic point of view
The traditional
is the key to Harvard's buildings, so
Not a single University of Oregon
far ns I can “< A. For instance, many student made application to enter the
of the ek.ss rooms are veritable barns examinations fer the Cecil Rhode
built two hundred 'ears ago. The scholarship to Oxford University from
desks are mere planks, penciled and this state.
The examinations are be-
.. i.-»,
,,-|11,-.«*,. ** ■
carved by a hundred classes. Some
Salem, Oct. 19.—The supreme court handed down an opin
ion today affirming the decision of the lower court in the case of
J. Thoburn Ross, convicted of violating the state banking laws.
Ross was president of the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, of
Portland, and the failure of the bank several years ago revealed
a state of affairs which was taken cognizance of by the district
attorney of Multnomah county. As a result Ross was convicted
LAND GRAB PLOT
on various counts and sentenced to an aggregate term of five
STIRS COOS BAY hundred years in the penitentiary.
The decision today reverses the extreme sentence, but af
firms a sentence of five years, which Ross will now have to
serve.
EARL F. STRONG
WRITES FROM HARVARD
■121'..
r
INDIANA ABOLISHES
INSANITY COMPLAINT
HAMMER THROW IN
IS FILED AGAINST
FUTURE TRACK MEETS
JOS. MATLOCK, JR.
Richmond, Ind. .Oct IS.—What Is I He Was Bound Over in the Jus
considered a forward step in athletics
tice Court This Afternoon
has been taken by the Indiana High
School Athletic Association. This is .
on Criminal Charge
the decision to abolish the hammer
throw on the ground that it is dan
Jos. Matlock. Jr., charged with as
gerous. The action comes as the te-
sult
suit of
or numerous accidents
acciueuis connected"
i-i>auw.eu sault with
... intent
. .
.. to commit
, . . rape upon
uiz-»..
with th. event, at least ore of which J“V“
I
bound
over
to
the
circuit
court
by
in this state has proved fatal There
is also a sentiment in favor of abol Judge Bryson, of the justice court,
this afternoon, after several witnesses
ishing the mile run.
had been examined. He Is now in the
county jail and his bail was fixed at
11000.
A large crowd had gath
ered in the justice ofrice In the city
hail to hear the testimony, but. before
the examination began the court room
Watertown. Wis., Gazette:
On was cleared, and no one except the
Thursday of this week Frank M. Ea witnesses and othqrs connected with
ton and family left for Eugene. Or., the case, not even the newspaper re
where they will reside in the future, porters, were allowed to remain in
it being Mr. Eaton's intention to en the room.
This morning, before the examina
gage in business there. Our people
part with him with n great deal of tion, E. D. Matlock, a brother of the
regret, for nearly all their lives they accused, filed a complaint charging
have been moat favorably connected him with Insanity. Deputy District
with the social and business inter Attorney G. F. Skipworth filed a mo
ests of our city, and have taken a tion to postpone the insanity exam
most prominent part in everything ination until October 22.
nere, hence all our people wish them
prosperity in their new home and firm of Becker & Peters, North Wa
trust that they will find as many ter street, his wife being a daughter
staunch and true friends there as of Mrs. Chris Becker, of thia city.
th
leave behind them ir. Water The best wishes of the citizens of Wa
town.
tertown accompany them to their new
\rihttr Peters and family and sis home.
ter-in-law, Miss Evelyn Becker, loft
In company with the Eaton family
Tommy Smith went to Portland thin
and will also m*-9to tn teneonn Ore-
.„a
there will take the
Pedro, to Join his
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PEOPLE COMING HERE