■ntl twtci * win noun, tnotm. oit mokbat ootobib a. 1»1» FOUI Monday and That I ts Tuesday Specials Poor Policy Monday morning we place on sale 60 Misses' and Children's Long Coats for Winter wear. Good heavy, well-made garments, worth regular from $3.75 to $10.00. You can buy them for almost half price. $3.75 Coats, Special price.. $5.00 Coats, Special price.. $6.00 Coats, Special price.. $7.50 Coats, Special price.. $2.13 $2.75 $3.25 $4.00 to shop around in buying clothes; to go where you see the lowest price quoted. Price doesn't mean much in clothes unless you know what the quality of the goods is. If you govern your buying by the price you pay, without reference to what you get for it, you'll find some mighty cheap clothes for sale; their cheapness is likely to be more in quality than in price. But you'll find plenty of good clothes, too; Hart Schaffner & Marx $ 1.50 54 inch Broadcloth $1.25 Monday and Tuesday you can buy any $1.50 Broadcloth in our great stock for, the yard .. . . $1.25 I cTon’t make any other kind. All their fabrics are all wool; the tailoring is the best possible; the styles are cor­ rect to the smallest detail; and we guarantee satisfaction. One trou­ ble wth poor clothes is they’re al- ways unsatisfactory, even when you buy them. (‘■■pynght H»rt S> lulfnrr A Mtn $ 1.75 Curtains $ 1.00 $1.25 to $1.75 Curtains, net or figured Swiss, the pair. . $1.00 Tans 50c We are showing an immense line of "Tams,’’ popular colors, at, each . .. ................ 25c to SI.00 Any day that you’d like to know something about the best clothes made, in a store where nothing but the highest grade merchandise is handled, drop in on us an d let us show you some of our Hart Schafiner (8S Marx Suits, Our clothes satisfy; they’re profitable to you and to us. Suits $20.00 to $40.00. EUGENE SPRINGEIELD COTTAGE GROVE WHER.E CASH BEATS CREDIT HAMPTONS al election against him. Still if Mr. Jones, of Roseburg, although ASSET COMPANY DESERVES THE CREDIT HUNTING FOR DEER a republican and on the same ticket, should receive the larger BE/ONO CROW WITH number of votes, he will take Judge Coke's place on the bench. The Guard prints today a letter to the Lane County Asset CHARLES H. FISHER, Editor and Publlsner Judge James W. Hamilton, the democratic candidate for re­ Company from Chief Engineer Forneri, which is especially grst AN INDEPENDENT PAPER PACK OF HOUNDS election, needs no introduction to the people of the Second Ju­ ifying to the people of Eugene. It shows that the route from bscrlption price per year, in advance ............... dicial district. He is one of its native sons, and the entire span thia city is the shortest and best that can be located to the Gaine Warden Has Left to Try * Agents for The Guard and Apprehend the Law The following are authorized to take and receipt for suD*cripUoM er of his active life is part if its judicial history. For several terms coast. Sixty-one miles is the distance from Eugene to Glenada Jnsact any other business for The Daily and Weekly Guard: Breakers prosecutng attorney, later on for a number of years the leading or Florence, and the line as located by Mr. Forneri, one of the I ^Creswell—J. L. Clark. Coburg—George A. Drury. member of the Roseburg bar, and for twelve years judge of the most experienced railroad engineers in the country, presents no| Thai n party of hunter*. several In court, his name is a household word, and it stands for legal abil­ engineering diffeiulties. For a road through a mountain range number. from outaide point*. have Application made tor entrance a t Eugene, Oregon, postoffice as se­ established a ramp on Wolf er «wk. ity, uprightness and probity of character. No court in Oregon the cost of construction will be remarkably low. nd class matter._______________ ______ _____________________________ (■■■ar (’row, planning to hunt and other larg«« animal* for th«’ir or, it might be said, in any state, is more respected by the peo­ There are now no less than four surveys being made for a do«r MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1910 pelt». and ar<> using bounda In thrlr ple who have business before it, or more satisfactory to the at- railroad down the Sruslaw, three of them from this city and one work having already ■Inughtvro.l * largo number la the report that torney who has practice at its bar. HAMILTON ANU COKE SHOULD BE CHOSEN by the S. P. Co. from Junction City. This awakening of interest com«-# from residents near there, and There can be no question of Judge Hamilton's re-election, in a section heretofore neglected is almost wholly due to the ac­ a deputy game warden baa left Eu­ The nomination of Judge John S. Coke, Republican, by the) but The Guard would like to see no change in the personnel of tivities of the. Lane County Asset Company. Their persistent ef­ gene to locate th«« law-bireaker*. Il a*em* that they have bwii ramped emocrats of this judicial district, was eminently proper. There the court, and hopes that the voters of al! parties in marking forts have attracted the attention of railroad companies, and has there for ten daya or ao. and non«» ar«> local men. two being from Dougina re three judges in this district, one judge, L. T. Harris (Rep.) their ballots will see that the names of both Hamilton and Coke aroused even the Southern Pacific Co. to action, lest another <'>unty and others from more distant are properly designated. The second judicial district wants no road would Invade the territory »b.ch It kN W long kept polnta. They ___ i'sides in Lane county, and holds over for two years yet; Judge gene to locate the law-breahera. change in its judges—Hamilton, Harris and Coke. bottled up. large pack of hounda to aaalst them imilton, (dem.), lives in Douglas county and is a candidate for They ar« planning. It la aald, to make The people of Lane county should not forget what they owe -election, while Judge Coke, (rep.,) is a resident of Coos coun­ an all-wlntcr'a ramp. Hunting deer THE PINCHOT FAMINE OF 2000 to the Asset Company, and should stand back of it with finan with hounda la agalnat the law. and ty, and is also a candidate for re-election. The three judges la probable that areata will fol' cial as well as moral assistance. If they are enabled to continue Il low. >w presiding over our circuit court are geographically distri­ Gifford Pinchot says that by the year 2000 there will be There la ronaldernble hunting out buted just as they should be; they are admittedly able and just 250,000,000 persons in the United States, and that the ques- the work one railroad, and possibly two or three, will traverse from Eugene thia month, and the the Siuslaw country within the next few years, and add to the courts over which they preside are unquestionably fair and tion of living will be a serious one. gun store* report a big bualnraa In prosperity and growth of Eugene through the development of guna and rifle ammunition. Thia la "apartial, and bar and public alike are satisfied with their admin- If Mr. Pinchot only knew it, the question of living is, with the laat month of the dorr season tributary territory. On the other hand, if the Asset Company before the rain commences. and tration of law and justice. Two are republicans and one a the majority of persons, a serious one already. many hunter* have delayed their va­ emocrat, making it a strictly non-partisan bench, apportioned Mr. Pinchot based his statement upon his estimate that the cannot continue its operations, it is likely that the other parties cation until now. The «la-or hunting, lirly and in accordance with the votes cast by the two leading “farm area’’ of this country cannot be more than double its . now in the field, especially the S. P. Co., will cease their activity which waa not good earlier In the la much better, and report* olitical parties. There are many and excellent reasons why ex­ siae at the very most, and if it can be doubled it will not be and the 8iuslaw country will remain indefinitely without trans Reason. of many deer wen are brought in by portation facilities. It is the Asset Company which is setting many partier ting conditions should be disturbed; and they wtill not be if enough to supply our people with food. Although the Reason for water fowl le voters thoroughly understand the situation. Evidently the ex-chief of the government department of the pace, and upon the success or failure of their efforts is hinged begin* tomorrow, the gun store men report but a «mail anle of shotgun There is but one other candidate for the bench in the dis- forestry has not been keeping pace with the advance in agricul­ the probability of a railroad to the coast. ammunition, there being compnra ict, B. F. Jones, a republican, a recent arrival in Douglas coun- ture and with the reclamation works of the government that lively little Interest taken, principally There should be a clean-cut anti-assembly ticket in the field because there are few duck* here yet. 7 to take a position in the Roseburg land office. We know little have opened up vast tracts of hitherto barren land. The two are counting, however, on a in Lane county. The assembly candidates, so far unopposed, They tout him, except that his experience as a practicing attorney opposite methods of “irrigation” and “drainage,” not to speak Inrge buslnea* the few day* before s been very limited, and that his activity has been that of a of “dry farming,” have even now added almost illimitable areas have made the issue direct by refusing to sign Statement No. 1 the 15th of the month, when th<> sea­ for the upland bird* open*. Thl* and by accepting their nominations, not from the people through son litician, instead of a lawyer or a jurist. His election would to the farming lands of this country. will probably be a record-breaking (isplace on the bench in this district, one or the other of the But this is not the most important change. By the new the direct primary but from an assembly of voters, designed to Reason thl* year because the bird* are very plentiful. vo able and tried judges who are candidates for re-election, method of intensive cultivation an acre has been made so pro­ override and annul the workings of the primary law Other hould Judge Coke be defeated, two of the members of the ductive that the limit of its possibilities vanishes into dim dis­ counties of the state, where the assembly candidates have been FOWLER RE-ELECTED >urt would then be located in Douglas countj, and Coos would tance. A quarter secton such as individual settlers once re­ anSXr’p iaVean ”° a in’tanCe‘ e,ected the anti-assembly men. IRRIGATION LEADER b witbout representation, and the geographical distribution ceived as a government grant could now be made to support a and there is a demand among the voters of all parties here for a ♦ Pueblo, Colo.. Hept. 30.— ♦ ould be disarranged. If Judge Hamilton should lose, the court whole village more abundantly than it once supplied a family. ticket to vote which will clearly represent the direct primary and R. A. Fowler was re elected ♦ Bolton Hall, the well-known economist and agricultural ex­ seekinT^n th° 1 d’entimeDt- “ W0Uld not bc reKarded as office­ ♦ president of the Natlonnl Ir- ♦ ould be solidly republican, and the oldest member, who has, ♦ rlgatlon Congro** hern today. ♦ iring twelve years of service, made a reputation for ability’ pert, scouts Mr. Pinchot’s theory. He says: „ was _________ seeking in the ordinary sense if men of standing in their resnec ♦ Chicago selected __ ns the ♦ “On the basis of five persons to the acre the state of Texas live communities would come forward at this time and otter ♦ place tor the itll nU'iìnii t. w ♦ xtending far beyond the district, would be displaced by an in­ experienced lawyer, practically unknown to the bar and the alone, if cultivated on the French plan, would produce enough to themselves as candidates in order to vindicate the principle of support the present population of the entire United States popular government. eople. oi John Maxwell, nn old realdent of SprinaflMd. la very 111 nt his homo • ————— - Judge Coke has mad® a splendid record during the two New York could support three times our country's population on with heart trouble. ears he has presided over the court, and is especially satisfac- ordinary farming, and several Western states could be depend­ Says the Grants Pass Daily Courier (Rep). -Thcrc ed upon for as good a record.” . J' JT Runrh, of Crow, todav jry to the people of Coos and Curry counties, which is his par- some persons so hardened that they still annie that brought to the promotion office of Mr. Pinchot has been having some bad half hours, but he bly has made good. But the changed tone of Jh n ""T ’ cular portion of the district. No candidate from these counties the commercial rlnb nonio fino King should not inflict his worries on the public by making the citizen from threatening denunciation to supplication an 1 reJ.OnIan’ " ‘n "'‘H'1 ,o ,h" co’inty exhibit pposed him in the primaries, and none will appear in the gener- r r"l’,nln Oo<1d h«s believe his children and grandchildren are going hungry. planations, ought to settle the question” ’ pologetic ex hrn>,Ih» rh I "i* 1” ",un”> K,Bnf specimens of THE EUGENE TWICE-A-WEEK GUARD Mt rnr’’ ■ ,hP °r‘‘n’ N<,r,horn »'xhf-