TWICE A WEEK GUARD. EUGENE. OR, MONDAY, OCT. 10 TOUR Monday and Tuesday Special Prices On Dress Goods, Broadcloths, Broadcloth Coats and Children s School Dresses. A two-days, money-saving occasion. Goods must be purchased on Monday or Tuesday to secure the discount. The sale closes at 6 o’clocK Tuesday evening, positively. $1.25 DRESS GOODS 98c About 3500 yards of new fail and winter Dress material«, always selling for $1.25 per yard, covering a wide range of shades. We place the lot on sale for two days at, the yard.................................... 98 g •* « You May Never Have Thought »-« As having anything to do with maintaining quality in merchandise; but if you get poor stuff in clothes, you have only yourself to blame. or $1.50 BROADCLOTH $1.25 If you are willing to pay the price of having all-wool clothes, and then get, and wear, a coton mixture, it is your own fault. You can just as well have ull wool. You may take your choice of any $1.50 Broadcloth in our stock, which is very large. The colors are brown, black, navy, cardinal, scarlet, green, tan and delf. blue; two-day special, the yard, only ......................... .......................................................... SI.25 $12.75 WOMEN’S BROADCLOTH COATS FOR $10.75 Good quality Broadcloth Coats, sizes 36 to 44, placed on sale Monday morning and continuing until 6 o'clock Tuesday evening—if not sold before—at the reduced price of, each.............................. SI0.75 Hart, Schaffner ® Marx clothes nre all-wool, nnd when you find tl eir mark in a garment you know, without asking any questions, that you're getting the best clothes made. $2.50 CHILDREN’S SCHOOL DRESSES, $2.00 These much wanted garments are all new this fall, having previously sold every dress before the new stock arrived, and in every way perfect and first-class. Sizes 6 years to 14 years. Monday and Tuesday, each............ S2.00 It s such an easy way of being aure of quality, it’s a wonder everybody doesn't adopt it. You Cannot Get Along Very Well These days without an umbrella. Our assortment is large and varied. We have them for Children at. . •••• $1.00« 75c and 50c Larger ones for the older members of the family at $7.50, We sell Hart, Schaffner A Marx Suits at $20.00 to $40. $6, S5 $4, $3.50, $2.50, $2, $1.75, $1.50, $1.25. SI ............................... '75c This store is the home of Hart Schaff­ ner A Marx Clothes. Simplex Folding Umbrella An indispensable article for one who travels; can be folded so small as to be carried in an ordinary suit case. So simple a child can operate it. Come in and let us show one to you —we ll not urge you to take it. They cost............. $3,50 implex S . Gordon Furs Have Stood the Test -Folding Umbrella Of thirteen years. Persian Silks In a great assortment every few days. New pat­ terns, new combinations of colors, charming, exqui­ site shades, very tempting; wonderfully priced at, the yard ...... $1.25 New Plaid Silks, with Persian effects; come In a beautiful combination of colors; come in waist lengths of four yards. The patern ............ $5.00 We handled this make of furs all these years, can recommend them to our many patrons because we know they are right. Is our experience worth anything to you? We will guarantee every piece that leaves the store. Get your Furs of us. THEY WILL BE SATISFACTORY. “u”8n,................. S2.50 to $40.00 Neck Pieces ............................ $2.50 to $40.00 C..Trt.k< H Mt • OUR BOYS’ CLOTHING THE MOST DURABLE Having the three best and busiest stores in the three best towns in the jest county of Oregon, and doing such an enormous busines, we are able to handle the best clothing made in such large quantities as to obtain the very low. est prices. Selling these for CASH ONLY, we make lower prices, give better quality, than is posible to obtain else­ where. Try us for your boys’ clothing next time and be convinced. Good serviceable school clothes for boys of 6 to 14 years at S3.50 Better qualities at......... ............... S3.50 $4.00. $5.00. $6.00 and $7.50 EUGENE SPRINGEIELD COTTAGE GROVE HAMPTONS WHERJE CASH BEATS CREDIT territory could settle such matters among themselves, it would running a survey from this city to th« coast. They should re­ seem the only right solution of a vexed problem. The conten­ member the Drain-Coos Bay fiasco, and be wia« enough to pin SERIOUS EPIDEMIC tion that new counties could never be created under such a law, their faith to the honest effort being made by the Lane County OF DIPHTHERIA AT CHARLES H. FISHER, Editor and Publisner AN INDEPENDENT PAPER_____________ because of the selfishness of the people of the older counties, Asset Company to construct a line which will give us relief DONNA IS REPORTED »1.50 who would always want to retain all their territory, is to impute from the present railroad monopoly. Nobody paid any attention ■ lbscription price per year, in advance to the American people a spirit of uniairness they do not pos­ to the Siuslaw country or its possibilities of development until Agents for The Guard The following are authorized receipt for auMcriptlona or sess. As time passes and the wealth and population of Oregon the Asset Company began its work a year and a half ago; now Eleven Families Out of 14 Liv­ 71 ' . _ .— to take and — ~~~ -.naart any other business tor The Dally and Weekly Guard: becomes greater, when many projected railroads are built and three or four other parties have suddenly decided that there is ing in Mohawk Village Creswell—J. L. Clark. our material development has progressed to a point of perma ­ Coburg—George A. Drury. __________________________ a good field for railroad building in this territory. Quarantined nent accomplishment, we predict that many new counties will Who really believes that this activity would continue long Application made for entrance at Eugene. Oregon, postoffice as se be formed, and that, too, by common consent of the people in r ■ once the Asset Company ceased its operations? It is to create a Rrrlotia epidemic of diphtheria »•iond class matter._____________ _______ _______________________ ha« broken out at -------- Donna, - -..J and' l I out the territory affected. That will be a far better mode of pro­ a diversion and divide opinion and interest in Eugene that the of the I 1 * I farnlllfii * living there have THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1910 cedure than to have the people of the whole state arbitrarily cut Southern Pacific Company has invaded the field, and our peo­ !>••<■» quarantined Z. twelfth cane la — a :—•••’-i A and carve and make new boundaries, regardless of the rights ple should not be foolish enough to be caught by a cheap trick that of Charles Evan«, hut he ha« been brought to Eugen« __ The con- and interests of a majority of the people directly interested, or that has been worked so often before by this corporation. The tn gio n wiiH a" nllowed to apread for ov- AS TO THE NESMITH COUNTY MOVEMENT their preferences in a matter which concerns them alone and people of this city and in the Siuslaw valley should extend all • 5 11 *' * t*D<* her Iced, on ih<* RlippfNll- that It wax tonnilltli. becauae of not the voters of distant communities, unacquainted with ac­ the moral and financial support at their command to the Lane lion It« mild form, and th«- number of ei- The Guard has devoted little space to the proposed creation tual conditions. County Asset Company, and if this course is taken and stead- poHur.-H waa very large. They are not ’if Nesmith county. It has taken this course because it believes confined t<> realdents of Donna, fastly adhered to, Eugene will in a year or two have a railroad only but many living all along the Mo­ ^iat every voter in the territory affected has his mind made up JAY BOWERMAN, PREMIER FLOPPER to the coast, and the Siuslaw country will no longer be isolated hawk, limy have contracted the dl«- ! nd that no amount of argument on either side will materially eaae, making the danger of a wlde- from the outside world. ’ hange the result of the balloting in Lane county. It is here «¡>reaa»t two day,. AIl ,m|lenU Br„ says: The enrollment at O. A C. new totals 1011. This Is an Inrn-nse of 24 Thin I k an Increaae of 24 • ’acted. An acrimonious discussion in the local newspapers <»f Dr. Barr, of Springfield, It 1 am elected governor I will veto any and every measure which at­ per cent over the numb- r «’-oiled »n this date last year and lr» see the county of Lane dismembered, but self interest, per­ assembly, which was called to evade nominations directly by the medicine, the University probably has the larger enrollment, and ault, or hl» cnun»el, J. C. Kleb- . a r*al’1on",bl* for eatabtlnhlng a haps in even a stronger degree, is back of the movement to cre­ people in the primaries, and which was especially bitter against and this, too, withuot including the students taking the corre- _nt: . overnment, but it is fully as unjust to compel the large and ■Hicy intend to suggest in assembly or convention candidates.fo- C h<,rhB'lm? nor nff each and ha. «he »pent. Some persons say land is too high in the Willamette vallev Id patience no longer such conduct “' hen they are almost unanimously against it. This is true, also, ALL WHO DECLARE FOR STATEMENT ONE/’ can endure Will the Oregonian make good now and put the knife into but is it? Prune growers, for instance, received tM. vZ« . k ' I the territory east of Roseburg, which is included in the pro­ wro-ged «poiiae now a dl- $200 an acre for their crop, netting the larger part of that would procure - ofed county of Nesmith, and which naturally desires Roseburg Jay Bowerman or will it regard his declaration in favor of amount. What is such land really worth? P 1 ki>ti.'P|ll vorce F,ij'"’ WJrp ,narr*««» In Spo- N,0- 1 aS mere campai«n claptrap, designed to dis­ >r a county seat. The people residing in the vicinity af Drain ln November. 1904, ahd nave a four-year old child. ’ nd some other communities are similarly situated, and therein guise his real convictions? If Roosevelt continues his “prooreaaivn” • as the strongest argument in favor of the stand taken by those further. It win be In order for the Social’«, fudge A. F. Rtearna, of thn largo altogether too radical. ■»'■«»t. to denounce him a. wlihXkUnT nf ■U*rna * c»>eno- EUGENE SHOULD NOT BE TRICKED pposed to the creation of new counties by vote of the entire fnmliv Ìh|d’ ?.r’>gon- *• vl"lting hl« •