The Twice-a week guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1910-19??, December 29, 1910, Page 4, Image 4

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THE TWICE-A-WEEK GUARD. THURSDAY, DEC. 29, 1910.
FOUR
HAMPTON’S
The Removal is Positive
and Sweeping Reductions
are given in Every Department
I
Started TUESDAY, Dec 27,1910
Corner 6th Street and Willamette Street
Watch the daily papet
For Announcements
1
I
t
Until then we will conduct the most gigantic sale in the history of
this establishment. Prices reduced in every department
Our only thought will be SELL, SELL, SELL. This great HA
ON’S
stock must be turned into cash to save the tedious task of invoicing
Basaras
■
♦
I
$1.50
Subscription price I”1 ' '
111 ■l'1' "
—
\ ,■ for lb' i.vi.ml
The following are authorized to take and receipt for niiiwriptlonr or
l,feu.avl au> oilioi I mh W > lot Ilf I'allJ and Weekly Guard
I
Creswell- .1. L. Clark
Coburg- -GeorifH A Drip«.
_
A|»pli<’atmt7Zi'ad.. for entranee at Eugene, Oregon, post of flee as se
Xjn<1 clasH matter.
__________________________________
f
THURSDAY, DEC. 29, 1910.
CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE. SOUTHERN DEMOCRAT.
ment of a Louisiana confederate to the office held twenty-eight
years by Roger B. Taney, is another demonstration of the fact
that the war between the states, in all its differences, ended a
good while ago.
Justice White is the only citizen of Louisiana ever in sup­
reme co-.rt membership. Presidents have rarely gone to that
state in quest of men for appointive offices; the father of Judge
W. H. Hunt of Montana was the only Louisiana man named for
cabinet service since Lincoln s election, a period of fifty years.
The newspapers representing the country’s opinion, to the ex­
tent that they have reached our exchange table, show that the
appointment of Chief Justice White gratifies them and, one end
all, they praise the president for that he acted upon his own pro­
fessions and was not influenced by partisan considerations in
selecting a chief justice.
i
ago, and that he preserved his health and even his life by es­ I Wools.” General discussion.
“Transportation of Wool
and
chewing dumb bells and Indian clubs, and taking to luxurious liv­
I Sheep, Rates anti Minimum Speeo
ing and big, black cigars, is the kind of information that we low­
Laws,” general discussion.
ly workers of the world like to read. There is in all of us a grain
"Range Development and Im­
of fetichness. We may not worship the great or wealthy, but we provement on National Forests,” C.
like to see or hear them at close range. Morgan, the inscrutable, S. Chapman, District Forester, U. S.
Forest Service.
is assuredly an interesting study.
WHAT ELECTRIC LINES DO FOR PROPERTY.
“Development of Grazing on Nat­
ional Forests,” Thomas F. McKen­
zie, District Chief of Grazing, For­
est service.
"National Forests," general discus-
On the basis o fan advance in value of only $50 an acre, 'sio"
Scliedule K,” general discussion.
what did the construction of the Oregon Electric railway accom
“Or< >1
Predatory Wild Animal
plish?
• • i -¡iscussion.
It is fifty miles long. and. taking the property for a mile on cussion. -islation Needed.” general dis­
each side, what was the advance?
"Better Sheep Breeding,” general
Fifty square miles on each side of the track would conta.n discussion.
Appointment and selection of ad-
64,000 acres, and at $50 an acre the advance would amount to , visory boards, reports of commit-
I tees, unfinished business, new busi­
$3,200,000.
ness. election of officers and dele­
If land went up $50 an acre for two miles on each side of gates. selection of place of next an­
the track, the advance between Salem and Portland by construc­ nual meeting.
tion of the Oregon Electric would amount to $6.400,000
HELPFUL WORDS
That would be at the rate of $128,000 per mile, as the re-
suit of building an electric line.
From a Eugene Citizen
These figures are given by the Salem Journal, which adds
Is your back lame and painful?
that the people of that city should not wait twenty years for the
Does it ache, especially after ex­
building of suburban lines, but should proceed to build them ertion?
Is there a soreness in the kidnev
now. Regarding the proposed Salem-Stayton line, it says the region?
benefits to the towns at each end of the line would be ten times' These symptoms indicate weak
as great as the cost of the line. From one to two million dollars kidneys.
There is danger in delay.
would be added to the market value of the lands along the line
Jtetik kidneys fast get weaker,
Give
—your trouble prompt atten-
This view of the Salem paper is the correct one to take and tion.
here in Eugene, a similar condition exists. An electric Im- to th
Kidney Pills act quickly.
• i/then weak kidneys,
west through Elmira would add millions of dollars to the value
ly -id this Eugene testimony.
of Lane county property. The people may go ahead and build it
Mrs. Anna Lake. Willamette St..
or they may wait five. ten. or twenty years for some one else to
Orpson- »»ya:
"Last win-
It has been pleasant to read the comment of this country s
newspapers in reference to the selection of the new chief jus-
jus
THE ANNALS OF THE GREAT.
’tice of the supreme court. Of course there never was question
John Pierpont Margan is said to abhor the sight of a news­
of the professional titness of Justice White. He was at the age
of forty nine, when, sixteen years ago, he was appointed to the paperman as the devil dreads holy water. He has no love for
the limelight, his friends say, and that makes it hard to under­
office of associate justice and he has served with distinction.
As for the other associate justices, as much can be said of stand why his name and his fame are spread over the holiday
them, for that matter, as of Justice White, in compliment to numbers of the magazines and other periodicals. If Mr Morgan
their professional equipment and their personal worth. But in is not using a barrel of money for pages of the cleverest kind of
an important respect the appointment is unique in that it places press agent stuff .appearances are very much against him. In­
at the head of the republic's judiciary a Democrat, as the selec­ stead of fighting the muckrake magazines, the big corporations
tion of a Republican president . And in a much more significant have recently conceived the scheme of buying their columns,
way it is a suggestive appointment by reason of the fact that the and in the past twelve or eighteen months it has been impossible
chief justice thus chosen was a rebel soldier in the civil war. That to pick up one of the trust busting types of publications without
war turned essentially on the interpretation of clauses in the reading of the beneficence concealed in the personality of some1
federal constitution; the business of the supreme court is to con well known financier or the well disguised beauty in some no­
torious corporation. Morgan, the aristocrat, is the title of the
«true and interpret that constitution.
Justice White is not the first Democrat to serve as chief Jus latest of the series We are slyly told that H H Rogers and Rus­
tice of the supreme court. His immediate predecessor, Melville sell Sage were grocery clerks, that Jim Hili worked on the sec­
W Fuller, who served twenty two years, was a Democrat ap tion. but that four generations of the Morgans have been bred
..’ . ! I kidney trouble and I suf-
thin lipped New Englanders, grim-faced and ar­
pointed by President Cleveland
But Justice White is the first m the purple
ntensely from backache ar.d
direct representative of the Confederate clement to be in this of­ bitrary " Listen to this gush from James Creelman, crown
' mptoms of the complain'.
STATE WOOL GROWERS
- of three boxes of Doan's
fice. Thus it happens that those of us who are a little younger prince of the muckrakers:
The program for the Oregon Wool Sidney Pin« cured me and niv kid-
"He is a great and generous man. unlike any of his century,
WILL MEET PREVIOUS
than the new chief justice go bad mentally to our High school
' ■
now doing their work prop-
foUoTsT A~*1'tfon convention I.
days when Roger B Taney last of the southern line, was chief but his ways are not the ways of Democracy He is one of the
TO NATIONAL GROWERS
Jor sale by all dealers. Price 50
Medici, free from their vices, but born five centuries too late.
Artdr*,,onrR*‘v
R nr.
justice of the United States.
_Addrew of weir .
v
ster'Milburn Co.. Buffalo.
Convene
in
Portland
January
3
son. < < hairman
_____ _ promotioi
Taney was, for a time, the most discussed American Through He has been consulted by the German emperor .the king of Eng­
, ' . ’'
so:p agents for the Unit-
With
Good
Program
and
Portland
Comm
err
ii
out the north denunciation of him was universal His words did land. and the king of Belgium He has advised the pope. The
Re
V
’
’
;
.
r ’he name—Doan’s—
sponse-
.
Jay H. I>
Addresses
-and take no other.
much toward precipitating the civil war
His language in the prime ministers of most governments have sought his opinions,
I president state asso >ciath
i
Annual
addre* »<•—G
famous Drod Scott decision was accepted by the people as an The archbishop of Canterbury crossed the Atlantic ocean to be Guard Special Service.
Knight, president .
Choked to Death
Portland.
Or..
Dec
Ϋ.
—
Wool
announcement in behalf of the supreme court that the
negro his guest But he dreads and loathes publicity, which is the vital I grower« of the state will
Annual report—I
hold their ^retary «rate aaeo, I>an
’
has no rights which a white man is bound to respec t
that is factor in the land of his btrth. the very breath of the ige he lives ( convention tn Portland just prior to
iW.tJ1 ’al** nf nnf,lps whn have
o-opei«««Ion of p f
the annual gatherin« of the National mal < Industry
.
..
.. cr'”ir>. How unnecessary
what the decision was interpreted to mean. Chief Justice Taney in."
with WooTa'-o
Wool Growers’ Association. The ses­
" , . ' fhfld ever had rhe croup
Oregon."
Dr
R
a
.
R
s
-
((
r
And
withal,
the
stuff
is
good
reading.
That
the
Jupiter
of
Hved to see his pronouncements thrown to the winds He was
sion will open on the morning of
<3
■>'.
" congh or cold at
Psrtment of Animal In
chief justice during most of the period of the war. but he was Wall street is a crack linguist, a scientist eminent enough to have January 3. and will probablv be In­
. n - , ’ '
fho first
Federal
and
Stite
Sheen
.
cluded that day
The National As- tine
,.
of the cough with Ballard’s
forgotten in the presence of military operations The appoint been offered a professorship in a German university fifty years wHiation will open Its convention on ‘ Reest Method"'¿
and Regulation.
‘.“"¡Cm "
. s
- r
,here *’ no d*n*er
n
f ’he croup.
>n. OilloL Drug Co
Sold bv the