Image provided by: Eugene Water & Electric Board; Eugene, OR
About The Twice-a week guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1910-19?? | View Entire Issue (Jan. 9, 1911)
DON’T MISS AN ITEM OF THIS AD-READ EVERY ITEM Your Chance to Buy Dress Goods is Now— i The dress good section contain unequalled bargains, values seldom, if ever of fered before. The entire stock is offered to you: come, make your selections early. They are going fast, and always the best goes first. Any colored dress goods In stock selling for $1.25 regular, can be bought for. the yard.......................................................................................................... -............................. 85c Remember our stock is the largest and best—with unusual reductions makes buying easy. ...6Sc buy any 85c quality during this sale at ...,60c buy any 75c quality during this sale at ..... 4 Sc buy any 60c quality during this sale at ...... 4 0c buy any 50c quality during this sale at ..... Great Crowds Attend The Grand Fial Removal Sale Every Day % The hundreds of people who throng our store every day Is a source of satisfac tion. not only from a financial standpoint, but it shows the confidence the public have in this establishment. We alm to have our statement ’ ring clear. As a res- sult our store Is always crowded during shopping hours. We advise the morning for the most satisfactory service. Sweeping reductions all over the store I ho deeply cut prices are telling. The stock is getting smaller. If you would have the best choice come within the next few days, for the goods are rapidly disappearing. Come and come during the morning hours. If you can; if not. come in the afternoon anyway*. BlacK or White Wool Goods Much Ur lerpriced— Black Dresses are never out of style. You are able to buy the best at the price of an ordinary grade if you come to our store during this sale 50c black or white wool materials, the yard ........................................................... 40c 60c black or white wool materials, the yard ...................................................... 4 Sc »1.00 black or white wool materials, the yard ................................................... 4Oc $1.25 black or white wool materials ................................................................ »1.50 black or white wool materials .......................................................... . Buy Your Year’s Supply Now and Save— You Need Table Linens — They are Cheap— Linens are going fast, yet excellent patterns and high qualities found. 35c Damask, extra value, sale price, the yard 50c Damask, extra value, sale price, the yard 75c Damask, extra value, sale price, the yard $1.00 Damask, extra value, sale price, the yard Every Silk—exery yard will be closed out cheap. »1.25 quality beautiful satin Damask, the yard .... Here, LooK at this Fur Set, All Half Price— $25.00 Misses’ Sirts, dark colors; don’t care to move them; during sale ea. 90c 25c 40c Corset Waists Selling at 25c— aoc «Ik- Thousands of Yards of Dress Trimmings for Part of Their Worth— The largest stock of these goods in Lane county or outside of Portland; a be wildering assortment. Everything you could wish. Edges, bands, Allover Laces, shades, qualities and styles beyond description. $3.50 values on sale at ..... . «2.80 $2.50 Laces or Bands ......... ....$2.00 »1.25 Allovers or Persians, ....$1.00 ’5c qualities, sale price ...... «Oc Tablefull of Goods at Half Price— Here You Will Find Great Bargains— Remnant accumulations from the Great Sale, all at 1-2 price. Children’s Bear Cloth Caps, all colors; tae your choice for 1-2 their price, now, each .......................................................................... -................... 15c, 25c, 35c. 50c and 75c SILK SPUN SCARFS, many colors, now 1-2 price. SHOPPING BAG«, many kinds and qualities at 1-2. WOOL SKIRTS, values from »5.00 to $10.00; take your choice while they last each ................................................................................................................... «2.50 to $3.00 WAY MUFFLERS, orth and sold for 50c; now 1-2, each ...................................... 25<- The Men s Department Is Included hi This Final Removal Sale We place the balance of our stock of Furs at a low price. All they cost you now will be 1-2 the former price. (13c »1.25 Neck Pieces only ................................................................. • 1.25 »2.50 Neck Pieces only .............................. . »2.50 Think what a saving on a »5.00 Collar or Muff, now only, each «3.75 7.50 Collar and Muff, the set ................................................................. «25.00 '.11 at 1-2 now; »50.00 sets now ................ Misses Skirts for Almost Nothing can yet be For Les If Not Mei ticned Here 50 and 75c Waists, nearly every size: to close outfit, each 25c Another great Corset Bargain is a 75c new model corset with hose supporters; ~.ti - price on them, each ....................... 41»«- By buying a 75c or 90c Gilbert flounce all ready to put on, at the sale price of . . 50 or 75e Come to the Genuine Sale; Don’t Put It Off— The Goods You Want May Be Gone— Where Cash B.-ats Credit* Hampton’s } 10.00 Suit or Overc 112.50 115.00 $20.00 »22.50 125.00 Sult or Overt oil it In stock f«r in for in for In for In for In $11.50 ««.50 I <1.011 rt.vi tn.oo I 7.00 All goods marked In plain yourself. A Bargain For The Boy MaKe the Old BlacK Petticoat LooK LiKe New— Domestics all cheap; fill your every day wants now. 36-Inch muslin, bleached, the yard ............ 7c Calicoes.............................................................................................................................. 10c Outing Flannel, while it lasts...................... ..................... 12 l-2c Out’ng Flannel, while it lasts .................................................................... 12 l-2c D.< s Ginghams, stripes or chtcks, the yard ......................................... NEW 1011 GINGHAMS. 11c—The new spring Ginghams came too soon 7500 yards of them. They go at, the yard ................................... Any Any Any Any Any Any .... 9c 5c . 7c . ...10c ...10c about lie Eugene Spi ngfield Cottage Grove Here you will find suits for les» thnn half price Rather -• II them than move them. Buy as many suits as you like. No restrictions < n this genuine sale Ilia more we sell the bettor wo like It. One lot of boys’ suits, ranging In price from »1.00 to $ ■<•"; th< iwo plee knee pants suits on sale at, each $2.05 Prici s On Fu nishings Very Interesting If you want to buy a shirt come here. If you . ..... a new pair of trum-r* see the ones we have. Socks, suspenders, anything, anytime you want any goods for men’s wear, you should come here, during this Final Removal Sale, we will save you money on every article you may purchase. FANCY VESTS—Have large assortments from wh'ch to s.-lact, worth from »1.25 to »4.00; sale price 03c Io «2.00 THE EUGENE TWICE-A-WEEK GUARD cratic party in this state;” for a party which fails to poll, at a ready reckoner he was not nearly as successful as in other, al-1 ♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ primary election, one-fifth as many votes as it polled at the pre- beit, nobler roles. I TALES ABOUT PEOP l E t ceeding general election forfeits its place on the official ballot, CHARLES H. FISHER. Editor and Publisner ♦ • * AN INDEPENDENT PAPER according to the Saturday Evening Post. We understand that certain alleged promotion ‘‘boosters" <>♦<■♦♦<>♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ bscription price per year, in advance 11-50 In 1892 Wisconsin gave its electoral vote to Cleveland— have hired boycotters, and are working on businessmen who ad. Guard Special Service. Nights of un New York. Jan .7 Agents for The Guard on the issue of tariff reform and general disgust with big busi vertise in The Guard to induce them to withdraw their business usual social activity tiring corroa- The following are authorized to take and receipt for »uoacrlptlona or ness in republican councils. In 1896, when the democratic from this paper. What do the people think of that for free ponding activity to the city missions. ansaet any othei business for The Daily and Weekly Guard: This we> k. In conjunction with the Creswell—J. L. Clark. issue was free silver, it turned to the republican column. The America? This boycott business, especially when it is used to two automobile exhibitions now be Coburg- -George A. Drurz. ____ - - —- - - ...... number of votes in the state is four hundred and fifty thousand, stifle free speech or a free press, is a double-edged knife that ing h< Id, In addition to the 'operas, finds the mourning benches with Appli " de for entrance at Eugene, Oregon, postoffice as se and to retain a place on the ballot the democrats would have cuts both ways. It will hurt the men who invoke it worse than one long lines of the partially submerged bad class matter. had to poll thirty-three thousand votes. There is some doubt, those whom it is directed against. In this instance it is the last filled shouldn't like to say positively then, whether seven per cent, of the voters are sufficiently in-: stand of the Southern Pacific Co. to coerce The Guard into si that “I th' MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1911 dawn nin| outs wero driven terested in democracy to keep alive the party. lence. Well, it won’t work, and the highbinders who are at to the sanctuary by reports of the so doings uptown," said Dr. John For many years the electoral vote in Ohio has always been tempting to work it will soon hear from the people who are cial son once paHtor of John Street ADVICE TO GIRLS republican, but we do not hear any doubts as to whether the with The Guard in its fight for right and justice against the rail church, the first Methodist church In America, "but It looks that way, The recent epidemic of suicides and attempted suicides of democratic party in that state is alive. On the contrary, there road monopoly. The knockers will get knocked themselves as because every time society prepares is a rather general expectation that the democrats will carry i soon as their names are given to the public. to cut an extra splurge, crowds of ■■|oung women who declared “the world was against them’’ the state this fall. slnmirs flock to tin1 various mis sions down town for repentance and - toved William Stephen Devery, better known as “Big Bill,” In Wisconsin, republican insurgency has stepped forward gay shindies The trade territory of a town is not dependent upon the dis Uhe best chief of police New York ever had, to eloquence. to lead and absorb the aspiration for popular government, ieav- i to park benches ami tance to neighboring trading points, says the Redlands Spokes-! ,'7' ’ ph',’• :ing " It stirs the blood of A wenty-five years of “pounding the pavement" has apparently ing the democrats not much to do except look on. In Ohio the; man. The trade territory depends upon the enterprise of the the fellows who hear It. They want I aken ________ __ ___ ________ ___ __ ___ much of the romance out of the veteran, who discoursed same aspiration turns to the democratic organization. Probably, bo up and doing something for merchants and residents of the town. If a town does not reach to Li a philosophical manner at “the pump. ,» themselves. Dancing ami operas lire if there was as much republican insurgency in Ohio as in Wis after the trade, it will come only as fast as it has to, and will not for them, but there Is nlways "a “This thing gets my goat,” he said, “when we think of the piny that Is open to them, ad grow as it is forced to. If the merchants go after business in one lj<ueer habit that has come over the girls nowadays of taking consin, there would be just about as little democracy. mission free, and that Is the mission, | the surrounding country, however, advertising in every possible so here they conio.” itaris green, going to a hotel and shooting themselves, or trying way, and making good every word of their advertising, trade will WHEN LINCOLN ’ S FORESIGHT FAILED ^ther means to wind up their careers. They leave letters be- Hack and forth glided the danc come from an ever-increasng radius, the town will gain a repu ing master anil after him whirled a iind them telling how hard it has been for them to live a decent When we point v^ith pride to our hundred millions of people,' tation for beiig awake and it will forge to the front. It is the flat-footed young couple In a dizzy Jfe and how terrible the men of New York are. Take it from dance. To a party of society folks, «»e, they’re bluffing. It’s wrong stuff written as a sort of de- we do not always remember that we have fallen short of the ex men in the town, and not altogether the men living within a cer headed by F. T. Martin on n "slum ming tot.r, It seemed that they were cjiiling switch to throw the reader off the right track. The pectations of fifty years ago. President Lincoln, in his message tain number of miles from it, that makes the town. doing pretty well, but the master to congress December 1, 1862, presented a close study of fig kept them nt it for another fifteen ¿rouble is these hysterical women do not want to work except Democratic politicians all over the country have been study minutes. 1 ri selected lines. They hankered for bigger jobs on the stage ures of population compiled by the census takers for 70 years, I m making them work overtime C*ith buzz wagons, birds and bottles, trips to Europe, hobble which showed for the nation, in his words, “an average decen ing Governor Dix, of New York, perhaps because he is a new star becnioe they’re engaged to be mar going to dnnre for a kirts and three-story hats, with three-foot hairpins sticking nial increase of 34.60 per cent population through the 70 years in the political firmament. It is their opinion that Mr. Dix is ried and *’*“ are Pnl,l "If they win there from our first to our last census yet taken.” very amiable, wth a streak of hunor, tactful and naturally a con will be several dollnrs saved on their ent of them. He continued: “It is seen that the ratio of increase at no ciliator, a smoother out of wrinkles. In his manners Dix is very ■ - room furniture. At this time » “When this dope doesn’t pan out, they sit down and worry yeir two-thlrds of my prlvnte one of these seven periods is either 2 per cent below or 2 per courteous, mild spoken, gracious of demeanor, seldom flustered impi ’ yemselves into a fit of nervousness. They take their pen in are engaged couples. They nil hitting up the dance for fl ^land and tell what a tough time they have had, after which cent above the average, thus showing how flexible and conse and not much of an orator, so the newspaper correspondents are nnnclal reasons. Mlddle-clnss cou- quently how reliable the law of increase in jur case is. Assum say. Illi'S most ( of them are. who attend <iey take the acid or gun and do the ‘Dutch act.’ ing that it will continue gives the following result: 1870, 42,- balls whore the best dancers win i “If they would only go across to the department stores or prizes. The ninnagors of these (’,nn- Some of the Eugene business houses which have made the co ar- s .„ II,,,» he quick lunch feedery they would get a job in a hurry, but, of 323,341; 1880, 56,967,216; 1890, 76,677,872; 1900, 103,- f„|l( Insteml of'gee 208,415; 1910, 138,918,526.” greatest growth in the past two years have used The Guard ex Raws for bride«, they give sensible (burse, they would miss the buzz wagon and the other things llmt may be for hotiM- The growth of population immediately slackened so that not clusively as an advertising medium. The merchant who is about vorn.s ut they’d meet some steady young fellow and a trip to Coney ho <1 nml the engaged couple thnt can I to occupy the largest department store in Oregon outside of’ iln s,...,.,.,,; JlIRt nbont fllrn|Hh one of President Lincoln ’ s calculations was verified. In 1870 lland, a ride or two on the chutes, and a glass or two of foamy tmfr now flat for the price of their jeer would make up for it. Take it from me, there would soon the count showed 38,558,371 persons; in 1880 the total was Portland boasts of the fact that his advertisement has appeared dancing lessons." 50,155,783; in 1890 the figures were 62.022,250, and in 1900, in every issue of the Daily Guard since he first opened a store of *ie a newly married couple, looking for three rooms and a bath, inclusive of Alaska, less than what he had fixed on for ten years his own some fourteen years ago. It is the evening paper__ the HOPS BOUGHT AT ‘ ith hot and cold water, and a cradle would be on the job in a earlier, or 70,303,287. The difference between the estimate of home paper—old established and with both quality and quantity SALEM AT 17 CENTS ;ear. You don’t find guns, or poison, or maudlin letters among Mr. Lincoln for 1910 and the actual population is even more in circulation, like The Guard, that brings best results to the ad le hard-working women, and the the men of New York are Salem, Or.. Jan. 6. B. (>. Sbuck- striking. His computation gave 138,918,526, while the census vertiser. ng paid the top price for now hops 11 right to women who behave themselves in public places.” bureau found only 91,972,266 men, women and children in the The"m.^,ng 17 o WnH "lnd,‘ from Squire continental United States. According to statements given out by the Hill officials the Farrfr non» t i 8e.V’’ral ofr,‘rK ,",v" boon re- THE CRY FOR POPULAR GOVERNMENT It may be that Honest Abe, himself no great exponent of Oregon Electric will be extended to Eugene this year. If this 7 r„L',"[lnK ,h“ I>«"t f-w days at ’ "" b""f aoalwr"’ price multiplication, did not forsee the epidemic of race suicide which proves true, and with the beginning of construction on the rail ronortZ? pX tn J"" 16 ’*2’ an" ,h” "-"t “One of the sensations of the primary,” says a dispatch spread over the lnnd during the past 25 years, yet by overshoot way to the coast, we may look for a red letter year from the fors Of° at ,B 3 8 C'’n‘" Of- rom Wisconsin, “appears to be the wiping out of the demo- ing the mark a trifle of fifty millions, he has shown that as a standpoint of pronnerity and growth . beon ron ‘ . a \at 18 <*Bt" hnv" i I ¡I * I •= about our neck.; It matters i to grasp uw .......... .