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About Daily Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 189?-1904 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1896)
l,8 people Read the BOARD . . For they Appreciate It. ind in perusing it they do not overlook the ads. 0h 10. HS SI si lb dla Vca Suffer From I'J .Ci".iiA -W43J-REFRESHING SLEEP Lrp-'OUS DEE!LITY"il-SOUND NERVES fir ir pX DES!LITY--GOOD CONSTITUTIOrj r:rnr.H -aTFINE DIGESTION ?' L'LL'ES " aBRIGHT SPIRITS IMPURE BLOOD -1C-A GOOD CONSTITUTION DR. HENLEY'S CELERY, BEEF and IKOM VVi'l Cure these Diaeaiea-AND-Bring all these Blessings fit sale by OS BURN & DbLAKO. boes your throat tickle? Is it sore? i n tv n n aj Are you noarstjr iu yuu uuugur juu. u.uu.iiy, Have you got a frog in y;iir Throat? THEN USE Preachers, Teachers, Speakers, fl'HEY -Sh'in.'V Jill' 'HEY Yerington's Ninth Street Drug Store. Jhave a DATE? .- i i Aini'i (lY'iTnrfl -no? III mi (Glace.) Are a natural laxative. Is wholesome. Does not crino or sicken the stomach. It is the coming laxative. Excellent for children. Ili'ii'Icrson A Una can tell you more about them. C. L. WINTER, Proprietor. Light, ClonrlF Weather Preferrefl. for Sittings. JfHOTO COMPANY. SUPERIOR PHOTOGRAPHS. EUGENB, OREGON. TAKE' LIVERINE- -FOR THE WEB AND CONSTIPATION. For Sale by Ail Druggists. L- A. OVERTON. "mIt in PAINTS, OILS, WIN DOW GLASS, VARNISHE3, "itl'MIKS nnd tho moat complete "f WALL PAPER In the city. ih street, Three loor Weil of Tout Office. 3 DRINKS Weinliard's Beer. BOTTLED BEER A Specialty. WM. MAYER. Acn. HOBBLE'S TRANSFER. S. HUBBLE, - - Prop. 1 Sensral Transfer Business Done. ,. W Hinds 01 Wood For Sale. ES?J.',mC"n " r irt city. "i Household t-urnltura rtorlne Swa.lty. Hill) J LUlMli DAILY EUGENE EUGENE, OREGON. FRIDAY EVENING. FEBRUARY 21. 18VG. UoJ. D. MATLOCK & CO.'S iliffereiie! Or Are Healthy and Ihvd FROG IN YOUR THROAT. Professional People and Laymen, ALL USE IT, ALL ENDOKSE IT, ALL PURCHASE IT AT The Mills-Wagner Shooting. Albuny Herald: From it pilvnle letter received from Prlnevillo It Is learned Hint the slierift and other officers have returned from the soene of the Wagner-Mills shooting allair. The officers found that James Wagnor was killed instantly, being shot tw ice with a 44-callbre revolver. Isaac Mills had both hands badly shot with a shot gun and will probably lose the fingers of his right hand. They had been having trouble for a long time. There stems to be considerable feeling against lilm in his neighborhood. No one saw the shooting. Wagner was a good citizen. He resided in the southern portion of Linn county for several years, and was about 03 years old and'lenves a wife and three grown children. Mills is about So, and is a widower with two children. Jerry Hinkle, William Zimmerman and R L Henkle, of Philomath, and Frantz Bros, of King's valley, reeei.tly shipped to Lonc-on 40,000 pouuds of hops. The only lot of hops now left in the vicinity of Philomath, says the Corvallls Times, Is that of It M Davis ion. Several teams went to Ilarrisburg todny after Yaquina freight. Hood Wniurd. The executive committee of the regents will receive bids for wood as follows, to be delivered at the Univer sity of Oregon by the first day of Sep tember, 1S90: Hotly oak, split, 20 Inches, 50 cords. Body oak, split, 21 Inches, 00 eords. Grub oak, 4 ft, from 3 to 8 inches in diameter, 150 cords. Grub oak, 10 Inches, Irom 8 toO Inches In diameter, 40 cords. Hig body red II r, 4 ft, 150 cords. Big body pine, split, IS Indira, 10 cords. Big body pine, split, 10 indies, 50 cords. Bids will be o)iened at Judge Wal ton's t (Tlee, March 2. 1800, at 3 o'clock p. ,. T. O. IIKNUKICK8, Chairman. Notice of Animal School Meeting. Notice is hereby given to tho legal voters of School District No. 4. of Lane con ntv, State of Oregon, that the an nual School Meeting lor the said dis trict will be held at the Court House in Eugene, Oregon, to Ingin at the hour of 7 o'clock p m, on the first Monday, being the "'0 '-" ; A I) 1806. This meeting Is culled lor me pur pose of heating the Clerk's annual re port and the transaction of business usual at audi meeting. Dated this 17 day of Feb., ISM. Attest- H. I'aisk. Oko'K Cbaw, Chrm of Directors. Clerk, NOW GOING ON BARGAINS In Every Department. tfx-if ."S l rvi ri i Kt v: vsa GOOD FOR EVERYBODY A!mot e-m-ka!v Utiles son laxative meJicine to cl-;:: e i:.e systen asULe-o the hiood puri. Tin re vl-.i f.!. SIMMONS LlVEl? KliUL'I.ATCS (!ui'LI or powder) get all the l e:iefi:s cf a iai!J and pleasai.l laxative a:i.i ionic l!:..t .t:ti:V:i V,w 1 :o' and stitiigi.'-.c. 'J.'-- v.! ; ;c v-teisi. Ai:.; more Hun this: i iv..v.0.s ! iv i i !?n(iL LATOK resulalfs t!u I ivr, keeps it a. iix and heaitiiv, sr-i whin '.:e I.ivu is i pood conJiii.m yi.u ;i..J vourjelf froe fror: Malaria, Bilious n-.-., IhJi.-esiion, bid. Headache anJ Co.it ti.Mio'n, and rid c; that worn out a':J 'ufliiii.nej ft-i-liotr These are ail car.-tj 1 y a sli v isti live:. Good digestion and Ireo.'om lioin sfoin.i. h troubles will only be b:j when Hi; livi-i is properly at work, li irorMeJ with any of these cbinplaii.ts, t:v bl.M.MONS LIVI D RBGULATOK. Tlx- Kins of Liver Medi cines, and Belter than Pills. SB-EVF:KY I'ACKAGLI-es, Has tho Z Stamp in red on wrapper. J.H. Zellln & Co., I'l .Ma., Pa, All lutorpsiiuf Letter. Stl.VKK Lakk, Or., Fd. 15, 1SD0. Ennoit OuAitu: Knowing Unit a few items from this place wiil be of interest to the many readers of the Guard in Lane county and that there Ih no seltleuicnt out of Lane county dial Is more dexirviiig of mention through Ihu columns of your paper than Silver Lake, we take I In liberty of sending you a few of the happen ings of this Isolated place. Oliver Luke is settled almost entirely by Lime con nly people, and llio CIuaiid is a Idler from home for nil. We have hud a very fine winter to far nnd cuttle on Ihe range are in line condition. Messrs Ciowdy, Wyniait and Thoni asson returned TuoMlny from n week's hunt on tho desert with their wagon well loaded with coyotes. C L Williams visited Summer Lake the first of the week. Elmer Lulz. returned from Poitland last week, where he has been on boo tless. George Wiiikicmau has been fteding his sheep at the A I. ranch. He in tends to turn a band on the range in a few days and move the others to his place a. Summer Lake. Sam Cortiui has a band of about IU0 heat! ot cattlo in U F Abshire's field that have not been fed any ns yet. C Porter is feeding several head of cattle at his place on Ililek Creek. L Iluzletnn has built himself n two wheel wagon and is putting ill his time working wild liormsand mules. Commissioner A V Lane lias l n sick for some time. We hope lie may soon rtcovi r asdeinoeralle nflkvrs nro tun scarce to l.Kise. A petition is lidng circulated for the establishment of a dailv mail route be tween th s place and Klamnth Falls. t'L Williams Intends visiting Eu gene early in the summer. F M Chiisnian has his large ice house and water tank completed. If this summer weather continues he will have to import his Ice. The populists aro howling loud mid lustrious here. So far only two aspir ants are reported from this place. Wo arc Informed that L Hazlelmi will without a doubt receive the nomina tion for sheriir, and Cope West bus great aspirations for tho ollle; of coun ty clerk. ' Leaving on l.rrrr Train Sl'oKANK, Was., Feb. 20. The nub to Marcus of miners making ready to enter the ( iville reserve anil loci.te mineral claims, supposed, to be of vast wealth, continues. Fully 100 left on the trains yesterday, with outfits. The movement has taken the form of a craze. Bill Nye, (lie huinoilst, is very III at his home in North Carolina and Is not expected t" mover. The democrats ami populists of Seattle, Wash., have fuse d, GREAT BARGAIN THE il KKXlS WAUON ROAD. ' Congress Will be Asked te Maintain That Part of it In'l lie Cascade I lteserve. The following iK'titiou to Congress has been circulated in the city yester day and today and Is being liberally signed, thcie being now about 100 names on the list: TO TIIK IUIMIHAI1I.K, Til K I'ONOKKSS or tii 13 i'MTi:i status: The tinoersigned business men and citizens of the city of Eugene, in the State of Oregon, most respectfully represent and show to tho Honorable Congress of the United Stales that there has been n public highway over the Cascadu range of mountains lead ing from lliesaid eily of Eugene in the Willamette valley to Prinevllle, ill Eastern Oregon, being known as tho McKenzie route. The said public road has been kept up principally by the citizens of Eugene and vicinity. That the said route is the best moun tain road ovi r the said Cascade Moun tains connecting (be large sections ot country together, and is of great im portance to the people of both sections of (his state to have the said road kept in repairs and open for pubi c travel, We would furl her represent that the said public road passes tluough the Timber it .-ctve of the Cascade Moun tains, create.) by the Honorable Con gress rt the session they held in 18!K and 'ill, a distance of about llfty miles, and inasmuch as h would ho a tres pass for people as private citizens to oe'eupy, repair and rebuilel said road, we therefore most respectfully ask the Congress of Ihu United States to de clare the said road n public highway of Ihu United State?, m.d llial tho sum of foOOO, or to much as may be neces sary be annually appropi luted to build and keep in repair the said public road. Pi rsoiial. I ans j j iiowarei is hick again. I Mil IS A Washburn of Springfield visited ill Eugene todny. Ir E D Melveniiey is home from a vifit to Latourello Fulls. MrsG It Chrismun and little sou, are now visiting at Oakdale, Cal. County Treasurer J G Gravis cou linnl lo his home witu sickness. John Ehrmun, C M Young's butcher is confined to his room with sickness. i We nro sorrv tn lenrn Hint J If Gonil. man Is nllllclcd with n cancer on Ills face. As-istnnt Superintendent J O Mo (iuire ot the S P company spent a few hours In Eugene today. Attorney II T Condon went to Sa this niorning on the local train to at tend to some business matters. Frank Anderson, who is III witli the typhoid fever at Ills home in Portland, is reported considerably Improved. Geo T Hall, Sr, arrived home on the early train this morning, after a visit of nearly four weeks in the East. Hon II I! Bcekman, of Portland, arrived hero this afternoon and will ledum before the advancement dub tonig-ht. Ilr RT Burnett returned to his home at Portland this morning. He was aciiiinpanled by his sister, Miss Laura, ulinwill visit in that city for a few weeks. A Shaving .Machine. Shaving a man In twenty five sec iii'ls is a feat deserving of praise by all ! nidi as value their time. The feat bus been rendered easy of performance i hy the construction of a shaving ma chine of wood, reported to have been ' made by Melchoir Farkas, a convict ; in the penitentiary of tho city of J'zege ili ii , in Hungary. Fnrkns was put to labor iii the cabinet making shop of the prlseiu, and, Inking tn his work wiili a will, he mhiii displayed great ill veiilive ingenuity. With his machine ho is said lo have shaveil all the In mutcs of Ihe prison, nearly 150 In unm ix r, within less than an hour's lime. I In-report f ills to slate, however, to u hat extent the shaving by machinery did or did not succeed ill giving com fit to the snllVrer In (he chair. Messrs I' Frank & Son are making definite arrangement for (heir liew hriek building on Ninth street. The htitldln, will le 4 i.S0 fett. Drift. The famous English reformer, Mrs Orniistou Chant is trying to arouse Chicago to a saving seuso of its in liiuitles. She thinks the great city on the lake shore is almost as bad as Lou . don in some ways, ami nobody knows better than Mrs Chant, how ery bati London is; you seo she has made an exhaustive study of its wickedness as excmplilled In its music halls and j other place of amusement that are not exactly what tliey should bo from n moral point of view. It is ene of tho I privileges of the reformer tman or wo man) to visit and investigates these haunts of evil in the Interests of the movement. And I suppose wo, who aro not privileged ought to be very grateful to Mrs Chant nnd others like her, who l ave courageously invaded the forbidden preclude, and come back to tell us all about it. Wc might never have known how dreaellully, horribly wicked and revolting our un fortunate brotheis and sisters in the music halls are. And that would be such a pity In this ago of social an alysis. It is true that some vf us are so old fashioned ns to believe that n know ledge of evil does not help us to a clearer comprehension of good; but then we happen to be so very far be hind the ago that we cannot expect the great hurrying, broad-minded pro gressive army of reformers to mind any tiling we pay. A for Mrs Orniistou Chant, she has been In Chicago such a short lime that one is templed to surmise Hint she must have drawn her conclusions concerning its moral sickness from Unit other famous English reformer and student of sociology, Mr Stead. Ho this ns it may, Mrs Chant "hopes" to start a reform wave which shall cleanse this city of Its worst evils. Peoplo who know Chicago im mediately think she has undertaken a tusk about the size of tho ono given n certain hero of antiquity, and are wailing tn seo if the woman from over the sen will prove n modern ller cule'S lu skirts. However much one may question the last ol her methods, no ono who has heard Mrs Chant speuk, or ob served her wonderful energy and In dustry can doubt the sincerely of her purpose. Site is a tireless and unceas ing worker. There is nothing that even remotely savors of the sensational or dramatic in anything she says, or docs. She Is too much lu earnest, too thoroughly won witli tho cause she ad vocates to lavish time or thought on anything else. Still alio is not with out eloquence, without beauty of style; but is the eloquence born of slrenglit, of purpose, of nobility, of thought nnd feeling. She believe lu the reformation of social conditions, and her utterances aro dignified by faith. "What the world needs now," she said in her morning address at tho Centenary Mothodist church, last Sunday, "is lives that have lived. Ideals may Wo hidden; hut dreams uro a fur off echo of a far ofT fact." Mon day noon she spoke at Willard Hall, In the Temple, and l:i tho ovenlng de livered a lecture at Hteinwny Hall where sho was introduced tn her audience as "a woman who could write a poem and set it to music, trim a hnt, cook a dinner, or sing a song and play her own accompaniment." Then as if to prove her claim to so much versatility, tills remarkable, woman rendered Shelley's "Ode to the Sky lark," the niuiio of which was her own. Whether she sang as well as she talks I cannot say for I did not hear her, but It was a rather Interest ing prelude to a very strong address. Another noted woman who is visit ing Chicago In the character of a lec turer this week Is Miss Amorelte M Beeclier, a cousin of Henry Ward Beecher. Miss Beeclier is 74 years of age and well fitted to tell fashionable society people "What Women are Thinking." In spite of her years, Miss Hi-eoher is still young In appear ance. Her hair is just silvered lightly, and as for wrinkles, time seems to have overlooked her pleasant face al together. She Is one of the few wo men who lecture to women upon the responsibilities of the home and wife and motherhood. And it la truly in spiring lo hear her. She speaks not in lecture bulls but In the homes of (lie Sill Heaaa, Statements, Carus, Envelopes Posters, Programs, Legal Blank, Etc., ttc. PRINTED AT THE GOURD OFFICE.- NO. 01. SALE. leading society people of (lie city and to women. 1 wonder If her listeners elo not often compare her with those lecturers w ho are so plentiful all over the land and who tell you Incessantly that in order to accomplish any great workwoman must hnve tho ballot; and thank heaven for a change. It Is incomprehensible to me why any woman should wish lo multiply mid complicate her already heavy respon sibilities; and the mother who cannot bring up her sons to a right conception of political duly would not find her self purifying politics to any notice. ablo degree by her right to vole. Wal ter Hesant is very near the truth when he says: "Nature, whenever she turns nut a now baby of the feminine sex, says to her as n last ailmoniliop, 'And, my dear, when you grow up re member tl at you will hate, loathe and detest any kinel of work except one. I design you to be a w He anil a mother and a helpmeet for one man. You may miss your vocation ami may e-ou-sole yourself with other interests; but if you do miss It you will be uuhap- py.'" Tho three Hamlets mentioned re cently 111 "Drift" have had a hard lime witli the dramatic news writers, at least, two of them have. Otis Skinner has fared rather heller than anyone expected. Poor Walker Whltesidei and Crcston Clarke have been told nil manner of unpleasant thiugs about tho way In w hich they played the mystic character of the Danish prince. s The Caxton club is having nu ex hibition of books Interesting on ac count of associations. Through the kindness of Mr Irving Way, ono of the chief exhibitors, I had the pleasure to visit the club rooms. One of tho most entertaining things I saw there was a collection of autographic copies of Eu geno Field's books presented at dlll'er cnt limes lo Mr Way. Upon the fly leaf of ouo was written 111 tho dead poet's Hue hand tho poem entitled "Dlhden's Ghost." Another con tained the following lncrlptiou: "To Irving Way, a poet who will not poetize from Eugono Field, a rhymer who rhymes." There were many oilier Interesting bonks and some ruro old manuscripts; but It would take too long to lull about them. And I want to say just a word concerning Mr Way, who Is of the publishing firm of Way & Wil liams, and ono of the best Judges of literature In Chicago, or perhaps It Is not too much to sny, on this side of the Atlantic. It is only the purest anil finest things that appeal lo him, and In a quiet and eamest manner ho Is doing what he can to eluvata and en noble literary stnndards In Chicago. Waller Is rarifoitnd. Wabhi.noton, Feb. 20. Secretary Olney this niorning received Ihe fol lowing cablegram: "Pakis, Feb. 20. Tho president signed this morning Waller's pardon. Orders are lieing Issued for his rcleas.e (Signed) Eustls." nn. ftterensoii Honored. Washington, Feb. 20. Tho Daugh ters of the American Revolution today unanimously elected Mrs Stevenson, wife of the vlce-piesldent, ns president general. MhsCunle Thomas, who recently gained considerable notoriety in San Francisco, wns not an adopted daugh ter of Mr. Mollis of tills city, but re sided with his family for quite awhile. Awarded Highest Honors World'. Fair, fJold Medal, Midwinter Fair. 'DIt Mmt Perfect Msde. if Years the Standard POMS! ys-Tps.s..y.g f . jf v ; i - ' "7" " i x i ; i t ' : ? f i i