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About Daily Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 189?-1904 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1902)
V wWl 'rcparauoniorAS- I ' .i.nf-v.l nnHDodnln- I ''jtjdis andI3owels of LlMlcsDi$eslion,CheerfuF ' . . .i HostConUtins neither rniJIorpliine norMicraL yotJCARCOTic. .IS loafed Remedy forConstlpa Ifen. Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea and Loss of Sleep. facSiriilc Signature of NEW YORK. PHPT. MTOflS fi piiEt, PROPRIETORS A fair share of the pnbllo pat lonsge solicited. To the Farm era we will pay the highest mar Bet prioe for fat cuttle, hogs and shiep. Bhop on Will amette Bt, Eugene, Oregon. Orders promptly delivered. Will Keep Consianllj on Hand a Full Supply of BEEF MUTTON PORK and VEAL Having a larfte tad complete stock of Staple and Fancy Groceries, bought in the best markets, I can offer the pnbllo better CASH Prices than any other house in Eugene J. L. PAGE EUGENE FLORENCE STAGE LINE. i: & BANGS, Proprietor. n?S? leVM "Kene for Florence ""uoept Sunday at 6 a m Kefurnlng stage leavee Florence "Kageae dally exoept Sundays at 2 SWrdayaat 8 am. ,MJJ In Eugene at 6 p m the day ..5 .-S livery stable. "mow. 1'k o0o A WHEELER, Expert Accountant. XmII' ,enc,,-I'irmnnt. OfOff011 i'rw, from single to doable entry, in In double entry. iLS , jnWcate and involved acooun -lOT.lric, nn orders addressed as above """ve prompt attention. Hie MUTUAL LFE INSURANCE COMPANY of Ntw York C of lire. Endowment and Gold Bond ud '?d tomMt: Cunntd value """uluMlmtd by W- A. WANN, Eugene, Or. otel Eugene I TNSEGA- Proprietor. Bjrlct'y fiut-olw.. wi man a-neat, t c jr dty. exact copy or wrapper. P Jfii I ll " Tht NTuii',OMiiiNf mki 7onR errv Groceries PSflGflSTOIlIA For Infanta and Children. The Kind fou Have Always Bougfn Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years BUSINESS CARDS ATTORN Y8AT-LAW. J M WILLIAMS, ATTORN SY-AT-LAW ' Collections a specialty. 3ffice Over Lane County Bank, k BILYETJ, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW Office Over First National Bank. Booms, Obiooh, 0 WOODCOCK, ATTOKNEY-AT-LAW Office One half block south of Chrisman B 1 Euoxni, Obiooh. SK1PW0RTH. 4.TT0RNEY-AT-LAW Will practice in all the Court's. Edozni Obioon. HXLMU8 W THOHTSON OHAS A HA&D1 fJIHOMPSON HARDY, ATTORNEYS A "-LAW. Uffioe-In First National Bank Building. i sau.iiai ui mi ine courts. Euoini, Orequ.i. ( M TRAVIS, Attorney At Law. Office Over Eugene Loan & Savings bank. Eugene, Oregon. QBO.B BO, B DORRIS, ATTORNEY & COUNSELOR-AT-LAW Will practice in all the courts of the Second Judicial District and in the Supreme Court of the state. SDeolal attention given to collections and matters inprobate. Office First National Bank Eldg. Rooms 1. 2 and 3. John M. Edmunson Leon R. Edmunson EDMUNSON & EDMUNSON. ttorneys-At-Law. Practice It all the courts. Collections a speci alty. -Umce Over Loan ft savings ttanjc, EUGENE, OREGON, OUIH E. BEAN ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Loan & Saving bank building. Room 3. Special attention given to land and mining matter. Eugene, Oregon. MEDICAL. -pAINE 4 KUYKENDALL, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Offices In Eugene Loan S Savings Bank Building. Special attention to surgery and surgical dis eaaeeot women. J S LUCKEY, JEWELER. Watches and Olocka Repaired. Ecodo. Oaxoos JR G BIDDLE, DENTIST Office .la Olive itreet, (between)" Fiftih land Sith tU-w'tone block west of Minnesota hotel J-JEKLEKT LEIGU ASSAYER AND METALLURGIST Eoorsi Oboos Bert equipped Away Laboratory In the State. Prrmpt and reliable returnii guaranteed. Working teats mwle on ore samples of one to 6ft j poumla to determine the moat suitable method of treatment. A& rpiiE PACIFIC MUTUAL LIFE. Very Latest LIFE AND ACCIDENT POMCIE?. A lbbbt J. CaiO!, Gen, Agt., J, M. Wr.uan Portland. re Lenl igra Xoieiejns THE BRAVE TIN SOLDIER By EDITH WYATT fopiHoW, 1X1, fty thr S. ii. McClure Comjuny 'ooo)ocooooooo FHUie Gross wag a good nntujvd. bluatcring young Jewish bachelor, liv ing In a boarding house on Lincoln av enue when he was not on the road. He was a traveling salesman for Fred Ein stein's clothing house, a blond, ruddy Gorman Jew, rather small and unwea rying In practical jolics. Mrs.' Einstein nnd her sister said he was Just as full of fun as he could be and they not only laughed, at his Jokes, but believed In his stories. These were always varloua instances of his own couruge, their scene an office or a rail way car, their clrcnmstonco the offer to the spirited Fritzlo of some distaste ful statement made by another man, their event the cowing and rout of the other man In such terms as: "I'll pitch you downstairs if I hear some more talk like that," I says. "Vant to get pitch downstairs?' I says. "Vant to get pitch downstairs right avaykvick?" While no one emetlv hoii.vo,i ,n. stories, yet somehow Frttzie Gross was uumirea ror tnem, and whenever he was In Chicago ho went to the Kin steina to swagger and laugh with the expansive Fred and his many family friends and to play with his children. They called him Unole Frttzie, and they were all riotously fond of him, but his best friends among them were Selma and Becky, the eldest children, two very pretty llttla girls, one thir teen, the other fourteen years old. Selma was dark and large, with a clear olive coloring, eyes dusky nnd glorious, and smooth, block hair hang ing In braids swept back from a brow calm with all the loveliness of child hood and the domestic affection of her house. Becky's hair was curly and hung loose about her shoulders and down around her Waist. She wnn mnoh llrrhto.. nnA thinner than Selma. Her dresses swung gracefully around ankles straight and slender nnil rrinninir mtin feet beautifully shod. Her skin was veij nuue ana ner eyes Dlue and sparkling with the fierceness of a rath er spoiled temper. , To Selma nnd Becky Fritzle Gross liked to bring presents of Roman AFTER SCHOOL PKITZIB WOULD HTABT OCT WITH SELMA AND BBCKX. sashes and gauze fans and jeweled buckles. He liked to have them down town to sit at little tables In sparkling candy stores and drink soda water and eat pink and white Ice cream. But es pecially he liked to take them to the matinee. It was delightful to him to sit In the lighted theater, with the gay music of comic opera sounding In some familiar overture and Selma and Becky blooming and happy oq either side in light summer silks, holding flowering leghorn hats in their laps. In the winter be would take them sleighing and skating. As soon as the ice was frozen over In the park ho and Selma and Becky would start out with skate bags late in the afternoon after school was over. Before they could reach it the North pond would be cov ered with skaters little boys plunging madly, young girls gracefully dipping and whirling, men swooping and strid. lng, swinging skirts, bright tipped hats and caps, dark coats and jackets, dart ing and flying under tho blue winter sky among the brown and white elopes and tho pillaring black tree trunks or the cold park. Fritzlo Gross would wear a gaudy purple tippet and a toboggan cap, and from his dress and manner of beating himself nnd of magnificently breaeting the gale one might have supposed the moderate winter gayctles of Lincoln park Invested with all the condition of Canadian or RusHlan seasons. He dashed around, noisily buckling ladles' skates and whizzing delighted, shrieking children about tho pond ar.d showing off, cutting figure eights in the ico and skating backward with his 6cnrf floating In the breeze. When Fred Einstein came to watch sometimes, Fritzlo Gross would teeter on one foot and tell him of different masterly scenes on the ice ponds, one In partieu'ar of a man of astounding meekness at Humboldt park, who clumsily skated In lady's way and Saved From Awful Fate. "Everybody pld I had eonsump. Hon," write Mrs A M Hhlelds, of Chamberebarg, P, "I wx so low after nil months or eevere sickness oauned by hay fever and a-tlnna 'nut few llinuuht I ooulil net well, but I learned of the marvelous mprit of Dr KlnuV N'W Discovery for coneumptlon, uwd It and was onmpletey cured." For deserate throat ahri lung riisesMW It it the safest cure In tb world and Is In fallible f' r onueh, colds and bronchial affections. Guaranteed bottle 60a and Trial buttles free at W L DeLaoo was told by Frlta Cross to "set out of this park get out already." Frttzie Imitated his foe replying In a low, whining key, "Certainly, sir." "Get out of this park, I'tell you, and go take u few skate leseons." One very cold winter the lake froze as far out as the crib. People took walks on the ice. and skaters crowded to the lake shore, it was at this time that Selma, Becky and Uncle Fritzle, very lively aud noisy, started out one Kfteniuou to skate on tho lake. It was a flue, e.ild day. Across the bare, gray paths und road of the park, glittering with little white pockets of snow nnd blue Bplinters of ice, they walked out to the shore, nnd there their afternoon spread before them. The sky was blue and dazzling with streaming winter sunlight In its un fathomable heights hung and floated snowy masses of toppling cloud, and un derneath the Ice clad lake repeated In tho colors of its calm scope the white and azure splendor of the heavens. Up to the horizon the veiled waters spread cold aud vast, and north and south they met the city's smoke hung shores in hoary sweeping line. A little breeze blew from the land. The air was cold ns water In one's mouth, and it seemed to the children they could hardly wait to strap their skates und be off, flying over the frozen surface. They seized each other's hands and shouted as they darted along the curve of the little sandy beach of their start nnd out toward whore a few other people were whizzing black specks against the white plain. They skated on and on. The fresh wind blow ing behind, the stinging air in their faces, the free scope ahead, all exhila rated them, and they bad gone perhaps a mile when they saw across tho daz zling field before them a wide black bar. The ice had broken there, and at a little distance from its edge a crowd of people stood or slowly skated, looking at the gulf. Uncle Fritzle made the lit tle girls sit down on the ice and took off their Bkates. saying noisily for tho benefit of the crowd: "It is best best to afoid all danger. Von little slide too far, vhere vould you be so kvick? Vat .vould your mamma Bay to me then?" - - i Ho kept his own skates on, however, and, with great difficulty, balanced himself, to the admiration of all, by sticking one skate point into the ice. While they were standing looking at the block, lapping water they saw skotiug toward it, a few yards from them, a little boy. He was plunging forward, swinging his bowed arms, his cap pulled down over his eyes to pro tect them from the glare. He was go ing ns fast ns he could. They nil cried out to him In oue common voice of hor ror. But his Impulse had been too strong. IIo turned a questioning little face to them as his skate runner slid over the verge, and he was gone. A woman in the crowd began to wring her hands and groan. Men and boys glanced nervously at each other and the water, and thoy all with one accord moved nearer to it. Meanwhile Uncle Frltzie had unbuc kled his skates and thrown off bis coat. His ruddy face had turned white. Ho ran uloug tho ico to where the llttlo boy had fallen, his high shoulders twitching, his purple tippet floating behind. Here he turned, half faced the crowd, raised Ills chin proudly and waved a reassuring hand to Selma and Becky. Everybody shouted, and he dived. Whether he reached the little boy, whether they came up under the ice, no one ever knew. In the sight of the watchers they did not come to tho sur face again. It was a comfort to the little boy's mother to see the Elnstelns and weep with their bereavement. Fritzle Gross had no relntions, but remote kindred were proud to mourn him. A Lobs All Arottnd. A short time ago two Englishmen on a visit to Ireland hired a boat for the purpose of having a soil. One of the Britons, thinking he would have a good joke at Pat's expense, asked him if he knew anything about astrology. "Be jnbers, no," said Pat. "Then that's the best part of your life just lost," answered the English man. The second Englishman then asked Pat If he knew anything about theol ogy. "Be Jnbers, no," answered Pat "Well, I Just guess that's the very best part of your life lost," said the second Englishman. A few minutes later the boat cap sized, and Put began to swim. The Britons, however, could not swim, and both called loudly to Pat to help them. "Do you know anything about swlm ology?" aBkcd Pat "No," auswered both Englishmen. ''Well, be Jubers," replied Pat, "then both of your lives Is lost." Does Bad Ending- Hurt the Bookf It Is rumored that Its sad ending la the cause of the comparative slackness of sale of a much boomed current uov tl. Whether the bad ending is "artla tic" or otherwise, the public, as a rule, does not Jiko It aud is prone to steer clear of the author who cultivates the habit. When William Black was writ ing "Madcap Violet," he wua beset with letters, says Sir Woiuysn Held In his biography of tho novelist urging and begging him to cud the novel hap pily. One letter read: "Oh, surely the last number of Macmillan waa a mistake! I do wish you would write another ending, or let me read the one you had originally written, so that I may be finite sure that my per sistent conviction Is a true one that James Drummond nnd Violet nre still alive and are living happily ever after. Of all churneters In fiction none has ever s'emed so real to me as yours." Then Black went to the pains of pub-, llshlng a lengthy defense of occasional bad endings. Don't Be Deceived With 66 or 70 per cent whlekles or brandies and think It better than Franols' pure double diKtllled ICO (roof brandies, Jut have them tested free of charge at Filth and Blair stieets Eugene, Oregon. IWFr.kcib CAb'iOniA.. r LlAMIHtU UULUMI. m kbwport. Notices under tbia head not to exoeed 6 lnee.60 oenta per week; H Wamonthi 112 parye&r. For Sale. pit hi l'imi ...... run OAjLr.. Uood milk cow for sale. Inquire at 149 Viailson at. (OK PALK.-A bouse, to be reiuovid from premises. Inquire at once at SS7. East Eleventh street. FOK BALE. A d.,zen bl.xHtt.1 Bel. glan heirs. Call on or address W A Wauu, 104 West Fifth street. FOR. WALE. Oue of the choice., residences In.Eugene on Wiilametu street. Call on TN rjegar, Uotei Eugene, for further particulars. FOR MALE. Town lots for sale at BlueElverCity. Sawmills In a few buudred yards of town site. Apply to B C Sparks, Blue River City, Or. A BARGAIN. Lot and bouse for Bale. Located on Wahington street between Third and Fourth streets. Price $800. Heury Hiillaubeok. FOU BALE -A good gram, hay aud stock farm of VIS acres for sale, mile from store, poetuftie, sobonl and church, 4j miles from rail road station, good buildings, well watered, level aud good location, 120 acres plowed aud part sown to wheat, on reasonable terms. A snap for the purchaser. Can be reaobed from Qoshen bystage. Call on C S Riobardson Pleasant Hill or C A Parker, iS2 Jeflersou Btreel, Eu gene, Oregon. Help Wanted. MILKER WANTED. Iquire of 8 M Douglas, Eutene. I MEN WANTED. Tem.fWa men to work in the the timber. Will pay from $1.75 to fa 50 per day. Call at the Beatlle Produce Co, No 04 West Eighth street, atouce. Vi ANTED. Several persons of char acter aud good reputation in each state (one la this county required) to represent and advertise old establish, ed wealthy business house oi solid financial standing. Balary $18.00 weekly with expenses adltlonal, all payable In cash each Wednesday direct from bead offices. Horee and carriage furnished, when necessary. References, Enclose self-add reused envelope. Mauager, 808 Caxton Building, Chicago. Miscellaneous. TEAMS WAHTED.-To haul lumber from our mill on Coast Fork river. Good pay, steady work. Coast Fork Lumber Co, Cottage Grove, Oregon. City Property for Sale OsNDmoxa' Addition to Eookni To those deBirins lo nnrohasa cltv lota. I have laid out an addition on the south side of the oity aud north of College Hill Park. I have 120 lots in this addition, and am telling them very low so as to enable every one to have a home of their own. The prioe of these lots is from $50 up. Euas Stswabt Addition to Ebobm I have some verv deBirrabla lots in this addition, in the very heart of the oity and within a few blooks of Willamette street. Wbituub's Additioii to Euoihe I have a few lots in this addition within two blooks of the First National Bank. College Hell Pabx I have 100 lots in this addition. The prioe now Is $60 each. W will advance the prioe soon. We expect College HiU Park to become the most desirable raai- denoe property in or near the oity. HXNDBIOKS ADDITIOH TO GoLLXOI Bill Pabx We have 70 lots for sale ohean in thla addition; also 40 or 60 acres of very choloe fruit land. I have on thlB place 1300 young prune trees, about 400 Bartlett pear trees, and 200 blaek walnnt trees, also apples, plums and small finite. This place has a good farm bonse, bam and out-houses, and is a most beautiful suburban piece of prop, erty. It is known an the Looust Hill farm, and there is no plaoe in the state more beautifully and pleasantly situated. I am not In real estate busioers as a busi ness we sell our own lands only. I employ no agents. Any one dealring to purchase any of this property will find me at the First National Bank. I will be pleased to show property and give prices. I miht ex ohange some of this property for good timber land. Come and see me. Hop Posts Wanted. Fifteen hundred oedar hoD Doata to square 8 Inobee at large end, and 14 feet long. To be delivered on bank of river at Jundklne' Point, 2 miles above Eugene anytime tbia summer or fall. Address, W R Walker, Eugene, Or. Pare Home Made Brandy. For llvnr Irlrinev ,ir tnmu.ft 1,ui. bles, colds, iagrippe or biliousness there In nmhlt.. L .... . I I i. luuiiui( iiinu r rBuuiB pure brandies. All orders promptly filled with prune, annlo or near brand vat 75 cents per auart. or' $'j.&0 oer iralTon. Orders by Btage or express will be se curely boxed. Made and sold to con sumers only. I M Francis, Fifth and Blair strent. Eugene, O New Addition to Eugene. R V Baker 4 Co have platted the R F Boott land tousli! ting of 32 0ta situ ate two blocks south of the Pattereoo school building. These are desirable lots and are for sale at reasonable prices, For further Information call on R K BAKtm, Office at No 6 West Ninth street. Bankers Life Association of Dti Molnei, Iowa. Silt laiuranct Low Kales Special Fuluru thai pluit bury nta. Rate cardi it First Natleaal Baak and Loan and Savlaga Baak. Oregon's Favorite Seaside Re sort. Recogo'zlng the advantage of New port as a summer resort over other sea side resorts In the northwest, and to make It possible for all who desire to do so to spend their vacation by thf "Cvan waves, the ei uthern PhoiBi no pany In connection with tha Cnr. vallia and Eastern Railroad, will place on sale, effective June istb, round-trip tickets from all points In Oregon on the Southern Pacific- to Newport, good for return until October lOtb. at aoeui ally reduced rates. For full Imormatlon pleats Inaulr. of your local agent. W F Cohan, General Passenger Agent. Citj and Nearby Country Prop erty for Sale. I offer for ala t & l,,w nPi 1 m r land 2J milea southwest of Eugene; aboaUP aorta of aune cleared: DlanU of mUr 11... 41 aorea 3 miles west of Eugene, and S acres Close to tno corporate limits on the west. AImj id acres oi nloe bottom land 3J axi.oi nor.n ol Eugene on river road. I also offer for amis, ubu H.!rmhL l.IM log lota at reaidence, Pearl and Sixth atrests. Anyone dealring such property will do wall to me. David Cbibbt. Eugene, Oregon. Notice. The bonus committee of the WIMimAtt Valley Woolen Manufacturing Co hereby gives notice that the subscriptions to said bonos are bow dno and i avabla at tha First Natfn.l Bank, the company having full, compiled with the provisions of the eontraot. Held subscriptions must be paid within ten daya from the date of this notice. Signed: . J. H. MoCluko, S B. Eakih, R. MoMi bp hit, F. E. Dmm, J. M. Shxllst, F. M. WiLKors, Comrxittee, Dated June 24, 1902. J. Bt 'A." U j3 r .A. . beaiaujk The Kind You Haw Hvrirs BsBtfK C S Farrow & Co ...REAL ESTATE... loans and Insurance. Dealer in Harvesting Machinery, Imple menta. Aleo have atorage room a treasonable rates. r-Offioeeot Willamette Bt THE LATEST IN BERRIES. Order while thT lul Tha liiniNiviiav a hjbrid between the tame blackberry and red raSDbCrlT. Ftlllt VnrV l.tVM. cln ,.r1lah ma, oon color, rich flavor, uo core. MAMMOTH BLAUKBKKRY. hybrid between wild black, berry and log.noerry. Fruit very large sue melting. Slrnug flavor ot wild blackberry, l oueolDoth uo alroug, vlgoroui and very pro line. A doten plants ol either variety bear enough lot a large family. Bent expressage prepaid, on receipt of 12.60 perdoian. Mention thla paper. NOVELTY FRUIT CO, ' Wataon vllle.bantaCioa Co, California. SOUTH AND EAS1 -VIA- Southern , Pacific Go , SHASTA ROUTE Trains leave Kngene for Portland and atAtlnna mt atrkWan. 1 UO , ' ' way lv Portland 80 a m tO p m .12:80 i s, 6O0 p aa 7M5 t m lv Eugene At Ashland .1:11 ittiOt . 405 8:15 Ar HaflnmantA . am a as a m Ar San Frandaeo A - OmIm, 6:45 enr 910 a at 7:25 a m 76 a m UK5 i M I 1:80 I Ar 'Denyer ar &anaaa Ulty Ar Chioago Ar Los Angeles ' ISO p m TOO a m v lil jraeo ttiOO n m Ar Vert Wnrfh fl.ait . ' o.on - Ar City of Mexico 0:55 a m ' tM a m as nuuston 4:00 a m 4KM a m Ar New Orleans , 6:25 u m , 6:25 p m Ar Waahingtoa 6:42 am 6:42 a m Ar New York ' 12:48 p m - 12:48 n m Pullman and Tourist ears on bothtrel-A, Chair oars Sacra mento to Ogden and JCI Paso, and eurlat cars to Cnlcage, . St Louis, New Orleans and Washington. Connecting at San Fran cUoo with several steamahip ' lines for Honolulu, Japan, China, Phlllipinea, .Central and South America. See Mr L G Adair, agent at Eugene or aoarea W. K. COMAN O P A Portland Or GapClosed The operation of through trains be tween Han Francbeo and Los An geles, via Surf and .Santa Barbara, will bsgia ua Sunday, .Marcli 31, 1901 ....ON THE NEW.... COAST LINE.- Two Throngn Trains Dafly. The Coast Line Limited leaving each terminal early la the morning equip ped wih elegant cafe and parlor can, will make daylight trips through tho most pictureaqne, varied and enter Uining, soenea oa the ooetineat, 1U,J., rkvum 01 toe iouthern 'acific, TICKETS TO ANPFROM ALL POINTS EAST YIA HORTLINE TO t- P-uf, Du'uth, Mirneapolis, Chicle AND POINTS EAST ITinngh Palace and Ton-lat Sleeper. Dining aud Buffet Smoking Library Ca DAILY TUA INS; FAST TIMB. For Bates. Folders and Full Informa isgarding tickets, routes etc, call on or address J W. PHALON, T r a H. DICKSON, ot a 122 THIRD STREET, PORTLAND . A. B. C. DENNISTON, O. W. P. A. 612 flrat Avenue, SEATTLE, Wasb. Oregon Shojline Union Pacific TO THE EAST The O. R. N. Give the Choice of S DAILY TWO VIA THE OREGON SHORT LINE TO Salt Lake, Denver, Omaha, Chicago and Kansas City. one the; great northern M. TO Siokane. Minneapolis St. Paul and Chicago. Ocean Bteamere leave Portland every 6 DayB for 1 SAN FRANCISCO. Boats leave Portland daily for all Wll Iftmetteand Columtia River Points. Monthly Steamers to China and Japan For full Information call ou or dress nearest O. R. 4. N, Ticket Agent or address, ' .,? A. L. CRAIO. Gen'l Passenger Ageht, . a. f . Your attention la called to the "PTONRFR LIMITED" trains of tha "CHIOACO, MIL WAUKEE A ST PAUL RAILROAD. "The only perfect trains in the world.'' Yon wUl find it desirable to ride on this Trains when going to any point in th -Eastern States or Canada. They oonnee with all Transcontinental Trains and el ticket Agents sell tickets. For further information, pamphlets, ete. ask any Ticket Agent or O. J.IEDDY, PortlanoVOt. J. W. CASEY Trav Paaa Agent. Corvallis & Eastern RAILROAD. TIME CARD NO. 20. No, 2 fori Yaquina ' ' Train leaves Albany... .....12:45 V M Leaves Carvitllls 1:50 P M A-rrivee Yaquina ...... 6:36 PM No. Returning Leaves Yaqnlna ...,7O0 A M Leaves CorvalUs ....11:30 A M Arrives Albany 12 at P M to. S for'Detrott Leaves Albany 1:00 P M Arrives Detroit 5:45 P M No. 4 'torn Detroit Leaves Detroit e-SOAM , Arrive Allien, 11,-06 AM Trains I and 4 arrive In Albany In time to connect with the H P south bound train, as wsil aa giving two or three hours In Albany before departure ol 8 P north hound train. Train No 2 connects with the S P trains a Corvallis and Albany giving direct service t Newport and adjaceat beaches. Train 3 for Detroit, llrel'. t buib ard ether mnaaaaln resnrts leaves Albany at 1:00 p en after the arrival of H. P. eenth boned train , frm Portland, learning Detroit at 6:46 p to. For farther iufuiccatjon apply to EDWIN 8TONB, Manager JTTT RNIR igrnt Albany H B CKOMNK, Agsat Ceivallfs