Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (March 11, 1908)
THE you ME DAILY GUARD ki;kxk, oi:f.;ox, wkpxksday. makch ii, hiuk ml TRAGEDY OCCURS AT EXCLUSIVE SEMINARY .. -v 1) At the Lau- 3m. ,, L p..nied by the daughters F" lct nlEht MISS Chamberlain Weed, of Chest .... oMi.rtflnhia. shot Hurt killed tL EHMbeth Bailey Hardee and Crantttrt ulcide. -The women Lrxers in t;e or-ra,ion ci Mi" flr'' .... f-.ti.-i' ' ic "it openli 0-'-To.rl rr,i, - -..i." -i acne n ' , ... . . - in..L-,l.njL'n. She was KiMaitarii.nl, but escape! the P""?.!. .1.1.1 onrt returned to F"5! ..'here MIfs Hardee vol- Lrdto care for her. It was no Plw. .... u-.rt neipri strange v iW'.- "... , , I tin V c'.ie wiuu- . r-" w the bodies Of both. I jn ere found in bed with bul- . b8 in their heads . ..imi,.r Stedmnn de- I ..v.. ui Weed committed sul- Crfter killing Miss Hardee. L'VFRAIi STOK8STIS f SKXTKXf K COM M ITT Kl . PrtTslwre. .Marcn 3. i.euerni Stoessel's chances of escape from the death penalty pronounced upon him by a military court, which tried him upon the charge of surrendering Port Arthur In the Japanese-Russian war are excellent. ' Czar Nicholas, It has just been an nounced, commuted the sentence of death Jo t?n year's imprison lent, and has Intl nated :'.ia'. a lull pardon will be granted later. 4. OFFICIAL KORIH AST Foil xonriiWKsT Portland. Or, .March 11. Western Oregon Rain to- night and Thursday; souther- ly winds. Western Washington-Rain tonig'ht and Thursday; fresh southerly breeze 'interior, strong southerly along eons'! Eastern Oregon, Eastern Washington and Idaho Rain tonight or Thursday. PRESIDENT MAY RE-INSTATE SOME NEGRO TROOPS Washington. March 11. In con nection with the report of the senate committee on military affairs on t'he Brownsville riot, made to the s?nate today, the president transmitted a message In which he said the facts set forth In his order dismissing the negro soldiers have been substantiat ed by the testimony before the com mittee. He recommended that the time for reinstatement of f.ie dis charged soldiers, which has expired, be extended for one year in order to permit the president to re-instate any of th.p discharged men who did not fall within the terms of his dismissal. ment of 29 counts,-Including eight teen conspiracy charges and eleven of making false entries. Hail was fixed at 130,000 for Morse and $1000 for Curtis. JEWS OPPOSED TO ANARCHIST CREED Chicago, March 11. Anar- chy being repugnant to rae 4 Jewish race and forbidden by 4 the tenets of their religion. 4 Olga Averbuch has protested 4 against the anarchists taking 4 part in the ceremonies Inci- 4 dental to the removal of her 4 brother's body from the Pot- 4 4 ter's field to the Jewish ceme- 4; 4 tery. 4 44444444444 NORTH BANK ROAD MORSE AND CURTIS PLEAD NOT GUILTY New York, March U. Charles W. MiU-se, (lie for hum biinh.'r, and Alfrel II. Curtis, formerly president of tho National Hunk of North America, to day pleaded not guilty in the United Srate COMPLETED' TO-DAY Sievnnson, Wash., Mar-h 11. The driving of fu la 4 spike that formally h rihls the completion of t h Sim- kane, Portland & Seattle rail- road from Pasco to Vaiienu- 4 ver, Wash., occurred today. t No elaborate ceremony mark- ed the occasion. U.l.'t. New Richardot. Swaiters, $6.50. Sweaters, Coat, Style, $3.00, $3.75. Ladies' Suits and Skirts This season we're strong on the new model suits for lad es. The "butterfly sleeve" is the feature for spring ad summer. There'll be a good many of these gar ments worn, and the best and most stylish of them will come from our suit department. If you want to see some of these "chic" styles Just come in some day and ask to see them. Our stock is oomplete. Prices frqm $20.00 to $45.00 Skirts . New $5.00 and $6.50 Mohair skirts are here in black, brown and navy.' You'll find a great difference in the style and quality as well as t'ie price, from all others. Our price each $4.50 Fancy Vesfs Here is where the finish ing touches come in. What garment makes you look more dressy than a fancy vest? You feel a little bit "smarter" than the fellow that hasn't one on. Get one quick for $2.00, or bet-., ter ones up to $5.00. Fancy.Sox They look a mighty sight better with the low shoe and yon know it. Bet ter get some at once. Silk finis-hc-cl, aH'colors. The pair.25c to 5Cc Boys' Clothing Boys' knee rants Suits of every uted shade and style. Our count ers ara rairly groaning under their 5rt load-of new spring clothing. We tan just fit that boy out to make Ma look like a prince Ho matter if h 4 years or anywhere up to 15 Mrs old. ' "you want him to have a "knock- tboni" suit, it win cast you only "50. or if a better one Is required, 't may cost you up to 10, and worth ""r cent of it or more. Knee Pants Tifse are alwavs wanted and ran tner 0ve too many. Our shelves " full of new goods and chap. Pair, $1.25, down to 50c. New Spring Hats Such an array of new blocks, new ,!; better supplied than ever. Gordon Hats Tht hat for th nrun i nj nd blocks are top-notch-" . Earh - Wf.UU Mallory Hats Ff StTV ,J ... ,. t . itu.;:.n.,"e..K..nM.n? tk. UU,J cravenette nai orlll: no other hat can be , - - nuui oy this " "e soft .j ...... JoKn B. Stet- son Hats U reliable, time-tried and r of the hardest kind process. all styles; n. of ,iv" them the dlstinc- nt King of Hats. Each, IM.IH) to H.(H1 This season we're strong on the new models in sack suits. If you want to see some of the most swagger styles ever made in men's clothes just come in here some day and ask to see one of our Hart, Schaffner & Marz Varsity models; there are half a dozen or more'styles in the Varsity line; some one of them will be sure to suit you. v. Business Suit s $18, $20, $25 arid $30 Smart Overcoats $15, $18, $20, $25 and $30 This is the home of the Hart, Shaffncr & Marx clothes Copyright 1908 by Hart Schaffner tc Marz New Ties Such an array of new neck fixings for men, full to the brim, every wanted shade, clubs, tccks, four-in- hands and bows, every kind and price. Come in, let the boys show you they're jolly. ' Ties from 25c to 75c Hampton. Bros. Where Cash Beats Crt Shirts These you must have; if cotirH". you have some old ones, but you need one or two new "Monanti" shirts. You can't do better than to buy unn of these. Many patterns, and we have the coat tyl. Each $1.00 to $2.00 Extra Trousers Maybe you will need a pair of extra trousers to piece out that mil. They'll be handy to have anyway It make two sulfa out of one by hav ln the eitra pair. We'd like to net you Info a pair of Dutches trors. You'll like th'!m. The best will rout yon only 14.50. or 'others down to $1.00. Kvery pair Kuaranteed. ATTEMPT TO FREE ABE RUEF BECAUSE SCHMSTZ IS RELEASED San Fruncfscn, Miirch 11. Follow ing the setting at liberty upon ball iKgregRtliiK $345,000 of former May or KiiRone K. Schmttx hint night, f r liavluj; been confined for nine months In the county jail, the prelim 'imry Htens were taken today for the release of Kuef, w.ioso attorneys took advantage t:f thj admission in He ley's voluminous I'flidavit that Kuef !md been twice In li"t'd on tht same vid.'iiee, as well us half a dozen .'h-irgi's on which M'parMely. Henry .lis bail be r ducil r t bat he l)t reb'as agnizanc;'. .) ud' be su f;cst ion v a- l.'fHiant sh burden of tin and Honey will d '-innt tomorrow n u'bich ,f the imli'tini'iils Ituef is o b" re I ased on his own reco'ii- This will reduce Kuer. ball from 51,'J:m.ooii, whic'.i I! n-f has d"cland he rould give thu. moment lit- plea of guilty l the charge of extortion before Judge DuiMie Is withdrawn. v;n tndiced Ach askdl that o a n-i'ninal sum d o'l his own rec .awlor held t',,'t l!''!)cr th:" th" ubl b" r 'liev I of th- olditiimal Indlctiuents, UCDOId II SPItKCHI.bS COIUtOltOKATKS IIKNKV San Francisco, March 11. Affi davits In regard to the Ruef Immu nity contract will be tiled in Judge ba whir's court today by Rudolph Spreekles and by Umr hlmseli. Spreckbs affld-ivlt contains the de claration that he always understood, believed and Insisted that Uuef would he given substantial puuh'iinout, and that Ileney always agreed wt'h hln In- this r spect, and always ierlaivd bis inten:on cf sending Ruef to prls on. Snrerkles further say be never saw the partial Immunity con:ni't. ,r knew its co?ient.i. until after It Wi'-i male publi,' January 10 last. The bulk of Stire-k 1m' i tfi'bivi Is given to explb-!t Jeuials of certain detail of the affidavl's of Kuef and Rabbis Kan hi it and N'teto. Tin affidavit of Rner h largely de. voted to a hiner attack en the pros ecution and a vigorous denial "f the st!.t"n'nts contain-d In the affidavit-; It lu: fth'd. THAW l'l.AV TOO DIKTV i: i: roit m:v.rk. Newark. X. J.. March 10. At the close of the performance last night of "The Millionaire's Revenge," the pollco arrested the management and leading actors. They were charged with producing" an Immoral play Uised on the Thaw tragedy. EVELYN THAW SEEKS DIVORCE FROM HUSRAND New York, March 11. Kvelyn N'esblt Ti torn row w ljl lnal.l tute proceedings for tbo annulment of her niHrrlngfe to Hurry K. Thaw. The tictlon will bo .baaed on the ul lcitutlun that the defendant was in- ADDRESSES OF SPECIAL INTEREST AT PITTSBURG HVKLYX XKSIIIT THAW nne when the union was eonlraeted. Thaw purposes to defeiv-1 Ihe suit. The papers will be served Rotne lime loinorrow. and an .rarly trial la cx oei'twl. In the meantime the two, iiy mutual agreement, will remain apart. In official statements by rounsel fir b'M'Ji jmitien tilfiliflil W AS COli f irni- ed Ihe lone-suspecled culmlnnllon In the wedded lives of Stanford While's slayer and the womnn whine storv In his defense hrnuuhl her nn unhnppy notoriety as wide as the readliiK world. For week It lias been gossiped that a divorro w4s Im minent, and even tlurlnit Thnw's Inst trial. throuKbout which his wife stood Kiimely by him, II was pretty generally believed that, whnl' Ver the outcome for the prisoner, the two would never again live together. SMITIISOV Ayll KIXI.V COMI'inK "TiTHirmV ri'T''inini'iiriiinm mm New York. March 10. f'hnmplons nt nearly every branch of field and track events were brought together the New York Athletic Club at Madl Bm Huuare (larden tonight. The uporl was of the best, the perform ances of Forrest Hmlthwin, formerly of Portland, Or., but now a members rf the N"w York Athletic Club, and Marry 1 1 1 II man . of the same club, particularly arousing the big crowd to k high plteh f enthusiasm. HmKbson, In the third heat of the 70-vnrd hurdle handicap, made a new world's record of 8 4-6 necondti from scratch. In the final thent of this race Htnllhson skimmed over the hurdles a winner tinder seconds. 'The rec ord for this distance over high hur dles tins been 9 1-f seconds, made by S. C. Vorthrldge, of the Irlsh-Amer-Iren Athletic Club, last year. The running broad lump handicap was won by N. A. Klierman. Mart mouth Collee- l Inchest, with 21 feet !t 3-4 Inches: Itin .1. Kelly. Port land. Or . I uniitlache 1 1 . scratch, was third wl'h 22 feet 1 Inches, being de. feated by the handicap. ' Pittsburg. March 11. Severn! ad dresses, delivered by well-known Christian workers, were features of todav's session of the Young People's Missionary movment. Kov. .lames W. Morris, speaking on Ihe work In South America, dwelt upon tfio ne glect of that vast field from the Rtandnolnt of missionary endeavor. He uild In part : "s compared with Kurope, Asia, Africa and even North AnierHi, South America Is-R vast unoccunlcd land. If we except Australia. It Is the one continent of Ibis enrtb so spnrsely settled that It may be called unoccupied llrnzll, for Instance, the vnst republic embrncing nearly one half of the continent, with an area "qunl to Hint of our own United States, has only some seventeen mil lion In'hnbltants n population which constitutes only a mengre fringe nlont the conRt line of the country. . "Knormous districts unexplored tracts of rich mineral lands, of tin touched forests, of wide nrnlrles still nwnll the dwelling and the de vloulng hand of mini. So full Is II of all sources of wealth, so abund ant In all Hint sunnorts human life, Ihal II Is calculated Hint llrnzll alone can with ease aivd comfort nccommo dnle one thousand nil'lllops of people. Thus the distance between seventeen millions nnd one thousand million niav well give some Idea of the vnst unoccupied spaces, the Immense r" irlons rich In the products proper for the support of man, lying unappro nrtMied In this mighty Southern con llnent. ''Mut further, from th' standpoint , of Protestantism, III which lies, as I cnn:-ev i, the only hone of evangel Izln't these southern lands, hop'i by giving new life to Romanism nnd by rediscovering to the peoee th" g'ts ne ef Christ, Sonlli America has been declded'v a neglected continent." Voice I'Vnin Shanghai. Fletcher S. Hrockmnn. of Shang hai, spoke on "t'oiifllctlng fores an I changed eitlindes In the Far F.ast," dr:"''lng this cunclusl'in: "For centuries Chlnt's erept Intel, lec'ual fori-e 'has been held with the I'laioi'-les of nn effete scholasticism. For 2000 years h"r Intellectual life has been a worthless Sahara. In Sep'emlier. 111(15, bv edlcl of the F.m press liowager, this entire sylem was within one day absolut'-ly nhol tshed nnd in Its place has been sub stituted the most modern system of education which Ihe Chinese could discover, namelv. the Amerlcnn svs- Itein, which thev hav taken through Japan. Thnt day will nt some time be recognized n one of Ihe greatest dates in the history of (he progress of the human race. On thnt one day one-ihlrd of the 'human rnce cast off the ftinlns Hint had bound them nnd advanced 400 years In their Ideals determining in take their real place In the van of human progress. With America's educational system as the accepted model of Chlnn And Japan and five hundred American teachers ami five Ihonsnnd teachers trained by Americans In the Philippines who can doubt that the destiny of the Far Knst nnd of America Is to be tndlsso lubly Intertwined?" WIHiln a few minutes after he re ceiving a letter Informing him that a sniri of money would be sent him from ih Knst by the next mall Cap lain K.lwurd T. Hales, retired sea captain, who formerly lived on the oast, dropped dead in his room nl tfimkane. Iienlh was due to heart dlM-as.-. NO. Illi JURY AWARDS " DOYLE $45,000 - DAMAGE MONEY ITXKS VAl.lK OK MAX'S I.WiH WHICH WKIIK ( IT OFF HY S. I . UM-OMOTIVK. Jl'IlY WAS Ol'T OVF.lt SIX HOI Its. ItF.TlltXIXU VKItPlCT THIS MOHMNU AT V2HM O'CMK'K ' SKXSATIOX.VI, CASK OF MUS. IIOFFM.W vs. Dl'XC.VX SCOTT NOW lll:iX(i TK1K1. The Jury In the case of M. J. Hoylo vs. Hie Southern Pacific company, in which the plaintiff sued for $IU0, unil damages for the loss of botll les which wiu-e cut off by belr.i? run over by on" of the company's locomotives at Divide a year ago, last October, this morning, about I2:;ill o'clock, returned a verdict for Ihe plaintiff, uwuidlng hlui the sum of $-1.1, nun. The case went to Hit) Jury last evening shortly before S o'clock and over six hours were spent arguing over Ihe amount to be awarded the plaintiff. It is said I bat sumo of the Jurymen wanted to give him almost the full .amount asked for, while, others wanted to (Continued on Page Four. I SMITH ORDERED TO INVESTIGATE - STOCK GAMBLING Washington, Mar oil It. Presi dent Roosevelt has directed Herbert Smith Knox, of the burenu of corpo rations, to Investlgute the methods of slock rmllng with a view to furnish- lug u basis of possible future legisla tion regulating audi practices. The ' HERBERT KNOX SMITH. president has expressed himself de cidedly In favor of eliminating stoi'k gambling. ,ia HOOT WAXTS HAOI'K TI5KATY H.VriHKI Washington. March 11. Secretary Hoot has proposed to tho senate com mittee on foreign relations t'int II. ratify the pending Hague treaty pro viding for general arbitration by Hie adoption of the provision that nil Is sues to be arbitrated must be sepa rately submitted to the sen-ne. Fu vorablo reports were ordered on tho treaties for respecting the rules oT war on land and prohibiting projec tiles from balloons. NATIVES BURNED - OUT IN MANILA Manila. March II. Two thousand native shacks were destroyed by flro anil fifteen thousand rendered homeless to be eared for In churches by tho police. The damage will amount to one hundred thous- and dollars In gold. Chicago Wheat Mnrksi. Chicago, March 1 1. May, US 7-K; July, 89 1-4; September, Mil 1-4. A series of meetings under the aus pices of the Oregon Development league are to be held this week In Ashland, Medford. Itoseburv. Crimls Pass, Albany and Stayton. lone held an enthusiastic meeting last week that lasted until 2 o'clock In the morning. Seventy new members were taken Into the Commercial Club I here. 4