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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1908)
f'..l THE EUGENE HAILT GUARD, HATlftOAV. JI LV II. ISO" o The Early Life of W. J. Bryan rS if K $:h Hoi 14 If vl ; t hi. Birth. 7rVMl lAV ftS Vmjl l Boyhood ,iLH 8 Kis Credit able Career The Kind You Have Always 3UBlit, and nhlcb liai ,cen In use for ov-r 30 em, liim bonte tho uauro of - and ban bren made uiil-r iiU ler s jtf -J1- sowil MipervMou iln-o Its liilancr-. -Xy7&XcAV. Allow no one to deceive you In lliia. All Coui.n rfelU, Imitiittons and " JisaUaui-ifood " are but Kxprriinriita that trifle with nde'i tfiT the health of Infants and Children Exprrlsuca BfaiuM. IJxjierlinont. What is CASTOR I A Cantoris, in a harmle. aubstltute for Cantor Oil, Pare goric, Uropa and Boothlnif Syrups. It 1 I'leusant, II contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Karrotln aubsUnce. 1 1 aire U IU guarantee. It destroy Worum and aU rYviTlsbness. Jt cure Iiarrhru and Wind Colle. it relieve Teething Troubled, cures Constipation and Flatulency. Jt iuuilrailt; the Food, ri'nulates the Htonuw h and Ilowelr., Riving- healthy and natural aleep. The ChllUr.jii'a I'auacea The Mother Frhjnd. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of W ' . H- 1.. . r su - 'mi t rm Mr 1 tnnmm'tmfei t Yetvr. In CTJ ilMf&F -nd Hi. P f Uw and ..SSSa Work In ? V Politic .'. t"-" ' Journali.m I 0 Hi, BlrthsUM. ll.m. III. Y H The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. What Stove for Summer? Nothing sdds to kitchen convenience io summer weather li'e a New Perfection Wick Blue FUme Oil Cook-Stove. Anything that any ttove can do the "New Perfection" will do, and do It better. Bakes, roasts, boil, toasts: heats the wash water and the aarl irons, and does it without dissipating its heat through the room to your discomfort. The NEW PERFECTION Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove actually keeps the kitchen cool actually makes it comfortable for you while doing the family cooking, because, unlike the coal range, its heat is directed to one point only right under the kettle. Made in three sizes, fully warranted. If not i your dealer, write our nearest agency. C2 T A JWD affords a mellow li(lit that iivery grateful io llreil eyes a perfect student or tamilv Ump. Drua, iiu-kcl plated, ueuce more dm able thsn oilier liii. If not wilb your dealer, write our near tit agency. STANDAKD OIL COMPANY (latawepurttletf m -TjUWavs 5 Kg . a a t vavr araV.iavi MOST CR.OCCRS SELL Olympic Flour every sack guaranteed Ud J wlnted rlutera Orrgoa bird wheat. It pro Ji.cn mora kuvea oi braid than any other Hour and tha loavea art Uthttr and whiter. Becauw ol the lucreaMd qoautily ol bead produced 'ht toil U w. hljhee than lor other lloure. ASK. YOUR GROCER FOR IT. THE PORTLAND FLOURJNC MILLS r ROBERTUS LOVE. rCoprrlSbt. If by Robtrtue Ioea.1 bat spoken face to face be yond all queatlon to more hearers than baa any other man In tu world't hbitorr." tayt on who traveled wltb William Jennings Bryan durln( tho presiden tial campaignt of 1WJ and 1000. and there la no doubt at to the truth of the statement. The purpoaa of this article It briefly to tketrb the life of Mr. Bryan up to the a me of thlrty-l. when be wat nominated by the Democratic party for tht presidency of the United Mate. It it a life poaalble only to American pol itics, aud. whether or not Mr. Bryan thall reach the prealdeniy. It Is an In tereatlna chapter In United State! po litical blatory. The town of Salem. 111., It the birth place of Bryan. Judice Hllat I. Bryan, a aubauntlal, Intellectual settler from Virginia, wat hit father. Maria Eliza beth Jennings wtt hit mother! maiden name. The child wat born March VJ. 18V). Judge Bryan lived on a farm near the edge of town. lie bad nine children, of whom William Jennings Is the fourth. Tho boy grew up out doors, drinking the dally medicine of tunahlne tnd the open air. Hit phys ical constitution, a marvel of robutt- neaa and energy, came by Inheritance the party leaders offered him the nom ination for the lieutenant governorship of Nehranka. He declined the offer, bet made a atnmplng campaign for the ticket throughout the ttate. The nest year, 1800. the young De mocracy threat upon the young De mosthenes from Illlnnla the nomination for congresiman from the First dis trict J. Sterling Morton, who In bis time was father of Arbor dry a-d a member of President Cleveland's csb Inet. had been defeated In the race for congress from that district In 18S8 by a Republican majority of more than 8.000 votes. Scarcely anybody expect ed young Bryan to win. He was not so very sanguine himaelf. but be made an oratorical campaign and defpated Congreasman Connell by nearly 7.000 votes. In Omaha, where Connell lived, Bryan was sneered at as "that Lincoln boy." It was the resctlon ngnlnat the new McKinley tariff that elected Bry an that and the allver tongue of the Lincolnlan lad. So at thirty Brynn was chown to the national bouse of representatives. He delivered hla first speech In the house the 12th of March, WC, on the subject 3f free wool. Senator Burrows of Michigan, temporary chairman' of this year's Republican national convention, declared that It was the best speech on the tariff he ever had heard. News- - ' V k e . ' i r t V 2 Itorshlp sfter a fierce lej-il flrtt .gainst the advertising contract. I -was noniluate-J for the siute by t.' unanimous vote of the state conven tion, despite the fa.t tl many of them disced with him on the si - r coinage Issue. With J"hn l. TJ .r ton. tie leading K-publl-n - for the s.-nate. Bryan (:.--- 'I u '' j..int delates, bavins vh-.i ' ' -"" ton. The foren-l.- duels to .:; p Lincoln and Oniahn. Thn tbe sole topic of discussion, i-ryiu defended rhe Wilson tariff, nhleli as a member of the ways nud mean coin mlttee he had help-! to create. A Llnc-oln the enthusiasm was sm-h 'bat Brvan was carried from the platform outside snd down Int.. the street, where howling mobs of overflow" admirers awaited htm. Tburston was elected D) WILLIAM J. BRYAN, FROM HIS LATEST PHOTOGRAPH. Lovelace Tyler B. The great trotting; stallion, stan dard and registered. The sire of m,IIW f.imniit lrrM.re . now oil the race track of ihe Nnnhweet Knn l... .1.. season. 535.00 to insure. By mc A young Wilkes Stallion of much promise. Standard and registered. $20.00 to Insure. 1 A Grand Perchcron draft, (reg istered). Glor. dapple grey; ! McioKt ?inn j. -f-i r " Pion Pcrcip, a, the last OrgS Fair. w hcrc he won two cups lour gold medals, several banners and blue Z bons. He makes the season Mondays and Thursdays at Ooshen; I uesdays and Wednesdays" at Cre.J -l 7nd Fri days and Saturdays t l.ugcne. G. R. rRICIi. M. n,L Veloce Kincaid , Rickel, Owners Bangs Barn, Eugene, Oregon and was nurtured by wholesome and healthful environment In boyhood. Bryan intended the public schools in Haleiu until he was fifteen, when he entered Whlpplo academy at Jackson ville, 111. Two years later he umtrtcu lated In Illinois college. In the same city, from which Institution he was graduated with honors at the ago of twenty-one. During hla college course hla oratorical abilities made him prom inent In middle weatern collegiate life. He won the honor of rv-presentlng hla school In the state rontet of college orators. He won that contest and rep rvoented Illinois in 1SS) at the Inter state oratorical contest, held at Uales burg. 111., where he achieved second honors, lie wss class orator st gradu ailon. I Jacksonville has a female seminary 1 In that school Miss Mary K. Balrd was I a student while youug Bryan wss In Illinois college. Site wss from Ferry. I III., snd was of eicelleut family and au ambitious student. A bright young I man and a bright young woman at I tending college In the same town some timet emphasise the aphorism that like sttnicts like. IVrhapa that explains why Bryan, after attendlug the l ulon 1jw college In Chicago and reading j law at the same time lu the office of I Judge Iynisn Trumbull, the celebrsted sssiH'Iste of Abraham Llucolu. r tnrned to Jacksonville to begin the practice of his profeMlou. llrysu and Mlsa Halrd were married shortly sfter his return. Mrs. Krysa studied Isw In order to assist her husband In his pro twsalonal work. After the Uryeus re woved to Uueoln. Neb, In 1SS7 Mrs. Ilryan wss tdmlttid to tht bar. Mr Brjsn btstnw Jonlor artner In the Isw finu of Talbot llrysu. He be Uevsl there was more opportunity for s Using young lawyer n a new state a Iwllef assuredly well grounded In his ow n e:'e. Ir; i" plunged Into s,lltU-s In the eptlns of I'vS.s. and that Nvnuiohls life Vivall. u In.teuJ of lh. law. lle was e:,vled - delegate to the Ivtrnvrstlr state coaem!on st tin-.a'u. h.-j' he made a vevh strong't adtivstlng fn- I-..I,-. also he niade a repntstuw ss tj) uprakrr He i only twenty rir. u jejrs old. jet theQcrj .t ear tlliners Of nil nolltlcnl noiMiinlr,na onll. ed It a masterpiece. The chairman of the ways and means committee was William M. Springer of Illinois. Spring er was so delighted wltb Bryan's free wool talk that he procured the appoint ment of the young Nebraskan on his committee. Old graybeards have sat In the house for a generation without achieving that coveted honor. Here was a youngster tneiuler so honored lu his first term. And when Brvan was returned to congress for a second term he was continued on that most Imnor. tant committee. in the Interim the Nebraska districts had been reapportioned so thst Omaha was eliminated from the First district. The district In Its new shape waa con ceded to be Republican by abut3.50u. Judge Allen W. Field of Lincoln, one of the ablest and uiost popular Repub licans in the stste, wss nominated to run agslnst Brysn. He resigned from the bench, so sanguine of success wss he, but Bryan beat blm by 140 votea. When President Cleveland called an extra session of congress lu the sum mer of lMi;i to push through the repeal of the Sherman sliver bullion purcbss lug set of isw. the Democratic presi dent of the old school unwittingly gave to the man of destinv In the new ...hr-.i of Democracy au altltudlnous stepping tone toward the presidency. Bryan of .ri.nisan, ageu tnirty-tnree, delivered In the bouse on the luth of August a peecn against the repeal of the pur chasing clause of the Sherman act. The whole house and most of ih ate heard It. When Bryan ,-ei speaking ha was picked, ap by enemlt sod fileuds tlike and borne around the hall on the shoulders of sntSi, who liked a rlpplsg line oration when they heard It rvgardlesa as to whether it suited their inJItlcs. N.,tw.l rfi. puted thst It wss the greatest speech oi ine eitrs session. Bryan declined a renonilnatlnn f, congress In 1 ,) became editor, of the Omaha World Herald. He wanted ft g to the fust,,) states senate. The "orid iiera.d business ortW made a contract to r-.-.a dallv on ,h in. ,'..! page two oo'tii: of ttuff." paid for i'J lepun.l,-a:i. which wss Inimical to Itrjan's protj,.. : llrysl resign ed the kraa. wtllum h. Lasrrrf. the legislature. Mr. Bryan remained a private cltlxen. He had chsllenged William McKinley alBO to a Joint de bate on the tariff, but the Ohio tariff builder declined. Mr. McKinley was destined to meet the Nebraskan In a broader contest a little later. In the meantime Mr. Bryan was happy at home with his little family, the helpful wife and three children. The children now are grown up. Ruth is Mrs. William H. Leavitt and has made her father a grandfather. Wil liam Junior is eighteen, and Miss Grace Is a budding belle of seventeen years. Younir Mrs. Leavitt herself Is some- I thing of a politician. She has been elected a delegate to the Democratic state convention in Colorado, her borne being In Denver. Young William is a student In the Nebraska State univer sity at Lincoln. Miss Grace, who In the event of her father's election to the presidency will become "the young lady of the White House," It at home with her estimable mother on the Bryan farm near Lincoln, known as "Falrvlew," where the head of the family some years ago built a hand some residence. Prior to that the fam ily had occupied a modest cottage In Lincoln, where Mr. Bryan returned to bis law practice after bis unsuccessful campaign for the senatorshlp. When In 1896 the Republican conven tion which nominated McKinley for president met in St. Louis, William J. Bryan held no office whatever. He still had a connection with the Omaha paper, and he went to St. Louis as a press correspondent. At the Planters hotel the clerk looked over the plainly garbed young man who signed "W. J. Brynn" on the register nnd made him pay in nd ranee. The clerk put Bryan In n room with seven Republicans. Un der date of June pi a correspondent of the New York Tribune sent to bis pa per from St. Louis this highly Inter esting paragraph: Kx-Onncressmnn William J. Bryan, the leader of the free silver wing of the Ne braska Democracy, was one of yester day', arrivals. Th appearance of Air. Bryan in a h-uel corridor In consultation with several Kepubllrans from free allver states of the far west excited much com mem. in response to a question concern ing his mission Mr. Bryan remarked. "I have nothlnK to say now except that these g-tnllwmen snd 1 will be found next November voting the same ticket." Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado and others were the free silver Re publican lesders Indicated by the Trib une correspondent. It was an accural -2 r 2 5ei -V Elixir sroenna flctsSoatWtnnMnpt tyontliebouels.clinsos ihe system effectually. assists one ui overcoming habitual consTipalton permanently., To get its "beneficial effects buy tke genuine. Manufactured by The CALIFORNIA rio Syrup Co. ao BY IEADIN0 DRUCOtSTS- 604 BOTTli SyrupfR&:j Special Tod' : : 1 0 1 t O !( IS AND EVERYDAY Bass-Hueter Paim. 3 OTi fA nln. ine dcsi job on ejr f. ludforJ iw.sthSt H Williams C o. Tr, VOOD TOR saitt I ;504 Willamette St- fiujem. Phone Black jjm CHICHESTERS.PiLLS !MLi; A ' IMOWa.uol HUMk HfifMil -La." f Lawllfal AikTovrVruxfUttot i t hl-rbN-lrra IHinrnd I! maid I'tllala Rr4.ncl Oold BietaUicX h- tei, aeale with D!" Ribbon. T.I Httifv. llu v f voar HrattttV A1kfnrrifI.ClftH.TFBS lIAMONI ItRA.NU PILLS, for 5 Ttan rtown f Bt. Safes t, Al-rtM Rdlabl SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE fowl imtMt mi IIU, AMI, - A - " n nvntu, at tint i Ursa obaci sstas. prediction by Mr. Brsn that tbey ; Would be voting rhe sar.ie ticket with him in November, for tbev walked out of the Republican national convention when the goi standard nlnff,e adapted and aligned themselves with j the free sliver lmoeracy. j But neither the New York corre lndent nor the free silver speeders nor the Neb,,ka c-rr,-s,,,ndent and fr,v sliver leader himself could fore tell that the seoeders would vote for i Wl.dam Jettnlfg, llry,,, thp I deft-.al ,-sn.lid-.,. n .k.. ., . i.M!ftl at (.ii.a-o a few vks later. J. O. THOMAS Eugene Electrical J. DAVEd Construction Co. Thomas & Davidson Experts in Modern Wiring and Repairing; All Work Guaranteed .to Pass Fire Underwriters Inspection Estimates and Specifications Furnished WILL BE OPEN FOR BUSINESS MONDAY MORNING Phone Miin 574 West Eighth St., Eugene, Oregon. EUGENE HOSPITAL Medical and Surgical STAFF W Kuykendall, M. D. W. O. Prosser, M. D. P. J. Bartle, M. D. B. F. Scaiele, M. D. D. A Paine, M. D. Geo. O'B.UeBar.M D. L. E. McDougal, M. D. For the care and treatment of Medical and Surgical Cases Modern operating room and equips Appliances forX ray work. Sputum and blood examinations Full corps of trained nurses. Rates on application. ..Training School for Nurses.. Regular course of lectures by the faculty and practicJ training in tne nospitai. l he medical and surgical sW oi mc nospuai constitutes tne laculty. ror rates or into mation address W. KUYKENDALL, M.D., Sup. Better Than Pills For Liver Ills. Nn?'' V"4? K'""' i1"" pai'- t,tJUt sets ta Hi. rleht w,. ' II tlroitiSeiii ih Sioouch. DijtMjoo. cures OyiDcptia. clcusa Uvo ml Bowtu, tunnr Conjlipalion. Urf, on, NR. T,bl,l .11 lh,t h nm.r, to coma th imp trouble It M !hN rlTS il ' Li,'' Ki,iIV, "d 4 "cTtA ri,h' " "r tuM Hull's Ited Cross Drag Store. N ewporl, YAQUINA BAY Oregon's Matchless Beach Resor The Place to Go for Perfect Rest and Every Conceiv able Form of Healthful and Delightful Recreation II!i,Ahn1L,1iIES COMPLETE Best of food" an .ir-updance of it. Fr..i, ........ ,n mii- ne-p;.i-- "oici.nuiii springs. il ''f' s"ch "tcraph, telephone, markets treshlvr , r ,e"yd;,y'. 'n abundance. Cottaces Mrtl)' Mnittrv ll7l'rni5hed to be had cheaply. Strict muitf? anii.iry regulations. AliTSV' 1?CM hY waX 0' the Southern Pa t v j"e dTiln i ' I?' thnlce CofvalIis & E"ni R. R. Ts " d,"ly and the tr'P a Pleasure throughout. RATE FROM EUGENE: Season six-months ticket .$5.3 Saturday to Monday ticket.. ...-$3.H lf"v'l!0M'' Sura,r Book Rives , concise 'descriptioi . ' ,at!udi ' t of hotels,, their Jcapscity ' ""' on. ,tleph,ne or write A. J. CILUTTg, WM. McMURR-AY, o. p. A , F it:v O CO o imatrr-