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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 17, 1908)
o o fBM ETJGEN LY GUAM) (:i ;i:m:, (ii:.o. moxii.w i:yi:ix;, ut.i m E DAI IflflD MCE WAR HAS ENDED l I 4pasA I A4 -I rf ,Se past and las' r . ..... nnmwara IriflOB "-' " jit cases of disor . -ii tho nt- BJJV Clttll" ffi.1itia, but it is not tie troops win oe , ' serious tasks. ; ol "aaaitional troops So etwrea upon the I jis riot nistory, ne .l. .ntrapps and the ; me . n- i cMvial eranfl , :uij. - LiedtbU onoruing by W .:..i.,n nnrt the l reigns", i till be in session so; tiolewe is flireatenea. Evidence will be submitted from day to day and indictments murnea us soon as a case Is made against an In dividual. It is estimated that 2000 negroes have left he city since Friday, many going to other states, never to return here. About -4 00 are sheltered tem porarily by the state. r 1UCHARJISAX WAV XOT ItK GlllTY OF ASSAllT Chicago, Aug. 1.7 A Tribune spec ial dispatch from Bloomington sa;'S that Mrs. Earl Hallam, who waB as saulted by a negro Friday night, the tsaiuilt belnn followed by riot, death una bloodshed, is not positive that Richardson is the man who commit ted the act, though Bhe believes lie is. In general appearance he is the same. Mrs. Hallam is greatly grieved that she was (he indirect cause of so mucli trouble and loss of life. A Record-Herald dispatch from of Richardson, white and colored, alike, are prepared to sear he wa at inline uli.i'veuiiig un ttu- nia n of the assault upon Mrs. Hallam. wife says he was not intoxicated t'nt evening, and that lie was at home 'ail i night. Mrs. Itichanlson lias the r,.-l spect of her neighbors, white and black. Negro Wounded. Chicago, Aug. 17. Walter Allen, a young negro, and several compan ions jeered at a policeman who or dered them to "move on" last niL'ht. In the encounter between Allen and the officer the former was shot and seriously wounded. Sutimhiy Xleht'M Riot. Springfield. 1)1., August 15 With one more victim added tohiaht to the roll of Injured in the race riots which began here last night. Springfield spent the night In anxiety. Appre hension nf more mi- l.icc Tile was modified, hut not stilled. 'by the presence of 2 r, 0 n ':in,,ai i.. i." men from various parts of the state under command of (ienernl Young. Tonight's victim of race prejudice was an aged negro, William Done gon. "OonegHn was a cobbler and in offensive. Tonight the mob set fire to his shop and the venerable negro was compelled to run into the street. His appearance was greeted with a shower of bricks and stones. As he staggered under the fusllade, he was semen ana ins inroni cut. A rope was then run through the wound anr (Continued on Page Four.) MINERS THROWN OUT OF WORK BY LOW WATER Pittsburg, Aug. 17. Work is suspended In eighty per cent of the coal mines along the Monongahela river and Ihous- ands of miners are idle as the result of low water in the Ohio river. Practically all of the coal in this district is sent out by river, but recent- l.v the water has been so low that shipment is impossible. I'nless there Is rain sunn there will be much suffering :t among tlie miners. ; Y . WIIKAT MAKKKTS Chicago, Aug. 17. September, 91 7-s; December, 93 3-8; May, it? 7-s. Portland, Aug. 17. Wheat is un i changed. Don Vlckers, a local boy of good size, has the local record for the hiuh dive Hecetittv ha Hitmou.l fx,.... I the top of the river bridge, striking the water head first. The distance 1 is nearly fifty feet. tgenes Busiest Store The Mail Order House of Lane County Make-Room Sale ah Summer Goods 5 W1 are not aCac to almost give goods away. We are STANDARD determined to clear the store of every yard of goods FASHION BOOK anc every piece of summer material if we have to make the fu. oi price so low as to almost give them away. This we are doing fpS and the goods are being sold and carried away very fast. t III vm m :Tf 1 A 1 ' 1 mtffim lr you want to see a busy store, even m August, look in f 1 here any day. We are doing the business of Eugene in the wr dry gbods line. Our goods are the best and prices always KJn $H everlastingly the lowest. It will pay you to keep posted on "?-""" I the contents of this advertisement. iess Goods Nearly all Sold Long or Short, Kimonas Wash Dresses Closing Out at, of our Uwns, batistes and all At a Make-R.OOm Price Jacket suits and shirt waist suits, some materials closed out at X-price Every garment reduced. pique, others of India Linon, all at 4-price 1"'n - -5c $1.2Slonf or short kimonas, OCT- $10.00 suits $5.00 L, 10c make.room price, each OJ1, $3.75 suits ..$1.88 1 . I I . per Sale Contin'd Mercerized Ginghams Pure Linen Suiting upper dressMoi black and white, 25c mercerized ginghams, blue, 35c 36-inches wide linen suiting, Mndwhrtecalico and percale, brQWn and light checks. Make-room blue or lavcndcr. V m $1 $.50quality$ 1.25 P"CC 1Q TT- MVt 07 r u5aKtrnow$L5o 18 cents "e yflrvi C 'tyr Ginghams I Linen Finished Suiting Lisle Gloves AMSee witf' aU 36 inches wide, white only 75C long I'lSie glOVBS, 12 button Isngttl, 55c . v e- 3, 0ng ise R0yes, 16-button length, 85c h yard 2y2c The yard 1 5c SI.35 long lisle gloves, IB-button length, SI hODress Goods Are Now Keady IST.JIh.tSE wiDame Fashion has decreed the most popular, are here ready for your selection. The best are sure to be ihe assortment is complete. m . i i i zzi i DepartmenL , WM5.00. Thcv a 1 f r-half$2.25to$f .OU workShirtsandSox 50c 25c Latest of the Late Newest of the New We call vour attention lo the full line of "Dutchess Trousers" now on display. Fresh Irom the factory. No uscd-to be or has-beens. New, snappy up-to-date stylish goods and every pair backed by the celebrated guarantee 10c a Button; $1 a Rip If you don't know what it means, ask us. ""ST HATS aid 45. 35 Cents Hampton Bros. 558-564 Willamette St,. WHERE CASH BEATS CREDIT 'NEVER TOUCHED ME!" A, E, TAYLOR DROWNED IN M'KENZIE RIVER Philaaelohia Ledur. STEAMER BLOWS UP WITH LOSS OF LIFE Traverse City, Aug. 17. One Is, known to be dead, a dozen or more j are missing or supposed to have been drowned, two fatuity injured and a I number seriously hurt by the eblow-l Ing up of the steamer Leelanaw on Carp lake today. The steamer, which plied between the ports on Carp lake, was on her way from belaud to I Fouche on the early morning trip with between thirty and forty passen gers on board. At 7:30 the boiler blew up, hurling many Into the hike ai,d scalding others. The upper works were entirely blown lo pieces. A panic followed the explosion and for a time Utile help could be given hfise who were thrown In the water. Mrs. Isabel Uihont, of this l'ily, a aister of Charles Mosier. captain of the steamer Leelanaw, was killed as -:he sat in the pilot house conversing with her brother. Having on board pleasure seekers bound for Traverse City to attend a Wild West show, the little Leelannw was plowing down the narrow lake with a steam pressure of eighty pounds trying to make up time. The engineer discovered a loose bolt in the engine and had shut off steam and was working on the bolt when the holler gave may, tearing off the top of the engine and demolishing the pilot house and upper works, but leaving Engineer Edwards practically unscathed. The force of the explo sion had all been directed forward, and all the injured were sitting in the forward point of the bow. Many were thrown Into the water anil clung to wreckage until rescued by farmers living along Ihe Shore, although some were able to swim ashore. About a ficore of persons were In jured, several fatally. Willi. h: IlfclllNli AT IIAYUKV HHIlK.l': MAY HAVK IIKKX S'lTXXUII HV KAUI'K'SK'K IVii WITH KKIKMtK AX II FAM ILY 1MIIV KKCOYKIIKII Arthur V.. Taylor, a plasterer and brick-layer, wan drowned yesterday afternoon at llnyden's Hi ldgo, on the MiKeiizit, before his wife and chil dren and a party of friends with whom he was upending the Sunday plcnlckimr A. T Miles, a friend who 'is employed by the telephone com pany, tried swim to Taylor, but though he got within a few feet of him the swift current swept the j strangling man out of his reach. A slight bruise on the head and slight struggles inuiraie mat layior iiugnt have bt.en stunned hefnve the cur rent gripped him. He was fishing off a log when last seen out of the water. One of the children of the party saw him float ing through the rapids just below tiliu, after which Miles attempted to rescue him. Taylor was unable to swim, and in the swift treacherous water was a toy of tho current. The body was soon afterward lo cated near tho railroad bridge in fourteen or fifteen feet of water, When the party of six or eight friends and brother Eagles arrived from town, Murray, of the local paint firm, dove for the body from a boat and brought it to the surface. Efforts at resuscitation were a com plete failure. The unfortunate man is survived by a wife and a son of two years, three brothers, two in Kngland, and one in Portland, the latter arriving last night to look after tho body. A sister and mother In England also survive him. He came to this coun try four years ngo from Hull, Eng land, his wife following him a year and a half afterward. He has been in Eugene with his family for about four months, be ing employed most of the time as ft brick-layer and plasterer. .Ho was about, thirty years of age. Curoner W. T. Oordon deemed it unneeesKary to hold an Inquest. The funeral will be held tonirorow morning at !l o'clock (rum the Cath olic church.. Interment will be made in the 1. O. O. F. cemetery. PRETTY WOMAN CAUSES TRAGEDY IN HIGH LIFE BARUMN AND BAILEY'S CIRCUS IN TRAIN WRECK New York, Aug. 17. Captain Pe ter C. Halns, who shot and killed Wll Ham Annls Saturday at the Itnyslde ; Yacht Club lauding, was today ar raigned with his brother, T. Jenkins ! ! V'W 1 Hellingham, Aug. 17. Eight Inen of theeooklnggang of the Harnuiti & llailey cir cus were severely and two probably fatally hurt when the sprendlng of rails cause. I four cars of the first section of the circus train to leave the tracks on the Creut Nor tlieru railroad, eight miles south of New Westtnlsnier yesterday afternoon. The seriously injured: W. II. W'heaton, of Itochcs ter, N. Y., ribs broken, spine Injured and otherwise hurt; may die. Andrew Mchmc, of Mount Vernon. Wash., wounded in bead; may die. PORTLAND MAN ACCUSED OF MURDER While rating dinner fit the Lon don I'cHtHiuanl on Hawthorne avenue Just wpt of ( i rand, lant niKht, Walter Johnson, 2 2 years of age, was ar rested on a chaiKO of imirdtn-ing KI nuT l'cnlno in a lonely cabin near Timher, WnrhiiiKtun rotinty. Uo Is in tin Multnomah county Jail and will he transferred to Hlllshoro today, when; a formal charge will ho en tered aaliiHt him. .lohnson'H whereabouts are said to have been lut ntflu d tho sheriff ot JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES. New VurU editor, ji farmer rei dent of ;eui;i. iiunin:iled fnr vie president on l'e Independence ,ciiKit ticket. " r Mains, who held the crowd at hay with h revolver while his broth r poured Khot aft'T shot into the body of the man who. he HKM-itw, ruln.-d hi.H horn. Hoth fdiotd littl- concern nvr thvir predlcarueitt In ciyrt. t- diiC T. Jenkins Haiti? -iis first held on h fh;tri' of fepmloim nssaitlt, tint wa.-i later cliai ued with belriK jm-c'-s- , scry to the killing of Anni. liefor t'-r- arraliriiinent Harv-v It lo- kwel. v.Imi had been a elo-c frl'-nd r f Anni, th sla.n rmiti, tnni'-d ov r tt) tin diK rti ? jfiofti-y .if i)'.u'-u -'ijiitv a ( initi'h of b-tter- rei-fivd by Antii.- re-' c miv. in wliich he was warned that his life wtis In danRer. Tb" la.t b '-j COTTAGE GROVE LOCAL WAS HONORED The (ii:-t train for whb'ii lick-tr-were sold at the II "W depot v. as 111' Cot fane ('.rove !.nal S.iinrd.iy eveii- vii. Ail day y-tu r Jay tho Kiiui-ho pi o pie visit . (I i he paKseiiM-r slat ion l:i crowds to how ft se!ii'd when actually oecnpit'd Lv the Southern I '.if ifi- otn-ia;-. The (bp t is t he In in the Mill oMt.-l;" .. f I'drtland , - I ' 1 : jus. jm ' SIT Till I, JMCIIAIM) CKOKKIC. Who j'Mnn to Ani'-ricii next IhMllh !' i;k fnr the eli-eMim of r,n;in in,' nr-ldent. or : i:s- si, i i: 'liie Are r (iili linii-nieut ''ooi t.ativ hav" dte I lii' ir tiT.tv ,W 'he V:i;irt .,! ;it lile hint ef V' M !il III ; ! e , M .'i-i. nar III" S. I', depot. The car. iiiviil will ii"'n tnnii.'til and runt Jiqn San Kranrlse i. Aim. 17. -The r;i:-e in v.!i!i li Wlijtii, hang, aei tisi d or Ihe mur der of Durham While Hlev eiifi, former ailvisor io ihe Knri'iili i: iverlilni'lit, came up today before .llllW. Collley, si'Mni: in .ImlL'e t'of'I's ib -purr meiit of tlie stijierior emirl. mill v;is set fur lli:il Septeuile-r " 1 . a-iiiif-'Nin (Mint,' by a woman of whom ) wa f-nau.ftred His wifo antl -ii!(j ;v in I'l.r'liitnl. but tho woman 1 knv. n n!v In the nether world. lb tv I 'iiiihI in Weed-, The atn-r-t wan m;.d- by Sheriff (!. ' Ma ii'-oc'rv . ' t Wi'.sli lUL'ton county. Tho b.dy of I 'erd tie, whom John mm U iiiriiM I (f killing. Wftf found sov o:al uv.n in a fod'-d mil-ti iw.-ir a d' r' d iiorncti ad a s!iort di tanio from Tiitt.tr. a tumuli Hfttle tiM'tit nii.th 'f Hillstioro. liver since tlie body v, us diMv itd Johnson ha.-i b-eti iind r - ipif ion. iil'tioiiuii tin o'f.ier- ref'i--d to tiko action until a --ii'il thiit th v had - u ! f icb::' evl d The bod , nf Max ' S-tiinii rvi!!e, v. ho-" f uti' !" I way he! j t hi affer- an . O ast iiikui rrom i.os f 1 'he ellfirV e k. Atmole-. ' O o o o o O (Continued on I'age rive.)