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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 5, 1908)
The LENOX Portland's Nw and Mo6 Modernly FurntshcS HOTEL Third and Main Strecti PORTLAND, - OREGON Possessing every convenience and an ideal location fronting an the beautiful city plata. Adjacent to business center. Up-to-date grill. Telephone in every room. Private baths. Bus to and from all trains Rates European Plan Rate American Plan $1.00 and fl.r.O ppr day. $2.r0 and $3.00 per day. $2.00 and $2.00 with bath. . $3.60 and $1.0J, ,hIJ.)i .batb... Eugene Cu.rU on File O.' H. SPENCER, Maimer THIRTY-THREE YEARS IN SOLITARY CONFINEMENT Lovelace The great trotting stallion, stan dard and registered. The sire of many famous trotters and pacers now on the race track of the Northwest. $25.00 by the season. $35.00 to insure. . Tyler B. A young; Wilkes Stallion of much promise. Standard and registered. 20. 00 to insure. . w r A Gr.md Perchcron draft, (reg- " ClOCB , I istcred,). Color, dapple grey; ; 'I vcight, 2300 rounds. I he cham pion Pcrchcfon at'lhe Oregon' Slate Fair, where he won two cups, four gold .medal:;, several banners and blue rib bons, k G. R. PRICE, Manager. . Kincaid Rickel, Owners I Eugene, Oregon Kincaid V Barn, Thirteenth and Charnelton Streets Boston. Ma.. S-it. 5 Js.-se Pom roy, on of the most notorious life lirlkowrs In tli- I'nltid Sialfa, to morrow will niter upon the thirty second year of Inn confinement be hind the gray walls of the famous Slate Prison of Charleston. All of 1 these yeara have been passed In sol itary confinement. ! When he was 14 years old Pom eroy was sentenced to prison for life j for torturing and murdering little children, lie is now 4H years old and I looks to be much older. Despite his long incarceration, he apparently I still has hopes of a pardon, though i he has never hec-n given the slightest i ynoouragemeut. In the early 70s Jesse Pomeroy 'and his crimes were discussed from i one end of the country to the other. I floston and vicinity were la a state of terror, when one small child after another was dlacovered horribly beaten, and Tlo clew to the perpetra tor of the monstronfl' cruellies could j be found. . ! On the day after Christmas, 1871, i a child mimed Paint-, living 111 Chel sea, was found unconscious, tied to a beam on Powder Mill. Ills eniirely nude b;j(ly was covered wllh great welts. W hen he reco verod . hU irate fmher nnd ihe police barni'd that he - bad met an older boy, 'wot had led 1 1 1 1 1 1 niwiy from the public Hln-et. ..jiiiil had then, in H'1'' of : li ift' wea k pronvt". taken off hi clothes and :inirk lilui auiiiii anil a;-,ain v.'ltii a . roll'1. . ' ' lb-fore tli" ivneral cm i i ri ii t ove li'is invMi' i i,p,M : t a i i H liarl di.it away. aiiiiiJn-r lit 1 1 bu;' i:ai:i' l Tnvy 1 1 ; i y 1 1 ' 1 1 , wh.- found in an on l -:,i'-t lie 'way lot. si riii.-i! . anil tied Ijy i-npt's to n board. His front, teeth were . in b'sill l.ie li';d'.:e nl Wis uose wan I'brulicii "and on oilier purls of li in body were a score of bruises. The i child' told a tale similar to tiiat r lliled by the lir.it la. I .who bad been assaulted. ' "', This second dastardly assault in I flamed Mli1 whole coiiimiiitjiy. It v, as ' ffrgiied no person of ordinai'y crihiluai or vicious Instincts could I have committed such wanton crud ities. The assaults were clearly the j work, of a degenerate. 1 Fathers j throughout Chelsea and South llos i ton wished to burn him at the stake. Mothers, when their children were long from home, became hysterical. I Kor three months thereafter no further assnults of this nature were Irenorteil. lid faliillleit licinn to breathe easier. Hut ono day In early July, 1S72, Johnny ltnlch, a boy of 5 years, returned to his home In South Huston on the verge of de lirium nnd convulsions. Two hours before he said he had met an older i boy w ho offered him candy and then ! too him to a secluded spot where he I stripped him, tied him to a beam, jiind beat him until he fainted. This fiendish niKanlt stirred the two dis tricts again, and the police worked desperately to find the criminal. Two months later Kobert (iould, another small boy, was found stripped and tied to a telegraph pole. The lad's body was covered with welts from a whin o r a rope and ! his head was badly cut. While the excitement was still at fever heat 4-yer-old George Pratt, of South SANDERS DISC PLOWS Solid Steel Frame Strong and Rigid Have all Necessary Adjustments If you wa it the Best buy a Sanders. Sold by J. W. QUACKENBUSH & SONS EUGENE HOSPITAL Medical and Surgical STAFF W Kuykenid.ll, M. O. W, O. ProMcr, M. U, P. I. Battle, M. M. B. K. Sciiric, M D. D. A PjIiic. M.;D. Gro.OMt.UtBur.M l. L. e. McUnig.l, M. D. For the care and treatment of Medical and Surgical Cases Modern operating room and equipment. Appliances lorX ray work. Sputum and blood examinations) Full corps of tiaincd nurses. Rates on application. ..Training School for Nurses.. Regular course of lectures by the faculty and practical training in the hospital. The medical and surgical staff of the hospital constitutes the faculty. For rates or infor mation address W. KUYKENDALL. M.D., SuPt. BoHlon was found in the cabin of a yacht. His body, which was quite nude, the fiend had punctured him with pins and needles. Several more assaults of the same dastardly character followed in quick succession. Finally one of the little victims was &hn to furnish a clew to rhe nernetrator of the crimes. Fie I named a I'omero youth who worked tin a store in Boston. Thither the officers hatened with all possible speed. They questioned Je?, the 14-year-old son of a respectable dressmaker. The suspect denied all i knowledge of ,the assaults, but' he i wuh" positively ' identified by several I of bis little victims. At that time d'nerncy was not ; so well understood ;is 11 ls now. They ! call"d IMmeniy a deu'enerat" nd : sint him to a r-firiu school. He "was lit tiKifli-l prison' : ;iihI :tt tlie iiil of j Seventeen tlioflihs he WHS 1 rele;rserl ! tlll'olll!tl tile .! rl- nf fb T.ty IiiTl VS- Ifrn'tners iittd 'it1!'-- v!:n h;i'l Inter ested t 'iei!).-e V. - in his "b'-'i,;"! f .W'i'l'in twn :;::. a f t r hi.-i re , b-ii-e iiml n tu:'i ': v.n' . I'oui j erf iv iih't It rent ' m I murder tl t wo j more children. One of li is victims 1 wa a little Mrl. 'h" other a ."-ye;tr- ; obi bny. The renin i wete so mil I Minted Hi nl t ney scarcely eon Id bt I recfinn I zed. J'meroy cuii fe.-jsed h L- j crimes and was L'iven n speedy trial. This tiiiie. insr-;e! of sent to i a reform school, he was sentenced to Isolliiirv ronf ineimnt for life. t 1 I'm thirty-oii" years he lias been ; nonfilled in a cell as small as a closet. dark and bare. On a dozen occa sions ho lias, with superhuman cun nliiK. devised plans of escape, and in spite of constant watching has succeeded in carrying; them to an advanced stage of execution. He has never attended divine services fn the priaon chapel and has never been required to work. It Is said that he has spent much of his time In reading and has become fairly well Informed. But so far as per sonal experience goes, such things aa electric chairs, phonographs, tel ephones and many other things in common use today, are absolutely unknown to him. . Don't Poison Baby, FOlfrY YEAES A0 rmost tverj- rvoihef thought h? PAREGORIC or laudanma t naie it sleep. These rW J sleep, and A FEW DROPS TOO HAS? win produce the SLEEP f THERE IS NO WAKINQ. Many are the ehildrea who ha u. , whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, laudanum and mpd of which is a narcotic product of opium. Druggists are prohibited fwj either of tne narcotics namea xo cnuaren at an, or xo anybody itW them " noison." The definition of " narcotic " is : "A medicine ichu,, ,.' and produces sleep, but which in poisonous doses produces stupor iConJ and sold under the names of "Drops," "Cordials," "Soothin? Sviht should not permit any medicine to be given to your children wJ) your physician know of what it is composed. OASTORIA DOES M IAIN JNAxCUUIUjiS, U lii ueaia tuo Biguauiuo ui vuaa. n, jtletcher, Letters from Prominent Phv tA .J rt .. . - ill., j t r- '.. I ANcacIiiMclVcpanilinalW-As- .-. ROY DAVIS HONORED AT ANNAPOLIS WiihIiIiikImii, Sopt. 4. Mldshlp iniui Uciy II. DuvIk, of KiiRi'iiu, has hri'ii npimiiiteil ndjutiint of tint w oiid lia 1 1 a I ton of niiilshliiinciit at An uipollH for the onsuliiK year.Mi'rlto rloiiH work won the niiolntmuiit, he KtandliiK m'Venth in the class. X i:VS IX llltlKF BEVERIDGE AND HUGHES OPEN OHIO CONTEST ( Cont Iniipfl on Pane Five.) Such men are necessary to human proKreas. Always Burn men have been the voice of a protest, but nev er the statesman of a cause. Always they have been the urers of 11 re form, but never the doers of the work. Mr. Ilryan Is an Aaron, but not a Moses; a Henry, but not a WasliinK ton; a Wendell Phillips, but not an Abraham. I.ltirqlu. He Is a storm of unrest which clears the atmosphere, but not Ihe trade winds that carry to port the freighted ships of a people's hops. Knur years iiko. In his own home. paylnt! tribute to his character and The Unfile River and Southern Or oKon railroad has been Incorporated,1 to run from (iniuts Pass to Waldo. Today Ihe court house Is In charKe of deputies, for every county officer who holds forth at the county's cap Itol Is out of town atteudliiK the Silo fair, says the Albany Herald. The Juilite, sheriff, clerk, recorder, treas urer and school superintendent are all miucl. r called Hint a dreamer who seehiK the fair. beholds happy visions but achieves A Boston dispatch says' a brutal ' " useful deed. Ills is the mind that crime was disclosed tonlKht In the thinks of the barren field hcndinK discovery of the torso of Mrs. Mono-, with Brain: hut his Is not the plow Sommcrvllie, In the trunk at a board- j man's hand, the sower's craft or the Iiik house at No. 7 Hancock street, ; gleaner's husbandry. The poet's this city. Later Ihe bend and bones;dreani of an undiscovered I'topla has of the limbs were found In (he fur-: cheered us all; but the Pilgrims, ac nnce of the Jordan home at Summer-1 1 mil ly landliiK on Plymouth Itoi k. vllle. and the scalp and hair and planted the real tree of liberty, be otlwr remains taken from the kltch-lneath whose shade we rest and bv en ratine of the house. O. II. I. uck. assistant coach at the I'nlverslty of Washington last season, has been escured by the athletic niau aitement of Albany Collee to'oouch Ithe college eleven this year. whose real fruits we live. No Astrologer Wlllhm II. Taft is of the Pilgrim stuff his Is the wisdom that makes the Ideal vision a living fact. Tried lln every realm of government, test led In every department of statesman ship, he never yet has failed. He Is ja skilled seaman of statesmanship I have u-ed lr. Kllm's New Life who takes hU reckoning bv the fixed i Pills for inauy years, with IncreiMliiK stars of human nature and cxperi- sausiaci ion. i ney iase i ne k i u s s i e m e ii 01 an uncertain astrologer They Take the Kinks Out I c25k HciliiTd-ftancdtj I Box. WUtMl.i3?TE XaMMMIMBKaSIMBaMnMMII I fou n Ititu out al writ. uV n Ml T4MiC kd rou will lt ttttf M ih RMwiuitf I htt 'U mk yu ttai Ki rtM. ttr' KMn4y" tirtntrwiu th Stvxrwvh. Uvtr, Khlaif k mvi i' K kfM or tKkM-tavublr swkiuf Um wm ImJ Better Than PiU For Liver Ills. Ti Mt TMW lJin. $vk SU Ul tl AttaM. IW Clnl Lm Ciqlia, Sku tkaua. rVnfln bviw Ckll M.WU, naium.ii KIhwmma 1p Uv or bM.lfv. Kttmy tM tM RMt4w ' . tram Ih. tttv Wfim. One Tabkt crvxs tiuxy out 4i f mi o tn a li, II wr mi l bowrl without fuss or friction. Urown, of I'ittsfU'M, Vt. (Inmuntcrd cat Isfnttitry at W. A. Kuykotnlall' din store. .u von V(xnsviu Aptlv J. 11. Con- mil. 733 K. Uth. 4 7 1 -. Stiri't'iior si ,t K. MrMl KI'llllV ha tnkrti rooins at Wlltanifttt Htrri-t. o'r K.itn' luok storr. 'IV I t'l'hoiu' lUark -SSI. UtMl SWVINli (iiiHolltto pnw.T, Xty V, V. Moor, phono Hoil 32S2. Order large or nmaM will ho RpprvtMaftHl. rastltm altsunl horosntpos from fin says X. Il.inary simis ami nymbols. Ami nut otn'e on all his voyam'M has tho rork oninji; 1h has mailt1 hoon wroni;; nut omo has a slnulo horosropo that Mr. llrvan has i at hoen rlufit. Wt dare not trlflo with our fu ture: "Humanity with all its fear. Telephone Ulaek .With all its lj.m's of future year, to W, 11, lavis. !ls liumim; Jmi athles on our fat.'" ; W'Ihmi the r.-ai commaml r wh Mas iiiii.l.-il vuv t,hip of stato through storuis of ttppositioti anil amtil tht rtnk of huMtil srati;ht for tho port of our hi In r liopts ami our larger liltorties. voltiMtarilv stops from the tf hriiUe and deliver to u hi hiua rommUsion. let u hand it to the ablest officer aboard and safely make the h.vhor of our heart's tie- I IV. AN c g c ( i 1 1 1c lVc p nni l io a I c : A s -simila'vinS I e I k d n n d i c T4 n ! a -lap iho Si.iiii :is iuttl !;avis oi Prf'motcs OicslioivCliec! ft: 1 ness.'UKlliisi.Conl.'iinsiit'illior Oiiiii:n.Moi!;lnMf nor Mineral. KOT NAHCOTIC. stix.Xtnntt Jitprrmiit - Jit 'omxuileSuda ttom Seed - Cfanftrrt Sttgnr vwiriytwi Flavor. Aperfecl Remedy forConsllpa lion. Sour Slonmrh.Diarrhoca and Loss of Sleep. foe Simile Signature of NEWVORK. Dr. J. W. Dinsdale. of Chlcacrn III ... ortvisn ttfl llr;ft in all faml!Iel wbern Hion .. ? 0Uf 1 ,ll o;0 Ca; jj-, zi . . " uuu 11 d Dr. J. S. Alexander, of Oryalia, Nob., says; " cedl-Js aeficial for c'..:',-'co as ylitt Ca&toria IiUoKrvcs Dr. benefi find it i;i use evcryv,!iore." Lr. J. A. j:eCio::un, of EufCalo, N. T., cr, your Cabtorla or .c!i!l;lrca.c!ia Gl'.ta;:s-; Ca.-- orla for my own children." "I !'.ivc .'p- J. : .I.O., r ibcJ I. 1 tit'.orr ::".h. y:::v , . : . ! :.3 ivca jo:- Dr. li. A B';.i;c:-, oi V.i::i-:.u'li'lla, Vs., wr: "i yTi toria 13 i'. riiiTMi'vc. i'l i'.o ciavs of chlMrtn f. r yr.-rs liaiTi" c.Tco:, ar.,1 f ::!!; csJIoriO it as a safe; reracl;-." Dr. J. A. L'oarr.ian, ri l-aias (Jity, IIo., aya: "YcurCj?- c.d remedy tor cn.ren, j.uot:ii tno world over. I nsei-: ap.d havorno liesitaiicy in re-conimendius H f0r taa aatffi. and children." Dr. J. J. JIackoy, of BrooUyn, N. Y., says: "I consider yu excellent preparation for children, being comjoscd of re!' and pleasant to the taste. ' A good remedy for all dlstuij digestive organs." GENUINE tJAS I OK A AL ceara the Signature of The Kind You Have Always B In Use Fop Over 30 Yeara THK OfNTAUII OOMPANV, TT MURRAY Till IT. NIWVOHNCm Sept. 14-J9 Salem, Oregon EXCURSION TRAINS and special rates to Sept. 14 Salem, Orel Oregon State Fair and Expositio ..For 1908.. The Largest and Best Pacific Coast Fair CHILDREN Frpp Monday, Uth I I CC Reserve Boxes Can Be Had in Advance tor th Races CHILDREN R (iinKiv 19th i I itr Sulc l HiiII'n Ittil 'rt. truc storv. (JASOI.INK WtMlll SAW. ll.nrriM'II lljion l:W all wood to .. ("U e lthu k 1 :. 7 I . Ilonip ll'.:-k KM. tt I i i. intti.i.iNt;. t ) flon- to rt Stnmtf I 1' .1. l:ly, of 12 4 7 V'st ronarosn I sf i-.-.-T . t'hl, .ii;o. tolls of n way to ln ( romo stroni;. , sas: "Mv tno:li tr. lio N and was v'rv f. ,'!!, . is SUBSCRIBE FOR IHE DAILY GUARD, 50 GTS. PER MONTH V'or in' to .l it v I : U'lko - l.olC-r I' . T. ' IJ. d M .M. tt'i'l 'i (tri'.M-li: ,! dnllo 'nr.l' Hon!. d. rU i-ic t:i.' Hit! , to t.''.l I I r. !i.:-li j r.' v uu fl-'h I- Greatest Exhibit at any Coast Fair New buildings all completed Walks and grounds the fii.cst Free camping for thousands Agricultural College to hold meetings 1i 1 HTrlll Kaces six aays; commence Free evening entertainments McElroy's Band ,M Orchestra Prominent men iil speak Fancy stock shown d.'.iiy COMPLETE PROGRAM FOR SIX DAYS Two Great ShowsDay and Night Something Doing Every Hour! 'One Hundred Thousand Oregon Peo Attend The Fair and Are Better For 8i ns( i:inK von uu: tiiwun w. pnuti loT'.rfit from KI t' .'( I fivl it N in ! nt w hi vo,t ; rmif nn.l t it;.'.!i-iit ;i!iiU it i i ' 'cti:.1 at' ! 'ic i s'-'a ii'v :iliiint SiU m!rr L-'irttiuu.' at A. Kn kouilaU'it dru ttorv. 5 ,'. Low Rates Salem, Oregon Sept. 14-19 A week of Profit for You! Enjoyment for the Family! Summer School for All! Low RatK Salem, 0d Sept. H c o O