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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1908)
0 THE El'GH.VE DAILY GUARD, MO.VDAF. OCTOBER 10. 1908 THE EUGENE DAILY GUARD GlAllI) I'KI.N'TINM ().. INC. Charles II. KlHher Published every day of the week, Sunday's excepted. Address all com munications and make all remittances payable to The Eugane Guard, Eugene, Oregon. XT JO- Huhscrlptlon Hts Iallf l)e!lvred by carrier, per week , . . . . DoliQ'd by ftrier, one month By mall one year (In advance) One month '' Cln.U A,., .Ice . UIHhJW ..,h;i ,.........,. Weekly Guard, per year., . Advertising rates known on application. .15 .60 4.00 .60 .05 1.50 'oUtiwlne are nuthorlze(!(al take and receipt for subscriptions or t.Other business for Tire Dally and Weekly Guard: Agents for The Guard The foL transact at Croswell J. L. Clark. r'nliiirc Cunrira A IlriirV AM postmasters are mithorlzed to recolve and receipt for subscrlp- and wKiy uuam Q tlonB to the Vv KnU'H'd ah .MltKK OK ASSOCiA TKI) I'ltKHS Ori'gon poHtofflce an sccorid-cliiHniatter V MONDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1908 GENERAL LUMB MARKET CONDITIONS t Soundingr the local lumbc.raca on trade c3n:.i'.ion3 re veals the fact that business conditions continr.e to improve, says the TacomaWest CQst Lumberman. It is observable in the weliOastainetTbuildini? operations, as the people have found they can builat fully Qteen per nt less than a aS Also" in the better inquiries from ret yards trSfutary to the railroads, while the cargo trade to Australia, South America and California ports has been a large factor in maintaining busi ness at a steadjQirice. SomjKdealeriQieem to be of the opinion that business seems to show the same uneasiness coOnon to all monSfciQimmediately preceding presidential elections, but that stocks are genfitilly low and must be replenished after the election anyway, so there is bofiid to be more life ft the trade then thangpw. MiJJ men say there has been a better inquiry in the rail trade jinaa much better movement of lumber in the past four weeKS, thogrh the car shortage is seriously interring with deliveries. OAlong thNorthern Pacijj the supp of cars has bean light since th)cropiHegan to move, and lumbermen re port they are not able to shipfjmuch more than a third of the quantity desired. Conditions on the Great Northern are not much better. Under this recurring aggQvation, the coming of the Chicago, lilwaee & St. Paul is eagerljdooked for, 3 M wiiVadd greatly to the transportation facilities. Indications arVj months, and nossiblv vears. After all. there is no particular rea son for the liberation of Thaw. Ho is a man of no character and so far as 'anybody has been able to determine has never accomplished a good deed in his lifetime. Society is better off with Thaw in the asylum or in prison. Men of his stamp can well be spared from life's activities. " In the November number of Bonville's Western Monthly Eu gene and Lane county received a three-page write-up which does not c63t the ConQercial Club nor any one else in Eugene a penny. The editor, having become interested in the way in which Eugene and Lane county were being advertised, intended -J to give this city an illustrated writeup, but being unable to wait I for same he used the contents of the folder known as the "Deck of Cards." These three pages of free advertising will un doubtedly do this part of the valley considerable good, as Bon ville's, published in Portland, Jias a big circulation. O We notice that the labor voteQives no evidence of sharing the fears of the political managetOabout its being misled. As we know bipa, the average labor voter is entirely capabjgjof intelli gently casting his ballot without assistance, and what is more, is likely to do To. O o ' O l;'s all very well to condemn the wife-swapping of savage peoples, but wherein does it differ from the wife-swapping of too many of our own people, via the divorce court? Only in a lit tie r9 tape and lawyers' fees. GLEE CLUB MANAGER ARRANGES TOUR Trip Will Be Kade Through Eastern Oregon This Winter Contracts have bee&slgned for the University of Oregontiilee and Man dolin Club tour through Oregon. The trip will be through Eastern Oregon this year; concerts being glvsn in Ba ker City, Pendleton, La Grande, The Dalles, Hood River, and then !n Portland, Salem and Eugene. Pro-j feasor I. M. Glen, who Is directing the club, has Just returned from Portland with an entirely new and different lot of mnsic for the club and the varsity singers will appear In a concert entirely different from any of former years. Ruben Steel-fl mr. ill 1. ...t . . the glee club, and Robin Nelson, '09, J will direct the Mandolin Club. Merle j tt. lliessiuau, u, is managing una year's club, as Harold Clifford, who was last year chosen manager for 1 I eason, did not return to college. Captain Hobson, of Merrimac notoriety andOissing fame, is owning to Eugene. A large audience is assured the heroic Southerner even if it is made up of non-voters. The girls will all be there. The plans for Eugene's nsy postoffioe are he at last and bids for construction will be agked for on November 7th. That reminds us that even the nqonal government moves if you(Jive it ample time. Hobson seems to have madPa most distinguied concert. Here's Senator Lodge declaring that Japan would make insult ing demands of us, if our navy isn't kept stronger than hers. that it willjpjn the field for bginess on the Pacific coiQf in the Qjurse of six or eight months. . Prices of lumber have shown improvement in repoi0e to the inoreased buyinand the advance in The log market. Most of the sawmills in Washington are now in operation, q Figures fromtne yellow pine region, in which reports were re ceived from SSSjnillS) show a reducftm in the stocks during the year of about 436, OW), 000 feet. With the opening of the fall season trade in yellow pine shared h?he general improve ment, but within the cast two weektheSituation was not ho. buoyant, though in the face of badly depleted stocks, with 01 ders coming W, tire mill men believe the business will be such as to mjntain the bettej) valuesyulingscedf fairs began to take the up grade. . Well, well; a poor clerk in the Portsmouth (ft H.) navy yard li ti a Iiaah fir-iA rA 11 : : 1 . , - . iui pcmiuiuua political activity. u, civil ser- iciuiiupwuai uumDuggery is pulled off in thy nae. Thi9lndiana womanwho has divorced her husband and mar ried heVfather-in-law must have been trying to outdo the Mas sachusetts man who married hiPmother-in-law. 0 FtEBLE OLD LADT Has Strength Restored By s Vin01 ltt Tfhaol TtTnom of IjewlstOWJl. a., who Is 80 years of age, says: "For a long time I have been so feeble mat I have had to be wheeled around ln an invalid chair, I hart no strWgth and took Old at the Qwest provoca te, which Invariably settled on my lungs, and a cough would result, ily son learned of ti cod liver pM aratlon called Vinol, a procured a bottle for me. It btii.' my strength rap'kv, ar.ivitr tubing three bottles I aiSable to ilQmost of(.y work, and I can walk a quarter of a mile easily. Every aged or weak pe(Sn wlre ouirestSlrength should-try Vlnol. I iQi delighted with what Tt has done r 1 1 As a body builder and siWneth crea tor for old people, delicate children, we; run-down perso and after sickness, V1 is unexcelled. If It falls to glQ satisfaction we will re turn fyur money, Vlnol Is sold iiH'hisene by tliAtcd Cross Di UK Company. Now they saQthat President Sam Gompors, of the AmericS Federation of Labor, ta a tool of the Standard Oil because the uQon newspaper which he edits is ct0rying two advertisements for the goods of the trust. While no particulars are given in the press dispatch we presuQe tese advertiserQnts relate to the oil stoves nd axle grease which e trust manufacture and sell, andM-hich they advertise in thousands of papers over the country, the buaincO coming Srym a well-known Philadelphia agency. jSjhc Guard carries thesu adverOiements and we always supposed that they were put in the pape because the Standard people, like most big business concer.O, believe thathe best way to sell goods is to advertise their merits. That the trust was trying to subsidize The GuaiQ nevercourrecPto the pub lishers, and probably rQerQis to the publishers of the "Fed orationkO'' which Mr. Gompers cd'Q for tho Federation of La bor. Such campOrn matter as this is as sillv as it is far. fetched and irrelevQ. The publisher of The Guard, not having any per sonnl political ambition, is willing to be called a tool of Stand ard Oil or anything else that it might please his enemies ti brand him, but we must object to any man in public life being j traduced in such a ridiculous manner in "special" dispatches published in a paper like the Orojonir.n, which is itself carrying the samo advertisement Q doubt that Sam Gompers allows tQippear in tho "Fcdorationist," if indeed Vf has anjVuing to say about that department of tho publication, which we very much doubt. Really, the present campaign seems to bo about the silliest in tho history of the coQtry, viewedQom the unbi ased non-partisan standpoint. Oregon is getting a great deal(f what Michigan is praying for ftfet now. q Q O GovernoiQjhamberlain is playing tho non-partisan game to tho limit in refusing to make speeches for Bryan, and his action will disgust the real Democrats more than ever. Everybody knows ho is a Democrat, Qui even the Republican Statement Today's Suggestion by Ellen Stan. O PRETTY FLARE SKIRT. SKIRTS are of more Interest at this season of the year than they Qe during the summer montlQ for it Is during tbe winter that there Is u demand for separate skirts to wear with heavy coats of broadcloth or fur. TheHored one piece costume will be worn early tn the season with furs, but Inter on the sepnmte co0 and skirt will take Its place. This ilops not mean that tbe tailored suit will not be worn, but preference shown lthe sepnrate coat. The plain gored models, with tfy gores straight and naA-ow, are the prefen-iQ style of skirt, though some circular and plaited ones are showu. The advnntnge of tho gored skirt over the circular one Is that it will not sutrj' uer iue nips, as the seams, no mat ter how much on the bias they are, can be stayed with straight pieces of the selvage stitched In with theQseiim. ln thO:HL'k a neat finish can be aiven the myefcet bj cut ting he- selvage edge stitched In Willi the sraiii wlili' viiouglt at the top f"r a placket' f:n Ins;. This niakiS a neater finish than a separate fnsij;. lis It does away with all raw edges ami extra bulk. This skirt is espe cially good for stout figures, as the num ber of gores makes one appear slighter. A pretty dark blue Aroadcloth or sorgo Tilth No. 1 legislators would respect him more amOupport him witl: better graco if he would take a more manly course. They are pledged tWsupport him bec.OQhe received a majority of the popular vote, not because ho is or was a mugwump, and like ever0)dy else in the state, will realize that he is simply trying to play them for suckers. Taking his own seasoning for it, if he is barred from making partisan speeches ir governor, he will be forcod to keep silent on politics during his six years' term ns 0-cator, having boon clocUjl as anwi-pajsan and being a rep resentative of all the poopio. YctWe imagine that a while before his term expires ho will rec.r enoujn partisanship to ask the Democrats to renominate- him in tho primaries. It's a safe bet that l'Qvill. After all it isn't suclii awful good job to kill a man, even if one bo a mQionaire. C3i fact is being realised more forcibly . 1 1 tT.. . - t i i , , until cut vy narivBiiuw, who mills mmseil lOCKCtt WltlUU tllO Th portals of an insane asylum for the criminal insane aMrfnttewan CVj1- Tii New York, with a good chnnCt of remaining there for several . fiv ,HA IS ...MAKERS... . DAVID M. PFAQLZER & CHICAGO. ARMTH AND SWELLDOM FOE THE LITTLE HOPEFUL. YOU never can tell what high office he may be called to in manhood thereforeQET HIM USQ TO THE BESTPThen he will feel at home anywhere at maturity. You know the conidens wearing clothes' tuat are beyond criticism. Thatfc what yoiQl find in this AJver aO $S4)($10.00 CO. 1 o o WILL BE FOUND o STANLEYS 612 WILLAMETTE STREET -tr ip O O SOME IMPORTANT SAFEGUARDS Every depositor natu rally desires safety for his funds, fthen you hfire an account with the Mer chants' Eank of Eugene your deposits are secure. The strength, careful management and soundQ investment of this institu tion re guarantees of safety. Your account cor dially invited. CAPITAL - $65,000.00 o 0) SIQN Afi 1 hat is the way gie trade flit, EEECTRIC sign , has tke same fascination htm that ligftt bgs for moths-it o attract theffi its way A bfllliantly lighted stores Q wtll patronized Ors n o Lane CounfyoElectricWa JOEBTUCK,Jigr. 62S. O a O'n to mntch In 0 mnke a neat ctvttiime wulst color for 4 ll. rMrCK WAtL PAPgft ?RED LUDFC&D Practical Painter 02 W. Eighth St. Eugene, Or ..IS GR PR.GGR.AH CO o O I BOISDAY TUESflAY AND WEft'lESDi "Pffctiferous p O O LVer iKneading Trough" "Arco ClulQJompetuios !JHalf Saturday Off" : 'Tirems's Daughter" , O "The Picture" ; "Down With Mevr O CISNGS "On the fi,nks of the OVW S:rei ' "Mx Hea.I'll Leave With You, Deal 0 o uiitiiTO amuraav ;ju p. u . f M OXvenins Psricnmance V L SEATS 10c. o and seal amy To ipy Wide or uiornlnr0ear dur ing the clng sea son. The skirt can be left perfectly plain or trimmed with hlaa banda of the satin. The favorct eol. orltiRs are A .eeus "nary blVe- nnrt black. Novelties have been seen to siQ extent, but preference has been shown for plain ma terials, broadcloth Mh'Iiik the f.ivonvl material, then ser.-e and chevKt. Some of the new serc iiretty color oomlilmiti klrt U In round length with under Ik-i piiiit at the likor l h,i... iticrn Is cut In eight sl2is-fi-e.:i : to r..t Inches ,vt n. ,',' It for the average person It re.iolr.-i ti ards of material :t.i ink j are In basket weave In quite a number of yards of material ii laches wide. Wlii!e Vising ttfe Sky Scraper on (gtrf Street Right' About Face and sec NeFall and Winter Suiting 9lEthSt. uene Poultry 5 h Bic Saturday Salcof Live and Dressed Pgi0 Cr Saturday Sales aregrowing in TOf ". meet the demand we will have on yj jnd drsS poultry. DON'T FORGE0W iui! cast iiinin oiiu i and no oa n,i ... h.,v( tie Ton t.-nvrs lf.r-.ib. W;t'' lets. 0 Broders O O O o O CD