Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 28, 1908)
. TUB ECOEIfH DAU-T' GUARD. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 88.1008 THE EUGENE DAILY GUARD Vl'fMlI) I'KIXTIXH CO.. IXC. Char II. I lslii-r Published every day of the week, munications am' make all remittances payable to The Eugene Guard, Eugene, Oregon. Subscription !(. Dully Delivered by carrier, i per week ' Delivered by carrier,' one month By mail one year (in advance).,. One month j0 Single copies Jjjj WeeWy Guard, peivyear i'60 Advertising raa made known on application. MKMIIFK OP ASSX;iATKI I'KKKS Entered at Eugene, Oregon, oUffico as econd-clas matter WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1908 J PURPOSE. I The useB of sorrow I comprehend. Better and beWer at each year's end. Diaper and deeper I seem to see Why and wherefore It has to be. Only after the dark wet days Do we fully rejoice In the sun's bright rays. Swootor the crust tastes after the fast Than the sated gourmand's finest repast. The faintest cheer sounds never amiss To the actor who once has heard a hiss. And one who has dwelt with his grief alone Hoars all the music in friendship's tone. So better and better I comprehend How sorrow ever would be our friend.' ELLA WHEELER WILCOX. 4" SPENDING MONEY AT HOME One of our exchanges has discovered ten good reasons why it is the best policy to patronize the local businessmen, and these reasons will apply to Eugene as well as any other town. Because You can examine your purchase and are assured of satisfaction before investing your money. Because Your home merchant is always ready and willing to make right any error or any defective article purchased of him. Because When you are sick or for any reason it is neces sary for you to ask for credit, you can go to the local merchant. Could you ask it of a mail order house? , Because If a merchant is willing to extend you credit, you should give him tho benefit of your cash trade. Because Your home merchant pays local taxes and exerts every effort to build and better your market, thus increasing the values of both city and country property.i Because The mail order merchant does not lighten your tax or in any way help the value of your property. Because The mail order merchant does nothing for the benefit of markets or real estate values. Because ' If your town is good enough to live in it is good enough to spend your money in." Governor Folk, of Missouri. Because The best citizens in your community patronize home industry. Why not be one of the best citizens? Because If you will give your home merchant an opportu nity to compete, bj bringing your order to him in quantities you buy out of town, he will demonstrate that, quality considered, he will save you money. And while on this subjoct The Ouard might, if space permit ted, give ton reasons just as good why the businessman should, in turn, buy everything he can get at home, his printing, for in stance. Too many bankors, hotel keepers, and even merchants, order thoir stationery and supplies from the East, when they can save a few cents a thousand on a big order, notwithstanding that the local printing office is an industry that employs labor and adds its share to the prosperity of the community. This patron izing of home institutions should apply to all lines of business and industry. . ,,. It would seem that tho decision of the supreme court in the Medford local option case has knocked a big hole in the law as applied to counties. Quite likely there will be a rush of towns in the "dry" bolt next wintor to get their charters amended so that they will conform to the Medford idea, and after that tho real fight over prohibition will take place in the towns, since voting the county dry will not close up the saloons if only the town goes wet. It appears as if the supreme court had delivered a solar plexus blowv to the anti-saloon league. The Southorn Pacifio demonstration train which will pass through tho Willamette Valloy ncxttuohth will be in Eugene No vember 10th. This is a new idea here and it seems to be a good one along the line of arousing interest in progressive methods of agriculture, and it is to be hoped that the farmers will show their appreciation by turning out in large numbers to listen to the lec tures. The idea is certainly worthy of a thorough trial. -Thoro ir. to be a iarmors' oounty grange next Friday and Saturday at Springfield. A splendid program has been arranged and there iwalso to be an award of prizes for exhibits in the domestic department. The Guard hopes that tho institute New Jersey is putting on a lot of side because it has a gander that can say "yes" and "no." There isn't a neighborhood in this Mown which hasn't a goo that can do as much, but we aren't proud of 'em not bo you can MarrWl women are slandered says they worry the price of a new bonnet out of hubby. It isn't true. Why should they, when glad to relieve them of tho job? The late W .K. Vanderbilt once complained that he had a so. in-law who was more kinds of a d fool than any man ho had Sunday's excepted. Address all com 4. 4. V.v t. institute, concluded by the Lane will bo a success. Ck. O notice it. by a newspaper Solomon who tho accommodating milliner ever seen. Wonder if the complaint has been recalled by any one of prominence of late? Aftef all, it's a good thing for the politicians that the people get so btv after the returns are in speculating on what the win ners are going to do that they forget call them to ount for their faOb predictions. Hobson has been outclassed as aJrisser. Four hundred girls kissed the groom at a recent California wedding. How the germ sharps would have enjoyed examiningObis mouth at the close of the kiss-fest. Some times we go so far as to suspect tUh there are men en gaged in the business oftjningut straw ballots to order, es pecially after comparing those printed by tyro opposing papers. A little philosophic investigation is apt to convince that the objective point of the "simple life" and the "sybarite lif" is the same advertising. Japan hasn't gone "dry," if we may judge from the reports of the entertainment of the officers and men of our battleship fleet. To numerous gentlemen who their chance for getting a cabinet THIS DATE IX HISTORY October 28 The first constitution of Penn 1701- sylvania was adopted. 1776 Americans defeated the Brit ish in battle of White Plains, N. Y. 1792 John Smeaton, celebrated en gineer, died at Leeds. Eng land. Born there May' 28, 1784. 1S04 Jnmes Bowdoln, of Massachu setts, appointed United States . o.o t"mln-,. - ISIS Abigail Adnms, wife of Pres- Idont Adams, died at Quincy, Mass. Horn In Weymouth, Mass . November 22. 1744. 1S51 Southern cotton planters met at Macon to devise a plan to; prevent riuctuniions lu tne price of the staple. j 1804 Knd of tho buttle of Fair Oaks. 1S8G Bnitftoldl's Stntuo of Liberty, In Nifw York harbor, dedicat ed by President Cleveland. 1891 The provincial net abolishing Hnpnrato schools In Manitoba declared" unconstitutional by tho supreme court of Canada. 1S95 The trial of H. H. Holmes for mnrdor began in Philadel phia. 1904 Geo. M. Nash, ex-governor of Ohio, died. Born August 14, 1842. THIS IS MY aoTIl IHRTHDAY Joseph W. Folk Joseph W. Folk, governor of Mis souri and a candidate for United States senator, was born October 2 8, 1869. In Brownsville. Trnin. His ed ucation was received at Vanderbllt University, from which Institution he was- graduated In 1890. 'He studied law, was admitted to the bar and practiced for a year in hi native ! town. He then removed to St. Louis where he soon became prominent in his chosen profession. He took an active Interest In Democratic politics and before long became prominent In public affairs. In 1900 lie wns in strumental In bringing about a peace ful settlement of the great street rnllwny Btrlko in St. Louis. The prominence which ho olrcnlncd through tho arbitration of the street railway strlko led to his nomination Inter in the same year as the Demo cratic candidate for district attorney. Ho was elected nnd during hlsr term of office bo won national fame by his prosecution of those guilty or elec tion frauds, bribery nnd municipal corruption. Nearly a sroro of leg islative bribers wero sent to prison through the efforts of Mr. Folk, and among' them several millionaire po litical bosHea. In 1904 ho was elect ed to tho governorship, receiving 50,- 00 more votes than tho other candi date on his ticket. As governor ho continued his work of purging state of political corruption. the DAIRYMEN. You are interested in whatever may bring yn the highest price for your milk product. Selling cream to as will bring you higher returns than you can get by any other method. EUGENIC CREAMERY, Successor to Independence Creamery. 474 H Wlllnmotte st. Phone Main 638 ... We are agents for the Empire Cream Separator. GRAND REPI RMCAX RALLY. in feast Eugene at Dempster's hall Thursday. Oct. 9th at 8:00 p. m. Hon. S. M. Yoran will deliver the principal address. Eugene citizens come our take the street car right to.the hall and hear one of the best addresses of the cipalgn. ; $pu are cordially Invited. East Eugene. Republican Club. 029. R. C. HOltfl JI'S FTRXITI RK KAlTORY. Furniture manufactured for whole sale or retail trade. Factory at east end of Fifth street. Repairing solici Ited. Phone Black 5391. Residence phone. Black 6501. tf Kl'GKXK GROCERY Having bought the Eugene Grocery, 104 W. Sth St.. I ! J . in up itumiuiUH' in me peo--s.'T pie of Kticrne and vlelnltyVi' I n:i-we win endeavor to deal fafeand square by all and will bo pleased to revive a sliaro of their p.itronavre. K. I.. POUR. are beginning to worry about job first catch your hare. 0LD GUARD OFFICE ' BUILDING LEASED Wm. Renshaw Will Put in Up-to-date Cigar Store Soon After more than twenty-five years 0f continuous use as an office for the Guard, the former home of the paper B being painted and newly lined and papered, making it one of the neat- est and most desirable rooms in the city. The bulging has been leased to Win. Renshaw for a term of vears. It Is understood that he will nut in an np-to-date wholesale and retail cigar store. The lounging room will be commodious arid with Its excellent light cannot but become a popular re sort under his liberal and enterpris ing management. The unpretentious structure is very substantially built. The waits are three Inches thick, consisting of three sections of Inch lumber, with broken Joints very solidly nailed together. The tearing off of the old Ifning with its three coats of wall paper showed a wall as tight and straight as the day It was finished. Then the floor is a double one with building pnper between with an air Bpace,the upper floor being held from the low er by rows of lath to which It is nailed. There is twenty by ninety-six feet of floor spwtce In the structure and it probably 'has the distinction of be Ing the best lit room fn Eugene, there being four skylights in It be sides the glass front. These skvllirhtai have a combined area of one hun dred and twenty feet of glass equal to a space ten by twelve feet. To better appreciate this amount of glass you may figure It out that the glass would fill eleven, twelve by sixteen Inch eight light windows and still have glass left over. DIED. 4. At Portland, October 26, 190S, Miss Pearl Lamb, aged 21 years. She wns the daughter of Lawrence Lamb, of Dendwood. Lane county. She had been In Eugeno for some time and wont to Portland for medical treat ment by Dr. Atwood, formerly of this city. The body has been shipped to Junction City, and will be taken homo for Interment. At Cottage Grove, October 26, 190S, John Sohniutz, aged 49 years. Death was sudden nnd was from heart trouble. He leaves a wife and two children. At the family home in Silk creek valley Monday, October 2 6, 1908. Mrs. Henry Dnmewood. aged 35 years, 5 months nnd 13 days. At his farm home on the Const Fork, ten miles south of Cottage Grove, October 25, 1908, William SmnlJ, a pioneer citizen of Lane coun ty, of complications Incident to old nge. He was one of the earliest set tlers In this part of the state, having come here in 1850. He leaves an aged wife and four sons and a daugh ter to mourn his death. SOCIALIST SPEAKER. Thomas J. Iewls, the wornftg clasPorator. well known for his good work in the east will speak at the court house Friday evening, Oct. 30, at 8 o'clock. Lwls will tell yon why the masses go hungry, because they produce too much wealth. Bring your questions along. Everybody in vited, party politicians aarl lawvers especially. O Q30 EUHR FLOIR Valley flour. $1.15 per sack. Billy Department Store. The reinforced cer vurtir ham mock Is the one to Buy. They are wider, longer and stronger than the ordinary kind. CHAMBERS HARDWARE . Heating furnace, brick and founda tion stone Jnr sain cheap Dy First National l'Q).c. G CA8TOTlIA, RESUME WORK ON SPRINGFIELD LINE IN TWO WEEKS A. Welch Says Work on Trolley Road Will Begin Again q Soon A. Welch, of the Portland, Eugenel & Eastern Railway, was in ija1 today on business. He stated to a rennrterwhis morAig that his corn- pan? would resume construction work on the Eugene-Springneia electric line in about two weeks If the weath er will permit. The company has plenty of rails In Portland, having re ceived a large shipment from the East some time ago. The rails are laid at present to a point opposite Judkins' Point, but the. trestle along the river bottom beyond that Is com pleted to the river at Springfield and part of the trestle on the Spring field side of the river has been built. Begins on Albany Line Mr. Welch stated that work on the company's street car line at Albany was begun today. Some of the tools used in the construction of the Eu gene line are being shipped there, but these are some that are not needed in the work here. BOOTH-KELLY COMPANY BUILDING LUMBER SHEDS Will Maintain Yards in This City for Local Trade Buildings at Depot The Booth-Kelly Lumber Co. has begun the work of erecting a large lumber shed on the Southern Pacific depot grounds in this city and will maintain lumber yards there. The shed will, be 100x22 feet in dimen sions and will be located on the north side of the tracks, just east of the Moon & Tingley warehouse. The frame work was raised today. The yards will be located on ground ad joining the shed. The Booth-Kelly company is doing a big local retail business nnd to bet ter handle the orders, decided to es tablish yards here instead of hauling from the mill at Springfield for each order. CfRE IT IX ONE DAY. Coughs and Colds Disappear liike Magic When Hy-o-niei is Usea. If the thousands of people who suffer from hacking coughs and ag onising colds wuuid arouse tueiu selves sufficiently to follow this ad vice, they would cease to complain within twenty-four Hours. Here Is the advice, If you take It and you are afterwards sorry that you did, ft won't cost yon a penny. Go to the Hull Drug Co. and pur chase from them a Hyomei (pro nounced Hfgh-o-me) outfit. It will only cost you $1.00. Take It home; use It according to direction, and If ft does not cure your cough or com, take It back and HuH's Willi refund the purchase price. When you use Hyomei you don't swallow nauseating drugs. You simply breathe In the soothing, pleasant and antiseptic Hyomei air through the little pocket inhaler that conies with each outfit. As this medi cated air passes over the inflamed parts, relief conies almost at once, and cure follows. Mary E. Bennett, Peru, Ind., writes: "I cannot speak too much in praise o? your Hyomei treatment for catarrh. I have been using your rem edy for about two weeks, and 1 have found more relief In that than any thing that I have ever tried. I have spent dollar after dollar getting medicine oi the doctor for a trouble some cough which I had, and have tried all kinds of cough syrups and cough tablets, and Hyomei Is the on ly remedy that reached the snot. I had given up in despair, but I feel so much better now that I feel as though I have a new lease on mv life." Hyomei Is also guaranteed by Hull Drug Co. to cure catarrh, croup, grip and asthma. 'and all diseases of the nose and throat. Albany Apple Fair, Nov. 10 to J2. For the nhnve nrpnctnn Ilia South ern Pacific Conmnnv will eaU mnl trip tickets to Albany and return at uue aim one-tnira rare, on Novem ber 10th, 1 1th and 12th. All tickets limited to November 13th. A. J. GILLETTE, Ageut. The National w. C T tt i tw, ver yesterday passed strong resolu- uiins.oiurnuiiR iintalrlng faith In total absUiit-tice,, declare prohibition the only,, means of w.lng out the traffic in . Intoxicating liquors? wie mand. a constitutional amending providing for prohibition: endorse woman jKiffrnge: single standard of morals Mr men nnd women and the Wiping out Of the sfialtnd "-l,l, slave traffic": express rr.i-rt a h continued Inaction of coamxess on the Llttlefleld bill. Whv the Enpeno TViiiltrv rn A- 1 1 11 prizes was because they used F J. Seofleld's Animal Chick Food', manufactured iltAhe Eugene Chemlc !' Works, at Eugene, Phone Red MSI, . O"3 CASTOR I A For Infants and Children, the Kind You Always Bought S'gnaiuxe SENATOR FULTON ADDRESSED VOTERS OF EUGENE Senator Chas. W. Fulton addressed a larda) audience at the cnnpthn last night in the interests of the can- uluw iu. n. mil ior president The senator was introduced by At torney Helmus jte Thompson, presi dent of the LincOTn Republican Club The address was characteristic of the senator. It was a careful, muirii... and complete comparison of tho-,.,!. cuw.W-ds of rthe Republican and nW cratic candidates for president. The meeting was enthusiastic and the Re publican and Democratic candidates for president. The meeting was en thusiastic and the Republicans pre sent felt much encouraged after hear ing the address. There were a num ber of women , in the audience and myiy men from different parts of the county. !- MARRIED At the home of the officiating clergyman, Dr. D. E. Loveridge, near Springfield, Oct. 27, 1908, Dr. Ed ward H, White, a E.ugene dentist, and Miss Katherine Cramer, recently from Oakland, Cal. IP XOV KNEW The merits of Texas Wonder you .vould never suffer from Kidney, bladder or rheumatic trouble, tl a bottle (two months' treatment sold by O. J. Hull, or by mail. Send for testimonials. Dr. E. W. Hall, 2926 Olive street. St. Louis The New York World, upon author ity of one Burke, connects James S. Sherman with a shady piece of at tempted legislation In connection with a timber land grab In New Mex ico. The vice presidential candidate strenuously denies the charge. PREPARED INSTANTLY Simply add boil ing water, cool and serve. 10c. per package at all grocers. 7 flavors. Refuse all substitutes. Madame Dean's FR emal Pills. F A Bafb, Certain Re- yt LIEF FOB BUPPKESSKP o? Menstruation. NEVER XHOWN TO FAIL. Bafel Hurcl Hpecdy! Katlsfiictlon Gunr antocd or Mouny Refunded. Hunt pre paid for 81.00 pur box. Will send them on trial, to by puii for when relieved. Samples Free. Jurist on getting the genuine, accept no substitute. If your druggiHt does not have them scad your orders to the WITED K'EOICAL CO., Boi 74, Lucutor, Pi. Sold in Eugene by IV. L Delano POSTJ.BOXESr Eugene Poultry Big Saturday Sale of Live and Dressed Poultry Our Saturday ales are growinf in W?"' rfj meet the demand We will have on hand a J F .-j and dressed poultry 102 East Ninth Street, Ther is Ogly One O "Bromo Qwnw Laxative B$$nio Qfi USQS &RLD OVER TO ' Always remember tho full r..ime childoriiutestK,v,S Vlnfc.i.":7?,tbl both need "N ihe mi d anJ bydruer st. i.c11 cent and oneii, size bottles. Yooa, J nave a sample booi bv mail w .1- pamphlet Idling m ,C' including manyoftiX; on al letters" cured. In writing Bmgliamton. K.vJ f. "Knots, Dr. KUmer's Svrwp. , dress, Bingbamton v t bottle. ' ' Clothing Salt Real Int :eresta! Time At Hansen's ifiJ and reliable ttet will always find & suits for the now J store becanse the celebrate! H Stern & Co.'sW clothes are haiii and for style u4if are unexcellei You will alwijjH goods priced ii(k only make a w profit at any tin-J ask our customer! anything more. If you boy a isj ting luuvameioiu) ey at all times.. Co see for yonrseU. We carry i d line of furniibj that cannot be od the city, and m will be found low many of our cod can afford to w own our own tte have no rent lo f are content profits. You are invited: and look at on whether you buy ED. HAK East Ninth L.CBEM Stone W nn west ms-'" DON'T FOrUcbvv- of t-Aszf-SZ (or this signature on even J 0