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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1908)
nx-MUVi. ,!.;a'K MKT VAMFRIDArrOCrOBBB rM .MegefablcPrepaxalionror As similating the Food and emula ting the 3 lomudis and bowels of CASTOR A PromotesDtgesllonCheerfiil- ncss and Rest.conutns neitner Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. sow lysAHiUFrrcats jtlxJmnm JIMM Ui- A perfect Remedy fur Constipa tion. Sour Stomach, Diarrhota Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of LXACT COPT Or WRAPPER. - In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTOI tub ecNTAua eHMMv. m lonn cmr. SIGN W ABO 1 hat is the way the trade flie. 'in , ELECTRIC SIGN , has the same fascination for people that light has for mothsit attract them its way A brilliantly lighted store is always well patronized ' Everything Possible in Wiring or Gas Lane County Electric Works JOE TUCK, Mgr. 627 S. Willamette OFFICE HOLDERS ARE GOING HOME TO VOTE Washington, D. C Oct. 30. The ments this year will go home to vote, general exoaus from the District of Already several hundred jof them Columbia has begun. The reduced have left the city, and it is said that railway rates offered this year are twice as 'many more will go within the best ever given by the railways, the next three days. The Interior Hereti,4)re it was possible to get , Department,"Dcpartuient of Agrieul rates to points only in the middle1 ture and other departments also are states, and a few of the eastern ' represented In the general exodus states. This year the voter may buy which began today. Those living in a ticket from Canada to Mexico, and the nearby states will not leave Un as far west as Denver. The; reduced til Sunday of Monday. The situa rate this year makes It possible for j tlon as it Is Sized up by the cam the resident of the District of Co-palgn managers who hail from Ohio, lumbla to go home to vote at a coet' Indiana, New York, Connecticut and of only one and a half cents a mile, Nebraska to go home to vote, when in 1904 the rate was three I Only a "Corporal's Guard' will be cents a mile. i left at. the capital building, where The outgoing trains during the the employes, who are strictly pol remainder of the week will carry Itical appointees outside of sivil ser several thousand voters In addition i vice rules, are all energetic campaign to thoBe who have already left the; workers in their home states. All city. Many clerks use their annual ! of the employes and clerks at the leave of absence for this purpose, and White House who desired to go home It Is difficult to estimate the exact -to vote were paido ff today, number of voters who will have gone : Business Men's Parade, home by Tuesday. Henry M. Camp, I New York, Oct. 29. It was an who has been Intrusted by the repub- nounced today at the headquarters lican campaign committee with the of the Businessmen's Republican task of getting out the republican Association that all the plans have residents, estimates that there are been completed for the great parade 20,000 republican voters In Washing ton and that each of these Influences two or three votes in his home state. The government printers and the employes of the postoffice depart ment usually exercise their privilege of going home to vote to a greater extent than the workers in the other branches of the government service. It is estimated that fully 60 per cent of the employes In these two depart- in this city next Saturday, which will be virtually the concluding Demon stration of the republican campaign here. Rear Admiral Coghlan will act as chief marshal, and it is ex pected that between 60,000 and 70, 000 men will be in line when the par ade starts from the City hall, at 3 o'clock In the afternoon. Every im portant trade In the city will be rep resented In the line. REALTY TRANSFERS OF LANE COUNTY W. R. Elliott et ux to Mary El liott NeBbit, tract in tp. 17 b ' r. 1 w $1. W. J. Warnock et ux to M. J. and C. A. Warner, tract In Packard's add. to Eugene, $10. J. J. Sherman et ux to Wllllnm Landess, 2 acres In sec. 28, tp. 20 s., r. 3 w., $1. James Tern pie ton et ux to Samuel Templeton, Jr., tract in sec. 10, tp. 16 s., r. 4 w $10. United States to Clara A. Thomp son, tract In sec. 14, tp. 16 s., r. 7 REAR-ADMIRAL CONDON IS RETIRED Washington, D. C, Oct. 30. Rear Admiral Albert H. Condon, president of the naval examining and retiring bourds, retired today from active ser vice, having reached the age limit un der the navy regulations. He was born in Indiana on October 30, 1846, but was appointed from Utah. He entered the Naval Academy on Sep tember 26, 1863, and graduated four years later. He Berved on the Frank lin, the flagship of the European squadron, from 1867 to 1869. In 11868 he was made ensign, became D. M. Holbrook to M. Y. and O.S?".L" i"L "ltonat ln..187J' A. Warner, 16 acres In tp. 19 s., r. 1 w., $115. George C. Frlssell et ux to E. H. Mahn, 1 acre in sec. 13, tp. 16 8., r. 5 e., $15. Emily B. Potter et al to Unlver- H Rit r.lminff Our Sale FOR NEXT TEN DAYS j Ladies' Underwear, Skirts,' Kimonas, Japanese Handkerchiefs, ) Buttons, Thread and Jewelry ) Call early as 1 mean business must give up building , I JAS. LONG, -SAT nwt:::::tt::nn:::i:n!:n:mi::m::tt! slty of Oregon, tract In Lane county, $1800. S. A. Huddleston to L. J. Berger, tract In James Huddleston's extended add. to Eugene, $10. Laurence Mlillcnn et nx to John M. Rennie, tract In Waltervllle, $1. George C. Simon to Ida Ford Nor throp, lots 2 and 3, blk. 6, Kelsay's 2nd add. to Eugene, $50. Mary Elliott Nesblt et al to Thom as J. Elliott, tract in sec. 18, tp. 17 b., r. 1 w., $1. Mary E. Nesblt et ai to W. R. El liot et ux, tract In tp. 17 s., r. 1 w., $1. United States to Jeanetto A. Moor head, tract In sec. 34, tp. 15 s., r. 7 w. Robert Watt et ux to Helen Watt, 160 acres In sec. 28, tp. 16 s., r. 4 e., $1500. Charles P. Barnard et ux to Frank W. ASchenk, tract In James Huddle ston's add. to Eugene, $4 00. United Stilt os to Frank Knowlcs, tract in sec. 2 7, tp. 17 8., r. 9 w. John Elliott et ux to- Philip Syl vester, 15 acres in tp. 18 8., r. 2 w., $800. is N. E. Bnwer et nl to Susan C. Pow ell, tract In sec. 31, tp. 11 8., r. 4 w., $40. J. O. Beobe et uxv to Henry Odell, tract in Springfield, $60Q. S. S. Lawrence et ux to Charles E. Michaels et al. tract in tp. 17 s., r. 4 w., $2400. J. Albert Scharen, et al, tract In sec. 4, tp. 19 s., r. 3 w. Heirs of John C. Arnold to J. W. and S. M. Calkins, tract In Hender son's add. to Eugene, $150. T. O. Hendricks et ux to J. G. Pitts, tract in College Hill Park, $500. EARL NlcNUTT I ELI BANGS J. H. VEST BANGS LiyERY CQ. Livery, Feed, Stage and Sales Stables Cabs Always Ready First Class Turnouts ei All Descriptions : ..STAGES.. frVKKNZU! ST AGEIeeves Eugene EUGENE-FLORENCE STAGE- l StJO . m. Sum do not call at A dally rtife leaves Eugene at 4 a. m, private raidmccs but will Cill lor far Miplcton, cloea connection by e.g(,eii ocHBed the day Mote. ; steamer lor Florence .and Acme Livery Phom Main 2 1 w v 1 Eugene Poultry Store Big Saturday Sale of Live and Dressed Poultry Our Saturday Seles are growing in poprity and in order to meet the demand we will have on h.nd a large supply of live and dressed poultry. DON'T FORGET OUR NUMBER. 102 East Ninth Street Phone Main 645 lieutenant-commander In March 1889, and commander in March, 1897. On January 15, 1902. he was made captain and was commander of the Atlanta from 1900 to 1904. He was still a captain when he was honored by being placed In command of the powerful fleet and thousands of marines sent to Havana at the time of the Taft intervention. It was the most Important naval command since the close of the Spanish-American war. President Roosevelt further honored Condon by placing him in command of the battleship Louisiana, In which President Roosevelt made his trip to Panama for the purpose of personally studying the Panama ca nal situation. On November 28, 1904, Rear Admiral Condon was made general Inspector of ordinance of the United States navy, and still later was appointed president of the naval examining and retiring boards, which position he still holds. WIIEItK lULI.irrg FLEW. David Parker, of Fayette, N Y., a veteran of the Civil War, who lost a foot at Gettysburg, sa-B: "The good Electric Bitters have done Is worth more than five hundred dol lars to me. 1 spent much money doc toring for a bud case of stomach trou ble, to little purpose. Then I tried Electric Bitters aud they cured me. I now take them as a tonic and thev keep me strong and well." 60c at W, A. Kuykendall's drug store. TIMHKIl FOR BALK Four and a half million feet ot old growth fir, consisting ot 120 acres, only mile and a halt from tide-water. Slualaw river, on good logging strom, can be bought for $2000 cash (need the money). Apply to TOM WOLF. No. 400 Hellman Bldg.. Los Angoles, Cal. OREGON TIMIIKK LAUDS Abstracts furnished, land titles ex amined, timber lands cruised, timber lands bought and sold. Fred Flsk. Eugene, Oregon. OMerclita' Bank Building. tf 1'ILKS CTKKI) IN 0 TO 14 IUYS PAZO OINTNNT Is guaranteed to euro any case of Itching, blind, pro truding or bleeding piles In 6 to 1 4 days or muuey refunded. 50c CI RE IT IX ONE DAY. Coughs niil Colds Disappear Like Mnglc When Hy-o-mel is Used. If the thousands of people who suffer from hacking coughs and ag onizing colds would arouse them 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 nre afterwards Borry that you did, It won't cost yon a penny. Go to the Hull Drug Co. and pur chase from them a Hyomel (pro nounced Hlgh-o-me) outfit. It will only cost you $1.00. Take It home: use It according to direction, and If It does not cure your cough or cold, tako It . back and Hull's will refund the purchase price. When you use Hyomel you don't swallow nauseating drugs. You simply breathe In the soothing, pleasant and antiseptic Hvomel air through the little pocket Inhaler that comes with each outfit. As this medi cated air passes over the Inflamed parts, relief comes almost at once, and cure follows. Mary E. Bennett. Peru, Ind., writes: "I cannot speak too much In praise of your Hyomel treatment for catarrh. I have been using your rem edy for about two weeks, nntl 1 hnn found more relief In that than any thing thnt I have ever tried. I have spent aouar arter dollar getting medicine of the doctor for a trouble some cough which I had, and have tried all kinds of cough syrups and cough tablets, and Hyomel Is the nn. ly remedy that reached the spot. I uuu RiTen up m despair, but I feel u mum uerier now mat I reel as mougn i nave a .new lease on my life." Hyomel Is also guaranteed by Hull Drug Co. to cure catarrh VivM.n grip and asthma and all diseases of uie uose ana throat. VLOl'R FliOVK Valley flour, $l.lPper sack. Billy Depament Store. Ax tf E. O. HAIGRT Q A I am going away persona having photos will please Mil for same. Tent Gallery, Sixth, street. MIXED RELATIONS CAUSED BY PRANKS OF DPJ CUPID A well-known Washington news paper man married his brother's step daughter, thus his brother becoming his Jjjther-in-luw and his sister-in-law his Tuother-in-law. The girl's step father became her brother-in-law. There is much food for thought and a chance for mental collaptje In the effort to figure out mixed family relationship complicate by unusual marriages, says the Kansas City Star. One man, William Harris, of Titus vllle, Pa., committed suicide because he ascertained, so lie said, that he was his own grandfather. The man left the following autobiography for the coroner: "I married a widow who had a grown up daughter. My father visit ed us often, fell In love with my step daughter and married her. Thus my father became my son-in-law, and my step-daughter being my father's wife, became my step-mother. Soon after this distressing complication arose my wife presented me with a son. This son was my father's brother-in-law and my own uncle, since he was a brother of my step-mother. My father's wife also became the mother of a boy. He was of course my broth er and also my grandchild,' for he was the son of my daughter. Also my wife was a grandmother. I was my wife's husband and grandchild at once. At the same time, as the hus band of a person's grandmother Is the person's grandfather, I am my own grandfather." A father and a son Involved them selves in a very tangled relationship by marriage. The son chose an el derly woman and the father married her daughter. A child was born to each couple. The difficult question at once arose what relationship was one child to the other? Miss Millie Beckenbough, of Min nesota, was married to her uncle's brother's neice's brother-in-law, and no one ever has been able to untan gle the relationship. One of the governors of Missouri, Clalborn F. Jackson, married, one af ter the other, five sisters. "When for the fifth time," says Arthur Herki mer, the Missouri hlBtorlan, "Jack son broached a marital proposition to his father-in-law the old man was 80 and quite deaf. This is the conver sation that ensued: " 'I want Lizzie. " 'Hey?' ' " 'I want you to give me Liz zie.' S " 'Oh, you want we to give you Elizabeth, do you? What for?' " 'For my wife.' " 'For your wife?' " 'I want to marry Lizzie." " .'Oh. ves: I hear you. You need not arouse the neighborhood.' " 'Weil, do you consent? " 'Yes, I consent,' said the old man as he shook his head and said slowly: " 'Yes, you can have her, my boy. You've got 'em all now. But for good ness sake If anything happens to that girl don't come back here and ask me for the old woman.' " Richard Ellsworth, of Sonoma, S. D., a mun of 60, married Jennie Bar rett, aged 20. At the same time his son, aged 30, married the mother of Jennie, a fair charmer of 41. All four lived on adjoining ranches, and there was a double wedding. The girl of 20 became the step-mother-in-law of her own mother, and the son Is the father-in-law of his father's wife. WJi ill Swollen glands about the neoir , nng sores ana ulcers, skin disease . tit il ways m which Scrofula U ua SWeni !J intrenched in the blood often attacks the S1, Ar hip difase, and the scrofulous aadS ucu.yyo ucuiLiiim properties of the wr,eVW1 ifrincurahu sir -at W" 1 FOUND HIS WIFE HAD MARRIED ANOTHER MAN Corvallls, Oct. 29. Revelation that George McDonald, or Morgan, the unfortunate who died at the coun ty jnll October 12, was another Enoch Arden, with an unusually pathetic career, has come to light throt.gli a dispatch from San Francisco. The dis patch says .McDonald went to the Philippines during the war days, leaving a wife and daughter. After the wnr he returned to find that his wife had married another man. hav ing received a report that he had been killed. No message preceded him and his arrival was not made known to the woman. He came on north to Oregon, keeping his secret and his sorrow. He was at Eugene and Springfield, then came to Corval lls, where his death took place in the city jail, following a debauch, prob ably Induced by his trouble. He had told Father Butler, of Cor vallls, thnt he was married by Rev Father Nettervllle, at St. Domonic's church. San Francisco, and that his wife's second marriage was perform ed by Fnher Nugent, of St. Rose church, San Francisco. Coroner M. S. Bnvee has communicated with Fa ther Nugent to help locate the dead man's daughter. A RKAL BARGAIN 577 acres; 250 acres of fine land In cultivation; ten million test of saw timber; a brand new sawmill that cost over $2000; $2000 worth of new farm machinery and tools; a blacksmith shop; $1000 worth of horses, cattle, sheep and hogs; al) level land; Is in good neighborhood near school, high school and store; six miles on good road to railroad station; land around It sellBrfor $50 an acre; worth $40,00fe Price, $21, 000. Reasonable terms. See the Real Estate Exchange. wqgn sawing. John M. P. Dixon, successor to W. E. Boddy. All wood sawed to guage. For prompt servlm nhnnA m.oir Mil. Residence 324 High street, tf iTTsaollne Woimsaw. Alfalfa meal. At Bal'iev'a Venth and Willamette streets. Ph Red KUVR KLOIK Valley flour. $1.15 per sack. Wily Department Store. At tf Bwnlla ll kind Km Haw Aiejrj BjcjM Big-t V si-; ) Wood sawixg Gasoline power, Dy W. W. Moore phone Red 3282. erders large or small will be appreciated. Why the Eugene Poultry Co. dreif? 110 Prizes Was hwniicta thaw J. Scofleld s .nlmal Chick Food' manufactured at the Eugene Chemic al Works, at Eueene. Phono n,i terminates in consumption, afi bein? contaminated, the " . r ' ... nay rn t-,, purify the blood and restore the circulate a. a. a. is me very Dest treatment for W , ' r LI blood supply and drives out the scrofnl,. i"U: 't taiN is the greatest of all blood purifiers, an very uoLiom oi me irouDie and removes th. ,y8riI diseased blood with the healthful prowT'?itSj builds up weak, frail, scrofulous persons an Z i n ""dot. Z S. S. S. is a eentle. safe. veetahi ""l.Psthma any age.. Boole on the blood containing Z? andBawTl medical adv.ee free. . 1HE SWDtt SS i MINORS WILL BE KEPT j ' ;,r or make it .l.t OUT OF BILLIARD R00MSWq !rore- There lj , H City Ordinance Will Be En- j C'ueTtCl H : WIUj"is Have yon .C. Have you forced by Police Officers Hereafter ei 2L,F"C Harrington last j ,c,""6 uwiii.eu nil Keepers Ot pool nain i i . vimr oni huho-h r.e.i.. pains in th u, stores where there are rear rooms : urine' if ,u?' 1 M thnt (tin nltv nr.li,,,,,, ,t,n.i.... UF. De7 SO. Kllj,.7. - ,..,,,,11,11. Wi ura I111UU1B IK where pool piuyeu win ue sir;-.tiy eniorceu. This Heatlne fn. ordinance was passed by the city Hnn .i. . Mo council some time ago at the Instance NatlnneTn.i, cuy ordinance prohibiting wtI1 " '"" ""UMrU from frequenting rooms comranv Sf- M ool, billiards and cards are : P J' prire 1(1 "Wl wttttttttttttttt .... .zrn eemfeetetMe hJJJJIJ' a Creamery Best Butt 75c Roll at DODGES smnnunummmmtHmssf EUGENE HOSPITI Medical and Surgical STAFF W Kuykendall, M. D. W.O.Proeser, MX). P. J. Battle, M. D. B. F. Scaiele, M. D. D. A Piine, M. D. Geo. O'B.DeBar, M.D. L. E. McDougal, M. D. For the care and trcatnoli Medical and Surgical Ca Modern operating room and qal Appliances forX tijitd Sputum and blood examiuic Full corps of trained mb Rates on application ..Training School for Nurses.. Regular course of lectures by the faculty and ftd trainine in the hosmtal. 1 he medical and surp of the hosoital constitutes the faculty. For ratesotq mation address W. KUYKENDALL, fill5"f" C AT A We Carry PriX and no other tui- i have inn best wi .nd let the other W die the lot nor Conseaueitlj our .mQr tnne lot F lamb, mutton, tlK all kinds ot poW ' and for chopM'" lets, ne oompeOT preach u In fluM- may be said ol hams ana Broders ,u J. 10. -WJ pnone itiuh. 1 For RWlc Wells and Pure,H soiiie Water See E. KILB0K Satisfaction Guaranteed J. Phone 539 1 1 Dressmaking ScW . .... fTf" Pupils bring own material au desWd uiflfer competent rostrum .3., all ed ancemeaccortog 0 , latest up-to-date systenTof c, furtle:rJ tnoroughiy. Terms reason""'-- crfctW5- lars address MIS&SECKEED. 50S1. N23 eeeww- ' "