Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924, November 28, 1908, Image 4

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I - nastr.V SUTtlUV
SATCTIDAV, NOVEMBER M. ".
f t vavK ir iw
Guaranteed under
all Fure r ood .tsfW:
.Laws
vagSByJifc-i I. Jaques Mfg. Co.
J2 anf.7iRi.ft KumeinEO w
f$ Stands ior j
afer?
ifBM Economy " &
TKCS Puroy :." M
f
Stands for
Quality
E
Purity
Inproviclhg t'-.e family's meals,don't 'Mi
be satisn:a wnn arycnmg cut w
besi. K C 13 zifiirwteedperfeo M?
OTA UP timtiKl una at a uicaw p-v. . xi.-i.t
8m U&'.l makes eve.vthi.-Kr better. 5?5
B.aUSSas'.... -1 ...
WW
SECOND OAY
OF CONVENTION
OF BOYS' CLUBS
! Interesting Papers Read At
Each Session All Boys
Invited Tonight
VJw fp,frl
,'r m$
Perfect
or
Money back.
Company manners and the (ront parlor are often a veiy different prapoiiuon
from eveiy-day home manners and the kitchen end of the house. . ,
Many beautiful store is the genteel outlet for garments made in places and
under conditions that would horrily the buyer if he could visit them, and would
make him fearlul of disease, as well as unwilling at a good cioien to sane
lion such methods of labor. In this connection it also occurs to the keen mind that
a high degree of skill and art in workmanship is always related to a high and proper
compensation. A sweat-shop product cannot be superior artistically or fashion
ably. A tailor of masterly powers would not demean himself by working under
such conditions. ,
Now for the contrasting picture, as suggested by our artist above.
Tho "Great White Shops" where every stitch of work on
FRED KAUFFMANN TAILORING
ia doric He hu never 1 (armed out 1 to muck u a buttoo-holo in hit whole 30
yean of buiineu. ' ' t '
We with every one of our customer could tee those big, airy, scrupulously
clean shops, flooded with aunlight from four sides, with every modem sanitary
device and arrangement for the guaranteeing of absolutely hygienic conditions.
Result clean, safe tailoring.
Many tell Fred Kauffmann that he ought to make an extra charge on all
his clothes because of the fcost!y and most uncommon conditions of production.11
He KMs shem "Nol The additional cost is nothing to hi... it is an investment in
personal salislaclion it makes the name of Fred Kauffmann stand for something
belter than excessive profits yes, better even than his continental leadership in
tailoring. And for the matter of that, the cost of maintaining hygienic production
is not a cost at all it actually pays in prestige, in distinction, in public con6
dence in fact it is one of the things that makes
Fred Kauffmann Tailoring 1 Competition Proof.'
Suits or Overcoats to measure $12.50 to $50.00.
What kind of a place do you want your clothes to come out of?
MEN BUY AT POLDERS'
SOLE DEALERS IN THIS LOCALITY
J
" u mill iseji
Old People .
Like Books
that show a comfortable bal
ance In the bank. To acquire
thill ualnnce you must begin
now. Start nn occount with the
EUGENE LOAN AND SAVINGS
HANK. Then you don't need to
worry about what ou have and
can devote nil your energies to
making more.
You will spend loss, also, as
a cneck book does not burn
holes In your pocket like the ac
tual cash.
Last evening's session of the
Boy's Convention proved a splendid
success. The meeting opened with
a hearty song service, followed hy a
prayer by Frank Guild. The five
papers on the Boys' Club, "Why We
Should Have One," by Rollie Carey
of Salem; "How to Start It," by Har
old Dalzell of Eugene; "What Should
! Happen as a Result of It," by Emll
1 Horning of Corvallls;" "What Meth
od Will Make Things Happen?" by
Charlie Collier of Eugene; "Who
: should Make Them Happen," by
! Jame3 Bulllngton, were read and the,
boys all took part In the seven min
, ute discussion that followed each
' naner. The papers and the discus
sion all showed deep Interest on the
boys' part.
The Saturday evening session of
the Boys' Convention Is open to all.
Boys from twelve years of age to
eighteen. All of the town are cor
dially Invited.
This morning's session began at 9
o'clock -with a paper on "Getting
Ready for the Day," by Gale Sea
man. This was followed by papers
on the Boys' Club, and "The Individ
ual Boy What Should I Do For
Him." "The Home Should It take
a boy away from home and how can
It help In the home life." "The
School What should and what
should not be the Influence of the
club group on the school." "The
Church and Sunday School How
can It serve them." "The town or
city Can the boys take any part In
the life of the town or city."
Thin Afternoon.
This afternoon's papers were as
follows:
"How much Social Life there
Should be In The pitth." "Boys'
Camps. Can They be Held and How
to Run Them." "Shall we study the
Bible as we would History, Algebra,
i or English Literature?" "What
should be the Features of a Class
! Session." "What should we have In
i Mind as we Prepare our Lesson."
' "How to Lead a Class."
! This evening at 7:30 o'clock J. C.
Clark will address the convention on
I "What It Means to be a Member of
the Y. M. C. A."
i Tomorrow's Program.
9:00 a. m. A quiet time together
led by Dr. Trait, of Portland.
I 9:45-10:30 Group Bible classes.
10:30 Church services,
j 3:30 p. m. Boys' meetings Ad-
dresa by Dr. 0. B. Pratt, subject, "A
j Live Wire.
1 7:30 Church services. Special ad
1 dresses to boys.
8:30 Farewell service. Presby-
' terlan church.
Officers.
i Officers were elected this after,
noon at yie Boys' convention for the
ensuing year as follows:
President Will White, Albany.
i First Vice-President Calarence
. i Sprague, Portland.
. I Second Vice-President Walter
Blomgren, Boise.
Secretary Francis Yoran, Eu
gene. Assistant Secretary Res Hammer
ly, McMlnnville.
The clubs represented are, Boise,
Idaho, two; Portland, five; Albany,
two; McMlnnville, one; Eugene, five;
Pn.imlllo 1
r -
i
..i i,..i.i i-ir nraisc;
?ovSt ' The president
""Like every olher good Harvard
man, I have' the heartiest feel ng of
gratitude to the entire team who won
the great victory on Saturday ast.
But I feel a special sense of Mtae
toward you. It was through you more
than any one else that Kennard was
p.it In a position f.110,'119.0
which he did so admirably, and to
kick the goal from the fu'ta. vmllO
"For the good or me "
Individual good was sacrificed, and
through the sacrifice and through
the admirable work you had alreaay
done and through Kennard s fine
kick the -victory was won.
"However, it was a first rate exam
ple of the interest of the individual
being subordinated to the good of the
team. There cannot ho y J- ue'
lesson for our national lire than to
teach that the good of the indiuuual
must be subordinated to the got a ot
the people. , .
"Now I have the heartiest udm ra
tion for Kennard's feat. He kicked
the goal and he did a service that no
one else could have done and too
much praise cannot be given him,
i,r . aro omitted to every whit as
much praise and every man I have
met here feels just the way I do.
With best wishes and congrauimi.ii
believe me, sincerely yours,
fHEODOKE ROOSEVELT."
Tho nrnol.lont clnscs his letter with
a postcript in which he says he would
like to thank personally nu
trlbuted to the victory.
-a
'
4,A
:r
CHAS IJHOS,
' STllAWiif.inti r iELii -mitt Sl'KI.VGFIELU (NOBODY'S MAG j
SIXTEEN-YEAR-OLD
BOY WAS FIREBUG
" Baker City, Nov. 27. Through
tho ennffisslnn of a sixteen-year-old
boy named Golden Ormond, the iden
tity of the incendiary who has caused
almost a state of terror In Baker City
iha nmt fivo months has been solved.
The Incendiary is none other than
Golden Ormond himself, according to
the confession he is alleged to have
made to Pinkerton detectives work
ing on the case. .
During the period named six' in
cendiary fires occurred, three school
buildings, one. residence and the
Standard Oil tanks of the city burned
and one laundry budly damaged, but
not destroyed.
The losses aggregate $100,000.
Detectives omnioyed by the mayor
learned of young Ormond's trouble
with the teacher and comparison of
dates of fires with his tVtys' absence
from school furnished what proved a
clue which led to the lad's arrest.
FIREMEN'S ELECTION.
The annual election of the Eugene
Fire Department to choose a chief
and assistant chief engineer will be
held on Monday, December 7, be
tween the hours of 1 and 6 p. m.
The election will be held in firemen's
hall in the city hall building.
W. W. STEVENS,
Pres. E. F. D.
DYSPEPSIA IS
RESULT OF FOOD
FERMENTATION
GET SOME DIAPEPSI.V FROM
YOUR DRUGGIST AXI) HAVE
YOUR STOMACH TROUBLE OV
ER WITH FOREVER ABSO
LtTELY HARMLESS, DIGES
TIVE AXD AXTI-FERMENT.
EVERY BONE IN
BOY'S BODY BROKEN
Paterson, N. J., Nov. 28. Andrew
Scheer, aged eight years, while play
ing "follow the leader," scaled the
tall chimney of an abandoned brew
ery and Btood triumphantly upon the
top. Suddenly he plunged to the
street below and every bone in his
body was broken. His playmates say
the old bricks crumbled under his
weight.
TAFT C0N$ENI$
PRESIDE Afi
elect
to
Washington, ft, HJ
icl Taft hasi
Preside over.Mj"1"
conference of fcs.
tlve Commission tin
the states In thUdtitS
event which till
assemblage of fe tT,
nien of ennir.,.;,! k. I
litical activity
PRESIDENT THANKS
FOOTBALL HERO
1 he Eugene Loan and Savings Bank
j
CAPITAL AM) Hl'KPM'S, $llM,Iiti(.
I'.ST.VItl.lSHKO I una.
Cambridge, Mass., Nov. 27. Tho
self-sacrifice of Ernest C. Verwelb.
the Harvqrd Tailback, in withdrawing
from tho game with Yale In order to
permit another player of goal-kicking
ability to supplant him at a crit
ical moment has brought the crlm-
Hr y mmu
eiRECTiiiY
Manicuring and
Hair Dressing
Mauling iSlxters Hrglstcr Illilg.
' Krout Hulte
GAR RET r & MITCHELL
Real Estate Brokers
I'limii"
lteutrr llullilllig.
.Main 108.
Eugene Cleaning
find Dyeing Works
J verjtlilng MMwill In cli-anliig anil
Corner Nixth Hiid Willninotte Sts.
Phono Main l'-J
SHIlSbN
THE SIGN PAINTER
Qt Went Elglith Street.
Smyths Transfer C8
o o
w IluKHOK1' atol for ten tlnyk.
W. H. SMYTH, Prop.
IMiosiNi Miiln 83, Red 4018.
(lent of work. . Don't f nil to see the
liicturea we are putting out
now ut half price
Tolman Studio
S18 Willamette Street
S. D. READ
DENTIST
Over Hull's Grocery
No. 018 WlllaiuctU Straet
VOH HKST
Teas, Coffees, Spices
or China ware
Call at SO Kant Ninth Street. '
G. 11. I.OCKK, Mrr.
Eugene Electric Co.
I. O. TH(ftlAS
Electric Wiring, Fixtures and Sup
plies Phono Main . Kl'GKXK, OR.
G. S. Beardsley, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon
18 and 17 MoClung KmIk.,
Phone Main 47 8th and Willamette
McLEOD
THB TAILOR
44 EAST NINTH STUEET
Jesse G. Wells
ATTORNEY
Register Itullding
1 Gives special attention the ex
amination of abstracts, drafting wills,
settling estates, conveyances and col
lections. Also to all pension matters.
Phono Main 10S.
TEA
Buy tea by the ounce
until you get Schilling's
Best ; it makes no differ
ence then.
Yaur sjracar returoi your neaay IJ yaa Aoa'1
llbt at! a r hiss
Mrs. Millard, of the Needle Craft
Shop, Portland, wishes to announce
a closing out sale of stamped goods.
All waists reduced from $1.25 to 99
cents: Corset covers. 60c to 39c: nil-
lo wtops, 60c to 89c; Miss Hager's
millinery.
WATTS FOR WATCHES.
WOMEN OF WOODCRAFT
ELECT NEW OFFICERS
At the regular meeting of the Eu
gene Circle No. 16. W. of W.. held
Friday evening, November 27th, the
iouowing oincers were elected for
the ensuing term.
Past Guardian Neighbor, Alberta
a. iucitiurpney.
Guardian Neighbor, Luolla M
Brewrter.
Adviser, Mary M. Chambers.
Clerk, S. J. Wilson.
Banker, Etta J. Green.
Magician, Emma M. Long.
Attendant, Margaret M. Hetlch.
Inner Sentinel, Severlne Newman
Outer Sentinel. Laura Morris
Captain of Guards, Ella E. Fraz-
er.
Musician, Minnie R. Frank.
Manager for 18 months, Mary
Chessman.
Managers held over,' Jennie M.
Williams and Lurena Zlmmer.
We Sell
ymbl
When your stomach is weak or
lacking in gastric Juice, anything that
you eat, no difference what it is, will
sour on your stomach, raise the bile
and acids to cover your food like oil
on water, causing Indigestion, Dys
pepsia, Stomach nervousness and
belching of sour poisons, wnicn pro
duce foul odors, nasty taste, .bilious
headache, heatrburn, intestinal grip-1
ping and make you an object of mis
ery, this is stomach trouble which
can not be overcome with ordinary
digestive medicines. It is caused by
fermentation of your food which will
be remedied at once by Pape's Dia-
take and as harmless as cany though j
it will digest and prepare for assiml-
latlon into the blood all the food you)
eat. - (
Indigestion is a resnjt, not a cause
of your trouble. If the stomach is I
sour and unhealthy, your food be
comes tal.Ved, and that's what Is
causing luJigestlon and other miser
ies. Pape's Diapepsln is an Antacid,
most powerful digestive and thor
ough regulator for weak stomachs.
The.ie Triangules will digest any kind
of food you eat and will cleanse the
stomach and intestines in a natural
way, which makes you feel fine five
minutes afterwards.
Any good pharmacy here will sup
ply you with Pape's Diapepsln for
fifty cents. Just reading about this
remarkable stomach preparation will
not help. You should go now and
get a case. Put your stomach in full
health and by tomorrow you will for
ge tthe misery of stomach trouble.
Your case is no different from many
others. It isn't stomach, nerves or
catarrh of the stomach or gastritis
or dyspepsia. It Is the food rotting
food fermentation that's all and
takes fivo minutes to overcome.
FREE 1
To' Some Lie !
NEW TODAY.
FOR SALE. An 8-room double
fconpe and lot near University
suitable for two families; will rent
for $15 per month. Price $1250 if
taken at once. 789 Onyx ave. Dl
We will give absolutely free to some little rail!
of age or under who will write us the best adiisri
stating why papa and mamma should trade at
Advertisement to cover one siuc of a sheet of coi
paper. There will be three prizes.
First Prize One Large Drcssej Do!,
Second Prize One Medium Dressed Del
' Third Prize One Smaller Dressed Dcii
Contest closes. Saturday, December 12th. !!
hand in the advertisements' at the store by F;
December 11th.
Judges:
I. H. BINGHAM,
E. R. GILSTEAP,
E. S. CAELYSK.
WINNING ADS WILL BE PUBLISHED
WANTED two or three good rooms
with lights, bath and heat nnttnhln
for light housekeeping. Close In:
millrf ha .Im AJJ m r ' -
care Guard. . . . , Dl 1
WOULD LIKE TO HEAR . of stock
for sale In any enterprise where'
an Investment of several thousand 1
aouars would be safe. L. Darby
shlre. Box 2032, Rochester, N. Y.
WANTED Your presence at the
United Brethren church Sundav
school tomorrow morning at 10
o'clock. World's Temperance Sun-dny.
FOR SALE Good stock beets and
carrots. Phone Main 152. do
A big bay horse has taken the
place of "Flora," one of the fire
team horses, temporarily, on aa
count of a litsje illness of the latter.
The horse is owned hy Charles Cro
ner and s almost a perfect match
for "Ned." (
Wm. G. Martin
! Attornrv-at-Law r
, w
Will practice In all the eourtsOOf
flce Warren Building. 536 Willam
ette street, over Crescent store.
Fish and Poultry
Market 0
Klsli Itix-eivrd Dally
W. II. ItllM.KWAY, Prop,
rhoas Main Bit. OiW Willamette St
DR. LULU MUNKERS-MARQUAM
Physician and Surgeon
Residence 28 East Eleventh atroet
Office, Register building. I'hone Red
6231
SPECIALTY
and children.
-DlseaacsHif women
on the positive guarantee
that if it does not give sat
isfaction we will return the
entire amount of mey paid
us fcr it.
We ask all those who tge
rundown, nervous, debS
tated, aged or weak, and
every person suffering from
stubborn colds, hanging-on
coughs, bronchitis or incipi.
ent consumption to try VinoT
with this understanding.
Vlnol In sold In Eugene, hy the Red
Cros- lrut; Company.
v4v, n r '
fit f A I 1...U -J ,
. . .. . V.UU, i,,,-!!, utrcruseu.
Notice Is hereby given that the
undersigned, E. . Campbell, admin
istrator of the above named estate,
has filed his second and final ac
count in the matter of said estate
in the County Court of Lane County,
Oregon, and that by order of said
Court, dufy made and entered Mon
day, the 4th day of January, 1909,
at ;he hour of one o'clock in the af
ter in of that day has been fixed
for ttte hearing of objections to said
final account and for the final set
tlement of said estate and all per
sons Interested In said estate are
hereby notified and required to make
and file such objetQns as they may
have on or before 'Kie said date of
final hearing.'
Dated this 2 8th day of Novetfifcr,
1908. g
E. L. CAMPBELL,
Administrator of the estate of A. J.
Campbell, deceased.
L. Bilyeu, Attorney.
Wny noi)
FOR A CHRISTMAS Q
I L.- Inn mildl 4 t V I
Itepa can -
SILVER
i, we to give
ver pUlcd heavier V
,i,sta "
Go
ARMORY H01 J
no ,y
Saturdays
WATTS6 FOR
r-N - . . r a 1 1 i
ii n n l
J