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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1911)
i: t THE EUOENZ DAILY OUAED, SATURDAY, JAN. 21, 1911 four The FINAL DAYS of this GREAT REMOVAL SALE are Fast Drawing to a Close The last days to be the best days. We move about February 1st. From this day until then we will make dry goods and stock ing selling the sensation of the day and an event in history. The moving of merchandise will be fast and furious. Profits all cut off and cost not considered. One idea only that is to sell as much as possible of this, the biggest stock of dry goods and clothing in this section of Oregon. The prices we name on goods the balance of this month will be record-breakers. Be here and supply your wants from the biggest stock and the greatest of all sales. , ... ! I I-;' 6 7 J , (; ; - - - - - Pi OCU I llj III f f I . fl Half Price Suit Sensation Ouo of tlio chief attractions of this sale will center In the Suit 8o:tlon. Korty women's BulU; the best and latest models; America's best and most popu lar makes; worth regularly from 118.00 to (40.00. We place the entire lot at the exceedingly low price of HAM'' VAIAE Consider the great saving: think whut It means to buy an article at half price. Our loss Is great, but wo are determined to closo out before we move. $16.00 Suits now on sale at $ 8.00 $25.00 Suits now on sale at SI 2.50 $30.00 Suits n.w on sale at SI 5.00 $40.00 Suits now on sale at $20.00 Women's Coats Greatly Reduced-- Wo have a good assortment of Coats which we placo on snlu at a profitless price, but we aro going to sell thorn out whether wo mnko nny profit. 8.00 Cats now on sale at $ 6.00 $12.75 to $15.00 Coats now. .. .$10.00 $20.00 Coats now on sale at SI 4.00 $25.00 Coats now on sale at SI 5.00 Way Mufflers Always f0c; removal sale price !Mc tl.no Shopping lings, salo prlro 7.1c 12.00 Hllkspiin Bcarfs, aiilo prlre fl.OO j Hamptons Half to Compel Speedy Sale Twenty ladles' Wool Skirts; grays, check and dark colors; worth from 15.00 to (15.00. For quick removal, half price Aft PA Ay rft each )ZJU to $ ,JU Furs Must Sell at Half Price 17.00 Brazilian Mink Collars, now :f.3 13.00 Collars, now fl.no (1.25 Collars, now (13c At the extremely low prices we name makes buying at less than manufacturer's cost, but It doesn't matter; we're determined to sell out. 110.00 Collars, now .YOO One black Bet worth $60.00; sale price :to. 00 White Petticoats Half Price Embroidery or lace trimmed I'ettlconta; always $4.50 to $8.00; during the few remaining days of January, half price An. OC C1 H Art JAZD to $4,UU Remnants of all Goods Half A great big lot of wool and wash goods of short lengths, on snle at ono-half former price. See them on the tnblo near tho front of the store. Dress Goods Half Price Great lot of Dress Qoods; plaids, mixed goods and stripes; the popular rough weaves; worth from 85 cents to $2.00; sale price, A4 AA the yard 4 2 l-2c to ,131) Children's Wash Dresses Half- Thirty Ulnghara and l'ercalo Dresses; 6 years to 14-yoar sites; worth $1.50 to $3.00. fh 4 Pft Bale price 75c to pi3U Pr'ces that are Selling Goods 50c Tarns; gray, corduroy and white 4(v $1.00 Tarns: gray, corduroy and white 7fSc 50c Wool Gloves; sale price -c $1.60 Outing Gowns; sale price Wlc 12 l-2c to 15c Embroidery; sale price lc l.onmliile Mualin; the yard H Hope Muslin; the yard 36-Inch Bleached Muslin; the yard 7c 20c Itlack Fleeced Lined Hose; the pair 12 l-2c 15c Huck Towels; each c $1.25 to $2.60 Wash Waists; each 7."c $4.60 Silk or Wool Waista; each $3.1)0 12 l-2c Outing Flannel; white or colors, yd 10c 10c Outing Flannel, colored; the ynrd 7c $1.00 Umbrellas; each We 50c and 75c Corset Waists for MlHses, each 2.1c 12 l-2c 1911 Ginghams; new patterns: yd. lie $1.60 Lace Curtains; white Ecru; tho pair $1.00 Table Linen They're Cheap 35c Damask, the yard 2.1c 60c Damask, the yard 40c 75c Damask, the yard 1c $1.00 Damask, the yard Napkins Same material to match the above Damask. $1.40 quality, the dozen fl.12 $2.00 quality, the dozen ...... ?' " $2.50 quality, the dozen ... - . $3.60 quality, tho dozen f2.HO $8,000 Sale of Dress Goods The largest amount ever put on sale st one time In Eugene. Thin entire stock Is offered st prices that are rapidly moving the goods. You can buy any colored Dress Goods In this mammoth stock regularly selling for $1.25 dur ing the remaining diya of this sale for CCf, the yard OJii $1.00 goods are Bold for 75c goods are sold for i OOe 60c goods are sold for 50c goods are sold for 40c 25c goods are sold for 20c SilKs Sold at Removal Prices $1.50 Silks or Satins Skinner Satins Included the yard $1.25 Silks, the yard l-00 $1.00 Silks or SatlnB, balance of month, yd. 80c Buy Your Years Supply of Blan Kets at These Removal Prices White, gray, tain and fancy Blankets and heavy Camp Blankets all reduced. You can buy any $1.00 Blanket now for 80c You can buy any $1.25 Blanket now for $1.00 You can buy ony $1.60 Blanket now for $1.20 You can buy any $2.50 Blanket now for $2.00 You can buy any $3.25 Blanket now for $2.00 You en buy any $4.50 Blanket now for $3.00 v"u can buy any $6.00 Blanket now for $1.80 " u cm buy ony $10.00 Blanket now for $8.00 $1,20 Saleof Muslin Underwear At a time of yoar you buy for spring and have to pay full prlco. Buy what you need at this great and positive removal sale. 26c Muslin Drawers; tucked flounce; each... 20c 26c Lace Trimmed Corset Coders; each 20c 60c Drawers; lace or embroidery trimmed; pr. 40c $1.26 wide tucked flounced l'cttlcoats; each $I.OO $2.00 Petticoats; lace or embroidery trimmed: snlu Suns prlco, each $1.00 Gowns of Fine Material and Also Heavier Goods 50c -Gowns now 40c 75s Gowns now 60c $1.00 Gowns now 80c $1.50 Gowns now SI. 20 $2.50 Gowns now $2.00 $3.00 Gowns now $2.40 Csprrtf bt Hirt IchtAktr Sc Mtrr Even if you don't need it now, you'd better buy one at the prices we're making for this removal sale. You'll get the clothes mighty cheap. They're all on sale, including those Hart. Schaffner & Marx Clothes. Notice the prices we quote. Here's the way we are doing things now: $10.00 Suit $12.50 Suit $15.00 Suit $20.00 Suit $22.50 Suit $25.00 Suit or Overcoat now or Overcoat now or Overcoat now or Overcoat now or Overcoat now or Overcoat now at $ 6.50 at $ 8.50 at $10.00 at $13.50 at $15.00 at $17.00 Hampton's Ihi EUGENE DAILY GUARD u 1ml. -pi mli-iii I'lipcr Memlicr of Associated l'i'es L'lUIU.I.H II. li.sllKK Killlor nml I'olillilier Published every day of tho week. Sunday ezcepted. Address til com aiuiilcutions aid mnko all remittances payable to Tho Eugene Cluurd, Ku- rn, Oregon. Subscript loii Utile Dnlly Delivered by Carrier, per week I .1J Delivered by Currier, One Month - .60 Delivered by Currier. One Year & Hr Mall One Year (In advance) lunle Copies rwlce-a-Wook Guard, per yoar .. tree Months .60 SATURDAY, JANUARY 21, 1011 EVENINGS AT HOME I'm silling In my easy chair before tho fireside's cheerful glaro. All modem comforts am at hand: electric lights and music canned; the triumphs that great men have wrought are gathered In my coxy cel. Tim neighbor children gather round, to her me drivel and expound about the good old limes genu by, which 1 up-plmd- I wonder why I wonder why old men aro prone to view the present with a groan and talk of vanished years as though they were Ihe smoothest goods below? The children listen while 1 tell of times whin everilhlng was well, when girls were angels, minus crowns, and nun were snluts In haiidinedow na, and llfo was one long round of Joy, without a sorrow In annoy. And III my heart I'm roiisclous that I'm simply talking through my hut. I'd huto like thunder lu tie swung hack to the times when 1 was young. I'd hate to loud by smoky light, and sleep on ticks of straw at nights, and go to bed at ti o'clock because no cm idles are In slock, and go out doors to get a drink, and find the risiern on the blink. We lived like horses lu those days, and yet. much to my own nmaie. I brag and brag, III prose and rhymes, about the good old vanished times. Coprlglit. kl10, by llcorge Matthew Adams. SAFEGUARDING THE CHILD During tlio couria of a enso involving a number of young sters, a prominent Butto judge yesterday took occasion to say something anent tho necessity of parents being more particu lar in guarding tho welfare of their children, says tho News of that city. This is a point that merits tho close attention of all citisens. It is all very well to spenk of safeguarding tho child and then assume that tlio guarding process in some manner should originato with tho child. A boy Isn't apt to discriminate betwocn the path that leads him to good, honest citizenship, and tho one that takes him to the dark ways of life. Corrective methods regarding tho boys and girls are very proper on tho part of the authorities after thoso boys and girls have been fully instructed in the difference between right and wrong and it is found that no amount of good advice, porsuaslon, or lecturing will suffice. Some youngsters, unfortunately, have no parents Jo whom they can look for guidance, or who will safeguard them in their progress towards manhood and womanhood. Surh youngsters, certni.- merit fto sympathy of all, but how pitiful it and kw sorious a matter when parents delib erately shut thoir eyes to the improper inclinations of their children. Thore is no excuse for parents permitting their boys to run the streets at night or loiter about places of amusement. Patrons of such placos don't want to be annoyed by them, and to tho crodit of the amusement purveyors let it be said that they certainly don't want boys hanging about their doorways, yot these boys are permitted at night., accustoming them selves to begging for nickols and in otherwise beginning careers that either land them in the reformatory institutions or make very undesirable citizens of them. Parents of tho kind concorned in the judge's censure owe the duty of caring proporly for the welfare of tho children, not only to the children, but to the community and the nation. Looking aftor tho bodily comforts f a bay isn't tho only thing necossary. He needs other kind of regulation, and such as only can be given by parents truly and doeply interested in the future suc cess and happinoss of thoir children. himself, even his assurance in reading the public a lesson on propriety of conduct might be overlooked. Still, a few months in the county jail, or a course of treatment in a lunatic asylum would not be a misapplied lesson for the fellow. Rockefeller says he can do a bigger day's work now than he could twenty years ago. But even if bodily infirmity should overtake him, the chances are Mrs. Rockefeller would not suffer for plenty of everything to cook and keep house with. Good streets are to a city what a clean face and well-polished shoes are to a boy they make the first impression a favora ble one. And it is first impressions that count. If Billy Sheehan'is elected United States senator from New York, Chauncey Depew's retirement from the job will not be a very marked gain for the people after all. All level-headed men should rejoice that the government so emphatically lost its suit against tho newspapers charged with libel in tho Panama canal case. We would give a penny for a map of President Taft's mind when he reflected that he must go on with the suit, to say nothing of tho moment when ho received news of his "defeat." Some dofoats are victories, and this is one of them. Now lot the gentlemen who think themselves li bolod suo the offonding newspapors as individuals. Tho govern ment's auccoss would havo put a dangerous power into tho hands of every administration a power with which no man is good enough to be trusted. The commission plan of government will bo no better than any other unless good and capable men aro chosen to conduct It. Whether such officials can bo secured among men willing to give all thoir timo to public duties for the very modest salnries named is an open question. Men of real ability are ablo to mnke a great deal more than $700 or $800 a year by attending to their own affairs, and while some aro willing to mako a reason able sacrifico for tho snko of the public welfare, there arc many others who cannot afford to do it. Governor Wilson, of New Jersey, who many think has a look in for the Democratic nomination, may find a Carnegie pension an inconvenient piece of baggage in 1912. If we are ever tempted to become hysterical over "unrliir able immigration, let us reflect that the Ohio vote sellers are nearly an nniive-Dorn Americans. Bowcrman seems to think the craziest thing about the in sane asylum is its management. The union laborites certainly cannot accuse the Oregon leg islaturo of working overtime. Eugene would make no mistake in going ahead with another pvi:iy campaign mis year. Some men work mighty hard for a long long time to get a soft snap for a short while. ABSOLUTELY CURES STOMACH TROUBLE AMD INDIGESTION Election of senators by bribery may suit Illinois it evident ly does and we know it has long suited tho sonate of the Unit-, ed States, for it has always dealt tenderly with those known to be guilty of it. But it does not suit the plain pcoplo of the coun try, and sooner or later they will find a way to make their pro test effective. They are a thrifty lot in Adams county, Ohio, if we may ac-; cept as a fair representative the preacher who sold his vote for $10 and the farmer worth $40,000. who counted a box in front ; of the village grocery and "auctioned off" his own vote to the highest bidder. O , I If "Jask the Grabber" really keeps hjjs promise to behave The 'in. ".Men as to how lung you are Koine to continue a sufferer fr on lu lie.efon. d (posts or out-of-or.liT stniench. in merely a matter of hew sitoii ou hesln taking some Uia i....n. If xmir stomach Is lucking In di gestive power, why not help the to PKi.h do Us work, not with dr.tir driK. but a ro-lnforrement of d'.nes tie scent surh as are naturally at w oi k In lh stomach IV -.', with we:ik stomachs shoii'd n utile l;ii-eisin occasionally, and there will I ,, no more Indices, lion, no feeling like a lump of lejd 111 Ihe stom.u h. no heirtlmrn. sour n.nc. Has on Moreach of botching of iitnlU' stct fiod. .,..,!.-awes, tt-rn. nes or sick stomach. snT. besides what you will rat will not fcrmeat and poison your breath with nan eous odor. All these symptoms re Miltlne from a sour, out-of-order ".i n ann dyspepsia are generally re leved five minutes after taking a little PUpepsln. l- to Minr druggls and gt a 50 cent rase of rape's niapepaln now ami you will ,!,,, go , th. t8b,e with a he.irty appetite, and what von t will taste good, because vour stomaeh and Intestine, will be clean ami fresh, and you will know there : .e not going to be any more bad night, and miserable day, for y.u Th. , fre,hon vn,, ,nd make )0ii feel u' life I, worth living maiix imv n.K.,Mxa .llr'B0f D7,n'"'n"" 18 '"-par r.rls, J , ; 'I" J mi""XlT,tOd bt M PiWf ,h pabn:- Much of the co-called Pry Cleaning I, "dry-', but not ".loaning." n The Inferior work Is th. result ofj the method employed by many small places who have no machinery or proper equipment for doing the work and consists merely In brushing the material, either by hand or with a small apparatus so-called vacuum cleaning, and sponging the surface with a liquid other than water. This method cleans the surface of the goods to some extent, but leaves all the dirt and grease on the reverse side and In the center of the cloth, and In the case of coats, jackets and other lined garments, the dirt Is left In the inter-lining, padding, etc., and In a short time will work out to the surface and the garment Is as soiled looking as It was before It was clean ed. Dry Cleaning In Its proper sense means an absolute and thorough cleaning of an article, through and through, without the use of water. This Is done by the employment of expensive and specially constructed machinery and appliances, with spirits and other solvents, the use and action of which are only properly understood by the chemist. EUGENE DYEING AND CLEANING WORKS Everything Possible In Cleaning and Dyeing 121 East Ninth St. Phone Main 122 LIVING AT HIGH TENSION. To overdo In order to keep tin with the parpde la the tendn-v of the age. Living at such a high ten sion, is It any wonder that our nerve sanitariums and rest cures are filled with nervous, overworked, broken down men and women. When one begins to get Into this condition, there Is only one cure a complete rest, together with a wholesome diet, and a good blood making tonic and strength creator. There 13 nothing In this line that can possibly excel the medicinal ele ments of the cod's liver combined with tonic Iron. This simple com bination Is found In Vinol. It con tains no oil or grease and agrees with everyone. A well known college professor states that he considers Vino! a trulr wonderful tonic and strength crea tor. He was hlmbself overworked and rundown to a critical point A friend asked him to try Vlnol. H did so, and Is now enjoying a per fect health, and Its curative powers cannot be too strongly extolled. we recommend Mnol to niiim and strengthen the run-down and overworked, weak women, old peo ple, delicate children and convales cents. In case anyone Is not satis fied afts-r taking one bottle, we al ways refund their money. This i not happen often, however. becau' Inol s percentage of cures Is very high. The new year will usher In an era of building activities that will pis'' Forent Orove In the first runs among Oregon cities, as a progres sive and growing community, ' me .-sews. O