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About Eugene daily guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1904-1924 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1911)
THE EUGENE DAILY GUARO. SATURDAY, JAN. 21. 1911 me 23 3 J r Ft-. .. ?Ztft& mm 'I! January ZlstioZSth, Bit kO enable the public to have the opportunity of viewing the latest types of motor car construction as embodied in the 1911 models of the leading manufacturers, the Automobile Dealers Association of Oregon have arranged the first Automobile Show under their auspices, to be held in Port land during the week of January 23rd to 28th, 1911. This show will take the form of Opening Week, which is a new and novel departure from previous exhibitions on the Pacific Coast, but has proved veiy popular and successful in Eastern cities. The distinct advantage of each .dealer having ample space to properly dis play his entire line is a very important one, both to the dealer and visitor who will thus have the opportunity tit closest possi ble inspection, while the impression gained by a visitor in a call at a dealer's establish ment, is more lasting than a visit to an exhibition space which can of necessity have little or no individuality. Call on jrour local dealer for further information. Reduced Rates on Railroads in Oregon. Automobile Dealers of Oregon In Sadden Emergencies like illness, it is often necessary quickly to raise the temperature of i room. For Instance, In those hours between midnight and dawn, when the day temperature has been allowed to drop, if you are called upon to get up, the room is chilly and cold., It takes a long time to start up 1 furnace or fire and raise the tempera ture by ordinary means. You can Instantly heat a room to any desired temperature with a Absolutely smokekst end odorless It quickly gives beat, and with one filling of the font burna Jteadily for nine hours, without smoke or smell. Has automatic-locking flame spreader which prevents the wick ,rorn being turned high enough to smoke, and it easy to remoe and drop back, so the wick can be cleaned in an instant. It his a cool handle and a damper top. h. n Indicitor I way a ahowa the amount of oil In the font. It hi filler-eap 7.. ? . ' not ne d lob crewed down; it Is put In like cork in bottle, tnd it "ached to the font by a chain. ine burner body or gallery cannot become wedp;d, because of t new "ce in obstruction, and consequently it can always bj eisily unscrewed in """'at for rewicking. . ,, Pc''ti"n Oil Heater Is finished In apan or nickel. It is strong, durable na mide, built for service, yet light and ornamental. tcwn Bmryvktri. If net ef ytrt. tm!t f-r ducrifiLH circiutr to tki nntt gtcy tf t Mt Standard Oil Company (Incorporate!) A Splendid OveraH for every us j. Cut generous ly fulL Two hip pockets. Felled seams. Continuous fly. fr Sat 4 11 Utrx ML'at'iY.CIHMSa j mi 6V Association J KNICKERBOCKER $ Washington Irving, In his famous history of New York, makes Uiedrlch Knickerbocker a joker and a preach-; er an exploder of Bhams and a j teacher of reverence. The New York ' of Irvlng's time was newly-old that is, just old enough to display pride of age, like the show of weulth pro-i vorblully ascribed to the newly rich, or like the stripling just turned 21, who speaks touchlngly of memories of boyhood and the lessons of expe rience, bo ihe arrival of Knicker bocker's history was timely, for this jolly historian could prick great bub bles of personal and family pride without piercing or injuring any solid flesh, and level to the ground some pompous structures of titles and tra dition without shaking the solid foun dations of nersonal character and so- clal worth on which all lasting wallB must be built. Knickerbocker contributes to these deep foundations of noble character and lofty sentiment by throwing around Manhattan Island the soft veil of legend and the warm glow of hu man Interest In Its familiar names i. nd pistes. In short, the lesson of Vnlckcrbocker is to quit Idle boasting, see one's own foolishness, get down to business and begin to build In heart and mind the treasures that endure because they are pure and hu man and true to the best In human life. Irving's playful humor and deep reverence, united In a life touched with the pathos of an early bereave ment, are needed especially In every new country, as they were needed In nineteenth century. We need the humorous writer to enable to see ourselves as others see ub. snd to laugh away our Tool- Hpoksne, Wash.. Jan. 20 On of Ish superstitions. the sights and amll of Ihe In- We need even more the poet, hlsto-i nn,j rntilre will soon be the biggest rlan aud novelist, who can rise to',,nK farm ln ,h wrld, If plain" the grandeur of our mountains and rivers and plains and Inte-iiret to us their sublime language, we need po ems that will make some of our na- iivn acenea sacred to us till e rev-lhi erenco the products of ages of earth' thit black skunk hides ere In grent I t'"'1" ' Or is It that we rejoice to ace , history and human development to demand and that afhlKh as $ir,nlr""tf l"""'fl H la difficult to which we owe the little skill we have each Is paid for perfect specimens I ""''I 'i' explanation when we re- and the tools and field for Its exer-1 . . -. .. - (call the fact that the cell of the mur- ,',.. KI'IKiKOX ClllltOi'OIMST 'derer if his victim has been a wo- The humorist ies us rt by Corns, bnnlons end Inrrnwln nails 1 ,llu"' h, treatment of her has laughing at bubbra and enabling ui treated without pain. Hovey build-' ''"'" particularly Inhuman la unual io tee ihroueh them, but h' 9 eld Inir, corner Klghth and Olive streets, j "de fcntlvi' with flowers and ends with the deep ei mtIi in lii ! I'hono Illark ""4. It. A. Ilnniels ! ote of symptiWy Irom lo r more, which human life touches the subllm-j w f20 fortunute sisters; and If lhile fond-j 4$i ""I fcilo, in at' est attainments of heroic devotion There are some subjocts that can nev er bo UHed for mirth In conversation or In newspapers or books without Injuring the foundation of reverence, which Is the basis of noble life and noble deeds. Such are "A picket frozen on duty; A mother starved for her brood; Socrates drinking the hemlock And Jesus on the rood; And millions who bumble and nameless, The straight, hard pathway plod." They compel us to bow tho head and worship. Our reverence will raise us to Its object, whether we call that object humanity or Qod. ARTHUR HAYES 8AROKNT. THIS DOC'S. NAME AIN'T COOK BUT Alton, III., Jan. 20. Dr. It. A. Pfaff, a promlent dentlBt of this city, has always had an excellent reputa tion for voracity. Therefore, his friends believe him when be declares that he has on his farm, near Fns terburg, III., a h'-n that he knows to be twenty-five years of ego, and a duck that Is older than the hen by two years. The dentist admits that the hen is no longer an egg produ cer, hut Is useful because of her wil lingness to adopt and "mother" ev ery brood of chicks that is hatched on the farm. Ily acting as foster tno.u..-, tho twe:it -,'lve year-Id hen enables the real marnni. s to get back on the Job of turn'm out fifty cent a dozen eggs. 1 hi? twenty-sev en year old duck alio has the same penchant for acting as a nurve to lit-! tie ducklings and tei'dilng them how to swim. Khe has also provided ' .(u.cr oi a cm,,:,. J"JTCu.TT7 '''i I'll KM ! now being made are carried to corn pletlon. fiaptrrn fur dealers have agreed to tnko the entire output of pelts at prices which immii to offer s urn ,.r,fii fnr ih mH.i.t.r 'n i. .uUul when someone dares defy, t TALES ABOUT PEOPLE J' ; tluard Special Service. ' I New York. Jan. 21. Tho Mnnncltil cnlli!lli nitons growing out if tho fa mous Dndgo-Murso divorce suit will , lie heaid today In Iho supremo court, j c.s tlio remit of 11 suit brought ly j Kdwnrd M. Hracken. n prlvato de tective, to recover $3,000 from for-! mor Judge Kdward V. foyno. Hrack en as employed ns a sleuth In con nection with the IHidgu-Morse do mostlo troubles, for some time af ter the expose 111 that case, he ab sented himself In Texas. Me was in dicted here, charged with having committed certain Illegal nets, tint Coyne nppeared for him and had the indictment dismissed. The detect ive was completely exonerated. Meanwhile, "he asserts, he had de posited the jti, Odd he hnd received for his services In the Dodge-Morse case, with Judge Coyne. When the troubles of the detective were lit an end, ho nsked the former judge to return the money, but Coyne gnvf Mm only half of It. keeping $3.U00 ns his fee. It was this Bum which Itraeken is now suing for. alleging that Coyne Is not entitled 1o any fee Irom him. ns Charles V. Morse re tained and paid Coyne to defend hlin and get the indictment dismissed. The most lordly cargo shipped to America In many years Tins just ar rived on the liner Adriatic. The list includes the Marquis and Mnrchlon ess of Salisbury, I.ady Mary Cecil. Lady Beatrice. Cecil, Viscount Cran- borne. Lady Winifred Gore, the Countess do Sibur, Prlnco Paul Troubeteiky, the Hon. John and Mrs, Ward, and the Uowager Conn toss of Arman. Another consignment of nobility is expected to sail from Knitlaud next week to attend the marriage of Miss Vivian Gould, daughter of George Gould, and lxrd Dccies. The t wedding is expected to take place on j February 7. i New York, Jan. 20. Mr. James Gordon Hennolt, editor und proprk (or of tho New York Herald, mid the New York livening Telegram, will celebrate his seventieth blrlbday next. May. Incidentally, the gay young blade is being sued by on Jac- (iuelia Shettler. who alleges that the American journalist is no other than her loiiir tost mpu, and the suit Is act for trial in Ihe Court of, ApiionlH at 1'nris tod.y. The fair .laciiui'llno nKlis that Mr. lU'nnott recognize bei ng his daughter, and. Incidentally, K.lvo a "Hiillalile allowance." Once before Mile, shot tier sued Mr. Hen net t, but the case wns dismissed sr contrary to French legal procedure. since then the French senate has ' p:u ssed a law authorizing "natural' children to take legal means for es tablishing their purentagc, und the young lady has resumed her stilt, un der the direction of Mnltro Henri Itobort, one of the greutest of French attorneys. At Ihe ourller hearing a letter pur porting to hnve been written by Mr. Dennett, 111 which he admitted that Mile. Shetler was bis daughter, was produced in court. The distinguish ed editor denied that he hud written the letter, and exports will probably bo called upon to decide Its authen ticity. For many years Mr. Dennett has resided In tho Chrumps Klysecs, I'nr- Is, and has made only brief and In frenquent trips to this country. He edits his Journals by sable, and nlso conducts a Paris edition of the Her ald. Or. Max Schlapp, chairman of the phychlatry section of the American Academy of Medicine and examining physician of tho children s court and Gerry Society, declares that fully half or the youthful criminals dealt with by tho latter organizations In New York, are feeble minded. The snme percentage, he believes, will be found to hold true throughout tho country. Tho moral Is, Bays Or. Schlapp, that medical attention rath er than punishment. Is what a major ity of young offenders need. This matter will bo brought up before the child welfare exhibition and confer ence opened today In New York, and as a result it Is expected that a law will be passed In this state providing that feeble-minded children shall have Clo attention and treatment of paid specialists. It Is pointed out that, as "the child Is the rather of the num." such adult criminality may bo prevented by this means. : At the WceK End The attraction of the Indecorous show seems irresistible. Men and women, old, young sad mld..ie-agd, who would never dream o, setting foot Inside of the foroiddeu limits of any city, will flock to a theutrc to see such an underworld depicted. '.very time tne police prohibit a play u disappointed throng wends Its way home. Yet these si,ows are almost always stupid and badly written and merely disgusting. What force Im pels us to witness them.' it a trial deals with phases of life not mentioned In polite society, the courtroom Is packed to suffocation, largely with women, good women, i i of these women would scorn her own slsier were she In the defend- tit's position. What is the appeal ! that Biakea modest women forget their manners and fight for places In the courtroom, and dun-guru the lifo-long admonition that she whu touches pitch mast become defiled ( ' is it uecaus'i we are ul heart, so little In sympathy with Hie lm.ii thai govern sociul conditions mat we re-! ant happens to bo a woman Bho is at oiue besieged with oilers ot luur- rillM. ll'oi.i .4,1 clashes ol men. What I impels us to champion the cause we despise and for whose ultimate ic-j feat we sneml mi r liA.it mw.il.d ,lle answer noes lull lie on tile Burl'ace. It must bo somewhere hid den In those depths of human nature winch "our understanding can make no complctu inventory ol." The Commonwealth programs were tremendous and gave each pro fession a chance to rldu its bobby, 'i tiero was the discussion of the best means for making rural life attract ive. All admit Unit It must attract more laborers or we shall have to overcome the taste lor eggB. butter, and putaioes. It was a little dis concerting to be reminded that (no oniy lue.tl and buauiuul rural life thai America bus so far produced was thai of the old Southern planta tion, when the labor was performed by slaves. Hut everybody braced up and expressed high hopes ot the ben enclai eileets ol developments of m- rul free delivery, good rouds, tele phones, automobile and electric sor- vice. I When the lawyer had his Inning no oeniaiiileii a limner typo or cli ents, men who would quuiTul on a higher moral level. Then the doctors took a good hard rap al us, and predicted epidemics of suverul tiialigtiunl sorts. The snow oil tlio ground at the time, must have made these ominenl physicians forget that Oregon rain robs contagious dis eases of most of their terrors. It is reported that one of the visiting doe tors forbado his wife, while in Ku gene, to take a sip ot water, even of boiled water, aud supplied her with bottled mineral water, with which to baibo hor face and bands. Ho bad not soen our wator in Its chocolate luiiii, either. It is salutary once in a while to see ourselves as otuers see us. If this phyBlclan hud exam luted the waler-bolllng plant at tho University, as did the stato bacteriol ogist, he would have been eminently satisfied that students aro supplied with thoroughly sterilized water. A year from now when the Com monwealth congress assembles, we expect to .bo nbio to look any man fearlessly In the face, a face washed 111 city water, too. The Toledo Reporter stales that 95 per cent of Lincoln county's taxes are paid by non-residents and speculators in limber lands. i The new hotel Julian, at Corvalils.l was formally opened Sunday nlk'bt.l It Is one of the finest In Western Oregon. I Are Your TEETH In Need ! of Attention? If they are, here is an excellent opportunity to have your dental work done by experienced practitioners. We do nothing but high-class, up-to-date dentistry at moderate prices. .We have all the latest dental devices for perform' ing as near painless operations as is possible to do, and the most modern and fully equipped dental offices in the state of Oreg:n. Dr. Kelsay, of Portland, will be associat ed with Dr. White. Dr. Kelsay makes a specialty of arti ficial teeth and orthodontia (consisting of irregular teeth of children). The health of the child as well as of the adult depends upon the teeth. Without good teeth you cannot have good health. DO NOT NEGLECT YOUR TEETH.' They are your best friend. All our work is fully guaranteed. We invite you to inspect our offices. We cheerfully examine and estimate your work free of charge. WHITE DENTAL PARLORS I Over Folly Theatre, bet. Eighth and Ninth on Willamette 1 OFFICE HOURS: 8 a. m. to 12 m. and 1 p. m. to 6 p. m. PHONE MAIN 5 t OPEN EVENINGS AND SUNDAY BY APPOINTMENT t t Robinson's Old Hide House has gone If you have any Hides, Tallow, Pelts or Rubber bring th m to Ihe Chemical Works Are Ready for Yvmi 4 r v -M i(talfuim)niniM Glnducss comes with a hotter under standing of the transient nature of the many physical ills v.hlch vaulsh be fore proper efforts gentle efTortB pleasant otTorts rightly directed and assisted by the pleasant laxative rem edy Syrup of Figs and nixlr of Senna. 1(3 beneficial effects nro duo to tho fact that it Is tlio one remedy which pron otes Internal clennllnesa without debilitating tho organs on which It acts. To get lis beneficial effects nl vnye buy the genuine manufactured by the California l'ig Syrup Co. Poor Sick Soles Like to coiius to us. EUGENE QUICK SHOE RE PAIR SHOP, 39 West Eighth Street, ftCn'S $eWCd SoleS 75C Women's Sowed Soles. .. 50c , M. MILLER 1 1 !": j.1 U 7" f". ' i