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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 14, 1886)
GENE GIT Y GU A ED, 1 u. J ESTABLISHED FUR THE DISSEflimiliJi OF UEMOLRATIC PKINi ll'LES, A5D TO E1U IN OONEST LIVING BY THE iVE.T OF OCR BROW. Vol. 1a EUGENE CITY, ()U. SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 1886. Nb. 481 l-f 3 if" St. 1. L CAMPBELL, Publiutter Mild Proprietor. ..OFFICE -On th East side of Willamette toreet, between Sevebth and Eighth Street. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Fur annum Six Mouth Three month. . . $2 60 . L25 , .75 OOROXL ' RATES OF ADVKKTIS1NQ. Advertisement inserted u follow: On quart), tea liuet or le ne insertion 13; fetch subsequent insertion $L Cash required la advanoe, , , . i Tim advertisers will be charged at th fol lowing rate.: Oh aquare three month $0 00 V)oe square six mouth.. . ... 00 . )oe square one year 12 00 1 ' Transient notioe in local column, 20 ci nti ! per line inr each insertion. i Advertising bill will be rendered quarterly. All job work must be faid roa on dkliviky. i. BILYKU. .CM. COLLIER. BILYEU& COLLIER .-Attorneys and Counsellors at Law, - ECtJENE CITY. OREGON. i PRACTICE IN ALL THE COURTS OF I L : this State. Will give special attention o collection and probate matter. Omc-Over Hendrick k Eakin't bank. CEO, B. DORRIS, 'Attorney and Counsellor ' at-Law, i "1TTILL PRACTICE IN THE COURTS I ff I the Second Judicial District and in . be Supreme Court of thU State. ? Special attention given to collection! and natters in probate I Ceo. fe. Washburne, J AUor nc -at-Law, feUUENE CITY, - - - 'OREOON I fWTtXP A tit a I'V,, U.a tirfitnQ JM" J. 47a. ue vuui w luunui juiuw CEO. M. MILLER, Attorney and Ccunsallor-at-Law, and Ileal Estate Agent. feUGENE CITY, - OREGON. f Oflico formerly occupied by Thompsou k Bean, . I j. e. eenton; . AMornry-at-Luw. EUGENE CITY OREGON. Special attention given to Real Estate Prao 1 ice and Abstract of Title. Okhck Over Grange Store. I.W. HARRIS, M.D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE ' ' i Wilkin's Drug Store. ' Kviidence on Fifth atreet, where Dr Shelton ormerly resided. Dr. T. W. Shelton, ' Physician and Surgeon. JtOOM3-Ai Mr. J. 13. Underwood. EUGENE CITY. OREGON. DK. JOSEPtL P. GILL, . OAK BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or re VVidence when not professionally engaged. s Office at the I POST OFFICE DRUG STORE. Residence on Eighth street, oppoaita Freby Irian Church. J. J. WALTON. Jr., f ATIORNEY-AT-LAW; EUGENE CITY, OREGON. TILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE Y Y I'ourteof the State. , ' Special attention given to real estate, col ictinif, and probate matter. i Collecting alt kind of claim against the United State Government, office in Walton' brick mom 7 and 8. N. HUMPHREY, tugerie City,- - Ofegori. BREEDER Of THOROUGHBRED t-Holslein Cattle- CONPON, Attorncy-ai-ifau , tUGEXE CITY, OREGON. Omtl Oprxwit Walton' Brick. MOHEYTO LOAN fX IMPROVED FARMS FOR A TERM lf of year. Al'ply Wi I . Micrwood fiirrr, ItJGEXECITY. - - OREGON I, OfWup Uiu in Walton' Brick. rr FAIEt DEALING IS OUR MOTTO. titjw niuuf in new ot Duildinir maw- - . . . ... .1,. . m ul A0 w.U U, call ende onr Cobnw o WW, kept at MidKley k Dy.inKer'. if i ni.r. i ... . , u;it and , JJthy .ve u. a call before M-.u Uwhero, . MarHtss, A.U NEW GOODS. f; E. tW A CESEUAL 2 0 ' A large assortment of La dies and Childrens Hose at li 1-2 cts. Good Dress Goods at 12c- Best Corset in towh for 50c An immense stock of New and Seasonable Goods. Fine Cashmere in every shade New and Nobby styles tit CL011IING. Liberal Discount for CASH. Cash Or Credit, Goods Sold Oregon for GASH OR The highest price paid Produi'e. Call and sec S. H. Friendly. Harness Shop. I AVINCf OPENED A NEW SADDLE west of Ciuiu liros'., I am now prepared LOWlEISTilTES. The Most Competent Wofkmen Are employ, and I vail endravor to m'e with a call. J.L:PAGB; -DIlALER IN- ttXying A LARGE aS'D (JOMF-LETE XX.ltork of Staple ud Fancy Groceries, bought in the best market EXCLUS VELf FOR CASH, Ca(i' offer the putffc better price' t!ian any other house IN EUGENE- Produce of all kmd taken at market rice. Excited Thousands All oer the land are going into citay over Dr King' New Discovery for Consuinptioo. Their nnlooked for recovery by the timely .IQVI M VIT. JIIO H1III1C ICIIICHT, V"" ,. . - , i, 1 "' ' c J' "r ', L to p.W,t vely enre Severe Cou.h. i'nnm Aathma. Ilav raver, f.ninclnti. I ; H--.. I,-, of Voice, or any affectum i the Throat and Loug. OF 010 GOODS. Trimming silk and Sat ins in all shades. MoircantUjUe Silks Velvets in Colors. Hie finest stock of French KID SHOES ever brought to this place.' BOOTS and SHOES iriall grades. GiUMEULES of all descriptions' Us Low as any House in CREDIT. for all hinds of Country AND HAENF.fS SIIOP 0 8th STR to furnish everything in that line at the give satisfaction to all whj mav fa'ver , -v A. S. liltHJE:. J. W; CLEAVER Dealer in all kind of Agricultural Implements. AND Real Estate. Eugene City, Oregon Ydii Can Save tine and money by calling nn , STERLING HILL and letting pirn rer.ew your vulwcriptino for DfViMMrt. torv pu.r and nmL-aiinr. He also keeM a coiiipl-te totk of Magazine, in j rlndinx Ontrirr, Harper Llie etc. All the . tmpnl.ir liljrri-, Heaowle, IelU. 8tandard, Munn anil I'.li-r. in I evorythinir uo ally found in a 1st cl new depot, P O Build ing, Kuirene. roR8ALa.-l.V)loUinaIl part of Kugene Cit, with and without ho, Jricj M it mil New Bovr lo Drslroy the Bible First g riJ of all flic copies in all the Uiiguoj-Ha thero dr lCO,oi)0,000 oopicK, My, of the Old and New TchU itint in one book and portion, of th KooJc you must liavn all tlirne pilnl tojetliei Into a pyraiiiiilal mass and rnduwd to aiilitii h'forn you can any you have dentroyfci iIih 13il.li. Tlmn go to th liSrarina of the world, and when you have snlrtotdj thpr uviry honk tlmt contains a rvftm-noo to lh OIJ and New TxataiUKitta, Ull must eliminate from virv Loo ft all muoK t&MHaL'pii: and 'until vou have so treated eviy liook of f rtm.trv mid nrnu MV.dutnit all idkiaa rf rw' " j r ' "v w- grandeur and puritv and tendernKKS and ' beauty for tlm knowledge and power of which ths poeu itiid pros writers wuro iudohted to tli Bilile--iintil you have taken all therio from lietwefii the hindinga and turned ihem into ashes, leaving tlm emaHcu'nter1 fragments behind not until then have you destroyed the Bible 1 Have you done it then I Once more. Go to the courts of Id w, and having sought out the panlecU and ondea, vou must master every principle of Uw nnd n(uiIv what it may have derived from the Old and New Testaments, and have till xucli paHsages removed from the code of jurisprudence. You must then go through tlie galleries of art throughout the world, and you must slmih and daub over and obliterate the geniua of the artiet has produced not until then have you destroyed the Bilile. tllave you done it then 1 What then t You must visit every conservatory of music, and not until the world shall stand voiceless as to its muster, not uu'.il then have you dustroyed the Bible, Then you must visit the baptisteries i f the churches, and from tlm ImptUmu! roll you mi'st erase all Christian nuinVh the names of John ailll Mary for they suggest the Scriptures, and the register is staittped wih the liible. IIav you done it then I - No, there is one copy of tlm Bible still I'ving. It is the cemetery of the ChriNtiun. The cemeteries, while they exist, tire Bibles, and to suppress the bonk, to let no trace of it be discovered, you must pass from gravestone to gravestone and with a mallet and chisel cut nut every name that is biblical and every inspiring puxsnge of Scripture graven thereon. To destroy the Bible you must blot from the memory of every Chrictinn its promises and comfor's. Not' until you have done all this can you destroy the Bible. Fr Guard. An Apt lilUKlruiion'. Henry George in his book "Prot c tion or Free Trade," illustrates the protectionist idea in this fashion': "Im agine a village f, say, a hundred voters. Imnaino iwo of these villagers making such a proposition ns this 'We are rfesirous, fellow. citizens, of seeing you more prosperous, and to this nd propose this pin: Give us the privilege of collecting a tax of fiv cents a uay trom every one in tlie village.' , N"o one will f-el tne tax much.' for even nVan with a wife and eight children ii wilf only come to the paltry sunr of five cents a ".day. Yet this slight tax will give rYur villagers two rich citizens, who can ufTWd to spend money. We will at once begin to live in comniPiisorate stvle. We wf.l enlarge our houses and improve our grounds, set up carriages, hire servants, give parties, and buy much more freely at the stores. This will nialce trade brisk and cause a greater demand for Ia or. This, in turn, wilf create a demand for agricultural pro. duclions, which will enable the neigli boring .farmers lo make a g'eoter demand for store goods and the labor of mechanics. Thus shall we al become prosperous.' " . George Washington was the father of hU country, but his brother Samue seems to have done his lest to deserve a similar title. lYe died at the sg'o o 46, having' been' married live times, and leaving behind him a numerous pro gony, from whom most of the W.ish legions now living are desee ruled. There is a woman in a circus in Pari whn jumps from one horse to snot be 'hil ,).,, ,orw.. .r(. m,i. sr'ouhd tl direc(ion4 ,r Silrrr Drrliniiig. A dispatch fron Butte, Montana, under date of Aug 3, says : Grave alarm exists, throughout the nunine istricts of Montana over the decline of Rilvor. The Intel- Mountain esti- matia that tSO.OOO people in the Tenl tory are dependent on the mining ndu'stry and cognate enterprises, ncluding merchants, farmers and mechanic. The recent depreciation of ten cerits per ounce in silver represents the profits of mining companies, which will have td close down unless a re- action occurs. Isd and copper mines in which silver is art important hi product are also seriously crippled. Die Glendale works, employing 1000 men, will shut down on tne lain, ihe Alice, Moulton, Lexington and Wyckes works, and many other great enterprises which for years liave paid heavy ividends and emplrjys thousands of men, cannot run if the present depres sion in the silver market continues. Great paralysis of business will result nless a change speedily occurs, Butte is a substantial city of 22,000 peoplej entirely dependent upon mining, 5()00 miners being employed. The copper' onielters will continue in opera tion, but with decreased profits. The ilver mills' of Montana represent an investment of $200,000, and mining machinery as much more. The silver product of the Territory the current year, estimated at 12,000,000, will be uddenly cut abort, and fully 1 2,000 miners win ie thrown out or. employ ment. The people are still brave and hopeful, but indignant at the acticn of Congress and the administration. Reports of other mineral States and erritories to the Inter Mountain are to the same effect, and directly alToct the personal interests of a million western people. 1 Prighirul AechVcei Mr A J Goodrich, messenger for the Transfer company, informs this paper that a sickening accident occurred yesterday at Dorthwick & i'ainea mill, lietween the Cascade locks and Wood river, on the Washington .territory ide. At 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon Adam Kennedy and Jacob Shuttle were Bent down the road to repair one f the flumes. There ate two flumes running side by side,' one for tho trans portation of stubs and the other for mber ; both are three quarters of a mite lonff, ana as an eviuenon oi tne propelling power of tho water it is only necf ssary to say that it requires timber twenty seconds to reach its destination from thn starting point. These men were repairing the ZimW flume, when ohe or more of the slabs eaped over,' completely knocking out the breast of one of the men and iterolly cutting off the head of the other. Of course their death was an iistantaneous one. Adam Kennedy wns a native of Nova Scotia, 83 years of age, and has a wife living here. Nothing is known of Jacob Shuttle. Telegram, Aug 7, f , ... town south boycotting is being sat down upon quite emphatically. Tho United Stales marshal of Virginia has served a notice on the oflicers of the Richmond typographical union and the editor of the Labor Herald prohibiting ihem from publishing in that paper or elsewhere the names of persons who are patrons cf a boycotted firm in that city which employs non union printers Judge Bond of the United hUtes court issued an order in Baltimore, which order prohibits the persons enjoined from causing or inducing publicly or privately others to lioycott the firm, The Lalmr Herald is virtually sup pressed for oss edition, having matter now printed which would render the paper liable under the injunction. The order is tlie most far reaching one ever isxued in the direction of preventing boycotting. At a recent meeting of Texas editors the proprietor of a brewery ser.l written invitation to tliem to corn's over and inspect his tstaUi.,hineniV Ten seconds after it was ieail a liU dust niiuht have leen seen settling down nn Ae empty chair, in the ..atl-if had 'jei-u anylody there to see it. iU Wanlrd I PittOL Once when draiit was President there came to the White Hottse a letter addressed to the President in person. It was from a aoman iri Kannas, who . said she had read in the papers that Mr Grant before be went into tr)e army was poor, and that, though lie Had wqo fame and was then President, she did not doubt that he was poor yet. She hat a scheme to mike him rich. She had invented a corn sheller a machine that not only shelled the corn and aep-1 arated t from the cob, but by the I. i Wit' i reversal ot a wheel at will it would grind com and cob together,, and to furnish t h'ne food for stock. 'Ihe lady inclosed some roughly drawn plans and asked if "Mr Grant" would not get her a patent and accept a half interest in, the invention to compensate him for. his trouble. But she added : "Mr Grant," I must ask you not to say any thing1 about this to my huslandj for he is very jeaioue, and it might get us both, into trouble. "Mr Grant" did not "say ..... i mi anything" to the husband, but ho did,' good iiaturedIyj send the letter and its inclosures over to the Patent Office to see if the innocent woman nitglit not in some way be benefited. It turned out that the idea of a corn sheller was original and, with some modifications and after further correspondence through the Patent Office -this time with the lady 'a husband, who did not prove to be a bit jealous a patent was granted. "Itufe" Iiu'alls cot bold of this story, and whenever he and Grant were together in a suitable crowd Rufua would got it off with great gorfto. RufuV , would add (when he dared), "The President and I used tjo shell 'corn' together up in Oregon and Wash ington Territory, but we didn't use any such invention. Our cylinder was mado of glass, and we got away with a good many bushels.' Siren And 'llurb'ofc The River and Harbor bill as passed contains., the following appropriations for the Pacitio coast : Humboldt, Ca) - $ 73 000 ' Oakland, Csl 60 000 Survey of San Franciaoo harbor, Sn Pably Hay, Suiiun Bay, Strait ot Carquinez, mouth of San Joaqnin River and month of Sacramento River, sl In California 14 000 edwnod.C! S 000. San Dirgo Harbor, Ca! 8 Q00 Wliiiiugteo, Cat 75, 000 Yaquiua Bay,' Or 73 000 Coo Bay, Or 33 730 Yellowstone River, M T 18 730 Mokelumn ItiverCal 20 500 Saurarnenfo and Feather Rivers aid drede '. 41 100 . San Joaquin River and Stockton aud Mormon Sloughs, Ca! 13 "50 Cascades, Or 187 600 Upper Colambil, River, icoluding Snake River, Or and W T. 10, 000 Mouth of the Columbia River..... 18 500 Lower Willamette ftiver and Co , lumb'ia River below Sootlaud (of which $21,000 it for tntgboat and $-')000 to be expended on the river front at Portland) 75 000 Upper Willamette River above Port land, Or I0 00O Coqnille River, Or 20 000 Chehali River, WT 8 500 Cowlits River. W T 2 000 Skagit, Stillagaamish, Nootok, Snohomish and Suoqualanuu Riv. ers, XV T, each 2 000 On last Sunday evening, at Panaca, Nev., at about half past 9 o'clock, Eli as Hunt was atruck by lightning. He was engaged in washing h a hands in a hosin of water that rested on the stove, when the lightiiini came down thw stovepipe, hitting Hunt on the shout der, and running" down his arms and side, entering the floor and tearing up the planka Hunt was paralyzed for a day, but ia now much lietter. Hunt ia now probably happy in the thought that lightning' never strikes in the same place but once. Pioche, Nev., Record! m., ... .. , . - , r)wsbiPTr?!,-r-Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing be tween Sksltoo k Borrows in the mtnufaot dre o( woolen good, etc. ha been dissolved by mutual consent. Wm Skelton annine entire control and will settle all claim ow. inu-to or from the hnn. A eontiunaiiee of pubiio patrouoge it solicited. , , . Wm. Smltoh. Ecoike, July 19. 18S6. T .ill L.1l.r nnd osdar Dost for t Pt h'indred, and good eodar boapls for tl per huu-( j JIU 1 Rorr-'T avo'is.