The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899, September 08, 1883, Image 1

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ESTABLISDED FOB TAB DISSEMINATION OP DEMOCRATIC FBlJICirLES, AID TO EAR 13 HONEST LIVING BT THE SWEAT OF Ol'R BROW. '
WHOLE NO. 826- EUGENE CITY, OR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1883. ' $3.50 per year IN ADVANCE
$ht (Sutjrue (City uarfl.
I. L. CAMPBELL,
Publisher and Proprietor.
OFFIOB-Ou the Kt nil of Willamette
Street between Seventh and Eighth Street.
RATES
OCR ONLY
OB' ADVEUTISINQ.
. Advertisements tusertod as follow.!
Ob square, 10 line or less, one insertion $3 J
aaok subsequent luertion L Cash required In
Timeiert'neH will be charged at the fol
wing ratal t
One equare three months. ,.......,. v. 0 00
" " six month. 8 00
" one year. i. ..... 12 00
Transient notice, in local column, 20 cents per
ft. for each Insertion. , ,
tdvertisintf bill, will be rendered quarterly.
11 lob work most be paid pob os hkmvehy.
N
EW
,mttmmt
I B. MIFS.
postorncfi.
i. to T p.
Sunday
vfloe Hoar. -From T
is m. Arrives from the north and leave, going
. ltk at 1 11 P- n. For Biuulaw. Franklin and Long
? close at on Wednesday. For Crawfords-
Latur will be tmlj for delivery h ilf an hour after
..liTalof train.. letter. .hould be loft .t the office
.aah.nrb.for. iTTEM0!l p. M
A1
SOCIETIES.
EOO! IO D"E II, i. -""
,1ImU tnt and third Weinesdays in each
taeath.
Kpihcur Botti Todok No. 9 I. O.
T -"XV. r. iuCTJvwwB. ,
.wW' Whuwhula EnoiiriiT ro. o,
assts en the Id and Uh Wednesday, in each month.
' bousss Lodge, No. 15, A. O. U. W.
Meeta it Masonic Hall the second and fourth
Wda,r.ln.achmotl,j M SjoAs M w
1 Mawmio H..I1, the Hrst aud third rndaya of
ach month. Byo-d'r, Comhanhish.
Oiskr op Ciiism FiFsn.-Mwts the
mt and third Saturday evening at Mouic
HalL Uy order of J. M. Sums, U C
Butt a" L-jogb No. 317. I. 0.(1. T. - Meet.
vary Saturday night ;m " Mw Halt
E.O. Pott bk, W. t. 1 .
LiAnwa S r ll B VM) ok IfrtPB -Mfet at the
. P. Church awry Surty ft"r;,n '
J R. HUHton. Supt: Mi" Uortha ;.Kk. Aat
Sunt; Cha Hill. Wy. Uatt.e bmith,
Chaplain. Visitor- invle wdCTtiif.
J. E. FEN TON,
Attoraf y-at-Laxv.
JCUCIEXE CITY
OUKGON.
B. t, ITttAHAS, Al.nANt. U niLVEU, El'OENE.
8TUAUA3I & IIILVBU,
Attorneys and Couisellori at Law,
KUliliXH CITY, OKEUON.
PtiiiCncu ix a.lfj the courts of
thU State. They Rive Bpecul attentlou
o collections and probata inattom.
Orrioi-Over W. T. C).'a Express o'fia
. CEO- 8- & GEO. A. DIMS,
Attorneys and Counsellors-at-Law,
WILL PRACTICE IN THE CDURT8
of the Secoud Judicial Dintrict and m
the Supreme Court of this State.
Special attention given to collections and
matters in probate
Cea. S. Washburne,
Attoracy-at-Law,
iUtJENE CITY, - - - OltEOON
OfTic formerly occupied by Thompiono:
Kaan.
. S A GENERAL
BUSINESS 3DIEECT0RY.
BETTMAN, O. Dry gooda, clothing,
pnoene. and ireneral nierchamliae, aouthweat
corner Willamette and Eighth atreeta.
BOOK STORE One door aouth of the Aator
Houaa. A full stock of assorted box papers
plain and fancy.
CHAIN HROa.-Pealer in Jewelry, Watch
es, t 'locks and Musical instruments u
lantette street, between Seventh and Eitibth.
D0RRIS, a F. Dealer In Stoves and Tin
ware W'illametU street, between 8vanth
and EUthth.
FRIENDLY, a TL -Dealer in dry (rood.,
jlnjt)tng and general merchandiae VS lllam
Wtt. street, between KUhih and Niuth.
GTLtii J. P.-Physielan, tai-pos. and Dnur-
gist, Postoffioe, iUauiett. reet, between
Devi
ill! Ili
A large assortm ent of La
dies and Childrens Hose at
12 1-2 els.
Good Dress Goods at 12o-
Best Corset in town for 50c
An immense stock of JV ew
and Seasonable Goods.
Fine Cashmere in every
shade.
Neiv and Nobby styles in
CLOUIING.
Trimming Silks and Sat
ins in all shades.
Moireantique Silks
Velvets in Colors.
Hie finest stock of French
KID SHOES
ever brought to this place.
BOOTS and SHOES
:nall grades-
GROCERIES
of all descrivtions.
Liberal Discount for
CASH.
New Departure
ft
TWO X?lE!lICr3 I
PATRONIZE THE MEN WHO HELP T IIUILI) YOUR BRIDGES, ROADS AND
SCHOOL HOUSES, whnne interests are your intercuts I Are permanently located and
ind their prohts at home. J ake notice tliat-
NOTICE TO SHEEP OWNERS.
VTOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL
1 1 Sheen owners that Ihev mu.t din their
sheep as soon ai sheared IK DISEASED. The
(aw makes provismna inai wnen me owner, inn
to do eo, that the Insiectir shall cause it to be
dona at their expense.
tt II. UUA13.
Sheep Inspector for lne Co, Or.
A. V. PETERS,
Will sell goods for CASH at greatly reduced prices, as low as any other CASH STORE.
Best Prints 16 and 18 yards Jl 00
Best Brown and Bleached Muslins, 7, 8, 9, and
10 cU.
jyin3
CEO. M. MILLER,
Mtornaj and Ccuasallor-at-Law, and
Real Estate Agent.
EUGENE CITY, - : - OREGON,
OFFICE Twe doom north of Post Office.
Dr. Wm Osborne,
Office Adjoining St- Charles Hotel,
OB AT THE
IEW DSUa 8T0EE OF HAYE3 and LUOKEY.
DR. JOSEPH P. GILL,
CAN BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or res
idence when not profeasionaUy engaged.
Office at the
POST OFFICE DRUG STORE.
Rssidenoe on Eighth street, opposite Tresby
rian Church.
DR. E. G. CLARK,
GraduaU of the Philadelphia Dental College.)
(3 DENTIST.
EUGENE CITY, - - OREGoN.
.rvrrw vritivr.a A SPECIALTY.
(jT Artificial teeth, made U order Teeth
extracted without pain. All work fully war
r. in hrinlc building over the
rauKu. vuivw -
Cnmygitorc
JEWELRY ESTABLISHMENT.
J. S. LUCKEY,
DEALER IX
Fine Cheviot Shirts. 50, 75 cts and 91.
New Assortment Dress Goods (No Trash) 15,
zJ and A) cts.
Mens' Umlerwear, Shirts and Drawers, 50 ct
Mens' Ovendiii td, 75 cts. and SI.
Mens' Overalls, 60, 65, 75 cts and SI.
Embroideries and Edwins at Fabulous Low
Prices.
Clarks and Brooks spool cotton 75 cts per Dot
Plain and Milled Flrnneln, 25, 35; 45 and 50
cts.
Water Proo , cents
Fine White Shirts. 75 cts and $1.
And all Other Coods at Proportionate Rates
Also the Celebrated
WHITE 8E fV NG MAOHNE I
t i.t,.,. t... .i -,,( K ,va l,1 nrttliilitvl. At irreatlv reduced rates.
Sir To my old Customers, who have stood by me so 1 ng, I will continue ti sell on same
tanns as heretofore on tim, but if at any time they wisn w mane Aau purenaa, i wm gi
all sm, as others, the full credit on my reduction A. V. 1 L I E1U3
BJ
OR
V
Goods sold as low as any House
in Oregon, for
Cash Or Credit
Highest Price paid for all kinds
of Country Produce. Call and see.
S. JFL Friendly.
CRAIN BROS,
DEALERS
a
ffatchei d I
Jewelry,
Musical Instruments, Toys, Notions, etc
Watches, Clocks, and Jewelry repaired and
warranted. Northwest corner of Willamette
and Eighth street.
ecks, Waches, Chains, Jewelry, Etc.
Repairing Promptly Executed,
yyall Work War ran ted. jM
J.S. LUCKEY,
rUnrurtll k Cj's Brick Willamette street.
this paper riTairrEXV,-
T70R BUXNA YISTA STONE WAKE go
A. O, HOVIT. H. C HUMPRBET. W. T. PEET,
Notary. Attorney. L ashler.
LANE COUNTY BANK
IIOVEY, HUMPHREY & CO
ETJCrENB CITY, - OR
Deposits received subject to check.
Loans made on approved securities.
Sight Drafts drawn on
PORTLAND, SAN FRANCISCO AND
NEW YORK.
Exchange drawn on the principal Cities of
Europe.
Collections made on all points and a general
evanth and Eighth.
i inirener
chandise northwest eorner Willamette and
Ninth streets.
HODES, C. Keeps on hand fine wines, liq
oors, eigara ana a pool ana biiuaru taoie:
Willamette street, between Eighth and
Niuth.
HORN, CHAS. M. -Gunsmith. Rifles and
shot guns, hreecn and muule losders, for salt.
Repairing dona in the neatest style and war
ranted. Shop on 9th street
LUCKSY, J. a Watchmaker and Jeweler;
keepa a hne stork of goods in bis line, n illatn
etta street, in Ellsworth'i drug store.
McCLAUEN, JAMES -Choice, wines,llnuora,
and cigara - Willamette street, between Eighth
and Ninth.
PATTERSON, A. S.-A fine stock of plain
and fancy visiting cards.
PRESTON, WM. -Dealer in Saddlery, Har
ness, tarriage 1 ritumings, etc. WillametU
street between Seventh and Eighth.
POST OFFICE -A new stock of standard
school books just received at the post otiica.
RENSHAW, W&L-Wine, Liquors, and Ci
gars of the best quality kept constantly on
band. The best billiard table in town.
RHINEHART, J. B. - House, sign and car-
riajte painter, work guarantee": nr.t clam.
Stock sold at lower rates than by anyone in
Eugene.
SCHOOL SUri'LIES-A Urge and varied
assortment of slatea of all sizes, and quantities
of slates and slate-books. Three doors north
of the express office.
WALTON, J. J.-Atorney-at-Ijiw. Office
Willamette street, between Seventh and
Eijlith.
lwaya Caret and nover dlsftp
joints. The world'a great Pain"
Reliever for Man autd Beaat.
Cheap, quick and reliable. .
283
PITCHER'S CASTOItlA
Is not Narcotic. Children
grow fat upon, Mothers like,
and Physicians recommend
CASTORIA. It regulates tho
Bowels, cures Wind Colic,
allays FeverlshnesB, and de
stroys Worms.
WEI BE MEYER'S CA
TARRH Care, a Constitutional
Antidote for this terrible mala
if, hf Absorption. The most
Important Discovery since Vao
etnation. Other remedies may
relieve Catarrh, ttia enrea at
nyetage before Conatunptlon
acta la. . , .
IiIALEBlK
Groceries nd Provisions,
Will keep on hand a general assortment of
Groceries, Provisions, Cured Meats,
iobacuo, Uigars, handles,
Candles,
SoaiM.
Green and Dried Y ruits,
Notions,
Banking
tanas.
business transacted on
avorahle
aUtf.
Wood and Willow Ware,
Crockery, Ktc
Business will be conducted on a
CASH BASIS
Which means that
Low Prices are Established
Ooodt delivered without (barge to Bojei
ALL KINDS OF PRODUCE WANTED
rill pay the hlgbmtraarket
J AS. U fAUK
yr which we
price.
SAN JUAN LIMB for sale by
T. G. HENDRICKS.
riayiog it oo the Old Iid.
Peck's Sun.
"What started your pa to drinking
agaiuT'
"Oh, nta thinks it was losing money
on the Chicago races. Ho has heen
st4-nming ever sine. Pa can't stand ad
versity. Rut I guess we have got him
now. Ho is the scartest man you ever
saw."
"How did you tiring him to his
senses?'
"Well, we tried having the minister
talk to pa, but pa talked Uiblo, about
taking a little wine for the stomach's
sake, and gave illustrations about Noah
gotting full, so the minister couldn't
brace him up, and then ma had some of
the sisters come and talk to him, but
he broke them a1.! up by talking almut
what an appetite they had for cham
pagne punch when they were out in
camp lost Summer! and they couldn't
have any effect on him) and so ma said
she guesxod I would have to exorcise
my ingenuity on pa again, so I told her
if she would do just as I said, mo and
my chum would scaro pa so that he
would swear off. She said she would,
and we went to work. First I took
pa's spectacles down to the optician
Saturday night, and had the glasses
taken out and a pair put in their place
that would magnify, aiid I took thorn
home and put them in pa's spectacle
case. Then I got a suit of clothes
from my chum's uncle's trunk, alout
half the size of pa's clothes. My
chum's unjle is a very small man, and
pa is corpulent I got a plug hat three
sizes smaller than pa's hat, and took
the namo out of pa's hat and put it in
the small hat I got a shirt aliout half
big enough for pa and put his initials
on the thing under tho bosom, and got
a number fourteen collar. Pa wears
seventeen. Pa had promiflod to braoo
up and go to church on Sunday morn
ing, and ma put those small clothes
where pa could puc them on. 1 told
ma when pa woke tip, to tell him he
looked awfully bloated and excite his
curiosity, and then send for me."
"You didn't play such a trick as that
on a poor old man, did yout" said the
grocery man.
"You bet Well, ma told pa he
looked awfully bloated. Pa said he
guoNSod lie wasn't bloated very much,
but ho got up and put on his spoctacles
and look at himself in the glass. You'd
dide to see him look at himself. His
face looked as big as two faces through
the glasses, and his nose was a sight
Pa looked scared, and then ho held up
his hand and looked at that His hand
looked like a ham. Just then I came
in, and I turned palo with some chalk
on my face, and I begun to cry, and
I said: 0, pa, what ails yout You are
so swelled up I hardly knew you.' Pa
looked sick to his stomach, and then he
tried to get tho pants on. Oh,my,it was
all I could do to keep from laughing
to see him pull them pants on. He
could just get his legs in, and when I
got a shoe horn and gave it to him he
was mad. He said it was a mean boy
that would give his father a shoe horn
to put his pants on with. The pants
wouldn't come around pa by ten
inches, and pa said he must have eat
something that disagreed with him,
and he laid it to watermelon.- Ma
stuffed her handkerchief in her mouth
to keep from lading, when she saw pa
ook at hisself. The legs of his pants
were so tight pa could hardly breathe,
and ho turned pale and said; 'Hen
nery, your pa is a mighty sick man;'
and then ma and n e both laughed, and
he said we wanted him to die so we
could spend his life nisur'iVfSd uioney'ih
riotous living."
"But when pa pot on that condensed
shirt, ma fairly yelled, and I laughed
until my side ached, la cot it over
his head, and got his hands in th
sleeves, and couldn't get it either way,
and he couldn't see us laugh, but he
could hear us, and he said: 'It's darned
funny, ain't it, to have a parent swelled
up this wayl If I bust you will both
be sorry.' Well, ma took hold of one
side of the shirt and 1 took hold of , the
other, and we pulled it on, and when
pa's head came up through the collar
his face was fairly blue. Ma told him
she was afraid he would have a stroke
of apoplexr before he got bis clothes on,
and I auebS' pa thought so too. He
tried to get the collar on, but it
wouldu't go half way around his necV,
and he looked in the glass and cried, he
looked so. He sat down in a chair and,
panted, he was so out of breath, and,
the shirt and pants ripped, and pa said
there was no use in living if he was
going to be a rival to a fat woman in a
side-show. Just then I put the plug
hat on pa's head, and it was so small if
was going to roll of! when pa triod td
fit it on his head, and then ho took it
off and looked insido of it, to see if it
was his hat, and when he found his
name in it pa said, 'Xak h away. My
head is all wrong too.' Then he told
me to run for a doctor mighty quick. ,
I got the doctor and told him what
we were trying to do with pa, and he
said he would finish the job. So the,
doctor camo in and pa was 0ft the
lounge, and when the doe ntw him hs
said it was lucky he Was called just as
ho was, or we would have called an
undertaker. He put some founded Ice
on pa's head the 6 rut thing, ordered the
shirt cut open, and we got the pants off.
Then he gave pa an emetio and had his
feet soaked, and pa said, "Doc, if yoa
bring me out of this I will never drink
nother drop." The doo 'told pa that
lis life was not worth a button if ho
over drank again, and left about halt
pint of sugar pills to be 6red into pa
every Ave minutes, Ma and me sat
up with pa all day Sunday, and Mon-
ay morning I changed the spectacles
nd took tho clothes homo, and long
aliout noon pa said he felt as if he could
get up. Well, you nover see a tickleder
man than ho was when he found the
swelling had gone down so he could get
is pants and shirt on, and ho says
that doctor is the bctt in town. Ma
says I am a smart boy, and pa has
taken the plege, and we are all right
again,
OREGON AND WASHINGTON.
Wheat is selling at 80 cents at Al
bany.
Dallas, Polk county, wants a hotel
liadly.
J, B. Fuson, of Yamhill county, rais' '
a nineteen pound watermelon.
Efforts are being made in Yamhill
county to organize a county fair.
Tho Marshfield Mail says the appro
priation has boon exhausted and work '
at Rocky Point has stopped.
The Yamhill jail has four prisoners, '
one of whom is G. W. Smith, charged ' -
with the murder of Mrs, Fetch.
Dr. 0. B. Westfall, of West Cheha-
em, Yamhill county, receivod a severe i
troke of paralysis a few days ago, and
ies in a very critical condition.
A correspondent of tho Hillsboro In
dependent, says Cornelius expects to
become the junction of the West Side .
and the proposed Astoria road, and
that town lots are going up with a
rush.
The Lafayette Register loams that
Hon. B. F. Lewis wheat yielded about
forty-eight bushels per acre. It also
says that Mrs. Gibson, near . Wheat
land, had twelve acres of wheat that
yieldod COO bushels, and her whole
crop averaged forty-eight bushels to
the acre.
Lafayette Register: Mr. J. B. -
Fuson, near Dayton, is the Sosa W
raiscr in this county. He has fifty
hives which yielded him over 9,000
pounds of honey the present year. He
says if April had been as favorable as
usual, he would have taken near 0,000
pounds. The honey this year is of the
finest quality.
Heppner Gazette: A couple of cou
gars, which have been the terror of
sheepmen for some time in the neigh'
borhood of Junction Bar, were treed
by James Rhea's shepherd dog Lum,"
and shot by the hearder recently. They
were males and evidently brothers, and'
measured five feet eight inches from
tip t tip.
On Monday night the citizens of La
fayctte met at the Court House and
elected a committee to wait upon Mr
Villard, when he arrives at Portland,
and endeavor to find out when the nar-row-guage
railroad will be finished, if
at all The committee consists of W.
D. Fenton, A R. Burbank, H. R. Lit
tlefield, W M. Townsend aod R. D;
.Bird.-