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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1883)
r 1l 71 i H 71 NE n t AID. taw ESTABLISHED FUR TUB DISSEMINATION OF DEMOCRATIC PEINCITLES, i.lD TO EARN M HONEST LIVING BY TUB SWEAT OF OUR BROW. VOL. 15. EUGENE CITY, OR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1883. NO 48. Itt tfugtnt City uarfi. I. L. CAMPBELL, Publisher ani Proprietor. OfKlO'! -') i t'n KtttU of Willamette ttreitbitwien Soventh and Eighth Street. 00 B ON'LT lATrt OB ADVKHTiaiNOf Advertisements inserted M follower Ob o,uar, 18 line, or 1ms, one insertion $3 ; ton subsequent insertion IL Cash required in Irene. Tim alvertlser will b charged at the fol- vlnj rata s 9 Nim thre months. . $0 00 " ix month 8 00 " " ou year., 12 00 Transient notices in local column, 20 cent per a (or each insertion. - Advertising bill will be rendered quarterly. ' All lob work must be paid roR on dkmvkry. 4te nnr -From J a. m. to I p.m. Konlars t.M to J: JO p. m. Mail arrive, from tbeoncn ana ieve iromg norm III... Arrives train the north anil leave iruin? it at 1:S1 p. m. For HmiiUw, Franklin ami lmj .Iom at I a.m. on Welueaday. For Crawford etlto, Oaiap Creek and Browaaville at I T.u. btture will be reedy for delivery half an hoar etr tstal f trae. letter, ehoald be Wt t tlra oe aMk.arb.ter mails depart. A. 8. PATTERSON ?. at. SOCIETIES. Rtrncxa Low No II. A. P. and A. M. Meets ttrat and third We Inewiay in .arb auath. Ill WIS I It' 1. B. BUM'S. 8. "r.ft Bcrra tonoi! No. 9 t. O. HeetseTerr Tueaday evening. eta an tb Id ana 4ln weauwly in men nm Eoumc Limit, No. 15, A. O. V, W. Meets it M Acinic Hall the second and fourth Friday in each month. J. M. S1.0AX. M. W. KfLfATRfon Post, No. 40, O. .V K.-M :et Htll, the first and third rrlUvs ot J A GENERAL Jg) 11 t OLD IS. , Mnonio each mtnth. By order, CuMUAKDKU. Ossst or Ciioss FRiF.sn. Meets the rat and third Saturday evening at Mawnic Halt By or.hr of J. M. Sums, (1 0. Bctti Lorn No. 317, I. 0. G. T. Meets erery 8 tturdty nL'ht iu O 1 1 Feilov' II dl. E. 0. Potter, W. C. T. Lmrtlil'l Sr.in Bwnoy Hips -M(eti at the H. P. Cliuroh every S in I y afternoon at 3:). -J. It. Hmrton. Supt.: Mi B.-rtha Cool;, As't. .Stint; Chas. Hill, S;c'y, M.n Hittie Sniit'j, Chaplain. Visitora mtde wdoom. J. E. FEN TON, A ttornoy -at v. -KTJG1SR CITY OREGON. B. , kTRArUtt, ALBA XT. L. DILVKU, EUGKNK. TUAUAN & I.IL.YEU, Attorneys aiJ Counsellors at Law, EUGENE CITY, OREGON. PRACTICE IN AIJ, THE COURTS OF this State, They give special attention e collections and probate matter. Orrios-Ovor W. F. & Ci.'s Etprci oifiia GEO- B & Gel A. DJI.1 Attorneys ari'i Counsellors-at-Law, WILL PR.VCriCE IX THE C JUKI'S of the Second Judicial District all I in the Supreme Court of this Sute. Special attention given to collections and matter in probate Ceo. S. Wa3hburne, AUorncy-at-Luiv, ICUGENE CITV, - - OREGON Office formerly occupied by Thompion i Bean. - GEO. M. MILLER, ittornej and Ccuns9lloat-Law, and Peal Estate Agent. BPGENE CITY, - - - OREGON. OFFICE -Two doors north of Pcwt OiHoe. Dr. Wm Osborne, Office Adjoining St- Charles Hotel, OR at the IE Dani STORE OF H4TE3 and LUCKEY. DR. JOSEPH P. GILL, CAN BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or res idence when not professionally enao'ed. Ofice at the POST OFFICE DRUG STORE. Raaidence on Eighth street, opposite Presby erian Church. DR. E. G. CLARK, Graduate of tb Philadelphia Dental College.) t. DENTIST, IUGENE CITY, OREGON. VJT Arti6cial teeth ma.le to order. 'I'eet'n extracted without pain. All work fully war ranted. . Office in brick building over the Crania store. JEWELRY ESTABLISHMENT. J. S. LUCKEY, DIALER IN cks, Waches, Chains, Jewelry, Etc. Repairing Promptly Executed. CSMUWerk Warranted. j& J.S. LUCKF.Y', KlLrwarth k Co'a Eri. k WUlamette atreet. A large assortment of La d&$ and Childrens Hose at U 1-2 ds. Good Drtss Goods at 12c- Pest Corset in town for 60c An immense stock of New and Seasonable Goods. Fine Cashmere in every shade. New and Nobby styles in GLOWING. Trimming Silks and Sat ins in all shades. Moireantique Silks Velvets in Colors. The finest stock of French KID SHOES ever brought to this place- POOTS and SHOES 'nail grades. GROCERIES of all descriptions. Liberal Discount for CASH, ; New Departure ! ! AH) PATRONIZE THE MEN WHO HELP T .BUILD YOUR BRIDGES, ROADS AND JL SCHOOL HOUSES, whose interests ars your iukiresbi ! Are permitui'iitly located uud spend their profits at home. 'J'uke notice that- A. V. PETERS, Will sell goods for CASH at ureatly reduced prices, as low as any utiier CASH STORK. Fine Cheviot Shirts. 59, 75 cts and (1. Best Prints lb and 18 yards $1 00 Best Brown and Bleached Muslius, 7, 8, 9, and 10 cts. Clnrks and Brook spool cotton 75 cts per Doz. Plain :ind Milled Flrnnels, 25, 35: 45 and 50 cts. Water Troo , cents Fino White Shirts, 75 cts and $1. Now Assortment Dress Goods (No Trash) J5, 20 and 25 cts. Mens' Underwear, Shirts ami Drawers, CO ct Mens' Overshirts, 75 cts. and $1. Mens' Overalls, 50, 65, 75 cts and SI. Embroideries and Edgins at Fabulous Low Prices. And all Other Goods at Proportionate Rates. Also the Celebrated WHIT K SIS V NG MAOHNE ! None better for strength, size, and durability), At (rreatly reduced rates. V&T To my oi l Customers, who have stood by me so 1 in, I will continue to sell on tame t-rms as heretofore on tima, hut if at any time they wish to make CASH purchases, I will (rive all sm, as others, the full credit on iny reductiou A. V. rETERS Goods sold as low as any House in Oregon, for Cash Or Credit. Highest Price paid for all kinds of Country Produce. Call and S3e. S. I. Friendly. CRAIN BROS. DEALERS Jtwclry, Musical instruments, Toys, Notions, etc Watchea, Cl'icka, and Jewelry reraired and warranted. Northwest corner of Willamette and Eighth itreeta. THIS PAPER rtm-a 5!!S3 Advert krtna- Hureao lu mno H. L br" i.i tn Mlncu laajr U uimUi ur U IN .Ni.VV VUatliL. .01! BUENA VISTA STONE WARE go to T. U. Kt.NUUR.h.3 A. 0. HOVET, H. C BLMPHRIT, W. T. FEIT, Notary. Attorr.y. Cashier. LANE COUNTY BANK. IIOVEY, HUMPHREY 4 CO EUGENE OITTT, - - OB- Deposit receive! subject to check. Ixuuis mayle on approved securities. Siht Draft drawn on I"ORTLAND, KAN FRANCISCO AND NEW YORK. Exclianfre drawn on the principal .Citiea at Euru. Collection made on all point and a general Banking basinea transacted on avnraM Wnus. alStf. KUOKNK CITY HUSLNESS XIIEECTORY. BETTMaN', G. Dry goo.ls, clothing, (rroceries and general merchandise, southwest corner Willamette and Eighth street. BOOK STORE One door south of the Astnr House. A full stock of assorted box paper plain and fancy. CRAIN BROa-Dealer In Jewelry, W'atrh es, ('lock and Musical Instruments Wil lamette street, between Seventh and Eighth. DORRIS, B. F. -Dealer In Stove and Tin ware-Wille.iuetto street, between Seventh and Euihth. FRIENDLY. 8. H,-l)ealer In dry pels, clothing and petleral merchandise illam ette street, between Eighth and Ninth. GILL, J. P. Physician, Surgeon and Drug gist, PostoHiee, Willamette reet, between Seveath and Eitihth. ItEKDltlCKS, T. O.-Dealei in general mer- , chandise northwest corner Willamette and Ninth jtreets. H0DE3, C Keeps on haud fin wines, liq uors, cigar and a pool and billiard table: Willamette street, between Eighth and Ninth. HORN, CHAS. M.-Gunsmit'u. Rifle ar.d shot gms, breech and muiile lorders, for sail Repairing done in the neatest style and war ranted. Shop on Oth street, LUCKEY, J. a-Watchmaker and Jeweler; keep a line stock of goods in hi line, Willam ette street, in Ellsworth's drug store, McCLAREN, JAMES-Choice, wines, linuors, 1! 4t-M, .. . -t t-'i 1 .1. aou cigars uiamette sueei, Deiween r.igntn and Ninth. PATTERSON, A S.-A fine stock of plain and fancy visiting carda PRESTON. WM.-Dealcr lu Paddlety. Har ness, Carriago Trlniniings, etc. Willamett street between Seventh and Eighth. POST OFFICK-A new stock of standard school books just received at the post othoe. RENSHAW. WM.-Wlnes. Llouor. and Ci gar of the best nualily kept constantly on hand. The best billiard table in town. RHINEHART, J. B. - House, sign and ear- nage painior. r ura giinniiut'ei iirni. uum. Stock sold at lower rates than by anyone in Eugene. SCHOOL SUPPLIES -A large and varied assortment of slates of nil sizes, and quantities of slates and slate-books. Three doors north of the express oltice. WALTON, J. J. -Attorney at-Law. Office- Willamette street, between beventn and Eighth. NOTICE TO SHEEP OWNERS. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TO ALL Sheep owners that thev must dip their sheep as soon as sheared IF DISEASED. Ihe aw makes provisions that when the owners tan to do so, that the Insector shall cause it to be done at their expense. Sheer- Insiiector for Lane Co, Or. h fit 4 alway Caros and never dlsap aoint. The world' creat Pain" Reliever for Vaa and Beast. Cheap, qnlcli and reliable. PITCHER'S CASTORLA Is not Narcotic. Children grow fat upon, Mothers like, and Physicians recommend CASTORLA. It regulates tho Dowel, cures Wind Colic, allays Feverisliness, and de stroys Worms. WEI BE METER'S CA TARRH Core, a Conatltntlonal Antidote for this terrible mala tya Bjr Ab.orptlon. Tha most Important Discovery slnoa Vao taatlon. Other remedial may relieve Catarrh, this aura at far etaca before Consomptioa aata In. . I. I'll,!. DEALER IK Groceries " Provisions, Will keep on band a general assortment of Groceries, Provisions, Cured Meats, Tobacco, Cigars, Candies, Candles, Soajis. Notions, Green and Dried Frnlta, . Wood and Willow Ware. Crockery, Eta. Business will be conducted on CASH BASIS. Which mean that Low Prices are Established Good dcHiered without barge. to Eojti ALL KINDS OF PRODUCE WANTLT which w will pay the hixbestiaark pnee. JAS U J-A'.fc SAN JUAN LIMB for sale bv T. G. HENDfJCKS, Some Pionrtn- JTom Merry in Sunday Oregonian.' In a fow dayn more the cart will lie running direct from the Columbia river to Lake Superior. TheM will lie a big array of Eastern railroad magnet and botul holders for a dny or two, and then they will be g6ne. And aliout the same time the excursion train of old pioneers will bo starting from Oregon for the scenes of their childhood, some of whom have nover crossed tint Rocky mountains since the days of ox teams and pack horses, tho times that tried men's bouIs. Rut the majority of the brave men and mighty sou led women who bore the Bible and axe into the wilderness and laid the foundation of our great agricultural empire will not le on that train. They havo already answered the summons of the great conductor nnd have cono awav to a V 0 terminal city that never reports to any human superintendent. There was the gigantio old Swede, Peter Lassen, who canio to British Columbia in 1833, stayed a year or two aliout Nisqually and along the Colum bio, and then went to California where, 18 14, he obtained a -grant of three leagues of land from the Mexican gov ernnient, That grant lay just below Tehema, on Dry creek, and is now one of tho grandest vineyards' in that State, Twenty-six years ago old Peter took mo down into the cellar of his rude adobe house, and gave me a drink of homn-madu wino, rich and fruity, and bade mo welcome to the bosquejo. Peter will not be on tho train. He has licen dead more than twenty years, and was foully murdered at that. Rut no man can mako me believe the Indians did it. There, is a darker pajre than that in tho old man's life, and the mys tery will nover be revealed until the judgment day. The triple crown of ice and snow which rises out of the Sierras, across the river from Red ItlulT, bears the old hero's name and commemorates his participation in tho great work of civilization on these western fhores. He has gone 'o the companionship of Sutter and Dye, two men who died poor after naving performing deeds at at which angles could smile. Joseph Muck will not bo there. The old man who called together the first federal court over hold in this tcrrito- ry, has himself answered tho subpoena of the Great Marshal and walkod be fore the bar of that mighty tribunal from whose decision there can lie no appeal. In the simplicity of his honest nature, he comprehended no such evil as overtook him in tho twilight of his eventful life. When the blow came and he was indicted for participation in a conspiracy, the real blackness of which has not yet been fully expowd, this brave old man never rallied fnm it; and one day the word went forth that the old marshal was dead; yes, dead of grief and mortification. The nobler sense of tho people who grew up around him has long since acquitted him of any willfully wrong intent in that matter, and fastened the blame upon the hungry leeches who profited by his error, which was but the fault of aii'tAi. an impaired nienory. Ana wnue me train moves eastward, let the old mar shal sleep well in his quiet grave. . Aaron Payne of Yan hill, will not be aboard, The simple-minded old man, with his unselfish hospitality and the singular thirst for study and self-educa tion which overtook him at a period when other men are usually thinking of rest and the end, has gone to sleep in his lonely grave beside tho north fork of the Yamhill, tho garden of Ore gon. The men who knew him in the days of hardship and suffering, when self-denial was part and parcel of the world's every day life; the men who were scarcely of ago when tliey first trod Oregon soil will look, about them on (he east bound train and gaze in vain search for the kindly old face a hose glanoe Uire a look, of love for all our father's cluldren. No fairer name or outer Efpute) lias ever been borne ly any of Oregon's adopted sons, and uocw Utaaonii lip will quiver with emotion as they recall the alwent form of Aaron Payne. Andrew J. Moody, th tint Sheriff f Coca county, was another man of getio lifo lie led during the palmy days" of the Josephine county mines! When Gold Beach broke out he was one of tho first to hie across the moun tains in search of treasure cast Up hf the sea. When tho Florence excite ment sprang up, he was one of the firiC off for northern Idaho. Of late years' his luck as a money-getter soemed (6 have deserted him, but he was cheerful and sociable as ever. Ho located black sand mines near Randolph, on the Co-" qmlle, only to put in years of hard laW with no correlevant enumera tion. For tho past six years ho has re-' sided at a little, village on tho Siuslaw,' which he named Florence, after the once great, but now deserted, camp of early Idaho. Ho was a man full of energy, and a typical pioneer in all his1 actions. He'd Scoop l Little About the time that Daniel Drew1 began his Wall street career, he was Up the country one time to visit some friends, and two farmers called upon him to decide a case. One had sold the' other five bushels of wheat, and pro posed to measure it in a half bushelj and sweep the top of the measure with a stick. The other objected, and Uncle Daniel asked to decide, "Well, legally speaking a bushel is only a bushel," ho answered. "And can the measure bo swept ofT." "I think it can." "What with?" "Well, if I was selling wheat I should probably uso half the head of a flour barrel." "Which edgo of it," "Gentlemen, that is a point I can not decido on," sighed the old man. "If I was selling to a widow or a preacher, I am certain that I should sweep the measure with a straight edge, but if I was selling to a man who pas tures his cows in the road and his pigs in his neighbor's corn, I'm afraid that I should use the circular sido, and scoop a little to boot" What shall it profit a milkman if ha own a $2,000 Jersey cow, and live on a dairy farm twenty-five miles from the nearest riverl Only a few weeks ago such a man moved to a new farm down on Egg Harbor river, which is a tidal stream. He wasn't used to that sort of things at all, and was amazed be yond comprehension when his custom ers mobbed him the second day and en compassed him about and entreated him roughly, and smote him sore and danced all over his person, and wound ed him in divers places. "Y gaul," he said to the police who rescued him, "I hope to die if I can understand it all I've sold the same kind of milk on the same , route twenty -three years, an they neyer got on to it afore." "Salt," said one of the victims, with a howl of rone wee" wrath. "Saltf queried the bo- wildercd milker, "what'n thunder's salt got to do with itt You're too amax ing fresh yourself." And when he went back to tho farm ho told his hired man to put twice as much water in the cans next morning, and, he added, "don't you give them koaws another grain of suit fur two tnont W Hawkey ' The News suggests that the decora tions be preserved as they may be needed in the future. Yes, thy might be wanted for an indignation demon stration in a couple of years. This re minds us of a conversation tha: took plaoe here- yesterday:. "Everything is Villard nowadays, and we- ho-va to eat it iimtoad of buttes on our bread." "Ye and in two or throe years wb will have to eoi Villard dirt, and only such men can tie eluded to the Legis lature as are pledged to cut the Villard gra out of our streets, Portland Sunday Welcome. The driving of tho lost spika was not dona according to contract. Tha offi cials came to the conclusion that the gold spike was a kind of jewelry too expensive for the business, and the veritable . last spike was an iron one, being the first driven on the opening of the road, and taken up, and preserved for this purpose. And instead of being driven by Villard, it was sent to 'Ita rehtiii! ulace lr the man who wjeliL mark in Oregon, and he will not be on the sledge over it the first time. Tj the train. What a stirring and ener- the romance endeth. " Je