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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1884)
Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will hwwkfur Imp a eompiet itoek of Ladies', Misses' ani Children's Shoes! Bl'TTOX BOOTH, Slippers, White and Blaok, Sandali, fire KID SHOES, MEN'S. AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact everything In the Boot snd Bhoa Jlna, to whleh I Intend to devote my especial attention., MY C00D3 ARE FIRST-CLASS! And guaranteed u represented, and will be sold for the lowest prices that a good article can be alforded. .A. Hunt. NOTICE! TO WHOM IT MAY COXCERX: I hereby give notice that I am the sole owner of the Patent Might for Sinking and Driving Wells In Lane County, Viteof Oregon, and that eald Right! is protected by Letters I'atent is sued by the United States Government to Nel son W. Green, of C'ourtland County, State of New York. All persons who have driven wells, or had them driven, without my permission, since the 21st day of Kcbuary, 187A are liable to prosecution for infringement of said itight and are hereby notified to come forward and adjust the same. All infringements In the future will be prose cuted. I am prepared to drive Wells or will grant permission to others on application. B. V. DO It HIM. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM CHARLES M. HORN, Practical Gunsmith DEALER IN GUNS, RIFLES, Fishing Tackles and Materials Repairing done In the neatest style and warranted. Hewing Machines, Safes, Locks, etc., repaired. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Furnished Shop on Willamette St, opposite Postofflce. Book and Stationery Store, Poitofflo Building, Eugene City. I have on hand and am constantly receiving an assortment of the bust SCHOOL & MISCELLANEOUS BOOKS STATIONERY, Blank Books, Portfolios, Cards, Wallets, BLANKS, ETC. A. S. PATTERSON. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Repairing of Watches and Clocks executed with punctuality and at a reasonable cost Willamette street, Eugene City, Or. B. F. DORRIS, DEALER IN STOVES, RANGES, Pumps, Pipes, Metals, TINWARE AND Honse Furnishing Goods Generally. WELLS DRIVEN PROMPTLY, And Satisfaction Guaranteed. WILLAMETTE STREET, Eugene City, - - - - Oregon. LIVERY STABLE! FORMERLY OWNED BY TITUS. Having purchased this well known table, I respectfully requost a continu ance of the public's patronage. I intend to thoroughly relit and restock the stable. IF YOU WAST A XOBBY BI Be sure and give the Fashion Stable a call Hones Boarded at Seasonable Bates. This stable is flret-cla8 In every re spect and competent and obliging hos tlers are on hand ready to serve the public GIVE 1'8 A TBIAL! Stable, one door south of St Charles Hotel' D. R. LAKIN. f. m. warns. ist z DB.UGS, MEDICINES, Brashes, Paints, Glass. Oils. Lead. TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Physicians' Prescriptions Compounded S3& DRAWN BLANK. All the Year Round. The passionate grief beside the dying bed; me passionate longing lor ine vauuuu Ml. The passionate yearning for the glory fled; thisf Ave answer weary lip and tired eyes, 10 violent sorrows, solace iauire grauu; Worse than the world's snpreniest agonies. Are ail its empty maims lot uopeim wants. When vivid lightnings flame and thunders crash, When the fierce winds lash the fierce soa to storm. We see the beacons by the lurid flash. ine tosiin,' gpray-cloudi guttering rain bows form: But when balow the sullen drip of rain, The waters sob along the hollow shore, Tis hard to think the sun csliiue again, Tl.. .I..II .., , .V .,, liirtit ntinA more. When time baps slowly strength and hope away, And the black gulf yawns by the lonely When the dumb night creeps on the empty any, Anil . nnn nln. nf nil la hrtlil llV HnA-h ! Look not to faded joy or lingering' love, m .. i L .. . i ,i v,i 10 WAKO 1119 power JWUIU UUU Wii-u a rri van Take patiently the lot we all must prove. Tin tne great bar swings nacs sun tu Heaven. ENGLISH GIRLS ABROAD. They Han age to Have Plenty of In terest Apart from Hoc I, ty. London Paper. American girls are mu -h more popu lar abroad than ours, and for an obvious reason. Thejr are more continental in ttiur tastes. Ihe live for so.iety, dress, llirtation. Our young women, like their fathers and brothers, ore pro foundly mlinerent to continental opin ion. When ftwouonnorg vis:teu ueuveu he found that the English there kept very much to themselves. So do our countrymen abroad. They have plenty of interests apart from society. They botanize, they walk, they play lawn tennis as if they meant winning sets, not hearts. They carry hummers, they ex plore fossils, they dig up bits of primi tive man, they collect sea beasts, thoy even study the peasants and their pa tois. They regard foreign young men as beings of another species, no mote marriageable than monkeys. For all thess reason, they Uo not dress to please foreign young men. Thev wear big-nnileU boots, niueou sunshades, and, when vory Alpine and pedestrian, seem chiefly to robe thorn selves in seedy old ulsters. Soalskins and waterproofs limit thoir ideas of costume. They wear out thoir old things. Occasionally they introduce rrsthotio dresses to a foreign population which never heard of Mr. Wilde. It is amusing to observe the horror-stricken curiosity of a foreign town when the first peacock-blue pair of pulled sleeves is promenaded through the streets. All these signs of the cold and insular in difference of the British fair ninke her unpopular on the continent. She is not thinking about love, and sentiment, and fine feelings. She is taking her pleasure manfully, after the manner of her race. So Boom In the Abbey. London Times. I ami mis like a landmark in history when we are told that there is no more room for interments in Westminster Abbey. Matters must have come to this pass when the dean has had to deny ground to the most distinguished mamlmr nf tlwit inventive class which the Roman poet admitted into the Pa gan i-lysium. it is saut oi tue last two interments, those of Darwin and Spot tiswoode, that the coffins were only a very few feet below the surface. 1 or a long time there have been ghastly sto ries of the disturbance necessary to me finding of room for a new arrival. This has been the case, indeed, for a cen fnrv onrl ft half or more. Chaucer's grave was molested to make way for Dry dens; uen uonsons nones ieu out one by one into the grave prepared for Sir Robert Wilson, ond came in sight again when a grave was dug for John Hunter. Addison lies upon the duchess of Albemarle, and upon him James Craggs. She Got Ahead of Butler. Buffalo Express. Washington claims the honor of pro ducing the only individual who ever got very far ahead of Gen. Butler. It was a woman, of course. She was imprisoned bv him during the war, and suffered manv hardships and indignities. One day he Bent for her to come to his pri vate office to interrogate her himsolf . As she entered he was busy writing, which he continued to do without speak ing to her or noticing that she was standing. She looked around for a seat, found one, and also a tray with a luxu rious luncheon for the general himself. Havinir notlnncr else to do. she quietly ate the luncheon up, and what she could ..... 1 .-! not get away with ottierwtse sue siuneu in her pockets. Afterawhile Gen. Butler wheeled around and said brusquely; "As you see, I have been deeply engaged." "And bo have I," sweetly responded the lady, pointing to the Amntv trav. where not a bone romained. i j j i History does not record the general s reply to the nnternnea woman. The Mnene Batter Trade. Philadelphia Rocord. Suene.whichhas thus become so great a part of the butter trade, is manufac tured from the very finest creamery butter the finest that can be purchased at the great butter markets of Llgin, 111. mixed with lard. Ihe adulters- t on is usually the fine.t leaf lard, which by an interesting process is completely deodorized. Then amalgamation of the creamery butter is made, and so romnletelv is the flavor and appearance of the creamery product retained in the counterfeit butter that people who nave been handling creamery butter for years fail to detect the deceit, even after making the most careful test The principal suene manfacturing centres are Chicago and Detroit One factory in the former city turns out fO.OJO pounds a day. A Tolume contain? Petrarch's songs, printed in Venice about the end of the fifteenth ceniu7, was receiuj auia ui London for the sum oi rv ". THE TWO SHINING EYES. A Vermont Yankee's Htory ef the Panther In the Hater lloah. Chicago Herald "Train Talk.") Three or fonr pa.songers struck tip a conversation in a smoking-car on the Baltimore Ohio, and, of OJurse, each man had to tell a story. They were re lating how badly thev hod ever boon scared, when an old ermont Yankee, with an elongated ;.tw and accent, took his turn. "Neow, I'm goin' to tell ye a true story, and so ye needn't ask mo if I manufactured it out o' the hull cloth. It was up in old Vairniont, 'bout seven vears ajo. I was a-k'opin a sugar bush thorn days, e.ut'boat four mile from llut'and. (One ni rlit the b ys left me eout in the camp all alone to mind the kittles. Guess it ware nigh niornin' when I waked np out o a cat nap, and, by gosh, up iu a tree, no more'n twenty feet from me, was the two shinin' eves of a whopp'n' big painter. An I could se his tail a-whiskiu' reound as if he was just ready to spring at me. Wall, I was too old a camper to run from a painter, so I got eout my old gun and give him one right between the eyes. But I'll be gosh darned if ha ever stirred, but kept on whiskin' his tail. So, kinder cool like, I give him another one, cal'clatin' that would fix him ilut thair was his two eyes a-glistn n' in fie dark same as ever. Then 1 begun to git a lectle kind o' skeered, but I kopt on pepperin' him with lea 1, and dog my skin if he didn't keep on glairin' at me. Al ter I had wasted "bout 2 shilliu's wuth of am munition my powder run out, an' S3 I liod down by the fire, w.th that air cuss's eyes a-shinia'at me. The longer I laid there the more excite 1 and a-feared I got. Abeout that time. I'd a-givon all the sugar in Vairniont to her been at hum. But the curiouscst thing was. wliou daylight came that air painter disappeared so mysterious like I didn't see him move." "I guess there wasu't any animal there at all," suggested a listener. "Just what the bovs 6aid next day," replied the Vermonter. "lint ef thoy'd seen tliom eyes o his n, tney woman t said so. Old Hez Johnson mado so much fun of me we had a fuss about it, though we dobelongto tho samechurch down to l.utlnnd. Ho sa d he wa'nt afraid of m s;ich painter, and so he staved to mind the kittles that night But beout dark he run home a-hollerin' an' screamin' he had seen the painter, an wasn't laughin' at me just thon." "So it was really a panther?" "Wall, no; ye see there was a dead tree nich the camp an' a woodpecker had bored a pair of hole, beout three inches apart into the old trunk, an had exposed the phosphorus. That made the two shinin eyes, an 1 s pose a brancit wavin' in the wind made me think it was the tail. I had solved the mystery 'fore the boys got through with their ooddincr of me, but I didn t let on. insisted it was a paintor, 'cause I wanted that air col-darned liez Johnson to liev a chance to show his bravery. Then the joke was on him, an' I allowed how I hadn't been skeered at all, but had put np the job on Hez It made him so all-fired mad he won't even say 'Amen' any more when I pray at class meetin'." Philosophy or the Boera. London Telegraph. The Transvaal delegates at Amster dam are forming a syndicate of bankers to raise a new loan, which is to be ex' clusively devoted to the construction of railways. Not so very long ago the Boers wonld have looked with very scant favor on any proposal for con structing a railway through the Trans vaal. The English administrator who vis ited that territory some years ago en deavored to convince a Boer, one of the oldest inhabitants and the largest farmer in the country, of the enormous advantages that would accruo from the construction of railways. "It would double the value of your land," said he "Well," said the Boer, "so much the worse for that." "What," said the Englishman, "do you not think it would be good to have the value of your farm doubled?" "No." said the Boer, "no respectable Boer ever sells his land What he has to do is to buy fresh farms for bis vouncer sons ; so that the more valuable the land is the more he has to pay for it, and tho worse it is for him. "Then you would not even have a tele graph?" said the Englishman. "No," said the Boer, "what's the use of a tele graph? If the news is good it will keor : if it's bad, it had better not coma at all, let alone coming in such a hurry. Horror of HinKlnc. Boston Herald. It is admitted that there are many other forms by which the death penalty could be imposed which would be swifter and quite as sure ; such, for ex ample, as shooting, guillotining or at. ministering a powerful shock of elec tricity. But the advocates of hanging maintain that none of these would have the same impression upon the pnblio mind that the old traditional form of punishment now produces. Obviously, this is a criticism the soundness of which it is impossible tc aftrm or deny. We have learned to associate banging with a special horror in consequence of long association; but, after a long practice, we might consider the process of killing a man by a powerful current of electricity a j eeul a ly terrible method, and one well calulated to appal a would-be criminal. We ure wedded to our pres ent custom in consequence oi the long period during which we ha e continued it, and it cannot from this be certainly argued that it is as wise or expeditious a method as might beueviseo. Met. L. Saley; Let it bo retained in mind, too, that the profligacy of tho many makes the fow rich. If every man and woman would save all that he or she could, there would be less money to flow into the coffers of the "bloited bondholders." Oliver fioldsmith: That virtue which requires to be ever guarded is scarce worth the sentinel. A .VT.i'linn Ttvan ? T .a fiAr-Uutarv to V-lr-l'fr 'J .. w J have a reserve force if a man would be successful. rOSETO Jl TEtEOKAPHlO XKWI. Bull flyhts are prohibited In France. Ex-MlnlMter Sarirrnt has arrived in Lon don. The surrender of Berber has been con firmed. The night lion. Sir Henry lUrtle Frere is ueau. Messr. Mooilv and Sankev are uraently requested to visit India. The woman ufTrait) amendment has beeu defeated In Kngland. Two hundred horses were burned to death at (ilasgow recently. The smallpox plague Is spreading with alarming rapidity hi Iiulon. The International convention of Social ists met in London last week. The police have found eighteen packages of dynamite In Scotland ard. It Is reported In Cairo that General Gor don is on his way down the river. A farmer was shot dead by Moonlight ers in Millstreet, Ireland, recently. There Is a threatened riot at Brussels, over the defeat of the Liberal party. Thirteen persons were injured by the recent dynamite explosions in London. Henry Irvlng's "Impressions of Amer ica" have achieved a nuccess in London. Extra guards have been placed around Mr. Gladstone's residence at llawarden. The Pall Mall Gmitttt advocates the formation of a dynamite insurance com pany. A London dispatch says: The Tlchliorne claimalnt was released on ticket of leave last week Parnell is preparing a general appeal for the national fund to pay Irish members of parliament. The Emperor left Berlin for Ems last week. A largo and .enthusiastic crowd was at the depot. Nationalist's meetings were held in Ire land recently, despite the proclamation forbidding them. Lord Arlesford. the aristocratic cowboy. Is on a visit to his ancestral halls in Kent and Warwickshire. Fresh election riots have occurred In Hungary. Three persons were killed and many wounded. A Rio Janeiro dispatch says: Prime Minister Kantas has lieen charged with the formation of a new ministry. El Mahdl Is marching towards Dongola with 35,000 troops. He hopes to capture the town before the feast of llamadan. Calista Held, aged lu: Joseph Costomer, aged 13. and Octave Hope, aged 1H, were drowned while bathing oil MicrurooK, Quebec. A dispatch has been received from the governor of Dongola stating that r,i nisnui has been crushliigly defeated by the Taka lia tribes. The attorney general of Victoria, B. C, f;oea to Ottawa, to oppose the dominion icense law before the Supreme Court, on constitunlonal grounds. A waterspout occurred in Akuislg, Hus sian Turkestan, recently. The river was overflowed and seventy houses destroyed. Forty persons were drowned. Preparations for the Egyptian confer ence, which meets in London. July 10th, are being rapidly pushed to completion by omciais in tne foreign omce, Prince Bismarck has proposed that the difficulty between Bulgaria and Servla be referred to the mediation of Austria and Russia. Servia has accepted the proposal Four members of the Salvation Army were recently fined in London, Out, $10 each, or ten days in jail, lor Dealing drums, etc., in the streets, iney win ap peal. Prince Hohenloheh. German embassador to France, declares that the public feeling in Germany is environed against France by constant provocation irom tne rencn press, Baker Pasha has gained health since the recent surgical operation. He now drives out daily in the park and is to spend three months in Wales before returning to Egypt. The Berlin National Gaxttte announces that the committee on the bourse tax, ap pointed by the bundesrath, has approved the government proposals, in a slightly modified form. Ti.A.. l.iTjft liAAn Af.Aan rln.Hi. from Vel 1 -... A.,A In 11v,. tha na.t. flv HaVR r...n.lna .llnhi aia KnillflP AtLllllHllAd anH nil nroeautions taken to prevent the spreau oi uie uiseane. A T n.,1n AMir-i am aava TVlA Indian A JJUUUUII v.uiVHiH -.-..--...-....if 1. ,i AaoAaA i nmrim twirl II 7 ui l.l tllli-iib in.', v. v, . -w ,' - ail machinery, owing to the discovery of oil Dearing staia in oiui, aim uuveiuji mo io sources in that region. n nm an Am.l.n .ll"ni wwuiiimif ' pan," of New York, was arrested in won ..! rVn Ifiat wonlr wl t h A lurfffl flllAll ucni xaii't in "- -i tity of jewelry in his possession, supposed to nave oceu buuicu. TWlIn advices state that the abdication of the Duke of Hesse is expected as a re sult of his marriage with and subsequent divorce from Madame Kaiemire, wnicn created such wide-spread comment. A ,nnnn TT-an. timan finnuifl Rtnnre at- UUIl lUHVItt-WH ....... "J 1 - tempted to commit suicide at the Driard House, in victoria, recenuy, no was seized before he took the dose, and Is now In 1a.il. suffering from the effects of hard drinking Tk. l.mlWtl nnlltlml fund nf Ireland has been organized. Lord Itossmore and Qi Gnmnal Vrllartn rA IrllHtAAfl. Thanh ject of the fund is to supply means with which to contest constituents against, u tlonallsts P.anaral Ttnnlh fal-ftd nf tllfl Sn.lVB.tlon Army, is treating for the purchase of Pat- ti s castle and estate in waies tor a iamuy residence. Ceneral Booth is said to be making large prollts as leader of the tai vation Army. The Queen of England was present at the erection recently at uaimorai oi a bronze statue of John Brown, which rep rnaenU his features in Highland costume The statue was placed within view of the Queen s apartments. There are great rejoicings !in Osman Digma's camp owing to announcements made by Osman that he has received im Dortant news from the west. Osman's forces now number 3,000 men, among who are included several tribes which dis persed after the recent battle, The economic crisis in Cuba was dis rupted at the council of ministers In Mad rid recently. The King presided. The government proposes to adopt a series of reforms, including the reduction of Cuban expenditures and the establishment of a coasting trade, lor tne mutual auvanuige of spam and tuba, r,ren.t efforts are being made to amalga mate the Invincible and the dynamiters' section of the Irish revolutionary part Two atrenta aent to remove Informer M Dprmutt have returned to Paris. They visited most of the capitals of Europe, but failed to find McDermott. He is hiding in London under the protection of the police, DOMESTIC TELEORAfHIC EWI. Boston had a 7.V),000 fire recently. Illshon Slmimon. of Philadelphia. Is in a dying condition. The House has passed the river and har bor appropriation bill. In the House last week the Presidential count bill was taken up. The President and Secretary of War have gone to West Point. Lu Chan Tan. a Chinese Mandarin, ar rived iu New York recently. The Senate has passed the Consular and Diplomatic appropriation bill. Financial circles in New York are again agitated by "bearish" rumors. General Foster. United States Minister to Spain, has returned to Madrid. Eisendelrker. the German Minister to the United States, has been recalled. The civil engineers held their annual convention at Buffalo, N. Y., last week. Ilandall introduced a bill in the House recently to prevent political assessments. r.iiral Grant has been elected president of the Society of the Army of the Potomac. In the Senate last week. Frelinghuysen's Nicaragua scheme was debated upon, but no action was taken. The annual convention of the American Bankers' Association will be held at Sara toga on August 13th and 14th. The dlrertors of tho LoulBvllle and Nashville Hallroad have accepted the res ignation of President J. b. Kogers. At Kev West. Fla.. recent! v. Frederick Gil Marrer was arrested, charged with having explosives In his possession. The executive committee of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company has resolved to create an insurance fund of (oOO.OOO. .Tn.rW Unite, an Enillsh pugilist, has ar rived In New York. He lias declared his intention of fighting Charley Mitchell Fnlliirea for the oast seven days in the United States number 2UL and in Canada 25, or an increase of 13 over the previous week. At the pension agency In New York re centlv. 4: 2.000 was paid out to 1.100 pen sioners. The largest payment was i.imo. the smallest $. Isaac A. Stanley, paying toller of the Natinnnl Hank of Commerce, of Cleve land, Ohio, was Imprisoned recently for embezzling f loo.uw. The remains of Noah 11. Swalm, ex-Jus tl. of the United States Suureme Court, were Interred in Oak Hill cemetery, in Washington, last week. ThA manairers of the NeW York Cotton Exchange recently elected William V. King their Secretary, and appointed E. K. i'owers, eupcrinieuuunt. Advices received in San Francisco state that it Is the Intention of the government to continue the branch office of the hydo graphic service in that city. A Washins-ton dispatch savs: The state department has formally notified the Brit ish minister that a requisition nas oeen made for the surrender of liiio. Sirrntrv SUvens. of Cincinnati, has issued circulars announcing the Indefinite suspension of the whisky export associa tion, known as the whisky pool. Pnlmml Morrow, whose name figured nrnmlnontlv in the Swalm case at Wash- inirton. In connection with duplicate pay accounts, is to oe courtinaruaieu. -.-,.. V UMah AT.nrAitilnnt nf the Ma. rlne National bank of New York, has k... iniixisH hv the United States errand jury lor violating me dbukiuk " Tt I. .M.iil In Vaw Vnrb that tha na r.,M t.hl.l- InwArAd their nrloea a few months since, will resume their former rates after the rresiaenuai election. r.lkmm TtanY-Am a npnminnnt lawver of San rrancisco, uiea ihi woe, in um n.n.l filial llAtWAflll .TllHlTA David Terrv and , 1 , II . 1. 1 ll. Senator Hroderlck. Beiiiiam acted as Ter ry s second. rl...laa V Ttnlililna nf tha well known A Illl,a lfi.l.l.lna gr f'n wlkoluaale III III Vk uiumv, - f ' ' paper dealers, and state prison director, died at his home in Oakland, Cal., re cently, a?ed W. c--...,nl vf I,1il1attn thA npnhnw and onlv heir of John C. Tavlor, who died recently I I..-. nw-nafrv In Krinda In thA Amnllllt of iaOO.OOO, arrived in the city of New York last week. A llmrHnrA fYinn HiHnatrh save: Wll liam G. Morgan, defaulting agent of the New York banking firm of Putnam & Earle, has been sentenced to tnree years in the stats prison. Ti i. .n.lil In Vior VnrV that the frov . .. t .r,,nrl. havA HmVArAd S dttflcl i I'll nii mi In tha I n nn Pari fin f- It T HI J,WV,IW . U ...w J . sinking fund, and that the money was used to sustain tne maraet vmue vi ura stocks. At. n,.tlnnr nf ItlA t - ll-tflfta nf tllfl SCt .' t.,A In Vaur Ynrlr laut week, it WaS decided to request all actors to give 6 per l ll,U aalarlea fnr t.llA third. tWBn- .Qllb Ul b I , V I . " - " - - f - tieth and thirtieth weeks of their engage ment to tne iuna. Tl.. fnmnna aloamAP AlnullA known SB nv. .n.tmmH nf thA Atlsntle." has been purchased irom tne uuion i-uihjjiit vj " Cunard line, which recently purchased from the same company me i-unu; mous steamer uregon. T W Clianavd AiinArlntindent of tlie Jewish cemetery of San Francisco, as .,i.,i nn AnriliTith tiv t)irpa men. and wi. ' - J ... I I mvutaHniM HlaflnnAAr- WlJUnO BUIIFWmUCIIW HIT u v . ... u.. ance has created mucn commeui, uas uvnu . . .-.ii . . i discovered in uakiana, t.ai. A " --r - fn iW Thnrnu nf Utah. In AVtlilf V. - ' " . CUIIIlllum:v nnii . i.i inn nf tl.A Tprrlinrlal Snnreme Court, graniea a reprioo iu mnn ni. .l .n,,M ! l.o.rH In the United States ..it Li. Supreme Court. He was to have been shot last l rioay. T,n .nn ri..rlA KAnnpdv. two laborers Villi ,,, j , - of Louisville. Ky., have received word that they have fallen neirs to aoouie-,-000,000 from an uncle who lately died in Australia. The uncle formerly lived at Louisville, but left suddenly, and for thirty years had not been nearo irom Ti,n tJv whfrh hn hopn under con A KO uvm; - AtiAtlnr In tha KpnntA rnniniitti'fl on lor Diuciami'ii !., .Ai.f.ni nmvlHincp fnp aii Interna- " '7. I"--"-"" ""I ...i.i,k i,u - I . v Kjipn rAtidpH lv t wenty WUItll lima nn j -rf - ... itnua-nmnntl Will rPnnHflfl Hfl THC T by the committee to the Senate, and after brief discussion rejecieu. m., Tin. ma mil. He land enmmlttea has 1 lio llV.,." ,,...,.. ..... .-.. a in rannrt favnratilv the hill renulr- ni ,.u w . v .... . j . Ing tne general government vi vj m State of t;aitrornia ior scnooi pur ieij u pes cent of the net proceeds of all public 1 i mnA lliln liwr ImundArlAM alnea the state's admission. The amount of the proposed payment is estimated at f i.vaju, OUU, George Hughes, clerk at the Central Hotel. In Jiardstown, Ky., was fatally cut by William Doom, a worthless negro, whom Hughes was trying to drive away from the front of the hotel, where he was using vulgar language beneath a window of the ladies' parlor. Doom was arrested and will probably be lynched If Hughes dies. fOKTLAJD MAKKET EEP0BT. iTLOUR-Fancv extra. bbl. 84.7B: bakers' extra, : country. 4.00&i4.&0: superfine. t.i5. FEED, ETC.-Corn meal, V 100 ths., f 2.75 (S.H.UU: buckwheat, (o.M); oat meal. (4.00(4 in; cracked wheat, e.l..K4J.fto: bran, w ton tlKailll; shorts. 1Uo,X; mlddlingn, fine. -.VUK.:iO.0O; hav. baled. timxuW.(U: chop, 8-..Nu,i0u; oil cake meal, 15.00. BUTTEIt Fancy, fresh roll. V lb.. SM L'tlc; Inferior, grade, 18 20c: pickled, 1 at)c. EGGS V dos.. aoc. OATS--Choice milling, nominal: good feed. &0i erdinary feed, .rifai.MJc. UAitLt. l lire wing, V ioons., nominal: feed, nominal; ground, f -l.OlXu ai.UO. A I11.'A'- l'.....l . nkln. ll-l n.- If illlAl UWU W VIIVI1.V, V 1W lull, t.4(iU good valley; Walla Walla and laterii uregon, 81..io(a,i.u. 1SU fcxtra I'aclllc codfish, whole. In V., gv, uviivh nn, all lAn, , j y ,ii. , uvnr. niiv salmon, lit hhls.. (UHKu.7.(XI. bbis., $11.00. 71n lu.n..l..- In I,.- Ul- U tt. ,l,.f In lull, 111 num., iif.inivu.1 ,w, uuin., f u.vu cans, fdoi., tl.4"; mackerel, No. 1, f l.75(-:2.llo. No. 2. l.ftO(tfl.75. No. 1. lib. hf bbis., $10.00, No. 12, $H.,'iO; herrings, salted, hf bbis.. . dried. 10-Ib. bxs., Toe. HIDES AM) BAGS-IIides,dry, over 16 lb., It).. 17(a. 18c: Murrain hides, one-third otlj hides, wet salted, over 65 lis., It Ih., 8 (a, ic (one-third less for light weights, dam aged, cut grubby or dry salted); pelts. shearling. iu(a.!uc; deer skins, winter, 12(al5c Eastern Uregon. 22c, summer, K O., lH(a 20c, valley, trKaj2ric: burlaps, 40 In., 8o, 45 in., Hjo, 00 In., 14c; twine, flour, 35 toe, wheat, mc, fleece, l-(gilJc; gunnies. iHc: wheat sacks, V(u,w; HONEY In comb. t lb.. 22 25c: strained in S gal.. 11c $ lb.; 1-gal. tins, f ikon, f 14.00ft) 15.00, half gal., (7.50. iiut's-v n., is(B,a)c; PUOVISlONS-liacon. 11 .0!l2.c: hams. country, tt., l:t(sl5c, butcher, scarce; shoulders, 10(a,llc. JAHU-Kegs. v "., izc; f-astern, palls, 12(c;; i:i.c Oregon, tins, 1212.c; Cali fornia, 10-Ib. tins, none SUUAltS-GoIden C. in hhls., V m.,ke. In hf bbis., ic, refined D, bbis., 7c hf bbis., 71o; dry ftranulated. bbis.. tfje, hf bbis., Ojc: crushed, bbis., lite; flue crushed, bbis., lOr, hf bhls., Idle; cube, bbis. 10c. hf bbis, 101c; islauds, No. 1, kgs, 7(ai7Jc, hgs., O.C-7c KVIMIPV,l'llf,rnU roHnnrv ful Iff bbls., 40c, kgs., 60c, cs., gal. tins, 00c; Eastern, bbis., gal., 50(a)5oc, kgs, 00U5c, , (KK tloc. ItlCK-Sandwich Islands. No. 1. lb.. 5c; China mixed, 4j(a,5c; China No. 1, none; ltangoon. thc GHEEN FKU ITS-Applcs, bx ?1.60 2.(X); lemons, California, 4.00(a;5.00, Sicily, $12.00.13.00; oranges, V bx., $1.00 4.60 limes, f 100, $l.S(Xa.2.0ll FUUITS-Prunes, Hungarian, yrs., ia 15c: raisins (new), bx.. $2.fXKrt.2.i5. hf bxs., 2.7iV3.0O, qr bxs., $3.253.5, 8th bxs., $;l.25(a;3.r)0: currants, ante, t lb. In bxB., 10c; citron, f lb. in drums, 22&c; almonds, Marseilles, Iti., l-Dc, Lane, 20c; walnuts, Chili, 11(1.12.0, California, 12(Bii:)c. DRIED FRUITS Bleached, 14 15c; apples, machine-cured, lb.. lSfelOc, sun cured, IkjiUOc; peaclies, machine-cured, in boxes, i;i6jl 4c; uerman, in boxes, v io., iu llc; plums, sun-cured, pltlcss, 15(a) 10c, machine-cured, 10lHc; pears, machine cured, 10fel2c, Buu-curcd, 10llc; figs, California. 23-tb. bx.. Uc: Smvrna, 20ft?;25c. WOOL-Valley, H&loej Eastern Ore gon. 14Ml5c rUUliliti--tJniCkens, r aos., spring, t4.0OCai5.5O. old. 80.50: ducks. 810.0OCail2,OO geese, SS.OtKcl 10.00; turkeys, V lt.. 12J 15c - PEAS, SEEDS, ETO.-Heans, V tb., pea, 4c w 3jc, lg. w 4.c, bayou, 4io, pink, 51e, llmas, ,4c; peas, field, 23Jc. sweet, locate; timothy seed, 10.(f,12c red clover, 22(9250, white clover, 4(i(".50c, alfalfa, IB 20c, hungarian grass, 810c, millet, 810o, orcliard grass, Ma 20c, rye grass. 2(Xft25c red top, l.Vsilvc, blue grass, 18(a,29c, wes- suite grass, hkm2c. VEGETABLES Potatoes. I bu.. 80 60c according to variety; cabbage, V lb,. , . , . . i a, .1-. ... A1 US. JC; turnips, V sea., f carrum, i.a, beets, $1.2i; onions (new), V lb., l.c; pars. ntp",2c. ... . CUEESE-Caltromla. io(jqic; uregon large, choice. 14 (Si 17c. small, none. BUCKWHEAT Nominal, f 3.W. CORN No demand. RYE Nominal, If 100 lbs., nominal fl.50fe2.00 AH FBANCI8C0 MARKETS. mrPtPTPTSWhoAf. OKIlO ctla.j rleur. 12.000 or. sks.:oats. 1.700 ctls.: potatoes, 1.. 500sks.: eggs, 10.500 doi. FLOUll San rrancisco extra, oest, at 5.00(q)5.:i0; medium, f -.50(5)4.50; shipping lupertine, j.uino,..&). MnlWAT TraHlnn ivu nnllA llffhL Shippers paid but little attention to offer ings, showing no disposition to buy, al though admitting uieir wiiiiugi""" w give $1.45 ctl for good shipping grades, ...A ,! flniira la almilt. tha full limit of exporters. Parcels that can be classed as OI milling quality onng uiuner iui-ob. Altogether, some ,ou tons soia as iouowb: Buyer 1KH4 aw tons, i.o.j. Seller 1884-100 tons. 11.411, 200, $1.41 sU. Closing prices were: No. 1 white Bid. Asked. $1 04 1! Buyer season $1 wj Seller season 1 44 1 Buyer 1884 I 62J Keller 184 1 40 140 ii.u:u Avn Tl Aflflivr. 'I'liere anoeara .n I.A a fvnnrl itnniAiid fur wheat hairs. We lu uo n nl'wl- " , ' ' quote Calcutta, 22x2(1, sUndard quality. at (? He ior spoi or o uiio ucuyci. h vni bags are nominal at 3tRe0c; poUto gun nies I4(ii4c apiece. BARLEY Althougn mere is no very tha feel is a shade stronger than at the close of last week. Ullerlngs are comparatively free, but there is no pressure to sell, while holders are quite Arm in asking rates. Borne fairly goon icea. rawer ukuu amu by sample at 82c, but for anything choice eel of good No. 2 quality, an offer offer of 774C FCll was reiuseu. in urewnm 1110 movement is moucraieiy sieauy, ohu iir in..nin. am rlnllv rveiirrinir within a range of IX)(a7Jc $ ct), according to qual ity. Sales last week wero as follows: Buyer season 200 tons, irjc. Seller season 100 Una, 851c Buyer 1884-400 tons, 03(o 04c ctl. nK PallrnmlA vaIiaw ia nuotable at V. W i ... vw. J ... - - $1.00(3)1.05 for large, and $1.05 for small; white, $1.57.(1.05; Nebraska white, $1.60 1.651? ctl. . . TAi.i.rnV Good to choice rendered. Ok 7c; refined, Him.c f tb. HUr 0 tjuotanie at iwgaoc, v w l" to medlum.and 18fe22Jc for good to choice. AITLKS-Uregon, r dx.. lirr.ia T..-V m tl. iiuunl AAlActinn. iWA UllUU 1'IJ , . . - - r 20c; dry kip. l?20c dry calf, 2022Jc; salted steers, 00 -, 11c LARD Eastern refined, 3 to 10 1U tins, 12(12ic. Other provisions unchanged. SAlilON-Oregon, l ib cans, t dos., f. 0. b., $1.20, $1.22. KGGS-jf dox.. 2;Jc BRAN The spot market is quoUhle at $15.50(11,10.50 per ton. 11JU11UJ AtUig .1 fi..wy.-,.i.wv T von. MILLSTUFFS-Ground barley. $24.60 on a Inn- nil cake meaL old nroceaa. $30.00, new process, $20.50: rye tiour. $8.00 V bbl.; rye meai, o.ou; oucn-woea. uour, V tb., be; pearl barley, 4(soc; graham nour, 3Jc; oat meal, 64c; Eastera oat meal, f bbl., $0.75, net cash; cracked wheat, V 4c WOOL-Mendoclno. Uc 15c tb.; Humboldt, 12c, 17c; San Joaquin, c 10c; coast. 8e, 11c: Red Blnft and Colusa, etc CORNMEAL Millers quote feedat$:H (a 35 V ton; fine kinds, for the Uhle, in large or small packages, 3c V lb. DRIED PEAS Green, $3.73; nlles, $J.0Or7 2.25; blackeyc $3.00 ctl BKKSWAX-Uuotable at 2527.clb. CHEESR-California. 912c POULTRY Dressed turkeys. 23 2k-