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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1884)
v.-- mm 1 AM. JL ' ESTABLISHED FOB THE DISSEXimiM OP DEMOCRATIC K.N1NE8. AND TO EARN AN iTOEST LIVING BY THE SWEAT OP Ot'R MOV. t VOL.17. EUGENE CITY, OR. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1884. NO. 3. V 71 4 1 0 , if (J ARB. H St; (gtjMf (CU'j Guard, I. L, CAMPBELL, PMWur an I Proprietor. O'ffl'j ? - ) i t'i K nt i l f Willamette r3tbiUji4 ijveath ual Ki.;lu!i HtrteU Tsa'Ji o?a'JBuiprio.v. Ier Annum 8AM Mix Month Thru Mouth OUR ONI. HA.TK-J OF ADVKHTW1NQ. AdvertueravnU Inserted at. ...uwsj On. pure. 10 Hue ""i " me.rtion ?; etch iuWiuent inwsit.on SL Cash reii'iired m TbafVlvei-tiseM will bo clianjed at the fob 'Tiu f Mi?: One square three month '" " " six meatha s " one year 1- 00 Trannient n tics in local cwluiun, 2 J cent per as (or each inwtinn. AdvertUiu," bill 'ill be rendered (iimrt-ily. All ot wrli mast he paiii nut " nm.ivKKY. iTiVcTerTKs. . m RroN. Un No 11, A. F. and A. M. A-MeU Ht end third Wetnea4,iys m eli menta. jnwi, KprscrB HrrtK t.mnK No. 9 I. O. V'lMlWUI. Encvmpukkt N. 6. U on the 11 mil 4th We lne lay. in each month. Kmisssc bums, N'. 1", A. t. U. V'- -Meets It Masonic Hall the sjcoilI ami fourth Fridays In each month. J. M.S1.0.VX. M. Karmtrs Pur, X .. 41. i5. V. fc-Mj t Miniui-; Hill. t'w K t uud third l-rvliy f aohmmt'u. Cy of ler. O.immani.Hi. .ISDF.It (IK CWMKN FlllMHH. M"t't till' wt an I thirl S.iMnl.iy t-venSti-.' t Mvniie HalL lly or lor of .1. .tt. Si.oax. ti C. Hutch Iem X.. 317, I. O. C. T Met Tsry 3 1'ir 1 ly ui,-'it in Oil fell Mil;. K. O. J'nTtKii, W . t 1. Lrvwxi Stab Bx-nif Hon: -M-et at tic t .P. 'Uurj'i evirv .S l'i I V nr't?Vii""ii lit 1. J.H. Il.ntm Sunh. : .ti 11 rt'u I'imI;. A I S.ifit.: OUm. H'U. S-io'y. M-" II ii S-with. !li.M)liiii. ViKitora m i l') wvlu.mi" L.-BILYB'U, ttor.isy aiJ CjinGsllor at Uw- . e i cUNrii I'irr. uniwo.v. e'iv'M'i'! '. ix ran oiT;: rsoi' .J. till HfiU Will t i-ci;il attentlou t i rolleotinn I iil'itJ mittoin. itfi-Vi -..'!. .V. Ir. & Ci.' Kprei oHi!B CclB.Dl.313, Attorney and. (Junnsellor- al-L'tAC, Xiu. I'iuo-nv: IN' THK OIUKTS V "f th S.k-. i. J;i IK'i'il Ditrut wi.l in hi Ipr riie O.inrt f tliw t.ite. S.tMiil ittfitimi yiven U ciilK-ctuin uiiil tti.ti.ter in nrulm'.e Q3D. 5. Va3hb-jrn3 I5U i!M.4 CII'V, - - OllK'.iON rlco formrly c;iiiel by Thomifoii & Bean. j-lS,rJ I. M. Ml lttjra37 ail Csuasolbr-at-Law, and Ileal Estate Agent. EUGENE CirV, - - - OHHUOM. OrFICE-Two doors mirth of Tost 0:H';e. J. E. FENTON, (Attpraey-ai-fi-aw. KUOENE CITY - OUKOON. Speoial attention (riven to Real Estate Prao tioe and Abstract of Title. OrricE Over Grange Store. T.W.HA11RIS,3I.D. Physician and Surgeon. office wiikin's Orucr Store. Kviiilence nn Fifth street, where Dr rihelton formerly reniJed. Dr. Wm Osborne, O.Tics AJjoi.ii.ig Si- Charles Hotel, OB AT THE w naaj srois or hate3 aai idckei, DR. JOSEPH P. GILL, rKS BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or r-. Vidence when not rofeiionuy ent'a,'eu. Otfic at the POST OFFICE DUL'G ,STOIlE. lUsiJrare on Eighth itreet, oiwlte Pre.by riao Church. . JEWELRY ESTABLISHMENT. s. iuckey, ,oiConipetent DEALER IN -' X J. Clocks, Wacnes, Chains, Jewelry, Etc. Repairing Promptly Executed. C3-A.ll Work TTarranlrd.1 J.S. LCCKKV, XHstMttb JtO's Crick Willamette street. 4 I JL I- A GENERAL large assortment of La- liimming Silks mul Sat dies and Childrcns Hose at ins in all shades. 12 1-2 rts. I Moireantiqae Silks- Good Drrss Goods at 12c Best Corset in town for o Oc An immense stock of New and, Seasonable hoods. Finn Cashmere in every shade. Xew and Nohhy styles in CUYliUXG. Liberal Biscc CASH, ISew Departure ! ! CAS 3 at:o.mi-: tjikmknwiiojiki.pt i St'lKlDi. lll'l Ph, wliiMe iiitiTcnl lire ivml tlioli' prolits m boiiie. '1'iihf imliic tli:it- L v. Will sell t'lMnln for l'A.11 ;it iiatly re.lncaJ iirlces, n I.iw iv iu:y i ti.or CASH STOKK !!,.s. IVinU 11. :i:i,l IS varitt $1 00 ri0 fhcvi.it .Shirts. 51, ') clit Mil f 1. I!c.-t I'.niwn iiml IJ'.oaohfl .Mu!inH, 7, 8, iunl Id ct'. I f hirAS.fiii 1 Brook ji:m1 oott.nn 7" cts wr l)nz. I'laili mil .Millc.l iUnncIa, 2.i, .i: 4 uml W i cts. Wiit.-r Proo , cent Fino White Shirts, 7'i cts and ?1 IK! ! llli V tlUII I iill'i -L And all Othsr Cocd3 Also the felehnilttd Kn iMitti-r for a'.w:.,'th. an I ilnniMUtyl. 11 ... ..... . . .11 iir lomv (i i n:iiHMineH, w in inve moon "v . i.... .. ..t i... :f ... ..... b .nils iici t.iii.i..- ...I nui-., .'.i, i. t m...t v....- all em, ;is others, the full cn-.lit on n;y rcdiii-tnoi mi Goods sold as in Oregon, for Highest Price paid ' for all kinds of Country Produce. Call and See S. H. .Friendly. Harness Shop H AVING OPENED A NEW SADDLE weft of Crain J.nw., I am now prepared to funiiih m try thin' in tliat line at the LOWEST Sfc.C'JSS, Tim Jlont . j Are rnip'oycd, anJ I til nJcTor to ! inc with a call. UM'S! Velvets in Colors. The finest stock of French KID SHOES ever brought to this place.' BOOTS and SHOES :nall grades- GROCERIES of all dcscriidions. . r.ni.; vorn iumduks. i:o.ds and yi.iir iuUTcslH ! Arc ifrimiiitntly l'i;.itril unn PEises, New Asmntnictit Orc.sa (ioo.U (No Trauli) 15, 2.) iin.i cU A, ih' I "inl.T.vo n . Sairti an I H.mw im, o) ct .Mens iMi'i-sliw ts. uiu ami oi. .Mens' Overalln, ":,;.", 7" cts and f. Kmlir.id.'Ties mid Kdyiim lit Fuimlnu Low i'ruvs at ProoortSonate Elates. ... . At ivtly r.;liiw.j nit.-H. 1 ..... I u . I .-.nitinti t.'i mh I nn Hume ni -,. -, T " . tli..v n s i toioako f AMI purclm I will iiive .r iii"r!'r 'i- ' -'" A i l r- j r il tl 1 l I.J rl I '..j. f , I ! l -: T t r J .'J a " 1 I . . I . LI TtH low as any House AND HARNESS SHOP 0 8th STIIE WorKinei) give ba'.fuitiuii tc nil win ma favtr III' Rllit lOi DR. V. C SEHLBBEDE If To IS NOW PERMANENTLY LOCATED in Cotti.'K ( rove, lie iwrfomm all opera tions in iiieclmnical and sorinil ilcntistry. All work warranteil and atihfactiin ciiariiiiteml. A Marvelous Story TOLD IN TWO UTTERS. FROM THE SON: TorKr " O'cnrrmca: My father roUloa at (Hover, Vt, He baa been a grtl tuffemr from Sorol i nl. and the Inclined later will teU you what a inarrelouf tff'jct Ayers Sarsaparilla hai had In hit ease. I think hit blood moat have contained the tiumor for at leut tea roars ; but it did not .how, except In the form of a scrofulous sore on the wrist, until about five years ao. From a few tiots which ap peared at that time, it gradually spread so ai to cover his entire body. I assure you he waa terribly altliol.il. and an object of pity, when he bi'itau using your medicine. Now, there are) few men of his ape who enjoy as good health M he has. 1 could easily name tlfty persoua who would testify to the fuels in his caso. Yours truly, W. M. PHILUM." FROM THE FATHER: duty for me to state to you tho benefit I have derived from the use of Ayers Sarsaparilla. Six months ngn 1 was completely covered with n terrible humor and scrofulous sores. Tho humor caused an Incessant and Intolerable itching, and the sklu cracked so at to causa tho blood to How in many places whenevof 1 moved. My sutleriiiR were (treat, and my life a burden. 1 commenced tho use of the Saks apa ui LLA in April last, and have used it regularly slnco that timo. My condition befan to improve at once. The sores have) all healod, und I feci perfectly woll In evory ro8iect be.nR now able to do a Rood day's work, although 73 years of ae. Many Inquire what has wrought such a cure In my case, and I toll them, as I have here tried to tell you, Aykii's SausaI'AIUI.la. Ulover, Vt., Oet. II, lbt& Yours gratefully, HlUAM l'lULLIM." Ater's Sarsaparilla enret Scrofula and all Srrofuloua Complaints, Eryalp elaa, Enema, Ringworm, lllotehes, Sores, Iloils, Tumors, and Eruptions of the Skin. It clears tho blood of all Impu rities, aids digestion, stimulates the action of the bowels, and thus restores vitality and Strengthens the whole system. FBF.PARED DT Dr. J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell, Masi. Sold by all Druggists; $1, six bottles for ft. WWI s IT. J "4 2'.ra7S Ctiroj aii novop dlsnp polutk. XuowoiCI'bc-oat Poin Uoliovcr for Kan Boaat, tlicap, (itilolt and reliable. Pfr-iry y nvr-y.Hggml imtciii:::': castoria ts not Nartotlo. Cliildrcn grow fat itpuii, Mothers like, iiml Physicians reeommi'iiJ CASTOKLY. It rt'sulatcs tho Itowcls, cures Wind Colic, allays revcrlslmcss, and do stroys Yt'orins. WEI DE MEYEIl'S CA TARRH Cure, a Constitutional Antidote for thl terrible mala 6y, hy Absorption Tha moit Important Eisoovery since Vno eduatlon. Other remedies may roliove Catarrh, tlJs enres at luy stago before Consumption sets in. ' J J it ilhff ll . Si . (IKAMCII l Croccria Provisions, Will ken on hand a general aswirtnic'nt (aPKwrioii, I'm iimii4, Cured McaU, 'J'oluuxn, Cigars, CanilicH, ('and!'.-., Moniw, Notions, tireen and Dried Knits, WnI Hiid Willow Ware. Crockery, Etc, Biwlueiui will I conducted on a CASir HAKIS. Wl.i -h ineaiw that Low Prices are Established .Goods dtlivtrf J wilhoul !iar;e to Eajri ALL KINOS OF PRODUCE WANTED V'whih we will pay the liihestmarkil pHee. JAS. L . PAoK- I MAM U IN J s-4 ran n The ExpliMri! of Uir Fiiliirc Tli cxplosiir of tho futiirn ia utt (louliti'illy lilrtsting golutiiip, llm latest invention of .Mr. Xolu l. Alremly on thn continent tlirt nuinufucttlrn of thin now ngent hits ft-wiimed important (liinniiKtons, tlinns;li liere, oivinj to the stringency of the climate test imposed hy govenunent its position nn yet in un estaMislied. Many of tlin litter opera tions in the Gothnrtl tunnel wero cur ried out with pure Masting gelatine; and in Austrin, the richest of all thn European countries in mines except Great l!ritiin,trin factories whero tlyna inim was formerly niacin nrn now j;ivpn over to its nianufactiire. It is simply dynamite a liaso aotif, containing nine ty three per cent, of nitro glycerine, with a list of seven per cnt. of collod ion wool, time in itself is an explosivp, in place of the inert kiselguhr. As a Masting agent it is more homogeneous than dynamite, mid on account of its olasticity, is less sousiMo to outward impressions, while in handling or cut ting tho cai tridge there is no loss of the material us HomctinicH occurs with dynamite. Its further advantages ate that the gnsses after explosion am lighter and thinner, and leave no dust, developing at the siimn timo a more consideraMo power. Taking the power of ilvuamite at lOUO.aml nitro-jdveerine at 1411, Masting gelatine is represented ly tho ligures 15 "),"), in addition to which superiority it is incapaMe, un lik. dynamite, of retaining its nitro glycerine, when drought in contact with water. Sir Frederick Ahle has kept it under water for a year without its undergoing the slightest chemical change. It is a satisf iction to reflect that, ho complicated and delicate is the process necessary for the production of (his nw explosivp, it is never likely to lie made hy unskilled persons or con cocted in a hack shop in l!ir ningham. Tlit Brrrliff Family. Chicnito Ti ilmne. The question was raised recently whether Henry Wind Iicechnr was vounger or older than his sister, Mrs. Slouv. It wus f iu I id tlmt .Mi's Klmve was horn in 1812, and .Mr. Ilecher in l.Sl.'l; he is a little morethitnu year the younger. Catherine lteechor was horn nimrly twnlvo years lieforo her lietter-known sister. While Catherine lost her lover, Prof. Fisher, of Yale college, hy ship-wreck whim still very young, Mrs. Stows married, it appears, a widower, if wn ore to trust Mr. K 1). Mansliidd's "Memories," which say that "Prof. Stowo hvl for a first wif.i a handsome New England lady." Mr. Stown.was ten years older than his wife, who wrote, her great work at the ago of 40, and her second important novel, "J)red," at the ag of 41. The IWcclier family seem to own their literary vitality to their trans plantation to the west, where their father, Lyman lleeuher, went ahout 1832, and he remained there many yeai i. Mrs. Stowe lived in Cincinnati ahout seventeen years, or till tho timo she planned "Undo Tom," which novel was net drawn from eastern or Vir ginian slave sources, hut from Ken tucky, and the escaping slaves who eamei up through Ohio and Indiana. Among tliesfl was "Eliza Harris," whose feat of crossing the river on floating cakes of ico is fully testilied to in the recently published reminiscences of Levi Collin, tho president of the Western Underground rialrotd, who sheltered her at his home. A newly murrted couple from Way hack sauntered into a downtown res taurant and the Mushing bride, allowed that she would try a few clams. "What kind of clams!" asked tho waiter. "Lit tlo Necks!" "Naw Sir," interrupted the rooin. "We air on our wedding tower, young man, and for two or three duys money ain't a coin' to ho no olject with .ne. I5ring us l.ig neck cluiiis 'he higgest you've got." . A Umatilla Indian Wing asked the other d iy what he was doing now, an swercd: "Well, I hunt some, lish some, and preach some." "Whern do you preithr' hAt the raucherie, over on McKay creok." "How much do they giveyoj." "'liout $.U a year." "That's mighty poor pay, isn't it!" "Woll, yest , but it'n mighty poor preach." Jiulnriil Gni The natural gas well at Jos Cannon's ranch, north of Heppner, still glvss evidence of hidden powers. Hern is B sketch of the same kind of a develop ment which is heing utilized ifi Fehtl' sylvania: Not a pound of wood Of coal is used at Creighton, twenty miles) from l'ittshurg, whom tllfl Fittslrurg Tlato Glass Co. havo their plant. Glasa factory and residencH art heated hy natural gas. Gas was struck at 1200 feet in a tivo inch bore. A torrent ofj what the owners dcscrtlm as pure nitro1 gen gas hurst out with n form of 200 pounds to the sqtinre Iiicfi, SmJ aflef threo years is (lowing with as much energy as ever. Tho visitor seea no coal, no wood, nn cinder, no ashes, ho smoke. In the furnaces is a lurid, s:eady heat, regulated by clockwofki No grimy stoker swests his life away at furnaen doors, hut instead a ctltii pel soin with a stained glass shield in yites you to look at the glass through the open furnace dojrs where glares heat suflicient to deter a modern Slmdrach, Mesacli and Ahediiegoi Overhead gas burners are ablaze in broad I'ay.becausi) it is not worth while to take time to turn the gas on" and ch, as there is plenty of gas and td spare. In the resilience there is a thumb screw which regulates tho temperature to absolute perfection. An Eastern capitalist has come out to examine Joe Cannon's well. Seeking Auvcnlurc The D ines are about as foolhardy as) the Americans in braving tho horror of the icy north. A new expedition starts from Copenhagen next Sunitnof "to seek adventure and promote scien tific knowledge in the highest latitude" which they may be able to attain;" "Adventure" they will always find, but the "scientifio knowledge" gained, if any, is bought at too great a1 cost to compare with I ho poor value It will ever be to tho scientifio world, that prates about a north west passage. The world has no use for such a passage, if one exists, 'iho scientilio theory that animal life originated in the Arctic) regions is no proof that the same life' exists in tlit) ice regions of this day, No one knows how many times this old earth has "Hopped," or may "flop" iu the future. That the, cold center has change in the past is tl geological fact; that it may changed yet again is no lss than a probability: If the latitudes that have been attained by our expeditions had afforded enough animal life to sustain a fow men, there might be better ground to stand on. A peculiarity about the blind ia that there are scarcely any smokers among them. Soldiers and sailors who lose their sight in action sometimes contin ue to smokn for a little while, but as a rule they soon give up the habit They say it gives them no pleasure when they can't see tho smoke, and some have said they cannot taete the smoke unless they see it. Tills almost dnmonstites the theory that if you blindfold a man in a room full of smoke and put a lighted and unlighted cigar in his mouth turn aliout he will not be able to tell the difference. ' - ; A benevolent woman in Cincinnati has undertaken to supply oor, lonely bachelors in the west with Wives, For $1 she will send an applicant a list of names of farmers daughters with whom he can correspond with matrimonial intent. If he cannot, with this advan tage, capture a companion, he ought to bo doomed to everlasting Irmefitttsfb Several interesting works on the art of letter writing contain some efllectiva ammunition for this purpose, Having the girl's name to liegin with, he has only to tire at the mark. Tho Grand Canyon of the Colorado, ICO miles east of Needles, on the At lantic and Pncitio Railroad, was re' cently visitd by Professor Davidson, who says he "saw vertical walls 2,700 fwet high, and 6,200 feet aliove sea level, where: the Culcf.ido river is 10O feet deep, and cainot imugine anything grander tlia'i the ellect of sunset shin- j ing on these walls only ten degreea I from vertiial, composed of different i colored rocks, rod sandstones, and thcr black ovorhaneing rocks. The temper ature was 136 degrees Fahr." i i ' A if .