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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 12, 1885)
r en G ARB. ui I . Tr-nrr ,f--fi-, r m j ---- , "ms y i "f " -.- r, . - .. . ,. - r V-tt -i.r - ri m -t-.t--.-t-.t- I n HISJ ESTABLISHED FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES, AND TO EARN IN HONEST LIVING BT THESWK1T OP OUR BROW. , , .- . -i s- i ; - j.1 1 - -g , ' .1 r. i - - r i 1 1 1 " iii 1 , . : ii " ... i-i .rv VOU 17. EUGENE CITY, OR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1835. vNO. 52. iiljfiaiMili f 1 U1IM II i i ii miiiii i t ' ' " " " ' " r 1 . . , .. , . ... . - - " - , ., - , , mi i t ., -.... .....r:. J ' &tu fcugrw (City Guard, I. L. CAMPBELL, Publisher and Proprietor. OFFlC3-'Ji thi Ewtstde of Willamette Stmt betsresn Seventh an J Eighth Street. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. rer Annum 12.50 it Month 1-2.5 Tarte Month 19 OUR ONLY it A.TK3 OH ADVKBTISINQ. Xarertisements inserted ao follows i t 6e square, 10 linr or lss, one liuertlon W ; ok snbseauent inseil.on L Cash required in (irate. " Tints advertisers will be charged at the fol wlnj rates : square three months 00 " " six moaths 8 00 oue year. 12 00 , "transient notices in local column, 20 eenti per fa or each insertion. Aivertising bills will be rendered quarterly. All ob work must he PAW FOB ttEUVElT. SOCIETIES. Cnaa Lodoi No 11. A. F. and A. II. Meets first an third We loeadays In each a.nth. . BntwKK Borra Ixdo No. 9 1,0. ,jiO. r. jaeeiseverv mesasv evening. ft- WlMAWRAL ENCAMm!T No. 6i tets oa the Id and 4th Wednesdays in each month. EoultMit Lodos. No. 15. A. 0. U. W.- Meets st Masonic Hall the second 1 and fourth aTidars in each month. J. M. Sloax, M. W. XarATRtoK Post, No. 40, G. A. R. Meets Masoniq Hill, the tint and third Fridays of oh month. By order, Commander. Order or OnosES Fbibnim. Meets the , rst and third Saturday tveninus at Masonic HalL By order of J. M. Sloan, G C. otti Lodoi No. 367, L O. G. T. - Meets rry Saturday night in Odd Fellow' Hull. E. 0. Potter, W. C. T. Liaotj Star Band of Hops Meets at the P. Church every Sunday afternoon at 3:30. K. Houston. Sunt: Miss Bertha Cook, As't (NLl Chan. Hill, Seo'y, Mist Hattie Smith, Ofeaalain. Visitors made welcome. fc. BILYEU. C. M. COLLIER. BILYEU & COLLIER, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,- ECSENE Clf Y, OREGOX. JiSACTICE IS A Til. THE COURTS OF L this State. Will k'-v "fecial attention 44 collections and prohaU nutters. Ornoi!--0er Hoadrick A, Eakin's Imnk. . CE0. B. DORMS, Attorney and ounsellor-at-taw, WILT. PRACTICE INT THE COURTS of tlis .Ssoond Jmlici.il District and in It S jpreine Court of this Slate. Sas.iial attention given to collections and J&attsrs in urobate Ceo. S. Washbiirn&, Attoriicy-at-Law JSrj3ENS CITY, - - - OREGON OFFICE At the Court House. y8m3 GEO. M. MILLER, Attora97 and Ccuns9lloat-Law, and Real Estate Agtnt. EUGENE CITY, - OREGON. Office formerly occupied by Thompson k aUan. J.E.FENTON, Attorney-at-LatV. itUGENE CITY OREGON. .Speoial attention given to Real Estate Prao let and Abstracts of Title. Orrici Over Grange Store. i. W. HARRIS, M. D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE Wilkin's Drug Store. Kvsidence on Fifth street, where Dr Shelton ormerly resided. Dr. T. W. Sliclton, Physician and Surgeon. ItOOMS-At Mrs. J. B: Underwood EUGENE CITY. OREGON. DR. JOSEPH P. GILL, CAN BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE r res ideic when aot professionally engaged. Offic at the POST OFFICE DRUG STORE. Bsidence on Eighth street, opposite Prwby run Church. WALTON & AUorncy-at-La w. ' fUGEHE CITY, ORECOt WILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE I norts of the State. ' ; .Special attention given to real estate, col .tine, and probate matters. t'ollrtctm,' all kinds of claims against the UsitM StatM Government. i"fEr in Waltn's hrick iwtns 7 aid 8. A, I B r3T A GENERAL Willi A large assortment of La dies and Qiildrens Hose at 12 M cts. Good Dress Goods a t lc Best or set in town for 50c An immense stock of New and Seasonable Goods. Fine Cashmere in every shade. New and Nobby styles in CL01IIING. Liberal Discount for . CASH. New Departure ! ! cash asd PATRONIZE THE MEN WHO HELP T SCHOOL IlOUSJiS, whose interests am spend their profits at home. Take notice that- A. V. Will sell goods for CASH at peatly reduced prices, as low as any other dlSH STORE. Beat PrinU lb and 18 yard) $1 00 Best Brown and Bloachcd Muslins, 7, 8, 9, and 10 cts. Claries and Brooks spool cotton 7A cts per Dor. Plain and Milled Flrnnds, 25, 3.5: 45 and 50 cts. Water Proo , cents Fine White Shirts, 75 cts and $1. And a!l Other Coeds Also the Celebrated WHLTTK SH rVTNG MACHINE ! None better for strength, size, and durability), At greatly reduced rates. fcS"Tomy old Customers, who have stood Dy ine so bnj, I will continue t-) toll on same tarms as heratofore on tiino, hut if at Any time they wish to make CASH purchases I will give all sni. as others, the full credit on my reduction A. V. I ETERS Goods sold as low as any House in Oregon, for G ash Or Credit Highest rice paid for all kinds of Country Produce. Call and See S. H. Friendly. Harness Shop. HAVING OPENED A NEW SADDLE AND HARNESS SHOP ON" 8th 8TRE west of Cram Bros ., I am now prepared to furnish everything in that lint at thi i LOWEST &.TJCS. The Competent Workmen Are emp'oywl, and I will nJeiTor to me with a call. DUIFS III II fill Trimming silk and Sat ins in all shades. Moireantiqae Silks Velvets in Colors. TJie finest stock of French KID SHOES : ... n ever brought to this paaco. BOOTS and SHOES in all grades- GROCERIES' of all descriptions. o:o.3S2:d:iqe"; BUILD YOUR BRIDGES, ROADS AND vour interests I Am iwrumnantlv LmutoH and PETERS, Fine Client Shirts. 5C, 75 eU and $L New Assortment Drees Goods (No Trash) IS, 20 and 25 cts. Mens' Underwear, Shirts and Drawers, BO ct Mens' Overaliirts, 75 cts. and 1; Mens' Overalls, 50,05, 7b cts and 11. Embroideries and Edgins at Fabulous Low Prices. at Prooortionate Rates. s K HI Most give satisfaction to ill h ma favcr A, 8. CURKIE. Thry are Nol Alikr. The Republican pn.'ss is widely quot ing against Mr, Cleveland an alleged remark of Professor Porter of Yale. College, to tho effect that "Mr. Cleve land is doing precisely as wo should havo expected a Republican President to do." If this be true, then the Re publican organs have no reason to find fault. But it is not true. Why should Dr. Porter expect a Republican Presi dent to do ai Mr. Cleveland is doing) There has beon nothing in Republican administrations to justify any such ex pedtati&ns. No Republican President has ever undertaken to put his admin istration oh a business basis. Not ono has paid any attention to tho demand for a reformed civil service. Mr. Ar thur, especially, ignored it. During the brief administration of Mr. Gar Held it was never thought of. It was incompatible, with Hayes' idea of ro-'l warding the rascals who pillaged for him the Presidency. No Republican Executive lias ever recognized more than half the people of this country as entitled to an consideration at the hands of those who administer the gov ernment None of Mr. Cleveland's predecessors sinco tho civil war has treated this country as a united land in which every section and class had equal rights and privileges with every other (lection and class. Yet all these things have been the aim and, so far as it-was-tu --the - powrr of any man, the achievement of tho present Democratic President. He is no copyist. He has acted up to his own high convictions of duty; and liard'y any contrast could m greater than tho contrast between his administration and those of his1 Re publiain predecessors. What ho is doing, judging from our experience in tho past, is just what a Republican President might be expected not td do. For one we fuil to see a single point of resemblance; nor do wo believe a single eoe-fixihts. 3. V. Examiner. - rcrpeluiilin; M'ar Memories. A Democratic family living near Harder, Arkansas, have on hand "since the wah" the following well-named progeny: Their oldest daughter, 15 years old, is called Ann Elizabeth Dixie Shirley. Then conies Benjamin Kirby Smith General Hardee Shirley, aged 13; Robert Enos Napoleon Bonaparte Leo Wilkes Booth Shirley, who is nine years old; John Thomas Emanuel For est Champion Gatowood Shirley is sev en years old, while Joseph Wheeler Zolicoller Stonewall Jackson Sam II il debrand Sterling Price Shirley is five years old. The family ends with Mary Virginia South Carolina Florida Geor gia Alabama Louisiana Shirley, who is three years old. The father's name is plain Elisha, and the mother's name is Harriett Susannah Maria Jane Shir ley. Tlie Fairs of lint Nuribncst. Here is a list of the fairs and meet ings of agricultural societies in the Northwest: Oregon State fair, Sept. 21. Walla Walla (W. T.) Agricultural Society, Sept. 8. Clarke County (W. T.) Agricultural fair, Sept. 28. Union County fair, Sept. 28, Lane County Agricultural Society, Sept. 30. Baker County Agricultural Society, Oct. 8. Butte Grangii fair, Washington coun ty, Oct. 7. Mechanics' fair, Portland, Oct. 8. Domeptio fat stock show, Portland, Oct. 12. Cure For Piles. Piles are frequently preceded by. sens r,f weight In the back, loins and lower part of the abdomen, cauxing the pitient tosupprae h has some affection of the kidneys or neighboring organs. At tiwrs, symptoms of indigestion ire present, flatulence, uneasiness of the stom ach, etc A moisture, like perspiration, pro ducing a very disagreeable itching, after get- ilant bleeding and itching pii-s yield at once to the application of Dr JiosAtiko's Pile Remedy, which acts directly upon the parts affected, ab sorbing the tumors, allay in-.' tho intense itch ing and effecting a prm;ij,ent cure. Price 50 cents. Address the Dr lfoanko Medicine Co., I'iqua, Ohio. Sold by Osburn t Co and W S Lee, of Junction. Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The' best salve in the wrM for Cuts, Bruises, Sre, I;lcers, Salt lihemn. Fever Sores. Tetter. Chspiwd Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles, or no pay required, it is cnanui t.ed to give perfect utinfacticitj, or money re fun M. For Sale by E R Lucker Co. The North a od the South. At the Grant memorial services in St. Johnsburg, Vt., Judge Rector, of Austin, Texas, who chanced to be in lown, was introduced as representing the South and as a Confederate soldier, and was greeted with applause. "On a great national occasion like this," said Judge Rector, "it seems to me proper for ono born and reared in the South and educated in a New England col lego, to join with you in commemorat ing the life and virtues of General Grant. Modern civilisation does not crown or sanctify the achievements of Alexander, Ciesar or Bonaparte. Suo- cess must come to this age in garments of justice, or it will hsve none of it. Judge Poland has truly said, at tho time of the war the Southern soldier bolieved in secession. While today tho South weeps for the great hero, yet if she had Raid at the close of the war twenty years ago, 'We believe slavery wrong and thct our ctuse was wrong,' we should have been false, and you would not havo believed us. Now, after the hillocks where your friends and our friends sleep have grown greon, we can and do say that slavery was a blight and that we are glad it has gone, and you believe us. Our inter ests are all linked in with this great and glorious land of ours. The flag for which your fathers fought in the revolution is yours and curs, and we will stand by your side to defend it." Why llllildisam are Culled "Suckcri," For a number of years after the opening of the lead mines at Galena, III., the majority of the miners, who lived in tho southern part of the State and in tile settlements on tho Missis sippi, were in tho habit of going to their homes in the Full and returning to the mines in the Spring. One day, in the Autumn of 1820, an old Mis- sourian, who was watching a number of Illinois miners go on board a southern-bound boat at the Galena wharf, asked them where they were going. They replied: "Wo are going down homo." "Why,1' said ho, "you put me in mind of the suckers; they come up the river in the Spring and in tho Fall they go down again." He had refer ence to a fresh water fish of the carp faaily, which has tho habit mentioned. Tho nieknamo of "suckor" was at once applied to lllinoisans and has stuck to them over nee. In the Spring the miners who had remained at the mines during the Winter, would say when I he shoals of suckers were soon ascond- ing the rivor: "In a few days we shall see the real suckers coming up the river." Ninety years old, and for sixty years filling tho chair of history in the University of Berlin, Professor von Ranke still works about eight hours a day, from 8 to 12 an" J from 6 to 10. He dictates now to an amanuensis. A friendly physician forbids his1 leaving the upper story in the house in Luisen strasse, where ho has resided for the last forty years. His habits and ways of life aro very simple. His little cot reminds one of the equally simple couch of tho duke of Wellington. He says that, after ho completes his pres ent work on universal history, he "in tends, if it please God, to write recollections of my own life." The peasantry of south Germany lias been thrown into a state ot con sternation over tho sudden and inex pi icabW departure from tile country of the rooks, which for centuries have made their abode there. Flocks of rooks, which nested in the spire of the Ratisbon, Bavaria, Cathedral, recently departed and have not returned. The general ova'cuation by rooks is gener- any r?garuou oy the. poople as ti ... . heralding the approach of Ihe . cholera A Republican journal in Iowa very properly says that Ihe Republican party of that State cannot be a whisky party and a temperance party at the same time. It must choose one or tho other side. A man cannot ride two horses at the same time, each going in an op posite direction; ho must fall oil" or ...i:. HL7III. ' , , 32,700 head of stock have been shipped east from points Wween Wal - jbila end Spokane Falls this neason. The Vufjalna Railroad. Linn county would probably be ben efitted by accepting a proposition from ho officora of tho Willamette Valley fc Coast railroad. It is made iu what seems to lie a fair spirit rnd would re dound to the benefit of not only Alba ny and Linn county but to the entire state, if its promises are carried Out. It will be observed that the company asks for $50,U00 from the people of Linn, but it does not ask it all in rnon-i ey. At least one half would be taken in rights of way, water powers and de pot grounds, and as the company doe not ask for anything except security for subscriptions until it has earned them, tho proposition is certainly fair. and should bo well considered. It is for residents of Linn county to sub; scribe certain surds set opposite their names, one third payable when tho road shall have been completed to a point op pasiteAlbiny,at least within one mile of the city limits, and temporary means of crossing established, one-third when a a combined railroad and wagon bridge , shall have been commenced and (10,000 expended upon it, and the bal ance when the bridgo is completed; the subscription to aggregate the sum of 4 150,000. It is essential that Albany have the road, and tho promised car shops, Queer Shaving Cupi New York Sun. . A young man in want of a shave re cently went into a little barber shop in Harlem, sat down' juv a chair, leaned, back and was about to shut his eyes to keep the lathor out when they fc!. upon array cf wonderfully decorated shaving cups. On one was the picture of a hearse flanked by two upright cof fins; on another was a dummy engine standing on a section of the elevated! road; and others displayed pictures of a milk wagon, a tombstone a saw or a trowel. The baroer explained that the hoarse and coffin cup belonged to an undertaker with an eye to business,' who had got enough custom from his novel advertisement to pay his shaving bill for the next ten years. An enginl eer on the elevated road owned the cup with tho dummy ongine on it, The other cups belonged to a milk dealer, a Btono cutter, a carpenter and a brick layer. Tho bariior said he had an or der for a cup, from a neighboring shoe maker which would eclipse all the oth er cups, it would contain a tiny pho tograph of tho shoemaker on a swinging sign bearing his name and the legend,' Repairing Neatly Done." A single lot in Birmingham, Ala bama, recently sold for $12,000, or as" much as the entire town plot would hate brought a few years ago. This remarkable growth and rapid enhance ment of values is not owing to any tem porary boom, but is wholly attributed to trie establishment there six years" ago of iron manufactories, which have brought with them other manufactories' This is a single illustration of what one branch of productive industry may ac complish in building up and giving a healthy, prosperous growth to a city. Mr. Whitney reported last week thai' 6,000 melons had already beon shipped from this valley to the Willwette, in car load lots, and probably 1,500' had , been sent in smaller lote, making 7,500 , altogether sent out of the valley up to, that timeand the prospects are that more than twice as many more vil) have been shipped Iwfore the close of the season. For the first year's ex portation this is a' pretty good showing, ihe melons are sr.id to have brought the producer from 23 cents to 40 cents each, net. Athland Tidings. Less noise is made aliout the Coeur . d'Alone mines than when they were, first ppened, but all reports unite, in in representing that a great deal of ' gold is being taken out by large com panies. Those familiar with the coun-, try say there is no show for men with out money, but that those who are wil ling to put in capital make a great deal of profit in developing claims. S. F. Chronicle. 1 . ... . I A Milwaukee eel nor commuted rm-. j cide. Itfoauw he was la debt. It ia such sn unusual thing for n editor to I ir 'd'b' that he could not stsnd is. ::x I i