171 1 0 ESTABLISHED FOR THE DISSEMINATION OF DL.D0C11.1T1C f RIMIftES, AND TO EARN AN HONEST LIVING BT TUB SWEAT OF OUR BROW. VOL.18. EUGENE CITY, OR, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1885. NO. 2 1 J 61TY AR t it r , 1 U fi il 1 J i Of ffiugtae (City tod. I. L. CAMPBELL, ani Proprietor. Om03-O,i thsEvtsiW of Willamette Street bitwaen Seventh and Eighth Streets. TERM? SUBSCRIPTION. Per Annum ...$2.00 8!x Month 1.25 Tjree Months 75 ODE ONLT KATE 3 OH ADVKKTI31NQ. Advertisements inserted so follows Oat square, 10 line." or 1bs, one insertion (3 ; msIi snbiequent inseit.ea IL Cash required in tfrancs. Time advertisers will be charged at the ful win; rates : One square three months " " six months: .... fooo, .... 8 00 " - " one yw 12 00 Transient notices in local column, 20 cents per me lor eaon insertion. ' Advertising bills will be rendered quarterly. aii ion weric must ie paw for os prlivekt. L. BILYEU. C. M. COLLIER. BILYEU & COLLIER, -Attorneys and Counsellors at Law,- IUGENI5 CITY", OREGON. PRACTICE IX ALL THE COURTS OF this State. Will five suecial attention . hi suunm nnu prooat. matters. 'rios--Over Hendrick & Eakin's bank. CEO. B. DOHRIS, Attorneu and ounsellor-at-Law, WILL PRACTICE IN THE COURTS of the Second Judicial District ami in ke Supreme Court of this State. Special attention given to collections and matters in probate Ceo. Si VVachburne, AUorajc-at-L:uv, CITJKNE CITY, - - - OREGON OFFICE At the Court House. iySra3 GEO. II MILLER, Attarnjj ani Ccaasjllor-at-LaTv", and Real Estate Agent. EUGENE CITY", - OREGON. Oflice fo.-.ue.'iy occupied by Thompson 4 bean. J. E. FENTON, AUorney-at-Lnw. KUUENE CITY OREGON. Special attention givnn to Real Estate Prac iee aid Abstracts of Title, Officg Over Grange Store. T.W. HARRIS, M.D. Physician and Surgeon. OFFICE Wilkin's Drug: Store. lUsidencv on Fifth street, where Dr Shelton ermerly resided. Dr. T. W. Shelton, Physician and Surgeon. r.OOMS-At Mrs. J. B. Underwood. FUGENE CITY. OREGON. ' DR. JOSEPH P. GILL, CAN BE FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or res idence when not professionally engaged. Office at the POST OFFICE DRUG STORE. Residence on Eighth street, opposite Fresby- flan Uhurcli. WALTON & NOFFSINCErT Attorncys-sit-Law. EUGENE CITY, OREGON, T7"ILL PRACTICE IN ALL THE y t'ourts of tho State. Special attention given to real estate, col ctinir. and Drohate matters. Collecting all kinds of claims a ra'ost the I United States Government. Office in Walton's br!ck rooms 7 and 8. New Barter Shop and batli Rooms (One door Norn of Post Office.) BATHS, ". CENTS. EVERYTHING fitted up in the best of order. Shavinz and bair cutting done in the most approved order. JERRY HORN. Proprietor. CRAIN BROS. DEALERS ts Uitcbei and "QHa JtwelrT, Musical Instruments, Toys, Notions, etc Watches, Clocks, and Jewelry repaired and warranted. Northwest corner of Willamette ud Eighth strveta. mm I B I3T A GENERAL Hi Mi A large assortment of La dies and Childrens Hose at 12 1-2 cts. Good Dress Goods a t 12c Best orset in town for 50c An immense stock of New nmil. Knn snnnhlp. (Znnrl.9. Fine Cashmere m every shade. New and Nobby styles in CLOUTING. Liberal Discount for CASH. New Departure WO PRICES I AD pATROXIZBTHlWIJiN-WHOIIKLPT L SCHOOL 110 US blS, whose interests are spend their profits at home. Take notice that- A. V. Will sell goods for CASH at irreatly reduced prices, as low as any uther CASH STORE. Best Prints lb and 18 yards ?1 00 Best Brown and Bleached Muslins, 7, 8, 9, and 10 cts. Clarks and Brooks spool cotton 75 cts per Doz. Plain and Milled Flrunels, 25, 35: 45 ami 50 cts. Water Proo , cents Fino White Shirts, 75 ct. and $1. And all Other Coods at Also the Celebrated WHITK SK yiNG MAOH iSTE ! None better for strength, sue. and durability). To my old Customers, who have stood by me so 1 ing, I will continue ti sell on same lnns as heretofore on tiros, but if at any time they wisli to make CASH purchases, I will give all m, as others, the full credit on my reduction A. V. PETERS H fl n 45 Goods sold as in Oregon, for G ash Or Credit Highest .rice paid for all kinds of Gauntry Produce. Call and See S. II. Friendly. Harness Shop. HAVING OPENED A NEW SADDLE AND HARNESS SHOP ON 8th STRB west of Crain Bros'., I am now prepared to furnish eveiythinir in that line at the ZiO"W2E32S7 The Competent Are employed, and I will endeavor to roe with a call. DUIFS Trimming silk 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 in all grades- GROCERIES of all descriptions. CRB3DOT, ' BUILD YOUlt BRIDGES, ROADS A NO vour iut.irK.tsl Are iinrnmnpntlv l,nt.vl M; PETERS, Fine Cheviot Shirt?. 50, 75 cts and f L New Assortment Dress Goods (No Trash) 15, 20 and 25 cts. Mens' Underwear, Shirt and Drawers, 50 ct Mens' Overshirts, 75 cts. and $1. Mens' Overalls, 50, C5, 75 cts and $1. Kmliniiilcries and Edgius at Fabulous Low Prices. Proportionate Rate3. At ereatly reduced rates. 1 low as any House HATES. Most Workmen give satisfaction to all h j ma favor A. S. CUIIIIIE. or in il s. SlfJLAW BEACH. A Pea ritlure of i Eomanilc Oregon Setae . A Pcrp at the Sri Lions. Away out upon tho heaving breast of the ocean a cloud-hank lay cold and sombre-looking. TIih sun had strug gled up through the smoke above tho hilla to eastward, and poured a flood of warm yellowr light all over Mwcen graBsy slopes, green valleys, lakes and wide expanse of tossinc billows. Tho wind was rising with tho tido, and whits-caps came tumbling in. madly threatening to swallow up tho beach and batter down thoJiiHs them selves with fearful souiflkof surf ar tillery. From our one small window in the driftwood cottage, nestled closo against the headland, we watched them chase each other Op the sand: surge in and out,, meeting with a crash as of cannon and hattio smoke of sprav, flung up and scattered on tho wiud We were listening, meanwhile, to tales of stormy adventure, of shipwreck and peril on tho wild north Atlantic coast, and the noise of wind and wave with out formed a fitting accompaniment to the talk within the odur walls of the nicturtsoue littlu cottnep. Hindu briobt , . , -"Of - -f and cliffy by blaze of driftwood on its humble hearth. An extetidi'd view is to be had from tho summit of the hills north of the beach, Captain, C informed us. An lour later we Wro toiling up tho steep trail, stopping now and then to rest ami to look back. Still beyond and aliove.cut like athrmd iu tho smoothly roimdod grass-cusluonod front of the precipitous slope, we could trace the graceful windings of tho, path. Wo crossed numerous rivulets, splashing down furn-filkd hollows to full over the cliff into the sea. Hero and thero tall tigpr lilies bent aud swayed in the strong breeze, and "painted cups" niad bright patches of scarlet in soft dull green of grass and clover that grew thick tangled mat, all over the coast hills, high and low", making a pfeasltiitTy yielding carpet to the treod. A strong fresh wind swept these airy heiyhti of the north Pacific, and almust took one breath sometimes, in midden delicious gusts. We sat down at last, up there, snme 400 feet above the reach of the breakers, to rest and enjoy the beauti ful scene. We had taken a position on the verge of tho precipice, where far down and beneath the tides had hollowed out a little bay in the face of the clitf and formed a snowy beach where the wave might come to rest when tired with wild sport outside, Out in the breakers, beyond, stood a solitary rock where sea gulls nested yearly. The young were quite grown now ami only distinguishable by their grey plumage. Myriads of the grace ful creatures wheeled in circles, hover ing above their barren island home. Southward, the incoming tide made a foamy fringe down eight miles of shining sand. To the left lay low lake-uemmed valleys, wooded knolls, running streams and groves of spruce and pine stretching away to the mouth of tho river. And in the midst, like a great gleaming crystal in a setting of greenest emerald, Lily lake, the love liest sheet of water on the coast, re. poses not a stone's throw from tho beach. Wo could see as plainly as if but a mile away, where the river, the sinuous, deep Siuslow, cuuio down and met the sea, making a spaco of smooth dark blue in the lino of foaming breakers. How delicious it was up there in the warm sunshine, to sit, to half re cline on the ybilding couch; to bask in the glow, and revel in tho new wild beauty cf it all. Tho wind blowing criHp with the smell of tho sea, and delightfully cool; the muffled music of the surf mounting ceaselessly, and, at uncertain intervals, another sonnd, un- fanuliar, weird, a faintly swelling cry borne down frcm the north. Away to westward the boundless blue of the "beautiful Balboa was" flashed in tho sunlight. It was a sceno . to haunt one's dreams with pleasant memories, to U recalled and relieved often when days are dull and skies ore laden. "Look all about and then tell us if you.see anything that resembles a sea 'iotii" said Mrs. O , presently. We obeyed, but after careful ' scrutiny of the coast line reported "nothing.' Our Hostess smiled and directed Our aten tiontoa particular point somo dis tane, two miles, perhaps, up the coast where a great brown rock, appa-ently much discolored, showed abovo the seething, foaming waves, Again that weird, wild cry, swelling faintly upon the wind and mournfully dying. "What was that soundl" we asked "Sea lions on tho rocks," was tho re ply. Thoso discolored splotches on the big brown rocks in the breakers thero wero sea lions. And Captai n i ... u inioruieu us mat there wero fully five hundred visible from wliere we were sittinpj. We expressed a do sire tor a nearer viow. It was snvern liles, r di not remember just tliedis tance, for the trail wound in and out and up and down tho steep groen slopes, now hanging over tho sea till it seemed a misstep might send one head long into the breakers; and again ro ceding into the ferny depths of some ravine, so narrow, so sharply cleft, ono could almost reach across it. Nothing daunted, however, wo set out, after re ceiving directions from Captain 0 , to visit the sea lions in their home. After a brisk walk of half an hour we entered a dense lir thicket, and through this descended to the fidgo of tho clilT, where, clinging to a scrub pino for support, we could look down into the toiling r surf beneath. Somo grass grew in clefts in tho almost perpendio ular face of tho rock, and by means of this we carefully let ourselves down till the showers of spray, flung up by angry waves, warned us to descond no further. We were not yet in sight of tho seals, though the melancholy sound of their roaring tono above the thunder of the surf. Patiently working our way along the face of the cliff, clinging to rough projections and finding a scant foothold iu ils clefts and crevices, we reached at length a comparatively safo resting plaoe' upon a narrow ledge. where we could look" acrow a setb.Mi.: chasm and see tho great, clunisy mon stern tumbling about in their sea girt fortress, roaring, barking, howling, like licdlam let loosn in that wild, weird spot. Five hundred! Thero must have been t wico that number on the rocks alone, while tho breakers seemed to fairly swarm with smooth shilling forms. Unwieldy and awkward as these interesting creatures are on land, nothing can exceed their graceful evo lutions in tho water. We wero so closo that we could toss a stono over among them with caHe, yet should have liked a nearer point of observation had it been possible to obtain it. As it was wo sat there with the deafening crash of tho breakers in our ears and salt spray in our faces, and watched them for an hour or more, reluctant at the last to retrace our steps along the dan gerous path, and wave these modern mermaids a final farewell; bo mild, so appealingly human like, wore they in expression, so afTectionato in manner. "Oraarv" in the Salem Statesman. The News of Tortland is the first Republican paper of any importance that has openly favored an extra ses sion of the Legislature, although, judg ing by unmistakable signs, tho stalwart press of the State, with the exception of tho Oregonian, would consider it just the proper thing if Governor Moody should decido to call the rolons together. The "cow counties" aro in significant; but if we are allowed to express our humble opinion, if the ex ecutive of the great commonwealth of tho Northwest desires a IleDublican victory in 188C, ho will let tho Oregon egislators remain at homo during 1885, and supply the deficiency in Washing ton City by making an appointment or U. S. Senator himself The Dalles Mountaineer (Rep.) The Mormons are in sore straits. Their chief apostlos are in hiding in Salt Lake and dare not show fhr.ir heads for fear of arrest, and now comes Ilishop Shaw, a pillar of tho church, who declares openly in court that he will abandon polygamy and will life according to the law. This action of Bishop Shaw is believed by the Cen tres to bo tho most damaging blow the Mormons have received for a long time. The beginning of the end is evidently at hand. Grunt louldnt Tie OouiDiiti. "It has never been told," said Judgo' Ashburn, who married Grant's cousin,' "that Grant might have gono through the war in a more humblo capacity. When tho, .rebellion opened he was poor, and had given up farming to work in his father's store in Galena. He camo to Bethel, Ohio, to see one of his cousins to urgo him to go in part' nership to supply bread for Camp Den nison, The cousin did not caro to en gage in business with hiro, and the majter full through. At this time Iter hardly know what to do, and while here he received a dispatch from Gov. Yates, asking him to take charge of a State instruction camp. "He thought it over and hesitated He, had been oiit of tho service fof t number of years, and was not certain of his ability to drill raw recruits. lie got a big pine board and a lot o( wooden objects for dummy soldiers , and commenced applying military rulos to see if ho could form a company He set up his njou over and over again, . but ho gavo up in despair. He could not do it. He had forgotten his for-', mer power and could not accept the position ofTered" by Gov. Yates. But ho went to Illinois, visited tho cauipr saw the actual men in motion, and like a Hash his old lessons camo back to' lini, and he accepted." It is for tho reader to speculato on Gonbral Grant's career had he becqme a commissary at Fort Dennison, or had le declined the offer of Governor Dick Yates. Registry Law. A fortnight since we put tho query to Senator Joe Simon if he had "al- owed his registry law to dio out." Ho assured us that tho law is in full work ing order, and only requires action by the several county courts of the' State Nto provido the county clerks with the registry books and blanks ' f ertainiug. to the Jaw.Freliminary to ' ho books being prepared for registry purposes, some expert should prepare a general form to bo used throughout the Stato in tho strictest accordance with spo ifications of the act, and we think the author of the bill is the most com petent to perform that service Printers and blank-book manufacturers Bhould not delay in setting tho ball in motion by corresponding with tho authorities of tho soveral counties, as there is a ig job for one or more in that line, which will require from now till Spring to prepare and deliver. All citizons in favor of fair and square elections should take interest in duo preparation to carry tho law into effect noxt June. County Judgo Moreland informs us that he and tho county commissioners aro now engaged in selecting good men for tho different precincts, Sunday Welcome. A Great English Victory. Tho editor of the Deadwooi Roarer attended church for the first timo last Sunday. In about an hour ho rushed into tho oflice and shouted: "What the blazes am you follows doing" How about the news from tho ' seat of war" i : ( I r "What newsl" "Why, all this about the Egyptian - - army being drowned in the Red sea. . Why, the gospel sharp up at the church was telling about it juct now, and not word of it in this mornings paper. Hustle around, you fellows, and got the facts, or the Boomer will get a beat on us. .Look spry, there, and run an extra edition, while I put on the bulle tin board, 'Great English victory in tho Soudan.' " Cure For Piles. ' Pil.-s are f'eoi'eutly preceded by a sense of ei'iht in the back, loins and lower part of the alxiomen, tdu-dng the patient tostippose ha baa cliou o! uie kidneys or uelKhbortnjr jr.ns. At tuus, sympUms of liuligestioa e prekent, flatulence, uneasiness of the stom al, etc A nmUiuie, like iwmniratioo. nro- ducliiK a very disagreeable itchinir, after get ting warm, is a common attendant Blind, eouing ami iti lung pile yield at once to the iiilicaiion of Dr ISuennko's Pile Remedv. Mch a'ls directly Uon the parts affected, ab irulnjf the tumors, allvvinv the intense itch ing and effecting a penrm.ent cure. Price 00 cents. AiUlrec. the Dr IVwanko Medicine Co.. Pliiua. Ohio. Sold !, 0burn k Co and W H Lee, of Junction, Bucklen's Arnica Salve. The best salve Id the world for Cuts, rinses, here, I, leers, halt Kheum, fever 'ores, letter. ( hrpneu llanos. I Inlblains. Corn, and all nVn emotions, and positively cures piles, or no pay renuireo. it is pnaran teed to give perfect sati.fartinn, or nmtifj re-' f uuded. Fur Sale hy E it Luckty A C'u. -