THE EUGEKE CITY 661RD. 8ATURDAY.....IKCEMHKK 5,' 1835 11. . .. I Danger I be Remedied. . Ifhe quoHtion of tlid PreHi.i'ntial suo tension is one to lw re.com mumled to thA early attention of the tt-ipuhlican Seriate, ThA sacc's.ion of a Republi can President for thn tiirte Ad another election, imy inspire th breast of some tweond Guitead to a deed of irturder. this is clearly ftnAfhtooJ by all, and tnft iban Or party of irten, who continue Into state of thirigi, m tho hope, that . they may. profit by death or aMassina ion, in that caio will experience the ' most bitter disappointment. The Re publican S mate can nniove, Hin con- r tingency, and we, believe they will do so, and in any casi the ' responsibility roost attach to the men who, knowing the rinks' incurred, continue them. We have no' doubt that in-caw of tho President death a . Democrat would sue . teed him by the election that would Immediately follow, aid tho Republican "party would never win another victory, It' is . lurcher to bo hopucl for , th welfare of the country that fvniUor - Edmunds may be elected President of ' the Senate, so that in cast of an acci dent a man whom all his countrymen puteein. and who is ish and censerva tive, may give confidence to tho coun try. The following from the San Francisco Chronicle . the leading Re '. publican paper of the Coast we believe voices the sentiments of the peoplo ir respective of party: , . Some of the Eistern newspapers are ncilatini about the power which wi i to the Republican party by tho election of a prescient pro tempore of the Senate to take the place of tho late Mr. Hendricks. The Republican par ty will be vpry ill advised if it seek power by any such means.. So far as the rank and file of the party are con cerned, the idea of defeating the will of . the people as declared at the polls No yenilier 1884 is abhorrent and if any Re publican leaders from mistaken motives -of ambiiion seek to take advantage of the death of the Vice President to as pire to the possible chaiico of the Proni . lency during the term for which Democrat was elected, . they will not bo sustained by the honest men of their . party. The country chose a Democrat to Kit the Presidential chair from Marc, 4. 1885 to March 4,1889. There must be no attempt by trick or political de vije to defeat that choice. If Mr. Cleveland is prevented by death or oth rwise from completing his term, his ollico durinjr the remainder of that term must be tilled by a Democrat. ., Congress will meet on Monday, after .next. 1 he very first act after the or ganization of the House, mid the read ing of the message, HhoulU be. tho in troductionof a bill providing for the succession to the Presidency in the event of the death of -President and Vice President. It matters littl whether the bill conforms to (he ono of last session, which provided that .the succession to the Presidency in a cer ', tain .specified order, or whether the Projiden'.ial electors should be sum luoned to meet in the electoral college, nd elect a President and Vice Presi dent to till the vacancies. " The essen tial thing is that the succession to ' the omen Bhould be preserved to the party to which it was' entrusted by the peo pie of the United bial-a .Any Iv publican who opposes tho passage of uch a bill will make a serious mistake. .The American people dividey with more or less intensity of party spirit, when 'election day come round,' and each de sires his own party to triumph. Hut, when tho election is over, .the citizen rises superior to the partisan, and all insist alike - that th majority glial covern, and that the purposes of that majority shall bs carried out in letter and in spirit in spite of acciuonta. ' Senator Edmunds spoke in the For ty Fifth Conirress as follows, "it is cause enough for nie, eonititutional cause, when the prosidont of tho UuUed Statics, attiug, if he is honest, as he always must do, upon a conscien lious sense of his ov responsibility to the people and to .od, chooses to (end in one man's name for the pljce that another holds." Senator Haw ley'i paper, the Hartford Courant ays that "tho senate will treat Presi dent Cleveland s nominations precisely as it treated President Arthur's, and that discussion on them' will be quite free we are confident from any admix ture of factious partisanship," Senator Shermau has been very quiet since the New York election. Wake up John, and again raise your voice in support ot tho Ohio idea. It will hurt nobodv. but will "ratify local Pi ide. The late Vice President Hendricks wot buried last Tuesd iy. Then were an impc8ing funeral pageant, and impressive funeral services, a fitting end to the careor of the great state. ' man. " ' ' - v. t. ... III.. it. a l.irihIHa ibfvt JiX oenaiur the Democratic party will have a long l?ase of power. Blaine occasionally ..f. t.mmelf riulit on the, leading uva a - ijurstions of the day. I A ,,?t frjkil of Evfl-irt a iuicmjan cuy ranuuj, m '--tenced 1J thirty days iiiprisoili4nl and to pay a tiiio bf $5V ink- drunk'-anexs. When she liiiard Uih -htiico slid nuneu a neavy iiinmaiKi ni um juugo . i .it . bead. He dodged, and the missile flow through ths winclov Aria fell to the pavement, the ink splashing over a lady's elegant Bilk dress and totally ruined it. the lady in frying to Shake ink from her dress frightened a team of spirited horses, that ran away with a carriage contninina two lad if s and a child, upsetting a fruit stand and the ladies into a butcher's cart whi the child was fastened in a bunch of telegraph wires about ten feet from the sidewalk. The team could not be stopped, and continued on their Hi ''lit, finally plunging through the plate glass windows of a China shop. Th Mi through the entire length of the store, spreading destruction on every hand; ran out of the door, leaped into the canal and were drowned. No they talk of calling on the Jude for damages liecause he dodged the ink stand. A friend of . Ferdinand Ward quoted y the loston ilttralu as givin a reason why Ward is in prison. II had ample money - and opportunity to go to a safe country after the exposure of bis rascality. Several days of lib erty elapsed after the bursting of tl Urant & Ward nubble before he was arrested, and then ho was kept only in civil confinement from which h eicape was easy, until his conviction, Why then was it that the Napoloonia scoundrel did not retreat quietly from the Moscow, of his ruint "For, tho simple reason that he likvs to live in New York," is the roplyj . "he knew that he could not set more than ten years, which term would le shortened by good conduct to about six years or and a half. He will be about forty when he comes out, wealthy, and full of schomes invented during hi s in carceration, and not at all ashamed of his great exploit That suits him bet ter than banishment for life. .A colored clergyman of Burlington New Jersey, sent four of his children to one of the public schools, and met opposition thereto by bringinij a suit in the Supreme Court, resulting in decision compelling tho sclionl to re ceive the colored children. Whereupon fifteen of the pupils withdrew from th schol and the rest arc devoting their on ergies to make things generally unpleas ant for the colored children whose father has lieen forced to appeal to the trus tees for their protection from insult. It would soem as if Messrs Sherman, Lo gan, Foraker t Co. had prematurely abandoned the missionary held and that there, was some t lung to do for th colored brother a little this side of the Sunny South. A dispatch from San Francisco shows how the officers of the custom house have defied the anti-Chinese law. It is as follows: "The customs report just issued shows thai since th passage of the Chinese restriction act in 1882 over 18,000 Chinese have landed nt this port. A still more ex traordinary fact is that out of this number nearly 4000 have boen per nutted to land without the necessary customs certificate prescribed by act o congress. It is to be presumed that these statements are the result of an investigation by tho hew collector. St Louis Republican: Gen. Rose orans is on the trail of the new two dollar greenbacks with which Dorsey flooded Indiana in 1881), and before he closes his investigation of tho fraudu ent issue of currency the country is is likely to learn where the Republican party obtaiued tho millions for its slush fuudr, ' The Mexican people cannot under. stand why it costs less to send freight from New York to the City of Mexico by rail, a distance of 3,000 miles, than it does to send it from Jumulco to the same point, a distance of GOO miles. But tho Mexicans will livs and learn. lailroad ways are peculiar. Among tho converted Indians of Arizona and New Mexico the real hero ot the lititle is Daniel. I he rueskness of the Savior does not ap peal to their' imagination with the force of Daniel's experience among the ions. Atlanta Constitution: lhe Repub- icans of the North have been taught to believe that the negroes in the South do nothing from year's end to year's end but wait for an opportunity to vote the Republican ticket. A man has bef n released from the linois state prison after serving six years for a crime of which he wa in nocent. Ho was convicted on the tea timony of a detective. . .A. CAJip. T6 all V'hd &Ve fulferini from th eiYiWs tirl Indiscretions of youth) nervous waknu, early decay, loss of iflaiihooiL Ao.,.I willsendarechw that will ctlre you, i libit OK CHAHUK, Thii great remedy u discovered by a mis nonary in Houtll America. Bend a self ad ilrtuMed enveloite to the lltv. Joheph T. Tmiiik ui ..:., n v.. v.j. -: uvij. uiijr, Its Delicate Flavor. ft J 1 n. ... . . . . .. Ana tne emcacr m Iti nctmn Aava rei remtered of Fki the famim. linld ft nit HVuddy Syrtfp of Kif iniinriiHeiy ptmuT, 11 clesnaf anil tnnea up th Qlnyged and feyeriHh iynUim, and dUpeli if.-nuaTiiCT, vohw ami ieern. fur aala by I M Wilkin Eugene, V 8 Lee Junction. Keynote to Health. Health i wealth. Wealth meani indepen dence. The keynote i lr Uoeanko'a Couch anil Lung Syrujt. the beet Couch 8vrup in the worliL Cures Cough. Colili Taina hi the Cheat, Bronchitu ami Primary Coiiumptiin. wn hiwr nives reuei in every cane. Take no otner. I'nce 60 cent! and 8L Batarles free, oum uy uiiuurn i L o. A Reliable Article. orenterprine. piuh and denim to get .i.:u gtHHin m win zive die inula MtlMacuon. uHrn it uo the iirug-inu tead all nmieti won. ihey eU Vt lioBankp'a Cnch and Lung Syiup, beoatue it'a the bent Medicine on me market, lor Cough, (Jolda, Crnup and Primary Consumption. Trice 50 cent and emu. , oampiea iree. .-. -i-- - -- . . . ....-a Buy Hayward hand grenade. For good dentistiy go to Taylor A Ebe'rly. The highest cash price will be paid fur wheat Anlc your druggist for a packageot'Oregon kidney Tea. . ;, , ", Photogrnpha finished . neatly and artis tically at Wintcr'a. 1 A fine line of silk plushes in all shade Slid grade at F B Dunn's.' . The best candies and nrangps can alwava u iimuu ai c nan nra coniectinnery store. ' If yon are in want of agricultural machin ery ot any kind, remember that Mr J M Hendnoka keep a full assortment." MrS II Friendly will pay the highest casn marnet price or wheat. iJive him call before selling your rain elsewhere. Fish Market. Mr J P Ditcbbnrn ha just started a finh market in this city on Ninth Street. otiDosittt Uav Pralf hlplt mil). hop. He will keen constantly on hand all kinds of fiBh, oysters, clnms, poultry and game, etc. The people should give the gentle man a gima support. - . IlIIIIVEH Alt T'N T1IUATEU H A. C MINSTRELS! Id a programme of refined minstrelsy. See the names: Seller and Kelly, v Hilly Dugan, Eugene Hntiten, . Hoy Mitri. JUarfey Sailing rrm jjrurrer,- Zen-Iper, . Geo Maek, ' " Geo .Vorri' Sillv rathker. liicharrt Jtytry, And the Fall II. A. C. Baud! FOPUL4.lt PRICES. 7.1 and SO ccnte. served seats at ('rain Bms. . mmmm t J. A. CARDWELL,. General Agent for Oregon. M. FULLKR. of H.irrisbuw. Local Agent for Linn and Lane counties. TS v teNI BLANKETS, -OVERCOATS,' FROM BROWNSVILLE Good sold at our the same price Gray Blanket Good va!uf, 3,50 por pair, Gray Blauketa aohl every where at $5,1 Cl.OO per pair. Gray, Red, Brown or Blue Blanket" All W ool, ?5.5U per pair. OVERCOATS. Tie are closing out this line, and as we have a large stock on hand will offer Boys All Wool Overcoats, 5 to K years $6.00 All Wool Overcoats, 10 to If years -$7.00 to $3.00. Boys Complete line of Furnishing Goods, Hats, Etc-, Etc Brownsville Clothing House, V GRAND A1U 11 UntilJan. 1, 18SG, . I propose to sell all , kind of GOODS at . JUICES that will as ' tonishall. If you are ' in want of anything -' in my line give me a i y call and PRICE GOODS. Remember I mean Business. This is a Genuine Clearance Sale. Sheriffs Sale. -VTOTICE 13 HEREBY tJIVEN THAT i-l by virtue of a writ of execution duly issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Laue county by the clerk thereof and to me directed on to-wit. No vsmber 13, 1885, upon a judgment and de cree of foreclosure rendered in said court, November 5th, J 885, in a suit then and there pending wherein the Board of Com missioners for the aale of School Lands and the Management of the Common School Fund was plir, and Benjamin Cox and Jesse Cox defendants in favor o( taid plain tiff and against aaid Benjamin Cox defend ant for the sum of $1949 50 with interest thereon from date of judgment at the rate of 8 per cent per an nn in and ('200 attorney fee and costs and disbursements and for the foreclosure and aale of the mortgaged prem ised hereinafter described said defendant Jesse Cox in said auit then and there pend ing recovered judgment against the said de fendant benjamin Cox for the sum of $."2! with interest thcreou from date of judgment at the rate of 10 por cent, per annum, $50 attorney fee, costs and disbursements, and a decree lor sale and foreclosure of the follow ing described real property to-wit: The 812nfth8K 1-4 oi sec 25, and E 1-2 of S W 1-4, and W 1 2 of S 14 1-4, and S W 1-4 of N E 1-4, ami S K 14 of N W 1-4, of section 27 all in T 15 S, K 5 VV, containing 320 acrea in I-ane county, Oregon. The proceeds or such aale to te applied: first to the payment of the judgment of plain tiff herein and costs anil disbursements and expenses of sale; and second tn the judgment of aaid defendant Josse Cox. Now therefore, to satisfy said judgments. attorney fees, costa and disbursements and accruing costs and expenses of sale, I will ell the above described mortgaged premise at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand at the Court House door in Eugene City, Lane county, Oregon, on Monday, December 21st, 1885, ' at the hour of 2 o'clock P M of said day. J. K UA.Ml'UKLU ' Sheriff Lane County Oregon. Dated Nov 20, 1885. Excited Thousands All over the land are ging into ecstasy over Dr King's New Discovery for Consumption. Their unlooked for recovery by the timely use of this great life saving remedy, causes them tn go nearly wild in ita praise. It ia guaranteed to poaitively enre fievere Coughs, 'Colds, Asthma, Hay Fever, Bronchitis, Hoaiseness, Lose of Voice, or any affection of the Throat and Lungs. Osburn mowers can be purchased at the store f Fritchett & Fnrkner for (80. THE- WOOLEN MILLS. store in Eugene for as at the mill. JOray, Brown, Blue, Scarlet or 'White- All Wool, 4 points, $7.00. White, Scarlet, Gray, Brown, Etc, All Wool, Extra Large Family, $3.50, $9.00, $10.00. special inducements- Young Mens' AH Wool Overcoats 110.00 to 12.00. Mens' All Wool Orereoats, former price $15.00-$I250. ml DON'T FAIL To attend Closing AT 1 Y Tf CJaw A EVERYTHING Iff Again at Are opening the ELOW stock of HOLIDAY GOODS ever brought to Eugene. Beautiful Plush Goods in almost endless variety. Albums, new styles, in plush, $2.50 and upwards. In Silverware our stock is just immense. Our show cases are filled with the finest GOLD GOODS: Gold watches, chains, broaches, gold setts, Diamond rings, solid gold rings', rolled bracelets, cuff" buttons, Etc., On our shelves are vases, figures, fyc-t in great variety Dolls, doll cabs, childr ens' without number- Also music goods, art goods, pictures, picture frames. work and hand baskets, purses, and in fact, everything you want, ' Call and examine, as we cannot 9 enumerate our. Stock. Come And See. A large portion of these GOODS are. on consignment and MUST be sold by Jan L Bankrupt Sale. Having purchased the Bankrupt Stock of GROCERIES, ETC. at prices VERY LOW, formerly belonging to Osburn ' I now offer them for' sale at rv Wmj Down? Prices. Give nio a cull and price tho Goods. J.L. PAGE. J no I You Can Sara time and money by calling oa STERLING HILL and letting him renew your wharriptiona fw newsimixrs, story paprrs and mstnuines. He also keeN a complete stock of Mgurinr, in cltulini; rentnry, Harper, Leslie etc. All tbe popttLv libraries, Sewide, Lnrellx. Standard, Munme ami others. In t u t verythintr ally found in a lot c' i newa depot, P O Build- I ing, Eugene. the Grand r Out Sale THE MUST BE SOLD S4 the Front. largest and finest gold goods, pins, ear rings. Etc. toilet setts, cum and saucer. and new designs. dishes, tool chests and. toys satchels, hand purses, pocket Belshaw, SKATING t LANE'S RINK, JOE L.4XE, Manager. NOTICE IS HEREBY (ilVEX THAT this nnk will ha open each day and ee rriff, except occaokms of a dance or theatrt eal, during the skating seasoa. Price only 25 eents per evening, or $7 50 per eeaaoa of four months. I he ao cWips, bnt hav the best Viniard anH Climax skates If I purchase chtmps I will buy enough I.m- all nsv austomera: 1 will not (ret dozen for cappers. 1 wiN treat all my ens Inraera alike. I Saye no cappers or dead fa 1 ssinicians to play for I will paint you alf with am bnaih. DISSOLUTION NOTICE. -TOTICE IS HEREBY GIVF.X THAf ii the copartnership heretofore eaistirf between Osburn k Belshaw is dissolved. OSBl'f IVBw( Nov. 17,1885. by GlO. Btuaauw, ST0BET eosTi