1 GENE G w. s 0 ESTABLISHED FUR THE DISSEMINATION OF DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES, A?iD TO lU IN HONEST MING BY THE SWEAT OF OUR' BROW, 01, Wr EUGENE CITY, OR, SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1886. V ' V a. 1: A, A wjL.-I k. gja-j.ac - (City (Ounra. ; L. CAMPBELL, ; p.bllslirr anl Proprietor. ,.vTWK-0ii the Kurt id f Willamette 1 i'tween Seventh and Kjghth Street. (ween ! :hms of s Jbm VRHu I MltllK :hms of subscription. $2 M US .75 i OCB ONI-?, jg OF .AUViiioiu limi-rlcd M follow): I inare. tin linen orb-, one limertion S3; C ll(U? "'1 ' . . .1 . Cah reiuired iTJ;.rtlr wi'Ue charged l th. fob -th.. 8 00 12 00 rroi' at ii'tie In local column, SiO cmiIm , line tor racii mm '" , bill, will he rendered nuart-rly. ill job work mint be paid roil on hKi.lVKKY. C. M. COLLIER. LYEU.& COLLIER Attorneys and Counselldrs at Law, EUGENE CITY, OJ5EG0.Y. IHUCttTCK IN ALL THE COURTS OF tlm State. Will give eciid attention ,jWl(!l-0er ILindriek Enkin'. bank. CEO. B.D333IS, ' iltornerj and Counsellor atrLaw, - . n.Ati tt turn r-iiTi'na IV of the Sucoad Judicial District ami in P .i .... .r .1.:.. .f.. . i uiriin ) uourun m . .iMiiUttmtini given t collection, and itteni in nniiMwe Ceo. S. Washburne, AUaraicy-at-Law, Ijil.Wt CII'Y. - - - OIIW.UN - ' JFFIOR-Atthe Court limine. iy8tc3 CEO. fi MILLER, Ijraj aai C5'ia33lloat-Law, and Real Estate Agent. . riiicvucirv. - OREGO.V. tnic (.ininrly oiwupio.! by Tlioini'iKm J. E. iNTON, tr.iiivn ni rv okkgon. Siuiil ittmti')'i ivi t I'wjal Eitnte l'rao :m I Axti:i': n I ttl. p,.v.nAitias,M.D. Physiciia and Surgeon, .7 OFi-lCH ' v Wilkin's Drugr Store. Kvinlence nn V if th street, where 1'r nlieltun Tmerly reniileiL C)r. T. W. Slielton, Physician and Surgeon. WOMS-At Mm. J. B. Un.lerwcMxl. EUGENE CITY, OREGON. . JOSEPH F. GILL, IA'. . FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or res jiilence wlien not profedaionully engaged. JIT t at the POST OFFICE DRUG STORE! Resilience on Eilith .treet. oiiuosite Treeby- 'i Church. J J. WALTON, Jr., ATTORN BIT- AT-L A. W, EUGENE CITY, OREGOX. rVU,L rRACTICE IN ALL THE M 'mrUnf the State. I 'WcUl attention irivi.ii tn ro.il vutAte. enl- i"''ai?, tiid prnlmte mattTK. .'inHiu;' ll kin'lx of claims 'anit the "H Stiitfs Govertinicnt. 'fflwta Walton's brick-room 7 nml 8. Xew Barber ' Sliop and Bath II onis. ("nedwr North of Tost Office.) U-WlS, 25 CENTS. EVERYTHING 1 1 ..... i i . i ... j 7, '.""'i up m ue Dit ot order. Miavnitf 'Wtuif cuttiuy done in the moot approved JERRY HORN. Proprietor. W.N. NOFFSINGER, ATTORN KY-AT-LAW, Eugene city. Oregon. 7T T Tin A ... ... Wan-OverGranse Store. olOtf PIPES & SKIPWOBTH, Attorn eys-at-Law,. JjALLrOTlEGON. PHOF. D. W. COOLIDCE of Jiola.., I.im.I IT AS lrv..n flf.th- N EUGENE CITY r"' Ror am '.'l iV'h,n r,AJ"' 0MA i'bWd to d.'. i . th ,,,Uf"t method, em- r DrcMn. - '. " nn" technniu". Room, for " dW.. NlVanlk I t I ' I IA.1 - . .iiku mm i niyn lie. uiu-u NEW :"GOODS.. I B A large assortment of La dies and Childrens Hose at 12 1-2 cts. Good Dress Goods a t 12l,c Best Corset in town for 50c, An immense stock of New and Seasonable Goods. Fine Cashmere in every shade. N ew and Nolbij styles in CLOIHING. Liberal Discount for CA ... Will pay the highest Market Price for " Oats and barley. Gash Or Goods Sold as Low Oregon for CASH OR The liigltrst price paid Produce. Gail and sec S. H. Friendly. Harness Shop. HAVING OPENED A NEW SADDLE AND HARNESS SHOP ON 8tli STRB weet of Crain Bro.'.. I am now prepared to furnish everything in that line at th. IiOWEST The Competent: Workmen Are employpd, and I will endeavor to give me with a-call. DOTS 1- Trimming silk and Sat ins in all shades. Moireantiqae Silks Velvets in Colors. The finest stock of French KID SHOES ever brought to this placed BOOTS and SHOES in a.' grades. GROCERIES of v. " descriptions. PETERS Credit as any House in CREDIT. for all kinds of Country EATES. Most satisfaction to 11 . wh j ma favcr A. 8. CUKHIC. iii mo in I Mi Closing Tthr. "CliMilUXIOAfEB.'l Wo can x-rarwly realize the fact that another year Ian ltn passed, while bo littlrt has Iwn acliinVncl. To night we shall pauw;uion tho boundary linn, though invisil) i to uh, that soparatos are, A yearl how fust two dillor-iiit y the hours I soft and btill . "On soiiip thov rest yi autumn leaves upon the graves of jkir loved oiiph, making them bp'iurifull even liy the passing of the ltvis wliuA will npver more come hack, in iljlng add fragrance to tWhr?.:M;thht HLPals away this lift, so light and beauty falls upon Home hearts, as the swift years go by, and they dni'pen and strengthen the ties that bind them to the lietter land! Then are many households which one year ago cplebrated .ho festive season as unbroken families, which have since been visited by death. There were then futhi'rs and mothers who rpjoiced with their children upon thp return of this holiday, who tilled their stockingR with gifts and their hearts with gaiety that have since passed from the family circle to tlfri family burying place. Children, too, have passed away to that place which Santa Claus never visits and where Christmas trees never bloom. Seats have been left vacant by Idndred and loved ones who during the piesent year havo paased away to "thnt land from whose bourne no traveler re turns," leaving us all lonely and the heart desolate without them Their home is on n brighter shore; they visit us only iu our dreams, floiting over our memory liki shadows over moonlit water, anJ tlm love we bore them lifts tlm heart above all the groveling aspi rations of this world, liut death has not been the only unwelcome visitor iu homes which were happy twelve months ago. Poverty has made its ravnijps. There is many a purse which was full twelve months ago, that is empty to eluy; and many a prosperous tfuiineKHiluriiig thrifveniful year through wpioliro have passed. But these reflections we should dispense with were it not tlmt in the recollec tions of our ijriefs, we appreciate the more a'l oup pleasur'K. If the year that closes to dr - has had itp dark clouds, i ' dad its sunny memories alno. j... .... iiientK, doulits and disap pointments have often been succeeded by success and reassurance. Thus it is we are encouraged to creet tlm Now Year with welcomes and one another with renewed congratulations, and wish ono and al! A llanny New Year. J'rineville New. i Prixevillk, Dpcember 21. Steady rain this evening. The new Court House is about completed. - City election to. day mixed in with a little pugilistic. Ilesult of the city election: Entire Firemen's aected. There u a man in town that every body shuns. They say his auger is four feet clear of the bit. The Fire Company here has a new engine on the road like the Eugene Engine, They will have a grand time when it arrives.. Indians havo been taking some horses frdm the rango belonging to Mr. Schmidt and Sam Jlodges. We call that scaling iiv Webfoot. Mr. Isaa." Swearingen of Newsome creek, former- of Junction, was in town to day and reports grass good in that section and stock doing well, Perry Poindexter went to the mountains to-day to get a Christmas tree. There will be a grand time here Christmas. Santa Claus lives here and has lots of deputies. When the mail arrives here , it reminds one of early days in Virginia City, where, w hen I lie stage would arrive a grand stampede would be made for the postoflice. Regular. Joaquin Mill . was seen the other day galloping utoas the country above Washington on a black mustang. He had a white sombrero on his head as Urge as that of a Texian cowboy, and his long blonde hair streamed from under it, just touching the grey flannel shirt which clothed the wiry form be neath. Tho port's long limbs were clothed in pantaloons of Angora goat skin, the white fur of which 'fluttered in the bfeze, forming a contrast with the jet black of the galloping ,tped. He was sitting on a big saddle, with a silver poiuwl, and wore silver Mexi can spurs. Clttcianil'i Cmcrwlty. A lawyer friend of President Cleve land from Buffalo gives some intep st ing gossip about h'm. Said lie: 'Pre-i. dent Cleveland is worth about $100, 000, and he owns considerable ret pstata In Buffalo, which is fast grnwin, in value. He made $23,000 a year at his practice before he got into politic He is not an extravagant man in A ", of his ta.tes, and he never has ber He had a class of cases at Buffii)" - paid well, and lie was often r el for corporations in big ' ' lie was Vjoei iionf fyi' ' U'l'e "rive away 'the whole of Ins Afnry in charily save what lie used fur his personal ' . it ' ... .it. ep jiises aim mr vne support' oi ' nis mother. I have seen many instances of his cliarity, One night I was with him in his private office at the Albany capitol. It was after ho liaj been elected President. He was opening his mail, and many of the letters contained requests for alms. I saw Governor Clevpland answer fully half a dozen of these by enclosing 85, $10, and at one time a $20 bill In an envelope with a kind word, and Bending it to the beg gar. Uno case was especially touching. It was that of an old man in southern New York who had lost his horse by death. Ho had a little garden patch of a farm, and this horse was the sole means of making a livelihood upon it. He had raised some money by contri butions from his neighbors, but still lacked enough by $20 to buy the horse which was to serve as the support of himself and his gray-haired wife. Some of the neighbors had heard of Clevp. land's charity, and had suggested that he write to him and ask him for help. from the tenor of the letter you could see that tile old mari.was very proud of its composition and handwriting. He said that he bad written it himself, wjth his ovu hand, and the appeal throughout was that of a simplo-mind-ed, unsophisticated, child like person. Cleveland's eyes tilled with tears as ho read it, and he put a $20 bill in an euvelcpo snJ sent it to him with a few kind word. I have no doubt, con eluded this man, but that President Cleveland is giving away a great deal of his salary in charity. If he does so you may be sure that no ono outside of the White House will know of it." ill I'rgenl Riqncifl, Bighorn Sentinel A nobby and snobbish milord of British extraction traveled ,from Big Horn with us and Abe Idleman on the stage coach. Milord was exclusively exclusive. He would not lie sociable, and spoke to no one pxcept the two "John Henry servants he had with him, and was-altogether as unpleasant as his snobln'shness could make him. At a dinner station were a loS of jolly cowlmyir on a lark, and one of them "ti eating" everybody, asked the Eng lishman to drink. Of course milord haughtily refused. Tho cowboy displayed a dangerot's looking six-shooter, and very impres sively insisted on his drinking. "But I cawn't, you know; I don't drink, you know," was milord's reply. Mr. Cowboy Irrought the muzzlo in close proxi.nity to the knot in which milord's brains were supposed to lie hidden somowhere, and then he said he'd drink he'd take soda water, you know. "Soda water nothin'," said Mr. Cow boy. "You'll take straight whinky.'1 "But, aw, this American whisky, I cawn't swallow it, you know." "Well," said the cowboy, "I'll make' a hole in the side of your head so that we can pour it in," and he began to draw on milord, and milord said: "Aw, that'll do; I'll drink it.'' Then the cowboy invited milord's servants to drink,' which horrified him. "They don't drink, you know," be muc!. "Well, we'll ee whether they do or not," said Mr. Cowboy. "Tbn chances are you don't geve 'em an 'lioppurtuni ty.' Come up here, you fellows, and guzzle, "and the two John Henrys, with a little show of reluctance, but reul!y glad to drink, came up, anil the cow boy passed a tumblerful of torchlight procession whisky for milord, and the servants poured for themselves. Then' the 'cowboy made the .i'jhuj Henrys clink glasses with milord anil all drank, and there was great fun Jhlo'd tried after that to bo very o; and the stimulant assisted him di ;id ly. But in the coach he fell Imc . it his exclusiveness and retaiiel throughout, and has probably ( yet. I ! 'If ml '.dry 1r'i) The phenoiii'ir.,' ; in hereditary" ": i and Jtioral.-' V, more sui" y; V- Cm' it . theif v . ? i I Austnn.Y irf upturn aid ehaf- ,,..i!i to offspring in it i . truinii, as this con-' ' ' r . 'v ' b a'','0,ll, ,isH.,.,)!ineeif -J T ,,,1u,'m' A jji'uut geniu8."bwns d fnr a son, a divino t:av Jiavel 4 l.noorriifiWe anil .lnmii.ua LlH-srttai fjfi, Kjpp ran orHi k'nU-' ing JiffofenceH su'fih foots aud'dispo- sitiou. Even In twiQ, llsame divers-, ity can be seen. Thnvse of a woman is cited who nearly diedrom hemor rhage after blood letting; lW daughter was so sensitive that A violenhomor. i rhag would follow oven thnost trifling scratch; the mother' in turn transmitted tho peculiarity to her son. Idiosyncrasies belong to the" individ ual, not to the specie's. Zimrfiorraan cites the case of a whole family upon whom coffee acted like opiifrri while l opium had no sonsible effect whatever upon thorn. Longovity in &H inherit ance, it is said of a saddler whose grandfather died at 112, hid dth'er at 113 and ho himself at 113, when the father was asked by Louis XIY what ho had done to prolong life: "Sire, since I was 50 I have acted on two principles: I have shut my heart and opened my wine cellar.'' The phenome' non of atrtvism, or ancestral influence, in which the child has a striking re semblance to the grandfather or grand-' mother, and none to the father of mother, is remarkable". Consumption and insanity may lie dormant for a generation, but in tho the next one will be manifested in all the conditions as the first. In such cases it is said that both father and mother transmit their organization, but they do so in unequal degrees. It'uf said that the offspring of an old Dialer and a young female resembles the . father less than the mother, and that the reverse if the offspring of an old1 female and a young male. The case is cited of a lady who in her 'twenty-fifth year went out of her mind after her accouchement; her daughter was afflict ed in the samo way at tho sairo afg 1 and under the same circumstances'. - Stephens Bv Iflkins is the only Re publican in the Elkins family. All tho rest are Democrats ;' A Reliable Article. For enternrine. nunh and HohIp to ml mich rocmI. m will uive the trade atifaction. Unburn Co the lni(,'i;iU lead nil competi tion. They Bf It Dr Ifomnko's 'Cough and Ii Syrnir, tacmme it', the beet Medicine on the m.trfict, for Cough. Coldn. Crnim and I'rinmrr Conmmtion. Price 60 eenta anil fl.CJ. Sumplu free. a i Bucklen's Arnica Salve. Th beet talve in the world for Cut., limit e; Hnre, Ulcers, Suit Rheum, Fever Sore. Tetter", Chnpped 1 J and, Cliilbliiini, Corn., and all akin eruption), and positively cure. pile, or mr pay required. It it guaranteed to rive perfect entifactinn, or money refunded. For role by E It Luukey & Co, Syrup of Figs, Manufactured only by the California Fig 8yrup (in., Han FnincUco, Cal., I Nature'. Own True Laxative. Thin nleaoant liquid fruit remedy may be had of W 8 Lee, agent, Sunotion, or ' V M Wilkin.-' ayent, Eugene City, at fifty cent, rr one dollar per bottle. It i the luott' pleanant, prompt and bfTuetwe remedy known to elean the evHtflin; to acton the Liver, Kid ney, and Ikiwtd. gently yet thoroughly; todia-' pxl Headache, Cold, and Fevere; to cur. Con- atipation, Indigeation and kindred ill., Excited Thousands All over the land are going into ecata.y over' Dr King'. New Di.covery for Consumption. Their unlocked (or recovery by the timely il.e of thi. great life saving remedy, came, them to go nearly wild ju it. prai.e. It i guaranteed to positively cure Severe Conght, ' d(i. A.thma, ; Hay .Fever. Rronobitia, ifoa-MiM( Ltmtjit Voico, or any atfection of t'i 'VI rmt ud Lung.. ', f ItsQ Iicate Flavor. Ao.l .. all .f ft, action have romUred'' ' t. i it r'.iwily Hyni; f Fj.r linin. . theci i ' 11. a, i Y M ijiwa ail" vmr nn' dii.;l 1 1 ...