Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (April 10, 1886)
EUGENE CITY GUARD. L L. CA JirilKIL, Proprietor, EUGENE CITY. OREGON. MISCELLANEOUS. ' In London gas is furnished at the rate ol sixty-five cents per thousand feet, yet the companies pay dividends of twelve per cent. In Brussels the price is eighty-five cents per thousand feet. In the American Journal of Insanity Dr. l'liney Lnrle says, so tar as statistics re an indication, tne recoveries in British asylums exceed these in Amari , can institutions by between eight and Dine per cent. The petriflod skeleton of a whale thirty feet long has been discovered by an officer of the Coast Survey on a range of mountains in Monterey County, Cal., over thirty-three hundred leet above tho sea level. The United States Fish Commis sioner says that within the past six years over twenty thousand applica tions or young carp have been sup plied. Imports of success have been received from about one, thousand. Very few have found the business i Droli till Je one. Erie Canal boatmen are raising a lunu to put a monument at ionawanda over tho remains ofruter Cummins, the driver who drove the first boat from Buffalo over the canal in 1825. De Witt Clinton stood at the bow of the boat and gave the word to start. Cummins remained a driver until he waa seventy-five years old, whon he was drowned at Pendleton, Niagara County. Kingston (N. .) Daily Free man. Tiny, a black-and-tan terrier, has the honor of having been the smallest full grown dog that ever lived. He belonged to Lieutenant General Sir Archibald Maclaino, of England, and in honor of his extreme thinness is now carefully preserved under a glass case. Tiny was less than four inches long, and could comfortably curl up and take a nap in a common glass tumbler. A touching example of confidence in the unknown factors of human ex porience is related in Ouillard's Medical Journal. A countryman, with a dis tressing toothaohe, asked a druggist for something to relieve him. "We have various remedies for that trouble," laid tho drug man, "and can givo yon anything you like." "In that case," laid the countryman, "I guess you kin give me a small bottle of tho Boston faith cure." "Man's Jnhumnnity to man" was mourned by tho poet. Alan's confidence in man deserves to be celobrnted. Look at the unhesitating manner in which packages and books are sometimes left upon the city letter-boxes by people who have such complete faith in their follows that tlioy are sure no one but tho postman will carry away tho arti cles intended for him alone. Yet who ever hoard of apackago of this kind boing stolen? Chicago Journal. In 1C69 two Quakers were hanged In Boston. A woman had been sen tenced to die with them, but was re prieved on condition of her leaving the eolony. Her namo was Mary Dyer. Next year she returned to Boston and was executed. In 16(10, tho same yoar in which she .was executed, Charles II. was restored to tho throne of his fathers. Tho King had many vices, but he would not per mit blood to be shed under tho pre tense of religion In any pnrt of his do minions. Tho Quakers in England told him what had been done to their brethren, and he sent orders to Gov ernor Kmlioott of Massachusetts to for bear all suuh proceedings in future. Boston Globe. Much indignation is expressed by the Judges of the Supreme Court at the current intimations that they aro hard drinkers. "'J' ho re is," says Jus tice Miller, "a tradition that in olden times thero used to be a black bottle in the closet of the room where we hung our overcoats and put on our robes, but there has never been any such thing in my time, and I havo never seen any of my associates drinking. If any of tho employes keen liquor about the place anu Judge Waito finds it out ho will make short work with him. As for any of tho Justices being in the habit of drinking about tho court-room or hav ing a sideboard there it is as silly as it is untrue." Washington Republican. SOUTH AMERICA. Tremendous Commercial Importune of the Southern I'enlnsula. Several of tho nations of Europe keep watchful eyes on South America. It is m vast and comparatively unoccupied portion of the earth's surface Ger mans, Italians and Portuguese, as well as the English, keep up close relations with it. Tho trade is profitable and largo, whilo tho number of immigrants, especially Italians, is steadily increas ing. Some, of the South American Suites are making rapid material prog ress. Chili is a very wealthy nation. Brazil has a very promising future, and the Argontino Confederation enjoys an Immense commerce. The South Amer ican trade in dressed beef promises to be immense in timo. The magnitude of this peninsula is not realized oy our people. South America is more than ilouhlo the size of the United States. The Empiro of Brazil seems on the map quite as large as Australia. It is twenty four times the size of England. The Argentino Kepublio is nearly as large as Europe, taking Russia out. Bolivia and Venezuela are each twice the size of England; New Grenada and Peru each as large as England and Scotland, Ecuador something less, Paraguay mini to Great Britain, Uruguay and Chili about the same, and tne little known regions of Patagonia and Terra tlel Fuego at least double the dimen sions of Great Britain. British, French and Dutch Guiana are nearly as large as Great Britain. Tho United States alone of all the nations has scarcely any interest in South America. We pur chase of it coffee, leather and India rubber, but our trade in return is a mere nothing. Some day or other we will wake np to the importance of culti vating business relations with the great nations to the south of ii.LkmortM'$ Monthly. MOTIVE. If yo"r purpose Is blgb, and your aim Is pure. And you toll with patience, and wait and prnr, 1 fell vou that work will nurture mltir And it matter! little what men may say. A swarm of Inieoti mar dim tho skies Till the sun teems shadowed and overcast; But clouds IhHt are only the whir or Hies Must yleid to the power of light at the last Nnthlnor nnhln ran he rintrntrnri And nothing worthy long bidden from sight; IWk of (hli ITnlverse stands a Ood. And He moves all tuiuifs by the lever of night. It takes true motive to make true art Art without motive lives but for a day And where there Is purposo, and fueling, and neari, It can nut perish though worlds decay. Keep up yoiiroourngn, and work and wait, O, tolll lers rho lull with an aim subllmel The eyi'i of the years shall discriminate. Ana ruaa your purpose anient in nmo. i'Ua H'htekr H'llco, in CVUcuy" Trlhunt. "PROF." SMITH'S SCHOOL. Foroing Young Ideas In the South, west Many Years Ago. Thirty years ago education In the Southwest was a lucky accident. Any man who happened to know more than his neighbors becamo a teacher. There was no system of schools, the only common belief being in the birch rod as a quickener of the intellect Throughout this section of country were a number of families from the older Southern States, and chiefly from Virginia. These families were usually of good lineage, and drawn to the new er country through land grants for mil itary and other services. With them they brought the habits and opinions of the mother State. These included, above everything else, devotion to some particular religious sect and respect for letters. The sons of the families were usually sent to college, and were con- siuoreu oracles ol learning when they returned. Such a teachor, belonging to ono of these old Virginia families, was Will iam Smith. His grandfather had moved with his numerous family at an early day into the famous blue grass region of Central Kentucky, in conse quence of a grant of six thousand acres from the mother State on account of military services. Owinjr to the imper fect surveys of that day and the rosult. ing litigations, ho throw up tho grant in disgust and retired to a neighboring State. Whon William Smith was a boy. the center of all accessible learning in that country was the Miami University, at Oxford, 0., and to it the youth was sent. Such an cvont in those days is to be compared with that of a modern ex plorer to unknown lands. The family seamstress who got up his wardrobo, was much in demand in social circles. owing to her acquaintance with its do tails and her opportunities for compre hending the family's state of mind in view of tho groat event. Whon W llliam Smith returned from college no youth was thought to have ever carried away so largo a burden of learning. All disputed questioiiti such as the spollinir of a word, miz.liiiff problems among the bricklayers, and hitches in the exelianiro of butter and Cgg8 him. for calico were brought before Parents wero fired by his suc cesses with ambition lor their own sons; and William Smith, instend of becoming tho teacher in ordinary as the other collego men had been, opened a school lor boys preparing for collego. Into this it was tho hope of every father and mother to get their boy. The school houso was a luriro brick building, painted white, with a portico and thoso imposing columns that were a part of the dignified architecture of tlmti, country, and was called the col lego. In keeitiiiff, William Smith was styled professor. Years after, when tho school was only a memory, middle aged men would occasionally drift around to William Smith's homo, then in a dilfuront State, and to tho astonish ment of his family, who knew him only ns nn activo business man, call him pro fessora titlo that sent his crrandchil- dren giggling behind the tables and chairs. At that time, however, as if to make amends for the restraint of the title. tho boys out of school spoke familiarly of him as Bill Smith. A real collego irofessor has since told mo that his life was mndo miserable at ono time, when nn installment of William Smith's boys was sent to his college, by being con tinually told "that wasn't what Bill Smith said;" Bill Smith didn't do it in that way." William Smith himself used to tell with glee how little Drake Ronsley, whose father begged to have him sit in the school room and gather what crumbs of learning ho could, since ho was too young to no admitted, too pre cocious for other schools, and too bad to keep at home, used to twitch him by the elbow in the midst of a lesson: "Say, Bill Smith, lend me a chaw of tolmeoo." The familiarity was all the more marked since little Drake might have borrowed tobacco from any of tho boys, for wooden boxos filled with sawdust were as much a part of the school fur niture as the desks. 1 knew William Smith ns an elderly man, although for some time familiar with the reputation of this school, which is one of the traditions of the country ho had long before left Sinoe he has retired from active business, as all men whom circumstances have turned aside from chosen pursuits, his mind delights to dwell on those early days. This pleasure is particularly keen after he has been invited to some clos ing exercises or public school exainina tions. It is announced bv a series of "ahems!" an uneasiness in his chair. an anxiety about getting his trousers properly adjusted over his shoe tops, all of which the children would call "getting a rood ready." His friends understand these sigus, and usually some one considerately says: "Air. smith, the high school exercises were very fine, now, weren't they t The essays were creditable and the declama tions lust grand. Well, well, children nowadays are sroatlv blest We didn't have such schools in our day, ehP" This is enough. William Smith give his person a final adjustment "Well, if you call It a school whero one-half of the time is spent in getting wo cim (lien's toes on a crack, and the other half in keeping them there, all I've got to say is wo (lidn t have any such schools in our dav. Whv. I happened to go in tho public schools the other day, ana the teacher, a young thing in frills and buckles, was trying to get the school in order. he was all rod an hot with trying. Then she said 'one, and the children took up their pons. 'Two,' and thev struck a position with their arms, ihen somo of the boyi weren't up to time, and it all had to be done over. 'Three,' then they bera to write in copy books that had all to lie at a certain angl e. It took nearly ten minutes to get them started. You may see the value of all this fuss and feathers. I don't. I never had any such red tape in my school. "Your school. Why, really, Mr. Smith?" "Why, yes," says Mr. Smith, smiling, and taking an easy position. "I wish you could have seen my school. That was a school, and nono of your still-as death schools, I can tell you. Jeems Rivers! You don't want still schools You want noisy schools. There is an educational value in noise that none of the folks down there" (snapping his fineers in the direction of the lihrb. school) "know anything about . "Now, look here. What is a . school hut a nrennmtinn for life. After von have been trainod in one of those deaf and dumb asvlums thev cull schools. do vou suppose the world is going to hold its breath while you do your work? tio, siree. I never dcmnnocil but one tiling of my boys learn, learn. Every man-jack studied in whatever key his voice went the easiest on. I'd like to have heard a boy come to me and say he couldn't study for tho noise. I'd havo put him between two of the great est roarers in the school. 1 lion wnen he was a man I'd have expected him to come and thank me. "Tho aim in my school was to get knowledge, and each boy got it in the wav best adapted to his caso, and as fast or slow as his mind was capable of receiving it. Some boys shot ahead liko arrows, other boys crept' like snails. But thev all learned, sir." "But how did you manage about their school books, Mr. Smith?" "Now, school books. There's an other delusion. I didn't break paronts up buying school books as they do now' a-tiays." William Smith flung himself again around the inner circumference of his rocking chair. "Every boy brought whatever school books they happened to httve in the houso. There wus a museum of old arithmetics, algebras and geometries in that school. I didn't care what book a boy studied in. When he went to tho blackboard I pretty soon found out how much he knew. "Well, you must havo needed as many hands ns Briareus to have heard a recitation. "Do you suppose, sir, I asked any boy those cut-nnd-driud things out of tho booksr I hey never saw any prob lem I ever gave them. I made them up. If a boy was in fractions he got frac tions, or interest and proportion, he got interest or proportion. I had equations all along the line, and sur veyod fields' of every conolvab'ghape. That is the way to find out luvvv much boys know. VtiUy, in mathematics, I'd match my boys against any set of boys your graded schools ever nave, or ever will produce. "There was my brolhor-in-law, Daniel Parkor. He was a banker. Ono day he came up to my school and said, 'Smith, I vo brought vou a problem that will try your metal. Wo ve been working on it at the bank until we're worn out. See what you can do.' I turned around and handed it to his son, a hid of sixteen. 'There, John.' said I, 'solve that for your father.' John took it and wont smilingly to work. In five minutes he gave it to his father, done sir. You never saw a man as pleased and at the same timo as crestfallon as Daniel. "(), what beautiful studies aro Latin and Greek! I just wish you could have heard Horace Morton conjugating the Greek verbs, lhat was what 1 call music, sir. And as for Ilomor, I'd rathor hear one of my boys rolling out thoso great, largo, sonorous Greek syllables than any of tho prima donnas you think so much of. 1 here s more niusio in it, sir," "Mr. Ninth, iiidn t you have any girls in your school?" "Girls? No, . sir, cveopt Kitty. I could do what I pleased with my own, when ner mother would let mo. blie used to toddlo around and stand up between the tallest bovs in the spelling class and spell 'ba' and 'bo.' But girls, no. Yon can't whip girls. They'd always be crying and running home to their mothers." "0, ho! There was some whippinc done. It wasn't all rose-color at that school, Mr. Smith." "I tell you, sir, we had somo of the jolliest whippings you ever experienced. Vou don't have any such nowadays. They were the nicest sot of boys vou ever saw in your life. But at first tliey would play truant Then they caught it. I only whipped for that and lying. I remeniber one time Dobyns Pougo and Mit Rramblo played hookey. Of course tho next day they had to take it I pommeled away, and although they roared like young bulls of Bashan it didn't seem to me I caught tho right note. I began to investigate, and would you believe it the little rogues had borrowed blacksmiths' aprons and stuck them inside of their shirts. "You see, I didn't allow any inter ference from the parents. Whon Mrs. rouge came to me about Dobyns I'd walloped him for something or other I made her a present of him. 'Take him. I don't want him.' The first thing I knew she was back, with tears in her eyes, begging me to take him again. "Why, sir, my exhibitions were the events of the year. Ette here, and all the girls, used to come and dress the church with cedars and colored paper wreaths. Every candlestick in the town was ours for the asking; and we had all the girls' finery we wanted. They were only too proud to lend it "And as for the people, every hitch ing post had two or three horses tied to it All the country people came and the First Presbyterian Church would be tilled cram jam, and the rest of the world look In at the windows." "Ette," calling his wife again, "what would Mr. Iligginshave thought if he could have heard Horace Morton declaim Pollock's description of hell: "'Wide was the plaoe. and doop as wide, And perilous as deep.' Or Smith Kephnrt, in a long, black cloak and tartan cap and feather, givo Lochiel'a 'Warning.' Ah! that was grand. And thore was Angus Liggett, in my niece Antoinette s balnarino dress, and his hands chained, reciting 'The Maniao' until there wasn't a dry eye in the house. Exhibitions! There's nothing like them now-a-days. You may say what you please, sir, there's no profession to be compared to teach ing. Give me forty or fifty boys with ability and industry, and I wouldn't exchange it for the best business in the world. '? Nobody said him nay, and William Smith sank back again into his chair, apparently contemplating the toes of his shoes, but his gaze in fact was fixed in the far away past, the source of so many pleasant and proud memo ries. Mary Oay Humphries, in N. Y. Star. CURRENT FANCIES. Novelties of the Midwinter and Karl Spring Seasoni. This is emphatically a volvet season. , Even morning wrappers are trimmed with fur. . Small plush wraps will be worn again in the spring. Cutis as well as linen collars are again fashionable. Corsages will be shirred on the shoul ders in the spring. Feather and lace fans are the pret tiest for ball-room and opera use. Plain black silk, faille and gros grain, is again in favor for entire suits. Round waists and belts a la Joseph ine are by no means out of fashion. A novel fancy in men's wear is vel vet bindings on dressy day suits. 15all dresses are loaded with nowers, natural and artificial,-this season. The catogan coiffure is in high favor in Paris, but not in New York as yet. Uld-iashioned round boas, very long and large, are coming in vogue again. Men s shoes, to be fashionable, must be pointed at the toe and low in the heel. China gauze broche with small figures conies among other ball dress novelty fabrics. Imitation straw hats, made of braids of plaited felt, are among late millinery novelties. Open work Scotch plaids are to be worn in tho spring, cut into lengths for trimming plain stuffs. liflle drosses, with satin bodices of the samo color, will be the preferred ball dresses of the season. Silk crape, spangled with gold and silver tinsel, is shown for ball dress draperies and entire skirts. When ball dresses are cut low, in heart shape, in the neck in front, they are cut still lower in the some form in tlio back. A novel kind of ornament for the hair is a band of velvet set with West Indian beetles in colored gold, alter nating with gold sequins. Hail dresses are slightly trained for married women, but de riaueur short. round, and fitJl for young' Indies and enthusiastic dancers. One of the novel fancies of this sea son in Paris is tho wearing of straw hats, but then they are heavily lined with felt, cloth or velvet. Russian coats with very high collars, in the back of the neck especially, are worn with those high toques orna mented with shaving-brush pompons. Tho prettiest, opera slippers are of fine black or colored satin to match the toilet, and beaded with jet or tinsel on the toes. The heels are de rigucur high. Enormous capes and collars, worn upon the cloaks and coats abroad, arc tho outcome of the desire to shield the bare nape of the neck made by wearing the hair on the top of the head. Military pompons, looking like a shaving brush of exnggeratod length, trim the most popular hats, tho high toques of velvet, plush, astrakhan and cloth, which are worn with tailor-iuaile suits by fashionable women. N. Y. Sun. Journalism in Austria. According to the latest official in formation thero aro in Austria 1,623 newspapers and periodicals, of which 4!)0 are political, 175 economical, 181 agricultural, 118 connected with trades or special occupation. 92 medical or scientific, 98 pedagogical, 65 geo graphical and historical, 208 represent ing literature and humor, 13 military; 12'J advertising papers, 58 ecclesiastical. and 107 local papors; 727 of the whole number are published in the single prov ince or bower Austria. As to lan guage 1,054 are German, 225 Czech.' 108 Polish, 95 Italian, 35 Slavonian, 32 in other May dialects, and 74 are mixed that is, have portions in differ ent languages. It is noteworthy that, as compared with tho preceding" year, tho German papers have increased in number by 7 per cent, the Italian by 6.7, tho Czech by 13.6, the Slavonian by 20.7, and the Polish by 6. Hungary and the provinces dependent on the Hungarian crown are not taken into account of this summary, which is continod to the Austrian provinces only.-iv'. Y. Post. The White Elephant. After the British had conquered Bur- mah, one of the four sacred white ele phants died at Mandalay. The Burmese ave always expected some national disaster when one of these sacred ani mals die. The earliest traveler in Bur- niah, as far back as 1532, speaks of this reverence for tho white elephant as having had even then an ancient and remote origin. When one of these royal beasts expires, the same honors are offered up to it as to a dead Queen. The queerest part of the business is that there probably never was an en tirely white elephant The one that has just died had some white about the eyes, but the body was black or brown. It is passing strange how even a semi intelligent people should for genera tions have paid snch marked lionors to a beast so far inferior in every way to the human race. Demons? t Monthly. RELIGIOUS AND EDUCATIONAL, Edinburgh has 181 churchcs.of whioh 124 aro Presbyterian. The public school superintendent of Wyoming reports 4,508 pupils, 73 school-houses, 147 teachers, and the total amount paid for salaries as f 88,0011. Five of the Bishops of the Episcopal Church were born in Ireland, one in Canada, and nino in New York City. Only two were born in the States in which t,hey are Bishops. The native churches of Japan are strict in the admission of members. A play-actor, story-teller and editor of the "personal" department in a nowspaner, were refused until they changed their business. While some of the educational papers are yet debating the question of the wisdom of industrial oducation, the School Journal comes forward with the unequivocal declaration that it is "tub education." The Japanese Government has lately sent to Vassar College a pair of bronze vases handsomely ornamented with inlaid decorations in gold and sil ver, in appreciation of the education given to Japanese girls. Poughkeepsie Eagle. A new school In Saharanapur, In dia, has been opened for the wives of tho young men of the Theological Semi nary of that place, to prepare them to take their places beside their husbands when they shall become Christian pas tors and missionaries. The salo of Bibles, religious books and magazines through the colporteurs of Mr. Spurgcon's Church amounted during tho past year to nearly $45,000. Seventy-eight men were employed in the work, and 1,500 towns and villages were visited. Since 1876 twenty-three missiona ries have been sent to the Central Afri can mission of the Loudon Missionary Society, of whom ten have died, and nine have retired from the service. In spite of these immenso losses, the So ciety has resolved to go on with the work with vigor, and a strong reinforce ment is to be sent at once. Christian Union. There is a school in London called the Zenana and Medical School, from which sixty women have been sent out as missionaries to India, in connection with the Baptist, Episcopal and Wes leyan churches. LadyDufferin, wife of the Viceroy of India, is said to be en thusiastic in advocacy of sending more well-trained women as missionaries to that country. The case of clergymen ordained in the English colonial dioceses seems a rather hard one. They are in many cases exiled for life from England. Thus tho Rev. Mr. Malachi was ordained dea con and priest by Bishop Hills, of British Columbia, and for four years was curate of the Cathedral, Victor, a. Family circumstances compelled him to return and live in England, where he desired to follow his profession of a cler gyman. But both the Archbishops of Canterbury and York has refused a li cense and have told him that having been ordained in and for the colonies it is his plain duty to return to them. WIT AND WISDOM. We hear of a grocer who calls his scales "ambush" because they lie in weight. Lowell Citizen. A young lady wrote some verses for a country paper about her birthday, and headed them "May 30th." It al most made her hair turn gray when it appeared in print, "My 30th. A horrible accident happened in this city the other day. As a dude was about stepping across a gutter a button in the rear of Ins shirtbatid broke, and his high collar sweeping upward cut off both his inr.l'liilalelpliia Herald. An inveterate old wag, seeing neavy door nearly oil its hinges, in which condition of neglect it had been left for some time, observed thnt when it had fallen and killed some one it would probably be hung. AT. Y Mail. A lawyer in an Eastern State, whoso reputation in the community was not very high, met and old gentleman and said to him: "Do yon know, Mr. H , Unit I am a direct descendant of Miles Standish?" "Is it possible?" was the reply. ' v hat a descent! Arqosy. 'Just borrowed nine hundred dollars ovs my own note," said young Hardup, "and I feel like a great man's monu ment." How's that?" said his friend; " 'cause somebody else has to pay for it?" O, no; not exactly that; but "I've got such a good starton paper. Brook lin Fnnle. fef THE GREAT FOR LIVER DISEASE SV MOTH IRQ a Bitter or bad taste in mouths VI Nil I WIVIsJs tongue coated white or coverts with a brown fur; pain in the back, tides, or joinu often mistaken for Rheumatism ; tour ,!5msch' lo",ofPPtlte; sometimes naussa and waterbruh, or indigestion; flatulency and Kid eructations; bowels alternately costive and lax; headache) lost of memory, with a painfnl sensation of having failed to do something which ought to have been done; debility; low spirits ; a thick, yellow appearance of the skin and eye a dry ceugh : fever ; restlessness ; the urine is scanty and high-colored, and, if allowed to stand, deposit a sediment. :s (PURELY VEG(TABLE) Is Keneratly sed in the South to arous the iorpid Ijver to a healthy action. It acta with extraonlinarj effloa'cy on th IVER, KIDNEYS, and BOWELS. EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC fM Malaria, ry.p.p.la. Constipation. HiUooineaa, Biok Headache, Jaundice, Colic. Ueatal Deprv.nlon, Bowel Complaints. Etc, Etc, Ktc Endorsed by the use of 1 MlUlona of Bottles, as THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE For Children, for Adnl j, and fcc the Aei. WE TO TAKE 111 AWT CONDITION OF THE SYSTEM I J. H.ZEILIN & CO., outraormiaroaj, PHILADELPHIA, PA. PKICE, tl.QO, i TIP T Has often !,. , bread. Ah a iM. l A nmkernoUiinifnuli. SAFE YEAST l'M,.l. i ... ' " un with XEVEIt VAulHl I la tin I . cakes in. box. Vtilx It vnim flM.. jluup .is, urucr u by jj Warner'i Safe Yeast Co., Rochester, H. y kccolu order it i.v WILL MAKE BETTER BUTTER THAN ANY. Bend for analyst! and testimonials of hist dairymen to prova It. CM a sampla sack fw yonr Ctmoer, or from 0. K. WHlTilKy k Co raeiflo Ooaat Ajtenta. Sao Francisco, ' Cahn, Nickelsburg & Co. T2'9 & 131 SANSOME ST,! BAN FltANCISCO, Make the best and most durable BOOTS and SHOES on the Pacifii Coast. Buy no other. - NO CHINESE EMPLOYED, :?A 131 PORTED IrmananiPercteonHoi FalrMnlc and Wilsev Inst Importation rtt tWt tv-u: tmm France. It is cu.n.wrwd ft tm Ureest ami! bnt IS clictonv I rcnch Ctuuh mJ Nonn.ins. 1 hey are ftma heaviest aiid nnwt rauiry t" the mr st tlocky draft twU laritcly of dirk i lr All of riNeArtion ami iKi.itittfulfnm I li.lveonli.iiwl -45 tusid to solvit Cnnri. Three wrnfilorl prfflia. fit the boiioinaaiid M.iriu Agricultural h Hr.mieforSwMo.- ovtr Ail tiratt. bx were a warden jirenimutft it the buicu at r.Yrinn'iun. Will Ik? sold on rc-woitflMe terms with approved setartr. Vc will sell rtiv ticr tli.ut tlie vtinc class otlivnat bunch t for. anywhere do i tfic V. S. I'.ttties tvislntitf lu piirt lmsc will do well to coll it Ot I a. 1 u s m-ti'ic hi 1 ei.iiiim.i ami examine our mock. tffTSoid f"r CRt.-iliii.nie. AUdrrn, II. T. Falrbuh II. Wihey, IN-uIuhm, sonuiua C. Cat IS UNFAILING 'EpilrpticFilt Spasms. Fall- ina Sickness. Convulsions, St. Yiliu Dance, Alcoholism, Opium Eating, Scrofula, and ALL HERYODS and BLOOD DISEASES. To Clerpymon, Lawyers, I.itersrr Met, Merchant, llankom, Ladies and all whoso sed entary employment cnusea Nervous I'riwtratioo, Irregularities of the Blood, btomach, Ilowelsot Kidneys, or who require a nerve tonic, appetuer or Ktlmulant, Iii jakdin'b Kkrvixk is invaluable. tlT'l'o Ladim On account of its proren merits It ia rottMitinomled and presi-ribeiiai' the ixft physicians in the country. Cue says : uYiW UKe a cnurui ana saves niucn pain, id mutui entirely the worst form of fulhnir of the men Lucorrhoua, irregular anil painful .Menstninrtk all Ovarian Troulilcs, Inlioinmation arid Hot tion, all llisphtvnientBundtiiocw quent Bp1n.1l weakness, ana is especially ausfe. to t lie ( naiico 01 Luc. tft,Thousands pro laiin It the most wonderf : Invigorant that eversmtaini'd a sinking systo. liLl'rlco, $1.01) ier uottlo. FOIt SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. S.NKI.L, HeITSHU & WOODAHD. Wholesale Aifenta, Porland.0r. Mi BirBftP'O ELECTIlO-MAOVETICfil- Vila rltnut if A Wonderful Invention. ! eases and WeaK'tiais of Male or Ft male ourod Wfti Medicine. It no's like inaydc. Ksr particularl sde Dhm. Fikrck & Hon, 704 nac'to 8t. Han r'nucinu" PETALUMA INCUBATOSi frajtotwrag Hatches all kinds ot It The SIMPLEST, ChwHj jjj and MPST PfPFfCT IB made. Htiold Medals, ISi' and 16 First I'mnmms. sizes, fiend for InanlUi1! ed Cimilar COPt I Address Petslurcs. Incubator Co , iwiura,! LADIES! T)n not. mih vonr Ck1" when you can wash wiirJ tn h nr u,-Ruh hwiArti. ' linn tnmmntiwl OflTV refunded. Send 15ceuta. silver. toM.F.ftf K&Li. & CO., SomeraeU Mich. Atrentow4 Tej Plug Cut Smoking Tobaccj oar lad; STEIN WAY .ShfernUh Pianos; M on i Organs, band Instrument. Largest stock -a Busie and Books. Hands supplied at Banem H. GieAT. sua Post Street, Ban Fnu" sllv, isilvp tIST OP DISEASES ALWAYS CTJRABLH BY USDT9 MEXICAN Tl Hs tain, prov ;thei MUSTANG Nine A not have settle tion OP HCMAJt FLKSD. OP AKMiU' Scratches. Sores aid Gall Snavln. Crack Rhramatlam, Bnrna and Scalds, work orri Iub Stings and Bites, Cats and Brahea, Sprains cV Stitches, Contracted Kasclea, Stiff Joints, Backache, Eruptions, Frost Bites, U'.rS. V, . - irreat rinl their Foot BoUDs Lameness, Swinnr, Foas1 ever t Vew Sprains, Straw Sore Feet, "trout CalL Stiffness, and all external diseases, and ererj hurt or : Be dealer for general use In tamilj, stable and stock T finally mt BEST OF ALL 'own do. "Well, LINIMENT worth ! forgo;, si r Xews. A.1A v. 34 1 to ize nn mi W the feel tbi No ; bet get ma bee Of