.EGON NEWS.' , a scarcity of horses in Lufiiy- a for Clatsop county this year ; i on the dolUr. ' wberg, Yamhill county, fair, e on the L'oM and continues s. mers around Prineville are anie ns a bushel for ouU and barley, - w heat. liy, while visiting at Jefferson , was thrown from a wagon and hkle fractured. . T. Branch, of Georgia, has ac- 0 chair of mathematics in the nil college, Corvalli. tingis abont finished through irthwest. It has been a most Keason for the farmers. Griffith, who was recently Lacon, I. T., was formerly a' Salem and had relatives at In eft,. ."incent, a well-known and re tizun of. Table KocW precinct, inty, was killed in a runaway ast week. Icffner, aged 17 years, was 1 ist week in the Long Tom a lance above K. V. Howard's Imira. lie was running lugs fa boom. eek, while a little fellow six age, son of Mr. Lindsey, at ity, full on a small knifo so as I to enter at the heart, and the v died almost instantly, r.llett, of Dilley, reports a yield !ive bushels .of wheat to the mty-two acres of beaver-dam Hory is duly attested by the the entire crew of threshers. J. L. Cowan, of Albany, has pg at the residence of the lii li promises to mature equal as in the sunny south, lie aton plants uliHOHt ready to ho: The Umpqua river rail t moves ahead in good slmpe. funds have been secured to He survey, and it is hoped to surveyors in the field within uman says that there is now t'lird Salem a constant stienm licveti, mckpocketn, confidence biers, long-haired men and d women, and the scum of irings of civilization. Ue is active at Yaquina Bay. 1 to be the result of the visit .-if the Northwestern railroad ,'robably the $75,000 appropri tad a material effect on the jperty in that section. Leader: W. W. Brannin, of 1 realize this year foOO from torn crop. It is a wonder ll-corn is not raised in Uma , as it grows well, pays bet heat and is easy to cultivate. k C. Buell lias been appointed superintendent of tiie Oregon :ilroad, vice Mr. II. V. Gates, Mr. Gates will remove to Oregon where he will take " jhe Oregon Pacific construe- de Gazette: There seems to mce of opinion in regard to of Carpenter by his step-son, t Bully creek, last week, some nit it was an accident, while k it was a cold-blooded mur- Wallowa Chieftain: A man lie of Neal, aged about 00, and ed Nichols, aged 14, of Prairie k McUully's stage on Friday tnde, where they boarded the iaho, in order to be made one rritory. hoco Review says that Phil Ver ity creek, sold out and gave his J and one of the children, tak '.her and $15,000, and left for nown. His action is a surprise ple generally, as he was a very S business man. leader; A Mr. Lemon and an ileman whose name we did not l of Missouri, have been in week preparing for the coming sixty families of immigrants ouri. They have chosen a He river for a catnp, and the I at once come to the camp. :em will buy land and others 'Vernment laud in this county. f MINING NOTES. fegdo of rock salt was discov i.tly near Helena, Montana. Ieadow lake mines, in Nevada ventcen men are engaged in hiill, and four or five men are m the woods. There is said to 15,000 tons of rock on the lii-li it is claimed will net $10 i.t f flock ranch of J. M. Bentley, . mtains south of Pendleton, a .ine has been found. Several the rock have been taken to n and found to contain gold in juantities. Great excitement rospectors recently returned to y from a prospecting tour in the iver mountains and claim they d a basin as rich in mineral as basin, and located east of War !iey named the place Yellow n, and claim that they washed with their hands during the "hen snowed in. They have with more provisions to thor " apect the country. . any Herald says : A mong the eived in this city Wednesday regon Pacific railroad, was a aher consigned to J. Riddle, at s. It was a new variety of ii, resembling very much a d Missouri steam washer. It of a large hollow wheel with a 5 roller inside, which takes the te stamps in an ordinary quart! ago a watchman detected two 1 robbing the sluice of the Bald unit mine in Nevada county, wveral shots at them. The the badly decomposed body of an was found near the mine. J and feet were eaten off by Tial. ther river has recently been So a tunnel excavated at a point to, Cal. The tunnel is large f allow its entire volume to K'h it. The bed of the river for iies has been drained perfectly as method, and tb gravel at p la said to be exceedingly neb w. ALONG THE COAST. In Alturas county, Idaho, hogs aro dy ing of cholera. Hog cholera h.w apjiearcd near Elmira, Solano county, Cal. The total assessment of Los Angeles, Cal., is IM.THS.OOO. , , A scheme is on foot to build 100 cot tages for rent in Santa Crui. The average price paid for wool in southern Idaho this year was 18 cents. Work has been begun on the postal telegraph line at New Westminster. The 0. R. A X. depot at Farmington will be an exact duplicate of the depot at Baker city. Vineyardists in most sections of the Sonoma valley complain of the grape crop being short. Artesian wells have been sunk near Battle mountain, Nevada, that yield a good flow of water. A shower of frog', extending over three miles in one direction, fell in Big Flat, Siskiyou county, lately. The discovery of gold on Wilson Peak,' in the Sierra Madre, has created consul able excitement in that section. Residents in the vicinity of Stein moun tain state that not less than 40,000 head of sheep will be wintered there this year. A company of surveyors have com menced work on the ex ension of the San Francisco and Noith Pacific railroad to Ukiah. The machinery erected in the Iron Mountain miuo, in Shasta county, at a cost of $120,000, is to be removed to New Mexico. Henry O'Httle was lost on the desert near Silver Teak, Nevada, recently and was found dead sitting by a clump of sagebrush. Tho Chinese who were evicted from the Treadwell mine, have been returned and they went to work without meeting resistance. In a dance house at Warden, I. T., Thomas Foy thot and fatally wounded Webb Leisher. Foy lied and bus not yet been captured. The sheep interests in southern Idaho have increased so rapidly during the past few years as to seriously interfere with some of the ranges heretofore occupied exclusively by horses and cattle. Tho river water at Sacranento is now acarely at all discolored. It is said to be almost as clear as ut the mouth of Feath er river where it is uncontaininated by hydraulic mining wash. The Cceur d'Alene Navigation Co., of Idaho, is making arrangements for the navigation of the lake and the river dur ing the winter. An iron barge for the crushing of ice will be built. The number of wcros in hops in the im mediate vicinity of Healdsburg is about 150. The yield per acre will be about 1800 pounds, ana the cost per box for picking, white labor, $1.25 a hundred pounds. "Keep out of this water millin patcho" is a signboard nailed to a farm fence a little east of Brighton, Cal. Some wag turned tne board over and wrote there on : "Take one," and the poor farmer is almost bankrupt in consequence. The Santa Monica, Cal., H'tir vouches for the truth of a story that a resident of that place recently opened a watermelon on the dinner table, whereupon a large and lively rattlesnake issued thence, to the great consternation of the diners. Water being scarce, some Chinamen who own a garden at Austin, Nev., con cluded to sink a well. They 'struck a ledge of ore which assayed $.'J50 a ton, and are highly elated over the unexpec ted find. They are now in a quandary what to do whether to work the mine and let the garden go, or work the gar den and let the mine go, or sell out. Union county has commenced suit against the Pine Creek road commiss ioners for $(000 and to restrain them from paying out $8000 to the contractors the county claiming that the road has not been built according to contract. Much feeling is caused by this action. A man giving his name as Thomas Reeves was recently taken to the resi dence of J. F. Lovelace, at Damascus, where he was left. He claimed that a young man and three others had drugged liini and robbed him of a $1000 certificate of deposit on the First National bank of Portland. Reeves was brought to Fast Portland and left at the Rivcrsido hotel. He is a railroad engineer. WaHliliiatou . errMory. The tax levy of Walla Walla county for all purposes is only 12) g mills. John Gilhaus, a farmer livimr about seven miles west of Sprague, fell in a well and broke his neck'. In Spokane county, the taxation for territorial, county, school, road and bridge purposes is 19 mills. Poll tax, $4. Ezra Leaning, of Kittitas county, W. T., this year raised a cucumber which measured four feet five and one-half inches long. The Ellensburg Localizer says there is a fine opportunity on the Wenatchie for any one who would like to build a saw mill in that country. The crops of Yakima county are unus ually good this season. It is estimated that the wheat crop will reach fully 00, 000 bushels this year. The taxpayers of Stevens county are to vote on the proposition to levy an 8 mill tax to build a court house and fire proof vault at Colville. Whitman college has just received from its eastern solicitor, Rev. Dr. Bar rows, $700, the last instalment of a fund for the erection of a young men's hall. Farmers in the Wenatchie country have built a ditch eight or cine miles lone, carrying 400 or 500 inches of water. The landhich will be irrigated is said to be of excellent quality. An effort is being made to have a tele phone line from Tacoma to Puyallup. Seven hundred dollars is the necessary sum. Puyallup has raised it half and Tacoma is considering the matter. The people of Ventura, Cal,, are going to try a novel experiment in sprinkling the streets with crude petroleum instead of water. It is thought that oil, after two or three sprinkles will lay the dust for months. The experiment is looked for with much interest. A Los Angeles, Cal., paper, having no appreciation of the beautiful, complains : "There are too many artists here, and not enough tillers of the soil; too many people trying to paint sunseU and pic turesque scenes, and too few who are willing to set out vines and plant orange ; trees." BOTTLED SWEETNESS. Faets About R.rh aat Delightful Per fumes Natural ami Flrtltlnu. Choice perfumes may be considered as belonging to ' three classes the so called bouquet" perfumes, those that are the simple odors of the flower whotie Dames they bear, and those Ilia' jy delicate art employ such combina tions and blending of various odors as together simulate perfectly the perfume of come particular llower.tlie real odor of which is so evanescent and delicate that it can not be caught and fixed by any process jet known to science. Of the lir.st of these, the representative one that most readily occurs to my mind at present, is the Edina." Tho' inventor of that perfume was no less than nine years in bringing it to perfection, and when it was done he was so justly en thusiastic over it that he declared that "in it art was glorified and nature eclipsed!" All these bouquet perfumes are made by various blending of tho rexilts of the cntleurago process the extracted odors of violet, jasmin, tube rose, rose, orange flower nndcaasic to gether with mu.ik.oilof roc, oilofylang- lang and ambergris as a tixateur. Ono or unother of these may ho left out of a special blending, but that is the open field for selection. The enfleurngo pro cess consists in exposingclarifiedgrea.se, th, nly spread on glues frames, to tho presence of tho flowers, until it has taken their odor from them. That is dime by manufacturers In tho valley , of tho Yur, in the south of Franco, where vast fields of sweet-smelling flowers aro grown for this purpose. Alcohol after ward takes up all the perfume ffom the grea.se, mid tho perfumed alcohol is h hat is used in making the extracts for the toilet. It is in the grease form that the perfumes aro imported to this coun try. Other tixatcurs than that which I have mentioned aro employed, such as iritiii benzoin and gum tolu. Tho prov ince of ambergris is to blend and de velop perfumes, to give them a lionio genitv, as it were, lis natural smell is not pleasant, being more like that of a damp cellar than anything else. It is found in the spermaceti whale, is an in d. cation of an abnormal and unhealthy condition of that creature, and is sup posed to 1h a product of indigestion. Nevertheless it is a requisite fortho per fumer, and nothing else can take its place. Doubtless the nicest art of tho per fumer is shown in the perfect simulation of the odors of certain flowers, the real perfiimo of which can not bo caught. Such a (lower, for instance, is the lily of the valley; yet thero is a perfume named after that flower, the cntrnncingly sweet ordor of which is tho perfect re production of nature's work, so far as tho smell goes. Tho reproduction of such a simulant perfiimo is sometimes the work of years. It can only b2 car ried on when the flowers themselves aro in perfection for purposes of comparison, for a scent can no more bo accurately remembered than it can bo analyzed. And even when tho time is propitious tho artist compounder must often lay asido his work forduystogether, because his olfactories grow "weary, temporarily vitiated and unreliable. Two of our most delightfully sweet flowers that grow upon our continent, the magnolia and tho tea olive of Georgia and Ala bama, have never yet been perfectly simulated in perfume, though thev have been tho subjects of almost countless experiments. Again and again the ex act odors have been caught nnd lost again tho moment that tho necessary tixatcurs for retaining them were added to the alcoholic compounds. Of course they w;ll bo won some day, but when tlie'v do they will have" been well earned. Uuti Timet. LINCOLN'S SIMPLICITY. S:,Kln; IWnd will) the Soldier Alter tlie Unit Hat tie or Hull Hull. Without attempting to record with any degree of conseeutiveness the occur rences that followed each other like the quick reports of a Catling gun, I will il lustrate tho simplicity of Abraham Lin coln's character, and tho singular 1 ick of what we recognize as discipline, that obtained in those days, by an incident mnicdiately after the battle of Bull Kun. It was either tho day after the biittlo of Bull Run, or tho day succeeding that, a bright, beautiful day in the latter part of Jul v, lxtil, when General Mc Dowell's troops were drawn up somo distance from Washington, that Pii si lent Incoln and Secretary of State Seward visited tho encampment. The soldiers were what were known as three mouths' men. Their time had expired prior to tho battlo of Bull Run, but with 'an esprit that was characteristic of the times, they decided to remain, and did so, sharing in the great drawn lighf, known throughout all time as the tit-sit battle of Bull Run. Tho troops were drawn up by companies, the Presi dent, standing 'in his carriage, Mr. Seward and General McDowell not far off, addressing them, thanking them for the loyalty which led them to re main rather than return to their homes, complimenting tlnni upon their gal lantry under tire, and, in the name of the Nation, assuring them of the re spect and regard of tbeirfellow-citizcns. That's all very well. Imagine the scene that followed. Drawn up in double line, face to face, stood the troops. Leaving his carriage, the Presi dent of the United States started at the head of the line, and, with a God bless yon to each, shook hands right and left with every man until he reached the end of the first company. Turning at the eod of the second, be did the same with thfm, and o on through hundreds and hundreds. There was a narrow 1 no there between the lublime and the ridiculous, but Lincoln didn't cross it, and although under or dinary circumstance such procedure would be absurd and indefensible, un der these circumstancs he did precisely the right thing at tho right time, and nine-tenths of these men whose time had already expired re-enlisted for three years or the war. Joe Howard, in Boston Globe. PRODUCE MARKET. rortlaaa. FI.OUK-Per bbl. standard brands. J3.t0ll.b5; oilier. U.!.Va.:Si. WHr.Af-l'er cu. vaney, 11.221 1.18; Walla Walla. 1.15ci.l7. BARLEY-Whole, v witaWl.OT.fcUi). ground, F tou, 24(g.S. OATS-Choloa milium, 42icj cholct feed, 40c. RVh-Peri-tl. ll.UMI.W. bUCKWMUAT FLOUH-IVctl, W.7J, CORN MKAL Per iU, yellow, fx&xj t7J; whlu., i5uft3.74. . CRACKKD WHKAT-Per ctl, 175 UOMINV-Perctl, 4.UU, OATMliALPerttj..8U. PEARL BAULK i -No, 1, 6c; No. 2, 4,o; No. a, 4c SPLIT PKAS-Per ft. fie PEARL 1 AHOCA-lu boxea, 04c SAliO-Per lb, 0c VLRAUCELLl-Per lb, No. 1, f 1.25; No, 2,f We.. 11KAN Per ton, 13.M15. SHOUTS Per ton. 10. MUJDLINUS-Per Uju, tJlKglB. (JllOP-Per ion, fltfiuu. UAV-Per tou. baled, 1)10, OIL CAKK MEAL-l'ertoii,?3(3-,Vi. UOPS-Per lb, Orison, V ft. i Waal-. Ter.. . EtiGS Pur uon. 18c BUTTER-Per IMaucj roll.ltlo; luterlor grade, U: pickled, 10 j; lo. CUEKSK-ier Di. Oreou, 41; Call, forma tRfcbc KICK -China. No. 1, (5.80; do No. g'j (5.26; SauuwicU Inland. No. 1, TEAS loutiK liysoii, &V400C; Japau ftHtiitoo; OoloiiK. liUoc; Uunpowder am ImueriaL &x&0ic SYRUP Calhorula rvtlnery la quoteo at &v. in uuih; tu keK aud l-gul tins ;ioi3'S, VKtiETAULES-l!eeU.yn).Uc;cabba.ro, I? ft. Siic: carrots. aelc.yl.&i; caulillower.y dot, fl.li. green curu. r dozen, loo; roeu mas, $ lli, 2tc; lelluce. f dox, 2cc; onions l.JS; turn um. V Ik lie; spinach, f sack, 4(1 MoOc; celery, f doa, (I; parsnips, ? sck, 76c; toumloes 9 box, tfl.oo.al.i6; taruu beans, tf lb. 5c; cucumbers, C dot., luc. POTATOES Paloioen, new, lie; pet sack, old, i.0J;swoot, p H,j-iC DRIED FRUITS Per ft, apples, quar ten, sacks aud bonus, IM, do sliced, lu tuitka aud boxes. yjW-lj: apricom, 17c. blackberries, 13.15c; nectarines, lt!(fl5l"c peachea, halvea uuptieled, 7Kto; lieaiK, quartered, 7(fe8; pilled cherries. We; pilled plums Calilornia, tHgilou; do Oi cguu, ku,7c; I'urranU, 8(gU; datos, tRa 10; Ii k. Suiyrua, 17 -Uri; California, 0(47, linnies, Calilorma. 6iU; French. llKuUit; lurkisli. (Kui7; ramnm, Culitorla 1au dou layers, tfi.l'fu Ii1 box;' loose M us cilelh, vS-ld; heedless, V ft, 12c; bul imia, 1-jc POULTKY-Chlckens, If dox. spring Jli.oO.a.il.UU; old .l.UOa4.(Xi; ducks, (n;i.ll; geese, tyi.UUtgd; turkeys, Y lb. uu'.uhial, .0;ilic llAMs fvt lb, Eastern, c; Or egon, Ufc(3 Hie. LARD Per ft, Oregon, 6(74; Eastern. 7ibyc. WOOL Eastern Oretroiu snrhtu clln. 18 gttr iu; laii cup, . valley Or egon, spring clip, 20 ⁣ lambs' aud fall. Electricity is now used to record ihe weights indicated upon scales or steelyards the application bein espec ially designed for the weighing ol frefght cars while in motion. if. Y. PICKLES-Per 6-gal keg, Duo; bbla, ,f gal., ii-iic NUTS California almonds, if 100 ft aks, 20c; Uracil, loO lb ska, f lb, 14c; chestnuts ltifeiWc; cocoanuU,(Xa.7.i0: II I beru. Sicily. 175 lb ska, If ft, Ho; hickory, luu lb sks.lOc; peanuts, tmwc; pecans, lex as, 1UU lb aks, 14c; California waluuia, tf KUlbsks, 11(9 m. CANNED GOODS-Salmon. 1-ft Una. dox, tfl.36; oysters. H-lb tins, if doi, 2.20; 1-Ib tins, ?l.4U if doi; lotmlers, l ib Una, if dox, 1.90; clupm. 2-ft Una, V doz, (fl.lRKffiSi.t'5; mackerel, 6-lb tins, if dos tft4.75ii!U.UO; f rutin. If dot tins, 2.0u(g2.25; jams and Jellies, Ir dox, tflwoigli.OO; vege tables, y dox, tfl.llKcd.VO. HIDKS-Drv, I4(15c; wet salted. B(7. BACON Per ft, Oregon aides, r7c; do shoulders, 6fct). TTTIRsnf PUlT!TAnnW Drainm. nw Ir box, O.KeM; bananas,!' bunch, $4.0'; Lieiiuiua, oicuv. v uoa, 9ii'iaii waLcri.iui ons, V dox, tfifO liimes. If 100. tfl.60; piuo- i,i.i..M u ilm a7 nfl I jim A 111mIhh nmiicrMN It uox,'3i4.M); Dears, V box, tfl.'Zoiml.N); 1 . t -- Al.i-.-.Vit. l u.1 readies, p uox, f i.&xoii.nu; piuuia, r uox, 70c; grapes, 4 box, tf l.M). KTTIt'IlQ Pan It, Hmnlliv Mfii'ilf 1-aH Uuuk. . ' aw. --'.-J. v,ii,. , cloTer, 14(a)l04c; orchard grass,, 17lttl0c; rye grass, ii(?ji.tc. rriiririr.Ri'w n. r:uimii in- Pnai Bica, l!(a,12)r; Old tSovenmient Java. dir.; Rio, 1UI2c; Salvador, KslOic M'vIia. tUiikJi. Kona. lc. SUGAltS-lJuoie bills: Cube, figa; dry uramilated. 0S: fine crushed. t)c. golden V.. f,5o- Hlflli'5l'.r IT. ivul 'Zkf amall whiles, lie: bayo, c; fiiuu, 3c; pink, 21c 0. C. R. TIM! TABLE. Mall Train "orth, 9:41 x M. Mall train south. 2.114 p. M. orncK houxs, euoenk city postoffice. Denaral Of lire ry. from 7 A. M. to T p. M. Monejr Ortlcr, fraiu 7 A. M. to 1 r. M. Kefrialrr, from 7 a. m. US h. m. Mails for north clone al 81A A. M. Malls for soulli close al l:JO i. M. Malls for Kraukliu closs at 7 A. M. Monday Slid Thursday. Mails fur Mabel close at 7 A. u. Moadav and Thursday. Alans rer (.anwniil closs 7 A. M. Monday. ItCIETIES. TUORVK LOIKIK NO. It. A. F. AND A. M 1 J Meet first and third Wednesdays lu each mouth. SPKNCtll BUTTK I.01H1K NO. I. O. O. F. Usula STerjr Tuesday veiling. TIMAVHAI.A KNCAMI'MKNT NO. (. I Mi tts on the seceud aud faurth Wednes days tu eax-h insiith. TJUOKNK LODllK NO. IS. A. O. 17. W. 1 J Mrets al Masonlo Hull the second and fourth Fridays lu each mouth. M. W, T M.OKAUYrOSTNO.t,O.A.n. MKKT3 fls at Masoule Hall tlis first and third l-ri- days of each luonlli. lly order. C'iimmanukr. Neighborly. Pmlth Tlint dor of yours loops ms awake nigh's, hnwlin;?. j0I,es Why, 1 uuva no doj it musi oe my daughter sinjins. Bmith Is lluit sof Excuse ma. I am sorry. I don't suppose she cun bo shot, ehr-The Jude. Itrason Knoii(rll. "I notice," paid tho g ntleman In scari-h of Information, to II.;rr Most, "that Auarchbti neyiT strika Why U tbisf" "That," said the great apostle of month at a factor In social progress, with much dig nity, "is easily expluinoj. No true Anarch ist ever works." Washington llatchot. How's Your Liver? Is the Oriental salutation, knowing that good health ' cannot exist without & healthy Liver. When the Liver is torpid the Bow els are sluggish and con stipated, tho food lies in the stomach undi gaeted, poisoning the blood; frequent hoadache ensues ; a feeling of lassi tude, despondency and nervousness indicate how the whole system is de ranged. Simmons Liver Regulator has been the means of restoring more Tieople to health and happiness by giving them a healthy Liver than any agency Known on earth. It acta with extraor dinary power and efficacy. NCVCR BfCN DISAPPOINTED. As a funeral family remedy for Dysptpsla, Torpid Uver, Const! nation, etc., I hardly ever one anything eW, and have nevel been disappointed In yie effect produced . It seems U lie almost a pt-rfort rnre for all diseases of the Hiomarh and Bowels. W. J. Mchiaor. Maoon. Oa. OnrKllOFCIIO"KN nilKNOS. MEETS the tint anil third Saturday eveniimat Masonlo Hall. By order of U. U. BUTTK I.0110K NO. 3ti7. 1. O. O. T. MEETS eyery Saturday night In thld rVllmvs' Hall. W. C. T. r KAMIN'O STAH HANDOKIIOPE, MEETS I J at IheC. I'. Chun-h rvorv Hiinday aftur- noon at t.'M. Visitors mail welcome. Eugene City Business Directory. IIKTTMAN, O.-Dry (roods, clolhlnir, mworlcs and Knerul iiien-iimiilitie, soulhwosl corner. Willaiiietleaud Kiglilh street CP.AIN IUtOS.-I)ealrs fn Jewelry, watches, clucks and muslpal InNti uincnls. IlluuictU) slreel, butweeu feventli aud Eighth. FKIKNDI.Y, S. H.-l)elerln dry gMun, cloth liiK and ircneral iiierohandise. Willauielti) street, bclwreu Eighth and Ninth. GII.I. J. r.-rhyslclan and surgeon. Wlllam- lic Dticcs uviwi-ei. ouveiiiu aim r.lgillll. 110DES, C-Keeps on hand flns wines, liquors, clicars and a poiil and billiard tahlo, Willain etls struct, between Eighth and Ninth. HOltN', CHAS. M.-Ounmlth, rifles and shot- finis, breech and iiiiutls loailers, fur sale, tepulrlng duns lu (lis ncHtcsl style and war ranted. Shop on Ninth street. Ll'CKKY. J. S. -Watchmaker and teweter. koepsatlne sbu-k of giMxts in his Una, wlllani sll street, lu Ellswurth s drug store. McCLAUEN", JAMEfl-Cholc wines, Honors andcigsrs, Wlllainetlsslreet, bolweeu Eighth and Ninth. POST OFFICE -A nsw stock of standard school books Just received at Ihe post ollloe, IIF.NS11AW k AnitAMS-Wines, liquors and cigars of the best inmllty kept oonstaiilly on hand. The best billiard table in town. ItHINEH APT. J. Il.-lln, sign and carriage painter. Work guaranteed Unit-class Hiack sola at lower rates uiau by anyone in htigene. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES t On Account of Removal I MATLOCK'S I will aril my stork at a amall mar gin above Coat, on account or not wIhJiIiik to remove tho atork to mj XewNtore studding. Come One! Come All! Al PHK K TIIE HAMKI J. D. MATLOCK, Opite tlie St. Charles Hotel. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Repairing of Watches and Clocks eimulcd with punctuality aad at a reanonabla cuU Wlllametto Hlrrot. Rngoao City, Or. W. V. HENDERSON, HAS RESUME!) ntACTICK. WITH olfice In lluys brick. My oiieratious will bs first-class aud ohargei reaxonabla. Old patrens as well as nsw ones are Invited to call. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. WILL ATTEND TO PROFESSIONAL M calls day or night. Orrit'K -Up stairs In Hays' brick; orcanbe found at K. It. I.uckey k Co s drug store. Ollloe hours: I la 12 M., 1 to 4 P. M., I to 8 P. M. DR. J. C. GRAY, DENTIST. OFKICK OTEIl ORANOR STORK. A LI. work warranted, iAiiglilng gas administered for painless ex traction of teeth. DR. W. C. SHELBREDE, 1EINTJST. TS NOW PERMANENTLY UIOATEI) IN 1 C'uttaire (inive. He perform all operations lu meolianit'al and surgical ilcntlslry, All work warrautcd ami sallniavllou guuranleea. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justiceof the Peace. UEALE3TATB KOIl HA LK TOWN IX)TS and farms. . Collodions promptly at- tcniled in, ... ItKHiiigMna -Onrner Elsrsnth and Ulgn ols., Eugens City, Oregon. oiiosrrioiv Is tlio Life of Trade! St. Charles Hotel KUOENI CITY, OREGON, W. H. WATKINS, Proprietor. Slew aad Riperlenced Management. C'bargea Moderato. F. M. WIIKINS. PracUcal Drnggist Cbemist DRUGS. MEDICINES, Hruahea, 1'alnta, iilaaa, lla, ta4a. TOILET ARTICLES, Eto. Pbyalolana Preaorlptlona Oompoundod. Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will bsrrarter kwp s souiplele .look of Ladies', Misses' aui Cbilircu's Shoes! BI TTOX IIOOTN, SLOAN BROTHERS Will do work cbeapxr than any other shop lu town. Horses Shod for $2 Gash With new material all around. Itesettlng old shoes II. All warranted to glrs satisfaction. Shop on tht Corner of 8th and Oliri SU Slippers, White and Black, Sandala, FIRI IID HOES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact everything In the Boot and rihoe line, to which 1 intend to doroto my esnechtl attention. MY C00D8 ARE FIRST-CLASH! And guaranteed as represented, and wtl. be sold for the lowest price tiiat a good article can b afforded. jY. Hunt. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM C. 31. IIOIIIV, Practical Gunsmith tsLsa ia CUNS, RIFLES, rUhlng Tackl and Materials ScwlM Machines ana Needles of All IifiU For Sail Impairing dona Ih tha neateat atria and warranted. Otuu Loaned and Ammunition Forniihed Shop oa WUlametU Street, opposlto Pestoflloo. Central Market, aMaaLaas FiHlicraScWfitkins PHOPBIETOB8. Will keep oonslantly oa hand a full supply at MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL, Which the r "I" n at tho lowest market price A fair share ot tho publlo patronage solicited TO THE FABHEBSI Wo will psy thf highest market price for fat cattle, Logs and sheep. Shop on "Willamette Street, EUCENK CITY, ORECON. Meat deUrorol to any part of th elty freo of charge. joali