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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1886)
OREGON NEWS. inf of Oenerml Interest ia Con deassd Fna, taxiiMo priH.Tty of Morrow . .-iyi. f3UJ,300. J million City, Lnno county, will : have a flouring mill. i ! run of salmon at Alsea bny is '1 to he the host for many yearn. Tim clectrio Unlit ut tlie itute lloiife i l lVnitentiury aro in operation. Cut'.le are lower in Klamath county . ii they have been for several year. The Umatilla county poor farm was ; I for 15(X). It cost the county The preliminary survey for the Ump- iii Kiver Hailroad was commenced ', week. L'uh Metlock, a horso thief wanted ; .Morrow county, was captured near :n.. "IlU'l VlllU. Ailrin Haley, of Monmouth, split I foot seriously while in the woods ultinj; timber. A bout 125,000 bushels of wheat is oi d in the warehouses of the Fcn ! ton tlouring mills. IJyron Turner has gone to the peni ntiary from Gilliam county, for one . ;ir for horso stealing. II. C. MY Finland, of Gilliam county, .I bis forearm broken by a kick :u a horse last week. i lumber is on the ground for the ii iii of the. Catholic church in the end of Heppner. Pendleton, Folwell, who idiot im, was sentenced to four in the penitentiary. m.1 buyers aro already in the uer country offering to make ad h on next year's clip, new postollico has been estab 1 at llale, Lane county, with ;-; II. Halo as postmaster. liver Vincent, a well known and erted citizen of Jackson county, killed in a runaway accident. ; lav Ileal, a renter of F. D. Bauers' - Ashland, lost $2000 by having a Mid contents destroyed by tire. bounty on rabbits, wildcats and s cost linker county for the past months over $2200, mostly on :tor Young's hop house, near no, with 2400 pounds dried hops, ' stroyed by lire; loss, $2000; no uce. i. 'Farley, a 12-year-old boy of ton, was thrown from a horse ek and had both bones of his i broken. '!'!:- 11-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. !. vi. Thy, living near the Cove, Union ;!, was accidently killed by hand V ',' a loaded pistol. J. "i Houston has resigned the of grand secretary I. O. G. T., : rof. W. L. James has been an- p .i' to the position. ! i. R. Trott has resigned the ;: of physician on the Umatilla re. fi(in "'niul u'lll riiliii'n witli liw to their old home in Missouri, i'licient amount lias been sub d toward tho Agricultural Col- r , - .- tit Corvallis to enable the building -nation to organize and elect 'TrS. Li is not generally known what an uiiant industry is the canning at ' oil bay. Messrs. Harrison & Dodge the owners. Already some 20,000 - ure put up. 1 lu wool shipped trom Arlington jr. i.ir this season amounts to3,500,000 ni ls, which, at a low net estimate - cents a pound, would bring : !te country $437,500. ' hn Backus and Charles Charlton, l i'ineville, have been arrested, ,od with robbing the safe of :y Treasurer Bushnell several :i ago of about $3000. v postotlices have been established icer, Linn county, and Seopy ' , '8, Union county, Oregon, with -ii Abasher as postmaster at the ii '-rj place, and C. Aiken at the Ti". hop house of Scott Wallace, ! Long Station, caught lire and I to tho ground, witli tho entire i raised upon a field of seven acres, h was in tho neighborhood of .) pounds.- '""rge Wise, a well-to-do farmer, bas resided a long timo about i miles above Milwaukee, on the City road, fell from a pear '. and received injuries from which iiit ti the next day. 1'ick Peebles, of Ladd canyon, while viiig to escape arrest for running his Tses through the streets of Union, is sliot m the left arm, probably reiv ing amputation necessary. Officer res wno did the shooting. Th( term of tho circuit court at !i Mattie Allison will be tried will i ene in Salem, October 11. Satin' a ill again appear in court to re ids delayed sentence at the term ii convenes m Albany, October::.), !. Harbin, who died last fall, or r made his wife believe be did, -rested by Deputy Sheriff Har n last week at Mitchell, Crook y, for branding a horse belonging V xk Thompson. His wife has in mourning for him for several .lis and now visits him in the nerjail. O. Richards, principal of the Ten schools, attempted to commit a. Mr. Richards had been sut- : with typhoid fever and was very but was not thought dangerously ile was left alone for a minute or his attendants, when he took a nife lying on the stand near by plunged it in both sides of his He is a man most highly re- h! in that place and at last ac- ' his chances for recovery were Orable. THE DUDE AVENGED. Jur Ant let of a llrand Naw Nlrlol. Mated, Ughtnlng-flreaeed lllcyrle. I always did despise- a dude, ami vhen I saw one glide swiftly by on his nngniticcut niekled bicyclo, I mndti up ny mind that any ono could master the trt without previous preparation. Im mediately proceeding to put my theory to test I selected the publio road (or ny experiment. Expecting to take liiite a long journcv I fillod my pocket with crackers and cheese for refresh ment by the way. Placing my foot ou the tnachino I hopped along what I con--tillered was a proper distance, and then made a sprihg for the saddle. My aim was not true. I miscalculated tliii ilistanco by about a foot, and 'lighted upon the fore-part of the saddlo with my knees well braced against the handles. The commotion that followed could not have been greater if I Imd touched off Hell Gate with a parlor match. I immediately discovered that this particular bicycle had never been broken to saddlo. I wasn't clear but I had mounted a circular saw under full headway. I started to fall about threo minutes before cloven o'clock, and I noticed afterward that my watch had stopped two minutes after that hour. I threw mys df back, but tho bicycle mot mo half way, totally dis regarding tho injutirtion to ,:novor kick a mail when he's going down hill." It was pluinly to bo seen that it had taken the hit in its teeth. It wobbled from sido to s;do to get mo oil my guard; then tho pedals played "shinny" with my legs. I had shut my eyes after the lir.st jump, and was vainly trying to touch bottom with my feet, but I was beyond my depth. The suspense between tho time I began to f.dl ami the time I arrived at a perma nent location, causod me to loso ten pounds. It was a short spell of sick ness, but my constitution fullered ter ribly. 1 wasn't hungry, and kind o' wished I hadn't taken provisions for so long a journey. I wanted to go home, but the bicycle couldn't sparo me. I tried my old ganiii of smiling to regain my composure. 1 didn't smile exactly iu the middle, and the machino began to career toward the left I instantly shifted my piece of chewing gum to the right side of my mouth, but that was too much billast on that side. The small wheel kicked up a little right hero just to let mo know it was still with me and didn't waut any foij ishncss. 1 was in the enemy's country and was completely surrounded. The ice wagon went by and I tried to call for help. I didn't have breath enough left to swear. In my efforts to keep on both sides of tho perpen dicular at once. I had tw'ated tho head of my collar button off. Tho tem perature had risen seven degrees tho first two minutes after I cut loose from Mother Earth, and I could hear tho cheese In my pockets beginning to fry. All was life ond motion and the bicyclo was very nervous. I was afraid the hand might strike up and make mat ters worse. I felt that my seat was contested and that I must soon "go to tho country." From tho topmost curve of ono of tiio bicycle's springs I caught a bird's-oyo view of outlying counties, and I panted for a change of air and seencry. Why didn't somo ono throw me a ropo. No one went for a doctor; 1 Biippose bocause they considered the case hopeless. I was conscious that I w is tho great central attraction, bpt painfully realized that I spread over too niueli ground to exhibit under one canvass. Slowly tho minutes woro on but I wasn't losing any timo. I had a certain amount of work to do before I struck the ground. There was a diver sity of opinion as to what I was trying to accomplish. Sumo thought 1 was .boring for an artesian well, while others thought it was scene irom a Da kota blizzard. I now b tcamo aware through every liber of the bicyolo's steel anatomy that it was gathoring up its rirccs for one Imal grand act oi ex termination. I wished I had been a little m ro regular hi my attendance at Sunday-school, then looked for a lira osi-ape. but it had no su-h attachment. Concentrating all its inherent wicked ness into ono mighty boost, intimating that it had no further use for me, 1 took the hint, left the saddle and winged my way toward tho azure. I had a round-trip ticket and came l ack on the down grade with all tho gathered force of niv past five minutes' exercise. Scooping out a ditch along tho road side with my shoulder led a bystander to remark that I was working out my1 road tax. When I got to tho end of the furrow the large wheel rolled oyer me, tho smaller wheel turned a hand spring overtho larger ono and knocked my hat over my eyes; then the entire miiehin i laid down on me, while the dude with the placid countenance and unruffled brow rolled silently by. Solier Sam, ' I'eclt' Sun. The Paper Tree of Tonkin. The principal material usod in tho) manufacture of papor used in Tonkin! is the paper tree, which grows in ahun-i dance on the mountains in tho environs': of Sontay. The dried b irk is macer ated and then rubbed up in mortars, so as to reduce it to a fine pulp, the latter being extended with a certain quantity of water, in order to form A clear paste which is sized with an infu sion made from the shavings of thd coniao tree. The paper is manufact ured sheet by sheet, by means of deli cate bamboo screens, which the opera tors alternately dip into the paste and take out therewith a thin sheet of paper, which is deposited upon a boar.l. At the end of the day these sheets are put into a press in order to extract tha moisture from them, and are then dried by placing them, one by one, upon a hot masonry walL after which they are put up in packages and trimmed, hach operative makes a thousand sheets a day. The thickness of the paper do pends on the consistency of the paste, and at one establishnwnt as many as 80,000 sheets are capable of being pio duced daily. X T. Sun. "Mamma." said Tato. "I have finished my cake and Gustave has got all of his left yet. Don't you Hunk, mamma, you ought to tell him to give me half of it to t -ach him to be gen erous?" Frtnch J'ajnr. SCHOOL AND CHURCH. Thero are now thirty-sevun women in tho I'nivorsalist ministry. Cincinnati boasts that It has the lnr.'o-t number of cIiuicIms iu the world. Jewish citizens in Las Vegas. N. M., are erecting the first synagoguo in New Mexico. A colored normal State school to cost ten thousand dollars will be lo cated at Louisville, Ky. Evening high schools aro now pro vided for cities oi fifty thousand or more inhabitants in Massachusetts. Won Journal. The Christian f'ntn says "this la the whole of righteousness to be un selfish, to obey rouson, and to love beautv." Tho Royal Academy of Belgium offers a prize of live thousand dollars for tho ablest paper on treatment of nervous dieasos, espoeially with S view for a remedy for epilepsy. Half a century ago Iii Turkoy it was considered a shanni for a woman to read. To-day two schools for girls In Constantinople havo ben estab lished by tho Sultan himself. Tho" ineomo of Yale during tho last college year was tHST.-VIO, with ex penses aggregating IG7,'.'3."). Tho total bequests to all the departments exceed $1.C00.U00. A remarkable record of prompti tude is that of Miss Annie Louise Good rich of tin classical conrsa Nashua (N. Y.) high school, class of '8(5, who was neither absent nor tardy for nino consecutive years. The cost per child in avera-e at tendance for the State s diools in the principal Australian colonies, and for the Hoard schools - in England and Wales, is as follows: Total cost per child of tho averagj attendance in the Stato schools in New South Wales jL'G 12s. lid.; ditto ditto in Victoria 5 2s. 2;d.; ditto ditto in South Australia i'5 7s.; ditto ditto in Queensland 5 7s. 8 Id. ; Board schools in England and Wales 4 10s. l)d. Tho lines of one member of tho Salvation Army have at least fallen in pleasant places. Ono of tho brightest and prettiest having gone to Plymouth to convort tiio town, met with such suc cess as a preacher that, at tho sugges tion of many prominent citizens, she has been induced to leave tho army ami to cstabl'sh herself as an independent minister in a church of her own. A gen tleman wiio offered to esjort her home was rather taken aback with tho ro responso: "I have como to Plymouth to catch souls, not beaux." Boston Uazcttc. In a letter from Mr. Moody, datod at North field, Mass.. to his Bible class in the Chicago Avciiuo Church, Chi cago, which recntly eolebrated its twenty-first birthday, ho says: "I have had a roving commission, and gono to my audiences. You have been stationed in the fort, and your audiences have come to yon. The battle is tho same; let us push it to tho gates. Whatever elso I forget, tho early events of the old Illinois Street schoof will never pass from my mind, and I love to think of your class as a tie that binds mo t tho past. Many things which you have dono will como to naught, and you will look back upon them with no pleasure, but tho work yon havo put into the Master's vinoyard will stand." Chi cujo Journal. ' PUNGENT PARAGRAPHS. "Why don't our young men como to tho front?'' asks tho Ailrocate. Well, wo don't know what keeps them back, unless it is thy high price of tho re served seats. llurdelte. Counsel for tho defenso: "Gentlo men of tho jury, if thero over was a case which, more than any othor case, challenged careful comparison with similar cases, this caso is that caso." b'lityenile. llla'tcr. A bnc, with a sufficiently vitiated taste to nttack the New Jersey onion crop, has made its debut. This is ul mo -t as bad as if it had taken to smoking cigarettes. Xorristown Herald. --Bridget (to iceman) "Av ye plane, sic. mo missus so, will ye put the ice in the saucer hero ivory mnrnin' ami cover it wid tho tayctip, so wo can have some left if wo don t get there the minit ye lave it." Things Ono Would Rather Havo Left Unsaid: Jones (to hostess, famed for her dinners)"!)., by the way, Mrs. Hodgkinson, if yem should hap pen to want a really good cook, I know of one who would suit you to a T!" Pit itch. Summer Boarder "You have a remarkably fine lot of chickens, I s jo." Farmer "Yes, and, Mr. Spinx, you mav not believe it. but those chickens seldom die. Why, whenever we want one to eat we generally havo to go out and kill iCTid-MLi. It was at a dinnor tablo. His father was saying something to his mother about dynamite. "O," ex claimed Jack, looivinj across to Eloise with an evident desire to impress her witli his aeiiii'enients, "1 know what dynamite is." "What Is it?" Inquired Eloiso. "It's something that you blaspheme rocks with," Jack explained. Boston Herahl. "Young man," said a stern old pro fessor to a student who had been charged with kissing one of his daughters -"young man, don't got In to that habit. You'll tiud that kissing Is like eating soup with a fork." "How so, sir?" asked the student "Because," answered the stem old professor, "you can't get enough of it.' Mrs. Flanahgin (formerly McFlau nigan) "Isn't it at Venice, my dear, tint we aro to see the Lion of St. Mark?"' Mr. Flanahgan "I believe it is." Mrs. Flanahgan (who has somewhere seen tho words Doze of Venice in print) "And we mustn't forget the cele brated Dog of Venice. The children will want to see all of the animals." K. Y. Times. "Where'm I goin' this vacation, pop?" inquired Jimmy Tuffboy of his paternal. "Well, you are going to be have yourself to start with?' "That's a tough one, pop. Where then?" "I guess if you go to the picnic that will Uo you. "One picnic! No picnic for me. I'm going to tramp these woods round here for six straight weeks. Who wants to row a boatload o' girls all over a pond an' not have 'em speak to you on the street?" Hartford 1'osL PRODUCE MARKET. rertlM. FLOUU-rer bbl. tmlard brands. $3.tO3.W: others. 2.2.te3.2o. WliEAT-l'er cti. viiy, (81.24 1.:0; Walla Wall U7,ftii.K). HAULKY-W"hoie,rf cental, 91.O0fl.lU; ground, V ton, $.1Affi5, OATS-Cholce mUllu, WQUo; cholot feed, 3tl;n:iric, HVK-i'pr ctl. fl.WKil.lO. BUCKWHEAT KLOUK-Pw cU. $3.75. CORN MEAL Per cU, yellow, fiii 2.40; white, i.60.3.75. . CKACKIO) WI1KAT Per cU, $175 UOMLNY-Per ctl, $4.00. O ATM UAL Per lb. 8.W. PKAKL liAULKY No, l.Sjc; No.S,5j. No. 3. 6c. bt'Ll f PEAS-Per lb, 6c 1'EAlUi TAPIOCA-In boxes, 60, SAUU-Per tb, tic. VEItMICELLl-Per tb, No, 1, $1.85; No. UKAN-Per ton, $13.J03;15. SHOar-Pcr ton. 1C MIDUUNUS-Per ton, CUOP-Per ton. $25.00. UAY-Pertou.baiea, 10(ftl2. OIL CAKE MEAL-Perton,'Va;3S.Mi. HOPS-Per PhcIQo Coast, '8S3,8i3l2c; do, ItMUiK 2.'. KUU: Ftr doa, 18c BUTTEK-Perrb.tancyroU.10o; Inferior grade, la; plcklod, lOia.l&s. CllEliE l'er lb, Oregon, 4o; Call, forma tnmc RICK -China. No, I, 0 00; do No. i, $5.00. Suudwirh Islands No. 1, $o.0U. iiiA! ouiig Hysou, 2Jtj6o; Jpu 20CAo5c; Oolou, 15iic; Guupowder am! liuoerial, iHsd"c SYUUP Calliornla rutlnery la quotou ai bor, tn lbl; iu kegs and 1-gal tins iiThf'45. VEUETABLES-neets.lb.Uc;cabbano, V lb. 2ic: carrois,? clc.1.25; caulltluwer.y dos, $l.7j. green corn. dozen, 15c; green oh, lb, Zic; lettuce, dux. 2uc; ouious 1.15; tumiia, lb. Uc; spiuauli. r sack, 40 dt oOc; celery, ) doz, $1; parsnips, V ack, Toe. tomatoes, f box, $1.uua1.i5; strimi beans, lb. 5c; cucumbers, K dos., 10c. 'PM'ATOKS Patotoes, new, 11c; pel sack, old. $1.00; sweet, f lb,.tc DRIED FRUITS-Per tb, apples, quar turn, sacks and boxes, H; do sliced, iu sacks aud boxes. 3j(g,44: apricots, 17o; biackberrios, laloe; nectarines. 10n17c ptvaclion, halves uupoeled, 7.J(a8o; pears, quariered, 7ia,8j pitted cherries, lflc; pitted plums, California, 8($10c; do Or egon, 7c; currants, fctou; dates, tKs 7c; tigs, rimyrua, 17.U-18; California, prunes. Calitoruia. 50; French. 10t.12j; Turkish. Ml; raisins. Califorla Lou don layers, if 2.15f" .'.20 p box; loose Mus Cttels, $2(0,2.11); Seedless, v tb, 12c; Sul tana, l-jc. PtClvl.KS-Per 6-gol keg, 90c; bbls, f gal., 2iic POULTRY-Chickens, dos, spring, $2.50yy.OO; old .t.U0v4.0U; ducks, $3,Oi fe&dO; geese, $1.00(&k turkeys, V lb. nominal, 0,g12c. IIAMSPrr lb, Eastern, -c; Or egon, OjOlUc LAUD Per lb, Oregon, 637i: Eastern. 7Kc WOOL F-asteru Oregon, spring cllD, 18 fegOoP lb; tall clip. . Valley Or kkou, spring clip, 20.a,23c; iambs' aud fall. SEEDS Per lb. timothy, OJ&74c; ren clover, 14(l0jc; orchard grass,, 1710c; rye sriss, HuuKJc, iSU i'S Calitoruia almonds, f 100 lb ska, 2t!c; Lraxil, X50 tb ska, u lb, 14c; chestnuts lK20cj cociunuw,$0.7.o0: mberta, Sicily, iVo u sks, v lb, He; hickory, luo tb a.ks,10c; i-.-iK.uu, (Ha7o; pecans, lexas. 100 tb sks, l .c; Calitoruia waiuuts, t luO Ibsks, 11(4 CANNED GOODS Salmon. 1-lbtlns, dos, (l.ito; oysters, 2-lb tins, V dos, $2.25. 1-lb tins, $1.40 dos; lobsters, 1-lb tins, dot, $1.00; clams. 2-tb Una, uoa, I.WjiM5; mackerel, 6-tb ilua, dos. $8.5t.0.u0; frulut, dos tins, 2.uo(g 2.25; jam aud jellies, k dos. $1.75(02.00; vege (aillen; f OUZ, l.lWtt'l.lW. iUDKS-lrv. i4wU)c; wet altd. 6V7. BAiUN Pur tb, OroRou sides. 8or7e: di sbouldeni, fH. ' FRESH KHCIT ADDles. Ortutou. new. tC box, 0 1(3,7 W; bananas, f bunch, $4.0'; Lemons, Si d t box, 8KX(i).l: watermel ons, f dox, $2.S0- Ijimes. f 100. $LoU; piuo apples, V ucit, $7.50; Los Auirelea oranges V iox, m4..-u; pears, v dox. ti.zoiaui): peaches, t box, $1.2.Vail.50: plums. V box. OOc: grapes, box, $1.A0. O-i Fhli-lrer lb. Guatemala. Hi; Costa R ca, 2(a,2c Old tSoveruinent Java. IH'g !: Uio, lli'$12c; Salvador, 10(3)10ic: &i ncha. tlWiv: Kena. 18c. SUUAtU-guote bbls; Culie, H3c; drr granulated ttjiv tine crushed, 0j)c; golden !. 6c. l-ra Avjtrv Inv nf tlin vnnr. hut flioro I'' "'J ""J V J J ...... ....W is always room for the Ifcst meats pro ilnpiwl at lln Kimt.. nnil ttt. nriccH that offer encouragement to farmers who know bow to Iceil cattle to make tlie most of them. Tn llii u'nrWsbui) it is froiiMcnllT Immlv lit linvii Knmo nw-tal tlnit will expand in cooling to lill bmall holes, i u-napia in nuHLini?s. i'lc. All iiiiuv lor this purpose can bo made of nine parts of load, two parts oi antimony and one part of bismuth. ' Take- 8IMM0N3 LIVER REGULATOR For all DiteuM of the . Lfrer, Elntyi, Stomici tad Spleen. Hii purely Titabl pro- Firation. now to celcbrMcd a a amily Medicine, origimttd ia Ibt South in IS'iS. It acta Smlljr on the Ilowvla an4 ,ldn-T and eorrects tho, actio of the Ur,and it, then fore, the beat preparatory medicine, whatever tha itcic aeaa aiay prove to be. In all common eweaftea il will, tan aaalalt by any other medi cine, effect a apeedy euro. Tha lUrnlator la aafe to adminiiter kt ray condition of the yttm,d under nn clrcuin aMincea earn it do harm. Il will InviaoraM lake a (lata of wine, but ia no intoiicatin( bever age to lead to intemperance ; will promote) dl Kation, dlaalpnte headache, and fener avlly tone) up Iba ayatcin. 1 he doaa araall, nut anpleaaant, and iu rirtuea undoubted. No loai of timo. no Inter mptlon or atoppag; of bualneaa while uking the KoxuUtor. Cbildren complalnlBf of Colie. Headacho, ar rtiak Htomaoti, a taaipoonkjl sr tore will fire relief. Iftakea occaaionallr by pa. denu eipoead to MALARIA, will expei the poiaoa and protact A PlTilflAJTS PINIOX. I have bean praendnf medicine fcr tweaty yean, aad have never bees able to put up a vegetable aeiinind thai would, like Swnawaa Lrver Regu baaor, promptlf and effectively more tha Liver M actios, and at the tame time aid (iaatead of weak, aing) tot digettiva and attimiUtive powen af tha ytuta. LM.HiinoNM.b.,Waibufte,Aitt. BBB THAT TOD SBT THK OEjrtrDIE. paaraaaa (V J. H. Zeilin & Co., Philadelphia, Pa. PRICE, SLOS). 0. C. E. . Tim TABLE. Msll Train orth,t:4l a m. Mail train soulli, i4 f. M. 0FFICK HOUKS, EWOEMKCITY POSTOFHCK. (leneral l)f llrery, from 7 A. M. to T P. M. sionejr unier, train 7 A. M. to t p. M. Kiyisirr, from 7 a. M. lol p. u. Mail for north close al V IA a. i Mailt for aouth cluae at 1:SU p. u. Mailt fur Franklin cloaa at 7 A. af. Monday ami Tlmnulav. Mail) for Mabel cloat at 7 A. M. Moaday and Thursday. Mailt for CartwriKht cloaa 7 A. af. Moaday. SWIFTIES. T.UOENK t.OIMiK NO. IL A. V. AND A. M I j Maou flrataud tbird Weitneadays in eaob month. SPKNCKIt BUTTE UHKIK NO. t, I. 0. 0. F. Meals every Tuesday aveulng. TIMAWHALA KNCAM TMKNT NO. 8, 1 1 Mi-rta on tha act-cud aud fourth Wednes day! iu each month. T 7 UO EN K l.OIK; K NO. A. O. U. W. Vj lfu,t at Hull Iia ....I feurth Fridays in each month. M. W. T M.OK.AUYlMSTN0.19,O.A.R. MEKTS f I a at Maaonio Hall the Unit ami tbird Fri days of eacb month, llyordrir. UtiMMANDKa. ORnKItOKCHOSKN FIMKNUS. MKKT3 the llral and third Haturday evening at Maaonio Hall, Hyonlerof O. C. IJUTTK 1IDOK NO. Sti7, 1. O. O. T. MEKTS 1) every rjalunluy iiinbl Iu Odd Ktllowa' Hall. W.O.T. TEADING 8TAH HANDOKHOl'K. MEETS J at the V. V. t'liun-h every Humtay after noon at MUX Yieitoia mad wi'loomo. Eugene City Business Directory. HKTTMAN, O.-Dry Rooda, clothtna;. RTooorles aim Koimi mnrciiaiim-, aouinwvat vornor. Wlllumetteand KikIIi atroeta CI'.AIV nilOii-IVaturs In Jowclrv, watchca, cick'hi ami miminai inatrumi-nta. lllamelto atroct, between iSorcutb and Kluhth. FRIENDLY, S. H.-Doalor In dry vnorla, cloth- iiir ana iretierat nn'roiinniiini, lllamelto street, between Kiglitli aud Ninth. G1LI J. P.-lliyalolan and aiwon. Willam- lio tirvet, betweeu Hoventli and Kiglitli. IIODRS, O. -Keepa on hand Una wines, llnuom. riifivra ami a pixii aim niiiiam inhie. vt lllani ettealrwt, betweeu Klubtb and Ninth. HORN, C1IAS. M.-Ounmith. rifles and shnt- Kiina, lireei-h and tmiEzla loaders, fur aule. I(lalrititr done in the neatcat style and war ranted. Shop ou Ninth street. LUCKEY. J. S.-tVatchmaknT and Jeweler. aerpaanne bum'K of ixhih in lila line, lilam ttte alreet, in Kllaworlli a drug store. MrCLAREN, JAMES -Choloa wlnoa, Hiiiora aniuMKHra, n iiittinotteau-vut, uelwoon Mtflitll and Nintli. POST OFFICE -A ne-w stoolc of standard acliool books Just received at the post olltoe. RENSIIA W Jt AIlltAMS-Wlnes, llnuora anil eiKara or ms ix-ai nimllty kept txmntantly on band. The beat billiard iuble iu town. RI1INEHART. J. n.-IIoaie. alien and carrlntre painter. ork icuaraiiteeil llrat-cluaa Hmrk sold at lower rates than by anyone in Kuvene, W. V, HENDERSON, DENTIST. HAS RESUMED PRACTICE, WITH ollU'o in lluys' brick. My operations will bo firat-olass and chance reasonable. Old patrans as well as new ones ara invited to call. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. WILL ATTEND TO PROFESSIONAL r calls day or nlirlit. Orriclt-t'inulra In Have' brink: or ran ha found at R. It. Luekey k Co's druv store. Olllce hours: t to 12 M 1 to I P. M I to 8 P. M. DR. J. C. GRAY, O KKICK OYER ORANGE STORE. ALL work warranted. Lausblntr rhs ailiiilnlatered for painless ex traolion of teeth. DR. W. C. SHELBREDE, xEivrrisrr. T3 NOW PERMANENTLY IWATED IN L Cotlaira Orovo. He pnrforina all opcratioui n nieulianleal and lurKlruldnnlUlrv. All work warranted ami aatinfactlon Kiiarautecd. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justiccof the Peace. REAL ESTATE FOR SALE -TOWN LOTS ami farms. Collodions promptly at tended to. ltavtiUKNCK-Corner Eleventh and II Kh Ola.. Eugene City, Oregon. opro s m ox Is the Life of Trade! SLOAN BROTHERS Will do work cheapar than any other shop in town. Horses Shod for $2 Gash With nrw material all around. Resetting old shoea SI. All warranted to give satlafactlon. Shop on the Corner of 8th and Olive SU SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM C. 31. IIOIIIV, Practical Gunsmith pitLia m CUN8, RIFLES, Fishing Tackle and Materials Seiiiz Uacliiiiesaiid Needles of All Unas For Salt Repairing dons lb ths neatest style and warranted. Qoni Loaned and Ammunition Famished Bhop on Willamette 8 tree t, opposite Poatoffloe, GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES ! On Account of Removal ! i wen I will sell my at ork at small Baar Kin above Coat, on arrount of set wlnhlug to rrmove the stock to Bay XrwMtore ltulldlng. Come One! Come All! AMI) ritll'K THK HAMK1 J. D. MATLOCK, Opposite tbc St. Cbarlcs Hotel. D. T. PRITCHARD. WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Repnlrlnit of Walcbes and Clocks executed with punctuality aud al rvaaouable cost, Wlllanitlta Htrcet. Kuscrne tity. Or. St. Charles Hotel EUGENE CITY. OREGON, ' W. H. "W ATKINS, Proprietor. w and Experienced Slanagesnent. Charirs Moderate. F. M. WILKINS, DRUGS, MEDICINES, Bruahrs. 1'alnta, Ulaaa, Leads, TOILET ARTICLES, Eto. Physicians' Preaorlptlons Compounded. Boot and Shoo Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will hereafter keep s ooaiplete .took of Ladies', Misses' anil Children's Mil 1IITTUN 1IOUTN, Slippers, White and Black, Sandals, . FINK KID BH0ES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact everything In the Hoot and ' Bboe line, to which 1 Intond to devote my especial attention. MY COOOS ARC FIRST-CLAt! And guaranteed as repreaentad, and wtU be auld for the loweat prices tliat a good artlole can be alfurded. A.. Hunt Central Market, FlMlicrtScWntkins PROPRIETOR 8. Will keep constantly on band a full supply of MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL. Which they will sell at the loweat market prices A fair share of the publio patronage solicited TO TUB FABMEBUt We will pay the highest market price for fat cattle. Logs and sheep. Shop on Willamette Street, EUCENE CITY, OREGON. Meals delivered to any part of the city free of charge. J unit