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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1886)
j of (lie Principal Events Now Attracting "Public Merest AL VILLAGES INUNDATED. . , h Vliitod by Dertnictivs Floodj-Iwo Hundred Live Last , w Oulean's Details of the do tiuii ly etorm at Sabine Pans and Bayou como in slowly, and 3t indefinite, though they all t!:at tlere has been grea't loss of , .-I J property. Two brothers 1 I'onieroy were picked up by imoner Andrew Baden in Sabine They had been in tho water v-hix houra, clinging to their cap s' yawl. Their mother and sister .Mrs. CapU Junker, hereon and ;,irl, of the party, were lont. The roys. report that fifty lives were at "the Porter house, where tho had collected as the best place ty. Many persons are missing. 1 greater loss is reported from .:on' Bayou. Whole families e swept away, and not a house was standing within live miles of the A npecial from the Mississippi quar ry station says: 'OnoOf the most iific and damaging hurricanes since ;0 prevailed in this neighborhood storday and last night. For thirty ; t oiiHt cutive hours the wind blew a ular hurricane trom tho northeast, ; tiff the waters from tho bay and ij ing tho property of tho unfor i inhabitants of this place, who rridly become reconciled to their iving no orange crop this year, by tho heavy frost of last year, tter trouble, however, would n surmounted had not been disastrous storm, which leaves ity of the most industrious and g people almost penniless. rm, or more properly called , was in such violence as to ty levees of seven years' stand ! carrying destruction to late its. Last night all the inhabi this place waded a distance e in water three feet deep, to ted States custom house, for on. Dr. Abey, quarantine ,n, and his family were driven eir home and forced to seek i the custom house." : The number of lives lost is :d at fully 200. A Destructive G.L. kio, N.Y. A terrific gale, ac ied by rain, set in here this o,and continues with increased U midnight the wind is blow-!y-five miles per hour. The .;,.!" iubabited by squatters, is ! !,and waters pour in huge waves ,r it.: Twenty-nine houses have i ! tally destroyed, and over 100 i are honielee. People are their household effects to the and. Officers were sent to he family of Charles Lambert, t was saved, but his wife and jr were drowned. Several re reported missing, ascment of houses on Canal re flooded, the inmates taking in upper, lloors. The roof of stem Transportation limine was , off, causing a blockade on the .iwanna track. Michigan and i streets are flooded 700 feet from iock. Ohio street is completely 1. All lumber yards on the 1 are wrecked. The damage to ing is very great. Barges are ' over Evans's dock, and a num ; a reported smashed. This even- the rear wall ot the new Music 1 went down with a crash. No one injured. A Baoe Tragedy. ij.M, N. C. A lamentableaffray n students of tho North Caro ate University and negroes took a Chapel hill. It resulted iu ath of one student and the lug of two others. For some ast a bitter feeling has existed n students, especially the stu ib killed, Jacob A. Freeze, and i who is supposed to have shot 'at Brewer, and from time to hey had quarreled. Two stu who had spent the evening in while passing Barber's house ursed and tetoned by some of iig. The young men hastened i University, and, " rousing up and four others, easily induced . t j give afsistance in seeking re . On reaching the house they i to force their way in, at the time calling on the negroes to out and give them satisfaction. ' rr ply was a volley from a second ry window. Tho fire was returned i lie students, but so far as learned ne A the negroes were injured. eee was instantly killed, a bullet --ir through his heart, and two idetits were " wounded. Seven ;rt s have been arrested, and fears x pressed that they will be lynched ':o students. Wedding of Hidgett. f York. A wedding occurred J stage of a museum in the Bow ,tst evening. The bride was i cesa Lucy," 19 years old, twenty is inches in height and twenty- pounds in weight. The groom Gen. Kheinbeck, who weighs pound, is thirtv-six inches in t and 21 years of age. The pair on a small table in the center of age the bride wore a train of bilk, with lace front. The maid was' Miss Annie Bell, pro- oal fat woman. j-ence Budd, employed in the er & Rio Grande yard at uraniu) . m attemntinc to lump a mov- eight train fell under the wheels, I passed over his neck,, arm and li'gs. seveiinsr them completely. as the son ot the scent at that ALONG THE COAST. Devoted Principally t Washington Territory and California. Idaho Territory has twenty-six news pajiers. There are 105 patients in the Nevada insane asylum. There are 3!)6 pupils in the public school at Dayton, V. T. Joe Storm is under arrert at Walla Walla tor horso stealing. Charles Martin, a fisherman, was drowned near Eureka, W. T. The Walla Walla fire department cost less than f 40(H) last year. Hugh Medlock is under f 1000 lxmds for horse stealing at Walla Walla. Saloon licenses have been raised from 1 100 to 200 at Pomeroy, W. T. Tho market price for horned toads in Southern California is 5 cenU each. Five men deserted from the second cavalry at Fort Walla Walla last pay day. A new Methodist church hag been dedicated at La Camas, Clarke county, W.T. E. B." Wise, of Klickitat, W. T., kills deer in tho mountains by using a tamo decoy fleers The product of the Cour d'Alene this season estimated at 11,500,000 gold, silver and lead. F. C. Taylor goes to the penitentiary from Dayton, W. T., for two years on conviction of arson. The steamer Almota has been laid up for the winter, owing to the low stage of water in Snake river. The remuneration of the sheriff of Alturas county, Idaho, for the year ending June 30 was f 19,458.20. Young Crow, the eighteen-year-old boy who killed a man near Carson, Nevada, was acquitted by tho jury. Private Joseph O'Brien, of F troop, Walla Walla, who received a severe kick from a horse, died of his injuries. At the Stoilacoom (W. T.) asylum there are 44 female and 146 male patients, the largest number ever there. Warren Sayre is under arrest at Farmington, W. T., for attempting to leave the country and several creditors behind. A rich strike has been made on Kettle river in the Kootenai country, from f 10 to 75 a day being taken out with a rocker. Mat Thome, a blacksmith, stabbed and instantly killed Emilio Ajala at Tehachapi, Cal. Both were drunk, but the killing was without provoca tion. The Elltnsburg New Era gives the story that the mother of Chief Joseph was a white woman, having beeu taken and adopted by the Indians when a little girl. W. B. Johnson, who embezzled funds of'the railroad company at Caldwell, Idaho, was tried at Iwiho City, and sentenced to four years in the Terri torial penitentiary. Capt. Orrin Kellogg has been awarded the contract for cleaning the snags out of the channel of the Cowlitz river and commenced the work with the steamer Toledo. The trick of the Spokane Falls & Palouse Railroad is within eight miles of Farmington. The whistle of the N. P. locomotives can easily bo heard on the O. R. & N. line. Kanaka Juk, who has been a Jef ferson county (W. T.) charge for over 13 years, costing the county nearly $5000 to support, has been sent back to the Sandwich Inlands. A boy named Holbrook accidentally shot the top of his head off at his father's ranch on White Bird, near Grangeville, Idaho, white climbing a fence with a loaded shotgun. H. C. Allen J Healdsburg, Cal., was carrying a crosscut saw one day recently. He stumbled and fell in such a manner that an artery in his hand was severed, and he nearly bled to death. The skeleton of a man with this ad dress, "A. J. Soule, residence, 1156 Post street," was found in an unoccu pied sheep camp near Huron. Cal. The suptKtsed cause ot ueatn was neat and thirst. At Colfax, W. T., a dispute arose be tween Cash Cole, a prominent sport ing man and pugilist of Palouso City, and Bill Lennan, which resulted in three shots beirr fired into the body of Cole. Lennan acted in self-defense. Recently a farmer on the Malad river, luano, nameu james jmrm-u, . i IT.... II left three of his children, the eldest need 12 years, to guard a vegetable patch against rabbits, wnen mo cnii dren were attacked by coyotes and the " - -. .... . .1 I ! two youngest were killed. On the Cascade division, nineteen miles of track has been laid beyond Ellensburg, and ono or two miles on the other side of tho tunnel. Of the remainder of the division, about sixty miles have been graded, leaving fifteen and a half to complete it. The complete catch of codfish by the fleet from San Francisco this year amounts to 1,232,000 finh, averaging about three pounds eacli, or an aggre gate of 1847 tons. This is the small rat catch for five years. There were caught among the Choumagin islands 500,000, Behring sea 239,000 and Ochotsk sea 427,000. In Washington Territory, under the grofs earnings law, the total receipts from railroads in 1884 were f48.954.78. In 1885 they were $50,377.10; or a total in the two years of $99,330.88. The cost of collecting was about one tenth of one per cent One-third of the amount went to tho Territory, and the rest to the several counties trav ersed by railroads, according to the mileage. George Bailey was guarding a corral full of sheep one night recently, near C'loverdale. Cal., when no let than seven linns rushed out of the brush and made a siiniiitancous' attack on the frightened animals. Bailey had a Winchester ritle, and he at once com menced pumping lead, with the result that he killed two lions, mortally wounded another, and the rest ran away. An incendiary fire destroyed 200, 000 cords of wood and one mile of William's flume, between Anaconda and Silver Bow junction, 'daho. The water had lieen turned olf, and ll,e flume and wood being dry, burned fiercely. The loss is fully $75,000. The wood was for the Colorado smel ter, to which the loss is a great em barrassment. There has been bad blood over tho right of way since tho flume was built, about a year ago, and ono man was killed over the all'air. According to the report of the gov ernor of Montana, that Territory is suffering greatly from drouth. He estimates the population at 120,000. a gain of 10,000 since last year. The cattle of the Territory are worth $50, 000,000 and number'1,500,000; homes 130,000 head, and sheep 2,000,000 bead. The products of the mines for the year are thus estimated: Gold, $3,450,000; silver, $9,000,000 : copper, $8,000,000; lead, $1,250,000; total, $22,300,000. Derose, Connolly and Maxwell, three tramps, wero convicted at Lyt ton, B. C, of the murder of a Nova Scotiau named Dielman and sen tenced to be hanged on tho 24th of November. The uwirder was peculiarly atrocious, Dielman having about $7.50, which the others wished to possess themselves of. Failures In Washington Territory for quarter ending September 30th last, 12, representing liabilities of $44, 272, and assets of $23,500. Same quarter last year, 31, with liabilities of $140,624 and assets of $112,000 Ore gon failures same quarter, 1886,30 liabilities $204,933, assets $69,700; same quarter 1885, 32 failures, liabili ties $109,499, assets $65,130. Henry Miller, working in the Gorilla mine at Grundy,. Mono county, Cal., was instantly killed recently. It is the custom of the men employed at tho mine to ride up on the tramway until they arrive at a certain station, when thev get off. It seems that Mil ler failed to alight at the proper time, and his face and chin caught on the upper edge of the chute, nearly tear ing the head from the body. Earl Cross, a bell boy, and Lu Liv ingston, a pantry boy of the McQueen house of Miles City, Montana, ap propriated a quantity of Tiilu alios consisting of clothing, shotguns, rifles and revolvers worth about $200, be longing to the guests of the hotel and ran away, with them. They also stole a skiff belonging to the ferryman and started down the Yellowstone river. Their boat was found near the river bank full of water, a whole knocked in the bottom and some of the missing articles in it. It is thought the two boys were drownpd, as the Yellowstone is a very treacherous stream, and the boys were totally unacquainted with it. Both wero under 18 years of age. Laura Virgil, who lately obtained a divorce from Harry Mainhall, the actor, encountered the latter in front of the Alcazar theater at San Fran cisco, and drawing a small horsewhip laid it with great vigor upon his head and shoulders A scullle ensued be tween the couple for possession of the whip, and friends coming to Maitihall's aid the scene was ended. Mrs. Virgil, Mainhall's former mother-in-law, who accompanied her daughter, resumed the attack and delivered a couple ot blows with a heavy parasol upon the actor's head. The women then de parted. Tho cause of the attack is attributed to un alleged insulting note sent by Mainhall to Miss Virgil. A remarkable instance of presence of mind and intrepidity occurred on a local train from San Francisco to Berkeley. The train from Berkeley happened to miss a switch at Shell Mound, where it passes the train from San Francisco, aud the two trains sped directly toward each other. The engineer of the train from San Fran cisco saw that a collision was inevit able, and in order to protect the pas sengers from injury ho ordered down brakes, disconnected his engino from the train and shot the engine away iu advance of tho cars, so as to receive the force of the shock on it. Tho en gineer of the Berkeley train, in tho meantime, did all he could to chock his e cine, and suoceeded in so reduc ing tiie speed that when tjjo collision came it Was comparatively slight, and did but a few hundred dollars' worth of damage. Many of tho passengers were considerably frightened, but no one was hurt. Willie Brough, 12 years old, who created an excitment among super HtirimiH neonle near Turlock. Cal.. by apparently setting fire to all objects by his glance, and who is nciu responsive for the destruction of $9000 worth of farm nroiierlv. has been cxnelled from a Madison county schoo!,near Turlock, on account of his wonderful freaks. The Brough family refused to have anything to do with him, believing linn TviKHPHsed lil a UCVl I. 11)0 DOV wa taken in bv a farmer and sent to school. On the first day there were five fires in the school; one in the renter of tho ceilinc. ono in the teacher's' desk, one in tho teacher's wardi-olie, and two on tho wall. The boy discovered all, and cried from frii'ht. The trustees met and exnelled him that night. Ono Turlock insur nni'P nt'ent has civen notice that -lie will cancel all policies on property occupied by the lxy. The neighbor hood of Turlock is in a furor of ex citment about the mystery. OREGON NEWS. EvaryUiin; of General luterekt in a Con dantod Form Diphtheria prevails at Philomath. Albany claims a population of 3000. Tho tax of Baker county is 22 mills this year. There are thirteen Presidential post ofhees in Oregon. Tho total taxable property of Currv county is $120,075. Crook county has nineteen tax-imv- ers on over $10,000. The Seventh Day Adventists hav organized at Albany. Albany has rais.nl the $10,000 bomis for tho C. P. railroad shops. The Newport Water comoanv has filed articles of incorporation. Over 100 tax navprs in T.inn rmintv aro assessed over $8000 each. The O. P. is to be pushed as far as the Santiam from Albany this fall. Tho taxable property of Grant county for tho year 1886 is $2,157,884. The llillslioro creamery will be ready in a few weeks to manufacture butter. Fall apples are sollinir at Mt. Anirel. Marion county, for 20 cents per bushel. Tho State Normal school at Mon mouth has an attendance of 100 students. Tho Portland reduction works are up and the machinery is being placed in position. Tho total amount of taxable prop erty in Douglas county for 1886 is $2,825,093. Mrs. Ben 4 Vincent, of Jackson county, raised this year cucumbers four feU long. The taxable property of Polk county this year is $4,420,416, with an indebt edness of $1,016,775. The Baptists of Medford have con tracted for the erection of a good brick church edifice. Five new buildings have been erected at Coburg, Lane county, with in the pait two months. The gross valuation of all property in Multnomah county is $24,935,020; increase over 1885, $1,132,365. Two children of Mr. and Mrs. Emerson, living on Yaquina bay, were jKiisoned by eating wild parsnips. The gross assessable property for Umatilla county for 1886 is $0,587,508. Indebtedness amounts to $1,873,391. The total value of taxable property in Washington county is $2,858,130, an increase of $84,000 over last year. Mrs. Annio Kinsey, living near North Powder, killed an antelope while it was drinking near her house, at a distance of 190 yards. Ed. Dunavin . was badly hurt at Myrtle creek, Douglas county, by a corn crib tilting over on him, break ing one leg in three places. Jos. Nimchick, who killed young Rcy at Jordan in Lane county, two or three years ago, has been adjudged insane and taken to tho asylum. Suit lias been commenced against the bondsmen of J. T. Buslvicll of (.'rook county for tho money stolen from the County Treasurer's safe last April. Cornelius Ryan, at one tune pro prietor of the Nicholai House, was found dead m his room on B street, Portland, death having beencaused bv heart disease. Luke Crandall of Linn county, has been scut to the asylum. It is said his insanity has been caused by the de sertion of his wife, who left him some lime ago for another man. Wool growers of Umatilla county have formed an association, with a capital of $50,000. The object of tho association is to make advances on and to buy, store and ship wool. Final orders for the construction of the railroad bridge in Portland have been received by Manager l rescott. It is to be a railroad and wagon bridge combined, to cost about $750,000. Mattie Allison was acquitted at Salem on the charge of accessory to to the murder of Campbell, and Hie uirl set at liberty. The jury was out but twenty minutes and stood eleven for acquittal on tho first ballot and on the third was unanimous. Senator Doll ill has secured an order from the Secretary of War for the re sumption of work upon tho locks at the Cascades of the Columbia river. By direction of the Secretary work will be prosecuted upon the plans pro posed by Capt. Charles . I'owell United States engineer. Simeon and Silas Stuggs are under arrest at Arlington for the crime of at tempting to kill their brothers, Sterling and Wallace btuggs. Simeon con fensed that ho had put strychnine in bread and given it to his brothers, the object being to get their property Both aro locked up for want of $2000 bonds. W. R. r rady met with a very pain ful accident near JJrain, w hich came verv near nrovine fatal. He went into the woods to look after fire that was'rasinK and before he was aware of his daneer. the fire had surrounded him and he undertook to run through being an old man he fell in tho tire and was badly burnt. It is now stated that Capt. James B, Eads, whose jetties at the delta of the Mississippi have rendered him a man of mark and fame throughout the civilized world, is shortly to visit Ore con. It is not tho deepening of the water on tho Columbia river bar that brings him hero but the examination of The Dalles, with a view to construct ing a steamboat railway about thoeo formidable obstructions to inlan navigation. SPANISH VENDETTAS. A Srlklnf InaUnr ot the Intrnaltf of Family UuarrvU lu 8ilu. About a year ago a gipsy named Moralis was assassinated at Zor.a, in tho province of Caeeres. by one of his comrades named Silra. The latter was in due course tried ami condemned to death, but his execution did not satisfy tho vengeance of tho victim's family. There had been Ill-feeling between the two families for three 'years, but there had been no open quarrel until the mur der of Moralis. Soon after the execu tion of the murderer, which took place last month, the two families met on their mum from a fair near the town of Caeeres. They had their mules and cattle with them. There were about fifty on each side, including women and children. A regular pitched battle ensued, revolvers, knives, and sticks being freely used bv the men. while the women employed their nails with considerable effect, and the children threw stones indiscriminately. The result of the struggle was that tho heads of the two families wero both killed, two of the women, and several of the children. There were ton or twelve wounded, and the bodies of the dead were horribly mutilated. If the mounted police hau not interrupted the tight, there would have been many more lives lost Several of the mules were killed, and the baggage of the two families was strewn about in such dis order that the road for nearly half a mile looked as if a large army had beaten a retreat along It Madrid Let ter. T "Is the ago of chivalry pait?" asked a contemporary. Oil, no. Only lat weela a young man in town mar ricd a red-headed girl with a wart on er chin. .orrtilown Hernia. Brown I never see Mrs. Snooks now. I used to be sweet on her, but lie was quite uneducated had not even learned the rudiiiutiiU of gram mar. Sm th Hadn't she thouirliP I ear she knew enough to decline an thnusrli. .Iwitic 0. ft C. E. B. TIME TABU. Mall Train forth. 11 A. M. Mail train south. P. M. OFFICE HOURS, EUQENK CITV F0STUFFICX. Oeneral Pvllrerjr, from 7 A. M. to T P. M. Money Order, f ram 7 A. M. to A P. M. Iterator, from 7 A. M. toA p. u. Mai In for north clone at 9:1.1 A. M. Maila for south close at I JO p. m. Malls for Krankllu clone at 7 A. M. Monday suit Tburadav. Malls for Mabel close at 7 a. M, MoatUr and Thurmlay. , Mails for lartwrlnht close 7 A. M. Moaday. 80CIETIIS. .U'DKNK LOIK1K NO. 11. A. K. AND A. M J Moots first and third Weduesdars la each month. ' I'KNCKR nUTTK UI1H1K NO. I, I. 0. O. F. I Meets every Tuesday evening. 1MAWHALA KNCAMPMKNT NO. & f ' Mi-ets on the second and fourth Wednes days in each month. a EUOENR liOfKIK NO. IS. A. O. U. W. MrrUt at Masonio Hall the second and fourth Fridays in each month. M. W, T M.OEAHY POST NO. 41, 0. A.It. MKKTS el at Masonio Hall the tint and third Fri days of each mouth, ity order. Commandkh. OnilKROFCIIOSKN KIUKNilS. MKKT8 the tint and third Saturday eveiilnim at Masonio Hall. By order of U. C. "nUTTK IIIIOK NO. 3(17. 1. O. O. T. MKKT8 J) every Saturday night in Odd Fellow' Hall. W. C. T. TRADING STATlBANlJOFHOPK. MKKTS J at theC. V. ('hurch every Hunday after noon at I:.1u. Visitors made welcome. Eugene City Business Directory. BKTTM AN, O.-Dry goods, clothing, groceries and general merchandise, wiuthwuet corner. Willamette and Klglilh streets CP.A1N nit()H.-Dealers In Jewelry, watches. cliK'ks and mimical limtruinenla, Willamette street, between Seventh and Eighth. FRIENDLY, 8. II. -Dealer In dry goods, cloth- Ing and general merchtimllHe, Willamette street, between Eighth and Ninth. GILL, J. P.-Phylclan and surgeon. Willam ette street, between eevenlh and hlghth. llOIHCH, O.-Keeps on hand fine wines, Honors, rlgim and a pool and Iml'ard tame. Willam ette si reel, between Eighth and Ninth. HORN, CI! AS. M. -Gunsmith, rifles and shot guns, breech and innt.lo loaders, for sale. Repairing done in tho neatest style and war ranted. Hhup on Ninth street LUCKKY, J. 8. -Watchmaker nd Jeweler, keeps a line stock or goods In his line, W Ilium tlU) street, in Ellsworth's drug store. - MoCLAREN, JAMES-Cholce wlnnii, liquors and cigars, W illamette street, between Eighth and Ninth. POST OKFICK.-A nw stock of standard school books just received at the post ollioe. RKNSHAW ft AURAMS-Wlnes. liquors and cigars of the brat nihility kept constantly on hand. J lie beel billiard table In town. RIUNKII ART. J. n.-Hoaan, sign and oarrlage painter. Work guaranteed. Unit-clam teock sold at lower rales than by anyone in Eugene. OPPPNLTION Is the Life of Trade! SLOAN BROTHERS Will do work cheaper than any other shop In town. Horses Shod for $2 Cash With new material all around. Resetting old shoes f 1. All warranted te gifs satisfaction. Shop on tht Corner of 8th and Olive SU SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM C. M. IIOI11Y. Practical Gunsmith CUNS, RIFLIS, Fishing Tackle and Materials Sew n Haai!ies3SlN:E.!Esaf ill Kinds For Salt IU-palriiig don. lh th. neatest stjls and warranted. Gum Loaned ahd Ammunition Famished Shop on WUlametw 8treeW opposllo PostofBoa, W. V. HENDERSON, HAS RKHI'MKII l'KACTICK. WITH oftlre in Hays brick. Myoperatlouswiilbeflrst-claasand oliarfea reasonable. Old patreus as well as new ones are liTited to call. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. 'ILL ATTEND TO PROFKSHIONAL I V calls day or nlgliC Orril'l -I'D Stairs in !' hrirk! ap nan ha reuuci HK.K. Mickey ft to s rtrui hsurs: 1 1 11 m., 1 1 I p. M. iriis- tier. Offloa i 9 to S P. M. DR. J. C. GRAY, OrFICK OTKR ORANGE 8TORK. work warranted. Latif bins; gas administered for palnta traction ef teeUi. ALL DR. W. C. SHELBREDE, TS NOW PEnMANKNTLT LOCATKD IN A Cottage UniTe. He performs all operation in mechanical and surgical deutlstry. AU work warranted and satisfaction guaranteed. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice oftho Peace. REAL ESTATE FOR 8ALK-TOWV LOTS and farms. , Collections promptly at tended to. ItitsiDisrc-Cernsr Elsreath and High Bit Kugeut City, Oregon. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELEB, Repairing of Welches and Cloeka vieuted with punctuality and al reasonable cost. WlllnaaelL Mtre.i. City, Or. St. Charles Hotel EUGKNK CITY. OREGON. . W. II. "W ATKINS, Proprietor. New .ad Kiperleaeed Ha.age.seat. Charge. H.der.te. F. M. WHKINS. DRUGS, MEDICINES, limine., f.lnla, Ulaa. II. Lead. t TOILET' ARTICLES, Eto. Pbr.tol.na' PrMortptlons Compounded, Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT. Proprietor. Will berrsfter km; a eomptet stook of Ladies', Misses anil Children's Shoes! 1II TTOM BOOTH, Slippers, White' and Black, Sandali, FINK KID BH0ES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And l.i fact ererythlng In the Hoot and Hhoa line, to which I intend to devota my especial attention. MY COOD8 ARK FIRST-CLASH! And guaranteed as reDresented. and will lie sold lor the lowest prices tiist a g004 article can be airoraeu. A.. Hunt. Central Market, FiNhcrAcWntkina PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on hand a full supply of BEEP, MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL, Which they will fll at th. lowest market price. A fair share of th. publle patronag solicited TO THE FABMERMt W will pay the highest market price for tat cattle, nogs and sheep. Shop on "Willamette Street, EUCENE CITY, ORECON. MeaU dsllrered to any part of the sity fre. ot charge.