Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1886)
OREGON NEWS. Utng of General Interest la a Con denied Form ALONG THE COAST. Detoted Frittcipalljr ti Wasuinptoii lerritorj and California. r.um county wunU to Im divided, j ikeviow liH8 ordered a hiuid fire A Lirg" Wftrcliouufl is king erected ;U Yaquiiift City. Th" Klamath flouring inilln arc run jiins ay d night. There are 3"0 pupils attending the jv-.'ne City whooln. Suinmerville. Union county, U to l ;ivt 11 pulilic library. Mitrthfit ld wants eitnncriiw to can Jm ( !iiinn, crahs and fruit. '1 he OrFRon Pacific round houce ut A!i :iiiy will have tuxty bUlls. T:ic large two-ftory k-IuxiI building tit I'oi-nil was destroyed ly fire. ; The Oncatta M)htollicc, lSoiiton comity, has lx en diMiuutinued. i Wm. Avers lias bein font 1o the in Une inylum from Marion county. ? Win. Taylor of Corvnlln ni'iulv cut iix rijjht Jiiind off while huU herin. ' J. H.Timnu'rman i in Hepner jail charged with larceny of two hornon. The Sulem bridge acroBS the Willam ette in rapidly approaching completion. i The new sehoolhouse nt Linkville Iihh been handed over to the directors. Minion county is asesicd at $5,- '.I'-'i't, with an Jndebtediu'&s of $2,- jnr Rennett, of Fort Klamath, been ordered to the Tresidio, San I , ncirtCO. I Tin- Lafavette Presbyterians will w,u l.! a $1200 church and n $800 Vtrxmage. f- I )uck aro reported plenty at West- rt, geese at Clatsop, elk on Lewis ,1 Clarke'.. Ti in Oits and Charley Parker, two ! etude nts at Chcnanoa, made eir o.cape. V. Pavin, of Salem, was kicked by iiotna and received injuries which .y prove fatal. Th wife of Pretton Mulliim, of h'luaulla county, has been committed 1 (' p insane asylum. Two hundred and eifilr-v-nine tux yi is in Jackson county pay taxes on trunk . . . fc.Vi'V ., -JUU afSCNJIIlCIllS. it in reported that horses are disap- .t ir 1 1 11 1 fc :ir;iig Horn me w anowa vauey unuer iiuims circumstances. The Mackay rxmtitl telegraph is pro- - wi tlirouyh the State and will mu i e ready for biiMness. An attempt was made recently to list .''aider s flouring mill at alow inch, in (ioo.se lake valley. $ will be an unusually large lT of stock wintered in the 1. ! Bonde valley this year. V State offers $100 reward for the (of the two Haight brothers oiiL'd f i-.m the penitentiary. i, iey valley is attracting consider v Mention and immigrants are ' ii ; 10 that plat e in large numbers. ' has. Knowles, who lives ncarllub A, found a loaded cartridge and v has a forefinger and thumb iiiikS' u S',' lit? Fourteen hundred curs were loaded ih cattle at Ontario, eastern Oregon, t rear for shipment to Montana ito future. Kestcnmaclier. who escaped from ' ClivckninaH county jail, was cap- iH it at 1 lie l'aii' S. ne is cnargeu jjtfiih murder. It is estimated that iiOUO acres of In at will ho sown this fall between k:i t l'ostfclllce and John Day river, to Civok countv. 1 rge Horeman was fatally injured " down in the Virtue mine shaft, it county, by a piece of falling r striking linn on the head. funnel Conron. aged -about 12 ..is, fell into the Willamette river at '.v.ilHs. while lishmc. ami was "vwicd. The body was recovered. .). C.Trulhnger is about to build a Iroad from McGill's place, 011 the . Ihifki, to heavy timber in Clatsop iaty It will be two miles long. A postofficc key was stolen from vd. Wasco countv. The money iwer ws forced open and over $100 P com taken : also the Dostomce mail era It ets xb! fit The sum of $800 has been subscribed jwardthe erection of a South Method It church at lleppner. The amount 1 . - - .. . is raiued amongst four or hve gentle- lien. 4 Union has organized a joint stock (ompany for the purpose of estabhslv z a pulilic library in that town, lne "'r.t capital stock of the organiza- 1 n is fliOOO. The erand jurv failed to find a true p i irainst E. E. Cates. marshal of for shooting at Mumford and '.er while attempting to arrest :a some time since. V f-heen berdcr working for Mr. ii,!, of Anttlotie, came near meet : hi death bv eating some food strychnine in it. It is thought t some one tried to kill him by lug his food. A .laughter of Mr. Merrill's, living l i Valley, Marion county, was 4 to death. Her clothes caught i 1 some way, and Imfore the blaze ! be extinguished, she was so ' burned, as to make recovery . sible. a 1euman, of Applegato, the '' day struck it very rich in his s ledxe on the hill between 7 gulch and Ferris gulch. Free ' a visible all through the rock. edge is four inches wide. He - discovered the ledge four years Colfax is to havo electric lights. Whitman college, Walla Walla, has 121 pupils. Terra cotta has been discovered at Great Falls, M. T. A new county jail is being built at Asotin City, W. T. Lumber trade on the Sound is re ported to be improving- Hoke City proposes to enjoy die luxury of electric lights. Firewood is quoted in Boise City at from $5 25 to $7 per cord. A man named Green fell into a well near Davenport, W. T.,and was killed. 1 ho ret.id.-nce of Frank Lilo, near. AKottu, W.T.. burned recent v : loss. tor m no month j of 18S0, 32,174 passengers have arrived in Oregon by sea and rail. The mouth of the Fraser river is to be dredged and made navigable for ocean vessels. The silver product of Montana Ter ritory for the current year is estimated at flZ.UUUAHX). The German bark Bvluia was fined $120 by the custom officials at Victoria for smuggling curios. The builili' in Vancouver, W. T., occupied as a variety theater, was burned to the ground. Michael McGinnis, of Lummi, W, T., was kicked in the stomach bv a norse, irom the etlects of which he died. The sash and door iactory at Chc- hnlis is getting out the material for a $16,000 schoolhouse in Butte City, Montana. TJ 1 SI r-u. uaines, a young lad, was ser iously injured by the explosion of a gun while out hunting near Mount Vernon, w. T. The Anaconda Mining Company at Anaconda, M. T., givesemplovment to 'ZWO men, and the monthly pay roll amounts to $00,000. A. A. Lengley, a well known farmer and cattle dealer, was killed by a pis tol in his own hand at Reno, Xev. It is supposed to have been accidental. Robert, tho 4-yeurold son of U. L, Carpenter, of Vashon island, . T. was shot and killed bv the accidental discharge of a gun which an older brother was carrying. A. S. Stacy was instantly killod, and V. . Williams Had a leg broken near the thigh and his skull fractured, while employed in taking down framework at a mine in v lrginia City, Nev. The Northern Facifie railroad com puny is preparing to build a transfer boat for transferring cars across the Columbia river at Ainsworlh, similar to the transfer boat Taeoma at Ka huna. A respectably dressed woman de posited a three weeks old girl baby on the doorstep of Mr. Bucklin, of Port Madison, W. T. She was apprehended and said the child belonged to her Bister. Cornelius Harrington, a laborer, while at the bottom of a ditch in Clay street San r rancisco, endeavoring to fit a piece of pipe, was buried alive by the caving in of the bank. His body was recovered. William Vickers, a uuarter-breed Indian, who stabbed Charles White at Gardner's ranch on Reynolds creek, near Silver City, I. T., last August has escaped Irom t lie county jail t tne latter iilvce. Tho sheriff oilers $10 reward for his capture. The dead body ot an unknown man was found near Santa Barbara, Lai in a ravine on Dibblee place. Au cinutv laudanum bottle and a box containing ten morphine pills, show ing that nine had been taken, were found beside him. A Salt Lake City dispatch says: A bodv supposed to be that of J. D. Farmer, who was lost in tho lake up ward of three years ago, while in batbincr. was found, and is said to be well preserved in the salt water and fully recognizable. The Northern Pacific Company have determined to build a mammoth transfer boat, to take the place of the Billines at the crossing of the Colum bia between Pasco and Kcnnewick. The new boat will have three tracks and a capacity for 36 cars. Simeon G. Thoeny, a young man employed in the Spokane Falls Review office for the past year, was mueu oy the cars near btevens station, W.J He was ridine on a brake-wheel, and a sudden jerk of the train precipitated him headlong between the cars. A dispatch has been received at the office of tin James Lick trust in San Francicco. from Alvan Clark A Son of Boston, stating that the latter had succeeded in manufacturing an object glass for the telescope at Mount Uamillon observatory. The glass will be put in position next spring, at a eostot fai.ow. Tho tocher of the Oneal district school, near Fresno, Cal., was return ing home on horseback, and took up a little five-venr-olJ girl named Hughes on tlm hor?e with her. While riding alone the child fell off, breaking her The toucher picked up tho little one's bodv and carried the bleed home, two miles, to the r. 1 little one's paienU. Tlifl mntract for the (trading of a v..nten miles addition of the Jeffer son branch of the Northern Pacific, has been let V) Greene & Barbour for tiiAivm The m akin e of about 300 feet of tunnel is included in the con tract Work will commence at once in the direction of Butte, the terminus A Canadian Pacific railroad express train going west was ditched near Aoherott, about 200 miles from Port Moody. A landslide of large extent was the cause of the accident. The track and telegraph line were swept away for aconsiderablo distance. Tho engineer of the train is supposed to be fatally scalded. Shortly before the City of Peking departed from Yokohama, news had reached there of the wreck of a ves sel freighted with lumber, some dis tance from Small Dnnkwater, a point near Shanghai. Four bodies had been washed ashore, and it is tho opinion that all hands were lost. The wrecked vessel is believed to be from Puget sound. No further particulars were received at Yokohama. A man bv tho name of Andrews was being buried at Ceour d'Aleno re cently, and as the coffin wos being lowered into the grave the lid was re moved and a man named Carroll, a friend of tho deceased, put a revolver in the folded hands of the dead man with the remark that " that was his best friend in life, and he could have one in death." Those present took a last look at the deceasinl and he was lowered from sight. AGRICULTURAL NOTES. A Column Derated to the Intereeu of Fsrmen and fctockinen. Twelve-inch iron pino for a twenty seven mile line is being construct id to convey motive power to tho Comstock from Marlette lake, in the Sierra Ne- vadas. This power will be used to run quartz mills to be erected at in tervals of a quarter of a mile apart) in Six Mile canyon, wlu.ro tho steep grade will admit of a fall of from 7') to 100 feet for each mile in that dis tance. The mills will be used to crush ore from tho upier levels of the Chollar mine, at Virginia, Nev. Suit has been brought in the San Francisco Superior Court by Robert alker to recover $15,000 from Capt T. G. Steer of tho Star of Denmark. Complainant alleges that he is a good miner of Newcastle, Australia, and that on the 16th of August last he was sczied, drugged and shanghaied on board the bark. Ho was com polled to perform sailor work during the voyage to this port, and was subjected to much cruelty. For all this he asks damagee as mentioned above. Walker claims to have a wife and four cliil dren at Newcastle. A voung man stood on tho bank of Lake Merritt in Oakland, Cal., and cut his throat with a knife, and then walked into the water. No sooner had he touched the water than he struggled to reach shore again. He was assisted by some men who came to his aid. He died in a few minutes. A hank account bearing the name of Michael Flanagan was found in one of his hip pockets. It shows a credit of $230. In another pocket was found $'.K) in coin. The suicide was about 2ij years of age. A St. Louis cattleman, agent ol a syndicate, collected this Benson in Ore gon a large herd ot cattle, wnicn were driven to Montana for British possess ions, where a large cattle range had been leased. The dry season came 011 in Montana, the grass became scarce and streams of water decreased, until cattle began to die by hundreds before British line was reached, finally the remnants of the stock were driven hack to the Northern Pacific Railroad, and stockmen estimate that there will not ho two hundred of them left next spring, the experiment involving loss of ?2.)0,0UU. Tho Secretary of the Interior has ordered that certain lands in tin Walla Walla land district in Wa-hing ton Territory, lying on the branch line of the Northern Pacific Railroad running between Walltila Junction and Walla Walla, now withdrawn foi the benefit of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company, be restored to settlement and entry. It appears that this tract, which comprises about ii,- 000 acres, was overlooked in the general restoration in 1881 of these liinds. which, by change 111 the general route of the road, was thrown outside of its withdrawal limits. A forty pound cabbsee is the pro duct ot I'omeroy, W. T. SanU Barbara. Cal., rejoices in a pumpkin that weighs 210 ounds. A 29-ounce apple was picked from Mr. Pfttiinan's orchard in Olympia, W.T. Boiso valley, Idaho, has yielded this season about 200,000 bushels of grain. Muscat grapes from California sell in Chicago at from $6 23 to $10.30 per 100 pounds. Farmers in the vicinity of Albany have already sown considerable of wheat for next year's crop. Lewis Hays, of Murphy creek, Ore gon, has raised millet fifteen feet high, and almost as tall as broom corn. A radish that weighed nine and a half pounds was raised by Jacob Hardman, in Grant county, Oregon. Tho fruit dryers of Vancouver, W. T., have finished iho prune crop, which turns out a third more than last year. At), (iihbings has tho contract to furnish 26,000 lbs. of potatoes and 8,000 lbs. of onions, to Fort Klamath. A largo quantity of excellent sor ghum syrup has been manufactured in Jackson and Josephine counties, Ore gon. Jackson Hockcrsmith raise 1 over 1300 gallons of blackberries on about an acre of ground at his place in Jacksonville, Oregon. Grass on the range in eastern Ore gon and Washington is very short, and a bad winter will not be accept able t tho stock-men. Bob Marshall, a veteran miner, re .. . 1 . 1 1 ...1 1... .. i...i. cenilv IiaI a leg uronuu im a nuiin puvinv. at the new placer mines in (rant countv. Oregon. The Chinese doctor at Susanville was sent for. He said it was a very bad break and would take a lonir while to knit. Conse nuentlv he would have tohaveiflVU 1 . before setting it. He was renion strated with and told that there was not over $100 in the camp. Then he wanted the $100 and a note for the other $300 signed by every man in the camn. About that tune Aewi. iA'siie got very hostile, and, alter telling ine Ch uaman what lie tnoiigni 01 any one who would thusexort money from the II nfortiinatccavi) him five minutes . loavn thn ramii. He left. One of the boys set Marshall s leg, and whe a Willie uocior arriveu iiu (iiuiiiiuuh.1 it all right. The Examiner publishes a story that some months ago ur. uv kciboh professor in the collegiate institution at San Dietro. wrote to a San Fran cisco matrimonial bureau, his object beini? to obtain a wife. In a short time the bureau sent him word that young lady named Kate Grant bad been procured and would probably meet his approval. The professor im Miss Grant and after lavishing about $2,000 on her, was rewarded with the promise of marriage. When the day for the wedding arrived the professor called at the home of his alhanced onlv to find her flown. By lette found in a satchel left behind the hitherto happy professor found that he had courted a woman who had been three times married and was un divorced. Heart-broken, the professor returned to San DicL'o. The woman is well known in San Francisco and Portland, Oregon, where one of her hiiibands resides. It cost the Snoqualmie (W. T.) Hop Growers' Association $26,000 U) bar vest their crop this year, but the in come therefrom tilts $100,000. Nearly 94 per cent of all tho sugar cane product of Cuba for the first quarter of this year found a consum ing market 111 the United States. John Lavcock has sheared hi band of sheep in Bear valley, and sent the wool to market. He shea rod early in tho spring, therefore reaping two crops of wool. One apple tree well nourished is worth ten gnarled and starved by years of neglect, for its fruit will bo more fair, more abundant and far more satisfactory in use. An Illinois hograiser states that ho always keeps a mixture of Kpsom salts, sulphur and wood ashes t-qua) parts of each in his pens, and is not troubled with the swine plague or other diseases. Paint applied to buildings in autumn after rains have washed dust out of the atmosphere and frosts have driven winged insects to secure retreats will be cleaner and brighter than when ap plied m summer. There are on exhibition at Walla Walla two apples weighing three pounds each, from the same tree on which crew the apples exhibited at the Centennial, which beat tho world. N. Ford is the owuei of the tree. The cheapest and best way to salt cattle is to place in the fields heavy chunks of rock salt where tho animals may have free access whenever apiie tite craves, and similar provision may be made 111 stables with equally good results. The bovs with the Patterson tt Grubh machine in Klamath county, Oregon, think they made the best short time threshing record of the season. At George Ring's place they threshed full three hundred bushels of oats in just fifty-five minutes. Market gardening is more profit uhlo than general farming, wherever sales can be niado easy and with moderate transportation, permitting all products to uo into use while yet fresh, hucli opportunities, unemployed, may be found 111 the vicinity ot every village having a few thousand population. Farm machinery no longer required for use thould he cleaned carefully, then stored under good shelter. To clean bearings cogs and other working parts, kerosene may be used by free application, then operating the nia chine to give it effect, after which the parts should be wiped carefully and the work is done. At a lmisville, Ky., horse sale forty heads sold for $122,000. The highest price paid for one horse was $28,000. Nutwood, the greatest living stud and representative of tho Hambletonians, was sold to r . 1. Mout, ot tnibuque, Iowa, for $22,000; and Pancoast, of the great Mambrino Chief, was pur chased by John H. Shultz, of Brook lyn, for $28,000. The herd of dairy cows owned by N. P. Haskell of Orono, Me., grade Jerseys of varying ages up to 12 years, thirteen animals in all, gave tio,.l.J pounds of milk during the year and made 3734 pounds of butter. This was an average of 3113 pounds of milk to each cow, or an average of fourteen pounds (less than seven (itiarU) IH.T day. The butter product averaged a fraction over 287 jsmnds each. But the best cow gave 7824 jtounds of milk. The Agricultural Bureau reports that the corn crop of 18H6 will reach the sum total of 1,630,000,000 bushels at an average of 22 bushels per acre. The average yield on 37.000,000 acres of wheat is 124; bushels jer acre, giv ing a total of 433,230,000 bushels; the home consumation is alut W) per cent., leaving only about 'JO million bushels for exjKirt. Oregon averages 12$ bushels js-r acre, New York, 17; Kentticky,Kansas and California. 11.5; and Dakota 10.5, being the lowest of any wheat growing section. ABOUT OSTRICHES. Thrlr Icullr 0lt, Which lift! Ilooa Adopted by Ran t'rnrlaco lli-lln. he sight of a dog is sufficient to ighten an ostrich badly. At such sion if permitted, the ostriches In tho rrals would immediately be speeding r the sandy plain, through a waste of tall, wild sun (lowers, at a gait which KiiuliL-aMonish a horse trainer. Dr. Sketchley has tlireo dogs on his farm, but they are all kept behind the build ings out of sight of tho ostriches. When a keeper approaches them to aunoy them, they emit a hissing sound like a goose, anil try to bite the in truder. They have no strength in their bills, however, and are harmless unless they get a chance to kick. Un like the emu, which Is exhibited often as an African ostrich, they have bn. one toe on each foot. This is a terriblo weapon. The bird kicks forward. Tho terriblo forco is shown in the exploit of one bird, which kicked a stout board on tho side of its corral, and broko it in two at one blow. The too is pointed, and will cut liko a knife. Tho bird which was killed at one kick had its breast laid open with an ugly wound. Of the young birds all aro perfectly shaped ex cept one, which has a club-foot, and which walks on tho back of the clubbed foot, the toe turning up. The gait of even this bird is- elastic. All tho birds walk precisely after the fashion adopted by many young ladies In San Francisco ol late, whoso gait may, tlieretore, perhaps, be correctly described in tho future as the "ostrich walk." It is as if tho birds stepped on hot gridirons. The feet are taken briskly up and raised high, and the body and head oscillate. This style was '.earned in South Africa and not in San Francisco, and is as old as tho race of desert birds."-iAc (CZ.) Ldkr, ineo 1910 the Government has spent the snug sum of .i.OOO.OOO in taking care of the aoble red man, not couHtinir the cost of killing or hunting hi 111 with tho military. Chicago Jlcr- ma. W. V. HENDERSON, iMsivrisrr. Mr oixiratluiii will be Anl-vlam and cbanre rwuuiitlile. t)hl itrout ai well u new snei are Invited to call. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. MI.I. ATT F SO TO PKOrESSlONAIi v ' calla Jar or niKlik pica I'n elalrs In Have' brick: or can be found at It K. I.ucker A t'o'e dm atom, OtHca hour: lull M 1 to 4 r. M., t to r. M. DR. J. G. GRAY, DENTIST. 0. C. X. R. TIVE TABLE. Mnll Train orth, :41 A. M. Mail train aontli. HA p. M. OmCB H0UKS, EU0ENK CITY FOSTomCK. General Delivery, from 7 A. M. to T I', u. Muney Ortlor, frem 7 A. M. lo 4 e. y. Itriflsicr, from 7 A. u, to& e. m. Mail fur north t-Uwe at 8:15 A. M. MuiU for mmth eloae at 1UM) e. u. Mails for Kruuklia clone at 7 a. M. Monday and Tlun-mlay. Mull for Mabel clone at 7 A. M. Moauay and I nnrwiay. Mniln for I artwiittnt cloao 7 A. u. Moauay. SOCIETIES. F. AND A. M lucsdaya In each IMNJKNK liOlMlK NO. 11, A I J Menu (Ireland third Weill month. Cl'KN't'Klt HUTTK UUHIK NO. 1, I, O. O. K, Meets every 1 ui-nday evening iflMAWHAIA KM'AMI'MKNT NO. f Meets on tne second and fourth Weduca. uayi In each tnunlli, IT. W, M. W. m'dKNK LOIHSK NO. IS. A. O. I J MecU at Mawinlu Hull the second and fourth r'rldaya In euch uiunlh. T M.OKAItY IDST NO. 4(l. A. It. MKKTS fl at Miimmlo Hull I lie II rut and third r rl duye of euch month. Ilyorder. Commamikk. -MtllKIl OK 0I1OSKN HtlKNim, V the Hint and third Saturday evcnlninat MKKTS I" 1 O. U. Masonic Hall, lly order of DL'TTK I.ODOK NO. .W. I. O. O. T. MKKTS I) every Huiiuiluy 11M1I In (Mil Kcllowi' Hull. W, C. T. KAIUN'I! STAHHANDOKlllll'K. MKKTS lit llicC. I'. Church every Sunil noon ul Jti.'S). VIhIIo- made welcome. Eugene City Business Directory fil RKHITMKI) I'RACTICK, 1 office In Hays brlok. WITH ALL AKFICK OVKR (1UAN11K STORK. V work warranted. ljuixlilnf km administered for oaluleai e- tracltuu of teeth. DR. W. C. SHELBREDE, l13iVl1JNrXV 9 NOW PKRMANKNTLY LOOATKt) IN Collaiie drove. Ha iH'rfortaa all oncraUnna In mechanic) and aura-leal denUntry. All work warranted ana aiiinuuiion guaranteed. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice of the Peace. UKAL KSTAT8 FOR 8AI.K -TOWN IX)M and farina. . t'alleuliuna nrouiuUr at tended to. ItiwiiiiiNca -Corner Kleveath and Ulgh 8U Kuicene City, Ore gou D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, RepftlrlnK of Watches and Clocks eieeiiud with atmcluallly and at a reasonable coat. WlllamttU Htrrrt. Kuceas tttjr. Or. St. Charles Hotel K.l'UKNK CITY. OIIKOON. W. H. W ATKINS, Proprietor. Xew and Kxprrlrnred Managcmeat. Charge Moderate. F. M. WILKINS. HKJTMAN, 0.- Ilry Ifooiln, clnllilnn. unx-erlea and Kfiiernl inercliaiullne, aoulhwunl corner. Willamette ami KiKhlh atrecU CP.AIN HltOW.-Ienlem In Jewelry, watchca, clock mm inilxlcul liiKtrunicnU, W iilumetle Direct, between Seventh and Kla-hlh. FRIKNDLY. 8. II. -Dealer in dry Rnodn, cloth- iiiK and ifeneriil nierchumllne, W lllainelte atreet, between Kl-hlh and Ninth. 01 1.1 J. I'. I'hyelclun anil mi won, Willam ette atreet, between Seventh and hlglilh. IIODKS, ('. - Keep on hand fine wlnea, llmiorg, clKttra anil a pool and iilli arn mine, iiiain ette atreet, between Kiw lit It and Ninth. IIOItN, ('II AH. M.- (lunoinllh. ride anil abut Kinia. hrecch and iiiiiMtlo loailera, for aula. TtciinirtiiK done In the nenteet etyle and war ranted. Shop on Ninth ntm-t. IXCKKY. J. H.-Wul hiuuker and Jeweler, kccpoatluft alork of kimhIh in lil line, Wlllam 1 lie atreet. In Kiln worth ilru atore. McCI.AHKN. J AM KH -Choice wine. Ilnunri uiniciKar, Willamette lrect, between KlKbtb and Ninth. I'OHT OKKK'K-A new Mock of standard school books Jtwt received at the poet olllce, ItKNSHAW k AltltAMH cluan bund. DRUGS, MEDICINES, Rrnahc. Ialnt. fil a., II. Iada, TOILET ARTICLES, Eto. Pbyalolan.' Preaorlptlon. Oompoundad. -Wlnea, liquor and cigar of the beet finality kept conntautlyon The best billiard tulile In town. ItlllNKII A1IT. J. lt.-lli fi. nn anil carriage painler. Work Kunranleed ftrat-claas Siwk sold at jopj'jr raUi tlio.ii by anyone 111 Kua-one. until Liosirnoiv Th J- IUI-H Is t$bffififo'of Trade! :o8LDaN BROTHERS fetn "uuu lllH Will ill) DVa-UtirftfkVraaiJtlTir other shop tne . in town. j. anil " Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will harraftor knee a eowplet "took ol a to', Misses' and CbilrcD's Shoes! UITTOX HOOTM, Slippen, White and Black, Saodala, FINX KID IH0ES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact everything- In the (loot and Hhoe line. In which I Intend Ut devola my eapecial at tun I Ion. MY COODS ARE FIRST-CLAf HI And guaranteed as represented, and IU be wild for the In weal price that a good article can be alfordeu. V. Hunt. Horfleapii'S2Cash J: 1ji Shop on th Cornir of 8th and Olirt SU SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM C. M. IIOItLV, Practical Gunsmith CUH3, RirLIS, nlilng Ts- kle and Materials Siflsi Ma:lHMaEm;.!es3f ill nil U lilt Itepairing don ih ttis oeateat styls and warranted. Gam Loaned and Ammunition Furniihed Hhop on WUIamctl HUeel, .pposit. Peetoffloe. I , 1 .,.., With new" iYlhm,H. Hrse.tUn old eP'.),! Allff-rnUTl to isiVKatiHrai'tiun. Central Market, IfjMlKil'aScAVllt liillH PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on hand a full supply ol MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL, Which they will sell at th lowest market price A fair sliars of th public patronage solicited TO TIIK rABHEK: W will pay th hlKheat market prlc (or fat cattle, Loks and sheep. Shop on Willamette Street, EUCENI CITY, ORECON. Meat, delivered to any part of lie city frw of bara-e. juoll t.f the road.