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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (May 28, 1887)
jjHlflDC SUMMARY. L of Uie I'riiMM Events Now Attracting nm mm. cu 0rm Kl" LTowHEM),W-T.-'n'o four- tliip Uit'il" l.i"K v,iii-hiii .hii-li lofc Nanaimo April 22, Pedro, coal IhJoii, was aboii- - ... r . I vher crew oil ftf uy uay y. . . . .. I.... Af ... I Btate Hull Oil ouiurany, iuny ; very heavy galea, tlio eaiU. .......iwl Mm veel Ktiirtn.l I ojrn J V 1 Tho donkey engine cuum not dl0 pump shatt was broken, m the heavy ten the crew hud irt the forecustlo and go uft. r i v j ; ,i, tlie vessel caiifm. uru, u is j from tho galley rtovo. Every , WH8 made to queneb the but without euccws. tin Sawyer arrived at Tort ad and related tho following ,. "I-eft Nanaimo on Wed- "inril 27, and arrived nt Cape 1 . ... r. n, r,;,i.ii. (i,. K Oil HI'' ,u"u ""'6 "ii night a heavy eotiuieuct guie Later tlie snip was re tins. The pump were im- h riunned, willi a donkey en- , I Itva il.ivi tlw. COAST CULLINGS. Devoted Principally to Washington Territory aud California. T., is going to have -ii'lu'il. . I1- live day tho nwi kept continu.tlly working. jy Ihey hecanio ilk-iatileil, anl nc could not work them. Tin n i maimed tho broken pump. had moderated ttlightly that J ulong in the nfiernoon it again with increased velocity, is carried the pump nway, but .uilly recovered und Liblied on. i the waves tho men would .viird.punip her a few niiiiute, :i recede mid wait another aity. On Saturday, May 7, the , mill furiously blowing. The ltd themselves to the pump?, v working for dear life. Sound water in the hole, it was ascer- iat die had seven feet. It was .irent that it would be an utter ility to keep her above water. itKk Sunday morning a sail :td,live miles t the westward, oro down and oll'ered assit-t-lie proved to bo tho sealing r Angel Dollie. Taking ad of liio invitation I lowered a licit was immediately smashed. ijoncr tin n sent a boat to us, d a couple of bonis had taken ie ship. We at this time were in from Cape Jll.tnco. Ou ke perceived a full rigged ship tenty miles to westward, going llirough 'glasseH she appeared taking good headway. The k took us, twenty-six all tohl, Cape flattery, when wo fell tlio United Slates Steam 'osmos, belonging to C. P. Pat- Kbich brought us to this port. i we arrived at 11 0 clock ; night." itf-masted ship Ocean King in Kennebec, Maine, aud is ly Henry Sears, of Boston. tired 250 feet in length, 42 Ptli and 30 feet in depth. The y held was in Sau Francisco r 18SC. . OREGON NEWS. Everything of Oener&l Interest in a Condensed Form. Egbert committed suicide in lie left a note saying he was al distress. lie was an cx- in the navy. Murry, aged 15 years, of II, Colorado, was dragged to having her font caught in eof her broncho. i Oswald, aged 45, a black ing near Klnaborough, Pa., his daughter Bessie, aged 11, cut his own throat. hien were wounded, somo of ally, by uu explosion at the icago rolling mills at South The accident was occasioned ng a car of molten metal into liuge molds in the nail mill. iwntrr chanced to be in the cause an explosion. iIWhv'b Cave, West Virginia, ficia McWha and Mrs. Van Itiother and daughter, were the floor of their residence, I, their skulls having been iith stones. There is no clue, vidently the work of burglars, supposed thero wax money 'Q the premises. Swan, of the bark J. J., gently arrived at New York, experience which ho thinks unt for the mvsterious din- tee of so many vessels at sea. tinge meteor, looking like of lire, dropped into the sea ig.-ide, making a tremendous nd the force of the meteor ,'he water caiwd heavy breuk- i washed over the vessel, her roll dangerously. Im- Lv afterward solid lumps of ice c. tlie decks and rigging be tfed with an iev crust and f'd immense vaporation. On frhere the meteor fell the ship il black, and some of the lfing was blistered. f hie accident occurred at the f at Braddock, Pa., by which ere so horribly burned tint lie. The furnace was blown 1 days ago. A gang of men anmg it out, and had the "Iei o coke, limestone and ei ml?, which were still at red ome were working beneath and without warning, the : W;'.v. The red-liot matter T! in all directions, knocking " in siime instances and ul f 'ng them. But few men in f. . ... catied unininrptl. In A the debris wan mmnrnl mid w"en out with their clothing " tluir bodies. The flesh y baked. Montesano, W a creamery. A boy named Tommy Morton was drowned at Sacramento, Cal. F. Dit rs, lately from San Francisuo. whs beheaded by. a freight train at Auburn, Ctd. Bob F ord, the slayer of Jessie James, is a waiter iu die.ii restaurant in Santa Fe, X. M. An Indian girl kilUd a cougar that measured ten leet from tin i tin in. ii r (Irangeville, I. T. A section haml named Conmy was run over and killed by a locomotive at Anaconda, Montana. E. Murne, a logger, was fatally, stabbed by a man named Shearer, at Xew Westminster, B. O. A silver ledge has been located at Tiptop, A. T., which is said to run 2'JOO ounces of metal to the ton. The Xorthern Paeilic railroad is pre paring to bu,U coal bunkers at Kllons burg, W. T., to cost $10,OOJ. Tho three-year-old son of a Mrs Treble was burned to death by his clothes catching lire, in Seattle. The people of Xorth Yakima, W.T., arc Liking timely action with the view of holding anotnerfiir next fill. Willi? Pitikham, a vinyurdist at St. Helena, Cal., committed suicide by drowning himself in a tank of wine. One hundred and sixteen num ipial ilieil ae murk-'iiien at the Walla Widl.i ganison during tho month t f April. Pointsman, tho largest horse in the world, died at lVtiluma, Cal. lie was owned by a company aud valued at $5000. A. J. Aldrich, II. E. Williams and A. J. Tuber lost their eyesight by an explosion iu a emelter at Helena, Montana. Between Sin Buenaventura and Santa Barbara, Cal., there Hro 1100 men at work on the Souther n Pacific extension. A boy named Leon Gratcie was ac cidently shot aud killed by n boy named Edward Cady, 12 years of age, at Middletown, Cal. Tho Indians at the Trcadwell mine, Juneau, Alaska, struck again for higher pay. All were discharged and white men employed. . Since a bounty was placed on jack rabbit scalps lat November, Tehama county, California, has paid out $2270 for 15,134 scalps. It will be discon tinued. Nelson Bennett is getting ready to lay the rails for the Tacoma street railway. He has also secured a fran chise for a stieet railway iu Butte, Montana. A carpenter named John McCor miek, engaged on the Bear Kiver bridge, near Colfax, Cal., fell from it, a distance of sixty fejt, and was in stantly killed. Jacob Hamel, a young man, was found at Monterey, Cal , dead fm a pistol wound in his right temple. Hamel was a hard-working man, but addicted to drink Robert Cobban, a brakeman, at tempted to board a moving train at Stuart, Montana. He fell under the wheels and lost his right leg and died the following morning. At Butte, Mont., Jack Itowand, a quarter breeed Indian, shot at a bar keeper, the ball passing through his arm and into the arm of Joseph Bossier, who died toe next morning. The Mormon church at St. David, X. M., was completely demolished by an earthquake. Seventy-eight school children, who were in the building at the time, barely escaped with their lives. It is said that it will take 1,000,000 ties' to widen th'e track on the Utah & Northern railroad between Pocatello, Ida1i, and Silver Bow Junction, Mon tana. Those lor the south are sawed m Oregon. While Ous Berdine and (Jus Peter son woro driving across tho railroad track at 1'acoina, W. 1., a s vitch en gine struck the carriage, killing Ber ime and the horse aud slightly injur ing Peterson. The east-bound passenger train on the Atlantic &, Paeilic went through a partially burned bridge near Daggett station, Cal , and a number of the pass engers ami trainmen were seriously and probamy fatally injured. A Woolen Mills Manufacturing Company has been incorporated at Walla Walla, W. T., with a capital stock of $100,000, divided into 1000 shares of $100 each. The object of the incorporation is to manufacture woolen goods at Walla Wall!, and eventually to make up clothing. Stephen Kelly, a farmer, was drowned at Prosser, Yakima county, W. T. He was driving down the in cline to the ferry and slapped his frac tious horses with the lines. The ani mals broke into a run. The ferry had no end chain or gang board, and horses, wagon and driver went into the Yakima river. One horse swam ashore dragging its dead mate and the wagon, but the man was lost. J. F. Smith, of Eagle Rock, I. T., while attending a eession of tho Pro bate Court, found a tender place in the carpet of the floor, and stepping upon it found himself making a rapid descent below. The prisoners con fined in the jail immciiiat' ly under the office had procured a razor and succeeded in cutting a hole in the floor above to effect an escape. Ilia dis covery made frustrated the plan. The cannery at Empire- will be run this season. Joseph Thierson, an Oregon man, suicided at San Francisco. Work ou the new vessel being built at Xorth Bend is progressing rapidly. A bridge costing $13,700 is to be built at Uoseburg between now and O. tober 1. Tho Government will uso its own pile-driver ou the Coquillo work this summer. There will be an unusual amount of building done in Wallowa county this summer. ' The body of George W. Topper, a carriage-maker, was Uiud hanging to a tree tuar Poitlind. The Ashland Tiilimm savs tlio first crop of alfalfa hny will suo'n be readv to cut in that region. Dogs killed thirty tine, innrino sheep belonging to Thomas Davidson, a fanner living near Salem. W. B. Todhunter, who owns 170.CMX) acres of land in this Suite, has m.ido an assignment to creditors. Johnny Stokes, aged fourteen, was dr.igg-d to death by a horse which he Was leading at Ea.-t Portland. Work on tho Lost River bridge 1ms been commenced, and that neces'arv structure will be completed before long. James Xonh, held for bigamy, es caped from the county jail at Jackson ville. There is no trace whatever of bis whereabouts. lv. Bihorstedt, of Jackson county, caught a hi own bear of an enormous size. It is said the quadruped weighed over 500 ivounds. The contract has been let for the construction of a new armory at Poit land, to cost $32,000. It will be com pleted in September, vii! Lizzie Fatills and Florence Fallon were sentenced to one year each in the penitentiary for robbing Isaao Alleu in a Portland saloon. Ben. Strang, an old pioneer of Ore gon, and lespected resident of Salem, lost his life in Astoria by falling from a roof upon which ho was woiking at his trade of tinner. A little child belonging to a family by the name of Oliver, living lelow Island City, Union county, fell in a kettle of boiling water aud died the the next morning. Work on the Oregon Pacific is pro gressing finely in tho Malheur pass. About one hundred men are employed there, and it is reported that tho force will soon be iucreased to 1000. Pendleton paper: Charlio Frazier brought a strange freak of nature into this ollice. He broke- open an orange of the ordinary variety, and found in side of it a perfect orange about the size of a thimble. j So many cattle are being driven into i-asterii Oregon at present that local papers unticiuate the over-f t x-k- ing of the ranges, and think them is Hanger next winter of Oregon cattle men getting a taste of what Montana sutlered lately. William Nelson, a sheepherder, formerly in tlio employ of Fritz Munz, of Sprngue River valley, committed suicido by taking strychnine, lie had been on an extended spree, and proba bly took his life while in a lit of tem porary insanity. Bear has been numerous in the mountains of late, und Jo Scott set a trap for the purpose of catching ono or more of them, says the Weston Leader. He failed to entrap the bear, but captured a tine specimen of the gray eagle. It is a very large bird, measuring ovei six feet from tip to tip, and extremely savage, so far whipping every dog in town. The State Board of Agriculture has offered two premiums, ono of $.100 anil ono of $200 for the best drilled malitia com puny which shall take part in the proposed niali:i i contest. The companies will have to be composed of not less than senty men each, ami nt least live shall, enter and threo com pete. A small entrance is charged, entries to close August 1. The engineer of the California ex press, when near New Era, noticed a calf just ahead of the engine, but it made a leap, and, us ho supposed, got out of the way. Nothing was thought of the calf for some time, when the en gineer discovered that ho was carrying it on the platform, where it hid been caught up by the cowcatcher, and from which position it was unable to move, owing to the velocity of the train. The train was stopped and the calf let off, not injured in the least, but almost scared to death. Commissions f r the following ofii ce-s of the new National Guard have been issued from the Gnverner's office: Brigadier-General, J. M. Siglin, Coos county; Adjutant-General, with rank, of Colom 1, J. C. Hoffner, Multnomah ; Judge-Advocate-General, with rank of Colonel, T J. Bowditch, Jackson ; Inspector-General, with rank of Colonel, M. E. Freeman, Mnlinomah ; Surgeon General, with rank r.f Colonel, A. L. Saylor, Morrow; Aides de-Camp on the st iff of the Governor, with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, Robt. A.Miller, Jackson ; J. II. Rarey, Umatilla, and Cecil R. Ilalcomb, Multnomah. The Aidi s-de-Canip on the staff of Brigadier-General Siglin will have the rank of Mhjor. By the new law constitut ing t.ie National Guard the Governor is commander-in-chief of all the forces in the Slate. The appointments date from May iO, when the law goes into effect. CHINA'S EMPEROR. flm Youthful Monarch Tukr llir Itrlusnf tiiivi-ruiuriit Into III llnmU. Advices from IVkiu say that the Km I'eror has assumed the (i"vThincnt. ma!l-pox carried off Tiing-elie. the late i'mpeior of China, at the age of eight. en, ou January v, ls,.. It is tin cus tom in China for the sovereign to ap point his siuvcssor from the mi'iuhcrs if his family of a younger generation than his own. This Tiing-cho had lie- ileeted to do. Tlie widow of his prcde ee-siir, Uiuig-tung, joined with Prince t'h'un, her hi-otlier-in-law. and brought about the election of Tsai-tien, the son of Prince Ch'iin.as Kniperor, and for the Inst time in the annals of the Tsiiu' lvnaMy the sticccsftiuii to the throne passed out of thedirect line. The Dow igor Knipivs herself became Regent She was :i woman of great tact and skill, itul had been Kegent after the death of her husband during the minority of Tiing-ehe. Tsai-tien. who succeeded under the title of Kwang-scn, or 'siicceion of lory, is the ninth Kniperor of China of the Tartar dynasty of Tsing, which succeeded the native dynasty iu the year Hi 1 1. The surname of the familv is Gioro- that is, golden and, accord ing to Irmlition, was given to their tirM ancestral chief, Aisin (iiori, because lie ivas the son of a divine virgin. About the year Ki.'lO tlie tribe of Tartars to winch the familv belonged drove out the lative rulers and occupied the north ern Ho inces of China, IVkiu was their apital for ina,ny years, mid in the nurse of time the present 1 sing dy nasty of Kiupei'ors was founded by ihrin. The Word "T'sing," which melius pine, was adopted as a surname to signii'v what would be the character of tiie administration which they set up. Isai-tien was born on August l.", 1X71. He was therefore a little more than three years of age when he was carried, "cross and sleepy as lie w as. in the presence of the conclave of Manchii Princes, Princesses and the Dowager Empress and the Empress mother, who met in one of the secret chambers of the palace, and- there solemnly declared Tsai-tien as the Ilwangli. The Kniperor was vaccinated when an infant before his high destiny was thought of; otherwise it would have been difficult to vaccinate him, for, his person being sacred w hen Kniperor, no lancet can touch him. His mother the Princess of Ch'un, w ho is a sister of the Empress of the west, was raised to the rank of Empress Dowager when he beciime sixteen, and his father was made Tai Miang Huang. On April IS, I KM, the Empress Dowager died, leav ing the principle governing authority iu the hands of her colleague, the Em press mother, Ts.e An, by whom the regency has beeii conducted up to Jan uary, 1S.S7. Under the tender care of his instruct ors the Emperor learned the noble art of how to govern China. It was part of his imperial training that a hakti rhiitttzc, or "wh'pping boy," was ap pointed to suffer for the faults of his imperial master, hi matters of pleas ure the wants or wishes of the youthful ruler were not overlooked. Attention we paid to his exercises and sports. He was married in April, KSNti, to the daughterof a Mandarin named Tao Tai, who, on celestial authority, is a "rent beauty. He selected her from over a hundred girls who had been gathered from nil pints of China for his inspection. Ckictttio Time. ROMAN POTTERY KILNS. The Inti'l-Ksllin lll'vpry Iterrntly Mmte Nrur llurjr SI. Kilmumla, KukIhiiU. A curious discovery was recently made in the neighborhood of Bury St Edmunds, at the works now being car ried out at West Stow Heath, about four or live miles from the town. Dur ing the progress of the operations, two pottery kilns were laid open, similar to those which were found about six years ago by a well-known antiquary of iiury. These are pronounced to be of the late Roman period; and the place where they were found, though now a remote common, w as at the termination of the Unman occupation of Britain an important station, possessing a con siderable population, forming, iu fact, a sort of suburb of the still larger Ro man station of lekliiigham. Iu the center of the western part of the heath, called Wildham, is situated a Saxon cemetery; and the whole region abounds with historical memories and localities, taking us back to the com mencement, so to speak, of early Eng lish existence, n'lnl of the deepest ilitel' v t to all antiquaries and arclueologisls. The specimens of Roman work just un earthed are about live feet in diameter, the walls two feet eight inches in height, composed of tempered clay, which still shows, by its deep redness, that it was subjected at one period to the constant action of lire. One kiln was tilled with blackened earth and broken ves M'ls, which had probably been spoiled and thrown aside. Some of these were circular vases with handles in bllff-eot-ored clay. Tim second kiln was in a more broken condition than the first, yet contained more interesting remains, ill the vessels being jars, saucers, pans, etc., of a dark color, showing that black and slate-colored work was spe cially produced in this kiln. A jMirtof a bow l of very line red ware, with deli cate red-colored glaze, and ornamented with the ligure of an animal resembling a dog, was discovered together with a quantity of sMeimens of pottery of various kinds nnd in different states of preservation. The ground on which these sewerage works are cr cried on now belongs to the Bury St Edmunds Towp Council, very fortunately, for no doubt a careful watch will.be kept for my Roman relics which may be turned ip by the workmen during the sewer age operations, UliatitUri JuuruaL ( TOMBS OP ROYALTY. VUlt In Hi llurlftl Vault of tha fa MKh n thuri-h m Ylnunii. In the vuu'ti of Cap:uMiln Church, Vienna, which are watch'd by flm barefoot monks of the convent close by, lie the remains of deceased Em perors and Archdukes a moth y crowd nf metal coffins large and small, round which burn tall wax candles, throwing (heir reddish light U)on the large wreaths that the imperial family places there the day before All Souls'. In the center, writes a Vienna corre xndi'iit. is conspicuous the sarcopha gus, with its many silver figures, raised by Joseph H. over the remains af his mother, Maria Th tcs i. At the foot of the sarcophagus st ill Is un iron roll! ii, the simplest in the whole vault, wherein lies Joseph himself, and the riblsms of a wreath that, faded long i"n. in the dim fold eniln-i.i,l..ri- n.- i peat what he said many times before Lis death: "I have got so far that I love nothing ou earth except my moth er and the state." One of the best best places in the vault was rt icrved by the Emperor's wish for the ivtliii of Maximilian of Mexico, by the ;da of which the Emperor often spends niany hours. The only inmate of this vault not of royal blood Is t certain Mine. Wolf, governess to the children nf Maria Theresa, whit wi-died her remains to be placed here, saying: "If the Wnl tin was good enough to keep ns company during life she shall not be set apart from us after death." Ou the day before Ail Souls' two special mes sengers lef:, Vienna for Bavaria, bear ing w ith them two of tho finest wreaths ever formed by human hands. The first w reath, of laurels and I'om-s, was sent by tlie Kniperor with orders that it should be deposited ill the vault of S:. Michael's church upon the tomb of King Louis of Bavaria. The second was sent to the Staruberg Lake, where in the dusk hours of All Souls' Day tho messenger rowed to th spot where the King was found drowned, and diopped the wrca'.h of jasmine mid ferns, fastened by a white dove with wings outspread, into the water. This was sent hv special order of the Empress. Interior. 0. A 0. T1M TAILS. Mull Trmln orth, II A M. Mall trnui Mtnih. t.M p. M. o via Uttsas, EtrossE city rotToFrrcK. (ittuaral delivery, from 7 A. II. to 7 P. at Mi' Oritur, fr.m 7 A. M. U) I'. M. Uhrtl"'r. from 7 A. M. loft p. it. .Mnjli for annli ihm- at tt:IA A. M. Mulla for iitli dim. ul :M)r. M, Mail! fur Franklin i lu at 1 a. u. Manila and Tuurwlav. Mailt fur Mabel clnae at 7 A. U, Monday aoat Tluirwtav. Mali farrartwrUliteW 7 A. M. Moaday. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. W'lI.I. ATTKNI) TO HtOKKHWIONAL ' ' valla (lay or nlKht. Ossick liifitttlra in llnva' krirk: or mm ha fuuiiil al K. It. turkey k I'u'i drug mure, UlUaa uouin: v ui u m., i iu i i'. u., o u s r. u. DR. J. C. GRAY, ji3:NrriKrjr. OWICK OVKIt CJ1UNUK 8TOIIK. wuik warranted. Alt luliliu kiw admluUtoroJ fur pniiilca) aa traction ul lit th. GEO. W. KINSEY, JiiGtice of the Peace. REM. rXTATK KOU S.M.K-TOWN LOT! mill farm, rolled ion proinpUj at tend"! to. ItKxiiikvi'K -Corner Elavtmili and It tub Bt, Kukcii ( U.v, Oi i'iruii. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Itepairlna; of Watehra anil (Ineka meoiitail Willi punctuality anil al a rtMuoiiabla runt. Willamette Mtrrrt. Kaarraa City, Or. Bellti on Tricycles. Two very pretty young ludic have been making a decided sensation on the avenue by their dexterous riding of the tricycle, ltoth wear handsome street cost nines. One of them wears a gentle man's high silk hat, the only dill'er ence being that it is turned up on one sitle and has a little black feather in it. Her cloth dress tits her trim ligure ex quisitely, and on her wee, pretty fool she wears a long boot like a backwoods man. The top of her boot hides her pretty tinkle, but the convenience obvi ates many of the objections raised to ladies riding tricycles. Her compan ion wears a Tain O'Shanter cap, which falls prettily about her head. They each own a single tricycle and use them in the morning, but iu the even ing, when the avenue is crowded, tliey ride a double tricycle, and cause many of the Congressmen's hearts to go pit-a-pat in unison with the girl's daintily booted feet on the pedals. II 'unlmujhm Utter. ' The following literary note is from the Arizona Jlotrter: "We notice that a few ornery Eastern papers condemn the list- of the phrase 'iu our midst.' We would tell these dudes that they don't know what they are talking about. Last week, for instance, we stated that we had been suflering from a severe attack of colic 'iu our midst,' and we will leave it to any of our intel ligent readers if that isn't A 1 English. It may be that the Eastern papers know where our colic was better than we do, but we doubt it. Come out to Arizona, gents, if you want to learn how to sling United Slates with neat ness and dispatch. wmiI HiKt no naturalist has Rvei ywt wiU-fue-Uir ly oxpiaued bow soma rs tif rorn U'-eonin rtd. bUClfcTItB. IVTiJKNK I.OIK1K NO. II. A. F. A N't I A. M I j MueU nnilaint tlilrtl Weduosdujrs in eavh luiiutli. I'KNCKIt MJTTK 1,01)0 K NO. 9. I. 0. 0. F. F. M. WILKINS. nisi D1UC1S, MEDICIItES, Rra.hra. ralata. Ulaaa, Alia, LeM. TOILET ARTICLES, Ete, Phyalolans' Praaorlptlona Oooppounded. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM C. M. IIOIMV, Practical Gunsmith vaALaa I CUNS, RIFLES, Flalilag Tackle and Malarial Stwisz MacbucsaBl Miles of ill For Sale IU-palrlng dune Ih the neatest style and warranted. Ouui Loaned and Ammunition Fornl&had Shop on Willamette Bteeet, oppoaila PoetoOca, a-V3Ti Boot and Shoe Storo. A. HUNT. Proprietor. Mucin uvery Tuemluy ovuiiliiK s WIMAW1IAI.A KNl'AMI'MKVT NO. 6. Mretsou tun Heron J and fourth nines day in eauh muiitli. L'OKNE UIIMJK I'j Ali-fti al Man in lo Hull tlio aucnl and NO. IV A. O. V. W. fourth Friday In each muiith. Al. W T JI.OKAilYro.HTNO.no. A. II. MKKTH f). at Masonic Hull the Unit anil third Sri day of each month. Hjrordar. Commasiiick. niKIlOF( IIOK 'KHIKNOS. AIKKTS f the tliHl ami third Saturday evening at Masuiilu Hal). H' order of U. C. Bt'TTK I)l)OK NO. SI7. 1. O. 0. T. SIKKTS every Siuturday uiuht iu Odd Fellow' Hall. W. C. T. T KAIIINO STAirHANDOFHOl'rc. MF.KTS Ii at IlieU. I'. Church ererjf Hiinday after noon at g:.). Vlaltot made welcome. Eugene City Business Directory. IIKTTMAN, 0.-Iry uotxio, dothinir. irrorerle and ip-aernl men-Mainline, aoulhweet corner. Willuiiietteaud Kahlh lrteU CP.AIS BUOSI.-Iliiilem in Jewelry, walehea, cliH-aaaud miliieil Imtru nta, WlllamelW utreet, but woe u Sieifcnth and Kialilli. FHIKNIH.Y. H ll.-Dctler In dry gimin. elolh iutf and Ki-ueral luerchmi'liie. WlllamelU) ttroet, b. tw. cn Klifhth and Ninth. OIl.I J. I'.-I'liynlcian and urir.n. Willam ette tret, twlwecn Stuvenlh aud K.lglith. IIOIJI' C. -Keena on hand fine wlnea. Ilqiinn, cVar and a sml and bill arl tile. WiUuin tle lr.yU between Kixhth aud Ninth. HOIt.V. ('HAS. M.-Ounmllh. rilleaand hot. ifiuia,' bn-ech and niuarlo loalers, for al. Tli!irinK done in tha n latest alylo and war ranted, riliou on Ninth itretU IX'CKKY, J. H.-Walchniaker and leweler. kii-jsi a line ' inl I" bin line, Wlllain- tllDatrevi. in r.iiwroi"" f . MK'I.AHKV. JAMKS-Cholee wlno. ll'tnnr anileiirurs, Willaiiiflle street, bctaoeu tinhth and Ninth. POST OFFICE -A nw atork of atandanl Kbool book jual received at the poat ollice. UHlNF.HAftT. J. fl.-llnoi". aim and rarrlairn painter. Work a-naranleed flral-cliuw 8 in k auld at lower ratu than by auyoneia Euicudo. Wilt bemrur kwp a aompWU atoek of Ladies', Misses' ani Ctiilf reii'st Shoes! lll'TTO.V BOOTH, Slipper, White and Slack, Sandah, FIB kid shoes, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fuel every tliliur In the Hoot and hlion line, to which 1 intend to Uevuta lay eaiHiviul altentlou. MY COOOS ARE FIRST-CLASftI AndtrnarHiiteedaa reprimehtrd.and wfL bu mild fur the loweal priiea that a tfewl article can W all'oriluu. vV. Hunt. Central Market, FiHlioi-AcWiitlcliiti PBOPRIBTORB. Will keep eonataulry on hand a full auppi of MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL. Which they will tell at the loweal market prior A fair ahara of the public patronaga aoUcltod TO TIIE rARHCnNl We will pity the hlirheat market prioa for fat cattle, Iiok and aliutp. Shop on 'Wlllaniette Street, ' tUCE CITY, ORECON. Meala b. k any part ot tba cltf tma or ciiarx.