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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 26, 1887)
GRAPfllC SU1AM. a of to Principal Erc&ta i AtlracUng Pale Interest Nov EwjtMng of General Xnterttt In Condented Form. jrnberof cases of aoarlet feYr orwJ in Cole's Talley, Southern teen young army officers hare entenceJ to Tarioua terms of , Siberia on charge connected revolutionary plot again! the ment at St. Petersburg.. Mr. Tate( while boMt riding on aie, near Waiaenburg, Col., d the boat and wai drowned in eseDce of bis wife, children and I meu standing on the bank, tore powerlets to reudcr aatint j eland's hotel at 8helton, W. T., arned to the ground, and also a pdjoining. The hoiel was rented named August McLean, and iiught by the ieopla in that ri tliut he set it on fire from mo revenge. An unknown man juumed in the building, 'ulcollisioa occurred at Bren iation, on the Atchison t Ne i railroad. A pastenger train I aouth crashed into the rear of hi, telescoping the caboose, which upitd by six graders on their 0 Arkaueas. John Worth was 1 to death. Win, Robinson was ly scalded and will probably f. McEldowney, Chas. Pullman j, F. Wilcox were badly scalded. Caradian Pacific overland , leaving Vancouver, and pas (car were thrown off the track, ing down an embankment thirty inh at a place between Orassette Otter, about half way between Arthur and Cartier. The cause ('accident was a broken rail and ct that the tram was trying to ud lout time. The drawing room rus full of sleeping pnseeugere, eonxidbring that the car was a lete wreck, it seems providential jeyoud a few cuts and bruises all id uninjured fcust Spies, Adolph Fischer, Adolph 1 and A. T. Parsons, tlie anar- , were hanged at Chicago. A pe- I Willi oieveil Ilima vit Bigunbuico presented to Gov. Oglesby, praying the condemned men be reprieved. Vqucit was granted in the caHe t hael Scwab and Samuel 1 elden itime Louis Linng had committed je by blowing his head off witli a inating cap. lue otuer lour paid i) ally of their crime on tho- scat ilh remarkable coolness. Engel, me. Fischer and Scwab weie ers. A Montgomery, Ala., special tells a le story of the burning of two td men. They had assaulted u e white woman, and were cap J by a poese of farmers. The young in identihed them on siglit. A was had and the people decided the two men should be burned to h. A loa pile was built on the of a public road, and the negroes chained each between two heavy fcud then the four logs were chained Slier, so that the wildest contor i of the wretches could not shake 1 A lire was kindled, which toon . . . i . mi. "i tin ana enveiopeu mem. i nuir aints and Bcreanm were not heard I fur the flames soon put an end to Sp trouble with the Crow Indians ided. Gen. Ruger gave them one f and a half in which to consider demand to surrender. They re i, and a red-hot t-kirmish then re ed, in which Corporal Charles mpsou was killed, Private Eugene foy slightly wounded, and Private k thrown from his horse and his iltler dislocated. A running fight ied, the Indians retreating, some peaceful Catherine near the agency others crossing the river and tak to the hills. " tJwordbearer " made nal stand at the crossing of the Lit- Horn, about one mile btlow the acy, in which he and probably of his followers were killed fordbearer's" body was brought into ip, but the other Indians are only orted dead. Most of the Indians led about and returned to the ncy, mixing with the other camps jre are now supposed to be from ' aty to fifty on the outside, At St Louis an explosion of gasoline the rear cellar of Michael Newman's eery Btore, lifted the two story build from its foundation and dropped ac-k again in a mass of ruins, be .In which were buried twelve per . They were Michael Newman d 52; Mrs. Newman, aited 40 mie Newman, aged 18 ; Nellie New o, aged 15; Kate Newman, aged 11; die Newman, aged 13 ; Charles De f, Mrs. Charles Devere, Ilattie own. of Columbus, Ky., Charles Elf- 1, Miss Bryany, and Mrs. Bergeley, explosion was followed by a fire. Ich was with great difficulty put out the firemen. They then bean the ircn for the dead. All of tne up- ars was occupied as a tenement. wman and his family lived over the The force of the exploeion was Tine. An entire block of buildingi f th of and across the alley from the aiding m which the explosion took ce was gutted by the blast. The iwmau block wascrutthed in and wm vered by the roof, which had settled n upon the mine and formed frier through which the rescuers hid ? cut away the beams and walle, ii(-h impeded their progress. In the me building lived Charles Devere veling salesman, and his wife. Vis ing them was Miss Ilattie Brown, of Jlumbus. Kentuckv. She Was badly j'ired, but miraculously escaped 0r 400 ritiniU ftlA nnv n ra1 in -a ' - HivtlVU IU the Bugene public school.. Grass is growing ninelv nn ina n,.. nd stock of all kinda i. d,.;., uu ; Umatilla county. Jos. Johnson, boatswain nf iKartriitut. bark Audrosh, fell into the river and waa drowned at Albina. There II more mountain fnear in thi. valley at prwent than ever before known, says the Wallowa ChieJUm. R. E. Marple. the murdnror nf n T Corker, was hanged at Lafayette. This ws the stcoud legal execution in Yam hill county. A great deal of fall plowinsr ia beine- done, and there is a constant demaud ior men to work on farms, says the Weston Leader. In Umatilla county prairie chickens, grouse and pheasants never were so scarce. The cold rains in the SDrinz 1-1. ... w niiea me young. Stockmen throughout Baker county are well supplied with feed for the winter, and there is every probability that stock will pull through the winter salely. Sylvester, eon of Wm. Blnck, while driving on a load of wood, near liar risburg, was crushed under the beam of a woodfhed, inflicting serious, though not necessarily lata! injuries. The Coos Bay Fishermen's Protec tive Union has filed articles of incorpo ration with the Secretary of State. Capital stock f 1,000. Also the First Congregational Clmr.'h of Albina. Value of property, $b00. Land Commissioner Sparks has re jected selections of the Oregon ft Cali- lornia Railroad of about bz.UOO acres of land in Oregon within the quadrant formed by restoration to the pubho do main of the forfeited portion of the Oregon Central railroad grant. One by one Company B of the First Regiment of Oregon Volunteers, en gaged in the Indian war of 1S56, are passing away to join the great mujority, says a Jacksonville paper, vi tne eighty-four men that composed that company, rank and file, but seven re main. OREGON NEWS. Devoted PrintiKtlT to WaihmTtnn Territory and California. COAST CULLINGS. USED TO POINT A MORAL. ( THE CRANK AND THE WAITER. The oldest editor in Oregon or Wash ington Territory is the editor of the Ellenbburch (W. T.) Localizer. He dates back to September 12, 1850, a little more than thirty-seven years, when he took charge of the Spectator, the only paper in Ortgon, in the sum mer of 1850. ' A few days ago a man was found at Rock creek, Grant county, under a wagon that had turned over on and seriously injured him. He was a Ger man namod Peter Howp, who had been deserted by hU wife at Malheur, and with his little daughter was coming to Upper Ochoco to his friends, Work has been resumed at the Cas cade lock, and those in charge claim thev have 210 men at work. 1 he lower end of the canal is filled with sand which is being taken out. A gang of about twenty men are employed in re cutting some of the stone which was cut xeveral years ago, and another gang is putting up some building! and re pairing others. C. C. Cumnberry. ot Union, was thrown from a buggy by a frightened team in Grand Rondo valley, and so seriously injured that he died the fol lowinff nielil. The L Grande GazHle o . . ... comments on the accident as follows The mortality caused by runaway teams and fractious horses in this county 'is something frightful, there being almost an average of two iiersons killed every year in this way, and the death rate from this source seems eituer oa me increase than otherwise. Alonio Mr iris, engaged at a logging camp near rine creea, iaur uuuuij. was k lied instantly and nomine mau iMedand crushed by the fulling of a tree. He had justcommenced logging that dav and had driven his cx team to a standstill near the tree he was about to fell. The tree was ready to fall, when the oxen started up, and fpurini? thev would eet in harm s way, ha attempted to sum thorn. He had only gone a few steps when the tree fell on him. striking uim in io oat and head. A yehing man named Cal. Winning h,n Lfed about 18 years, met his Hpnth in a fineular manner at the home of himself and brother, in Flounce Uiopr nrecinct. savsan Ashland paper, His brother, about 21 yean old, had a homestead claim there, and the twe km wr chonoine wood. Cal. had a varv harn ax. and in a fall backward over a log the ax struck his neck under the chin and severed me juguiar vem. His brother ran to h neighbor's for help, and the young man waa Kofnm his return. Tn ilia office of the Secretary of State clerks of the following counties have filed copies of the assessment ron oi i rU-ictiB counties, and from them it is learned that the amounts of ...uKlo nmncr V r . IO1I0WB : ? amr inor.n f2 fiS7 000 :M"TOW,f 1.172,318 Clatsop, 12,120,380; Grant, 12,814.124; Tillamook, 121)0,633 ; Columbia, GW,- 371; Klamath, 11.01-WJ; uroox, o.w 178: Baker. 11.617.683; Coon.fl i5'8iW; Lake. 1.606.294 36; Gilliam $1 265,295; Douglas, $2 886,460; Mai I ' . 'ir,.in02: Jn.et.hiHe. $716,061; Ul'Ul, T " ' I ' nrrv 1470 222: Multnomah, f-'0, ininr.. Itrnton. $3,772,571: Clacki ng, $2,247,829; Lne, $4,076,579 VY: ir.i92.Sfit): Polk. $1822,188 vv.Jo $3.085.360 ; Marion. $6,421,684 Willowa. $558,524. The amount of taiible property in the entire State will oe in niun-i ii'iiu'-vi" , M. Alexander, a elothinir merchant. was fouud dead in hi ltoreat Bel lev ue, luano. Nellie Ahart. a four-vear-old daushter of Peter Ahart, waa faU'.'.y burued at i.incoui, cut. There are aaid to be fiftv-eiaht caaea of measles on the l'uvuilun ( W. T Indian reservation. At the ranch of T. A. IIulan."near Visalia, Cal.,Iroy (colored) shot aud killi d Henry Fridgeon. Bears are said to be makine verv free with the orchards in the vicinity of Port Townsend, W. T. Fred Numan, a younir man of Seattle. was drowned near Coupeville, W. T., by tho upsetting of a steam launch. W. F. Borchers, an old resident of Sacramento, accidentally shot and killed himself with a breech loadiniz gun. UpAo Novembei 1 of this year, 1235 bah of hops, with aggregate Weight of 226,000 pounds, were shipped from North Yakima, W. T. Josephine Martin, a Norwegian woman, died from a dose of " rough on rats," at San Francisco. She took it in mistake for medicine she had been using, being in ill health. The planing mill and the sash and door factory ot the Madera Flume and lradme Company, was consumed by re at Madera, Cal. A carpenter named Alonio C. COllins perished in the flames. The loss is over $20,000. The vegetables grown in Washing ton Territory are surprising to visitors from the East. Watermelons weigh ing 57 pounds, cabbages weighing 40 pounds, beets 24 and potatoes 8j pounds are calculated to excite the wonder of any people outside ol the i erritory. Prof. Cushman, who has charge of the Government exploring expedition South Aniona, has unearthed whole city there and exhumed 2000 skeletons. The location is about eighty miles northwest of Tucson, near the junction of Salt river with the Gila. A night watchman found the body of a laboring: man lving at the fool of the embankment of the railroad i rack at Stockton, Cal. The coroner found a deep cut over tho right eye, which it is believed resulted from being hit by a freight traiu which passed through there. The bridge over the Columbia river, at Keanewick, W. T., is only tempo rary work, for use until the permanent bridge shall have beeu finishtd. It will be some time before the perma nent one will be built.. It ia said the bridge will be similar to the one at Ainsworth across the Snuke rivor. dead i- rea, hut miraculously escapu - $li)mm Ul r MuKp 3..a.nd wa th0 on!.?, person "fSSnS iCera.rst Ka u, lurinign tne Uornoie or jew uu . . 4 1 700 000 fed to tll tha .t,,r. ,.f iu r facaoe. U W K over W.- Taking Advantage of ralnf Lady t Sharna a Wlfa llaallnf ltufflan. I jot off a Jamaica Plain car at Cedar troet in Roibury, tin other itny on my way tn pay a visit. Tba itrwt (nn U a bill rather ntimptly from tUt cornvr, anil It ia not ju.it hre a vary ptauant rt I waa bout hntf way up lb hill aiwt n)potibi annra aoi t of a brewery place when I nai no coHtnl ifi")aotfully by a plrawit fari lit. bi nuin, who bud bran talkinx to ni mm who wrrerollm; out br twrrrlt from tba doorwny of tba plao arrxxt tba trvt. I knw tliut tlie man bo kKkt U ni hrtil UMn calling acitM. Imt I waa btuy with niv own tboubtii an,l luitl nut uotimi liu woln. Ilia ipcnkiiiE Ui ma aa avuleiiUy a tuJJen inapt ration. . - "Lilly I" ha aaid in a loud, clrar ton; lmly!" , lttoppnl and looked at him. Ihonldbav npixianl I would ba itHrtlnl nt Mnti ypokrn to to linivraiivclv and cudilvnl.v, but thf nuui'a voi,-o and mnum-r wcraquitu abort any prrvimdity. I had limply nppratvd It an opportune moment to jotnta in ii-altor him. Ua wan lei-tui iiiR a low Ixnkinn man ovor tlio way, on of the workmen euiploywi in rollins out tho berr barrvif. a "Ixwk at mat wiiiiiiwuie'i aeounorei o' ihnlr, lmly; look at him! 11 ohUhi hit mother rigilar. Do yc e that, yea booming nwcal, J ft Tb laity enn't benr to look a eo ond time t the likea of ye. To dUgr- tba neii:liUoibcid by hnliiij yerowu motherr 1 wei't on up the lil.l. ami a I tne iiidiKiinut man he stvpptu politely off the lilcwalk t' make room for tne, aaying, "Ooh, mn'nm, it would kbmiM bim woll if ye'd looked ionuw." I Uxvi-il, hut as it treived to me that I had done aervii-e eunuzli viral louly na a mi- ionw-v. I ex'-ma-d myacU' from canting, eon detuning i;liuicnt niou the siniwr uudor ai1- ruiirinnpiit. When 1 iTture.1 to ml boras car, after a wnil- l!.ron;h pU'aailUr atrect. tlia man who bad i:m.lovcl the novel method of tryluR to li3li)e hia nindil friend hud diwippcniv-l. Hut ihe Imrrel roller wni ttill buy nunit tlie door of the lieer plnr. I glanced townn! him with Kime wonder a to hia ioitil be- lmvivr. He had not eml to hear ht aoca'wi' Uefoie nr to aee me; but at Hlght of mo now, ho ducked hia bend liehind a barrel and ro mniiKHl i:i nn extmonliniuy doublel over po rtion of hhmned acnii-coiiifftlinent at I wulkcil down the rtreot. When I waa fairly down Vi tho corner cm loaity Impelleil m to turn and Wk asniu In hi direction. H wna jiiist. li:ii-litonius up iigain to go on with hia work. I have wondciwt aiiico if he feared that I myitndd a postwript to hia friend' icnlhiiiR. I ahoiild liktf t' I nm uiv, If 1 linuwwbat one could powjlily any to touch ttm eon rience of nian "who Uites hi mother rcsilBr."' n.wto Trunacript. The Man Who AYanted Toal The Order KepealeU A Tip at ImU The crank's stomach was out of order; not that there i anything remarkable In that, ns the stomach Um been the fountain of all crankiima (idiii Dioc,eiiea down to Carlykx Put the sUimaeb of tins particular crank wna feeling inrticulaily ld. He entri-etl a res taurant on aindlnon street with a (cowl that turned all the milk In Ihe place sour, took a rat with a a-iirlt and iapiie.1 sharply and nervously on the ede of a chin tumbler witb cmbo knife. 8o sharp and nervous waa the summons Ibut everybody in the place looked up with a birt, and the ebony colored Ul peiM'i'of vim ills forgot that dnrjilllcd delay almrni'lei ilic of the imHH Uince of biaofllct and of the movementa of all other Rival bod tea, and hastened Immediately to the crank s aide. "Olva me," said that peculiar Individual, "some tea and toast and when I any tonat 1 niviin toaL What's the renaon," continued be, raising bis voice as the memory of pre vioua excrieucet naw up before bk excited imnKination, "that when you order Uwit in a restaurant you cant get HI If you II let tne come out there I'll show you bow to make toaht. I'll put the bread on a fork and bold it before the tval and brown it thoroughly, lint nn one side anil then on Ihe other. I wouldn't throw It for nlxiut two seconds on top of a nasty stove, dry It out a little on one side, then bring it iu and lie alMiut it, and any it was toot. IK) you un derstand! 1 nant some tea and toast toust I" "All right, iih; all right, snh," meekly re plied the dignified pro-Adamite. A moment ntcr he thi'ut his Ilea I through the kitchen port hole und yelled in a voieo pinfnnionully suave, but of such volume that the customer pricked up his emu to Imir: "Toast for a ceutlemnnl Browned on one sido browned on the other side browned on both sides hi on union the imjilv browned all aiMund the edgel" Then, returninz to tho crank, the waiter meekly said: "lie benh, sail, aa toon aa lie done. That peculiar Individual nte his breakfast in silence, seemingly oblivious thnt ho and his toast were objects of couidcrnblit iutervst to other bivakfusteiN, but when lio left he slyly slipiml a quarter into the waiter's band. All of w hich tends to prove that even a crunk in his crankiest moments bus a simi it of ordiuury human mturo ubout him somewhere if you only know how to find IU I hicngo Herald. 0. C. B It Tim TABIX Mall Train "orth, II a. m. Mall train south. tiM r. at. OFFICE HOUat, E"0EW CTtl P0STOT7IC1. fleneral Delivery, from 7 a. M. toT F. at. Money Onior, frem T a. M. to a p. M. Iti-Kinier, from 7 A. M. to A p. M. Mulls for north eloae at 9:IA x. u. Malla for south eloae at I::e3 e. u. Mnllafor Kraukliu cIom at 7 a. I ami inunMiay. Malls for Mabel close at T a. M. Moadai mi Thnrmdan. Mntis for Cartwrlghl e'oae T A. at. Monday. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. found al K. It. Luckey ft Cos ilni ooura: a w u u i to p. u DR. J. C. GRAY, Three children, all sutTuring from smallpox, were found in an old build ing teparated by only two walls from he Broadway school house, where a h und red or more child ren attend school at San FrancifU'i. The parents had seemingly attempt d to conceal the preaence of the disease, ihey are Italians. Muunt Constitution, on Orcas island, W. T., is 2-100 feet high, from the top of which some grand scenery is dis cernible. It has two fine lakeH, pretty we'll up. A corresixnident writes that a movement is being organued to grade a road to the top of the mountain iu order to open a bummer result at the feiininut. Tho residence of Einil Hansen, a butcher, with the contents, burned at Fresno, Cal. Hansen s two year old son, in the building, burned to death. The mother and two remaining chil dren birely escaped with their lives. One boy four years old was badly scorched. The orogin of the fire, it is supposed, was a defective flue. John Cutler, a laborer engaged in whitewashing a store on Montgomery street, San Francisco, while standing on a board, und attempting to white was-h a corner of the room reacliou too far, his feet pushed the plank from under him, and he foil to the floor with a craah. He fell on his In ad, re ceiving a shock that caused concus sion of the brain. The boys on the day force of the Western Union telegraph messenger rervice struck at San Francisco for ten hours' woik a day, instead of thirteen and fourteen and sometimes more. They also asked that regular night boys" should be employed to work n . n ' , : from Z P. M. w a in too muniing, iuus doing away with the former syeiem ol alternate " nights on." The company's managers at first positively refused the demands of the youthful striken, but as an appalling array of telegrams be gan speedily to accumulate, with no prospect of delivery, reconaideration waa soon taken, and the little fellows reaumed work victorious. The other day, aaya a Spokane paper, five of the leading Indians of the Cueur d'Alene tribe left this city for their reservation, some fifty mil. a distant, with a bran new improved threshing machine and a handsome buggy. These Indians have 70 acres of grain each, ready for harvesting, and the condition of their neighbora is aaid to be similar. Theee Indians were well dressed and intelligent, and drove well kept ponies, William Kleinschraidt tried to kill his wife at Tacoma, and then commit ted suicide. He waa arretted three months ago while trying to kill a po lice officer, and has been in j ail ever since, after having hod one trial with no result. The theriff allowed him to gr and see bis wife and change his clothing. He attacked her in Iter bed room with a razor and rut h r face fearfully. She broke awy from him and ran. When be was discovered h had rut hia throat frmu ear to ear. He I was j years old. lite w tin is a young j weman. Col. T'nt Donan'a Narrow Kscape. Col Pat VMiibh, tba western orator, who miv ho ingoing to be tho pnert to unite mo north and 'iitli by menus of ninrryhig off a h.tof pietiv gnWfrom inxio to young meu in Ihn north, lius had many narrow csciiihm. II.' snviil hi life onco by ntistiiinliis f mm a ::inif of (l:cr and leading tho Bible. A few reiiii alter Ihn war ko was a passenger on a hi Jli-iipl sUnmlioat bound to HU Louts .'rum .N'ew Orleans. Tho colonel wa nsked ui take n hand In a game of draw tioker that was filing on tu tho forward part of the cnliin. It. wan Sunday morning, awl a and den immiK' aeiHl him to rca.1 something in td of playing joker. He hud nothing to rend until ho Umught of a littlo Blldo that a nn ttv voiim! girl cousin gavo bun Iu Kew llrleiiii. extnicting a promUo fivin bim that ha would sooner or later look betwoeu iU leaves. In order to keep the poker players and tho men who watched tho cauio fr m laughing at him if 'hey saw bim rending a Pililn, he went to his stateroom, situated alniut the niidUlo of the cabin. Ha had been i-mling from tho Vnilnw of David about ten minute when alerrillo eT;ilosioti took plnci', killing outriL'ht all Hie poker player and tho men in the front part of the cabin. Tim colonel was badly shaken up. but bo managed to savo a half dozen ladles by llghtmij a lot ot hock hand and entitlli iliS a small bryit. Ito took to tho water uftor pushln;' o(T tlio liltiu bisit ailcl with women, and was pic.o-1 ;) tlireo miles below, frtwn nearly to Uenla. iiow York Muil and EipreJix. The l'auious Sickles Trlul. The case not only cominnndcd nttfliitlon In Anitrica, but wata ciiuiw celobro wherever the EnclLsh lungunco was spoken. It was a blood v imiidor, with no pulliatlng circum' itanco save that Dan Sickles defended Ills do mestic honor under the Mosaic. M a that the adulterer could bo killed if ciiiitlit in tho not. Thei-e was a splendid urray of tnunse!. Car' .ysle and Ouhl, tho latter then di vrlrt nttor isv and afterwards prominent In iho Con, fmleruto war dciiartment, proscciited Dull Kirk hs. Tho latter wo defended by IMwiu il. Sainton, tboL'oldcu mouthed Jamea I. Drndv. of New York; John (Jrahniu, the great criminal lawyer, yet alive; Mn;;ru.ler and Charlton, of Virginia, and the brilliant and ciftcil tieil. Thomas Meghan. Ktiiutou'a siH-ecb uniuittedlho prisoner. Htnuloii Wco was accepted uy iuo ueieuse, the killing wan admitleil and tho defenso took the erotuid thnt the provocation wai sum cient to JiiMlfw acquittal. Tho Kient wnr crvtary quoted from John Milton, who said: Who knows not that ciiastity ami prouiiy of livitic cannot bo estaUUbad or cont limed except it bo first set up in privuto families whence the wholo Utcoil or meu como mriii, and witb wonderful eloquence, while tho jury gazed in wrapt utteiition at the stalwart eloquence of the great oruior, no comniueu; "Tho family la iuo cranio oi sonsiiHiny when tho tint lexsous aio taught of tliut ten deriies and humanity which cement tlio vait iw.u of mankind together, and wero they ex- liuuibed the whole fabric of society would be dissolved.' Philadelphia T inios. How Nreklles Are Made. The designing of silks and satins for neck lies is a proiosion in lurir. "lhero aie shh'IuI grades ami desigua of silks and satins n nulii exclusively for the necktie trade," said a manufiki-turer. "These materials are mode from patterns designed by men w ho do uoth lug but study new things in this line. There ai from titty tosevoutydlve factories iu the country, and ten or twelve Hint clut luakeju. The latter usually secure exclusive rights to uso certain stvle of coikIs offered to the American inurket, or a lurgo portion of it Hut the success of making up such goods just like a lottery, I'erliniH one season I bit upon a design that will become so xipulur tliut all the oilier mukers are forced to adopt it, but the next season some ono in Dmton or rliilaili liihl;i will make a hit and I am forced to copy that, Tliero's never any telling how a liecklio ia going to take until it ia fairly on tho market 1 hen it deiicuds for success ou who adonis it first. If ho liuppeus to be swell, tliut par.icular kind of liocklio will seil well." "Aro tho styles of making up neckties orhr inaieil auroailf "Not now. Tlicy wero until atiout thire yenn ago, but now our sty lea aro smicrlor to tho Kiin.pean, und they nm coining over hem for pattern. However, there isateudeuc totvard ICuglisii iiatU'l'iis this seilsnn. "1 here ui o mora limn I,UUguis employed in this cily nlonc. They work by tlio pieco mid mukn money mora or less according to Iheirixis'i iuiico. A good lluislier can mill. 8 or t'J a week. Slie tul.es u neektlo a tier is put together and llnislies cneb detuil ixir lecily a.illmtltl leudy to box. i bicodil (emit colors of tlio snmo dilgu r.nd tame stylo aru twisted together to give tho dealer uu mortmcut iu the ono make, Tho fiiiUher must see tliut nil of this kind are vxuctly uliku in point Ct finish and make up. We have ono gil l who iloea nothing but turn bauds of necktie, und sbu makes (15 a week. blio turns twenty-live or thirty dozeu banda a day." New York Mail und Lxpresa. ILL ATTKNI) TO calls day or niiftit. rnoKsaioNU. OrricR-fpstalra In llava' hrirk a r- II. Mickey ft t o s itriiff stare Stoir.au oreaak atara. OOa OK KICK OVKIt UltANUR 8TORB. work warranted. Uuirliin pa administered for palnla traction of levlh. . GEO. W. KINSEY, Justiceof the Peace. UKAI, KSTATK Kttlt H A I. K -TOWN LOTS and farms. Colloeliona urnmuUi aa. tended to. ItKMiiiKNOR-Oorner Klerenlh and High Stav KuKne City, Orvgin. D. T. PRITCHARD, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER. Itepalrlna: of Walehea and Clonks esecuted Willi piiuutualily and at a reaaouaule cost. Hlllamrlte Mtreet. Kuceaia Uly, Oaw F. M. WILKINS. Practical Drosist i GbBmist DRUGS, MEDICINES, Itraahea, Falata, 4laaa, 011a, Lessatav TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Pbyalolana' Preecrlptlona OompoundaaV SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM The noen's Hinl)l Oxen, The gii'iit feutuiv of the Isle of Wight Agl l- riiliuriil show was n pair of luapiilln-nt HpanWi oxen iu lieiiulifully embroldeivil bar ties, which were shown, wilh their cart, by tlicipiecu, who also sent a number of entries for coiiiietllion from In-r farm nt (Mioriie, Tins Himiiisli oxen nn t, Willi iu oxen nun Iiai ne, t u reci'i. pieneitt to her mnjesty from Hp-in. They ni-e benatli 111 iM'nsla. mill tlie whole turnout was most pioiuresquuk (...if.n 1't".i, C. M. IIOUIV, Practical Giinsmitlx WW iisalss . CUN8' R,FU"' VslX Kiahlng Tackle and Material SewlD. lsTamcsanfl Nscdlcs 3f All Kills for&Jt ltepalrlng done lit the neatoat atyla aoaV warranted. Guni Loaned and Ammunition Forniahsl Hhop on Willamette Street, opposite foe toHaas. Boot and Shoe Storo. A. HUNT, Proprietor. IOCIETir.H. IIinRN'li: IllMIK NO. II. A. F. AMI A. M I J Meets Hint and third Wedueadaya iu each month. CI'KNCKU nUTTK 1.0DUK NO. I, I. O. O. F. O Meets every Tuesday evening. llMMAWIIAf.A KNCAMI'MKNT NO. 8. Meets on the second and fuurtb Wednes days In each month. o. u. w. M. W lUHKNIC LOIMiK NO. 1J. I j M,el al Masoiiln Hall the second and fourth rriduya Iu each month. T M. OEAUY ItlHT NO. O. A. H, tl s dayi MKKTS at Masonic Hull the Unit and third Sri o( each month. Uyorder. L'ommanukh. MKKTS iliiKs U. C, MlllKriOKCIIO-iKN KltlKNDH. Vl the tliut and third Haiurday aveniiiKsat Masonic Hall. Uy orilnr or mitwtA every Haturday nlKht In Odd Fellows' 1)UTTK IltKlK NO. 307, 1. O. O. T, 1 Ona Woman'a Makeup. I met the wife of a western congressman In tho Corcoran cullery here tho other day. Wbllo sho does uot by any means represent a type of Washington women, sho yet combine! hi many traits that era found among them that sho is in a certain senso representative. She seems to bo in a sort of transition state in overy particular, not only at to mental char acteiislica, but t ven inberattiro and man ner. bl bil n bonm t that reached the furthest ext.ii f farhlon, a pair of thick oled and . .. ...irtl booU thnt could only have been i: a lrt bock country cobbler, and her ati r. vuan indeacrnl'ly aid col lection of Vii; ion stylea ana fasiiioiis. liU' meiliuli'ly Uu-uih the new fash lone-1 bonnet o hwl an old faliioiiel bang. Iler eyes era bright. Iier color iwrfect, and alio talked with au enjoyment of one under a perpetual sne.l of cxeiteiiK-nt In summing up ber attire I should place it .ime hat as follows: Hbora, Keokuk; bon net, r.iris; cloth Jic'..et, Ioudou: gown, Wasl if'on; miuaive gold chubi, Chhao; naiavj'iew York: rlr.li. Vfiino; accent, Ivrt.lon. Iowa, l'oris. Illinois, New York, Sew Lngland, Germany, South Carolina ond Ireland. Tuat tl.ese warring rlenwnts aid ihoitly Iniolveadnsbirj and r"."f,,,,nir" Auiria a U te mn.; U VVasuai ivu LitUrr. Hall. W.C.T, T EADINO STAUI1ANDOFIIOPK. MKKTS Ij at that!. I'. Church every Holiday after noon at 1:30. Vlsltoia made welcome, Will aarraftM Step a eumplnta stoas af Ladies1, MissGS1 and Children's lll'TTO IIOOTM, Slippers, White and Black, Sandalav FINX KID SHOES, MEN'S AND DOTS BOOTS AND SHOES! And In foot everythlna; In the Hoot and Klioe Una, to whieh 1 intend to dovata) my eapecial attention. ( MY COODS ARE FIRST-CLASH! A nd stuaranteid aa repreaented, and wlU be smiI.1 ior the lo went prices thai I article cau ba all'orUed. A. Hunts Central Market, Eugene City Business Directory BfCTTMAN, 0.-lry Kola. elolhlnir, irrooerlee anil Keaeral nierelianiiliHi, souinaeas corner. Willamette and Klg-hth streets CHAIN W(0.-Ilealcre In Jewelry, watchea. Wl Ml cliM-kaand muxleal Instrument. street, between Hevenlh and Klahth, llUmelle FlHUtivAcXVntUln PBOPRIBTOB8. Wilt keep constantly on hand a full aapptf ( FltlKNIX.Y. 8. H.-Deler In dry (foods, cloth-1 intf and veneral ini'irlminil-w. vt uiauieite I street, between Klichlh and Ninth, GILL J. I'. Physician and ainveon. Willam ette alreet, bvlweeu ttevenlli ana r.iiun. HODKS.r.-Keeision band fine wines, liquors, rla-are and a pool anrt til Hum lama. uiaiu ellu afreet, between KlKhlh and Ninth. IIOItN, ("HAS. M.-Gunsmith, ritleaand ahot-l irnns, lin-r.'li and muulo loaiera, ior aaie. IteiiairinK done In the neatest style and war ranted. Hhop on . liitn streeu IX't'KKY. J. H.-Watclnnaker and Jeweler, keeina flue stork of al In his line, lllaiu t lie street, iu Kllaworth s dnif store. McCl.At'.KN, JAMKS-Cholce wines, tlqnora and cigars, Wiuamettestrevt, between kightii and Mnlli. I"OST OKKICK-A nw stock of standard arhool books Just received at the poet ollloa. mVi'I haTtt J. h.- Ilrnv.. stirn and carriage I iifiUir. Work Kiiaranieea nrm-t iana a ot a i uaata latltaree, K any pars ox ua cuy i MUTTON. PORK AND VEAU Which they will sell at the lowest market pricoa A fair share of the publio patronagw solid taat TO TIIK FA It II Kit at I . We will pay the hlifhe-A market prloe tor tatt cattle, hogs and shut p. Shop on Willamette Street, tUCFMI CITY, ORECOM, . I urn pa aol sold at lower rewe tbaa by aujoue in tuusna, , al oharge. - 1 I !