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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1888)
(.SHOP MANIA. HE . r Infatuated Young ' r ..ii rlU'l oth,,r di,-v on i.wn-hopi In our uitiv TTo .young friend, H hr.U 'Otis.. md. 1 i ... uwvrr. .on ot ono of the ift ilMil):lko,a- blessed will, f .if ul wife nn.l oo " 'y. 'ul,"U nrnniUe. which WHS uu ,,k went to protwt 88 he full th'tfiltb" intluttnce of the pawn In an vil- tlK1,Ue!, hw,ir- niiumiiion enticed Iniu into hi, 13 irof the destroyer, and .eaicely " ff what ho did. he eoaked a ;hidIe.livWer.thB gift of hi. teacher, for Beven dol- 'nit; mtj. " . i If lUi nnre.' ho uid. t Una the Hwt of blood to the .-..in and aeain he fell, and it m uinj - f ,d .pain ho said: "It is only hif4t to he allured. It was not Hint ,ted money; it was only the res -Bldeninff craving to pawn oim Once ho came to mo with Llmt eve nml feverish lip. hat info inD, f L let, iJ mo'voiir watch, ho Raid. ir what? ' I Hsko.l. "To pawn," he hoarsely; -uimw. n.... W forty cent, i-.r u ice i "Iciinnoi pan nivi j ,,, . i ill "ive von twice forty cents." "... V. .!!.. .,..i ,.i Iv no. nu """J " Ut wniit ") n,!in 8 nw,lv- ' "'y r I i ....1 I... aliiu'nil inn fmirnr fivf .fy; mm nu - e difki ol menu wnicu in me ,l Stat la or Jollars, "but I L pawn something or I ahail go ti mad-hn. ha!" My heart wn? ,-id by his abject misery, and 1 re- on J Ltitly gave him my nanu-niaiic v.erbury gymnasium, ininKing uini kiuM nave 1,10 grindstone moved I . .l.!l. !.... ,mystiuiy lor my uauy tssurcisc thanked mo fiercely and was gone, cot twenty cents on tho watch and "put up tho ticket at another shop lien cents more, nay oy nay me ;t grew upon linn. iNigiii alter bt li s heart-broken wife would sit embroidering Kayonux tapestries by dim hpht of a solitary tallow c:u which flickered low ana MliUy in tucket all night long, while he wl away the hours, held by the A fascination of a pawn-shop. Often friends would find him prowlingthe tt at night stark naked, with every tet full of money, having put up clothes in tho glittering perdition :iie niiwn-shop. Once ho so far for- lihinnelf. in the delirium caused by week of pawning, as to strike his lit young wife with his clinched list, aiie while there wasn t a crust ol in thti house, and sho and the hid been f .r two days without 1. she refused to let him have her liskin c'oak and diamoixl eur-rinss it he mi-lit hang them up in the tie ;irinr vortex of the abyssmal pnwn p. He never did it again. The in :tl wife let him have it wiih the roll- '.'-pin until a general enso of inllani- ijitnry rheumatism would nave leu e a toothing ointment to him. At when he had put up every tiling had la tho world, he got on a tram I went down in Texas A train roh rboarded tho car. drew il revolver d shot three laU into him. He put hi hands and died. ISob liurdcllc, Ihkago Journal. RUSSIAN DESPOTISM. f tli (r' Chief or Police IMxpoieil of a Kuiiny Clown. Hie Rns-iiau clown. Turnff, of the ti'islim' ('iiusellt Circus, trotteil a il-lr.iined and knowing-looking hog ft into the arena, and caused it to rry and fetch sund y olijects in obe- nee to his orders in tlio most n ivid canine stvle. Tho aiulienee ii delighted, and insisted on an en- re. whcivupn the clown threw a pa rr.'iilde not" into tho arena and or red th" pij; to fetch it to him. Piggy 'tted up to tho note, snifl'ed nt it dis infiilly, and finally, notwithstanding 8 vituriieratioiis and obturations ol ii clown, deliberatelv turned its back on the note and trotteil away. On 'in;: this, the clown shrugged his millers, and addressed tho pig, ex- iinieil: "Well, after all. von are t.ot bo blamed! If a man like ishue- I'iski (the Minister of Finance) is uti le to t aise the rouble note, surely ;e can not expect a ))or ignorant fi like yourself, todoo!" Tho Min er of Finance was indignant, and on :e following day tho clown was siun 1 "lied into tile presence of General 'esser, ehief of the city police, and or fed by him to jail for three days, i emerging from prison, the clown "ted until one night when (ieneral 'esser, with his family, was present at e performance in one of the boxes. I soon as he saw tho ehief of police. i-mwii orove a wnoie iroup oi lined pigs into tho arena, and made 'ni squat down nil in a row on chairs. 'Weapon, ho explained to the public during Ids ini prison nioii t. ho had 'einpted to pass away the timo by 'filing German, and then, with tho Jeet of showing the audience what ,r"gre.s he hud made, he turned to tho and addressed them in that lan ,:'Sv. Commencing with the smallest S he exclaimed, as he tenderly pat 'I its snout: "You are only a littte S- hut you." he added, to the next "are grosser (the German patois "igger). and vou." turning to the lir'l. "are also gresser. while you." Tning to the fourth, "are a very big The audience fairly roared with '"-liter, but fiimornl i;rur ronsid r,M that he had been grossly and pub- A; iiisulted. and inimeiliately left the "ilding. The same night the clown arrested, and when last heard of, r Tun IT was on his way to Silri.i, tere. at hanl labor in the salt-mines. dl have time to reflect on the folly ' hiking fun at the chief of the Czar'f 'iliie. San FrauCitco Argonaut. -.Ulkl. KINU OF IMC PAPUANS. Ab Kiplorer Who Had Thri llln( Ktperl nee la tlia l'arlflo. A short time ago an explorer died in St Petersburg who was known far and wide among the Russian as "King of tho Papuans." Jt was Dr. Maklucho Maclay, the noted Russian ethnologist, in whoso honor a long stretch of the northeastern coast of New Guinea, now in the hands of Germany, Is called the Maclay coast. P-w explorer have braved more hnrdslrps and dangers than Dr. Maclay, and pure lovof science induced him to incur peril, from which most men would shrink. A few years ago a schooner dropped anchor one evening in an unknown bay on the New Guinea coast Boats put off, landed Dr. Maclay and his boxes on the bench, and then the schooner aaiW away in the darkness, leaving Dr. Maclay alone on a savage coast that no white man had ever vis ited before. When tho natives next morning found the white man sitting on his portmanteau they thought the strango object had dropped from the sky. They believed at first that ho was a god, and they nearly killed him with experiments before they decided that he was human like themselves. They fastened him in a hut put guards around the struct uro and nearly starved him, thinking that if he were not of human origin he did not need footL They said that nothing ought to fright en him if ho wero a god. and so they tied him to a tree and shot arrows clove to his head and neck, and severely wounded him during the experiment Then they pressed thoir spears against his teeth to make him open his mouth, and in many other waya they put his courage, temper and strength to se vere tests. They I'm ally made up their minds that he was not a god. because his wound bled and he needed food, but they decided that ho was a capital fel low, becaiiso ho was always good-natured. Many of thoir sick recovered health under his ekillful care, and Dr. Maclay dually acquired the reputation far and wide of being a big medicine man who had dropped from tho moon. For two years Dr. Maclay lived among these navnges. feeling limply repaid for all his sacrilices by the wealth of scien tific facts ho was nblo to collect Four years ago. Mr. Komilly. Great Britain's Commissioner for the West ern Pacific, visited Astrolabe Bay. "Tho natives wero rather shy at first," ho wrote, "until I shouted the magical name of Maclay; then they came up as fast as they could. By the help of tho few words Maclay hail written down for me, I was able to inform them that ho would come back to them soon. They nt once became extremely friend ly, and kept on telling each other that 1 was Maclay' i broth r. It is pos ible that they wo e more civil to mo than they would bo to every one. owing to the fact of my acquaintance with Maclay. which 1 made the most of." Over a year ago it was announced that Maclay was about to lead 2.r)0 Rus sian colonists to New Guinea to settle on tho coast which ho was tho first to visit. The Russian Government how ever, discouraged tho project ""d it was abandoned. The Germans are now planting their stations all along the coast, which Komilir says is mo most beautiful ho ever saw, and in his book ho fully confirms the favorable reoort that Dr. Maclay gave of Ins Ut tin nnrt of the rroat island. Though only forty-tw o years old w hen ho died, Dr.'Maclav had' traveled more exten sively in tho western Pacific than any other scientific man. and it is to bo re irretted that the account of his pro tracted explorations which he had been writimr for many months was only half completed when ho died. N. 1. Sun. Woman's Bewitching Laugh. A woman has not a natural graco more becoming than a sweet laugh. It is like the s. und of iutes on the water. It leaps from her heart in a clear. sparkling rill, and the heart that hears it feels as if bathed 111 the cool, cxtill arntiusr spring. And so of the smile A beautiful smLe is to the female countenance w hat the sunbeam is to the landscape. It mbellishes an in ferior face, and redeems an ugly one, A smile, h .wever, should not become habitual, or insipidity is tho result; nor should the niuiith break into a smile on one side, the ther remaining passive and unmoved, lor this .mparts an air of deceit and gnJesqiieiiess to the face. A disagreeable laugh or smile distorts the lines of beauty, and is more repulsive than a frow '. There are many kinds of smiles, each having a distinctive character; some announce go dness and sweetness; others betray sarcasm, bitterness nnd pride; some soften the countenance by their lan guishing tenderness; others brighten it by their brilliant and spiritual vi vacitv. Gazing and posing Ix'foro a mirror can not aid in ncquiniiL' beau t if til smiles half so well as to turn the gaze inward, to watch that tho heart keeps unsullied from the reflection of evil, and is illumined and oeauiineii by ail sweet thoughts. A. I. Ltdger. - A noted and thoughtful American author says: "If a man minus, nature straightway sets to work to undue his building. Rust ea s into the iron, and decav into the wood, and, little hy lit tie, time ravages and destroys. But if a man plants nature proceeds to coin plete his unfinished work. He sow s a seed, and U tiold wneai; no j lanis n enttin. and liehold a tree or a vine Such is thediflerence lietween working alone and working with God. Since the evacuation of Boston by th British there has never been bi.t one British mau-ot-war iu the harbor. FLOWERS Al FUNERALS Tarletlat That An In 0neral Ueutaad for HTiiipathetle OITerltgfc "Oil, ye," said the merry little maiden who was tyinj great bunrhos of lilies together at tho flirist's, "we soli more flower, than ever to co to ihe cemetery. That bakei wo have just mado up. It it for Mm " J ho basket was ai oblong mass of do'leate ciit-fluwoi's bankod In sweet profusion. Above it brooded a white dove from whoso bill a single roso de pended. A--card upon which was written, beneath the name, ihe Word "sympathy." was appended. "vi hat flow -rs are most used for funeral orders? ' 'All the white lilies the N.pteto ros.-s unite carnations white bride s rose, wliiio paiisL-s, white violets nnd lilies of Ihe valley." Bunches of lilies tied with knots of white satin ribbon, lay on the florist's counier realy to bo delivered. A cluster of roses had a card attached. It read: "To dear Nellie, from her Sunday-school teacher Auf Wiedor sehen." ' D tos," said a voung man in another flower store, "i.vo not fashion able. But thev nri very popular, especially for children and young peo ple. Jim funeral dove is quito an article of (ommerce. There is a jdaco on brand u ver arouiie where they are raised a delicately as if they were children." "Is that caro necessary?" "Yes to preserve thoir plumage. Tho white ones aru reared by thoni sclrns and at a certain age thoy are killed and nrepred by the taxider mist Germans are very fond of them nt Ihe funerals of children. "Are thcro any new features In thi business of flower f r tho dead?" "Several, One Is that flowers with out fragranco aro used now. The tube-rose has gona out as Its excessive sweetness mado people faint. Then colors aro nsod moro than ever. Rvl and pink rosns aro sometimes ordered in large quantities 2ot only are flowers used at (he house, but Ihe grave is lined with evergreens stml ded with flower. A new feature is h.vinsr texts printed on tho ribbons instead of making thorn In floral let ters" "Aro white rlbb org always used?" "Whitn lavender, pale pink and pale blue. The lavot dor and purple rib bons nro fur old pimple. White is pre ferred for children. Thorn nro often floral funerals wher.; only one color is use I. Wo have had roso funerals pansy funerals timed funerals and heliotrope, the last for ol I people." "And the expense?" ' What you please to make it. It is easy to estimate roses at sevonty-l.ve coins a dozen. Nine hundred roses were recently ordered from one florist for such an occasion. Lilies aro about I he same price at tho present timo o! year. Camellias are much moro ex pensive. Thou them aro tho tropical plants for I ho house. The whole ex ponso does not fall on tho family, how ever, in any instance. There are al ways many pieces sent in by friend. ' In referring lo tho notico "omll flowers," which is sonio:inins men tioned with (lie fuel of decease, a well known florist remarked that it was iu very poor mate. "It would bo more gracious" ho sai l, ".o recoivo the flower and send thorn to a hospital than lo repress the k ndlv sentiments of friends by such an announcement I: nu. omits to a churlish refi-8.il of sympathy." Detroit Free Ve.. COARSE CREATURES. Conditions Whli-li J ustir.T a Man to Une Force Ag.ilimt a Woman. It is bcconiin'.r raihcr an interesting question how f ir a man is bound to refrain from udng forco against a wo an. In many places it seems to bo a fre quent practice for women lo wield Ihe horsewhip over men. even the public places. In New York it has happened on several occasions of late that wom en have thus assaulted men by mistake, or for some trivial oll'ense. In Jtrscy Cily not long ago a reporter was hshod across tho face, with a wh:p in the hands of a young woman of un savory reputation whose appearance before a police court ho had reported in tho regular conrso of his duty. A few weeks ago a married woman in New York met her husband walking on Fourteenth street wiih a young woman. 'Jh wife pnlh-d a cowhide whip trom under her cloak, lashed the man till be ran nwav, and then turned her attention to the young woman, whose face she lacerated in a horrible manner. An innocent bystander, win ventured a word of remonstrance, wnf treated in tho same manner. O.il? recently a young actor was severely punished by a female niemb'r of lib company, who. whilo intoxicated, fancied herself tho victim of some trivial slight. In each of those cases the man made no resistance whatever, being re strained by a mistaken senso of honor trui ii using force towards a woman, even under those circumstance. But th re is no grou id for such n senti ment. The woman who will so far forget her womanhood as to resort to such m insures has no claim upon any chivalric feeling among men. She who apeals to forco lias no ground of complaint if fi rce be uso l against her. The n an w ho wou d w illingly strike a woman i a Lru.e; b it no man is cilb'd upon to endure p.is-iyely the Idows of the ui se.'d creatures who apxa'ito the In r-l i- Especially H, like the reporter a;id the innocent soec:ator w ho remonstrated, 1 lie man b- biamel ss ho h is a p rlect right to i si whatever force may lie necessary loir tec. hiu;selt B'jtlon Glcb:. FAR WESTERN THIEHS. Haw Thar ! to Ha Watched Aflat Ther Are Captured. Having captured our men. we were in a quandary how to keep them. The cold was so Intense that lo tie thorn lightly hand and foot meant In nil )ikelllu.l. freezing both hand and foot off during the night; and it was no nse tying them at all unless we tied them lightly enough to atop in part the circulation. So nothing was left for u to do but to keep perpetual guard over them. Of course we had carefully searched them, a d taken away not only their lire-arms and knives but every thing else that could possibly lie used as a weapon. By this time they wero pretty well cowed, as they found out very quickly that they would bo well treated so long as they remained quiet but would re ceive some rough handling if they at tempted any disturbance. Our next stop was to cord thoir weapons up In some bedding, which we iat on w hile wo took supper. Im mediately aficrwnrd we mado the men lake IT their boots an additional safeguard, as it was a cactus country, in w hich a man could travel barofoo only at Ihe risk of almost certainly laming himself for life and go to bed, all llueo lying on ono buflalo robo and being covered by another, in the full light of tho blazing tiro. We determined to watch In succession a half-night apiece, thus each gutting a full rest every third night 1 took hist watcli, my two companions re volver under head, rolling up in thoir blankets on th - side of the lire oppo site that on which the captives lay; while L in fur cap, gantlets and over coat took my station a little way back iu tho circle of firelight in a position in which I could WA'cli my men with ihe absolute certainty of being ablo to stop any movement no mailer how sudden. For thi nighl-w niching we always used the double-barrel with buck-shot, as a riflo is uncertain in the daik; while with a shoi-giin al such a distance, and with men lying down, a person who is watchful may bo sure that they can not get up, no inatler how quick they nro, without being riddled. Tho only danger lies in the cxtromo n oiiolony of sitting still In the dark guarding men who mako no motion, and the consequent tendency lo go to sloop, especially when one has had a hard day s work and is feelin" really tired. But neither on tho first night nor on a.iy subse qiient one did wo ever abate a j t of our watclif iluess Tlieodire liootevelt, in Century. EVOLUTION IN FROQS. A Serle of Mnt-vi-loii Chang" Kevealoil lijr Ihe Little C roukem. Viewed Iromiliis development pniul of view, il is interesting to observe how ihe infancy and adolescence o ihe individual frog accurately repeats for us as it were, iho various stops in the slow evolution of il wholo kind from some unknown and pro-historic progenitor. The liny I ad polo is not only a lish, but. also distinctively a fisii of a very early and antique type, allowing close analogies to tho most ancient known form of veriobrtue animal. Iho boneless laucolot, as well a to Iho larva of thoso curious sac like molluscau creatures tho ascl.li ans or sea squirts presumed degener ate descendants of iho oldest, un developed ancestral vertebrate. As ' it grows, however, il gill and other characterislles be. como moro truly fish-like, and il f wis entirely in this early stage on vegeta ble matter, like its pi-cino relatives tho banainiindaaiid the other a uphib ious forms of ganoids. But a iho season for the drying up of the ponds approaches it takes lo itself lungs wiih a peculiar inodo of bieathing through tho nostrils by tho aid of tho tongue; il gradually repeats tho an cestral stages in Iho acquisition of legs; its eyes nsh through tho skin lo the surface; it hop ashor.f. a full 11 'dged frog; and its beak giving placo lo true carnivorous jaws It fcl hencef. rth exclusively upon its later diet of insects, slugs nnd other ani mal mailer. Tint common Eugl.h frog thus appears to sum up for us. in a sing e generation, a series of mosl marvelous historical changes which ii must probably have taken its remote ancestors whole gonlogical ages to pass through in loug suecjssio.i. Gladstone's London House. M- near G ndsioiie'i L "lidon H iuso is B .ckingham Gate. Ji i in the not the iii'w f tngbid icon Ann ol style, nnd the drawing-room windows overlook the parade-grounds ot Iho Wellington Barracks Mr. Gladsiono like spending a few inomonts now and then watching ihu soldiers go ilironcTii their drill. Tho eniranc - hall isqtiare and roomy, paneied, a i ihe staircase, with fine Chipponda e carving, and lighted by a slained-g ass window. In it are af.-w repioduu mr.a of Ihe Autotype Gallery, and a larg.t picture of tho en ranco t A.ex andria. which n list recall to the ex Premiereach lime he enters the house one of tho most un pleasing remii.isce ces of his oflicial life. Tim dining-room Is on the ground floor, and it is of somewhat restricted di mensions. Above It I the dr.iwing room, which is a long, charming room. In one comer is a portrait of Mr. G adstone painted by Wa Is. ami in ihu middle window is placed Mr. Gladstone's writing-table. Ii is shut in by a screen on which hang por trait of her husband and voii 'ger son. The room in which Mr. Glad--tone works is at Ihe brk of ihe house, and i in couseq lence free from all noise- Nit even ihe sound of a passing cab-wheel can break iu on hie I ueu London Letter. FOREIGN GOSSIP. I Tho doctors of London have start ed a club of thoir own. Thoy call it th G .Ion C lib. There will be another attempt to build a railroad through tho Euphrates valley, notwithstanding tho many previous failures Just before leaving Purls Mr. Van. dorbilt hnd a port rait of hi child taken by Chaplin, and It was so pretty that the proprietor of the B in Marche put imitations on their confection box covers and copyrighted tho deslen. In India tho finest grade of cigars can bn bought for half a cent apiece, and cigar aru considered a ratner ex neiulvo luturv at that In that coun try a man wdio has ten cent in cash is looked upon a comparatively weii-io-do. A monument which will cost 000 000 will soon bo erected In Panama in the memory of General Bolivar, the liberator of Bdivia, Colombia. Ecua dor, Peru and Venemiola. Each ol tho five republics will contribute f WU.WU for Iho purpose. From observations on tho Congo, M. Dimmit, of tho Brussels Natural History Museum, Is convinced that the waters In the interior ol Uonirai Airica once collected In a great lake, of which Stanley Pool Is the last rem nant. In Purl the annual consumption of butcher.' meat I 3 SHO. 000 000 pounds which means an average of I7fi tiound for each man. woman and child. Tho total annual consumption for the wholo of ranee, however, is only 2.640,000.000 pounds or an aver ago of 70 pounds per head. A beautiful brown and goiuon hird In Mexico is a remarkably exnert boo catcher. He has a way of ri tlling iho feather on the top of hi noad so that his crest looks like a beautiful flower. Whon a bee come along to tip honey from this delusive blossom it Is snapped up and devoured. It has boon calculated mat tne quantity of boor browed yearly in tho undermentioned countries is about as follows: Groat Britain. l.OSO.OOO.OOO eallons; Germany 900. 01.000; Austria, 270.000,000; Bjlgiuii. 180.0J0.000; France, 150,000.000; Russia. 50 000. DO0; Holland, 33.000 000; Denmark, 30.000.000; Sweden. 30.000,000; Switz erland, 17.OO0.0iK); Norway, 16.5 )0.000. Somo of iho soc oty mon of Paris aro advocating tho adop'loii of a moro suitablo stylo of evening dress Tho costuuio proposed consists of buckle shoes silk stockings kneo breeches velvet coat (curtailed), laco n.lH.iS olc. Tho promoter aro anxious to avoid Iho dress which causes somo tin cs mistaking resemblance boiwoeu guest and waiter. Paris is overrun with Americans of tho fair sex. Most of thorn como to replenish thoir wardrobes 111 cheap er to cross tho Atlantic buy at me Louvre" or "Bon Marche" and re cross to the Slates than to fit one's nlf out in a no-malter-whiit American city. The margin of gnm is wide enough to admit of a sojourn of four or five wocks in Europe. London Truth. The fowl of tho nlr as well as the beasts of Iho Hold aro placed undor contribution by modern militarism. Iu France, besides owning a military carrier-pigeon service, tho government will have at its command. In case of war. the 150.000 "homors" owned by tho three hundred plgoon-flylng socie ties of tho country. Carrier pigeons are used in Italy to convey dispatches betwoon Kinio and tho garrisons in Sicily and Sardinia. Thnro nro a number of women studying medicine nt the Belgian uni versities wishing to obtain situations in Iho apothecarios' Bhops Tho phar maceutical course is tho shortest nnd in some rcspeMs tho oasiost, and It Is far cheaper than all oilier courses A number of young girls who have passed tho pharmaceutical examina tion, havo fascinated tho heart of country physicians so that tho hus band oroscrilios tho wife makes up the prescription, and tho profits are kopt in tho family. m m i All Albany physician asserts that many young ladies of that city uso bel ladonna to give brilliancy to their eyes It 1 employed chiefly by thoso who have light eyes Tho practice is a very hurtful one, as it cause partial blind ness, and besides affects tho nerve of tho face, producing a muscular con traction. At Stratford-on-Avon a man living near a sewage farm recently sued tho tho corporation for damages on ac count of the suffering caused by tho horrible stench of the farm, and got a verdict for fj,ri,000. Tho afflicted plain tiff's lawyer said ho "thought his client' noso could stand a good deal for 15,000." Little Freddy Smith, a twelve-vcar-old bov living at Couhranton, Pa., enjoys the distinction of being tho champion rabbit hunter ol tno maw. Last season by means of a bag and a large pet rat, w hich lie used as a ferret to explore the rabbit holes ho suc ceeded In capturing more than two hundred rabbits F. M. WILKINS. Isl DRUGS. MEDICINES. Rraahea. ralata. (alaaa. Wlla, lada. TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Pbralolana PraacrlpUon Comi pounded, ecimti. TJCC!SNX LOIHJK mi. ii. A. f. AND A. M IU MA Drat ami third Wetnttj la eeeh CPKNCItrt BL'TTK bOIHJK NO. t, t. O. (h F. O Meet ererr Tuenlajf evening. MMAWHALA a.VCAMPMKN'T NO. t. klevle on the econd and fourth Wedaaa da) Iu each month. rU'fitNK LOIHIK NO. U, A. O. U. W Aj Meru at Maeonlo Mall the second aad fourth t'rldayi In each month. M. Vf. T M.OKAHYIKWTM.4H.O.A.n. MKETS tl at Masonic Hall the Unit and third t rV day of each mouth. H) onler. C'ommjnukb, HL'TTKLOIKlKNO.SHT.I.O.a.T. MKRTS eery Saturday iilxht la Odd Kellowe" W.O.T. IKAniNOHTAItllAMHIKlIOPK. MELTS J at llieC. I'. I'hurvh every Hunday after nooaall M. Vleltort made welcome. 0. C. B R. Tim TABLE. Mall Train "orth, 1:14 a h. Mail train south. 9M H. M. Kiiirene Ux l - liavo north 9:00 a. M. Kiiiiene locl-Arrive 10 p. M. OFFICE H0SBS, EII0K1TE CITY POaTOrPCm. Omieral Pcllve ry. from 7 a. M. to 7 F. is Money Orilrr. frein 7 a. M. to 4 t. M. rliwieler, from 7 A. M. to A H. M. Mailt ior north clone at H1U e. u. Malls for ml h cloee at SHU I1, M. Meila hy lK-al clone at 8 M a. M. alalia for fr'ntiibUi, pLm. v . u . anil Thitnutav. Matla r.ir nl.l.. I .i.. ., . . .. ,i . . Thureday. Eugene City Business Directory. BKTTMAN. O.- Dry Koods rlolhlnR. arooerie T.',.." M,r" naimiee, eomnaeel corner. lllauielieaiid Klvhlh tlreela C1UIN UrtOH.-Dealers in Jewelry, watch v. . aim mumrai umirumcnia. luaaiet itreel, bulweeu Hevoiilli and Kihth. ritlKXIIbY. 8. H.-Ilnaler in dry Roods U0 In and veaural nicrrhamllM. WlllanteMw reel, between Kiirhth and Ninth. GILL, J. P.-Physician and iiinreon. Wlllaak- in auTei, oeinecn anivenm ami HiKMn. IIOIIKS. C- Keepe on hand flue wlnea, llqoora. clKara and a pool and ollllard lahle. Willam ette itreet. between Kltf lull anil Ninth. HORN'. rilAS. .- (liin.nillh. rtfloaand tho. una, orercn aim lllliriui loauera, lor iiopamntr none in ine neatest alyle and raineu. onop oil IMIlin iireeu bUCKKV. J. 8. -Watchmaker and lewetar. keep a flue atock of goodi in hU line, WUIaiaV tlte alreet. In Kllsworth drua (tore, McCI.AItK.V. JAM KM -Choice wlnea. Honor, aud eltfara, Wlllamutteilroet, between Utfhlh and Ninth. FOOT or PICK -A new itock of slander chool books Juit received at the poet offlae. ftlllNKIlART, J. Il.-lluow, ilKn amlcarrtac painter. Werk guaranteed llral-clana Hi era) wild al lower raim I linn hr anyone in Kinreaa, DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. W'lM, ATT KN II TO J'ltOKKBSIONAI. ' cttlla day or iillit. OKrii K-Cpaialin In Tlnia" brick: or can t found al K. Kkl,mkey k Co t ilrnv elora, Offle honrn: V lo I.' M I lo i e. M.. 6 Ut e p. M. DR. J. C. GRAY, llSIN'rriNrX OKFICK OVKIl UltANUK 8TOKK. AIL work warrmilod. Ijnurlilnif k" administered for palaleea at traction of teeth. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justiceof the Peace. UK At, E8TATK KOIl 8AI.lt -TOWN LOTS Mill, fair Ilia I Ilu.it lima ak..M - a. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM HORN & PAINE, Practical Gunsmith s D1ALR IM GUNS, RIFLES, Kishlnv Tackle and Material Sewifiz Mac&.nesandNeedles or AH mil! For Sail Itepuiriiift done Ih the neateat atyla and warranted. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Fornish4 Bhon on Wlllamotle Street. Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will kfirrttfter keep t oonipleU itook ol Ladies' Misses' and Children's Shoes! Ilt'TTON HOOTM, Slippers, White and Black, Sandala, FINE KID BH0ES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact evnrythiiiK In the Hoot and Shoe line, Ul which 1 Intend lo devul my eapoclal attention. MY COOD8 ARE FIRST-CLASH! A nd uruaranleed aa represented, and will be wild for the lowest price that a good article can be airorilf. A.. Hunt. Central Market, FiMliere&Wiitkiiis PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on harid a full inpply i TIICIIJ', I MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL. Which they will aril at the lowaat inarket priooa A fair ihara of the public patronage ollellaA TO TIIK f AKMKKNl W. will pay the hliflimt market prioa foi fat cattle. Ihv and aheep. Shop on Willajnette Street, VUCXKS CITY. OREGON. SfeaU taiteraa. k any part ot tb city tnm f eharire, JamaA