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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1888)
1 WHIMS OF STUDENTS. l..o0 Hoys Mm Pete of Keptllra 9B i.Mrv llMrrlDtlnn. uhiiiH o( collwrlana am like L., f women, about which no much I""" .. I Tl.... 1 .1. ...... written uwo .,, its of th ml t',,'J' me 'l'ciilcilly IVlllCI't.tll IIIU HH lllllliy HH 'je. II irviiid anl I'oliinihhi have. A vi'iir 'l w,w for erv iiios'mtoiik student to have tin .f;l.,;,i cl"c' or ainiilii!r whiMtl i.l. ,,.,.m. Tnt-stf relics of foiM ' -s !,n" tlic orcharN ami farmyar.U ,.re the cl izi. .it it ln b1' ctilh'C" to have some suri. of a ., J) are favorite, oi course, ami ,'ir . lu s"!.. Tim horse can he reii'lily .., liierv stable. U.i'M an; not n '(l on th campii ami so they l'U . II!.. .1 lVe io In' kepi couci-aicii in me iibiiiis r faiMicl out somewhere in town. irr, t. ca iary blnls ami jrnld:ish are it tic caper a. ion;,' the younger class- lll'll. Ii II H "ill J'""':- "n ni riitsb:irh that started mo oiiucsi several years n;o. Perhaps it n't fair to call it a erae. for it was i i c: i... Jii'Ver elicr.llly nuoi.ii. onieu nil- '.Itsliiir.'li sdiilent loit oiners nave uiiaicl his example, u"1 never very Hvis-fullv. 11 ' always lis.-1 lm room , of snakes. 11 always can ieil one more of t!m repiiles on his person. I, ,,l tim utmost control over lliein ill. I W.IS neii'i ki ii 'I'IV " i .. I...,. I.,. khI three or four in his pockets ami ncr a iloen scattered about his apart- Ill'lltS. The iTPiitost thin?; the Pittsburgh i. i . . i i. :..!. .j jMlllll'llt del WSWJ Hiiro auiu ,n the campus, early iir the summer. is the boys were retiirnins anor iin er. Ho would select two lanru black .mikes, say five feet long, and then so .. .1 I..,.. .......1.1 ral. lil.,l 31IIHOV Uirill lll.lt lllfM HWIIIW ..mi ,l... a .....i, .ii!i,.r. Tim itv of "snake Iirhl" filirini,-rh the campus would draw a liiin- l.lreil fellows in less than live minutes. Arimr would be formed, bets would be iiiadc and the excitement was as intense (or the time being ns though Sull.van mil Mitchell were at work. The rep tiles usually fought until one or both ere mortally injured. O'Ncil could harm tlx) snakes. He often made them nb-v the direction of his evo or voice. As a number of the reptiles were very poisonous, ho extracted the sting from most of them, but he alwavs kept sev eral that wore dangerous. These were his especial pets and were kept about his person, let be was never known be stiui!r. Of course the IMishurzlior was a rare sort of student. Every class doesn't have its snake charmer. Hut it is understood that a mild form of the snake era.') is again prevalent Long black snakes, with their fangs removed, are favorites. O'Xeil's old fad of feed ing his snakes with frogs inside the plans-inclosed fireplace is reported to be in vogue in several apartments. The man with the fad enjoys the excite ment and has as much fun as the average, collegian extracts from his horse or his dog. But to the average student the idea ot keeping snakes causes creeping sensations every time it is sugge-ted. Fads are fads, how ever, and the college is entitled to its own peculiar craze. Princeton (N. J.) Letter. ARABIAN AMULETS. t'harmi Against the Evil Eye, Disease and lliiil I. lick. Next to a commercial grandee you will lind a patriarch versed in the Koran and possessing the power of writing extracts from the book of the prophet, tail tliiMiiu'li them and his own venera ted mediation of insuring the individ ual made happy possessor of the valuable document by paying a few sou against disease, bad luck, the evil eye and innumerable misfortunes. A chnrmingolit acquaintance of mine, near whose sanctified abode I made several studies and took refuge when it rained, seemed to have an extensive practice in writing these charms on ,'gs, perhaps three times a week at one sou each. These charms are more frequently written on paper to be folded and in closed in amulets, which are generally square or triangular in shape, and niadc of silk, leather and tin. As thev believe in thootlicacv of these scraps of paper, so are they superstitions about paper generally; they object, for in stance, to going before French authori ties to settle their grievances against each other, preferring verbal discus sions of their casein presence of their cadi, for they fear that all sorts of harmful words may be written beside the name of God and subsequently used to their condemnation. Children wear them around the neck or tied to their cap; men and women wear them on their person, sometimes alwve the tlbow, and in their garment; horses have them attached to the band passing across their chest to protect them from 'he evil eye. Those worn by the women "f the higher and wealthy classes are inclosed in richlv engraved cases of L'old and silver and suspended to chains slung over the shoulder and passing around the waist, they add greatly to the richness of their costume and form part of their wealth. "Tell nie, Baia, what do you do when you fall ill. I suppose you call in a doctor?"' "O no; the men may do so when they are sick, for our Arab doctors are far Miperior to the French, but we women go Ui the iimrabout; he writes a few words from certain chapters in the Koran, such as these: -God is the best protector.' 'Hrt is the most merciful of those who show mercy;' or, A guard azainst every rebellious devil,' etc This paper we chew and swallow, and v.ith a little water which he gives us fro. ii the sacred well of the mosque S di Al.l-e!-R!i man w e need no more, ind in a few days we recover." liar- COURTSHIP IN CA Th Eminently Practical Nature of Ou Canuck Cnuilnt. Canada may be several laps behind most nations in the march of intellec tual progress, but she keeps going per severingly onward. Her provinces have their school systemi, her boys are w earing off the virgin gold of their nat ural quickness and ability, and polish ing it until they have almost arrived at the glitter which dazzles and captivates the world that has yet failed to recog nize or encourage mere diamonds in the rough. Her gins are really the cream of the coitiuent Their coyness is more than unequal for the. blushing, sensiioii b.is!ifulnes of the Southern brunette, and their phisiquc has the perfection to which alone the mo Icrate zone and the Northern clime caw give birth. A certain business idea underlies all their actions and crops out in nation il as well as in individual concerns. Kven the courting of the young folks, which is in most countries a sort of delirious, if not ins inc. round of continuous t'fstacy, and tin ex gger ted idea of the beauty an 1 worth of the individual, takes a mundane form. C'ourtdiip is a business, possibly a pleasant one, but invariably a short one. By this it mut not be understood that the young ladies may be had for the asking, or that they are the mer chandise of their parent. Not at all It is simply that both the men and the women take the sensible view of the subject. It is not that their Dul cinea is tlivino or their Lothario is an Apollo, but purely that they each con clude that marriage woul I be an ex cellent th'nr for both. There is no consumption of several tons of coal or cords of wood over the proceeding. It doesn't last long enough for that. Generally the probation period is six months, and if a young man has been brought up within fifteen or twenty miles of the lady to whom he is paying his attentions he neces sarily know s all about her and her an cestry, and ho is expected to make his proposals and announce his intentions within that period. If ho is particular ly bashful and the young lady is indul gent she may give him a place on the sofa and accept the contributions of the sap of the maple with which he comes laden to her fresh from the forest for another three months. But unless somewhere in that month ho asks her to bo his own he must seek other firesides. She doesn't weep at the parting or make any time over it. There nre as good fish in, tho sea as ever wero caught, she argues, anil in that reason she finds consolation for the inispeut time. Are the Canadian girls pretty? Well, rather, and still better, they are all trained to make good housekeepers, Thero is not a young lady from the Red river to Labrador that can not make the most tempting of wheat cakes as well as the rarer delicacies. They are good helpmates and never prove faithless. X. 1. Press. MOMENTS OF TERROR. Hair Straightening Experiences In tha Mia ft of a Nevada Mine. "I was working at the Chollar in 18G6," said an old-timer the other night. "Wo were sinking the shaft with a bucket, and were down over live hundred feet We had a double compartment shaft, all boarded up. We used to lower our timbers one at a time, and, thinking that it was too slow, wo bored holes in tho timbers and passed a chain through and then low ered several at once. This plan worked well until one day. There were six of us at the bottom of the shaft, and among our number was a tall State of Maino man, who had come to earn money to buy a farm. "They were lowering a number of timbers, and we paid no attention to them; but it seems that they caught on the side of the shaft, and the cable unrolled on them until the load was too heavy, and then down they cimie, ono after another, ripping and tear ing down the boarding. We mado ourselves ns small as we could in that shaft, three being in it and three in the other compartment, and we thought tho timbers and boards never would stop coming down. Not a man moved until every thing was quiet, and then we went to the other compartment and wero pulled up. The Maine man never opened his mouth, but put on his coat and siartcd off for Maine that night to work on a farm. "But I want to tell you another scrape I had in that shaft a few days before: I was being lowered on the bucket, and when about two hundred feet down it caught on ono side and stuck there. 1 gave nn alarm, but was ,not heard, and then set about doing the best 1 could. I balanced myself and steered the cable clear and let it go down. The great danger was in the bucket starting as the cable gathered weight on it But I did my work so well it stayed there. After I managed to make myself heard men came down the other shaft and released me by working through the compartment" Aei'tirf't Enterprise. A Bit of Bric-a-Brac 'YnnnT nmn " mill n Pliilanthronist o " i a:..... ...i.;., io a HT) r.i'eu ituti ui unit; unmii, why don't you go home and wash yourself ?" "Hain't cot no chance." "Doesn't your mother havt?soap au.1 : water?" - ' We got water tuf an one piece oi soap that a gentleman give me," "Well, why don't you use it?" "'Cause ma's kce. ing it ,n the pal kr uiautlc-iieee."'-iftirc(ar 'Iravtltr. DIMINUTIVE SOLDIERS. The Military EaiahlUhnitnU nf the Central American Itrpnlillca. Traveling from Panama northward along the Pacific coast one is immedi ately made lo feci that each nf the Central Americill Government has an army. The steamer hardly conns to lUichor when a barge rowed by uni formed marines approaches, bringing the "commaiidaiito." He is a most important individual, not usually mure than live feet high, with very dark, curly hair, li s little form seems to have been melted into bis tight-titting bliie-aml-red ti'imm"d uniform, his small feet are crowded into smaller shoes with Louis tj.iiiize heels, and be f lirlv reels under the weight of enough gold lace to lit out a French Field-Marshal or a Captain of marine in the I'liited States. He is a very polite little man, and ns he walks 'he deck he bows to all the ladies. Then he takes another drink with the captain, pronounces the ship's papers correct, mid passes ashore. But it is in the interior that you must see the army to form any idea of its effi ciency. '1 he private is a low-cast native; be dors not show much Castilian blooil: he wears sandals instead of shoes; bis fora;:e-cap is two sizes too large and rots on his eais. and his business seems to be to lie in the sun mid to tire salutes to the president. The ollicors and lion-iMinmissioned olliei rs hoi'-nob with the men, and the effect on disci pline can be imagined. Tho army pays little attention to cleanliness; the xp 'iise of wa long is, perhaps, the e Use of the absence of collars or w hite ii O ice. when watching an arinv n Sa:i Salvador pass in review before isihef I could not help thinking of i he major's remark to poor ensign (' utti rliuck: "F.nsisjn Cliitterbuck." said he, "I am no friend to extrava gance, but on the day when wo are to pass in review before our sovereign, in the name of God, I would at least show one inch of clean linen." But wait till Sunday, when the city's militia is marched through tho streets in col umns of four platoon inarching is never attempted, and "company front' is unheard of. Tho militia comprises overvbody. from the one who has not enough money to avoid it down to the ono who is too low on the social ladder to carry a gun. Here you have the sickly-looking di ng clerk, the editor of thn opposition paper, tho fat butcher and the stooped cobbler marching side by side; and. quoerly enough, many seem to have toothaches, for nearly half have their jaws tied up in cotton handkerchiefs. This service is not in tended as punishment, but it is. With guns at a right shoulder and at every angle under the sun. they stagger over the cobblestones, up hill and down, after their little German band. From the size of the privates, ono would stig got pop-guns as appropriate, but in stead they are armed with heavy Rem ingtons and with the bayonets always lixed. When the Captains bring their companies to a rest they leave the guns it a carry, and tho privates are fools enough to think it's all right. Not many days ago. on t e arrival of the President in the town, the nrtil iery brought out two small, Fourth-of-luly looking cannon to lire him asnliite of two guns. Ono "gunner" was in a hurry to dischargo his piece first, and n his haste ho blow off the right itrni of No. 1 and sent tho "sponge and rammer stair' through a German dry goods storo on the other side of the olaz:u This was explained as n mis ako in tactics. There Is no trouble in Central America about tho "Ihrec Uatallion organization" or any other organization becauso tho army don't 'now what organization is. The alow less of promotion, that truthful theme if the frontier post and of tho "Letters to tho Editor," is a thing unknown ; rivates are always privates, and Gen erals are always Generals, on fi'OO a month, at a discount of 30 per cent. hen thero is money in the treasury to pay them. -V. Y. Times. MANUFACTURE OF SNUFFS. Soma ill the Many IngreillenU tVhlch En ter Into It CoinpiMltlon. In the manufacture of snuff in this country the finest Virginia leaf tobac co is used, which is considerably modi tied by carrying the fermentation much urther than in tobacco intended for smoking, and is simply ground and silted. "In our Jersey City factory," said a prominent dealer to a reporter, "we have about sixty mills, resembling large coffee mills. The ground tobac co falls upon an endless band of broad canvas, which cmveys it to four sets of mechanical sieves. Tho snuff which passes through is received upon nn endless traveling band, which carries it thence into a close chst The particles which are too coarso to pass through the seive are reground. The immense varieties of snuffs arc formd by mixing together and grinding to baccos of different giowths. and by varying the nature of the same, For the snuff known as NVaroco, forty parts of genuine St Oiner, South American, tobacco, forty parts of Georgia and twenty parts of fermented Virginian stalks in powder are used. The whole i ground and sifted. Then two and one-half pounds of rose leaves are cut and mixed with the powdered Virginian stalks, and two nnd one-hall )oiiml of rosewood in fine powder, moistened w th salt water, are added, it is then work d up with one pound of cream of tartar, two pound of salt of tartar nnd four pounds of table salt. 'J his snuff, which is highly scented, must be preserved in lead and brings four dollars per pound. The other brands of snuff manufactured here are Boiongaro, h-rge grained Paris ami S. otch snuff, rang ng in r t o from three to ten dollar H;r poui.d. -V. )'. Jim and Lxprun. VALUABLE TESTIMONY. Important KmcU lloealeil hy a Wit new la a h, murky t ouru In a Kentucky court. Lawyer (to witness)-Where were you when the defendant knocked the plaintiff down? Wilncs (a my boss. Lawyer Where w is you horse? Witness -In the big road. Lawyer Vmi were on your horse? Witness -That's w hut 1 said. "And your h. rso was in the big road?" "That's w but I Mowed." "Ah. hah. What time was it?" "lOll't klloW." "Ah, hah. You wero on your horse?" "Yes." "In he big road?" "Yes." "On your horse in tliu big rond when the defendant knocked the plain tiff down?" "Yes." "Tin' plaintiff down?" "Yes" "On vour horse?" Yes!" "In the big road?" "Yes sir." "Well, where was the plaintiff when he wa knocked down?" 'On the ground." On the ground when he had bean knocked (low u?" "Yes" "On vour horse?" Yes" "In the big road.'" ..V i "1 es. "Well, how far is it from the road to the spring? ' ' "Half mile." "From the big road? ' "Yes." "The big road w here you were o;' vour horse?" "Yes. sir." "So the plaintiff was on the ground?" .. I "1 es. "When ho was knocked down?" "Ye. " ' In the big road?" "Yes." "Well, yon may go homo. Wo have no further use for you. He had lidden a blind horso thirty six miles to deliver this testimony. Arknnmt v Trardcr. MIND YOUR BUSINESS. Hull lluril. tle TelU How One May tlrow Healthy. Wealthy anil Wine. "Diligent ill his business!" It is the man who i diligent in his own busi ness to w horn this exalted position is promised. There are people, dearly beloved, who are diligent In every body else's business, and have, there fore, no time to nt:eml to their ow n. They do not stand before kings; Jiey more frequently stand before tho po lice judge. Their diligence is not com mendable A workman is known by his chips; so, alas! is tho faro banker. Do you be diligent in your own busl ness and bo content with its rewards, You may not walk so many miles in six days ns Fitzgerald, but you can sleep a great deal nioro in that time, and if you do not get so much money for it. neither do you get so many blis ters. On your little salary at the sus pender counter, you can not clean up .:);X).0)0 on Wall street this week. Hut then neither can you bo cleaned out of H'iO.OOO next week. You may if b; able to set the fashions in nialo attire, but voll can (ill your soul with nameless joy and an ex illation of celestial birth, and climb to tho top of high Olympus, and lean back anil pile your feet on tho sofa. and make yourself easy with tho Im iortal gods, by paying your landlady every Saturday and keeping even with vour tailor. You may never bo the Washington correspondent of a society paper, but then your hair won't turn w hite In tho agonized effort to explain what it is about a Senator's wife, who has red hair, freckles, no upper teeth, a hair wart on her nose, nnd a twang in her shrill voice that "makes her so bewitchingly beautiful and universally admired." Just be diligent in your business, and wait in patienco for tho reward of your diligence. It may V n little slow in coming. Tho mills of the gods grind slowly, so does a hand organ on tho "Lust Hose of Summer" stop, but it always pets there. And don't pay more for ihe n ward than the reward's woimIl A mnn who lives on twenty-nil. e cents a day will be apt to die wealthy, but he won't dio very fat It is the liberal soul that shall bo m ide t:i.Uiirtlette, in Denver Jlcpub liran. Sam's Saving Clause. Jim Webster and Sam Johnsing, two colored citizens of Austin, do not like each other, hence Jim was boiiio what surprised on Sunday when Sam approached him and said, with the blandest of smiles: "Howdy, Jim!" "Same to you. Sam. De wedder am pullectly supcrlliioiis (lis niawniu'. "Had any luck, lately, pl.iyin' kenrds?" "Not ter i e ik erlioiit." "I wish you niout win a (Tar mill yun dollars," said Sam. "Thankee, Sam! Much obleegcd ter ycr feryer kindness." Yes," replied Sam, and a dark frown passed over his face; "I hopes you may win a millyun dollars, and hub ter spend tie last cent ii hit ter de doctors and fer medicines from de druggery shop." Texas tiifitn;s. m m Nothing but etcar-cut principle is a safe guard in human action. The laws of nature are inexorable, why iniuld not bum in law be? N ituro is he best government we have ever .(ii. nn that being true, does it not follow that the nearer we pattern our overmiieiil after nature, the belter the govtiuaieiit will bj? HONEY ANTS. How They store Away Their Accumula tion! of the Sweet flu J. The hoiiev ant is a small, red Insect, fxtremelv demonstrative and active. and found particularly in Texas and Mexico, and in considerable numbers in Colorado. Their nests are promi nent mound in so' i i cases, and again are low heaps spread over an area of twenty or tbii IV square feet, forming a ct 1111111 unity. A a rule they are noc turnal, woi -king at niglii. though I have seen them at work in tho bright sun light at three o'clock in the afternoon, and marching in line perhaps seven feet wide nnd forty feet in length to a Cottonwood tree, up which they passed long ami slender, coming down larger and fu'l of a pure white liquid. It would strike even a casual observer as curious that these ants were carrying home a liquid that could hardly be stored away, ants not having, as a rule, store-iioiises for liquid provisions; but the honey ant overcomes this ilitli culty in a decidedly novel manner. Certain of the ants, either by agree meiit or seleitioii, are utilized as re ceptacles for the honey-food supply and It'c.ei'.e 'iterally honey-bottles. They are kept by the others in a sepa rate apartment, about six inches long bv four in height, that is a store-room. Here, if the nest is carefully opened, thn ants or honey-bottles will be seen hanging on the wall, look ing like ripe currants. The modus operandi that results in this is ns fol lows: The ant, at least thesniall ones, forage for food, and find it In some cases in what are known as galls, curi ous enlargements of groiths, often seen on trees nnd formed by the eggs of nn insect having been deposited in the wood, the latter growing about it and allow ing in soiim cases an escape of illiquid that is greatly esteemed by ants and certainly tastes like honey. Filling their bodies with this material, the workers proceed to the store-room where the bottle ants are kept and de liver it up to them, the receptacles re ceiving so much that they become dis. tended to an enormous extent, as we have seen, nnd are incapable of movement to any great degree. Their bodies, upon examination, seem par ticularly adapted for tho purpose, be ing covered in their normal condition by several plates that spread apart w'hen the abdomen is extended. How long these living bottles hold their storo is not known undoubtedly indefinite ly. When the other ants want to draw their rations they proceed to tho dark chamber, and a supply is forthwith given up. Such an arrangement seems to show that ants have miicii more in telligence than they are given credit for. as all their movements can not bo instinctive. In Colorado their nests are quite common about the Garden of tho Gods, mid Ihe tunnels that they form olten penetrate considerable dis tances into the rock, and the work in arriving at the chamber where the honey bottles are hung is one of no liu tie labor. San Franeisci CalL Utilizing Wasta Ground. Land in this country has beon too cheap, and our peoplo have been too greedy to get hold of more tnnn they can use, to have our wastes properly filled up. Quite often the richest laud on the farm, noar the barn or house is either idle or covered with weeds, when it might be put -to prolilablo use. If fanners would occasionally look Into city and villngo lots they might lind instances of ceononiU ng spnen tint would put them to shame. Trellises for grape vines aro built up high closo to houses, ami yet far enough to allow a covered passage way that is most pleasant at any season, and in tho fall is loaded with rich clusters of fruit, Tho poultry-yard even need not be de voted entirely to this use. Many have learned that this is the very best place to grow plums. Rhubarb may be placed in sonio corner near tho barn too rich to grow any thing else. The various out-buildings may bo prolitahly covered with trellises, not to allow grape vines to fall upon and rot the roof, but far enough to receive its re flected heat Tho fanner who now seU himself to thinking how he can best put to use wasto places around his premise will In a year or two be wondering how he ever could have let so much satisfaction and profit escape him without ' noticing its loss. tit. I'aul Pioneer Press. e m A Fair Exchange All .Around. Mrs. Jones (who has just moved Into thn luiuse lately occupied by Mrs. Smith) "Dear, dear! I never saw such a dirty house in my life. I should think those Smiths never cleaned houi-e while they lived here. And the yard is full of theirold rubbish, too. It will take a month to clean up after them." Mrs. Smith (w ho has just moved into the house lately occupied by Mrs. Jones) "Dirt! Don't talk to me of dirt! I've counted ten different kinds of finger marks 011 the parlor wall And to think w e moved on purpose so we wouldn't have to clean house! It's positively dingracvful to live tho way those Joneses do. I'd as lief be a sav age." Detroit Free Press. F. M. WILKINS. Practical Drnssst i Cfiemlst DRUGS. MEDICINES. Braahea, Pal at a, 4laaa. lie. lada. TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Pbralolaaa PrMcrtptiona Compounded, BOCIETILI. El'OBXJC LOIIUK M). . a. r. AVI) A. at Matti Aral ami lliiril Weiliiewlayi ia aaafe skenlh. SPKNCKH HL'TTK ,iiM(K no. , I. 0. O. T. Ml every Tuesilay evening- UMMAU'llAl.A KSCA.MI'MKNT NO. & ' ' llt i'U nn His eeuml and fuurlh Wednes days lu racli mouth. LM'flKNK LOhtiK So. I. A. O. 17. W. 1j Meets at Mammin IIhII I he aeoond ana) fourth f riilny In nu ll inuiilli M. . T M.OKAItYI'OSTNO.UO.A.H. MKKTS r't at .Miwoiiie Mnll lliellrsl and Ihlid rrt dayn o( ri h inuiilli. Ilv (iiilrr. l'o.UNNOa. HL'TTK 1.0IKJK NO. ;iil7. 1. 0. II. T. MKKTS 'very Hal unlay iiiK-lit in Odd r rllowa ball. w, c, T J KAIIINIISTAIIIIANHOKIIOI'K. MKKTS I' l lliul'. I'. I'hiiicli every Sunday after noon at X:.HI. Visile, iiin-Ui tieli iinie. 0. C. k K. TIMb TABLK, Mull Train "ertli, l:l.i m. Mail tinlu Mouth. V.A m. hiiKruu Ih mI ,nvi mirth 9 00 . M. Kuit'-nt' IM-nl -Anlve -.Mil j. Officii H0UK8, E'lllKNE CITY P0ST0I7HX (ieneral I lellvei . from 7 m. Io 7 K if. Mime) Order. frhi 7 . m. In A . M. Rivisier, hum 7 a. m. ma e. n. MnllKior nm Hi elime at sill e. M. .Malls for miulli elime at S im e, m. Wstls li lH'iil c W nt s.; a, ji. Malls for Krmikliii eluw m 7 A, H. Muudaj and riiiiradnr. Mails for .MaM clo at 7 A. M, Monday and 1 luimlii). ' Eugene City Business Directory. 1IKTT.M AN. ().- Ilry kooiIs, cIoiIiIiik, irruceriea and Kcacral mereliamlise, oillhol coraer. IV illiiinetliiaud Kixlilli ulreela t'AIN HHOS. Ilenli'm In Jmvelry, Matches ... 11, 1 iiiiiniithi nirtiruiiioitiii, i IllameU Ireet, bvtnwa Sevunlh and Klulilh. KIIIKNDI.Y. 8. II. - llenler In dry KiHida. cloth- In and id-aural nicreliiimlian, Willamette, ismi'l, between KIkIiIIi and Ninth. (HLU J. V.- rhynieinn ami mirKeon, M'lllanv elle street, butween MVvkiiIIi and Klulilh. I10I1KS, ('.- Keep nn hand tine wlnea. tin (Hire olKnra and a pool and liilllrd Inlilu, Wlllam ette street, hoi ween KIkIiIIi and Ninth. HOHN, CM AH. M. (liiiiKiiuth. rtlteaaml ehot ifiuia, tireeeh and inur.le loader, for aale. rtMairlii(f done in Hie uenleHt style and war ran UU. Sliunon Nlnlli sired. l.l'CKKY. J. 8. - Watchmaker and jeweler, krspua fine sleek of kikhIs In his Hue, Wlilaaa. ttt struct. In Kllawurlh a drutf store. McCI.AItKN, J AM KM -Choice wines, liquor auA cigars, WillamvtleslriHiL belweeu Kuihtk. and Ninth. 1'OtjT omi'K-A new stock of aUnrUr school books Just received at Ihe post utile. ItHINKHAKT. J. II.- IIoojii. slitn and carriage paluler. Wnrk KUarauleed llrsl-vlaiM Hiec sold al lower raimlhui hv anvniiein Kmrane. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. W'lLI. ATTKSIl TO I'ltOKKSHIONAL calls day or lilKht. Omcie l'p stairs in Tims' brick: orraab found at K. It. I.nekny ti Co s drug store. Oflhw hoiirs: V lo I'J m I lo 1 1', is.. B to 8 P. M. DR. J. C. GRAY, ;iiQivriHri OrriVK OVKIt UltANUE 8TOKK. ALL work wa mm nt. I.aiis;lilui( Kim administered for painless a. travllou of teelti. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice of the Peace. KKAL ESTATK KOIl 8AI.K-TOWN LOTS and farms. Collodions promptly at tended to. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM HORN & PAINE, Practical GuiismitL s CUNS, RIFLES, KIsIiIiik Tackle and Materia SewlBZ MacbinesasfJ Necdlesof All lieu For Salt Repairing done lb the neateat atyU and warranted. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Furnish 8hon on Willamette Street Boot and Shoe Store A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will swelter mi s ouniikU stool ia Ladies' Misses' aud Children'. Sto! lll'TTO MOOT. Slippen, White and Blaok, Sandal, FINK KID SHOES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES I And In fact ererythlns; In the Hoot and Blioe linn, to which 1 Intend to doroto Diy especial attention. MY GOODS ARE FIRST-CLASH! And iruarantecd as rnpreaunlcd. and wit be sold for the lowest prives Bat a food art lole can tie afforded, J A.. Hunt. Central Market, rr-inliei-aScAVut kiiiR PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on hand a full supply at MJJTT0N. PORK AND VEAL, Which they will aril at the lowest niarkut brloee A fair share of the public patronage aolioitea) TO TIIK f AHIIKHaJi We will pay the hlithitat market price fos fat call)". Iioks and shneu. Shop on Willamette Street, tUCFM CITY, ORECON. Meata latiieres, k any part of tba city fre of chance. jaai o