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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 29, 1888)
i THE TIPPING EVIL. i..m Hhnulil Not He I'ald Kitrs, '' h Cuatomtira. i.tntheiwllithni und thought- ' of the rlrh that the, growth of CiTir" mln!y du0, ,5"1, whlla 'Ui!t l not oppressive to them, It T ...,. a HorioiiH tux on potnonH of K Iri-al'' iii',,u-s who trBVl 11,1,1,11 or B mwilsi in restuiiruiiU. The 111' 14 .,..n nffurilto nav nnvwhere $ to 'm' "inner 1,008 nt , ,),c qtiai-U.i. which in the lowest will jr've otlie wuiter. . To the 0r woman of moderate means who three meals a day at a restaurant the service l" euHIdontly jjood to faille the necessity of paying rfv (ynut a day for "tips" is a Herioiw Won to the expense of living If 'e meals cost from 1.50 to $2 . inc rease is from 16 to 20 er tsent. jverflOla yenrcoinpulorily s)entln Is a sum wnien, u naveu, woum .jteto many people the ditTerenee be- ...I......1 iiim.htntr unit n fiiii. , yn OlUlU'i"'" i" n , of comfort. Ten cents Is the low ,. -tip" that can bo given in u good Imd-fliuts restnurant. Now, if a u has a chop and a glass of beer or of tea or coffee for lunch at the 4 of thirty-five or forty cents he In ing twentjvfive per cent additional .' the privilege of giving the restau-it-kcfwr a large profit, as the cost the meal, with all expenses udded, li the highest not more than two- ! (if the Kmount charged. The necessity for "tipping" is ever the increase. Even at tho lunch- mter down-town where the hurried er sits uon a swinging stool, It is .toniary to "tip" tho -waiter, and ne patrons also "tip" the carver, r :he cafes of the largo hotels, whore abnormally high chargo is made for :;d refreshment, tho waiter who .rries an order from the bar to a table t expects a tip. If the system ex i. much further the bar-tender who its a glass of beer will want ten !; instead of five. The public has bocome so accustomed ,. the neecessity of "tipping" that ..ie there is much private grumbling re ie no organized public opposition. Mins who really can not afford to p" either do so and stint themselves other directions, or patronize cheap J uncomfortable restaurants where .as" are not extected. There will be i public move against this practice, l-aasc people who banded themselves .position to it would foolishly fear called mean. Hotel and restaur .' keeR'rs claim it is impossible to p the system, because some solfish p'.e would always try to get the bet- rvice by continuing tho "tip," and t-refore they (the proprietors) are iy acting wisely in taking advantage J1 the public's weakness. This is a orthlews argument, for the experience ( nearly all the best clubs where .TAtuitivH to servants are absolutely rVuMen" is that equally good atlen- !;on on s paid to all members. Selfish ple ould be the first to eeiwe giving tips" when they found that so doing J not bring any advantage. Reform is only to be hoped for IJlirouL'h the action of hotel and restau. VVit keepers who will possess enough w-lhgem-o to see that larger profits m be made by ridding the publio of is. to many, almost intolerable bur- n- Any man who will start a good taunmt or hotel . in which there shall 8 strict and ridgidly enforced rule iiM "tips" will almost assuredly ft more patronage than he can ao mnodate. It would need only a few b entering wedges to generally ro ve the public of this irksome and tin wsNiry tax. Efwch. Arctic and Antarctic Icebergs. It is not generally known that a irked difference exists in tho form of icebergs of the two hemispheres. eof the Arctic ocean are irregular bnpe, with lofty pinnacles, cloud; ?ped towers and glittering domes, was the Southern icebergs are flat .Ted and solid looking. The former n'b the shore by narrow fords, but 'formation of the latter is more reg- f- The northern are noither so large " w numerous as those met with in 'southern ocean. In 18.15 an im berg was sighted in 42 degrees 'h latitude, which drifted ubout for eral months and was sighted by ".v Aip. It was 300 feet high, sixty long and forty miles wide, and " m riiupe like a horseshoe. Its two inclosed a sheltered bay nious i forty miles across. A iy emigrant ship ran into J hay an(j was iost with all hnri. Only about one-ninth of an Vff is visible above water. There evei-al well authenticated accounts icebergs 1,000 ft hig-h having been :bld in the southern ocean. This make their total heic-ht 9.000 'or nearly two miles. Science The ater gtntisties do not improve ' ord of some New England States the number of divorces granted courts. In Xew Hampshire in 'there was one divorce for every """-riages. In Maine in 1887 612 Ofces were granted by the court. "toblume for many of these, as al- ui probably hasty, thoughtless and unkind and neglectful acts marriage are responsible for a larger number. United 1'rubytc- Man to be Envied Dumley 10 that CPnlWlin fVint iinxhul ' so jKditely to you just now, -n.- llardcash-My tailor. Dum lth an envious sigh) Ah, it must Plorious thing to be treated in " ilV hv ...II T-l - IV. 1 USES OF PARAFFINS. How Mineral Oil. IUv M,rr: il In l.rrn Mmiijt KIiiiU of l.ahur. There seem no end to the multl tudlous fashions In which mineral oils come to tho aid of man. And yet how very recently have these uses been discovered. Hut a few years have elapsed since tho days when tho red Indians of North and South America, the tribes on the shores of the Caspian and Red Seas, In short, primitive man, wherever dirty bhick grease, oozing through dark mud. smoothed the water of sluggish streams brought their sick, suffering from cutaneous and rheumatic diseases, to be healed. Ac cident and experience had taught them this value of that floating oil, but that was all. Tho so-called fire-worshipers (at tracted by tho weird flames which sometimes played on the mountuiu side, kindled by the spontaneous igni tion of gases) had indeed erected a temple at ltaku, where the sacred tire was fed direct from the soil; but It had not then occurcd o enterprising men that tho oil which floated on the lake, and which, when ignited by means of blazing straw, produced such fairy-like illumination, could be turned to ac count; nor could the wildest dreams ot the earliest oil prospectors on the Cas pian or in tho 1'nlled States have Von ceived the possibility of a commercial success so amazing as that of the oil traffic which has boon developed with in the last thirty years. Paraffin e has well nigh supplanted the various oils and greases previously in use through out the whole world, even to the re motest Hawaiian, Tnhifinn or Fiji Isles, where tho cocoa palm has ever afforded the purest of vegetable oil. Nor as an illuminatit alone Tins the kindly earth-oil been turned to use. It has revealed such precious prop erties of soothing and healing, such excelence as lubricating oil for ma chinery; it has yielded such varied preparations of vasnlino for wounds and for toilet purposes, that merely to cata logue these would bo a task. And now, to all previous services another is added perhaps tho most domestic of all. Mineral oil offers to be the ready benefactor of that great body of women whose lives are embittered by the ever-recurring toil of the wash- Jill). It seems that by the addition of a very small amount of mineral oil to boiling water and soap almost all manual loborin clothes washing Is dis pensed with; for at tho end of half an hour the clothes will be so clean that little further is required save to rinse them out in two or three hot and cold waters.- The smell of parafflne is not pleasant during the boiling process, but after the final rinsing no trace of it, it is said, remains, ami the clothes nro easier to Iron. Henceforth all temptation to use deleterious bleach ing powders must surely bo at an end, for nothing can be cheaper or simpler in its application than this use of mineral oil, which has no injurious effect whatever on any animal or vege table fiber. St. James' Gazette. KILLED BY A COBRA. A 8nnkr-(iinrmir Kail Mnrt.vr to III Kultll III Ills Own l'linerx. India has just lost a snake-charmer, one Kondajeo Mubojee, who fell a martyr to his belief in his own powers. A lad six years old, named Vittoo Heorree, was bitten by a cobra at Mazagon, Bombay, and, as usual, a snake-charmer was at once sent for. Kondajeo arrived at the spot in half nn hour, but the hoy was already dead. The snake-charmer inquired whore the cobra hud taken refuge, and, on a woodpile being pointed out, ho re moved the wood, found and seized the snake, and endeavored to make it bite the bov, declaring if it did so the child would at once be restored to life. For two hours he persevered, but the snake refused to strike the body, and, at last, irritated beyond endurance, turned and bit Kondajee in the hand. The -snake-charmer calmly placed the snake in n copper vessel and then sat down. A vehicle was sent for and the man placed inside, but by tho time he reached home he was dead. The story testifies strongly to the belief of snake-charmers of India in their power over the snakes, and to ' tho existence of a superstition that the second bite of a snake will restore the life that the first has taken away. The apathy of the Hindoo is evident by the fact that tho snake-charmer used no effort what ever to save his own life, Whether he thought that he was proof against its Ill-effects was not stated in the evidence given at the inquest held on the body of the child; but It is clear that he had no bolief in the virtues of - any anti dote or mode of treatment It is most probable that he was con fident in the powers of the drugs, oint ments or charms he had previously used to protect him, for the evidence of the spectators showed that upon finding the snake in the woodpile, he had seized it without the slightest hes itation. It is certainly singular that a man accustomed to handle snakes should have Ix-cn so convinced that their bite had power to restore life as well as to cause death. London Stand ard. The ambitious youth who achieves a measure oi lame never niues ms light under a bushel, but he frequent ly gets himself into a peck of trouble. Duslon (Jaztttc. A favorite amusement of the Pope is said to hi that of catching birds in a huge net which has been made es pecially fvr him. After having played with -ds he sets them at liberty. SOME LIVELY KICKS. Vlj-nroun l.ilriii'U Iroui l.nl iiit of lln "Annum Kli-krr." dl'K Piu.li V. - Heretofore. ' as our rv."dors know, the A'iVjI. r has almost .ntirely nh.itnincd from publicly ci'lti ;isinr the evils which all know to exist under our iiom. We have beivmn tired und disgusted with ourselves for '.his lack of spunk, and next week wij mail mien a red-hot campaign on The mayor, Tho common council. The Urn department, All secret societies. The saloons. The gambling dens. And on various other organization ind institutions reeking with corrup tion. It will be a spicy issue. It will ninko nore than a ton of human hair stand in end. It will-make a thousand hearts thump like pile-drivers. Chicanery, ieceit. hypocrisy, theft, robbery, arson nd murder will bo properly tagged MT and the tags pinned to the right jont-tails. Order your extra copies at an early late. Advertisers should send in their ;opy by Saturday. Don't neglect this foldon opportunity. Another may never come." A Candid OriNinv. We have re vived visits from several of our lead ing politicians to inquire why the A'icl-ir loesu't take a decided political stand In favor of one party or the other. It is a question easily answered. We are not publishing a newspaper for fun. i)ur convictions all run to publishing a iietionary or an almanac, thus leaving as neutral in politics. If the A7c,',-,'r Hies the Democratic Hag md hustles for Cleveland and Thurnian X must have some solid assurance that ifter election the editor will receive a .'all. A call with a salary of about f:l,000 hitched to it would just about fit 5iir shape. If the K'rkrr puts up tho Republican ticket and blows for its success it must have something in writing to fall back in after election. We think we could fall back on a piMt-ollico of the second lass and not fracture our anatomy. Wo sat up all night la-st night wait ing for a committee of Prohibitionists :o come along and get down to facts, nit the bridges were down und they iidn't. come. We don't say that it all iepends on the AVfc v which party rules for the next four years, but wo do solemnly ii'tlrm that the editor will to-",) clear of the whole mob and pub lish nothing but poetry and local news unless some pretty solid promises are held out to arouse his slumbering con victions. We are not for sale, but we lo hanker for office. Stoitkd His Papkh. Old Steve Bridgeman. who has several times been illuded to in these columns as the neanest white man in Arizona, has stopped his paper because we did not have a column editorial on the Fourth jfjuly. He says we are no patriot, lad that a man who can't whoop er up for Independence Day is a cussed rebel. We have scratched his name off tho list, and if he doesn't quit lying about us we'll scratch his carcass oil tho face sf the eart h. As to the Fourth of July, we were horn on that day. As to patriotism, we've got more In our heels than old Steve could hold in his whole body. The man who intimates that we don't take off our hut every time we hear tho name oi Washington is a i:ar ana a horse-thief. Our editorial on the Fourth was a solid chunk of patriotism weigh ing twenty-five pounds, but was crowded jut to make room for (he advertisement headed: "How to Cure a Bad ltreath." We know our gait and we think we know the great need of most of our townspeople. As to old Steve Hridgo man, we are expecting two or three of his six or seven wives to drop in on ug any day and furnish us some powerful good reading matter. Don't bo uneasy, Stephen we'll get to you in a few days. Waumni!. We are no fighter. We have neither the sand nor the muscle to make ono. We always knuckle un less there's a chance to run. We ad mit to a dozen lickings In the last threo months, and In every case wo were the only one who suffered. How ever, we want to warn the coyote who plastered ourolllee door with mud the other night that tho worm will turn. We are the worm. When we turn he had better look out. We can be kicked, cuffed, insulted and abused up Ut a cer tain limit. How far off tho limit is, we don't know; but, when we reach it, we shall be a bad, bad man to fool with. Mroit Free I'rcss. Half a Dozen Dark Sayin't. A bully wins about de game 'mount ob respect as a mule's heeds. Modesty is a mighty good p'int in a 'oman'B make-up; dor sweetest berries grow in de shade. It diesn't cost any thing tor say howdy when you meet a man uv U makes the road 'pear shorter. Advice is sometimes like bone-set tea; hard tor swallow but doe. a heap ab good when you get it down. Education an' common senee make a pow'ful team, but if dey's got to pull jingle, common sense is the best nag ob do two. If people would prais' de Lawd for their success half as much as lli'-y biaine Him fer their failures, we'd hab nag more churches in de laud. uljc. m An Allentown, Pa., firm of t;;i!or mploys a pretty young lady as col lector. If a debtor murmurs some llii.ig alxiut being short of money and hints at "calling again." she smiles iwcctiy at him and takes a seat from which she seldom ri--s without tLe uoucy d Je lu Lor Laud. AN UNCOMMON DIAMOND. The Ktrriitltr llrilu. of tlir !nl Kmiwn m "KiiiiikI Hurt." Within live years the study of the diamond by scientists has developed sumo of tho eccentricities of this most precious of nut lire's formations. One of the most extraordinary of these eccen tricities was brought out recently by an experiment at TiiVany's great establish ment in this city. In a recent lot of diamonds purchased by thoTiffanys was a tine specimen of "round bort," and Mr. (iin. F. Kutu. the miueralofrisl em ployed by the firm as a gem export, de termined to test its hardness on the polishing wheel. "Hound bort" is a distinct form of diamond, called by the French "extromodurete."mid Is harder than any other kind of diamond known to exist. The specimen to bo experi mented with had lnen cut into the u-ual form of the brilliant, and its "table" or face was placed on the pol ishing wheel. For ltK days It was kept on the wheel, which revolved '.'.S00 times per minute. The point at which the diamond came Into contact with the rotating surface wits about fifteen Inches from the axis. It was cal culated that the diamond passed over a surface amounting In the aggro gate to 7ii.!H) miles. Notwithstanding that the pressure on tho diamond was gradually increased from two and ono quartor pounds (the usual weight) to forty pounds tho gem refused to take a polish sufficient to give it a commercial value. On the contrary. It plowed into and badly damaged the wheel, throwing constant scintillations in all directions. In a paper prepared by Mr. Kunz on the subjift of peculiar specimens of rough diamonds ho refers to this "hard round bort." "It is," he says, "often called tho 'rolled diamond,' but this is a palpable misnomer, since the dia mond can not be rolled. There is noth ing in nature hard enough to abrade It except the diamond itself, and this Is never found In sufficient quantity. Moreover, tho form under considera tion is" quite uncommon and so exces sively hard that it conld never be abraded under any natural circum stances, not even with an entire pot hole of diamonds, a very unlikely oc currence. It requires 100 days to put a slight polish on a surface five milli meters square. The Koh-i-noor, with LMhhi square millimeters of surlace, was cut in thirty-eight days of twolvo hours each, while it took 1,(KH) hours, nearly twice as much time, to polish five milli meters of surface on the specimen of hard bort. A'. J'. Times. DECAYING MANNERS. Jennie .lunr l.Hinritt the OAPtlna of Hocliil mill Dmiierflle MweetnpwA. Higher education has something to do with the gradual decline in that so cial and domestic sweetness which is the outgrowth of the performance of loving little duties and attentions one toward another. The daughter has her school, her college, her post-graduate course, her societies, her discussions of political economy and her "aims," and no longer relieves her mother of house hold cares or places the slippers by tho lire for her father. The son has his night key, his own set of companions and associates, is 'only seen at meal times, and not always then, and hits so many engagements that mother or sister can rarely ii'ly upon him as an escort, and are often obliged to seek or accept the attention of strangers or mere ac quaintances which they do uot Und at home. lint this Is not the woi-st of "society" young men. Vanity and imbecility aro fast rendering them an indistinguish able race, neither divine, human nor respectable as brutes, but a new spe cies, pos.-ihly the "missing link," to be Investigated and assigned a place by naturalists. A young dude recently nuido It a condition of going to a party with his sister that she should not "in troduco" any one. lie didn't want to "lncwensu" the list of his acquaint ances: besides, he was "afwald" the "collection might be mixed." This is literally true. Modern improvements, inventions and luxurious appliances have done their share toward ridding us of the humanities. Nobody now wants to "take any trouble" for themselves or for other people, not even the members of their own households. What is the use of taking a message or carrying a parcel? There Is the telephone in tho house or office and the messenger lsiy on the corner. Memory is no longer cultivated in the direction of perform ing thoughtful little acts, and fails even in the service of directing others to at tend to them. Jmtnie June, in A'. Y. World. Practical Philosophy. "If you don't see what you want, ask for it." That is what we sou In some of the retell stores. We act too often as though that sign was hung up in this world for our direc'ion. Wo fret for what we have not No: life says to us, "If you don't see what you want, make it." We are told that w hen Isaac Watts was a buy lie complained to his father that he didn't like tho hymns used in the church. "Voting man," said his father, reprovingly, "If you don't like the hymns we have, make better ones." The boy took the hint, intended as a reproof, and did write "better ones." As we hnve already said, if this pajier is not what you want, make It so. If people about you are cross, be cheerful; if they are Impatient, be gentle; if the world is crooked, keep straight your elf. We shall not be much annoyed by l ho faults of others If we cultivate in ourselves the opio-ite virtues. What we sre toward the world the world will bo to us. Yvuhq (Jtristiart. WORTH A MILLION. The llril-niiil-Velliiw Itojrul ('limit of the Kiiiiit'liHiiirhA ltyimittY. "I don't euro; I wouldn't wear It." "Hut see what It cost. You don't mean to say you wouldn't wear a cloak that cost a million dollars?" said tho stout man in a satirical tone that indi cated that the woman he addressed was his wife. The pair had stopped before the royal feather cl.iak from the Sandwich Islands that is spread out fan-shaped In a case in the National Museum. This cloak Is computed to have cost in labor $1,000,. (KM. The native name for it Is mams. In tho days w hen a Hawaiian beau or liollo wuiiW little clothing, but wanted that gorgeously colored, this cloak or mantle would have been considered of more value, a'sthetically and intrin sically, than a shipload of Worth cos tunics, and its happy possessor might truly ho said to be in high feather. Since the natives have adopted wide trousers, lawn-tennis shirts and four-iu-liaud ties, Its value lies chiolly in the traditions that surround It The man tle, which is semi-circular. Is 4 feet long or divp, and It is 11 l-'i feet wide at the bottom and 'Jti Inches at the top whore It gms around the neck. The entire outer surface Is made of feathers of fine texture, giving tho whole the appearance of plush. The prevailing colors are red and yellow or orange. The body ts decorated with large fig tires, crescent-shaped, of either red or yellow feathers. The upper and latr end borders ai-e corded and decorated I with alternate tufts of red, black and L yellow feathers. ' A legend on a lalxd states that this ' feather cloak formerly belonged ; to Kehnarknlanl, one of the high j est chiefs of the Sandwich Islands. I After the abolition of idolatry in LSPJ that chief rebelled against tho rclgnhigkiug mid attempted to re-ostab- lii-h the ancient religions. A sanguin ary battle was fought and Kehuarkalani was slain, and this cloak, which he then hud on, fell Into the hands of the conquerors and thus became the property of King Kemehameha, by whom it was present ed to Captain J. H. Aulick, U. S. N., in lull. Tho cloak is now the property of Captain Aulick's grandson, Kich mond Ogston Aulick, who deposited It la tho National Museum. The great value of the cloak is duo to the long time required to securo the feathers that compose it rod to manufacture the cloak. The foundation Is a net-work of olona, or native hemp, and to it are attached by fine thread of the same material the feathers of birds found only in the Hawaiian Islands, and very rare there. Recent writers have declared that the bird is now extinct Tho feathers are woven In so lis to lap each other and lie fiat, forming a smooth, plush-like surface. The inner surface is without lining and shows the olona net-work and tho quill-ends of the feathers. The cord of the upper margin is prolonged so as to serve as a fastening at the throat. The yellow feathers nre ob tained from tho Oo or Uho, and as stat ed, are of great value, as tho bird is rare, very shy and difficult to capture, and It has but a very small tuft of these feathers upon each shoulder. Tho black feathers aro from tho head and back of the same bird its general plumage being a glossy black. The Oo is caught alivo by means of bird lime; the yellow feathem aro then plucked and the bird released. Tho red feathers aro from the body and neck of the Dro pouts Core Inca, the most abundant bird of the Sandwich Islands. The Hawaiian Sit:ctatr, anewspnper published in lHD'J, refers to this, or a similar mantle, as follows: "Kaw keaull has the mains, or feather war cloak of his father, Tc-Moha-Mcha. It was not completed until his reign, hav ing occupied eight preceding mien In Its fabrication. A piece of nankeen, valued at ono dollar and a half, was formerly tho price of five of tho yellow feathers. Hy this estimate tho value of the cloak would equal that of the purest diamonds in several of the European regalia, and, Including the price of the feathers, not less than a million dollars' worth of labor was expended upon It at the present rate of computing wages." A bunch of the yellow feathers called liulu was received by the king from his subjects hi payment of a poll tax, and It required many years to collect the material and manufacture one of these mantles. Until recent years these mantles were the royal robes of state and considered the principal treasures of the crown, but European clothing has entirely siicrsedcd them and they are not now manufactured. A beauti ful head-dress for women, called lels, was made of these feathers. Another authority states that two yellow feathers only are obtained from each Oo, and these are found under the wings. When the much-prized feathers are plucked the bird is set at liberty. The price of the feathers, according to this authority, wasoiiedollarand a half for three, and the time occupied in making the cloak was estimated from fifty to one hundred years. Washington Star. F. M. WILKINS. Practical Drnssst 1 Ciiomist DRUGS. MEDICINES. Brashes. Pal at. Ulaaa, Alls, leasts TOILET ARTICLES, Etc. Physicians PrsncrlpUona Compounded, SOCIETIES. ni'HKXK r.ot)HK .no. 11" a. r. and a. u I J .MouU ttrat siul lliinl WeilnuwUri In sauh month. CI'KXCKR lll'TTK billitiK NO. 8, 1, o. O. T. 0 .MuvU st ory Tili'mtuy clulilnn -IMAVltAt,.r KN(VA.il'MKST NO. . Jli eta on the am-uml and fourth V ulnae clnyi In esoli iiiiiiiiIi. l.U-OENK I.OiiilTNO."l. A. O. V. W, 1 J .Mil la ut Mm...., I.. II. .11 ii... . V I tf ...-.i .. i i i V immq nan luuiiu i-riuu) ill I'lli ll llliilllll. M. W. M.OKAUY IftSTNO.naA.a MKKTS " at .MiuHinlii Mall the tint ,,(! n, fri. days of cmi'Ii month. Hi onler. I'uMNANUKa. 1)L'TTK WiWK NO. M7. 1. O. (I. T. MKKT8 II erory Sulunluy nlulil in iMil yellows' "M- . W.C.T. I KAMXnsTAHIIANUOMIOI'K. MKKTS 4 " i'1':1'' .' Huii-i-h evnry HnniUy alar niKin at X:.l. VIllo, iim.le acl.oins. 0. C. R R. TIME TABLE. Stall Train "orlli, :A a m. Mull train auiuli. M p. m. Kiikciki Us-nl l,(ivt north 9 00 , at. Kiiiih lM'al-Arrlve :lu r. u. Wtm HOURS, EITOENECITY FOSTUFnCaV "ral IMIvury. 'mm 7 . M. to 7 P. M Money draw, frail. 7 . m. to t v. i. il Kimr, from 7 a. m. loi r. ai J lr north done at Kill p. m J alia for south i lnaoat (.- h. m i. f!" .,v l'"c"1 ' M A. al. Mil fur Franklin i-low al 7 a. m. Monday anil Tluinulav. monuay TSr M,,el ""' T A. M. Sloada, aad Eugene City Business Directory. I1KTTMAN, (1.-Dry K.HxIa. rlollilnB. grooarias V 111""".';! ",r,'''"lM,li"". outline." eornai! PP.. 41V 111 -..... i.iauut ni rue i It l ivr m. v.. i:OS.-lk'Hler In Jewftlrr, toh i imisicul iimtrun tn. VUIaiueUi clHka Hint imiNirul iimtrun In, V RtrtW'f hail tv.t.ia. U .1 t a., 1 .. 1 , v,nwil anuvumi, nim iiiyum, r!fl!,K'.,,)!,Y a "r'to'" ' ilry Booita. dot. H0' ni'rhiiiiilli VVillaaielU atrout, ImIwwjii Kll,ll, am SinlU. ",mm" !h' 3.' ,-1',1'"1i'Ihii iul lurKpnn, Wlllaot. elte alroet, bolMveu atovnnlh ami Klglilii. IIOHKS, 0.- K- on IihiiiI line wine, liquors. eUrsnj hiiiI a iimil ami l.nUani tahlOvAlau. ette iti-mii. helwren Klxlilh iiikI Nliilii, ",!?' fi'A!?- M,TU m,h' ""'l nn. Kill I nri-li ami iiiuxxlo oa,ln. for aala, Itci'.irliiK ilnne In I ho imnli'it alyle and nKr rnnloil. Slum on Ninth ilrt-rt, k..afl.i, .t,H:k fK.vl,, lila line, nlllauv Ute ain-ui, In Klliworlh ilruK Hore! MrOI-AltKN , JAMK.S-('l,nlee wlnei. liquors nd I Miuh au,,","ul",. between kUu HHT omrK-A nsw alm-k of itandar school book! juat received al the poet ollloa. imiiili r. ork Kmu'Hiiteed llraUilnai Hlavk anl.l t w..r m.,.. thin l.v i,v,., Kwmns? DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. OKKicK-UiiatHi lii Titus' brick: oroanbs found aj K. if. I.m key & ('-, drug a ore. OffloJ hour.: to 12 I to 4 r. at.. 8 to 3 e mT DR. J. C. GRAY, C)mCK 0VK.lt nilANQE STORK. ALL, V ' work aarruntod. UiikIiIiik kh admlhlatered for Dalai a traction of teeth. !. a GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice of the Peace. UEAIj KHTATK KOIl HA I. K -TOWN lTTU and fariua. Collection. uroiiiBllv a- Uiiidi-d to. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM HORN & PAINE, Practical Gunsmith s J CUNS, R IF LIS, L-CFliliiiiK Tackle and Materials imi Maclnncsand Ueso, All rinds Far Salt Impairing dune in tlis neateat .tyls and warranted. Guni Loaned and Ammunition Farnlsh4 Bhop on Wlllamotl. Htreet Boot and Shoe Storo. A. HUNT, Proprietor. Will linranw aMp a auiuilt. .took at Ladies' Misses' and Aiilta' j Sices! llt'TTUW IIOOTM, Slippen, White and Black, Sandals, FINE KID SHOES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fact .verythlnir In the Hoot and Khoe linn, to which I intend lo derois Diy cepacia! attention. MY COODS ARE FIRST-CLASH! And KtiaranUwd a roureecntMl. and will be wild for the lowrat iirlcee that s good artiol. can be allbrded. A. II tint. Central Market, FiHlier AcWiit Ulua PROPRIBTOR8. WU1 keep ooniUntly on hand a full ripply st MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL, . Which they will ,ll at ths Iowa market prices A fair .hare of the putilio patronage aoUsllsd TO TIIK V A II N R KW We will pay the lilKhmit market prtos tot tea cattle, hotra and aheep. Shop on Willamette Street,. VUCfME CirY.ORECON. MoaU CUisi4 k any part ot ths city tr ot chance, jssid Ml -j vug utiiur. i nc L-lr.tw