SECRET S OF THE SEA. uf hi Mint Have Myetrrloua. INMMMtmL . imH -. ,1,1 , : I v in wi , mid it ion. liff t.'iirjfo wen hujwbh. i ..-.i ....... n., ml A'ti"! tniil iiouunifinever iieiiiu . . . t I I h,.r lid OOnleoWre t vain. A mui- ,! m:tv lmvt! taken her ubiifk d wilt h"r to tin' bottom uteri fore- ah., nviv invtt uiinil.Teii in a ..II Inn , , - hull de. ,. nn r i". ved or ! -f ':'' '"' lluv'' K"t ay und ii'i'lthed one by one on tho oeeitl niin. oumeumoa, uui rely. Ihere tUM heon a mutiny and ...,,',, .t'i I th.i survivors may havo i.f tlr'ir tt'ny to Hiune tropii'al island, eiv to live us "bM0h0Onbf" or .i 'I. th.t - i i ' When HriiiMvuin at m-non a merchant .., mile the ive.itlier is very led to time, the crew generally mii-eeed getting i;ay. A mutiny may bo lowed by the burning of the shut as pieann oi destroying erimltuititig evl- n,v. In In" China s"att there are souv pirates, and a vessel lie Imed in the neighborhood of some of f isl.m ls Mattered ill croups there grit ineur the danger of uttitek by t wiekod-looking junks tiiut are nallv eniieealD.i in the msM:ig.. bo ! the islets. I'l such cane if there pp no lire-arm- on Hoard it might go Mrit with the ship's eomp'itiy, but a bd supply of shotguns or riflM in hands of white men is usually a jarantee uainst l hinese pu-iitea. tin. many VeftMla have mot their fate i that uoluokf region, and nothing U remained to U-.l the story. Ty coons, too. are doubtless responsible Lr not few mysterious disappear- i;s (i. vessels, and once in a while iiably u watei-spout bursts over a hip and sinks her suddenly with all linds. In the Indian Ocean furious flniall often come up at night with a kiftness very menacing to any heavy- Urred clipper dipping along with uddinp-ails s-.-t alow and aloft, and Here i : i ; i i- a possible eauso of de motion, and one whieh might over !te lie' most cautious skipper if his 1,'ers were less sedulous in eonsuit II the glass. Occasionally the mysteries are pre nted in the most bewildering w iv. uch a ca e was that of a vessel which, Bveml years ago, was found drifting irith all sail set and not a sou J on V Joard. All her boats were on the ,ivii. the materials for a meal wero l the galley coppers, the chronom- M, Compasses, charts una uistru- 'nts were in the cabin, but no ship's P'Ts. i li" nnme on me siern was noted out; nothing had been left by hicii to Identify her. Yet all these Neautiona had been Uiken deilber- telv. while tile final evacuation Bed to have been effected with :i iddenncss suggesting mortal panic, he men's things were all in the top rnVuuit forecastle; the captains ann Ifloonf' cffoots were all in their respeel ie cabins under the poop. The who', ppoaratios of the vessel indicate, ii! her people had left her o; .c spur of tho moment, driven b Hue overmastering impulse c ar. She hud encountered no bn. rra'her since tho desertion. 11c. irdl were braced up ns for a trn.b id. and there was no disorder on decks of 11 Wn below. No lino o: ling was found to give a clue I; . dark seer t of tho son. and to this it has remained an insoluble puz to every seaman lU'quainted wit I facts. Sad and mysterious us an appearances such as that of the Far- nit) it must bo admitted that there omething even more perplexing in discovery of derelicts abandoned Incomprehensibly us was tho vessel ken? referred to. It should be added bit she was not leaking, nor wore r spars sprung or strained, and no on could be perceived in any thing (out her for the disappearance of her m and officers. A'. Y. Triltune. Cocoa-Nut Culture in Florida. It is probable that the cultivation of be cocoa-nut for profit will always, in Honda, bo confined to the region on he Keys and mainland south of the: 'aloos.ih.itcjiie river, though tho palm 'ill continue to be grown for its great pbty, or a chance crop of nuts, in protected spots, oven as fur north us be latitude of Tampa and Cape Canav eral. Tho cocoa-nuts produced in lorida are a trifle smaller than those 'the tropics, and are not considerd valuable for seed, hence most of bose used for planting are procured rom Cont ra! America, more especially fom the Bay Islands (Utilla, liannco id Buatan) and mainland of Hon iras. The nuts that have not sprouted to the voyage are sometimes planted I nursery beds and transplanted when Jour or eighteen months old. Only small per cent, fail to germinate. bouirh sometimes the sprouts are a r or more in appearing. The dis fo upart at which they are planted ies from fifteen to twenty-five feet; nty fevt .is the usual distance. The r cultivation given on tho Keys is hofinaloillj cutting of the weeds and dergrowth in the spring and fall. re is a popular saying that a bear- jf cocoa palm will produce one nut each day throughout the year, but 1 is a little overdrawn, the best producing about two hundred 'peryear. Anrri:nn Ajri-u'iuri-'. common Hule Heversed. 'ly calling, said the letter-carrier. "iffrs niaU-rially from all others." In what way?'' asked his friend. "Most people ffet their walking- Nws when they ar discharged. h t thev'" "Tes." "eli, I ant mine when I was an- r'-eL' -CkieagQ Tribune NOT GET TING CROWDED. MM aftk'l 'rilv r.ir Supplying ti riiilallun ill ', unfurl. In a wo t report of the Oamwi SUitlstica! liureau. the dii presses the opiaion that population has not overcrowded any part of the I empire, and that its resources. proh-r- I ly husbanded, uro adequate to the sup port of an enormous addition toder- many's A,O0O,UiK) people. It is inac curate to say that any part of F.urope Is ovrp i,iulat4'd. Wh-ti the most or Oormiitiy was a succession of b area j plains, und a large part of Holland was under water, those countries could j have supported only a small part of the people who now inhabit them. It I would have been a case, however, not I of excessive population, hut of almost wholly undeveloped resources. So long as human ingenuity can add to the productiveness of a country it should not be called overpopulated. Mr. Cadell, of the Geologic Sur vey of Scotland, has recently shown that while the British public complain j of over population, and look with favor upon schemes of state-aided em igration, a vast deal can yet be done I to enrich soils, reclaim waste lands, develop new indiisfies, and improve methods of husbandry, all of which would add greatly to tho resources of ; their little corner of the globe and en large its capacity for supporting its teeming population in comfort. The Dutch are still reclaiming from the sea an average of i,SO0 acres a year, and Holland's resources are more than ! keeping pace with its increase of pop- ' ulation. Though there are ;!) ! people to the square mile, the Dutch live in comfort and few emigrate. China proper has only a little over one-third of our area, though her popu- I latiou is six times as great as ours; I and yet, though the industrial knowl- edge of the Chinese is in many respects extremely primitive, China is far from I being overpopulated. The Chinese treat their fields like gardens, gather fertilizers from every conceivable source, sow their grain in furrows, und hoe It as wo do corn. Waiting nothing in the process of sowing und harvesting. Give the Chinese modern agricultural implements, en- largo their scientific and technical knowledge, and with their consum mate painstaking a still greater popu lation may live within their borders. It gives us a vivid sense of the gran deur of our own country when wo re Beet that wo have as yet merely scratched the surface of its inexhausti ble resources, and that hundreds of millions may live here in comfort, .v. ". Sun. AN ALASKA VENDiTTA. tutftel llruvnry f Cnnrinnni'il ladlaasaad Thflr Krh'iiiN. "A terrible trait of the Alaskan Indian- is the viudictivencss and deter mination with which th.-various tribes Tonga the death of a single warrior," continued Mr. Hamilton. "The slayer must either be killed or the blood of some member of his family be shed in I. is st ad. Although Sitka George was mortally wounded he knew he would be killed by tho rival tribe. So ho went home and painted his face to meet his doom. When a dozen Chilohat warriors approached with their rilles, a trader tried to save George, but the latter would not allow him, toll ing him to see how a Sitka could die. Then ho nrfise, drew his knife, and singing his death song, stag gered weak from tho loss of blood toward his enemies. They fired and ho fell, pierced with many bullets. The Indians then went away and tra ders carried the wounded man into a shack. Strangely enough, he was yet alive. Later in the day the Chitchats, learning he was alive, came back and dispatched him with knivos. "Another Indian pretended to be dead, but. at an opportune moment, ran away. He knew he wius doomed ' by the Chilchats. His mother offered ' her life to save him. She came run ning toward the enemy, herurins aloft, crying: 'See how a Sitka woman can , die for her son.' Sho was ithot dead. ! Then the coward's sister stood erect over her mother's body. 'See how a Sitka girl can die!' she called to the bloodthirsty rabble. A dozen bullets ended her life. "Another Indian, Turn-Turn by name, who Was a victim to the avengers, was encouraged by his wife to k op strong until his deuth, which they knew was lire to come. Sho painted his face for him, becauso he was too weak from loss of blood. Then she sat him up against u tree ready to be shot. Sho piled all his good clothes upon him be fore this. Then she helped him to sing his death song and staid by him until he was killed. "I accompanied the bearer of this news to the residence of the brolher-in-!vw of Sitka George, When we told him of his relative's death he never moved a muscle. Ho was so stolid in receiving the news of the massacre that it was hard to believe him human. Ho motioned for us to tell his wife. Sho was no more af fected by the news than he had been. The barbarism and superstition of the Indian arc pitiful." Pittsburgh bit patch. A magnificent hieroglyphic, con taining a careful transcript of tho ' Book of the Dead," has been secured by the British Museum. It was wriv ten by a royal scribe called Ani, who was a man of great importance in the early part of tho period of the rule of the Kings of the nineteenth dynasty over Egypt, about 8,200 years ago. The papyrus is quite complete, the fii t and iast viffnette having been pre served intact. MOTTA'S DISCOVERY. n I .' i . linnl.r I'mrm fur th aaUsaetsa t ii...hc. A writer in an Italian newspaper de seriU's a visit tiWhe atelier of an old Turin chemist, Angelo Motta. recently deceased, who is said to have devoted thirty years of his life to the discovery and iHirfeeting of a process for effect lug the metalisation of corpses, an arti ficial process corivsiioiidhig to petri faction. "Having informed him of the object of our visit," he writes, "1 said to the professor: 'Such wonder ful tilings have boon related of you that it is hard for DM to believe them. 1 was told that you metalizc human bodies. Kt'idently what was meant was that you cover them with a coating of metal by galva'i- plasty." -oh, nor replied Motta. "Not at all! I do not apply a cover ing: I substitute metal for the or ganic matter; in a word, 1 isetaliM in the fullest sense of the term. You may convince yourself personally of the truth' of my assertion. May I request the gentlemen to walk into my atclierr The scientist led us into the adjoining room, and showed us his preparations. On a pedestal stood a magnificent burl of a female made of a copper-colored metal. The Qnesl wrin des and veins on the neck ami hands were repro duced with wonderful minuteness. Motta informed us that, tiie bust was made from a corpse which he had se cured with indescribable difficulty. As we examined this bust, which looked as though it had just left the work shop of a great artist, the professor delivered a long lecture on the dis advantages of galvanoplasty, which effaces the minute details and does not five a faithful reproduction. "My proc ess is different,' lie added. '1 destroy the organic substance, and replace it by a similarly shaped muss of metal. Here, for example, I have the arm of a child, which 1 am just now preparing.' The scientist produced from a closet tne arm of n child which had been cut off at the shoulder. Through tho nolo length of it passed line ooppet wires, which protruded at the S tiger tips. 'A portion of tho organic mat ter hus already lieen destroyed.' he continued. 'By means of a chemical preparation, which is my secret. I toldlfy tho arm without In tiny way altering its shape. Then I place tho object in a metal bath, and pass a strong electric curr.ii' through the copper wires. Skin, bone fleeh, libers gradually disappear an.: arc replaced by exactly similar me talio deposits. When the process I completed I hare a metal arm whlcl n its cross and longitudinal leotl . presents identically the same OOnifcfUl Minnas an arm of llosh and bono." Prof. Motta then showed the writer i number of similarly metallud b id if men and children, one of which ha lieen sawed across, so that he con! lourinee himself that tho whole ha been metaliaed. Motta Ured and dl hi poverty, and carried the secret 0' lis discovery into his grave. .V. 1 Pod. THE EARNER OF WAGES. s inr Moil Work whih- Otkan Ipsnd Ihi Ktohaj ottka Wnriti. It Is apparent that an immense perl of w hat is earned is not spent by Ihosi who earn it. Whether wages, sain ries, stipends or fees, the most of thos. who work for them enjoy but a smiil part themselves. About all tliuta mail get! in this world is a cup of coffc. and a roll in the morning, a llicc oi meat, pcrhnps, for dinner, and possi blv a cup of tea in the evening. Now Utd then he gets a now coat. But thi is all. The most of what ho wins tills- ether mouths entirely. The money goes, the earner hardly knows whore. Some part, no doubt, feeds the creatures whom he has taken in bond from nature, and is obliged both by law and by his own feelings to support. But yet, making allowances for all that, and for taxes, bil i. ies, which may bo described as a draj lage almost equally unavoidable by fur tho most of what most people acquire by their own handiwork Is peat and enjoyed, not by themselves, but by others. You. yo sheep, says Virgil, grow wool not for yourselves; you, ye bees, make hoicy not for yourselves: you, ye oxen, druw plows not for yourselves. This is, in grout measure, the case with mankind, too. A few of us are industrious to the excoriating of our fingers, und the dizzying of our beads; but, by reason of our very application, we have neither time nor taste to spend the result: it often goes to pro vide senseless luxuries to persons who are in some way or other connected with us. and who, relying more upou our resources than wo are ourselvet disosed to do, permit themselves to have abundance of both t ine and tantc. Who do you think keep up the put-mi boots, and the handsome clothes, and the ejgm that are smoked on our fashionable streets? Not, to be sure, the smocked-faced lools who wear and whiff then:. Who do you think support the fine fancy taverns, which, under tho monkey names of cafes, and saloons, and restaurants, now orna ment our cities? Not, to be sure, the strutting coxcombs who fnxpjent the places, and think they are enjoying life. It almost all comes out of the pockets of industrious fathers, broth ers and other oppressed relations, who would be shocked at nothing so much as to be told that they supported MMfc follies. JV. Jl ledgrr. The good news comes from th. Yellowstone National I'srk that then are still a few hundred buff;. In- hi, several thousand elk. deer, and moutr ain shtep left in the Kocky mountain ! VALUE OF FINGER-RINGS fswili wMk HlitsrtM Bssf Hen worts ' Th.m I'rwioua Miiiim. I don't think there is any danger of the summer-time girl wearing rings on her toes, as the nursery jangle tolls a bout, but that she does have them on her lingers can not lie doubted. A quaint ring, one set with a curiously colored stone, one that belonged to a famous beauty, orcven ton great man, is valued not only far above rubles, but quite casts a glittering diamond In tho shade. A ring with a history is a treasure It affords something to talk about, and as it is considered rather fiuart to ooii!y express ndmiratiqn of one's belongings. It is easy to under stand the advantage attached to a pecu liar ring. One young woman is hropy In tjOttf row band of curiously bright green enamel set about with diamond stars; this ree picked up In a pawnbroker's ihop in St. Petersburg. At the begin ning of the season this was the old utory told about it, but now, as tho young w oman has a vivid Imagination, she has added to its original story, and says that it was given by the handsome Orloff to tho lieautiful blonde Kmpress Catharine. She tells a blood-curdling story about it. How he put it on Catharine's linger the night before she wot him to Siberia, and how, at tin' instigation of his rival, tho liny ring was thrown out of tho win dow, picked up by a peasant, and nfter all this time und many adventures Hashes from the hand of an American girl. This little fiction makes the ring much more interesting and sends mo In a state of rapt admiration at tho coolness with which tho young woman tolls this tarrudidlo. Another ring is of soft gold und was made in a miner's camp in 1HI). It is set with a single ruby. Tho workman ship is very rough, but tho ring ia decide Uy sicgostivo of the old ones that were worn by the Egyptian wom en as symbols, of their slavery to one man. The moonstone Is religiously worn to the races, for, following up the idea of the Prince of Wales, it Is believed to bring good luck in gambling. She who is nervous, who j feels that life is only worth living be cause of the hope that she ma v some day be well, is rapidly getting bettor under the inlluence of a beautiful emeruM. Nobody ever does confess to being annoyed about a lover, to doubt ing his faithfulness or thinking that ha may be growing weary, but the fiul for sapphires seems to suggest that somo maidens are taking time by the fore lock and keeping him faithful before ho has time for any thing else. ( Hear pearls are not anxiously sought for, as they bring tears w it bout end, but the pink pearl that insures a sudden shower of '.curs und then weeks uud months of perfect happiness la usou perly looked for us it is (Uffioull to get. A long time ago a wise man said: "He who hath torquoise hnth a friend." so thai it is not odd to see parasol handles studded with the bright blue stones, while bands of them are worn as bangles and vinngrots are set wilh them; the smart girl of to-day evident ly believes, like the old Bussian: "Tho more friends, the fewer enemies." Apropos of pearls, while ls. Mur Khull O. Huberts may have the finest DOlieotlon of white pearls. It is very certain that the largest single pink pearl shows ilssoft luster on the white, Well-formed baud of Mrs. I.angtry. Mrs. Astor is credited with having the finest single sapphire in this country, but again does her lilyship lead, for her famous sapphire nock luce is, it is said by exports, tho most J perfect string of sapphires ovorshown. ' Real rubles are not only rare, but in addition arc wonderfully expensive. No great number of them Is possessed by any single woman, although almost rv.-ry lender in Cue swell set possess a line one. The interest in the stones, these beautiful Hashing stars of the earth, is to be condemned, and it is by long odds the host fad that tho sum mer time has had for a long time, and to be perfectly mi fnit in regard to them it becomes necessary to do a lit-, tie reading and to cultivate the mom- j ory two desirable occupations for tho young woman of to-day. -PkUddttpJUi 1 r ns. m From Quaint Nantucket. Apropos of Nantucket, one hears lome rather odd sayings and of somo quaint happenings there. "You ,-eo. we are somewhat out of the way," said one of the islanders; "so tramps seldom trouble us, and It I is only lieu our summer visitors como ' that are think of locking our doors at night." , Last fall i' man was tried for ictty larceny, and sentenced by tho judge to three mouths In jail. A few days after the trial, tho judge, accompanied by the sheriff, was on his way to tho Boston boat, when they passed a man sawing wood. The sawyer stoppid his work, touched his hat, and said: "Good- moroing, judge." The judge looked at him n moment, 1 passed on a short distance, then turned to glance backward, with the question: "Whv, sh.-riff, isn't that the man I icnteneed to three months in jail?" "Yes," replied the sheriff, hesitat ingly "Yes, that's tho man. but you you see, judge, we wo haven't any one in jail now, and we thought it a useless expense to hire some body to keep the jail for throe months just for this one man; so I gave him the jail key, and told him that if he'd ileep there night it would be all right." It. A. ilarr, in harptr'i Magazine. m B The largest marble quarry in the world is that of the Georgia Marble Company in Pickens County. HISTORY OF ACHILLES. A KiiiM.I Aii ni ,.f Hi. Many (onilnu anil li' i i-i Hrfi'Hl. in the intervals of his engrossing dm ies as editor of tho "' f Oa telle. Colonel Homer wrote a poem called "The Iliad." Colonel Homer has never received any royalty on his book, owing to the absence of an international copyright law. The hero of this little romance of the Colonel's was a military gentleman named Achilles. When ho was very small Achilles' mother, who doubtless expected her son to honor his family by developing into a base-ball umpire, wished, with true motherly forethought, to render him invulnerable to brickbats and other persuaders. So she dipped him into the river Styx, holding him by the heel, which section of his understanding was not saturated. We peel over the time spent by Achilles in going to school, and take up his life again as ho approaches man hood. When the capture of Troy seemed desirable to the Greeks, a seer named Calehas was asked whether or not that town could be captured, and he said it could not unless Achilles as sisted. Achilles' mother, still watchful of hor son, although he was a big boy now and belonged to the militia, feared lie would be fatally killed if he went to the cruel war, so she sent him to the court of King l,ycomedos. Here he wore false hair and a bustle, read Browning's poems, and, in other ways, masqueraded as a girl. General Ulysses suspts'ted some trick of this sort and resorted to one himself to find whether Achilles was among the maids. Hi offered a choice display of pres ent:! to them. Some selected spring bonnets, others took caramels and chewing gum, while a few enjoyed Ulysses' liberality to the extent of se lecting dress patterns and jewelry. But one of the girls took a base-ball outfit. This girl was Achilles. The hiding scheme thus proving a failure and no substitutes being allow able, Achilles put on his uniform and sailed for Troy. Soon after his ar rival he engaged in one of the pro lOundoet sulks ever known. The magazines of that day wore full of war articles on tho subject, In which different theories were pro pounded in explanation of Achilles' masterly inactivity; but the following recital may he depended upon us giv ing the true inwardness of tho bus iness. Achilles had eloped with a girl named Brisels, and had taken her with him to Troy, probably with the inten tion of procuring her u situation in one of the laundries for which that town was famous, and of using her stipend us beer money. Another party, named Agamemnon, who commanded the third army corps, had also been engaged in the maiden- stealing industry. Ho had abducted Chryseiiis, a daughter of one of Apol lo's priests. This infuriated Apollo, and he sent an Al pestilence into tho Greek camp, which displayed a groat deal of pernicious activity and refused to leave until Agamemnon sent tho girl beck homo. All would have been Borene had the matter rested here, but Agamemnon then took Achilles' girl to fill the va cancy, and the latter got mad. A lit tle thing like that annoyed him. After that Achilles and Agamemmm never saluted each other us they passed by. Then Achilles refused to participate in the war, but sulked in his tent. He did nothing but sulk, and drew his pay with unerring precision, until a Trojan named Hector killed l'atro clus, a man who used to go to school wilh Achilles and play marbles with him. Achilles then thought it was limn to take a hand in the fray, to avenge li is friend's death. He did so, and for a time carried on a largo wholosulo business in Trojan gore. After Troy surrendered, Major Achilles retired Into private life and became postmaster of his town. Hv was brought into prominence, however, by being shot by a French man named I'aris, who drew a bead on his heel, Achilles' only vulnerable sot. Life. Xntilage is really winter green food, nil hough It is fed to the cows us a regular portion of the rution.yet tho horses, pigs, sheep und poultry relish It at times. It is the cheapest food that can be produced for winter use, and its value consists not only of iti nutritious matter, but also of tho ben efit derived from it as a substitute for the dry food which cattle are com pel I. .1 to eat during a long winter, the ensilage taking the place of grass Or BUCCIllent food. - . An ugly animal should not bo tole rated. Erefl without horns he is dan- mom F. M. WI1KINS. Fatal DreisH Giiisi DRU03. MEDICINES. Rriakra, Palnta. Ulaaa. Olla, 1raSa TOILET ARTICLES, Etc i byslctaos' Prescriptions Compounded, wtimut jm pVpSNJI LOUOK Sail A. T. ANI)A.M li Mr, Iti it an. I iLu.l U , '.lunula) In mot swath. QKNcm hi' n k Louoino., i.o.e). r. M.Hbud Tn-'ilay t ruing tVUfAWHAU I M MI1IKNT NO. a ' t . mi um moom ami roaita Irseeea asjs la aaoa DioMih. PUMMI lADUK .so. ii. a. o. V. w. li NU.ii- ai UaMttfc Hull Hid aeoonil aaS to.irlli rrltla) t In MOO aMBtB M W. 1 M. ORARY VOn NO. 41, 0. A. ft MKKTB tt . al Mas.. nle Hall I ) 11 r-xt anil third ftt- oayeef MwaaMaia. Hyeresa coMauaoEa. nt'TTK UllHIK NO. !W7, t. O. O, T. MKRTH ri" "aiiinla) i ml odd Kaliowa' leU. w. it. t. I K.UHNO SI' A It IIANI'OMIOI'K. MKKTH I I al thr ('. I1. I'liuii I) . .. i) Sumla) alar llrton al I SI. Vlslln a lna.l .-h mil.'. 0 C. K T1MK I A 111. K. Stall Train aorta, a m. Mini train auutli. )& f, m. KiiKciki Uaal l.. n, thUOT) a. h, y iiin ni. I ... 1 1 ri ho s:(l i'. m. umCK H0UHH. KtlOf NKi'lTV lOlTorHOB, Qessrel BaUrsr, froai 7 . u. to 7 r. m. Moani OiSnr. frmii 7 a. M. to A p, m . It.'Kiatvr, from 7 A. ii. Isl I', at. Malln tin Hin t h ONM al Sit) r, m. I .Mails for aniilh ehkN al S:HU I'. M. : MM !) ls'al BlOM at S 3U A. M. M.iIIk fur Kniukllii i liwi. at 7 a u M.a4a aiiilThiirailin. ' Malls f,.r Mabel ekM at 7 A. II. Monday mu4 Thnrailai . Eugene City business Directory. BVCtM 0, Iut k,.,.,h. dm inn,,, tSMMlm Slid Keaeral mi'iv)uii,ll.', .iiiihn,. ,urur. ill. on. 11, um 1 KlKhth ulriieU tl'MS 111... DMlSM In lmi.ri M , ... l . .. , . .. " . 7 "." iiiiisn-Hi iii'ii iiini'itiH, vi ma urn, la intn'ii Muvtiilli and hlhtli. f tlP.NIH.V, .H II. II,., I, rlu dry SOSSaVI I lint and wai'ial rrliandl. Wlllaa -mm, nviwrnii Mlitli and Ninth. QUiLJ.P, PhyaMaa ami NrsjMJh wuias. . ctU atrwt, bvt'ni.(.i Sri null and Kltflith. 1IOUKM, ('. k. . on hand Una wlin-s, li.iuora. i'Ikhii mill 11 1 1 ,, Mill. 11,1 utaM lllaia Hlr Mr't, iN'Ini'on KIkIiHi and Ninth. HORN, I'HAS. It QUMtuita, ultra and Me 1 cms. MMOjl ami MSSHI loadrra, for ami. Iti'.alrhi dour In tin. nrnli'iit at) lr and war I ranted Shop on Ninth feest l.l i'KKY. J. H. WltahrSIMI and Jnwalar. ISMSemM "ha ll id K'l.'ds 111 hN Ilim.Wlllam- tto atrtitil. ill Kllawortti a drns lore. Mol LARKNi .1 mks rjaeiet inrm iiqusra I nndclKiira, Wlllainrtliialrort, iHUnrvii KUrbtk ! Mil Ninth. POM QmOl A Ml lm.t of aUndard MB00I hiHika jimt rrcrlvrd at His mal ottloa. ItlllNKIIAItT. J. II. !louvlKii and carriage paiiilrr. Wark cuaranlMil Ural rlaaa Siaoh JMMjmiM- ral a llein In aioom. in Kinrrsa. DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surgeon. W ILL ATTIND TO I'ltoKKHaiONAfc n.in .in) HI 111111. Okkh k I'paUUra In Tlina' hrlcV: ormaba !"'" r- i.m'kiy ( dnnt lor. hoiira: to u.. I to 4 r. u.. I to i r. at. DR. J. C. GRAY, .mOI OVKlt (ilt.N(i; MTOHK. AIA ' ' work narrmitnil. LaMghlni K.w ailiiilnlHlvrsil for luilalua trsoutw ofi IMOl GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice of the Peace. Rii a i , mrf A.TM roit saiJ town urre Mill I i. i in-. I '..II Zl Ivmlrtl to. SPORTSMAN'S EMPORIUM HORN & PAINE, ' Practical Giuismi Ik a iinuiaa ik CUNS, RIFLES, flailing Tackle ana Malaria Sewig Hacbjnesaiitl Needlesol All lm FirSalt Hralrlng dune ih the iipateal slyls so4 warranted. Guns Loaned aud Ammunition Furnished Shon on Willamette Htreet. Boot and Shoe Store. A. HUNT, Proprietor. WIU kttrvmtUir ktau oompUU ilook of Ladies' Misses' and Children's Shoes! Ill I TON llllll Ih. Slippers, White and Black, Sandals, FINE KID SHOES, MEN'S AND B0YS BOOTS AND SHOES! And In fart var;thlna In Hn II ...I and Klioa linn, to wlil. li I Intend lo davoas nil i s..'i ml ill I. 1,1 mi. MY GOODS ARE FIRST-CLASH! A nd KuarantiH.il aa rnrrarntrd, and wIL ha mild for thn lowi nt iirh ca that a Hnd ai ticla can tw atronliKl. A. Hunt. Central Market, aSSsVaaSoBMa PFlsherefcWatkliM PBOPItl KTOK8. Will keep cnnttanllj on hand a full anpsljf ml BEEF, MUTTON. PORK AND VEAL. Which they will aell at the lows uiarkrt prioea A fair (hare of the public pelronatfe aolloUaA TO TIIK MKHRRSi Wa will par the hlpheat market prioe fa tat catUn, liotpi aod ahtvnp. Shop on Willamette Street, UCEI CITY. ORICON. Meata CaSllaTSa, k an) part of tbs dlj fraa Sa eaaruo.