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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 2, 1889)
vl ?! ' r AN AID TO MEMORY. "While you're M UN city. Ned. Won't r 'ii "iy lomiliUiraiiir I'bflln wki. and tiile I liniter, Tiikltiic Hint which u tba due Of blm who wina UM lire! (or two, i Mhr Imi wir thn-a't around mjr flnj er, Alrtlnif: I) 'r, leal V'iu forget, I'll tench you memory's alphabet. "Ftrat. Hi'- tl.rr 1 I 'i f'-t atr n; Any nr'nj mr M meauire; We'll ay a rrd-'he.rary thlnir Kemrnii-r nt that will be pleaaure; A IMy ynl (what's In nameti Wlllmuk you thmkiidiwn witboiM, Ami Un n I miatln r the wine. Ami MMlWl RMMi 11 "U please. Now oottoK wound. as I opine. It nothing. ifier ll. but thread, Ami fifty It y ur e-e ami mine I'm sure you emi t forgot it, Ned." I answer her as beat I v Hut now w thin thn ahop I llnirer; Whet In Ifcf d rkens did ibe r About Hie itrliif eround my flni'-rt llurprr t llntar. was:iini;to.v HONUMENT. A Trip In tho Elovntor to tho Top ol tho Great Shaft. Hensatio.. ripllinil ! Making the .- ' cenl MbkiiiII. eiit end Impressive View of till- City end SorroillidlMg ouu try -A Miiiioieble Vint. from Ihn inoniinii'tit visitor run ol- taiu a rliurmini; fliW of thu city and vicinity, whlrli tli'-y can carry away in thi'ir DMmorlM d OM ' tlndr uitiHt Dri-i-inua niiivinir". A trip up, with tint car lowli-d, OOOtipiM about ton minnl' H. Ton inlnuti'S arc ihti1 at tlm Uip tn (flvi) tlm visitors a chance: to lOM nut of thu windows, nntl then thiiHu who wi-.li lo ko down an) taken Inutk U the lower ri'jjions, about nine min- llU'N iM'illlf occupied by Hie tl went Tlioo who wli.li to remain nbovo, how ever, are permit lod to do no, but they tniirtt Wtil for tho next downward trip of the car, shun no visitors are al lowed to MOOtll or doauoud by mean.i of the stairway. At lant the word wax given, tho door wan shut with a iiiinjf, and the con ductor, with a glance uround tho car, pulled the hiiiiil-cablu downward hcv nrul tiiims In suns'Hsion. There wan a light tremble or Hhako as the car was lifted from the floor, and then the howls of tit watchman, ami the floor nan, and the square doorway full of light Heei I to xlii down, down, until they were IomL Tlie car moved noiso-i-.l ami Minoothly an it slid up tho longcHt elevator almft in the world. Tl y. ttiineil limtiuctlvelv upwartl, winked nt the Immense vista, through which the strong, stiff red cables twins they lookeil like spin them selves up and over two great wheels in the roof, live hundred feet overhead. The light from the Incandescent lamps filtered through tho grated roof and Ides of the car, giving a spotted ap pearance to the passengers. On either tide were Hi" rough, uneven courses of the old masonry, thu stones ragged and the MUM zlg.uglng without regard to uniformity. Thu eye had about tired of the monotony of the surroundings win n Home one exclaimed ut the appearance of the llrst of the celebrated memorial tones net In the walls. This llrst erics occurs on the thirty-foot level, lly the way. every thing in the ,1101111 lueiil i. loeated by "levels." The bot tom in called th" ground level, ami every landing Is I. iowii by tlm number of feet of its elevation. On the thirty foot level are the stones of Maine. Delaware, Arliannas and the National drays, of Washington, From this point to the half-wnv level the trip Is full of Interest, Hie attention being drawn to alternate hides of the car to note tho various tablets and iuscrlp Hons A good plan to follow is to take one side going up ami the other going down, pa, lug strict attention to each in its turn. The level at forty feet contains the stones from Nashville, lenu., I.nuisiana, Colorado, Alabama and the Columbia Ty pogrnphical Society. Thence the Slates ami all sorts of hocieties and military companies are Intermingled. On the sixty-foot lev el i an old sipiaro tablet, so lindly wcnthcr-hoatoii that It is il legllile i in m tlie car. ln the next lovel is i nmgiiitlceut stone from Mas sachusetts and one from Connecticut. I he latter is worn so on the left-luind side that some of the raised lettering Is very Indistinct, while that on the other side is sharp ami clear. The City of Washington'! tribute to her godfather Is a neighbor of tho stones from liar laud and Virginia on the eighty-foot level. On the two hundred fool level Is one of handsomest eollee tlons of Mono In the monument. The tablet from Hremen is n rich piece of dark -tone, highly polUhod, standing out two Inches from the wall, with rounded edges. Tho lettering is ele iranlly gilded on the surface. In the center of the landing Is stone, In re lief from a Turkish temple. The rich On -ittiil ornamentation is in sharp roctrsst to the simplicity exhibited in i it. . . mo iiuijeiuj of I lie stones, and at tracts instant attention. . To the right, under the Itremen tone, Is a large tablet from the Swiss Federation. This allows to a greater xteut th.ui any other stone iu iho haft Uie vandalism of visitors that finally forced tho now extincl Monu ment Commission to close tie- shaft to the ptihllo. Klvo or six of the hirge raised letters of the stoue have been bodily removed and the tablet othor wise in.iur.sl In many Instances the atones have been blackened perma nently b the close application of cau dle flames. This occurred when rery visitor was obliged to carry with him a candle or a lantern to llghl the way up the slops through tho Ktfyptian darkness of the shaft. Mi, In- au u rapraaaatod ou the twj umi,vU j and ton-foot lv jl by a olid block of copper suitnoly Inaaribod, and ton fci-1 above is the gem of Ho- collection, a stone from Nevada, bearing the name of the State In letters of solid liver, set into the block, flush with the surface. On this same level Is a mIjinm from Salt I-ako City, with the characteristic bee-hive carved on the front The tablet extend to half-way up the shaft. The last ones are on the tarn hundred and forty-foot level. Of these tho highest is that from Wales, a handsome black stono, highly pol ished, and beurlng an Inscription In the outlandish tongue of tho land of the Cardiff (liitnt. The car has long ago passed through tho old portio i of the shaft, and ii run ning as smoothly as at tho start through the n at, exact masonry of tho new work. The dark surface of tho granite Is checkered with white tipiares, the faces of marble blocks that extend entirely through the walls actiiiL' as a bond to the miisonary. Tho corners of the shaft In this portion are n' atly rounded instead of being square, us below. At every lifty feet from tho floor to the if of there Is an elevator landing, thu fl airs of levels being ex-1 tended to meet tho car, and guarded by a high latticed gate. These occur on alternate lidei, and. the car having a door In both tho east and west sides, I exit from the car Is thus provided In cither direct In I. At four hundred anil sixty feet the smooth walls are broken by the project on of twelve bufrossi-s, 1 Hit on e ich aide, iheiionro tho rib stones which support the nsif of '.he monument At the bottom they extend about six in lies, leaning out more nfifa more as tie y go up, until at tho top they project about live foot Tho mid dle ones on each side are a little in ad- vaiico of tho others, narrowing more rapidly to inrin nn urch for tho sup port i)J tho capstone. Tho light from the Incandescent carbon is by this time K,.l I. I... dim,.,.,. I l. tl,.,l fram " h ' II'...)....,,.... the outside, drifting down from the J windows in the roof. The great wheels that have been devouring tho cables seem to bo falling upon tho car, and suddenly the comluctoi ivcs a long upward pull on the hand-rope nnd the car cuiues to a stop In the midst of a sheet-iron cage. The air is chilly, and as the passengers step timorously over the threshold they button their over coats and turn up their collars. This upper lauding is a cold, lonely pilot the abutting ribstones cutting it up iutu angular spaces, und the bare floors and shining white walls tending to give it a lonesome air. Ou each sidu two oblong windows give views into thu atmosphere mid down upon thu flattened earth. The world looks big ger limn one thought it to no; n stretches away on every band to a melt ing blue horizon, faintly outlined, with here and I hero a hill-top intruding its sharp point as If in claim of recogni tion its a part of the scene. On the south side the Potomac ruaches down toward the sea; silent uud steadfast, immediately beneath lie like a map tho Huts pi the river front, with dredges nt wurk here uud (here. A steamer U crawling down stream at a slow puce, anil the shipping thinly scattered along the wharves is silent, as if ashamed of Its scarcity. From the west windows a mngnill-1 cent view is obtained of the Virginia shore, with Arlington shnwinp; like a yellow spot to mark tho resting place of the soldier dead. The I'otomuc drifts nut of sight around a bend, and then appears again for a moment with a flash. The ba.o that softens tho (jun. In about nlna minutes tho pas sengers emerge from tho shaft Into the outside atmosphera and mentally con gratulate themsolva upon their good luck in safely returning to the earth. Than, glancing upward along the face of the shaft, which soems to be falling over upon them, they shudder slightly and go away to boast that they have been to the top of the highest urtill clul structure In tho world. Is the elevator safe? has been nsked hundreds if times. ThU question is hard to answer, for almost all ele vators are a matter of some slight rlk. even tinder the most favorable circumstances. Vet It can bo said with truth that the element of danger lias been eliminated from the trip to and from the top of the groat shaft as far as bumun skill can go. Tho muchinery has stood the hardest tistts for years without break. Thu cables have been test- , cd to n capacity of over ton Wins, and the car ami machinery fitted with the best Of safety appliances. Under these conditions it Is safe to say that the elevator Is as safe as any other, and much safer than the grout majority ol hoisting machines, the immense length of thu shaft notwithstanding. The Irum of the elevator is locuted under ihe floor of tho monument,-and it is reached by means of traps in tho iron flooring. It is a great nil iron cylin i tier. Ii foot In diameter, and contains, when the car has been hoisted to the ( lop, Mfil feet of cable xhieh is wound ; uround it in opposite directions from I tho center. The end of the cables are aecured to the drum through boles in the surface, und inside are tied to great ! jrOss-boams. Tlie governor attached I to the starting and stopping machinery iperates by stopping tho cur when it ilrops too rapidly. On the ear Ittfelf are two dogs thai catch on the corner 'olumit at thu northwest ami south- ast corners of tho elevator shaft. HYPNOTIC TRANCE. fetlenfl SOME ENGLISH IDEAS. t I lit Kin-Is About in. no on Tfcll lids of tin Wuti-r. For my pnrt, I could almost wish that wu In Kngland would give up making any comments on American literature, manners or social habits. Wo can mako -nono that will give pleasure; wo can hardly speak w ithout making what is recognized as a mis take. If wo prune, we pruisu thu wrong thing; if wo blitnio, our hlumo is mere ignorant jealousy. This I know, for I have tried, in an ineffective but icarty manner, to praise Mark Twain :ts one of the greatest of living genuises (perhaps it is not saying much) who now uses tho English language. Yet this humble appreciation has not seemed to be welcome to all literary Americans. They are not as proud of Murk us nnu could wish. On tho other hand, if I chance to describe tho stylo of an esoteric Ameri can novelty, a queer medley of bail Ktiskiu ami indifferent llret Hurte, I urn once more looked down upon from the frozen heights of literary disap probation. The fact is that over here we do not know what is the correct thing either in current American liter ature or society. We admire. Amor loan authors whom American critics Jespise; wo have never heard of authors whom the more serious Amer ican reviews, which ought to know, distinguish by their applause. It Is the same thing, uf course, iu America. There they appreciate English writers who are not or have not vet become l',.rr Arllnr Through Ihe Mind on Ills I'hyslral MMMMMb Almut a century ago, Mesmer, a nv live of Switzerland, was able to induce a peculiar sleep by means of the now well-known "passes." Ho professed to have discovered u new force, to which he gave tho name of animal magnet Um Imt which most neonlu call mes merism. In 113. Hrald, of Kngland. ..-i.-niiticallv investigated the truth that lay beneath tho delusions und decep tions of thu ransmerisls, and wus soon Independently followed in the same di rection by tvid'iillo. in India, and Mitchell, in the United States. Tho patient, being mode to fix his oyes steadily on a bright object, about a foot from his forehead und a short distance above it. a sleep was Induced in which all sensation was lost Nu merous surgicil operations were psr formed with absence of all pain. Tho celebrated Charcot performed many experiments of the kind on his hvstorlcnl patients ut his fiimous hospital in Paris. Tho late Dr. Heard, of this country, devoted much time, with signal success, to a scientific in vestigation of tho subject of the hypnotic state, and of hypnotism gen erally. The word hypnotism, now usually employed, is from a Grook word signifying sleep. Moro lately there have been many contributions to tho subject by (iermun und French ex perts, und sorao new conclusions huve been reached. According to tho now views tho hypnotic condition is not one of lethargy, catulepsv nor som nambulism, but it is u normal nervous state, closely allied to natural sloop. Tho use of bright objects before tho eyes is rejected and condemned us in jurious. The operator sitting before the patient, assures him confidently und pleasantly that ho will soon be asleep, tells him to mako no resist ance, and that he is already fwdlng drowsy. Tho patient falls asluop in from flvo to fifteen min utes. From eighty to ninoty per cent, of tho penOM experimented upon can he thus hypnotized. The best subjects aro persons of sound nervous constitu tion. Tho most susceptible aro chil dren under fourteen years of uge. Signal curative rosults huvo been ob tained In rheumatism, neuralgia, alco holism, morphine habit, various forms of nervous diseases und nmenorrhu'ti. It is not always necessary that the pntlent bo put fully to sleep. It is now thought by somo investigators that Baindcuringjand the new hypnotism are essentially the same thing. These results and the sleep Itself uro de termined by tho suggestions of the operator acting through the mind of tho patient on his physical system. Youth's Companion. To relie re coughing roaat a lemon without burning it When entirely hot. squeeze the Juloe into a cup on thre ounces of finely powdered sugar. 'I aki uteuspoonful whenever you feeUlke coughing. -Homavaade Coxgne Water. - One quart of alcohol; throe drams each ol oil of lavender, bergamot and essence if lemon, one drain of oil of rosemary ind three -lropi oil of cinnamon.- oood thutckeroinq. The women of Franco, somo of them at loust, are In fuvor of tho restoration of tho monarchy. With this object In vlow thov huve organ ized an order called "Tho Hose of France." It is putternod uftor the English "Primrose Leugue." Tourists complain that the de lightful culm and quiet of Holdelborg bus given wa to noise and manufact uring bustle. A number of tall chim neys injure the vlow from tho castle grounds, and tho fearful roghorn irom various tugs disturbs tho quiet of tho Noeknr. -The electrician Is somewhat slow er in his conquests in hurope than in America. Electric lights have but lately lu-eii supplied along Perlin's fa mous street, Under don Linden, nnd tho young Emperor Kr.dii tr.;;oh delight in watching tho weird shadows under tho lime treej. THE MORPH NE HABIT. lion- to stop the Orawth "t This Terrible I'l-ininliif Vleea horizon makes It almost Impossible to Prophets in our own country, and they discern the peak of Sugar l.ouf, thlr- "ircgnrd some very considerable ty-elght miles uwity in the northwest- (''"') prophets of our own ulto e'rn sky, but after u moment's search it .vllir. Wo do not mind this much; appears, the summit seemingly float- our ne "ntivo bumptiousness wo Ing In the atmosphere. Tfio northern ! mn,'' wo know bo1- Hut ono can view Is llrst a mass of houses, dull red i'uagino that, to an American man of letters, English praise of a countryman of his whom ho does not admire semis itnothor proof of our insularity. -Mumtt's Miujaiim: In tone, enlivened by a patch of white or light brow n hero and there, with certain streets shooting straight out from beneath until their converging lines lose themselves. Kcyond the houses are the heights, marred at in tervals by grout red patches of exposed earth, marking the course of the Aque duct tunnel, Off to the right, just hc low the Soldiers' Home, is a large patch, the walls and bunks of the new rosonoir. A country road some miles out suddenly climbs a hill and shows Itself through the trees, like a steady column of yellow smoke. The -it proper is best seen from the cast, rroin the base of the shaft to tho Capitol, standing like a Chinese wall, the mull stretches In a churinlng sno cession of groves, graceful pathway and ornamental staMtorm Thai Smithsonian Park is gorgeous. Hero and there some more forward tree has decked itself in gaudy array and ilamcs out lu the midst of the softer green and brown of Its neighbors. The picture Is marred, however, by a line of smoke and steam from the railroad cutting across the middle of the park. 1 he spectators ore awed, surprised. chilled into silence, and they occasion. ally ftaJkM upward nt tho m:uo of stones in iho roof, the converging arches, and tho seemingly light airy mode of construction, and then shud der slightly and hurry Into the car. Somo take off their hats und put their heads through the windows, exclaim. Ing at the dwarfed apknrunoo of tho workmen on the mound below. a.nd ANGINA PECTORIS. Mtro-lilrrrrine an XI t tafaUlblS RasatMtj for Brass t-Paay. Angina pectoris (agony of thechest) carries off many people, the last of whom, according to tho newspapers, was the novelist, ltev. E P. Koe. who Mplrod in ono day because of its crushing anguish. Major General (t.orge R McClollan (according to published reports of that time) like wise succumbed after twenty-four horn's of uucoutrolable pain. Just how these putionts wore treated I am un able to suy, but Dr. Uichurdson, of London, long before C.onerul McClel lan's death, hud received a prize of 15(000 francs from tho Academy of Medicine in Paris for having discov ered an almost infallible remedy for angina iootris by tho administration, in the very small dose of 1-100 to 1-'Y of a grain of nilro-glycerine! This dis covery entitles Dr. Kichurdson to tho never-ending gratitude of every suffer ing man. woman or child afflicted with angina pectoris. 1 know u number of persons who al ways carry tablets of njtrtl fljITW lM with them, and 1 am equally certain that all these people, by the use of nitro-glyeerino, uro living in compar ative A physician of this city states in an ; Interview that the opium habit is grow ing to alarming proportions in tills city not tho use of the raw article, but its consumption in more agreeable forms, such as morphine pills, injections, etc. He avers that it is no uncommon tiling for family physicians to find many pa tients slaves to tho habit, and their arms ami sometimes entire bodies cov ered with scars inade by the injections. hen their physicians discover tho result and forbid the future use of th drug ho says they not infrequently change doctors and lie in order to ob tain medical permission to continue their course. It id not unusual, according to him, for them to go to a strange physician and represent themselves as from tho country and in sore need of relief by mentis of opium in some form. Under these circumstances, the relator says, he always insists on seeing their arms. In nine of such cases out of ten ho finds evidences of hypodermic in jcctions, and refuses thei- requests. He claims that the habit is tnkitiir such 1 hold .pun the people that it' can only I bo checked by the combined efforts of I physicians nnd legislators, ami that unless it is (irmly takon in hand it will , work as much ruin as does liquet it seems that women are moro ad dicted to thil debasing habit than men, for several reasons. To start with men nave oilier stimiilanls, such us liquor and tobacco, ami again women can obtain morphine more secretly than they can liquor, and consume it without showing so much of its effects. There is no need hero to dilate upon the hor ror which this wretched practice brings upon its victims. Nothing which sci I one or ingenuity has discovered to the i world reacts so torribly upon those who abuse this crenturo brought into I w i i a ., . nn norm lor ino niieviauon ol man s ills. If one tithe of what the physician j lias averred is true no time should bo lost by his fellows in co-operating to prevent the prescription of tho drug ! avo in cases of the utmost neces ! sity. hen tho Legislature meets I '"ore should tie a memorial presented to mat body asking for legislation of the strictest sort, which shall punish wiiu severity any druggist who sells opium in any of its forms without a proscription from a physician of rcpu tiicn looking up toward tho oap-stono, ""' mot dreadful of all pains. Dr. wondering at the multi'udo of light I ufia, in llclforf$ JUTfMfua, nlng-rod point which cover each o! tho four triangles ol the roof. Th' One of the natural curiosities near aluminium tip lookt like a dark spot , Waukesha is a spring that bubbles up ooujvu mi points, men the head 1110 nouow or a tree. Every comfort, who would otherwise table standing, or any doctor who shall alleviatiou ol k ...... iuhit mmwi in tier iiirt inAiinivwta , . i . . . torture of ,h, f aJ L"'.".,L I ' K W e.icompast, 7 ""'-'n'liaium mo navmg of lfe or the are MUM with a sljfh of relief. At lat Um conductor shouts for all to get on the car who wish to go ho. low. and the rialtolW huddle them-c- o ills.,1 i a .ul the ,o u i; .; is bo on who does not know tho secret thinks th water comes from tho tree itself. - England uses about 110,000,000 pot cards ayaar, m4Um United BtatH j Ujl fur fruia .H.PJ.uaJA'OO anuuullv. tho direst distress. Chicwjo MaiU A certain moans of stopping a doj fight or loosening a vicious dog's hold upon any thing, is showering something over the animals that will produce sneezing. Ho his will power ever so strong, the motion of sneezing involun tarily opens u dog's jaws. Popper an swers very well, but snuff is tho best, as it can be used without limit. Kindness, sympathy nnd encour agement shown toward the erring, will accomplish a thousand times as much . . , .... If !. ,.f 1 us r.gm severity, n oiso " .-. words that almost invariably exert the influence of crushing, wounding and destroying the better impulses of thu soul, the hand of love Is extended, the noble nut re in the erring ono will bo awakened, and tho lifo redeemed. King Humbert's gift to Emperor William was unique, being a scries of models of the remains of tlio men, women, children und animals in the famous Pompeiinn museum, takon by tho well-known sculptor. Signer Achillo Dot-si, who hits been engaged several months on tho work. Those aro tho I'.rst models ever taken of tho bodies in the tuns -um. Slaver lo is tho MUM of tho man who has succeeded to the positiou of chief baiiclt iu Bulgaria. Ho is de scribed as i handsomo young fellow, highly educated and a most eloquent orator. I WO yours ugo ho was a mem ber of the lliiiguriun Skuptsc hinu, but being detected in "bundling" lied to the mountains, and now has a very ilesiruble position us boss of the buck counties. An influentiul paper of Iluda I'esth, Hungary, advocates a reform in the upper House of that country, mak ing titles of nobility descend only to tho eldest son. und haying them in separable from a seat in tho House, English fashion. The roason is fan lustic enough that so-called llurons and Dukes have been killing them selves lutcly becnuso they had no money to support their dignity. The extent of forest and woodland, as compared with the total area in tho principal countries of Europe, accord ing to statistics published by tho De partment of Public Works in Franco, is as follows: Sweden, 40 per cent; Hus sin, UT; Austria (without Hungary), 82; Hungary. 28J; Germany, 2oJ; Norway, 21; Servin, 20; Belgium, l'J; Switzerland, 19; Franco, 18; Spain, 17; BotimatlU, 15; Greoco, Vi; Italy. 12; Holland, ": Portugal, 5; Denmark, 5; lireut Britain, 4. Social entertainments in England aro made tho subject of tho following criticism by an English magii.ino writer: '"Tho chief performer in drawing-rooms is a girl of wild nnd unset tled look. Her dress is loud, her huii is touched with dyo; she plays and sings, acts and recites, and is said to muke a great deal of monoy. Sho is always engaged to a young mummer, und sho is now playing tho accompa niment for her futuro husband. Like tho others, ho is exceedingly lovoly, and every when you hour of his loveliness.'' Ihirin? a very bad performance of "iluailet" by ,a barn-storming party in a country theater the audi ence in its entirety commenced to hiss, w ith tho exception of one man. At lust the man next to him said: " Why don't you hiss this show?" It would hardly bo fair," ho said, " its I came in with nn order; but if they don't do better pretty soon, I'm hanged if I don't go out und buy a ticket and join you." Tho handwriting of English liter ary men being under consideration, it Is said that Andrew Lang writes a pe culiar, but not illegible hand; Swin burno's was curiously school-boyish, but perfectly legible; Matthew Arnold's was lucidity itself; Mr. Ruskin's is pretty und plain; Sir Edward Arnold's Is also very plain: John MopIpv'. lo lifticult nt first, but easily trot uc- luaintod with; Labouchere's Is pretty bad; T. P. O'Connor's is rather rough, out easy to rend; Frederick Gren- wood's is culled agreeable, and tho ed- . . i ... .. ... our oi mo unus, it is said, writes particularly rood nnd legible hand. OTJFTlHi vralTflENE LODtae. xn u . r jjlecuflrataiid thlnl' wi-di OPENCKR BVTi ai Ujuuk No , O Meet over) Tueeilay .-i ,.,' ' IITIMAWIIALA KNUAMPMirv, v .Meets on the mvoinl and r...'. 1 1 ilaya In eaeh nionle slfnVUD I .tl.. . .. .... I. nn..a n. i'inir, au, i, . I j M.-.-la at Mas,, in,- ll,.ii ' U I fourth t'rldaya In earh month V , I i I I . k.J, . , . I .i. ...... . i ay.-i i .iij.i i . h . at Mn. Hall t lit. r 1 I Hal. nt ua.-li III,, nil, Hi-nnl.. rt,"l v-r. May,- nt'TTK IXIIKJK NO. ;17. . 0. Q. II II "' I K. IlINd STA II it ANII OK Hop, I j at tlieC. '. Church every Sui noon at 3:.10. Vlsito a made vi-, iltt 0. C. H. H. TIME TABU" Mull Train 'Mirth, U . M. Mail train south. VM e. u KiiKene Ixs-al - Leave north 9 00 1 I Kuit-enu lwal -Arrive :W p. u OFFICE HOURS, EUOENE CITY J General Delivery, from 7 a. m. loi.J Mfinev Order frmii 7 a u I.. . .. 1 II.,., .i..,- !,..,',. " . ... fti.T" ... i.uiii , n. ... . , MuiIh or north close at 8.-00 i; y Mulls for Bouth 'lose at S:00 p, M M -ul . hy I.,., nl close at s .i u' Mull- Tor l.'p..,.LU.. ,.!... .. . i M,i! Tloirsday. anil Thumda .inula tor .iiatici runi al 7 i. y , Eugene City Business Dir 111. I I It V . " M- -!.. air.rl ifuiiaral - la . . . . I . iiinni, hit am, ,.,iMii,ii niiueia viuiii. uiiuo. I'raivie ill jeill-lrr k clocks and imisical in-i i Street, between Seventh ami KitltO. r lllr.N 111. Y. M. II. Healer In ih i , niK ana uenerai iiicrciiamli.i.. i Biieei. iieineeu i-.iKHlll ami .Mntli (JIM. J. P. -Physician ami sunn, i cue ,,,,,,,, um nn i ii ami y. j- IIODKS, C-Keeps on liaml line lnJ cikrara nnd a pool anil tilllianl lakuM ettc street, between Klktlilh ami NlnUil initio. ii.v.i. .vi. liiuiHinith, nlteia Kims, brseoh and muzzle loaileti, ..,... ...a ...... c , ino neait-Hl Hlylfla ranted. Shop on Ninth street. l.l'CKKY. J. S. Watchmali.p .i , keepsa fine slock of kooiIh in In. Im. i ttte street. In Kllsworth's ilrun storj 1 Met l.A KKN. JAMKS-Cholr-,, iJ amlciKurs, Wlllamettestreet, betK-Hl ami Ninth. POST OKKK'K-A new .n.,1, , school books just received at tlm pdJ ItlHNKHAItT. J. B. -Hoimi, l.j. painler. Work guaranteed llrKt-claal n "'""i init-w man ovaminn.nifc DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and SurgJ 1VILL ATTK.VI) TO I'ltOFKS v ' calls day or nlgiit. OrKic-K - Up stairs In Titus' brick: orl louiiu i r.. ii. i.ucsey ec t:o ciruif ston.1 iiuura: a iu is i to I p, M II to 8 p. a I DR. J. C. GRJ OFKICK OVER ORANOK STOItl work warranted. Laughing gas adininlstered for i iraction of leulli. GEO. W. KINSEY. Justice of the Peal 1KAI, KSTATK KOIt SAI.K -TOWKl and farms tended to. Collections protu SPORTSMAN'S EMPOR HORN & PAINE, Practical Gunsi DBA LIKa IU GUNS, RIFLE Fishing Tackle and 1 Sewing MaCuinesaodNeeleso!Al!uiils Kepairina; done ih the neatest stjJ warranted. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Fm Shop on Willamette Street. Boot and Shoe St A. HUNT, Proprieto Will hercftrtor keep a oompltrteit(Mkfl Laities' Misses' aui CUM III lllix BOOTH, Slippers, White and Black, I FINE KID SHOES, MEN'S AND BOYT3I BOOTS AND SHO And In fact everything In th" HtJ onoe une, lo winch I Intend w on my especial attention. MY GOODS ARE FIHST-CU And guaranteed as represented, suds oe soul tor ttie lowest prices t mat article can be afforded. A. Ilunl Central Mark fiNliei-aScWfitlil PROPRIETORS. W keep constantly on hand a full ' F. M. WILKINS. its BEEF, DRUGS, MEDICINES, make. Palata. Ulaaa. Olla. i ,-.,t. TOILET ARTICLES. Etc Physicians' Prescription Compounded MUTTON. PORK AND 1 Which they will sell at the lo market prices A fair share of the public patronage m TO T11R rARHKK: We will pay the highest market prtol cattle, hogv and sneep. 8hop on Willamette St IOC ME CITY. ORECO Meat ceuTerec. U any part of the' of charge.