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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 23, 1889)
NERVED TO DEATH. TTj Can Which ImMn M Han) I rlnr i -. l - to Ills "liams." There has iint dh-d In I'arU n vnnor able i-eidi-Hliii-tln nnmnd Abbo Croxee. whose lonu curtwrof useful beuefieeneH Wan piwHi'il H mill HiirrounillnifH which to most uhmi would have boon extntme lj piilnful, If not absolutely repulsive. The dr.eennid ablwt ww chaplain to thn prison of l.n Koquottn, and from 1H0H to IHH'J it luid been his doltdul duty to 1 uk pastoral cliarifa of nil criminal! eentonced to death. During bin twenty two your of office he had attended to tho scaffold DO fewer than tlfty-one murdererM, i-oiiiprlsini; among others La rimmnll. A vlvfiioin, IMmohmm and ItiHolr. 'J'hc nolo accusation which his diitracters could urge against the "aumonicr" of l,n itouiiuette was that he woh apt to hIiow a litllc too much commiseration for the atrocious d--porados who rnceivi-d IiIh niinistra tlonM. and that he VM moved even to use bin LnflttWm to obtain u reprieve for Hi" exceptionally bloodthirsty young BM Tropptnun, who satis fied hit craving for slaughter by the BUMMMN of nil entire fami ly. Thn Abbe ('ru.eH oecii pliKl a fefy humble npnrtment In 11 In clime lo the Jail, ami bin room wm adorned villi nil kind of Mrdid articles presented to him a aouvonlra by tht aettaiedni who bud received the eininnlutiouH of i- ) :r ion from hi hand lit the supreme nODMOl of llieir fnle. One of tho most curious of tho in tribute! of II xce lent priott who bus jiiHt plowed a way remains to bedescrib 4d. It vvni be who supplied the eon dumned with Btimiilnntii jiiMt before their execution. While praying with the malefactors he gave them n small gloss of mele-ciiMii'H." wliicli our I 'aria rorriMpoudeiit describes iim "black current cordial, dashod with braiuly." The publieiitioii of Hucb a petty detail in not without Hh une, imti-iniicli iih It serves to illustrate a fact with which it in highly expedient thai no! only tho MHBmunily nt large, but the criminal ehiHHCH in particular i should be made fully converNunt Ibut nine tOflthl of the statements made an to murderer "dying game" are ho much arrant lion BeiiHe. In iilmoHt every ciiho whim a criminal in led to execution, whether it bo by the guillotine or by the gallows, it in found absolute )y necessary to administer Home kind of alcoholic Hlimulnnt to the trembling wretcli, mid in olden ti iih h, when the condemned primmer was al lowed lo drink iih much iih ever he liked on the morning of execution, it was probably the man who wiih till) moMl drunk who died unoxceptionally "(fame." It may Heein nt the llrst IiIuhIi Homewhnt iml iroiiH tbnt n jail chaplain hIiouIiI be. above all others, the functionary IntriiHted w ith the tank of giving n paitln "nip" ton criminal, but, on rcllecllon, the "numonler" may appear lo lie the moot unliable person by whom ho delicate a function could ba perfume-d. From the lime of Ins condemuution the prisoner has been on terms of aaoottotiala friendship with bia spiritual instructor, at wb IiiiiiiIh lie kuowri Hint lie can wifely ex pect kindness and sympathy, ami it may lie with n fueling uf yrntitudo, which (or 11 moment partially Hiifleim bin depraved heart, that the male factor accepU a drum from bin eon feHHor. Tlio like refreshment olTercd to him by Hie etc I ioner or by one of the prison warden might be accepted only willi repugnance or rejected In the disgust of desperation. London IWajjfQpfc Evil Etbictt ol Coriet. A ltussi in physician ban renewed the assault on cormilH, mid charges them with eatulng vfaakflaaa of the lung ami iniiHcular structures of the trunk, lux abdoBtina wall ami protuberant belli"-., local lutiammalion of tlie liver mid a grooving of that organ (dlscor ered post moi'lem), (jail stones, biliary colic, wandering liver and displace nieul of the kidney, displacement and Ilex ions of the womb, curvature of the Hpine, dyapapatai onunpad lunn ami OXVgan Hlarvatbui, nmeinla, albumin uria Vaab eye and Intercostal neuralgia. Tight-lacing evidently cramps the vital llfgMI. iulerfero Willi their normal unctions ami thus brings about n (front variety of dis orderH, commonly known us female complaints. It it nil the excessive up piers of alcohol don't die young, and nil the women who enjoy the dissipa tion of Mgbl corset don't kill tliein hoIvch thereby. Mont of them do man ajc, however, to prolong rather a mlaerablo ort of existence, plague the doctor ami deplete the family purse. Health Monthly. A Bolton Woman's. Age. There appear to have been no luck of humorous lucldcut attending the regUtratiou of tho women voters here in lloHton. The !ntct utory comoa from the headquarter of the regis trar, and may lie accepted a entirely authentic. A large number of the women m em to have boon exceedingly annoyed at Mug obliged to give their ago to the registrars, and In a number of pane they forfeited their right to Tolo rather than to state how old they were. In one Instance a spinster gave lier agon "twouty-oueplus." "What do you mean by 'twenty-one plusf " inquired the registrar. "1 moan, sir, that 1 am over twenty-one." was the tart reply. "We can not allow any of that nononse here." said the official; "you must give your exact ajre If you sleaire to be registered." This she porsUleittly declined to do, and con sequently her name is not on the vot in' li.. Ai.ee Htralii. MIGHTIER THAN NIAGARA. i .ii.i lirl of s WoDilrfiil .'4lrt la in nia. ui aknaMi Marvelous stories are related by the few Montiignal and Nam-iipee Indian who have penetrated far Into the in terior of Labrador respecting a cata ract, beneath whose terrific leap Niagara pales into Insignificance. Hut one white man has ever seen these falls, and the Indians' Idea of measurement and distance are so imperfect that, even where their stories agree, It Is exceedingly difficult to d duct from them any tiling like reliable data. An expedition lately undertaken by Handle f, Holme, t. K ;. &, and II. Duff, fellow of All Souls' I'n 'i.,'ii, Oxford, to explore the b lot of l.ubrador and investigate i!. falls unfortunately failed in it oh.. el. the explorers having been ml ed by erroneous calcu'iitions a to dis tances and the exact location of the cataract, and oonielo(l lo return in sonwiipience of running short of pro . kdOM They got so near to the ob ject of their expedition, however, thai ey were enabled, from the general i dig urution of Hi" country, to form Mat must bt a tolerably correct esti mate a to both the location and magnitude of the oataraol This aattmata ag i with tbe d - oriptton of tba graad falls faralahod by Maeleuu, wilo visit" 1 tli"UI ill 1639, and whose further profffoai inlo'th" iftoeior was Mopped bf than lie gava tba widtii of lha river unnto- di.it. ly above tbe falls at I..VSI font, but says that the ealnrai't itself I not more than IfiO (aot aCKMa The height af the falls ba estimates at feet. This estimale is at i dors 'd by a half breed named K.-uiiedy, met by Messrs. Home and Duff in the interior, mid who, thirty years ugo, was in charge of Fort NiiHcapee. on Lake I'etclii kapou. One of the chief dillleulties e ii oiintered by explorers desinus of reaching the falls is tho obstinate ro funal by the Labrador Indians to ap proach than They believe tban to ho haunted, and think il impossible to look upon them mid live. Kennedy was conducted to them by an old In dlao nt mod Louis-Over-thc-FiiA who, being mi Iroipiois. did not share tile superstitious belief of tin. Montagnai and Naonpoes. Messrs. Iloline and Huff were principally misled by the erroneous statement mill calculations tut to distances contained in l'rof. Hind's "Labrador," the leading au thority upon this virtually unknown country. Tba falls are on the Grand or IVtohi- kapon river, w liieh Hows into Hamilton I Inlet. They are thirty miles above Lake Wiiiiiiuikapou, a body of water which i itself forty miles long, ami lltuated IdO miles inland from the Mouth of the river, l'rof. Hind gives Ins lake lis only loo miles from the V'Uth of the river, so that Hie expedi tion of Messrs. Holme anil Dull has brought to light the fact that the best orks heretofore published upon this terra Incognita contain any tiling but reliable data. 'I'hey agree, bo.vever, .villi l'rof. Hind that the elevation of the immense tableland which forms the interior of Labrador is about I'. '.Mo foot. On this height of laud are a suc cession of great lakes joined by broad, plaotd stream:., ami when these reach the edge of the tableland they commence their wild career to the sen. The Moisle ami the Cohl A liter rivers descend by successive fulls, but toward tbe southeast tbu laaOanl from tba elevated tableland is piite sudden. This is particularly true Df the Grand river, w hich has a drop sf over 1.000 feet in the thing miles omuioncing with the falls and ending t Lake Waminikapou. There is a slight rapid below the falls, but none near tho lake, and every thing goes to show that the height Ol tbe grand fall is verv little, If any thing, short of 1,000 teaV They are by a great deal the highest falls in existence that are composed of my great volume of water. There are mere mountain torrent-, that fall from a greater height, and the great fall of the Yosemite Vulley measures 8,660 loot, but it is broken into three dis tinct leaps. Niagara, on tho other hand, has a height of llil feet only. Quebec Cor. Boaton Herald. A Singular Case. For four years Mrs. llenjumin Mover, of Souderton. I'n., was totally blind. Not long ago she was taken ill, ho that she hail to stay in bod sev eral day. On the fourth day she awoke in the morning and exclaimed: "I see!" Her husband rushed to tho bedside ami was recognized She point ed out different article of furniture in the room, told different person what they were wearing, and in many ways proved that ho saw. She asked that all her children and grumlchilden, twenty-live in all, come to her bed side, and thoy did. She told them that she had earnestly prayed that she might see them all once before sho died, and this was tho answer to her prayer. Then she said: "This is the iastday that 1 shall over have the uso of my eyesight." Sho awoke the next morning a blind as ever, and has been so ever since. Marnags a Success. "How do you do, dear Mrs. JonosP" "Mrs. Smith-ltrowu, if you please. I have been married twice since I saw you. but I use my second husband's name a prefix." A week later-"Iear Mrs. Smith Brown." "Excuse me, Brown-Wbtte. I be lieve in progressive marriage. I will -end you cards to my wedding reunion, (iood bye. dor." Detroit Five Press. i HATCHING MUSCALONGE. t ...lieu nl til- III! !'"" a iu w I'lm.hi. The nrogroBS of modern flll culture in no more aiitlv shown than by an cx- iMuimeut in the artlllciiil hatehiug " muncaloiigo which wassuccosnfully ac complished at Chautauqua Uke lasl spring. Although shad and trout have been hatched In large quantities by artificial mean. all experiments with muncalonge had before this been fail ures. The work was done under the direction of tho New York .State Fish Commission, with the object of artificially propagating the fish and stookingthe lakes In the Interior of the .State with them. The experiment took place at James town on the take, and was commenced in the latter part of last April. Mr. Jonathan Mason, an iilstnnt at the i aJadoola hatchery and a fish cultur ist of many year experience, was dis patched by Mr. Sdh (ireen on April lie at one commenced opernlioiis at the lake, and was assisted by Mr. Menor (ireen, a resident of Jaui" lown. who lias taken great intere-l in tho artificial propogattoa of musea- longe. A seme was III ployed to catch tba nature Bab. After aooaiderable dUBoulty alfout a doaao aaealonge ranging in weight from lx to nine pounds Ware caught. From a six pound female aboul lOtt) eggr bjlbjood OOOdittoa were first olitaineJ, then, on tha following day. 90,000 gggl ob UUlMd from ii sixte ii-pouud female ami ln.ooo from two other females The spawn was plooed in hatching boiea and kept iu still water over nii'bl. II xt d.iv it was taken across the lake to Southlands creek, w here there was a little current. I he temoeraliirc of the water ranged from 60 to Ad dag. most of tba time, but ft as low a- l.i d' g ami rose as high as li.'i dog. before the experiment was fin ished. Tho formation of the lisb in II ggs could I' seen oil the tiflll liny, and the fry commenced batching on the eleventh day. On the twelfth din 1 1 ggs hatched rapidly, and by night it was estimated thai 60.000 young muscalonge were hatched. A number of them arara taken to the Caledonia hatchery, where they were examined with a microscope daily. I'hey were throe-eighth of an inch in length when hatched, Thoy showed no movement of the gills or signs of breathing until they were nine day old. but the heart action and the cir culation of tile blil were seen to bo strong and vigorous. They uro help less little creatures, and lay so quiet f,. )mrs at a time that one would think they were dead. When nine days old they showed signs of life, i'hey were then half an inch in length, and the yelk suck, which in of good size when thoy are hatched, was two thirds absorbed. At lifteon days old the yelk sack is entirely absorbed and the fish commence looking for food. LUCKY INVENTORS. Fori unci I i ii list,. II.hi Kr;iU.fU from i tie aals Of TrlfU. Tile rubber tip at tile end of lead pencils bag yielded .''.''" pounds, a large fortune has been reaped by u miner who invented n metal rivet or eyelet at uiich end of the mouth of coat and trousers pookotl to resist the strain caused by the carriage of pieces of ore ami heavy tools. In a recent legal ac tion it transpired in evidence that the inventor of the metal plate used to protect soles and heels of hoots from wear sold upward of 12,000,000 plates iu IHT'J. and in 1S7 the number reached 143,000,0110, producing realized profits of a quarter of a million of money. As large a sum as was ever obtained for any invention was enjoyed by the inventor of the inverted glass liell to hang over gas to protect ceiling from being blackened, and n scareclv Ic.-s lucrative patent was that for simply putting emery po'vder on cloth. Fre quently time ami circumstances are Hunted before an invention is appre ciated, but it w ill be seen that patience is well rewarded, for the inventor of tlie roller skate made over I'dti.OOO, pounds, notwithstanding the fact Unit Ills patent had nearly expired befoi ils value was ascertained. The gimlet pointed screw has produced mois wealth than most silver mine, and the American who first thought of putting copper tips to children's shoes is us well otf us if his father had loft him 400.IHM pounds in I'nited Slates bonds. Upward Of L'.iHHJ pounds a year was made by the inventor of the common needle threader. To the foregoing might he added thousands of trilling hut useful urticles from which hand some incomes are derived, or for which large sum have been paid. Few in vention pay bettor than popular pat ented toys. A clergyman realized 100 pounds a week by the invention of a strange llttlo plaything U be seen for a long time iu every toy shop window, and even in the street of London. That favor ite American tov. tho "return ball" a wooden ball with an elastic attached yielded the patentee an income equal to 10.000 pounds a year, and an Income of no less than l.i.000 pounds per an num to the inventor of the "dancing Jim Crow." The invention of "Pha raoh's serpent." a toy much in vogue some year ago. was the outcome of some chemical experiments and brought tho inventor more than 10,000 pounds. The sale of the little wooden ngure, "John Quota,' was Incredibly large for many .ears; and a very in genious toy. kno.wi as the "wheel ol life," is said to h ve produced upward Of tOO. 000 pounds profit to iu) nn enter The field of Invention Is not only vasl and rafted, but it is open to every Ixxlv without raipaet to sex or ago, ktation or means, -invention. LITTLE DOLLYS CRY. . , i lulr lorl W hlrh in m now " - Tiiwh K.mry llrarl. My name is Anthony Hunt I m a w ... J i drover, and live mites aim mm ---m noon the Western prairie. mere -r. t m. house in sight when I (Irs I moved there, my wife and I. and now we have not many neighbors, though those we have are gool ones. One day about ten years ago I went oway from home to soil my fifty head of cattle Una creatures as I ever aaw. I was to buy MM groceries and dry goods before 1 MMN back. and. above all. a doll for my youngest Dolly. She had never had a store doll of her own -only rug babies her mother hud made hor. Dolly could talk nothing else, and went down to the very (fate to cull after me to got a bigone. Nobody but a parent BM understand how full my mind was of that toy : and how when the cattle were sold, the Hrt thing I hurried off to buy was Dolly's doll. I round n large one with eyes that would open and hut when you pulled a v.re, and had it wrapp-d up in paper, and tucked it under my arm. while I hud the pntvel of calico, and delaine, and tea. and sugar pill up. Then, late as it w as. I started tor Home. It might have I n more prudent to iday until mornin?. but I felt anxiim to g t back, mid eager 'to hear Dolly I praises about her doll. I wus mounted on a itoady-golng old I .,,,,1 t ttv well loaded. Nigh' I J set iii before I was a mile from town, ami settled down a dark a pitch while I wn in tin- middle of the darkest bit of rood I know of. I could have fell my way, tl gh. I remembered it so well: lind when the storm that had been brewing broke, and pelted the ruin in torrents, I was llvo miles, or may lie six miies, from home. rode as fast as I could, but all of a sudden I heard a little cry like a child's voice. I stopped abort and listened I heard it again. 1 called mid it un v.i red me. I couldn't see a thing. All wtu as dark as pitch. I Rot down and foil around in the grass called again, and again wn answered. Then I began to wonder. I'm not timid, but I was known to be a drover and to have money about me. It might bo a trap to catch mo una wares and rob and murder me. 1 tun not superstitious not very; but how could a real child bo put out on the prairie in mob a night, at such an hour? It might be more than human. The bit of coward that hides itself iu most men showed itself to me then: but once more 1 heard the cry. and said 1: "If liny man's child is hereabouts, Anthony Hunt i not the man to let it dio." I H-nrched ngnin. At Inst I be thought DM of the hollow under tile hill and groped that way. Sure enough I found the dripping little tiling, that moaned and sobbed a 1 took it iu my arm. I called my horse and the Ih'ast came to me, and 1 mounted mid tucked the little soaked thing under my coat as well us I could, promising to lake it homo to mama. It Beamed so tired, and pretty soon cried itsell to sleep on my bosom, it hail slept there over an hour when I saw my own windows. There wen lights in them, and I supposed that my wife bud lit them for my sake; but when 1 got Into tho doorway I WW something was the matter, and stood still with a dread fear of heart live minute before I could lift tho latch. At last I did it, and saw the room full of neighbors, and my wife amid them weeping. When she saw me -dio hid her face. "Oil, don't tell him," sho said, "it will kill him." "What is it, neighbors?" I cried. 'Nothing now, I hopo what's that you linvo in your arms?" "A poor lost child." said I; "I found it on tho road. Take it, will you? I've turned faint." And I lifted Un sleeping thing and saw the face of my child, my Dolly. It wus my own darling and none other, that I had picked up on the drenched road. My little child had wandered out to meet papa and tin doll, while the mother was at work, and they were lamenting her as one dead I thanked Heaven on rav knees before them. It is not much of astorv. neighbors, but I think of it often iu the nights and wonder how I could bear to live now If I had not stopped when 1 heard theory for help upon the oud. hardly louder than a squarrel's rhirrip. That's Dolly, vendor with hor mother in tho meadow, a girl worth saving- think (hut then I'm her father and partial, may be) tho pret tiest and sweetest thing this side of the Mississippi. .San Francisco Vail. What a Copyright Protects. A title may bo entered, but the copy right covers the book and not the title. A title alone can not be copyrighted; it can be protected solely as a trade mark. What Is a copyrighted manu script? Copyright pertains to a pub lished book only. So long as a book is In manuscript it is protected by a com mon law of property; no one can print it without authority unles he steals it It is when a book is published that the copyright law steps in to protect iu Every day we have evidence that au thors have wrong notions of copyright; they make a point of having obtained copyright as if it were something dif ficult like a patent and think they have in some way secured their nook and their title by entering the latter. They have secured nothing. Nothing whatever is gained by entering a title except a pn-liminary step to be fol lowed by tiling copies of tho book. -tYific . . - M WW It I. Thcv marrv when I hey clioose; iney the disensi (inire. the I was assured bv Mr. Mnc- suiierintc-iidcnt of the Iper Asylum iu Calcutta, that ho count testify, from often repeated olwerva tlons, that in tho congregations of poor people who uss-mlilo at the funeral feasts of the wealthy natives one per son in every three wn a leper. By the same authority I as told that tho asylum was generally overcrowded, and that the police do not hesitate to bring in cabs lepers w ho nro in inlying state, mid for whom it is necessary to turn out some less imminent eases. Indeed the evil is so widespread that, as Lord Dnflbrtn said to me, one might almost i n.. m ,.1 mijk l.wi;,. ,,r Whvlh.M.n.l.rr of Tho.. ,h. Dfeamia k taaaeaim The official report gives 135,000 as the existing number of lepers in India. but then- can be little doubt that they already exceed 1KW.0W. and that their numbers are steadily increasing. Nor can this increase be wondered at. for whether tho disease is propagated by contagion or by heredity it has every opportunity of increasing. I saw most ghastly lepers begging in the streets and In the balconies of houses. 1 met them at railway Bullions and in places of public resort. In one small bazar a friend of mine told me he had just counted twelve. I even hoBnl of one who was employed by an English baker in the making of bread. It is moreover estimated that all the copper money in India ha possod through tho hands of p,M.rs. I found In Itombny a mun whose hand were covered with leprosy engaged in the railway service as a ticket collector. Who can estimate tho danger to the English and native oom munif many hundreds of railway tickets dai.y passing through this man s hunds? An English lady In tho snmo city had, just before my arrival, fallen n victim to the disease. Lepers, with their revolting miseries fully exposed, maorlatfl freely with the community. a rapu.iy unoei ume . .u u. amU-ivar. Willamette alreet, belwMttl SnilK.CS a Ol US leprosy. .iiiiniiiioi itiei .Mill ii. the absence of Indian public opinion i t'OHT OKKICK -A new stock of on such matters, and tho constitutional callousness of the native mind, increase tho difficulty in a way that English renders can scarcely estimate So care less of danger does tho Indian fatalism make men to this evil that, in the great leper hospital at Tarantnrn, the author itiesa 1 wo assured by nn official there have to hunt out relatives of tlie diseased, who huvo come in pretending that they are leprous, and who are actu ally willing to become infected for tho Bnko of acquiring board, lodging and tho power of leading an idle life. Tho Indian desires above nil tilings to bo a man of money, and what tho lepor at Tarantarn likes to save two out of tho throe rupees allowed him monthly, and either to bide them in tlie ground, put them out at interest or invest them in jewelry for his wife. One man had thus acquired six hundred rupees at tho cost of most wretched diet, and consequent inerea-o of the disease. Kiiutc nth Century. Canonization of Joan of Arc. We may look forward to an early canonization of Joan of Arc. A number of devout Lorrainors bought in the course of this year an "authentic stand ard" of the heroine to lay on the shrine of Notre Daiiie do Lout des. They asked the Bishop 02 Nancy to receive mid bless before they set out to fulfill their pur pose, which they fully explained to him by letter. After sumo delay ho fixed a day to receive them. The Bishop, be fore consecrating tho relic, spoke of Joan n having been Rent to give confi dence and moral unity to a shattered nation, and ordained or a great work in the world. "Tho Papacy," said the Bishop, "which rehabilitated her will glorify her purity, piety, patriotism and valor. It will give a plaeo on the altar of the churches to the warrior and martyrized shepherdess. When it does, France will quiver with new hopce from the Pyreneee to Lonaine, and from Brittany to tho Alps. Sbo will then invoke with boundless conlidenco Saint Joan of Domreitiy, Saint Joan of Orleans, and ."saint Joan of irance." fit ttaMM ''ii' tte. The recent sale of Frank K. Dng gott's share in the Amulet silver inino, near 1'rcM-ott, A. T., recalls tho mun ner of its discovery, in June, 1886, Daggett w ns climbing tho side of Lynx Creek Mountain with a prospector's outlit on his shoulder. Ho was on his way to a gold-bearing quartz claim on the other side of the mountain. Halfway up he stopped to rest, and after a nap picked up his tools and was about to start. Just then his pick slipped from his grasp, and, in falling, struck his leg, hurting him extremely. Ho grab bed tho pick and struck it into the earth with all his strength, swearing that it might stay there forever. After a whilo the sharp pain ceased, and Dsggett changed his mind and thought ho d take the pick. Ho pulled it from the earth with difficulty and with it some shining metaL He had stuck the pick into a blind ledge, which is now the Amulet mine, and from which thousands of dollars of ore have been shippesi F. M. WELKINS. DRU08. MEDICINES, raehe. r.i.i. aiua. Oil. Leads TOILET ARTICI.ES. Etc Phyalclsuia- l-er-t' tlois- Cnmoouxdiw rVJOICN'K U),,.,. - Fj Masto flmai4 th i-si vr.f month. "'-s mi hi 1 1.. '"llu Cl-KNCKIt lit "i , , C5 MueU urery T" tt'IMAWIMLA-'. ' M. ls on ll,,. day iu each uiunO- I'uiSni. '"IBm'-4l V L'UOk'NK LOlA.,. , Mfu at ,M,, ,. fourth r i nl..j s In , I. . 1 , III. ""liJ It T M.dKAKY I H.AK I l'L.S , ,. " t dajiof Mchiuunlli IJUTTE LQDSIMu, i i 1111. It every latardas niui.i i' ;J kh I KADIKfl STAIui.v.xi.i.L..,-.... I j l the C. P. Church ei.', J K-. l i n t .'i :i Vislin fl v aU ' inuile vr,-( am u . I'M . UBU MhII Train north, ni.i u. -Mall train unulli. 'I: I e m Kuueiie UkI Man Ill 0 00 a KWaewe Iswl Anne f.tll r, Z lurjfiVJ Huunb, euo tin ,.i n 1UJ (ii-ueral llellvery, fruai 7 a. m. ii Money Order, from; m. loAr Ksgjfier, from " a. m. ins v. m, .Midi or i ... j in close ui Hall i , m Mails fur south close hi SiiKj c. , Mails lit I, wal ciose ni ami ii Mails for Franklin close at T a, I slid Tliarsduv. .Minis lor .uanei close at 7 a. m I Thursday. .uosaa !i!::,,:::;rV::::i;S : Eugene City Business Oi UK I 'I'M A N. (!. .... , , .. . anil Kcneriil mirehaniliHi. hhiiI,.,,., ve 1 1 1 ...... i ... . ...i l-i.-i.. i. ... . I i am" is, eliii hi,i , .,111.1,111, I ... i I II SI I l'('l . mifM nhi.. i,.... i i.. . v i in. ...-!. is-rnou ill .leuiiry ntt clocks mid musical iusli uiiii iiiH win" slreel, between .Seventh and Kiliih KKIKMILY. . II. Denier In dry kuU .. Kbl.v.u. ,.,V,L,,U.II-,.. il sireei. pesweea unin ami Nnul,, (11I.UJ. I'. I'liysielHii ami siiiviiin. cite street, m-tween Hevelilh anil Kindil IIODKS. ('. Keeiwon hand Hue in. i 'Km . and a imki! ami hill ant lalils w elte street, between KiKhth ami NlnUi lltlltN. ('MAS. M. (Inusiinil, ,t,....,J kuiis. brsaeb and muzzle loailen (ora i,umm iik .ii.ii.- in i in n ti i i'm Hijn J iMiini. :i....mi i.iniii nui'y, UUCKKY. J. 8. -Watchmaker and la keeps a Hue stock of kimnIs in Ids liniffi tlie sireei, in r.nswiirui s uriiu siore. McCLAItKN, J AM KS - Choice winw.) school book just received at I lie p, ItlllNKIIAKT, J. H. House, hIkii undo painter. Work raaiant ed llrsi i l.. Hold al lower ran s Mian hv anwuii. m U DR. L. F. JONES, Physician and Surge will attikd to pro rami talis day or night. Omen - Upstairs in Titus' brick; ota loiimi at r.. u. Mickey Si ( ;o s drug store. lours: io ii m . . i id I v. M.. n to s r. a. DR. J. G. GRA DENT1NT. Ofkicic ovku (iiianuk stohh work warranted. Laughing gas administered for palnl) 1 1 union oi lecili. GEO. W. KINSEY, Justice of the Pead KAL B8TATI Kim SALB TOWta o i. nil larins. I.olleetioim irompi leiiut-ii io. SPORTSMAN'S EMPOfil HORN & PAINE, Practical Gunsmit "J DIALIHS IX CUNS, RIFLE! Flailing Tackle and .Mr. Sewing MaciuDesaad Needlesol All M 111 Itcpairi ne done ih the neatest styleJ warranted. Guns Loaned and Ammunition Fa Shop on Willamette Street. Boot and Shoe Stoi A. HUNT, Proprietor. f!l I . i i t.-i kp.p rt complete nlocl at Ladies' Misses' aud Children's SI HI NO IIOOTN. Slippers, White and Black, Saudi FINE KID SHOES, MEN'S AND BOY'S BOOTS AND SH01 And in fact everything in the II, nit & Shoe line, to which I intend to denl my especial attention. MY GOODS ARE FIRST CL And guaranteed as represented, and be sold lor the lowest prices that a article ran be afforded A. I I il in Central Markd n KislieraScWatkU PROPRIETORS. W keep constantly on hand a full i BEEF, MUTTON. PORK AND Which they will sell at the lows market prices A fair share of the public patronage I TO Til K FABHBBN: We will pay the highest market pries 1 cauie, notn and eneep. 8hop on Willamette St lUCaTNIC CITY. ORECON- Twrw n n Ueatt cu,on a. any part of the cWJ or cnarge.