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About The Eugene City guard. (Eugene City, Or.) 1870-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1891)
HER OPPRESSOR.' 'ilti rVf .vH--' ENUY WHITING, schoolmaster, found the abovo dopirorol written on the black board In a disguised band ono morning. He promptly erased 7 777 'JTfl 11 na' 10 tu0 "aP- hit Y'3 t pointmontof tbeper- i f ' J Potrator Bnd hr S fefl' I bosom friend, said HOU11UK UUUUl 1W TThon be assigned the lesson in con posi tion for the following Wednesday after noon, the task sot out for Ida Urnveson :..) to write a new Psalm of Llfo. Ida scrutinized hor teacher'; face carefully, but It was marked by tts usual placid grav v rid she was uncertain whether this was .ishment or merely nn experiment to ..y his suspicion that she was the of- ilor. After the ossignmcnU bad all been rood Ida held up her band. "VVbnt Is It?' Inquired the master. Ida rose, twisted her handkerchief and ber head in protty affectation of child confusion. Hor friends looked on with :. iuhtful anticipation of "a time," for . u-coly a duy passed in which Ida did not some prank that was more amusing to In. r f cllow-pu pils than to hor teacher. Tlease, air," ahe said at last, "great ...,vi3 like me should bo allowed to select ' i cir own subjects ; may I write a Psalm of itaith Instead of a Psalm of Lifcl" 'Certainly, but remember It must be sub-n.it-cd tomy Inspection before It can be read id the school." "Ah I'' said Ida, with a profound sigh that -ct the whole school In a giggle, "genius ...uch as mine should be trusted." "It may usually bo trusted to bring Its possessor to gnef," returned the master. " But it's like Sampson, when it falls it bring down the bouse,' and the enemy too," replied Ida, with serenity equal to bia own as she resumed her seat. "Mibs Ida," said the master, presently, "I fear you are forgetting to prepare your Mstory lesson. The class will be called in liticen minutes." "Oh, I'm writing poetry now," calmly averted Ida, "and I can't be expected to .ome down with one fell flop from the eagle ::ei.'hts where I soar to the commonplace details of a life like Benjamin Fran kiln." "There are even greater depths; take rare that you do not full into them," said if r. Whiting, partly-vailed twinkle in bis eyes. During the progress of the history lesson, Ida, being called upon to give a sketch of the life of Ber.jamin Franklin, saldi "He was a man in a broad hat and ben. evolent countenance, who achieved fame by ornamenting kite-strings with keys and lightning." "Next may try the same," said Mr. -Whiting, "while Miss Ida writes on the board a classification of the topics in the losson." As Mr. Whiting's back was toward the black-board, Ida seized the opportunity to caricature Mr, Franklin and the kite in a manner that convulsed the class with laughter. , As the master turned bis head the drawing vanished in a twinkling. "Miss Ida will please remain after the close of school touiRht; I wish to speak with her," said tho much-tried tawncr. 'Young men usually speak to fathet Jrst," wrote Ida on tlio board. Of course the class luughed again uproariously this time, but the words were quickly erased, leaving the master as greatly mystified as before. The school-house was in a quiot country place, and, after all the pupils but the refractory one had passed out, an oppress, lve stillness reigned. Ida sat in calm silence awaiting what the master might have to say. She made a beautiful picture with the summer sunshine falling across her crinkly red-brown hair. Her merry brown eyes looked Fate (in the person of the master) bravely in the face, IDA HIZID THE OPrOKTCNITT. and the lovely color in her fair face, with its full red lips and pink-tinted cheeks, did not change at all in anticipation of the com ing lecture. Mr. Whiting left his desk and walked slowly down the middle aisle, seating him self near Ida, but still in utter silence. He fingered his watch-chain nervously and shuffled his feet uneasily from awkwardness to awkwardness. It was plainly a difficult matter for the young master to censure a bright-faced beauty of seventeen, much as she might deserve rebuke. At length the stillness became unendura ble to Ida, so she turned toward him and said: . "Weill" He tappod the desk before him nervously with his pencil. "You look rery ood," she said, In a low tone. "Doyou know why!" "Dyspepsia, may be, or possibly remorse that you didn't divide up that strawberry pie you had for dinner." "Ida, Ida, can yon not speak serlouslyl" "Ohyesland I can think seriously, too, of the shortcake mother promised for sup per if I got home in time to gather the berries. I'm just dying to go; I'm famish ing for mv suoner. It will be an extreme case of cruelty to animals to keep me here a minute longer." "You are always cruel to me. You know 1 could compel civility and obedience from you or require your withdrawal from the school, but you also know that I would rather suffer in the esteem of my patrons than bring any sorrow upon your bright young bead, and so you have your way and sometimes it is a way not improving to the discipline of the school" The merry brown eyes suitened and the full, red Upt of the pretty maiden trembled, hut she was loth to betray any feeling and determined to divert the conversation into some other channel until she recovered ber wit oo ih drew forth ber alata o&d soldi mi IHPI IIII.IIIH! II I III .)lf f !. y " '3' ?-&P? m& H--'-.iAiv,r-W'"-''-' "Would you like to Inspect The Psalm of Death!'" . He took tho slato and read i " One had a jolijr master, Whom tha children all adored; Never bad we crammed books fatter) . (This was bOHted by the board). But a wicked, red-haired maiden Broke the peace one awful dsjt Her benighted mind was laden With desire to say bur say. And the master mosned ber folly,' Wlthagrel beeouldaot bidet i So at last, of melancholy i And strawberry pie be died." Mr. Whiting laughed softly and said! ""- "That is not a bad performance for a little girl like you, but the poor master bad even more reason to feel melancholy than the red haired maiden ever guesed. Will she try again!" -"Perhaps he bad bunions." 'Try again." ' "Or boarded where they put onions in the hash." "Try again." His eyes were fixed upon her face with a, look that brought a rush of color to her cheeks. She looked down and murmured confusedly: " I give it up." ' His musical voice dropped almost to whisper, his mesmeric eyes swept ber face as he bent toward her and said: "It all came of one great folly on his part he loved the maiden, not as a school master should love a pupil, but as a man loves her whom he wishes to win for his wife. Then," dropping the half-playful tone in iwhich he had spokenhe added: "I did not keep you here to tell you this, and yet, now that I have told you and the mis- Bl TOOK TBI SLITS AND BIAS. chief is done, will you not give me word of hope! I know yon are very young, so am I, for that matter, but I would wait for you as long as Jacob waited for Ruth were I sure you would be mino in the end." Bhe looked up with the old, daring smile, but there was moisture on her long lashes as she replied : . "He didn't die, after alii Ton see, there was nothing seriously wrong, and he had no real excuse for dying," and, takings sponge in her hand, she quickly erased "The Psalm of Death." "No," she added, a mo ment later, '-he didn't die, neither did she, but the chances are that she will suffer the loss of her bands by amputation after he has crushed them as much as he likes." After four years of waiting, the master, then principal of a high-school, claimed his beautiful, merry-hearted bride, and made her mistress of a little home in the village nearest the country school-house in which she had written doggerels on the black board. Clara Dixon Davisbox. J DRINK DID IT.. A Soldier Who Famd Dvath on the Field I of PatUe Only to Slset It in s Hora Ter rible Form. . He was a common soldier of the Confed eracy. Somehow he couldn't get on in the world. He bad no luck. Standing with his back to the wall he watched the pro cession of prosperity pass by without even touching the garment of one in it. Then he would sit on the curbstone, his chin In his bands, and think of what! Of the past, irresistibly; of the future, fearfully. But ho did not grumble. His ill-fortune he was accustomed to describe as equivalent to that of the man "who played seven-up all winter and never held a trump until spring, when it was a misdeal." The free drinks be consumed would start a first class sa loon in a high-license town ; but be was not "beat," "standing off' a bar-keeper was always an awkward action with him, and although be hod done It ten thousand times, It always required a mental struggle and a suppression of pride. Raised on a farm, be was used to negroes ; and what little mon ey came to him was through running a plantation store and overseeing the hands. Thence he would drift to town, spend his cash and look lonesome. He was not lazy, and was willing to do any thing honest; but bis shabbiness spoke against bim, and not even the influence of a stray friend could got him the meanest job. He was gray and hollow eyed. To strangers he appeared venerable ; to those who knew him he was "old Tom Jones," whocould laugh out with an empty stomach upbraiding bim and gleefully re late a war joke when the rheumatism was tearing his joints apart. The bar-room of a barrel-house was his sleeping apartment and his bed a chair, a privilcgo granted him by the proprietor, whose books he would "unravel" when the ignorant fellow got them In a badly-tangled condition. One free lunch a day kept him from starving. "Old Jones muster bowled up somewhere last night," said the porter to himself. "He's sleepiu' like er baby ever sence two o'clock this mornin'. Hoy, ole man 1 Lunch ready I He never failed ter wakeupter that soun I say," shaking him, "it's eatin' time. Get up on have some soup." The "shake" threw the old soldier's bead backward. It hung over the chair, and rested there. The coroner's Inquest called it heart dis ease. . CHABIM 8. BlACKBCBg. i Be Was So Vrsgu. r "Prisoner, you were beastly drunk last Highland disorderly, too. What explans, tinn have vou to offer!" 1 "I couldn't stand prosperity, your honor. That's aU." t . , "What good luck have you been having, Patrick!" ' "A fine gentleman gave me half dol lar last night, and it upset me. They usually give only a penny or a nickel." I "Are yon a beggar, as weU as adruni- "Neither, your honor. I holds out my hand, sometimes, and rich people drop money into it That half dollar upset me. 1 Eras of Cnlverul LaaroJof . ' i .... . - AAnrifchfwf Amons Learning ana iuo r . the Greeks, especially under Petratus, 637 B. O, and again under Pericles, 444 o. C and with the Romans under Augustus, at the commencement of the Christian era. Greek refugees caused the revival of hter ature, sculpture, Into Dd "??n 5 fa Italy, particularly after the taking of ConUnVe by the Turk, , in 14 , the invention of printing shortly Renaissance period. bS2 Medici of Florence) greatly promoted learning in Italy in the sixteenth century, . Suture revived to Engl Ow . ffiany and FrOBCS). CONCERNINQ FLOWERS. Bow to Arrang Thi-in r(TWilvelv-Thir ImpurUnro In AU tha Afluirt ut Ouolol Life. What nioro oppr. r.riuta than fbwere silent mMwup. : of l.av, clarinets and sympathy! h..t i-uii nioru iloiicately ex prcts the sent lucnlt of the human heart! Poet, artist, m-ulptir-all hi'k that inde scribable umiriioiiaia of urotninu similar emotions within the human her.rt Poetic eButlt n, chlm;!''il ni-r Ko and p-i'iited can vn, however gnu.d ;w.d tnaMerful, ore de void of tint n.ysi cv.'i Axrii'tlilnj which to aprviita to tli iv.: !i. rt rvii inhuman im'.ui i Oii'yi : i ,r ci nlcst flowers have .'..it a i'.ih . -, 1. 1 t.i. Cue who baa iinvi r tried it ran not know tho pleasure derived from reiiioiiiti'iiiu: friends with flowers. Tho atli-i.!in is to trifling; yet how gladly it Is ntcived, par ticularly by thosowluli'- not the facili ties for growing them. lathe e'rnt of be reavement or lllnoKS a; jin jtkio flowers express sympathy mom d;-l '...tfly thun words. For social p.r.li-ri'.iK of any kind; parties, receptions, o'c, the hostess is grateful for floral deri.ruti.Mis. Ou such an occasion flowers cmi nut I o too profuse. vThe characteristic beauty ct any Dower is 3 best broi:;;bt out by beinj hrranged with no'.hinir but its own y.a iouago. A mass oi a color is more io than a uit- V play of various colors. A uouqueiut sorted flowers is not so effective as la a bunch of flowers of but a slnirlc kind with noth lnirbutiuown green. US OLOVttt I!f STSAW BAT. In sending flowers do not mar their natural beauty by confining them in a stiff, paper lace bolder. Simply tie the long, slender stems with a white, satin ribbon. It the flowers droop readily, wrap moist moss and tin-foil around the stems and slip the bou quet Into a soft, tissue-paper holder made at follows ! Take a square of French tissue paper of the desired size and tint, from the center draw It tightly through the hands; this creases it beautifully. Cut the outer edge In deep, irregular, sig-ag points. Slip the bouquet Into this bolder; the creased paper being elastic it spreads out, showing the flowers while closely con fining the stems. Try a bouquet of popples or geranium fa this manner. The result will be surprisingly gratifying. A charming way to arrange delicate tea roses Is to place them, moist cotton or moss about each stem, in a small work-basket With a ribbon tie the cover back to the handles of the basket, disclosing the rose peeping from underneath In fragrant loveli ness. If flowers ore scarce, take the fragrant red clover. It Is a flower which Is too often slighted. It is easily gathered, for the meadow is a crimson mass of honey-sweet clover blossoms, nodding their pretty heads with every gentle zephyr.. To be effective, the rural simplicity 01 their origin must be preserved in their ar rangement Tula is successfully done by placing them care lessly in a straw hat The stems must be well wrapped in cot ton and tin-foil, for clover droops quick ly. For this purpose take a boy's ordinary straw hat, not too large. With pale pink and green ribbons tie a bow at the crown and bring up the ends to serve as a handle, at the same time holding the run up In basket shape. The effect Is very abtistio arbahosv pleasing, and has the hunt or hrss. appearance of having just been gathered and thrown into the hat If enough flowers of any kind can not be procured the treasures of the woods must be utilized. Rich green ferns are always to be bad in abundance. Arranged in the fol lowing manner they retain their freshness several days: Taken Japanese paper para sol and draw a ribbon about the lower edge forming It into a V shape; then fill with brakes, ferns and quantities of perrywinkle or lovers' tangle. Each, or several fern leaves together, must be well bound with plenty of damp moss and tin-foil. To the handle of the parasol securely tie a ribbon for carryingor banging. Thissrrangement makes a beautiful decoration for a bare cor ner or beneath the ball chandelier. Whatever the flower whether the simple blossom of the fields, the verdant growth of the wood, or rare hot-house roses all serve the same admirable purpose of gladdening the hearts of friends. They ore always ac ceptable, bringing good cheer, pleasure and comfort It may be an Ideal morn ot mid-summer. Go to some secluded spot where on unob structed vie w of the rising un may be ob tained. His coming is heralded by fiery lines shooting out before. At lost the splendid orient becomes visible: His warm, soft rays intensify the rare, fresh beauty of the rural surroundings. AU nature la bathed in sparkling dew-like a shower of diamonds. Or the elements, Instead of be ing passively beautiful, may be terrifically sublime In the Intensity of their raging fury. It matters not to the flowers. Grate ful for sunshine and shower tbey smilingly bold up their pretty heads waiting to fulfill their sweet mission in life to be plucked for some one's joy. .'' On the battle-fleld, where war and car nage ore raging, midst the tread of man and beast and the boom of cannon and gun the humble heartsease continues to bloom, un disturbed, to make easier the lost moment of poor fallen soldier. ( Whatever the occasion, be It one of gloom of glee, nothing is so expressive of con dolence or congratulation as 1 nature's bounteous gift the speechless flowers. -i . . Anna Hikbicss. Thar Work Bard. ' "Mis Boofuls, will you please direct these envelopes for me some time to-day!!' and the chief ot division laid the work upon her desk. V 'Is'poserilhaveto," he languidly re plied, a he took ber pen and oommenoed the task. "Here, Thomas, Til give you half a dol lar if you do this work," she said to a col ored messenger, as soon as the chief was gone from the room. Thomas complied, and Miss Boofuls resumed her official tatting and yawning. Lady clerks work hard for their living., Tha Flrtt PubUo Thaatarv The first theater, that of Bacchus at Athens, was built by Philos 420 B.C. Mar cellus Theater at Rome was begun by Cesar and dedicated by Augustus, 12 B. C. Prior to that time dramatio reading and recitation were enjoyed only by the wealthy. , A Will and a Way- V "Where there's a will there's a way," and she eitrhed a sigh in the gloaming. "Yes, Minette, where there's a Will there's a way to matrimony. I am the Will and the way!" and be stopped out ot the flaxkneM to bar aid ana kissea Mr. BuHiuaMior Sale. Tb boot snd shoe butiuet now being conducted In the Titus block by John En ner, sgrnt, is offered for sale. Tha tnrk is a well snleoted one nearly utw, sod will be disposed of at a bargain. The gentlemen represented by Mr. Ebner propone to start a boot and shoe manufac turing enterprise in Eugene and therefore desire lo dispose of their retail busiuvsa. Brick. Brick. Whitconib k Abrams, contractors snd buildi-m, bare plenty of the best quality of brick at their yard miles east ol town, and will supply the demand at reasonable price. Tbey also contract for all kinds of brick work and gnarnutee satisfaction. Will deliver brick oo order to tny part o( town. Millinery aud Dressmaking:. Mie Brnmley it Stafford wib lo snd imuni-a lo i bp Imtir of EuKn snd vicinity iht lliey bate oprtied h full line ol uiillint-ry KO'xUof the latent htj let aud at reasonable prUs. We sn ali-o prtjered to do dress making in tb most tatiafactory manner Uur cutter snd fitter, Misa Ella Fsy fogle late of Ohio, has had tett-ral yrars expert--iii-K iu tbx liadina, citimof that state, snd "Hut-i highly reciimnienileil. Delinquent Tax Notice. Notice ft hereby given that the city lax of 1890 of EuKt-no is now delinquent aud has rx-en placed io iny hands for collection. Those who are del iuqnxnt are noliUnl that unless prompt payuivnt is made cou will be made. Sept. IS, 1890. I. E. Stitamk, Marshal. MsnroBD Floub. A. Goldsmith has re-c-ived another car load of the celebrated Medford floor. He will keep this excelltnt brand of flour iu stoek at all times hereafter. ADVICK TO MOTHERS. Mrs. Wiwslow's Soothiko 8tbof, for eliil ilren teething, is the prescription nf one of the beat female mines and physicians in the United SUtre, and has been used for forty years with never-failing success by millions nf mother fur their children. During the pro- otm of teethinir its value Is incalculable. It relieves the child from pain, cures dysentery and diarrhoea, griping In the bowels, and wind colic. By giving health to ths child it rests the mother. Price 25c a bottle. Local Mark r. Hone, 32c: wheat, 58 cts. net; oats, 65 cts; tga, 25 cts; butter, 35rt; bacon haras, 14(&l6; sides, U'i; shoulders, 10; potatoes, w; law, l.'J. . . L -I FISHER 6c WATKINS, PROPRIETORS. Will keep constantly on band a full supply of 3E5 3D3E3 3P, MUTTON, PCRK AND VEAL, Wlich thty will sell at the lowest market prl cee, A fair share of the publio patronage so lid tea. TO THB FARMERS : We will pay the hk'hent market price for Fat Cattle, Hoot and Sheep. SHOP ON WILLAMETTE STREET. EUGENE CITY, OREGON. Meats delivered to any part of tb eity free of charye. EAST AND SOUTH. VM Southern Pacific Route Shasta Line. Eipress Trains Leave Portland Daily. ScS j . I Korth loOriffLv Portland Ar!:35Aii 12: 02PM Lv EtiRene Li j 4:44 AM 10:15a m I Ar San Francisco Lv 9:00 t M Above trains stop only st following stv tions north of itoseburff: East Portland, Ore gon City, Wood bnru, Salem, Albany, Ian Kent, Khedds, Halsey, Harrisburg, Junction City, Irving, Eugene. ROBBBUBG MAIL, DAILY. 8.00 a mlLv Portland 1.05 pmLv Euijene 5.40 pm Ar Roeeburg Ar4.00 p m Lv ft. 55 a rn Lv 6:20 a m ALDANT LOCAL, DAILY (Except Bunday). LEAVE: AURIVKi Portland 5.00 p. m. I Albany.. 9.00 p. m. Albany 5.00 a. ro. I Portland.v.OOe.io. PDLLMAI BUITET BIXRPEBfl. TOURIST BLEKPINU CARS, For accommodation of Second Class PaateeD gers, attached to Express Trains. Went Side Division. BETWEEN P0MUBD AMD 00BTULI8- MAIL TiAIK DAILY (KXCIfT SUNDAY.) 7 :S0 a m I Lv Portland Ar I 8:20 p m 12:10 m Ar Corvallit L 1 12.65pm At 1II..MV anil .IorvIli. connect with trains of Oregon Paclflo Railroad. , iiwtaa TSAlll daily lEicmsuwDAV.) 4:40 p m Lv 7:25 P m I Ar Portland Ar I 5:30 a in McMinnville Lv 5:45 a m THROUGH TICKETS to all Points East and South, For ticket snd full Information rreKrdlng rates, mapa, etc, call on Company's agent at ERKOEHLKR. RP ROGERS, Manager, Aaat O. F. and Pas AgU F. W. A. CHAIN, Watchmaker and Jeweler. Junction City, Oregon r f .M.nt(AM uivvn I WATClSa. CLOCKS nod JEWELRY, DMIJMtT Boot & Shoe Store A. HUNT. Prop. Will hereafter keep s complete stoek of Ladies' Minses' and Children'- SHOES. BUTTON BOOTS, Slippers, WUto and Black Sandals FINE KID SHOES, MENS' AND BOYS' BOOTS&SHOES And in fart everything; In the Boot and Shoe line, to which I intend to devote my csiwcial attention. MV OOODS ARE FIRST CLASS.- And eurante1 at renresentad. and will be sold for the lowest price that a rood article can be afforded. .V UUi INT Having purchased the Matlock Grocery Store, we call the attention of the public to the fact that we will keep on hand a FIItST-CLASS stock of groceries,which will he sold to our pat rons at the lowest rates. FISHER BROS. WANTED. WOOL, HIDES AND FURS AT GOLDSMITH'S. J. L. PAGE, TTAVINU A LARGE AND COMPLETE JLL stock of Staple and fancy Uroceries, bought in the liest markets EXCLUSIVELY FORCASH, Can offer the public better prlues thaa any other honse IN EUGENE. Produce of all kindt taken at market price. R. B. Cochran & Son, Real Estate Agents. Eugene City, Oregon. Will attend to general Real Estate bnslnei inch at buying, soiling, leasing and renting furmsand city property, etc Office on south aid of Ninth street. GEO. F. CRAW, POSTOFFICB Cigar store, Eogant City, Oregon. J.DAVIS, Merchant1 Tailor. HAS REMOVED TO THE OLD LANE County Rank RiiiMinn on Willamette st IU is prepared to do all kindt of work offered in hit line. . , ... A Urge ttock of Fin Cloths on band for customers to select from. Repairing and cleaning done promptly. Sat (faction guaranteed. EUGENE CITY PATTEIISON, EDMS Jc CO. Manufacture Best Grades Family Flour, Store Grain on the inoet favorable terms. Wheat receipt of any warehouse north nf En gene, prowrly assigned, taken in exchange for Flour or Feed. ty Hibet Cash Pric Paid lor Wheat.3 DR. JOSEPH P. GILL, CAN III! FOUND AT HIS OFFICE or re iiknot whes sot professionally engagMl. li . ! .1 - r.. KiVhth anaL ODfK alt. PlM i amujrftw , . ' ter . Church. Groceries -DEALER IN HILL C0e F. M. WILKINS, t Practical Druggist 6" Chemist. DRUOS, MEDICINES, Bra.he, Paints, Class, Oils, Lea-, Toilet Articls, Etc. Physicians' Prescriptions Compounded. McClarens Building, (Opposite F. M. Wilkin' Drue Store.) Has sn extensive Stock of STANDARD, MISCELLANEOUS. COLLEGE AND SCHOOL BOOKS, Mercantile, Fancy and School Station ery, Blank Books, Cutlery, Etc. nrOrders for Books snd Subscriptions lo Newapspets and Periodical promptly at tended to. YAQUINA ROUTE. OREGON PACIFIC RAILROAD AND OREGON DEVELOPMENT . COS. STEAMSHIP LINE. (T. E. HOGG, Receiver.) i'15 mile anoBTi, 20 houu uta Tims Than by other route. Flrst-olae through 1'asMinfrer and Freiirht line from Port land and all points in the WILLAMETTE VALLEY To and fcoro ' San Francisco, Oal, For information apply to C. C. Hood, Act Uen'l Frt Pau Agt Oregon Pacifio K U Co. SAILING DATES. From Yanuioa. Willamette Valley, January ItHh Willamette Valley, " 27th From Sao Frauoisoo. Willamette Valley, January 23d Willamette Valley, " 81st This Company reserves ths right to change sailinir dates without nolle. FaasenR-ers from Portland and other Wil lamette valley points can make clots conneo tions with the trains of the Yaquina rout at Albany and Corvallis, and If destined to Han Francisco, should arrange to arrive at Yaquina the eveuins; before date of salllLg. Passenger and Freight rates the lowest W. ft wiimtkr, Corvallls, Or. Gen Frt k Pant Ag't, Oregon Development Cof 804 Montiromery Ht. Han tranclscn. GEO. K. CKAW, GENT, EUGENE. B. F. DORRIS, INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE ACENT. . I. HAVE SOME VERY DE31KABLB Farms, Improved and Unimproved Tow property for sale, on saty terms, Fropertj Rented and Bents Collected. The Insurance Compauiet I represent ar among the Oldest aud nintt Kellable, and io ths Psoun andEquiTASt.i adjustment of their one. Stand Sicond to Nous. 4 shar of your patronage Is solicited. Offloe-In City Hall. b. r. DORRia Northern Pacifio Railroad. PtrPl'LAR nOVTK FROM POIIT LAND TO THB KAT. TWO tras daily AUD No Change -of Can of Any Class No other line runs Pnlaoe Dining Cars lietween Portland and tho East, THE FINEST EMIGRANT SLEEPING OARS la the world ar run nn all throuxh trains, da and night, without change aud free of charge. PULLMAN PALACE SLEEPING CARS, The Finest, Best snd Safest In Use Any where. SEE THAT YOUR TICKETS BEAD via the Northern Pacific TX It - Portland Ticket Office No 2 Washington 8k Depot Tioket offine or lt and O, Portland. A. D. CHARLTON, Ass't Uen'l Pas Ag't. Northern Pacifio Railroad. 221 First St., Cor. Waahlugton, Portland, Or Sportsman's Eporium. HORN cV PAINE, Practical Gunsmiths Dealers in GUNS, MFLEfl, Fishing Tifkle and Baleriali, NewiPK Machine sind ftrrdlrsvl All Kind ' Nl I Repairing don in the aeatmt style aud war ranted. Guns Loaned & Ammunition Furnished Stnre on Wlllamtt tret. JAMES McCLAREN, CHOICE WINKS, LIQUOIW and CIGAR WUUmetU Street, bet 7th and 8th. Oiksitj Bookstore