s»t » u fftrer r m a * b 'o ti.ln f »av» m, u id a b d o m e n w en d o**QO m y itttfl aud. in » T abula» adv »rtf t aunt» tu U lo o k th«J m a b o u t »brw» w e e d I am u o t cow*tlpaled > 111 pans Tabulât*, k br.v» n o occupation m d n u r sin g m y a i j •op»y a n d I am try) io fe e l* so m e beU«| .0 h a s b e e n «lek so) »nd na m e a s you lik» Mrs. IU ui U oiui u (Taring fro m head* 1» ¿ Irl. I cou ld nev« car or go Into i ♦ » placo w tlhuul ,> head ache and ito m a c h . 4 ot B ipan» Tabuh a u n t o f mlna ta k in g them f< o f th e atcm acl fo u n d su ch n th e ir u se uh» a to ta k e them A D V E R T IS E R S THE W EST SIUSLAW'3 ONLY PAPES. Y O U R HOM E PA PER S U P P O R T IT ‘Ì O PP O R TU N ITY 1 T h e A to r tn e a a o f L if e . G E N E R A L D IR E C T O R Y o — REG ULAR M A R G U E R IT E , W i l l m a k e ------- D A IL Y ta Priater..................... ■nay General D. R. Ify aaran-yeat J o . . « : : : :: : : su ffered w i t h 1 h ls head, com a n d c o m p la in « s to m a c h . Ho « e a t lik e ohUtjy«, b Second District. .J. ag o d o a n d w »cuBng A ttorney.. .G d id e a t d id n<| w ith him . He« an d o f a aaffrcuSE B B rL --------- th e testim o n ia ls In i r le d th e m . R1 pans Tap Q O U N 1 a c tu a lly cured m y yn ro d isa p p eared , b o w d ^ ^ ^ K = ^ = id h e n e v e r eom plalafW T ¡. R. Kincaid. r a red. chubb y-faced I a ttr ib u te t o Klpana T * * * * ............... ......... J. R. Hill th e y w ill b en efit a n y « . e> i f ta k e n a ccord in g a m l M l o n e r S H. D. Edwards ’ool Superintendent »eyor .................... o n e r i..................... ¡tice of Peace........... ■stable...................... . C IT Y * r - A / R B etw een D G E I I s r E C om e, i R . L iI N S . If you havaii.you H. H. B arrett, Prop’r, P'Z^S.w.-"V^!h ^BOW Stage Leaves Steamboat Landing on the Umpqua for Florence Saturdays. Returning, Stage Leaves Florence Sundays. Extra Trips When Necessary Charges Reasonable. , k n ° w I about M You a ll th e heavy Feeling / LQ F in the stomach, the ijZ 3x/'formation of gas, the THE STEAM ER iJ t /n a u s e a , sick headache, « /a n d general wectd’.ess of the whole body. \ You can’t have it a week ’< without y o u r b lo o d W ill carry freight and passengers being impure and your S T A G E L I N E . from Florence to San Francisco. nerves all exhausted. W ill also bring up freight E. B a n g s , P roprietor. »’ There’s just one remedy Stage leaves) Eugene for F lo r­ >' for you----- ... *«* ... *** EUGENE-FLORENCE F or further inform ation inquire ence daily except Sunday at (5 a. m. A rrives a t Florence th e day fol­ ..........E. U. Lee lowing at 10 a. m. W. W. Withers R eturning stage leaves Florence .A. 8. Patterson for Fugene daily except Sunday a t ,. ,D. P, Burton ’ " w . M. Miller 22 M arket St a t 2 p. in. A rrives in Eugene a t 6 ,.C. M. Collier San Francisco, California. p. m . the day following. G. W. Griftin C. H. Holden G. C. Cumpton O F F IC E R S ORTHERN Pacific, Ry isident Singlo fare - _ _ - 5.00. Round trip - - - - 0.00. Tickets for sale a t E. Bangs’ livery barn, Eugene, and a t O. W. H u rd ’s office in Florence. All through freight on the stage either way between Eugene aud Mapleton, will be charged at the rate of two cents per pound during the m onths of October, November, December, Jan u a ry , February, M arch and April, and one cent per pound during the months of May, June. Ju ly , A ugust and September. M. Morris Win Bernhardt L. Christensen D. W. Stibhens Trustees G S T A T R IP S . * " , i M " r e r ....................................... Baoùit. Pufclie Instruction J T R A V E L E R S ’ G U ID E TR A V E L E R S’ GUIDE STEAM ER lavo pernor........................... w d fetary of 8 ‘a te ............. >n (w ithout tu e » ) If ao ,e poor and the eçopoai forty-eight cent» to t i r w ) will bo seat for t There’s nothing new about it. Your grand­ parents took it. ’Twas an old Sarsaparilla before other sarsaparillas were known. It made the word “ Sarsaparilla” famous over the whole world. There’s no other sarsa­ parilla like it. In age and power to cure it’s “ The leader of them all.” sle e p I Oh, sle e p , t h . cvr-atr. k n o t of peace. T h e b a ilin g p la ce o f w it, th e b alm of w oe, The poor m an ’» w e a lth , th e priaoncr a release, The in d ifferen t ju d ge b etw een th e h igh anti low I W ith sh ie ld of proof sh ie ld m e from o u t the preoae Of th o se fierce d arts despair a t m e d o th th row ; Oh, m ake in roe thng» c iv il war» to ceaac; 1 w ill good tr ib u te p ay, if th o u do ao. Take th o u of m e sm ooth p illo w s , s w e e test b ed ; A cham ber d eaf to noise and b lin d to lig h t, A rosy garlan d and a w eary head, And if th e se th in g s, as b e in g th in e b y rig h t. H ove n o t th y h eavy grace th o u s h a ll in m e, L iv e lie r tlu u i elsew h ere, S te lla 's im a g e sec. —S ir P liilip Sidney. BEATRIC1A AND THE IMAGE VENDER. A Tale o f Italy and N ow York. What always strikes oue so forcibly Is, I think, the shortness of human life, compared with other works of nature. The longest life—how short It Is! And half of It one can hardly call life, being spent In sleep, which la not real existence. A French preacher I heard one« brought the shortness of life strongly before me by relutlug In hls sermon how a saint. In olden days, wishing to 'mpress on himself the rapidity of life’s •ace, when he cojue to years of dis­ section. placed 80 marbles in a glass jar, each marble to represent a year of human life, taking 80 years ns an ont- sido limit very far exceeding that. Then, taking another glass Jar, from the first one he took the number of murbles representing the years he had already passed, and placed them In the empty Jar, and then year by year ex­ tracted a marble from the other, till, more rapidly than he could have dreamed, the two Jars contained 40 marbles each. Then still more swiftly did each year seem to speed away, and what had so short a time before been the full Jar became the nearly empty one, till three, two and then only one marble remained, and life, which had looked so long at starting, had swiftly and silently melted away.—O. De la Warr. A G r o te sq u e C v e a tn r e The Maori Is not strictly beautiful, but be 1 b valiant and, let us trust, good. As for hls better half, in her native dress, with tattooed lips nnd chin and long, single eardrop of greenstone and with an appropriate background of tree fern or tl tree scrub, she Is savage and not unpleaslng. But In town, when her fancy has been permitted to riot • among the violent aniline dyes of the drapers’ cheap lots and she Is dressed to the bent of her barbaric taste, she la a hldeoslty. Begin at the ground and picture ■ pair of large, flat, brown feet and thick ankles appearing beneath a bad­ ly cut skirt of some howling design la checks. Above haugs a short and dis­ proportionately full Jacket of scarlet, purple, magenta or green velveteen. A neckerchief of yellow, blue or crimson encircles the neck and topping all ts a grotesque tattooed face half concealed by the flapping frills of a brilliant pink sunbonnet. No sketch of a Maori lady of respect- ability Is complete without a pips— frequently a heavy sliver mounted ons —worn In the mouth, the united effect of the pipes, the frilled bonnets and the gorgeous gowns being to bestow upon the worthy dames the appearance of animated Aunt Sallies. — Black* wood’s. ________________ years now he had molded piaster cuhib ■ aud Images and sold his wares on street corners and hourded the meager « gnin to he able to get hack to hls Bea- 1 (1.00 a bottle. All d r e n b t s . P u llm a n trlcla. On the hanks of the Tiber he Ayer’s Pills cure constipation. had left her picking gropes with the I “ A f t e r s u f f e r in g t e r r ib ly I w a s men and girls In the Roman vineyards, i in d u c e d t o t r y y o u r S a r s a p a r illa . I t o o k t h r e e b o t t l e s a n d n o w f e e l l ik e and he had come to seek an El Dorado I N O T A R IE S . a n e w m a n . I w o u ld a d v i s e a ll m y before he claimed her as hls bride. f o llo w c r e a t u r e , t o t r y t h ia m e d ic in e , D ininej C a rs f o r i t h a s e to o d t h e Dost o f t im e a n d For one long, sad year of separation i t s c u r a t i v e p o w e r c a n n o t b e ex­ F. A A. M. Florence A. R. BUTTOLPH, she wrote to him. She upbraided him T o u ris t c e lle d .” I. D G o od , I Rsguler communie J a n . 3 0 ,1 8 9 9 . B r o w n to w n , V a . for hls slowness In winning the wealth 1 S leep in g C a rs i i fodrth Saturdays in they had dreamed of, she scolded him W r tta t h t D o c t o r . E. W. 8T. RAUL I f you h a v e a n y c o m p la in t w h a te v e r for only lukewarm affection, sh$ a n d dealro th e b e st m ed ic a l a fitto e y ou B, M a w , Secretary wounded hls sensitive soul with re- 1 MINNEAPOLIS c a n p o a sib ly r e co iv e , w r ite th e d o cto r fr e e ly . Y ou w ill r e c e iv e a p rom p t r e ­ peated attacks on hls loynlty and love, p ly , w ith o u t c o s t. A d d ress, DULUTH DR. J . C. A Y E R , Low ell, M ass. Perpetua Lodge, No. 131, and gradually these criticisms, emanat­ ry- 1st and 3d Tuesdays FARGO ing from the restless, pnsslonate soul Members and visiting M A R IO N M O R R IS - QRAND FORKS of the young girl, tender, but selfish, iod standing are cordially giving much, hut demanding more, CROOKSTON ¡nd. A. O. F unkb , M. W. crushed the ardent spirit of the young Recorder. PARLOR TO N SO R IA L Italian, and he drew hls love within the recesses of hls heart and brooded O R E G O N , F. Heceta Lodge No. Ill,m eets over It, nnd ceased to pour out tho ^Wednesday evening in Lodge soul’s desires In the Iljtle message Mot • Question o f O w a o r S k t * . T I C K E T S Iference, Oregon. Brothers in T H R O U G H which he sent occasionally across the President Eliot of Harvard told lb * ■tiding invited to attend. P p o t r i e t o i : water. story at a dinner: E. A. E vans , N. G. Finally, when she believed her love CHICACO “A friend of mine, a college pro­ too little appreciated, she ceased alto­ fessor, went Into a crowded restaurant WASHINGTON gether to write. Pietro had been wait­ In New York city for luncheon one hot PHILADELPHIA ing nnd watching and counting the day last summer. The negro In charge 0. Ol?F. Maple Lodge No., 15 Shaving and Haircutting neatly days for the letter which she owed. of the big corridor where tbs hat , »»a«a Thursday evening in Of Eugene, Oregon NEW YORK Weeks went by, then months, and no shelves stood wus an Intelligent look­ yla’stta ll, Mapleton. Oregon, and promptly done. BOSTON AND ALL word came to lighten hls labors and hls ing fellow, and hls bow and smile wars ra ia good standing invited to Razor Honing and Scissors Grind­ loneliness. The first sharp pain of dis­ POINTS EA8T and SOUTH not of the obsequious, stupid kind so T. J. N sbly , appointment gave way to n long, dull, often affected by colored waiters and F o r in fo r m a tio n , t im e c a r d » , m a p » a n d t ic k e t s ing a specialty. >MO S .ls i.P i, Sec. ceaseless agony that filled hls heart doormen In hotels. He took my friend*« e t c . , c a l l o n o r w r it e to the brim and made It throb wildly hat and gave no check for It In return. nt times within the tender walls. “Oh, R. M cM U HPHEY, An hour later, when the professor O O F Irene Encampment, No. 42, beloved Beatrlcla.” he would cry out came out of the dining room, the negro ’ meats in I. O.O. F. hall in Florence G e u e r a l A g e n t . R o o m » 2 a n d 4, S h e l t o n B l o c k , A G eneral B anking Business In the wakeful watches of the long EU G EN E, ORUGON. s second and fourth Friday of each glanced nt him In a comprehenslvs Transacted on Favorable Terms Washington Street, Florence, Oregon. i night, ‘‘have you forgotten your »nttLiM embers of thia degree ure way, turned to the shelves and handed A. D C H A r t L T O N , rdlaMyrn vited to attend. | Pietro?’’ him lila hnt. A s s is ta n t G en er a l P a sse n g e r A g e n t, D r a ft» I s s u e d o n t h e p r i n c ip a l c i t i e s o f t h e S. J. S eymour , O. P. The plaster Venuses and Mercurys “My friend Is a man who prides him­ 255 M o r r is o n S t ., C o r ., 3d. U n it e d S ta te » a n d f o r e i g n c o u n t r ie s . I I . . Scribe. and Sacred Marys stood side by side self on hls powers of observation, and P o r tla n d , O r. I n t e r e s t a l lo w e d o n D e m a n d C e r t if ic a t e » o f along the shelves of hls shop, gazing the negro’s ability to remember to O. O^F.—Sunset Rebekah Lodge No. down on him from their clnsslc gran- D e p o s i t w h e n l e f t s t a t e d p e r io d . whom each article of clothing belonged . 114. meets m Odd Fellows’ hall, , dear with cold, unpltylng eyes. Boine- C o l l e c t io n s r e c e i v e o u r p r o m p t a t t e n t i o n . struck him as being something very lonWt. th® second and fourth Thurs- I times at night he thought that he saw ■y evenings in each month. wonderful. C it y a n d C o u n t y W a r r a n ts b o u g h t . thy m oTpm ont o f tlio f f v ou h a v e n 't a h the Imperious Milo shake her head dis­ K atherine B rund , N. G. “ ‘IIow did you know this was my r w ill b»’. K eep y o u r CASSIDY & SON - - Proprietors bow» ’a every day, W . E. BROW N, D . A . P A IN E , , 1:» th o »hapo c f viu- dainfully when he cried aloud. Mer­ bowelo open, and bo F red 0. P kil , Sec. hnt?’ he asked. ijtiOHs, Tho »m ootti­ P r e s id e n t. V ic e P r e s i d e n t . le n t pliyM e« v pHJ I" F lo re n o s , O re g o n . cury sneered, nnd a dimpled Cupid’s » tt, oaiiloxt, |»c “ ‘I didn’t know cle a r and d e a n w t' F . W . O SBU RN, W .W . BR O W N , O. 0. F.—Mignon Lodge No. 105, head, by Praxiteles, broke Into amused | ply. CANDY C a s h ie r . A s s ' t C a s h ie r . • Befcekah Degree, meets in Meyer & mirth. Once In hls grief he knelt he- I “ ‘Then why did C A T H A R T IC Tables furnished hvith all th e vie’« Ball, Mapleton, the 1st and 3rd fore a Mary, which be bad himself j the professor persisted. iursday evenings in each month. molded that very day, and he prayed delicacies of tlie season. Give us “ ’Because you gave It to me, sab.' M attie O. H udson , N. G. wildly and despairingly, nnd, as If in —Boston Journal. bs . C. B ean , Sec. a call. compassion. It seemed to him that the | sacred Ups of the Image moved to In­ The Connie«» of Ayr. ie is one ot tl tercede. R C H D IR E C T O R Y At a dnnee In the country a glided He lived alone. Others In “Little youth from town was complaining that is country, anC. Italy” sought to know him and to draw there was nobody fit to dunce with. » at rates w K r e SBYTERIAN’.CHURCH,Florence, i E A T ’ E M LIP him out of ldniself. He was a hand­ “Shall I Introduce you to that young P lea sa n t, P a la ta b le , P o tcr Oregon. On every Sabbath in each I some youth, perhaps 22 yenrs of age, lady over there?” asked hls hostess. N over H icken, W eaken, or U ty. I t is fine,onth ,"Bnnday-8cbool at 10 a. in. and T w e n tv -th re e per box. W rite fo r t r v o a und many of the Amerlcau bom young “She Is the daughter of the Countess of jienltli. Address unior Budeavor Society at 2: 30 p. m. M ile s W e s t BTRIlMNd BBHKDY C M M Y . | Italian girls cast amorous glances at Ayr.” ts tlie names oQ the Bemud and Fourth Sabbaths of him. He did not even notice them. He Delighted, the young man nssented, „ ush month, ireaching „ services at 11 a. | looked far beyond l hem and saw a and, after waltzing with the fair scion T u t. A cordial invitation to these services T h e S c h e m e F a ile d . little dark eyed girl, with a clear, of a noble house, ventured to ask after extended to all. A. M ioht . In “Under Three Flags In Cuba,” by her mother,' the Countess of Ayr. Preacher in charge. white, transparent skin, more beautiful W A N T E D .—C a p a b le , r e li a b l e p e r s o n In e v e r y Musgrave, the author tells how a than th« day—n cam » with but the “My father, you mean," said the girl. c o u n t v t o r e p r e s e n t larire c o m p a n y o f s o li d scheme was hatched to capture tho no­ B offici}, “No, no. no,” said the bewildered f in a n c i a l, r e p u t a t io n : tW!C s a la r y p e r y e a r , p a y a ­ merest blush of pink. “He no goodn; he no gooda,” shouted torious General Weyler: b le w e e k l y ; »3 p e r d a y a b s o l u t e l y » o r e a n d a l l youth. “I was asking after your moth­ ATTORNEYS General Weyler walked nightly down er, the Countess of Ayr." e x p e n s e » ; s t r a la h t . b o n a fid e , d e f in i t e s a la r y , n o the mob of merrymakers, tossing hack c o m m i s s i o n : s a la r y p a id e a c h S a t u r d a y a m i e x ­ their heads In unbridled, mocking the I’rado with ouly an aid aud three “Yes,” was the reply, “but that's my p e n s e m o n e y a d v a n c e . l e a c h w e e k . 8 T A N D A R D laughter. They would look at one an­ I secret police sauntering behind. Some father.” C. W OODCOCK, M oney Saved Cubans often debated with me the H O U S E , 334 D e a r b o r n S t ., C hicaoo . 41-14 other when he passed silently, nnd Utterly at a Ions, the young man then raise their eyebrows significantly feasibility of seizing him there one rnahed off In aeareh of hls hostess and By tobacco SPIT and smile with knowing, conclusive night dragging blm down the steps to said the girl she had made him dnnes P a tro n iz in g it F T ) O 1 \! and S M O K E smiles os they touched their foreheads the Punta beach and shipping him with was “quite mad; told him the 1 . I ...- H ili- Your Life away I r a n t c m r a u r a . a K r s j v ? down the eoast to Gomez, to be held as Countess of Ayr was her father.” O regon e w i n g M a c h in e » w e m a n u f a c t u r e a n d t h e ir with a Unger. Y o u c a n b e c u r e d o f a n y fo rm o f to b a c co u s in g nssegsed h j ti p r ic e s b e fo re y o u p u r c h a se a n y o th e r . Pietro scarcely knew of their pres­ a hostage for all Cuban prisoners. This e a s i l y , b e m a d e w e l l, s tr o n g , m a g n e t i c , f u ll o f “So he Is." answered the Indy of the i m i 7 a n d S M c L a r e n ’» B u il d in g , - T O - 8 A O , ence. He used to hear their uproarious would have been easy In the darkness house. “Let me introduce yon to him. in tlo n g iv e n t o c o lle c t io n s a n d pro- trena, THE HEW HOKE SEWINS MACHINE CO., t n h e a w t l m if e a k s e n s d w v ig e a o k r b m y e t n a k s i t n r g o n g M . O M a n y _ I S 'i with a launch and a tug In the oiling laughter, but It did uot attract him. te n p o u n d s in t e n d a y s . O v e r R O O t O O O O llA I fO E , M A SH . Mr. So-and-so, Mr. Smith, the county 'or them,” C E N T R A L LY LOCATED He had no respect for them. Many that could race the obsolete boats In surveyor.”—London Chronicle. I Union Snnare, N. » . C hleseo, HL Zt- L ot !«. N o - c u r e d . A ll d r u g g is t s . C u re g u a r a n t e e d . H ook- le t a n d a d v l c . I K 1!E . A d d ress S T E R L IN G pal!*«. T e n s . San Vraneisen. Oal. A tlanta, Oa. were but provincial horn, and he. why. the harbor. R E M E D Y C O ., C h ic a g o o r N e w Y o r k . 437 F R E E S A M P L E ROOM S. 5. H . H O L D E N , We worked perslseutly In planning M a a e l e . off 4 h e M o o t » . he. I’lctro Gonzales, hud been horn In 3 R N E Y - A.T - U j - A / W , An plastic play of the muscle« of th« Rome Itself, above the shop where this. The gunrds were to be overpow- m d U. S. L a ñ o C o m m is s io s íb . Gonzales the elder had chiseled the , cred by sudden onslaught from the mouth la necessary, trot only for dis­ head* of prelates of the Vatican from rear, the geueral seized, piuloned and tinct utteran a y e a r , s u r e p a y . H o n e s t y m o r e I b a n e x p e r ! had loved art and labored for It In the at the last and Just as another boat tho muscles of the mouth are In nor­ SO YEARS* e u e e r e q u ir e d . O u r r e f e r e n c e , a n y t w n k i n a n H O L L E N B E C K B R O S. A B R IS T O W , P s o r s . mal tension, the line cf the mouth Is c it y . E n c lo s e s e lf a d d r e s s e d » -a m p -a l e n v e lo p « pure Joy of creating. Money to him was offered Weyler was recalled. EXPERIENCE M a n u f a c tu r e r s , T h ir d F lo o r , 3 3 | D e a r b o r n Ht waving and beautiful. In singing and was nothing. He did not know how to RATES $1.00 to $2.00 PER DAY C h ic a g o . npeaklng. ns well as In repose, all un­ H I* L 'B ffr l.B d ly S n a g e a t l o n . | earn It well, or to keep It. Art wan Augustus Van Wyck of New York due tension of the muscles must bs I everything. lie deemed It worth the EUGENE. OREGON, l sacrifice of hls son. whom he forced to was an able sod popular member of gunrdeil against, else the mouth may ’ i go to America In order to extract a tor- the supreme court bench. Though al­ assume s forced and strained expres­ ways dignified when presiding In court, sion. ’ ' tune from the new world. ’ J But Pietro was beginning to learn he occasionally waived the rule by a ffffer F t « « » » . I that fortunes are slow lu coming, even little quiet fun. A pompous and loud 8hs— I can’t understand what he i J In young, thriving provinces, and hls voiced lawyer ross one morning lu In her. Her face Is decidedly plain art was more than tho art of chiseled chambers. He—Yes. but then the figure she ¡C aveats s n d T r a d » M a rk s o b t x ln - d a n d a'.l P a t “This, If the court please. Is a curi­ ’ marbles or of plaster easts. Ills love made up for all the— a o t h a k n -O T o n ' o r t i d f- r M o d e r a t e F e e s . ous case. I am retained In It”— Here 1 was hls ambition. He placed It above ' S e n d m o d e l, d r w r in g o r p h o t o . W e a d v i a » l She—Figure! Why. ahe’» P* e a t r t t a b l a f f r e e o f e h i r j e . On r f e e a n t d a « h t • hls art, above hl* duty. al»ove life Itself. he paused for a word. There was a scrawny. She hasn’t any figure I n d e n t I s s e c n m l . A P r i e p h l e t 'H o » t o O b • And the object had only grown to mock painful silence, ended by the mag- ' u l a P » U n U .” w t t ll e o » t i n t h e V» r H e-Y ou ’re mistaken. She k him for hls devotion. iwaely iBaserated weekly. Ie an<1 the first ons Is a A -P h lla ÌÌì nTs Often a* lie sauntered along the city F H T IR T L A W T IR » . C. A. SNOW & CO uBrHtKQ. W A S H IN G T O N , D. C. streets, absorbed lu thoughts of her, he John I. Butterfield ......... 0 . W. Hurd . . . .G. C. Cumpton Notary Pdblic, Surveyor 'ARY PUBLIC EUGENE Loan s Savings Bank F* Elk Prairie Hotel ON E U G E N E AND FLORENCE S TA G E RO UTE. A. Attorney at Law, .a, for - *4* PATENTS TION fle flmtrkan. PATENTS H.B.WILLSOHÄCO I