THURSDAY, MARCH 0, 1905. THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. I THE STORY OV WlfftATJ SHINA SEEMS TO have re em tui v FIRST CANE CULTIVATOR. OrltfMllr k Prod! Wm UmpUf 0lr MiUllr-Tfc Art f ala Wm br a rtiuaalb 0atiT Vallaa. Ftw other commodities posseia t tar ter bibliography tbna sugar. Never UioIom the early history of euftr la wrapped la obsourttr, Forarl cbem tela called everything a "eugar" which luid a sweet taste, but the tons la It eclentlflc euo soon came to be re stricted to tho sweet principle la vege table and animal Juice. Only one of these, rone sugar, wua known a a pure ubstanee until Mil), when an ltaltao chemist UolateU th augur of milk and proved It Individuality. The original bubltnt 6f the sugar cane la not known, but It Mm to have been Oral cultl V11I11I In China ami to have extended thence to ludta and Arabia at a coin paratlvely late date, Auger I not men tioned by, either Oreclau or ltoman writer nutll the Ume of Nero, gad tug r candy wa the Sret u4 only apeclea known to the European anclenta. It was the original inauufacture of the uit, particularly Chlua, and found It way Into Europe a raw ugnr Old la after gs by way of India, Arubln and the Red aea. Hugar when first In- rrodncod Into every country wai used inly medtdnnlly. Aim oat all phyet- uuw. commencing with the Arab leochee, employed It ortglually to reo- Amm linnlaauill alul IMtiaMtlnir 1IUm11. J-lne grateful to the alck and recom l nndd It In comptalnU of the abeet I' nd lungs. f J ftist which prcMTveta applaa aad ptumi If WUI alao prwMrve llvr aa4 la if la an old adage. But toe uae of augai In alrupa and preaervea came later, while barely three ceuturUaj have etapaed alnce It bocntn an Ingredient ta the popular diet of Europe, The Venetlaua were the father of the European uar trade. Anterior t the yenr 11 W they both Imported coaaldcrable qiututltle of augar from India and plautad the can la the Island of fh-iiy. With the produce of thla la ft laud i.ml the Indian Imports the Ven ' Can carried on a grest trade and sup f cited all tbe markeU or Europe with .uls commodity. However, to exact , idste wheu augur wa llrst Introduced ttnto England la difficult to ascertain. I One of the earliest reference to augar ) in England I that of 100)0 pound of eugar being shipped to London la 1310 by one Lorcduuao, a merchant of Veutc. to be exchanged for wool. In the eame year there appears Id tbe ac counts of the chamberlain, of Scotland payment at the rate of la. Bftd. per pound for suimr. Writing In WHO. Chaucer mentions the sweetness ef sugar sllejtortrnlljr. ' The art of refining sugar and making what 1 called loaf augar was Invested lj a Venetian cltUen toward the end 4f the fifteenth century. Tbla seme art wa first practiced In England In 1M4, the adventurers being Thorns Qnrdlner and Kir William Chester, a suited by three Venetian. They were proprietor of the only two sugar house In England, but the profits aris ing from this coneern were at first small, as the augar refiner at Ant werp could supply the London market cheaper. Eventually war stopped the Intercourse between Ixmdou and Ant werp, and these two houses supplied all England for a space of twenty years and greatly enriched the proprietors, whose auccesa Induced many others to embsrk In the same trade, lu lMHS Sir Thomas Mlldmay tried to create a sugar trust On the pretext that frauds wsre prsctlced In refining sugsr hs pe titioned Elisabeth to grunt him a li vens for tbe exclusive right of refln I&3 sugar for a term of yenra, bnt the qun refused the request. Meanwhlfe the Spaniards bud become In their tarn thu great dlaaemlnators of the sugsr cultivation. The cane was planted by them In Madeira In 1420; It was curried to the West Indies In 150(1, and It spread over the occupied por tions of Houth America during tho six teenth century. Yet augar continued to be a costly luxury, an article sub ject to the control of the physician and confined to the npothecury's shop, till the Increasing use of tea and coffee In tho eighteenth century brought It Into the list of principal food staples. Sugar was believed to be sn antidote to alcohol. Bacon warmly supports tbe theory of tho power of sugar not only to render wine lens Intoxicating, being mixed therewith st the time of drinking It, but also when eaten after ward to remove the HI effects of too copious libations of nnmtngled wins. Falataff, It may be remembered, al ways took "sack and augar." A cu rious echo of thla theory cropped up at the I-aoison murder trial. The pris oner pleaded that the sugar brought Into the room to serve as t suitable vehicle for tbe aconltlne which he In tended to administer to bis victim waa really Introduced to counteract tbe In fluence of aome strong sherry tbey were drinking. The great Duke of Beaufort, who -was a heavy drinker, for forty years before hut death used TBr B4 BIs "Tommy. I've talked to yo until I'm hoarser "Don't blame ma for all of It, mamma. Ton know you talked t lot to papa before h left thla morning I" Tonkers Statesman. Oct. I "He's out good deal nights. Isn't bet "He was last night I won a lufundred from him.,,-Clvia4 Plain FAM OU 8"EWCl.f S VT WELL3 Son Who WaUfs Are Caar4 With Bfaal Mlraealvas Paw. Though there are hundreds of wells supposed to piiNfM-N iniiglcal power scattered all over Umftiind, the general public Is Iguorunt of their locality or the romantic stories connected with each one, There may bo a possible ex ception In the well of St Keyne, In Cornwall, for Houtbey has made It fa mous In a witty little poem. Tbe mag ic of 1U waters Is such that the hat band or wife who drinks first from It after leaving the altar will have the upper ..hand over the mate for their joint Uvea. The bride of whom Bouthey tells ns did not wait till after the mar rluire ceremony to pay a vUlt to the well, but took the precaution of taking a bottle with her to the church. Another well, In Monmouthshire, which bat a peculiar fascination for tho unmarried maidens it known It the "virtuous well." Vor generatlont the muldcns of that locality have ac credited It with marvelous powers In forecasting their futures. Tbey have only to drop a pebble Into Its water and count the resultant bubbles, for each bubble represent a month of watting for tbe day which will make them brides,' In order to propitiate tho genius which presides over tbe well It Is necetouiry to decorsta the bram bles which shads it with bits of wblts Cloth. i tTben there are tho so (tilled holy wells which have tunny mcdlcloal vir tues Such u one Ih St. Winifred's, at Holywell, which Is accredited with cures thst are almost miraculous. Tbe legend of Its origin bt t very pretty one. ' It II said that twelve centuries ego St,Wlnlfred, tbe winsome daugh ter of a Welhh chief, wa wooed by Prince Caradoc, a prince of 111 repute. She declined his persistent advances, and at last be killed ber In a fit of race. From the spot on which Bt Winifred's lireblood fell there gushed forth a stream of crystal watsr which hat worked miracle In ber nam for o many centuries. rrsctlcfllly ull the 111 to which the flesh I hel can be cured by 6ne or an other of these wells. 8t. Ninon's, In Cornwall, is xuld to restore lunatics to sanity, but the patient must be Im mersed In the water aud held there un til the breath bus nearly left bla body. This seems s heroic measure. But even this it not so severo as the treatment which must be endured If a madman It (o be cured at Llandegla well. In Wales, for after the victim It nearly drowned lie Is ti tinned Ilk a fowl and laid under tho communion tnble of the neighboring church for the night THE CHRYSANTHEMUM. Tbe first chrysanthemum show waa held In Norwich, England, In 1S29. The Philadelphia Horticultural tocb ty held the first chrysanthemum abow In the United Ktatc In 1S&1. Tbe first chrysanthemums brought to Europe were taken from China by skip- pom of tbe tea trading ships. After the chrysanthemum Is potted leave It for a little time In the shade. Then give It all the sun that Is possible. The chrysanthemum was Introduced Into nngluud -"00 years ago from Chi na. It was grown first In Holland aft er Its emigration. Tbe chrysanthemum hi one of the easiest of garden tlowers to grow, but It needs careful tending after It I brought Into the house In pot when the frost comes. The Chans at a Naaaa. How family nmnes change In tbe course of ninny years Is Illustrated by the conversion of "Botevlle" Into "Thy line." An English deed bearing date In the clotting days of the fifteenth century shows three brothers then flonrtshlug-John Itotevllo of Bote vile and Thomas and William Botevlle. The trio are distinguished from all oth er Botevlles by the explanation "of the Inne," or family residence, the title to which had come to their joint posses sion. John's grandson was known at Italph Botevlle-of-the-Inne, from which the transition to Ralph Thymic is easy. His descendants have been Tbynnet ever since. THE FIRST PRINTING. f the RarlUat BxaiupU at tk Art PrBrratlTc. The following are the earliest known examples of printing two Indulgence, printed usually on one side only of a tingle piece. Of vellum and two magnif icent Qlbles,. Of these one Is known to be the first complete book that ever was printed by the wonderful new In vention, which, as the early printers to often proudly atate In their colophdn. produced "letter without the aid of any tort of pen, whether of quill, of reed or of metal." The first piece of printing which Is actually dated It the famous Indul gence of Nicholas V. to such as should contribute money to aid the king of Cyprus against the Turks. This Indul gence baa the prluted year date 1454, and a copy In The Hague museum has the date "Not. 15" filled In with a pen. Mr. Duff tells at that "In the yean 14R4 and 1455 there waa a large de mand for these Indulgences, and seven editions were Issued. These may be divided Into two ats, tbe one contain ing thirty-one lines, tbe other thirty lines, the first dated example belong ing to the former." Thla thirty line edition hi thown to have been printed by Peter Bchoeffer d Gernshetm by the fact that tome of the Initial letters which occur In It ap pear in another later Indulgence of 1430, which It known to have come from hit press. Saturday Review. 1 FROLIC IN MEXICO jREAKINd THE PINATA DURING THE CHRI8TMA8 FESTIVAL. Hits MUta PravaklatJ PalM I taa Oraat tealal aa4 Pa a Maklaar Paa- ' tare at ta Maaea Orassla; aat Plllla- ta Oil. Christmas la Mexico la not tfl typ ical Christmas of cold and snow, and Ice, bnt on of bright, warm sunshine, cloudles blue skies, flower la profu sion, tree In full foliage, and a life of out of door. At least a week before Christmas In the principal streets of Mexico arches are erected from1 sidewalk to sidewalk, festooned with wreaths of flowers tad bunting la the national colorsred, white and green. Under the srehes booths are erected, and every toy man ufactured In Mexico If on sale. In every' Mexican house greet prep arations are made for what Is called tho "plnata." Every child begs and scrapes and saves the centavos for weeks and months ahead. Ail kinds of articles are made especially for thla ceremony, and every family vie with1 It friend and neighbor to have It plnata more beautiful and fanciful than any one else's. - ; - , Tbe plnata It really an earthenware utensil which Is In general use for cook ing. It It called in common parlance an olla and la of brown pottery tome thing like th old fashioned earthen war crocks used In the north before, ensmel ware became th fad. ' The plnataa are largo or email, at tbe inrs of the purchaser penults. Tbey are round, pot bellied and very large at tbe top. They are sold from door to door on the street and la the markets. Tbey coat only 10, 15 or 20 centavos, but the olla I tbe least expensive part of the gam. Tbe body of tbe olla for a woman 1 covered with tissue paper; then a crin kled paper dress is fashioned; then a bodice Is built up draped to represent a loose white waist, and above this Is placed a false face. Tbe balr Is mad with black paper, braided Into one long plait at tbe back, a tbe women wear their hair In Mexico. Bometlme a white tchusna headdresa Is made of th lace paper used by baktre and confec tioner. , A flower plnata la decorated with large paper flowers in every color of th tain bow. Red, white and green rib bons, forming long streamers, and sil ver and gold tinsel, glssa ball and col ored light all help to make tbe flower plnata very beautiful. Tbe possibilities for dressing these plnataa are endless. In , a large family tbe mother and daughters bare their own plnata. and great secrecy la maintained In the dec oration of the olla. It la th aim of each to devise at original a dressing for the plnata as possible, and It can be made a very extravagant ornament In tho families of wealthy Mexican the luxury of the plnata often mounts Into thousands. After tbe olla Is decorated to the tatt It I filled. Th filling consists of pea nuts, hsscl nuts, hard candles, like marble, snd all kinds of Mexican dulces. These dulces ar candled fruits, nut paste, etc. Chrlstmaa night the plnata are car rted In great atate Into tbe aala and suspended from the celling one at a time. All tbe relative of tbe family are present, and as cousins of tbe fifth snd sixth degree ar recognized and children are very numerous there la generally a large gathering. Tbey all alt very demurely on chairs ranged ta a row around the walls of the room. One person Is constituted master of ceremonies, tbe eldest son or daughter ef the house. He or she stand In th middle of tbe room. Near by is a Jar or umbrella stand filled with' aplsaco canes or sticks. When everything Is ready a child or grown person la se lected and called by name. She comes forward and Is blindfolded... men the run Degins. ' tho person blindfolded is turned round and round until she loses all knowledge of where tbe plnata bang. A cane la put In her bands, and she it told to hit the plnata and try to break It She It given- three chances. If she, falls to hit it she alta down amid laughter. and ridicule. If she hits It without breaking It she Is entitled to a small prize. And ao It goea on, one after another being called up, blindfolded and given a cane and three chances to break the plnata. Fluully one more fortunate than tbe rest succeeds In giving a hard enough blow. nud. crash, the plnata falls to the (.-rounds in hundreds of bits, and Its contents ore scattered far and wide. . ' " ' A wild scramble ensues. Every hotly rtpihes forward to (rather ns much of the splllcH contents ns possible. Tbe fortunate breaker of the plnata gets a handsome prize aud is awarded the sent of honor. He or she sits down and Is debarred from another trial at breaking another plnata. As soon as the confusion dies down and order Is somewhat restored another olla la huug up and the same routine goue through. So the fun continues until the Inst plna ta Is broken, and then the prizes are awarded. . r . . The plnata party la the great social and fun making feature of the Christ mas season. After th plnataa have been broken and a supper baa been served there follows dancing, or A trav eling company of Indiana from the mountains Is brought In to sing and dance In native. costume. Eva Th. Think twice before you speak, and even then nine times out of ten the world won't lose anything If you keep till. 8omrvllle Journal TRICKS OF THIEVES. Clara trhciao That All la th P avtrailoa af Crlae. "Thieve resort to clever method In order to get sway with tbe goods," said an old police oiHcer, "and I am firmly convinced that If the criminal of th world would devote tbe am amount of time, talent and patience to think ing out uplifting and advantageous schemes for humankind they would In t short while revolutionize the world la many oteful ways. Bnt somehow tbe mind of tbe criminal teemt to be tbaxper, If I may tay U, and bright er and quicker than the mind of tbe honest man. The fact may be ex plained la any number of ways. In tbe first puce, the criminal bat noth ing to do but think out some plan of getting something that doesn't be long to him. That la hit special busi ness. Quite naturally the plan be work out under those circumstance will often startle even the oldest men in tbo police departments of the coun try. Who would have thought of the wire ssw, a thing so small that It can bo slipped In between the layers of tbe shoe sole, but tbe criminal who found in It a ready, convenient and unfailing means of escape? He is constantly thinking up some new scheme. Here we find a man aud woman in a jewelry store. Tbe woman carries a parrot with ber. Tbe bird suddenly get away and beglna to flutter around In the store. Tbe Jeweler I afraid the parrot will break something. lie trie to catch It and succeeds after a short while. A . small purchase Is made. Tbe man and tbe woman leave. Result several hun dred dollars' worth of Jewelry gone. It waa stolen during the excitement over the bird. Good scheme, eh? Yet It Is but one out of a million worked by the clever degenerates of th world." New Orleans Time-Democrat Ta CVoraat la 9000 B. C. Mr. Arthur Evans, the Oxford arch aeologu:. who made so many Interest ing discoveries In the so called palace of Minos, In Crete, found in a subter ranean sanctuary certain very ancient email earthenware statues, represent ing some goddess and two of ber serv ants. Tbe dress of the figures is high ly modern. The goddess, we grieve to ay, wear a corset-just such a corset as contemporary man shyly wondere at In th window of a department store. Everybody's. A Jspaaena Paaallarlty. "When a Japanese servant Is rebuked or acolded," says a traveler, "be must smile like a Cheshire cat The eti quette in smiles Is very misleading at first I often used to think that Tail, my rikiha 'boy.' meant to be imperti neut when be insisted on smiling when I was angry at blm. But when he told me of the death of bis little child with a bunt of laughter I knew that thla was only one of the curious detail of etlquatt In .this topsy turvy land." Ta Tarker Real JTaata. The original name of tbe turkey wa oocoocoo. by which it waa known by the native Cherokee Indians. It It tap posed that our pilgrim fathers, roam big through the woods In search of game for their first Thanksgiving spread, heard the oocoocoo calling in the fuuiillnr tones of our domesticated fowl, "Turk. turk. turk." These first Yankee huntsmen, mistaking this frightened cry of the bird for Its real song, immediate)- bsbcled It "turkey." and turkey It Is to this day. Much more beautiful and musical was the Indian name o3co.k-3o, the notes pe culiar to ti e flot-K when sunning them selves lu perfect content on the river beeches. Sunset Magazine. He Tnlt! the Truth. An Irish geutkcuu had a splendid looking cow, but she kicked so much that It tool; ;i very bii;i time and It was almost Imp i;u'e ta milk her, so be sent her to a f t be sold and told bis herdsmau to be suro not to sell heV without letting tlie buyer know her faults. lie brought lio:r.e a large price which be bad got for It. His master was surprised and said, "Are you sure you told all about herT' "Bedad, I did. lr," said the herdsman. "He asked me whether she was a good milker. 'Be gorra, sir,' says I, 'it's you'd be tired milking her." ""Seventy Year of Irish Life." Th Dracaa Trae. The dragon tree (Dracaena draco), which yields the astringent gum resin called dragon's blood, is an old aettler of the Canary Islands. A veritable co lossus of this family once grew In tbe town of Orotava, Tenerife, which was eighty feet in circumference at the base, hollow Inside, with a stalrcese for visitors to ascend to the branch ing top of the truuk. Humboldt re marks that Its antiquity must have been greater than that of the pyra mids. This giant went down In a hurri cane In 18G7. Ha Sold' and Ltft. A lawyer had a horse that always stopped and refused to cross a certain bridge leading out of the city. No whipping, no urging, would induce blm to cross it so he advertised blm, "To be aold for no other reason than that the owner wants to get ont of town." A Strang Part. Soubrette Yes, the understudy aaya h used to have a very strong part on the stage. Comedian So he did. He used to be a scene shifter and lift tbe mountains and castles. Chicago News. Homa Traits. "Isn't your husband dyspeptic?" "I rather think he la. I know he al ways disagrees with his meals." New York Times. CLASSIFIED RATES: , ,;, .., First Insertion, One Cent a Word. One Week, Each Line, 30c. Two Weeks, Each Line, 45c. Oae Month, Each Line, 75c. '.-.1. .: As tori an Free Want Ads. ' Anyone Desiring a Situation can Insert an Advertisement in this Column of Three Lines Two Times Fre; of Charge. HELP WANTED. WANTED MEN TO LEARN B A li ber trade; 8 week complete; posi tions guaranteed; tuition earned while learning. Write ' for terms. Meier's Barber College, 644 Clay St, San Fran cisco. , WANTED LADY OR GENTLEMAN of fair education to travel for a firm of $250,000 capital. Salary 11072 per year and expenses; paid weekly. Ad dress with stamp, 3. A. Alexander, As toria, Ore. WANTED INSTALLMENT COL lector for merchandise accounts; good salary and expenses. AJdress. Manufacturer, P. O. Box 1027, Phila delphia, Pa. LOST LADY'S CRESCENT CLASP pin, set with small stone; finder will please return to this office and receive reward. MISCELLANEOUS. NOTICE FOR BIDS BIDS WILL be received for the foundation and basement of the New St. Mary's Hos pital; plans and specifications may be seen at tne office of the architect at St Mary's Hosptal; all blda to Be In on or before the 25th of this month; right reserved to reject any or all bids. March 6, 1905. SUTUATIONS WANTED. SITUATION WANTED AS COOK. and do general housework, by Jap anese. Inquire at Astorian office. WANTED BY HONEST YOUNG man, position as clerk in store; experience-!; can ' furnish good refer ences. J O. Astorian. MASSAGE. FINNISH MASSAGE AND SICK gymnastic cures rheumatism, nerv-j kinds ef eld Junk. Bought and aold. ousneas, headache and atemach tru-jHJ Tenth St ble. Given In most approved methods: . -by Ida and Onne Jurvo. 159 Flavel j ' -pajpunq jd 05 1 !3(BO St, Unlontown. 1 BTHX XT STTS HOJ SVZdVd TIO The New of doing the family washing the way which changes it from dreary drudgery to a cheerful household duty is by using -CONTtHTHmT" J. A. MONTGOMERY, Astoria, Or. The New ALASKAN WARE THE LATEST AND BEST. f FOR SALE UY W. C- LAWS I. CO. Kit. IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE HIM. figrSU Scow Bay Iron Rlsnafacturers cf Iron, Steel, Brass and Bronze Castings. General Foundrymen and Patternmakers. Absolutely firstclass work. Prices lowest Phonel245fa . Corner Eighteenth snd Fttnklta ADVERTISING. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS. NCTJBATOR FOR BALE 400 EGK33 capacity; also tnr -100 capacity brooder; ' flnt -class - condition. Ad dress A. Astorian Office. HORSE, BUGQT AND HARNESS for sale. Addreaa If. Artertan. ' " FOR 8ALE SHETLAND , PONEY, cart and harness. Apply to A. E. Al ien, Clatsop, Ore. ., v 160 ACRES OF" FIRST CXASS'tftf- ber bind for sale, In Pacific county, near Columbia, river. Address Box 190 Astoria, Ore. FOR SALE LOT t BLOCK 14. Adair's Astoria; for particulars writ to J. P. Miller, Onleda, Wash. FOR SALE STEAM TUG IS FIRST - class condition; terms reasonable: suitable for seining purpose. For particulars apply at this office. SCOW FOR SALE AT M'GREOOR'S mill, 22x64; would make a good fish scow. Inquire of Dan Gambel at mill. FOR SALE AT GASTON'S. FEED stable. No. 105 Fourteenth street; one Landie'g harness machine; one 20 horse power motor and belting; 1000 good sacks. . FOR RENT ROOMS. FOR RENT FOUR NICE SUNNY rooms. Inquire at Star theater. LOST. LOST ODD FELLOWS' GOLD PIN, three links with round band. Finder will be rewarded by leaving at Asto rian office. JUNK DEALERS. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR ALL Way "Standard" Laundry Trays Install a modern taadwd" Laundry in your home and there will be no water to carry, no leakage or damp floors, and no tubs to empty or upset. It will increase the selling value of your home. 8 Brass Works til I 124 1 uair