THE ROSEBURG REVIEW Has Pushed to the Front and Has the Largest Circulation and Is acknowledged to be the Best Newspaper Ever Published in Douglas count. Subscribe Now. One Year - - . - - - - - - 2 00 Six Months - - - - - 1 23 GESEEAL DIEECTOBY. Proveb Clevelasd. ........ president. Thos. F. Bayard Secretory of State Dasiel T. Massing, Secretary of Treasury. 4j. Q. C. LamAB .Secretary ot the interior. Wm. C. EsdIcott. . . .Secretary o ar W. T . Vivas .i . . . -. .Post Master General . A. H. Garland. .". ..... Attorney General. MoRRisoS R. Waite. ....... .Chief Justice. STATE OF O8EG0N- J. J. Dolph a:::::::::: U. S. Senators. T. H. Mitchell RiKr.KTt Heemams Congressman. Sylvester Pesnoyer. . . Governor. Geo. W. McBride. .'. . .Secretary of State. G. V. Webb State Treasurer. E. B. McELBOY Supt. Pub. Instruction. Frank Baker.. V. State Printer. R. S. Strahan ) " , Wm. P. Lord, ....Supremo Judges. W W Thayeb i SECOND JUDICIAL DISTRICT. n T .Tndffi. . K. . BK.V J. W- Uamiltox...-Prosecuting Attorney. DOUGLAS COUNTY. J. H. Snci-E, John Emmitt, j W.F. Benjamin ) P. P. Palmer, f Jas. Bluhdrll, i .. . Senators. ..Itepres ntatives. II. Mckenzie. J , TurtK R. Sheridan ..-.--.-j ' le - - , t?i.. tr BEN. C. AGEE ...ouw.u. D S West i Treasurer. G. T. Russell School Superintendent. Jas. A. Sterling Assessor. j 9. FiTZHUen County Judge. J. Hall, C. A. McGke Commissioners. N. E. BRITT Surveyor. Dr. S. S. Marsters. Coroner. Tiios. Smith Sceep Inspector. TRECISC r officers: T. L. Gannon justices. I as. IIarpham J Peter Junger Constable CITY OF HOSEBUUU II. C Stantos, t John Rast, I J. P. Sheridan, O L. Willis, P. Benedict. ' '" - ' , T. Ford Recorder. Jons Howard Marshal. Will H. Fisher Treasurer. TJ. S. LAND OFFICE ROSEBURG, Chas. W. Johkstox Register. A. C.Jones Receiver SIGNAL SERVICE. B. S. Paoce....... Observer. PROFESSIONAL- L K. LANE, T ANE & LANE, JOilX LANE c U Attorneys at Law. Main street, opposite Cosmopolitan Hotel. J.c FULLERTON, Attorney at Law. Office in Marks' brick, np stairs. 11. G. HUNTER M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. CAXYOXVILLE OREGON K. L. MILLER, M D Surgeon. Homoeopathic Pbjbician. Offiice up stairs in the old Sheridan Brick, on Jackson Street, Roseburg, Oregon. Chronic diseases a special ity. Dr. THOMAS GRAHAM, A GRADUATE Of ths University t.f P. at Philadelphia and of the ROYAL COLLEGE OF SURGEONS, and KOAL ALLEGE OF PHYSICIANS, LONDON ENGLAND has located for the practice of his protesrion in TjrmFVttnir; OREGON. Office and residence, Wwliin-toji street opposite the Catholic Church F. G. (EHME, M. D. (Pronounced Ama.) HOMOEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN & Graduate Of The UNIVERSITY Of Leipzig Germany. Office & Residence at the house of Geo. W. Day, near R. R. track, Rose burg. Dr. C- A- BONHAM RESIDENT DENTIST Roseburg - - - - Or rmce overhead in Marks' huildinar. Mv re put a tion as a Dentist U based on he merits of my work. Prices reasonaoie ana 10 ui n """- 13TG0LD FILLING A SPECIALTY." The Leading DRUG HOUSE W. S. Hamilton. Successor lo S. Hamilton.l Roseburg - - - Oregon. EDWARD J PAGE, SURGEON AND PHYSICIAN, OAKLAND Special attention ' OREGON, diseases of women. THE OLD RELIABLE f Established in 1867, Jacob Bittzer VOL. XII. J. JASKULEK. . Practical Watth maker, Jeweler and Optician. ALL WORK WAUUAXTED. Dealer in Watches, Clock?, Jewelry, Spectacles and Kyeglassea. A , FULL LINK OF CI'JARS, TOBACCO & t'A.N'CY UOODa, HMiE OSLY RELIABLE OPTOMEU'IN TOWN X tor the pruper adjustment of Spectacles. Depot of tli Coituiuo Brazilian Pebble Spectacles Mitl Eyo glasses. Office in Hamilton's L'ricklilurk. NEW YORK LUMBE1 & Wood Yard iiu To 31 K. Howell's East side of track one block south of depot is where you will find number one dry lumber, Sugar pine, Cedar, Fir, and all Dimcntion lumber for buildings,, saved ami' tbdved iedar shingles, Sash Doors, ' Blinds, Screen Doors, Mouldings, Wall and Stair railings, Balusters, Brackets, Newel posts, Ceilinsr, Rustic, Flooring, and all kinds of Finishing lumber, sawed and split Cedar posts, 1 inch plank sawed expressly for sidewalks. I represent the Sugar Pine Door & Lumber Co. of Grant's Pass Or. which from personal inspection I believe to oe the finest establishment on the Pa cific coast, it employes seventy men. The Proprietors and Overseers are all I Ectstci n men and experts in the busi Trustees. ! ness, the machinery is new and put j up in the best manner, and all under srtict discipline and order. I heir i work is all done by number one me- chanics and is equal to any work of the kind done m New Yoik or the East. Fruit boxes, Picket fences and Gates complete. 1 also represent a number one mill at Yoncolla where I have sawed all Dimcntion lumber to order on short notice. All guaranteed as represented or no sale. Call and see stock and prices before purchasing. Stove wood constantly on hand at HARD TIME PRICES. OVERLAND TO CALIFORNIA VIA OREGON AND CALIFORNIA R. R. And Connections THE MT. ShASTA ROUTE. Cliise connections made at Ashland jvitn stascs of I the California, Oregon & Idaho Stage Company Only SiO Miles ofSstagiug Time ?etwcea Roseburg and San Francisco, . 29 hours. CALimasiA KxrHRsa ikai.vs daily. South , Frjm May 1, 1S87. North. ur. Leave Leave Arrive Portland Roseuurx Ashland Arrive j 10: 40 A. Leave 1 12:50 A. Leave 1 6:00 r. 1:4S A. M. 8:30 A. x. PULMAN BUFFET SLEEPEES. Daily between Portlaud and Ashland. The 0. aud C. R. R. Ferry makes connection with all 1 tbe regular trains tpi Last aide Di v. from lootof r at. West Side Division BETWEEN PORTLAND & CORVALLIS MAIL TRAIN DAILY (KXtRPT Sl'SDAY. LEAVE. I ARRIVE. Portland 7.30 A. M. C.rvallis 12.2.". P.M. Corvallis 1.30 P. M. Portland 0.15 P. M. At Albany and Corvallis connect with trains of Oregon Pacific for Yaquiua Bay. BXl'RESS TRAIN PAILY (KXCErT Sl'SDAY.) LEAVE. ARRIVE. McMinnvillc.. 8.00 P. M. Portland 9.00 A. M. Portland 4.50 P. M. McMinnvillc. . . .3. 13 A. M. For full information regarding rates, map?, etc., call on company's acnt. R. KOEHLER, E.' P. ROGERS. Manager. G. F. & Pass Agent. TVT.eaG UVL'exrK-et' McGregor's old staud, Jackson Street : Roseburg. W. 15. Koln-cr, & Co HICHEST MARKET PRICE PAID FOR HIDES. THIS MARKET is always supplied with the choicest quality of FKKSa ATS Of all kinds, including beef, pork, veal and mutton: also, corn beef, sausage, lard, etc. TI.e most latorable inducements offered to patrons, and no effort will be spared toward giving satisfaction. ( BLACKSMITH AND WHEELWRIGHT B0WEN BROS. Having dissolved the copartnership exist ing between Bunnell & Bowen Bros, and are uovr prepared to do all work in the line in a . WORKMANLIKE MANNER, AND AT REASONABLE KATES. CITY DRAYTNG DONE WITH DISPATCH. ('ALL ON JOS. CARLOS. DR. JORDAN'S JlusKUM of Anatomy.' 751 MARKET STREET SAN FRANCISCO. t O AND LEAKS HOW TO AVOID T disease, aud how wonderful! you are made. Private olHcc, 211 Geary Street Consultation on lost manhood and all diseases of men. Send for Books. This paper is kept on file at E. C. Dake s advertising agency, 64 and 65 Merchants' Ex change, San Francisco, Cal., where contracts for advertising can be made for it. .Ros HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS- BilLEYS HOTEL Oakland, Oregon. Board Jl per Day; Single Meals, 25 cents, i3TTUU house has lately changed hands and la orouglilj-, renovated and refurnished. "The travel public will Ond the best ui accommodations No Oliiiiumeu Kmploycd. SMim BAILEY. DEPOT HOTEL, . OAKLAND, OCEGOX. RiclmiHl Thomas, Prop. .First ClaK!3 SLEEPING ACCOMODATIONS. AND THE Table supplied with the Best the Market afords Hotel a he Depot of the Railroad. Central Hotel ! KOSEHUKG, OREGON, OPPOSITE CABLOX'S LIVERY STABLE. Boar. arijd Lodging per day . $i.oo .... 5-oo " r' " " week... " ithout Lodging 4.00 Meala, 25 cents, Lodging, 25 cents Thorough satisfaction is promised to travel crsand the rrnblic generally. MRS. E. GARRISON, Prop. No Chinese employed , NOTICE. ALL WHOM IT MAY CON- ryo cern that I have appointed D. W. Steams of Calapooia Precinct, Inspec tor of Slock for said Precinct, Post office address, Oakland. Also Ralph Smith of Wilbur Precinct, Postoffice ; address, Wilbur and others will be added as parties interested make their desires known to fne. TnOS. SMITH Inspector of Stock for Douglas Co. Or. Wilbur, Or, April 13th, 1887. MOORE'S RESTAIRANT. (rrinclaal Business Street.) X4oSt;llll5'5 lioyoiA MEALS 25 CENTS LODGING 25 CENTS We Keep tho Kest tho Market Affords. CIVIL BEED STORE V. I.. ARRINGTON, DEALER IN Dry Goods Grocsics etc All Kinds of Produce Taken in Exchange CIVIL BEND, DOUO. CO , OREGON. NEW STORE AT J IB. 1, A I UK OR. if 1 would respectfully inform .the public that he has on hand a flue assortment of Dry Ciioods, Groceries, licauy-Madc Clothing and in fact everything usually kept at a fust-class store. Give him a can. Goods at Low Prices. All kinds of Troduc Taken in Exchange for Goods. t3All orders promptly attended to. MRS. S. A. HITCIIIXSOX, MILLINERY STORE! Oakland, Oregon. V ADIES WILL FiTD M STOCK LARGE AJiD Complete. Trices moderate. Gi-ra Mn Call. Mes. S. A. Hutchinson. 1 Malaussene and Clements New Furniture Store IN FLOED'S OLD STORE. : A full line of first class Furniture. i Anvfln'n-f vpiialrftd or made to order. CALL IXSTAXTER. INSURANCE. CO TO Humphrey & Flint. And get your property insured, for they represent reliable companies, such as the AIIGL0 IIEVADA ! Of California And LONDON ASSURANCE CORPORATION Humphrey k Flint - i.-is .; :::w'-t lit bur ROSEBURG, -.OKEPOIBIDAY; JULY, 22. 1881 Fl 8 H It. 411'vN Hliii'1 . 1 u a - THE DAILY , is the best morning journal publUlicJ on the . Pacific Coast. THE WEEKLY -' . . . i llic most complete Weekly. It Iwi the lar . gest circulation. Paily one year ...... $6.00 Weekly" " :. $'SO Remittances U Examiuer Publisliiu Co. San Francisco fa I. - Ktliplc copy tint lite. . EsUblUbed 1Sj2.) ' A. ROBERTS, Corner First and Alder Street Portfand.-Or. THE LEADING . OLOTHtiR. HOTTER AND OP, OREGON.. c. w. KNOWLES, ST. CHARLES HOTEL, EUROPEAN PLAN.) C. W KNOWLES, Proprietor. FIRST CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. Good Restaurant Connected With The House Fire-proof Brick Building ISO Rooms. In the Center of the City COU. FRONT AND MORRISON STS., PORTLAND W- F- BENJAMIN REAL KSTATi:, INSURANCE, Transferring, Collecting and Purchasing Agent. Correspondence . Solicited. H. PAIJKY. Merchant Tailor. in the Red Front, next door to A. C. Marks Store. Kepairs and Alterations neatly done. Y Homeopathic and Patent Mediciiu&, I Perfumes, Satchct powder, Combs, Toilet articles, etc, etc; Stationery, ink spectacles, d usters, memoranda and I school books, mucilage, pencil, erasors, shoulder braees, sponges, trusses, drug gist sundries, etc. DKUG--S And chemicals, paints, oils and var nishes, window glass and putty, wall paper, cement, a full line of brushes. Perscriptions and family receipts care fully compounded. All of whicb, and much more can be found at our STOKE. MILLWOOD MILLS OX HUBBARD CREEK. CLARKE & RAKER, Proprietors. We are now prepared to furuiuh lumber o the best quality in quantities to Buit the purchasers, al-aytl having on hand the largest stock of any mil in Douglas County. Wc will furnish lumber at our mill at the following PRICES. Ho-1 roujfh lumber- 8 to $10 M No, I flooring, 6 inch D & M 10 M I No. 1 flooring, 4 inch D & M $18 M No. 1 finishing lumber SIC M CLARKE & BAKER. -Brewster's Patent Rein Bolder. Your lines are where you put under Horses' leei. one brtiiv v. J " 6 days, one dealer sold 6 doz. in 16 days. Samples worth 11.60 rocs. Write for terms. E. E. BREWSTER, Holly, Mich. ivtriili! MABSTEBS Hold on There, WhereareyouGoing? T am Going Y oung Wish to Announce that they Ms).rriwaie Stoves Tinware And are Prepared SUCH BARGAINS AS tSf.S - '-::- .RevieWo - h mxm ftbsbtutely Pure This powder never varies. A marvel of purity trength and who.esonieness. Moro economical than tbe ordinary kinds, and cannot be Sold in com petition with the multitude of low test, short weixht alum or phosphate powders. Sold ouly in cans. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 100 WaU St. N. Y. H. C. Stanton I DEALER IN STAPLE DRV GOODS! -OF- THE .BEST QUALITY. GENERAL FURNISHING, HOSIERY, TRIMMING .tc Boots & Shoes OFJTHE BEST QUALITY, a full -of GROCERIES ! Wood And Willow WAUE. CROCKERY GLASSWARE, ELECTRIC LAMPS, SCHOOL ROOKS, AND STATIONARY. Subscription AGENCY. Subscription received for all Eastern aiid European Publications. Money To Loan. Money io loan on improved farms, enquire of 5. Gold smith. 114 First sfveet, Porland Or. i ' FROM .ROSEBURG TO lEMPlREIZCITY. From Roseburg to Looking Glass $ .75 " " Foot of mountain .... 2.00 " ' Dora 5.00 " " Fairvicw 5 5 " " Sumner 6.50 ' Marshfield 7-QO " Empire City 7-5 DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY. For Particjars Inquire at the Post Office. Jas C. MctULLOCII, Prop to Say That. Hamniitte AT have just received the pineal Stock OF to Give Customers DEFY COMPETITION I' : a w ' Ou Monnt Washington. "The view from Mount Washington," says my guide lxk, with pnrd mable en thusiasm, ' 'is incomparably grand. " As a matter of fact, it is 11 good view, but still quite comparable, and not good enough in proportion to the elevation. You are at the 6ame height aS on the top of the Rigi; but oh, what a difference! Mount Washington towers as the actually high est peak anywhere around; whereas the Kigi stands a mere observatory in the center of a girdle -of mountains, alt in finitely grander and nobler than itself. I don't want to nuike "odorous" compari sons about the incomparable; I merely mean that, all things considered, the view from the American mountain is not quite so fine as one might naturally have I expected it to le for its height above sea level. For one flung, there is little or no water in sight, only a stray lake or two, shimmering, pond like, inXhe remoter dis tance. No near tarns, as in the deep comles of Snow-don; no sea, as from Ben Nevis and Ilelvellyn; no winding meres, as when one looks down on Lucerne and Zurich; rather a tumultuous mob of surging mountains like the serried ranks of the Dc-eside hills fntm top of tho lcli nagar. Still, I will frankly admit it is a mag nificent prosj)ect in its own way. ' West ward, through the faint blue haze, the Camel's hump and the Green mountains of Vermont loom indistinctly on tho cloudy horizon. Eastward, the other great peaks of the presidential range Jefferson, Adams, Madison rising to above the limit of trees and w ith their gaunt bare summits of loose strewn bowlders remind mo more of Cader Idris and of the Coudon, near Toulon, than of any other masses I have seen anywhere. Southward, tho more wooded and round ed tops of Kearsarge.and its giant neigh bors recall rather St. Catherine's peak and the Blue mountains of Jamaica. Grant Allen, in Longman's Magazine. Important Arclur-ologlcal TMscot-ery, At the state department I read the manuscript rejiort of M. Bissinger, our consul at Bey rout, Syria, announcing an important archaeological discovery, which has caused a great sensation in Sedan, a town of 12.000 people, on the east shore of the Mediterranean. It seems that re cently a shaft thirty feet square and from thirty-five to forty feet deep was discovered one mile out of town. Cleared of the earth this shaft led into a rock chamber, where at the present time more than sixteen Wautiful and perfectly pre- - served sarcophagi have lieen found. Iliese are a clay white marl tie, save one, which is of black marble, having a peaked shaped lid. The marble is highly pol ished, and some of the sarcophagi arc wonderfully carved and very beautiful. They show in has relief lions' heads, eagles, horses, centaurs, men, etc. Some are tKiintcd, and others have inscriptions. One is a Greek temple. Some arc cut of solid blocks. They are supposed to lie long to the Egypto Phoenician type of art, and are verv ancient. Fuller Walker in Kansas Citv Journal. The Meerschaum Industry. It is not generally known that the or dinary meerschaum of piie bowls, tip and ornaments is a true mineral. It is found in considerable !eds in Crimea, the island of Negropont, and in Asia Minor. In chemical constitution it is a combina tion of magnesia, carbonic acid gas and water. The largest and Ix'st pieces arc sent to Vienna, while tho smaller bits are purchased for the north German in dustry. At the little dorf of Ruhla, dis tant sixteen kilometers from the lustoric Eisenach, is the center of the business. The exxu-ts of finished products from that village alono amounts to several millions annually. The IkmLs of meer schaum are owned by the Turkish g eminent, but are worked by European capital. About 4,000 men are employed at the mines. Chicago lriounc, flow lie Cot Even. A little while bac k there was a "strong man who traveled about the country performing very wonderful feats, but he had the misfortune to quarrel one night with an assistant, who with superhuman struggles was wont to hand him the gi gantic camion balls necessary for the per formance. The assistant had demanded increased wages; the demand was re fused. The performance proceeded swim mingly, but when tho applause was at its height, tho assistant collected the objects on tho stage, which in the aggregate should have weighed about a ton and a half, threw them lightiy on a tray, and jauntily carried off all with one hand. The "strong man" never exhibited at that place of entertainment again. Fhuadel- pliia Call. Decimal Clock In Wiesbadru. There is a decimal clock i;i 'Wiesbaden' which is constructed on the following principle: The day has 10 hours, thd hour 10 decades,-each decade 10 minutes, each minute 10 seconds and each second 10 rays thus dividing the whole day into 100,000 parts. A similar division is to be applied to the circle, llerr Moder, of that city, goes still further, and pro poses to divide the year into 10 months the even months of 30, the uneven ones of 87 days each. The advantages of this decimal system are placed in evidence, and the inventor hopes to see the same adopted before long in spite of the present opposition. New York Tribune. The Sun is Not Bine. A year ago Professor Langlev, the dis tinguished American astronomer, per formed an experiment in the theatre of the Royal institution to show that the true color of the sun is blue. He argued that the atmosphere cut off a large pro portion of the blue rays, and that, if the observer could get beyond it, tho sun would look blue. Capt. Abney, in a lecture on "Sunlight Colors,' rejected tins experiment, adopting Prof. Langley's figures with mathematical accuracy, but dispensing with his paper disks, which this lecturer held vitiated the result, and ho showed that the color of the sun was not blu, but very ivarly that of tho white light to Ijc seen at high elevations in a clear, dust-free atmosphere. London Telegraph. Woman nnri Her Work. "Could a man make a shirt for sis rents?'' asks Charles Dudley Warner in IIarr's. "No! What limit is there to a woman's ambition or iierformancc! She drives a stage, plays the violin, sews, sings, dances, acts, jiaints (both in oil and water' colors), teaches, is a clerk, a typewriter, a typesetter, an editor, a marvelous producer of short stories (said by critics to be the most difficult art in the world), a telegrapher, and as a yeller through the telephone probably will never have an equal. Go where you will there is woman, lovely or plain, ready to cure, to cliide, to guide, to aid, to instruct, to amuse, to rule, to lead, and point tbe way for halting man." NO. 16. Pure In Heart. Almost every one appreciates the duty of governing the tongue, although few people dwell upon the necessity of con trolling the thoughts. Right speaking is a recognized duty, but right thinking is too often classed among the impossibili ties of life. ' "It may be wicked to feel so, butl can't help my thoughts," apologetically says some detractor. Tlie excuse 13 a generally accepted one, but it has not sufficient foundation in fact. Isolated thoughts cannot always be controlled. They flash into the mind like obstinate sprites, and the more one fixes the attention upon them in disap proval the more impossible does it be come to expel them. It is, however, within the limits of hu man effort to control the tendency of the thoughts. Wlien a malicious or frivo lous member of the tribe starts - into lieing they can be best combated, not by out and out fighting, but by turning in stantly to another class of valuable and interesting reflection. The mind may be so thoroughly disci plined that its thoughts shall be - drilled battalions of soldiers. They will doubt less be always raw troops, not marching according to strict military rule, and not in all cases sure to obey upon the mo ment, but they will steadily improve -with practice, conforming themselves more and more to the true and the good. Physiologists have a great deal to say about the force of habit. Dispose the brain toward a certain line of thought and it will keep it with increasing steadi ness, for purely physical reasons. It lias its automatic action, as the fingers have theirs, when they so accustom them selves to seeking the keys of the piano tliat they find them without the aid of the eyes. The discipline of the thoughts contrib-utes-to the intellectual as well as moral development. There are in all lives un occupied intervals of time, when one is riding to and from his place of business, or taking his "constitutional," for ex ample, lie cannot read or study to ad vantage at such moments, but instead of letting the mind drift whither it will, he can fix it upon the last poem he has read or upon some truth from an author of yalue. Youth's Companion The Persian Antelope. The Persian antelope seems to be a duplicate of his distinguished American relative in a general all round sense; he is, if anything, even more nimble footed than the spring heeled habitue of the west, possesses the same characteristic jerky jump, and hoists the same con spicuous wliite signal of retreat. He is a decidedly slimmer built quadruied, how ever, than the American antelope the body is of the same square build, but is sadly lacking in plumpness, and beseems to be an altogether lankier and less well flavored animal. For this constitutional difference ho is probably indebted to the barren and inhospitable character of the country over "which he roams, as com pared with the splendid feeding grounds of the far west. The Persians sometimes hunt the anteloi on horseback, with falcons and greyhounds; the falcons are taught to fly in advance and attack the fleeing antelope about the head, and so contuse tnem and retard tneir progress in the interest of the pursuing hounds and horsemen. Outing. "The Queen'. Pipe." In the center of the tobacco ware houses at the London docks there is an immense kiln, which is kept continually burning, day and night, and goes by the name of the queen's tobacco pipe. The English government has a different way of treating confiscated articles than that in use in this country, one of them being to utilize; them as fuel for what is termed re oueen's smokin?. Whenever mer- M. - f chandise is seized for nonpayment of duty, or because it is considered under the law as in a damaged or unsalable condition, it is taken to this great kiln and burned there, the owners having no remedy. The only utilization that is made of these seizures is from the sale of the ashes from the furnace, which, to the amount of a great many tons a month, are sold by auction to chemical works, and to farmers and others to be used in enriching the soil. There is a similar but smaller queen's tobacco pipe in the government tobacco warehouses at Liverpool, these two forming the points of destruction for all confiscated merchandise in the United Kingdom. Cincinnati Commercial Gazette. Dickens an an Actor. Carlyle referred to Dickens as an actor, liaving seen him in one of his amateur performances. He gave it as Ids opinion that Dickens' genius was essentially his trionic and mimetic; that with his faculty of keen and minute observation, bis general alertness of mind and body, his mobile power of gesture and expression, he had all the requisites of a successful actor, and that had lie lived at a great period of the drama, in the Elizabethan age for instance, his genius would have found its appropriate outlet on the stage. He would have become a popular comic actor, wntmg a humorous piece now and then, perhaps, as was the custom of such actors in those days. But while living under different conditions and working with his jx?n, his books still re tained and revealed the native genius of their author. They had the sustained, if. rather jerky, liveliness, the pleasant tricks and mannerisms of humorous por traiture upon the stage. He was, in short, a 1xni actor. The Athenannn. A Derbyshire Story. A correspondent calls to mind tliat in Derbyshire a story was told about fifty years ago which has some resemblance to the story of Tarn o Shanter, as related or adapted by Burns Lpon a dark even ing, as a man was riding homeward, he passed a large house which was all ablaze with light. From within came a sound of music and dancing. The house, he knew, was said to be haunted, and, being curious to see wliat was going on, he went in at the door. He was invited by the revelers, who appeared to be ordinary men and women, to supper. According ly he sat down at the supper table, but before he began to eat he asked his host to say grace. The guests said, "Hush!" but the host did not say grace. Then the stranger shut his eyes and said grace himself devoutly. When he opened them all was still, the inmates had gone and he was left m utter darkness. Notes and Queries. Jntt What The Ml Say Hon. D. D. Hayntc of Salem, Ills, says he uses Dr. Bosanko's Cough and Lung Syiup in his family with the most saliIactory results. in all cases of Coughs, Colds and Croup, and recommends it In partialis r for tne little onos, sample bottle a cents at V. b. Hamilton. Now is the accepted time to subscribe fvi itifi KEYlEWt DOUGLAS COUNTY Is Situated in Southern Oregon, and is a veritable empire of 4,950 Square Miles, being larger than tho Great State of Connecticut, Magnificent Climate Wonderful Resources. Live Men Vanted. ' The Review is the Medium for Reaching this Great Einpiie. " SPEECH AND SILENCE. " Soft words are dear. Making sweet music in Love's tranced ear; , But Silence hath a spell That breatheth more than any tongue can telL Clinton ScoIIard ia Youth's Companion. THE BEAUTIFUL WEST INDIES. A Healthful Climate and Magnificent Scenery Plain and Cordillera. Those islands are as distinct in features as in origin. Some are suggestive of a period when a large portion of our con tinent was submerged in the ocean. Others are towering masses of trap rock, with cone like summits, declaring their volcanic descent. Others for ages havo been in a progressive state the work of tho invisible zophite architect. Some liave not yet risen above the belt of foam that marks their existence as coral reefs, and notifies the mariners of danger, while others soar above the tides and " bloom with evidences of bounteous liar vests. Servile insurrections, attended with great loss of property and life, have, -in j-ears pajsr, retarded the prosperity of those islands. Shocks of earthquake there have alarmed the inhabitants, and the serenity of the heavens is often dis turbed by the desolating track of tlic hurricane. Large conflagrations liavo occurred there, as in tfco United States, ' but energy has surnif.inted those losses by fire, and better built houses Jiave " arisen from the ruins. From December to May the climate is delightful and healthy, even along the coast, where, in tho summer months, yellow- fever occasionally occurs. The mountainous regions or cordilleras, where the wealthy planters have their elegant residences, are blessed with a perennial springtime and exempted from epidemic influences. The mean temperature of these highlands is about 70 Fahrenheit, . and at the elevation of 2,500 feet you are securely fortified against the attacks of yellow jack. Beauty and sublimity in a pre-eminent de gree are combined in the scenery of thoso cordilleras, especially in tho blue moun tains of Jamaica, the largest and most valuable island of the British West In dies. The loftiest peak of that ridge, wldch extends some fifty leagues in length, is nearly 8.000 feet high, although the mean elevation dyes not exceed one- ' third of that measurement. The crest of. the chain is so sharp that in many places it is only four yards across; the escarp- . ments are wild, the declivities steep, checkered in places with stately forest growth. The more elevated ranges are flanked by btill lower ones, and these Tiy verdant savannalvs. A belt of intervening plain lies between the ocean and the blue cordillera and is brightened with tracks of guinea grass, corn, sugar cane and groves of cocoa and plant-iin proudly tossing their palmatod heads in unison with the rustling airs. There are also the tapering furnaces of the sugar works, tho overseer's dwell ing and clusters of the laborers' huts. But those evidences of culture and popu lation are not confined to the plain. Look np the steep, rugged side of the cordillera and you will see where its precipitousiiess' does not render cultivation impossible. The dark tint of the woodland that gives a name to the mountam chain ; is diversi fied with the light ; green of cultivated fields and golden shades of ripening cere als. You will see abrupt cliffs dotted with w hite specks as points of rock, or perchance rexainding you of an eaglc'a aerie, When with a telescope these points are brought closer to your vision, you be hold one white s;eck transformed into a lovely country seat, othere into hamlets nestling on the brows of precipices 3,000 feet or more in height. Bridle paths . scarcely twelve feet wide are cut up tho sides of this cordillera to its gorges and tablelands, for journeys in the interior are generally made on "horseback, as the asperities of the country are unfavorable to the transit of carriages. Baltimore American. Another Fortune Made. Omaha Man Are you makinjra fair living out of your Kansas farm? Kansas Man Iivine;? Whv I'm rich. You see, there was a little piece of poor ground back of tho dugout which was not fit for anything. Well, one day brother Jake dreamed there was gold under it, and the next morning he offered me $100 for it, on lone time, of course, for he hadn't any money, and I sola it. "Yes." "Well, Brother Bill heard of Jake's dream and bought the lot of him for $1,000, in the same wav, you know. Then I got scared and bought it back for 3,0H0. Then i sold it to Bill for $10, 000, and so it went on until a few days ago, when I got the lot again and sold it to Jake for $100,000. Just think of it. No more farming for me." "But what security have you to show for all that value if Jake has no money?"' "Why, I've got a mortgage on the lot." Omaha World. Comfort in Knglitih Hotels. The gucsti of the hotel sijend ve-w little tune in their rooms. The smoking room in the English hotels could 1 copied with advantage in the United States. There is nollung more drearv in the world than the reading room or gen tleman's waiting room of American hotels. In the English hotels tho smok ing room is furnished with heavy leather covered chairs and sofas, with small tables scattered about. Here any one can order anything he pleases to drink or come m after lus dinner for his cup of coffee with his cigar. It is alwavs n cozv and comfortable place, and, indeed, al most the only comfortable place in the hotel. T. C. Crawford a Letter. Yonthful Gallantry. Ethel Now I run going to lx nurse and play I'm taking tlie lbv in its car riage to the iark. Koy (who lias a penchant for Ethel) Well, then, I'm going to lx? your p'licc man. Harper's Bazar. Early In the Season. Yoii.fe- Wife I took great Tains with that cucumber salad, John, and I hope you enjoyed it. - Husband (anxiously) I m afraid, lnr dear, that I took great pains with it too. rew 1 ork bun. Food products from nil parts of tho world arc tc be rxliibitcd in Amsterdam, during June and July. 1 Snellen s Arnica Salve The Best Salve in the world .for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, "ever Sores, Tetter Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively- cures Piles, or no pay j required. It is- guaranteed to give per fect satisfaction, or money refunded" j Price 25 cts tbux, F Mleby Maxstws 5t Co