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About The Coast mail. (Marshfield, Or.) 187?-1902 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1885)
T The Coast Mail. 'Published' every Thursday morning, Hy JOHN CHURCH, Editor and Proprietor Terms, in Advance X-l t-1 t I "WV'HttffcA' ,.,., M )R:j.H FIELD. OREGON : Thursday, :;::::::: August 13, 1885 JOHANNE. 1 fAniuouv E. Anderson, Tbo postoan had just gone. And Miss Edith ttood under tho ball chandelier, one hand pressed lightly against her soft brown, nngtry bangs and the other hold lug two letters. . e of tho ctiTelo cs was largo and yel low and tho ether smaller and creamy while. Tho light from tho chandelier wn rather dim. and she found it a difficult nin'fci to decipher the superscriptions. however, she soon discovered that tho whi.t 0110 lad ".Miss 1 dith M. Ward" vntttn 00. it in a hold, rather angular hand. She slipped it into her pocket with a suWueil, alert air of being watched, which was comical because it was so entirely un necessary. The letter ws from Jack Field, and every onoii her "set" knew ho was her lover, flic had see tho postman como up the steps, and hud own to the door les nnyo v should fires tall her. ililii found the writing on the other envel pc harder to inaku out It was in a rramiied. queer hand, by no means lcgl-b'..-. thr foiugn stamp in tho corner bided l.tr u lti c. v dent y the sight of this letter pleased Eil i ill almost as much as the other had dona -Ah it is f ran Xorwayl" she said to hi' s-e f "I hope Sister .inaa is con.irined a, mi, nnu iscomt g 10 America 10 maKc 1 obanne happy. " Johanne nudstatter was sitting in the Kitchen paring apples and singing in a low key to herself. Tho air was a Norse national hymn indeed you could never have caught Jo ha. ne trying to sing anything which was not .orwegian. Her love of country was a sort of religion with her, and her loro for her r-isier was very much like it, though far above it in degree. Every thing cos nee ed with Norway was right, and is er Anna too, could do no wrong, ohanne was not pretty. Her thick, tare arni were rough and ungraceful, and her (ace was red from constant and close apjuaiutancc with kitchen tires. Her cheek b nes were hign, and her coarse, scant locks were of a nondescript hue lsut she had beautiful eyes, large and gray, and with dnrc, long lashes. " h. - rge cr init II;cm!" (Oh. Nor way ii my home ohanne was singing wheu Ldith stepped into the kitchen, the yellow envelope snugly stowed away in her pocket. "I've got something for you. Johanne. " she said, her brown eyes shining with pleased anticipation. "Guess what it is. " . obanne laid down her knife and apple, and assumed an exaggerated expression of thoughtfulncss. t-hc pursed up her mouth, she closed her eyes for a moment, and e n foaled her lianas. ".s it a-a kitten, Miss Edit?" she esked irith a puzzled air. Ldith laughed. "No, you foolish Johanne, it isn't a kitten! What should I be giving you a kitten for? Here you'll never guess it; it's a letter from Norge. " Johanne' s eyes opened like a Gash. "A lettcrl Oh, gif 'im me, Miss Edit!" With fingers that trembled she took a small pair of scissors from her pocket and cut the end of the envelope. Her hands trembled even more when she read the letter. when sue naa nnisnea sue iicavea a deep sigh and her gray eyes were ilium- "Oh. Miss Edit! rtis letter is from my pastor, an' my Sister Anna was conflrmert, and she stood high, an' she is on de way here h. she will be here to-morrow 1" " nd she shall be my maid!" cried Edith, with sudden inspiration, she was no .ess excited than Johanne. "You can hare her near you always then, Johanne. " " h, 1 ud is goot uud is gootl"the warm tears coursing down her cheeks. "I'm so glad I sent her the money, Miss 1 dit. do dc pastor he say she no can come till she be contiraert Pat seem pretty long, 3Iis4 dit. but now she will be here; an I be verv glad all day.- She haf no fader nor moaer. Miss Edit, only me, an' she mus stay in de pastor's house till she If big enough to come to me. She can s;'k some Engelsk, too; dey learns It deit" .Edith bad heard the whole story often lie ore, but she listened with the tears of sympathy shining on her brown lashes. " h she is so vcr' pretty. Miss Edit' mit hair yust like gold or do sunshine, an ch cks like a rose, an' eyes oh, muu prttler don dc sky in de hlmmelL Ak, I never see no prettier girls dan she, even in dc richest house. " Her love made 'ohanne eloquent Edith could not help wondering if it was her lo e that inaae sister Anna so beautiful, too. "Hans vill he glad to hear de news, an' soon ve can git married, w'en we safe a leetle mere money, an' Sister Anna can Iff mit us. Ak, ve Till be so glad all de time!" ans Stcen was the gardener, and Jo hanne and he were engaged to be married. They had lived in the same parish, and had knovin each other since childhood. He was a stolid, slow man, with a broad emotionless face, and small, blue, white lashed eyes. Ldith had often de clared her conviction that ho was un worthy of Johanne. Mrs. Ward did not exactly approvo the plan of taking Anna K nudstatter as a maid, hut was won over at last; and t- nna's position was secure when she ar rived. Ed.th hed expected to see a pretty, rustic face, but was not prepared for the visum of loveliness that threw itself with tho impetuosity of childhood on Johanne's neck. Anno was very plainly but neatly clod. but her garments were unnoticed. She had YBof tho most cxaulsltclr nurn blonrin faces J dith hod ever seen. The small features were perfect In shape, her eyes were like Johunno's, but the had the advautago of a beautiful set ting, and so appeared to bo larger and longer-lashed, and a deeper gray. In re alitj they were almost exactly the coun terpart of Johannes. "I shall be afraid to ask her to dress my hair," said Ldith. looking at Anna with pleased wonder. "She is tho most grace ful creature I ever saw. Is she not per fectly lovely, mamma?" The happiest woman in Boston for at J icusi u uionwi was jonanne Knuusiatter. bho had a smile on her face from morning till night, and she hummed "Norge or mit II, em" with redoubled enthusiasm and pa triotism. una, too, teemed well pleased with her new home iu America. She spoke English aimost as well as Johanne before she came, and she improved rapidly." he was a source of constant wonder and usthctio delight to her young mis tressfor Ldith was nominally her mis tress, though the lines wcro not very tightly draws. Anna soon strutted about In some of Edith 1 cast-off gowns, and aped Edith's lUtVsfcks.to perfection. She was vanity pwfonlM, ud tod not been in the house AWMkMwaksMlwdcuUS lierwftootu bands of golden nalr, In exact imitation of her mistress' "bangs. " Edith began to feel a little- uncomforta ble. It was unpleasant, to say the least, to be copied In everything, Imperfections and all and Imperfections were followed the most easily and assiduously. I. ans Stcen was much pleased with Johanno's sister, and spoke enthusi astically for him of tho time when they so, OOl would bo married, and Anna -Should itvo with them, Edith received an invitation to visit an aunt in a small ermont village, n fow weeks after Anna's arrival, and made her preparations for departure at once. Anna wns not needed, and would be more useful at homo, and so she was left behind.- Tho present visit extended over two months, and as Edith entered her homo again, sho felt as if she had como into au atmosphere of brooding storm. Her mother met her at the door with an anx ious face. "Mamma, what is the matter?" Edith asked in alarm. "Isany ono ill or dead?" "It is something almost worse, Edith, " said her mother, sadly. "Anna was mar ried secretly to Hans Stcen yesterday, just a week beforo he was to havo married Johanna Our poor Johanno is almost broken hearted to think that her sister, whom she loved so dearly, and her own lover, could bo so false to her. " "It is shameful." cried Edith, indig nantly. "My poorJohannel" 1 "Anna does not seem to realize that sho has done any thing out of the way; always protesting uiat suo hkcs mm, and nail a right to do as she pleased She had not tho slightest idea of the meaning of dutv and I don't think sho is at all capable of understanding the wealth of love Johanne has lavished upon her; and Hans is a great deal worse. I would discbarge him, but I know ho could not And another place easily, and Johanno begs me not to ao so, - ... Johanne would not hear a word against sister Anna or Hans. "Dey lofes each odder, " sho said, with a wisttul expression in her gray eyes. " Dot is deir reason. Lofe is every t'ing an' all's fair in lofe, you know. " Poor Johannel Where l!rber Wax Fat. IU. S. Minister Harrison's Letter. The barber trade is one of tho most important in Persia. The Koran makes it honorable for a man to wear a beard, but commands tho shaving of tho head. There are two great sects among those who accept, the Mahometan faith, the Sheas and the Sunnccs. The latter aro all Turks and they shave the whole crown, excepting a "tuft in the center by which the archangel may draw them out of the grave. Hut the Persians are Sheas, and they shave the center of the head, from the forehead to the neck, leaving a long curl on cacn siuc it is curious little bos with their heads thus polished. The Persians consider it a treat ' disgrace to lose their side curia As they 1 all wear turbans, or black, conical caps I of Astrakhan lambskin, no one would suspect the head to be shaved until the cap is taken oil. Then, indeed, the ap pearance of tho head is exceedingly gro tesque. It is evident that the care of the hair is a very important question in Persia. But this is not alL One rarely tees a gray beard or gray locks in Teheran, l.vcn the most vener able men have dark or red hair. The rea son is because all, from the highest to the lowest dye their hair. Even the tails and manes of the horses aro sometimes tinged with henna. Those of the royal stables are dyed a beautiful rose color: Tho use of red for curtains, awnings and umbrel las is forbidden. It is a color reserved in such cases for the palace and the king alone, A Iaek or Card Well Earned. New York Sun.l "Why do you pick.that up?" asked a 1 reporter of a man who had just stooped down and taken a fugitive nine of clubs litiA nf nliiliii ' out of the mud. Ho was carefully clean ing the card with his pocket-handker chief, " It's a habit I have contracted. " he said, laughing. "Long ago I noli.cd that a day rarely passed that I did not see a playing card lying in the street I won dered if it were possible to make a whole p:i k by picking up all I saw. I went to work to try it. At first it seemed easy enough, and I picked up plenty of cards of different kinds, but as my collection grew larger tho task became more dittl cult, and I found cards of the same sort over and over agaia It took me twelve years to find the last four cards I wanted the five of diamonds, the eight of dia monds, the king of spades, and the four of hearts. Two of these j cars were spen t in looking for the eight of diamonds, which was all I wanted to complete this pack. I found it three months ago in an &sh barrel on Baxter street, ana I have now the entire pack. I was just eleven years and two weeks collecting it. and I would not sell it for $1,000. 1 Talking Shop at the Art Iteceptloo. Cliieaso Times. Some people never can leave tho shop behind, even at art receptions. A group of four attended one of these swell events last week, and their comments were rather characteristic. "Did you ever see any thing more exquisite in the typographical artT" eald one, holding up the illustrated catalogue. She was the wife of the man who got them up. "'We can do more artistic framing than that In Chicago. " He was a frame-maker, of course. "Look at that palette of roses, isn't it a picture? " He was the florist that furnished it. "Isn't that Strauss waltz too lovely for anything?" She was the trouibone-p!ay-er s sweetheart But tljey all enjoyed the reception except the frame-maker. The Typical American. IW. L. Aid n in The Current. In 500 years more we may develop a true national character, we may have a language of our own, and we may form an American race as distinct from the Kngllsh or nuy European race, as the Maloy is distinct from the Hindoo. Then we cau find and describe the typical American without difficulty. Now the search for him is as fruitiest as it would be to search among the passengers in a street car for the type of a race boru and bred in street cars and nowhere else. A Street in a Great City. IThe Current.) At edge of northern sidewalk a four story row of bcer-kegs dripping into gut ter; a banana wagon; a ditch six fee. deep; moat of ditch-. Iron pipes two feet iu diameter; car-tracks; moat of scraped surface mud, brick pile; southern side walk missing; new building erecting; u hundred thousand people passlug. Thli is called "progress. " A Good Word for Toe. A'lemtn 8. Bull ran. Poe, profligate as he was charged will being, has nonnchaste "word"orih.u;jl 1 In all his poems, or a single word Hi could be unchastely illustrated. That . a remarkable fact, isu't it? It bus mv, been necessary to publish cJk)ure'iil editions of his poems. The Coast Mail And the San Francisco WEEKLY CALL S3 75 rr yVx-U tWcV. THE 8INQINQ BCQQAM. lEdfftr U Wateman tn The Current F. Two bag-gar, clutching from the throat OruJjreJ alun. No aoul was la their song, Itoas&hunnred, scourged, by cruel thong, Ver like them as they shrunk along Such wild, flerce,cborUtrs were ttty. It I han.nl two beggars sine again. Tly tang of lovs when day was don( Ttiy sang to sleep their llttta ono. Such swMtnrts through their vesper run As glorlllod their lay. I won Song's best reroalmsnt mad to men. The- Smallest VTaloh In tho World. (New York Pun. A small, gold penholder, resting in a rich velvet caso. lay on a jeweler's show case in John street, last week. Tho end of tho holdor was shaped like an elongated cube, and was au inch long. ATalnt musical ticking that issued from It at tracted a customer's attention. The jeweler lifted tbo holder from tho caso with a smile, and exhibited a tiny watch dial, oue sixteenth of an inch in diameter, set in uie smo ociwcen two otner uiais almost as small. One Indicated tho day, and tho other the month of tho year. The center dial ticked off seconds, minutes, and hours. "This is the smallest watch ever made. the jeweler said, "and tho only ono of its 'kind in tho world. It took a Geneva watchmaker tho better part of two years 1 to tit the parts together so that they would work accurately. It has been exhibited in London and r'aris. " The works of the watch were so that they fitted lengthwise in tho holder. The mainspring was an elongated coll of steel fitted to tho wheels by a tiny chain, and worked llko an old-fashioned clock weigh. The works wcro wound up by i "tig- A" wrujuo iiuunuuuu up Uf means of a little screw of gold on tho un dcr side or tbo handle. A good pen was uitcu tn trie noiucr, and tno jeweler wroto with it without disturbing the oswratlons of tho fairy watch. "What's tho price?" the customer asked. "A round 300, " replied tbo jeweler, laugntng. SnppreMlon of Xaw In Kunla. SttpnUk.1 The catastrophe of Koukoueff was one of the moat heartrending of our national calamities. A train ran off the line and went headlong Into a morass. Many of the passengers were badly hurt and more than 100 killed. The accident, as was fully proved, arose from the unsound con dition of the permanent way and the rot tenness of the piles, the engineers and managers having appropriated to their own purposes the moneys assigned for ro pairs. On this becoming known there was a cry of indignation And the government-wbat course did it irom one cna 01 ttussia to mo oincr, take? Promise a searching inoulrv and the exemplary punishment of the de- linquentsT Nothing of the sort 7 It issued this circular: "Auk 19. 1B83. Since the disaster on the Koursk railway several papers have printed articles briug ing grave charges against some of the employes of the ministry of roads. Articles of this sort having a disturbing character their publication will bring on the offending journal the severest ad ministrative penalties. " Thus the state forbade parents and friends to protest against the authors of their misfortune. or to offer an opinion on the best method of preventing further similar disasters. Tlie Italics laMlon. Kew York Tribune. Menzel, whose paintings are now on ex hibition in Paris, has a studio in Berlin adjoing his private 'studio, in which his pupils work from living models. One day a student rushed into hissanctum exclaim ing breathlessly. "Herr Meniell The model! inei" Tfc vnm, wnm.n hn ... ,. j 0 ... w ,j,w- rf . Well, what of her?" "Sho is dead! She has dropped down lifeless!" Stepping into the other room he found her on the fioor, dead indeed, with the horrified students standing around. "What an admirable poscl"he cried, as he saw the corpse; "make a study of it! Uuickl" And seizing a pencil and tketch block he himself set the example. Uow a flajr llune. Boeton Herald Interview. Sometimes a play will run late on the night of the first production, and after that be played in a much shorter time, al though not a line may havo been cut out of it This is due to the actors who, on the first night are feeling their way with the public. They know what they are about and what they have to do, but what they do not know la how the public Is going to receive tho .play where the auatcce will applaud and where laugh or cry, as the case may be. It is a fact that on a second night the play will talk fully fifteen minutes quicker than on the first and not a line be cut out The Traditional ClreenKoom. ITld-Bita. As a hit at the actual scarcity of exist ence of the traditional "green-room," the author "Un the Stage and Off, " says of his firsttheatre: "Thero was no green room. There never had been a green room. I never saw a green-room, except in a play, though I was always on the lookout for it. I met an old actor once who had actually been in one, and used to get him to come and tell me all about it But even bis recollections were tinged with a certain vagueness. " Almoit Qualified. (Philadelphia CalL Editor I have a few vacancies on my staff, yes. You are a newspaper man? Applicant I have written poems and essays for some of the leading magazines of the country and am now writing a novel: am also at work on a new pocket encyclopedia. " Vou never worked on a newspaper?" "Well, no. " "I sec, I see. Well, we need a new po lice reporter, and I'll give you a trial. " Civilization of the Planet. Exchange. M. Do Lesseps, in his address upon be ing received Into tho French academy, observed that "a little imagination is a good lever for the heavy weight of hu man atfairs, " and M. Kenan, in his reply welcoming tho distinguished engineer, aid that "if astronomers had sutliclently powerful instruments they might judge of the civilization of tbo planets by beeing whether their isthmuses were cut or notc 1 1 Cuba' Hl Debt. IKew York Tribune..' Cuba has not paid her civil list salary for fivo months, or her army for three. She has a debt of $40,000,000, and a yearly deficit which Is swelling thai amount at a rapid rate. Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph: After noon journalism deals in what happens, and morning journalism iu how i happened. The Coast Mail And the Philadelphia WEEKLY PRESS 3 OO A'Odaete rrtntta "reW (JUn rranclsjo Rerorl A Yfclt to a Chinese printing wlaMlsb. ment productive of much that Is Inter esting. MoTablo types art not Iwuse in Saa Francisco Chinese newspaper olUcos. I he manner of grtllng a Chinese nowspaper on the press and printing U very prim itlva Tho editor takes American news papers to friends, from whom bo get a translation of the matter, ho needs, and after getting it written In Chlneso In a manner satisfactory to mm ne cam fully writes It upon paper chem ically prepared. Ipon the bod or tho press, which Is of the style that went out of use with the last century, ia a lithograph stone. I lwn this the paper Is laid until the Impression of tho charac ters la left there. A largo roller Is Inked and passed over the stone after it has been dampened with & wet sponge, and noth lug remains but to take the tmprouloii upon tho newspaper to be. Tho L'hlncso pressman prints three papers every jlvo minutes, five carers in the samo time less than L'enjamln Frankllu had a record for. A Chinese nrlntingo .ce has novcr beeu struck by lightning. , , Tho life of a L'hlncso Journalist Is a happy one. Ho Is free from care and thought, and allows all the work of the establishment to 1m done bv the nrcssman. The .Chinese compositor has not arrived. Tho ChlntKA nlltor. like the rest of his countrymen, is Imitative. He does not de pend upon his brain for editorials, but translates them from all the contempo raneous American newspapers he can get, There is no humorous department in the Chlneso newspaper. The newspaper office has no exchanges scattered over the tioor. and in nearly all other things it differs from the American establishment Tho editorial room Is connected by a ladder with bunks on the loft above. whero tho managing editor sleeps, and next to it is, invariably, a room where an opium bunk and a layout reside. Evidences of domestic life are about the place, pots, kettles, and dishes taking up about as much room as tho press. In'one instance on Washington street a barber shop is ran In the same department with the editorial room, and. in all cases, no disposition is shown to elevate the position of tho "printer" above his surroundings. If an editor finds that journalism does not pay, he gets a job washing dishes or chopping wood, and ho docs not think he has descended far either. Among the Afghan. Cor. New York Tribune.) We saw perhaps a d07cn Afghan women. They wore no bonnets, but simply a long ell of gauzy stuff. Look at them in the right way, and they are pretty. Their countenances have a Jewish cast, but they arc not brunettes. Their skin is anemic, strikingly jo, and they wear their hair tied over a ball so as to make them look 2?!?.&S"LtXV,,ii 7h.1 J"V 2?K of their veils display much InnaW grace anu elegance. Of tho men I may as well say that they are not unllko wnat a cross between a Hindu and a Persian would be. Athletic; fair and well-bearded, they have aquiline faces, with the foreheads shaved, and the hair on the sides hanging In curls that fall over the shoulders in a picturesque. shaggy, mace-liki Their carriage is full of rcsolutio nd from ouo corner of the cannot but remarl her you Ind you of bantam roost are like thorn, too turb relsomc. likln? al, quar to an tne practise of raartl uel cast The hazh, or chi Cote, was as porfect a gam saw. Maud. tail, IFtilt Maud S. U rent from any of tho rest, breaker L-1 T.nl. L""n """0 her own. uexter was e times, and Goldsmith Mali ed Budd uooie irora ncr 001. "jimwon tiui con trary, must bo petteiL rTnly Blair, her trainer and driver, said recently tbat the crowds who came to see her were her de light She must have company, and the only sign of pettlsbness she shows is when sho is not admired. Some ladles petted and caressed her, and children stroked the legs of the animal that has gotten over the l.TCO yards fanter than any other of her kind in the world r-he seemed pleased, and when the box doer was opened would cock up her cars and gaze to see who was coming In. Tbo Tramp'. ICebaha. IDotton TranKripM He was'torn and tattered, travel-stained and hungry. He rang the bell of a house which seemed to possess a hospitable ex terior. "Ma'am, be said to the woman who answered his ring, " I'm just about starved to death; haven't bad a bite to cat for a week. " " Why, " asked the woman, "can't you get any work?" The tramp threw back his head with impatient dis dain. "Beg pardon, " he said, "but let u not talk shop. " The woman was so taken aback, that In her surprise and mortifies Hon she shut the door In his face. Qalto Iha lAjn. Jjlr I "Who la the man by the curtain, yawn ing?" uWhy, that's Brown, the most original man In London. He's quite the lion of the season. He can't doanythlng, neither paint, sing, act nor talk. " "What a relief! Let's have him to din ner. " Alligator Ileeoming- VtrtaU (New Orleant City Item. The alligator destroys great numbers of muskrats, the stomach of one lately killed containing fourteen of them. As muskrats are e ceedingly destructive of levees, it is proposed to protect the alli gator from wanton slaughter by punish ing it as a misdemeanor. One Out of a Tliouiand. ICape Ann Aitv tUe . Out of trery J.OOO people born Into this world of sin and sorrow, uyy oithcr do not know a good story when they hear it, for get it after they have heard It, or do not Know how to repeat it themselves, or haven't good judgment about when to In troduce it "Found a I'alnt Mine. U'hllailelpli 1 C II Near Cairo, III., resides a man who claims to have discovered pure paint in largo quantities on his farm. Any onu who has ever walked across a ersey farm In wet weather will believe him, V ry Car I en', Courl- uniAt.' It is now said that America was disco v ercd in the fifth century, by somo Budd hist monks. If this is true, Mr. Chrldo pher Columbus wa certa n'y a very can lets leader of the dally papers. Total Krltpte of the Moon, 1 rofessor Proctor, In hit recently pu lisbed article on the moon, rtlites whn. not generally known, that, during at oue past lunar eclipse namely. In 1 the moon entirely dltapja-ard from ij. The Coast Mail And the San Francisco Weekly Chronicle KB3 BO Btway., ysV irlrW U IfttfTUrt teUcelltaMtti ' ,, ,-1,-- r riji,rn ' - . ji-.ih , - - for Infants trteeauBeod leumtoau. MBtoe." H.A.Ac.M.D., m80sr8.,rMr,H.T. TUB. STAR SALOON!! jrXlOWl' X3rA'X,r Opposite O'Connell'a Hardware Store, UARHIintLl), OltKdOX, WEBBER & SONDSTROM rnorniETonH. C HOICK WINKS AND LIQUORS 01; all descriptions and the twit brands of Imported and iomctlc clears diwxd tiy at tentive and gentlemanly Uirkcepers. CV Also pool table and club rooms for llie uic of patrons, BP3 Bon Ton Saloon! Holland Building, - - - - Front Street, MARSHFIKLD, J. NASBUKO, - Proprietor. Always on hand, CUTTER mid AAA WHISKIES and Choico Wines and Gigara. Also Boca, Milwaukee and Buy View Brewery Beer. UT BILLIARD and POOL TABU.. apto EXCHANGE SALOON, Trout ntt-ect, Marahtlcld, N. P. HANSEN, Proprietor. TTkEALKR IN CHOICE I1RAND.S Or Gibson's well-haoHH WliNUy, AAA WhliiUy sHd tttto Urandtc, Yt'ltac CIsrar etc. Also Agent for the renowned Chi cago Lager Deer and Porter, at whole sale and retail. Also Tils celebrated Boca Beer, on draft or In bottles. nozo ARCADE SALOON! Front st opposite Whitney' Market, MAIlHIiriKI.D, M. HUTCHINSON, - - Proprietor R A NEW RESORT. SUIM'Ul.U Wl . C'kolce Wine IMqnbt-M, Clsrnrw. Ale, sForteir, l,agor Ifct't. And all the appointment ol' A FIRST-CLASS SALOO I. Patronage spprrcUtrd and the sil J hi tomert promptly allcnded to by ecnttciit.tr) barkeepers. Give the new uloon .1 trial. ri(. II. KEINO, A. tUUKHLLNn PIONEER SALOON, Front Street, Matshfield, dtUEUMi.tin Jc iuii.xo, Proprietors. THIS OLD AND POi'UI.AR SMjOON. under the new management, h l-rTre-furnished with a slock of CHOICE WINES; LIQUORS & CIGARS, Vhlch are served by courtcou-i tnrkrcx-i. A share of patrun.iKr solicitrd mid npirra4lrd tTAjenti for lliiLulclpliU Uier IVi.xfta myi2 NOTICE FOR FINAL IMIOOF. Land Omen, at Roskiiuki;, Oregon, July 11, 1885. "VTOTICE. IS IIEREnV GIVEN THAT Xl the following-named settler hat filed no tice of his intention lo male r111.1l profaf in tuii- port ol his culm, and that snid proof will lie lwi wi 1111 tiami, anu inai snia prooi will lie Dl?edc!r0o,Ji,oenclCT,c " Co counlJ'' al IJn" pire City. Orron, on Saturday, Aueust 22, i83s. Viz. WAtUKN M. Davis, decUMlor slate- ment No. 4501, for llie north half of the north- east quarter, the southwest qiurfer of lite north- eait qiurtcr, and the northwest quarter of the Miilheast quarter of section ai, township t south, of range 11 west, Will. mcr. tie names the following witnestes to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation ol said land viz 1 John C, Neelev. Dick Verlop, S. U, HoUen-Ix-ck and J. D. Iknham, all of K.ilrvk-w, Coos Co., Oregon, JyiS Wm. Y. IIKNIA.SIIN, Ricliter. Execution Sale. TT7HERKAS. AN EXECUTION WAS the Circuit f'miti ,.f f T duly issued out of the Circuit ineauiieoi urcgon, Tor Hie county of C001, trsted the 13th day of July, 1B85, upon a tletrre of said conn, duly made on llie atlh iliy of May. i88i, In a cerialn suit, In which Thomas H, Walkkk was plaintiff and Tiicouokk JoiiNtoN defendant, In favor ol snid plalnlirf, ,md lo me drrecled, commanding nic o rll ni mlilic nuclion llie certain re.il elale hcremafler rlescribrd: Now, therefore, I will, on Saturday, the 39th day of August, 1885, at the hour of one o'clock In the afternoon of llwiday, at the Court House door al Empire City, in said Coos county, offer for sale, and jell, at rwhlic nuclion. for cash down, to the hlfhest bidder therefor, all of those certain pieces and parcels of land situated In the county of oo and Stale of Orefon, and particularly de- scniiert as lots numbered five and si. In section Ihirly.five, and lot two, the south. half of the rlv, ill) he southwest quarter, and the nonheaii q.f of me souinwest quarter ol seci on Hi rty-sls, all In township lweny-sl south, of ranVe 'fouflUa wrtt, of Ihe Willamette meridian. nmiunt,. Willamette meridian, conialn "- wv.WV. NVIf, Ul Mllll, . . . .ISAIAH IIACkER, iftl fA.)nn rtw aI..I 1 iai K r.H. .TrJTTT 17-j'u onerin 01 i.oos Notice of Final Settlement. ojricji IS IIEREIlV OIVEN THAT 2f. J?A. 1ENK.NS. d ccasedTha, .h.. 1 me unurrsivnen. mini n iirain, r.t d... -.,. rS-."",'. .f0n'0,-"J ''' I" Hi uounty COUrl of Coat cauniv n,.,.. . , mat Monaav. Sentem ur ,Ra. h.. 1 ' .. thai .innrf. R.i..,i: :' t'.' ,"' " for bearlne objections to ill; ur,U. mi.. Tcou. w k. :.;.'.u.r '... .v:"" ?'. '"j- " ""n Court room,. per.ee, IntTres.Vd In Mid . fate aft rwjulrtet al Mid lime 10 show cause if Of !ttt.'vijr tlw jmim sheuU iwU Allied. at a.l4 u- . ' . - Advertisements ---- nd ChHdrtn. in?. !7 twouteMtita intffirtugrmM TM Osm-AVa Ouwakt, IM ITaMo ftreet, W. T. i ---, swkrl tfr , AUkl - 1 ura. PRAqiCAUY fONUMqiTUL m ES? JT OVrtiy , Oesigip aifd. 15000 Wees 6n cT-A IW, Mthj. 13 PS F MONUMENTS FRED SCHETTstR of Empire, Agent for Coos county, Oregon. m INIATUKK MONUMKNTS, MADE of " White' Iknnte," ate bit rjlilblilon at rny office nt Empire. Al lUutlrnud designs 01 nu descriptions 01 monuments, ltn prices and fuH.urt!ailiur. IVrtons wishing lo purchase monuments are Invited to ctll ujwn me and Impcct the White llronti,! the neurit, neatest and meal durable sulxtunce of which thrr are now manufactured. fi J r'RIU) SUiETTKR, Empire City. SJH&El BOSSi t "TTT Spring Mattress! The Giiylonl Patent ! J 1 SOW 'MAN'PFACTUKIIS'G I 1 1 1 flm:(t my aliup, at lint ship ''if lio,ip'-nt itii'l boat nprlng mat- .! pnif evvr put upon this 1' rkft It injiiibiiu'a Mrcngtli, light-if-, I'lrttMllty. Kluiplieity and adapt 1 -I'lii i'lnJnt)f nil kImU and dlmon Vtn, .mil wit nuiinlod tho flrat jire in''. .11 -it tin- l.i-t Oregon ntnto lair. Iff Mil (it iff, G; wliiilfHnlr. f-i W). .. , ri' bin ing ytnir niattrrn, oxaiulnn iiilin-, whirli In decidedly the cheapest lii If of the kind on the bay. .! Olio. DAVIR. Tie Hotter' Gcidb Is tmitd Hutk and Sepu, each year: 221 pajesv 8J a II Inch, vitli ersr 3,800 AlasUatiosa-. a vheJapietwa gallery. OItm wholesale prices Untt U ummtmert ea all good for personal or js family ,. flrea uact V cort of or erjthJajyoaJH ,m: ,, drink, lth.Thet lsP Intalttallt Iwoksconuin Inforastloa cleaned from the markets of tho world. 'e will mail acopy JFre to any add ran upon receipt f tie yeio.8 est- La cs ).ear frora you. liespectruily. JOHN KENYON. lUtAHtlflS KAICYb Gl ' S-X-MIIV aOOKST8ttrOMERY. t " f. CUTLERY 'OOiACpO, V. X J LJ riGAlih. A XII w ttlinliilxlrulot-'M Nuft). rvi'ATI' OK nil a f.-oos-".r ll" vl of wle. Iviued oui of ORIiOON COUNTY OF vlmic of a decree and order stale of Orrron. for the count tt f 001. in th mailer of (fie etile of ClIAUI.l.s A. WlNCIItS- 7:k; oeteased. for the iwlc of rwl properly left "f deccued, under nionjir, In lt a nuirl- pBe lo "re the tnymenl of a certain f'ronv '"y note, rtalcd Novrmtirr I, i88j, for too, Hh Interest therron at the rate of 8 per cent. ir innum 110111 itie ilale ihrrof, anil payalile 10 llie order or ritir TlltMHWAN, which said I iiioiiKaK-isnlivn nimri the followlnc. ile- tcrirx-il '-.! properly, situated in the county of 1 oo arm nine 01 Urrni, to wit- ljo three (1), in Muck lurln- u), of ,Urlili-lil, in shown by it innp of 11 iHirtion of .iii.l town f Murshfirld lireuared by K. II. CU-iiihii andlilud In theofllce of ll tiiunty Clerk "f (00s crMintyOineoni wliich iLiril lot has a fronjar of, fony.U aad 66-107 fret on I'lne Hfyei, liy a uniform depth of nfnny feet lO.CLir atrvi, on hihl( has'fl front ijje forty-iin and f'ioo feet, Now, thcrrrore. In pursuance of s.lld decree nm odrr of sale, I will un Saturday, the sth day ofjieptember, i8S.e, nt the hour" of o'clock rm , at tfic cdurl home door, In Ml. I county and Slate, sell the alKVc-dcri,d real proriy at public auction, lo thr hihett liiilder, for cash, wairu ainjuil o, ;8Bt. vu-iaiii.f.sw;.Towr. Auminuira or or he ICstateof Charles A'r-Wln. clieiler, deceased. uufitd 8HKMFF8 SALE, STATfj :QFr'offi)N, COUNTY OK ,.. t!'' ty,Vnut "f n "cutlon Issued out of Ine I'irciili Conn nf 11,. u,,,. i n in .n.i r, .k. ;:. Trrr: "". """ vieson hmlTAAirKKll7.SiV: uki rtniinii i I,.., ,u "a""" s"i"' tokSS Kt1.'?' I !"P L?'i IS'icodplla,., l.Z.V ' J """ " I'V.' l"""1 " V' ' A. I), 1 11.'. " ' " . " '" ' 'V of Jui. l8B. and on the folbmnBdc.crll,ed real ironeriv mliuS lows, lo wll .Southeasl ouxrter of u.ln- .! accrumr couj have levied jio;, ic-wnmip wenty.elhi (0) south, of ranee , - , (- -' -.-.-.. .... ., u, , in tne wihanKiie niefldfan. Now, 1 Tvui;wwurv;...'7'.'. ?::":"" i ' on m n.,,,,,.aMj.. .....-r---. --mhwm, i i tKW"AJX'Wm- "' house r In to,rX:'."u": Si. i'-ViV:" "" ?! ?. "A !!nl'..rbL' T., ")"""'"' " " ueiennanls nrhi. " f "1 "VJ t V :. lwjMlewlW JffitfL"M!L . S? '1ld'f' . " wavMltlUlli III1HC1I saflfl fftlll uatea this 10th day of Jul, itlc, IjTO . rrru.n .WrtiwrrtT! I U f.0 f ' yjffjf " f '. KltllXiMJ i 1 1 1 . """ lifMaltoffjetJIijiJbj, t73P3P-AXt, 3kr. 'XL rtaatM wl umi, . 22!!1" TsSa? feme f, iMaSr?? OiK FffLB W SttfCtt V LT.".T."", ' S5& fcjV.aeeS; 75amVNHTavi.. with or wouit;;a tkT, WW anillair 1.. 5, ?.lE,J,UrH.'! paxtloiJairsvi iTTu tvs?: m BpsotaHtto. jltfrwcl call, w and wiihMM BBS JaarasttevtV J2?,M "' teiieg Ismttltuafcea, sAomaeds oFrwB gg Use pecuiSTto81 um tSpeMSS& DR.. PIEkc" Favorite Prescription tafhareuHoftkUwrtriJ. natHrsl attppreasloite, prola lalllHjr or Ao titertiawaj atvf7rleai7hreverSoMr dOfVH lion of 1: nilMllBBI, CHroule iHllataraatlc-i an nleerafl . ; - ifaiiu a-naeni the. womb. HHd ICHllO Hd leHilorueaa M ovarlerlHtersu3 ! aud . l'remale-weaktV.J w 'i illJr " and ciireTkaMea it lie tmntloH, beat. u afMBl.SA.M lion, HloatlHir. NerTou. I'roMra feiu or Stomarh. ladleea. fU. ladltH. rouratiea, PRICE $1.00. OR 6 rVnd ten.eenU In stamrs for Tie. Mk, lanra .Treatlso on IJleeaM at VTomm. unaal tratl 6fl3 Mala Street. STJVVALO, S.T. tlCK-MEfllME,1 Mtllatia Beaaaeks, Mssttisaa, CaasUpa. lew. sBiHeiiita, Parsrsuti mm vki, JT,Qnm r SEWING MACHINE l ORANGE MASS. 30 UNION SQ.N.Y. CHICAGO ILL I 8T. LOUIS MO. ATLANTA BAi F.QJH.S ALEJJY&lr;: .r. it hAm HAM UF.I. HILtf. '4 - S. I ' wrbl 'fHUii'I-raticwo Oal. IM W ARent WaJreeOefe'rywhefe the New Home tf. h, Co,, No. lo ' fast street i,y Simranclsw u; ;iiHtioH. N TlErcouNTVfXiqUH.TOF TUB Her of lite estate of JOHN r. ,"t2 maiier 01 ine esiaie 01 ruiin - ij ceard.Cliallon. To Mary II, Weaver. Fr Conrad Weaver, Lydfa Wayer.o itrnnn IfnrmilU lililia WeSVrrl. lsrioas,lnlfrefidin said eiiaM, Ifft pHcalkip havliw wen aiaaejoji coiirl.'on the sfh drof lUy, 1 idsyof lt7ilf &$ rHf..j .jt.i.i..i, a, ik jttlalc Weaver, tUstutt, lot an order of court a lilnj hlni lo tell the real eitats of sU ' escrlbeu as loLburi. W li iaii - flection ad. lauaairkJai.SQUtluriaf '. Wlllfniett ;saMlairWu' Ji nccioiwna.' .Mi.nraiasii.wOTf-'-''-fKH lK lime ml i.fiw ',d. '& WtifW to UrtvnU r.?K.?ourl f 1 it t rill lil iall f the t.un houM in KnwfM tmuTeim omr 0nSSt'. Om the Lytk Pyj(Wrh S53i I at one p'dock r.th. . aasajPjr- 1 n '! r,!n Ukj name of tho staetOf'tfWiyeM nK of nu are hereby cited na rslss. '.wv?j7 ape.ir In said Court, at M"a!sno ffT there and lher to ilipw cauH. Iffff rilm why an order for Ilia sale rftf jWI r rj should not lie, eranted, ..,' , . ii. Witness my hand an lh l ft . rT IhlsaotU day of July. A. IX. HH fT Wi"a, Ssisui in-tlafX3rf aaara suiar'i Nopturt,.l'l'JNll aWWHwliJaj 4 rarHtei """saawBi rsieaa & KlMlfiaiaftWltMaa.,.. nrnissm. .TBaaaB-sisa! e " " 4VMBB aF -sT""-iSS CatraUJl aVaVaVS taps nHRt-ff IliaillilMMsWMM . ti r 1 ira t r Was mmn niiiaaa humii preeasiafy esst sy -"t lleraaa VI a aa ami 'O lHlttte. aV . t r " -HllT&TPiBGWVI rW" y sihg(tUc5t & HLlJaaaCs -B HvMBHsisHHL; . lint oNtyf mm)MMF. i . THAT GIVES ..r-j MM) v-i lW .yi iiArtrucwAfljv.o