X, ,!Wr 'll l- I ,ifc -?. ipamii -, isr i I LefeMlo""1 d Batn" Card. i w I. llAlAHn. Iunl F. WILSON HAZARD W.ILSON, TTORNKVH AT LAW- Lpr, City, Cm cmsbIy, Oregon. j. w,wwttoht TIORNKY AND COUNSELOR AT I-AW. 4 :. ' In O'Connell's new building, Front rtttet Mitlfifl' Oregon. t ,Mlr A M xHWllKti i 1 st "VAlXUU . .mi KnVnnii.ir , .,,.- Un .jiii.t -iiih' new . ,i n. . mI Urgii'i, iji ih distracts of ink' , u I'liy or tell I ml out He . .u.iriiMi'r triurltv mill will ui'iiti'Mi iii tvxauilninjj. lillot mid )ani"lnmi,'l u tmr cure will rccrlve im.it attention J W, TOWER.1 M. D., 1,11 1. 1 1 wn.swudi'.ON- . 4 I .. C......II..L.... tt L,,,, , i lluiliiinc. iiNff thnlnu iifc, I hi i lircl Marsuu'-Hi, uu-kiui I . M 01 II S II GOLDEN a McCORMAC, Y: K lAN's Mi sUKOINS In i I MlMTV CipH . rttirM, M.on. i 1'iirii MflU' n.iniln r ,f iii r n Oiruun i vmwe uu? R l ' t I'dsMf I C at I .Wef'ii. G. "KJ. 3JiTr Ki .i. 4 f V f " ... , t - ,.,... . -- Set: Front Room over the Drut? Store, Senitaclcen and Smith's new Building, Front street, MvKMII li:i.D, 6lliO)N, 1" 1 . ,. n VET t WW wU sfa wU Js lU loJsy i: .Vt V Ml ECVI'.YOK 'or Coix. "iiiily, t i : t Orrt'im. Hltl Willi T u. ovi;. Lg., ipttalrs In O'Connell's New Dutldinjf, (Ijolnlni l he lianlwarr store, UARMIHI'XI), ; . OREGON. IrhRFirr MAPS of all summed and ten- I lands furnithed on tliort notice, ocao H, S, BONEBRAKE, f MATCHMAKER AND JEWELER, Al .Norton' Vnrloty Store, Dppoilte the Dlanco Hotel, Front street, Mmrshfteld. wa riu: u mi .ii:wr.i.KY OK AH Dr-SCKIIrMONS k.nt.ily tu,v.lkl .U I MIKS' l'RUI AND Repaired with perfection, neatness and dliDfttch at the lowest rates. Ml uork lulrulcil In me l war ranlinl in che kalUuitlon. II S MONKIIKAKIU J. N. NELSON, DKAI.KH IK CUM UK, I'OHAl'CO, rASV, NUTS, NOTIONS, ETC., It the stand of the late Mike MuUrlcey, North o( O Cimnrll'a Hrdwre Store, Front Street, Mnrshfield. I IT New aimli, mluuil priic. nnll profit, na Mill on drlivrry. IV I nr cliolce tlarj nml lotucco clunp, give Ha Irlil oca. j. N Nl:l-SON. CKCEIjEIST! luickest and Best Ijisil'lKi; CITY AND IIKAIPO MA- j I mvi c. i l. i n .iitm '- ,w,i niii);c iiiiu oiciiiiiit,i.i iHir, iim jMte t U.S maili and Well, KtrgOi Co'nexprcis. JARVIS. CORNWALL & CO. I-Mvet Crnplre City and Drain's station errv j'O.S'DAY, WICDNI'-SDAY and ritlDAV. 'l at the mouili of Hie Umimiui. New and omfoiublc states. Tare to Drain's station. $B, i piswnter allowed 50 poumls 01 Uttli'Ki-' I aivenRers arc requested to lw In Kmplre City h iiililit liefure ileparture. Information In re- r'l to the nljnvi- llii inn tr itroenred nt (lie 'Unco or C entral hotel In Marslifield und at tin) t01l0fTir lr inu tint. tin Iwtii.a tti lnilslrf Ivfi COOS BAY AND ROSEBURQ 5TA.O-E1 LI3STEJI J AUKS LAIIID, Proprietor. Through In Fourteen Hours vxv.oks oooa oitvi r'piiu nir Kounc to and from 4. Coos Hay LT I Iniul ! .:mt.tt .., hhAhI H.A.I , llni. . -m IIUbK, V.IICIUI HMU BHW"I'IIM""" I tu'ivtrs and excellent uicoiiiiiiodatloiii on the I'M. , "Slarei lean Com Cdv and Uosaliurir '"Y mornincr rrril RunHuli unit InvAriablV M')' luisenrtrs Ihrouth On lime. ' tiiKcieri win nna u 10 intir imcroi i -wiw, w pjuoBi uni'i untf tua I m COAST . VOL. VII. t TO MAKE TOBACCO 8WSAT. TI rroBM EipUlned bf Wrliou CUU IU.11IU ObUlntd. (Dsltlmors HrrsM "Sweating anil rcsweatltiK 10111000." alii tt young man In tho top story of a Houlu Charles street warehomo "arc very Interesting ami curious Industrlci. " " What iloos the term sweating mean?'' asktil tho reporter. 1 ry Ing out thu rnnknets and tho gum, " answered tho young man. "It also brings out the dark colors. I will ox iiliilu tho process to you brlolly, It Is app led only to llio leaf tobacco which Is ihmI for cigar wrappers. After tho to bucco Is cut It is put on bulk-that Is, In largo piles, whiro it rvinaliiH during tl.o wlnlor. Then, the following summer, nftor lielng closely packed, it Is put through tho tlrst 'swiat,' It Is put ou bulk In largo warehousjs liko hugo bun dies of hay, and thoru It tas during tho summer. Tbo natural heat genoratcd ulllcea to do lLo sweating. Sometimes tho bent becomes so great that a pllo Is set on lire by spontaneous combustion, though this does not often occur Tho tobncio Is puckotl stalk by stalk with the Uaf at. inched, each stalk and leaf being cullod a 'hand,' "Tho rcswcatlng Mono, at I said be. fore, to dry out the runkness, and tho Rtipcriiuous gum and to bring out the dark colors that are no much admired In O'gar wrappers. This, In fact, Is tho only way In which tho desirable Aladuro and Oscuro shades can be produced. "Tho ro sweating does not nircct tbo strength of tbo Icarus, but only thu tolor. Or, jierhaps, 1 should say, It does not render tho tobacco mors strong. It Is a iwpular fallacy that a strong ilgar must havo a dark wrapper, or that a dark wrapper Indicates a strong cigar. Asa matter of fact. If anything, tho dark res waited leave nro milder than than the uatursl bull and suulT colored leaves. " "How Is tbo reswentlng dono!" fell from' tho mouth of tho listening scribe. "We get the bands of tobacco in largo boxes from the dealers. It Is first taken out of these boxes and cased there, like that, " he said, pointing to a man who was gathering up double handfuls of th? stalks and dipping them, butts down ward, for a moment in a trough tilled with water, which was deeply dyed with the coloring matter of tho leaves. "After soaking tho ends of the bauds In tbo water tbuy aio placed on n casing table, stems upward, win ro they are allowed to drain this consuming from fifteen mlnules to ono hour Tbo stalks are thou put buck Into the original boxes, and thero they re main for forty eight hours. Kacli of Uiumj boxts holds from 100 to 450 pounds of kaf tobacco. "Noxt the tobacco is tightly packed In hermetically scaled cast Iron boxes, lined wllh wood, the boxes holding one third of u case apiece. After being sealed up. tbo boxes aro subjected to a steam heat rang ing from tOdogrecs to 1.10 decrees during periods varying from three days to thirty. three days. 110 ording to Iho kind of to ba co under treatment. The quality of leaf Nsric-t very greatly in this particular. I or Instance, tho crop of I'enusylvnnU leaf of lsyi was tho hardest to sweat of an I over go lit tho establishment, while that of 18M aud of I H--I was compara tively easily treated. No two crops of tobacco are alike. Tills year's crop from tho satno ground, with tho satno weather and under, so fur as we know, tho samo condi tions every way, may bo no more llko that of last year than Havana leaf is like Connecticut leaf K differ in streugtb, I avor, quality aud tcxiuro, and for no ex plainable reason, t-omolluies, doubtless, the icrwiu has somothlug lo do with it. "After tbo tobacco comes out of tho' swi'uting room It la removed from tbo air tight canes and again nutou bulk In small piles, where It gradually cools during front forty to forty-eight hours. After ward It Is packed In the original cases and Is ready for the market. Alter being re sweated tho leaf has a sweet odor, tcry unlike thu rank perfumo It gives off In its natural stale. Tho width of tobacco lcaes vary from four inches to two feet. Tbo cost of rcswcatlng U ft) per case or 2 cents per pound. Micccm of 1'aiUur's BWttiod. Ark-w TraTrltr.) Vast possibilities have been suggested by the success of Pasteur s method of protecting cattle and sheep from anthrax b inoculation with the attenuated virus, si tbero se-ems to be no reason for believ ing that we may not lmllarly ward oil the attacks of other deadly contagious dis eases of man aud beast. The eitlcacy of this system is shown by tho report just madu by n Uclglau government commis. ilou! blnto the spring of IbcM many vac cinations lmc liecnHrfonnodnt Hcrveon furuti U hero anthrax is constantly pres ent, and tho Investigators lnuo fully sat isfied themselves that 1 'as tour's method preserves both sheep and cattlo from the disease. , , , Among 1,000 fully grown cattlo which hnvo been vaccinated no caso of anthrax has been obsorved, whllo tho non-vac-cltmtcd hnvo died as usual. Tho protect ho Ini uenco has lasted ono year in 00 per cent, of the youug animals, whllo among all mature nulmaJs tho duration for each inoculation Is nt least two years. Ilummopattila l'arfumes. KxcliariK I Tho odoriferous molecules of musk must bo Incompieheuslbly smalL Wo cau not Imagine their srnallncss, as It Is said that the samo grain of musk under roes absolutely no diminution In weight A single drop of the oil of thyme, ground down wllh a piece of sugar and a littlo alcohol, will communlcato Its odor to twenty-five gallons of wator. Haller kept for forty years papers perfumed with ono grain of ambergris. After this tho odor was as strong as ever. Ilordonavo bos evaluated a molecule of camphor sensible to the smell to '.'.liO'.'.oBOOOlh of a grain. Doyle has obsened that ono dram of naf lido exposed to tho open air had lost In six uays tuo bikihu p" ' ...-, from which Kelll concludos that lu ono mluuto It had lost one 00, 120th of ft grain. , Hie Apparent aln AooounUd for. I IKrank I-oslle's Il'ustrataJ I According to Preuldont Warren, of Uostou university, the apparent gain In numbers of the black race over the south Is largely doe to Iho fact that tho wlU U credited by tho census simply with lis own whlto offspring, whllo tho negro Is credited with lis own proper descendants, 1 as well as wllh all tho Increase of the en tire mixed population of thy country, and over aud above this, with all tba chidreu of while wen by negro or mixed mothers, and "with Xthi children of whlto women by negro or mixed fathers. j Mauto-Hoisiaa Hones- I KbtoaxaKsrsld) I Twelve mounds of incinerated human bones have been dug up In France, at a point which wakes it, llW that they are the remains of Oaulo-Homan warriors, I 1 . , .L..I ( ll.nn Idl fill 111 dft. fWeod'.ng UYK. tet imA passage. t rwr-v1-' MARSHFIELD, OREGON, THURSDAY, THE BIG Z. Hannah Gneldt leaned upon her broom and looked out from tho low kitchen door across the wintry fields and ice-glazed streamlet which lay betwe 1 her home and tho village of Ureenock, with Its ono tailoring spire and sloping roof and blank whlto walls, bare now of tho summer verdure, Bbo had done her household work, polished overy artlolo capablo of polish, and soaped and sanded all the rest. At tbo last sbo had swept clean her door stone, and now felt froo to do what she chose, to rest or gossip or It down to needlework, a thing impossible to her whllo a spot be neath her roof was out of order. Just now sho felt neither llko gossiping nor sewing, her heart was very full, and she foundlt necessary to stand still and think awhile. Only that she was not used to it sho would havo cried, sho was to very tad. It teemed to her that the happiest people were those who lay In their green graves In the churchyard, with crossed bands upon tholr bosoms, and wero quiet from all earthly going to and fro for ever more Not that Hnnnah Oneldt was tirod In body or weary with tho toil of household duty, for she was strong In framo and her health was perfect, as her hands wero willing. It was on her humble heart tbo burden lay, ber spirit that was worn with earthly travail and caro. "Twenty-three years today I've been his wire. " sbo muttered, "and I'vo loved him well, and workod hard and faithful to keep things decent, aud it has como to this at last. 'Things had been better,' says ho, 'If he'd married Miss Lester.' " Yen, that was what Farmer Qneldt, harassed by toll and debt, had said that very morning: and It seemed to Hannah like the confession of a long repentance, forced from her husband's lips at lost "Poor man I I wish I could help him, " she sighed, leaning ou ber broom besldo tbo door. "I doubt he's right about 31lsi ester. " With that ber eyes fell and rested by chance on the doorstep. " I can mend that, anyhow," she said: "and I have timo, for my work is done. " So sbo bung tho broom up and peeped Into her oven aud sot the kettle on, and then, hooded and shawled, crossed over the fields to where tho farm Joined that of Simeon Gray. On one spot were men nt work break ing up the stones lying about. Hannah Qneldt nodded to tho old farmer and ho catno to meet bar. "I want a tmootl stone, "sho said. "May I havo one." "I wish you'd tako'em all," said the farmer, "a lot of rubbish. You see I'm clearing away what they call the old graveyard at last. Wife talks to mo o' tacrllego aud ditlurbtn' bones. Bless you, thero atn'l been none for years and years; and thesn hard times a mau can't let laud go to waste. I tell wife tho don't know nothln' about it, What do you want to dor Havo a bit around the well?" "No. I want n step." said Hannah. "That great white one is Just the thing. " And she pointed to a slab hard by. "Ike shall bring it over to-night, " said ' thu farmer. , "No, " said Hannah, "I can roll It along. I wish I could tell what that was," sbo said, "fromo one's age and noma Ah I tbero were soro hearts when that was new. I hope when I dio Oliver will have writ- , ton iivcr mo that 1 was a good wife. I've . irtea imiu to tc. 1 ougui 10 Know mat big letter watt a bit; I bellevo It's Z. " tho brounht tho slab to tho door. turned tho Inscription downward, washed Iho other sldo clean and white, and fitted it into place. She received littlo credit for her work, 1 Oliver ouly muttered: " You needn't havo published the fact I couldn't atlord a porch to tho place. " I And no ono noticed tho step afterward , save Haunah when sho scrubbed and I swept it. Matters were very bad at the Oncldls. Oliver brooded over tbo fire in qpeochleia sorrow und grew grayer and balder with I each passing day. Hannah kept ruin oir a little by making a home of the bumble . faro by her houMWlfq'i skill. Sho might even havo been cheerful but for the mem ory of that luekleus speech. ' Working in her garden ono day, when me nrsi spring grass was growing green, Hannah beard footsteps, and, lifting her head, saw two gentlemen beside hor, and arose precipitately, with womanly anx iety about her ankles, not strictly cov ered, perhaps, by her cotton gown. Tho nearest gentleman, an elderly man, with bright, dark oyes, addressed her. ''ilra. (Jueldt, I presume. " " Ves sir. " Sbo rnkod him to walk in and he did so. the other following. In the little parlor thoy sat down. "You nro Mrs, Hannah Qneldt, Oliver Qneldt wife." "Yes, sir, It Is about about excuso roe, you look like a lawyer, and I fear It Is mora troublo for poor Oliver. " " 1 tassure yourself, madam. " said tho gentleman; "reassure yourself, maduiu. Your husband Is not concerned, b&vo through you, and that, I hope, pleasantly. Your name was Burns before you were married?" "Yes, sir, Hannah Burns. " "Do you romomber dates well?" "No sir. " "You havo, perhaps, a record of family events, your own birth, your parents' marriage, your grandfather's death?" Hannah Unuldt wonderiucly replied, "I havo father's Ulblo, and they tell mo It's all there. " "How far back?" "To grandfather's birth, I bollovo j Grandfather Hums. Ho had ono child; , and I am the only ono my parents over had. Oliver set down our wedding day and our two boys' birthdays. " "And our great grandfather tho record of his death is thero?" I don t know; you may tee. Walt, I'll call my husband. " Uolug to tho door, Hannah took down a horn, used for that purpose, and uttorcd a call, which brought Oliver Qneldt homo from tho field at once. He also felt alarmed, but explanations qulotod him. Almost as astonished as his wife, he brought out the Bible. "Tho death of my wife's great grnnd father, ebulon Burnt, Is not hero, " bo aid. "Tbo tlrst record is in his hand, I believe. It Is tho birth of his oldest child. " So It Droved, and the lawyer looked disappointed. "You can not remember the day of hit death?" ho said. "I mean tho dato of It." "He died long before I was born, " said Hannah, "and, though rich, left nothing to grandfather. They had quarreled. I believe. He told old stories of him. He must have been very eccentric, and a servant or housekeeper had groat influ ence over him; she had tho property, MarU!yr7l think.- .aid the ltwvnr "Yes," said Haosub, ej -eneniber x&&&jsftswi tell you something. We bavo found something. We found a will among the c eels of a legal gentleman who died cry suddenly of apoplexy. Don't hopo too much, mind A will in your fnror. as your father! only child." Hannah clutched ber husband's hand "it was written by ono on his denth bed, dated tho 10th of March, 17, and leaves all his property to your father, his grandson, then a boy, llushl don't ho,,e too much, Margery Wither or her heirs now hold this property under a will dated March 15, 17." " A later will, " said Oliver. " Then, of course, they aro rightful possessors. What need of all this? Tho latest must stand. " "Not If It Is a forgery, " said tho law yer. Oliver laughed, tho hitter laugh of care ati-l disappointment "Who can prove that?" he said. "No one. Vet the rocord of his death might. A man whoso dying hand signed u will tho 10th of March would scarcely mako unothor on the lfitu. Wo bellovu the will a forgery, written on old parch ment, slneo the discovery of the ono I have spokon of. Margery Wllbcr took po'sesslon with legal forms, for no ono appeared to test hor title. Whero was your greatgrandfather burled!" "Here," said Hannah. "They say ho was brought down at his request Mrs. Wilber as chief mournor, and his son grandfather not oven sent for. An old. graveyard somewhere. Oh Oliveri Olivcrl" Sbo turned quite white and uttered a cry. "Oliver, that must bo tbo graveyard on Gray's place that he dug over last winter in tho warm spell. " "Then It is gone, " said Oliver. "And our last hope with it No, gentlemen, good luck could ucver como to us. l'ov erly means lo cling to us to tho last, I wish you had better clients. " "Oliver! Oliver'" gasped Hannah C ncldt, "tell mo ono thing, ebulon Is spelled with a 'I, isn't it? Oh, do speakP "I think you aro going mad, Hannah; of courso it is. " "Oh, the blgZ, I remember it so well and know It was Z; and it would have been broken to pieces boforo now. Oliver, don't you remember my doorstep that you were so angry at? I do bellovo it Is my poor old great-grandfather's tombstone. And not to know it when I stared at the great JCI" Oliver Gneldt tald nothing. Ho feared his wife's brain had turned, and that made him faint and cold as ho followed her Into the garden, and there watched while tho three others lifted at the flat slab. It lay befi'oj them on tho green spring grnss, black letters on tho whiteness, and, bending over It, they read aloud: "'ebulon Burns. Born May , Died March 14, 18." With eulogistic verses, with long s's underneath, as in duty bound. - "It's poor greatgrandfather's", said Hannah. The lawyer extended his hands, grasp ing those of Oliver and his wife. "Tho proof is found I" he said. "Tho latest will is a forgery, for it is dated the day after the old man's death. Mrs. Gneldt is heiress to a large property. I congratulato you." And Hannah, with her head on her liiifihnnfl'n aliitilrtAt wlifanArtul. --.---- w-.-w, K.vu, , "Oliver, it wouldn't bavo been better to have morriod Miss Lester, after alL " llonner and Uergtu ("Uncle Bill's" New York Letter. A trustworthy gaugo of prosperity' is ' tho road on which New Yorkers drive I fust horses. There aro men who up pear and disappear thero coincidental with their ups and downs In finance. The . i-f.naral i-Avlvnl nt hlialnnc l Iihi-a Inrit. I cated curiously. It is a suro place, loo. to see interesting persons. Bonner is now a roadster nearly every afternoon, and he is going to roturn Maud a to this service. , I was present tho other day when Bonner fell lu with Bergh, whoso road diversion consists in driving a big, sound, lary horse, harnessed in leather softened here and there by soft pads, bitted with wood I Instead of Iron, urged to no swifter pace t man nts own lancy dictates, ana uiantcctcu instantly on stopplnir. with tceminz refer ence to tho exact state of tbo thermome ter. Bergh Is a merciful man who is I t ...... , . ...... .... mercnui 10 uis ocast, anu wtsnes to com-1 pel everybody elso to bo tho samo. I "By tho way, friend Bergh,? said Bon-1 ner, jocosely, let mo urop you a nine, i am not amenable to your ant I cruelty law now, for I've withdrawn Maud S. from training, but at any time within the past si c mouths sho has been worked harder than any car horso or truck drawer in New York. She had tho best of care, of courso, but it is a fact that you probably never thought of that a trotting horso whllo kept in condition for trials of speed does more work than an ordinary beast could stand. I don't think there "is often any cruelty in racing itself, but in tho training you might easily find justification for interference. " Classware fjr the Whlto House, Bai Fi-nn;Uco Ar-onsut, A class-works company at Cornlacr. N. Y., is now manufacturing a set of table classwara for the White House Tbo nfty dozen pieces ordered include for tho luawaru lur ma it una iiuuau. iuui most part what Is called stem wore-L o., Bobleta, tumblers, decautors, liqueurs femouadeicic Tho light glasses for i ...... i.i ...i?,. ?..., which is strikingly beautiful. The order .r," T . .".'" .""'."'. ""." ""JV . "ineorcicr. also Includes ltoman punch glasses, finger-bowls, Individual butters, ice cream plates, Ice cream trays, caralles, pitchers, and tlagont. Many ot tho largo pieces aro dazzllnc in their perfect beauty. Some of the workmanship has been so I carefully executed that it might bo called J art work. No pains hnvo been spared to make each piece as perfect as possible Tho design engraved on tho ice cream plates, glasses, and other articles In tho set. couslstt of an American eagle perched on a shield above tho words "E l'lurlbus L'num. " It is the design that has always , omamouicu ware lor too wmte iiouse ornamoutcd I ware- ror tbo Wulto House , Tho order for this wure is the outcome of an appropriation by congress. Stories at tlio Coast Kogroes. Ilxchsutu-I An Atlanta lady sayt: "It Is not gener ally known that the coast negroo tntono most of tholr stories. A ghost story is always chanted not unmusically, and with a flavor of exaltation. I never go into n Catholic church and hear tho serv ice without thinking of the old days wheu I listened to negro folk lore on tho Caro lina coast " Tli Auitous Csarljo. I Vienna Cut. I-on Ion Tlnias.) 1 Not very long ago a friend of mine who I had boon the czar's guest at Qatchlna.was told by her majesty the czarlua that the life of tbo Imperial family was one of con stant anxiety " ndeed," added the em press, "1 almost dread sometimes lest tho milk given to my children in the morning should contain poison. " . Field Marshal Moltke devotes all his spare time to agriculture Liberia, Africa's colored republic, Is oh mw vgkv u utMJJttuyfrvjr i MAIL. DECEMBER 3, 1885. Farming In Botlaad, I (Naiittvilb) American.) Tho Dutch farmer Is continually fertil izing hit farm of thirty or forty acres, and this process repeated for tomo cen turies, with no crop to drain the substanco of the toil except gross,, makes it rival If not surpass In fertility tho famed banks of tho Nile. Ho consequently mows four or II vo crops of hay a year, and gets as many tons of good hay from each aero mowod. This ho carefully packs away in tho barn, where It can never get wet. Our pcoplo would naturally iuquiro: Where docs his living como from? It docs look strange to the cotton planter, or corn planter, or wheat raiser, but he has solved tho question, just as Tennessee will do In . tbo near future Ho makes it from his cattle. Thirty cows in milk tho wholo 1 year round, for ho has a breed that re fuses to "go dry, " and ono that has sur prised tho world with hor immensa yield of milk. After nn experience of several hundred years ho has learned to makij tho best cheeso that Is made In any quar ter of the globe; It is knowu the civilized world over. For this cbceso ho has a fixed, certain and remunerative market, and sells it each week and pockets tho cash. His cattlo have become almost m well-known as his cheese; consequently the increase of his herd arc sold at the most fancy prices. Ho makes butter as well as cheese; ho makes cheeso from milk after tbo cream is taken off, though its quality is not ranked as tho best. These cattlo rtipport the thickest population In the world, and havo mado of tbeso Hoi landers the richest farmers on tbo globe, l.vcry farmer keeps his carriage, his wines and his Schiedam 6chnaps, and lives in a nioit elegant and tasteful brick residency 1 His land is worth not less than $&00 per j acre, and, though he wears wooden shoes, he has never learned that others are mora I comfortable, and if he does make his wlfa 1 work hard she declares she prefers 11, uiul expresses contempt for any ono who does J not know how to keep clean stables aud . make good butter and cheeso. Mexican l'ecollarlllo. or Character. i , Boston Cimmerda! Bulletin.) ' The Mexicans exhibit perplexing ele ments of character. They arc industri ous, but not thrifty. While Mexico is the market for the thoapest and most in ferior goods, tho population Is addicted to vanities of a luxurious aud costly nature, to which tho import trade contribute very littlo except jewelry. Hats of uncut felt of grey colors, and udorncd with silver embroidery, costing $0 to $50, nro every where met with. Saddles and bridles cost ing from $ 100 to $C00 are in general use. The country is full of small silver coin used for buttons, and often as ornu ments down the outside scam of tho pantaloons. The national vanity shows itself among the beggars as well as the most protiigatc class. Women will go without food, or reduce their subsistence to beans and bread, to take chances in the ' lottery, and tho men will expend their last dollar on a magnificent sombrero. 1 No country aflorus a more deeply inter esting study, and whllo it is dtitlcult to perceive that it is making any progress nt all so far as regards the great body of the population, it is easy to see that it is pa tiently ovolvlng Ideas of what a better 1 condition means. The chronic disposition 10 cicicr ceryiuiuK iu uioimua, iiuww. row) aud tho slow-moving thought and ,li... :. I puy sicai ucuuu &u uuuu-iuk uj -buiupcaua ' j a i, A1Itn lf1 It a ,1 ,1 n ! and Americans alike, while it adds to tho cost of every article In trade, is not wholly without reason In this peculiar climate At tho high altitude of the American plateau. 7,000 to 0,000 feet above sea level, along which the Central railroad is built, tho air is thin and dry, intensely rarifled. evaporation is rapid, oppression of tho heart common to all strangers, and physical and mental exertion has limits that seriously interfere with business energy. Tho fact is so pronounced that it is something of n problem itself with " out reference to other obstacles whether any foreign colonization will ever sustain itself on this plateau. Origin of Madams Tussaud'a Show. Whitehall Review 1 Everybody has heard of Madamo Tus saud's show, but everybody dees not I Know inai us louuuresa ,wua, iu uer uuy, aatliaa A famnllB Sltnmilll llj (njtt U1 . . . "" lumuuo ,uu.uu mv.. u markablo woman in England, " tho great duke used to can ner. Sho met. while j el a girl, at her uncle's table, many of the men whoso names became afterwards famous enough Voltaire, ltousseau, franklin, Hobesnlerre, 31 Irn beau and Ma rat. Sbo was the drawing-mistress and friend to the Princess ElUabcth, one of tho gentlest and most innocent of all the innocent victims of the revolution. After the Beign of Terror she married, and, when she had attained tho age when matrons usually settle down to enjoy ex Istence more thoroughly than ever, poor Madamo Tussaud found herself in Eng land, alono. with hardly a penny in her pocket Tho happy thought struck her that she might follow the example of her uncle, and forma kind of museum of wax casts of contemporary celebrities, turning her natural skill in wax modeling to practical account M no tuea was a success, .unuamo ius ' ""i mR tt " " ox JT ,n " . . . m. ....... f,r"'uT' u, '"".. uJ . ' ti,t iT , Llkc,y '? bo less popular now that tho h m?ve,1,n nb,t ".l",? laree onoueh to hold them and their ' !T.nr ttltrmnt rrowdlno- n! without - - .- -------o --- . tbo accompaniment ot a suiting atmos tihcre. Tho crcat uinrblo staircase at tho entrance, the original price of which was 11,000 pounds sterling, is of itself worth a visit. Poisonous Xjtrd Oil. Cor. Scientific Amerlotn. A recent experiment with what is termed low grade lard oil, or bolt oil, has convinced mo that machinists and others canuot bo too careful to keep it from any slight abrasion of the skin, as the follow ing will prove Having to fit some new dies to mv bolt cutter, and testlnjr their opermJon, my hands became covered 1 Ji,h 0.1 Dn.otin ir,t nii a iid, n,i I .,most unnotlccd abrasion of the skin below tho nail of my left thumb allowed it to come In contact with tbo flesh be neuth, in about an hour it became tint red aud painful, then tumid, and finally black, showing unmistakable signs of blood poisoning, which resisted all reme dies until cauterized with caustic potash. The skin has separated from nail to wrist, and after Intenso sutler In it for two weeks Is slowly healing undor a covering of old .1 linen dipped in "cosmotina " cuery: 1 Was this oil made from the fat of diseased animals, that is, "bono?yard olL " Hot Wator Cur. Writers la The Lancet call attention to the great value of hot water applications to the Leaii In cases of fainting or syncope They say also that their prompt use upon the forehead wllh cloths, will very often avert such attacks. Tho present czar ii the- Bleat ardent waltzer In St Petersburg, and often catches bold of the young court ladles to give them & spla wliitiatUl NO. Mlsccllaneous Advertisements. I Twin Foes to Life Are indigestion and Constipation. Their primary symptoms me among the most dlftrcssln of minor human ailment, and a host of diseases, speedily militant from them, mutually aggravate each other and assail at once tho wholo machinery of life. Nausea, Foul Breath, Sour Stomach, Dizziness, Ilenduchcs, Bilious Fever, Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Kidney DIseases,Plles,Ulicumatlsii, Neuralgia, Dropsy, and tariotix SKI11 Disorders, aro among the nyniptom and maladies caused by derangement of tho stomach and bowels. A Thorough Purgative medicine Is the tint necessity for ctire. Then the cathartic cflect must be main tained, In a mild degree, just nufllclciit to present a recurrence of eostUeiie, and at tbo name lline the llcr, kidncj and stomach must be stimulated and strengthened. Ayer's Pills Accompli-di this restoratlvo work better than nny other medicine. Tbcy are searching and thorough, jet mild, In their purgatlio nettoii. They do not gripe tho patient, and do not Induce n coMUc re action, a lit the cflect of other cntbaitics. Withal, they poitc9 special propcrtlci, diuretic, hepatic and tonic, of tuo highest medicinal alueaml ' Absolutely Cure I All diioa.'M proceeding from disorder ' of tho dlgcstUo and iisslinllatory orpaus. The prompt uso of Ayf.k's I'ills to correct the first Indications of tostlvc iichu, ncrt the serious Illnesses which neglect of that condition would !ncitably induce. All Irregularities in the action of tba bowels looseners as well const!- . p.-ttlon nro benefit l.illv controlled by I AYr.n's Tills, and for the stimulation of digestive organs weakened by long continued dysjK-psIa, one or two of Ayeii's Pills daily, after dinner, will do more gond than nn) thing cl.se. Leading Physicians Concede That AYxn's Tills arc the best of oil cathartic medicines, and many practition ers, of tho highest standing, customarily prescribe them. AVER'S PILLS, rnErAKED by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Analytical Chemists. For sale by all Druggists. HONGELL & SELANDER. O'Connell's new building, Front street, IlKAl FKS IS BOOTS, SHOES AND Clot3a.iaa.gr Ladies' fine and coarse shoes, bos boots and shoes, .nd gen Is rublr coats, ooois anu snoes in great anety. Our ready-made boots and shoes were manufactured expressly for the bay trade. Hats, caps and underwear; stationery, cutlery, tobacco, cigars and matches. A full assortment of men's clotlunjr, in suits or otherwise; mattresses, bed-clothing and vilises. Custom-made boots and shoes specnlty, for which we keep the best French lip, calf and soleleather. Our entire stock is of the latest st)les and finish, and as cheap as the cheapest. Come and sec us al our new store, in O Con netl's new building, Front street, noq. W. G. WEBSTER, DECLKK IK CLOTHING-, HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, Harness, Saddles and Bridles, Crockery, Etc. AIpo, a full lino of Gent's Furnishing Goods Custom Boots made at short notice and repairing neatly and promptly done. Call and see me. N. B. Gentlemen's fine suits a spe cialty. np24 DR. SPIimEY, THE SPECIALIST, HAS HAD 25 YEARS' EXPERIENCE in the treatment of CHRONIC, NERVOUS and PRIVATE DISEASES, And haine thoroughly proed the merits of his Specific Remedies m the treatment and cure of many thousand cases, he now offers them to those In trouble to cvr thtmschex at hvmt. Dr. SPINNEYS Specific for Gonorrhea. Dr. SPINNEYS Specific for S)pluhs. Dr. SPINNEY'S Specific for Spermatorrhea, Dr. SPINNEY'S Specific for Calvin. Price of cither Remedy, $io per case. Sent by express, picked secure from obseralion, on receipt of price. rv.ii ... nffif nnrl Privnr Ijisnpnarv. Mnltnoiinh block, opposite Postofhce Write to UK. M. fc. sriJNiNti. Mox 033, rem uiu Oregon. noio THE BOSS Spring Mattress I The Gaylord Patent ! T AM NOW MANUFACTUKIXC J and selling at my shop, at tho ship yard, tho cheapest and bert spring 111.it tress tor tho pneo over put upor tin market. It combines strength, light ness, durability, simplicity and adapt ability to beds of nil kinds und dime li stens, anil was unaided tho ihrt pre mium at tho lnt Oregon t-tate tmr. Retail price, $0; wholesale, $1 50. Before buying your mattress, examine mine, which is decidedly tho cheapest article of tho kind on tho bay. a!0 GEO. DAVIS. The Coast Mail And the San Francisco Weekly Chronicle B3 so Per yr 1h RdvaHce. " Miscellaneous Advertisements. MRS. M, TOWER, ft? MILLINERY -AJ5D- DRESS-MAKIXn J r,MI'II!K CITY. ('VVi. ' MAS ON HAND '-? J . hue stock of Millinery nttd l;r. i,5.", : ' 1 rAll orders prcmf.tly n. - Wl2y RECPE; tf : . Palace Restaurant spTHE BtiT ai W'.?! Kcrcl In sljli sir 1!) 1. -nt-. i- . ' 11r.ct.1vM -. , . ' . ,f Formerly : . t w LOOKEiAST KST.If km pi 11; 1 ; -'Tkv npHi: i;.v 1 ' . -, t house is too well kno-." . j -. recommendation i' -lAtf&r 1 long- since pr-.-. --, ' ih HOTEL rUL f- MRS. E ;- ! '-HAftly ninq r'rapntjtifr Marshfisjd Hotel! North End Ficct ::u-', Ma &!, THIS PIOX lieen opeii i t ! lime under a man 1,4c ep.curci all thn h , for The hous.- - ' nlshed through- mi . Uons are no " Hoard and j ,. Single Meal. . . Rooms for prtvnt , CJiickcn suppers, os. , of am kind, unit all th- i and the liest wires 1 f ' order at the sho '.-t ' soluble prices. Te us iCTAlso, in eiiiin- i first-cl.us tiakiiy .he, v cakes and pisti J ') all times, frLsh in v BlhUm H8T:.:t Marshfielrl, C . ) FIRST-CLASS AttSMSKh. J(h: And IilfHt1lt.r .'-,; ,. Havinji !at n ' , - tinn to tin .il r nil fxte-ii-i t :! - lmsincts. n. tl , patrons ei . 1 celled li C2T ' contains the .i-i . , it . t lnntic States and tb, !.., i... , ,M Fiiiiin:Yd- noi i. i s ;. SCplO I'tintrifltf CENTBAL HOTEL ! Corner of Front u d V shp.v MARSUFIKLi v JOHN J. KRONH'f ! t'.oj,,,. . THIS WELL-KNOW s HOTEL lias just bet r. enj. . reft'rnishyd throughout and is agn 1. .,.-, public for patronage. New beds and spring mattresses have been placed in almost every sleeping room of the house and neither trouble nor expense has been spared to put ever) thing in first-class order At the bar is to be found the best bra wines, liquors and cigtrs A new entrance to the dining room h.. mide tliat opens on Front slret-t. nnil i" will nlways be supplied wnh market affords. my3 J. J KROV . ,4 T H IE WESTERN HOTEL South Front street. Marshfield, JOHN SNYDER, :::::: Proprietor I HAVE RECENTLY TAKEN CHARGE of the above-named well-estihhshed rt ) nudum sparing neither p.uns nor. xptns,- to r sure in) guests the best of accrmm 'taiioiis. THE TABLES AT THE ES1'RV Are supplied with the liest the iiiarkut ..JK and patrons of the house io.cit- prompt 1 courteous attention. 1 ERMS Board and lodging, pei week. . . Jt to Board, jier week 3 50 au7 tiingle meals 35 NEW CABINET SHOP CD pOKffi - C3 ON FRONT STRM T, OPIOSITl THU Postoflicu, in the building formerly occu pied as n rt-iidcno- !) 11sb11rg, where tlin undersigned havo cir) hcility lor doiu cabinet work of all kinds, upholstering and gcneial job bing uork In wood, at short notice and on lib era iterms. Furniture manufactured and furnished to or der at bottom price. Handsome Chromoi for nle nt low figures. Also I-ooking Glasses of iissorted sites. Pictures (mince to order to suit customer Furniture of nt Und n paired COFFINS niado t order at lowest rnlus and assorted siie kt-l on h.ind. Wo aro also prrp-irt-d to do contrail work, such ns house tmildui. reuiring, and every thing In the carK.nlry line Jobbinc W6rk a socially and promptly exe- cuicu iu uvins ruin. OLE EVANSEN. ) p,,i.,. VICTOR LACKSTROM. f lwlw. spa ANU jsmiwsni iiiHMnBMMtfttiiAiVML'tv '; J- V-i at. I ,1 l IA $h "V Li