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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1887)
0 VOL. NXYI1, NO. r;. ASTOIUA, OREGOjV, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1887 PKICE IIYE CENTS. " KUSIXESS CARDS. G KO. XOL.AXl, ATTOKNEY AT LAW. tiiv m Kinnej'rt !ock, uppoMte City Hall, Astoiia, Oregon. " W. FUI.TON. J. O. VL'I.TON FLT.TOS UK OTHERS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Uooius 5 and G.Odd Fellows Uuiluhig. . O. " TMOMSOX, Attorney at Law and Notary Public, i Special attention gi en l o pracnee in me U. S. Land Ofuce. and the examination of land titles. A full set of Abstract Hooks for Clatsop County in onioe. Money to loan. , , Ofkk-k Rooms l and .r, out Cit Hook NIlMV I . A. BOWIiKY. l . lit onto niitl i'lmnxcllor :t law o.'lliv mi CluMiamiit .Slieet. AMon.i. Orrgoii LT I. 1VI.VTON ATTOKXKV AT LAW. i:ioiiis No. It and 12. Pythian C.iNtlr KuiM- ing. I B. WATSON. Atly.at Law and Deputy Dist. Atty. Allbusine-s before the U. S. Iuul Ofmva specialty. ASTOIUA. - - Olir.CON f K. I. A PORCF.. DENTIST. Rooms 11 and 12 Odd Fellows ISuildiug. ASTOIUA, --- - OHEfiOX. -r. A. li. FITITOX. l'liy.Iolmi ami Stirgoon. Ofllce on Cass street, three doois south of odd Fellow's building. Telephone No. 41. .1 AY TUTTIjK, Hf. I. PHYSICIAN AND SUKGEON Office Booms fi Pythian Building. UF.srDKXCE On Cedar Street, back of M. Mark's Hospital. t lt.O. B.F.STKS. ' I'll YS1G1 AN AND SURGEON. OFKii'K. : fSem P.uildlng, up stairs. Astoiia, Oiegnn. "VK. FIUXR PAK, I'll Y.SIC1AX AND SUHKEOX, OppositeTelegraph Ofllce, Astoria. Oregon. fl KL.O F. PARKEIt, SURVEYOR OF CLATSOP COUNTY A1 Ex-City Surveyor of Astoria fllce : X. E. corner Cass and Astor streets. I'oom No. 8 Up Stairs. Robt. Collier, Deputy, D It. AKFKF.D KIXNKY, Office at Kinney's Cannery. Will only attend patients at ids ofilce, and may be found there at any hour. E.a IIOLDF.X, Notary Public, Commissioner of Deeds For Washington Territory, Auctioneer, Real Estate and Insurance Agent. Office, at Hold en's Auction Rooms, Chena inns .street, Astoria. Oregon. A. F- SIIAW. DENTIST. Rooms in Allen's Building, up stalls, cor i.er Cass and Squemoqua .streets. Astoria Oregon. A. SMITH, DENTIST. Rooms 1 and -J Pythian P.uild mg oi C. H. Cooper's Store. Caniahan & Co. st'cciissoirs 'io I. "W. CASE, IMPORTERS AXI) WHOLESALE tAXPj RETAIL DEALEIIS IX I GENERAL MERCHANDISE, Corner Chenamus and Cass stiects. ASTCUIA ORKOON THOS. MAIRS, n A Good Fit Guaranteed. CHARGES MODERATE Agent for the Celebrated TTou-elmld Se wlnj Jrachlne. Shop opposite C. n. CooperV i H. s FasIuonablB Tailor TAR TRADEVMARK. ''Va Absolutely J-'ree frutn Ophites, nineties and JFoison SURE. PROMPT. 1UK til IKLEs A. Tln.H.11: CO.. lULTiaOKE. Mil. AT UMTGOiSIS AMI 1IF1LLR3. f JACOBS rfftOE GERManreMEGY or Pair CsKsfiireaitSss. Nrailria. imtxatsr, iieaaitiie, louUBtiit, bpnuiu, uruitM, clr., tr. PKWK, FIFTV CENTS. At Ilni7..ra r..l I luUn. 1UE (H1KLL3 a.iuqu.kk co.,uai.ti20ke, no. rrPNe r mi K' HULI !! Jares Teaala Complaints. AGrsatKldnej Umely. tW S0L5 BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Boat Building. TlfAXY YEARS EXPERIENCE IX ItA binldiuK loat- on the Columbia iier and hundreds of line boats of m build make my ;uaranteet for good work." Head quarters at the old Astoria Iron Works building. Will build boats at any point on the Columbia iher w here my sen ices may be lerjuireti. WM. HOWE. -AGENCY OF SAX FllAXCrSCO. Flavel'sWharf and Warehouse, Astoria, Ore(;ou. Caimory Supplies at Lowest Prices. Storage and Insurance at Current Kate. Banking Department Drafts on the leading Cities of the World JOHN F. McGGVERN, Agent. B. II. Coleman, Accountant. WilsonJ Fisher Ship Chandlers, HEAVY AND SHELF IAEDWARE Paints, Oils, and Varnish. LOGGERS' SUPPLIES. PROVISIONS AXI) MILL FEED AGENTS FOU SALEM PATENT ROLLER MILLS, Portland Eoller Mills, Capitol Flour and FAIRBANKS' SCALES. I ASTOIUA. OREGON. -THE- DIAMOND PALACE! flrSTAY HA.NSEX, Prop'r. A f-irge and Well Selected Stoek of Pine $ R J At Extremely Low Trices. Alt Coo J is bought at ThU EstnldMiniHit Warranted Genuine. r(ii mttl Cloclt Iki:tiriii I A SPECIALTY. Coiner Cass and Squeinoqua Streets. Elmore, Sanborn & Co. ; COMMISSION MERCHANTS, -J!7LiYi Tncnvonno Ai w t"" ReitresentitiK the Largest and jrost Relia ble Fire Insurance Companies. All Business prompt! yjand accurately tran acted. FlavelsWharf. - Astoria Oregon. iJllJLlJlbJ IH 8 n HE km H SJh E K i Kan OK fit y. i i' - ffl (IRA UA1 m Coleman&Co Diamonds Jewelry MEMOEIAL SEEVIOES. Synopsis of an Address by Hev. 0. B. Whitmore at Boss' Opera House March Gth, 1887. The memorial address delivered by Rev. O. B. Whitmore, at the Upchurch memorial services of Seaside Lodge No. 12, A. O. U. Y., last Sunday evening, was a i very creditable production. 1 he reverend speaker took lor his "text "True Charity." He said: raiuer jonn j. upenuren, lue subject of this memorial service, was born in Franklin county, North Carolina, tho 2Gth day of March, 1S20. fits father being a farmer, the first seventeen years of his life were spent upon the farm, but at 17 yeats of age he began to learn the trade of a mill wright. Then he worked at house carpentry for awhile. At 21 he was married, anil undertook to run a hotel at Raleigh, N. C. Again, at J25, we find him in the employ of the Pennsylvania rail way company, where ho remained for a number of years, and then engaged with the Atlantic and Great Western railway company, and was foreman of their hops at Meadvilie, Renn. It was here thai he became disgusted with both the spirit and the practice of the trades unions, which he be lieved to be based upon principles altogether loo narrow and selfish, each trade organizing and support ing a Union of iLs own, and each in their intense selfishness willing to sacrifice every other interest in order to advance their own. Stys Father Upchurch: "They were selfish and envious; tho black smith was ready to sacrifice the business of the machinist in order to build up his own. There seemed to be no sense of fairness toward employers, and often strikes were organized without sense or justice." ,IIe believed this to be all wrong; that there ought to be rather a union of the whole for the greatest number. And thus the idea of the possibil ity of another organization based upon broader and more liberal principles, where capital and labor might be harmonized and their common -interests promote I, dawned upon him, and gradually took shape until finally, on the 27th day of October, 18G8, he or ganized, with 11 members, what is known as the A. O. U. W. The first five years of its existence it passed through a number of .strug gles, being confronted two or three times by seemingly insurmounta ble difficulties, but finally, in the year of '73, it tided safely over all difficulties and began to spread with great rapidity, so that when Father Upchurch died on the ISth day o January last, the order numbeted 1S0.00?, beiug organ ized in almost every state and ter ritory in the union, and in the do minion of Canada, and having dis bursed for the widows and orphans more than 815,000,000. This is purely a benevolrnt and beneficent organization. "It has no connection with any religious sect, or political part, or organi zation for affecting: the prices of lahor, or commodities, but is de signed to promote fraternity, men tal and social improvement, and mutual assistance." But while it has no connection with either poli tics or religion, it antagonizes nei ther, but rather from that book, the Bible, which contains the great underlying principles of all true government, and is the only per fect guide of a truly religious life, its chief motto being "Faith, hope and charity, but the greatest of these is charity." Ilere follows a glowing eulogy on practical charity, that all em bracing charity which makes a man look upon the world as his country and to do good as his re ligion. j "It is this spirit of Qhrist life, '.and which permeates all of his . teachings," continued the speaker, i "that was tho ruling passion of the j life of Father John J. Upchurch, . and out into both of those depart ments of life's activities, of which ! we have spoken, did he thrust the ! A. O. U. W., of which he was the honored founder." "The primary object with Fa ther Upchurch was to harmonize and unify the common interests of men, and then to provide for the widoweel and fatherless, and so ' broad and deep "were the founda- tionb laid, aqd so wisely lias the magnificent superstructure been ! reared, that men of all professions and avocations in life are sheltered under its dome, while its rich dis pensations of charity to the widows and orphans amount now to more than 3,000,000. My friends, let this charity which nevr faileth but suffereth leng and is kind, that inclines us to think favorably of our fellow men and do them good, which was the ruling passion ot this man s lite, become the great underlying prin ciple of action along every avenue of life's activities, in every depart ment of life's work, and this world would, be lifted by this mighty, mqving impulse of the Divine life, onto a higher plane of living where vice, crime and want would cease; and righteousness, peace and pros perity "would reign. Talk about building monuments out of perishable things, to the memory of such men! I tell you they build their own monuments, which are more enduring than shafts of marble or piles of granite. Listen! "Afoou Ken Adhem may lm tribe in- creaso '; Awoke one night from a sweat dream of peace, ; And saw, witbiu (he moonlight m his room, Making it rich, and liko a lily iu bloom, An angel writing in a book of pold. Exceeding peace bad inndo iten Adhem bold; And to tho presenco in the room he said: What writest thon?' The vision raised its head, And with n look made all of sweet ac cord, Answered: 'Tho names of those who love the Lord.' 'And is mine one?' said Abou. 'Nay, not so,' Replied tho angel. Aboa spoke more low, But cheerily still: 'I pray thee, then Write me as one "who loves his fellow men.' The angel wrote nnd vanished. Tho next nicht It came again with a great wakening light, And showed the names whom love of God had blesseih. ActUo!-Ben.AdOTra,B-nam9''lea"ftll the rest:" " Nearly Two yeartiLago 1 went siirht-seeinir in the city of New Orleans, with a man for my guide who had lived there more than half a century. lie took me first to Lee's place at the junction of St. Charles street and St. Charles avenue, where stands a monument of granite 150 feet high, erected to the memory of General Robot t E. Lee. Thon he pointed out Lafay ette square, named after that hon ored Frenchman; then he took me to ''Margaret place' near one of the large orphan asylum, where a monument was erected to the memory of Margaret. It was a piece of sculpture carved from a block of marble the figure of a woman sitting in a large chair, with her left arm encircling the waist of a girl standing by her sido. In outline of form and feature it is said to be a faithful representation of Margaret; and tKe girl by her side is supposed to be an orphan. Do you ask who was Margaret? Go and ask the inmates of half a dozen orphan asylums in the city of New Orleans, who have been blessed by her benefactions, and they will tell yon that a few years ago she came to that city a poor, unlettered German girl, and was employed in the asylum near which her monument now stands, where her sympathies were soon enlisted for the poor children who came there to be sheltered, clothed and fed; that in a little while she saved enough from her small earnings to buy a cow, , then another and an other; that she went into the dairy busincs?, and finally bought a lat'o-e bakery; that while she lived, her benefactions to the orphanages of the city were constant and liberal; and when she died she bequeathed her business, with an income of several thousand dollars a month, and all she had, as a dispensation & charity to those asylums. And I said, as I looked upon that piece of sculpture erected to her mem ory, and listened to the recital of the story of her life as it fell from the lips of my friend, Mr. Spear ing: "This piece of sculpture will grow old and become tarnished as the years j go by, and finally, like all material things, will waste away, but Margaret will live in the memory of a grateful people, who, as the years go by, are blessed by her benefactions in those asylums of the crescent city of the south." For charity never faileth and i the dispensers of charity bein dead, yet speak. Even so Father John J. Upchurch will live while i time lasts in the memory of a grate-' tul people who are blessed by the benefactions of the A. O. U. W. j "And now abideth Faith, Ilope and Charity but the greatest of these is Chanty." T lXrvv CXi. T1,at arC frctful JVAV35 peevish, cross, or troubled with "Windy Colic, Teething Pains, or Stomach Disorders, can be relieved at onco by using Acker's Baby Soother. It contains no Opium or Morphine, hence is safe. 1'iiec 121 cents. Sold by J. W. Coun. General Wolsely in an inter view at London Saturday, said "he felt sure that a vast and appalling war is certainly in the near future. The rapidly increasing armaments and huge burdens which the several power.-, are laying upon themselves, and the directions iu which these armaments are being developed, must make war inevi table. Whether it will come this summer or not there is only one man in Europe who knows, that i Bismarck. ISiioklcn'S Arnica Sulio. The IJEsr Sai.vt. in the woild tor Cuts. nniises.Srtros.Tlepr5.SfiH l?lintii Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains. Corns, and all Skin Erup tions, and positively cities Pile.-., or no pay tequircd. It is guaranteed to gie perfect satisfaction, or money refunded. Price '5 omits nor lto.v. Vnr-..i ! hv V E. Dement As Co. Tho Tayhlatl says that owing, to the war scare emigration to America has sreatly increased. the emigration cominir chiefly . troin Hesse, Wurtemburg and Baden. ,. - C3 - How' Liver? i tin' Oriental salutation, knowing that good health earmofc exist- without a healthy Liver. When the Liver is torpid tho Bow els are sluggish and con rtipaLed, the food lie3 in the stomach undi , es ted, poisoning the nlood ; frequent hcadacho ensues ; a feeling of lassi tude, despondency and nervousness indicate how the whole system 13 de ranged. Simmons Liver Regulator ha3 been tho means of restoring more people to health and liappiness by giving them a healthy Liver than any agency known on earth. It acts with extraor dinary power and efficacy. NEVER BEEN DISAPPOINTED. As a general family remedy for Dyspepsia, Torpid Liver, Constipation, etc., I hardly ever use anything else, and have never been disappointed In the effect preduced: it seems to he almost a perfect cure for all diseases of tho Stomach and Bowels. W. J. McElkoy, Macon, On. J. H. ZEILIN & CO., Phlladelpha, Pa. Price SI. OO. Look Here Boys. It 1 want a mat flttini; Suit of Clothes, BO to J, 3E3 ROSS, Merchant Tailor. HiiMui: jusl roroiwd .1 complete assort meiit of Foreign and Domestic Suitings. Something Entirely New. 1 am prepared to make up Suits cheaper than the cheniest. Utvemea call ami he convinced that I mean what T say. J. E ROSS, Corner Squemoqua and Hamilton streets, east of P II. Cooper's. B. F. ALLEN PRACTICAL DRAINER and PATNTER. SIGNPAINTING, AND GLASS SHOW CARDS, IMjAIX AXD DECOOATnT. ! Paper Hanging, Frescoing, Etc. Shop on Cass St., uet to Stinson's lllack snuth shop. Astoria, Oregon, TirpiaCiEaraniTotecoo Store J. W. BOTTOM, Proprietor, Water Street, Two Doors East of Olney. Fine Cigars, Tobaccos aad SmoVcrs Articles, Sold at Lowest Market Rates. FRUITS. CANDIES. NOTIONS.&c. Just Received. 1,500 Soils ffallpajer ai Becorations Of the Latest Designs and Shades. Also to Arrive THIS WEEK. 0 Leather, Plush and Carpel Rockers, In Elegant New .styles: Ju-t the Ihing un -L 3EEclcLt3r DPosodllI;. Call and See Us. CHAS. HEILBORK. BoaaaMMBaBattn -IX- 6S A'Xl) Musical Instruments T TI1K New York Novelty Store GREAT Br i Mins TO a " ! Baby Bugs W. F. ArmbrusteriEstabllshed Practical cQ J :ej w e l e 3EL WATCHES, Clocks, Jewelry and Musical INSTRUMENTS Repaired on tlm Shortest Notice lit Rea Muable Kates. Chenamus St., net to Spexarth's fiun store. BOOTS AND SHOES! Of Best Quality, and at ; lowest prices,! AT THE SIGN OF THE GOLDEN SHOE. iTOIBCIKr 3EIjSl33Z3ST. Strike It Rich! -JJUVYOUlt- Groceries Provisions OF Foard & Stokes Their largely increasing trade enables them to self at the very lowest margin of profit while giving you poods that ai e or first class mial l ty. Goods Delivered All Over the City. Tin-Highest Price V.U for Junk, ISA And J The New Model Range CAN BE HAD IN Agent. Ca and Examine It ; You ft iil be 1'leased. E. It. Ilawes T also Agent fm th Buck Patent Cooking Stove, AND OTTIElt FHiST CLASS STOYES. Furnace Work, Steam Fittings, Etc., a Specialty. A Full Stock on Hand. Coliili Transportation FOR PORTLAND! Through Freight on Fast Time! TJIE NEW STEAMER TELEPHONE Which has been specially built for the comfort of passengers will leave Wilson & Fisher's Dock every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 6 A.M. arriving at Portland at 1 P.M. Returning leaves Portland every Tuesday and Thursday at 6 A. M. arriving at Astoria at 1 P. M. -An additional trip will be made on Sunday of Each Ween, leaving Portland at O'clock Sunday Morning:. Passengers bj this route connect at Kalama for Sound ports, tj. b. SCOTT, President S. ARNDT & FEKCHEX ASTORIA. - OKKGOX. 'The Pioneer Machine Shop M.ACKSM1TH HOP-I AND VVS I n -i- Vjfite3KP6S oouer 5nop 3.g- Sv ENGINE, CANNERY, ASH- STEAMBOAT WORK I'romptly attended i. A;nrcl:ilty made of repairing CANNERY DIES. FOOT OF LA FAYETTE STKE1C1 1870 t tw r a nti 1 A fl 11 h7 ILJ X. W . J3Lf3SU9 PIONEER BANKER, ODD FELLOWS BUILDING Does a General Banking Business Drafts Drawn Available in anPart of the World. 1 Boat Building. JOE LEATHERS Is on deck and prepared to build boats that he w ill guarantee as to work and dur ability. Kefers to all wlfo have used boau ot I his constiuctioii. Allworkguaranreod nnerymen NOTICE. If ou want to contract for your summers wood now b your chance. Apply to FRANK L. PARKER Or to the Astoria Food Yard. .lust received at the Astoria Wood ;d 150 cords extra choice Red 1'ir Wood. a!-. 50 cords line Vine Maple Limbs. Lea e orders with F. L, TAttlCCR. Telephone 3S. ASTOIUA, ONLY OF Coipny -ti