CI cnjmi,w'imm.' S. . I fel J M-hT mj)j w kt J' IJi 1 I 1 CS2 ID J flj 1. t J I 1 ;i. I . .rt &.JLJ w 41 m A 1 if ju jL 1TXTT1 t -J BTTn . -W. -w- - -s ft a b a a A n 1 1 it I A -1JLKJ JL JL; A- JL X 1 9 Yol. 2. THE ASTORIAB. rUBLISHKD KVEUY TUESDAY, THURSDAY AXD SATURDAY, Monitor Building, Astoria, Oregon. . c.iks:x,axi ....2rosrictor fjH;serijtion Rates: One Coiy one year & $ One Copy six months W One Opy three month 1 oO tiS' Single dumber, Ten Cents. SU Advertising" Rates: One Insertion per square, 10 lines or less...$2 f0 Each additional insertion, per square 2 00 Yoarly ndv'ts per month, per square 1 GO Agents- L. P. Fisiifr. 20 and 21 Xcw Merchants E change, is authoji.cd to act as Agent for the Asiokun in an Franci-co. Any friend who feels an inierct in the pros perity foi this region, is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, in procuring MiberiJiei. CITY INTELLIGENCE. The steam tng Merrimac return ed from Portland Thursday morning having "given bonds to appear in Court" when she is wanted. J. G. Coe has a class of mice that -will eat up a trap but what they "will get the bait set to catch them. liis last trap is about one third gone. Mr. J. L. Stout, founder of Unity, -was in the city on Thursday, lie is pursuing the peaceful avocations of a farmer now, at his ranch on the weather beach. The Oneonta Avith the British ship Lord of the Isles, arrived in this liarbor Thursday. The British ships Lord of the Isles, and City of Paris, have both cleared for Europe. James Welch of this city and Judge Philo 'Callender of Clatsop plains are in Portland, attending the United States Court as jurors. Judge Cal lender was made foreman of the jury. On and after to-day, until futher notice, the General Dilivery at the Post Office in Astoria will close at G p. m. instead of at 7 as heretofore, except on evenings when the mail -arrives too late for delivery before G, then it will be kept open 15 minutes -or more after distribution. l1apt. George Flavel's large pile driver was taken up to the site se lected for Megler Brothers new can nery on the Columbia river yester day. They will make some exten sive improvements there, requiring over three hundred piles to be driv en. J. II. Gist has been selected to foremanize the work. After making a statement con cerning the Salmon fisheries of the Columbia river, (not, wholly correct) the San Francisco Chronicle has this, which we enderse: If conducted with judgement, and so as not to exhaust the breeding source of the supply, the salmon fisheries of the Columbia may in future years support as many people as do any of the great fisheries of Europe or America, and be the source of almost incalculable wealth to that region. "Omitting the more weighty mutters.' ' We were reminded of this saying yesterday, at the Post-office in this city, where there was a letter posted up: "held for postage." On examining the surperscription of the letter it appeared that the writer had taken great pains to write " catte-corner-wise" across the letter, orna menting the letters and words of the whole address with pen shade marks and dots, so as to require care and close attention from the post-master in reading it and putting it in the proper box, package, or mail. This of course was observing closely the "mint, anise and cumin" part; but neglecting, as the writer did, to put on the little stamp, the missive will liave to go to the dead letter office, unless the writer goes around and puts on the stamp, in which case the person named in the address will never see the filagree work of the su perscription. Tke Postmaster says this is only one of several similar ca ses t this office. No wonder then that so many millions of letters find their way to the dead letter office every year, from the whole United States. Astoria, Oregon, Saturday Morning, Nov. 8, 1873. 5g?graE:j!aA;ai.vrrrrrs Common Coxmcil Proceedings. Astori v, Nov. 1, 1S73. The Common Council assembled in reg ular session Mayor Kippen presiding. Present Councilman Fen-ell, llobson, Page, and W. W. Parker, Messrs. Chas. Stevens Recorder, and G. W. Raymond Marshal. Absent Councilman Reed and Wright. Minutes of previous meeting read and approved. A side walk was ordered to be construct ed, under the supervision of the Street Commissioner, on the north side of Sque moque street, from Main to Lafayette str., on the petition of Bev. T. A. Ilyland and lion. W. D. Hare, representatives on the part of Grace (Episcopal) Church, and the United States Custom-house and Post-office block. Also, on petition of II. B. Parker and Thomas Monticth, owners of the property affected thereby, new side walk was order ed on the north side of Chenamus street, from Main io Lafayette street. Petition for an oidinance to license ven ders and retailers of fresh meats, was laid on the table. Renewals of licen-es for the Globe and Columbia Bar saloons were allowed. Committee report on the harbor survey was placed on file. 3Jetitions of S. In. Arrigoni and Colonel James Taylor relative to Avharf improve ments, were temporarily laid on the table. An ordinance was adopted granting F. Ferrell permission to construct a wharf. Report of the Street Commissioner for the month of October was appioveu and placed on file. Quarterly report of city Treasurer David Tngails, showing a surplus balance of $5 83 was appioved and placed on file. Warrants were oidered in payment of claim again-t the city as follews: David Ingalb $12; J. W. Welch 6 25; Ed. A. Taylor 30; A. Van Dusen 2 G2; G. W. Raymond $0 50; Charles Stevens 834 30. Repoiton the subject matter of the city Cemetery was taken up, and the Recorder -was instructed to collect amounts due for lots, either by cash or note, forthwith. Council then adjourned until the next regular meeting, December 2d, unless oth erwise ordered. CHARLES STEVEN'S, Recordor. A post office has been established at Fort Wrangle, Alaska. There will be a childrens' service with sermon at the Episcopal Church on Sunday next at 1 p. m. Spiritual Hall Astoria, is one of the best halls in Oregon. We ob serve that futher improvements are being made to it. On or about the 13th insr., Messrs Lawson t&Farleman, present proprie tors of the Globe, will open the new Parker House on Main street. They have proven what they can do by way of keeping a hotel, in the Globe. To-day Mr. Fayette Gere, who has been employed on the hydro graphic survey of Astoria harbor, with Mr. II. J. Stevenson, C. E., leaves here for Portland, and will soon take his departure for Urban a, Illinois, his native home. All friends of Fred will wish liim prosperity wherever he may go. Jovial gooi fellow good bye. A fewT days ago quite a fete was performed in pile driving at the Farmer's wharf by Messrs. G. W. Raymond, R. D. Adair, and T, H. Reeves, and others on Capt. Flavel's new driver. Twenty-three piles, from 42 to 50 feet in length, and from 18 to 20 inches in diameter each, were driven to depths ranging from ten to 12 feet each, in five and a half hours. The hammer weighs 2,000 pounds. Philip Condit and J. H. Halstead of Clatsop plains recently returned from an Elk hunt on Elk Creek, near the line of Tillamook county. They succeeded in taking the horns and hide of one fine fellow, and some considerable smaller game. Wolves are abundant in tliat locality. The best tiling they have to report is the finding of a lanje tract of rich arable bottom land, whieh is onhp waiting settlement to develop a fine com munity. - . ' . ' ' w,n t".'! Tf; - aEARXXZ: 3TJSWS. The schooner Margaret Crockard has gone to Humboldt. The City of Paris takes about one half her cargo for Queenstown from Astoria. The Stcilacoom schooner Clara Light has been sold in San Francisco for S,550. The Norwegian bark Gungner, for this port from Montievcdo via Victoria, reach ed the latter port on the 2Gth. The ship Cutwater, due at this port is from Dunedin, New Zealand; and the ship David Brown, from Newcastle. The ship Puritan, hence lor Hongkong, with a cargo of flour, was still at that poit on the 27th of September, unengaged. By some miscalculation the shipLoid of the Isles did not get her full comple ment of cargo in to about twenty tons. The first steamer to lie at Capt. Flavel's new dock ha been one of the wheat light ers, of which there aie now four or five in constant use. The charter paity of the new Westport schooner, Ettie Ma', has been changed. We understand that Capt. John "West will freight her with salmon for San Francisco. It will be a dire disaster if the Columbia should close with ice, leaving the bulk of the grain crop unshipped. The wheat and flour should be hurried to Astoria as fast as possible, and not be kept waiting anoth er year. The schooners Carolitannd Louisa Mor rison left San Francisco for Shoalwatcr bay on the 2Sth. The Mary Zephyr, six days from Shoalwater bay, arrived at San Francisco on the 22d. She is probably on the return voyage by this time. The schooner Superior recently changed hands in San Francisco, for $13,500. She was built in Michigan for the Lake trade; came around Cape Horn, has made two voyages to the Columbia river, and is now again on the way to this port. The cargo of the Three Brothers for Havre was valued at $190,000. It amount ed to 87,333 centals wliQal 4,3G6 tons. We should like to ee a cargo of such di mensions leaving this poit, which is not by any means an impossibility. It could be done verj' easily, and we suggest that Astorians induce some prominent shipper like Messrs. George Howes, Fiiedlandor, or E. E. Morgan's Sons, to make the trial if our Oregonians will not. This would settle the mooted question at once and for ever. Real Estate Sales. Following is a list of deeds recorded in Clatsop county last menth: John Adair and wife to the United States part of lots 3 and 4, block 17, Adair's Astoria, consideration 900. United States to Rinehait Brown 14.72 acres town 9 north range 7 west. State of Oregon to F. Tilcn 80 acres town 7 north range 9 west, 100. State of Oregon to David Odam eighty acres town 7 noith range 9 west, $100. Henry F. Fisher to Feid F. Fisher lot 8 block 70, Olneys Astoria, $150. Philip Gcarhait to George W. Siferd lots 3, 4 and 7, block 19, Lexington, $200. D. W. Wallace to Trustees of the town of Clatsop Plains, tract of land adjacent to the town of Lexington, ibr town purpo ses, consideration $1 GO. United States to Charles Stevens 323. 27 acres town 8 north range 9 west. R. W. Morrison to First Prebbyterian Church of the incorporation of Clatsop Plains, tract of land ibr Church purposes, ten acres $1 00. United States to Wm.Blackmore 40.97 acres town 9 north range 7 west. George Kellogg to Joseph Kellogg lots 5 and G, block 104, Olneys Astoria, and a certain tract of land in Benton county, 1. George and Joseph Kellogg to Joseph Knott above described propei ty. SI, GOO. State of Oregon to C. A. McGuire SO acres town 8 north range 6 west, 1G0. United States to Joseph Jeflers 645.37 acres, town 8 north lange 9 west. Estate of John P. Ward bankrupt to Byron Z.Holmes assignee, all interest of said bankrupt in and to real or personal estate in Clatsop county. A. Cloutrie and wife to School District No. 10, Clatsop, one acre for school pur poses, 1 00. An accidental -lire an a defective flue atthe Officers1 Quarters Fort Cape.DUap pointment, did slight damage yesterday re - T're,TirrrBJ. Lrjm?.i.c7: mmm dispatches. T5bc i'rice of Gold. Portland, ' Xov. 7. Gold in New York to-day, 1081 ; Portland Legal Tender rates, 90V buying, and 9U selling. islisccnaiieoiis News. The revolution in Sonora is ended. Forty houses were burned in Con stantinople Tuesday. The Xew York bricklayers are on a strike, owing to the reduction of wages. Mike McCoole was arrested in St. Louis on Tuesday for the murder of Patsey Marley. There is a prevailing feeling of satisfaction in Berlin at the collapse of Court de Chambord. An attempt was made to burn Leb anon Pa., on Saturday last. It was fired in five different places. The total number of admissions to the Vienna Exhibition from the open ing to the closing was 7,250,000. George II. Bradbury, President of the Pacific Mail Company, is stop ping at the Occidental Hotel. San Francisco. The International Bridge was for mally opened over the Niagara river on Monday. Several passenger and freight trains crossed. The Spanish steamship Murillo, seized at Dover for sinking the emi grant ship Northfleet, has been con demned, and will be sold. From the best data can be obtained the First National Bank of Washing ton will pay its creditors from pres ent assets about 50 per cent. Girard the Prussian subject, who was arrested by the Cartagena in surgents, on a charge of being a spy from Madrid, has been released. The Texas and California Company failed to meet its heavy obligations maturing last Monday, and over $300, 000 worth of its paper wont to protest The total disbursements of the United States Mint Department dur ing October, exclusive of interest on the principal of the public debt, $14 832,S65. Three steamers are now constantly plying between Wallula and Celilo, carrying down full cargoes each trip, and yet they are unable to take away the grain as fast as it ofibrs. m Between $700,000 and $800,000 in silver of various denominations will be coined at the Philadelphia Mint this mouth. 37,000 trade dollars coined in Nevada have found their way into circulation. The election of the Tammany coun ty ticket in New York is generally conceded, with doubts as to JDonahu I lor the Supreme Court, and the con trafcis e-xriMnpnnlv in thA ARsomhlv and Senate districts. and 5Qn,tn iHefnK, Chris Raflerty, who murdered Po liceman O'Meara in Chicago about a year and a half ago while the latter was about to arrest him on a warrant, and who has been twice convicted and sentenced to death, has secured a new trial from the Supreme Court. After three years of steady labor, day and night, the Enterprise ora paiiy of Sucker Hat, California, have completed a bed-rock tunnel, 2,500 feet long. The tunnel opens a Tai amount of rich mining ground. The vegetable dealers and growers of San Francisco resolved to stand by each otlier in resisting the order of the Board of Supervisors driving their wagons off the Sansome street stands. The price of vegetables ha advanced in consequence of their ac tion. The house of Jay Cooke & Co., which borrowed froin. the First Na tional Bank of New York $100,000 has since the failure withdrawn $200, 000 in Central Pacificbonds deposited with the security for 8200,000 advanc ed them before ilieir failure. The creditors are to investigate the pro ceedings. The strike of the engineers and firemen on the East Tennessee, Vir ginia and Georgia Railroad threat ens to assume & dangerous character. Some of the employes Saturday pre vented the freight train from leaving by uncoupling the cars. The night passenger and all freight trains have been discontinued. Col, Baxter, at torney of the road, is now addressing the employes, explaining to them No. 4 .RZkWW.,iJ.!ln'm-rv.JLi- i, ,j nisg-ryryi the trouble. They are subjecting themselves and advising non-interference with operations of the road. The Kansas Pacific, St. Louis and Southwestern, and Central branch of the Union Pacific failed to pay their semi-annual coupons on Saturday. The Directors say twenty million dollars in securities, to be used as bonus to raise the necessary means to meet the interest on the bonded debt to liquidate the greater part of the floating debt was of no avail. Money could not be procured during the present pressure. The disposition of employes in the East, so far as their feeling and pur poses can be judged, is to reduce the number, of hours work, and not dis charge or furlough employes. At least a dozen prominent firms in New York City have made known their intention to prevent the discharge of men and women employed by them, but to reduce the work to a few hours per week while hard times continue. The rumor that Government pro poses discharging a large number of employes engaged at Navy Yards and other public works, is denied by the Secretary of the Navy. lie believes it the duty of the "Government in such a crisis as the present to give all the aid it can to the material inter ests of the country. The Treasurer of the Chespeake and Ohio Railroad says in a circular to the bondholders that the only way to re-establish credit is to refund the entire floating debt in income bonds, to be paid out of the net earn ings of the road. has secured to his family one mil lion dollars by a gift to his children. It is reported a pool has been form ed for the purpose of saving the house of Claliin A Co., and that five millions have been raised for that purpose. Falling timber, during the prevalence of high winds in this region Thursday night, made so much noise that the sounds were mistaken for minute guns at the Fort, and many supposed it was a signal lor some vessel in distress happilyit was not. Dr. I. M. King, former bilk of the Herald, manages to worm into the San Francisco dispatches to the Portland press pretty freolv. He has cheek enough to cause a flash most anywhere, which prob aly account for it. He is a "nice" man to hare around a hospital or a balloon; as Mrs. Partington would express it: "If 1 tnere is anybody under the cannister of JaoaYen that 1 have m utter exere?ence,u is the fansilfyer going about like a boy con structor, circulating his calomel upon hon est folk." The map of the hydrographic survey of the harbor of Astoria has been complet ed by H. J. Stephenson, G. E., and assis tants, and accepted by the committee of the Common Council. It is really one of ' the finest specimens of the kind we have ever ie en, and exceed; and exceeds the expectation oi the committee. Bubides which, it has the : merit of correctness, is accurate in every particular, and hereafter, when improve ments are contemplated in our harbor, Or along the city front, the work may b un dertaken understand in gly. According k this survey Astoria has a excellent front sgo along the lines of high and low water, and to the deep channel, as any city iu the world. The wharves owned by ben Hol laday, Caut. llobson, and F. Ferrell, are represented on the map a they exi-t at th present time. Those of Capt. Flavel, and tho Farmers' Company, as contemplated. Mr. Stephenson leaves for Portland this, morning, Excavations recently made at Ostia, & small maritime town of Italy, have brought to light two questionable master pieces of ancient sculpturex One is a mar velously executed head of Apollo, in tho very best utyle, like the celebrated statue in the Vatican, the other is an alleged head of tho Sun, equally remarkable for its sculptural perfection. These two precious relics of ancient art -have been deposited in the collection of antiquities of Mont Pal atine, to which place the art critics flock in crowds to admire and extole their fin ished beautv. A firm at Detroit, Mich., is frzeeing fish to send East during the Winter. The fish are kept in salt and ice 24 hours, after which they are packed in refrigerators, the temperature of which is 20 or 25 de grees. The firm will put up 80 tons da ring the next thirty days. Massachusetts finds it imposiblo to get young men to work her farms. The State r eittabliphed an Agricultural Colletro at a cost of between-$300,000 snd500,u00,and lr&r graduated t$n farmery. tu ,