(3 J !&& &ils gstecimx. ASTORIA OREGON ISSUED EVERY MORNING, Monday Excepted), t. C. IRELAND : : ITBI.ISKEK. Arforian Building, Cass Street, Terms of Subscription : fcsrved by Carrier, per tveok 25 Cords Sentbj' mail, four months SS 00 Sent by mail, cne yoar 9 00 Free of !'ota.se to Subscribers. car AdvortiFcmcncs inserted oytho yoar at tfco rate of SI o0 per square per month. Transient ndvortHns, by tho day or week, fcfty cents per sauarc for oacli insertion. THE CITY. J23r-77ic Daily Astoria will he pent by nt'tilatiriccrtte a mrtJth..Trcc of pontage. Read v irh't ctnJcmtHafralMK-ncc fntm (he city can hai'c Tiik Astoriax folbw Umn, Daily Vt'RKMiY alii ion tn a.wu pfM-o&cr wilh hit additional expense. Addrowcs may he fttiintfetl as often n desxrod. Loavc orders at ii- cnumtina room. BRIEF AXXOT7NCEMEXT. A new lot of full bound blank, and receipt books, specially for use in cau teries, at the City Book store. Get vonr baskets filled for a little money at Bailey'.s. Fresh oysters in every style at Schmeers'. See advertisement. -A small house to let in a desirable locality for residence.. Inquire at this -office. A stunningly beautiful selection of valentines were opened at the City Book store last week. Call around and see them. Capt. J. G. Hustler wishes to zi ve everybody timely notice that if that school tax Is not jvaid within a few days costs will certainly follow. Trenehard & Upshur have at their afcore. samples of cedar net floats made by Pixlew at Westport, and which will be furnished in quantities to suit at $3 00. "A celebrated case7' Harvey W. Scoot. "One more Daily Oregonian. unfortunate" The - -Satan rebuking sin Harvey W. Scott and Bill Watkins. Be in time to secure your masks. They have arrived at Adler's. Rapidly disappearing The Ore gonian's influence, and the snow. For Fresh Roll Butter, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Oranges and Lemons go to J. W. Gearharts. We are informed that Mrs. Kelly of Portland, has established in Shus ters building for the purpose of open ing a stock of millinery goods. Mr. C. Linenweber, of the firm of Bad llet & Co., senior partner of ihe hemlock tannery, will leave for San Francisco upon the out going steamer Geo. W. Elder. It is said that it is an ill wind "that blows nobody good. Yesterday was quite a windy day, but it blew but few items for Thk Astorzah this morning, of local import. Cannerymen and business men in. general will do well to examine Adler's new stock of Blanlboote and Stationery which he bought in the East and offers at less than Portland prices. m Mrs. Steers woiUd call attention to her valentines, they are as pretty and as cheap as any one could wish. Am bound to close them all out, so ume and see thein.before -buying else where. -- The Ro'seburg Plaindealer of tho 8th says: "A coroner's jury sat upon the remains of Nathaniel Allen on the 29th ult.," which seems to us to liare been an ungentlemanly proceeding for this age. m 't Coming home again, is Mr. S. Danziger, who kept c popular -stand for the sale of clothing in Pages build ing last year. Tie nvill return to Astoria next month, and occupy the same old stand. Business calls us to Shoalwater bay on Saturday, and during our ab sence we shall feel particularly obliged to friends who may call upon Mr. Woodworth with matters of general i&formation "and faith he '11 print them." People who receive 'their papers through the carriers would do ex ceedingly well by putting little boxes with a covering, at their gates. It would save them from the rain and the pilferere gaze, from the jaws of bird dogs and the high winds, which sometimes carry them oil and casts tho blame of not getting the paper on the carrier, or your neighbor. Put up a box at your gate, if it is only a cigar Tbos. A Harbor of liefago Pfcumd. A friend who has been conversing with Mr. Habersham, civil-engineer, tells us that that gentleman has the honor of having discovered the much wished for Harbor of Refuge on our coast. This harbor of Refuge is a good and natural one, and hence it may not please those who wish to see a million dollars expended for that object. This harbor is situated, it is said, a few miles north of Cape Foul weather, not far from Yaquina bay, and is deep enough for any steamer or ship that sai's on the Ocean, wit-i good anchorage, etc. The entrance 's one thousand feet wide and fifty feet Seen. Further information we can not now give, but a map of the bor will probably appear in the report of the Chief of Engineers. har next TVord Orniraents. Thx Astocian is situated between two fires, so to speak ; Portland Ore gon and San Francisco California ; which cornels us to keep supplied with all The varied styles of type, and nov elties and new desigiiE in the art. We ha c done this from time to time, and by so doing please our patrons ; ic is for them we do it, and the latest beauty added to our stock is the new series of Word Ornaments, from the popu lar house of Murder, Luse & Co., al so the iatest style of cards from flie house of Cunningham, Cnrtiss & Welch, the finest grades of paper from Blake, Bobbins & Co., an-d legal pa per, blanks, etc., from A. L. Bancroft & Co. Purchasing from the leading firms of this country, and the east, as we do, we are at all times able to keep up with the demands of our pa- Irons, whether we make a cent or not. Call around, and Frank will be de lighted to sho w you what he is able to produce upon the steam presses now employed in The Asteria: office. Forest Culture. The remarks of Gardner's monthly upon the profit of forest culture, which we trausfer to our columns t-dajT, are not intended to have a local bearing upon Astoria, but are given more for the benefit of readers beyond the mountains. We would glafily ex change some of the magnificent for est trees of Clatsop, Columbia and Tillamook, for some of Che treeless districts of Umatilla, Walla Walla, Columbia, etc., but this is impossible. We found the country as nature left it and 2. grand and beautiful country it is too, all of it; but to our friends of Oregon and Washington, east of the mountains, we commend the ex ample of Mr. Fay and Prof. Sargeant. juasi year we sent to xr. JMaiocK a package of tree seed from South America, which we hope and expect will be found more favorable to "the region bordering the upper Columbia, than the trees referred to in tho article quoted. Those extra valentines have ar rived at Adler's. They are of all sorts, and will be disposed of to order. Messrs. Barth & Myers are put ting up a .very large and expensive Or gan in their first-class saloon, corner of Olney and Water streets. The room is also to be enlarged double its present dimensions, and attractively finished off by L. Hartwig & Co. A party of gentlemen from Asto ria will leave for Oysterville on Satur day morning, returning by special boat on the 10th. They go,preparsd for the purposeof forming a company to construct and operate a road, or tram way, between Ilwaco and the head of Shoalwater bay. Our Seattle friends are justly in dignant because a large vessel lately dumped .her ballast into the harbor contrary to the provisions of a statuto which has long been in existence. Seattle will have to create the office of harbor master and fill the posish with an argus-ej-ed, good man. - . We understand that Mr. Charles Stoll has about completed arrange ments for removing his building on Main and Squemoqhe streets, to a site nearly opposite Ths Astokia building, next door to the store of Messrs. A. Yan Dusen & Co. This will add materially to the business and appearance of Cass street, below .Jef- J-ferson street. Odd Fellowship on the Coast. Mr. Daniel Norcross, Past Grand Representative, who has been travel ing throughout Oregon, Washington and British Columbia, in the interest of the order on the coast, has taken his final departure for his home in San Francisco. Mr. Norcrosa has been identified with the history and growth of this noble order on the Pa cific coast from its -earliest history down to the present time. He was present and assisted at the institution of the first lodge ever orgmized on the coast California lodge institutedSept. 9th, 1S49. In 1865-G, he sat iu grand lodge of the United States, at the session when the Odd Fellows of the north and south, lon' separated by the sanguinary civil strife, were re-united. It was at this time, too that the monument erected in honor of T. Wildey, P. G. S., the founder of Odd Fellowship iu the United States (having instituted the first lodge in this country in the year 1819), was unvailed. Mr. Norcross has assisted in the institution of three grand lodges on this coast, be- J ing present at the institution of the Grand Lodge for California, for Nevada, and for Washington territory at Olympia, in November last. The vast and rapid strides which the order has made, not only in the United States, but in Australia and the old world, is just cause for congratulation of every member. California is the banner jurisdiction, leading off with a membership, in good standing, of 22, 000. Oregon has 2,800; Idaho has a membership of 300; British Columbia, 600, and Washington territory has 14 lodges, with a membership of 500. In the United States the grand total swells the number to half a million men. bound firmly together for the noblest purposes that can actuate the human heart. Profits of Forest Culture. Gardner's Monthly. We have repeatedly s"hown that if forest culture were carried on as a business, there is nothing that would be more profitable when well managed. It would not pay when bungled any more than any other. To merely plant .a lot of trees and wait till they are saw logs will never do, except for one who is willing to die for his coun try, or merely desires to preserve her in the dim future from becom ing an "arid waste." Forestry, when conducted as it might -be, ought to be able to pay all expen ses in a few years after planting, and at J east in ten years bring in a very handsome profit on the whole capital invested. "We are glad to see that this making of forestry a sound business occupation is pro gressing. Richard S. Fay has been doing a little toward it, of which we find the following account, by Professor Sargent in the Massa chusetts Ploughman : " The read ers of the Ploughman are familiar with the experiment which was made some thirty years ago by Mr. Richard S. Fay in planting a portion of his estate near Lynn, m Essex county, with .European Larch and other forest trees. Up to .a year ago the thinnings from this plantation had .yielded some seven hundred cords cf firewood, besides a very large amount of fencing material. The thinning has been continued d ring the past winter, and has produced:: 175 cords of firewood, sold at an average of S5 50 S9G2 50 500 .iarch posts, 25 cents 125 00 51 larch telegraph poies, si 100 larchfallroad sleepers, 50 cts 51 00 50 00 SI ,188 50 These figures represent the thin- .ning of a single season, which will :be continued for many years to an equal or greater extent ; they seem to make very clear Mr. Fay's wis dom in employing agriculturally worthless land in the only way in which it could possibly have been made to yield any return whatever. It ought to be a part of the regu lar spring work of every farmer, having suitable land, to plant an nually i few hundred or a few thousand forest trees, according to the size of his farm and the extent of his means. The. cost of 'the trees and of planting them is com- naratively small while profits, al- that she phas iust opened a well selected U, . '. , i;j . : urt I stock of Ladies underwear, and Chil j though slo-wly realized, are in tin. (lrpn,s and Illfants 0miSt t0 which she end, all things considered, en or- .invites the attention of purchasers. mous. For planting on mucii or the waste land of this state, no j. u ,.n, cnfplv Pirmlnvod .tree can be more saieiy empiocci Uhan -the European larch, as Mr. Fay's plantations of this tree show us. The larch, however, must be transpanted very early in the spring or it will not survive the operation." This is only a begiji ning, and when the business is better understood a much better showing, and before thirty years, could be made. The larch was evidently chosen at a time when it was thought very important that Scotch forestry should be the model for American forestry, and not that America required distinctively American treatment. The larch is profitable, but it is far less profit able than many other kinds of trees would be. It may also be noted that those who are going into the timber culture must remember that some of Mr. Fay's figures are high. It is chiefly because railroad sleep ers are fifty cents each that the railroads are anxious to have more timber planted. They will not, nor ought they to bring fifty cents each when the most judicious kinds planted in a judicious place, shall come into market. But we do not care to be critical in this place. Mr. Fav and Professior Sargent too, deserve much praise for -what thev have done and are doiEtr in encouraging forestry, to make criticism pleasant. And yet it is very important that in an interest like forestrj-, where if the planter blunders he is eternally lost, he should start in a faith that will pro duce the best of work. There is a very general move ment in some eastern cities to pro hibit the rinjrinp; of larp-e bells CO o within certain hours. St. Louis, which seems especially indisposed to be reminded of church nours, proposes to:Stop bell-riiaging -altogether. An ordinance is under consideration to silence every bell in the eity that weighs more than fifty poinds. It is :ot expeeted that the ordinance will pass, but it is quite likely bells of large weight will be restricted in use to certain hours. AROUND THE CJTY. Yalontincs. all kinds, C. A. May's Fresh oysters in every style and at all hours at the Pioneer restaurant. Thesh California roll butter, or anges, lemons, and limes at the grocery store of J. Strauss. Shipmasters wishing to secure seamen can have their wants supplied by calling at the Chicago house, Main street. J.Strauss received a large lot of the best qualitv of kerosene (Evening Light). b3 the Hera last evening. Call around and leave your orders. Parties in want of good Cedar Shingles will do well to apply to B.C. Comegys, Kalama, W. T. Peter Jluney Is still in the market with all kinds of 'building materials in his line, lias iust received 100,000 lath, 2,000 bushels of sand, and a large stock of first quality of brick at his warehouse foot of Benton street. Mr. J. Stewart, stone and marble cutter of Astoria will guarantee satis faction to all ordering work of him, and will do a bettor job for less money than any outside workman. Ills work in the cemetery here Should be sufficient recom mendation. Before you let your con tracts for work of this kind'it would he. well to call upon Mr. Stewart. Call at Mrs. Derby's when you wish any article in the millinery "Ime. Trimmed liate.ficlling at cost. If yonwant anything in the line of Cigars, Tobacco. Notions, Fruits, etc call at Fosters, on the Roadway. P. J. Goodman, on Main street,ttas Just received the latest and most fash ionable style of gent and ladies boots, shoes, etc Wood of all kinds, and a splendid lot of pitch wood, at Gray's wharf, for sale in lots to suit purchasers. Fresh fruits and vegetables at Bailey's. -.New invoice, of those Medallion Ranges at Magnus C. Crosby's. Foreign Exports. Since the last report of clearances fiom the Astoria -custom house, was made for publication in TiieAstouian, the following vessels have cleared for European ports withtxirgoes and values as spec"rfied. Shipments from Portland are noted as they eccur: To Liverpool, perXJity of York, Feb. ltth: Flour from Artorin 4,ai0 bblfi... 20,833 M " rortland...t3,5-i0 " ... 0l.72iJ to Totals.. 17J39 bbls... $2,33 00 To Qucensiovni, per Cudzaxo Forest, Feb. 10th: Wheat from Atoria .ll ctls... $12.3k'.2 00 " PortlantL2S,yH " , 50.'iCO0O Totals.... 'MfiX ctls. 3Ey?as oo Important to tho-larilcs of Astoria. Mrs. A. Ginder, next doorto Thk Ar tokiat oftice, takes pleasure in in form ing the ladies or Astoria and vicinity Lodging House Persons requiring furnished or unfurnished rooms can be M..nmmnAntnA of y.ananna rtAa . Mrs. Munson's Chenamus U Astoria. MISCELLANEOUS; QTETEXS 4c JTOPI9, ASTORIA, OREGON. Trucking, "Draying, and General Team Work Done to order, and satisfaction guaranteed. KB"Wood for sale, and delivered to order. r T. KEII, CALEDONIA SALOON. Comer of Front and A streets. rORTLAXD --- - OREGON ffSTLatc butcher In the Central Market. pIIAS. A. MAY, DKAT.KR, IT Foreijyii sil TJomisxc Frnlts, Nuts, Candles, Yankee Notions, Toys. Finest brand of CIGARS AND TOBACCO. Chenamus street. - Astoria. TYTTI.liIA3I TVIHTCIt. ROOT BLACK, OCCIDENT PHAVTNG SALOON. Astoria, Oregon. Astoria Liquor Store, AUG. DANIELSON, rroprietor. "Water st. Roadway, - Astoria, Oreqox. Importer and dealer in W2NES, LSQUORS, FOREIGN A:ND DOMESTIC CIGA213. Sole agent for the celebrated STONEWALL WHISKEY. Branch of MARX & JORGENSEN, Portland. Washington Market, Maiv Street Astoria rregon BEKGMAN & BEIiRY TESPECTFULLY CALL THE ATTEN iLtion of the public to the fact that tba above Market will always bo supplied with a FULL VAPJETY BEST QUALITY FRESH ANDCURED MEATS! Which will bo sold at lowest rate3, wholetala and retail. Special attention given to suppl nff ships. D. K. Warrkn. C. A. iticGuutfc Astoria Market ! Corner of Chenamus and CassstreeU, ASTORIA. OREGON. WARREN & McGUIRE, Proprietor (Successors to Jlobtim it Warrcr.. Wholesale and Retail Doalors in all klna? Fresh and Cured JVIeatsI A full line of Family Groceries, CANNED FRUIT, VEGETABLES, ETC. K2T Butter, Eggs, Chooao, otc. constantly on band. ear Sbip supplied at the lowest rates. IT IS A POSITIVE TRUTH' That housekeepers can do better by-deolinjj -with J. K. WIRT, on Main street, as he keeps the best of FRUITS, CANDIES, NUTS, LIQUORS AND CIGARS, SMOKED SALMON, BOLOGNE SAUSAGE, JERKED ELK MEAT. And also from Clatsop every other day 3TRESH BUTTER, EGGS, CHEESE, CLAMS, DUCKS, CHICKENS, And everything that is needed in the ool: ing line at the lowest living prices. Call and examine beiore purchasing else where. J. li. WIIIT. CITY BOOK STORE, KAIN ST., ASTORIA. CHAS. STEVENS & SOW Invite the attention of purchasers to tbeJr stock, just laid in ThQ Finest Selection 1 The Cheapest Pjacesl The Greatest Wortlir RECEPTION POCKETS; LADIES' DIARIES AND PURSES COMBINED: COMB AND BRUSH POCKETS: CUTLERY, JEWELRY, CHABM ETC., ETC.; LADIES' EANCY BOARD. ETC.; GOLD PENS AND PENCILS; PAINT PENCILS, GUTTAPERCHA. GOODS; EXCELSIOR DIARIE8, BLANK BOOKS, STATIONERY, ETC. Bar AM goods sold at lowest cash prkxs. CHAS. STEVENS & SON. City Book Store to Main street, two doors from the Pioneer Restaurant, opposite Rw Daxeryot Mrs. c litnuer. Charles Heilborn3 MANUFACTURE! 03s And Dealer in FURNIT4JREandBEDUJN& ALHO IMPORTER OF CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, WALL PAPER, SHADES, .etc CST-AH kinds of repairing promptly at- leaded to. :iud fundi tire made to order. CSA full line of picture mouldings 2nd names, brackets, "window ccmiccg, etc. EFtdl toek and lowest prices, corner d S4juemo'cha and Main street. Astoria. A RARE GHflNGE. J WILL SELL ANY OR ALL OF TEES JL fouV.vmg.deacrihed property, -rlz : 3GO Arrw, Sec, 22, T. S, Sf.-of iS. 9 vren southeast einarlev. Also, In Olneys Astoria I.otH 2, 2, 3, and 4, in Ii!o?k T&j Loto a, 4, o, and 0, in SSoek lGej. lot 2 and 4, In .Block ISO: and "Let S, In Blocfc 132; North half of Bck 8, 2 7-2 acres. . ., DAVID INQALL3. Astoria, Oregon, Dec. ltt, 1878. ,35-& i