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About The Daily Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1876-1883 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1881)
C I ) ; U . ,J' "- r ;-.T a' . "V V 002- "" .. Ori t Vol. xvi. Astoria, Oregon, Saturday Morning, October 15, 1881. 3To;i3. k Pftfiff t! Jt, ' LEAVE THEM ALONE They Will Go Home and Take Their Tails Behind Them. Twenty-five Chinese students being1 all remaining in America, and two- Chinese Government Commissioners are now at the Palace Hotel waiting to take pas v ' :, u.t..irt l" lP;ls-TJnired ge or iner at e . i . rcfloud river to the East has just students arc all from l ale Col- . ,. , ....... i i ' i.:.,. :..,.: .. rbe'l "Iade- Il,0i' wcnt fwwr(1 , lege, at which institution most of them have been for six years. Those who have departed for China were students at other Xew Eng land colleges. The 8100,000 build ing erected by China for its Com missioners is to be sold. Yung ( Wing, at whose instance the Chi- j nese students firsl ca'me to America, will soon go to China, but it will be on business only and he will return to Hartford, where he has a family by an American wife, which "place he will make his permanent home. It was when Prince Kung and the party of "young China" was in the ascen dency that 120 students and the Commissioners, the last of whom are now here on their way home, were sent to the United Slates. The intent was that these 120 students should learn specially the theories, the arts and sciences that would more immediately enable i China to develop a commerce and the resources of the vast country, and that when the students should return to China their acquirements should be imparted to the other 400,000,000 Chinese, all of whom could not be comfortably accom modated in New England colleges. But the conservative Chinese party, the literati, regained the ascendency, and the recall of the students is believed to be one of the results of the exclusive policy, another of which was the con struction of the crockery wall round the flowery land. The al leged reason, however, of the re call is that the young gentlemen were learning bad habits, which, being imparted upon their return to their compatriots whom they had left behind them, would be disastrous to the lofty and delicate line of moral and social ethics obtaining among the people pre sided over by the brother of the ' sun, the "cussin" of the new moon, and the only begotten child of the j milky way. The present Emperor, and the blood relation of all the principal points of interest m the sidereal heavens, as aforesaid, is a youth whose extreme rickety health gives hopeful promiso that he will presently lay aloft, and him self become a fixed constellation. He is the last of the Montchoo dynasty to date, and it is fondly believed that when, as a little star, he shall twinkle up above the world so high like a diamond in the sky, and when "young China" is again summoned to take its trick at the wheel of State, the 4 students now departing,'or others, will come to America. S. F. Chronicle. Things Always Hidiculous. Madame Sophie Gay, the mother of the celebrated Mme. Delphine do Girardin, amuses herself by drawing up a list of persons and things that always have the ad vantage of-being ridiculous. This inventory may be found at the snd of her treatise on the "Physi ologic du Ridicule." Among ri ,diculous things Sophie Gay places little diamonds, natural flowers in false hair, a finely formed woman dressed' in-man's clothes, a woman playjng-on a. fiddle, an old maid, a. red ijig, a man being shaved, false calves, a man who wears stays, dyed hair, the first phases of a first tete-a-tete, the exaggerated com-pliments-of -women "who hate each other, an ugly jvoman in. a-fainting '.fit. the marriao-eof a widow, a fash-' i: i.i o.. n,l - PoTIcV. .-. iuubuh, uau aUU .. men in a pastry cook's shop. SALMON HATCHING. Fish Propogation on the Columbia. , The annual yearly s-hipinenl of' 10,000,000 young salmon from the Stales fish hatchery on the! in charge .of Livingstone. Stone,; the Superintendent of the hatching establishment. It is customary j remained silent. for him to accompany each yearly) After three minute had passed ! shipment in order to direct the j the ex-Judge became impatient j treatment oi the voting fish in jand extlaimed, "See here, are you transit. Mr. Stone's assistant, Mr. Richardson, remains in charge of the McCloud hatchery, and is at the present time engaged in hatch ing the 2,500,000 young salmou purchased yearly by the State for distribution in the rivers of Cali fornia. The hatching out of this ! quantity of young salmon for the State is always done immediately j after the shipment East is made. The young fish are handed over to the State Fish Commissioners, who make the regular distribution, which has been the means of so largely increasing the supply of salmon in the Sacramento, San Joaquin and other livers, and in creasing the number of canneries and the expmt trade in canned salmon. Tt is believed that some meas ures will soon be taken in Oregon J for increasing by artificial propa-j gallon, the salmon in the Columbia and other rivers of that State. A few individual attempts have been made, but it i now thought the Stato wjII take the matter in hand. The young fish lequire to be placed in the headwaters of the river, and this creates an interna tional difficulty, as the headwaters of the Columbia river are in Brit ish Columbia. The Snake river "Which rises in Idaho could lie used, and the probability is, if no ob structions exist, preventing fish from passing up, that as many salmon would reach the headwaters of the Snake as those of the Co lumbia, the source of the one be ing at as high an elevation as that of the other. Bulletin. How He Tola tne Time A good story, told at the ex pense of a well-known e-.ludge, is going the rounds of the lawyers' offices, and it is heai tily apprecia ted by those who best know the irascible but good-hearted dispo sition of the old gentleman. It was an admiralty case, where ho is most at home. The deposition of a sailor, who was soon todio.Li i, t.., 1....1 i... 1 , , ;.,,., had to be taken at his bedside one day last week. "How long,'' the ex-Judge snapped out as the first question on cross-examination, "do you think it was after tiie vessel left the wharf before the collision occurred?'' The sailor was himself something of a character, and not so near death but that he appreciated the vital importance of "getting back" On a cross-examining lawyer. "Wall," he drawled out, "'bout 10 minutes.I s'd judge." "Ten minutes! Ten 'minutes!" exclaimed the lawyer, jumping up. Man, how long do you think 10 minutes to be?" t"Jest ?bout 10 minutes," was the unru filed reply. "How do you generally meas ure ten minutes?" persisted the lawyer. The old sailor turned slowly in bed and eyed his questioner. Then he turned back again and-'said in differently: " Waal, sometimes wid a watch and sometimes wid "it claack." This made the lawyer a little mad. He jerked his watch from his pocket and said in a querulous, hio - h - pitched veice: "Oh. vou do, iln vrtn,J Wli I'll taII vnn when j . to begin, and you tell me when 10 minutes are up." The sailor slvly winked at the ialvver on the other side, and he isel dredges from six to Unity-five wiuci siur, i .1 ition in an intant.feet depth; lias twin screws, anl;jn took in the situation 1 and made no objection. The ex-' Judge stood with hi back to a mantle on which a Jittle clock was rhoie-power, and besides loading , 1 hn eon hand a lare. amount of brluk i v . .i . .iJ; ..., ...,m h ....n fill r ,-, ' f"-ale at from .." to 3 per thousand. quietly indicating the time to the its own cargo, U u 1.11 if "1.aIlllM,lilil.lieir4riaofl, sailor who lay facing it. "Ave, aye," the sailor .-.aid, and ; going to keep us here all day?" But the sailor made no answer, As five and six and seven minutes went by the lawyer became almost wild in his assumed anger at the man lor keeping them so long be yond the time. But not until the hand of the clock was on the exact notch of 10 minutes did the sailor speak. Then hev said carelessly: "Guess the time mus1 be "bout up." The Judge put up his watch and sank back in his chair, ''Well," he said, 'of all men, tlying or alive, that 1 ever saw, you can measure time the best." It is said that the ex-Judre does , lit not even yet know what made the j other lawyers double themselves over with laughter as the' did at that last remark of his. The Oyster. The oyster is a fortunate crea-: lure, if it be fortunate to be much mentioned in history. People who have swallowed an enormous num ber of oysters ligute in anecdote, and are considered to have done something meritorious. The Ro man who first formed oyster beds, which he did at Bain, is known to have been named Sergions Orata, who had the happiness to live in the time of Augustus, and who is known to have made a great deal of money by the exercise of his ingenuity. To-day it is mentioned in the encyclopaedias that Apicius, a contemporary of Trajan, was the first who taught the world how to pickle oysters. His fame rests upon that fact. There was another Apicius distinguished for his love j of lobsters; there was another who notherwho cs- but the v.-, "i has a dis - set up a school of cook nv;f nr-nirifliiior Atiieins 7,2 , . ,. ,, tinct fame, and survives freshly : r : l ,i::..: wi... in classical dictionaries. hen. George I. came to England from , - Hanover, the royal cooks could not j i ,i f .i . :.. .1. ..,,. I please the toval palate in the mat-: 1 ter of oysters until it was dis- covereu uiai nr .uuji:s.i iikuii Uicm Male, a.s m -uuw .iiiV.s nu-eu in the habit of eating them When Mr. Thnckerav came first to Bos ton, certain of his admirers asked him to supper. There were among other delicacies gigantic oysters. The novelist could no( comprehend that he was to swallow one of these in an undivided state, but being shown the way, and having accomplished the feat, he observed that he felt "as if he had swal lowed a baby." The Largest Dredge m the "World. The, new iron hopper dredger recently constructed by Messrs. W. Simons & Co., Renfrew, Scot land, for Otago, was tried on the Cbyde, and dredged at the rate of 400 tons per hour, which was plunged into its own holdor cavity, containing 1,300 tons of soil. At the same time it loaded with sev eral' hundred tons the new govern ment steamer Perseverance, which came along side. Afterwards b' steam appliances, its bucket gir der was elevated and its twin screw propellers, put in motion, and the vessel steamed down tlie Clyde to the measured mile where the loaded speed was tested at 7i knot per hour; the esel then steamed down the Frith of Civile, ..,.;.. .1 when its large cargo u as instantly deposited through its bottom mio sixty fathom-i' of water. This ve- is propelled by two independent sets of minimum! engine of TOOj .quired, :i Meet or barge., on the'!''"- .Unix A tr.T.i .mov. old system. U i the property ot the Otago I Ia.r Board, anl will steam to .New Zealand. L In; ln.il of (hedging, rteainiii ing and depositing, was oon-iilorrd' very satisfactory. This is the tenth and largest hopper tlreilger eon structed hv Messrs. S5nion. & Co., : V. Case for upper Astoria or anv other . . mT-rm-n- -r-.r-i ",i . i . : -parlof !htMMt. Leave our orders on ' (JAJNJNKK.Y DIKS who are the inventor- and ongi- , hie -date and they will be promptly at- - JiiCT, nators of the system. i tended to. n"rAr kinnkvs astopja fishery. An itinerant preacher in Miehi-- 2an was invited informally to dine' w ,. . . , , at a house where he called in the country. To provide for the emerijenov they, slanshtered a pet ' nen neionirinir.io a utiie. iv m , , i , . , I the household, who was meoiola- ik ,, u: ic . I ri,..t:.,.,n...,..,,. j bleat his loss. J After dinner pray- er was proposed, and while the 11 . ' preacher was praying, a lonesome chicken wandered under the hoie dismallAor its dead mother crying dismaiiyf for its tieau moi ner The irrievinsr Jittle buv put h " " P ' inoui, to a il0if.' ;,, tle noor .m.i i HILlIt' llliv 1 IIS Limi0(, , n imi !,:,.. wfM.uL. i i;i i t i-1 i. i mi ey: cuicKuyi jx iiiiiu t kiii you .. . ie naughty tolks killed her fortnar big preacher's dinner!" !;ronnc'!ltH; w,,0"ll,- co"& .croup, in m. . hi Ilueii7a, consiunptinn, and all throat and I he 'anion7 came very .suddenly ' imi-r rnmirintnts. rt cents andSl a bot- m tie. .u organized band of cattle thieves are ruuning oil stock in British Columbia, killing th' ani mals and selling theni to I he butchers. lotliei-Kl .tiotliei-N ! ! .i;iiinM-s ! Aieyou itistitrltod at night ami hi iikrii vour rest hv a sj,-k ehihl uirenng' of :imi r-rvni" uiin Jin. ivcriifi:iimi' n.im of cutting teeth '.' U so, go al.ouee and ... . l.l.l..iB llu 11V7..1... . L' . ,t - Svriin. it will relieve lhe imor iilllu stif- ferer immedialelj depend upon it:, tierc is no mistake a tout it. liiere is not a mother on eattli who lias m-er used it, who will not t-II ou at onee that it will regulate -the how els. and irive. nst in Hn nuiilicr niul r.-lii-i' sunt health to the ehild.opcrating like magic. ' It is perfectly safe to use in all eases,' aim pleasant to the taste, ami is the me scription of one ot the oldest and best ' female iliys!clans and muses in the1 United States. Sold everywhere. :!.' . oents a bottle. , Peruvian Kittirs. Cmclion Hutu The Count Cinchon was lb.. .Sp.mish . Vjeen.y in Peru in 10. The to:luds.: I iSWite, was piostrated h au intermit- ' u"ut fever, fiom which she was I reed ! I the use of the native ieined,lhe lVrii- U'un bark. or. as it was called in the language or Uu- country, "tjiiiiiquiiui. OnUefuI for her ni-over. mil ier Uuni to Europe in iree. .she introduced the iemed in .Spam, where it was known under various name,, until Liuiiaats. called it Cinchona, in honor of the ludv ' .. t.n i..i i.mili.i i i... ,. i.:,.i. ... ." llllll tlalll Ifllllllli lilt III lllitl IH 41 4- Kft urea ami nuj years. M-i.-nre nas uirn I s nothing to take its place. It ejfeetu-l , aUy t.,m a uwrU appite for flimil- ' laiits.'bj restoring the natural tone of. of liquor as it does a fever, and destroy s j bothalike. The powerful ionic irtue ' i. m. .!..... v .. .....,i :.. .1.. ' ine.siomaeu. iiauueus imvs.sii nm. Peruvian Hitters, w hieh ans as elf.vlive 1 .!ICN I 1 1 A 1 j M A 1 v RET. against malarial fever Unlay as they; were in the days of the old Spanish .,,,.,,,., .,1,rMm.l.M..l,rt,,,.st,HKl,,1,UMi:t viceroys. e guarantee tlie ingredi ents of tlie.se outers to be absolutely . pure, and or the best known quality. Atrial will satisfy you that this is the ucst outer m tle world. Tltepioot 01 the pudding is in the eating. and we wiUmsIv abide this test. For .sale bv ali druggists, grocers and liquor dealers, i Order ft. ', - King of the Blood Is not a "cttre all." It it a Mood-purifier and tonic. Iiupnntvof the blood jvoIsoik tlicss tem, deranges the circulation, and tims In duces many disorders, known hr dlnVrrnt names to distinguish them accerdlm: to i-f-fects, but feelnj: rvallv branchi-s or phases of that great generic disorder. Impurity 01 Blood. Snch are Dynjfpxfa, umtniMiea.", Lirrr Onnplaint. ContUimttim. Xerwrti -orrter. Headache , Bae hrtche. General Weal: tic. JTeart Ditcatc, Dropsy. Kidneu Dfcvnxf, Pue, Rheumatism, Catarrh, Scrofula, Shiu Dlwrderx, Plmplot. Ulcer. Sicclltnu, Ac. Ac. Kins or the Blood prevents and cures these by attacking the rniw. Iinpiirilv of the blood. CheniLstsnnd p'isk-lans agree In calling It "the most genuine and cfllcicnt preparation for thn purpose." Sold by Dnig- Kisis.oi pfrooiin". .-x-eiesiimomais,iurvc ot th Iilood." wrapped around'eacli bottle. n ons, &c. In pamphlet, Treatlse on DUea.ses mdeacli bottl )N & Co.,Trop Buffalo, X. Y. u. kaasi i.w, sun Co., rrops fSS-S- Xotift. .Jiisl lcc-md ncr sioainar Columbia. ' line lot ol eastern ovstersy which will fis,.nclup in nrst class style at Ros- "'-. w.-,,.it-,;t mu..k. KuH,7iytor. . .. ,. , . . ,, . , , Another lino lot of Eastern Oysteis - t leeeiveil at Uoeoes. per steamer Oregon. Occident block. Briok! ttrim: iirirk! f n . a rhoioe hd or jK-ar and npnle. fresh ui! i.urvhaacis. shermr.i, itroKxpre Will leeehe orders at Hie store nf 1. . 'What im all This About 11 ! all imthjnjr. Fails provn that I .eep me in-i iicit in .vsiona, mc refill- far Albany beer. Al-o the semuneAI- oan l su leii iscer Kept always on hand CiiAS.Gii.vrKK. Hnsroos Acw Place. i , Uo-eoe. the popular eatcrer, invite.-, ifJCMCDAI MAPUIUIQTQ kUl ;lu his old patrons, and as manvnewUl-ncnML ITlAOniniOlO Anil in is nv ne pieaseu to niaKU nun at jvWlftooan at fa IIPW ice Cream Sa- ""; "" ,l henainu street, Occident. hotel hloek. which he has just fitted up in tlrtelas style. ' . feVSr N: I rj i...m...i!. ..-i. ...lit- IVlll UL IHU I1U1 IS IlUlil MUlt, till, hut in all disoiders attributable to im- ."3 'advertisement. i .... ns. --. !...!-... r ...:i.i ....... I :,hvavs at hand. It cures ronclis. colds. hronchitis, whooping cough, croup, m- H.vi.i.'.s Vi:oi:rAi:i.E Sicilian" JIaii: Ukni:wi:i: is a Mricntitic combination of .some of theniuist powerful rcstorathe AhTORIA ,. OREGON. auculs in the eeiahie kingdom. It re-; stores rav hair to it-s original color. It I dealkk , . makes the stuili) white and,cleaiu U,lptC-ApQ A Kin TORAP-PO rures dandruff and humors, and falling- J OlUrt MO AMU I UDAVbl'i out of the hair. It furnishes the nutrb- live priiifinle h which the hair is noiir - ished and siiniKirtetl. It makes the hair iaoi-t, sott ami glossy, and is inisur- pa'd as a hair dressing. It is the most efiiiiuiiicai !irfii;ir.uiiui uvtT iinercu to the imhlie.as its effects remain a long ftim. inntritiir milt .til nni ziminl or,Hl alum neee-irv. Ir is recommended and used h eminent medical men, audi meiaii enuorM-ti n uie aiaie Assajer Massachusetts. vl'he popularity or Halls Hair Kciiewer has iucrersed with tlie test or many i;ears, both in this C(iiinlr and in foretell lauds, ami it is know u and Used in all the civilized eoe.ntrie.s oft he world. Von Sai i: v. m. Di: vi.nr.s. MI.rKI..ANEOTIP. YQfJ Wlhk FIND - r j i t: , fc .. ,.,., - - LATEST Mid 8EST STYLES . m Ale.ii'.s f Isiei. IfiiN I. or no Cents, .tieii Overcoat. lloj s i) ereontN. And a fuiiiiih'lp line of Furnishing Good S. , um.. 'nii-. HihiSn ami hlioes. At lb- lm.etl pnnsal JYI. D. KANT'S, Merchant Tailor. Malu Street. on tin.nl. sttrh at CitniHMi Fruits ami .li-lly. Bacon, Hams, Shoulders, Lard, i:c.is. iiiTTi:ie. niKKsx:. Fresh Fruits and Vegetables, V1SU. 1HI'Y AS1 -.431F . In l lie xriiMin. k:asis Al) touacco. Kesl ol" WIA'IM AM) LIQITORN. All cheap ln CASH, f.'oods sold on eoiii mlssion. oipsite 1. W. Case's store. .1. t.oui;ers. Washington THarketr Mnii Street, - - Astoria Oregon n i:it cm. 1 .v a- a im n y RKSl'i-CTl'ULL'i LL THE ATTBN. t:on of the public lo the fact that the aboTe Market will a 1 way a bo supplied with a FULL VA MKVY BEST QUALITY FRESH AND CURED MEATS I tTbicb.wU!besold at loTrest rataa, wholesale and retail. Special attention given to supplj- MISCELLANEOUS. O APTnTX- ffffPPflM o.AltiMJl A, U 11iJiUaJU, ASTORIA. - OKEGO The Pioneer Machine Shop ISLACKSMlTlf SHOP vv fT " . """-1 "F PS All kinds of -gjjf (JJJJJJ CANNERY j AXI- STEAMBOAT WORK Promptly attended to. ' A-siieclalty made of repalrlna ASTORIA IRON WORKS. , Kkton m-kkkt. Near I'arkki; Houhk. ASTORIA. - ORWJOX. BOILER MAKERS. nm..MiniimniTdhrnn UM U 111 it 11 1 ft ftW KM Boiler Work, Steamboat ;Work, and Cannery Work a specialty. i A. D. "Wass, President. J. G. Hustleb, Secretary. 1. W. Cask, Treasurer. -John Fox, Superintendent. WILLIAM EDGAR, ., . i. a nnrJ.aMQwaui8B?B. i The Celebrated t I JOSEPH RODCERS &. SONS J rUiillir' runt lou nilTl rnu j btnUlnE. LfluUbn LU I LLKY i i AND THE GENUINE WOSTENHOLU ... ' and other English Cutlery. FAIRCHILD'S GOLD PENS Genuine Dleershaum Pipes, etc. A Hue stock of rutelteH and .Jewelry. Muzzle and Hreech Loading Nliot CiuiiA and Hitler. Itevolvcrw. HlHtotA. nutt Ammtiultloii GIjA.HSKB. AI.sO A risp. ' Aor.tU.( -" 1 ; r' - -'ckix i-ortinent of Iliii SI'Fri'ACUS and EYE J. A. JIONTOOJIKUV. 3PX03NrE:J3R ST0V! AND TIN Sole Agents for Hit- STORE I Magee Standard Ranges, Etc. ASTOIMA. - OHEfSON. ' SAW 'FRANCISCO National Brewery ; Beer Depot. MAX "WAilNKlt. ASTOIMA, OHIKJON. AOKXT Is prepared now to deliver beer t Ids cus tomers in the-elty with his own conveyance IT IS GUARANTEED THAT. THIS liEER WILL NEVER SOUR. -' OA"jr RE KEPT FOR ANY LENOTII OF TUIE. PrioeH pee Barrel or Thirty 1 Gnllonn 8 00 Tea (),uantItIeN per Thirty GallonN ...9 OO One 5 CiuIIou lietr ..... I SO J?Send In our orders. . " JlAX WAONER, At the OreaCEastern, I. "W. CASE, IMPORTER AND WHOLESALE AND RE TAIL DEALER IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE Comer Chenamus and Cass street. ASTORIA - - - - . - OREGON JXBlKaMllVc u ssS BUSINESS CAIEDS,,' E. HOLDE.V. NOTARY PUBMC,,- AUCTIONEER, COMMISSION AND SUBANCE AGENT.. T A. STcIXTOSK. - MERCHANT TAILOK, Occident Hotel Bulldtng; ASTORIA - - - 0BE60M DRESS AlAKlimAND SET7ING. CHEXAMUS ST., ASTORIA. ' Opposite Mrs. Munson's Lodging House. 3Cuttlns and fitting, and. paper patterns roni measurement. i 1'. T. BABCL-VY. T: Hr HATCH. 'HATCH & BARCLAY, COMMISSION MERCHANTS. No. 20 California St., San Francisco, CaJ. XK. 31. I. JESXDfGS, FIIYSICTAN AND SURGEON. Graduate Unlversltx of YlrgtBto. itm Physician to Bay View hospital, Balttaore uu , iokj-tu. Office In Tage & Allen's building, up stairs, Astoria. P CRAXC, M. J PHYSICIAN" AXD-StTItGEON, Room No. 3, Astertaa Bmildlas. tUt STA1H8.) Rksidksck Corner of Benton and Court sireew, Astoria, oregoar JAY TUTTtTB, X. I. PHYSICIAN A2?D'SUEGEON Offick Over the VfUts Hoase Stora. RKSlDKXeK Xftxt door to Mr. MifTivaiS boarding house, Chenamus street, Astori Oregon. TO P. UICKB. PENTIST, ASTOKIA, - OKEQON. Rooms In Allen's, building qp stairs, corar of Cass and Sqemocqae streets. I Q. A. BOWLBY. ATTORNEY AT LJLW. Chenamus Street. - ASTORIA. OBSGO& t W. PUI.T03T,- s , , ATTORNEY- AT LAW, ASTpRIA - ,-- - OBEGOS Office oyer Page & Allen's store, Cass street Q II. BAIX 4c CO., dealer nr Doers. AVlndews, MUmimi Trma bemSvIiHsber. e.. All kinds of Oak Lumber, Glass, Boat Ma terial, etc. Steam Mill near "Weston hotel, Cor. Geo evlve and Astor streets. WIUJAM FRY, PRACTICAL BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. - Chrxamus Strert opposite Adler's Book store, - Astokia, Okxoon. . 3T" Perfect fits guaranteed. All work warranted. Give 'me a trial. All ordei promptly tilled. dealer In FAMILY GBOCEBIS, If A1TLS, IHII,!. FEED ANH HAY Cash paid for coantry produce. Small profits on cash, sales. Astoria, Oregon, cor ner of Main and Squemocqhe-streets. J. H. D. GRAY. Wholesale and retail dealer In. FXaOUR, ALL KIXDS OF FEED, Hay, Oats, Straw, Wtttf, Etc General storage and Wharfage able terms. Foot of Benton sire on reasoB- et. Astoria Oregon. Lot and Improvsmrati for Sale. LOT EIGHT, IX BLOCK SEVENTY tlye In Olneys Astoria, together with A Good IIoHse aad W4iBlieA . roB XLK UDNOXED DOLLAMS. For pai ticulars Inquire of M. SERRAor W.H.TWILIGHT. Astoria, July 11, 1881. T. G. JRAWLINGS, Wholesale and retail dealerin California Fruits, Vegetables, Etc. Fresh Fruit "d.VegtabI ON HAND EVERY DAY. Main street, opposite Loebs clotbing store. BOWLING ALLEY, GEO. HILL, t ?IKPRIETOR Eiitranee on Chenamus Streer.lastorla, Ogn. The best quality of-WhiesyLujuojs and Cigars, and taabeafcAUey laOBn. '5P-