en Jriill' It w& Vol. xviii. Astoria, Oregon, Sunday Morning, March 11,. 1883 No. 138. OLD TIMES EAST. Tho "Way it Used to Be. This is an expensive age. Our richest men began with more noth ing but their brains and hands, and with little education. Ches ter "W. Chapin, one of the richest men in Massachusetts, when he was twenty-one years old let him self out to work twelve to fourteen hours a day for $12 a month, farm ing and teaming from the armory to the boat on the Connecticut river: but he laid his money up. Nov you would insult a young stripling of eighteen years to offer him such wages. He was the tax collector in 1S2.2 for the town of Springfield. His fees were SSO for collecting 68,000 the whole taxes for that town. He paj-s more taxes now than the whole town did then. It cost more time and trouble to collect them, then than now. The people were so scattering and they were so afraid of a tax-collector he said some would run and hide up stairs or down cellar when the saw him coming, and in some instances he hunted them up in their hiding places after their family said they "waVt there!" After finding the delinquent he would get a part of the tax money and go again for the rest or pay it himself. He has paid in this way hundreds of dol lars, finding it easier to earn the money than to collect it. Money was scarce and worth semething: then. I recollect in 2S25 or '26, in our town meeting, the proposi tion was to raise for the coming year $14,000 for the town of SpringGeld; Oliver B. Morris arose and objected by saying: "What arn we coming to? It is astonish ing that pride and ambition, or fashion should demand such a tax." But they overruled the old man, and he lived to see pride, fashion and ambition rise much higher. A great change surety. The fashion of those da's I rec ollect. "When ray mother was go ing to get a new dress, or gown, as it was called then, the woman that was engaged to come to the house to cut and make it told her she was so tall and large she must get six 3ards for it. Five yards was the common pattern, and 50 cents for cutting and malcinjr and a dinner found. "What a change from that day to this! The cloth $1 and the making 50 cents, and dress was worn to meeting. The fashion and pay of the preachers lias changed. The first Methodist preacher m our town got 100 for one year's salary, and if he had a present of a pair of socks he must report it. The second preacher had a wife and three children, and $35 was added for each child. Bishop Hadding in our time got less than $75 a year. Also Priest Clough and Lorenzo Dow less than either. Our old Methodist preachers worked for a living and for God, instead of for reputation and a salary. I was thinking about the fashion in domestic af fairs, say music, fifty-five years ago. Governor Thrash and I met at Monson for Thanksgiving, with the family where he got his wife1 at old Uncle Saul Squires', uncle to us both. Their house music was, for treble, the flax spinning wheel, played or run by one of the girls; for the tenor, the large spin-ning-wheel, played by another girl; for bass, the old lady whack ing away at the old loom, all work ing to make their music profitable and healthy. The fashion of those days was to have a good healthy family of from eight to ten chil dren, all learnt to work for a liv ing. What a change! Instead of a good, healthy family now, all up in the morning early to work, "we see from one to three little piping children, with a sickly mother, not able to take care of ! two as easily as our mothers would ten, fifty years ago without a hired girl. The children now must be in fashion lie in bed until eight or nine in the morning, no appe tite, little vitality. They play on some kind of instrument, and go to school to be crowded with more kinds of lessons than our old schooheachers ever knew. But this is the fashion and intended improvement of the age. Perhaps this generation does not look at these things as I do, but I think that health, economy and mortality are not improved by getting high wages or a fashionable education. This generation will spend what its fathers have earned. Gener ally it is watching the pulse of the man who has property, longing for the time to come when it will come in possession of what it has not earned. It is a known fact that the rising generation are spendthrifts. Another great change is in the mode of traveling. Fifty years ago we had to go through the country by stages, at the fast speed of seven miles an hour. This was much faster than the common farers traveled. It was considered a great treat to take the stage at old Jeremy "Warriner's tavern start at four o'clock in the morning and get to Boston at nine o'clock in the evening, if the going was good. When the fare was reduced to 65, two of us worked two weeks to get money enough to pay our fare to Boston, eighty-eight miles. The young men in. these days earn enough in one day to pay their fare, and go in three hours instead of seven teen. Our conductors get for driving their team through to Bos ton $3 or $, and tho old stage drivers got $12 a month. This was Chester W. Chapin's standard price in those days. Connecticut river steamboats, started by Blanchard, fifty years ago, cut down the fare to Hartford to $1, which enabled us all to go to Hart ford and back in one day for $2 and stay four hours in Hartford. This was another great treat for $2, costing us five d:i3Ts work. Now young men can earn enough in "half a day, and go out and back in the other half. Springfield He- publican The Timber Iiands ofthe New North west. Practically, the whole country between the Minnesota prairies and the Rocky mountains is bare of timber. There are little strips of forest trees along the water courses in Dakota, but they con sist mainly of cottonwood, soft maple and alder, and furnish only a scanty supply of fuel to the set tlers and are of no value as a source of building: material. West of the Missouri there is nothing worth sawing into lumber until the advanced spurs of the Rockies are reached the Big Horn, the Judith, the Big Snowy and the Yellowstone mountains. In the gorges running up their sides there is sufficient "bull pine" and spruce for the settlers' purposes, and for railway ties and bridge timbers, but there are no large well-timbered areas. " On both sides of the main divide of the Rockies about the same condition is found. The pines are somewhat larger, and some cedar is met with. For want of something better, the lim ber is of great value for local con sumption, for fuel and building purposes in the neighboring val leys, but this is all that can be said of it. . Not until I reached Clark's Fork of the Columbia, or the Pend d'Oreille, as it is known to the settlers, did I see any ex tensive body of good timber. On both sides of the stream between the Cceur d'Alene and Cabinet mountains, lies a heavily timbered belt of about 100 miles in length by 30 miles in width, reaching down to and around Pend d'Oreille lake. The trees are "bull pine," cedar, hemlock and spruce, with a little white pine. The western slopes of the Cceur d'Alene moun tains and the Bitter Root moun tains, which are a continuation of the same range, are moderately well timbered and furnish material for fuel, fences and buildings for a widestretch of rich, bare country further west. From these moun tains westward, to the narrow valleys running up into the Cas cade range, the country is nearly destitute of forest growth. A few stunted pines grow on the sides of the deep, narrow valleys through which the steamers run. Along the lower course of the Columbia and around Puget Sound there are immense forests of fur, furnishing a practically inexhaustible lumber supply. Eastern Oregon is al most treeless, but the slopes of the mountain ranges bear sufficient timber for local uses. Eastern Washington, fast becoming a great wheat field, feels most the lack of forests. Western Oregon, includ ing the fertile, well-settled Wil lamette valley, is well supplied from both the Coast and Cascade mountains, while Western Wash ington is all a vast forest, where the clearings are mere specks upon the immense expanse of woodland. This magnificent forest is destined to be a source of great wealth for centuries to come. The lumbering operations up to this time, al though very extensive, have only notched it here and there at long intervals close to the water side. E. V. Smalley in the Century. Every horse owner caring the least for his stock, believes in St. Jacobs Oil. Absolutely Pure- This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomcness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, and cannot be sold in comp-tlllon with the mul titude of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate inrnders. Sold only in canst. Royal, Baking Tow dek Co.. iog AVall-sU N.Y. STOMACH SITTERS Tnrnlirl? rlin nrn rwwitAt-Tnf vtul ,:.. declare in pat etui terms their appreciation of tho merits as a tonic, of Jiostettcr'a Stom ach Bitters. Not only doci it impart strength to tho weak, but it also corrects an irregular acid Etato of tho. stomach, makes the bon-eU act at proper intervals, gives easo to those who suffer from rheumatic and kidney troub les, and conquers as well as prevents fever and acuo. For sale By all Drugcists and Dealers Generally. 1111 rUWlJiJl I " CELEBRATED T A a Jfk 'A fiNAIf or Elrll i FOB RHEUMATISM 3 Neuralgia, Sciatica. Lumbaqo, Backache, Soreness of the Chest, Gout, Quins, Sore Throat, Swell ings and Sprains, Burns and Scalds, General Bodily Pains, Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted Feet and Ears, and all other Pains and Aches. No Preparation on earth equals St. Ja cobs Oil j a safe, sure, simple and cheap External Bemedjr. A trial entails but tho croparatirely trifling outlay of SO Cento, and every one tuTer Jng with pain can hare cheap and potitiTe proof of iU claims. Directions in Eleven Languages. B0LDBYALLDBUGGI8T8AHDDEALEB3 IH HEDI0DTE. A. VOGELBR & CO., Baltimore, 2ZtL, U.S.A. During last November the total beneficiaries received by the mem bers of the A. O. U. W. in Ore gon and Washington Territory was $10,969, and the total dis bursements were S12,000. The total membership is 3,324. The total beneficiary fund received in the United States by the order during the same time amounted to S1G5,0S6.50; total disbursements $150,903.90. Total membership 113,811. SYMPTOMS OF WORMS, The countenance Is pale and Icndcn colored, with occaslonnl flushes of a cir cuinsorib'tl sjot on one or both cheeks; the eyes becmno dull; the pupils dilate; an azure semicircle runs along the lower eyc-IId; the immj Is irritated, swells, and pomct lines bleeds ; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual se cretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breatli very foul, jwirtlcularly In the morn ing; apictitc variable, .sometimes ora cious with a gnawing sensation of tho stomach; at others, entirely gone; Meeting pains in the stuimu-h; occasional nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the nbdomen; bowcb .irregular, at times costive; stools slimy, not unfrequently tinged with blood ; Iclly swollen and hard : urine turbid ; respiration occaMonnliy diffi cult and accompanied by hiccough ; cough sometimes dry and convulsive; nneasy and disturbed sleep, with grinding of the teeth; tamper variable, but generally irritable. Whenever the above symptoms aro found to exist, IU. C. HcLAXE'S YEIUIIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. In buvlng Vermifuge Iks sure you z-t the genuine IU. C. McLANE'S VJiimi 1'L'Ci;, manufactured by Fleming Iti os., '21 Wood Street. Pittsburgh, V.u The mirket is full of counterfeits. You will be right If It has the signature of I'Iphi ing Uros. and C. McLauc. If your storekeeper does not hao the genuine, please reiort to us. Send us a three cent stamp for 4 hand some advertising cards. FLEUIXtt BROS., Pittsburgh. Pa. Fisiiennen Attention! Sutton" Genuine Cape Ann Oiled Clollilug. Double Long Coats. Half Peas, Double suits. .Fisherman Jumper. " Fisherman I'nntx, AprnnK. Sleeves, ilnbher Iloot.s, Itlanket Kiilri. Socks, etc. At San Francisco Prices. A Liberal Discount to the Trade. Ship Masters Supplied. II. P. OIIADliOL'RXE, Aucnt. Ou the Roadway, near Water Street. HEADQUARTERS Foolers Emporium. Most Complete Stock in Astoria JSi ovelties of all Kinds Fruits Uoth Foreign and DoracMic Wines and Liquors Of Superior Brand. 'FOSTER'S CORNER, 0 It 4rX JJOCK For lame Back, Side or Chest use Shiloh's Porous Plaster, Price 25 cents. For sale by W. E. Dement C. ir. STICKEL8 A. M. JOHNSON & Co., Dealers in r CROCKERY & CLASS WARE. Also Wholesale Dealers in Paint. Oils, Varnishes, Glass, Iutty. Artists' Oil and YFater Colo, l'nxnt ami Knlso- ininc Crushes. Constantly on hand a full and choice stock of Staple and Fancy (Jroceries Only tho Best Kept. Our stork or Crockery and. 5IaH Ware is the I.arjrcM and most Complete Stock ever opened hi Astoria. Consisting of Tea and Dinner Sets. Toilet Sets. Glass. Fruit, and Water Sets. Bar Fixtures. Ale Mugs. Ponies, Bustle Bottles Goblets, Tum blers Lemonade Cups &c ,.&c. Everything sold at Lowest living Rates. lu:itilj- Guaranteed. An Examination will more than repay you. OKU.KK IN" Hay, Oats, Straw. Lime, Brick, Cement and Sand Wood Delivered to Order, Draying, Teaming and Express Business. Horses ana Carriages for Hire. D HA LEU IN WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. FIRST. CLASH Important ! ! Rmd Carefully! 1 1 Hereafter all our Pure Coffees will be put up under our own private label NONE GENUINE Unless bought of A. M. JOHNSON & CO. N. B. All goods bearinjT our laliol ;ire guaranteed to be strictly Pure and of Best quality, -and are sold by no other House. MAGNUS C (VR0SBY, Dealer In MBBWAB1, IRON, STEEL, Iron Pipe and Fittings, PLUMBERS ,KD STEAM FITTEEf! Goods and Tools, SHEET LEAD STRIP ILEAD SHEET IROH TIH AND COPPER, Stoves, Tin Ware and House Furnishing Goods. j JOBBING IN SHEET WON, TIN. COP PER PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING Done with neatness and dispatch. None but Hrst class workmen employed. A large assortment ofi SCALE? Constantly on hand TO CANNBRTMBN ! ORDER BOOKS, TALLY LISTS, Time and Credit Cards. CPMJMD LINEN NOTE and LETTER HEADS AXD JOB PRINTING ! Of all kinds at lowest prices. We Guarantee Satisfaction We have new type and n large stock of first class material. J.F.lIALLORA3"&Co. V 31 .10H'?OX. WILLIAM HOWE DEALER IX Doors, Windows, Blinds, Transoms, Lumber. All kinds of ics OAK LUMBER, 3 GLASS, Boat Material, Etc. ' XHsssstfi; j Boats of all Blinds Made to Order, j l... .......' - "Orders from a distance promptly attended to, and satisfaction guaranteed In all cases. S. ARNDT & EEKCHEN, ASTORIA. - OREGON. The Pioneer Machine Shop BLACKSMITH SHOP! '$ Boiler Shop 33i All kinds of ENGINE, CANNEBY, xsv STEAMBOAT WORK Promptly attended to. A specialty made of repairing CANNERY DIES, FOOT OF LAFAYETTE STREET. ASTORIA IRON WORKS. Benton Street, Near Parker House, ASTORIA -' OREGON? GENERAL MACHINISTS AND BOILER MAKERS. LANDfMARINE ENGINES Boiler VYorl:. Steamboat Work, and Cannery Work a specialty. Or all DeBrrJptfouH mntle to Order at Sliort Xofoe. A. D. YAS3. President. J. C. H uvr ler. Secretary. j l.V. Case Treasurer. j JouxFox Superintendent I t TirnT T?.TIR.A"R. ASTORIA. - - - OREGON, Dealer in Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes Meerschaum and Brier Pipes, Stationery and Optical Coods, Joseph Rodgcrs and Wosteuholm GENUINE ENGLISH CUTLER Revolvers and Cartridges. WAJLTOATSl ATO ELGIiY Gold end Silver Watches and Chain Fine and Coarse Liverpool SALT. Tin Plale, Block Tin, Caustic Soda. For .sale ex "Warehouse at Portland or Astoria by BALFOUR, GUTHRIE & CO. dtf Portland, Or. Barbour's No. 40 I2-Ply SALMON TWINE! CORK AND LEAD LINES, SEINE TWINES. A Full Stock Now on Hand. HENRY DOYLE & CO... 511 3Iarkct Street, San Francisco Sole Agents for the Pacific Coast wmm, mmm, wesg S3Pii5Lr"' 5ttfi v rrTT"ff ' "rer" T1 -wr r v a.. .kw c AND WM Bracket Work A SPECIALTY. BUSINESS CAUDS. "El G HOIiDKX, NOTARY PUBLIC, AUCTIOXEElt, COMMISSION AND IN SURANCE AGENT. -i EJLO F. PARKER. SURVEYOR OF Clatsop Conn ty, and City of Astoria Otfice :-Chenamus street, Y. M. C. A. hall KoomNo.8. TCI . tVIXTOW, Attorney and Counselor at Law. . SB-Office in Pythian Building. Booms 11, 12. ASTORIA, - - - OREGON. TAX TUTTJLE, 31. . PHYSICIAN ASD SUKGEON," Office Rooms 1 , 2, and 3, Pythian Build ing. Residence Over J. E. Thomas' Drug Store. F. P. HICKS, PENTIST, ASTORIA, - OREGON Rooms in Allen's uuiklteg up stairs, corner ol Cass aad Sqemocqhe streets.; --r nm v-y Q. A. BOWLBY. ATTORNEY AT LAVY. Chenamus Street. - ASTORIA, OREGO M.AVERTriEIMEi: I. VTEKTHEIMKi: M. WERTHEIMER & BR0. MANUFACTURERS OF FINE Havana and Domestic Cigars No. 51S.Fiont St. San Franchco Dressmaking. Plain and. Fancy Sewing, Suits xnado in tho nest Stylo and Gnaranteod to Fit Mrs. T. S. Jeivett. ROOMS OVER MRS. E. S. WARREN'5.1 G. A. ST1NSON & CO., BLAGKSMITHING, At Capt. Rogers old stand, corner of Cass and Court Streets. Ship and Cannery work. Horseshoeing. Wagons made and repaired. Good work guaranteed. 1. W. CASE, IMPORTER AND WHOLESALE AND RE TAIL DEALER IN &EMEEAL MEKCIAMSE Corner Chenamus and Cass streets. ASTORIA - OREGON FOR SALE ! I offer for sale my ranch near Skipa non in this County; it consists of 160 ACRES, Eigliij- Acres improved, -with good dwelling House; Tito Rnrns, Out Houses, etc.; A Fine Orchard. Everything is well improved and in good condition. A large assortment of Farming Implements, Three A'asscnger Coaches. One Kuggr? Kine Head Horses, Cattle, Hogs, Etc. This affords a rare chance for a man to get a good home in the oldest settled section in the state. Terms favorable to one meaning busi ness. C.A.2IIAOVIBI-:. Notice. STATE AND COUNTY TAXES FOR THE year 1882. are now due and can he paid at my office at the Court House, d-w tf A. M, TWOMBLY, Sheriff. 1 k