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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 16, 1884)
$ w -Mht gdlvt Mtokw. ASTORIA, OREGON: Wednesday janoary ig, igst ISSUED EVERY MORNING. '- (Monday excepted) , J. F. HAL.L.ORAN & COMPANY, PUBLXfiHEUSAXD PROPRIETORS, ASTORIAIC BUILDING. - - CASS STREET Terms of Subscription. 'Served by Carrier, per week 15cts. Sent by Mall, per month . GOcts. " one year .S7.oo .Free of postage to subs -rlbers. ''"Advertisements inserted by the vear at itte rateof $2 per square per month. " Tran sient advertising fiftv cents per square, each insertion. Around the City. The Portland went to sea yesterday. This weather is hard on outdoor plants and flowers. ' This kind of weather makes the wood business lively. Astoria is the best town on the coast for local items. Correct Astori a time is a mooted ques tion these days. A large fleet of minor rivor craft is moored along the dock. ,' Jordan &Bozorth have a fine display of crockery and glassware. Harry Stap'.eton and wife, of Salem, are in the city, visiting friends. 'Several minor casualties, the result of slippery sidewalks, aro reported. The legal fraternity are well repre sented in the circuit court this week. t The Nellie Boyd troupe are on the Ore gon and will appear to-morrow evening. The Chas. Cotesworth has a 'charter of 70s, to load wheat on her return voyage. The Oregon is due to-morrow; the Co lumbia sails for San Francisco next Friday. The firm of J. Hess & Co. have dis solved. A. il. Johnson will continue the business. Scarlet fever and measles still linger and causes considerable trouble among the little folks. Diving in sixteen feet of water while repairing the Astoria Gasb'ght Co.'s tank is.cold work this weather.- The cargo of the TillieE. Slarbuck, now discharging at the O. R. & N. dock, is coming out in good condition. In the police court yesterday Frpnk Valero and Louis Sanguinetti each for fejted $15 on a charge of vagrancy. Considerable improvement is going on tft the Upper Astoria school house. Parti tions, planking, new fence, sidewalk, etc. v There are "tons of Oregon butter" ly ing in Portland, and yet good sale is found for butter imported from Illinois creameries. yalentines have begun to arrive. The day is fast becoming a season for send ing anonymous insults in cheap imita tion of "a joke." One Sea side man rolls logs into branches to rid the land of them; his neighbor, tor the same reason, rolls them out and burns them. In the circuit court yesterday Antoine Bang, Nat. Jones and Thos. Larson wer6 admitted to the rights and privileges of American citizenship. The Washington Territory Board of Pilot Commissioners met yesterday at Ilwaco, W. T., and adjourned to meet on Saturday, the 26th inst. The Baptist, Presbyterian and M. E. congregations unite in another service to be held in the Presbyterian church at seVen o'clock this evening. Any of our weekly subscribers who have not yet secured their receipts for '8i can have them signed by calling at the office any time they are in the city. In the circuit court yesterday, Thos. Talzan, convicted of manslaughter, was sentenced by Judge Bennett to the peni tentiary for a term of ten years. The Portland board of trade at its last meeting passed resolutions compliment ing Viliard. They also indorsed the Oy s terville and Gray's harbor railroad. L W. Case, assignee of the T. Bailey estate, is now paying the declared divi dends to claimants. Those having claims can get the percentage allowed to-day. Yesterday the wind blew keen from the east, and when, the sun went down, the stars that oversprinkle all tho heavens seemed to twinkle in the icy air of night. The usual annual remembrances in the way of almanacs are arriving. The New York Tribune sends us the best one, though the Baltimore Sun is not far be hind. An unusually largo numbsr of public documents are received at this office. If we knew but one-tenth of what they con tain we would be even wor82 off than at present. The Chas. CotesworUi began discharg ing yesterday. She has tiro-brick, salt and tin plate. Of the last she has 12, 500 boxes, of which 9,650 are consigned to Astoria. The work of driving piles for the new mill of the Astoria Box Factory was temporarily suspended yesterday, owing to the pile driver having a hole knocked in the bottom. Annie Gilbert, the little sister of Mrs. A. V. Allen, while crossing the slippery street yesterday morning, fell, breaking hir right arm in two places. Dr. Fulton set the injured member. JDr. Hamilton of Boseburis in the city visiting his son, the gentlemanly tele graph operator at this place. The doctor reports the railroad now in operation 99 miles south of Roseburg. The schooner Gen. Banning arrived in from Gray's harbor yesterday afternoon with freight and passengers. She goes to" Portland to-day, and will leave on her return trip about the 20th. The.Port of Entry Times, Port Town Bend's new paper, is received. Deacon Parkinson, an old Nevadan, is running it-and is as spicy as in the old days when delinquent assessment ads. assayed 900 ne. The O. B. & Co., will as soon as practi cable put on a steamer to run Irom Port land to Ilwaco direct in six hours. The best time ever made in northern waters will be recorded on the Columbia next summer. The Shoalwater Bay oysters are coming in great numbers on the Miles. They Were never finer nor fatter. . 2fo. One's are diligently rehearsing for their entertainment. It will be worth attending. Cant. Scott of the Fleetwood, will soon beeih the building of his new boat. The next thins in order after his new boat is finished is to get the mail contract and deliver it the mail at one o'clock in the afternoon. It is terribly discouraging to a sea cap tain and a marine reporter to have the aforesaid a. c. spend two hours writing a report for the m. r. and then drop the hole business on anebb tide as he starts for shore in the gig. Arndt t Ferchenand the Astoria Iron works are busy on cannery work. Every year more and more machinery is used 3D the salmon fishery. The first thing wo kaow CapL W6st, or Jensen, will invent a machine to catch the fish. .. The trial of the three Leahy brothers mba in progress all day yesterday. The flefense brought up several witnesses, a 'shorthand reporter, J. G. Hume, taking '.testimony. Considerable interest is man ifested in the trial, which will bo resumed at nine o'clock this morning. ', We got our first view of Pons last anight. He was hero last in 1812. Asto ri&h&s grown considerably since then. In 1812 Pons had one tail. Now it has two. Pons is a vagabond of the skies -.and clows in the southwest, just in the . frail of the gun. With a good field glass the runaway star that has sprung a leak may be clearly seen. TILLABD'S TISIOIfS TASISFIED. "Eaclneers' Underestimates Graro." Ills Financial The Eastern papers are full of Viliard and his downfall. A clever Now York correspondent writing to the Philadel phia Press, under date of January GthJ says: Among the cormorants of "Wall street Viliard was a rare bird. People could not understand him. He was gen erous to a degree that made them sus picious. They could not but think that in his large and liberal way of dealing there was some deep scheme of personal gain at the expeuss of others. When he entered Wall street, Jay Gould said: "I will give him two years to get out." A little more than two years and Gould's prophecy is fulfilled. He is out of the street, out of all the great companies he controlled and out of the fortune he amassed with such wonderful rapidity. Three mouths ago he was leading across the continent a train of distinguished men governors, senators, noblemen, bankers, artists, journalists who had come from many states and nations to do him honor. No monarch ever made such a royal procress as ho made last August. He returned to New York to fight for his very existence as a financier and railway manager a losing fight from the first, because it was against the resistless downward tendency of the wholo stock market and in opposition to the shrink age which is operating in the entire bus iness world. How he struggled on from day to day with a desperate calmness, keeping a cheerful manner in the midst of the greatest distress, and all the time getting more hopelessl' entangled, would make a dramatic story if it could be told. For a time the newspapers called him the lion of Wall street, and the street itself praised him because he had jumped into a torrent of disaster, when nobody else dared, and was trying to stem it. But when ho was swept away he was de nounced as a swindler and a charlatan, deserving of a state's prison sentence. Nothing was too bad to be said of him. The men whom he had helped to make millions led the outcry against him, and even some of his oldest friends were car ried away by the clamor and began to suspect that there was something crooked in his operations. Thev had seen so many corporations wrecked and the wreckers retire safely with millions that they could hardly believe that Viliard had not enriched himself from the spoils of the companies ho managed. Now that they have learned the truth, and see that he has ruined himself in mistaken but honest efforts to sustain the corporate properties in his control, they are ashamed of their distrust. THE CAUSE OF HIS FAILUBE. Villard's weakness, which led to his fall, was overconfidence. He trusted too much in his own wisdom and took advice too little from others. As his.prosperity increased he withdrew more and more from the counsels of his old friends. He was exceedingly secretive and in his later operations did not confide even in his vice presidents or tho directors of his companies. He made important con tracts and borrowed millions without calling a board meeting. The bears in Wall street who were engaged in assail ing his stocks knew more of his opera tions, through their spies, than did his immediate associates. "Ho employed half a dozen different brokers in order that no oue concarn should have much knowl edge of his affairs. By nature a pro jector and an optimist, he persisted in be lieving that the tide would turn in his favor. If he had possessed a higher form of financial genius ho would have fore seen last spring that the periodical epoch of business depression and shrinkage in values which comes about once in ten years could not bo very far off and would have prepared for a storm. He lacked this foresight and his craft was caught in the tempest with all sails set. Then in stead of running before the galo he held on in its teeth. BECKLKSS HASTE. In the execution of his scheme, Viliard was impetuous and extravagant. He made haste without regard to cost and disbursed money with a lavish Jiand. A million more or less seemed to be of small account with him. Ho onco said in a speech in Oregon that his was a "benevo lent monopoly." It was, indeed, benevo lent to the bankers who made heavy com missions on its loans to the contractors who built its lines and to tho great num bers of people who were taken into its service. All were treated with a royal generosity. When Viliard set out to build for'his lines in Portland, a city of 0,000 inhabitants, depots and other ter minal facilities more costly than those of tho Pennsylvania railroad in Phila delphia or the Central in New York, he seemed to have lost his head, but oven then his prestige was so great and his temper so masterful that none of tho many prudent men in his boards opposed him. It was a mystery to tho general public how men like Frederick Billings, J. Pierpont Morgan, August Belmont, J. W. Ellis, R. G. Rolston, Robert Ames and J. C. Bullitt could have sat at the Northern Pacific directors' table without putting on tho brakes until a floating debt of nearly fifteen millions had been piled upon that company a mystery, too, that Endicott and Halilwell, cautious Boston capitalists as they were, and Fabbri, too, of the houss of Drexel, Morgan & Co., and Adams, of Winslow, Lanier fc Co., should have been in the Oregon and Transcon tinental board without knowing upon what a perilous courso of speculation it was launched. Those on the insido knew how magnetic and masterful Viliard was; how ho bore down all opposition and in spired everybody around nim with nis confidenca and his rosy views of the future. Directors who shook their heads and whispered together as thoy ap proached the board room would vote ayo to all th6 president's propositions as soon as they got inside. At one time he al most ceased to consult them in advance. He would announce that he had done such and such things and ask for their approval as a mere formal matter to go on the records. SEVEKTX MILLIONS GONE. It is silly to attribute to Henry Viliard the decline in the stock market which has wiped 70,033,030 out of the selling value of the securities of his former com panies, but people hold him responsible, just as they did Jay Cooke for the panic of 1873. The general decline in the stock market began a year ago and has affe ted all stocks, some to a much greater degree than the "ex-Villards." A cautious, sav ing, prudent policy would, perhaps, hove kept Northern Pacific preferred from go ing below 70 and held Transcontinental up to 50, but that would have been the best that could have been accomplished. The Northern Pacifies and allied stocks were almost the last to yield, and when thev went down their fall attracted more attention than that of any other securi ties. The losses of the Viliard management cannot fairly be measured by comparing the present value of stocks with those prevailing a year ago. What he is re sponsible for is a nart of the floating debt of Northern Pacific to be funded in the second mortgaged loan and a part of the debt of Oregon and Transcontinental. Probably four or five millions might have been saved to the construction account of the Northern Pacific if a year longer had been taken to complete tho road and close economv practiced; but by uniting its tracks in 18S3 instead of 1881 tho com pany saved itself from embarrassing at tacks in congress nnon the land grant along its main line. Attacks will bo made, but thev will bo directed only aoainst the unfinished portions of the Cascade branch and against the holding out of market of tho grant along the oo- lumhia river, where the Oregon .Railway ana navigation iompay ua aiinuiijaicu tho Northern Pacific in tho building of a Toad where there is no present use and onlv a xtrv remote future nso for a second line. Of the 10,003,000 of dent found by the investigating committee to be owing by the Oregon and Transconti- nental Company it is impossible to learn how much was contracted with abortive efforts to "holdup the market'' and in laying high interest and commissions on oans to tide over emergencies. Perhaps five millions should bo set down to this account. A close friend of Viliard saidyesterday: "Tho underestimates of engineers have been his financial grave. With all tho care he could exercise the cost of c ery thing he undertook considerably outran the fcgures made in advance by his engi neers. His plans for raising money had to be used on what the engineers told him the works would C03t. Afterwards there always came demands for money and still more." AS TO YILLABD HIMSELF. In Mr. Viliard personally, his financial condition and his prospectSj a great deal more interest centres than is usually ac corded to the fallen monarchs of Wall street. He is a generous, big-hearted man, who was always helping other peo- Ele in his days of prospsrity. Hundreds ave made comfortablo fortunes throuph his aid. He carried forward in his ad vance his whole following of the Kansas Pacific Railroad management and a great many others who havo come into his later enterprises. He liked to see others prosper and took risks and spent money to help them. His charities were lavish, though upver paraded in the newspapers. He had no fondness for notoriety. When his por trait was published in one of the illus trated papers tho photograph from which it was mrtdo was obtained in San Fran cisco. None could be found in Now York and ho refused to sit for one. The facts upon which the biographical sketches that have appeared were based were got from him by the hardest work, and only by the intercession of his wife, who in sisted that ho should leave some record of his career for his children. Ho is de voted to his family and all his time out side of his business hours is spent in his home circle. Such a man lias many friends in adversity. He is not going to give up as many havo prophesied, and rust in some corner of Europe, but will mako for himself a new business career. I hear that ho is going to take hold actively of tho Edison Electric Light Company, in wfcich he is a director. Like Jay Cooke, he will make a second for tune. He is only 50 years old, and with a strong constitution and temperate habits has a good deal of lifo before him yet. The Appropriation BUI. In the senate on December 17th, 18S3, Mr. Dolph asked, and, by unanimous consent, obtained leave to bring in the following bill, which was read twice and ordered to lie on the table: Making appropriation for the improve ment of the mouth of the Columbia river, in the State of Oregon and Terri tory of Washington. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States in Congress assembled, That the sum of five hundred thousand dollars be, and the Bame is hereby appropriated out of any money in the treasury not otherwise appropriated, to be expended under the direction of tho secretary of war for the improvement of the mouth of the Colum bia river, in the Stato of Oregon and Territory of Washington, in accordance with the plan submitted in the report of the majority of the board of examiners for the permanent improvement of the mouth of the Columbia river made to the secretary of war October 13th, 18S2. Last Erenins's Performance. The large audience that gathered to see the gifted Langrisho last evening were not disappointed. As "John Unit" ho made a decided hit, and the one bit of acting in his soliloquy after the making of his will stamps him as an actor of un common merit. Tho after-piece was in a lighter vein and convulsed tho audience with laughter. From here the troupe go to Salem, where they will doubtless draw large audiences. Should Mr. Langrisho return to Astoria he will fill the Occidental by the announcement. Wasts Chinese Labobebs. Loni Mon, a sleek looking Chinamen, is in the city as agent of Sisson fc Crocker, railroad contractors of California, to procure Chinese laborers. Ho wishes to engage a large number to work on the Oregon branch of tho Central Pacific About 3000 men are now at work on this line, and it is desired to push it forward to a connection with tho O. & C. as speedily as possible. There is also an application here for Chinamen to work on the Eureka and Humboldt road, and it is probable that tho greater number of unemployed Chinese here will soon take their depart ure for California. Oregonian, 14. It Wouldn't Go. "See here, sir!" exclaimed an irate individual, rushing into a toy store yesterday morning and unwrapping a curious looking contri vance on wheels, with a key to it. "Here is that 'great novelty,' tho 'Keely Motor toy," you sold me for my boy at New Year's, and I want you to take it back." "Did you wind it up?" asked the clerk, blandly. "Wind it up? Well, I should say so. I wound at it for two hours, and' might have gone on winding to eternity. It won't go." "No, of course not," answered tho clerk; "that is whv it is called the "Keely Motor toy." " "SIGIT.VO MUKC LVIUES!" for Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Prescription" is a prompt and ceraain remedy for the Buini'ul disorders peculiar to your sex. y all druggists. FIuo Dress Goods. A splendid l:ne of ladles dress goods is being displa3'edat the Empirestore. Pianos to Rent On easv terms at Adler's music store. At tlio Empire Store You will find the finest laces and em broideries, of richest quality. "W1TA.T! do you think that JEFF OF THE CHOP HOUSE gives you a meal for nothing and a trlass of something to drink? "Not much!" but he gives abetter meal and more of it than any place in town for 2Ti cent. He buys bv the wholesale and pays cash. "That settles it." For n Hi eat Fitting Boot Or Shoe, go to P. J. Goodmans, on Che namus street, next door to I. W. Case. All goods of the best make and guaran teed quality. A full stock; new goods constantly arriving. Custom work. Hosiery, Hosiory, Hosiery I The. latest novelties in ladies and childrens hosiery at Prael Bros', L'c IMmuilttH Coazh Balaam. W. W. Batterton, Columbia. Mo., says i "I cannot say too much for Dimmitt's Cough Balsam, for it always cures my cnildren of croup and mvself and family of coughs and colds.' At W. E. De ment & Co.'s. The delicious Crescent Creamery But ter for sale at Wyatt & Thompson's. Roscoe Dixon's new eating house is now open. Everything has been fit- fowl tin in fircf-nlncc ctiln otwl ytu11 known reputation as a caterer assures au wno like good things to eat, that at nis pjace mey can ue accommodated. Shlloh's Vitallzer is what you need for Constipation. Loss of Armetite. Diz ziness and all symptoms of Dyspepsia. Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle. Sold by W. E. Dement, Important Case Decided. Tho great railroad case of B. B. Brou son against the Oregonian Railroad Com pany, limited, of Dundee, Scotland, and others, was finally decided by the supremo court yesterday. Tho court af firms the decision made by Judge Boise, of the Yamhill circuit court, in every particular, and requires that the Ore gonian Company, of Dundee.be called on to pay tho judement first, and if it can't be collected off that company, then the Oregon Railroad Companv, limited, of Portland, Oregan, is to be" called on to pay: and if this company can't pay, then Ellis G. Hughe3, Esq., must pav, and in case of his default, the plaintiffs can call upon Joseph Gaston for pay ment. The sum for which the judgment is rendered is upwards of 60.000, and some two or three hundred persons are interested in a dividend. The history of tho case is briefly this: When the owners of the old Dayton and Sheridan Narrow Gauge road found thev could carry it no longer, they disposed of the same to the Scotch banker, William Reid and his then attorney, Ellis G. Hughes, who were or claimed to be, act ing for capitalists in Dundee, Scotland; and before turning over tho propertv the former owners tried to secure p ivnient of nil the then outstanding debts. Reid and Hughes bought in about G0, 003 of the debts, but refused to pay about 43,000 of debts, known as "freight scrip," held mostly by farmers in Yamhill and Polk counties. After offering to sell their claims for 59 cents on tho dollar tho farmers concluded to "pool their issues" against the Scotch, and placed all their claims in tho hands of Mr. Branson for collection, and their confidence in him seems to have been well placed, for he has prosecuted their interests with great fidehtv and coura". r.Bronson had some difficulty in getting lawyers 10 iaKO up me case against the rich corporations, and one of the ablest law firms of Portland declined his busi ness as impossiblo to collect. Mr. Bran son then laid his case before ex-Senator James K. Kelly, who commenced pro ceedings thereon nearly three vears ago. Tho case has been tried twice before Senaca Smith as referee, now the judge of this circuit, twice beforo Judge Boise, of the Yamhill circuit, and twice before the Supreme court of Oregon. Standard, 15. nOTEL ARBIVALS. PAEKEB HOUSE. S T Harrison, Skip F M Sweot,Bay View HC Harrison do NMcCullum, SF PSMcGowan,Ch'n'kJ Smith, Cath F Finlay, Ft Canby JH Whitcomb, G Fleming do Willanah W Burk, do C M Carothers, do E C Crow, Knappa J W Crow, do Jj A Gates, Cath H Stone, Ilwaco R Stone, do P Patterson, Canbv C E Green, Oystervillc. OCCIDENT. C W Fulton, city J G Megler & wf, a. btapieton & wi, Salem G T Durham, Port J Kamm, do E F Hair, do T Fairfowl, do Brook J Broson, city S Hamilton. Roseb'g T H Foss, J Days G Wilson. Port J West, Wcstport C Brosse, Port E McKee, do M McFarland, Knap J A Mcintosh, Knap S Wingate &wf Clat J Bove, S F J M Munroe, J D W Morrison, J D C Ward, Clatsop J H Safely Port . NOConnor, Fishsrton 'Fnir Girl Graduates." whos? sedentary lives increase those troubles peculiar to women, should use Dr. Pierce's "Favorite Preacriitiou,'" which is an unfailing remedy. .Sold by druggists. Oh. I Say! Have you seen the new Archer pat ent barber Chairs, recently imported from Rochester, X. Y.. by Mr. Ileilborn for Joe G. Charters V They are without a doubt the three finest chairs of the kind in this state. For the finest work in the tousorial Hue call at Charters' oppoite Hume's store, corner of Olney and Squemoqua streets. IVotiee. DinneV afJ EFF'S-'CIIOP HOUSE every day from 4 :30 to S o'clock. The best 25-cent meal in town : soup, fish, seven kinds of meats vegetables, pie, pudding, etc. A glass ot S. F. Beer. French Claret, tea or cofftv included. All who have tried him say Jeff is the "RSS." Cor.scLs ami Underwear. All the latest makes and styles of cor sets and ladies underwear at I'rael Bros.' Empire store. All the patent medicines advertised in this paper, together with the choicest perfumery, and toilet articles, etc can be bought at the lowest prices, at J. W. Conn's drug store, opjosite Oi'Milen lictel, Astoria. That Hacking Cousin eau be so qwicklv cured bv Shiloh's Cure. We guarantee it. Sold by W. E. Dement. Croup, Whooping Cough and IJnm chitis immediately relieved by Shi?oh' Cun,. Sold by W. K. Dement. Have Wistar's balsam or wild cherry always at hand. It etires coughs, colds, bronchitis, whooping cough, croup, in fluenza, consumption, and all throat and lung complaints. 30 cents aud.Sl a 1mm tle. Will you suffer with Dy.spepia anu" Liver Complaint '.' Shiluh's " italizcr i guarantee! to cure you. Sold by V. E. Dement Sleepless Nights, made miserable by that terrible cough. ShUnlfs Cure is the remedy tor you. Sold by W. YL De ment Brace up the whole system with Kin: of the Blood. See Advertisement. Wilson & Fisher, SKIP CHANDLERS. DKAI.KKS IN Iron, Steel, Coal, Anchors, Chains, TAR, PITCH, OAKUPfl, NAILS AND SPIKES, Shelf Hardware, Paints and Oils STEAM PACKING, PROVISIONS. tXCUK AH!) JIIIX FEE1. Agents for Salem Flouring Mills, and Capita Flour. FAIRBANKS STANDARD SCALES. All sizes, at Tortland Trices, in Stock. Corner Chenamus and Hamilton Street- ASTORIA. OREGON, FRESH CANDY ATTIIE ASTORIA CANDY FACTORY Patror.lzo ITome Manufacture, AU my CANDIKS are of the FiNE-T QUALITY, A full assortment of NUTS, FOREIGN FRUITS, JOH.Y P. CliASSEX. ETC. IT WILL PAY TO Low Prices Still! lESJEH&ZHS 3VC DB 2 IFL. I WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD! FIVE CENTS EACH. Fireside Companion. X. Y. Weekly LfrtceV, Saturday Night, Arm Chair, family Story Paper. Boys of New York Week's Doings, Texas Sittings, S. F. Chroniee. Call, Oregonian, JS'ews, and Astoi:ia.x, etc.. etc. 8 Cts.. 3 for 25 Cts., 13for$1. Police Gazette, Police News, Illns-tratt-d Times. Pack. Wasp, and Judge, Harper's Bazar and Weekly, Leslies Weekly and Chimney Corner, Argonaut ami many others. 1 have printed tickets for those pa- Eew to make exact change. Back num ers always on hand. OR OCIITO Leslies Popular Monthly. LJ ULniO. Young Ladles' Journal, eti etc 30 CLHTS. Harper's Monthly, etc. etc., Having made arrangements with all publishers 1 am enabled to give the jmlilu a benefit of the ilmve nam d re ductions. I have also Reduced he price for Subscription-, which will be as follews: Ilarper's "WVeRly, peryear.S 3 7- not$t Ou Read This 3 75 ' 4 00 3 50 " 4 00 10 00 " 2 00 3 75 ' 4 00 3 75 - 4 00 2 85 " 3 00 1! 75 " 3 00 2 75 " 3 00 2 75 " 3 00 2 75 " 3 00 2 75 3 00 3 75 "4 00 Monthly All thre for " Leslie's Weekly. " Leslie's Chimney Corner Leslie's Popular Monthly, Fireside Companion, New York Ledger. atunlav Night. Family Storv i'api-r, Arm Unair, " S. i. Ar-'onaut. " And all others too numerous to mention at the same rates. Now is your I ime to ul)scribe for the new year. Remem-Im-i CARL ADLER'S SUBSCRIPTION HEWS DEPOT. Crystal Palace CARL ADLER, PROPRIETOR. Drugs and Chemicals A" J. E. THOMAS Prescriptions carefully compounded Day or Night. A. M. JOIl.WSON. C. J. JORNSON. Astoria Sail Loft. ilANUFACTUUERS OF SAILS. TENTS, AWNINGS, TARPAULINS, And everything else pertaining to our Business. Lowes tPrice and Best "Work For your Jroney, At the Old Stand. Leave your orders and get your work doueatonce. JOHNSON & CO. - - Oregon. Astoria, PETER BLANKHOLM, Dealer in FINE CIGARS, IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC. THE BEST BRANDS OF TOBACCO. SHOKEilS' ARTICLES. Cor. Squeinoqua and Olney Streets, Astoria. BOAT BUILDING, R. LEATHERS Has reopened his boat shop, over Arndt & Ferchen's. foot of LaFayctto street, mid Ls prepared to turn out FIRST-CLASS BOATS. AL.li WORK GUARANTEED. TAILORING, Cleaning Repairing. NEAT, CHEAP AND QUICK. BY GEORGE LOVETTt Main Street, opposite N. Loeb's. ip A DItUGGIST V AND VT Pharmacist, ? rAST0RlA,o v m r A Av ANNUAL SALE Dry Goods ana Clothing. FOR I will offer my STOCK of CLOTHING at GREATLY REDUCED PRICES in order to reduce previous to stock-taking February 1st. OVERCOATS, AT POST Enr fhta Havf 0 Dquo rUl UIp lllfli ?U Udjo GENTS Furnishing Goods, lAL yn H bUUr EK, IAL The Leading Dry Goods and Cothing House of jSTTor special Dry Goods Advertisement see Dally Indcpcn.dctxt.JSl FIRST QUALITY LUMBER. WESTPOBTj BULL COMPANY j IS IN THE FIELD AND rP.OPOSES TO remum. We will take orders for lumber from 100 to POO M at the mil ordeliveicd. We also manufacture lath autl shingles of At quality. Flooring a Specialty . Address all orders WESTPOItT MILL CO. . C, Uenxek, Supt. SOLID' GOLD JEWELRY Scarf Pins. Chains, Watches, s i jcv e waja is , Of every description. The finest stock of Jewelry In Astoria. J3yAIl goods warrantedasrepresented GUSTAV HANSEN, JEWELER. First Annual Clotliinfi, Hats, GeiitB' Fnrnisliinff Begins To-day Will Oontinui Men's Overcoats Reduced. 'Business Suits Reduced, Hats Reduced, D.A. The heading TAILOR. CLOTHIER, HATTER and GENT'S FURNISHER YEARLY CLOSING SALE OP M.D.KANT BARGAINS Men's, Tonths', and Boys' CL0THIN 6. BARGAINS IX Farnkhlns Goods, Etc. Suits madp to Order, m FL p SfvTrt frum 5.10 upward, am! a Neat Fit guar - antcea at 1 31. D. KANT'S jOT Merchant Tailor JyJgX S THE .1 OVERCOATS, FINK DRKSS SUITS. BUSINESS SUITS. WORKING SUITS. Hats and Caps -rs'wra tte7 Astoria. gagnus (J. CrOSby Dealer in HARD! ABE, IRON, STEEL, Iron Pipe and Fittings, Plumbers and Steam Fitters Goods and Tools, SHEET LEAD STRIP LEAD SHEET IRON, Pl-n and Copper. Cannery anfl Fisiermens Supplies Stoves, Tin Ware and House Furnishing Goods. JOBBING IN SHEET IRON, TIN. COP PER PLUMBING and STEAM FITTING Done with neatness and dispatch. None out first class workmen employed. A large assortment of SCALES r-onstantly on band Clearance Sale of at the Occident Store. lays Only. Youth's Overcoats Reduced, Dress Suits Reduced, Furnishing Goods Redued. 31 UN STREET, I Opposite the Parker HfK5. , Hoods ! 4 Jy W the V ewYorkNovelty A stere: r &