Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (July 17, 1884)
01 aW 4r4V4A Avll .aB i fi-V,a I T at VOL. XXII, NO. 8. ASTORIA, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 17, 1884. PRICE, FIVE CENTS. AViNUf)4 f af (LP II F 4L I Hi 1 iJKil l LI I 1 El 1 1A r-mmm .ivcww in ran av'ai msm araa -- LIFE OF S. G. CLEVELAND. Democratic Candidate for the Prrsidcn.v. Cleveland's great-grandfather ivas one Aaron Cleveland, who made hats in the town of Norwich, Conn., and who, nfter figuring somewhat promi nently there as a stanch anti-slavery Republican, turned up in Vermont as a Congregational minister and died in New Haven in 1815. The hatter, politician and minister left thirteen children. One became a city mis sionary of Boston and was widely known as "Father-Cleveland;" anoth er married Dr. Cox, father of the present Episcopal bishop of western New York, and another became a sil versmith of Norwich. This was "Wil liam Cleveland, the governor's grand father. Besides being a silversmith he 'was also a deacon of the Congre gational church for a quarter of a century and died in 1838. The relig ious strain wnicn naa run tnrougn the family for these generations was not loBt, and William Cleveland's second son, Richard Falling Cleve land (the governor's father), after having graduated from Tale in 1820, developed almost immediately after into a full-fledged Presbyterian min ister and took charge of a church at Windham, near Norwich. The Rev. Mr. Cleveland traveled about consid erably, as was the fashion with itiner ant Presbyterian ministers, and f reached in circuits that ran from ndiana to Now Jersey. He settled down, however, in 1853 aB installed minister at Holland Patent, N. Y., but died suddenly after having preached but three Sundays, leaving a family of nine children, having married a Miss Neal of Baltimore while preach ing at that place. HE SEEKS HIS FOKTUh'E. It was while the minister was preaching at the little obscure town of Caldwell, Essex county, N. J., that his third son was born in 1837 and was christened Stephen Grover Cleve land. The family moved to Fayette ville, where the lad went to school and then was placed in a store at a salary of 850 a year. The next preach ing station was Clinton, and there Grover attended the high school un til 'the move was made to Holland Patent, where the tired preacher died and the family was broken up. Gro ver, then a young man of 16 years, set out for New York, and finding a va canoy in an asylum for the blind as under teacher, he took it and held it for two years. Not unnaturally grow ing weary of the work and place, he left it at the end of that time, and, reversing the general order of events, turned his back on New York and started out again to seek his fortune. Impelled by a half-superstitious idea, he made for Cleveland, but halted by the way and put up with his uncle, Lewis F. Allen, a noted stock breed er. The young man wanted to study law, but the old gentleman wanted him to. help make up liis herd-book, and with a promise of 850 for the as sistance set him to work. Grover did not forget the law idea, however, and after repeated applications was finally employed by Rogers, Bowen & Rog ers of Buffalo as office boy at 4 a week and the privilege to use the law library. HE BECOMES A ZiAWYBR. For eight years he remained in that office, rising gradually step by step until he had become head clerk and had been called to the bar. His old associates do not ascribe his rise to any-brillianoy indeed it was far too alow for that but rather to a plain, humdrum, persevering way he had of doing things. In 1803 an assistant district attorney for Erie county was . needed, and his fellow-clerks, forming " themselves into a canvassing commit tee, secured him the appointment, holding it until 1866. It was while he was in thjs subsidiary office he was drafted for service in the civil war. 'He promptly supplied a substi tute. Before going out of office he was nominated by the Demoorats for the district attorneyship, but was de feated by the Republican candidate, Lyman K. Bass. In 1866 Cleveland formed a law partnership with the late LJK.-Yanderpool, which lasted till 1869. He afterward associated himself with the late A. P. Lansing and the late Oscar Folsom. The lat ter association, however, ended at the -expiration of two years, owing to Mr. Cleveland having been nominated and eleoted in 1869 to be sheriff of Erie county. At the close of the term he took as partner Lyman K. Bass, his former antagonist, and then Wilson S.JBisselL Bass retired to Colorado, George J. Sicard took his place in tt8?,and the law firm now stands as . Cleveland, Bissell & Sicard. HIS CHASAOTEB AND CALIBEB. What Cleveland's position at Buf falo was at that time may be gather- . ed from an extract taken from a de "soriptivo letter to the St Louis Qlohe-D'emocrat by one of his fellow tawnimen: "At a club room here, of free aocess and easy ways," he writes, "the old habitues smile when they talk of Grover. He used to spend his evening here with the regularity of a bachelor of fixed'habits. There ''are card-standB, billiards, tables and -newspapers. The men who come and gojsrejjoocl fellows of unpretentious ways. -They are slipping through life with, as little friction as possible. Five' years ago Cleveland was one of them. He practiced law in a modest way and managed to make an income from it which was more than suffi cient for a single man of his moderate tastes. "In his relations to his profes sion -he was classed as fourth-rate. Nobody aoouses him of having been able, to make a speech. In a plain, common-sense kind of a way he at tended to his business and got cases which required neither great knowl edge of law nor remarkable forensio talents." From various other sources it is evident that Cleveland was a lawyer of more honesty than acumen, that hewas rather direct than clever, and that at no time he was more than simple-minded -attorney, good-natured, 'aha- 'mastering the cases that -were intrusted to him by solid study ad hbt'byLgrasp. IH, FLOATS ON THE TIDE. In 1880-81 Buffalo was making a bera!ieHTeistacc to' rinfif rule. With all its water front, its five miles of docks, its canal and its railroad yards, then- had developed a strong municipal ring. These transportation interests furnished a big field for local legislation and room for an army of petty office-holders. The re formers were casting ahout for a nominee for mayor and Cleveland's name was mentioned. He was almost 45 years old. His political experience had been confined to tho unimportant office of sheriff of tho county eleven years before, he was a political Ver dant Green, had no henchmen, was stolid, and was entirely ignorant of caucuses and conventions. He seem ed just the man, was nominated, and went in on the tidal wave of protest against ring rule. As mayor ho acted with an independence that was at once charming and refreshing. When measures were passed which he thought were wise he signed them. When bills came to him which he thought conflicted with tho interests of the city he vetoed them. Old tax eaters suddenly found themselves shelved and new men got their places. A novel disregard for pres sure characterized these selections. Buffalo was amazed. A "turn-the-rascals-out" policy is nlways popular with the masses, and "our Grover" of the old club room began to achieve greatness as a reformer. HE BECOMES OOVEBNOJl. The election of Grover Cleveland as governor of New York is part of tho recent political history of tha t state, but the genesis and growth of tho chaDge from belief in to hostility towards the bearer of the 192,000 ma jority should be briefly related Tho New York Democracy wanted a can didate for Governor. From North ern New York and from the city came delegates for the man with tho bar'l Flower. Brooklyn and tho old sol dier element were bent on having Slocum. Western New York sent an element sounding the praises of tho reform Mayor of Buffalo The last following was the smallest of all, but there were dissensions among the Flower men and delegation went to Cleveland to get even and nominated him. Ho was nominated on a plat form which took strong ground against monopolies of every descrip tion and meant precisely what it said. It declared expressly for a constitutional amendment guarantee-, laws to make labor freo and health ful, to prevent the oppression of chil dren, to improve the sanitary condi tion of factories and to establish an efficient bureau of industrial statistics. HE GOES IK "WITH THE BOOM. The campaign "was remarkable o en for New York, with its astonishing and kaleidoscopic changes in politics. It was just when the Half-breeds were waiting for their opportunity to ad minister a rebrko to the stalwarts; the stay-at-home policy was so thor oughly pursued by the Republicans that 25 per cent of them did not vote at alL Then, too, it must be remem bered that the number of votes cast for him at that eleotion was only 800 more than was cast for General Han cock two years before, and was 20,000 less than was cast for Garfield. It is also importaut to bear in mind the fact that, practically speaking, every Eepubliccn who refused to vote for Folger in 1882 will vote against Cleveland for the presidency in the coming eleotijn, and that any Repub licans who may vote for the Demo cratic nominre nest November are Republicans vho voted against Clove land two years ago. The coming election is Presidential and not State, and such a bolt as sprang out of Fol ger's candidacy is in all human prob ability among the impossibilities It is rather a remarkable state of affairs that there are to-day out-and-out Democrats who believe that the great majority received by the Demo cratic ticket in 1882 was almost a dis aster to the party. Governor Clove land believed it was his personal popularity that secured that unprece dented majority. He mistook the effect of Half-breed hate for a Clove land boom, and with innocence that was "childlike and bland," accepted J the result as a certificate of great in tellectual indorsement. HE ASTONISHES HIS FEIEXDS. No State administration was eer inaugurated more prqmisingly than Governor Cleveland'.?. Elected by u majority swollen to immensity by Re publican inaction, on a platform that roused the Democratic and attraoted the Independent vote, and with both branches of the Legislature Demo cratic, Governor Cleveland's road was clear to enduring popularity. To his other good fortune was ad ded the indorsement of tho anti monopolists. And tho Democratic party of the state was seen for once Hushed with a splendid victory, cor dial and united. No sooner had Cleve land, however,taken the gubernatorial chair than he began to antagonize his friends and to attempt such regula tions of legislation that he very soon began to be regarded as a reformer of an eccentric stripe. Ho showed this principally in tho extraordinary use of the veto power, his refusal tosanc tion being appended to measures which it would appear to his aston ished and saddened constituents were in everyway advantageous to the pub lic weaL Altogether he thus disposed of 120 bills passed by 'the lastrNow York legislature, a few of which are as follews: He vetoed a bill to in crease the powers of the New York board of health in the lino of improv ing the drainage of houses; ho vetoed a bill to put a stop to bucket-shop speculation and another to prevent the sale or giving of cigarettes to children under 14 years of age; ho ve toed a third to regulate the hours of street car conductors and a fourth providing for a mechanics' lion. HE GAINS KEW ENEMIES. These, were all bad enough, but perhaps the first real surprise to which he treated the people was the veto of the five-cent, fare bill, regu lating the fares on the elevated rail road, on tho score of its alleged un constitutionality. That veto has not been forgotten, or forgiven in New York city, and the constitutionality of the bill has been again and again affirmed by tho ablest lawyers. Next, he gained many enemies by his veto of the $50,000 appropriation to con struct a new sewer for the Catholic Protectory. The item had been op posed both in senate and assembly, but ultimately passed both branches as a necessary and lawful appropria tion for a state-aided institution. Lastly came the veto on tho fire proof house bill. New York city has no adequate building laws and recent" events have drawn attention to tne want in a painful way. There has been going on for three years a move ment to obtain ameasure which would insure substantial construction, se cure safety to families and which would require theaters in future to be so built that those attending would be reasonably sure of getting out of mem auve. it was uesigiieu iu uavo the tall tenements and flats, which are becoming so numerous, made fire proof. The only opposition to tho bill, and that was not strong, came from speculative builders interested in cheap construction. The bill was finally passed, but the governor de clined to let it become a law by refus ing to sign it niS APrEABAKCE AND HABIT?. By this lime the reader may have some curiosity to know something of tho man as he is personally. Ho stands above the medium height, is" of fine presence, just a fraction too portly to be commanding and a little too fat in feature and smiling in countenance to bo impressive. He is suggestive somewhat of the biggest boy in school, rather than of a great man. His features are regular, and he has a strong, dark, though not a particularly strikiug face. Ho has dark eyes, heavy eyebrows, a thick brown mustache and thin brown hair. His movements are deliberate and ho has a constitutional reserve of opinion that gives one the idea of uncertainly rather than caution. Ho is an un ostentatious man, is free of access, works hard while ho is at Albany, keeps no horses or oxlra servants, and always walks from the Executive mansion to tho capitol. At Buffalo he J retains tho plainly furnished rooms over his law office for his living quarters. He is not a rich man, in spite of his bachelor habits, although i it has been said that these bachelor babits have had tho effect of keeping THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOR PAIN. BeUeTts aad cores EIIED3IATLS3I, Neuralgia, Sciaiiet, Lumbago, BACSAOIE, EIIDICHX, I0MH1CB1, SORE THROAT, QUIXST, SWELUSOB, SPEA1XS, Ectttas, Cuts, BnijtJ, FROSTBITES, BUBX9, SCALDS, An3 all otter bod 11 ntw nnr czsrs i Bonn SMb all DrngfUu ul Detien. Direction! la 11 luicirtt. Tfcs CtirUi A.7ejlr Cj, (SoMwltsJ-TwCMftCO cacjf, Ki, c.a.1. ffOSUJTElft . STOMACH bitters Tn thf tier-rt-i nf tho tnurlct sn..irr.tni traeler aud new settler, Hostett-i's Stom- ii rli Itlttxrc 1 noniillnHv -ulaiitn.l en i. stiens-thens the digestive orcans. and braces me puysicai energies io unneailMUI Influ ences. It removes and prevents malarial fever, constipation, djspepsla, heaMh'ully stimulates the kidneys and bladder, and eri rlfhcs as well as purines the blood. When overcome by fatigue, whether mental or physical, the weary and debilitated And It a reliable source of renewed strength and comfort. Eor sale by all Druggists and Dealers generally. c. uiNHswr.nr.:i. Leinenweber & Co., KarAHMSUED IBM. ASTOKIA, - - - OREGON TIMERS ll CURRRIES, Manufacturers and Importers of all kinds of LEATHER AND UNDIES. Wholesale Dealers In OIL AND TALLOW. cn'IIighest cadi price paid for Hides and Tallow. J. W. RUDDOCK, Practical Plumbing in All Its Branches. Steam and Gas Fixtures. A Complete Stock of First-class Material. All Work Guaranteed. Office nd .Shop In Hume's bnildlnsr, rear of Wheeler ft Robb's, Astoria, Oregon. iHMppr BIB--i-i-Hi . -cv"4In:c r m m -X -j, -BSS.,!5i?" liSfe3lSfe J .CfS? lraa." i ' rijs-"? r mrm1 in . i - -----wrj4..i aaaaaaaaaaaTaaaaaaaaaaOEwlfJTj'jlCiSi-criiir Columbia . Transportation Company. FOR POXfcFX.AJSX3 FAST TIME! THE POPULAR STEAMER ,spt it tep "sp mvi m -E? JBLMl & & & Which has been refitted for the comfort of passengers will leave Wllon & Fisher's Dock every Monday, Wednesday andFriday at 6 A.M. arriving at Portland at 1 P.M. Returning leaves Tortland every Tuesday and Thursday at 6 A. M. arriving at Astoria at 1 P. M. 2T"An additional trip will be madt on Sunday of Each WecK, leaving Portland at 9 O'clock Snndny 31 orniiis:. Passengers bj thli route connect at Kalama for Sound ports. U. B.SCOTT, President HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. PARKER HOUSE, H. It. IMKKKR. rrop.. ASTORIA, - - OREGON. Al. CKOiSHY. Phil. I'.OWKKS. Day Clerk Night Clerk. First Class in all Respects. FREE COACH TO TDK HOUSE. Fipres Mer Lie ! AND JEFF OF THE CHOP HOUSE duiprmeln his books that he I? doins the Mggi st business uf wi RESTATJEANT In the city, and he will guarantee to give the best raeid for cash. MAKKET3. WASHINGTON MARKET, 3iala Miect, ttoria, Oregon. BKKCM l. it KF.KRY, l'KOPIUETOBg. RESrECTFULLY CALL TflK ATTEX tlon of tlio public to the fact that tho above Market will al wa s bo supplied w 1th a FULL VABIKTY AND BF.ST QUALITY OF FRESH AND CURED MEATS I ! Which will be sold at lowest rates, whole sale and let all. t3ySpecIal attention given to supplying Slllp3. WYATT & THOMPSON. DEALERS IN FRESH AND CURED MEATS, CHOICE GPwOCERIES, PROVISIONS, Crockery and Glassware. Mill IF'oeoL, Elto, Pacific Market. We furnish !'roisIons. Fresh and In Uood Condition. Dressed Chickens. Vegetables, and Market Produce of all kinds In season. A Fine Stock of Family Wines, Liquors. Cigars and Tobaccos. STAR MARKET. WHERRY & COMPANY, Fresh and Cured Moats, FRUITS, BUTTER., and EGGS. OPPOSITE OCCIDENT HOTEL, CHEXAJU'K Ntroer. AMoria, Op W.T.Odnui&Co.'s AGEXCY, Banking Department A General Banking and Exchange Busi ness transacted. Every facility for prompt and satisfactory business. Drafts on the leading cities of the I'nltcd States and Europe. Deposits Received. At The Bureau, Anheuser Bnsch Brewing AssVn or St. Louis, Mo. Celebrated Anheuser Beer on Draught at Pinckney's Sample Room, CS, Water Street, (or Roadway). This Beer Is far superior to any Imported from the East. Call and sample It. FAST TIMEI 5. AENDT & FERCHEN, ASTORIA. - OltEGON. The Pioneer Machine Shop BIACKSMITII SHO PM M 1MI . i7 sv Boiler Shop All kinds or ENGINE, CANNERY, AND STEAMBOAT WORK Promptly attended to. A specialty made of repairing CANNERY DIES, FOOT OF LAFAYETTE STREET. ASTORIA IRON WORKS. Bkntok Sthert, Neak Parker Hocsb, ASTORIA. - OREGON. GENERAL MACHINISTS AND BOILER MAKERS. LAND ai MARINE EMMS BoilerWork, Steamboat Work and Cannery Work a spe cialty. Ofall Descriptions made to Order at Short Xotlce. A. D. "Vyabs. President. J. G. IIcbti.er, Secretary, I. W. Casr, Treasurer. joun Fox.Suporintendent. A. V. Allen, Wholesale and Retail Dealer In Grooerfas, Pravisloas, MILL FEED. Glass and Plated Ware, TROPICAL AND DOMESTIC FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Together with Wines, LiquorsJobaccoXigars c. h. bain & CO. DKALKItS IK Doors, Windows, Blinds, Transoms Turning, Bracket Work. Sb-op W ozrlx. A specialty, and all work guaranteed. Oak, Ash, Bay, and Walnut lumber ; Ore gon and Port Orford Cedar. All kinds of boat material on hand. C. II.BAIX &. CO. CLATSOP MILL COMPANY Manufacturers and Dealers in Lumber, Salmon Trays, BOXE8, ETC. OFFICE AND MILL, CORNER SALMON AND CEDAR STREETS, ASTORIA, - OreM. mm-p ?jMBgFaffci-- SSC3K& StaKKar SsHSr TRANSPORTATION LINES. Oregon Railway & Navigation COMPAHT. OCEAfiTDIVISIOar . During the month of June, 18&f( Ocean Steamers will sail from Portland to San Francisco, and from San Francisco to Port land, as follows, leaving Alnsworth Dock, Portland, at Midnight, and Spear Street Wharf, San Francisco, at 10 A. ar. : From Portland. From San Francbco, Jnn. Oregon .Thur 3 btAteof Cal....Tu 10 Colombia JJiin IS Oregon Fn 30 KUte of Oal....Wed 23 Oolcmtla Mon 9i July Orozon Sat 5 State of Cal....Tu 3 Colombia Hon 8 Oregon ..Fri II but of Ca)....Wed 13 Calnmhia Mnn Oregon ...Bat 83 ISUteof Cl....Tbnr 3 ThrAHffb Tf ..1cCb onlil tn all niHntfnl cities in the. United States, Canada and Europe. RAIL DIVISION. PaSMigerTralns leave Portland for East ern points, at 11 144 A. M. dally. Pullman Palace Oars rnnnin betwaan Port land, and St. Pan), RIVER Dinsie.Y (Middle Columbia). Boats h-ave PortlandVtor Dalles at T HM A M. ALSO: Leavp Pnrt-i i i land for IMonl Tu. 1 We.lThu.1 Fri. I Sat. A.ttorU and I lower Oo-I I lumbta.... 16 AM 6 AM Daiton. Or. 17 AM J CoASlis"! !6AS GAM SAM IsamIsam 7AM 17 am; 16 AMI Tacpmaand Seattle, dally at 10 PM .ivtiauicwiicn uo doi run oonuaja. Learee Astoria for Portland at 6 a. m. dallr x oept Sunday, i t crr, C-n- RESCOTT. . "v?8, .- Manager. Oea'l Freight and Pasa. Act. E. A. NOYES. Agent Astoria. pregon & California R. R. OREGON & TRANSCONTINENTAL COMPANY. LESSEE. On and after June 28, ISSi, tralas will ran as nuus : uAiux (.nxcepc aunaaysj. KASTSIDK DIVIHIOX. Between POUTLAAD and A811LAND . ,. MAH, TItAT LEAVE. ARRIVE, Portland 7 :30 A. MlAshland 5:40 A. M. Ashland. 0:20 i.m Portland 4:23 p.m. ALBANY EXPRESS TRAIN. LEAVE. ARRIVE. Portland 4 :O0 r. ai.Lcbanon 9 0 p. m Lebanon 4 :43 A.M.lPortIand... 10 :Q3 A. m Tollman ralaceSleoping Car leavhs Port land Mondajs and Thursdays. Returning leaves Ashland Tuesdays and Fridajs. The Oregon and California Railroad Ferry makes connection with all Rejralar Trains on Eastside Division. WESTsiDB-prYiaiotr? Betweea Pertlnsd and Cor vail li MAIL TEAIN o -i1 ARRIVE. Portland 9 ha. M.Corvalli-.4 :30 r. M. Corvallls 8 :80 A.M.Portland3 :20 P.M. EXPRESS TKAIX LEAVE. ARRIVE. Portland 5 $0 p MlMcMlnuvllle.8 oopm McMlnnvHIe-5:45AMPortlai.d s Axu .Close connections made at Ashland S-ltlUhe Stages j?f the Oregon and Califor nia Stage Company?""" - - MfTlcketa for sale at all the principal points in California, at Company s Office, Corner F and Front Sts., fortland, Or. Freight -will not be received for shipment after 5 o'clock p.m. on either the East or West side Division. R. KOEHLER, E. P. ROGERS, Manager. O. F 4 P. Agt llwaco Steam Navigation Go.'s SUMMER SCHEDULE. Astoria to Fort Stevens, Fort Canby, and llwaco. Connecting by stages and boats for Oysterville, Montesano and Olympia diL UntU further notice the llwaco Steam Navigation Co.'s steamer Gen. AdClles, Will leave Astoria On Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays (Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays being Oystenllle and Montesano mall days.) at 7 A. M. FOE Ft.Stevens, Ft. Canby and llwaco ON Wednesdays, and Fridays The steamer will leave Astoria at 9 x. m., as formerly, not being confined strictly to schedule time. Oa Tuesdays and Thursdays A SECOND TRIP will be made, leaving As toria at 1 P. M., connecting with steamer TFfde IFf, from Portland. Fare to Fort Canby and llwaco, ..S1 CO tTlrkets can bo bought at tho ofMco for 73 cts. JIlwaeo freteht, by the ton, in lots of one ton or over, $2 per ton, EBFor Tickets, Towage or Charter ap ply at the office of the company, Gray's wharf, foot of Benton street J. H. D. GRAY. Agent. $67,000,000 Capital ! Liverpool and London and Globe. North British and Mercantile Of London and Edinburgh. Old Connecticut of Hartford, AXD COMMERCIAL OF CALIFORNIA Fire Insurance Companies, Representing a Capital of $67,000 OOO. A. VAN DUSEN, Ascent. Carnahan & Go. SUCCESSORS TO I. W. CASE, IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALB AND RETAIL DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE Corner Chenamus and Cass streets. ASTORIA - - - OREGON FRANK H. LAIGHTON. DEALER IN Fruits, Notions, Cigars -AND- Water St. aetweea. West Stk aadWent9ta. Tropical and Domestic Fruits per every steamer. Nut", Candles, etc.. at Lalgntons. Everything Fresh and First-daw, BUSINESS CARDS, J. . MIGttlM. Ceutjr gckaai Malt OmeftAtHilnlt CnM rbaaarv: UBMt Astoria. J FKA9TK PAGE. M. JD. Pkyslclaa nad StrcMB, Oflice opposite the Joiansen twHdiic ASTORIA .... OBSOblf. T" D.WESTOS. ATTOBKETC AT LA.W. Abstracts .r Title a Maeelftlijr. Roollipil2,lCalg3fPytHaaCU BoUdin. Telwamaae J.4,i Q f. arccesMAC, Attorney gHd CeaaaeLUr at taw ROQQ 12, Odd Fallows-Building, ASTORIA, - - .' - OKoa. QBO. A. D0BB13, QSO. aCOJUrf If OULTII tc, MBSia ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office In Kinney's Block, opposite City Hall, Astoria, Oregon. Qt JU THOMSON, Attorney and Counselor at Law. Room No. 6, over White House. ASTORIA, OREGON. a W. FDXTOW. o. C, VVZOQK. FULTON BBOTHEBI, - . ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Rooms Sand G.Odd Fellows Building. T Q.A.B9WIBY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Chenamus treet, - - ASTORIA. OSEOON TOSEPH A. GICX, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. WOfflee with J. Q A. Bowlby, ASTORIA OTeaaa. J C. UOLDE5, NOTABY PUBLIC, ACCTIONKKR, COMMISBION AHt O? SUEANCB AGENT. Q W. LFJK. ARCHITECT AND DSAUGHTSMAN. Scholars received for Course of DrauxliUag KtrP.ffice over White House 8to. fKJLO F. PARJLX, 8URYEY0R OF Clataen CoaBty.aad City t Aaiavta Office -Chenamus street, Y. M. O. A. kaU noomno. o. r BEKMOBI MABTIIV, M, D Pkyslclaa mmA Saraa. . ASTORIA, - - OfiEGON. Offick Room 12, Odd Fellows BuUdl&f. RssiDBxox-Hume's building, up stain. TAX TUTTIiX, M. . PHYSICIAN AND STJBGIOH Otfick Rooms 1. 2. and 3. Prthlan SaUd. ing. Rksidekos On Cedar Street, baek at St. Mary's Hospital. F. P. HICKS. A. S. BXAW. HICKS 4k SHAW, DENTISTS. Rooms In Allen's Bulldlasr. ud stairs, ear nerCass and Squemoqua streets. Aatorta. Oregon. ' Bozorth & Johns, Real Estate and Insurance Agents, and Brokers. ASTORIA, Otegoo. Buy and Mil all kinds of Real Estate and represent the following Fire Insurance Conpanles : Scottish Union and Na tional, assets Eg.ett.01i PhcDulx lartford " 440&C0i Home of .ewYork, " IfiKJJtt Hambuig and Bremen, " . 2jaflpa Western. 3QDol Phenlx of Brooklyn, " iJSOJBm Oakland Home, " VBDflM Policies written by us In the Phoealx aad Home and Scottish Union and Natloaal at equitable rates. BANKING AHMHSURAWE! I. W. CASK, Broker, Banker, and Insur ance Agent, ASTORIA, - OREGON. OFFICE HOURS : From 9 o'clock A. M. until 8 o'c!o-.L IV M. B. S. Worsley, AUCTIONEER AND COMMISSION MERCHANT BfOfflcc and Ware Rooms ou Sqpemoqua Street, next door to corner of Olney . Advancements made 00 Consignments -. Ne Cliarsea for Storage f G4". GE0KOE L0VETT, Tailoring, Cleaninff, RepairiBf,- NEAT, CHEAP AND QUICK. Mala St., oepeslte Jf. Lth't, Astoria, 9tt Astoria Cooperage. BARRELS AMD HALF-BARBELS All Kinds of Cotperit DjMt aa-Leave orders wita JOHX BOASBa, Superintendent, at Ceatwl Market V