Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 28, 1884)
., OJ sas , a feg&a& A W V'T", '-r -'&: . .iPi J& i w 4l Ma s i a b is '-feT?4.;v--.v!s-,'.s?&R VJIJW' II' ASTORIA, OREGON. SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1884. PRICE, FIVE CENTS. VOL. XXII, NO. 70. u j ;nj cards. prts s.wiv. v. t. urtTr. TEA -III.!: r Applv :w ! l..ii .l liv. M. I). Wibnu. Office at Ra.Urih-t ,t C. Ommtj, 1jt Astoria. B Pit VMt. Sfc -.' . 31. . hyii ism ! -.i:r;r !. Office opposite the .jn':.w it LuiU.ing. -WIOltlA .... OREGON. "O JK'IVIXTOaT. ATTORNEY AT LAW Abstrarts I'lstSi' :t ispfini.v. Rooms 11 and 12, Kiiislit -f I'ytliian Csi'tle Building. 'l'vl-,tliiii.' Xh.-IO. ri p. .iic-cos:.-i.is AtiorKoysud t;iiisetir at .:; . Room r', Odd Fellows Buildi:;, ASTORIA, - Oregon. .! A. HOKKIS. I.Mt.KOU'.il ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office in Kinney's Block. pjxisito (.'it. Hall, Ait 01 m, Oregon. j It. TIIOSISO'c. Attorney and Counselor at Law. Room No. c, over White llonw, astokia, okewon. r. w. ruiioN. o. - tvi.ros. ATTOKKKYS AT LAW. Room 5 and fi. dd Fc'tofts liiiikliPi:. .A. BO'il E.HV. ATTOKXEV AT S.AW, Ghcuiiiitus tr.ot, -. - AfrlOltlA. llIW(;0 Tof:s a. f.-js-k. A'lTOirCEV- VT-I.A W. K'Ofiluc w!h .1. - A. JSonrlby, AS101IIA, ----- OnKwr. NOTAItY PUBLIC, auctionelh, cow:i:.'-sion .M JX SU1LVXCE AGENT. c. w- XjEXCK. AUCHITECT AND DKArCHTSJiAN. Scholars received for Course oLl)i74gbIjui SOffrovcrjlSlilWnmcTSforc!5S3;: Q.EL.O P. PAKKKIC. SURVEYOR OF Clatsop Comity, and Ciiy oiMron, Olflce : Cbeuumus : street, Y. 51. C. A. hall ltoom No. 8. f Ki:X:0i 3SAKTAX, az, ., XliyMician and Si::sr-csi. ASTOKIA, - - OlMKJON. OrriCK Itoom VI, Odd Fallows ISuiidhi. JtEStpriNcn Hiimt-'s lusildin. u; stairs. TAX TUTTIiE. 3E. I. THYSICIAU AND SUKGEON Office ltoom 1, 2. and : i'vihiiiit r.iiild lng. ItKsniExrn On CVdsi St net, lack ol St. Mary's Hospital. K r. mcics. ,. k. sJIAW incus & shaw. DENTISTS. Itoonis in AI'ipm Hnildiiifr. 5 stairs. r ner Cas and Siiueni jna .stnets. Asloiia Oregon. Bozorth &; Johns, Real Estate and Insurance Agents, and Brokers. ASTOItIA. - - - OiORon. Kuy and sell all kinds of Itwil Kslale and rciiresent the follow "mj; Fiiu InsuRiiicu Coup inics : Scottish Union and Na tional, asM-:s a,eoatco Pliceniv of Hartford -IXOU.oOo Home of New York, " 7,000,000 Hamburg and Jlrmu-n. " " ios.-0.tttO AVcstcrn. Soo.ia Phenix of Krooklvn. JOo.003 Oakland Home, X),XX) Policies written by its in the I'Ikkux and Home and Scottish Union tnd National at equ itablerats. BANKING' AND INSURANCE"! I. W. CASE, Broker, Banker, and Insur ance Agent, ASTOKIA. - . OBF.GOX. OFFICE HOUItS: From 0 o'clock A. SI. until 3 o'clock P. M. AGESCY. inking Department A General Ranking and Exchange I.tisi ness transacted. Everj facility for promp and satisfactory business Drafts on the leading cities or the United States and Europe. Deposits JKeeeivcd. NIGHT SCHOOL, the REV. W. D. WELSON WILLTtECEIVEA LIMITED NUMBER of Boys for instruction, three evenings In the "week, in such branches as inav be desired. Glasses in Latin or In any ordinary branch ofjidvanccd education will be formed. For further particulars apply as above. ;. -,-,, fflMeiilte 111 jn? r -iftil bRS?! IUJ OESTISKIE. .3 This nedicirie, combining Iron with pure vesetiible tonifs, quickly and completely Ciiros IIsifisln, iiidiscslinn, WcnKiic', Impure n!nQ!,raIaria,C'liilNai:d revere, r.ntl Ncur:i!ai:i. It is an unfailii.c remedy for Diccnse"5 of the liiilnrys aii.l I.lver. It ih imaluablc for Diseases peculiar to Women, and all who lead fedentary lh es. 1 1 dix-s not injure the teet u, catm? hendachc.or pr wluce contipJition itlhT Jron medicines 1o. Ilenrichcsaud purifier the blood,. Simulates the appetite, aids the nsslmilation of food, rc ljeres Heartburn and Inching, and strength ens the muscles and nerves. For Intermittent Fevers. Lassitude, Lack of I Energy. fca, it has no eiiial -CS The genuine lias nlmvc trade mark nni r4ed ltd lilies on u rniijier. Take no other -:jr-i.ij ii) iu:on iiiriiK l 10 UiLTinoi;R,xn ltFWNt.TOX. WOnrfAKI) A CO.. Portland. Or. lit I JAl.i: A I Ms. ssssgaicjts a 1 CCLEURATEO STC;ZAC22 S3SS3 5iSS m lb 1 t,i,-ui u u I.i- tier's jt niach Itttti'is as a pii'Mitw of cpidt imes, a -stoini'lnc. .1:1 uiMuonin'.a encrd iistn alive. and a specific for fecr and ague, in digestioa, biliuiis an'tion, rinumili-tr. ierou- lelnty, coiiMltutioiial Vic Km--., is established upon Uic .sound bais of 111 ie than tKout jearsexpeiience, and v .11 mi more be shal;ou by the claptrap nostrums tf uiwcifi.t'fic nr-t"iider. than the o et lasting hills b the uimlstliat rustle throu-h their denies. J'orale by all Druggists ami Dealirs gent-i.il!; . yWgam;!ieiStgaIi Prescriptions carefully compounded Day or Night. 1 V. holesale and ltctall Dealer 1:1 t?o&eri&$j & Provision MILL PEED. Glass and Piateri Ware, TltOPICAL AND DOMI-STIC FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Together with W(nesf Liq:?ors,TGbCCQ,Sigsrs vFefi's Notice SAYS TIIF.lt E WILL BE NO INCREASE OF PRICES IN HIS CHOP HOUSE A ND THAT HE IS DETERMINED TO ti. maintain his relitigation for keeping the bfst aad che iprsr IttM.mraut in town. een at a loss to hhiiM-lf, while thp dull times last. JEFF. J. if. D. GRAY. iiiiiemle and retail denier ii . GROCERIES, FLOUR, km FEED Hay. Gats. Stray, Wood. Etc. LIME. SAND AND CEMENT. General Storage and Wharfage on reason able terms. Foot of Ben'on street, Astoria, Oregon. B. S. Worsley, AUCTIONEER AND COaDHSSIOX merchant -Ofllce and Ware Booms on Squemoqua Street, next door to corner of Olncy. Advancements made on Consignments No Chnrjrc.H for Storage of Goods. I A j. i. mmk I Pharmacist, I ASTORIA.?" fX o o ! 1 m I I j ' v j Mien, FA3IILY CHAT. lights of a ship at sea, illuminates only the path we have passed over. Ifc is the many lesser men, Krewim: slovrlv, but steadily, in thought and strength, that make the advent of every great man possible. "Whatever be its inspiring motive, tactisinits outward feature a sort of charity; it is impoibk' t be tactful, however selriMil. without making life pa1: more plcisantly for our neighbor. "ily boy,' said a father to hN son, 4,tre:it everybody with politeness, even those who are rude to you. For remember that yon how courtesy to others not because f he tire gentle men, but because you arc one." It is only bv labor that thought can be made healthy, and only by thought that labor can be made happy. The professions should be made liberal, and there should be less pride felt in peculiarity of employment and niore in excellence of achievement. Life will bring cares, many of them doubtless heavy and bitter. Troubles there are far more sad than many fortunate ones ever knew; but there is one generally safe and certain cure for nil, and that is work. Occupation for others must bring with iE the great panacea for all uuhappiness, dullness or ennui. While what we do unquestionably influences what wc are, it is equally tme that what we are influences and determines the real value of what we do. Let no one imagine that he can permanently benefit his work or fur ther his business by sacrificing his manhood or neglecting other obliga tions. Do not be troubled because you have no great virtues. God made a million spears of grass where He made one tree. The earth is fringed and carpeted not with forests, but v.ith grassess. Only have enough of little virtues and common fidelities, and you need not mourn because yon are neither a hero nor a saint People who are vain and selfish, shallow, petty or false, cannot honor their employment, whatever it may be, and cannot attain any real suc cess in it, for, to make it subserve the ends of mankind, the very opposite qualities are required. From clean ing a street up to regulating the af fairs of a nation, the character that is put into the work is what will de termine its value, and only that can be put in which exists in the ivorker. "What we call the sterner virtues alone cannot make a good character. Thoiman of integrity who is cold, or or hard, or unamiable, is as far from moral goodness as hi is from moral beauty. He who prides himself on bciiig righteous and forgets to be kind is not truly righteous. "Wc can not analyze character an&parcel out some parts of it to constitute moral goodness and others to form moral beauty. Each is wrapped up in each, and only together can either mantain a hetdthy life. - - &inaring the Circle. On the 18th of August, says the London iVecv, C. E. Parker-Ehodes exhibited to a few gentlemen, at An derlou's Hotel, Fleet street, an inven tion by which he claims to be able to do what mathematicians have vainly aitempted for two thousand years namely, to square the circle. He be lieves also that his invention will prove useful in education and to pro fessional and commercial men, as it will enable them immediately and without calculation, to ascertain the exact square of any area, however ir regular in shape. The appliances used are extremely simple, being merely a quantity of small shot and a shallow, square trough, with which, and an adjustable "right angle," squares of various sizes may be made. When the square of a given circle is requtrca, tne tatter is cut in some hard material. The circle thus form ed is placed on a level slab and care fully filled with small shot, none of which are allowed to be above the others. Then the shot arc placed in the shallow trough and the "right angle"' adjusted till they exactly fill the square formed by the "right an gle" aud the corner of the trough. This is the square of the circle into which the shot were first measured. When the square of an irregular area is required the process is somewhat similar. If, for instance, a surveyor were dealing with a piece of land of many angles and unequal sides, he wonld make a small drawing of its outline "to scale." as the professional phrase goes. He might then cut the figure out in cardboard, the thicker the better, and fill the hole formed in the cardboard with shot The area covered by tho latter would after wards bo measured by means of the "right angle" and shallow trough. Ir. Parker-Rhodes did not demonstrate yesterday the mathematical accuracy oi liis process; but he maintained that such demonstration was prac ticable, and he offers the discovery freely to alltwho may choose to adopt it. Certainly it seems likely to be practically useful if not theoretically perfect. A young man at Elkhart, Intl., has started a six-column weekly paper with the avowed object of "restoring to the republic its wonted grandeur and prosperity." You can't do it, young fellow, says Peck's Sun. We tried for six years to restore the re public to its wonted graudeur and prosperity by publishing the ablest paper in this country and taking tur nips and slab-wood on subscription, and never had money enough to buy a dog; but of late we Lave let the wonted grandeur of the rennhlin shirk for itself, and the first of Jan uary wo had over six dollars. Air. tL.BL.Hunt, grocer, N. E. cor ner i-airmount; Ave., aud Ann St, Baltimore, Maryland, states, that he had a severe attack of acute inflam niatory rheumatism and his pains were such he could not walk. After one application of St Jacob3 Oil, the conqueror of pain, he experienced immediate relief and was able to walk as well as ever. How Clothespins are Made. ' -To look at the clothespin,'' said the dealer, ''you'd scarcely believe that the manufacturer could make and sell twelve of them for a cent, and have a profit of more linn oOper cant, at that, wonld j'on'r". "Well," continned the dealer,'- they whittle them out at the rate of eighty a minute. ,A beech or maple log, a fool in diameter and ten feet long, will whittlo up into 12,000 clothes pins. That log won't cost more than $2. The clothespins they out out of it will be worth SflG.40. It 'will take them two hours and a half to run that log into clothespins, which is whittling out 4..800 an hour. At ten hours-a day they get away with four logs and have on hand 4S,000 clothes pins, worth S3S5.C0. Now the lumber for the-:e pins has only cost $S or so. If that was all the expense, a man with a clothespin factory might snap Ins fingers at the Standard Oil com pany or Grant & "Ward profits. But then these logs must be sawed up by four different kinds of saws; One separates the log into" lengths of six teen inches; another saws these into boards three-quarters of an inch thick; another cuts the boards into strips three-quarters of an inch square. These strips are caught on a wheel that hurries them to a gang of saws which chop them into clothespin lengths. These lengths are carried by a swift-moving belt to a machine that seizes them, sets them in a lathe that gives them their shape in the twinkling of an eye,nnd throws them to an attendant, who feeds them to a .saw that moves backward and forward as if it were madder than a snake. This saw chews out tho slot that the wash-woman shoves down over the clothes on the line, and the clothespin is ready, all but kiln drying and polishing. 'The latter is done in a revolving iron cylinder the same as castings are cleaned. All these processes cost money, and when the manufacturer comes to put up his goods for sale he finds out that his profit on the tS.OOO pins, his day's work, is only about $193. We pay the manufac turer a cent a dozen, or a triflo "more than SS a thousand. Wc are com pelled in these close times to sell them for 1 cents a. dozen, or $32 a thousand." JST. Y. Sun. Let uk Wve by the "Yav Said a wise man: "As we journey through life let us live by the way." A very good rule for obtaruiug true happiness, if acted upon in the spirit it is given, If we would pay more attention to the present, tho thiugs about us, not losing sight of the fu ture, and turn our backs on the past, letting the past' bury its dead, wc wonld be much more happy. Half of ' our tronJilesirioHhis Jife areonac-J count -of Vsnrdtsposition to grieve over the "what might havo beens" and our apprehensions of disaster and evil in the future. Live in the over present Help those about you to see the good things of the present by enjoying them yourselves. To be sure our lines may be cast in dark aud troubled waters, yet there never was a time so bad as to be utterly void of something to help us to bear the heavy load with which we may be burdened. A kind word or deed will not only help us to enjoy the world, but it will help those about us to en joy the good things in life. .Don't as- J sume imaginary cares, don't hunt I aronnd for something to worry abont; don't forget everything but some par-1 ticular object you have fixed yourj purpose on in the future. You will not attain to it any sooner. You may ' be stricken down on the way beforo' you havo reached the goal. Then whygive up all else in the effort to attain it? An honorable ambition is a good tuing. it urcs tne energies; it makes the man more manly. But the greatest man, the manliest man, is he who lives by the way as he jour neys through life. An Aged Arkansas Clergjman. Who has preached the gospel for 40 years, has been greatly afflicted with kidney troubles. His case is such an obstinate one and his ace is so erreat tint he camnt hope for absolufo! cure: but he writes from Richland, that he has used thrco bottles of Brown's Iron JBitters, and adds, "I have felt more relief than from any thing I have ever used." He desires an additional supply of this great family medicine in "order to make further trial. Fields, Wilson and Johnson, who were arrested at Brownsville last week for Jiorse stealing at Umatilla comity, when arraigned a few days ago at Pendleton,waived examination and on furnishing $1,000 bonds were released. They were immediately ar rested on another warrant, and hear ing that there were nine or ten more warrants out agaiust them they con- uiuueu it wouiu oe too mucn. trouble to ask their friends to sicrn so manv bonds, and so they went back to jail to await taeir trial. Indians eat the horns of the deer when in the velvet One day, on the Sioux reservation, in Dakota, a deer was killed near camp and brought in entire. At, sight of it Pahlnniote, a Minneconjou of some fifty years, dropped his usual staluesquo attitude knocked off the' horns, and, seating himself by tho fire, began at the points to eat them, velvet and all, without cooking, as if they were most delicious morsels. Tho others of the party looked on as if they envied him. They said they "always ate them so.' Twenty-nine boats are engaged in fishing on the Coquille, catching in the aggregate 1.000 salmon per night. A Life SaTins Present. "Mr. aI. E. Allison, Hutchinson, Kan.: Saved his life bv a simple Trial Eottle of Dr. King's New Diseovcrj', fcr Con sumption, which caused him to procure a large bottle, that completely cured him. when Doctors, change of climate and everything else had failed. Asthma, Bronchitis. Hoarseness Severe Coughs, and all Throat and Lung diseases, it is guaranteed to cure. Trial Bottles free atW.E. Dement & Co.'s Drug Store; Large size S1.Q0. THE GREAT GERMAN REMEDY FOB PAIN. Bellefes fnd carcj RHEOLYTIStf, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, BACKACHE, ESiEiCHZ, IOGTEACEE, SGRE THROAT, QCIXST. SWELLIXGS. SI'IJAIXS, c2tn Cats, Braises, FROSTBrTES, nenxs, scaxds, AnJ all other tadUj- ftchu in J ai&5. IIFIT CZST3 1 2GTTL3. SaM by all Dmnliti ant Dealers. Direction! la 11 (Sne-Ttxiri L A. YoctUr t Co.) nlUcjjr, HJn C.S.A. HOTELS AND RESTAURANTS. PARKER HOUSE, II, . TAHKER. rroi.. ASTORIA, . - - OREGON. Al. CltOSBY, Phil. BOWERS, Day Clerk Night Clerk. 2?irst Class in all Respects. FItEE COACH TO THE HOUSE. Pi npros JEFF OF TEE CHOP HOUSE Can prove by his books that he is doing the higget business of any EESTAUEANT In the city, and he will guarantee to give Hi" liest menl for cash. FRANK FABRE'S CHOP HOUSE. oysters, ice yream, COFFEE. The New Model. Everything First -. Class. r Casj Street, rear of Odd-Fellows Building. Every attention paid my customers, and tho best set before them in first class Atyle. BAY VIEW Restaurant and Bakery Ulrs-K. ZIMMERMAN. Wishes to announce to her friends and the publi generally, that s le has opened AFIKST-CLASS RESTAURANT AND BAKERY Tn the Dn new building opposite the O. R. & N. Company's Dock. The Best the 3Iariet Affords Cooked to Order. Ojtcr in Kvcry Myc' Soffl Golfl Jewelry, BRACELETS.. Scarf Pins, Chains, Watches, SILVERWARE, Of every description. The finest stock or Jewelry In Astoria. ESfAU goods warrantedasrepreseutcd GUSTAV HANSEN, JEWELER. fi. A. STINSON & CO.. 3LACKSMITHING, At Capt. Rogers old stand, corner of Cas anil court streets. Ship and Cannery work. Horseshoeing Wagons made aid repaired, ftood work guaranteed. 'TjT-rniwri -armTJin-ir iw Lie Columbia Transportation Company, FAST TIME! f L Hi LI Which has been refitted for the comfort of passengers will leave Wilson & Fisher's Dock every Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 6. A.M. arriving at Portland at 1 P.M. Returning leaves Portland every Tuesday and Thursday at 6 A. M. arriving at Astoria at 1 P. M. tSAn additional trip will be made on Sunday of.EarH Wccfc, leaving Portland ito O'clock SnHdny aiornlnjc. Passengers bj this route connect at Kalama for Sound ports. - - - U. B. SCOTT, President ASTORIA IRON WORKS. BkUTOX StKEET, NKAll JTAnKXR TTOCSE, ASTOKTA, -OREGON." GENERAL MACHINISTS AND BOILER MAKERS: LAND ail MABIHEMES BoilerWork, Steamboat Work and Cannery Work a spe cialty. OASTIKTGS , Of all DeKoriptioiiH made to Order at Short Xotice. A. D. Wass, President. J. G. Hustleb, Secretary, I. W. Case, Treasurer, joujf Fox,Superintendent. S. ARNDT & EERCHEN, ASTORIA. - OREGON. The Pioneer Machine Shop BLACKSMITH SHOP ifo"v. Szm&r.- Boner bnop .sfe-g All kinds of ENGINE, CANNERY, AJiD STEAMBOAT WORK Promptly attended to. A specialty made of repairing CANNERY DIES, FOOT OF LAFAYETTE STREET. Magnus C. Crosby Dealer In HARMARE, IBDH, STEEL, iron Pipe and Fittings, STOVES, TINWARE AND HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS SHEET LEAD STRIP LEAD -.SHEET IRONUVS Tin AND Copper. PRANK H. LAIGHT0N. DEALER IN Fruits, Notions, Cigars AND Water M. between West StU amlWe.ttOtli, Tropical and Domestic Fruits per every steamer. Nuts, Candies, etc. at Laighton's. Everj thing Fresh and Firht-class. P. Blankholm. Cigars, Tobacco and Notions, FRUITS Cor. Squemoqua and olney street. Astoria. Westport aad Astoria TOUCHINC AT KNAPPA. THE FAVORITE STEAMEIl GOLD DIJST Which has linen thoroughly refitted for the comrort of Passenger- will run tins season between Westport and Astoria DAILY TRXS As follows : Leave Westport at 7:30 A.M. Knappa at 8:30. Arriving in Astoria at 10 -JS0 A. M, Leave Astoria at 2 P. M. Arrive in Westport at 6 p. m. Will. touch at aH wny landings. For freight or passage apply on board or to CAIT. J AS. COX, Manager SrwV ""nTiwnnT -"- mm FOR PORTLAND, FAST TIME! THE POPULAR STEAMER ETWOOD TRANSPORTATION LINKS. Oregon Railway & Navigation OCEAN DIVISION. During the month of September, 1884, Ocean Steaiiit-rs will sail from Portland to San Francisco, and from San Francisco to Port land, as follows, leaving Ainsworth Dock, Portland, at Midnight, and Spear Street Wharf, San Francisco, at 10 A. at. : From Portland. From San Francisco. Sent bent Orrson Utn of Ual. Columbia ..Wed 3 State of Cal.... Hon 1 ..Mori 8 Columbia "at 6 ..Sat 13 Oiegon .Thar 11 ..lhar 1- btateofCal Taea IS ...Tues V"3 OolumVia Min 21 ...inn 23 Oregon Fn 26 Oct Oct . ..Fri 3 State of Cal....Wed I ...Wen S Columbia .Mon 6 "Oreuon.... Mate or Ual. Columbia. ... Oregon State of Cat. Thronsh Tickets sold to all principal cities in the United States, Canada and Europe. RAIL DIVISION. - Passenger 1 rains leave. Portland for East em points, at 11 :40 A.M. daily. Pullman Palace Cars running between Port land, and St. Pan, KIYER DITISIO.V (Middle Colambta). Boats leave Portland for Dalla Rt 7 KM) A M. alse: Leave Port-1 i i 'and for JMonl Tu. We.JTmi. Frl. I Sat Astoria and lower Co lumbia.... 16 AM6 AM 6AM SAM SAM 6AM JAM "ajion, Ur.;7AJd; Uorrauls" KAMJ.... ,7AM" 1 6 AM I lacomaand Seattle, daily at 10 PM victoria bteamera do not run Sundays. Leaves Astoria for Portland at 6 a. in. daily ex cept bunday, A T c:Tm.-r C H' FRE3COTT. r S' JT, Manager. Gen 1 Ireight and Pass. Act K. A. JsOYKS. Agent Astoria. OVERLAND TO CALIFORNIA VIA Oregon & California R. R. And Connections, ."9 Hours between Portland and San Fran cisco. Only 21 houro' staging. Fare to San Francisco 832 ; to Sacramento $80 Leave Portland at 7:30 A. ar. daily (except Sunday) : Arrive at Sau Francisco 0:40 p.m., third day. Close connections made at Ashland with the Stages of the Oregon and Califor nia Stage Company. KASTSIDE DIVISIOX. Between FOHTLA.ND and ASllLAXIV. MAIL THAI. LEAVE. ARRIVE. Portland 7 :30 A. Ml Ashland 4:45 a.m. Ashland tf 0 .P. M I Portland 4:23 p. m. ALBANY EXPRESS TRAIN. LEAVE. ARRIVE. Portland..... 4 :00 p. M.;Lcbanou 9 20 p. m Lebanon 4 X5 A. M.lPortland... 10 :05 A. M Pullman Palace Sleeping Car leaves Port land Mondays and Thursda3s. Returning leaves Ashland Tuesdays anu Fridays. The Oregon and California Railroad Ferry makes connection with all Regular Trains on Eastside Division, from the foot of F St. WSTSIDE .DIVISION. I5etwtn Portland aud L'orvnltla MAIL TIIAHT v LEAVE. - ARETVEr" Portland. 9 -.00 a. M.,Corvalli- 4 :30 p. m. Corvallis 8 :S0 a. M.Portland3 -J20 p.m. KXPIIHSS TttA12f LEAVE. ARRIVE. Portland 5 :0O p MlMcMInnvllle 8 .-oo p m McMinnviIle5:45 AM'Portland 8 :30 am Local tickets for sale, and bag-age checked 7"-"-." . ! iw,i WUltt, I.UU1C1 oiuin and Second stit ets. Tickets to all the urin- clpal points in California, can only be pro cured and baggage checked, at the Com pany's oBlce, Corner F and Front Sts., Portland, Or. Freisrht will not lir rppplvml fnr cViinmnr after 5 o'clock p.m. on either the Eastside or Westside Divisions. K. KOKIlLfcR, E. P. ROGERS, Manager. G. F 4 P. Agt Ilvaco Steam Navigation Go.'s WIN I Ett SCHEDULE. Astoria to Fort Stevens, Fort Canby, and lluaco. Connecting by stages and boats for Oysterville. Montesano and Olympia a JPf? Untu" further notice the Ilwaco aska. Steam Navigation Co.'s steamer G-en. UVEiXes, W ill leave Astoria on Mondays, Thursdays, and Saturdays (Mondays, Thursdays and Saturdays being Oysterville aud Montesano mall days.) at 7 A. M. FOR Ft.Stevens, Ft. Canby.and llwaco ox Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Fridays The steamer will leave Astoria at 9 a.m., as formerly, not being confined strictly to schedule time. On Thnrsday A SECOND TRIP will be made, leaving As toria three hours af tr r arriving from llwaco. Fare to Fort Canby and llwaco, SI 00 CeTickets can be bought at the ofilce for 73 cts. EIlwaco freight, by the ton. in lots of one ton or over, $2 per ton, C-For Tickets, Towage or Charter ap ply at the office of the company, Gray's wharf, foot of Benton street. J. H. D. GRAY, Agent. COUNTY C0R0NER-J. C. ROSS. UNDERTAKING ROOMS. THE FINhST AND MOST COMPLETE stock "f OFFIVs and nKElX In the city. ar r oms thre do rs above the Masonic II ill. on MAIN Sl'KEET A-toria, Or. Coroner's office at tht s tine place. Orders front the country given prom, t at tention and sitisfa.tiou guaraute d. Ki'siden c, We:jt 7th an-' Odar streets, one h.ock from St. Mary's Ilojp.t.i . B. B. FRANKLIN, TJnflertaier and MM Mate, . SQUEMOQUA STREET, 'KXT TO THE ASTORIAN BUILDING. O y-All work done in a skillful manner on short notice at reasonable rates. GRADING, BLASTING, WELL DIGGING, DITCHING, 4 ND ALL KINDS OF MINING WORK .L will be done satisfactorily. Inquire of - OTTO LINDR003, at Weston Hotel. i zSV &