The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899, November 26, 1885, Image 1

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VOL. XXIV, INT0. J 26.
ASTORIA, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER -26, J 885.
PRICE. PIVE CENTS.
OJ
(I 1 ill fix JI 1 llilf ll I iTH ""kMjiiSi fxk Klir IHl li II fill I II
t -! JB - " -
I;: MS ESS CARDS.
1IC. A. u u:A j. a. Friro.
IMaj si-i;;:js nrt Surgroii..
Will she promnt attention to Jill r:i!!. i
:om any p.irt oltne ctt or country.
OfiiceotcrAlleii'MoK. corner Cas sui.I
-iiH'tnoi(i:i Mroctb. Astoil.i, Oregon.
IVIepllllllC o. 41.
D
B.K1SASK XA1.
E'hjsirlnn nud Nurjroou.
i!l:w, KoomC.owrD.A. McIntoli .-.im.
i kicr Hours : -3 to 1 1 a. jr. ;-:: lo r i m.
Residence, opposite thp.Ioh.msen hulldir.j:
JTVK. ESTES.
PHYSICIAN AND M'KGCON.
Ori k r : Ccni ihii'din. tip Mail's, AMoiia,
IC-JOIl.
K. fOOVKKT,
aJ.
attorney ittliawaiut Romrj i'tiblic
COLLECTIONS SOLICITED.
Office with C. It. Thomson. ninn " 'er
City Book Store.
'IEO. A. l)OIl:lS. !KO. OU.M'
Jtf(f.tlfcl it ICRIS.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Office lu Kmnej'rf !Hik-J. pposlte Cit
!1 all, Astoria. Oregon.
W. FULTON'
a. c rui.Toy.
rFF-TWar RRO'S'SIKRS.
ATTORNEYS at law.
Itooins 5 and C. Odd Felloes Buildup
f KLO F. PABKEIC
SURVEYOR OF
t'latKop Conntj' and. City of Astoria
Oillce:-N.K. comer Cass and Aslor streets,
ltoom No.8
T tj. A. BOWLBY.
attorney ami Counsellor &t i'liw,
office on Chenamus Street, Astoria. Oregon.
F.
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Rooms No. U and l2,l,tliianC.u.lr r.uild-
:R.
JAY Tt'TTLB, 31. I.
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
Office Itooins 1,2. and 3 Pythian Bui!'-
REPIUF.NCK On Odai Slice'., lncl. ol
!. Mary's Hospital.
- P. HIOKS. A. V U"
HICKS & Sil 1AV.
DENTISTS.
Rooms ill Allen's Buildup.;, up Mali-.. cji
ner Casi aud Squenioijua. slrceti. AMorlH
Oregon.
T R. SPEDIE,
XOTAUY PrJILIC,
Kenrrher of TitlcM, Abstrct t-r iii
Conveyant't'i.
OBleo on C.ws Street. HdouiKO';!li of A
torian office, Astoria, Oregon.
BANKING AND INSURANCE!
!. W. CASE,
Broker, Banker, and Insur
ance Agent,
ASTORIA, - OKoa.
OFFICE HOURS :
Krom 9 o'clock A. M. until 3 o'clock 1. 31.
AHEAD OF ALL COMPETITORS!
Capitol Flour,
Manufactured on tlio Oradu.il Rodutr'ion
Sj stem by tne
Salem (Or.) Capitol Flour Mills Co.,
LTMITFlt
the only flour that has taken First Prize
three years in suceeasion at the
PdttTLASD 3JECHAXICS P'AIK.
Alio at State Fair.
One trial Is sufficient to com ince of its sune
.riority. See that the void CAPITOL is on each sack
GEORGE SHIEL, 8 Stark St.,
Portland Agent.
WILSON & FISHER. Astoria Agents.
HAVE YOU
IN THE MATTER OF
Rags. Bottles, Old Metal,
or Junk of Any Sort,
FOABD & STOKES
Will give you the best price for It.
Do You Want to Buy'
SHIP MATERIAL.
From a Belaying Pin to a Hausei ; from
Block to an Anchor.
You Can Get what You Want
at FOABD & STOKES.
Headquarters at buildlup, east end
Water Street.
Wig to Sell?
i i B k - rr eJI SB i
1 5v iys, Jk1
i mM-
THE GREAT
GREAT Mf0f$
m reMEO
Cures
Rheumatism.
Neuralgia.
iirsoltaclap. ircadaclic, Tootliacbo,
Kpraiuo. BruUca, etc., etc.
l'ricc, Finy Cents. At DrupgUts and Dcalcr-i.
THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Sole Prop
B vn jicke, Maevtt), U. S. A.
INVIGORATOF
Is jusc what its name implies ; s
Purely Vegetable "Compound, thai
acts directly upon the Ifter; curing
the many diseases i
pcrtant organ, and
o that tm.
ting the na
merous ailmonts
s from iti
deranged or
ction, sacli as
Dyspepsia Jaundice, BiliorisnesSj
CosenessVMclaria, Sick-lieadache,
RheumaMMetc. It is therefore 2
3-iiismwr'rTo have GoodHealtfc
:ha Lryer must he kept in order."
DE. EAHTORD'S IIVEB IKYIG02AT0E.
Invistorates the Liver, Rcgtilatca the Bow
sis, Strengthens the System, Purifies lhc
Blood . AssistsDipestion, Prevents Fevers,
s a Household Kecd. An Invaluable
Tamily Medicine for common complainla
DO. SAOTOED'S LIVEE HT7IG0EATGE.
An experience of Forty years, and Thoi
lands cf Testimonials prove its Merit.
FOU SALE HT AXJj DnALTHtS IN MEDICnCCS
For fill information fcend yenr address fcr 1JX
.-"-Krok on the "Liver an J its divascs," u
r'wNroaD 2A DAs st.. sew occ citr
AH Sorts of
hurts and many sorts of ails of
man and beast need a cooling
lotion. Mustang Liniment.
The Mirror
is no flatterer. Would you
make it tell a sweeter tale?
Magnolia Balm is the charm
er that almost cheats the
looking-glass.
$67,000,000 Capital!
Liverpool and London and Globe
North British and mercantile
Or London and Edinburgh.
Old Connecticut of Hartford
AXD
COMMERCIAL OF CALIFORNIA
Fire Insurance Companies,
Representing a Capital o J S67,000 OOO.
B. VAN DUSKN. Asenl.
WILL
Cut Faster
AND
EASIER
Than any o'h-
eraxeiuaue.
Hundreds of
woodmen tes
tify to Its supe
riority. It goes
Deep End rer
Stlcis.
CARNAHAN
& CO.,
A cents Astoria.
Price, 81.50.
acidenn;
tKha ans
rnioi
fiUPiEX;
AXE.
J pA.TnnrDAisG30.asi.
LC.iruiunner
WAR STORIES.
LINCOLN'S TERMS OF PEACE.
Johnson' JOcterminatlon to Ar
rest General Iiee for Com
plicity la tlis Assassination.
When the late Mr. Garrett, Presi
dent of the Baltimore and Ohio Rail
load Company, wished for a little
rest or recreation, he was in the habit
of causing his private car to be at
tached to one of the trains running
west or south, and with his wife and
perhaps another friend or two he
made an excursion. At such times
Mr. Garrett left his business behind
him, and though deemed a man not
given to much conversation, yet he
then often narrated some of his ex
periences, especially of the time of
the war and immediately subsequent
thereto, in a manner that was ab
sorbingly interesting.
Two years ago the writer met Mr.
Garrett upon one of these occasions.
The conversation turned upon the
South, its risks and its losses entailed
by inaugurating a civil war, and as
some of Mr. Garrett's reminiscences
have a special interest just at this
time, I have written out from notes
made soon after the conversation
what he said. In speaking of Mr.
Lincoln, President Garrett said:
" I never travel through the South
without thinking what a dreadful
climax for the South President
Lincoln's assassination was. During
the war 1 often met Mr. Lincoln on
business pertaining to our railroad,
and in the latter part of his Admin
istration he used sometVues to speak
to me of what oujdit to follow the
return of peace, which he saw could
not long be delayed. Had Mr.
Lincoln been able to carry out his
policy, and I think that the man
who proved equal to that would have
been equal to all that followed, there
would have been real peace, and an
early revival of prosperitv in the
Southern States. It was a" frightful
retribution that followed the murder
of Lincoln; but, after all, I think, as
I look it all over, that it was in one
sense the result of the short-sightedness
of some of the leaders of the
Confederacy. I mean that all that
happened after Lee surrendered, in
cluding the assassination of Lincoln,
could have been avoided had the
Confederacy not failed to make
terms at the peace conference at
Fortress Monroe. Every man of
capacity in the South knew at the
time of that conference what the in
evitable was to be, excepting Mr.
Davis. Now, 1 know it to be a fact,
that when Mr. Lincoln was asked
respecting the terms of peace that
would be demanded by the Federal
Government, he just tore a sheet of
paper in two, and wrote across tho
top of it just these werds:
" On the part ot the United Statw:
The Union preserved.
Slaiery abolished.'
"Then pointing to the blank space
beneath, he said : ' There, let them
write their own terras underneath
that.' "
Mr. Garrett said that many of the
Southern leaders felt that the Federal
Government could properly ask no
less than that, and that the Confed
eracy could ask no more lor itself.
Peace ought, they felt, to have been
established then." General Lee, with
whom Mr. Garrett was on terms of
special intimacy after the war,
grieved greatly because the peace
conference was" a failure, for he could
only look forward to useless shed
ding of blood after that. " In fact,"
said Mr. Garrett, "General Lee,
like Gen. Joe Johnston, realized, as
a military man, that after the fall of
Atlanta the end of the Confederacy
was near at hand. Like Johnston
and ever' other great General in the
South, Lee understood that with the
defeat at Gettysburg and the sur
render of Vickstiurg, the only militarv
policy left for the South was that of
defense long enough to obtain terms
of peace that would not be humiliat
ing. "With the fall or Atlanta, it was
plain to Lee that the terms of peace
would be just what the Federal
Government choose to make them,
and, as a military man, General Lee
told me that ho often, though un
officially, protested to the civil au
thorities that further prolonging of
the war meant only unnecessary loss
of life and destruction of nronertv.
His pleas, however, were wholly
without avail, Mr. Davis seemed to
be convinced that the Confederacy
would succeed in establishing itself.
There was much of the highest im
portance of tho inner history of the
last year of the rebellion that has
been lost by reason of General Lee's
failure to write a history. In the
very last interview I had with Lee
he was a guest at my house in Balti
more. He had been telling me some
of that inner history, showing, in his
view, that the war had been unnec
essarily prolonged. I told him that
he ought not to allow those facts to
be lost to history, and that he ought
at once to begin the preparation of
an account of the war from hiB un
derstanding of it that should
be complete, and should, without
hesitation, tell the whole truth.
He told me that he fully intended
to write such a book, but he
thought that it was too soon then to
do so. He had, he said, much valu
able matter, many documents that
would throw light, taken in connec
tion with other facts that he person
ally knew, but which did not appear
of record, on the last year of the war.
I urged him not to lose a moment,
but to begin the work at once, and
before he left me he promised to set
about it as soon as possible. It was
not long after that he was stricken
with his last illness.
"I don't thiak," continued Mr.
Garrett, "that it was ever known
how near Lee came to being arrested
as one of the conspirators in the plot
to assassinate President Lincoln and
his Cabinet. I know that Andy
Johnson in some unaccountable way
got the idea in his head that Lee was
in that conspiracy. Somebody had
told Johnson something, I have
some reasons for believing, that led
him to think so. Johnson wanted
Lee arrested at once, and T know
that he proposed, if Lee was found
guilty, to have him beheaded.
Johnson told me that Lee couldn't
be hanged, shouldn't be shot, and
he would order 'him beheaded. A
warm friend of mine and of Mr.
Johnson, who knew what was going
on, came to me in great haste,
knowing that I had long been a per
sonal friend of General Lee, and
was also a warm friend of General
Grant. This gentleman said that
Lee was in great danger of arrest,
and that in the ,then excited state of
the country it was hard to say what
might happen. I at once telegraphed
to General Grant to meet me and
started for Washington. I met Gen
eral Grant a few moments after my
arrival there. I told him what was
in Johnson's mind. I have seen
men black with anger, but I never
saw such anger as Grant then showed.
He was not passionate ; but he was
terribly angry. Said he: 'This is
infamous infamous! I will throw
up my commission if there is the
slightest attempt to do it, and if
there be the shadow of a circum
stance to justify even the faintest
suspicion against Lee, I will throw up
my commission, too. It's as impos
sible for Lee as for me.'
" I said, ' Can't you see President
Johnson and his "Cabinet and tell
them what you have told me.' He
said he would, and ho lost no time
in doing so. He was very stern with
Johnson. He said that if Lee was
insulted by threat of arrest he would
throw up "his commission at a mo
ment notice. Lee has given rae
his parole, sir,' said he to Johnson.
'You can trust every West Point
officer who gives his parole.' Grant
was so earnest and angry that John
son was impressed, and he was a
little frightened, too, by Grant's
threat to throw up his commission.
The matter was dropped, but there
i3 no doubt but for Grant's action
Lee mighthavo been at serious peril.
I mj'self told Lee about it afterward.
He was deeply touched by Grant's
conduct. Afterward, when Grant
was President, Lee called on him at
the White House, and was received
with great consideration and courtesy
by Grant.
" General Lee had many flattering
and highly remunerative offers after
the war, that I personally know
about; but he told me that he be
lieved that he still owed a duly to
the South. He believed that educa
tion was the great need there an
education, too, which should teach
the young the duty of loyalty and
love "for the Federal "Union, and he
determined to devote the rest of his
days to the simple work of a teacher.
We had very great difficult in induc
ing him to take the Presidency of the
branch road of the Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad built down into
Virginia, for he feared that its duties
might impair his usefulness at the
college." N. Y. Sun.
SubsiKufe ?" Crilnrueloni" fctilni e
Simmons Liver Iteguiator, purely veg
etable, is equal in power to blue mass
or calomel, but w ithotit any of their in
jurious properties.
4I find feuniwms Liver -Regulator a
most excellent medicine, acting like a
charm on tiic liver. It is the best sub
stitute for calomel. Have tried it in
several caes of bilious disorders, chills
and fever, and it effected a cure in a
mo-t satisfactory manner. I)i:. .1. H.
IJowe.v, L'i.into.v. ua. '
The European muddle is, after all,
inerelv a stock broker's battle be
tween a Bull and a Bear. f Pitteburc
Chronicle-Telegraph.
Tired and Languid Women
How many women there are of
whom these words are true: 'They
feel languid nnd tired, hardly nblo to
bear their weight on their feel, the
bloom ell pone from their cheeks, ir
ratable and cross without meaning- to
be, nerves all upset, worried with the
children, fretted over little things, a
burden to themselves, and yet with
go rente disease." What a pity it is.
Bnt a few bottles of Parker's Tonic
will drive all this away, and relieve
tie troubles peculiar to their sex.
A man has been arrested in San
Jose, Cal., for practicing medicine
without a license. Tho authorities
discovered that there was something
wrong with the man when he cured
five patients in one week, and an in
vestigation proved that they were
right.
The Grand Alms of Life
Arenulhticstothechronlcimalid. What to
hlra are the rewards of ambition, the accu
mulation of fortune, or the fruition of domes
tic happiness? The zeal of life is gone. Its
alms are dead. "Well for him if all this Is not
Irretrievable If his malady is not of the deep
seated organic sort which forbids hope of
cure. For many of the Ills to which Hfch K
heir, formerly supposed to Le Incurable, Hos
tetter's Stomach Bitters Is a sovereign rem
edy. Among them are dyspcusia. chronic
consHpatlon, rheumatism, debility, and
nervousness. These are remediable with the
Krand restorative, which does the wore
tborouchly, sulking at tho root of the evils
to the removal of which It is adapted. By
InsurlnE activity and purity of the circula
tion inducing a healthy flow of the bile, and
promoting a regular habit of body. It fortl
hes the system against malaria, it Ls useful
as a diuretic.
Primary Education.
The cmphasi3 laid upon -primary
education, and the preparation of
teachers for primary schools, is begin
ning to have a noteworthy effect in
the school systems of our large cities.
Primary work is discoveredto have
manv attractions. For in a school of
small children, government is easy
anu accomplished mainly by gentle
means. There is, moreover, some
thing verv nttrfle.tivn in n Tiricht and
intelligent young woman in the
modern methods of teaching young
children. She is to be entertaining,
lively, fertile in new devices, to win
the love and admiration of a company
of docile little children. Her uork
is almost cntirelv ponfinpfl to Mia
school-room. There are no tiresome
exercises to be looked over out of
school hours, no piles of dry exami
nation nauers to bo rend on Sntnrilnvs
and in tho evenings. In the inter
mediate and grammar grades, on the
other hand, there are intractable
nunils to manage : the fowos of nvil in
the child are gathering strength and
must be met with firmness, patient,
and wisdom. It will be essential,
before long, to give more attention to
tho methods of teaching and man
agement in intermediate and gram
mar grades. Wisconsin Journal of
Education.
A merciful mau is merciful to hm
baast. When he finds it stiff End
ame ho at once applies St. Jncnus
Oil.
A Xasal Injector iree with e.u-h
boltle of Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy
Price 50 cents. Sold by V. R. Dement.
MARKETS.
WYATT & THOMPSON.!
DEALERS TN
FRESH AND CURED ftEATS,
CHOICE GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS,
Crockery and Glassware.
32:ilX Food, 22-fco,
STAR MARKET.
WriERRY & OOKPANY,
Fsvsh and 'nrM I 31 wits,
VosetaTblos ,
FRUITS, BUTTER, and EGSS.
ofrosiTL' nccisiLwr iusrr.i.
:..-. tr;i'K SHxret. Ahtoi'Ik. its.
Washington Market.
JlninMicrt, - Aslnrin, Oregon.
KSKKMAX A 0.1,KOSltIF.TORS
fcJKSl'ECTFOLLY CALL TIIK ATTEX
IDk tlon or the public to the fact that the
above Market v. ill always be supplied with a
I'ULL YARIKTY AND BEST QUALITY
FRESH APiD CURED MEATS I I
Which will be aold at lowest rates, whole
sale and retail.
5-Specia' attention given to supplying
ohips.
B. B. Franklin,
&
sr s
-N2
tertater ail CaMnet Mate
SQUEIYIOQUA STREET,
NEXT TO THE ASTOKIAX BUILDING.
J2T-A11 work done in a skillful manner on
short notlce'at reasonable rates.
THE REST
IS THE
Royal Brand Flour
Manufactured by the
OREGON MILLING COMPANY
Is of Superior Quality, anil is Endorsed
by all who use It.
THE HOUSEKEEPER'S FAVORITE
Of SuperiorHlsing Quality.
Guaranteed to Give Satisfaction.
WYATT & THOMSON
gole Aceutsi for .latorln.
rr -" -C-. ITirW -:Ns
ARBOUR'
rish Flax
HAVE NO EQUAL !
GRAND PRIZE PARIS 1878.
THEr UAYE BEEN' AWARDED
HIGHER PRIZES
AT TTIE YARIOUS
International Expositions
THAN THE GOODS OF ANY OTHER
THREAD MANUFACTURERS
IN THE WORLD.
Quality can Always
iencrju Finn use i Otter !
xuer
HENRY DOYLE & CO.,
5 1 7 and 5 1 9 Market Street. SAN FRANCISCO,
AfcEXTS FOU PACIFIC COAST.
Seine Twines, Rope and Netting Constantly on Hand.
The. Telephone Saloon.
The Finest Establishment of
the Kind in Astoria.
Especially fitted up for tha Comfort and
Con enlenco ot those who enjoy a
Social GUs.
The Best or Wines and Liquors,
Tho Choicest Cigars.
Everything New and First-Class.
R. I. JEFFREY, Iropr.
Magnus C. Crosby
Dealer In
HARBIABE, IRON, STEEL,
Iron Pipe and Fittings,
STOVES, TINWARE
AND
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS
SHEET LEAD STRIP LEAD
SHEET IRON,
Tixx AND Copper.
ia T
Colli
ruorn
FOR PORTLAND!
Through. Freight on Fast Time!
THE NEW STEAMER
-TELEPHONE-
Which has been specially bililt for the comfort of passengers will leaye
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.
HT"An additional trip -will be made on Sunday of Each Week, leaving Portland
at V UC1BCK HHUH JIOTBIB.
for Sound ports.
Threads
be Depended on i
The Gem Saloon.
The Popular Resort for Astorians.
For the
Finest of Wines and Liquors
Go to THE GEM 6ALOON.
ALEX. CAMPBELL. - PROPKIETOh
J. EL D. G&AY,
Wholesale and retail dealer In
GROCERIES, FLOUR, AND FEED
Hay, Oats, Straw, Wood, Etc.
LIME, SAND AND CEMENT.
General Storage and "Whtrfafie on reason .
able ionns. Foot of Benton street, Astoria,
Oregon.
WEI. EDGAR,
Dealer in
Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes
Meerschaum and Brier Pipes,
GENUINE ENGLISH CUTLERY
Revolvers and Cartridges.
COllNEB MAIN AND CHENAMTJS STS.
Passengers bj this route connect at Kalania
u. s.MJUi. a, rresiaemi
Company
Jw
s