o CO '---- VQL. XXV, NO. 45. ASTORIA, OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1886. PRICE. TIYE CENTS. hs BUSINESS CARDS. c. R. TKoyso.v, J- n. roavt kt. TiI03ISO. tfc COOVEIIT, Attorneys at Law and Notaries Public. ' Special attention gfen to collections nvnl examining title1;. j Okfjck i:oom 4 and .", oxer Oit Bowl; j More. . f"l It. 3IABP3X. C I'., Architect and Civil Engineer, j (n icn Koohi H. Kniht- of I'ylhLrv , Bllddlllg. i t k-. a. i- Huti .1. a. :ir.. ViH sr.c ironmt attention lo xlt cmIK ..i:tii par? of the oltyorcomtiiy. omivot Allen'-, More, oornrr Cx. nsni ,u moijuu Mrco:-, .Wmh. Oregon, li 'jih.ine M. II. lie. PKAMi SWtiK. riiylt wl Kiirsfou. . i:iii(., o-.i-i P. A. Mclntobh s store. j-: n r i!oi is: 1 to 11 A. 51. ;-s: r.M. lUi.lence. opposite the Jo5miien bulldm? .1 ay tit ma:. 31. i. :k.-ik.vck On (Vtle.r St if el. tmk nl -j .:ir'? Hosjiltal. J It . k. i:tcs PHYSICIAN AND M'KOEOX. DhFK r : fiein Itui'd'iis. up Mairs, AMona, i'llMMll. D It. AI.FUES Kl.WT.Y, Office at Kinney's Cannery. Will onlv attend patient-, at hw olihv, and may be found lheie at am liom. iiHI. A. IIOKUIS. OHO. J'OI.AM ATTORNEYS AT LAW. ihkv in Kinney's Block, ppoiHe Cii llall, Atoiia. Oregon. E'UIFOX RROTHE5SS. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Rooms 5 and C.Odd Fellows Biilltllux. f 1 KM) F. PA KECK It SURVEYOR OF CLATSOP COUNJ Y Ex-City Surveyor of Astoria Olllce : N. 1- coniPr Cis and Astor treeK Room No. s Upstairs. r . A. UOWIiUY. Attorney and Cuuiibi'Uor at Law, Olllce on Clienamus Street, Astoria, Oregon. F. i. wivrojfc, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Itooms No. it an-1 12. IMhlan OaMle Build in ' T D. KAYMOXl, civil engineer, city stkveyu. Onieein City Hall, Astoua. Oregon. 4 K. SHAW. DENTIST. Koonts In Allen's Building, up j-taiis. cor ner Cass and S"nu'iimiu.i Miects. AMoiin Oregon. Xr A. SMITH, DENTIST. I hax'e jiennanenllv located in Astoiia. n practice Dentistry. 1 have all the late Im proved appliances. None but thexery lust of xvork done and satisf.iction guaranteed. Office in Kinnex's Building. X It. SPCUUFA, NOTARY PUBLIC, Searcher of TitleM, Alixtrartor uv.&. Conx-e'anrer. Olllce on Cass Street. ,1 door- vmt h of A s torlan ofllce, Astoii i, Oregon. General Agency of W M. B. A1AIK, Real Estate, Iiisnrance and jlonrj- BROKER- Vahuible Properties for Sale or Lca.se in I'pper Astoria.- Accounts Adjusted, and Book Keeping done on Short Notice. Olllce with Col. spedden, cor. .lenerson and Cass streets, Astoria, Oregon. A. V. Allen, Wholesale and Ketall Dealt-r In mUjL i-Eta Glass and Plated Ware, TltOPiCAL A.N'D WOMSSTir FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Together with Wines, Liqaors,Tobacco,S!g ?s To Rent. AFIKE SUITE OF ROOMS IN THE ODD Fellows' Buildlug. Apply to A.J.JOEGLEIL offi no sfcc-- wy m J THE GREAT M3M mLvi i st.-S5 Cures 'Mi Him NEURALGIA. laelrarl:?'. lifaOaoIic, Toothache, XlnislKt, KrciuM, c!e., etc. l'rfce, IVty i . .'.Tjsru:--inlIV-aW-r CKAnLES A. VCGrLHU CO., Sole Pre 15.1LTIK "UC.AlTI.in, U.S.A. 15 JU5E what its name implies ; s Purely Vegetable Compound, thai acts directly upon the irer ; curing the many diseases incidenno Lhat im. portant organ, and p1cjhtuig the nu merous ailmsnts tKarisa from its deranged or Vnrxvjaction, such as Dyspepsias Jayjiclice, Biliousness, CloswenessVMiaria, Sick-Tieadachej RheuMaMxtaetc. It is therefore a rniisrihk a To Lave Cood Healti :he Liver must he kept in order' DE. EAHIORD'S 1IVEB INVIGOEATOE. nvioratea IheLircr, Regulates the Bow sh, Strengthers tho System, PuriGes the Bloo.1 . AsJ ?t s Di jeslion, Prevents Fevers. U a Household .Need. An Invaluable family Medicine for common complaiula D2. SAUrOED'S LIVUE IK7IG0EAT02. Ancrpsrkncs rf Fjrty years, and Tho'i ianCsrf Testimonials prove its Merit. foh ui.n r.r ai.Tj Di:AT.ETts njsrnDicnnia For f '1 lafornivjon t-enA yonr nddre's for 10( .-I'o't on JLo I. r and 19 di-!.-c3," t( IIAGAN'S Magnolia Balm is a secret aid to beauty. Many a lady owes her fresh ness to it, who would rather not tell; andw; caiit tell. roR Man and Beast. LIustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year. 8. hip Chandlers, HEAVY AND SHELF HARDWARE Paints. Oils, and Varnish. LOGGERS' SUPPLIES. PROVISIONS MILL FEED AOEXTh FOK Salem Plonring Mills, 1 rortland Holier mills, Capitol Plour and i FAIRBANKS' SCALES. imperial Pekin Duck Eggs: $ -I Kf PER DOZEN. FOR SALE BY A . t J D. J. IX GALLS, Chaduell. Hotel for Rent. THE HOUSE NOW KNOWN AS THE Gennanla Hotel Is for rent. House is 43x75 : three stories : 43 rooms ; near the O. It. t: N. Co.'5 dock. Possession v. Ill be given immediately. , If. B. PAEKER. iyws ra. My I I . tiff GtiAST TS. 3IAKK TWAIX. Two Accounts of One Campaign From Opposite Points. I took my regiment to Palmyra and remained there for a few days, until relieved by the Nineteenth Illi nois Infantry. From Palmyra I pro ceeded to Salt River, the railroad bridge over which had been destroyed by the enemy. Col. John M. Palmer at that time commanded the Thir teenth Illinois, which was acting as a guard to workmen who where en gaged in rebuilding the bridge. Palmer was my senior and com manded fite two regiments as long as we remained together. Thebridge was finished in about two weeks, and I received orders to move against Col. Thomas Harris, who was said to be encamped at the little town of Florida, some 23 miles south of where we then were As we approached the brow of the hill from which it was expected we could see Harris's camp, and possibly find men ready formed to meet us, my heart kept getting higher and higher until it felt to me as though it was in my throat. I would have given anything then to have been back in Illinois, but I had not the usual courage to halt and consider what to do; I kept tight on. "When we reached a point from which the valley below was in full view, I halted. The place where Harris had been encamped a few days before was still there, and the marks of a recent engagement were plainly visible, but the troops wero gone. My heart resumed its place. It occurred to mo at once that Harris had been as much afraid of me as I had been of him. This was a view of the question 1 had never taken before ; but it was one I never forgot afterward. From that event to the close of the war I never experienced trepidation upon confronting an enemy, though I always felt more or less anxiety. Inquiries at the village of Florida divulged the fact that Col. Harris, learning of my intended movement, while my transportation was being collected, took time bv the forelock and left Florida before I had started from Salt River. He had increased the distance between us by 40 miles. The next day I started back: to my old camp at Salt River. From the Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant The rest of my war experience was of a piece with what I have al ready told of it. We kept monoto nously falling back upon one camp or another, andeating up the country. The last camp which we fell back upon was in a hollow near the Til lage of Florida, where I was born in Monroe County. Here we were warned one day that a Union colonel wassweepingdownonuswithawhole regiment at his heels. This looked decidedly serious. Our boys went apart and consulted; then we went back and told the other companies present that the war was a disap pointment to us and we were going to disband. They were getting ready themselves to fall back on some place or other and were only waiting for Gen. Tom Harris, who was ex pected to arrive at any moment; so they tried to persuade us to waftalittb) while, but the majority of us said no, we were accustomed to falling back, and didn't need any of Tom Harris's help; we could get along perfectly well without him, and savo time, too. So about half of our fifteen, including myself, mounted and left on the instant An hour later we met Gen. Harris on the road. . . . Harris ordered us back; but we told him there was a Union colonel coming with a whole regiment in his wake, and it looked as if there was going to be a disturb ance, so we had concluded to go home. . . In time I came to know that Union colonel whose coming frightened us out of tho war and crippled the Southern cause to that extent Gen. Grant. I came within a few hours of seeing him when he was as unknown as I was myself. From a War Paper by Mark Twain, in the December Cent ury. Modes of Courtship. The tailor prwses his suit. The shoemaker lays his awl at her feet. The blacksmith strikes the iron when it is hot. The carpenter savs her society adz joy to his existence. The woodchopper offers himself as her feller. The mason believes his chances rest on a good foundation whea h informs her that refusal would bt mortar-fying to him. The sailor first ascertains how the land lies, then approaches her when she's in stays and informs her that she's in need of a first mate. The dairyman declares lie is bound to heifer and can love no udder. The furniture dealer is so much in love with her that he is willing to ac cept her affections on installments, one-tenth down. The poet woes her with a sonnet, and her big brother starts out in search of him with a shotgun. The "funny man" approaches her with jokes and puns, and has the dog set on him and loses the skirts of his swallow-tail. Finally the champion roller-scatei rolls into her good graces, and she elopes and marries him. Mackerel are so plentiful and cheap that the fishermen don't caro whether the school keeps or not. Dainty Boots with Suckles. Pointed toes to shoes are still fash ionable, and LouiB XV. heels, but the perfection of these articles is their dainty embroidery. Brides are wearing white satin worked in silver and pearls, with bows of lace or ribbon and tulle caught through pearl buckles. Nothing can well be prettier than the present make of evening shoes, especially those em broidered in gold or silver some times both combined, or with color intermixed. Many are worked in such artistic coloring that they can be worn with almost any dress. They mostly have a tiny buckle in the center of the shoe, and the star shaped is one of the newest. Stone colored kid shoes trimmed with brown are pretty ; but it is well to avoid Suede shoes they are un becoming to the foot Shoes with toes covered with narrow stitched ribbon can be had in black or white, or any color. They wear well. The Cromwell shoe holds its own, and a pretty make, with patent leather frouts and morrocco back, having a simple buckle in front, is most becoming to the foot. Very pretty are the mule or heel less slippers now worn in bedrooms. One, lined with pink and bordered with pink, had the foundation black duchesse satin worked with pink flowers, and a pink kid slipper was edged with white fur. Riding-boots are made after the Newmarket type with cloth legs (drab or black), and for hunting the butcher boots, of strong leather, are generally adopted. The cloth tops prevent any adhchion of the habit. London Queen. A woman in the northern ,part ot Vermont is telling of -the way she fooled the inspecting Dr. Kay,' of Newport, on one of the recent Montreal trains. She had deter mined not to be vaccinated on the train, and so sewed a button undei the sleeve of the dress near where the arm is usually Fcraped. The in spector came along and ordered her to bare her arm. " But it isn't nec essary, sir; you can feel the scab,' she said. He planted bis hand on the button, the woman gaveascream of pretended pain, and Dr. Ka moved along. Springfield (Mass.', Up. p ubl ican. The Yellow Pine of the South. No wooden flooring that is used is superior to narrow strips of seasoned Georgia yellow pine. A well-laid surface ot the wood improves with age and friction, its resinous quality hardens and forms for it a sort of nat ural varnish. Art, too, has recently touched this sturdy old timber. Thin door panels are sawed out of planks containing thick deposits of rosin. When these panels are placed in doo:s that the sun can strike, the efTect produced is a rich, red wine color, showing inside of the loom. The; e is a process of artificially sea soning pine. There is also one of steaming it, so that the rosin will show unifoimly 'in the board, but the naturally veined surfaces are handsome enough when properly smoothed. What sea in Europe is very light? White sea. The Ilexinluffof Sickness Never trifle with what are called Miiall ailments. If you feel inert, with a bit ter or bad taste in the month, loss of ap petite, bowels costive, take at once Sim mons Liver Regulator. Forthcmiseru's of dyspepsia, the Regulator is a cer tain and speedy cure. Hood very quaintly declared that the phrase the "republic of letters" h used to insinuate that the whole tribe of authors are so poor that they have not a eovereign amongst, them. Frozen ears or fingers are immedi ately healed by St. Jacobs Oil. A Xaal Injector tree with each bottle of Shiloh's Catarrh Remedy Price 30 cents. Sold by W. E. Dement. Will you suffer with Dyspepsia and Liver Complaint? billion's Vitallzer i? miaranteed to cure you. Sold by W. E. Dement & Co. BeecTs Sporting House Open Day and Night, The Leading House of this City. A New Staje Managed hy Professor IHnxvrell, of London, Who has played In all parts rf the Woild with Great Success. GOOD MUSIC! I ha e also connected to my hou-.e A First Class Restaurant ! Run ii Eastern Style. SyNothlng but "White Labor Employed, Annual School Meeting. NOTICE IS IIEREBY GIVEN TO THE legal voters of School District No. l. Astoria. Clatsop county, Oregon, that the annual school meeting of said district w 111 be held at the school house in said d. strict, to beuin at the hour of 7 :30 o'clock i r.. on the first Monday, being the 1st day of March, A. 1). 1SSG. This meeting Is called for the nurnose of electing one director to serve for three vr-ars. and one clerk to tene for one year, and for me transaction oi me business usual atsucu meeting. J. G. RUSTLER. District Clerk. Astoria, Februarv. 17th, A D. 188C. New Varieties of Seed Potatoes. LATE BEAIJTY OF nEBRON. WHITE Star. Very productive, quality unsur passed. In earllness they are between early and late One dollar per bushel. D. J. INGALLS. Chadwell, Or. HOTAI i fr tl J "(ga V Irih F ax T nrftarh Sill ! HAVE NO EQUAL ! POWDER Absolutely Pure. Tills rnmler iiivpr v:irlM A nmrvol (if purity; strength and wholesotneiiess. More economical th in tlie ordinary kinds, and can not be sold in competition with the multi tude of low te-t, short weight, alum or phos phate powders. Sold only in emu. !t.it. ilAKlxr. PohtdkrCo. lOGWall-sr.. i. Y. MARKETS. STAR M ARK ET. WHERRY & COMPANY, Fresh and Cured Meats, FRUITS, BUTTER, and &2GS. OPPOSITE OCCIDENT HOTEL. Olir.N'ASIUS Street. AMtoria. Ox- Washington Market. .Ilaln lrcel, Astoria, Oirgon. BKKUaXAX A co.f'Korim.Tor.s RESPECTFULLY CALL THE ATTEN tlon of the Dublic to the fact that the above Market will always be supplied with a FULL VAKfETY AND BEST QUALITY ?RSH AND CURED IttEATh I I Which will be sold at lowest rntei. whole sale and retail. &hpccial attention given to supplying hips. VM. ED&AR, Dealer in Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes Meerschaum and Dtier Pipes, GENUINE ENGLISH CUTLERY Revolvers and Cartridges. CORNER MAIN AND CHEN'AMUS STS. MUERAY & CO,, GROCERS And Dealers in Special Attention Given to Filling Of Orders. A FULL, LINE CARRIED And Supples furnished at Satis factory Terms. Purchases delivered la any part of the city. Office and "Warehouse Iii IlmneS New Building on Water Street. P. O. Box 153. Telephone No. ST. 1STORIA, OK EG OX. WYATT & THOMPSON. KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A Full Stock of Canned Fresh Mackerel, Canned Fresh CodGsli, Canned Fresh Finnan Haddies, Canned Shrimps, Canned Roast Beef, Canned Chicken, Canned Pig's Feet, Atmore's Plum Pudding, Atmore's Mince Meat, Epp's Cocoa. Ground Chocolate, A Fine Aisortraent of t'&nned Vegetables, etc J. R. D. GKAY, Wholesale and retail dealer in. GROCERIES, FLOUR, AND FEED Hay, Oats, Straw, Wood, Etc. LIME, SAND AND CEMENT. General Storage and Wharfage on reason able terms. Foot of Bentoa street, Astoria, Oregon. Cilery Sillies! BBBppyf rtoBBsslsBHsasM" 2Bn i i t GRAND PRIZE . PARIS 1878. THEY HAVE BEEN AWARDED HIGHER PRIZES AT THE VARIOUS International Expositions THAN THE U00D3 OF ANY OTHER THREAD MANUFACTURERS IN 1HE WORLD. Qaulity can Always be Depended on ! Exueriencetl Fiieiei Use n Otter ! HENR.Y DOYLE & CO.,- 5 1 7 and 5 1 9 Market Street, SAN FRANCISCO, AGENTS VOlt PACIFIC COAST. Seine Twines, Eope and Netting Constantly on Hand. THE NEW MODEL tings, etc. a specialty. A EUUL STOCK AI.WAYS ON HAND. The Telephone Saloon. The Finest Establishment of the Kind in Astoria. Especially lltted up for the Comfort and Convenience of those who enjoy a Social Glas. The Best or Wines and Liquors, The Choicest Cigars. Everything New and First-Class. K. t. JEFFREY, Frop'r. CoMia Transportation Company. FOR PORTLAND! Through Freight on Fast Time! THE SEW STEAMER -TELEPHONE "Which has been specially built 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. t-An additional trip will be made on Smnday oTc WeU,legToa. at 0'lek SHHdajr MeraiB?. Passengers bj this route connect at KaUm a for SomiU ports. u-B- scoxr l resident, KAXCE CAN BE HAD IN AS TORIA ONLY OF B. B. HAWES, AGENT CALL AND EXAMINE IT, YOU WILL BE PLEASED. K. K. HAWES Is also yei-.t for the Bnci; patent Mm Stove And other first-class Stoves. Furnace "Work. Steam Fit Camahan & Co. SUCCESSORS TO I. "W. CASE, IMPORTERS AND WHOLESALE AND HKTAIL DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE Corner Chenanius and Cass streets. AST'K1A - - OREGON 4 &.. -. sjm&i -'.iar'- &'jtZsfo&Bzitbmvii nft mi, CvA i s. CA rfjiiM!iS'-3siy!3i4afcW-'.fct i --.-v