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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1886)
I (JLPvIl P iL, 1 11 1 I I I-VilI LULL BLJI l - "VOL. XXV, NO. 75. ASTORIA. ORliGOA', TUESDAY, MARCH 31), 1880. PRICE. FIVE CENTS. . 7 - - BUSINESS CARDS. F ? J?1 HJEflQIM BEER DISEASES. Uncertainty or Literature. c. k. thomsov, r.. n. coovj i:t. TXI03ISOX &, COOVERT. Attorneys at Law and Ifotarie3 Public. Special attention given to collections and examining title. OFriCK Rooms 4 ami o, oer City Book Store. ( . MAKT1X. V., Architect and Civil Engineer. Oi'hck-Room ;. KnixhU of Pjthias lrullJtny. "j V' A. I. ami .. A. iri.TOX. SMijsiciaiiNiiKtl SarRcojis. Will sue prompt attention to all calls, nut an part of the city or country, i j.'mv.iut AllenS Store, corner Cass and ..lMitjuaMreeii. Astoria. Oregon. Li-phone No. 41. K. FKAXH. I'ASK. I'll VSICi A X ANDSrilGEON. OppoMt-lVIe.;ir.phOihre. Astoria. Oregon. .1 AY TIITTI.K. HI. 1. VUYSlCiAN ANP rsl'UUEON ': ni-K KiMWto 1... :m-l " Plhh: iJ M- KhMiKM'K -On Cedar -: xinrj's Hospital. Strf-el. back of t tt . . ILSTBW !M 1 YMC1 A N A N'l SURGEON'. in ri. r Cejn Unl'dinR. upstairs Astoiia, j e i. p Tiior.x. PHYSICIAN AND Sl'lM'.EOX. Iteaideuce, I'ppei Astotu, NilSon Honse. jytTALFUKO KIXXF.Y. Office at Kinney's Cannery. WillonU attend patient" al hisoflVc.nnd may be found theie at any hour. ( KI.O V. SMKIIKU VX SURVEYOR OF CLATSOP COUSTY M Es:-City Surveyor of A3tona OKlee : N. 1. corner C:.s and Mot stn 'K Room No. tTi istutrn. f.i . SMMtJMs. OKO..NOUMI jJi..W!) & rOKSSS. ATIORNKVS Al i.AW oinct in Ilinnej'5 ..ill, Astoiia. Oregon r.loek. jiuiil" Ott . M'l.ToN I. C KOl.TOV l'n.T UI5HTREKS. XTTOUVEYS AT LAW. Kotini" ft and C.Odd Fellows Bnilding. I l if A. tVl.Y lttir:ify al Cocu-i-llor -.t Law ) life on Chciinnius Slieet, Asrtoiia. OreROJi P I. WIXTOX. ATTOKXEY AT LAW. Koonis No. 11 and VI. r.Mhiwn Castle Slu'dil 111. I. K.VY3IO.Vr, civil. i:xt:iXEi:ir. CITY SlTRVilYOK. Ollire in f:t Hall, Astoiia. Orf,o;i. A. K. SHAW DENTIST. R001111 in AllenS Building. p stairs, cur nerCa and Squenioqua Micels. AMoiia Oregon. H. A. S3IITH. DENTIST. practice nentistry. 1 havall the ute Im proved appliances. None but the very heM of wk done and satisfaction K":r"l,pd. Office in Kmnej'.s Building. tl k. ir.iin', XOTAItY I'UBLir. Menrrliorof Titles. Almtrnctor und Conveyancer. Office on Cass Street. 3 doors south of As- torian ofllce, AstorU, Oregon. General Agencv of II. A I A I It, W jr. Real Estate, Insurance ami Money BROKER. Valuable rroperties for Sale or l.cise in Upper Astoiia. Accounts Adjustel. and Book Keeping done on Short Notice. Office With Col. fcpedden, cor. .lefferton and Cass sheets, Astoria, Oregon. A. V. Allen, Wholesale and Ketall Dealer in 6rftres, Provision, MILL FEED. Glass and Plated Ware,; TROPICAL AND DOMESTIC FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Together with Winn, UquorsJobaccoXigar tjsusis iii y INVIGORATOR lc -incr srtiat-ifc nam Tmnlipc n in jusc wnat its name implies , 2 Purelj Vegetable "Compound, thai blc to rapid decay. When the fer ae ts directly upon the Diver: curing 1 P6"1?,10" .f llc wort of beer sets it. j- jil '.-I. .. mat the high temperature to which the many diseases inctdefMo that im. it is raised in mashing, the liquid re- portant organ, and i5evvab.tinKttie tm merous ailm Its t from its deranged or jrjjHVaction, such OS Dyspepsi yr.dice, Bilionsness.1 LcsXbrenessVft iarta,Sick-Tieadache, RheuinatMmretc. It is therefore j: Kkt) arise " To lave fioodHenltTi' m"st,.of PfaPe jce. an acid of pu 10 nave uooaiieaitii frUl liqufd would invariably be pro. Tuism? :he Liver must he kept in order." DE. SANFOSD'S IIVZB IN7IG0HAT0II r:iviiorate3 the Liver, Regulates the Bow iU, Strengthens the System, Purifies tin Blood . Assists D Vestion, Prevents Fevc rs. 9 a Household .Xced. An Invaluable family Medicine for common complaints. CZt. BAIfFOED'S IIVZR nrTIGORATOH. A:i experience cf Forty years, and Tj" iattdstf Testimonials prove its IfiriL Fon sat.k nr at.t deuxrb ixmediccei Fcr fu'l ir-formaMon Knd yorr aiJdrct-a for 101 f.Dook on Hie "Livrr md i' c'.-faP9." tf 8xrop.D dum: er.. n- tokic en- TUTT5 m I Lb lag TORPSD BOWELS, DISORDERED LIVER, and MALARIA. Fi-om these sources arise thrce-icurlhs oftlio diseases rf the human lace. Tlie&e byinntoins iudicute their existence. T.OSS of Appetite, ZIowcls t-ostivr, hlclc ITcadache, fullness after cnt iiKversloii to exertion of body or mtiid,12ructKtionof food,Irrltnu!I Ity of temxer,IiOvr.siJ!rUj, A feeling Fluttering at the IIeart,Iot before the eyes, highly colored L'rIue,COKSTlPATZO.V,anademand tlieuseofaremedythatactsdlrcctlvon theLlrcr. AsnLIvcrincdlclncTUT'T'S 3'It.I.S have no equal. Theiractlonon the Kidneys and fekin is also prompt; removing allimputities through theso three " scavengers of the s stent,1 producing apjietitc, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear skin and a vig orous body. TDTT'S PII.I.S cause no nausea 01 griping nor Interfere with daily work and are a perfect ANTIDOTE. TO MALARIA. old everywhereij. Ollice It Miirru SN V. GratIIair or WitiSKKRS changed in. slantly to a Gixissr Black by a singlu apphcation of this l) v.. Sold by Drug. st3,orscntby express on receiptor CI. Olllee, -14 Murrav Street, New York. hot aiOTAL or tosrui ssssffn rssc A Clear Skin is only a part of beauty; but it is a part. Every lady may have it ; at least, what looks like it. Magnolia Balm both freshens and beautifies. Did Sup- you pose Mustang Liniment only good for horses? It is for inflamma tion of all flesh. AUG- DANIELSON. SAMPLE ROOMS, Coiner ol Water and Wet Ninth St reels. CMk Lipors anil Cigars! Etery Attention to the Comfort of Patrons Cheap Lumber! S3TTO CASH CUSTOMERS For Terms, etc, apply at office. CLATSOP MILL CO G. A. STINSON & CO.. BLAGKSMiTHING, M Capt. Rogers old stand, corner of Cava and Court Street?. Ship and Cannery work, Horsesboeiuj.'. Waeona made and repaired. Good work guaranteed. PAPER! r beXouasl a flteat Geo. P. fell & CoiXtTOoaMr Ad- itmi SelSrlt IN alWTORK. How Pasteur ISKrovercd a Item edy for the Malady. During the terrible days of the supremacy of the Commune in Paris, j at the end of the Franco-German war, Pasteur was occupied in the laboratory of M. Djjclaux. at Cler- inont-Ferrand, in studying the dis eases of beer with a view to attempt to raise French beer to the higher standard of the German brewers. Beer is naturally more prone to dis- j ease than wine, on account of the comparatively large quantity of o"""" J"" saiLiiariiie mailers , it con(fl:ns in Rfnf. &. quires to be rapidly cooled. So long as it remains between the tempera lures of 77" and 95 of Fahrenheit's scale it is peculiarly liable to be at- ,atKUU l"e injurious lerments acids. If the must of' beer were spontaneously fermented, like the tluced in the place of beer. In the old process of what is technically know as high fermentation, which h also the one that is still emploved with the bitter beers and pale ales of England, the fermenting liquid was kept in barrels, at a temperature ranging from G4 to G8 Fahrenheit. In the process of "low fermentation," which is more generally emploved by the brewers of Germany and France, a slow fermentation is es tablished at a lower temperature, during which the yeast settles down to the bottom of the tubs and casks. The wort is then transferred to open tubs, and the fermentation is car ried on at a temperature as low as 4:; Fahrenheit, which is maintained by means of floating cylinders filled with ice for from ten to twenty days. This low fermentatipn tfeer is princi pally prepared in the winter season, and is preserved in ice caves until the summer. The cost of its produc tion is on this account comparativelv high. Twenty-two gallons of the beer require something like two hundred -weight of ice for their ma turation. The wort of gee, after it has been raised to the boiling point, may be kept indefinitely if it be mixed only with pure yeast, and if it be preserved from conlafiunation with extraneous gdrms that are dif fused through the air. Tie beers fermented and kept at lov tempera tures to some extent fulfill thV con dition. By the employment of Ice the brewer is able to meet ttib de mands of a long period of consump tion w-ithout any great riik of con tamination by accidental impuritieB. But Pasteur has introduced an ad ditional safeguard, oven more sure than the low temperature fermenta tion. He has taught the brewers to bottle the beer when the fermenta tion is approximately complete, and then to expose the bottles for a short time to a temperature ranging be tween 122 and 131 Fahrenheit? Bv this management all extraneous germs of undesirable ferments are killed, and the beer consequently remains sound for long periods of time. This is essentially the prac tice which is now pursued upon a very large scale, and nhich is famil iarly known as the Pasteurization of beer. In addition to the adoption of this process, the principle chicflv insisted upon by Pasteur 'is that the wort shall be protected while cooling from all organisms accidentally floating in the air, and that the leaven used for the wort shall be absolutely pure and itself free from contaminating organisms. At the recent exhibition of Amsterdam, M. Yellen, of Marseilles, showed bottles half full of a perfectly clear beer which had been tapped at the opening of the exhibition and left in this exposed state to prove the keeping powers of the liquid. This was beer which had been subjected to Pasteur's method of preservation. Ediuburg Review. A Brutal Conductor. "I can't let this girl travel over this road on that half-fare ticket," said the new conductor to the widow Flapjack. "Why not? what is the matter with my little girl? " "She is no child. She is more than half grown." "Well, if that, don't beat every thing then I'll give it up. Here poor little Mamie has been traveling over this road on a child's ticket for the last ten years, and now all at once you say she is no child. That's a new way to worrv the traveling pub lic." She paid full fare, and then the diminutive girl in the corner pulled herself out, so to speak, like a marine telescope. Texas Siftings. Young Highcollar. "Beastly weathaw, this, Miss Symphony, bah Jove!" Miss Symphony (ttred). "You ought not to decry the weather, no matter how bad it maybe, Mr. High collar. If it were not for the weather you would be at a loss for something to talk about. Now take me to mamma." Hew York Times. Johnny " Teacher, what is an orchid?" Teacher "An orchid is a Ctieer little plant like a funny flower that does not look like a flower." "0, I'd like to see one. I neu"- did." "Why, yes, Johnny, OHe seen one. A lady's slipper, ou know." "Oh, yes." Judge. Why is it that young writers harp so persistently on minor chords? Where there is one poem on home, and sunshine and happy life, there are a dozen which moan over blasted hopes Cat 22), twilight by the moan ing sea, withered leaves, and other j subjects of a more or less melancholy nature. Very few wholesome, cheery, religious verses are offered, , nearly all expressing the writer's praiseworthy resignation under ca lamities which never happened, and . his extreme anxiety to turn his back ' upon 'the earth, which he designates J as a "vale" or a "desert." The same is apt to be true of prose offer ings. All editors will unite in saving that the rarest and most jiifjicult short sketch to procure js"a racy, well-written, Thanksgiving orChrist mas story ; while themes of hopeless love and early 'death a.re dwelt up on withjavidity. By far tile most nu merous class of short stories offered to magazines and weeklies isthato'yuve nile sketches. It is a popularfallacy that, while it takes a genius to write a society novel, anybody can tell stories to children. "While this de lusion, for such it certainly is, has been productive of a great deal of good juvenile work, by drawing ef forts of writers to that field, it also overloads the mail-bags with a vast amount of inanity intended to nour ish the 3'outhful imagination and ap pease its pangs for intellectual enter tainment. Try to read one of these stories aloud to half a dozen mis chievous boys and girls and see whether it holds them. There's the real taste. At the bottom of all, the real fact is that the literary market is over crowded, thesurplusagebeing iargely composed of those who, as Holmes says, mistake laziness for inspiration. Half a contur3rago the case was differ ent. In the first place, literary work was then poorly paid, as may be seen by the $5 checks Hawthorne and Longfellow received for some of theirfinestproductions,andsecondly, the natural consequence was that there was b.it little really good writ ing. Again, many of the fields which were then open to writers have been since trampled over un til their flowers are all plucked, and their turf plowed up for corn and beans. Altogether, literature is, as has been well said, a most uncertain staff. While, however, there i3 much in the present condition of things to discourage those who are preparing tljemselves for this work, it is to be remembered that there is a constant demand, even in the editorial offices of our largest magazines and papers, for bright, wholesome, earnest arti cles, stories and poems on subjects that lend to cheer and amuse as well as elevate. Of such the market is never full. Boston Globe. Verj Thonshtriil in a Trying Mo ment. When the youngster of the house hold slipped into the hall and saw Adolphus with his arms around Ma tilda, pat taking of a gentle squeeze as a "good-night," he simplv yelled, "Oh !" with a big O. "What's the matter, Harry?' in quired the mother from the adjoining room. The question was answered by Matilda, whesaid: "Oh, it'snothing; Adolphus merely had his arms around me." "lam surprised at aucn conduct, Matilda. You should have repressed him." "Oh, I did, mother," exclaimed Matilda. "I re-pressed hiin two or three times." Bob Toombs was met one day by an old friend in Paris, who asked the questien: "General, how do you live?" By G d," was the emphatic response, "I eat an acre of dirt a day." This was true, for his ex pense were $5 a day, and he had just sold a tract of his Texas lands for $5 an at-re. fAtlanta Constitution. "Will you please give me seme dinner, iha'ara," begged a tramp. "I gue.c- so," was the reply. "Will you have a plate of soup?" "I'm not j articular," said the tramp. "There was a time," he went on monrnfully, "when 1 wouldn't think of sitting "down to dinner without soup; butthingsisdifferentnow. Yuu kin start me on roast beef, or pie, oi even an ontry, for all I care." Drunkenness. The inebriates craving for liquor is caiHrtl lv a diseased stomach, and the application of an appropriate medical remedy prevents this craving and thus promotes the cause of temperance in an effective and rational manner. Sim mons Liver Regulator arouses the tor pid digestive organs to healthy action and counteracts Hie de-ire for more drink. "Hackmetack." a lasting and fra grant perfume. Price 2Ti and SO cents. ui.iui genuine X uuu . Sold by W.E. Dement. Eggs for Hatching! Wyandottes and S. C. B. Leghorns. My birds are of the best strains, and all first class. I am now prepared to furnish a limited number of egp for setting from either yard at S3 and S3 per 13. GEO. IV. WOOD, Cor. West 9th and Arch streets, Astoria, Or. (YAl POWDER Absolutely Pure. ThN powder never vaiies. A marvel ol purity, st react h and wholesomeness. More economical than the ordinary kinds, ami can not be "old in competition witli the multi tude of low te-.t, short weight, alum or phos phate powders. Sold only in van. L'oyai. 15akimjPowikkCo. lOCWall-st.. N. Y. MARKETS. STAR MARKET. WHERRY & COrOPANY, Fresh jhhI VuvvCi 3! eats, FRUITS, BUTTER, and EGGS. i'i'Jt;iTI'. (H'UDkM II01KI.. rHK.-VAIH'tt Street. Astoria, Os. Washington Market. Main fieri. - AMorla, Oiexou. F.m.:: , A O. I'KOI'KIKTOUN OKSPECTFCLLV CALL TIIE ATTEN 15, tiou or the public to the fact that the aboe Market will alwaj s br supplied with a Ull VUMLTY AND P. EST Ql'AI.ITY F'fS ND C'-SU.EZ MEAT.- ! Which will l- -M at luucit rates. IuI'--ule.i' 5 ivl.iil. "hiiviil attention given to supplying tii. WEI. EDGAR, Dealer in Cigars, Tobacco and Cigarettes Meerschaum and Brier Pipes, GENUINE c&SLfSH CUTLERY Revolvers and Cartridges. CORNER MAIN AND C1IEXAMUS STS. MURBAY & CO., GEO GEE 8 Ami Dealer in Cannery Sillies! cpecial Attention Civento Filling Of Orders. A Fv:LL LIME CARRIED And Supples furnished at Satis factoryTetms. Purchases delhf red in any part of the city. Office and Warehouse In Hume's New Hmldin on Water Stiret. P. O. Ho iv:. Telephone No. ST. tSTOKI.I. UK ECS oar. $67,000,000 Capital! Liverpool and London and Globe North British and mercantile Of tendon and Edinh'Kh. Old Connecticut of Hartford AN'O COMMERCIAL OF CALIFORNIA Fire Insurance Companies, Representing a Capital o I S67,C00 OOO. B. VAN DUSEN. AenL J. H. D. GKAY. Wholesale and retail dealer In GROCERIES, FLOUR, AND FEED Hay, Oats, Straw, Wood, Etc. LIME, SAND AND CEMENT. GeneralStorage and Wharfage on reason able terms. Foot ot Benton street, Astoria, Oregon. THE NEW, MODEL I o" tings, etc., a specialty A FUiL. bTOCK ALWAYS ON HAND. ! - sioria Planing Mi! HOLT & CO. Proprietors. MumfacSiireiNor Mouldings, Snfh noors, Blinds, Rails, Balusters, Newel Posts, Brackets. Scroll and Turned Balustrades, BOAT MATERIAL, ETC., Orders Solicited auil Promptl) Attended lo. Satisfaction Guaranteed As lo Stjle, Quality and Prices. Mill and Office cor. Polk and Concomly Sts., ASTORIA, OREGON. Address IIOI.T A CO. Astoria and Seaside BAKERIES, ED. JACKSON. - Proprietor The best llread. Cakes and Pastry in the City. Ice Creams and Ornamental Work to order Manufacturer of Fine Candies. WYATT & THOMPSON. KEEP CONSTANTLY ON HAND A Full Stock of Canned Fiesli Mackerel, Canned Fresh Codfish. Canned Fresh Finnan I laddie. Canned Shrimp, Canned Roast Beef. Canned Chicken, Canned Pig's Feet, Atmore's Plum Pudding. Aim ore's Mince Meat, Kpp's Cocoa. Ground Chocolate, A Pine Aksortnient of Canned Vegetable, ete ASTORIA IRON WORKS. IlKNTONHrKKKT, NKAK PAUKKR HOUSE, ASTORIA. - OREGON. GENERAL MACHINISTS AND BOILER MAKERS. LAND ai MAEM MNES BoilerWork, Steamboat Work and Cannery Work a spe cialty. 03lSTI3STC3-S , or all Ocscriptlons nnde to Order nt Short Notice. A. D. Wass, President. J. G. IIustlek, Secretary, I. V. Cask. Treasurer. JOHN Fox.Sui)erintendent. BANKING AND INSURANCE! 1. W. CASE, Broker, Banker, and Insur ance Agent, iN3 0i5l,, - OREGOS. OFFICE HOURS : Itikii y o'clock A. M. until 3 o'clock P. M. Coluiia TMirtutioi Company. FOR PORTLAND! Through Freight on Fast Time! THE NEW STEAMER TELEPHONE Which has been specially bmlt 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. Returnlnj leaves Portland every Tuesday and Thursday at 6 A. M. arriving at Astoria at P. M. n-At, additional trtD will be made on Sunday of Each Ween, leaving Portl&u d KAVGE CAN BE HAD IN -ASTORIA ONLY OF E, R, HAWB9, AOENT I'AI.I. AND hXAMINE U. YOU WILL BE PLEASKiJ K K. JHWFo Is al-o ateiii for.U Bil jateit (Mil Stove And other tlrst-clasa Stoves. Furnace 'Work. Steam Fit S. AllNDT & KERCH KN ASTORIA. OREGON. The Pioneer Machine Shop BI.ACKSMITII a m a p, wj ii w J -AtKlsgilMZSstfri. mil v&pjcMmiD Boiler Shop All kinds of ENGINE, CANNERY, AND STEAMBOAT WORK Promptly attended to, Aipectaltymadeot repairing CANNERY DIES, FOOT OF LAFAYETTE STREET. Furniture and Upholstering, Mattresses Made and Repaired. Paper Hanging. Carpets Sewed and Laid. Furniture Sold on Commission. Sum, corner Main and Jefferson Streets MARTIN OLSEN. Carnahan & Co. SUCCESSORS TO I. W. CASE, IMPORTERS ANti WHOLESALE MU tr.iAlL, lh.'.4L.KhS IK GEMRAL MERCHAWE ornrr Clit-iirtintit dud Cass streets. ASTORIA MRKWrN WilsonJ Fisher Ship Chandlers, HEAVY AND SHELF HARDWARE Paints, Oils, and Varnish. LOGGERS' SUPPLIES. PROVISIONS AND MILL FEED AGENTS FOR Salem Elouring Mills, . Portland Roller Mills, Capitol Flour and FAIRBANKS' SCALES. ASTORIA. OREGON. C. E. BAIN. DOORS, WINDOWS, BRACKETS. Honldlngs, Window Frames, ete. A Full Supply of Material. Bids Furnished : Contract Work a Specialty. Mill and Office on the Old Site. WJ