fa . - ,&. tekit VOL.. XXXIV. iT0. kJ3. ASTORTA, OREGON, TUESDAY, JAJVDAliT 2. iSi)0. PRICE FIVE CENTS --; C P. Upshur, Shipping and Commission Merchant aan Wharf. Astoria. Oregon SPECIALTIES Cannery Supplies Barbour's Salmon Net Twines. KXTTTE Bmml Salmon Twine, WQQDltKRRY Cotton Lines ami Twines SEINES and NETTING Ofa Iention Furnished at raelry Trices. FIRE IN5URA?C Wrt Clans Cuuijituih-s. ItayrecMUuc si ,on,oo: UartroTtl, Conn . ,.....lCiw Yoik, lumit. inwj I'aotSr licprevs anil t lis. I'arao A Co. ThiBlseiL Later & AnaeiSen, CIVIL ENGINEERS. Swrvpywi'S sul Architt'cte. ' Hvtrr. VUvu . Fi.a vicis I.i.n'o, 8BSOSRC STREET r.WfB3. AsTCUlIA,Oi:. Win. B. Adair, RhAL tbiAtt MUbNt.l X. r. Or. OIik-j x-iil Third Ms P- O. Cox 43G. racttcttUr atitnttAii Riven Jo 1'wjHTiies n IH4,T A""tis : xl to itirolix4e il Tim Abstracts 0 'JLltiG.'cUy r-xpriss Transfer Company. c. n. THOWSOK """; " "' - ? ""' Yult iwt nf AKetm C?iolf ' "W"HI leMMMMC tin litleloHii lJe.il K 1 tatpnUirntiHit Mild furnish an Abstrae j nf 110 lm Jht Name ' T)iw rNuw-iaMi. York gunrniitod. I zssaazxtucxsuxxm'iv zvm-j&ixt r' f&VLWESSMT' fell VJ pr jcZS- ariyggrgTsr bpksl: B N l P M& W : rrl i. it I mt d v;;iics Cover uncut. Fmloisw! bj ilic lieails of tlio Great Uiuver v.nrMHl fut.iio 1 m1 ualrtsasilK,Slnini,t. Piintiuil inol liciltl'ful. Dr. Puce's VajK lUkuu- P. w. or do. s not contain Auimom.i. Linn or Alum In. l'r.ce's DclicioiLS IlKwrmc Kvtrts. .iji11i, Iamiumi, Or.ii'gc, Almond. Rom. to. lo not lontaln Poion- Olfc' or Clu-wir d. PRICE BAKING POWDER CO.. -" w .rl.. n.icago. San Francisco. iffo 4s5 A 8 & S fr ITm ttTiHii. of tin Iiwacoand .Sho.ilw:r"r IJa. ll.i load. 'JJUCGUIjAT l, TMMKU HE-UKT ON THE NOK'l iiVlT t ()AT. I iiat th.- ImwI f Slnlfci,l tlivp watci, and only liw'u' it'il- 1st 15. t'- Ik r. '1 he ruining 1'amuLv ! mid iVtinliifi finl Molroii lis 1 I'.n'ilic f ni nt . Xi v. inid (in Lr,t"s 'nuuiv mm tft. .tmLak2 fmlll Vlf) ?TllH lllivrlldlv i-ariuullctilarand fuli informali'iii, B. A. wwtrew-ajKrwrsHKiiisiKiErcfiMsresrrirzssirsn::: This Delightful Suburban Property is Now on the Market and Selling Rapidly. It is Inside Property Compared with all Other Additions to Astoria. Situated on the Water Front is Clear and Level and as an Investment Has no Equal ; in the Northwest. Lots, $75 and $85. K ROBB & PARKER, Agents, -He - 7S v-4 -v y Best of A! Cough medicines, Ajer's Cherry Pec toral id in greater demand than ever No preparation for Throat and Lung Troubles is so piompt in its effects, i.c agreeable to the taste, and so widely known, as this. It is the family medi cine in thousands of households. "I have suffered for years from a bronchial trouble that, whenever I take cold or am exposed to inclement weath er, shows itself by a ery annoying tickling sensation in the throat and by difficulty in breathing. I hmc tried-a great many remedies, but none does sc well as Ayer's L'herry 1'ectoral which always gives prompt relief in returns of my old complaint." Ernest A. Ilepler, Inspector of Public Iloads, Parish Tcr rc lioime, La. " I consider Ayer's Cherry Pectoral a most important remedy For Home UseB I have tested it.-, curative power, in my family, many times during the past thirty years, and have never known it to fail. It will relieve the most serious affections of the throat and lungs, whether in children or adults." Mrs. E. G. Edgeily, Council Blufls, Iowa. "Twenty years ago I was troubled with a disease of the lungs. Doctors afforded me no relief and considered my case hopeless. I then began to uso Ajer's Cherry Pectoral, and, before I had finished one bottle, found relief. I continued to take this medicine until a cure was effected. I believe that A j er'd Cherry Pectoral .saved my life." Samuel Griggs, "Waukegan, 111. "Six years ago I contracted asevero told, which settled on 1113' lungs and soon developed all the alarming symp toms of Consumption. I had a cough, night .sweats, bleeding of the lungs, pains in chest and sides, and was .so prostrated as to be confined to my bed most of the time. After trying various prescriptions, without benefit, my physician finally determined to givo me Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. I took it, md the effect was magical. I seemed io rally from the first dose of this medicine, and, after using only thrco bottles, am as well and ound as ever." Rodney Johnson, Springfield, 111. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. rUCI'AIlED CY Dr. J. C. Ayer Sc Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by nil Druggist. Price $1; six bottles, $5, -TJIF- DIAMOND PALACE GUSTAY JIAXSEX, Prop'r. A Largo and Well Selected Stock r f 1'i.ie Diamiss Jewelry t I 'li uiely Low Prices. XII f;oo!s lUi 'hi rA Ihis rt.il)lKliiiici,I Wt .. ted Go-mint;. V. " . Il'J' StrjKtxpiJJ . vnClALTY i-,.. ,,. qi::uii:i:ii Mhcn A HFW ENTERPRISE. H. D. Thing and C. E. Miller, PROPRIETORS. lIyi.l.iii:ii:or-;tt M:dn htreet wli.irf. TKLMMIOXK X0.4". A firnornl I ii". -s and Ielliy RiLsIuess , irausMCii'd. Yar p:nii:ig-in solicited. RING RACTS FRUIT fOHRS call on 01 addi SEABORC5 lllffllODS POWELL'S -r'j?. ? GLADSTONE'S CAREEB. A Man "Who" II as Rapidly Changed His Positions. Gladstone, the leader oE English liberalism, has been SO years a human being aud 0 years an olliceholder. In that time he has been for establish ment and disestablishment He has been a protectionist and he has been a free trader. He has favored govern ment grants to sectarian enterprises and he has been an opponent of all tlio-e grants. He has been for the En glish slaveholders in Jamaica and he favored the measures which ended hu man chattlehood wherever flies the English Hag. He has opposed the ex tension of the ballot to the common ieonle and he has in lunt enlarged the bounds of tuffragc so as to make them J well nigh universal. He has con demned the interference o England in Oriental affairs and carried on, be hind a mask of protest against Jingo ism, the most rapacious campaign of conquest in Egypt and Afghanistan that England ever waged. ; He upheld the rights of the Boers, to their freedom, and he then over whelmed them with conquering troops. ' He long maintained the Episcopal I church in Ireland, and then he over threw it with hostile legislation. He' went to almost Cromwellian extent in- to the coercion of Ireland, there sup pi cs,-ing free printing, free speech, the right f petition ant' of popular as semblies; there throwing the leaders of the nation into jail for the crime of desiring human rights and toward the same country he has favored home rule, a home parliament and a measure of political autonomy which, in all but name, would make mat country free and independent He bcgan.iu the language of Macauley, as "The rising young hope of the tories,' and he has come to be the specter of imperialism in that country which his brother prophesied "he would ruin, just before he himself died in a madhouse."' He is the most considerable figure in England, where he has belonged to every parly and attached himself to all sides of every issue. He is the most considered of foreign statesmen in the United States whose destruction ho plotted, when he sought to secure the recognition and tho armed estab lishment of the confederate experi ment, to the end that England might maintain relations with a government of aristocracy in the south confronting n government of democracy in the north. If changeability is inconsist ency, Mr. Gladstone has been the most inconsistent man that ever lived. If a repudiation of old principles and a constant courting of new .ones is to be called progressive, 3Ir. Gladstone has been tho mo3t progressive human being the world has ever seen. Ho was first elected to parliament in 1833 from the borough of Newark. In that body he urged the right of Jamaica slave owners to compensate and put himself on record as an im placable church and university man. In 1S3J, under Pefcl as premier, he be came junior lord of tho treasury, but the cabinet went out of office on the question of voting subsidies to the Episcopal church in Ireland, XIr. Gladstone supiiortiug tho grants. He remained a minority member until the return of Peel to power in IS II, when he became vice-president of the board of trade and master of the mint It was then that Gladstone faced the rising tide for the repeal of the corn laws with a bill for a sliding scale of corn duties which the great Cobden denounced as "an insult to a suffering people." In the same session Air. Gladstone forced to passage a measure of his own in which out of 1,200 duty-paying nr ticlas a total abolition or a consider able, reduction was made in 750. At this time his unsurpassed inastery of detail was shown, "his ability to make statistics eloquent"' In 1813 he abol ished the restrictions on the exporta tion of machinery. The next year he carried the measure to broaden rail way service for the people. On ihe top of these popular measur&j ho voted for the Alnynooth improvement bill." yet admitted that "exclusive support to the established church was being moro and more abandoned every day." In 1S1G perhaps the noblest service of Mr. Gladstone's life was rendered to the repeal of the corn laws, in which he stood only less conspicuous than Peel, Cobden aud Bright AVheu the great Sir Robert resigned otlicc at the close of that parliament, it was a sin gularfact that he went out on the ministers defeat in tin endeavor to pass an almost iuhmnan Irish coercion bill. The homes of Englishmen had been made brighter by untaxed bread. The homes of Ireland were to be darkened by the shadow of despotism. Mr. Gladstone supported coer cion as earnestly as ho favored free food. Small -wonder is that Peel wished io ascribe his defeat not io coercion but to the resentment of protection. From that lime onward Mr. Glad stone's career coincided with the present generation, and has been made familiar to it Surviving Bussell and Palmerston, he became the undisputed leader of English liberals. Surviving Disraeli, no foeman worth Ins steel ap peared until Salisbury appeared with the integrity of the empire as an issue io the interest and prejudice of tho nation. The progress of Mr. Glad stone to the extreme of every propo sition which at the first he has teuta- c , -. r -0 HOUSEHOLD SHOULD BE "WITHOUT Tifr.tt iiZMSbz. wr - I IW ..-V -A""' -Jl B mi&ssasm co. A STRICTLY VICETACLt MUL-LCiS FiMiur cc:cixc p inhAJiz't phi a. --r.Jj.. ;g . f - , .1 , .. TI:o jnnjwl'y of ttio Ills of lho human bodj- arlso fro:si a diseased Uver. Sim mons Liver P.egu!atc r Isao been the racanh of restoring .more people to health anc happiness by Giving t'lcm a Iioalllij J.Icrthan r.Mj other p-cucy on earth. SEE TUAT rOU G1TT 1 MZ GEMJ1-E. l'lir-. gl OO. lively handled i-s a pari or the history of llic English shaking race. There is little that he lias not been. In his lime ho has played many parts. He has been a theologian, a iolitician, a statesman, an agitator ami a dema gogue, pamphleicr, an author, a translator, a critic, an art connoisseur, a farmer, a woodman and an amateur scientist He ia further off from Ihe principle-.? with which he started than any other niu of this generation. He lias grown as i-ibly oat of one set of opinions into another as a babe out of infancy into youth, as a joulh out of 3outhfulnecs into manhood. With less leisure than any other statesman, he has translated nomcr, vitalized Dante, humanized Goethe. Balancing an empire or a parly on hi i shoulders, lie has discussed in the roviews the most exalted problems of the antique world or of the prescut time. Ho is an equal authority on pottery and dogma. His are the wealcnesscs which hang on the neck of strength. Great is his vanity, he is greater in I113 versatility. Colossal in his impatience, he is superb in his fortitude. Un equaled in his arrogance, he is trans cendent in his capacity. Extraordin ary hi his self consciousness, he is unrivaled in Ins ability to lose it. Prone to detail, he can yet generalize as wisely as Bacon or as subtly as Bol iugbroke. Incredible in his miscon ception of the opinion of oilier coun tries, his knowledge of tho springs of English action is absolute. He is the most picturesque and prodigious hu man miraclo of tho nineteenth cen tury. He is utterly unconscious of lho ra pidity with which he has changed his position, for he is lotaih de-titute f humor. Hcii di enabled from real izing defeat, for, as the premiership involves his appeal to the commons. fo does the opposition only involve Li? larger apsal to the people. In hi, seventh decade lie ha freed l.im?. if from limilutious, Ho no longer jie ; Iri-di legblation on British hates or British interest-, but he reposes it r.n human righl-. Ilo fearlessly cm ;. ihe spirit of adventure and avarice, or bullying and profit, which has made English enterprise a historj of jnixed motives around the world. Tho United States have forguen him the error of befriending the con federacy. They sympathize with his endeavor io create the United States of Great Brilaiu, for such is the ten dency of the work of transformation he isat Americans salute him across tho sea with the wish of many years and many ictories alike, because ho means well to mankind, and because, classed wilh him, other English lead ers are smaller than sanal!ncs3 by comparison. Bv the side or an orb so resplendent they seem like stars in the daytime, calculable by the mind, but not apparent to tho sight . fntarrli Cimd. Aclergymau, after ears of suffer ing from that loathsome tliser.se, Ca tarrh, and ainly trying every known remedy, at last found a recipe which completely cured and saved him from death. Any sufferer from this dread ful disease sending a self addressed stamped envelope to Prof. J. A. .Law rence, SS Warren St., New York City, -will receive the recipe free of charge. Or China's 0)0,000,000 people, one tenth are agriculturists. A sc tv To tO!2:::i.r. It ii surpr -dn ' lh.it people will um a common, ordi' nr nil! whoa tJii-. cm secure a valuable Kiigli-di one fur lho same money. Di. Ack rs KiigIKh pil are a positire cure for siek-he.id.irhi' and all liver t roubles Thev :ii- small, sweet, ea-.ilj taken, and do not gripe. Sold by ,1. W. Co n. r H HOW THEY V0RK IT. Frauds of the K-iMcra FMi Trade. Dr. Lawrence Hamilton, of London, has lately been making a systematic study of tho frauds of the fish trade, which he reports to be very many. It seems that stale codfish are made to look fresh by smearing their gills with fresh blood." Slabcod and other fish are often made to look plump and fat by means of the blow pipe. Small haddock and rock pouters are fre quently skinned, their tails inserted into their mouths and sold for whiting. Halibut and brill aro often passed oil as turbot; while such cheap fish tis plaice are sold for "fille'tietl soles." Painting the gills of stale fish to make them look fresh, and coloriug cured fish tire old and comnion "tricks of the trade." Stale eels and skate are made to look as though just ont of the water by rubbing them with sand. In France skinned dogfish are sold 33 Dutch eels. It is said that sorats are often canned as sardines or ancho vies, and anchovy paste largely consists of them. Now in America split herrings are sold as anchovies and small herrings as sardines. Tho so-called Russian sardines are, it ap pear?, only small herrings, flavored with spices. To save the trouble of smoking herrings, some dealers use a special varnish, having a smoky taste. Even lobsters and crabs are loaded and made heavier by having a piece of fre-Ji haddock or other fish inserted. "Wked they have legun to grow stale the remedy is to rcboil them, and by that means the odor of decomposition is destroyed. As for caviares made from the roes of sturgeon, they are often "fixed" with rocs taken from in ferior Hs-h. Dr. Hamilton fouud much to condemn nbonj; canned iLdi, there being a frequent lack of care and cleanliness, aud often a sub stitution of a cheaper and coarser fish for that supposed to bo held by the cans. There is good reason to lielieve that frauds in lho fish trade arc much more common in England than iu this country. Still, many of the deal ers here will bear watching. The harm winch can result from eating stale fihli is not generally appreciated, and besides that, tho symptoms of poisoning -excited in that way are rarely under stood. There is reason to believe that they are often misin terpreted by physicians, and many CfOSC3 of poisoning are mistaken for cholera morbus. Certainly the most rigid laws should govern this and any other trades in articles of food. Bos ton Journal of Commerce. Constitutional orscrofulous catarrh, core eyesj etc., surely cured by Ayer's Sarsapanlla. At Tangier, almost within speaking distance of Enropean shores, a cara van of fivo hundred slaves freshly arrival from Timbuctoo, were sold in public mnrket -one day last month. The men were sold at S30 each, the women at 10. The young girls brought SS0 apiece. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria Wlica KiiVr vraAcIi!., vv navo I.er Castoria. rtl:cn sf j kua r. CUM, s!.e cried toe Castoria, r.hen r.Lo tecuum itte, sho citing to Castoria, Yhea sLe l:ad ChiMron, she ct.tc thian Castori The Italian anarchists hao pla carded tho walls of Lugano with a proclamation calling on ihe Italian people- to rise agaiut aud overthrow the monarchy, mid holding up Ihe new Brazilian republic tw an example which Hah should follow. As a remedy for coughs and colds, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral has never been equaled. Its name is a house hold word. CTJAstBs I CURES PERNAKENTLY A O c" Drcfjgists and Dealers. TlfECHAniCS A.V0CELER CO.. Ealllmrs. 121 ElPiHE. ? plantation Is in a malarial dls trlct"w!ier Texcr and aguo prevails. I employ l.lO IinntLs: frequently half of thrill woro siclr. I xras nearly dis couraged AThen I began tho use of Tho result was mnrvpllnus. Tj men l-c:tino Btvonsrand hearty, and 1 have Imrt no farJItur trouliK. "With these rU, 2 vtiiuM not fear to lho hi any swamp." 11. IilYAX, Bayou Kara, Xa. SOXJ EVERYTVHERE. Gfnce, 44 Ilrtrray St., Ke7 York. mhv &" TRADE U'Ss1 MARK b? K2 1 o ;,TKE GREAT. - glkl "&&. Mmmmmmm r sni.ri vrv 1 ADDITION! POWDER Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies, A marvel of frfirity, stremrtli .aid wholcsomeness. More L-cuii mlcal lhan tlu- ordiiury kind, and can wit hr -old in competition with the multi tude id low test. h rt weight, alum or plios-'i.-i'o pow.ters. vw nnJu in cans. Koval 1: kimi I'm- mk. Co. I0r V'all-st.. N. Y. Lewis JI. .Ionsox &Co., Agents, Port land. regon. EAST ffARBENTON In t'oiisequencu or Hits demand for those lifnulifid lcvd bits. far. P. C. Warren lias been induced to pl.it nlnety-slx lots Adjoining Warrenton on ihe East. VI hit ill be known and sold as East Warrenton ! THi: KAILKOAI) runs through the plat, Which lSOIllv "00 V:iril friini tlw Unrrpntnn deNii. Fur further information call at on von tlif ASTORIA REAL ESTATE CO. For Sale ! The West One-Half of Block 71, McCliire's Astoria. Only three blocks .south of the Odd Fel lows' building. There is a line dwelling on tins choice iiropertv Hint will rent net op ujmres the year round. For further particulars inquire of ASTORIA REAL ESTATE CO. I. w, BANKER. ESTABLISHED - - 1870. Transacts a Gearal Backiu'' Easiness. lJnifi-. drawn .tv;iil.i!ii- in .ui p.irt tf tin U. "S. i! HiriM. and on Mmi'Kuii';, Chun n n. k llouitn :- in v. t: io:tr. m. Olio KKix.-twr Ki;ii :iin, Asinrl.i.OreKon. Grand Sale of Cheap Lots Adair's Astoria, BLOCK 12, (kecently ci.kaked.) Adjoinins present Street Hail way Extension Lots hi the above sightly Block aro offered for sale at prices ranging from S20O TO $250 PER LOT. Terms, one-half down, balance in sit mos. Ronds for deeds. Hvu per cent, off for cash. Warranty deed. WM. B. ADAIR, Agent. Morgan & Shernmn GROCERY' And Dealers Iu Special Attention Given to Filling Of Ordei-s. A FULL LINE CARRIED And Supplies furnished at Satis factory Terms. Purchases delivered In any part of the city. Office and Warehouse In Hume's New ttnildlug on Water Street. I". (). Uox M. Telephone No 37. ASTOItlA. OREfSON. i- --i Cannery Sillies AL0ERBR00K Joins Astoria on the East and will be the terminus of the two Transconti nental Railways. Young's Addition to Alderbrook! Is the only inside addition on the market, and prices of lots will treble in value within three months. Buy now, while lots are selling for $75; $20 down and 10 per month. Wing PARIS TAILOR. Iieading Tailor of Astoria Great Reduotion la Prices. -IMPORTER OF- ! English, French and Scotch Woolens. NEW GOODS BY EVERY STEAMER. First-class work, and no garment will be allowed to co out of the store unless it Rives satisfaction. Fine Business Suits made to order for $35. Genuine Imported Tweed Cheviot I"? ClVshmere Snit3 from ?38 to $45. Broad Wail Overcoats at $30 ana upwards. Ihis Rives every centlenian in Astoria a chance to get a Fine Fitting Suit. Come around and satisfy yourself. J. N. KLOSTER. BARBOUR'S Irish Flax Threads HAVE NO tgOTMriffe kyyypft drK BsllBaWFlllllllllMi5SbisS2illl5iiii.i SKBSBSSrcLfKtmAMftmKUWBmSfSm kkkBkkkV p51si88Bii'--iR5HakJ K klkkBkHSiSk1l'lHIkkk9E, HRHSEK!sjBKSaiiHkkkkliS" GRAND PRIX PARIS 1878, AND GRAND CROSS OF THE LEGION D'HONNEDR They received tlie ONLY GOLD MEDAL For FLAX THREADS at the London Fisheries Exhibition 1883. And have been awarded HIGHER PRIZES at the various INTERNATIONAL EXPOSITIONS, Than the goods of any other THREAD KANUPACTaHERS IN THE WORLD, Quality Can Always he Depended on. ExDBriencBQ F HENRY DOYLE & CO.. 517 and 519 Market Street. SAN FRANCISCO. AGENTS FOR PACIFIC COAST. WOODBEI&RY SEINE TWINE, ROPE and NET TING Constantly on Hand. SEINES, POUNDS and TRAPS Furnished to order at Lowest Factory Prices. Astoria, Oregon; & EQUAL! tBiJt isberm Use bo ier WMMM -I- MM M -j- - a- . -i - M -S-. 2K- yi