Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (March 26, 1890)
rqii zFW&X, rt" c ' J:i&Te('zyitT"- "asv && ?-t-W3-3W5' i X-" Z&ggr-zrs'Wi Wg ( d She gaihj gforian. ASTOKIA, OUEGON: WEDNESDAY MAHCIl 28. ISM age, and the i young lovers must elope or wait until the boy becomes a man. ISSUED EVERY MORNING. (Monday excepted.) J. P. HALLORAN & COMPANY, PublMiers atid Pioprietors. astorian Biit.mo. - Ca?s Srur.r.r. Ttrat of Subscription. Sen til bv Carrier. jxr week .. Sent by Mail, per month. .... Sent by Mail, one j ear .... Free of postage to &ubcribers. The .wtokiaj. UMire tne largest circulation or any lit wspa per published on the Columbia rivei. CITY AND COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER. The real estate transfers yesterday, as filed for record, were six in number, amounting to Si,403. A man yesterday wanted to know the meaning of the silver dime in the middle of the "O" in the word office on the door of Tun Mooning Asto hian's editorial rooms. That dime was the original ten cent piece and all the money that the founder of this paper had when he started it in 1873. It is of date of that year, and when the new door was put in, the little silver disc was given a place in its , decoration. 15cts i- mCts I Senator Dolph has kindly forwarded -'w I to Tnn Astouian a copy of a letter from the secretary of war transmitting uanir.te s to Us adver- i a full report of the board of United btates engineers in regard to over coming the obstructions to naviga tion in the Columbia river at The Dalles and Celilo Falls, and Three and Ten Mile rapids. It also con tains full diagrams of the proposed boat railway, and will be referred to subsequently. CHARGED WITII MURDER. Farther Developments in the Fredrickfon JJytery. New planks have been put in at the foot of Cas street below Second, and it is now in good order again. Postmaster Gray's commission has not yet arrived from "Washington, D. C-, and Mr. Bell still has charge of the office. There will be asocial dance at F. Hill's place at Skipanon this evening, to be attended by several Astoria young folks. A. V. Allen has plans drawn and will shortly begin the erection of a handsome dwelling on his lots on Main street. lleserved seats on sale at 9 this morning at the New York Novelty store for the Fisk Jubilee singers' performance. J. D. Hay died of pleurisy at the hospital yesterday. Deceased was in the fi2d year of his age. The funeral will le at Clatsop to day. The delightful weather of Monday was succeeded yesterday by a very light sprinkle of rain, just enough to do neither good nor harm. Beaver lodge, No. 35, L O. O. F., will celebrate in good stvlo the 71st anniversary of the founding or the order, on the 26th of next month. Yesterday in justice May's court, Ah Gee was bound over in the sum of $20 (on a charge of opium smoking) to await the action of the grand jury. The Fisk Jubilee Singers are great. They will appear at Boss' opera house to-morrow night Reserved seats now on sale at New York Novelty store. The total amount of taxes as per the assessment roll for this countv, is 36,127.35 of which the sheriff had already collected the sum of 853,118.12 up to the close of yesterday. The city council was called to order last evening by auditor Jewett, and on motion of Mr. Welch adjourned to 730 o'clock this evening, as some of the members wished to hear Bill Nye. The Mercury says that there are "bloodhounds" in Astoria. Ne: but there are two Kangaroo hounds dat run wid der masheen, and Bescue En gine Co. No. 2 thinks they are great dogs. The eight Chinamen arrested Mon day evening by deputy sheriffs Kinney and Oberg were arraigned before justice May yesterday, and they will appear for examination at two o'clock this afternoon. If any boys or young men feel com pelled to retire from a theater before the close of the entertainment, it is a waste of effort on their part to try and make so much noise with their heavy boots, especially during the time when the balance of the audience is listening intently to the attractions on the stage. If you must go out please have manners enough to go quietly and not disturb and annoy every one che with your unnecessary noise. LAST EVENING'S ENTERTAINMENT. The case of the Astoria & South Coast Bailroad company vs. George Hill came up before Judge Shattuck in Portland yesterday, was argued, and taken under advisement. The judge will render a decision next Saturday. In addition to the suit brought by C. H. Isom for a sum alleged to be due him from H. E. Jackson, B. N. Carnahan has brought suit for 150 for groceries and provisions furnished the levanting engineer who, it is thought, will not return to Astoria. The Columbian continues to have a case of genuine jaundice in viewing The Morning Astokian's advertising columns, while it is itself compelled to run a lot of railway "ads." for which it doesn t get a cent in cash. Any thing to nil up and save composition bills. One lonely drunk was to appear in the police court yesterday afternoon, but he was still too much demoralized and will have twenty-four hours more to repose in the city bastile before he appears before the "judicial tribunal in answer to the question of "How came you so?" Thh Astobian, the Oregonian and other newspapers that take press dis patches had the president's proclama tion yesterday morning. The Colum bian, the Pioneer and other fourth class sheets will republish it after the San Francisco papers have commented on it a while. Win. Nye and His Three Coadjutors. A large audience assembled in the opera house last evening to listen to Bill Nye, the humorous journalist whose witty writings have been read and laughed at by millions or people. His clean shaven face and shiny, bare footed bead destitute of any capillary adornment save a few straggling locks at each side, surmounts a good sized, muscular frame, and this added to the vacant quiet, passionless ex pression he knows so well how to assume, gives the audience the key note for mirth. His slow, listless walk and his low 3et clear and dis tinct voice, and his easy, moderate, hair drawling tone are other elements of his wit. Thus his appearance, and the manner of his speech, added to the amusing style of his narratives or stories all combine to form the great humorist and continually excite the laughter of his listeners, and as the loud merriment would interrupt him, he would look up in a dazed sort of way, jis much as to say, "What are you laughing at?'' and this, of course, added fuel to the flame. Saudwiched between his efforts were musical gems, presented by art ists of true merit and rare skill. Frank Downey is a pianist, a very ac complished musician, whose render ing of difficult gems of the old masters was thoroughly artistic and enjoy able. Mr. Gustavo Thalberg is a fine tenor soloist, whose rich, clear voice, both powerful and sweet, was greatly ad mired. Last and best, Miss Ollie Torbelt. a sweet faced, modest appearing, young lady, neatly attired in creamy white, adorned with white satin ribbon, looking like a fair young graduate, won the hearts of the audience as she came forward with violin and bow in hand. But when she played it seemed as if she was imbued with the very soul of music, and as the low, soft passages were rendered artistically, they appeared like angel choirs far in the distance, and there was perfect silence in the v;ist audience that not a note should be lost The lit tle lady proved herself to be a faultless musician, and was applauded and en cored again. Four years ago she was here with Clara Louise Kellogg, but the others of the company were never here before. Smash In A Barber Shop. The tragic fate of Geo. Fredrickson and wife, who were both former resi dents of this city has aroused con siderable interest here. Mention was made in these columns of their mys terious disappearance and the impres sion based on circumstantial evidence, that the hapless pair were drowned in Shoalwatcr bay, while on their way from South Bend to Bay Center in an open boat But circumstances have transpired that have so aroused suspicion that it is now believed in certain quarters that a foul murder has been com mitted. A detective has leen for several weeks working up the case, and he claims to have conclusive evidence that the two were murdered, their bodies buried and a huge log rolled upon their bloody graves. Whatever the facts, certain it is that Geo. Bose, proprietor of Bose's hotel at South Bend, and Jack Ed wards, the cook at the hotel, have been arrested by the sheriff of Pacific county, on a warrant charging them with having inflicted gunshot wounds on the person of Geo. Frederickson. Their preliminary examination was at Bay Center yesterday, and the out come is awaited with interest PERSONAL 3IENTION. F. H. Snrpreuant will return from San Francisco on to-morrow's steamer. D. H. Welch. J. Q. A. Bowlby, A. T. Brakke and P. A. Cook have been ap pointed notaries public Dud Blount's unwonted rubicund visage is due to a disastrous experi ence last Saturday with a Bussiau bath. Jno. A. Montgomery and wife and Mrs. F. B. Willson, his wife's sister, aro in the city from Willapa, on a vls t to friend's. " John A. has been seri ously ill this winter, but is all right again and reports good times in the Willapa country. MARINE NEWS AND NOTES. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. MARCH 25. As Filed in The County Recorder's Office Yesterday. W. H. Frv et al to George Flavel N 77 feet of lot I, blk 19, Shively's Astoria.. S 2,300 M J. Kinnev etel toLudwig Larson lots 31, 32, 33 and 31, blk 27, and lots 6, 7, 8 and 0, blk U, New Astoria 1,110 Columbia Investment com- pauv to Thos. Pridmore lot 9, blk 17, Columbia addn Go J. P. Classen and wife to Fred Krosel lots 7 and S. blk 3, Kindred Park 300 F. Lindstrom and wife to John Larson lot 8, blk 99, Adair s Astoria 350 Oregon Land company to I. B. Fisher NJ of blk 41, Pacific addn 250 Previously reported this year 1,129,277 Total to date S1,133,6S2 A PROSPEROUS SECTION. The government steamer Cascades came down the river last evening, towing three barges loaded with rock for the jetty. The three-masted schooner Jessie Jliitcr arrived vesterdav from Hum boldt bay with 240,000 feet of redwood lumber, bound for Portland. The British bark Archer expects to go up to-day to Portland to receive her cargo, and will be painted while there; theu stnrt for the United King dom. August Ehlert, C. J. Lee and H. Craft, the three men picked up at sea, as described in TriE AsToniAX of yes terday, will go up to Portland on the Archer. The fine lurge American iron ship, Clareme S'. Jiement, which left New York on the 17th of last November, was towed over the bar and up to the city last evening. The steamer (Jen. Canbj leaves for Ilwaco this morning at 6:15 and to morrow morning at 7 o'clock, after which she will leave here at 8 o'clock, in accordance with her schedule time. The steamer Manzanita yesterday took on one of the large whistling buoys which is to be placed in position off Coos Bay, and will start out this morning with it, returning in a few davs. Growth and Development at South Bend. The Willapa country, in Pacific county, Washington, Is coming to the front in great shape. It is enjoying a boom that mil not prove a boomerang and Is on the top crest of the wave of prosperity. There are 100 buildings, including three hotels, now going up at South Bend, and people are getting just what they choose to ask for prop erty. In the last two moutns Jno. Wood has sold over JXjpjM worth ot property. The South Bend Land Co., has withdrawn all its property from the market. Bumor has it that that corj)oralion has been offered Sl,500.000 by the N. P. B. B. Co. for its holdings. J. B. Parcellsold 1G0 acres near South Bend last Saturday for S10,000. I. S. Barston sold another 1G0 close by, for $7,000. Two years ago $2,000 would have been considered a good price for either tract Epk lund. Holcomb and Schwctt aro doing considerable there. It is reported that Ecklnnd has disposed or his hold ings to Holcomb for au even $59,000. The Dolphin arrived there last Sun day with 30 passengers. Even-steamer brings large numbers of people. Ev ery bit of surveyed land is occupied, and there are 200 families on land as yet uusurveyed. Bristol & Leonard are finishing their new saw mill and sash and door fac tory. There are about 000 real estate men there "whooping things up" and it is a lively place. The Small Town in the West. Scaly Skin Diseases I'sorlasls S years, covering face, head and entire body with tchite scabs. Skin red, itchy and bleeding. Hair all gone. Spent hundreds of dollars. Pronottneed incurable. Cured byCuticuraBemedies Cured by Cuticura My disease (psoriasis) first broke out on my left cheek, spreading across my nose and almost covering mv face. It ran into my eyes ami my nhvsiclnn was afraid I would Ursemy ejvMjht alnetber. It spread all ovcriii he.:da d iu hair all f-l out, until I w.ls -ulirel bihl-luv.dt'il , it then broke out on my arms and : j uliK r,u:it I m arms were jnt one ire. It rovered my entire body, mv face. Lead and shoit'ders behur the vort. The w liltcs scabs fell constantly from my he.nl . shoulders and arms ; the sklu would thicken and be red and very itchy, and would crack and bleed if scratched. After spending manv hundreds of dollars I was pronounced incurable. I heard ot the Cuticura Remedies, and after using two bottles Cuticura Resolvent I could see a change ; and after I had taken four bottles I was almost cured ; and when I had used six bottles of Cuticura Resolvent and one box of Cuuicura, and one cake of Cut icurSoai I was cured of the dreadful disease from which I had suffered for five years. I thought the disease would leave a very deep scar, but the Ctrncun. Reme dies cured it without any scars. I cannot exurcss with a pen what 1 suffered before using the Cuticura Remedies. They sated my life, and I felt it my duty to rec ommend them. My hair is restored as good as e er and so is my eyesight. I know of others who have received great benefit from their use. Mrs. ROSA KELLY. Rockwell City, Iowa Cuticura Resolvent, The n-w Wood and Skin purifierand purest and best of humor remedies, internally, and Clticuka. the great Skin Cure, and Cuti cura SoAian exquisite Skin Beautifler, ex ternally hae cured thousands of cases where the shedding of scales measured a quart daily, the skin cracked, bleeding (turning aim iicmng almost oeyonu Human endurance, hair lifeless or all gone, sufiYnnz terrible. What other remedies have made such cures? Sold everywhere. Trice. Cuticura, 60c; SoAr,ac: Resolvent. $l. Prepared by the Potter Druo and Chemical Corpora tion. Ronton. aS"Send for '-How to Cure Skin Diseases," Ct page, 50 illustrations and 100 testimonials. nil'LKS,black heads, red, rough, chap rllM pedand ollvskln prevented byCtrr- H'l'RA So A I. u IT STOPS THE PAIN. Rack-ache, kidney pains, weak ness, rheumatism aud muscular pains relieved In one mimite hy the Cuticura Anti-Pain Plaster. The first anil nly instantaneous paln-kill- iiu pi.is.or. A CASE IX POINT. S. Walker and others circulated a subscription paper on Gray's River, and the good-hearted people of that section responded liberally with a sub eription of S198 for the family of the Jite John Schroeder, who was acci jientally drowned nt Gray's River a "few days ago. Part of the cargo of the Clarence iS. Bement, consists of 600 kegs of nails which are consigned to tins port. Her crew comprises twenty-eight per sons, including the captain, officers and men, and they have all had good keilth on the entire voyage, having been out four months and eight days from New York. xne annual amount ot talk is now going on preparatory to getting things in shape for the salmon season. Every year there are the same prefatory re x&arks before the work begins. A prominent canner last Monday offered f 1 for salmon in April, though how manners can afford to pay even 1 in April is what puzzles canners and fish ermen alike. A singular accident, and a paiuful one befell Gillette ot the Third street barber shop yesterday. He was up on a step ladder cleaning lamps, eta, when his foot slipped and he em ulated McGinty. To try to stop his fall he made a wild grab at the fix tures on the ceiling and down came the whole business, gas pipe, chan delier, ceiling, Gillette, step ladder and all, in one mixed up mass on the floor. There was a dreadful crash and considerable damage, but the pro prietor who gazed upon the fearful ruin he had wrought congratulated himself that he was unhurt. A Sugar-ilaple Tree. Did you ever see a sugar-maple? "Rack in the states," especially that part of the north Atlantic coast known as "down east," sugar-maples are com mon, and about this time of year the trees are tapped aud the san boiled down into maple-sugar. There is a sugar-maple tree m As toria; probably the only one in Oregon. It stands in Captain T. G. Hustler's garden. Yesterday A. B. McKcan tapped it and the sap flowed freely. After he gets enongh he will boil it down and have some genuine, unadul terated maple-sugar. Three 3Iorc New Plat. la our forefathers' dajs, pimples were at tributed to diseased blood. But modem medicine has demonstrated that rich food does not create eruptions by fouling tho blood, but retards digestion, which makes tho stomach torpid, aud tho circulation sluggish, aud in turn causes au enfeebled action of the pores which congest or become pimply. Tho modern theory therefore is not to treat tho blood, but the stomach aud liver, and it is under this new idea, that Joy's Vege table Sarsaparilla was conceived. It is wip ing the old " blood disease " idea out of ex istence. A case In pelut: " I hac had for rears spells of indigestion and dyspepsia aud tried nearly everything Finally I took one of the leading sarsaparlllas. It caused pim ples to break out ou my face, which I was told was caused by the potash. Hearing that Joy's Vegetable Sarsaparilla did not con tain mineral, I Kent for It Tho pimples dis appeared aud I havo had no return of the ld sprite 11 is a euro for indigestion and lyipcpsla and the attendant fare eruptions." Mas. C. I). SruAnT, 1221 ilis.-don street. S. F. Ilailly Cut in the Hand. Have Some Yesterday in the county clerk's office there were filed three plats of land now open for sale. One wis a subdivision of tract nnmber one, Chelsea, bv D. Smith andD.W. Rush. Another was a subdivision of blocks 3, 10, 12 and 18, Chelsea, by the same parties. The third was a map of Morrison, on the Astoria and South Coast R. R., filed by R. J. Morrison. The Melody of the South. Yesterday three subjects of foreign lands filed their first papers in the county clerk's office, and will eventu ally exercise the right of franchise. John Larsen dissolves partnership with the emperor of Germany, Frans Herman Eby cuts loose from the em peror of Russia, and Antone Contos Las no further use for the king of Greece, but aU will go into partnership with Uncle Sam. The Fisk University Jubilee Singers alone preserve to us the real folksongs of America, and their singing of the wild, plaintive and characteristic melo dies of the South has doue more than anything else to make the once popu lar negro minstrelsy appear thin and tame. New York World. Sales ef ZVcw Astoria f.etM. List of siles of New Astoria lots on March 25th : Ludwig Larsen, lots 31, 32, 33. 31. blk 27, and lots C. 7, 6. 9, blk 44 ; Herbert Logan from Elk Creek, lots 3, 4. 5, C, 7, blk 27 ; Henry Ingalls from Skipanon, lots 8, 9, 10. 11, iz. oik mi ; k. iu nspy irom uys Peter Clawson, bartender for Peter Rrach's uppertown saloon, was carry ing out some bottles yesterday after noon. One of them was broken, and Peter, in walking, slipped and fell, striking liis hand heavily on the jag ged bottle-edge and cutting it, the blood flowing from the gasli. He lost considerable blood before the surgeon arrived, who stitched liis hand up and left him as comfortable as possible. Tho First Step. Perhaps j ou are run down, can't eat, can't sleep, can't think, can't do any thing to your satisfaction, and you wonder what alls you. You should heed the warning, ou are taking the first step into' Nervous Prostration. You need a Neive Tonic and in Elec tric Bitters you will find th". exact rem edy for restoring your nervous system to its normal, healthy condition, isur piising results follow the use of this great Nerve Tonic and Alterative. Your appetite returns, good digestion is restored, and the Liver and Kidneys resume healthy action. Try a bottle. Price 50c, at .7. w. Conn's drug store. TfU'ihoneljort:rit:r House Uebt I'rrisiu town. Konnis per night 50 and 25 cl.s., per week Sl-ri0. Now and clean. Private entnuicv. terville,lotsc,7,blk28. A abort time ago a certain stern -aarant intimated to the ruling powers ---- rt?;i. oM;hi v.4- it i;a amwaartod to marry, to refuse a Haaaaa'aa the young m& has not at tafced MaTiwSority. "Yeaterday the aMgiai awaia 4eaired a permit to wed fcTlUfaiiai Hig of hie heart, but it wa iVftawi o account of his tender To tfcc Indies t AKteria and YiciHity: Grand opening of Mrs. Merie Davis' Fashion Millinery parlors Wednesday and -Thursday. March 2Gth and 27th. Third street, next to Itucker's restau rant. Call and see the finest and largest stock of millinery ever displayed in Astoria. Tor Fine Pkotograplis. (Jo to Misses Carruthers' photograph gallery: Third street, opposite Mor gan & Sherman's. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mrs. Wixslow's Soothing Svkup should always bo used for children teething. It hootlics the child, fe: tens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind chohc, and is the best remedy for dlar-rhoea.Twenty-five cents a bottle. The latest style of Gents' Boots and Shoes at r. J. Goodman's. In the east, says the North west Magazine, life in a" small town is usu ally rather stupid. Everything is fin ished and established. There is no change to look forward to. Social re lations run in fixed grooves. Rusiuess is in the hands of a few old concerns. The energetic young men are forced to go away to find opiiortuuities for advancement. Tennyson described the condition of such a town when he wrete: "A sleepy place, where under the same old wheel the same old nit doth deepen year by year."' In the west the small town presents a very different aspect. It is full of eager, scheming, active people. They all be lieve it will some day be a big place. They come perhaps from twenty differ ent states, bnt they readily assim ilate without much thought about each other's family histories. There is a good deal ot social interest developed in the process ot getting acquainted with each other. At the beginning they are nearly all strangers and have to take each other on trust. All have migrated with the same motive, that of bettering their condition, and all have a common bond of union in their ardent desire that the place of their new nlxde shall flourish. Social castes are slow in forming and when they begin to develop their distinctions are usually based on the measure of success people have achieved iu their new home and the force of character they have there displayed, and not on anything they used to be or on any connections they used to have "back east.'' There are many things which make life interesting in the small town in the west which are wanting in the small town in the cast. There is the con stant change aud the constant expec tation of cltauge. The place is grow ing aud every new building that is put up interests" tho whole community. New people arrive from time to time and are taken into the business aud social activities of the-town. Things are to be made from the ground up streets are to be opened, bridges built, schools established, churches erected; in a word all the frame work of mod ern society must be set up, aud in this work there is a wide opening for public spirit, for generos ity aud for talent. Everybody is exceedingly busy aud everybody is very hopeful Thus the spirit of the place is buoyant and elastic "When people who have helped build up one of these new western towns go back to their old homes in the east for a visit they find things very dull. The at mosphere seems stagnant Nothing moves. They have become accus tomed to change and progress as the natural condition ot every-day life aud they wonder how they could ever have lived in a place where nothing exciting happens but an occasional funeral. The small town in tho west means to bo a big town and is disposed to anticipate events a good deal. It se cures many comiorls and conven iences which it would not think it could afford if it weie not so sure of ad vancing. It lights its streets with electricity, constructs waterworks, builds an opera house, establishes newspapers, starts a club and goes in for lectures, art classes and literary societies when it has a population which in the east would call for nothing beyond ordinary village institutions such as the three board sidewalk, the town pump, the weekly prayer meeting and the church social." Of course all the small towns in the west connot become cities; but the ambition and effort to make them grow makes people broader in their in telectual range and their daily lives more worth living than would be the case if they had no hope ot a large measure of prosperity. SITITILIE About You ! Ever so many years ago when hitetles were still an unknown quantity, and lite dudes of that day knew naught of cigarettes and making love, there was no such a thing as style, or what style there was one could easily condense into a bandana hand kerchief, consequently thestore kecpers of that day had an easy time of it. A few dozens of san dals and some fig leaves was their only stock in trade, and they never bothered their an cient heads about advertising the latest styles of fig leaves. However, things arc different now. The most successful mer chant of to-day is the one who knows how to advertise and how to secitn: the handsomest goods, backed tin by reasonable prices, all samcc HERMAN WlbE, the Reliable Clothier and Hatter in Occident Hotel Building, who has just opened THE GRANDEST MOST 3IAGNIFICENT ASS0RT3FENT OF Immense Importations O-E1' Dmi ad tap wj m Received During the Past TwoJWeeks at the Leading House of Astoria. Novelties in Dress Goods in the Latest Fabrics-Fashionable Shades WMMlnitfl H. COOPER, M Slral. Coffee and cake, tn npnts. at the Central Kestaurant Meals CeefceA te Order. Private rooms for ladies and families: at Central Restaurant, next to Foard & Stokes'. From present indications there will be an uuusaal rush for timber lands under the timber land law the coming spring. Already there are many per sons who havo come from the eastern states to locate on claims. Grand spring millinery opening at the Misses Thrall & Sherman's milli nery parlors, Wednesday, March 23th. A full line of latest novelties in hats and trimmings. All are cordially in vited to attend this grand opening. Wcinfcard'f. ttrcr. And Free Lunch at the Telephone Sa loon, 5 cents. Ludlow's Ladies' S3.00 Fine Shoes; also flexible hand-turned French Kids, at P. J. Goodman's. CailireiCrykPitclertCatiria You don't know how much belter vou will feel if vou take Hood's Sarsaparilla. It will nvnrcninp. that tired fcelinff, pur ify your blood, give, you a good appetite ana make you bright, active ami siruuK. Be sure to get Hood's Sarsaparilla. bold by druggists. Th Like a Ged Cigar? Call at Charley Olsen's, east of C. 11. Cooper's, lie will suit you. A fine stock ot cigars to select Irom. MORGAN &G0.,The Leading Shoe House FOR A GOOD SHOE FOR LADIES" OR GENTS' WEAR GO TO MORGAN & CO., Mansell's New Building, Water Street, Astoria, Or DO YOU WEAR CLOTHES? IF SO REMEMBER THAT PE. A. STOKES & CO., EToatt Door to Foard cfc Stois.es, IIA.YK A Large Stock of Itens Ml Boy's Clothing, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, Underwear, Etc., That will suit you in size and price. We cannot he undersold. PHIL. A. STOKES & CO., Water Street, Astoria, Or EAST VAiENTON In consequence of the demand for those beautiful lerel lots. Mr. F. C. Warren nas been Induced to platnlnety-slxlots Adjoining Warrcnton on the East. Wlilch will be known and sold as East WarrentonI THE RAILROAD runs through the plat, which Is only 200 yards from the Warrenton depot. For further Information call at once on the ASTORIA REAL ESTATE CO. FOR SALE. The SW 1-4 of Block No. 22, Shively's Astoria. CoBsisUagef three lets each Mxt50. mak ing a spleaftld eoraer site 190 feet square for a flue residence, and In the best part of tie city, with majtalflcent views of river and bar. Good houses all around and service water within ten feet. Price 5.000. J. H. Mansell, Real Estate Broker. Crisp Snaps. $8,350 llouse nnd Lot on First Street, Business Property. Cheap. $373 to $335 Lots in Block 2fi, Hustler & Aiken's Astoria. Very desirable. $80 Corner Lot in McClure's Astoria. Beautiful residence Lot. $375 to $50O-Lots in Alderhrook, on water front. $3,00 Eighty Acres on Klaskanine. Nice home. $130 Per Acre Ninety Acres, near town, suitable for platting. If You Don't See Your Particular Snap, Call and See Us. Heal :EJstft irolter NOVELTIES! THE CREAM OF THE MARKET, Which he guarantees to sell at Bottom Figures. And as it is with the live, en ergetic man of business, so it is with the live, well dressed man of affairs, who knows how to dress well on moderate means by trading with a rustling, push ing and reliable dealer like HERMAN WISE -THE- 014 Reliable Clottaifl Hatter Occident Hotel Building. Marshall & Co., Salmon Net Twines MANUFACTURED BT GEO. A. CLARK & BROS., NEW JERSEY. Far Sale fcy . SMITH, Agent, Office at Wherry & Co's. PATRONIZE HSME UUUSTRY! Therelsnooeeaatenfortbe most fastidi ous of our citizens to send to Portland or San Francisco for Custom Made Clothss As they can get Better Pits. Better Work manship, ana for less Money. By Leaving their Orders with MEANT. New Goods bv Cvory Stoamer. Call and see him and satisfy yourself. P. J. Moany. Merchant Tailor. QKLO F. PAKKRK. CARL A. HANSON Parker & Hanson Odd Fellows' Buildin ASTORIA, OR. Wholesale Wine House. Fine Wines, Choice Brands. I have completed arrangements for supplying any brand of Wine in any quantity at lowest cash figures. The Trade Supplied, Families Supplied. ALL ORDEKS DELIVERED FREE IN ASTORIA. Your patronage in City or Country solicited. A. W. UTZINGER. Cosmopolitan Saloon. I. OT, Case. BANKER. Transacts a General Banking Business. Drafts drawn available In any part of the 0. 8. and Europe, and on tlong Kong, China OrncK Hours : 10 a. m. to 3 p. m. Odd Fkixows Building. Astoria. Oregon. E. P. N00NAN k GO., (Successors to) J. P. HYNES, DEALERS TS- Groceries Produce. Water Street, Astoria, Oregon. TELEPHONE NO. 7. P. O. BOX SM SUCCESSORS TO C. L. PARKER, DIALERS IK GENERAL MERCHANDISE New GmJs Arriviiif Every Steame THIS WEEK, TbeOldStaad Astetto Oretoa. Your Money's Wortli IS WHAT TOTJ GET AT Foard & Stokes Groceries IN- tnd Provisions. ErerythlBg la a Flnt-claa Store and at Extremely Low Figures. Goods Delltertd all e?r Towa. The HlfthMt Prlo Fat far Junk. FOARD STOKE Lots ii Case's Astoiia Are if on Sale AT THE OFFICE OF THE Astoria Real Estate Co. PRICES PROM $150 TO 250 EACH. TERMS One-Half Cash ; the Balance in Six and Twelve Months. Stockton & Welch, Real AND EMPLOYMENT OFFICE. City, Suburban and Acreage Property Fop Sale. MAIN ST., ASTORIA, OR., P. 0. Box 511. No curbstone brokers employed kert FLYNN, The Tailor, KEEPS IN STOCK THE- Finest Woolen Goods for Suitings. All the Latest Styli He boys forCash at Eastern Prices. ',Uo Guarantees the Best Workmanskkj m & Garments. Call and sse In yourself. Earth Block, ASTOEIA, OR. J ;:iv