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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (April 13, 1890)
.-, ? k) She gaitg gjtt 'ASTORIA. OREGON: SUNDAY APIIIL 13. 1BC0 SIX PAGES. A FROZEN PEOPLE. el Continent Where Chil dren Never Plav. r. n i:iij:a.j; l i: i:xis tv.sci: The latest sensation in the lecture field is an address by Miss Olof Krar- i cr of Greenland. Miss Krarer is an Esquimaux who came to this count ry a few years ago h way or Iceland. Her native "snow-land she had never seen, being one thousand miles farther north. The ivto Iceland was made by sledge mk sea, in company with a num ber of her people, for the relief of a party of shipwrecked .sailors. There is a legend among her people that they cnswerigiually from Norway. She Ptetfjpth pride of "pure descent," nntlMfiriainly she has in her appcar ruiaJiiile in common with the Esqui maux Indians of the west coast, with Mii-ii. no are more familiar. This diminutive ladv is fortv inches ilk m lieichL and proportions and appear- j mines of Mexico and Peru disembow :ijfcTisscd en traine," strongly re- eled would hardly pay a penny in the itfrrBC of the wife of the famous pouud of cost." hrrVReneral Tom Thumb. She has Other speakers were as severe. A .i fair skin, bluo grav eves, and brown London paper said "the whole terri- uj.rincuucu 10 goiuun. ; wji. iu uuimtu u uui nuiui-u,w. Much has heretofore been expected The Edinburg-fteDtewsaid, "the des of Greenland in the way of contribu-1 ert extends from the Mexican border :io:is to the world's stock of informa- j to the Columbia," One Captain Stur tioa. or its entertainment, but here is gis said that ''rather than to have new mmulc madame from the northern-1 states beyond the Rockies the Union e-i point or that unprepossessing coun- would be better off if Oregon would tr. who in a pleasing manner and sink into the Simuies' hole." Even with much dignity, and no lack of a i Thomas A. Benton said the god Ter projcr understanding of the proprie-1 minus should be set on the Rockies. tif-vaiid jK)Ssibilities of the platform. Senator McDnffic, of South Carolina, lfiy bfibro her audience of cultured said he wouldn't give a pinch of snuff Uikl5axcns, in a very simple way, it for the whole territory. He thanked is true, but with great vividness, the j God for the mercies of the Rockies, ot.jrtstions or human life in this, her ' Then the writer said: "What would it iA-M country; "my country," as. .Dayton and Benton think if they 11.IJ4J and with true devotion, not J could take a Pullman at Chicago to f.UVaiow could it be?), she calls it , day and visit the Oregon of 1889." These conditions need no other elo-, Further. "The history of the Pacific incnce than the bare recital to break i slope since that debate in congress the heart, and as one listens the re- of ISi-l has been marvelous m 'mbrnnei, "All ye arc brethren," beyond any precedent in the annals of would give the soul" a dreadful despair ' the race." Then he goes on to show wit not for the other remembrance, "what the mere riddlings of creation" lQO -.-1. 1 Ir. .. ...n.l.-m,vnI .....l.l ' .,,,.1 , ll'11- lir-lTVIO Tlf1 1 0 Tffl fill IfTinTV if. 1Q ,'C1'""1' ir '"'ttUltll U.1U, .Hill st Mime day even urccnianu must ilssom as the rose," and "rejoice u ith jot. :nd Mugiug." Existence in Cinvjiland, Miss Krarer declares, is not hfijor. if it is, it is frozen life, '"iftencondition of human beings in hjjjjpugealed continent is a pcrpetn-airr-ocnumbed one. both in body and mind. The cwr present sensation is that of extreme chill. It is so cold, she says, that even iau is frozen. When asked if ' mnf linr lovi llioir lin1i?fa clo rmilinJ ' I do not think they do they are too ' cold the cannot care much for any thing. Children do not play in Greenland, and mirth or merrymaking of any kind is never seen. Calling attention to her arms, -which are quite bowed, she said, this bent form is "universal, aud is owing to the constant folding over the breast, which mothers compel their children tvj firftchco, iu order that a little more bfbmay be retained. , ,Thp temperature in the snow huts m which they live is always freezing, C"nc can easily seo must be the case. ' QUwfrwie, theskins placed on the walls when wet, and frozen fast, wonld not retain their adhension. Greenlauders do not drink. There is notliing to drink. No food is cooked, not even for in-1 fatif who from the age of one month ' fe&Jed upon "blubber." In a land where water is never iluid, aud an occasional lire of whalebone aud fat, j all that the resources of the country provide, aud the nature of their dwell- ings permit, there is no natural food NVVily for the infants, and even if TW:s were not the case, nothing short of taliet of pnre fat cau generate suf- ficient heat to maintain life. Possibly others, like the writer, not ignorant of the fact that the climate of Greenland is intensely cold, have supposed that somehow the natives had become accustomed to it, aud probabh rather enjoy it. But no one can ever think this again, who has seen the look and heard the tone with which this little creature says "O it is Ji cold, so cold in my country. No ie is am thing but cold there.' In conversation with this most in resting fugitive from the laud of jSbrpctual winter, she said with eyas heavy with unshed tears, "Human be ? ought not to live where my peo ple live. There no progress is possible to them. They are not responsible. They do as well as they can, as well as anyone could do. Some day. ome day. God will help them." Miss Karcr, at the close of her lec ture proper. asMimcs her native "cos tume as she calls it, of polar bear &kin -it is the dress she wore in her iiumc ami invites questions, a.l or which sho answers most cleverly, often wittily, always aptly, and with quickness aud intelligence, f One of these drew out the fact that fchyiiad never until she went to Ice la&L washed her face or her hands, or luw a bath other than an oil "rub." If one reflects a moment, nothing else is practicable or possible. The hair is never combed iu Green Iftfl. How cau that be? There are Y6feombs. "-When asked if she was of the aver age height she replied, "Few women are taller. A man four inches higher would be a tall man." To the rather delicate inquiry. "Are ycki a fair specimen of the intellectual aUlity of your race? she quietlv re- plied that she did not think herself superior to most of her people. A cHtoni in the "training of children, low no embellishments of existence, and least of all encourage nursery blandishments, n custom which in stxnlly commends itself to the inteli goEce is this, a crying babe in Green lfcl is never noticed! When the will a! the icy mite of humanity ceases, a cJuirming morsel of blubber is pre heated a premium thus being offered, contrary to what prevails in many HRrserics to good instead of ill na ture. Very early lessons in self con trol are thus impressively taught, the h-sbit of not fancying itself the centre of the domestic, not to say social circle. le;ng lastingly acquried. Chicago is to have a new hotel four teen stories highu The total number of licensed places to sell liquor in New York citv is 7, 787. The Sunshine mills have twenty ve million feet of logs in their boom. Riwnnrck has been granted a pen- we oc m,tW. OREGON A SIBERIA. ThatN What Speaker in Coii-res Said In 1844. A Libel on Paradise. A copy of the Interior published at Chicago, contains an article headed '"Orecron in 1811 and 1889.' which is mil oi lnieresr, ana to tuose not lamil- 1 il. xi. j t i - i i 2 1. - , . , . ., . . .7 iar with the facts would astonish many. ' xt shows that in congress in 1814 Mr. Dayton, of New Jersey, made the fol lowing remarks about Oregon, and were he alive now to make them he would receive one of the biggest casti gations imaginable for lying about perhaps the most promising section of the United States: "With the exception of laud along the Willamette and a few water courses, the whole country is among the most irreclaimable and barren vmte of which we have read, except i iiiu illicit yjL ouuaid. nui ia iuia iuc worst; the climate is so unfavorable to human life that the natives have dwindled away nnder its malaria to a degree wnich defies all history to fur nish a parallel, Of all the countries on the face of the earth it is the least favored by heaven. It is the mere riddlings of creation. Russia has her Siberia, England herBotany bay, andif the United States should ever need a country where to banish her rogues :iJd scoundrels the utility of Oregon would be manifest. By water its dis tauce is 18,000 miles, and by land 5,000 miles. We are nearer the remote nations of Europe than to Oregon. Talk of steam communication. Who is to build a railroad across 2,500 miles of prairie, of desert and of mountains, and who is to supply the means. The un- ...wii.... mum. . .. .... mmw.., ' not uecessarv to repeat it Hear his peroration, for he is a Californian; "Let the readers of the interior look toward the setting sun and realize what an empire is growing up there to be kissed daily by the lingering beams ere he sinks into the ocean to rise upon the far Orient We of Cali fornia are proud of our northwestern sister state. We rejoice most heartily iu their prosperity prospects." c and their FRONT (SATE AJAR. linn- Tillv ami Hank 3Iauaire to Part. -Party night, aiu't it, Tilly?" "Yes. purtv enough; good night, Hank." "What's yer rush?" "I'd say 'rush' if I were you." "Whv, we ain't been standing hero but a few minutes." "O o-o-h, Hank Sparks, what a big story-teller you arc. We've been hero over an hour." "Well, what if we have?' "Well, that's lo-ig e.D'ih, that's what We'd oug.it to be 'shamed of ourselves any h .-." "What for?" "For being so billy." "I reckon we ain't the only silly folks in the world then?" "That don't make any difference. Good night "No, wait a minute, Tilly." ,'What for? You s'poso I'm going to stand here all night?" "Nobody wants you to stay here all night; but I don't see why you snatch your self away like this.' "Pa'll be calling me first thing I know." "Let 'em call; it wont hurt him." "It might hurt you if he took a notion to come out to set old Boze loose." "Pooh! Who's afraid?" "You'd better be. Good night" "Wait a minute.' "What for, you big gump, you?" "Oh. because." "I shan't stnv out here another min ute." "Yes, yon will." "I shan't Let go my hands." "T don't have to." "You mean thing you! I I if you date kiss me again, Hank Sparks!" "Oh, I daren't eh? There!" "Hank Sparks!" "There's another." "I've a notion to call for pa. I will if you kiss me again, sir!" "Oh, on will? There! Now call him-" "You're the worst case I ever saw. Shame on you!" Pooh! I pity a feller who ain't grit enough to kiss his girl when he can." "I'd be ashamed it I was you, sir. Good night" "Good night, Tillv." "Good night" "Good night Don't forget that we're going to the singing school Fri day night" "Maybe we will and maybe we won't" "You better look out or I'll kiss you again." "Ye?, vou daren't! Good night" "By-by." "Good-by." Pergonal. Dkak Uro. M merit. Etl. The. Central Methodist, Catlcttsburg, Ky: I see in ",0 la5t Central that you want a sick "" cicuj. isuueiciurumsitfc IffiftJS.. a"SJ 11UIU 11111111 J CfcUU I could get. but never found anything to do me good until 1 used Simmons Liver Regulator. I feci for anyone that suffers with that terrible disease, and I hope you will give it a trial. C. S. Mounts, Browns ville, W. Va. ADVICE TO MOTHERS. Mr.1?. Wixslow's SooTHixa Sntur should always bo used for children teething. It boothes the child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cures wind chohcandis the best remedy fordiar rhrea.TwentjMive cents a bottle. CATARRH CURED, health and swept breatn secured by Shiloh's Ca tarrh Remedj. Price, 50 cents. Nasal Injector free. J. C. Dement. THE KEV. GEO. 11. THAYER, of RourbePjlndsays: "Both myself and wife owe our lives to Shiloh's Consump tion Cure will give immediate relief. Price, 10 cts., 50 cts. and Si, at J. C. De- men t's. i All the patent medicines advertised in this paper, together with the choicest perfumery, and toilet articles etc- can be bought at the lowest prices at J. W. j Conn's drug store, opposite Occident hotel, Astoria. O.NE WHO DIED AT ASTORIA. Written lor Tub Astobiax. I sob the years like -craves roll back upon Time's dreary ocean, 'Till memory's horizon ends their cease less steady motion, Breaking upon the dark teaves' crests sumo forth those happy hours; T J... J -lI. 11 "T. J 1 uuereu wim mcuuu j. jutbu wuwt Vilvimftrl AQfnnnc flnffarc We wandered o'er some lonely path while dark trees waved above And threw a shade upon a face too sweet for sunbeams' love; Or wandered by Columbia's banks when stirs bad ceased their dreaming And wakened by the gathering night were down upon us beaming. Then of ten wildly beat my heart when fell her kind glance on me, Knowing the sunlight of her soul sent rars of love upon me. There came a time, though, when I saw j her face grow thin and pale, j And then I saw come o'er her eye a glaze of death the veil. And then I watched, with breaking heart j that cheek so thin and white And kissed ner nrow sne saw me nor her eye had lost its light. Since then .I've wandered o'er the path to step where sho hath stepped, But whero she hath stepped, the flowers have grown and snowflakes there have slept.j And 1 have listened to the birds that sing their wildwood lays, To see if now they ever Bing the songa sung in those days; Bat when I listen their wild songs upon the heart seem flowing Like snowflakes fleecing all the earth in winter when 'tis snowing. 1 leave her by Columbia's banks where fitnra nra droaminp cf her. The wild flowers growing on her gravo . n cicrn thnt af.il 1 fhnv tmrn hp.r; ! The very ills of wintertime their gentle ness o'erflowing Fall down upon her flake by flake, with silence, when 'tis snowinc. AnjLtB WELCKEa. San Francisco, March 18th, 1890. A BREEZE FROM THE WOODS. The Softening Influences of Outdoor Life. What a splendid freemasonry this ia of outdoor life! How gentle and gen erous the rivalries! Which head shall dive deepest in the cool depths or speck the white surf farthest from shore? Which rod shall lift the heav iest trout or gun show to its credit the fullest bag of game? Whose deck shall shine the cleanest, or whose white sails shall lead the fleet to evening's anchorage? Whose table of bark shall boast the tenderest venison or lodge front display for ornament the noblest spread'of antlers? Whose rifle is truest to the camp when food is scarce, or is silent longest when game is plenty and the larder over-full? These are the generous and healthy rivalries of ouf outdoor life, which stimulate but never fret, and leave both victor and van quished healthy and happy still. Compare with these the scramble for wealth; the rivalries of gain; the sui cidal despair of some; the vain and boastful bearing of others; the bitter ness of those who lose; the arrogance of those who win; the sneering enyy ings and rankling jealousies, ripening to hatred as the years go on, which ' characterize the lives of men who live in store, office and street, and note the contrast Who of us frank-spoken and sweet-hearted vagabonds of tide and field, of deck nnd camn. are envious of anv? Each man we meet is comrade, fel-' low picnicker, brother man, partner of ours in the sweet profits of our healthy, happy, natural life. Mild mannered and light hearted wander ers; boys with smooth or wrinkled faces; grayheaded, some of us, but boys still, thank God; disciples of the rod and and gun; lovers of oar and sail; canoeists, campers, yachtsmen, our fires are lighted on a thousand shores, and our evening song floats over a thousand laces and island studded saints, touched sweet rivers. We are a family of Our spirits have been and softened by the grace of nature. We have been indoctrinated in the truths that shine out of stars and which the blue heavens declare at noon and night The leaves of the catechism we have studied, have been the flow, ery meadows, the voiceful slopes of mountains, the shining beaches, the whispering leaves of trees, the thunder-shaken firmament or the star lighted depth of level waters; from these un-Calvinistic text books we have learned sweet lessons of God, whose gentleness we saw in the very leaves we studied; our souls have drunk of the waters of life fresh from native fountain, and our spirts have bathed each day in the riv ers which flow from the throne of Him whose voice is as the sound of many waters. All hail! ye healthy bodied, healthy minded, kindly hearted and gentle mannered saints of flood and field, of hill and river, of oar and sail, of deck and camp your smiling faces rise before me in thousands, and your voices, in happy talk, in joke and song, come from afar and stir the silence around me into laughter. Joke, laugh and rest on, ye thrifty vagabonds nnd gentle loafers, you are storing each hour with the honey of health, on which in future dayB of toil and strain your strength shall feed and fill itself with vigor. I hail you, fellow saints in this lower heaven of God, where each happy one is his own priest, each pure mind its own creed, and the gen tle wishes of each hearbits only "sum tind substance" of doctrine. JOHN C. FBEXONT. As He Appears on the Streets of Xew York To-Day. A great crowd was surging up nnd down Park row, men and women in a hurry to get home, newsboys rush ing in every direction, and there is a general air of eicitefcent as the great offices pour out their thous ands of human beings. There are all sorts of people in this crowd, the least noticeable of which is a thin, gray-haired, gray-bearded old man, whose shoulders are stooped and who shifts along as if he were afraid of being knocked down in the helter skelter of the multitude. It is none other than John C. Fremont, the first candidate of the republican party for president of the United States. When in New Yorkdie comes downtown ever day, visits some of his acquaintances, and although no longer a worker, he is deeply interested in all that is going on. He looks to be very frail; he cer tainly doesn't weigh over 120 pounds; but his eye is clear; the grasp of his hand is firm, and there is no tremor in his voice. He has passed the mile stone of life alloted to human beings by the psalmist, and seems to be wait ing quietly for the end. Occasionally he goes out to a public dinner, and once in a while a few of his old time friends meet at his hospitable board. They crowd around him and never for a moment suspect that he is the great "pathfinder" and the man who carried the standard of the grand old party in its first fight SLEEPLESS NIGHTS, made miser able by that terrible cough. Shiloh's Cure is the remedyfor you. J. C. Dement San Francisco, Cal., October 9, 188 Your committee have made a very careful examination of the Royal Baking Powder and are satisfied that it fulfills all the requirements which the public can make of a baking powder. For purity and care in preparation it equals any in the market, and our test shows that it has greater leavening power i "nan any other of which we have any knowledge. THINKS LESS OF THE "AHMEE." How a Hotel Porter Was Paid liy nn Offi cer for PcisonalSrrvic. The following incident in the office of a hotel, says the Chicago Tribune, was seen and overheard by several peeple: A young man in citizen's dress asked the colored boy in charge of the 'phone to call up a certain ticket office. This was done and the boy said: "Heah you is, sah!" The young man said: "Hold it; I want you to do the talking for me. Ask the agent if ho has a lower berth in the 10 o'clock train for such a place." The boy repeated the message and informed the young man that thero was a vacant lower berth. "Tell him," said the young man, "that I want to secure it. Tell him I am , of the United States army." The boy repeated this and notified the young man that it was all right "Did you tell him whom the berth is for?" asked the young man. "Yes, sah. I tole him it was fo' de United States ahmee." (Several giggles in the office of the hotel.) "Did you tell him my name?" "No. sah. Didn't 'spose it made enny diflunco what wa3yo' name when I done tole him it were fo' the ahmee." "But T want yon to give him my name." "All right, sab." The ticket office was called up again, and the colored boy bawled out in his upper register: "De sleepin' cab am fo' , of de United States ahmee. Ho wants yo' to put dat down." Then he turned to the army officer and said: "De cah will be ready when yo' calls." "Thank you," said the army officer as he walked away. The colored boy eyed him as he walked off, and said to one of his asso ciates on the bench: "If de United States ahmee kin put a cullud man to all dat trouble ad' jes' say 'Tank you,' fo' it, it s a won- dah to me dat it eber fit to make us free." Affidavit Famished on Application. Although Connecticut is but ninety miles long and seventy broad, it is so well supplied with railroads that yon can travel in its cars close upon 1,000 miles, it is said, without crossing its borders and without "repeating." At Auburn, Cal., a woman was watching her hens which were scotch ing in the garden, when she saw them unearth a black object and try their bills upon it She took it into the house and it proved to be a chunk of gold worth 857. Mrs. Marshall, of Dubuque, recently laughed so heartily and opened her mouth so wide that she was unable to close it. A surgeon had to break one of her jaws in order to "shut her month." She is now eating liquid food with a spoon. Charles Ness, of Searsmont, Me., who was partially blind for twenty five years, from a bad fall received during the war, fell while carrying a bucket of milk into the house last week, and again struck the back of his head on the ice. Strange to say, his eyesight has been restored, and now he can see to read as well as before the first accident William Mason, of Bluehill village, Me., thinks he has a gold mine on his farm. He keeps ducks and the ducks spend most of their time in a certain newly deepened body of water not far from the house. Several ducks killed this winter have had bits of gold in their crops, and William thinks this rich food comes from the pool, so ho is going to dig it out this spring. A few days ago John Ball, of Bj chelle, Ga., had a log-rolling, and about 12 o'clock, while the men were at dinner, an old hen came into the house, jumped upon the bed, deposited an egg, which one of the small chil dren started to carry to his mother, and on the way accidentally broke it To the astonishment of those present it was found to contain a chicken fully developed. Tkp Blestta of Stroag Strm Is recoverable, not by the Utt; of mineral e datives, but by a recourse to eftt-ctual tonic treatment. Opiates and ihe like should only be used us auxiliaries, and tiien as sparingly as possible. Vigorous nerves are 3uiet ones, and the most direct way to ren er them so Is to reinforce the vital ener gies. That sterling invigorant, Hostetter's Momach Hitters, w ill be found all sufficient for this purpose, since it entirely removes impeuuupnu 10 inoruugu digestion ana as similation oi uie ioou, so last me uwy is Insured its due amount of nourishment, aud consequently of stamina. Ithematlc tenden cies and affections of the kidneys and blad der are also counteracted by the Bitters, which Is besides a pleasant medicinal stim ulant. Infinitely purer than the raw excitants of commerce, which react Injuriously upon the nervous system. Henry M. Stanley is in the field for "boodle." He said to a friend before he left this country in search of Emin Pasha. "I am getting on past middle life. My books and lectures shall pay me within the next five years enough to make my old age comfortable. This African expedition is for money, not for glory." The two great wants of the day better mail service abroad and better female service at home. Burlington Free Press. Burkleu's Araiem tfelre. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rhe um, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively enres Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to ?;Ive perfect satisfaction, or money re unded. Price 25 cents per box. -For sale by J. W. Conn. SK r3n2fea,JUftJL PA -t-. of the University of Oliy !!jfe Stop A FINE Children's : Carriages JUST DECEIVED. PRICES LOWER THAN EVER. Mtf im "File Sheading Tailors. Fiedler : & Call and See Our Nobby Stock of Spring Goods Just Arrived. It comprises the latest goods iu the market, and c ottVr them at priers never before heard of in Astoria, and guarantee the best and most comfortable tilting suits in the rity. Next to C. H. Cooper's C. P. Upshur, Shipping and Commission Merchant Slain St. Wharf, Astoria. Orejjou. SPECIALTIES: Cannery Supplies Barbour's Salmon Net Twines. NEPTUNE IJmnd Salmon Twine. WOOI)BE!t:tY Cotton Lines and Twines SEINES and NETTING Of all Description Furnished at Factory Prices. FIRE INSURANCE Heeled in First Ci.ws Companies, Representing S13.000,0Ut) PIKE5IX, Hartford, Conn HOME, -..New York. IfeBCj Pacific Express and Wells. Fargo &. Co. Mrcfi Golden Feiale Pills ! For Female Irreg ularities; nothing lik them on the market. Xevcrfall. successfully used i, by prominent ladies V mommy, uuarau- iceu lo relieve sup pressed menstrua tion. Sure!. Safe! Certain! Don't be hutnuug ued. Save time and health and money ; take no other. Kent to any al- dress, secure ly mall on receipt of price. 52. Address. rCsV" 0V THE APHR0 MEDICINE CJMPANY. Western Branch, Box 27. PORTLAND. OK. Sold by J. C. Dement, sole ae.ent. Atona. IPUBE1HE. ?- plantation Is in a malarial dls tricWhero fe er nnd np;iio prevails. I employ 150 hands: frequently lialf ofthemvere sick. I -was nearly dis couraged when I began tho use of Tutl's Pills The result xras marvellous. My men became strong and hearty, and I have had no furthur trouble. "With these pills, I would not fear to live in any swamp." E. RIVAL, Bayou Sara, Iu SOL.I EVERYWHERE. Office, 44 Hurray St, New York. E. P. N00NAN & CO., (Successors to) J. P. HYNES, DEALERS IN- Groceries Produce. Water Street, Astoria, Oregon. TELEPHONE 50. 7. - P. O. BOX 390 SO TO LARSON & HILLBACK Fon GROCERIES AUD FltESH FRUITS. Orders Delivered Free of Charge. Country Orders Solicited. Third btreet, next to Pioneer office. mmm ?&' Q 1J 7fe"ps"E 4en gUfc -'y rUM?utA - .ns California. 4 i STOCK m rra imaipcrti Astoria, Oregon. HAKKKTS. Bf 3S Si I flglO II III dhS. f!nn Mrcet, - IMorla, OrrgoH. ci::urrr.sr. v to., rrtorimrroiis. SJ-LSi'hOTFCLLY CALL THE ATTEN .5. Moil of the rublic to the fact that the ai" Market w. tn alurijsi'e.suppneawiin a ! LI. VAK'ETV AND P.KST QUALITY ok FRESH AMD CURED MEATS ! 1 Wl.ton vii: be Mild at lowest rates, whole sale and retail . SCfSpi'i'ia' itiiinion Keu to supplying 1?Tarmarket. WHERRY k COMPANY, Fresh and Cured Meats, , Vogotables, FRUITS, BUTTER, and EGGS. IPI'OStTl i(YHi.T HO' n. CSS::. 5'S Nsrf-r Atnr::. '.;. Roadway Market. P. O'HaRA, Prop'r. Opposite Fo.ir.l Mor.es. A First-Class fteat Shop. Fresh and Salt Moats. Alt Purchase Delivered in anv part id ihr City. F. E. WILLSQJ5T, Civil Engineer and Surveyor. DRAUGHTING : AND : .MAPPING P. O. Hox MX Office with J. II. Mansell, next W. U. TrteKraph Offlce. Third Street. AMoriu, Or. TMelsen Lsster & Andersen, CIVIL ENGINEERS, Surveyors and Architects. Office, Room 9, Flavel's I3rn'n SECOND STREET P. O. Dox 813. ASTORIA, OR. I. W. Case, BANKER. Transacts a General Banking Business. Drafts drawn available In any part of the U. S. and Europe, and on Hong Kong, China Offick Houns : 10 a. m. to 3 p. sr. Odd Fellows Buildixg, Astoria, Oregon. The Oregon Bakery A. A. CLEVELAND, Prop'r. Gooi Bread, Cate anil Pastry None but the Best Materials Used. Satisfaction Guaranteed Customers Bread delivered lu any part of the city. . i ifiiipyiidiUi KEEN and COOK G02&3AXSSZ02? Insurance and Beat Estate Agents ftfQlVEY TO IiOAN ! ON GOOD -A.toxi, iBjff AT- i k, ittJyire'J fci? t rsTSrss- Lflr-i-- rtjyf""- - 5 ss& ' 434JJ5r3 -1"-5S43' IggBfWa W fef t cp iMf mlwwwk wMMWffk I Pi v "f j Immense Stock of Furniture S. HEILBORN. Two Car .Loads received : More on the wav. Vou are invited to see the Finest Display of Furniture, Carpets, etc., in the City. Trices reasonable. THE OLD STAND, SEALAN0. The terminus of the ilwaco and Shoalwater lUy ltailroad. THE GREAT EST SUMMER KEsOllT OX THE XOUTIlWEbT COAST. Lies at the head of the J5ay, at deep water, and only twelve miles from the bar. The coming County Seat and Commercial Metrop. lis of Pacific county. Xow laid out Lots on the market from S30, and upwards. For particulars ami full information, call on or address B. A. SEABORC, Ilwaco, "XTSramlim KEEP YOUit KYE OX NSW ASTORIA! lots ron SALE IIY Fitzgerald & Carney, Iff liUiubdlG If! Fine Wines, Choice Brands. I havo coiuploted arrangements for supplying any brand of Wino in any quantity at lowest cash figures. The Trade Supplied, Families Supplied. ALL OltDEKS DELIVERED FREE TN ASTORIA. Your patronago iu City or Conntry solicited. A. VV. UTZINGER. Cosmopolitan Saloon. BARBOUR'S Irish Flax HAVE NO gss&i rMT w ftfgs liJlDEN FLAXMILLS.USBURN.IREIANG V V HflUSE FDUMDEO- 1784-. ' Mr SL X!wi3. Ewfe&rj GRAND PRIX PARIS 1878, GRAND CROSS OF THE LEGION D'UOXXEUIt. They re-eived the 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 VJSRSAO MANUFACTURERS IX THE WORLD, Quality Can Always be Depended on. Exueriencea Fisiiermen Use no Ota. HENRY DOYLE & CO.. 5 1 7 and 5 1 9 Market Street. SAN FRANCISCO. AGENTS FOR PACIFIC COAST. W00DBERRY SEINE TWINE, ROPE and NET TING Constantly on Hand. SEINES, POUNDS and TRAPS Furnished to order at Lowest Factory Price MERCHANTS. SECURITY. Oreson. THE - Largest : Stock I THE Lowest : Prices I ASTORIA, OREGON ne House. Threads EQUAL ! 7k nHNntfc WW