Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 7, 1890)
-v,' - , TvwTJF CI) M a - 1 'S VOL. XXXV, KO. 9S. Highest of sll in Leavening Power. D 51 Baking ABSQI&TE13f PURE BUSINESS CARDS. y I. HOWARD, HI. D. HOMEOPATIIIST. Graduate or University or Michigan. OMceoerA. V. Aliens store, noithca conwr Third and Cass. Hours from 10 to 12 a. in.. 2 to 4 and 7 to 7 :T8 j. in. . R.YYMOXO. CIVIL ENGINEER. County Surveyor of Clatsop County. Office : Koom No. 7. Kinney's Krick, Asto na, Oregon. FR ri. w. sTi:icKi.i:itj rmSICIAX, Sl'KHCOX AND druggist InstiHnle cases, rhnrges only for medi cine. car PoMolnco, Cheitanms Street. Astoria, OrCgOH. T r. UAHIII.TOIV, ATTOKNEY AT LAW, Astniiu, - Oregon. OftVo, three doors east Court House, Third streeL rt J. CURTIS. Atlorcirj-t-Lnrr: SotAry Pnbltc (VimniNsiourr or Deeds for Washington mtory. Office in Flavcl's new brick ui.ttiiiR, Cor. Second and Cass streets. f KtiX M. .NHITK. ATTORNEY AT LAW. OMci o Cass vtrect, 2 doors hack of Odd oitaw Kuitduu;, Astoria, Oiegon. l. A. ROVIj riartr,j nnrt Counsellor nt Law !3cp m Chouamus Street, Astoria, Oregon A H. KAKACA, ATTOKNEY AT LAW. cc oer White House Cor., Astoria, Or. r ii. iixsi:l.i, BKIL ESTATE BROKER AJTD NOTARY PUBLIC. Established 18SX Third Street, next to W, U, Telegraph Of fice, Astoria, Or. W W. PARKER, Real Estate and Insurance Agent, Conveyancer and Notary Public 112 Ronton Street, opposite the Postofflce. Ret ween Chcnamus ArSqucmoquc Sts., Astoria. Oregon. A. CLEVKIiAKI, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Olfire Flavel's new brick building, comer rcond and Cass streets : up stairs. -O F. KAFFERTY, ITI. I. Graduate Jctfcrson Medical College, Pliiladclphia. OFiiPK-r.se Third Street. Ylt. A. U AM J. A. FL'LTOK. Cass street, between 3rd and 4th. Sneclal attention to Diseases of Women and Chtldreu, by Dr. A, lu Fulton. Sitecial attention to Surgery, by Dr. J. A. Fulton. Office hour from to to 12 A. m and l to 4 p.x. JAY TUTTLE. M, P. Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur. Oftlce, Room C, Pjthlau Building. Office hours : lo to 12 and 2 to 5. ltesidencc, ttB Cedar Street. B. K. 3IIL.LKK. X. I. Graduate of Cleveland Homoeopathic TIos oltal College, and rost-Oraduate of New York City Polyclinic School of Medicine and Surgery. Firtand Main streets, Portland. H:c.kck of Wemcn a Specialty. .K.O.B.BSTKH. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Special attention to Diseases of Women special alt id Surgery "Ikkiee: Opposite Telegraph OQlcc, up Stairs, Astoria, Oregon. TTK. I .V ICKtX, DENTIST. Rooms T and 8, Flavel's new Brick Build ug. TV. T- RUUXKV, r T. JIAWX J. W. lUtArKK. Bnrncy, Barin & Draper, AtterHeyH at-I,aw. ;Oregon City, Oregon. Twelve years experience- as Register of the U.S. Land Oftlce here, recommends us in ourspeclalty of Mlnlncand all other bus iness before the Land Oftlce or the Courts, and involving the practice in the General Land Oftlce. TlielBi, Lester & Anflersen, CIVIL ENGINEERS, Surveyors and Architects. Office, Room 9, Flavel's Bld'g SECOND STREET P. O. Box 813. ASTORIA, OR. U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889. C P. Upshur, Shipping and Commission Merchant IiTaiu St. Wharf, Astoria, Oregon. SPECIALTIES : Cannery Supplies Barbour's Salmon Net Twines. NEPTUNE Viand Salmon Twine. WOODP.ERUY Cotton Lines and Twines SEINES and BETTING Or all Description Furnished at Factory Prices. FIRE INSURANCE Effected in First Class Companies, Representing $13,000,000 PIKEMX, HOME, Uartfortl, Conu ........Kew York, Affrncj Pacific Express and WcIIk.Fiu-roACo. o-T H E-o AUST!N-:-H J. P. AUSTIN, Propr. Open All tie Year 'Roil THIS POPULAR HOTEL Is new and clean and beautifully located on the banks of the Necanicnm. within live minutes' walk of CLATSOP BEACH, The most pleasant Seaside Resort on the Northwest Pacific Coast. Eery attention is paid to the comfort and accommodation of the guests, and the table Is supplied 'with the cry best in season. Here aie plenty of Clams and Crab-, thic is game in the woods and plenty of the finest fish in the streams. E. P. HOOKAS' & GO. (Successors to) J". :E Hynes, DEALERS IN Groceries Produce. Water Street, Astoria, Oregon. TELEPHONE SO. J. - P. O. BOX COO . F. Scheibe, CIGAR MANUFACTURER. Smokers' Articles in "Stock. THE TRADE SUPPLIED. Special Brauds Manufactured to Order. MAIN STREET, - - Astoria, Or Thompson & Ross Carry a Full Line of Choice Staple and Fancy Groceries. Give Us a Call and Be Convinced. J. B. Wyatt, DEALHHS IN Hardware and. Ship Chandlery, Pure Oil, Bright Varnish. Rinnclc Oil, Cotton Canvas, Hemp Sail Twine, Lard Oil, Wrought iron Spike. Galvanized Cut Nails. Agricultural Implements, Sewing Machines, Taints, Oils, G-rooeries, UEZto. Magnus C. Crosby Dealer in HARDWARE, IRON, STEEL. Iron Tipc and Fittings, Stoves, Tin ware, and HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS Sheet Lead. Strip Lead, Sheet Iron, Tin and Copper. A NEW ENTERPRISE. City Express Transfer Company. H. D. Thing and C. E. MUlor, PROPRIETORS. Headquarters at Main Street wharf. TELEPHONE NO. 43. A General Express and Delivery Rusiness transacted. Your patronage is solicited. V. H. COEEEY. Groceries and Provisions. 372 THIRD STREET. Butter, Eggs, Canned Goods, Potatoes, Wood and Willow Ware, Etc. TIIK OLD, OL.D STORY. At) embargo wag placed on the tele graphic news baget of the Astorian' again hut trgat c msed by the break ing of the "Western Union wire be tween Inn city and Kuappa. A heavy g-ile el in up the river and prevented tl i" lin- rep-iirr rrom mending the br,. .k It is expected that the wire will be repaired and in working order sometime to dsv. V (ii.iiic Susr Vine. A tevt days ago A. J. Gliddon, of Lumpkin Mill, cut down ;i gigantic sugar pine. The tree was so huge that particular pains were taken iy its measurement. It scaled at the butt seventy-five inches, while there were cut from it ten logs; two of these were each eighteen feet in length and eight were sixteen feet long, the smallest log forty inches in diameter. This gave alength of 164 feet to the end of the smallest log and the top was near ly 100 feet longer. The tree scaled a little over 28,000 feet, which shows it to have been one of the largest sugar pines ever cut in California. Mr. Gliddon handles about 2,500,000 feet each year, and has been handlmg logs for twenty years, but this is the largest tree he has ever cut. Uroviue Reg ister. Dame rumor has it that Mrs. Navar ro (Mary Anderson) will appear before the footlights once more. When she married young Toney Navarro, it was thought that she would retire from ihe excitement of applause, but her friends who are numerous, have urged her to appear again, and it is not un likely that next season "Our Mary" will once more gladden tho hearts of her admirers. W--- UilUii Saturday, September 27th, Wc ulll open our ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE :OF- Cloaks, Wraps, Jackets, SILK : SEALETTES Our House lias a standard reputation which nccr fails to attract general atten tion during our Clonk Sale?. COKRESPONDEXCE SOLICITED. mcallen & McDonnell; 331 A- 1G3 3rdSt., Vortland, Or. Leading Dry Goods Store for first cla"5s gc od at Eastern price?. Agents Tor McCalls Itazaar Glove Fitting Patterns. James Einlayson ercM ,i34 Tliiril Street, Invites the gentlemen of Aston.i and sur rjiiuciiudiMiicts to call and see his large selection of HEW SEASON GOODS Suitable Fcr Ulsters, Overcoats. Suils, Trousers CiiinpriMng Scotch, English, French anil American Roods xr?TA Good Pit Guaranteed"Sa OEM) F. TAEKKR, CAU! A. HANSON & Hanson SUCCESSORS TO O. L. PARKER, DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE New Goods Arriving Every Sieame THIS WEEK, Dross - CS-oocis. The Old Stand - Astoria Oreeon. Morgan & Sherman GROCEJKS Aud Dealers In Cannery Suite! Special Attention Given to Filling Of Orders. A FULL LIfiE CARRIED And Supplies furnished nt Satis factory Ternu. Purchases delivered In any part or tho eit Office and Warehouse In Uunie's New Building on Water Stn-et P. O. Pos 153. Telephone No 87. ISTOKIA, OREfiO Punch Rmthrrs. Fuuclt ; Punch with Care nTIUF QJ uuuiiA Tailor tfS211i5ie!2E ASTORIA, 0RBG01Y, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7. THE WORLD'S FAIR, What Is Being Dons in tie Hatter of Preparation. tj : cm va co cor, v.u n us to wen Chicago, Sept. 20, 1890. The past week has been tmspiciou3 for the World's Columbian Exposition. The nation commissioners have taken the city by storm. Their coming was anxiously awaited. On tbeir arrival, like Ciesar of old, "they came, they saw. they conquered." The delay of tho site question had spurred them on to immediate action. They meant business from the instant their feet touched the city. After disposing of the appointment of a number of com mittees, they at once proceeded to elect a director-general. Colonel George B. Davis, of Chicago, who was selected on the first bailor, was born in Palmer, Mass., in 18i0, received a liberal education, entered tho armv in '62, was promoted to the rank of major in '63, came to Chicago in '69 with General Sheridan, resigned from the army May 1, 1871, and went into the insurance business. He was elected to Congress in 1878, served three terms aud in 1886 was elected treasurer of Chicago and Cook county, which po sition he has held ever since. On ac count of being a local candidate it was at first thought the selection would not prove satisfactory, but on account of his marked ability to handle large bodies of men, universally considered, his selection has proven to bo a happy one. Bo that as it may, ho was the main spirit that secured tho fair for Chicago, and to tho victors belong tho spoil. Tho commissioners also wanted moro usite." Thoy asked for it aud got it. In addition to Jackson park and tho Lake Front, Washington park has been added. They now havo over 1,000 acres of tho most beautiful park system to bo found. Chicago has ten dered her choicest spot to the gratifi cation of all, and now tho commission ers can rctnrn to their states with glad tidings. No longer need the livestock fraternity vorry about their feature of tho exhibits being slighted. No ampler or handsomer place could have been found among their native hills. By this addition tho exposition -will have the most extensive and hand somest site ever occupied by any ex position in tho history of nations. AN ETirNOIiOGICAIi DISPLAY. Professor Putnam. ofTTnrvnnl pn'. lege, has proposed to tho directors an extensive ethnological display. His object is to erect a great ethnograph ical museum, the exterior to bo a fac simile of the great stono structures which in TiroliistoriR timps wArn -nu merous in Mexico and Peru. Hero he would gather specimens of all relating to ore-Columbian times. This rnnh? include a collection of all tho relics from the first traces of man in Amer ica, when he lived south of the great ice sheet, which covered tho continent north of New York. Ohio. Mississinni and Minnesota. In the collection would be skeletons of the mammoth. mastodon, reindeer, the musk ox and other northern animals which wore living at that early period. following this would como an ex hibit of the Eskimo of tho Areiin re gions, showing their winter and sum mer houses, sleds, utensils, weapons, works of art, models of men, women and children made from casts taken and colored from life, and dressed in native costumes. A similar collec tion would be taken from the West Indies and eastern portions of North America at Columbus' time. By this plan wo could contemplate the condi tions and wnlkK of nrimnvnl num. which would be a great object lesson for the millions of visitors to study and ponder upon. To all this would bo added a collection of human skulls and skeletons from nil parts of Amer ica, so that tho differences and resem blances in the structures of the peoples shown by their bony relics could be compared. Mr. E. W. Keelcr, of San Francisco, has devised a plan for California's contribution to the exposition in the novel feature of an enormous eliptical panorama. This is about his descrip tion of it: Extending from end to eud will bo a scries of mountains formed of rocks and soil and partly covered with shrubs. Skirting this diminutive mountain chain will be an elevated railroad twenty feet from the ground, permitting visitors to view from the cars the paintings of California land scapes on tho walls, as they are passed in succession. The elevated track will be reached by cars gradnally as cending through a tunnel at one end. In this tunnel mining operations can bo shown. When tho tunnel has been passed Oakland, Alameda, San Fran cisco, Mount Tamalpais and the Golden Gate will first appear. Tho cars will pass through the body of one of tho "big trees." At annronriato ooints men will hfi seen catherincr frmfc nnd pnrnrrpl in other principal industries of tho state. unaer an tnis will bo a vast inclosuro capable of holding 40,000 people for Concerts or nmteritinn in wwn nf min. The series of paintings will be about jouu ieet in circnmiercnce. THE GREAT TOWER. "Tho Chicao-o finlnmlms Tmvrr." which is to bo erected in 1893, will bo i,wu leot nigh by 480 feet at tho base, constructed of steel and iron and sup ported by sixteen great arched legs. Tho architecture is of modern Benais- SanCC stvlo and rn 73?rmPi1 Lv Messrs. Kinkel and Polk of Chicago. -ix win require over 7,000 tons of steel and 6,000 tons of irou. Its estimated cost is 2,000,000. In tho center will bo a largo dome 200 feet wido and 200 feet high. This is calculated for con cert and theatrical purposes, and will havo a seating rnnnnifv nf 9H HOO nv- ple. Tho walls and canopy will bo rtcniy decorated in oriental style. Eighteen elevators with a capacity of fifty people each will make twelve trips an hour. Only two elevators Will run n flicfrmpn of 10TJ) ff. "Mnnv will take advantage of the trip. Here monoy will secure passage for at least a short journey in tho direction which all would like to travel. At the land ing will be a large restaurant where the travelers can rest and lunch before returning to earth again. At the apex will be a great globe of thirty-three feet in diameter, provided -with sixteen powerful electric lights which will be observable fifty miles distant. Ad mission fee will be 25 cents. 50 cents 'to 400 feet and SI to top. When completed it will be 500 feet higher than tho Eiffel tower in Paris and the greatest architectural construction erected in the history of man. It will be tho pride of our nation and one of the most attractive featnres of the great exposition. Now that the officers have been se lected, the committee appointed, tho site chosen, a large amount of tho subscriptions paid in, and tho plans taken a definite shape, the directors of tho exposition are ready for business. Tho time is short for the extensive preparations that must bo made. Each opportunity must be taken ad vantage of. The eyes of the nation will anxiously watch the daily pro gress. But, with tho maguiScent site, and the harmony that exists between all officials and the able officers who have tbe management and are con scious of the responsibility resting upon them, the exposition is destined to even surpass in maguitude and grandeur the highest anticipations of its most sanguine supporters at the national Congress. In our next letter we will describe, among other things, the national cx hilils and buildings. J. B. Campbeli. 1 he Yonng Womru of T-Rny. It is not enough tha the young women of to-day shall be what their mothers are, or were. They must bo more. The spirit of the times callson women for a higher order of things and tho requirements of tho women of the future will bo grea. I must not bo misconstrued into saying 'that tho ftituro woman will be one of mind rather than of heart. Tower of mind iu itself no more makes a true woman than does wealth, beauty of person, or social station. But a clear intellect, a well triiiucd mind adorns a woman, just as an ivy will adorn a splendid oak; a true woman has a power, some thing peculiarly her own, in her moral influence, which, when duly developed, makes her queen over a "wide realm of spirit. But this she can possess only as her powcra r.re cultivated. Cultivated womeu wield tho scaptro of authority over the world at largo. Wherever a cultivated woman dwells bo suro that theie yon will find refine ment, moral power aud life in its highest form. For a woman lo bc cnltivatcd sho must begin early; the days of girlhood are trausitory and fast fleeting, and girls arc women be fore wo know it, in these rapid limes. Every girl has a certain station to oc cupy in this life, some one placo to fill, stud often sho makes her own sta tion by her capacity to crcato and fill it. Tho beginning influences the end. Ladies' Home Journal. Papa Getting In His Work. "Etheliuda darlinr ." murmured thn enraptured yonng man, "this is the hanniest moment of mv life. I camn here this evening, hoping, yet fearing 1 could not put it olt any longer. I feel that I must know mv fate. The susuense was killini? me. Bnt n-jw T swear it by this lovely head resting so contutingiy on my shoulder, by the kiss on vour sweet lit)?. I lint what was Unit clicking uo:se I heard just tnen?" "Nolbinc Waller, nothinrr but n.ina. He's a lawyer you know, but ho amuses himself with all sorts of queer fad. He's practicing on us with his Kodak. Go on, Walter, dear. What were you abont to swear" Ths American Girl. Au Enclish novel bv a mnch-nd- mircd writer contains thn fnllntrimr description of the Americau girl: "j. no cold-blooded, cut-throat Ameri can girl, calculating her romance by me yard, bookiug her flirtations by double entry, and marrying at com pound interest, with the head" of a railway president and the heart of an Esquimaux." Well, well ! what Ameri can girl jilted that author and left him out in tho cold? Victory For :i Iu.c:r:uee Ci p.sny. s-. S. CexovKK, Agt., Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Co., of Manistee, Mich.,sajs: "1 had llieiuiintiam twen ty yr.; used crutches ten jcars. ifrum the u u of powerful lir.itnenis my hip and knee had lof nearly all strength, llibbard's Jtheumatic Syrup has cured me, and I wish to herald to all, the merits of this wonderful medi cine." For sale by .1. v . Conn. A Croat Tiling for Helena A dam to develop 20,000 horse power is contemplated across tho Missouri, near Helena. It will be a timber-crib stxucturo 47 feet high and 800 feet long, forming an'impounding reservoir with an area of 429 miles. Tho water will bo taken from above the dam to the turbines by a tunnel 15x17 feet, driven through a rock promontorv. The cost is estimated at $100,000. The power developed is to be transformed into electricity and transmitted to Helena, thirteen miles away. Kxtru Liability to Malarial Infection. Persons whose blood Is thin, digestion weak and llwr sluggish, arc extra-liable to the attacks of iual.iruil disease. The most trifliug exposure may, under such condi tions, infect a system which, if lie.il thy, would resLst the miasmatic taint. The only way to secure immunity from malaria in lo calities where IMs prevalent, is to tone and legulate the system hy Improving; weakened digestion, enriching tho binoJ, and giving a wholesome impetus to hslry secretion. These results are accomplished by nothing .so effectively as Hosteller's Stomach Bit ters, which long experience lias proved to he the mast reliable safegirird against fever and ague aud kindred disorders, as well as the best remedy for them. The Bitters are. moreover, an excellent invig orant of tho organs of urination", and an active depurent, eliminating from tho blood thoc acid impurities which originate ilieu matic ailments. , John Baymond of Athol, Mass., has gathered from his hens 18,000 eggs so far this year and raised 473 chickens, and his-wife, besides attending to an extensive dairy business, has sold sixty canary birds of her own raising. 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 .1. W. Conn's' dmg store, opposite Occident hotel, Astoria. !H)0. The Stanford UnlTersity. Over 250 men are busily employed at present about the Stanford, Jr., university buildings at Palo Alto. A report was published lately that all work was to be stopped by order of Senator Stanford, but Ariel Lathrop says there 13 no truth in this report, work being pushed as rapidly as pos sible. Every effort is now being made io gectuo nne lour-story dormitory under roof befor the rains begin. The foundations of the second dormitory building have been laid, but work on the upper walls will have to wait at present. The six school buildings grouped around the main quadrangle aro all done, except interio'r finishing, and this will rest until Senator Stanford's return. The fittings of the various rooms will depend very largely on tho instruction to which they are to be devoted. Tho usual and necessary furnishings, for example, for a chemistry or mathemat ics classroom are different from those which a professor of literature or phil osophy would desire. This distinct ness of equipment is likely to be much more pronounced in the various branches of technical instruction to which tha new Palo Alto institution will bo very largely devoted. On their present trip abroad it is understood that Senator and Mrs. Stanford are giving much time to visiting various universities, and in advising with dts tinguished scholars concerning the carrying out of tho project here. It is generally expected that tbe university will be regularly opened for instruc tion in September of next year, al though present plans may not all have been fully completed by that time. S. F. Bulletin. &- Lights and Shadows. Last evening nt tho opera house this lino six-act melodrama was pre sented to a good audience by Joseph Grismcr, Phoebe Davies, aud a capital company. Tho play is intensely in teresting from first to last, and every character was well sustained. Tho plot is deep and of such a nature as to hold tho interest of the audienco through tho entiro piece. Many in teresting poiuts aro presented and well received. It is a nlav fnr'hp- yond tho nveragc and well worth wit nessing. At a mcetimr of woolfrrownrn nf Columbns on tho 13th iustant, ex- Longressmnu uouverse, a protection ist Democrat, said: "Major.McIunley is too great a man to permit to retire to private life, and I think that the woolgrowers ot his district ought to see to it that he is not retired, and the pledges that were made by woolmen from year to year, that they would carry this question to the ballot-box, OUSht now to ba narripd nnf:. Tn mv judgment Major McKinley has worked in ht-iuiuu uuu one ot season lor tne wool industry." Converse has always been a wheelhorso of OhioDemncrnnv and his support cannot but bo of great value to iuclionley. it is re freshincr to see a man of his nllifv shaking off party shackles for the goon oi nis country- A PREMIUM TO SUBSCRIBERS. A Liberal Offer to Old nnd New Sub scriber;. Either Daily or Weekly. Attention is directed.to the extraor dinary premium offer for The As TORT.vx which is advertised on the fourth page. A complete set of Dickens' works is offered with tho Weekly Astoioax for 2.75. A com pleto unabridged set of Dickens in twelve volumes for75 cents additional is an extraordinary offer when one considers tho extraordinary amount of readimr matter offered. Thisofrnn?j extended to old subscribers who re new their subscriptions, as well as new ones. The Mammoth Encyclopedia is another premium which is offered on the same terms as above. For a de scription of this rare offer scoYidver tisement on tho fourth page. To oH subscribers who send 2 for a new subscriber to the weekly, will be sent twenty-five novels to be selected from a large list to bo published very shortly- Or, if the old subscriber sends S2.75 ho will receive the novels and the new subscriber will get either of the premiums above offered wlifoh Iia may select. To those who pay forii year's subscription to Tnu Daily Mokxccg AsToniAX f&r.oue year in ad vauco S7 either of tho above premi ums will bo given postage free. Those who prefer, iustead of tho above pre miums, can havo a copy of Washing ton living's "Astoria,'" a beautifully printed book ot 698 pages. This book needs no other xecqmmendation than the fact that Washington Irving' is tho author. This is an nnusually good opportunity to get a good newspaper and a good library for Very little money. It is worth looking "after. Bead Ihe advertisement on the fourth page. Symptoms of Consumption; WlI.T.IAM J. SnAJlPIjES,PORT OltAJI, Mourns Co., N. J., writes : "My business is that of sharpening mine drills and 1 am mush exposed to smoke and gas. About three years ago 1 began to have a bad cough, with con siderable indigestion and pains in my chest. My physician told me I had svmntnnis or rnnsiiinntirm iXv t lx ! vice of my father, an old friend of iiiA.i)iiETus i HjiiS. i coHimenceu using that valuable remedy. By the time I had got through tho second box 1 began to pass a very disagreeable humor or nns. T homin tn Jmnrnvn iwi- rapidly after this, nnd grew stronger uimuutiti uvuli iiuy. .my cougn is now well. I sleep well at night and have no more indigestion." The first railroad office started on Broadway was in the interest of tho Michigan. Southern railroad, back in 1S53. William M. Hall, who started it, has just celebrated his golden wed ding, A. nrrap ol laper Saves Iler T-ire It was just an ordinary scrap of wrap ping paper, but it saved her life. She was in the last stages of consumption, told by her physicians that she was in curable and could live only ashort time: she weighe I less than seventy pounds. On apiece of wrapping paper she read of Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a sample bottte; it helped her. she bought a large bottle, it helped her more, bought another and grew better fast, continued its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy, plump, weighing W0 pounds. For fuller Iiarttcnlars send stamp to V. II. Cole, )ruggist. Fort Smith. Trial bottles of this wonderful Discovery Free at J. V. Conn's Drugstore. FASHIOX XOTES. For the Benefit and Information of Lady 4 Headers. Sleeveless jackets grow in favor. , Sleeves are made of accordion plaits. Tho coming tint in dyed hair is ma hogany. "Fish net" is now available for veil ing. Dolls that can turn somersaults are in fashion. Tha very slim girl is fashionable. Detroit Free Press. Fancy effects in hosiery aro worn with evening costume. Full trimmuirs still nnnear on the majority of new bodices. Brown is named as the color which will find most favor this autumn. Silk muslin with polka spots is used for underskirts as well as dresses. Onlv ladies with nerfpefc rnmnlov- ions should dare to wear palo green. Some of the new tea gowns are ornamented with belts of polished ivory. Leather trimmings studded with steel tor gilt will be worn on winter garments. Gray is to be well worn this winter in combination with soft yellow and gold braid. Valuable laco that must not be cut si flounced on to plain skirts a little slantingly. The "Charles IX" shoo is of black satin aud ha3 Chantilly laco inserted over the top. A ring that fits any finger is out. Tho fickle-minded youth calls it a great scheme The new stylo of mourning paper has only a black border on tho upper leit-nand corner. The petticoat should be made of sine, jnst two inches shorter than tho dress. iV. Y. Press. A rnfflc around the bottom of the skirt is tho distinguishing feature of all tho new gowns. Steel trinkets set off with - nrfifimnl pearls arc likely to bo the rage in Lon don next winter. Tailor gowns are to bo made very plainly with velvet or silk sleeves and narrow panel at the side. New veils measure threo yards in length and aro looselv twisted around large hats. Zv. T. Press. Tho evening gown should bo of the color of tho lady's complexion if possi ble. Pit Hade IpJi ia Record. Tho new gauzo veil is a coquetry to a pretty girl and a chapity to an ugly one. Ph iladelph ia Reco rd. The girl who sprays herself with much cologne is being called a "daudy ette.'' Ph iladelpli ia Record. Leather waistcoats aro tho freak of the moment, and aro exceeding dur able. PA iladelph ia Reco rd. Square-toed shoes for men are to bo revived, and patent leathers aro to be worn more generally than ever before. Many women wear tightly clinging gowns Nind bodices that mould the figure. Few women look well in them. N. Y. Sun. Gold watches hang promiscuously and temptingly from tho chatelaine of tho Chestnut-street girL Philadel phia Record. The new bonnets Rre of medium sizes or else very low, small shapes, to bo worn with tho hair coiled on the napo of the neck. Shot-volvet ribbons arraigned in standing loops, choux, coquilles and points aro noted upon many French bonnets and round hats. The useful and comfortable blouse waist and its kindred jersey bodice aro such useful articles of -wear that their reign is likely to be prolonged indefinitely. All kinds of Irish laco are coming into favor, and bridal dresses for youthful ladies aro trimmed effectively in Limerick. Guipure and point de Gene hnve by no means gone out. "If you wish to see what men and women will do in the way of conform ity." says a modem nhilosonher. H ak a European hat for your subject of meditation. I dare say there are' zi,uuu.uuu people nt this moment each wearing one of these hats, not for their own special satisfaction, bnt to mease the rest." As an indication of the fashions of the future, it may be hinted that thick striped woolens with softened shaded effects are being prepared for the fall and early winter; also, sofc woolen stuff of all kinds with fringed boiders, or a piece of cloth with interwoven stripes in Astrakhan black on a color. iV. Y. Sun. rEETTY DKES3 FOR A PRINCESS. I will describe a simple and pretty dress made for Princess Marguerite, tho ftancce of tho Due d'Orleans. It was blue and white striped foulard, studded with small flowers on the white stripe. The bodfeo was made like a blouse, and fastened on tho left side under tho arm; tho sleeves were gigot; the collar, cuffs and waistband were plaited blue fonlard. From the waistband long sash ends fell at the back. Tho skirt was plain in front and on the hip3, and the plaits thrown to the back, forming the fan shape, as nearly all skirts are now made. Lon don (jueen. THE NEW SXLK DIiOUSE. . -Among the autumn novelties aro silk blouses mado in tartan or Persian stripes. Blouses of thi3 kind worn above black skirts of silk or wool make bright and pretty house toilets for these dull days. Tho blouses aro rather full, but do not spread like the old variety, and a fringed rnche car ried around the collar and down tho front makes a becoming finish. The now silk blouse, unlike its cambric compeer, is not to be turned inside the slrirtband. The straight beltband secured by a bucklo js brought to a point and fastened there somo inches below tho waist. A popular silk plaid for a blouso shows a mixture of black and green in shaded tones, with a line of gold or red between. iY. Y. Post. ::irlilcus Amies Salve. Tite Best STaive in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rhe um, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. 1 1 i.s guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money re funded. Price 25 cents per box. For sale by .1. W. Conn. PRICE FIVE CENTS Xelllo Bly's Fortune. Nellie Bly has made her fortune from her tour around the world. In the first place, she got a good salary from the paper, and her lecture tour brought her in just S9.500. A.Brook lyn real estate man gave her a lot in that city, and she was presented with another lot in Iron fiifcv. Tpnn Thoaa lots are worth at least 1.500, and so her net profits up to date havo been at least S13.000. Tn nrtrtiK (n t;a 10,000 copies of her book havo been issued, and a second edition will soon be published. i I, .i i The Detroit Journal enva- A youusr farmer from tho star a of Wnai ington has paid a handsome tribute io me .uetroit police. Ho was seduced from his far western iinmotn "Woto-VAtI- by the hopes of buying counterfeit money wiinwnicn to cheat his friends, neighbors, and tho community gener ally. Instead, ho Of PnnrSA irna him self deservedly cheated out of his own umu-cuiiicu acivm-p,. xut no did not apply to the oolioa of Nave Vnrt.- ha. cause ho didn't think it would do'any jooa. xseing a former resident of Michisran he conelndoi tn 11 home police industry, and waited un- uino reacned tins city before com plaining. His "cnmnlflint." nrill Via nf long standing; propably life-long." The Union Pacific pays the North ern Pacific 375 for tho uso of tho let ter's docks in Tacoma, its water sup ply, rental of tho port captain's office and a man to catch and cast off the head Hues. In return tho Union Pa cific steamers have the right of way at the docks even over tho Northern Pa cific, Puget Sound & Alaska boats. This will all be changed after tho Union Pacific gets its trunk line into Tacoma, when it will have docks of its own. Tho now Union Pacific steamer Victorian will be brought around to the Souud sometime this month. A curious matrimonial custom pre vails in Brittany. On certain fete days tho youug ladies appear in red petticoats, with white or yellow bor ders around them. The number of borders signifies the portion the father is willing to give his daughter. Each white band, representing silver, denotes a hundred franc3 per annum, and each yellow band in dicates gold, and betokens a thousand francs a year. Thus, a young man who sees a face that pleases him has only to glance at the trimmings of tho petticoats to learn tho amount which will dower tho wearer. Papers that print lottery advertise ment have been advised by the Lonisiana Lottery company of a plan by which they can avoid conflict with tho new law which shnt3 them out from the mails. Papers to go by mail aro printed without the advertisement and marked"mail edition." Papers for local distribution are marked "home edition." This rule has already been adopted bvtholjonisinnn papera which print the lottery adver tisements. Honrv Savaero Landor. a mffvl young artist, and grandson of Walter aavago .Landor, tbo poet and enbe, is now traveling aud painting m tho in terior of Japan. Although nnlv twenty-four years old, ho has visited this country, Alaska, Egypt and much of the continent, and hones dnrinor thn next three years to spend somo time in oioena, uorea, Uhma and Australia. Then ho will exhibit his work in Lon don. A Michijr.m mother, who hv profit. effort had procured a nair of thn nnw French gloves thirty-two buttons v.ta aiuimsuu uuu Homewiiai oisgustea the Other dav to find tiiem nnnn linr little son's legs. The shaver had put tnem on ior leather leggings, and they mado him a crood nair. nomin tr well up above his knee3. Hannibal Hamlin, thn vnf nmn ilfmnn politician and ex-Vice-President of tho United States, is an inveterate clubman and card player, and enters into a game ot winsc or auction pitch wnu tis mucn zest as if he was a col lege sophomore. Mrs. Colt, widow of tho inventor of tho revolver, has several millions of money and lives in the handsomest residence at Hartford, Conn. Sho has out of her own resources erected a handsome Episcopal church near her home. Important Ftoticc. Now is the time to test tho best Ca tarrh, Bronchitis, Asthma and Rheu matic Cure in the City of Astoria. Fifty packages of LcSoy's West India Catarrh Cure, the regular price of which is $5.00, can be had from J. V. Conn, the druggist, at 1.00 per package, thereby saving $4.00. This is u preparation warranted to cure. Call and get a package, as they go fast. Remember the place Conn's, oppo site the Occident Hotel. S. Brown & Co., Proprietors. Los Anceles, Cal. P. O. Box 802. Blumaur-Frank Drug Co., Portland. The census gives San Francisco 297,990 population, but to this will be S added about 5,000 sailors, fishermen, etc., who aro new at sea, but belong there. The census authorities havo them on tbeir list and will count them ADVICE TO MOTIIEES. Mrs. Winslow's SooTirrNa Syrup should always be used for children teething. It soothes the child, softens the gumsallays all pain, cures wind cnolic, and is tho best remedy fordiar-rhoea.Twenty-fiva cents a bottle. "Mother Goose" was Elizabeth Fos ter born in 1665. She married Isaac Goose in 1693, and died in Boston at the ago of ninety-two years. The first edition of her songs was printed in 1716 by her son-in-law. CURES PERMANENTLY BRUISES and WOUNDS, Fell From a Telegraph. Pole. t t. j, ,. ,Ga Dofc-. Sepl&, 1888. I was badly bruised and strained bviftfell from telegraph pole; couldn't turn fn be Doctors did no gocd. Tried St. Jacobs Oil J II cured me. w. II. SCANNELll. Tho Kiclcor qutwlttefl. could wecES,Dutst.jacobsOil cured mo completely' L. LANQDON. At Druggists and Dealeks. THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO., BatUflNn), M -- . JL -"- "'w U4Vfi BUilt S?JABS OIL