TELE DAILY ASTOEIAN, ASTOSIA, TUESDAY MOliNTNG, FEBRUARY Hi, 18J3. ABOUT -THE C1T1 Council meets tonight. Circuit court mra In -today. 1j. Q. Carpenter appeared la court yes terday. Campbell, Trullinger, and Fulton,"-wel-couiu home. Let us awear oft talking about a railroad uurinu Lnt. ... Judffe McBrlde gets through business with a rush. , . . The Jury at the circuit were excused . until Thursday at 10 o'clock. Messrs. Bears and Adams represent the Portland bar at the circuit court. Let the city councllmen deprive them selves of long meetings during Lent. Judge Milton Elliot came up from San Francisco to attend court yesterday. Will tho city fathers get through' busi ness this evening as quickly as they did last session? Why will a man wear a light hat all winter and don black headgear at the first sign ot gentle spring? Nothing was done yesterday In the case against L. G. Carpenter. It will probably be acted or. this morning. Both the circuit judge and the prose cuting attorney are recovering from sick spells. Luckily, the criminal cases are not numerous. ,... There are five or six scarlet fever caseB In Pendleton, three of them being In the family of Dr. E. F. Guyon, whose wife and two children are sufferers from the disease. A review of the field of battle, after the smoke has cleared away, reveals the fact that Astoria has fared about as well as any city In Oregon at the hands of the legislature. Court street school is not forgetting patriotism from Its list of work done. A special Washington-Lincoln program Is being prepared for next Friday. ' It prom ises to be quite Interesting. Can it be true that rubber boots and mackintosh coats have gone from us for a season? If spring isn't here she Isn't far off, and, like an overdue steamer, may now be looked any day. Ex-Captain McKevltt, of the police force, was arrested yesterday and placed under bonds to appear this morning be fore Judge Cleveland, to answer to the charge, of asasult and battery preferred against him on Saturday. Word came to Salem on Saturday that Daniel Durbln, at his home on Howell prairie, had drank a cup of carbolic acid, supposing It was. water. He was thrown into Intense agony and expired before medical assistance reached htm. He was an old resident, about sixty years of age. It Is believed that Ed Hallock, for sev eral years head net rack man for A. Boooth & Co., has been appointed captain of police. The new officer will doubtless Mil the position with credit to himself and the city. He Is one of the most trustwor thy and honorable young men In the com munity, and. has hosts of friends to wish him success. The following officers of Astoria Divis ion No. 1, Uniform Rank, Knights of Pythias, were duly installed last night at the lodge room: Sir Knight Captain, A. A. Cleveland; S. K. Lieutenant, H. A. Smith; S. Kc Herald, T. H. Loughery; S. K. Recorder, E. C. Hughes; S. K. Treas urer, C. H. Cooper; S. K. Guard, M. Ol sen; and 8. K. Sentinel, W. McCrosky. The Ice which has been floating down the river since yesterday, say's The Dalles Chronicle, all stops at Crate'B point, and Is jiow plied up there as high as the Uma tilla house. The river there makes a sharp turn, and as It Is frozen solid from there to the tunnel, tho Ice Is hindered from going farther. .It makes a very beautiful sight. Ice ls;,stUI . floating by the point In huge mftBsej.- j- . Here Is something from the Hlllsboro Independent. The local authorities might act like Captain Cuttle, and "when found, j make a note of." "The school authorities In the Hlllsboro district require a clean bill of health fcom families having been afflicted with a con tagious disease .before the children will be readmltted.to school. While this seem ingly appears1-to be a hardship, yet tak ing the whole community Into account it Is a wise regulation." The heavy fall of snow about Nehalem played sad havoc with barns and other coverings in this valley. At least a dozen buildings have collapsed within the past week In' thld neighborhood. The vast quantity of snow which fell was sufficient to crush ordinary buildings while It was dry, and since It has begun to pack and receive the occasional rains which have fallen when the temperature is high enough, it has become very dangerous. Pendleton business men are preparing M 1 . .1 for the organization or an asauirnmuu w ho Irnnnrn fln the commercial - club. Its object Is to promote a better acquaintance and harmony of purpose on an quraui f nnhiir interest. One of the principal subjects for consideration will be that of securing more favorable rreigni rates from the railroads. Since Spokane's vic tory in securing a general reduction In freight rates, the business men of Pendle ton believe they can accomplish some thing In the same direction. Bids for furnishing 100,000 tons of rock on board of government barges for the Jetty at the mouth of the Columbia river have been submitted as follows: Max well & Huber, Spokane, 63 cents per ton; Daniel Kern, Portland, 65 cents; Per ry Hlnkle, 58 cents; W. Jacobsen, 65 cents per ton. Fifteen bids in all were received, those for the storehouse ranging from tl.796.by Paquet & Smith, to $3,300,. and those for the wharf ranging from $11,900 down to $9,925, by Fastabend & Sanderson, of Astoria. The two lowest bids were re commended for acceptance. The men employed at Bays ft Jeftery's quarry on the Barnes road near Portland, some time ago, noticed the heads of two Angora goats protruding from a snow bank on the side of a hill about 200 feet above the road. The poor creatures were nearly Starved, having been completely buried until the snow melted off suffi ciently to expose their heads. The quarry men shoveled out a path to them and dug them out, and Mr. Bates took them home and put them in his stable. It Is evident that they have an owner some where, and he U requested to come to the front and get his property. Harrison Hale was arrested and brought before Justice Hallock Tuesday at Pendle ton charged with assault with Intent to kill. A week ago last $aturday Hale had a row with Chaa. Matteson at the bitter's place on Itheai creek.- Both were tinder the Influence of liquor, and In the melee. says the Heppner Record, Hale drew a knife, striking Matteson with It several times and inflicting three wounds over the right shoulder blade. The wounds were not of a very serious nature, however. and after hearing some evidence, pro and con, Justice Hallock considered It about an equal thing on both sides and dis missed the case. The festive burglar has not yet ceased from "burgling" In Tortland, A day or two Blnce he took advantage of the ab sence of the family of Thomas McCarthy to enter the residence on Davis Btreet, and carry off Mr. Davis' best suit, a lot of Jewelry, etc. The adjoining house Is vacant, and the burglar probably laid In wait there for tho opportunity he found, as In one of the rooms Mr. McCarthy discovered some evidences of a man hav ing tarried there. Mrs. McCarthy no ticed a man prowling cbout the place the day of the robbery, which took place between 5 and t p. m., while she had gone out on an errand. A woman's foot was found on Thursday by George Bump, county assessor of Is land county, while duck hunting on Use less bay, .near Seattle. Mr. Bump and seVeral companions were walking along the beach whenthey made the discovery. The foot had apparently been torn from the leg, Just above the ankle, as Indicated by threads of flesh hanging to it. On the foot was a lady's No. 3 shoe, and when this was cut and removed only the skin came with it, showing the flesh in a good state of preservation. Diligent search was made for other remains, but without success. It Is not known that anyone has been lost In that vicinity. One of the $2 currency notes changed to a $10 note by Parker, In Portland, who was recently, sent to the penitentiary, was passed on the conductor of a City Suburban cor a few days ago. It Is prob able that there are quite a number of them In circulation, and people handling money should look out for them. While a person unaccustomed to handling notes might be deceived by one of these, al most any one would notice the change at a glance. The number 10 pasted on over the 2 should attract any one's atten tion, as It Is of a sickly greenish-gray color and quite different from the color on any bank bill. A person who gets fooled on one of these changed bills will never take another. The Salem Capital Journal remarks that "It was a corrupt legislature In this re spect: That nearly half a million dollars of appropriations were looted out of the public treasury before the legislature ever met. Deals were made by which an asy lum was given to one part of the state, a normal school to another, a Jute mfll to another, etc., etc., and . these deals bound men to vote by whole sections, by groups and counties. Tew men were left free from the clutch of boodle in either body to vote upon measures of general Interest upon their merits. The Willamette and Columbia rivers were left In the grasp of transportation monopolies while members fell under the fatal sway of appropriation boodle. The port of Astoria has not yet been troubled with the conflicts now raging so bitterly on Puget Sound and In San Fran cifoco between union and non-union sail ors, but the result of such fights was shown vividly on Saturday night when the schooner D. B. Leeks arrived In from California. She had o non-union or "scab" crew on board, and half of them wore thoroughly green hands, two never hav ing been to sea before. One of the latter, a young fellow 22 years old, C. O. Clark, became heartily sick of his venture the day after leaving Son Francisco. ' On reaching the mouth of the river, the schooner tacked about for eleven days. On the sixth day Clark could stand the strain no longer, and threw himself over board. He was never seen again. . - The trouble from washouts at bridges near Hay station, on the Spokane branch of the Union Pacific, will, It is reported, continue for a day or two longer. A few bents In bridges Nos. 14 and 16 have been washed away. Five carloads of ties were ent up Friday from Pendleton, and a pile driver and piling were , dispatched to the scene from Bridal Veil, via Uma tilla to repair the damage. A train ar rived In Pendleton on the branch, at 1:40 o'clock Saturday with with passengers who left Spokane last Thursday and were delayed by the damaged bridges. They were transferred by team and wagon around the obstruction a distance of half a mile or more. This train was brought In by Conductor Frank Wills. Transfers will be made each way until the bridge is repaired, and trains will run regularly. Everything Is clear on the main line of the road. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Shearer, says the Dalles Chronicle, are visiting relatives and old home friends In Nlcholvllle, New York. His consignment of wool has now arrived In New York. Mr. Shearar shipped from The Dalles 275 tons of wool via the Columbia river to Astoria by the Regula tor line, where It was placed on the ship Tlllie E. Starbuck, which sailed from As toria October 19. 1892, going via Cape Horn to New York, where It arrived safe ly January 31, 1833, In care of Denny, Rice &Co. It is to be transferred to New York and takes three ships of the Metro politan line to take It to Boston. This in the first year Mr. Shearar ever sent his wool to Boston by the water route. The distance is 14,800 miles; time, three months; rate paid per ton, $28. He has formerly sent his wool to Boston by the Union Fraetflo railway. Dlt'.ancf, ,362 miles; time, one month; price paid per ton. $62. The wool la insured for $75,000. After It Is sold they will return to their Oregon home. Complaint was made by a gentleman a day or two since that a bank In Portland had paid him half the yalue of a check In silver. He did not want so much white metal and remonstrated, but .he was told that It he wished gold he must pay a fP)? (ngMMMlilnt UIOlPoi'jdeK The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia; No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years tr9 Standard discount. .. He Imagined ' that the silver question had come to a head right tn Portland, and was much dissatisfied.- On inquiry It was found that there la no su perfluity of silver here In fact there Is hardly enough and, the bonks are some times obliged to go out and hunt up ell ver. At on of the principal banks It was stated that out of $000,000 on hand there was not $500 In sliver, counting In all the dimes and nickels, and other bankers said they had no more silver than was necessary, and never offered It In any great amount-unless It was asked for. The particular band above mentioned may have been overstocked with silver, but if so, it is probably, the only one tn the city so glutted. Mrs. Charles Norton died near Yaqulna ten days ago under very suspicious cir cumstances, says the Corvallls Times. Her husband Is a brakeman on tha Union Pacific railroad with headquarters at Walla Walla. Two weeks before the death of his wife he went to Yaqulna to attend the bedside of a sick child. Up to the day she died Mrs. Norton was In her usual health. Sometime in the forenoon she became suddenly 111 and In a few hours waa cold In death, having; died In convulsions. Her husband was alone In tne room witn ner ana tne nrsc informa tion the other persons In tha building were afforded concerning her condition was the announcement of her death. When they went to dress her for the grave a newly born six months' babe was found In the bed. A physician well Informed In the symptoms attending Mrs. Norton's death, states that they were the same Invariably manifested In arsenic poisoning. NofTon's real name la Mason- field, and his reasons for sailing under an alias are unknown. Sufficient sus picion attaches to the affair that Deputy Sheriff Martin came out last Thursday, and Is said to have returned with In structions to exhume the body and cause an examination of the contents of the stomach. The "Y"s" have snent a rood manv do! lars this winter In flowers and fruit for the Hospital., and in clothing, etc.. for several poor families. Now the young ladies need more money to be able to carry on this- Work, and you can help mem oy attending tne uoioniai Lvee next Thursday evening. Only 50 cents for Dotn entertainment ana supper. Take our advice and have voud nhotna taken at Crows Gallery, the only place In the city where you can get first class worn. IOOOBOXES RAILROAD TIES? No! Neckties-In puffs tecks and four-in-hand, plain or fig ured, in silks, satins or silk crepes: these goods sell at re tail for 75c. $1 and $1.25; but you can take your choice for only 50c at HERMAN WISE'S, ' The Reliable Clothier and Hatter. THE PILOT BILL Despite the opposition of the U. P., Campbell's Pilot Bill has passed, and once more Our pilots will be en abled to make a decent living. Prosperity for one class it to the benefit of all; there's no gain in Bending money oat ot town, or by patronizing concerns who bring tbeir-cld trash here and take our good money away from tie. If you believe in building up your town, trade with your home merchants, who stand by you in hard, time as well as when times are good. 7 You cannot possibly do better than by trading with the Reliable (Jlothier, Herman Wise) because his stock is first-class and bis prices are Tery reasonable. . WAJtEUOVSB STORAGE. IM FIRE PROOF IRON BUILDINO CORNER AMorand Oluey Hired, JiU((Ulre of i'ishor lirothors. WAHTKO. AN'ffcl). A BOY AHOUT 14 YEARS OLD. Apply AutohiaN ottico. TO MKXT. rnwoiMKuu HOOVS, KITKN1HE1 com X plrte lor houwkeepniK, moderate rent to uio.iKiih party, uuj Auuuabieeu . rOOMS r'OR LIGHT HOUctEKr-Rl'INti li Ground flour, nuud location. Ibijulre hi MlSCtLLLAXEO VS. YOUNG & LKWI3, AGENTS AND DEALERS In real estate aud Urcgou Flue Lands, bit ovcoua ureew City lot and acreage, Tongue Point property, n propony, mi on eaey K-rtns. 10-acre Irult and chicken tracts close to town, coesp. Best thing on the market Howell & Ward GROCERS. ASTORIA W00I) YARD O. & D. R. CAMPBELL, Pro'rs. t3uoresora to A. F. Kragor) . Dealer In Fir. Marie. Alder. Hemlock, oh, Spruce Limbs and Hay. Wood cut or uncut, orders promptly nilen. leiepuime . 47. runt inree nines. IexT otters nt. liunullnii ei uo.'s cur. B6C01IG and Cass, or at Wood Yuul, COLUMBIA TRANSFER CO., WILLIAM WILSON, Prop. FEED - AND SALE STABLE General Express and Delivery lluslness. Office lit Olney street. Ktahlis foot of West Hliiui at, Astoria, leupnoiie o. . CP. UPSHUR, SHIPPING and COMMISSION Astoria, Oregon. THE : OREGON : BAKERY . A. A. CLEYELAKD, Prop. Good Bread Cakes and Pastry, None but the Best Materials used. Satisfaction Guaranteed Customers Bread delivered In any part of the city PICKED UP. A new scow, forty feet lone, fifteen foot beam. New anchor and line. Own er can have same by proving property and paying expenses. Henry Pise. Knappa, Or., Feb. 24th, 1803. ASTORIA TRANSFER CO. . FRANK DAMANT, Propr. Livery, Feed and Sale Stable, Express and delivery business. ET YOUR COAL AND HAY FROM FRISK ' DAMAN r. Beit Walls Knd coal delivered. 1.0O. Call at Ui Third street. Telephoue 12. Foard & Stokes aiTOOERO Dealers In Glassware, Crockery. Ship Supplies, louxreo. Wines and Fine Whliklre. Fine leas nd Coffee a Hwclalty. Tbe Finest Display of Fiul:s In Hie Citv, Frenh on Every Steamer. Corner of Third aud West EUutn ttreeti. FISHER BROTHERS SHIP CHANDLERS. Heavy and Bhslf HARDWARE 'Carry la rick Wagons and V ehicles, Farm Machinery, Paints. 'His, Varnishes, Loggers' Kutpllea, t-'aUbank's Mcala, Pour aud Miooowa. pnovioionG, " FLOUR and It I IX FEED. AST02IA. - - nnwKtf, ROSS, HICCIHG & CO., BUTCHERS - AND - GROGEES Astoria and Upper Astoria. Sell V 1 . rr 3 J i ( CHOICE FRESH AND SALT 'MEATS, Sugar Cared H ims ard The World's Pair Directors Have 5,000,000 Souvenir Half Dollar Coins in their treasury, the gift of the American people by Act of Congress. The patriotic and historic features of -these Coins and their limited number, compared with the millions who want them our population is 66,000,000 have combined to create so great a demand for these World's Fair Souvenir Coins that they aw already quoted at large premiums. . Liberal offers from speculators, who wish to absorb them and reap enormous profits, have been rejected for the reason that This is the People's Fair We Are the People's Servants-- and a divided sense of 'duty confronts us We need $5,000,000 to fully carry out our announced plans, and We have decided to deal direct with the people To whom we are directly responsi ble among whom an equitable distribution of these National heirlooms should be made. The World's Fair Offer to the American- People: That none of our plans for the people's profit be curtailed we must realize from the sale of 5,000,000 Souvenir World's Fair Fifty cent Silver Coins the sum of $5,000,000. This means $1.00 for each Coin, a much smaller sum than the people would have to pay for them if purchased through an indirect medium. Every patriotic man, woman and child should endaavor to own and cherish one of these , Coins, as they will be valuable in future years a cherished object of family pride. Remember that only 5,000,000 Coins must be divided among uu,uuu,uuu ueopie. 1 nese ioins . could be sold at a high premium to.Syndicates, but we have enough confidence in the people to keep the price at a Dollar for each Coin, as this will make us realize $5,000,000 the sum needed to open the Fair's gates on the people's broad plan. HOW tO Get to vour neares Bank and subscribe for as many tl r co'ns vou need fr vour family and friends. These InelrflinS Sub-Agents of the World's Columbian Exposition wiH give you their receipt for your money, as delivery of these coins will not begin before December. There is no expense to you attend ing the distribution of the Souvenir Coins, as we send them to your local bank. If for any reason it is inconvenient for you to subscribe send Postofficeor Express Money Order or Registered Letter for as many coins as you wish with infractions how to send them to you, to TREASURER WORLDS COLUMBIAH EXPOSITION. CHICAGO, ILLS. Ordefi will t Filled In th Order In which they r gclvd. J". O-. Nioml, Manufacturing Jeweler Wa'ches a Specialty. Solid and Plated Silver Ware. UMBRELLAS That can be taken apart and pocked lu trunks. 466 Third Street. Astorl, Oregon. JEFF'S 11ESTAURANT -IS THE Bon Ton Ton Restaurant in ths Town (And tha Finest on the CowU Dinner Parties, Banquets a Special! 1 Tk Flaest TTIats tad Liquors. CAR HAH AU & CO Bucr-pKsors to I. W. Caw, Importer and Wholesale and iUUtil Uutiof lu GENERAL LIEXLCIIAXIDISE Cor. Second and Cass Btreet, ASTOEIA, ' . OB BOON North 'Pacific Brewery JOHN KOPP, Proprietor. Bohemian - Lager - Beer And XX Torter. All orders promptly attertded to. Safes, Fireproof. TMv eslobfated Alpine Hfc kept In stof k si Ihe 4r-i, Tlilrtl MU, Ueitl fctatani. -r-ractd asg'Kid as tkel-(t. 'iermj yciy sy Pino Teas and Coffees, . Table Delicacies, Domestic and Tropical Fruits, Vegetables, etc. Bacon, Game, Poultry, etc. World's Fair Souvenir Coin for a Dollar.' AUG. DJNIELSCN, GAr.lPLEROOr-lG 7incs, Liquors and Cigars. A (font tut the GUION Btoanifthlp Line and Uia ruiNUVALLA HteaniHlilp Line, direct. Also, a(Mit (or "Hveutsk Trlbunea" Slid -vrjHka AmerlkHiiHren." (lorner ot Water aud West Ninth - Streets Astoria, Oregon. M. M. Hunter, J. D.Mti-xens. HUNTER &. MERGERS. Proprietors of tlio Portland Butchering Co.'s Markets In Astoria. Dealers In alt kinds ol Fresh and Salt Meats 0'irnM-P"wid and Benton stive!.. Uuiwr Third aud Wot fcinluU streets. Shipping tr.-idfl a Specialty. Terms Cash. Fam Uiux, hotels and n-staurauls supplied. H. B.PARKER PBALKli IS Mine. Eilck, Kami, Fire trick. Fire Clay, Cfinent, Mill Feed.Oato.tttraw Hair, Woud Delivered to ttrUcr. DnyiEg, Teanian and Ixprei Eaiiuiei. E0DI3 MID The Largest Stock, Best Quality and Lowest Friees at lh Biisa Tha Goli.oi b-ue.