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About The daily morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1883-1899 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 8, 1894)
THE 1)AIIA ASTORIAN, ASTOKlA, SATURDAY MORNING. . DECEMBER 8, 1804 CLATSOP CITY NOTES. Mr.' Joelah West went to Portland Monday to serve on the grand Jury. C. W. Carnuhan and Dave Morrison are hauling: piles from the beach to kocp until the the coming boom Bhall have created a. market for t'hem. The school board of Clatsop School have recently contracted for the pur chase of a large globe and a micro scope warranted to magnify nine hun dred diameters. The cost of the mi croscope is 75, and the Instrument la Intended for the use of the school and the community. Mr. J. C. Adams has a novel Idea In the way of a fire-ilace. The fire place is In the sitting room of his new house and is large enough so that It has large oven-like cavity behind it. This oven has connection, by means of a register, with the parlor, and will sup- heat for that room as well. Mr. Alex Tagg has recently purchased a ore.im separator and is using it with gratifying success. Mr. West has put In a new churn of much larger Bize than the one he ha been using, and has also a steam en giDe to furnish the motive power. On Saturday evening the Clatsop Lit erary Society will debate the question: "Resolved, That the pen is mightier than the sword." Rev. H. S. Lyman will fill the pulpit of Mr. MoCart next Sunday as Mr. Me- Cart Is absent at Klaskanlne, assisting with revival services. 1 Lu MODERN PHYSICIAN. MY CASTLE IN THE AIR. By David La Costa. From "Home and Country," (New York) for December. If I could go ballooning, And had the time to spare, I'd Journey to discover My castle In the air. It stands, that stately building, Iteyond the yellow moon. Whera tradesmen's bills can never come Not even by balloon. The water-rate collector He eyes its doors in vain, Because its oi3tern runs with, No water, but champagne. Its roof has been constructed So very hlyh and steep, No love-lorn cats can clamber there To frighten gentle sleep. My neighbor's hens can never Djfy the garden wall, Because there are no neighbors Or hen-coops near ait all. So In the garden nodding. In rich profusion grow, Tobacco . trees and cauliflowers. And roses all a-row. O! could I reach my castle, I'd never need to think, I'd niiver need to scribble. And clothe my dreams in Ink. So when I'm not so busy, I'll hire a big balloon, And pail away with I know whom Beyond the yellow moon. FRANKLIN AVENUE GRADE NOTICE. Notice Is hereby given that the Com mon Council of the City of Astoria, propose to establish the grade of Fran: Jin Avenue in the part of the J.y 1.1 n&tUU, (t,I -Ll k unit .....wauwv. by John Adair from the west line of the John Adair Donation Land Claim to the east line of Thirty-fifth Street, at elevations above the base of grades as established by Ordinance No. 71, entitled, "An Ordinance to establish a base of grades for the streets of the City of Astoria," as follows, to-wlit: At the west line of the John Adair Donation Land Claim. 27 feet. . At '-he crossing of franklin avenue with 33d street, 38 feet. At ithe crossing of Franklin avenue with ?th street, 55 feet. At :he crossing of Franklin avenue with ?."th street, 67.4 feet. The grade to be of even elevation throughout the width of the street at any (ne point, and upon a straight or even elevaMon or slope from cross ing ito arESing, and the crossings to ba k;.-el throughout the width of the imter.-iwting streets. And unless a remonstrance signed bj tha owners of three-fourths of the property fronting on said portion of raid street be filed with the Auditor and Police Judge within ten days from the final publica tion ct this notice, to-wlt, on Tuesday, January 1st, 1S!)5, the Common Coun cil will establiFh said grade. Bv order of the Common Council. Attest: K. OSBURN, Auditor and Police Judge. Ailtorta, Oregon, December 7, 1S94. NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. Sealed proposals addressed to H. G. VanDucen, clerk, and endorsed "Pro posals for construction of Astoria water works " with name of party submitting Itf.d, will be received by the Water ComTOlnaion of the City of Astoria, Or egon, until two o'clock p. m. of the 10th day of January, 1896, for the supplying of !ab.r mnd materials for the construc tion of a ompiete system of water works involving the following Items: Diverting works; a gravity conduit con sisting of 7 1-2 miles of 18-lneh wood stave pipe; 3 miles of 18-inoh and one m;i of 11-inch stel riveted pipe; a 6 010,009 gal. reservoir; a masonry lined tnnnel 9"0 feet In length; and a dlstrib ut'r.S system .requiring 28.000 feet of new" riK, S,000 feet of pipe raying. 91 hydrants; gattJ and all appurtenances necessary t.i mek? a complete system. V,,a ar-a nn fil it the OfflcC Of the X v.. Water Commdon. and specifications and form for proposals can oe uuiaiueu by application to the clerk. W. W. PARKER, Chairman. H. G. VAN DITSEN, Clerk. A. L. Adams and R. C. Gemmd, En gineers. Astoria, Oregon, December Mh, 1834. Has X u : .1 ej SLOJBoti! One cent a flow. It J 'id on rui rnttx oy all dre r" . T car's iicirt t-ttopti andisthafceis C3'--C-s- Croc Cor renteo oy all drug- Can, To Whom Thousands of Mm and Women and Children Every where Owe Their Life and Happiness Today, His Reputation Has Made Dartmouth College Famous in Every Town and Village in the Country Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D.f LL. D. Who First Gave to His Profession Paine's Celery Compound, the Wonderful Remedy That Makes People Well. PROF. EDWARD E, PHELPS, Mi D:, LL. Dl crrr.Hnir Ua handful of magniflcenit stateamen and Its military heroes," says the most recent winter upon "th roole owe more to Dartmouth 8 physician-teacher than to any one """iii every walk of life, among the m hniHrt nt Washington, in the homes of the best people In the large cMies, among xne eveiy-uajr in the country, faunilieB in comfortable ., .-.,, ,mtiio ,hnl 'live from hand to mouth and could not, if they witUied, anora tne iBei-v.jj hut an ordinary physician everywhere I have met people 10 wiwin erv compound has been a blessing. Via Vlfo Work Of thlS giant among men, has been often tola snd la ranMlltur 10 nim. ictvu.. -likeness above is probably the best portrait of him yet printed. It was ths world famed discovery of Prof. Phelps of an infallible cure for those fearful ills man. result wom blood Which has endeared the great doti'or to the -wona, ana maue ins m am era in the practice of medicine. Prof, fneips was Dorn m ,uinic.i." and graduated from the military school xt v. v Ta inflJp1 medicine n m wk Qm fVi ftf NpW Ha ven, Conn., and graduated in medicine at Yale. . . . His unusual talent soon Drougiu nm reputaition and pramtlncnco naming his professional brethren. First lie was elected to the professorship of anatomy anjurery in the Vermont University. Next he was a-ivolnted lecturer on ma teria medlca and medical botany In Dartmouth college. The next year he i ... .fiar... n.f ihp ch'Air tnen ; was cavern v.- ; vacated by Prof. Roby, and occupied the chair, tne nioa;. unpi'..i. the country, at the 'time when he lirst formulated his moit remarkably pre scription. In view of the overwhelming testi mony to the value of Palne's relery compound that has recently appeared from men of natlona.1 reputation, the picture of Prof. Pheips Is particularly lniteirestlng. ' Njw York's state treasurer, Hon. Ad dison B. Colvln. F.x-Mlni&ter to Austria, John M. Fran cis. Mlvs Joness Miller. Preldent Cook, of the national teach ers' association. Hon. David P. Toomey, the puollsner ! Jen. J.Jhn A Unlderman, of New f Hon. John Q. Carlisle's private sec- I ,,l-,- .ml -):t1r-rt!r-rl aftrPF. I X lit - "-llli u"-' - - " Miirle TVTvpt'.-t; the pet author, Al- I brave Ids. Lew'.?, and a host mure of prominent men and women are among ihe thousands of grateful people who have rc-ceiitly sent to the proprietors of this wonderful remedy their expres sions of its unequalled value men and women who can well afford, and do command the highest med'ictil advice in the country. And then aiw, from the "plain people there come thousands of honest, straightforward, heartfelt letters, tell ing how Paine's oelery compound has made them well. Their testimony simply goes to show what New Kngland'8 vigorous essayist has so aptly said, that Palne's celery compound Is not a patent medicine; is not a sarsapartlla; it is not a mere ton ic; it Is not an ordinary nervineIt is as far beyond them all a the diamond Is superior to cheap glass. It makes people well. It Is the one true specific recognized and prescribed todiy by eminent praotHtoneiu for dl (Kjise. arising from a debilitated ner vous system. Prof. Phelp gave his .n rurcitlva cure for BleeDlcsn- tiu's, waaUng strength, dyspepsia, bil-inusnes-i, liver complaint, neuralgia, rhi-umatism, all nervous diseases and .wipoy tr-mble. For all such com p!Hirj:s Paine's celery compound has f uu ""f d',d again end again, where ev trvtMn? ebe h:is failed. it Li as harmlens as It is good, and it waa the universal advice of the medical profession that the compound be placed where the general public could secure It, and thousands of people every year have proven the wisdom of this good advice. Only a truly great and effective rem edy could continue, as Palne's celery compound has done, to hold its high place in the estimation of the ablest physicians and of the thousands of busy men and women whose only means of Judging is from the actual results in their own honws or among their friend. No remedy was ever so high ly recommended, because none ever ac complished so much. Today Palne's celery compound stands without an equal for feeding exhausted nerves and building up the strength of the body. It cures radically and per manently. The nervous prostration and general debility from which thousands of women suffer so long that it nanally gets to be a second1 nature with them, all this suffering uid despondency can be very soon removed by properly feeding the nerves and replacing the unhealthy blood by a fresher, more highly vitalized fluid. A healthy In craawe In appetite and a corresponding guiln In weight and good Binlrita follow the use of Paine's celery compound. Palne's celery compound Is the most remarkable achievement of this la half of the nineteenth century. F Sle by J- W. Coun. IUVINO A VEN V E GRADE NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the Com mon Council or me uuy oi "'i nrnnrne to establish the grade of Irving avenue In the town (now city of Astoria, Or., as laid outand recorded by J. M. Shlvely, from the claim line be tween McClure's and Bhively's D. L. C, to the east line of lsth street, at elevations above the base of grades tor th Cltv of Astoria, as establlsnea by Ordinance No. 71. entitled, "An Or .11... -no namhiiahlfiir ft baiie of erades for the streets of the City of Astoria," aa follows, to-wii: At center of Irving Avenue ana ciaim line between McClure's ana biuveiy Astoria, 167 feet. Ait center of Irving Avenue anu nm street, 167 feet. At center of Irving Avenue anu w.u street, 166.5 feet At center of Irving Avenue anu iuiu At center of Irving Avenue anu i.m street. 173 feet. At center of Irving: Avenue aim in-u tlrrt, 1SS feet. The grade to be on a straicni or r.n. , n th. r-rrr-nr?. end of eaual height throughout the width of the Ktroet at any one pl'ace between w4d c.ro.-;inff3. Anl unless a remonstrance sinied by the owners of three-fourths of the property fronting on said part of s;.ld street be filed with the Auditor and Police Judge within ten days from the final publication of this notice, to wit: on Tuesday, January 1st. K. the Common Council will establish said grade . ,, By order of the Common Council (Attest) K. OSBURK. Auditor and Polloe Judge. Astoria, Oregon, December 5th, lb'Ji. TO DOWN SPOOK9. v A wealthy bachelor declared that a horrid hsg had glared at him through the night. Ills friends laughed at him but he insisted that the house was hQurvted. He erew 111. complaining of extreme heaviness In the rtomacn. ms, appetite failed, he grew sallow, emacl- niii and deonondept, believing he was; j going to din, the ty-r-M. ben? a warn ; iX'K. and de!ired te ccul'l i-." funeral j hrfla rhifflnff In his eirs. snd even hint- f d at isuici'ie. A tr'ihr.A induced bim to use Dr. FiiT.-e'a Colden JIeHcal Dis- cOTery, and he rapidly grew well, spooks and all his distresrtng symp toms disappearing. A torpid liver and dyspepsia caused hli suffering and the 'necllnine cured both. A pamphlet free, or a large book, on liver and stomach diiwafces, and how to cure them (136 trmns) for six cents In stamps. Address World's Dispensary Medical Associa tion, Buffalo, N. Y. . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure con stipation, biliousness, and derangements of stomach, liver and bowels. NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the under slanied have purchased the interest of Hor.g Chong. deceased. In the partner ship business of Tal W'ah Lung Kee Co., No. 5.V7 Commercial street, Astoria, Or., and will continue buslneaa at said rla under said name, and request of ihe pu'.llo the same patronage hereto fore enjoyed by said firm, guaranteeing the same courtesy heretofore extended December 3d, 1- LFTE FTH MAN, LUI BEU ENG. THREE REASONS WHY. The Printz-Craln Drug Co. are coming to the front and outstripping their ri vals: , L Messrs. Prlntz and Craln are both thorough druggists, each having had nearly twenty years' experlneee In the business, and have the confidence of both the physicians and the public. 2. They are always pleasant and obliging to every one who enters their stori, whether they wish to buy any. thing or not. 3. They have no clerk hire to pay, their rent Is reasonable, and their ex perience In the wholesale department enables them to buy goods in a way that they can compete with the best of tbem on prices. Give them a call and you will be convinced that the above Is true. Airs. T. 8. Hawkins, Chattanooga, Tenn,, says, "Shllor's Vltallzer '8AVrD MY LIFE.' I consider it the best rem edy for a debilitated system I ever used." For Dyspepsia, Liver or Kid ney trouble, it cxcells. Plive 73 cts. Hunter & Epicures say u. Pork Satisage comm... fh tl:ivnr nf of liin nl(r riergen'.pork with the flaky fat and the lines herbs. We furnish the table, with this kind of sausage that pleases the veriest epicure. Portland Butchering Co'i Marks Corner Second and Bei.ton streets. Corner Third and West Eighth streets NO BREAKFAST Is complete without a good piece of choice meat One can be Deceived In a piece of meat at tbe meat deal ers, and discover when It Is too late that what appeared to be good Is noth. lng of the kind. Guard against such mistakes by coming here. V always have the best. WASHINGTON MEAT ilARKET, CHRISTENSEN & CO., Prop'rs. Dalgity Iron Works, General Machinist and Boiler Works. All kinds of Cannerv. Ship. Steamboat and Engine Work of any Description. Castings of all kinds made to order. , Foot of Lafayette St., Astoria, Or. THE flSTOip SAVINGS BflflK Acts as trustee for corporations end Individuals. Deposits solicited. Interest will be allowed on savings . deposits at the rate of 4 per cent per annum. Q. A. BOWLTJY President BENJ. TOUNG Vice President FRANK PATTON CaRhler W. li DEMENT Secretary DIRECTORS. J. Q. A. Bowlby, C. II. Pngo. Q. A. Nelson, BenJ. Young, A. S. Reed, D. P. Thompson, W. E. Dement. ASTORIA IRON WORKS Concomly St., foot of Jackson, AslorU. General Machinists and Boiler Makers Land and Marine Engine!. Roller work, 5tPm boat and Ginnery Work a Specialty. Castings of All Petrrlptlnn. Made to Order OS Short Notice. John For. President and Superintendent A. L. Fox ...Vice President 0. B. Prael Secretary TH8 UN HI I I M Is the Beat of Its Claa On the Pacific Coast. flfl UflEXCEbbED TABLE. featti. f i daily and upwards. Kopp's Beer Hall. Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars. KENTUCKY WHISKEY Only handed over the car, The largest glass of N, P. Beer. Half-and-halt, jt. Free Lunch. Briokson & Wirkk&la, Proprietors Cor, Concomly and Lafayette Sis. S. H. WILLETT, PLUMBING, Gas and Steam Fitting, Hot Air, Sieam and Water He atlng.--- 179 Twelfth street, Astoila, Or. FREEMAN & BREMNER, UlacUnrnltlm. Special sttentlon paid to stamboat re pairing, flrst-olu.s horseshoeing, etc. occniG cAfri? motjK n specihiiTY. 137 Olney street, between Third and and Fourth, Astoria, Or. Dr. Price'! Cream Bsklng Powder World's Fair Hif heat Medal uxl rxpfaaaa. Japanese Bazaar SINO LUNO. Prop. finv a Pimrcimnr nt inmA (it thOM nai -. lira (.ova in ah rtnpvt(i for fall trade, and that we're selling so remarkably chenp: "They are the best bargains we ever got In Astoria." They are captivating In quality and style and will make a record as purse openers. 417 IJond Street, next door to Mouler'i Fruit Store. FISHER TWOS., SHIP - CHANDLERS, HEAVY M SHtLF HARDWARE. Waffona Sl Vehicle! In Stuck Fans Machinery, Paints, Oils. Varnlthes, Loggers' Supplies, FalrbunlTs Sca'es, Doors and WtnJows. Hrovlaioum. Flour, and Mill YwtX , Astoria. Orr jon.