NOTION J Books, Periodicals, Maarlnea, &.C., Are ffct to bs Taken fra V,n Library without pcirr.w-cion.' Any ASTORIA PUSUC UBRAST iSSOCIAHDrT. Oru iv.nd guilty of wn be liable to prose VOLUME LVI. 'ASTORIA, 'OREGON, -TUESDAY, JINK 2, 1003. NUMBER 131. We Seek Comparison BINGER HERMANN WILL SUCCEED TH0AAS TONGUE U873 0 ei-lBP With Other Lines. Place I suit f cur CLOTHING side by side with ay ether Hoe en the market end the result U a Satisfied easterner. oir styiest materials, Vt?j?) anderltesare Wlffiffil Abxolatcly Ccrtecl. D A: ft FISHER BROTHERS ' f . . ; -V,. - 1 Are Sole Agents For Tho Celebrated Ocean Wave Washing Machine. :i "Doworo of Imitations. . SPORTING GOODS) Fishing' Rods. Lines, Flies, Complete outfits. All best grade goods. Prices Lowest. ; J. N. GRIFFIN. You can pick a That can't be picked When on your door. All sorts of locks At all sorts of prices. Some are expensive because of the care with which they are, "made. They are safe wherever used. Put one . on and your ptoperty is safe. Phone Black 8241. Commercial street. W.J.SCULLEY 70-73 BBC HIVD Timely hints from Astoria's most popular store. Some prices on the latest novelties in la'dieV dainty neckwear Lace and embroidered Collar and Cuff sets Plauen Lace Collars Cap Collars . Shirt I A. F. C Ginghams . . 10c yd I Shirt Waist Oxford Cloth VI.' . Wcyd Waist Goods Mercerised Ginghams ; . ,14c yd Goods Iff .1; BEE HIVE 111 I 1 III ftf AH T O K P fi Base Ball 'Hits, Gloves, Pads, NasKs, Bats, Balls. loch here BARGAINS Collar Tops 5 to 50c . 25c to $1 ; 25 c to $1.75 . ' $1.50 to $3.50 . FIMsj for Life Two Hundred Kansas, By Collapse Of Bridge Crowd ed With People Viewing Flood. Kansas City, Mo., In Total Darkness And At The Mercy Of Fire, All Water Works Being Shut Down And Storm More Furious. ' ,; Twenty Thousand People Are HomeIes$While The Stage Of Water Remains Stationary, There Is But Indications Are That ; Swell The Already e St. Juwph. Mo., June l.-A Ulephone iiiiKe Irom Kanww f City. Kn.. ya that m people were imwneil at that pUc Sun- day afternoon by h prai"hln of e four brldtrwt.MsrQM tb Jvaw.rlvtfr by blf tnfc of th- Jjttmlurd Oil rominy. The tank, which had e bet-n wirroumied by ' the raging watpr. broke Uione apd v wpt aga'ni't the brlilgos, upon which thire were, many people watching the Hood. The brMgm, with the exception of that o( the Missouri Pacific, were rruahed like kindling wood, and 200 people deelroyed. Kunsaa (H'y. June J.-Wlth gu and electric Ughta extlngutnhed, water- woi ki jhut down and the city pructlcal ly at the mercy of the flint fire that nhnll break out; with the railroad trane povtotlon feeble and uncertain, Kansu City may. If Its waters do not rede within the next two or three day, be compelled to fight for her yery life. Tonight the ekles are dwrk and lower. Ing and rain te falling heavily, more stormy weather la sweeping up from the west and the Insatiable river l hold Ing Its own. It Is practically station ary tonight, but what flood It hna It keeps and there Is no certain promise of when It w'lll recede. The stage to night Is M.J against J5 feet this morn ing. Chief Connor of the weather bu reau says that while the outlook was for continued rains, It would necessi tate a very heavy fall If the present high water Is to continue and whether this win corns or not Is something he cannot tell, ' " Thr fir nuthentlc Information from Kansas City, Kansas, was received to night. In that district 20.000 people are homeless. A number, which cannot be estimated, have been drowned and the property loss has been heavy, The.slt uatlon there Is parallel to the situation here,' apparently no better , and no worse. There Is no great probability that there will be furher loss of life If the river does not rise very suddenly. Down In the wholesale district, people at dusk tonight, were waving whlt,e clothes to attract attention. The con-, dltlon of some of these Is pitiable. Thcyhav been held prisoners.' lor, .two. days threatened with death by drown ing; at one time by fire, and for the moat part without food. JEvery effort la being made toward their rescue, and thy, will b saved tomorrow unle the Lives Lost In No Promise Of Less Water The Heavy Rains Will Rajjnj Torrent. water rises more and this seems Impos sible. ' ' ENGINEER CORPS "WILL, ASSIST. Situation Getting Worse nd Criminal Element Are Looting. IHVoaworth, June l."-Colonel Minor at Fort Leavenworth tonight ordered out Company 8, A. and C. of the engi neers oorps with their pontoon boats snd arm. The men will go to Kan sas City tomorrow morning. Mayor Gilbert of Kansas pity. Kan., tonight stated that conditions In thut city were growing worse hourly. He stated that all grocery stores of Xfie city had been completely shut out and that the crim inal elt-nier.t had gone to pillaging. TO ASSIST SUFFERERS. . . , ( Floods In Wst Opens l'p the Heart of the War Department. Washington June 1. The war depart ment Is exerting Its full powers and Is going to the extreme warrant of the law In aiding the Hood sufferers in the west. Putting aside all technical questions us to power of the department to move In the matter without violating the law prohibiting an expenditure of govern ment supplies without the direct order of congress. Acting Secretary Sanger has asHtimed full responsibility for the extension of reltef where this Is neces sary to ahve human Ufa and If neces sary congress will be asked later to ap prove this exercise of authority. The Advocate once received his greatest reward as a lawyer. To-day it is the business advocate- the man with pwer to persuade others who wins the great prizes. N : I desire to secure the services of a few of the best men capable of selling invest ment securities. . ... . In writing give age, occupa tion and bank reference. GEORGE T. DIXTEH, ' lnMrlnUWut'.f 0nrii. A.Mlt, Th St"""! Life InwnSM Oonpnysf Nw Vsffc, 12 Nsnss llrssl, New Vers, N. V. Foley's Honey "Tot - hei.li Jusjs mad steps the courA-, Kansas City, TORNADO STRIKES GEORGIA Buildings Unroofed And All Conv - munications Cut OffLoss Of Life Two Hundred. Atlanta. Oa. June 1. By a longdist ance message from Oainesville shortly after noon today It Is learned that that city was struck by a terrific tornado, killing probably 100 persons unroofing the city hall and other large buildings and destroying the Gainesville cotton mills. The number of dead will not be known until the debris is cleared away. The greatest loss of life Is reported in the destruction of the cotton mills where about SO are believed to have been killed and a score Injured. Eigh teen persons were killed in the fitr be tween the center of town and the rail road station, where four large stores were blown down. The storm had driv en many people Into these stores for refuge and they probably ail were kll- J'.yr. "'v,' ' ' Five hundred people werkt work In the cotton mills when the storm came The, mill waa" a three-story building. The .roof of the cHy electric car barn Lwna blown oft. S " : ; . "j.., .. The tornado struck the town In the southern portion. " It came with a frightful roar and the day was tunusi Into night. As people fled N from the storm th?y were caught in the wind and bodily blown In all directions. Some houses were torn Into fragments; oth ers were lifted from their foundations and carried intact for quite a distance. Roofs sailed like leaves in the air and several persons were carried over three blocks In a house by the wind. At t o'clock the Western Union wire In the Atlanta Journal office was cut through to Duluth this side of Gaines ville, and later reached Gainesville. The operator reports that the details are not exaggerated. He says every town is being urged to send doctors. H says estimates now place the dead and wounded at 200 at the cotton mill alone. Special trains 'will be run to Gainesville to carry surgeons and medi cal supplies. " Atlanta, Ga. June l-(Later)-The re ports from Gainesville now place the loss of life at 200. - .. DRIFTING INTO SLAVERY Urookly Minister Deplores! Condition of Southern Negro. New York. June 1. "To the white race belongs the responsibility for the I'oiulltlon of the black man In the south and the people of that section of our country have no right to nullify the Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments by the suppression of the negro vote," said ths Rev. Dr. David Gregg, who was applauded several times during his germoii on "Hss the Civil War Settled Anything?" i t '. ',. " .-'. . Ir. the Lafayette Avenue Presbyter- Ian church, Brooklyn, Dr. Gregg la- borated on the cause of the Civil war and Its horrors as an Illustration- of what should not again be gone through with and mid, that unless this southern negro question was taken up Immediate by wise heads oh both ' sides and quickly brought to,an amicable settle ment, he left morally certain there wouhl "be an uprising, ' the result of which could not be predicted.. There Roseburgj Candidate Elected Yesterday By A Majority Of About Two Thous and Vote Estimated As Being ; Thirty-Five Per Cent Short Every County in the District Went For the Republican With the Ex ception of Two. The Homes of Reames, Democratic Caridi . date, and of Mr. Browne!!. 57J Portland, June 1. -At the special election held in the first con gressional district today, Binger Hermann, republican, was elected to fill vacancy caused by the death of Congressman Thomas II. Tongue. Hermann's'plurality is about 2.000. ... , "" Hermann carried every county in the district except Jackson, the home of A. E. Reames. the democratic ranrlidtr. and f'I:irt.'ims county. Reames will have 150 plurality in Jackson and 350 in Clacka mas. The vote is about 35 per cent short. was every Indication, he said that the south was gradually drifting back to slavery and this has been doubly made certain In the act of two or three states The negra haa been disfranchised ami "the disfranchisement of a race can mean only one thing and that is the negro Is forced to Jo the white man's bidding and such bidding In this case is nothing more than pure slavery.., It should not be permitted to extend further."- - V'.V . ;v PRESIDENT. ON .THE ... MOVE,.',,.,'., Spoke In"ebr4Ska YesterdayNear .i. .. ,': ing. Jottrneyt- End.. x . J"-' . North Platte, Neb. June I. President Roosevelt left Cbejenne, Wyo., shortly after noon today and made but one short stop between that place and this. This was it Sidney, Neb., where he 'de livered an address. He ran into a rain storm here but notwithstanding that a large number of people turned out to greet him. The president will spend tom.wow In Iowa and Wednesday and Thurslay will be devoted to Illinois, the only Stop scheduled for Friday will be Pittsburg. - , ' BREMERTON SHUT OUT Report On the Immorality of the Place Decides Department. Washington, June I. The report of Captain Hleeker, acting commandant of the Bremerton navy yard at Seattle, relative to the Immoral conditions In the vicinity of the yard-has been re celved by Acting Secretary Darling and In view of Its contents the niivy depart ment declines to alter tls decision not to allow any more warships to go to that yard. r ';.., ' , 'The department has just receiped a proposition from a San Franclsip Arm to dock the New Tork free of charge and If necessary the New Tork IH be docked there. BODY OF RAILWAY OFFICIAL. SuperlntendenS of Great Northern Sys tem Found Dead. ' Spokane, June 1. A private dispatch received here today announces that the body of Superintendent Benjamin Re gan of the Great Northern railway was found this morning. Regan, who was superintendent of the Kallspell division started Into the mountains near Bel ton, Mont., for a deer hunt early last November', He was never seen alive again. His body was found this morn ing near Lake Five. . Send In your orders for Wyoming coal.-' 8. Elmore ft Co. , ' , WILL CAN SARDINES. The Hemlotr Sardine Packing com pany was organized last evening for the purpose of conducting the business of canning sardines In Astoria. The in corporators and directors are W. 6. Hemlow. H. C Hackman, Jno Mattson' C.'h. Cordes, H. J. Wherity and W. X. scnoineia, ana t. naucne. i . - .... ... -.. . .'The officers Who were ; chosen hi-e: President, W. T. Scholfleld; vlce-preui-dent and manager,, W. O; Hemlow; secretary snd treasurer, C." H. Corde. The eapiUl stock Is $50,000, of which ons half Is to be subscribed by the Incdrp orators and the balance placed on ,the market."' The Intention Is to use purs seines are to be put on the market In the mouth of the river In taking the sar dines which are said to be found there In large quantities. The old laundry building at the foot of Ninth street la to be used as a cannery, having already a boiler and dry rooms, part of the nec essary equipment for the business, In place. ,The larger fish taken in ths selns are to be put on the market in the shape of kippered herring. It is hoped to have the plant In operation by Mr.. Hemlow has conducted eitehs lve experiments In canning Ash,' ; last year putting up 809 cans of Columbia, river sardines which were said by the United States fish commission to be su perior to. any American canned sar. dines It bad examined and only Inferior to the best French grades. The suc cess of the venture will probably .depend principally on the available supply of the raw. article, , , ,i . , v , u '.. 1) DEER AT SEASIDE.' - Early last Sunday morning three deer were seen browsing near the Seaside Sprlce Lumber companjys camp near Seaside, but upon observing that they wre discovered sklppe to their native haunts. Immediately all the available deer hunters In Seaside began to hunt' for big game, deer preferable, but found nothing but the , tracks, whkh they did not carry back with them. Deer Is a mighty scarce article In this country, generally, and particularly In the thickly settled , comniunltlee, ). though orw ta occasionally dropped, so In this Instance the near presence. of three of them created a pardonable state of excitement. POUTLAND WILL HAVE BHD1GE, , Portlund June 1 , The special election InJhtaclty today on he proposition to Issue 1465,000 in bonds for the erection of a new bridge across1 the river at Mr rlson street an dtq provide for two fi ve fetTtfs carted by a large rnajorlty.