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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1903)
ASTORIA, OREGON, MONDAY. DECKMBEh 21," 1903. 3 1URITY GUAR AN TEED o o 0 utTlie Beer of the North Pacific Co. is manufactured right here at home. .- ' i ' i i ASTORIA Realizing Astoria's need of greater facilities for the acoommoda-Hon-of the traveling public, I have leased the Astoria Hotel, Seven teenth street near Commercial, and am now prepared to aocommodat guests. COUNTRY TRADE SOLICITED- Good board, a table well supplied with wholesome food, comfort ' able rooms, reasonable rates and courteous treatment to guests oom ; bine to make the Astoria Hotel all that Is desirable to the public. JACOB DENCK, Prop. 217 Seventeenth Street, : : : : Astoria, Ore NOTICE TO HOUSEWIVES. In order to make home happy, good meals are indis pensible, but you cannot 1iave good meals if the principal , part the beef is poor. We are prepared to furnMi the very choicest FRESH AND SALTED MEATS as well as Poultry, Fish and Game in season. Fresh Crabs every Wednesday and Friday. ( .Astoria pat, pish and Poultry Jlafket- Malar & Johnson, Proprietors. Twelfth St. The Imperial Oyster and Chop House P. GALLAGHER, Manager Toke Point and.Shoalwater Bay Oysters. First Class Cooking Guaranteed. We Make a Specialty of Coffee. . COMMERCIAL STREET. . . 444444 H-l 11 1 t j II 1 1 M II 11 II 11 T-1-T-1 I Winter We have just received a large consignment of seasonable Cloth ing, and feel confident of our abili:y to please in this as in all other lines. G. H. COOPER'S THE LEADING HOUSE OF ASTORIA.' ?iiniiiniHimiiiiiitni"t OOOOOO OOOOOO 00 Bishop Hicks of BiU Munford, O rv riu.i- The National Saloon and Cafe ' Finest W nes, llqacr and Cigars o 0"473' Commercial St ' - HOTEL. Astoria. Opposite Petersen & Brown's. 1 1 V l-H 1MIM1 1-M-M I 11 H-I-f 00-0000000000 0 Park City, Utah. . , o o o o o o o Oscar Morton, ixologist. ;: Astorio, Oregon O Clothing Insist on getting it and drink no other. in Dr. N. H. Stewart D E N T I 8 -T Eooms In Kinney building Over Griffin's Book Store a,,orl Dr. T. L. Ball DENTfST .. " f 524 Commercial street. Astoria Ore. Holmes T. SiBterts Wagonmaking and Horseshoeing ; LOGGING CAMP WORK By Experienced Mechanics GENERAL- BL5CK8MIT1ING J 6So Duane St. Phone 2561 CHR1STEN5BN & CO. Wholesale and Retail Botchers and Packers Live BtocK bought and sold 8ta.m boats, ships and mills supplied on short notice Families Supplied at the Lonest Hate NoGoIdGure WhisKey , Morphia Cure No Bad After Effects Office Hours 9 :30 a. m. to 6!p. m. ' 6 p. m. , to 10 p. m. in Three Days Guaranteed Correspondence Solicited. d.wTOpps Imperial Hotel.'. - - Portland RUSSIAN BATHS Only the bettr class of patronaer Is entered to. Try one and you will come regularly, Price, 26 cents. Ladies' Private Apartments J17 Astor Street Scott's Smtil-P epsl) Capsules A POSITIVE CURI VorlnOiunmatlOflorOatsiiTh 0t tb Bladder aad D1mu4 Kldn7. So mr bo pf Oar qnkklf tu4 Pero nently ih wont ee 4 &oarrbr tad i, so BMtterof bow loo UwW Inc. Atwoiately hirmlM. told by Aragtftt. iriot 11.00, or by tttuL poftMskL m MXM&tm ca, Bold by Cbft. Bosrft 4T9 Commercial " r Washington Market a.aja Popularity Daily STRIKERS HOOT AT MOURNERS. Funerals. n .Chicago. Held. Under Grave Difficulties. Chicago, Dec. 21. Undertakers wa gons and street cars were used to con vey dead to cemeteries Saturday. In narly every instance the funerals were watched by union pickets who were there to see that no Uvery carriages formed a part of the funeral proces sion, Thfl most prominent funeral of Saturday was that of Judge. Jonas Hutchinson, for 15 years on the bench of the superior court. The remains of Judge Hutchinson were taken to Oak wood cemetery In an Undertakers wagon, while private carriages for his personal friends were used for pall bearers and Immediate friends of the family. Some disturbance was caused at the funeral of Mrs. Anna V. Lick, a Bohemian woman who was murdered three days ago by her husband. When Undertaker Llnhart drove up to the church with his wagon he was hooted and jeered but no direct vio lence was offered. The police used their clubs to press back the ctowds. Police protection against strikers for funeral corteges on the way to cemeteries was demanded of Chief of Police O'Neill this evening by a committee of the vJolnt Livery Association and was promptly granted by the chief. He ordered the police inspectors to afford every' pro tection In thler power but refused to allow officers to be seated on or drive vehicles bearing bodies. Two Vessels ' Overdue. Victoria, B. C, Dec. 21. The steam er Amur Is now three days overdue- from Skagway, from which port she left Saturday last with 65 passengers for Victoria. The steamer Al-Kl of the Pacific Coast Steamship Company Is also three days overdue and it may be that on eof the two has broken down and the other is assisting her. Seattle Pion.ef Dies. Seattle, Dec. 21. Judge J. McGIlvra, one of Seattle's oldest pioneers died Saturday aftrnoon at the age 76 years. He leaves a widow and two daughters. JudgeMcGilvra " came tdWashington In 1S61 and settled at Olympla. When Lincoln was elected president he be cnmft United States attorney. He re tired from active life 12 years ago. ( Miners' Awful Death. Butte, Mont., Dec. 21.-A Miner spec all from Wallace says Fred Sickman and James Ashhurst, two machine men working on .he IsOO foot level In the Tiger Poorman mine at Burke, drilled Into "Missed Hole" and both were frightfully mangled. They will both die. The right side of Slckman's face was crushed In and both eyes blown out and his entire body perforat- Dr: Oswald H. BecKman PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Kinney Building. Phone No. 2481 Office hours. 10 A. M. ri.i M., 2 to i P M 7P.MU)1'. M. Hunduy tol 2 f M - I House Moving j j General GoDtradting : Bouse Moving a Specialty First Class Work . Guaranteed at 2 BIRCH & JIC0B80N, : J8T0RII, ORE. : , Helps to advertise your town. Is it deserving ol your patronage? ed with fine rock. Ashhurst had both eyes torn out, abdomen torp open and left arm completely crushed. Two ahovelsful of fine rock were removed from their bodies by physicians. Ths Ultimatum Crop. London, Dec. 21. A special dis patch from Tientsin says tl Is report ed that Japan has sent an ultimatum to Eussla. Utah Easy Game. Salt Lake ,Dec. 21. On a field covered with several inches of snow, Carlisle defeated Utah here Saturday by a score of 22 to 0. Utah was com pletely outclassed . The Indians work ed the wing shift play very success ful and had no trouble whatever In making their distance. ' Six Rounds With McGovorn. Philadelphia, Dec. 21.-Bllly Wills of Philadelphia, stayed the limit In a six-round bout with Terry Mc- Govern Saturday night. Big Steamer Ashore. ' London, Dec, 21. The steamer Fin land, which left Antwerp at noon Sat- Fulshlng .Holland. Assistance has been sent to her. ; , Workm.n'a Christmas Present. Chicago, Dec. 21. Four thousand men employed by the Illinois Steel Company In South Chicago will be Iaifi off for an . indefinite period, on Thursday, the day before Christmas. Paris, Dec. 21, A miserably clad man fired two, shots from a revolver at Max Nordau, at the Zionists' ball at Salle D'Charraa. One of the shots grazed Nordau and the second wounded a guest named Assowedskl. The -would be assassin was Immediately arrested. He gave his name as Loubln and said he wa a Russian revolutionist, aged 23 years, and had been chosen by lot to shoot Nordau. Report Unconfirmed. London, Dec. 21. The report from Tentsln that Japan has sent an ul timatum to Russia Is not confirmed from any source. It is regarded fts Impossible that such Important news should come first from Tientsin. oMor Buncombe. Paris, Dec., 21. The Russian em biissy her takes an optimistic view of' the far eastern situation, and con siders the lust . dispatches exaggerat ed. Members of the Japanese lega tion here authorize the statement that it retains hope of a pacific solution of the troubles. No alarming news has reached the legation from Toklo, and Its rumored recall of Its military attaches to Japan, It says, Is an In tention. SlG. 5ICHCL . CO. m m llfimik Cigars :M For Sale II STOLE FREIGHT BY TON. Northern Paoifio Loses Thousands By Thieving Employes. Srtttie, Dec. 21. The Great Northern and Northern Pacific officials admit that a conspiracy to rob the two com panies has existed In Seattle for a per iod of four years' and losses running Into thousands of dollars have result ed. During that time freight cars have been robbed and their contents and goods consigned to one merchant have ' been sold to another in the same line of business In the same city. Tons upon tons of merchandise, it is charged, have been sent from Alaska to California, to Oregon and interior western states, and sold for what it would bring. Herman Reinhart, James C. Graves and P. J. Flynn, who have been ar rested, are 'alleged ringleaders in the conspiracy. The Northern Pacific, it is said, is the heaviest loser and Bums paid by the company for "lost goods" runs far into the thousands. " The Great Northern has not suffered to the same extent. Warships Ordered out. Seattle, Dec. 21. The cruiser New York has left the navy yard at Bremer ton under rush orders for San Fran cieco. The gunboat Bennington will follow today. THE PANAMA MUDDLE. " can Outposts.. Gunboats in Touch With the Ameri- Panama, Deo. 21. 'By means cf hl gunboats Admiral Glass is keeping In almost dally communication with the two American outposts at San Mlsuel. Ther are at Tavlza and Real Santa Maria about 100 Panamans, These men have been scouting toward the Colom bian frontier. According to the very latest information there Is no sign of Colombian Boldlers at Panama territory Statements have been cabled from the United States that the democratic sen atorial caucus at Washington hod -fla" elded that the party should oppose the ratification of the Hay-Bunau-Varllla treaty and have caused much Interest. The possibility' that the senate will not ratify treaty la contemplated wllh consternation. Little else occupies of ficial and public attention at present. Washington,, ' Dec. 21. President Roosevelt has transmitted to the house the third Installment of the papers re lating to the recent revolution on the tHthmus of Panama. The papers com prise the correspondence between the state department and Minister Heaupra nt Bogota relative to the Hay-Herran treaty, consisting of 120 letters and telegrams sent between March 13 and November 19, 1908. Everywhere. S a o o o o o o o o o o oo o e o o o o o o o o o o o o