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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 18, 1904)
it i i 1 THE MORNING ASTOR IAN, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3 8. 1 904. PAGE THREE All Wo o 1 Rugs V:... . 75 cents each L. H. HENNINGvSEN a CO. 304 BOND STREET, ASTORIA, OREGON." pH0NC WD 23w V J NOME:I& ItOGKEB FAST ' IN leif GRASP oin NO TO) ii AN ASTORIA PRODUCT , Palo Bohemian Beer -Bost la The Northwest. . North Pacific Brewing Co. ft -r b m w-.t-m w w r 1 v Death or Health? taw Loeaet irei, . Lowe, Mo., March , 10. Iwao vletlm of aleepleeeaaea and estreroe rroieseM '"''i""!; momo., uhdii w i proper Binra reel aa Kw,:um tina aoa worn oat eonuouaiijr. J and nretarlcal at tht ellihteet prorocal! , ..... . "" "e (r raiior. within a m after I aala 11 I mi, Imi maI mwuI .h. k-j i . .... t . .... J7 . . 7 Bral syitaaa toned ap Mil awrvoafueea bacaa a UIDB .at) rtt a Hra Kernel ttaa emallr IrrltataJ irovocalloa, but Wlaa 94 mat. f am o Imuw4 to ackaowladf l reat rnn merit of Tour hxtlia iiumeaa gladly aa4oraa Ik ai Oaamaia, Lain or Ho do a, ha, ST. mm Seattle, Feb. 17.8peclal correspond erne from Nome to th Fost-Iiitelll gem er any: , ! Since November 3 solid ice ha ex tended out from shore a fur u tr ye can ee." It began to form October 30, the earliest dale In the history of Nome. In 1899 Ice 'appeared Novem ber 19; In 1900 and 1901 It came No- vember le. Iaat year the first ke be came visible November 21, but perman- ent Ice did not form until December. Thla lee forma In Bering ea. It la not Arctic ocean Ice. It floated quietly In with the currant, and If the weather stay calm and cold It will remain, but heretofore the first Ice lute gone out, leaving an open aea for aeveral day, last year for aeveral weeka, before the e wa frogen for the winter. No now has fullen ao far. Thla la an unusual aeaaon. The cue. tomory autumn torm were conaplcu- oua thla year by their abaenee. Che weather hna been clear and cold for week. The mine were cloaed down auddenly. On Ophlr creek. In the Council precinct, operation had to be auapendod at 1 o'clock tn the night. On aeveral clitlma, when the men knocked off work at 12 o'clock midnight, they found on returning to their work at 1 o'clock that the water wa freednr In the none, and there waa not enough running water for .lulling. Doa'ena of people leaving Council to catch the hoped that anow will be found to the eaatward. Carrier. OrllHn will go m$ tax aa laaaca iiolnt, where he will tie met by IX. II. Heiineber, wno la Ir charge of the route between that place and Unalaklik, the flrat Yukon river point. ' ' Noma Quite Orderly. That Nome la and haa been an order ly town la clear from a peruaal of the pagea of the record at the office of the municipal Jail, with the immenae crowd of people who thronged the cltye atreeta night and day during the aum mer and fall of thla year, the record of crime la aurprialngly amall. With a police force conalatlng of two patrolmen, in addition to the chief of police, 285 arreata were made during the puat alx montha, and yet the police have found time to work up the evl dence in each caae, resulting- in 270 convictions. Mont of the crime charged agatnat the offender have been of a minor character. . Of the more aerlou crime, the record ahow but eight caaea of larceny, two case of burglary, two hold-ups and one rob bery. Taking the record month by month. It la a follow: May resulted In 49 arrest and 35 conviction; six prison er were turned over to the federal Jail; the flnea amounted to $352. In June there were 62 arrests, 27 convictions, three turned over to the federal Jail, 1292 collected in lines. In July, T7 ar rests were made and 58 convicted, two went to the federal Jail and -900 col X ii Jl 1 t f . ; net balance in favor of the city of 3403. i parently trying to make his way to The average flne per man of trie num-1 the shore." ber convicted 1 111.50. The work of the) Mr. Holme, who was coming down Nome police department Is chiefly j fromyQuart creek, directed the atten shown by the above figure, and tha't tlon of a number of other rron to the It work ha been well down is aa clear ly shown. Captain Ha'l Die. t " Captain Jack Hall, well known In the north, died In Nome October 29 at the Holy Cms hospital, from a compound fracture of the akull. Captain Hall sustained the Injuries from which he died by falling down the ataira of the man out in the ice pack. All agree that a native would not be found there at thi season of the year, and It may be possible that the man waa a messen ger from the schooner Zenith, which many think may have been caught In the Ice pack. The wireless telegraph situation may be summed up in a few words: A faint Muther building on October 2. The 1 a'gnal has been received by the station oeceasea naa been aaslsting Mr, Muth-! at Port Safety from the St. Michael a ti er In some work about the rooming J tlon very faint, but yet distinct house, and in attempting to descend enough for the operator to distinguish - " v iiv kt vuci ai juti biiu f ?vv VUI- last boat out of Nome were frown In j lected lrf fine. August brought forth We want to call your attention to the complete and immediate relief Mr, teat secured by taking Wine of Cardui. With in a week after she be gan taking Win of Cardui, Mrs. Beat bad ber first jruod night rest for eighteen months. Her restlessness watcauafd by nervousness and Win of Cardui, attb beat menstrual regulator, has no iuerior in the world as a medicine to soothe a woman's nerves Nerrouinras and hyatcria are warn ings of tb approach of insanity and if relief is not securrd the end can only be the asylum or the grave. With such an outlook as this before ber, no suffering woman can reasonably refuse to give Wine of Cardui a trial. It brings a cure that thousands of women have sought for in vain. Will you secure a bottle of Wine of Cardui today and start treatment? All druamsU sll 11.00 bottle Wine of Cardui. crSeir '4rwl You don't bavo to hire a Cab The La Salle Street Station in Chicago, which is used by the trains of the Rock Island System, is located in the very heart of the city, less than a block from the Board of Trade; less than two blocks from the Post Office; within easy walk ing distance of the principal hotels, theatres and stores. Yea doa't he to Mrs a tab to retch them. Ths ' 'union loop" is right In front of the ration. Pay c cents, set aboard the elevated, and you are whitked toanv sart of town vou with h .rk tin ma fir you otner rtatoni why you ihould we ths Rock Iiland Syitem, There are lots of therm l . CORMAM, Osnsral Agent, 140 Thlri SCferUansl, Or. HETf ON COAL on the river steamers, and they were forced to an exhausting trip overland. and arrived Just in time to catch the Inst boat. , First Winter Mail Leaves. The first overland mall of the win ter schedule for the outside left Nome on November 1. It waa a very light 5 atresia. 43 convictions and 1301 In fines. In September there were 79 ar rests, 0 convictions, six went to the federal Jail, and $380 collected in tines. October resulted In 63 arrests, 49 con victions, four turned over to the fed eral Jail, and $500, fines. The total amount of fine collected Is man. about 25 pounds. It wo taken ; $3,128; the salaries of the policemen by R. H. Criffis by dog team, although j during the period In which they were not a bit of snow has fallen. It is ' mitentMi amnunt. m t7"r. iat.in - " . . . ft . the stair, missed hi footing and fell He waa picked up at the bottom in an unconscious condition by Dr. Barton and carried upstair. From the time of the accident until hi death reeulted, Captain Hall never regained conscious ness, v' r f "-''f'-: Captain Hall was an old Pacific coast sea captain. He went to" the Yukon from' San Francisco in 1898, and spent that winter at Rampart. He returned to St. Michael in 1899, and worked there for the N. A. T. k T. Co. Later be camo to Nome. Captain Hall wa a native of Delaware, and claimed to have seen service in the Confederate navy during the war and with Captain oemmes, or me Alabama. He waa about 55 or 0 yeara old. Boatman Excites Curiosity A man, evidently white, waa seen in a boat yesterday morning about three mile out at sea, opposite Jessie creek, three mile this aide of Penny river, a number of people watched him for an hour or more. That the man wa not a native is believed by the men who saw , him. Thl information waa brought to Nome yesterday by N. P. Holmes, who watched the motion of the man in the boat. "Sometime," he say, "the man wa sitting down; at other time he stood up, and wa an. the St.. Michael call of "S." It show that the station at St Michael ha been completed, and all that may be neces sary for the proper adjustment of tha instruments is a little, time and prac tice. ;'. . , ' , On Wednesday, October 28," the flr attempt at communication between the two stations wa made, and since that time the operators have been endeavor ing to transmit messages. Just what result have been obtained at the St. Michael station i, of course, not known, and it is possible that ther have been able to read all sent to them from this end. Before the close of nav igation it wa agreed between the op erators that as soon as their work of installation waa completed they would work Intermittently during the odd hours of the day St Michael endeavor to call Safety, and during the even hour the situation to reversed. . On a number of occasion the tape In the Port Safety office ha distinctly recorded the letter "8." and this- ha been repeated so persistently that there is no doubt but that it was the St Michael call. From the fact that no other letter has been received, it may, be argued that the signal from the Safety station has not a yet been beard at St Michael, i TREATMENT FOR CANCER Application of Radium Water round to Be Effective as Cure. The finest Product of Australian mines for dames tic use. The best house coal ever brought to Astoria 400 TONS JUST ARRIVED PAIN IS RELIEVED INSTANTLY I Pi j kIoImiis Demonstrate He iintrkAble CuriiMve Prop ertied ill Liquid Used on Virulent IMnoaxe Chicago, Feb. 17. A dlspnich to the Tribune from Ann Arbor, Mich, says: The possibility of using radium to convert ordinary rain and well water Into a mineral water, more highly medicinal than any, known natural mineral water, hits been demonstrated at the university of Michigan In a scrl" of. experiments covering the last 10 weeks. In searching for a method by which nullum could be applied to the Interior of a caiKtr without any danger of the terrible radium, or in which ray burns it has been demonstrated that the im mersion of a sealed tube In pure, die tilled water for 24 hours produces radln-aitive water of powerful effect injected into cancers, thl water stopped pain In 10 minutes. Patients now under the radium water treatment Include one with a cancer of 18 years standing and some of the ordinary nose and breast cancers. "The 18-year-old cancer hn had six weeks of water treatment, and from the flrat five mln utes' treatment after applying water pain haa been almost wholly absent. In each Of the Other rasoa nalna stopped immediately and aeveral suf ferera were released from the mor phlne habit, which had been forced upon them. She was taken to St. John' hospital. Captain Cooney learned later from the pastor of St. Adalbert' Polish Catholic church, Elmhurst, that John Drynov, of Russian Poland, and Eva Gaskov came to his church on Sunday to be married, but that at the altar the ' cheater, after young woman suddenly backed out and When Wilson f Hsirs Find Lost Fortune. New York. Feb. 17. A fortune In nigh class railroad bonds has been rouna oy the granddaughter and heiress of Thomas Wilson, of West- a search of. 13 years, died no trace of his charged the groom with having a wife ! wealth could be found, although he was and two children p Russia. He denied j known to have possessed a conslder- the accusation and tried to calm the j woman, whom he offered $100 If she I would consent to have the ceremony j performed. She refused to be recon- j died. She wears a wedding rinar. able fortune, accumulated in building. Mrs. LUzie Pell, his granddaughter, in stituted immediate search, but without success, until a safe deposit box wa found in his name in a Long Island bank. It contained $26,500 in bonds of high grade and paper showing the in vestment elsewhere of a large sum. es timated by some persons at $200,000. You -Will Need Will Abolish Degree. r j Chicago, Feb. 17. The faculty of the i college of Liberal Arts has decided that the degree of bachelor of philosophy no longer will be conferred at North western university. The requirements" for the degree of bachelor of arts and bachelor of science have been changed so as to demand only one ancient lan guoge, Latin or Greek. The effect is to unify the requirements for the arts and philosophy degrees, and the latter Is discontinued. Will be sold at same old price while it lasts. FAILS TO END HER LIFE. at Free Delivery in the City ELMORE & Phone 1961. 9th and Commercial Streets GO young Woman Turn Down Lever Attar and Jumps Overboard. New York, Feb. 17. Dressed for wedding, Eva Gaakkov, a good looking girl, 20 years old, wag fished out of Newton creek yesterday. She had tried to end her life by Jumping from the roof or Oakland street into the stream from the Greenpolnt aide, near the bridge. She clung to a huge Ice floe after striking the chilly water. Her cries were heard by Captain Louis P. Williams, of the New York Central barge Ardsley. He hauled her aboard hi boat and administered restoratives. Seeks Court's Aid. New York. Feb. .1". Lawyer James W. Rldgeway made application to Jus tice Marean at special term of the su preme court this morning for an order directing counsel for Augusta Sommers to deliver to her certain papers In an action brought against her oy George I Sommers, in which he was granted an interlocutory decree and Judgment ab solute. Lawyer Ridge way said he had asked I for the books, papers, etc., from the I former counsel of defendant and al though promised them he had not re ceiveu mem. Mr, mageway saw no copy of any decree had ever beenl Kerved on her. Mrs. Sommers' former! counsel said he had no papra or books in his possession, as was demanded. He had given all the photographs, let ter and a few papers to her and that a copy of the decree had been served on her. , Mr. Rldgeway said that if counsel would agree to give up all paper he had relating to the case the motion would be withdrawn. This waa agreed to and Mr. Rldgeway withdrew the mo tion. THE ASTORIAN 1904 DIREC TORY, which is a complete business and statistical gazeteer of the Lower Colum bia, now in process of publication. This is not the R. L. Polk directory, but is a product of home industry and enterprise. THE ASTORIAN 1904 DIREC TORY will not only be superior iu value to any other, but will be sold for less monev. Subscribers are guaranteed a satis-, factory work, and advertisers are guaran teed a satisfactory circulation. Give your order for The Astorian 1904 Directory No disease cause aa sanrti Kruf!T A-.m,tt .. . ... Ectetaa. 1 Berinninr often with a alirkt r. ,v. f Spreads, followed bv tnatn1a r t1Ura f k;.i. . 7. : , ... J .r : -.. v wiH.a m rummy, sucaT Bala otes watch dries and scales of or forats bad look i sir pcan oa di ffere.t parts of tke bcd7 but cftes tst tipon the back, arms ' tan da, lers and face, and is a ' FINAL NOTICE. . Notice 1 hereby given that I have filed my final account in the estate of Chas. C. Sackett, deceased, and the county court of Clatsop county, Oregon, hus set Monday, the 21st day of March, 1904, at' the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon, for the hearing of objections, if any there be, to the same, j J. Q. A. BOWLBY, Administrator. Dated February 18, 1904. 8-19-8-18 IT that ilobaa mmi aiaooiajor. As tma want br ii rrew I was c.aTea4 that 1 w3 affltta with Bessaaa. I eon. suited saver al phyaietana aa a. nam bar af spool aiiata, and uaaa aavaral tarsal applications, reoeiTlnr bat !1ih,.i"lpcr'f I February I deoided to try 8. B. 8., and la laaa toaa a month I expert aae.d a chaare 'or ao batter, and by May all symptoms had dlaappaarad, and I found mye.lf entire ly oor.d, and have bad no return of aaniftr Stockman's Advertiaina Aa.ncr. Nobody's dog always has a kick com ing. : t i m I , especially at alfht or when over- T, aeatea. The cause of Ecze- asa is a too acid and reneral nnhealthT con- uinua oi ine mooa. i The terrifying itching fr(-jrrss' and burning is pro- . . .ir J duced bv the overflow through the elands unA pores of the skia of the fiery poisons with which the blood-current is over .aaaaw - inflnaWff Urlt si Avavm n I MsnIaAfat-Aiaa . washes, soaps, salves and powders aresoot hing and cooling they do not enter into the blood itself or touch the real cause of the disease, but S. S, S. thin acid blood nd cleanses and builds tip the general system, when the Skin clears off and Eczema with all its terrifying symptoms disappears. Send forour free book on the Skin and its dispaxp Kn -nortr. medical adrice. .. rrr rr xpenmi nn ati ht rm T - --- - . - v way " manager Stockman's Ac Statioa Kansas City, Mo.