Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1904)
THE MORNING A8T0RIAN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1004. PAGE TilREK. All Wool Dufvfl i 75 cents each L. H. HENNINGiSEN Q CO. 504 BOND STREET, ASTORIA, OREGON. PHONE, RED 2305 5 . AN ASTORIA PRODUCT Palo Bohemian Doer Uest In Tlio Northwest North Pacific Brewing Co. The fledicine That Cures. fcaxo, Oku., May II, IK. Win of Cardui abttttutrly d cur nick wnmcri. I consider It the uit vaiuabl multclnr. and It la th cuitixt cur toy tick woman can ua. a It tak a a rule. only a low touii to rffwt a comtilrl. and lanilng curs. I wpwcmllr recommend It fur uw-rln or orin IrouM, InlUnimailno and ulceration. Dninrul. tn iMiivtrukilon and It la a nut valuable adjunct to u durlnif lh RtMlatlv period, lnurlnf y chlluulrth aad apetiiy rwwfry, It nhnulil Imv a )il- In ry hum a It I a tru friend to wif, niKthrr and mulili n and I mo brt- WaiTira awn LKfitrasa. Dr. VLn. lluchaimii in au authority on the acience of medit ine and cer tainly appreciate Uie great work phvuidani ar doing for the rclit-f of uf fmvni. Hut this doe not dftcr tier from eiprewintr lier view in praine of WineofCwdui. Mr. Iluchanan's high inti'llip'tu- ami )oiif and twx-eaafiil uperienc render her ad vies of great value. Wine of Cardui regulate menstruation, cure tx'iiring-down pain and relieve Differing women of the pain and miarry to which their at-i i heir. You have tho word of Dr. Hm hanan aad thoiiKitmU of other eminent women that Wine of Cardui will completely cursyou. . ' All drutftfUt ll 11.00 bottle Wine of Cardui. jtftW , -, , M , u. m - un. ,.,, 1 mmw j'JiwMSr tjsj - (Hlf lalWMItlilMIWMIIlllWl lH 111 mi WllWIIWSl I" I IIUI11UUL1UU , wxr-seiw You don't have to hire a Cab La Salle Street Station Chicago, which is used by e 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. You don't hi to hire a cab to reach them. Th "union loop" h right in front of the Marion. Piy J cenlt, get aboard the derated, and you ir whiiked loan part of town you with to reach. Let m it tou other itatoni why you should UK th Kock IiUnd Syitem. There ire lot of them, U . CORHAM, Cnral Aaant, 140 Third St, Portland, Or. I I mm. ZZZJ HETTON COAL The finest Product of Australian mines for domestic use. The best house coal ever brought to Astoria 400 TONS JUST ARRIVED Will be sold at same old price while it lasts. Free Delivery in the City. ELMORE & CO. Phone 1961. 9th and Commercial Streets. HE BARKED LIKE A D00 Bite of Mastiff Results in Hydro phobia and Terminates in Awful Death. SLIGHTS DOCTOR'S ORDERS Uiiiimhh! (June In New York Hrlngn to Llyht Ttiat.xcel If nt Ordlnniice In mot Kn ford Ilj Official. New York. Feb. 1 John C, Kane, 43 year old, of 240 Bergen treet, died at the Long laland College hopltai ahortly after S oclock luat night. The direct cauae of death wa. hydrophobia, contracted about three month ago. Mr. Kane up to the time of hla d?ath conducted a hnraeahiielng ahop at 117 Bergen alreet, a couple of block from where he lived. On the afternoon of November 11 Iwt Mr. Kane waa work ins; In hla little ahop when he heard a woman acream for help. He ruahed outalde and found that a little dog, the property of a nclifhborlng woman, had been attacked by a large maatlff. The woman xereamfd for Kane to aave her drK. and while he waa attempting to do ao the other dog turned on him and took a Inrtte pNe out of hla arm at the elbow. After the trouble waa over Kane via Hed Ir. Leech, who haa an office next door, at 15 TU-rgen atreet. The phyl clnn t-auterlaed the wound and told Kane to take a couple of doya' rent, or Herloua result might follow. Kane waa very buay In hla chop at the time, and kept at work. Kane'a wound healed very alowly, itnd when he returned to Dr. Leech Inat Friday he waa In a critical condl (km. The doctor Immediately recog nised the aymptoma of hydrophobia, and told Kane that the proper place for him wua In a honpitul. but Kane didn't think It waa aa aerloua aa that, and decided to etay at home with hla family. The doctor waa again called on Sun day evening, and he found the sick man barking like a dog and Buffering greatly.' Monday morning Kane wa taken to the Long Island College hoa- i.ltitt. where, after undergoing an oper atl"ti he died laat night writhing In agony. The dead man wna one of the best known horaeshoera in Ilrookklyn, where he conducted a buslnexa for IS year. He la aurvlved by a wife and live chll dren. Following Is a "tntement made by Dr. Leech: "The case of Mr. Kane, whom I nt tended, wna one of the mont peculiar that I have ever come In contact with, or 'n fact have ever heard of. In most hvilrnnhoblu raaea there are three ftneea. and the patient usually passed through them all, but Mr. Kane's case waa out of the ordinary run. He skipped the first two' atngea and died In the third and bW' stage, which '! paralysis of the muscle. - ' "Thla c.ae," continued Mr. Leech, "Is a gnat lesHon to the city of Greater New York, and probably after a few niore people suffer death In this awful way, the po'lie will wake up to the f:ict that there la an ordinance (n this dty prohibiting the running of dogs at large .vithout being mur..led." WORKING PLANS ARE TO BE PREPARED TO RUN TRACTS (Washington Correspondence to New York Commercial.) , Frederick Weyerhaeusei, president of th. Weyerhaeuser Timber Company, has algned an agreement with th. bur eau of forestry by which the bureau agreea to prepare working plana for the conservative management of about 1, 300,000 acre of the company', timber land, in Washington. By the agree ment, the Weyerhaeuser Company agree, to defray the living and travel ing expense of agents of th. bureau engaged In th. work. Th. Northern Pacific Railway Com pany ha also requested that the bureau of forestry prepare working plana for U enormous timber land holding In Waahlngton and Idaho. The Umber lands of the Weyerhaeus er and the Northern Pacific companies are the most extensive privately owned tracts of land for which th. bureau 0 forestry has ever been asked to pre pare plans. The field work will begin next summer. The task of putting all these binds under careful management la of great magnitude, and only one familiar with the nature of the forests of the northwest can appreciate Its dif ficulties. But great aa these difflcul tlea are, the Importance and vaiu.'of the workj.dnce accomplished, far out weigh them. It Is another proof of the profound Interest and confidence which the west haa come to feel In the prac tical result of forestry that the two greatest land holding companies of the Pacific coast and Rocky mountain state, the one representative of the lumber, the other of the railroad In terest of that country, should have tailed on the bureau of forestry for ex pert advice in managing their landa.' The main timber supply of th. United States 1. contained In the northwestern states, and the great advance which forestry haa made In that part of the country must be regarded everywhere! as of general benefit. In a letter to th. chief of the bureau of forestry, Howard Elliott, president of tb. Northern Pacific, writes these significant word: "The Northern Pacific Railway Com pany a larger holder of timber lands In the northwestern states, which are now being logged from in more or less irregular method. "Realizing the increasing scarcity of j timber, and the probability of a more economical use of forest tracts which we have, and understanding that your foresters lend assistance to land hold er in the way of making survey and plans for economical forest manage ment, I would aslt whether it would be possible for the bureau of forestry to make surveys and plans for this company, lookmg toward the "forest management of Us tracts." The work for the Weyerhaeuser Com pany in not the first undertaken by the bureau for that concern. Last sum mer & party of foresters made ft study of the Norway pine on the company' lands near Cloquet, Minn., and a work ing plan for the, lands la now in preparation. The following I part of the text of the agreement under which the bureau of forestry 1 to prepare working plan for the Weyerhaeuser Company: The department of agriculture, !n pursuance of th. Investigations In for estry and in order to disseminate a knowledge of Improved way of hand ling forest lands, shall, after personal study on th. ground by it agent or agents, prepare a plan for harvesting the forest crop and reproducing the forest on the land of the aid Weyer haeuser Timber Company, situated and described a follows: ' 1.200,000 acres, more or less, state of Washington. "The said plan shall be prepared for the purpose of promoting and increas ing the present value and usefulness of the said land to Its owner, and to per petuate and improve th. forest upon it. " ..' "Upon the completion of the said plan and it acceptance by the said Weyerhaeuser Company, the depart ment of agriculture shall supervise the execution thereof so far as may be necessary. V "The department of agriculture shall have the right to publish and distrib ute the said plan and it. results for the information of lumbermen, forest owners and others whom It may con cern." . Hay 1 1, hus been declared In a state of siege. CARROL WRIGHT ON LABOR. GREAT DISTRESS PREVAILS. Miery and Want Follows In Wake of Dominican Rebels. New York, Feb. 19. A French mall steamship which lias arrived here re ports that the United States cruisers Newark and Columbia have, says a Herald dispatch from St. Thomas, D. W. I., been forced to fire on the Do minican rebels outside of the city of Santo Domingo, because the Insurgents fired upon an American mail steamship. The American commander haa forbid den either party fighting wKhln the city limit. Great distress and starva tion prevails in Santo Domingo city. The town of Jereml. in southern ,VNHAPPINE DISPELLED. Heft nl Warne Vaaatmeaa Abeat It. Many women wep and wall and refuse to b comforted becauaa their one. mag nificent tresaea have become thin and faded. Many men Incline to profanity because tb. flies bit. through th. thin thatch on their cranluma It will be good news to tho miserable of both .exes, to learn that Meworo's Herplclde haa been placed upon th. market This Is the new scalp germicide and antlseptlo that acta by destroying th. germ or microbe that la th. underlying cause of all hair de struction. Herplclde Is a new prepara tion, mad. after a new formula on an entirely new principle. Anyone who ha tried it will testify aa to it worth. Try It yourself and be convinced. Sold by leading druggists. Send lOo. in stamp for sample to Th. Homtcld. Co.. De troit Mich. T. F. LACRIN, Special Agent. Religious Idea Must Prvail In Solv ing th. Problem. Buffalo. Feb. 19.-Carro D. Wright, United States labor commissioner, in a speech here on the question, "Is There Any Solution of the Labor Problem," said: "Law has always failed to adjust wages and Its efforts in that direction have done more harm than good. So cialism la an ambitious remedy, but it Is not a vital principle. It is not a con structive force. The application of the religious idea is the true solution of the labor problem." ' Mr. Wright said that the late Abrain S. He Itt and the late Senator Hanna were two of the greatest friends that labor had ever known. C. TOROTANI IN TROUBLE Unpopular Jap Dropped Over Board by Irate Jap Country men Then Jailed. HAS AN UNSAVORY RECORD Return to Seattle After Kecpin; Away From Authorities and ' Meets With a Decidedly Damp Keceptiou. COMPLAINT OF USURY. Woman in Case Is Arretted By Auth orities For Third Time. New York. Feb. 19. James T, Fltz gerald, of 1383 Meserole avenue, Brook- '. lyn. was complainant recently in ob taining usury warrants from Justice Wyatt, of special session In Manhattan, for Charles Bridal, of 508 East Eighty fourth street, and Louise Walsh, of 2031 Third avenue, employes of the Manhattan Finance Company, of 277 Broadway. .Fitzgerald said that on June 5 last he borrowed $35 from the concern and repaid it in six monthly installments of sf each. The warrants were executed yesterday and the de fendants admitted to bail in $500 each. Ida. Lode, of 3 IS West Forty-fifth street, Manhattan, was also arrested for the third time. She waa employed by Mitchell & Co., now In Jersey City. Assistant District Attorney Kresel said that the Manhattan Finance Com pany, the Globe Surety Company and the Aetna Security Company are own ed by two brothers, one of whom Is president of a state bank in Manhattan. He added that as fines are being paid by employers, employes do not seem to mind prosecution. He will endeavor to have some one put in jail for a term as a curative. Seattle, Feb. 19. The troubles of C. Torotanl were many early yesterday morning. By enraged countrymen this Japanese, who is known to the pol!ce as a desperate character, was cast into , Elliott bay; then fished out again, and I finally slven oyer to Patrolmen Keith and Roesler, who landed him in the city jail. Torotani has another name, which smacks more of his native sod and is harder to remember. 1 Under this he went among his compatriots when in Seattle before. At that time he made a pretty good living by frightening women of his race with a long knife and tnMiig their money from them. He was having a pretty good time until Detectives Hubbard and Freeman drove him out of the city along with the celebrated Gonda. Early, yesterday morning Torotani stole back to Seattle. He came In via the Grant street bridge and stopped to rest at a saloon on Grant and Weller streets, kept by another Japanese. Here were many men from the land of the chrysanthemum, discussing the pros pective capture of Port Arthur and celebrating their country's Fourth of July. Into this good-natured crowd Toro tani male his way. His arrival was greeted with loud cries, and he was about as popular as though he had shouted "Long live the csar." It) Golf Cur Bright' Disea. Chicago, Feb. 19. Golf is a sure cure for Brlght's disease, according to Wr. E. N. Nash, who has made the statement at a meeting of the Homeop athic Medical Society. Dr. Nash sup ported Ms statement by citing cases In which he had noted definite and im mediate benefits resulting in the pa tient's pursuit of the pastime and in the healthful open air life on the links and close communion with , nature which the exercise compells. Descendant of Edwards. New York, Feb. 19 Jonathan Tryon Hughes Edwards, sixth in "line of di rect descendants of Jonathan Edwards, Is dead at his home here. More than 5000 descendants of the famous educa- tor knew him as "Cousin Tryon." a -wm Almost endlne fatally started a horrible ulcer on the leg of J n Orner Franklin Grove. 111. For fOU venrs it defied all doctors and all rem edies. But Bucklln's Arnica Salve had no trouble to cure mm. juauauy kou for burns, bruises, skin eruptions and piles. ;&c at unartes nogers uru tor. looked like a riot for possibly two min utes. By the end of that time the en thusiastic and law-abiding - Japanese had taken Torotanl to the back porch and dropped him over the railing. H. splashed loudly as he struck ejfc-ht feet of salt water. ' ; Rescue work on the part of his as sailants followed, and by the time the man was landed the patrolmen had been notified . They hastened to the place and gladly welcomed Torotanl, who is always considered a good cap ture. He is being held for investiga tion, as there are a few points in his past conduct which the department wants to clear up. , . Prominent Lawyer Dead. New York, Feb. 19. Francis Forbes, a prominent lawyer and recognized au thority on trade mark law, is dead at his home here. He was recently ap pointed by President Roosevelt as a delegate to the international conven tion of Jurists, to be held In connection with the world's fair at St. Louis. Raoul Seek Retirement. ' New Yotk. Feb. 19. William G. Raoul, pres)dent of the National Rail road Company of Mexico, has an nounced to the directors bis Intention not to acceot a re-election in April. His desire is to devote more time to personal affairs. No formal action on the matter was taken at the meeting of the board at which Mr. Raoul' statement was presented. To Issue Papr Money. , ' New York, Feb. 19. The Japanese government has decided, says a Herald dispatch from Seoul, to Issue special paper money for military use through out Corea, redeemable in gold coin. Escaped an Awful Fate. Mr. H. Hagglns. of Melbourne. Fla. writes: "My doctor told me I had con sumption and nothing could be done for me. I was given up to die. The of fer of a free trial bottle of Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption in duced me to try it. Results were start ling. I am on the road to recovery and ow all to Dr. King's New Discovery. I surely saved my life." This great cur ts guaranteed for all throat and lung diseases by Charles Rogers, druggist Price 50 cents and $1. Trlnl bottle free 7B pjiF5(Ti mntTb ffi Signs of Polluted Blood. ' There is aothing so repulsive looking aad disjfustinj as aa old aon. Ten worry ever it till the braia grows weary and work with it until the patience is exhausted, aid the very sight of the eld festering, sickly looking place makes you irritable, despondent and desperate. . Achronicaoreistheverybestevidencethatyourbloodisinanunhealthy aad impoverished condition, that your constitution is breaking down under the effects of some serious disorder. The taking of strong medicines, like mercury or potash, will sometimes so pollute and vitiate the blood and im pair the general system that the merest scratch or bruise results in obstinate non-healin j sores of the most offensive character. Often an inherited taint breaks out in frightful eating sores upon the limbs r face in old age or middle life. Whenever a sore refuses to heal the blood is always at fault, and, while antiseptic washes, salves, soaps and powders can do much to keep down the inflammation and cleanse the sore, it will never heal permanently till the blood itself has been purified and the dea J! germs and poisons destroyed, and with S. S. S. this enn be accomplished the polluted Dlooa is puniica ana mvigoraica, una wnen rich.pure blood is again circulating freely throughout the body the flesh around the old sore begins to take on a natural color, the discharge cf matter ceases and the place heals over. S. S. S. S3 both a blood purifier and tonic that puts your blood in order and at the same time tones up the system and builds up tits, general health. If you have a chronic sore write us. No charge for medical advice. 'JHE'SWifT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, CA. .