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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1904)
THE MORNING ASTORIAN, SUNDAY. kARCH 27, 1904. PAGE SEVEN. First National Banh of Astoria f ESTABLISHED 1886 J J Capital and Surplus $iop,ooo ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK Capital I'nIJ lo 1100,000. Surplus and Undivided TrollU 25.000 TransaoU general banking business. Interest paid on time deposits. J. a A. BOWI.BY. O. L TETEltblON, FKANK PATTON. J. W. OARNEIt, President. Vk President Cashier. Asst. Cwliler t s A M.. m Do You Eat For health and happiness, or wly as a duty If the former, try eating at the TOKE point oyster house Every Delicacy in Season. Private Iiooms. 112 Eleventh Street PATS HIMSELF ON THE BACK GeneralfReyei Expresses the Op inion That He Will Contin ue to Be Good. IS OPPOSED TO HOSTILITIES !i Famous Trains :i f The Southwest Limited Kansas City to . Chicago, The Overland Limited to Chicago via Omaha, The Pioneer Limited St. Paul to Chscugo, run via Chicago. Milwaukee & -St. Paul Railway Each route offers numerous attractions. The principal thing to insuro a quick, oemfortable trip cast is to soo that your tickets read via tho Chicago, Milwaukee & 8W Paul Railway. t i. HOWE, Gsaeral Af.nL 134 Third Street, Portland JlellevfN the Independence of Panama and the Building of Canal In Kent Thlnjf Kor Civilization.! Paris, March it. General Reyes baa left Parli for Bordeaux, whence he will tail today for Colombia. Before hit departure the general received a correspondent of the Associated Press and outlined the plana be would fol low when he reached Colombia, con ctrnlng the Panama controversy. He aald: "I have been oppoaed to war through Out and I feel that I accomplished a treat deal In avoiding actual hostil ities. I return with the same pacific llrlt, feeling that It la for the benefit of civilization. There will be no re course to war and I am also desirous of avoiding placing any obatacle in the way of building the canal and other wise carrying out the canal project which will result to the benefit of Co lumbia by Increasing business activ ity In that region and inducing the Investment of American capital. "Concerning the dllterencea between the United States and Colombia, and Colombia and Panama, I hope and be lieve they ran be arranged In a man ner honorable to all concerned. The matter of adjustment la a question for tbe future, but It will be my policy If I accept the presidency to seek an honorable adjustment Secretary Hay's suggestion of a plebiscite In Panama seems to be a good plan. I do not doubt that some way of arriving at a settle ment wilt be found." Tbe general gave the impression that he was likely to accept the presi dency. The Inauguration will take place on August 7. SUNDAY MORNING THOUGHTS FGf! USE DURING THE 'W&i MUTUAL KINDNESS. . Dear ties of mutual succor bind The children, of our feeble raee. And, if our brethren were not kind, This earth were but a weary place. We lean on others as we walk Life's twilight path with pitfalls .'" . strewn; ' An 'twere an Idle boast to talk Of treading that dim path alone. Amid the snares misfortune lays Unseen, beneath the steps of all, Blest is the Love that seeks to raise And stay and strengthen those who fall; Till, taught by him who, for our sake, Bore every form of Life's distress, With every passing year we make The sum of human sorrows less. William Cullen Bryant '.' VALUE OF THE SABBATH. The worklngman sees clearly that legislation defining tbe number of hours that shall constitute a day's work is definitely In bis Interest It serves the higher ends of living and de livers him from slavery from tbe greed of capital. Can he not also see that the legislation that gives him rest one day of the seven is quite as definitely In his interest? It is a boon for which he should not cease to be grateful. If he will rightly use It the very best ends of living will be served by It The worklngman' can not afford, for the sake of either his physical or moral welfare, or allow the Sabbath to be taken from him. But let him know that when he Joins In Us desecration as a sacred day, he does his best to do away with it entirely. As a holi day it will never be allowed with such frequency to Interrupt business and to stop the wheels of Industry. With the sanction of religion back of It and as the expression of the divine will, It may live but as mere human expedient, it is doomed. Parish Advocate. ' "EVIL OF WRONG THINKING. Wrong thinking is indicative of weakness; it Is, Indeed, a species of Insanity, for a wrong thinker is con tinually Vearlng down and wrecking his own mental and physical structure. The right thinker is the only sane thinker, and be Is the happiest as well as the most sucessful man. He knows better than to keep constantly trip ping himself up with tbe adverse thought which produces destructive conditions. We all know the disastrous effects of wrong thinking. We know by ex perience how It cripples us mentally and physically. - Physicians are well aware 'that anger poisons the blood and that fear, anxiety, fretting and all odther inharmonious thoughts serf ously Interfere with the normal action of all the bodily functions. They are also alive to the fact that anxiety or apprehension of impending disaster. If of long duration. Is liable to bring on paralysis. It Is an established fact that a mother la not only seriously affected by her own thought but that It affects her infant to such an extent that the the same symptoms and conditions from which the mother suffers are re produced in the body of tbe Infant Selfishness, jealousy and envy long in- j dulged in tend to produce serious liver troubles and certain forms of dyspep sia.: Lack of self-control and habitual Indulgence In violent passions shatter the nervous system, lessen the will power and Induce grave disorders. Worry Is one of the greatest enemies of the human race; It carves its deep furrows wherever It goes; v It carries gloom and unhapplness with It; It de lays or prevents the process of diges tion and assimilation." ; - ' Wrong thinking, whatever its na ture; leaves Indelible scars on mind and body alike. . It affects character and material prospects equally. Every time you grumble or find fault; every time you lose your temper; every time you do a mean, contemptible thing, you suffer a loss which can not be re paired. Tou lose a certain amount of power, of self-respect and of an up lifting and up building character force. Tou are conscious of your loss, too, which tends to weaken you still further. A business man wlU find that every time he gets out of sorts, flies Into a rage, of "goes all to pieces," when things go wrong, he Is not only ser iously injuring his health, but is also crippling his business. He is making himself repellent; he is driving away success conditions. ' " A man who wants to do bis best must keep himself In good mental trim. If the would achieve the highest suc cess he must be a correct thinker. He can not think discord and bring har monious conditions Into his business. His wrong thought will honeycomb and undermine bis prospects In life, Suc cess. .'.'. - Pauline Wants Decree. New York, March 28. Divorce pro ceedings have been Instituted here by Paulina Hall, the actress, against George B. McClellan,' the well known theatrical manager, whom she mar ried In 18J2. j ABK THE AGENT FOR TICKETS VIA D ELIGIITFUL ItOUTE AYLKiHT KIDE IZZY CRAGS EEP CANONS r0 8pekane, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Chioago, 8t Louis, and all points east and south. ) OVERLAND TRAINS DAILY fl L The Flyer and The Fast Mall SPLENDID SERVICE UP TO DATE EQUIPMENT COURTEOUS EMPLOYES A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY See nature In all he glorious beauty, and then the acme of man's handi work. The first is found aleng the line of the enver A Rio Grande Railroad, the latter at the St Louis World's Fair, Tour trip will be one of pleas uremake the most of It For infor mation and Illustrated literature write W. C McBRIDE, Gen. Agt. MOTHER CHARGES 80N. Brought Into Court Charged With Be Ing Incorrigible. Portland, Or. Daylight trip aoross the Cssoade and Rocky Mountains. ffor tickets, rates folders and full In itiation call on or address f II DICKSON. J City Ticket Agent it Third Street Portland, Or. L O. TERKES, G. W. P. A., , 613 First Avenue, Seattle, Wash. NORTHERN PACIFIC TlnioJOrtrd oi Trains PORTLAND Leaves Arrive hget Bound Limited.: inl:PB kansas Ctty-St Louts Special U:M am : P korth Coast limited l:M O m T:00 a m acoma and SeatUe' Night Express U:U P 1:05 Take Pugst Sound Limited or North oast Limited for Gray's Harbor points ake Puget Sound Limited for Olym- i!a direct ! IK.1,. D.. D..l T ImltAll AF TTall- Is Clty-St Louis Special for polnta h South Bend branch. Double dally train servlee on Gray's 'arbor branch. Four trains dally between Portland, (.coma and Seattle. "As the Crow Flies" The shortest line between Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago is the route of the famous North western Limited -Th Train For Comfort" every night in the year. Before smiting on a trlp-no matter where write for Intercutting; Informa tion about comfortable traveling. H. L SISLER, General Agent 132 Third 6t Portland. Oregon. T. wTR48rAtK, General Paxoengrr Agent, ' . Bt Paul, Mlna. Njvt York, Mirch 26. Harold A Duryea, n years old, of 461 State street, was In the Myrtle avenue court before Magistrate O'Reilly this morn Ing at the Instance of his mother, Mary Duryea, who charged her son with being Incorrigible. With Duryea aneared his H-ytar-old wife, Eliza beth, as a witness. The young couple were married sev era! months ago without the consent of their parents. They had lived to gether, it Is said, at a hotel in Clark street. They later sought the blessing of their parents but In vain, the cut mination of which was the separation by the Supreme court. The couple went to live with their respective parents, but finally diso beyed the decree and lived together again, It is claimed. Duryea In the court this morning was reprimanded by Magistrate Rell ly, and ordered to remain at home un til he is of age, when he can do as he pleases. The lad sold he loved the girl, and could not remain away. "Why, Judge," he said, "I am capa ble of earning a decent ilvlihood as uny man. I make good wages, and she loves me. What more do we need to be happy?" The magistrate told" Duryea that all he said was feasible as far as love was concerned, but he was bound to either hold him or demand a promise from him that he will remain with his par ents. "I will promise to do so, led by my present feeling, Judge," exclaimed Duryea, "but I am maldy In love, and of weak will." Magistrate O'Reilly paroled Duryea In the custody of his mother until April It. , . ANOTHER CUT IN RATES. Trsns-Atlantio Lines Are Now Retal' iating Against the Cunards. New York", March 26. Another cut hns been made In west-bound peer age rates, this time by lines carrying Hungarian immigrants to New York. The rates are reduced by five contin ental steamer lines, in one instance from S34 to $24.50. These companies appnrenlly are aiming at the Cunard line, which has invaded the Mediter ranean field and will establish a line next month, with, as stated, the co operation of the Austrian authorities. Former Treasurer Guilty. Boston, March 26. Wallace & Hall, formerly manager of the Boston office of the American Surety Company of New York and treasurer of Bt Luke's Home for Convalescents, has pleaded guilty to Indictments charging larceny of 1238,000 from those Institutions. Sentence baa not been passed. Ex-Inspector Acquitted. Manila, March 25 W. D. Ballan- tine, ex-inspector of customs, has just been acquitted by Judge Ambler on a charge of conspiracy to defraud the customs by furthering the Illegal non exempt Chinese. ' He was tried upon a similar charge in January last and acquitted. ' . . . I For artistic job work come to The Astorian. ,. - - WILL OUT m THE I rig, bumm FLESHM Iff :pf I'm Is true of mankind as well as lower animals. We do not ex pect blooded stock from common sires, physical giants from dwarfs and midgets, nor well-ueveloped, robust children from tainted ancestors and sickly parents. It is contrary to the law? of nature and heredity, which are inviolable, unchange able and fixed. Children not only inherit the features, form and dispo sition of their parents, but the mental and physical qualities, infirmities and diseases as well. That certain diseases are transmitted from parents to children, are bred in the bone and handed down front one generation to another, can not oe denied, ior we see evidences or it every where and every dav. SCROFULA, a disease almost as fatal as Consumption is a disease of the blood, is bred in the bone and will out in the flesh in 1 the form of glandular swellings, deep abscesses and sores, boils and eruptions. It affects the eyes and ears, weakens the digestion and destroys the red corpuscles and solids of the blood, resulting in emaciation, stunted growth and poorly nourished bodies. RHEUMATISM is handed down from gouty ancestors and rheumatic parents. The acid poisons in the blood that cause the sharp, shooting pains in muscles and joints have been there may be from birth, and exposure to bad weather, nieht air, or cold, easterly winds only hastens the attack by exciting the acid blood. The blood must be purified and the poisons filtered out of the system in order to get relief from this painful disease. CATARRH is something: more than a cold in the head: the Doison extends into the Throat and Lungs, attacks the Stomach, Kidneys and Bladder, and every part of the sys tem. Ve inherit a predisposition or tendency to Catarrh, just like other blood diseases; it is bred in the bone and can not be reached with sprays and salves, but requires constitutional treatment and a thorough cleansing of the disease-tainted blood. ' CONIAGIOUS BLOOD POISON is responsible for more suffering than all other diseases combined, and none is so surely transmitted from parent to child. Fearful ulcers and sores and disgusting skin eruptions often break out in infancy, and those whose blood is tainted with this awful poison are handicapped from birth, and unless the poison is eradi cated carry the taint through life. CANCEROUS ULCERS and old sores seem to pursue some families through ven erations, and in spite of washes, salves and ointments, continue to spread and grow be cause the taint is in tha blood; is bred in the bone and grounded in the flesh. Nothing but a real blood remedy like S. S. S. can reach these deeply rooted, inborn diseases. It goes to the fountain source of the trouble, uproots the old taint, drives out the poisons that have been lurking in the blood for years, and tones up the weakly constitution. o. o. o. reacnes diseases or tins cnaracter tnac no oiner meaicme does or can. At nas been tested in thousands of cases during the nearly fifty years of its existence, and its reputa tion as a cure ior chronic blood troubles is firmly established. , S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetable and .suited to old and young and persons of delicate constitution. If you have inherited a predisposition or tendency to some family taint, the sooner you begin a course of S. S.Sthe quicker and more certain the cure. The disease may develop iu childhood or later on in life, but is sure to make its ap-. pearance sometime, "for what Is bred in the bone will Oat In the flesh," as sure as you live. Uur physicians make diseases of the blood ana skm a special study. Write us all about your case, and medical advice or any special information desired will cost you nothing. WE SWIFT SPCCinO CO.. A TIAHTA. CAm