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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 4, 1904)
THE MORNING ASTOIilAN, WEDNESDAY, MAY PAGE SEVEN. First National Bank of . Astoria ESTABLISHED 1886 Capital and Surplus $100,000 ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK Capital I'sld lo 1100,000. fiarplus sod Undirldea" Profits $26,000 TraoaaoW general banking business. Interest poid a time deposit. HA. BOWLDY, 0. L FETEK80N, FRANK TATTON, J. W. (tARNEH, rreeldeol Vtou President. . Cashier. Asst. Cashier 168 TENTH STREET, ASTORIA, ORE. Credit Is A Necessity Government bank, corporation,, Institution,, all seek credit with prlvilejree of part settlements. Why not the housekeeper with ber own Institution? We don't believe for moment tbat grant you a favor ia extending charge " privilege. We appreciate your acoept anoe of oar offer. It easts a mutual confldonee and clear understanding over oar relatione. When you are doubtful about vsloes auk candid a nitions. We are a reliable botiae, and we would rather loae a aale by iiinappoloUog you with foot than selling you by misrepresentation. The lat nametlfault would be commercial suicide. ZAPF S CO, The Bid RELIABLE Housefurnlsherg. New Style Restaurant Everything First Class. The Best the Market Affords. Open Day and Night Good Service. ASTORIA, OREQON PRES. ELIOT ON UNIONS Famous Head of Harvard Univer sity Addresses Studcntj on Labor Questions. 1 120 llth SC atxt door te Griffin Brat. I snd sdjoinlnj tht Offlct Stlooa COOPER SHOP Tierces, Barrels and Kits for Packing Fish, Butter, Etc., Made to Order at Lowest Prices by M. STANnVtrH, Cr. 17 a Duane St,. AMTOntA, OIllSOOJV short, every civilised nation la discov ered at the very dawn of it, history In full possesion of a nyatem of bo,k- maklng. f It Is Impossible to decide the Ques tion as to whether one nation borrowed from another In developing the Idea of bookmaklnf. Limiting our view strictly to the his torlc period, w find, as has been said, the live types of books in general ue We have now to consider briefly the distinguishing characterlatlcs of each DENOUNCES STRIKE SYSTEM thw typ" MoT9 goln n ... vw vi development through which the modern book was evolved. First let 111 rivm .. n . ... Educator Snya Weapons Would rus roll of the Egyptians, kt has been viuvraiixo jxnKrtn ana isaid. th i tvr t t, i a m . I ' ' v jn,-" wo vfiiyiurea mmm u nity Mhoilld m Egypt from the earliest dav f th. M.i I WT. ... ePPVIft I ' " m vRvuiiueiu, Ihffltnrtrfll MrM a. i- .1 ....ww n9 t tv CI I AIIUW II, payprus Is a species of primitive paper -th Wrtrsi Mrf in .hfr.W . m Cambridge Mass., May l.-Method. of ,tr)p, tne papyru. pIant pIace4 modern trades unions have again together t.V,,r, .m. .u. bn .1). ... , I . " i I niMrs of one rrnulnr .w. I - 'iS umv va, lilC commenoea oy ur. Charles W. Eliot, other and th. hi. .... . president of Harvard university. In firm uhtmt vlH . 1 svsi mo riu eji, riuc ana n11rsvaai ilnllw aMil ...eTi. it.. MAAi.t 1 . . -.v- Mtu uvlulo ll)e iwhm mechnJC4 rr..r Th .te. I ' - aa aaai Vi Lience commuiee, a Harvard student Daovrus were .iiv . . ,i organisation. In the audience were ith in irth ua t several prominent labor leaders. to aeveral vaxd. in i.nfh o-i.. "The actual Industrial organisation waa not used, as m.ht perhaps have . u...a oiaie.., aia rresiaent been eiected. for th mrt!nn r . YIIa HI- 1 1 . I , i ""sw vviiwuuuu- cuiuinn cis wniiJiK crn nlea linn ass mamVh ri U I L. I .. v,v. ,lu, iuo A moment! PonnleraHnn .111 v " e,ss4,ja,g ,,u1 ,wa year in,B '"lustnal combat ,t c,ear that such a method would have has become more Intense, though Sen iiftv.,ii!.. wi. . . I -" "I awv vl KIIUC T,uieni inrougn in' nrrn organisation and for the reader, therefore the much "l """" ""oc,al,on' 01 emp.oyers; more convcnIent method waj iw, um.Ke orainary wanare, nf writln lln . rfl it... i I " V W IIIVIICB SiS ICllftVU, am. agreeing to truces out never max- umn. wh,,,h folM-. ftfM ,nAlK , Ing peace. Its evils are pervasive, fr ... I w 1 " tuo saisf i(iiif) a..i niwBy one a very ooor. t lhe end of th rnllMn, This condition of combat ought to Wl11iam, it n . ., I ' " r D 4 d w iiuiiiiiiiuiim una itmiwrary, icri.na nr t..v real public happlnesa cannot polbly of an set of grow out of It. "Should amoctations of employers, which for purposes of combat mustl .. ... . .... .. - all. bci um unim unaer me oirection or one man, or of a small group of men, abridge liberty the liberty of each individual employer to utilize his own Ws It Dynamite? One drink of Scotch whisky did It Aro you Bilious? Are you Fagged? Are you Constipated? QQC If you mre DlUoum ham s Pills A hUrlmt milk work, lMon and lunliKM-TrTlw4y kMM ttatMi la mm. m m. Ilf. . bkb. fa.. wuh u .u,, nZnL ?h. Bl.I piiit ipf0puiertta,a4wiiiiAOrttt. wo.Ta When you aro Farnmd Qonttlpatod ilTJT S-f.ttMk.lftl,. IckM- h, th. world. Sold Everywhere In Boxes, fOc. and 25c. brim. With a cheery "here's how" he downed the draught. 'Gee whllllklns! that's scorching white wine." "Yes," said his host, dryly, "it's im ported.' ' The visitor from shore had boarded the liner Gaelic from a newspaper launch. His friends of the press had invited him out to take a lok at Prince Pu Lun. An Introduction to the Ship's officers had been followed by the in vitation to "say when." After the drink the gentleman who didn't know whisky wandered Into the officer's messroom, where dinner was awaiting the navigators. .Picking a half chicken from a platter the native started for the hurricane deck. Prinach P'lun mtuhbe hungry," he volunteered as be set forth. When the liner's officer said, "Sayi Unable to find the prince, he bal- when," the visiting landlubber WhO.-SnCed himself AfirAfnMt a ltanrthlnn an A held the glass mistook the gurgling fluid for white wine. The glass was special advantages In competing with n"w ror whlte w,ne' The wa othr mon h r. i ,h. .om- h.i. or.ine nign-smed, tound-belled kind, AN ASf OR I A PRODUCT Palo Bohemian Beer Best In The Northwest North Pacific Brewing Co. STEAMER ness. "The habitual effort of trade unions to create a monopoly in labor, each In its own trade, Is a hostile effort against the community as a whole; for they aeek by this means their own pecuni ary benefit at the expense of the rest or the community. The boycott Is a method of combat which is eminently a method of 111 will. It is a gross In terference wjth a just Industrial lib erty. "As they have grown powerful the unions have themselves become ex elusive and oppressive, and their for mer altruistic spirit has been corrupt' ed by class selfishness. The plain fact is that the proscription of non-union men, the strike In sympathy or in sup port, and the boycott are weapons which angels and saints could hot use without being demoralized." one of the largest members of the tumbler family, and the sort In which John Bull prefers to have his "Scotch" served. He withheld his "when" until the fluid almost reached the tumbler'. attempted to build a cigarette.' To ha?e both hands free he placed the chicken between his knees. His hands had lost their cunning, however, and struggle as he would he only tore cig arette papers and scattered tobacco in all directions but the right one. As his hands strove with the cigarette his knees squeezed the chicken, the grease fronj which trickled indelible ruination down the legs of his Sunday best If he found Prince Pu Lun he has no recollection of the meeting. When he came to himself he was standing at Third and Market streets gazing at the dome of the Clans Spreckeli building. It was 'dark and the street was desert ed. In one hand he held a crumpled mass of torn cigarette papers, in the other a chicken bone. He stood in bewilderment, trying to gather to gether his wits. He remembered. As he started for home the policeman on the corner heard him say: "White wine be damned. It was dy namite." San Francisco CalL Mr. Kolfe, the expert tailor of Chi cago Is now at C. H. Cooper's. Come and see a magnificent line of woolens In the piece. A THOUGHTFUL MAN. M. M. Austin, of Winchester, Ind., knew what to do In the hour of need. His wife had such an unusual case of stomach and liver trouble, physicians could not help her. He thought of and tried Dr. King's New Life Pills and she got relief at once and was finally cured. Only 25c at Charles Roger a dru? store. " .. JJ 11 J EVER HAVE ITT SUE H. ELMORE The Largest; Staunchost, Steadiest and most Soaworthjr vessel over on this route. Dost of Table and State Room Accommo dations. Will make round trip every five days between Astoria AND Tillamook Connecting at Astoria with the Oregon Kail way & Navigation Co. and Astoria & Columbia River R. R. for Portland. San Francisco and all points East. For froight and passenger rates apply to SAMUEL ELMORE & Co. , General Agents, Astoria, Or. OR TO . A. (EL C. R. R. Co., Portland, Or. Pacific Navigation Co., Tillamook, Or. O. R. & N. Co., Portland, Or. If You Hsve, the Statements of This Astoria Man Will Interest You. Exer have a "low-down" pain In the back? In the "small" right over the hips? That's the home of backache It'a caused by sick kidneys. That's why Dean's Kidney Pills cure it Astoria people endorse this. Read a case of It: D. E. Duncan, who is employed at the Astoria Soda Works, 428 Duane street, and who resides at the corner of Duane and Ninth streets, says: "I had been troubled with a weakness of the back and kidneys for a number of years. There was a constant. dull ach ing pain In the loins and a numbness of the back, often extending through the whole muscular system aa far up as the shoulders. Not only did my back ache, but there was a weakness from the kidney secretions which was very annoying and disturbed my rest I heard about Doan's Kidney Pills and one day I stepped Into Charles Rogers drug store and got' a box. I found them to be a great benefit After the first few doses I felt better. I know Of others who have used them with the same good results." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents per box. Foster-Mllburn Co. Buffalo, N. T., sole agents for the U. S. Remember the name Doan's and take no substitute. fif r THE OLDEST AND BEST Mi WW 3C Primalive Be.ks. The oldest books in existence are doubtless those of the Babylonians but the great permanency of these Is explained by the material of which they are composed, and It does not necessarily follow that they were the first books to be mad. We know that the Egyptians employed a papyrus roll from the earliest historical periods, and that the Hindoos made their palm leaf books at a very early day. In THE GREATEST OF ALL TONICS. A Sonne: Medicine that adds - - W O T dlVUl purines and enriches the Blood, and kvs the fmW; i w vur . w a ava ca strong constitution and good health during; the hot sultry summer. Most everybody feels bad in the sprincv Some have no nartinilar ailmt tired, worn out and totally unfit for work or anvthinc els? that - j o VUV15J' t-iiui i. They, mope around upon the border-laud of invalidism, irritable, peevish, hysterical and unreasonable. A irood acoetite in the sDrinfr is a ran'tv. and w ciVk t .t t j it i.. of eating, and what little we do eat is a burden to the stomach and a tax upon the digestion. . Warm weather is sure to brinsr out the hidden nave been collecting in the blood and svstem dur ing winter, and you may look for some old chronic trouble to make its appearance. It is a time", too, when boils and carbuncles, and pustular or scalv skin eruptions like eczema and tetter, pay their annual visits and make life miserable by their intense pains and intolerable itching and burning. The fight for health should begin before any warning symptoms of physical collapse are felt, or before the seeds of disease have time to germinate if we would avoid the usual spring sickness ; and , with S. S. S., the acknowledged kincr of blood purifiers and greatest of all tonics, vou can Dut your blood and system in such perfect condition , and so strengthen the constitution that one mav be as free from sirl-nco arA o innnmna strong during the trying months of spring and depressing summer season as at any other time. S. S. S. notOnlv builds VOU UD. but searches nut and lecfrnvc o impurities that may be lurking in the blood. The benefits derived from the use of S. Si S. are permanent because it acts directlv on the blood matter, leaving nothing to cause fermentation and deterioration of this life-giving fluid. In selecting vour blood purifier and sorinir tonic tret one tW Inn w o O " n-uvv. auu luut ough test have proven the best. In S. S. S. you will find a remedy whose purifying proper ties are unquestionable, and just such a tonic as vour svstem needs. A sir . - w -j j 66 .i. S. S. S. there is nothing else just as good. tor the past 40 years we have had a standing offer of $1,000 for proof that S. S. a con :ains the least particle of any mineral whatever, and this offer is still open. Nature's Remedy PURELY VEGETABLE Gentlemen: For over four years I suffered with, general debility, oausing a thorough breaking down of my system, so that I was unable to attend to my household duties. I had tried other medi cines, which did not relieve me. . Seven years ago my cousin, who had been benefited by S. S. S., told me about it. I tried it and It cured me. I havo been able to attend to my household duties ever sinoe, experiencing no inoonvenienoe whatever; in faot, I am able to work in the garden as well aa my house. I heartily recommend 8. S. S. to all who may feel the need of a thoroughly good blood tonio, feeling sure they will be benefited thereby. Yours truly, MRS. JOSIE A. BRITTAIH. 44 W. Ninth St., Columbia, Tenn.