7 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, SUNDAY, JUNE 12, 1901. PAGE THREE. Tli ere nro no flics on us, HUT wo Imvo a full lino of Trout Flies 35cttiiH0oirdcw. FISIIKU 151108. COMPANY NEW ZEALAND FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Of NEW ZEALAND. V. P. Thorns, Manner, Han Frnmimo. UNLIMITED LIAS! LIT Y OF BIIAltKiiOLDEUS. linn been Underwriting on the Pacific i Coast twenty-live year. ' ' ' S. ELMORE ft 0., Resident Agents, Astoria. Or. -u, -, r, a -i. 0 EMGHTFUL ROUTE A VUG 1 IT HI UK WAY CRAGS EEP CANONS A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY 8 nature In all bt glorious beauty, and then the. tern of mun't handi work. Tin first 1 found along th lint of th Dsnvf A Rio Grand Railroad, the latter at ttio Bt Lnul World" Fair. Tour trip will b on of plea urinuk tho most of it. For infor mation and Illustrated literature, wrlto W. C. McBRIDE, Cen. Agt. Tort land. Or. NORTHERN PACIFIC rime Curd J Trnlna PORTLAND Lmvm Antra Tiget Bound LJmltod.MS ml:pu SMITH WILL BE ON HAND Missing Witness in Nan Anderson Case Will Be Present When He Is Needed. IS OUT OF THE STATE Kanaai Clty-SL Lou! Special 11:10 am 1:46 po North Coaat Limited l:W o ra T:00 ft a Tacoma and Seattle Nlgbt Ei press ll:tt pro 1:05 a Tak Puget Bound Limited or North Coaat Limited for Qrajra Harbor point Take Puget Bound Limited for Otyav ola direct t ' - , Take Iuet Bound Limited or Kan sas City -St Louia Special for print on South Bond branch. Double dally train aervloe on Qray'i Harbor branch, ' Four tralna dally between Portland. Twortm nd Brtl member that ELATE E ROOFING ia tbo WheaTou Want a Roof, IS moat durable rH,lli.ff mater iT;m-n. It la not aliened ty neai.coni, n," J P'w n.H ,l"",i It H...r.. lorvnnr boil, mas the sumo Insurance rat aa iimtsl an.l ill will. Twelw y1mmlru,m -tn- C'uiiiiot Jto round nnd No One Hut CoiiiihcI Know Where (he JUikIi-Wanted Mhii Holds Out. New York- June 11. Counsel for Nan Patterson haa Informed a repre aentMtlva of the district attorney and aim the detectives wlw have been- searchlng for him, that 3. Morgan Smith, brotner-ln-law of tho woman who la held pending Investigation In to the death of Bookmaker Frank T. Young lust Saturday, will bo surren dered next Monday at tho aame time assurance wu given that Smith wilt then appear before the grand jury to purge himself of the contempt of court which he committed when he failed to answer when subpoenaed. Smith la now outside the atate and la safe from arrest on the warrant of attachment Issued last Thursday by JudgeNewberger, but It had bn the Intention of the district attorney to have him arrested on another charge and brought back to thin city. The to l'-f"tifcf will change nxt werk nnd that tin xii.nctlm of tho tragedy of the irb Hill b(t offwsd by thfl woman who Wis Young's companion when he was shot. promise will cauvj odcr him probably attorney Jerome to tough thj police for the mls- kSwe.mey, In occurred, ty win io cx- abnndon tl will contin" i slntr witne whose tllat bclltvin pcrU'ncej iBMK-SmVh t nit"Ti?rUnow8 alKut. the df.uh f Yui!g and the caune leading up to lu Theta afo reiwU, which as yet are unconfirmed, that the attitude of the Noting fculty wl Not an Empty Echo. It was two years ago when I first st foot In Kcho, Umntllla bounty, Ore. A couple of store, a blacksmith shop, a saloon, a pooriy-Kpt notei, a post- office, a score or lcis of dingy houses, Acres on acres tit sage brush in all di rections, dust flying. Certainly the most deadening and discouraging site for a town, end a town In keepfng with Its appearance. But tributary to Echo Is the Meadows and Butter creek and a new spirit was abroad In the land. A few of the old settlers who owned con siderable property resented the new stir. "These restless ones were new corn ers; why did they come to disturb the calm sleep of those who bad been there for year content with the existing con ditions," they grumbled- But a few progressive spirit Willis and Robinson and Roger and a few others con ceived the Idea of Infusing a little en ergy Into the sluggish current of the town'la life. After months of toll Wil li organized the American Hare k Cold Storage Company. From a joke It became an accomplished fact Rab bit drives were organized, the factory whistle tooted shrilly, the eyes of east ern Oregon were turned toward Echo. "Ha Echo really awakened or Is she but stirring restlessly In her sleep?" they asked. "We must have a paper," said Wil lis; and the paper was an accomplished fact. "Let's Incorporate," he suggested; and after strenuous opposition from the conservatives this was accomplished. "Sow," said the progressive ele ment, "let us vote bonds for a new schoolhouse. Let's put up new houses; let's paint our old ones; let's show them this is no Idle dream and that we are really awake." And wo the Willis ldf?a became the Echo Idea. Picnics were given; farmers' Institutes .were h-ld: new ditch companies were formed, surveying parties began to be seen in jjJjjtUp i ir iL'"' WILL OUT IM THE F mm x iJ ( l Wl 1 : n ,u h i lit i Is true of mankind as well as lower animals. We do not ex pect blooded stock from common sires, pliysical giants from dwarfs and mulcts, nor well-developed, robust children from tainted ancestors and sickly parents. It is contrary to the laws of nature and heredity, which arc 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 from one generation to another, can not be denied, for we see evidences of it every where and every day. Sf!ROFIirA. a disease almost as fatal as ConsuniDtiou. is disease of the blood, is bred in the bone and will out in the flesh i: the form of glandular swellings, deep abscesses and sores, boils and eruptions. It affects the eyes and ears, weakens the digestion v and destroys the red corpuscles and solids or the blood, resulting ' ..... 1 .i i i 1. j i i emaciation, stuntea growtn ana poony nounsnca uouies. 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 maybe from birth, and exposure to bad weather, nieht air, or cold, easterly winds only hastens the attack by exciting the acid blood.1 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 poison extends into the Throat aud Lungs, attacks the Stomach, Kidneys and Bladder, and every part of the sys tem. We 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 cleansingof the disease-tainted blood. ' CONTAGIOUS 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 gen erations, and in spite of washes, salves and ointments, continue to spread and grow be cause the taint is in the 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 tlie trouble, uproots the old taint, drives out the poisons that have been lurking in the blood for years, and tones up the weakly constitution. S. S. S. reaches diseases of this character that no other medicine does or can. It has been tested in thousands of cases during the nearly fifty years of its existence, and its reputa - . . tion as a cure for 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 "begiu a course of 'S. S. S. the quicker and more certain the cure. . The disease may develop in childhood or later on in life, but is sure to make its ap pearance sometime, for what Is bred in the bone will cut In the fleshV as sure as you live. Our physicians make diseases of the blood and skin a special study. Write us all fcbout your case, and medical advice or any special information desired will cost you nothing. Til SWIFT SPCCinC CO., ATLANTA, CA "it's the first anniversary of your wedding day. You did not mention It. You even forgot to kiss her.'' "So 1 did, so I did," he remarked sorrowfully. "But what is to b done? Here! I can take the day off. You run home and tell ber you and I had been planning a little surprise; that It wa all arranged yesterday. Tell her," b continued almost deliriously, "that you commanded me to keep quiet for fear of spoiling It, Get me out of this scrape, Bertha, and that ring we talked about Is " "Why tell her that?" asked the de mure stster-ln-law. "Don't you seef' he continued ex citedly. "While you are going up home and you needn't hurry I will buy a little present on the way to the ferry, There's a man in the ferry house who sells flowers. By the time you get home " "No use," she Interrupted. "She haa closed the house and sent the servant away for the day." "Great Jehoshaphat!" he shouted. "Poor little Margery. 1 am a brute." "I have a plan," said sweet 16 ten tatively. "What Is Itr "I did tell her you and I had planned a surprise." "You angel! What's you plan?" "I told her I had intended going to your house this morning, and bring her over for a quiet anniversary little din ner at ma's. But that you would hap pen along about noon with a coach, and that you and she and ma and J would go to the races." "Great Scott!" "And I told her that Instead of the dinner at ma's we would dine at some nice place you knew, and go to the the ater afterward." "Anything else V "No," said sweet 16, "except that I think I ought to get that ring." "I'll bring it with me when I come n soap in stick form ; con venience and economy in shaving. ' It is the best and cheap est shaving soap. Sold fl tw-r t world. with the coach. Bertha, you're a d r Ing." "Margery, dear," he said that night; you have forgiven me, haven't you?". '1 'suppose I must," she replied, "w have had such a delightful time." "And "Bertha is a little brick, Margery!" Then he confessed. "I know it dear," said Margery, swe'etly. "I sent her to your office. She showed me the ring." , I CHEMICAL DISCOVERY, Chicago, June 11. A dispatch to the Tribune from Peoria, 111., says: Miss Adelaide Mlckel, a teacher in the art department of the Bradley Polytechnic institute. In an attempt to rediscover madder printing has dis covered a chemical resistent that, when used on white duck with a stenciled design, makes possible dyeing In blue and white. The resistent Is applied with a brush through the stencil and the material thus designed with the resistent Is thrown in a blue vat when removed. The design is clear, there being n evidence of running colors. The pro cess Is similar to zinc etching work. The beer that made Milwaukee fam ous Schlltz la always on draught at The Grotto. Otto Mlkkelson, proprietor; .-War--, strTu?er was a rare sight, now the hotel was frequently crowded. Tho strangers look It over and they said: "This soil Is wonderful ly rich; &U it needs is water." Bramweil came. He said: "Why, this is a splendid soil for sugar beets.' So sugar beets were planted and are thriving splendidly. Now a beet sugar factory may be erected there. The Hazelwood people say: "This is a good point for a creamery. With these hundreds and hundreds of acres of al falfa land It will be better to ship out your alfalfa as butter than as beet Better for your pocketbooks; better for your lands." And so by the re slstless energy of one man a dreamer, an Idealist this little town has become not an empty Echo. May every town In Oregon have a Willis to stir it into life and against criticism and objections keep stirring away till, like Aetna, the crust of old fogylsm Is blown sky high. All hall to the Willises whether they are H. C. Willis or whatever their names may be. Get In. Boost for your town. Be a Willis. Talk new side walks. Talk civic improvement. Talk new Industries' and they will come. Pacific Homestead. THE PLOT THAT WORKED. He was astonished when his lt-year old sister-in-law walked Into his office in the Townsend building. "What is it?" he Inquired. "Margery." was her brief response. "Good heavens! Haa anything bap pened?" he exclaimed, jumping from his chair and closing the door. "She was all right when I left Montclair this morning." "Yes," with a sorrowful shake of the head; "but she's up at ma' now crying to break her heart." "What the deuce?" Worst of All Experiences. , Can anything be worse than to feel that every minute will be your last? Such was the experience of Mrs. S. H. Nowson, Decatur, Ala. "For three years," she writes, "1 endured Insuffer able pain from indigestion, stomach and bowel trouble. Death seemed In evitable when doctors and all remedies tailed. At length I was Induced to try Electric Bitters, ana tne result was miraculous. I Improved at once, and now Tm completely recovered." For Liver, Kidney, Stomach and Bowel trouble Electrio Bitter la the only medicine. Only EQc. It' guaranteed by Chas. Rogers, Druggist Driven to Desperation. Living at on out-of-the-way place, remote from civilisation, a family Is oten driven to desperation In case of 4t' nt, resulting In Burns, Cut, Wounds, ulcers, etc Lay in a supply of Bucklen' Arnica Salve. It' the best on earth; 25c. At Chas. Roger' Drug Store. &je Virginian MOST CELEDItATEI NOVEL PUBLISHED .'r first TIME IN PAPER, 25 CENTS EACH SEE T H E S H O W W.I N D O W J. N GRIFFIN V ' I I -1 fk . .. . J '''M WHEN YOU ARE WARM from a row on the river, cool off and slake your thirst by drinking a glass of our delicious soda water. It would be hard to name a flavor we do not have probably we can name many you had not thought of. EASTERN CANDY STORE. Next Griffin book oiore. 506-503 Commercial St, PHONE 2175 RED OPEN DAT AND NIGHT The Astoria Restaurant MAN HIXG, Proprietor SPECIAL SUNDAY DINNERS Fine Meal Served at all hour. Oyster Served in any Style. Season. We Guarantee the Best Meal m the City. . 399 Bond Street, Cor. 9th Astoria, Oregon Game in Are you going to St. Louis? If so call for your Tickets via the ROCK ISLAND FRISCO SYSTEMS The line having Terminal at entrance Fair Grounds. Bound trip rate $67.50, good for Ninety Days from date of sale. Choice of routes going and returning, via St. Paul, Denver, Colorado Springs, Pueblo or EI Paso. . Stop over permitted in both directions. DATES OP SALE: Jusi 7th. 16th, 17th, 18th. July 1st, 2nd, 3rd. Aafutt 8th, 9th Ivth. September 5th, ith, 7th. October M, 4th, Stfc. On above date rate of $72.50 will be made to Chicago and return. For . further information and sleeping ear reservations ' call upon or address A. II. McDONALD, Gen'l Agent, 140 Third Street, PORTLAND, ORE. i