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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1904)
TUB HORNING ASTOMAN, WEDNESDAY,. J ONE 15, 1804. CD e ill o r n I n o jFI i t 6 r i a it ESTABLISH ED 1873 PUBLISHED BY ASTORIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY. j. n. carter, General manager RATES. By mail, per year By mail, per month ....... . By carriers, per mouth ....... to 00 50 60 t THE SEMI-WEEKLY..' ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, ia advance $1 00 : , i THE NEXT LEGISLATURE, The next legislature will bo made up of one more republican than the last legislature. In the upper house there will be but six democrats Miller of Linn, Coshow of Douglas, who defeated Senator Marsters, Avery of Benton, Pierce of Morrow, Uma tilla of Union and O. J. Smith of Umatilla. The defeat of Senator Marsters for re-election was a de cided surprise, as he had long been prominent in politics. The independent republicans joined with the democrats in the fight against him. In the lower house there will bo 11 democrats Cavender, Blackburn and Munkers of Linn, Burns of Coos and Curry, who will find a namesake from Clat sop on his aide of the house; Smith of Josephine, the silver-tongued orator who presented the Hearst "reso lutions at the state convention; Fawk of Polk, who was supposed to have been defeated, but who was shown by the official count to have won by six votes; Calwell of Yamhill, Burns and Laws of Clatsop and Blakeley and Chamberlain of Umatilla. There will be one independent republican in the senate C. W. Nottingham of Multnomah, who de- THE DEMOCRATIC NOMINATION. Five state and territorial democratic conventions feated A. A. Courtney. I ' I "' " MM - tms. h . were held week before last, and 96 more delegates w Ane lotai repuoucan strengin win do a, wnUe " ...... .. , , the democratic lineim will be 17. in both housi. Not wnm Aiw.twi tn thA nurmnni nmncmM pnvtiiiion. i RUV VVVl.U .v - " " l.i . ... 1,1 ' . . . , , , .... x a . v 3 v ungnam, ww proDamy worit wun me republicans. About two-thirds of the delegates to that body have , .. . ... . . . ' ' b Were it not for the trovernor and his veto nower. the now been chosen 656 out of a total membership of d?mocrats woul(1 have mmi in the ndwl of 994. Tet it cannot be said that the convention's affairs at Salem next winter. choice of a presidential candidate is any more defi- J 1 sitely foreshadowed. From the beginning of the con- w lork is in fairly close communication with tot it has been Judge Parker against the field. ; The 0re&n' throuSh: the medium of tt telegraph and line mails, yet events that transpire here are 1 re- la uentlv made public in New York in such manner as last spring aiarmea conservative iinocraw every- to absolute h meani f thb The New where. For a time the chief concern of the con- York Commercialof June 4 expresses itself editorial- aervative leaders was, as Mr. Cleveland put it, to ly with reference to the Oregon election, then two "stifle" the aspirations of the young, ambitious and J"8 off an1 concludes with the opinion that the I Ia. xi . II 1 m . 1 a radical New York congressman. Judge Parker r8 In ims 81816 W0U1U De 01 iniercsi anse 01 Itlm fatt tYiot AMtmn qA BAnf a cti.l TTnntf lnl. eemed, three months ago, the most hopeful and avail- . . . T r . . . ...... , .. gation to St. Louis. As a matter of fact, the men able candidate about whom the frightened conserva- chosen at the gtate democratic convention uvea eouia rauy. me pressure 01 tne iiearst boom, sent Oregon at the national convention are all con lather than his own power of leadership and attrac- servatives, and the effort to indorse Mr. Iiearst failed lion, gave substanec and momentum to Judge Park- utter7- mmuwtum. lyvn lb m Clear HJ CTVrJ UUC 11181 IBC Hearst movement has spent it foroe. The oonserva- JUST FOR INSTANCE. ; Th Tal of Jupitr Brown. lirtwa wftlkwl actHmi tht cnmimi untl throw hlnipelf Into a wt In th wont rinot irnr. Troulili wro ftr Junlter Brown! Hm-k In th Latin room an olit irofomor had jut onld to him:" You havo t timklng' tt u inod ntuilent In you, Urown you huv It In you, lr, and tht nrxt thlntf. by sad! lr, l to gft It out!' Hi-own, when onre comfortttMy Rrt ed vrlth hl newly-fllWd ilj -twen hi III 111 own Kinoked Duke's mixture In a tn-dolhwr lp aid to hlmMf tht th profcmr could gx whwe they never mwkt Latin und have fryed out of him all th'ro wat In hit withered carcaaa." " Thn Hrown Ix'Riui to think, Urown hud a habit of thinking at times, not wlthatandlng the fact that he wm an athlte, HI thoujthta ran throuxh several channela. lit determined to learn La.lt n and allng It at that pnrfee r In an endleaa atream with a ikt feot accent. Thinking wna not good for Brown bcaldea, the day wn hot. Brown wtnt to aleep! When ht awoke ht gmtpedl Hia pipe waa altll between hit lira! H had on the name clothe! lit waa aUll Jupiter Drown. '04 Tale! But thla waau't Tale! There were cIbbkIc at looking building! There waa a hoat of men drevned In flowing robea. Even aa he looked there imaaed near by alx alavea currying what looked to Tlrown like the door of a aide-entrance Pullman. And on the door there waa a Being that Brown knew wna a woman! Brown could alwaya tell a woman when he iww one! The Being gnve Brown one look. turned while, kTeamod to the alavea, who looked In turn, and then the slave aforesaid carried their preclou burden down the atretch of paving atonea on a run! . A few minute later 3lrown aaw a file of men approaching, led by a iwui In a abort skirt. Tht man carried what looked like a (pearl Brown's fleih began to creep, and at tht a&me tlmt ht glaaced behind him. Ht aaw a great building filled with a eon coiiree of people. In the center a man waa declaiming. Brown llatentd. "O, temporal O. More!- aald tht naa. "Thask geodnein," aa!4 Brown, 1 aa ta aaclent Herat!" p. vauoiian; Dbntut rytLIan Builllni, Aitoria, Orfffon. Dr. T. L. BALL "I Dr,rJ.Friedricl!; ir 4 - - DENTI8T8 - --- -M Commercial atreet. Aatorla Ore, Dr. W. C. LOOAN f k DENTIST 678 Commerclnl ft., Shanahao Building C. J. TIIENCIIAUD Inauranoe, Commlaakm and Shipping. V CUSTOMS HOU8K BROKER. Agent Wtlla-rargo and Northern " raclfto XzprtM Companlee. . Cor. , ELEVENTH aod BOND 8T& ' ' JAY TUTTLE, M. D. i rHY8IClAN AND SUHQEON . A"Un A wlUnt Hurgeoo tM. Marin t1o(illl Morv let. . . as u J.. umct noura; iv to 11 a.m. i v p.m. 477 Commerelal Street, Ind floor. I)r. IUIODA 0. HICKS OSTEOrATlllST Uanaell Bldg. Tl Commtrtlal It f HONI BLACK tm. V. W. BARIt, DENTIST i afanaoll Banding 179 Commercial Street, Astoria, Or TELKriIONE RED 20nL "Ntglecttd colde make fat grart yard." Dr. Wood's Norway Plat Syrua attpa na and womta to a happy, vigorous aid age. The TROY Laundry Is the only White Labor Laundry in the City. Doe the Beet of Work at very reasonable Trices, and ia In every way worthy of your patronage. Cor. 10th and DUANE ST8. Phone 1901 General Kuropatkin ia a crack marksman. "When DlA warn mnator nt wnr 1nrirtn a tnni. nt inonantinn tivea are almost oertarn to have a two-thirda majority he Tigited orxA and atrolled with the command. in the national convention. The necessity for union ant along the boulevard, where there waa a shoot no longer remains. No single candidacy ia now ea- ino- nalimn Tfi w-t ineA h;m rt . n.i aential to aonaervatiTe safety. Th Rnti-radiajil - u m Meaawant tat nit or me ap . ..... - - 'uo ov:Ficu, racu w lire aw biwu wiui . Droached. Th, la(j8r halted them at I - a abort dlatance. He didn't know ex actly whether to arreat Brown for p. auaplcloua character or worahlp him for a God! More people began to no tlct Brown. Soon there wna a crowd before him. In tjme the crowd parted, and through It etrode a man of ma jestic bearing. Brown gave a glad cry of recognition! Brown knew him! He wu Jullua Caesar! Jupiter Brown roae to hie feet! An inM-lratlim had come Ilk & flaeh to hia mind. "Clullla cat omnia dlvlaa In parte trea," began Brown. Then he etopped Tb"ss people did not underatand him! And yet thla waa nome! And then, like another ilaah tame a aecond fact to Brown's mind. He had been apeuking Latin with the English accent! I (To be continued.) KcCULLET. gate are free to divide among themselves, and, the a revolver at 15'paeea, the target being a piece of pressure from without relieved, the anti-radical white, cardboard about the size of a small cigarette iorcea are gradually dissolving into opposing groups, ,aae. With a revolver the general put all hia 10 eacn group maneuvering to control the party's final ghota into the target, to the complete discomfiture of i,uon at uouis. the other competitor, and when a similar target was ine oreaic-up in the conservative ranks is empha- put up 10 paces further off he repeated the perform- sizea oy the results ol last week's balloting for dele- ance with the rifle gates. Eight weeks ago instructions for Parker 1 W n a. wouia nave carried in beorgia by an almost unani- The deepest sounding ever made by any vessel mous vote; but the convention at Atlanta last was by the United States ship Nero, while on the Wednesday passed a half-hearted and equivocal reso- Honolulu-Manila cable survey. When near Guam Iution of instructions by the narrowest of margins, the Nero got 5269 fathoms, or 31,611 feet, only 66 The division was 166 1-4 for and 157 3-4 against, feet less than six miles. If Mount Everett, the high- mother convention held last week instructed for the est mountain on earth, were set down in this hole, chief judge. Wyoming instructed for Hearst, and it would have above its summit a depth of 2612 feet, Michigan, JSebraska and Oklahoma chose uninstruct- or nearly half a mile of water. ed delegations. Of the 96 delegates chosen Judge ' barker got only 26. Mr. Hearst got 10, and the rest The sudden death of Lieutenant Bower, U. S. A., go into the uncommitted column. On the surface, who was killed by a bolt of lightning at Fort Leav therefore, the week was clearly a losing one for the enworth, deprives the army of one of its most promis- Parker managers. ing young officers. Sympathy will go out to the rel- So far, of 656 delegates chosen, 202 or less than atives of the young man, and as well to his fiancee, one-third are instructed for or committed to Judge Miss Mae Nickerson, one of the fairest and most Parker. Three hundred and thirty-eight delegates deservedly popular young women of the coast. are still to be chosen. Should Judge Parker capture - " 1 them all he would have a total of 540123 votes An Olympia (Wash.) woman has been treed by short of a two-thirds majority ; but in the states and a mad bull. The incident is interesting as showing territories still to elect his managers will be for- that, after all, women are really capable of being tunate to get 100 instructed delegates. They are treed likely to carry Mississippi, with 20 votes; Vermont, with 8 votes and Louisiana with 18 votes. In North W. E. Whitman has bought the Ilwaco Journal Carolina with 24 votes and Kentucky with 26 votes, He will conduct a democratic paper hereafter. The delegations more or less friendly to Judge Parker Journal had been republican for many years. will probably be chosen ; but in Texas, Arkansas and Missouri the indications are that uncommitted dele- The Baltimore thief, who returned several thou gations will be elected. Virginia is as friendly to sand dollars' worth of stock, doubtless wished to in- Mr. Gorman's candidacy as it is to Judge Parker's, suit Mr. Morgan. Delaware may or may not instruct for Judge Gray. 1 Colorado, Utah, Hawaii, Illinois, North Dakota and The Manchurian climate is frigid, but the Bus the Indian territory are apparently committed to sians manage to keep in hote water there. radical policies. Minnesota and Idaho are being! fought for by the Parker managers, with the chances! The Panama canal transfer was signed at Paris. more against them than in their favor. Can it be that there is an ill omen in that 1 Granting Judge Parker 125 votes in the states and territories still to elect, his total will rise to When the fop sees himself as others see him, he 327 less than a third of the membership of the believes in optical delucions, convention. The radical strength will be a little less than his, and, even should he gam from a third to a It has recently been discovered that steel has a half of the uninstructed vote, he would still fall far remarkable affinity for water. short of a nomination. It is clearly within the power of Senator Gorman, James M. Guffey, James bmith, Has the mantle of Herbert Spencer fallen on Jr., Francis M. Cockrell, Edward C. Wall and half George Fred Williams! a dozen other democratic leaders to block Judge Par ker's progress and to force the selection of some other Does the present Attorney General Knox the conservative candidate. Whether they will exert trusts? that power or not is still to be determined. All in- dications point, however, to a protracted and an ex- Some, of the captains of industry have lost their citing struggle at bt. Louis. commissions, PRAEL 0 COOK TRANSFER CO. Telephone 231. Draying and Expressing All gooJaalilpped toourcart will receive pec la 1 attention. 709-715 Commercial Street. Electrical WorRs .W.tYUII, Maaater W are thoroughly prepared for making Mtimate. aod eiecutlng order, for til kind, of tlactrlcal loitaUlnf and repairing. Hoppllea in stock. W ell tb Celebrated SHELBY LAMP. Call ap rtoMliel. 428 BOND STREET IXIlXXlXgIlAllllIllIITlHtItl-ItfTTllllI.II..U,,nm FRESH AND CURED MEATS ' Wholesale aad Retail . Ships, Lopging Camps and Mills supplied'on abort notice,' LIVE STOCK BOUGHT AND SOLD WASHINGTON MARKET . CHRISTENS0N ft CO. IXXXXllIiriimXIItltmriTYTTTTTTTTTlllllllllH.yyy A Chinaman employed at the Mc Gowan cannery in ilwaco had an ex perlence liutt week that may coat him hia life. He waa engaged In cutting tin on a chip dye when two good-alzed plecea of tin etruck him In the mouth, and before he could extract them one went down hia throat. He waa at once hurried up town to Dr. Kennedy' office, where proper relief waa admln latered. At last accounts he was suf fering connlderable pain, but- was atlll among the living. Rutherford M. Rau, for whom Roth child Bros, of Portland are working, is In the city crying his wares. The World's Fair Route. Those anticipating an eastern trip, or a visit to the Louisiana Purchase exposition at St Louis, cannot afford to overlook the advantages offered by the Missurt Pacific Railway, which, on account of Its various routes and gate ways, has been appropriately named "The World's Fair Route." Passengers from the northwest take the Missouri Pacific trains from Den ver or Pueblo, with the choice of either going direct through Kansas City, or via Wichita, Fort Scott and Pleasant Hill. Two trains dally from Denver and Pueblo to St Louis without change, carrying all classes of modern equip ment, including electric lighted obser vation parlor cafe dining cars. Ten dally trains between Kansas City and St. Louis. Write or call on W. C. McBride, gen eral agent, 124 Third street, Portland, for detailed Information and Illustrat ed literature. . MATTRESSES Wool, Curled Hair, Mohair, Spring. AU kinds of Mattresses made to order. Prices the Lowest. L. H. HENNINGSEN S CO. 304 BOND STREET, ASTORIA, OREGON. PHONE, RED 2305 ANDREW ASP, BLACKSMITH. Having Installed a Itubber Tiring Machine of the latest pattern I am prepared to do all kinds of work in that line at reasonable pricus. Telephone 201. CORNER TWELFTH AND DUANE STREETS. V 1,000 TONS REST LUMP Free Delivery. Phono orders to No. 1061. Elmore & CO. HOTEL PORTLAND The Finest Hotel (n the Northwest PORTLAND. OREGON. uont rortret tne ukwmn strip uie-uue juugiu uvluvv nail! p.a.peterson