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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1904)
ASTORIA, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 14, '1004. PAGE THREE. 3C REE SIGN THE COUPON We have just closed a contract with the publishers of A high grade magazine for 'Women Who Think," whereby we are enabled to pre sent a copy to every reader of this paper absolutely free. This well-known maga zine is endorsed by over three million women. Its pages are filled with inter esting articles, covering all branches of fiction, art, music and literature, from the pens of world-renowned writers. The edition is published monthly and is pro fusely illustrated. Some of the contri butors are as follows: LADY HENRY SOMERSET THE MARQUIS DE CA8TELLANE MRS. BURTON HARRISON -MRS. MAY WRIGHT 8EWALL ELLA WHEELER WILCOX MRS. JOHN C. BLACK CAPTAIN R. P. HOBSON CAMILLE MANELAW BI8H0P POTTER MR8. MAUDE M. MILLER OUIDA JESSIE ACKERMAN The Morning' Astorian is published every morning except Monday. It is recognized as one of the best dailies in the Pacific Northwest. Its local news service is up-to-date, clean and reliable, while all the import ant events of the world are covered each day by wire. 4? X? X7 & ? Some 1904 Reasons for Tailing The Morning Astorian THIS IS THE PRESIDENTAL CAMPAIGN YEAR. J3hQ MORNING ASTORIAN prints all the NEWS of all the parties. j& X? j& & & A WAR BETWEEN GREAT NATIONS is being fought. &q MORNING ASTORIAN is covering the details of this war through THE ASSOCIAT ED PRESS of which we are the only . members within 30 miles of Astoria. ? & & "MADAME" Xl 111 1 Will be mailed to you each month for ONE YEAR FREE OF CHARGE upon the following termsi OUR SPECIL OFFER To all Old or New Subscribers to THE MORNING ASTORIAN Paying Six Months in Advance "MADAME" will be mailed for one year absolutely free. To all Old or New Subscribers to THE MORNING ASTORIAN Paying One Year in Advance TWO copies of ' MADAME" will bo mail ed to any address desired for one vear absolutely free. Uus oiler in cludes only subscribers who get the paper by carrier on the SIX MONTHS and YEARLY BASIS, and mail subscribers on the yearly basis ONLY. A sample copy of the next issue of "MADAME" will be mailed to every home in Astoria. This is an offer no one can afford to miss. Rmember that we give you this beautiful magazine ONE YEAR FREE. Watch for the sample copy of "MADAME", lexamine it carefully and have the money ready when our agent calls, or bring it to the office to avoid delay. Fill out this coupon plainly, cut out and mail to THE MORNING ASTORIAN with remittance or hand to an accredited representative of this paper. p. 0 SUU.. '.. . . Street: Addrw. TO THE ASTORIAN PUBLISHING COMPANY: In consldcntlon of $ btlnj idvinct psymcnt for THE MORNINIj ASTORIAN from .. K0...., you may itnd m absolutely FREE 0 ...190.... to........ the "MADAME" immIm fof one yur from dte. DUd - wo-" sSn,d r THIS OFFER MAY BE WITHDRAWN AT ANY TIME ADDRESS ALL COMMUMCATIONS TO THE ASTORIAN PUBLISHING GOAPANY Pay no money to agents who do not carry The Astorian Publishing Company's credentials. REWARD FOR HEROIC ACT Story of New York Banker's Inter est In a Trapeze Performer Who Was Injured. HE SAVED FINANCIER'S CHILD IteMcticd Little One In Runaway Accident and When He Was Hurt the Banker Came to 111 AMHlHtauce. Chicago, July 1J. A diitpatcb to the Tribune from Milwaukee says; The mystery in which a New York banker's family has been caring for Lou la M. Gardner of thia city, a young trapeze performer with a broken back who arrived at New York from London has teen wived. The Garden, mother and son have reached here from the east with nurses and with them came a report that the banker will build a home for the boy to insure his com fort as long as he lives. An explana tion of the generosity of the banker is given in this story; While walking down a principal street In New York one day, Gardner was attracted by a runaway. The swaying coach containing a child came down the street dragged by two fright ened horses. The young man dashed out, grabbed the animals, and brought them to a standstill. The mother of the child offered Gardner a reward. He refused it, then she gave him her card, telling him If he ever needed assistance to call upon her. Gardner refused to give his name and disap peared. When he came to read the card he found it bore the name of the banker's .wife. Soon afterward Gardner returned to London. It was there be fell, missed the net and sustained serious Injury. News of the accident appeared in the New York papers and with it came the story of Gardner's act In rescuing the banker's child. Seeing the report, the banker's wife took the first boat for London. Upon arriving she engaged the two best physicians In the city, employed a competent staff of nurses and did her best to make Gardner happy In his trouble. Meantime Gardner's father died. Hearing the news, he asked that bis mother might come to London. The banker's wife at once made arrange' menta and since that time Mrs. Gard ner has been with her son. astery of Solovetsk, taxing the ground that the prince must have been out of his mind at the time be committed the crime. In this way the princely house of Bartenlen was spared the Indignity of having one of Its scions wearing the garb of a felon. It is un doubtedly motives of an analogous character that have prompted Em peror Nicholas to deal in this fashion with Prince Alexis Dolgoroukl, who would have otherwise been sent to jail. For his extraordinary assault upon Count Lamsdorft Is only the culmina tion of a career which, in the last few years, at any rate, has been one uninterrupted succession of troubles of one kind or another, both in Rus sia and abroad. He must not be con founded with the Prince Dolgoroukl of the same Christian name who married the enormously wealthy Miss Fleet wood Wilson, and who divides his time between his own estates In Rus sia and those of his English wife in Great Britain, but belongs to an en tirely different branch of the family. Formerly he was an officer of the Hus sars of the Guards regiment But after squandering his own fortune and that of his wife at the card table he was turned out of the army, and from that time forth lived mainly by means of his wits, his wife having secured a judicial separation from him. Count Lamsdorft was compelled to warn the Muscovite embassies and legations abroad to abstain from granting any sort of recognition to the prince, and it Is this, together with the refusal of the minister to recognize him or to grant him any post in the diplomatic or consular service as a means of live lihood, that led him to make the as sault upon the minister, who was fell ed to the ground, with blood stream ing from an ugly scalp wound. The Dolgoroukl family Is one of the most ancient and illustrious in Rus sia. They were princes before the Romanoffs became czars. The first Romanoff emperor. Czar Mikhail, mar ried a Princess Dolgoroukl, and Peter II died in 1730, on the very morning of the day appointed for his wedding to another Princess Dolgoroukl. During the reign of Catherine H a Prince Dolgoroukl conquered the Crimea and added it to her empire, receiving a return for her surname of "Krlmskoi." It was his grandson. Prince Michael Dolgoroukl, who was minister of war In the earlier portion of the reign of Alexander IL who married the states man's daughter Princess Catherine Dolgoroukl, morgonatically, a short time after the death of his consort, the Empress Marie, whose maid of honor the princess had been. The princess did not become em press, but was created by her husband Princess Yourleffska, and since the death of her husband has lived en tirely abroad, making her home at Paris. She has three children, off spring of her union with the em peror, all born several years prior t her marriage" however. The boy, a half-brother of the late czar, was for merly in the navy, and visited tha United States at the time of the Col umbian celebration. In 1893, as a mid shipman on one of the Russian men-of-war. He now makes his home In St Petersburg, where he holds a com mission In the Hussars of the Guard, bears the name of Prince George Yourieffskl and is married to the Countess Alexander Zarnekau, a mor ganatic child of the Duke Constantino of Oldenburg. One of his sisters, the Princess Olga, is the wife of Count George Herenberg, while the other, the Princess Catherine, her father's fa vorite, and who was jilted by Levi P. Morton's former son-in-law, Count Boson Talleyrand-Perlgord, on account of the Insufficiency of her dowry, la now married to Prince Alexander Bariatlnski. The Dolgoroukis, whose name means "the Jong armed ones," are influential In the Russian great world. For many years Prince "Sandy" Dolgoroukl was the grand master of ceremonies at court His brother. Prince Nicholas, spent a long time at Berlin as mil itary attache, while the salons of three of their sisters, Mme. Albedynski, the Princess Soltlkoff and the Countess Stelnbach, were and.stlll are among' the most popular and frequented at St Petersburg. No Pity b flown. "For years fate was after me con tinuously," writes F. A- Gulledge, Ver bena, Ala. 1 had a terrible case of Piles, causing 24 tumors. When all railed Buckiens Arnica Salve cured me." Equally good for Burns and all aches and pains. Only 25c, at Chas. Rogers' drug store. FATE OF PRINCE WHO BEAT RUSSIAN COUNT LAMSOORFF Alexia Dolgoroukl to Spend the Re mainder of His Days in the Monas tery Prison Near Archangel. It Is In a monastery that Prince Alexis Dolgoroukl, who beat the Rus slan minister of foreign affairs, Count Lamsdorft1, about the head and shoul ueis with his cane In the street of St Petersburg, attacking the statesman from behind and taking him altogether unawares, will spend the remainder of his days as an unwilling Inmate, says a writer in the New York Tribune For he has been conAgned by order of the czar to the famous Solovetsk monastery, about 150 miles beyond the remote White sea port of Archangel The winters there are arctic In their intensity, while In summer the heat Is oppressive and the plagues of mos qultoes and other Insects beyond all endurance. The monastery, which is one of the holiest places in Russia, having been founded in 1429 by St. Sabbatheus, has always been a favorite place of de tention of people of high rank who had offended the czar. They were sent there on the ground that their minds were slightly unbalanced, and that re moval from the temptations, the ex citement and the intrigues of the outer world, together with solitude, medita tion and companionship of the holy men, that Is to say, the monks of the establishment, was likely to restore them to reason. Prince Anthony of Brunswick and his consort, Ann, regent of Russia, Simon Bekbulatovltch, the deposed czar of Kazan, and many other persons of light and leading were Im prisoned there, while even at the pres. ent moment there Is among Its Inmates Prince Bartenleff, who, some 10 or 12 years ago, murdered a lovely and pop ular young Polish actress at Warsaw in a fit of drunken Jealousy. The young Hussar officer was sen tenced by the court to penal servitude for life on the dreadful Island of Sag- hallen. But the late Alexander HI, from motives of consideration for the prince's father, who was one of the most trusted and faithful of the vet eran members of the Imperial house hold, commuted the sentence of the court to one of detention In the mon- RHEUMATISM J0HITS AKDMUSCLES SW0LIXH AIID STIFF A disease so painful and far-reaching in its effects opera the human system as Rheumatism, must have a deep and well-laid foundation. It originates and develoos in the blood, and, like other diseases of the blood, is fre- Ov""TT quently inherited. The poisonous acids with which the Mi SjS blood is charged circulate through the system, breaking w "l..J down the health, irritating the nerves, settling in joints ; i SS&sSSSSSSSS and muscles, and causing the ij- iwjsUidupinbedforsi month. ni t. sharp, cutting pains peculiar tl to Rheumatism. Unless the med to help m. finally I Jift o Uair mtdl muscles become coated With could not olose thsm when opened. Tint ruiog the acrid matter and are rsn- i."ftuf!rsd whn f,be"a B- B., but I w it dered stiff and soSuhe Zd?''00''" nerves completely wrecked. 1355 Mt. Vmon At. B. K. CHAPKAJT. Rheumatism, being a constitutional blood disease, requires internal treat- . A. ! " A. i .... ivimments, piasters ana sucn uiings as are applied outwardly, give only temporary relief, s. S. S. is the recognized great est of all blood purifiers and tonics, and in no disease does it act so promptly and beneficially as Rheuma tism, neutralizing the acids and restoring the blood to a pure, healthy condition and invieoratinsr and ' toning up the nerves and all parts of the system. It is guaranteed strictly vegetable. 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