The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, September 06, 1904, Page PAGE THREE, Image 3

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    ASTORIA, OREGON, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1904.
PAGE THREE.
BUYING FOR XMAS
THATJ THE STORY AND THAI WE MAY HAVE A BRIGHT
CLEAN STOCK THEN WE OFFER YOU NOW
00 Chlldrtni M. 4S booki o IWO Sundsrd Tlllei rt. 25t bouki 20c
1 (Ml Pocmi rtfultr 75 boob :Wc
J. N. GRIFFIN
L. H. HENNINGSEN CO.
Furniture, Stoves and Ranges, House Furnishings
All klmUof uiatreM roiule to order. Furniture repaired,
upholstering. Absolutely the lupt place in town.
Second-baud gomla liougLt and o!tl.
504;BOND STREET. Nx Door to Wlli-Frjo Ex. Co. PHONE, RED 2305
Urooks & Johnson, Proprietor. Phone No. 831
THE WIGWAM
CIS BROOKE, Manager
Great Palace of Art of the Pacific Coast
Fine Bar and the Best of Liquors and Cigar;
SHE IHt ILLLSIKAItD PICllRtS
Eighth and Astor St. ASTORIA
o
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W holes ale
CIGARS. PIPES.
TOBACCO. ETC.
WILL MADISON
0 KM OMMFKI IAI. ST. 11 Ll.l. I.M II ! O
0 0 f. 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 ft 0 it 0 1 0 O t 0 O ' 0 t 0 t 0 0 $ 0 0 00
nttttttuttnntt ttaattBanna
Some People Are Wise
And some are otherwise. Get wit to the value of our Pro
scription Department whan you want Pur, Clean Drug and
Madiolnaa aeourately oompoundad.
Anything In our atook of from our prescription eountar.
you can dapand upon aa being tha beet.. Get It at
n and Commercial Street Hart's Drug Store
n 8 d s r tt R 11 R r a a a8nBntta
ANDREW ASP, BLACKSMITH.
Having installed Kubber Tiring Machine of the
Intent pattern I am prepared to do all kind ol work
in tunt Una at reasonable pricei. Telephone 2M.
CORNER TWELFTH AND DUANE STREETS.
AMMUNITION
Shot, Shells, Wads.
546-550 Bond Street
FISHER BROTHERS COMPANY
PRAEL & COOK TRANSFER CO.
. Telephone 221.
Draying and Expressing
All gooda shipped toourcare will receive special attention.
709-715 Commercial Street.
1,000 TO
NS
BEST LUMP
C
A
Free Delivery. Phone orders to No. 1061. Elmore & CO.
I
" Best
by Test"
A transcontinental trav
eler Bays: "I've tried them
all and I prefer the
North
western Limited
It's the beHt to be found from
const to coast."
It's "The Train for Com
fort" every night in the year
between Minneapolis, St.
Paul and Chicago.
Hoftire i(aitlnon a trlp-no matter
wlinre-wnm fur liiU-rtlii informa
tion about comfortable traveling.
H. L SISLER, Central Agent
132 Third $1 Portland. Oregon.
T. W. TRAHOALE.
Oenoml hum-iiKcr Agent,
ht I'uul, Minn.
OONQ TO THE FAIR.
What to Do If You Deeiro Practical
Information.
If you contemplate visiting the St
Louis Exposition, to secure reliable In
formation a to railroad aervlce, the
! lowest rates and the best routes. Aiac
as to the local conditions in St Louis,
hotels, etc., etc.
If you will write the undersigned,
stating what Information you desire
the same will be promptly furnished.
If we do not have It on hand, wll'
aecure It for you If possible, and with
out any expense to you. Address
B. H. TRUMBULL.
Portland. Ore.
Bee that your ticket mads via the
Illinois Central R. R. Thoroughly mod
ern trains connect with all transconti
nental lines at St. Taut and Omaha.
If your frlenMs are coming west let us
know snd we will quote them direct
the specially low ntm now In effect
from all eastern points.
CONDITIONS
ARE BETTER
"Standard" Brand
Highest
Grade
PORTLAND
CEMENT
$2.15 Per Barrel
HARRY E. CHERRY, Ageat
Excursion Rates
SEPTEMBER
5-6-7
OCTOBER
3-4-5
St. Louis and Retrn
$67.50
Chicago and Return
$72.50
Via
Great Northern
Railway
Any Information as to rates, routes,
etc., cheerfully given on implication.
8. It. TRUMBULL, Commercial
Agent. 142 Third street, Portland, Or.
J. C. LINDSET, T. F. & P. A., 14J
Third street, Portland, Or.
P. B. THOMPSON. F. A. P. A..
Mercantile advertising must be pf
the . ."eontinued-in-our-next" . kind
that is, if today's busy store is to be
be a continued story.
Tickets good 00 days; stopovers
allowed going and returning.
II
Full information from
DICKSON, C. P. & T. A.,
122 Third St, Portland
L. G. YERKES, G. W. P. A.,
Seattle
PARK AND WASHINGTON STREETS,
PORTLAND, OREGON
Established in 1866. Opm all the year. Private or
class instruction. Thousands of graduates in posi
tions; opportunities constantly occurring. It ay to
attend our school. Catalogue, specimens, etc., free.
A. P. ARMSTRONG. LL.B., PRINCIPAL
New York City Troubled With
Fewer Strikes Than During
Last Year.
OPEN SHOP MORE GENERAL
or 150,000 Union Men in Me.
tropoli Not 31 ore Than JM,
000 Have lieen Idle at
One Time.
.New York, Sept. 5. Labor Day, 1904.
presents many Interesting facts and
conditions both to employers and em
ployes In New York city, as compared
with the same period a year ago, gays
the Herald. Within five months be
tween April I and September I. this
year, losses In wages to worklngmen
In New York city from strikes and
lockouts have been more than one
third less during the same months last
year, and tha losses to employers have
been correspondingly smaller.
In all of the 1904 strikes, except
possibly in the building trades, the
outcome has marked a decided step
towards the "open shop" and In sev
eral Instances the employers have
achieved a decided victory, the strik
ing union men having returned to
work side by side with non-union em
ployes. This was especially noted in
the strikes of the marine workmen
machinists, tailors and the butchers.
In 1903 the building trades strike
was the most stubborn and disastrous
ever known in that branch cf indus
try In New York city. During the
season 81 unions of skilled machinists,
comprising 40,000 men, were Idle most
of the time. Involving a loss of 1.707,
000 days' work and $6,675,000 in wages.
The loss to builders and members ag
gregated more than J200.000.000. In ad
dition to this last year, more than 25.
000 laborers were idle much of the
time. Including 20,000 unskilled work
men in the subway, teamsters, ma
sons, helpers and others.
.This year at no time have there
been more than 20,000 men In the build
ing trades Idle at any time and there
have been no strikes of consequence
among the unskilled classes. In
March and April 5000 masons' helpers
quit work, which forced an equal num
ber of bricklayers Into idleness for 20
days. This was the only trouble of
Importance In the building trades un
til the recent lockout, and this fight
has not brought about a complete tie
up of building operations, such as oc
curred In 1903.
In the building trades at the present
time there are only about 10,000 men
In enforced Idleness.
There are 150,000 union workman,
skilled and unskilled, In the metropol
itan district At no time during t'.ie
season has the army of idle exceeded
35,000.
clamatlons as he danced around the
rsg In an ecstacy of enjoyment. At
! sight of Y.'. master Jack's gladness
knew no bounds. Mr. Woods had to
take him out of his cage.
"I wouldn't sell that bird," exclaimed
Jack delighted owner, "for IIOO.OOO!"
Jack Is a paragon among crows. He
shares his master's faculty of being
able to Imitate the cries of all other
birds In the vicinity of the district. To
hear Mr. Woods reproduce the calls of
chickens, turkeys, sparrows, whip-poor-wills,
robins and others and har
Jaek do the same, and to hear the bird
whose natural cries are thus mimicked
respond to both deceivers Is remark
able. This faculty In the man is more re
markable than It Is In the crow, the
throat of which, like the parrots and
other talking birds. Is adapted by na
ture for this purpose. Mr. Woods, will
tell you he first began to exercise this
power of Imitating the calls of birds
when he was a boy on the farm.
"It came natural to me," he says,
"and I thought nothing about there be
ing anything extraordinary In It until I
came to a city, and then those who
heard me give the notes and calls ex
pressed themselves as astonished, es
pecially when they noted, as some had
opportunity of doing, that the birds Im
itated responded to the sounds.
"This led me to keep up the prac
tice of Imitating the birds In what
might be termed their language, and
the consequence Is a peculiar adapta
bility of the muscles of my throat to
the exercise."
Mr. Woods said that birds have al
most a language cf their own.
"Of course," he continued, "any
method for the Interchange of thought
or feeling Is a language; but the birds
have a systematized series of sounds
which convey definite ideas. They
have their mating or love language, an
eloquent gamut of sounds, each of
which proclaims and expresses ideas
of endearment.
"They have their calls of alarm one
cry In the case of the chicken, for In
stance, signifying to her young the ap
proach of danger from overhead, the
appearance of a chicken hawk, perhaps;
another densting that an enemy is ap
proaching In a certain direction on the
ground; another calling to the young
chickens to take refuge underneath he
wings. These calls are all distinct, and
may be imitated so as to be responded
to, for a time at least, until the chicks
find they are being deceived."
DUEL IN THE STREET.
Scow Bay Iron 8 Brass Works
Manufacturers of
Iron, Steel, Brass and Bronze Castings.
General Foundryinen and Patternmakers.
Absolutely firstclass work. Prices lowest.
Phone 2451 Comer Eighteenth and Franklin.
OWNS CROW THAT CAN TALK.
ASTORIA- IRON WORKS
.mil.v OX,Pres.andSupt
K. I.. WdHOP, Secretary
A. I. FOX, Vice Presldeut
ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK, Treat
Designers and Manufacturers of
THH LATK8T IMPROVED
CANNING MACHINERY, MARINE ENGINES AND BOILERS.
COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.
Foot of Fourth Street, .... ASTORIA, OREGON.
rnmrxirxxmiiiiinxmxxrnxiixxixinnixxxiimi
FRESH AND CUREDIMEATS
Wholesale and Retail
Ships, Logging Camps and Mills supplied on short notice.
LIVE STOCK BOUGHT AND SOLD
WASHINGTON MARKET - CHRISTENSON & CO.
Washington City Official Has Pet With
Peculiar Gift
Washington Sept. 6. A. B. Woods,
ornithologist of the Smithsonian in
stitute, Is back in Washington after
an absence of several weeks, and. in
consequence. Jack, Mr. Woods' pet
crow and champon talking bird of the
district is in jubilailon.
Jai-k spent the perlcd of his master's
absence with a family In the northeast
ern part of the city; but he had not re
celved any advances of friendship made
to him. Indulged In few remarks and
in fact, sulked all the time.
As soon as he heard Mr. Woods' voice
at the door of the house, however.
Jack's demeanor became metamor
phosed. His drooping feathers became
erect, his black eyes glistened and he
sprang to the bars of his cage and
manifested every sign of Intense ex
citement. "Hello, Jack! Hullo. Woods! hullo!
hullo! hullo! ha! ha! ha!" were the ex-
New York Fist Fight Engs in Demon
stration With 'Gun.
New York, Sept. 6. Three men have
been shot here in a street fight In
Prince street and two probably will
die. They are Joseph Falano, aged
24, and Alfred Setterl, aged 21. A fist
fight was In progress and was being
watched by a crowd of Italians, when
three men In a carriage drove Into the
crowd and began to strike one of the
fighters with a whip.
Carlno Malinfrone, one of the fighters,
fired into the carriage and Is said to
have hit one of Its occupants. Then
he turned his weapon on the two men
with whom he had been fighting. A
dozen or more shots were fired. The
identity of the men In the carriage is
unknown, as they drove hurriedly from
the scene.
JACK GARDINER BEATEN.
Fight
3
A WOMAN TO BE PRETTY
Hast Bit Laxnrlamt and Gloss? IXaJr,
lie Matter Wfcat Color.
Tha finest contour of a female face, the
weetest smile of a female mouth, loses
something If tha head la crowned with
cant hair. Scant and falling hair, it Is
now known. Is caused by a parasite that
burrows Into the scalp to the root of the
hair, where It saps the vitality. The lit
tle white scales the germ throws up In
burrowing are called dandruff. To cure
dandruff permanently, then, and to stop
fating hair, that germ must be killed.
Newbro's Herptclde, an entirely new re
sult of the chemioal laboratory, destroys
the dandruff germ, and, of course, stops
the falling hair, and prevents baldness.
Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c. In
tamps for sample to The Herplelde Co.,
Detroit. Mien.
Eagle Drug Store, 351-353 Bond St..
Owl Drug Store. 649 Com. St., T. F.
rtTTTTT? rrmrr ttt 1 1 Ixxttttttttttttttittttt r i tjjj Laurln, Prop. "Special Agent'
Knocked Out by Kjd Everett
Near New York.
Xew York, Seot. S-ack Gardiner
of Chicago has been knocked out in
the ninth round of a fijht with "Kid
Everett of this city. The bout was held
cn the banks of the Hudson opposite
Tonkers and was witnessed by 209
enthusiasts who went to the scene in
launches. Gardiner had much the Worst
of the battle through the seventh and
eighth rounds. In the ninth he ral
lied but was knocked down and took
the count When he got up Everett
sent a jab to the Jaw which sent him
down and out. He did not recover con
sciousness until 20 minutes later.
UNION LABEL ON THE COFFIN.
If It
Isn't There, Boston Buildina
Trades Will Ask Why.
Boston, Sept. 5. The Building Trades
Council yesterday afternoon debated at
length the question of requiring mem
bers and friends of members to be
buried in union made coffins only.
Resolutions were adopted calling
upon a firm of coffin manufacturers to
comply with the union rules and place
the union label upon its product, un
der penalty of withdrawal of patronage.
Car Goes Over Cliff.
San Francisco, Sept, 5. A car was
derailed and thrown over the embank
ment close to the site of the scenic
railway near the Cliff house early this
morning. Frank Roman!, a passenger,
received Injuries which caused his
death a short time afterwards.