ASTORIA, OREGON, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1904. PAGE THREE. t a MEATS - FISH - GAME - POULTRY 1 Evcrthing seasonable is in our Market. We sell only fresh, pure an dclean foods. Prompt delivery, Everycustomer satisfied. !! Astoria Fish, Game and Poultry Market. . ; : ftALAR BROS., Proprietor!, Twelfth Street, 'I For Stylish Men Suits with the Snnp, Style and Finish. Be correctly dreiwod. It conui no more if you see ANDREW LAKE 482 Commercial Street. Scow Bay Iron 8 Brass Works Manufacturers of Iron, Steel, Brass and Bronxe Castings. General Foundryuicn and Patternmakers. Absolutely firsteloss work. Prices lowest. Phone 2451 Comer Eighteenth and Franklin. PRAEL 0 COOK TRANSFER CO. Telephone 221. Draying and Expressing All good. .hipped to our care will receive special attention. 709-713 Ccmmertlal Street. WILL OPEN EXPOSITION ON SUNDAY AFTERNOONS Series of Institutes Will be Addressed by World's Prominent Educators, Scientists and Clergymen. Staple and Fancy Groceries .. FLOUR, FEED, PROVISIONS, TOBACCO AND OIQARS. Buppliee of ell klrnli at lowest prloei (or Fisherman, Farmers and Logger. Branch Unlontowo, Phones, 711, Uniontown, 713 A. V. ALLEN, Tenth and Commercial BtrooU. ASTORIA. OREGON. rTTTTTTTTlUlllUlIirilllllllillTTIlIIIIIIimTX 0$0000000000000000000 A 8) o o o o o o w holesale CIGARS, PIPES, TOBACCO. ETC. WILL MADISON 2 K)nrniiMPi'iii.HT ... 1 14 ELEVENTH ST. OSO000000000000000000 i PLUMBING and TINNING I O3jD000000000O000SO$O000 JrJLv ii u 111 vjr c&iiv iiiinuiv STEAM HEATINO, OAS FITTING. RCINQ AND REPAIRING g BAT' .DBS, SINKS, CLOSETS AND OTHER FIXTURES IN O O STOCK. ONLY THE BES T. CALL AND GET OUR PRICES a. . m . , 425 Bond Street Phone 1031 J. A. Montgomery S00000000000000000000 MmiiFiiiiEffluorai Of New Zealand W. P. THOMAS, Mgr., San Francisco. UNLIMITED LIABILITY .OF SHAREHOLDERS Has been Underwriting on the Pacifio Coast for twenty-five years. Portland, Nov. 1. Sunday on the Lewie and Clark exposition ground, will be obeerved In an enlightening and j edifying manner. Jnstead of tightly cloalng the gate, to the public all day, aa waa the caae at St. Loula, they will be thrown open at noon, although all tbe machinery will be .topped, and alt the exhibit buildings, except the pa lace of fine art., will be closed. One of the greatest eerlee , of In atltutea the world ha. ever known la being planned for the expoaltlon, em bracing religion, education, civics, charities and corrections, labor, science, history, and woman's work. Notable men and women from all parts of the world will be secured to deliver addresses, Including famous exponents of Buddhism, Moham medanism, and the religion of Con fucius. A general program provide, for an Institute on each Sunday be tween June 1 and October It. Tbe plan of keeping the exposition open, bealdes giving the people a chance to hear some noted speakers and become enlightened on many different subjects, affords an opportunity to enjoy the beautiful architecture of the buildings and to drink In the glories of the land scape picture and the surrounding scenery. Jt Is the aim of the management to make tbe Institute, of 1905 the great est gatherings of the kind ever held. Tbe details In connection with the In stitute, will be left to a committee of five educators and clergymen who will shape the program under the general direction and with the co-operation of the executive committee of the expo-i Won. The dominant Iden will be to make a fair showing of all tbe forces which have been material In the de velopment of western America and contributed to Its progress. The conferencee on religion held during this period will be addressed by men of national reputation, such as Lyman Abbott or Amory H. Bradford of the Congregational church; Edward Everett Hale, Minot J. Savage, Robert Collyer or Samuel Eliot of the Uni tarian church: William S. Ralnford or R Heber Newton of the Episcopal church; Bishop McCabe. Bishop Fow ler or Bishop Hamilton of the Metho dist church; Archbishop Ireland or Bishop Spauldlng of the Roman Cath olic church; Henry Van Dyke or C. Cuthbert Hall of the Presbyterian church; Emll G. Hlrsch or Leon Harris of the Jewish church; Felix Adler of the Ethical Culture society. At the Institute of charitlee and cor rections, which will be held In con nection with the national conference of charities and corrections there will be such speakers as Robert W. De Forrest, Jane Addams, Florence Kelly, Edgar Gardner Murphy, H. V. Hart, 8. J. Barows, Pomer Folks, Judge Llndsey and Professor Henderson. The statea of the northwest will be asked to abandon their county Insti tutes next year, and meet In one great educational conference at Portland. At this congress many distinguished acholora will apeak, among them being, President Elliot of Harvard, President Butler of Columbia, President Schur man of Cornell, President Jordan of Leland Stanford university, President Wheeler of the university of California, Booker T. Washington, Colonel Pratt, John Cotton Dana. Melville Dewey, Herbert Putman and Dr. Billings. Besides these meetings there will be held the national conference of chari ties and correction; the Industrial In stitute' at which noted labor leaders and scholars will speak, and the con vention of the national woman's suff rage association, which will be con ducted In connection with the institute of woman'a work. There will also be many gatherings of less importance, each Interesting and of value. deference, consideration and sympathy, and when these do not come, we grow bitter and resentful. Now why In the world should we demand such tributes from our fellow menT Most of them have troubles enough of their own. Certainly all have their personal In terests and few are going out of their way to pat us on the shoulder, to poor- pussy us or to assume our load or even divide it with us. Moreover, why do we need this outside assistance? The manly man burns his own smoke, paddles his own canoe, shoulders his own way through the world. We expect too much from the pro cesses and events of life Itself. Too often we take the attitude that the world not only owes us a living, but a good time and various forms of minis tration to our diverse needs. But If we expect that either a long series of years or the next twenty-four hours are bound to give us a certain amount of ease, satisfaction and delight, In nineteen cases out of twenty, we are bound to be disappointed, and the more keen our anticipations the more probable will be the collapse of our hopes. I once crossed the ocean with a man who was making his first trip abroad. To It he had eagerly looked forward for years, but not until he was released from the care of his father, a paralytic, was he able to carry out his long-cher-Isbed Intentions. Now he was free. and right eagerly did he anticipate the satisfactions of old world travel. On a ship he chanced to meet a family that he-had long known. The father, be fore the voyage ended, was stricken with paralysls,and It became my friend's plain duty to return to Amer ica with him and the wife and daugh ter on the first steamer that left Liver pool. So In a moment down fell his castle In Spain, and wbUe accepting manfully his task, he could not help saying to me: "I believe the Lord loves a good joke." No. It does not pay to cherish too roseate expectations of tbe morrow. Better keep them within bounds, and then, If you are surprised by the kind ness of others, or if some rare piece of good fortune slips Into your hands out of the passing days, the experience will be an unexpected, but thoroughly enjoyable bonus, a rich and surpris ing addition to the assets of your life. This may seem a couse! of prudence, but It Is not meant to militate against the proper use of the faculty of an ticipation which Is one of the dlvlnest possessed by man. Only let it be held In check in certain directions and ex ercised In others, and then life will be steadier and more satisfying in the long run for us alL Cherish; Indeed, great anticipations of yourself and what you may be and do with divine help, and cherish, too, large anticipa tions of what God may yet reveal of truth, of His own character, of His boundless love for manklnu, and of His gracious purpose for the Individual life. THE PARSON. Women Should Laugh. Laughter Is a good healthful, mus cle making, lung developing exercise, and It Is aa good for girls as for boys. And humor can be cultivated In a girl's mind without any abatement of the dignity and modesty and charm of her womanhood, not the unpleasant and constant frivolity evidenced in "smart nMch or Quickness of repartee, but the humor that looks at the world with a twinkle In the eye and sees Its ab surdities, its smallness and Its fun. It should be part of every woman's mental equipment, for women are nii,t iinon to bear so many of life's small worries as Well as Its greater ones. The bringing up of children. the care of servants and the many so called social duties that become a bur den all are made easy and possible to put up with by the woman with an r, foiling sense of the bright Side Of life. It I. a sense that last, through life, through Its many Ills, its dlslllu alons and Its tribulations. . INDIANS AT CAMP-MEETING. Red Thau Msetinae Aooeal to the Men With Peculiar Fore. One would hardly think that the Americans Indians of all races, would be Interested in "camp meetings" aa the experiences of such a gathering cannot have for them the element of novelty which la found by the whites who have lived In houses for genera tions. And yet one of the most popu lar religious gathering from an In dian point of view la the annual camP' meeting held In Oklohama by mission arlea of the Dutch Reformed church. This year', meeting has Just been held and Is described by tbe Rev. E. W. Thompson, who Is superintendent of Oklohoma missions for the religious body named. The camp meeting waa held about two miles from Colony, on the govern ment reservation. Invitations had been aent to Indiana for miles around and about five hundred ' attended.1 Their tepees were arranged In a semi clrcie-around the large assembling tent In which the services were held. All the accompaniments of an Indian camp were to be seen, Including quar reling dogs, frolicking children, sleepy ponies, and here and there a group of gossiping squaws. The clear waters of Cobb creek furnished drink for the ponies, wading places for the children and natural wash tuba for the squaws. The services were held morning, af ternoon and evening. As tbe time to assemble approached, Indians em ployed for the purpose went about crying tbe camp," Soon afterward the white workers would gather about the little organ In the assembly tent and sing gospel songs, while the Indian audience assembled. A few prayers were said in both the English and the Indian tongues, voluntary testimonies were heard from Indian Christians, and simple gospel sermon was preached. The Indiana are said to be intensely interested in the meetings and each year a unmber of them start to follow what they term the "Jesus road." An Interesting tour of the Reformed churches In the eastern states la now being made by two Comanche chiefs, Pertconlc and Nahwatx," accompanied by an Interpreter, White Wolf, tbe Rev. Mr. A. P. Brokaw, and Mra. Alfred R. Page, secretary for Indian work of the womens executive committee of the Reformed church missions. board of domestic Legation to Be Raised. Paris. Nov. 18. A dispatch to the Temps from Constantinople saya that negotiations have been resumed for raising the American legation to the rank of an embassy. Pears' Pears Soap is made in a clean, sun-flooded factory;, then stored a full year in a dry, airy place, before com ing to yon. Is it such a wonder it lasts so long? Established la I79- This will help you to decide WHERE TO BUY FURNITURE No store in Astoria is so well prepared to show you just what you want in either plain or ornamental House Furnishiugs. We Sell the Best Values for the Least Money. Carpets, Rags, Matting', Iron Beds, Folding' Beds, Lounges, RocKers, BooK Cases, Dressers, Stoves and Rang'es. i-l.J.U- 1 '.1.' ' .i, i - E niiiiitHminisiiiiimiiMiumiimMii ELMORE Q CO., Sole Agents Astoria, - - Oregon. HOTEL PORTLAND The Finest Hotel In the Northwest PORTLAND. OREGON. 8UNDAY MORNING TALK. . The' 'Unwisdom of Expecting too Much Women Should laugh. Over-expectatlona are as bad as overcapitalisation. We soon witness In the business world the results of the latter Iniquitous device and In the wide sphere of human life we encoun ter a countless number of disappoint ments due to cherishing too sanguine hopes of the future. The wise man learna to put restraints about his an ticipations, not to bank on the boom in real estate that may never come, on political preferment almply because he has been nominated to office, in short, to underestimate, rather than overeatlmate the beneftte which the future may yield to him. As-a rule, we expect too much of others. We think ourselves entitled to Handsome Music Cabinets From $7.50 Up. Luxurious Morris Chairs $6.50 to $25. Price our goods and you will not buy elsewhere. , We Sell on Easy Payments. Your Credit Is Gccd. H. H. Zapf & Co. Commercial lSt The Leading House Furnishers. ai