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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 24, 1905)
THE MORNING" ASTORIA N, ASTOhU. OREGON. TUESDAY. JANUARY 84, 1005. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. JAY TUTTLE, -M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Acting Assistant Surgeon 0. S. Maria Hospital Service. Office houre: 19 to a.m. 1 to 4: JO p.m. 477 Commercial Street, Ind Floor. I Dr. RHODA C. HICKS OSTECTATHIST HanstU. Bldg. 87S Commercial 8t PHONE BLACK Sfltt. C. W. BARR, D. D. 8. Has Opened Dental Parlora In Rooms 817-818, The Dekum. PORTLAND, OREGON. ' Where he will be pleaeed to meet Frienda and Patrons. Dk. VAUGHAN, Dkstist Pythian Building, Astoria, Oregon. Dr. W. C. LOGAN , DENTIST ' 678 Commercial St, Shan ah an BuHding MISCELLANEOUS. C. J. TRENCHARD Real Estate Insurance, Commission and Shipping. CUSTOM HOUSE BROKER. Office 133 Ninth Street, Next to Juetioe Office. ASTORIA, OREGON. JAPANESE GOODS New stock of fancy goods just arrived at Yokohama Bazaar. Call and see the latest novelties from Japan. BEST 15 CENT MEAL. You can always find the best 15-cent meal in the city at the Rising Sun Restaurant 612iCommercial St FIRST-CLASS MEAL for 15c; nicecake, coffee, pie, or doughnuts, 5c, at U. S. Restaur ant 434 Bond St WOOD! WOOD! WOOD Cord wood, mill wood, box wood, any kind of wood at loweet prioea. Kelly, the transfer man. 'Phone 2211 Black, Barn on Twelfth, oppoaito opera Jiouse. t BAY, jVIEW HOTEL E. G LASER, Prop. Borne Cooking, Comfortable Beds, fCeasoa- able Rata andjNice Treatment" f ASTORIA HOTEL Corner Seventeenth and Duane SU. 75 cents a day and up. Meals 20 cents. Board; and lodging $4 per week. THE COMFORT SALOON Franteo?icht& Francisovich Proprietors. Logan Building Patrons will be furnished wit hthe best the market affords. Only the best goods kept in stock. These tiny Capsules are superior to Balsam ot topaiDa. Cubebs or Injection and fttrm CURE IN 48 HOURSUnlUi. the same diseases with out Inconvenience. Sold by all nrvrtftt1 ' Fnone 2175 Red. Open Day andJNlght. The Astoria Restaurant . MAN MING, Proprietor. Fine meals served at all hours. Oysters served in any style. Game in season. 899.Bond Street, Cor. Sth. Astoria, bTa! f t (9 jilii IlimilllllllllU'tf The Sound of? i A Voice Hy Ktith Cordon f Copyright, br Franc Wilson 4 hi in n m minin win They met first in the dusk of a June evening, and, as Mrs, Stanton said, It looked like a sheet and pillowcase par ty. The drawing room was ghostly with pictures, statuary and chandellcn draped In white muslin, the furniture bulking awkwardly In Its summer linen. Lansing bad dropped in to see the Stantons and say goodby, and soon after Mrs. Audley, who was. It trans pired, to sail with them on the mor row, was ushered In. She hesitated foi a moment In the doorway, a tall, sten der, unsubstantial figure In white- Then aa they rose and Mrs, Stautoo stepped forward to greet her she spoke, and the obdurate heart of Richard Lansing fell, without a sound, with out a flutter of resistance, a willing captive to the most exquisite voice he had ever heard. In the flow of small talk that fol lowed he was strangely silent, floating, as It were, on the music of that voice, with Its beautiful modulations and strange, minor pitch. He scarcely heard what she said. Indeed, with a voice like that, words became ridlcn lously unimportant Rallied by Mrs. Stanton upon his alienee, he replied to her banter awk warily and with an effort, like a man aroused from a dream. Later, when Mrs. Audley rose to go, she extended her hand to him frankly. Then she drifted out Into the glimmering light of the hall, followed by Stanton, who went to put her In her cab. The moment they were out of hear ing Lansing turned to his hostess, with highwayman-Like directness. Where Is Mr. Audley V he asked sententionsly, with a grim determlna tion to know the worst without delay. "Really, Dick!" she mocked. "Is the foremost bachelor of our set 'taking TinHfw' at lst ? TTatp verv Inforpstlrnr'' "Where Is Mr. Audley?" he repeated doggedly. v "Dead these three years," she an swered. Then at the long breath that she heard him take in the soft gloom of the room she added warnlngly, "But Penelope has many suitors!" She bad indeed so many that Lan sing used to wonder afterward by what miracle she bad been preserved for hlra. It was six months before he saw, UBS. BTAITTON STEPPED FOBWAJRD TO GJtEE EEB. or, rather, heard, her again. A death in bis family and the precarious state of the great business that he managed prevented him from carrying out his first mad scheme of following her pell mell across the Atlantic and as many Continents and parts of continents as need be. After the first few weeks faithless Mrs. Stanton had ceased to keep him Informed of their whereabouts. But, though Edith Audley seemed to have drifted beyond his ken, that rare, ca ressing voice still sounded In his ears, and. In dreams he saw again that straight, slim, unsubstantial figure, the face a mere pale phantom from which two shadowy eyes looked out It was just before the Christmas hol idays, and Lansing had decided that nothing should keep blm longer, that In spite of fate be would sal for Eu rope within the next ten days, when the tinkle of the telephone bell aroused him. He lifted the receiver to his ear, and at the sound that greeted blm he felt as If a flame of happiness ran over him. "Is this 332 Cortlandt?" The voice was unmistakable. Though the wires Imparted generously of their own metallicness, it was still the most beautiful voice in the world. TJnllke Trilby's right foot, which had a rival In her left Mrs. Andley'a voice had no rival. Lansing was aa certain that It was she who was speaking as be was that it was himself who was listening. "This Is 832," he began. Before he could get further there was a despairing exclamation from the other end of the wire, while the only voice in the world pleaded, "Won't you please ring off?" . Lansing laughed delightedly, but that cost, him hls.hance. ' MM Trow are yon, Mrs, AndleyT he be gan, but a bus, busa-t, bms a i-a, buM-i-a-t was all that be. got for bla pains. Nor did his frantic ringing not the thing he said to central avail him. "Don't know, air. Can't Bud out," was all tliut the distant, impassive voice of the operator vouchsafed, and with a slch of exasperation lie at last hung up the receiver. She was hack in the city then. $orne where in the wilderness of brick and stone that incomparable voice was making music, but not for him. Sud denly Mrs. Stanton's warning remark fell upon his ears us If it had been Fpokcu by some Invisible presence. "Penelope has many Miitor." The thought gomUsl him. While he tarried, allowing mere life aiul death matters to detain him, what might not have bnpcmt? The truth came to him now with a terrible, crushing force The one thing hi life greater than all other things was love. And, strangi and unnatural as it might seem, lit loved with nil his heart a woman whom he had practically never seeu, since that brief, dim half hour In the Stanton drawing room seemed more like an encounter of souls than an ac tual meeting, where the sweet, strong woman of her had been revealed to him In that strange, vibrant caressing voice. , Inquiry at the Stanton residence did ' not put him forward. They were atlll In Europe, and the housekeeper did not know when they would return. Nor could she tell him anythlug of Mrs. Audley. Baffled, but determined, he left no stone nuturued for the next three weeks, but- without success. Kdlth Audley seemed to have disappeared lo the crowd of the unknown, nud he wondered If that fool Stanton would ever bring bis wife back from Europe. Then, in the most casual manner, the Information that he had sought In vain came to him. Waiting moodily for a friend in the Turkish room of the Wal dorf late one afternoon, the strident repetition of a name at last recalled him to his whereabouts. "Symington: Mr. Symington:" anng out a call boy In a nasal tone, looking Inquiringly about as he sauntered through the room. None of the men scattered about the room responded, and the boy tried another tack. Cnrd for Mrs. Audley! Card for Mrs. Audley:" he reiterated, with an expression that Implied that the fel low who had sent his card to that lady must be trying to conceal himself. Then suddenly a gentleman near the door beckoned to him energetically. "Mr. Symington?" demanded the boy. At the gentleman's uegatlve re ply he looked away very weary. Hut when the latter, pressing a quarter in to his band, asked a certain question he replied with mitigated severity. Lansing's first impression of her when at last she came toward him In broad daylight was that she was like reed. The eyes were dark and a trifle wistful, the mouth wide, tlexiblo. with thin, vivid lips. And then thut moving voice fell uiwu his ears for the third time, and lie only knew that she was all that he hud ever dreamed of in woman ami more. "Talk to mel Talk to me!" he would beg playfully during the weeks that followed, when he was trying with all the arts he could master to lead her to the point that he had reached at a bound. "I'm growing Jealous of my own voice," she said to blm at last, wkh a hurt, questioning look in her eyes. "I sometimes think that it isn't my friendship that you care for at all, but It's only that my voice appeals to you, touches some chord in you. I don't Just like It." And It was then that Lansing told her, told her with an ardor that she could not doubt ending with, "Your voice, my darling, is the most beauti ful thing in the world, but it's beauti ful because It Is you put into sound." And, being but a woman, what could she do but believe? A PROMINENT Lawyer Praises Vinol. Druggist Chas. Rogers states he is continually receiving such letters as the following in regard to his famous cod liver oil preparation, Vinol, Mr. John Kinney of 812 West 28th St., Indianapolis, Ind., one of the most noted lawyers of the state of Indiana, writes: "The Grippe left me in a nerv ous, weakened, run down condition. I took Vinol with the very best of re sults. It made me feel like a different man, and I am now better and strong er than I have been for fears. Bald Mr. Rogers: ."There Is nothing equals Vinol to restore strength after sickness, to build up the aged, run down, weak or debilitated, to cure stomach troubles or chronic colds, coughs or bronchitis. What Vinol did for Mr. Kinney I can guarantee it will do for others or I will return the money paid me for it every time. "Remember, Vinol Is not a patent medicine; everything in It is printed on the bottle. It contains In a concen trated form all of the curative, strength creating properties contained In cod liver oil, without a drop of the oil. No one will dispute the fact that Cod Liver oil Is the greatest and simp lest tonic known to medicine, the ques tion Is which is the best Cod Liver oil preparation we claim and prove that Vinol Is. It Is delicious, and the weakest stomach can retain It. Try Vinol on our guarantee." Chas. Rog ers, druggist DISFIGURED WITHECZEMA Under Physicians Five Months. Went from Bad to Worse. CURED DYCUTICURA Wonderful Change in One Night. In a Month Face Was .Clean as Ever. " I waa troubled with eczema on the face for five months, during which time I was iu the care of physicians. My face was in such a condition that I could not go out. It was going from bad to worse Bud I gave up all hope, when a friend of mine highly recommended Cuticura remedies. The first night after I washed toy face with Cuticura Soap and used Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Resolvent it changed wonderfully, and continuing the treatment it removed all scales and scabs. From that day X was able to go out, and in a month my face was aa clean aa ever." THOMAS J. SOTH, 317 Stag St, Brooklyn, N.Y. THE AGONIZING Itching and Burning of the Skin As In ecicma; the frightful acallng, ss in psoriasis; the loss of hair and crust ing of scalp, as in scallcd bead ; the facial distigureincut, as in pimples and ringworm ; the awful suffering of infants, and anxiety of wornout par ents, as in milk crust, Utter and suit rheum all demand a remedy of al most superhuman virtues to sucecs. fully cope with them. That Cuticura Soap, Ointment, and Pills are such stands proven beyond all doubt. The purity and sweetness, the power to aflord Immediate relief, the certainty of speedy and permanent cure, the absolute safety and great economy have made them the stniulurd skiu cures of the civilized world. Abso lutely pure. Sole throughout 1)1 ,I4L CallrBrm Rrtotwit, Ms. (In kit uf I knrul.l. Cuwnl l'l,), S3. wr vUl irf HI), Ololmnil, .p, -Of. tuij,, T but.h thMmSq. 1 1'ftfK Ku tt It I'mii Hoin, 1.17 Cniuutbitf An. luuw Uiuf Omw. Cim feu, t'ruiufetou- HAIR NATURALLY ABUNDANT. Wheat It la Free of Dandruff, It Grews l.aiurlantly. llalr preparations and dandruff cures, as a rule, are sticky or Irritating- affairs that do no earthly Rood. Hair, when not diseased, grows naturally, luxuriantly. Dandruff Is the cause of nine-tenths ot all hair troublo, and dandruff is caused by a germ. The only way to cure dand ruff Is to kill the germ; and, so far, tho only hair preparation that will positively destroy the germ Is Newftro's Herplclde absolutely harmless, tree from grease, sediment, dye matter or dangerous druirs. It allays Itching Instantly; makes hair glossy and son as silk. "Destroy the cause, you remove the effect." Sold by leading druggists. Bend tic. In stamps for sample to The Iierplcldo Co., Detroit. Mich. Eagle Drug Store, 351-S53 Bond St., Owl Drug Store, 849 Com. St, T. F. I aurln, Prop. "Special Agent" A Grim Tragedy. Is dally enacted, In thousands of homes, as Death claims, in each one, another victim of Consumption or Pneumonia But what Coughs and Colds are prop erly treated, the tragedy Is averted. F. O. Huntley of Oaklandon, Ind., writes: "My wife had the consumption, and three doctora gave her up. Finally she took Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Colds, which cured her, and today she Is well and strong." It kills the germs of all dis eases. One dose relieves. Guaranteed at 60c and II by Chas. Rogers, drug gist. Trial bottle free. , w. BLANK BOOK MAKERS LITHOGRAPHERS PRINTERS lost COITID No Contract too Large. No Job too Small Book and Magazine Binding a Specialty The Modern Discard the use of leslty wooden wster in and wish water out, ty J. A. MONTGOMERY, Astoria, Or. ANDREW ASP, BLACKSMITH. Having installed a liubber Tiring Machine of the. latest pattern I am prepared to do all kind of work in that line at reasonable price. Telephone 201. CORNER TWELFTH AND DUANE STREETS. ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK Capital I'atJ tu 9100,000. Surplus and Undivided Profits 125.000 WrtiMnante m I kuhLInn l.tiHliwuaai IhIau.I I I .... i i 1 .v. !t. AinwRitvter m gvieuiui ufeuftiug uugiuiw, lUVvrl JH1U UU VtlUO U,vll4 J..Q.A.IIOWLBY. O. I. PETERSON, FRANK MTON. J. W. Cl.UNER, President Vioe President. Cashier. A sat. Cashier JftS TENTH STREET, ASTORIA, ORE. ASTORIA IRON WORKS JOHN FOX. Pres. and Eupt. A. I..KOX. Vlre I'mdrtriit. r. L. MSIUM', Secretary AMlyKU HA INtiM HANK, Treas Dcsifjners and Manufacturers of , TUB. LATKST IMl'HOVKI) CANNING MACHINERY, MARINE ENGINES AND BOILERS. COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED. ' CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED. Foot of Fourth Street, .... AHTOKIA, OllEOON. 433 Commercial Street Phone Main 121 Sherman Transfer Co. ! HENRY SHERMAN, Manager Hacks, Carriages Buggag' Checked and Transferred Trucks and Furniture Wagons- rhinos Moved, Boxed and Shipped. TO BE IT One needs a great many things that can be found at our phar macy. Every lady needs exquisite per fumes, face powder and fine toi let soap, We have a fine assort- ment of the best qualities of these things. Particular gentlemen who ap prccltate tho extra good quality of our shaving brushes, shav ing soap, tooth powder, etc., can procure them at moderate prices HART'S DRUG STORE. Corner 14th and Commercial Sts., opposite Foard & Stokes. PR ASTORIA, OREGON ete Printina P nJgsJ Laundry wsih tubi, quit cirrylng 1 luting your Ltundry with Laundry Trayi If your Laundry U not modern, don't you think it should be t If you nuke it o, the houichol j du ties wilihe pleasantly pcrflirmed, and in esse you wish to tell your home it will, increase tho selling value, Let ui give you pricei. ricsn .1 1 HI ant in