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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 5, 1905)
THE MORNING ASTOR1AN, ASTORIA, OREGON. UNOAY, MARCH 6, 1909. J? ii:: i ... !!' ! t ' i " ( IN SOCIETY CIRCLES Social Events of the Past Week ' in Astoria. SEVERAL BRILLIANT AFFAIRS Th Ntir Approach of the Lenten Sa on Will Check Many Contemplate ; d Social Evtntt Until After th Season. of Mrs. W. O. Barnes has returned from a visit to California. Mrs. Charles RicharJs and two chll ren and Miss Pearl Cole have gone to Seaside where they will remain for ome time. Mr. and Mrs. Will Bell have arrived from Stanley, Ore., and expect to re- aide in Astoria. Mrs. Oscar Wilson spnt part of the week with friends in Cathlamet. James W. Welch has returned from s month's visit to Hot Lake. Mrs. Welch stopped In Portland but will re turn home in a few days. Miss Hannah Adair will entertain the young ladles bridge whist club on Monday afternoon. The ladies of the Friday Afternoon Club spent a pleasant afternoon with Mrs. George W. Sanborn on Friday. Mr. Swarti will entertain the ladie f Holy Innocents Guild and their friends on Monday afternoon at her home on Thirty-third street The members of the Every Fort Night Club will not hold any more meetings for the present The Pioneer Euchre Club will be en tertalned by Mr. and Mrs. Herman Traef on next Friday evening. A large number of the frienJs Mr. and Mrs. William Gordon tendered them a surprise party on last Satur toy evening at their home In East As toria and all spent a most enjoyable vening. Miss Hannah Adair was the enter tainer of the Thursday Afternoon Club this week at her home in East Astoria. Five hundred was the game provided for the amusement of those presen and MisffOlga Hilbom and Miss Tlolet Bowlby were the prize winners. : The Sunday school pupils of Holy Innocents chapel were entertained by Rev. William Seymour Short anj their teachers on Saturday afternoon. The members of the Degree of Hon or lodge gave a very enjoyable dance and social on Thursday evening In the A. O. XJ. W. hall. The ladles who belped to make a success of the affair were Mesdame. Louis Hartwlg, Geo. W. Morton, Nelson, Porter and Mat toon. Mrs. Martin Foard entertained a umber of her friends with a Bridge Whist party on Wednesday afternoon Id honor of Mrs. Wilson of Seattle. Carnations and violets were used for tfce decoration of the rooms throughout the Foard residence on Seventeenth treet and Mrs. Thomas Ryrle and Mrs. Frank Patton were the fortunate wuiuers oi tne prizes. Mrs. H. Christenson entertained a large number of her friends very de lightfully on Tuesday afternoon. Pink carnations were used for the decora tions and euchre was the game pro vided for the amusement of those present. A large number of the ladies of East Astoria were entertained by Mrs. Vos hurg on Wednesday afternoon. Each guest brought a photo of herself, taken a number of years ago, and when the .photos were exchanged around among those present Miss Ida Painter and Mrs. Foster of Fort Stevens won the prizes for guessing who were the own ms of the photos and then all present inj their photographs taken. Tne ladles of St. Mary's Catholic church gave a curd party on Tuesday for the!r friends in St. Mary's hall and those present enjoyed themselves play Ing whist, at which Miss Bessie O'Con nor, Miss Theresa Oramms, Mr. Lov ell and Mr. Lightfoot were the fortu Bate contestants. Mr. and Mrs. George W. Roberts and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Kuetner gave a card , and dancing party for a large numWi of their friends in the Odd Fellows' Ball on Friday evening and the affair proved Itself to be the most enjoy able evening party ever given in the city. The ladles present all wnv Trandsome evening costumes and the elaborate decorations of the hall all eomblned made a very pleasing sight The card room was separated from the dancing room by fishnet and an arch way which was decorated with laurel ferns, cypress, butterfles and red chi nas lanteis. While the dancing room was decorated with Indian baskets and evergreens. The refreshment room was decorated with ferns and screens. Mrs. Kuetner and Mrs. Roberts were gowned in beautiful white evening eostume, and made charming host sses. Progressive euchre was the fame played by the card players and the handsome prizes were won by Mrs Howes, Mrs. A. M. Smith and Walter Bobb. Each one received a handsome souvenir of a burnt leather dance pro gram and score card, which will be kept as a momonto of the event ROOSEVELT IS INAUGURATED (Continued from Past 1.) tread In harmony with the dl!iilii1 stop of the chief Justice, the president advanced in state down the long nisi of distinguished guests. By this time all were standing And nothing could be heard above the roar of thunderou welcome. Immediately following came arm in ami the members of the com mlttea on arrangements. As the pres tdent passed down the aisle he bared his head and with characteristic sweep of his hat bowed In acknowledgment of the salutations from the stand and the ovation from the people. His mail ner was not that of a man Incurrii: onerous responsibilities, three years Ii the White House having familiarise)! ftlm with the duties of the high office to which he was to be Inaugurated. While he waited for the applause to die out he stood In triumph, with no show of vanity, with no evidences of political enmity, apparently no mem ories of the campaign gone by. and nothing more disconcerting than huge gathering of loyal Americans. At a sign from Chief Justice Fuller the clerk of the supreme court stepped forward holding a Bible. A husn fell over the crowd. The president raised his right hand and the oath to support he laws and constitution of the Unit ed States was reverently taken, amid deep silence. When this had been concluded there was practically no demonstration and the president began his anaugural ad dress. As soon as he finished Ing he re-entered the capltol and a. he disappeared within the building a signal was flashed to the navy yard and the roar of II guns was begun in official salute to the president. My reiiow-Cltiiens: No people on rnu oave more cause to be thankful than ours, and this Is said and in no spirit of boastfulness in our own strength, but with gratitude to )ne it ner oi uood who has blessed us with the conditions which have en abled us to achie.e so large a measure of well being and ot happiness. To us as a people it has been erint.i lay the foundations of our national life In a new continent. We of the age. and yet we have had to iwy rew or the penalties which in old coun tries are exacted by the dead iiund of ojgone civilization. We hnv ni been obliged to fight for our existence against any alien race: and yet our life has called for the vigor and effort without which the manlier and hardier virtues wither away. Under such con ditions It would be our own fault if r Ian, mm me success union we have had In the past, the dikwm wnicn we confidently believe the fu vuie ui uriuK, snouid cause us no reeling or vainglory, but rather a deen and abiding realization of all which Iff nas offered us: a ful acknowledgment of responsibility which Is ours; and, a fixed determination to show that under rree government a mighty people can tnnve best, alike as regards the things of the body and the things of the soul. Much has been given to us. and much will rightfully be expected from e have duties to others, and du to ourselves: and we can shirk neither. We have become a great na tion, forced by the fact of its great ness into relations with the other na tions of the eartn; and we must be have as beseems a people with such responsibilities. Toward all other na tions, large and small, our attitude must be one of cordial and sincere friendship. We must show not onlvi in our words but In our deeds that we are earnestly desirous of securing their good will by ac ting toward them In a spirit of Just and generous recognition of nil their rights. But Justice and generosity in a nation, as in an Invl vi.lual, count most when shown not by the weak, but by the strong. While ever careful to refrain from wronging others we must be no less Insistent that we are not wronged ourselves. We wish peace; but we wish the peace of Justice, the peace of righteousness, We wish it because we think It Is right and not because we are afraid. No weak nation that acts manfully and Justly should ever have cause to fear us, and no strong power should ever be able to single us out as a subject for Insolent aggression. Our relations with the other powers of the world are important; but still more important are our relations among ourselves. Such growth In wealth, in population, and In power as this nation has seen during the century and a quarter of Its national life is inevitably accompanied by a like growth In the problems which are ever before every nation that rises to great ness. Power Invariably means both responsibility and danger. Our fore fathers faced certain perils which we have outgrown. We now face other perils, the very existence of which It was impossible that they should fore see. Modern life Is both complex and Intense, and the tremnndous changes wrought by the extraordinary Indus trial develoijment of the last half cen tury are frit In every fibre of our so cial and political being. Never before have men tried ho vast and formid able an experiment as that of ad ministering the affairs of a continent under the forms of a democratic re public. The conditions which have tol.l for our marwltum material well being, which have develop to a very high degree our energy, self-reliance and individual Initiative, have also brought the care and anxiety Insop ernhle from the accumulation of grent wealth In Industrial centers, 1 pott the success of our experiment much depemls, not only us regards our own welfare, but as rviturds the wWfar 'of mankind. If we fail, the cause of free self-government throughout the world will rock to Its foundations; and therefore our reeptmsiliility 1 henrv, to ourselves, to the world it Ih to- day and to the generations yet unborn. There Is no good reason why we should rear the future, but there Is every reason wny we anould face It serious ly, neither hiding from ourselves the gravity of the jiroblem before us nor retiring to approach these problems wun tne unonaing. unflinching pur pose to solve them aright. et. after all. though the problems are new, thotiRh the tasks set before us differ from the tasks set before our fathers. who founded and preserved this republic, the spirit In which these tasks must be undertaken and these problems faced. If our duty Is t be well done, remains essentially un changed. We know that self-govern ment is difficult. We know that n teople needs Such high traits of char acter as that people which seeks to govern Its affairs aright through the freely expressed will of the freemen who compose It. But we have faith that we shall not prove false to the memories of the men of the mighty jsist. They did their work, they left us the splendid heritage we now enjoy. We In our turn have an assured con fidence that we shall be able to leave this heritage unwasted and enlarged to our children and our children's chil dren. To do so we must show, not merely In great crises, but In the everyday affairs of life, the mmlltics of jiractlcnl Intelligence, of courage, of hardihood and endurance, and above all the power of devotion to a tofiv Ideal, which made great the men who founded this republic In the days or Washington, which made groat the men who preserved this rejiuhllc In iii days of Abraham Lincoln, in Good - Stationery cotints just as much as koo1 dittoes and costs much less, and just now much less than usual SEE OUR SHOW WINDOW Regular 50c and 65c values goods to suit any or. taste, now -JV For three days only. J. N. GRIFFIN ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK Capital j'aid in $100,000. Surplus and Undivided Profits S.15.001 Transaota a general banking business. Interest paid on time dejxwiU. J. Q. A. BOWLBY. O. I. PETERSON, FRANK PATTON. J. W. OA NEK, President Vic President Cashier. Asst. Cashier 1 It is me MAM ! 11 1 1 1 11 111 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 J 1 vtnen you re at sea mid storms I I Ii abound- When Jap n.1 nuselan nien of war. II 1 I And your heart slnka low. .-. . . .... II III And your knees do shake, An(, tn, r,u-( fc -otir) I I II I A,,a nurncans make furious sound, Met-wlw not that l.ihu.. .w I I II I And from stem to stern it tint h.,n-,.- .i... I i II I The nil 1 11 iliuia iitlulr ...... ... II ill r u imijeuea before. I I II To whom do you look to steor yuu swt VM'ry enm, to th Jspanes I II I "na? TllP; I I n1" 11 th 8h'PT !t wasn't the ships. I Or Hi UVV'B .... I. ....I II II I - ,v"" "v,,c' nut the MEN, whu knew I I II . howl I I When armies meet In nne nrrny W h. n In need of clothing or hats. And the sabres flush. And von nr. in II And the cannons roar. Aa t0 wher, , trR,j I I I And the men fall nroiu. while wnnmn i .. .. . II " wimre tne siuw . mix or WW sjunt. And old Mother Earth See thP nrrvy man Is wet with red (fore, Wh. , fr(llj Who do..s the work thiit decides the To get th.- new tyf, Jay' To clean mit old blots. Is it the gun? ftM. Or the MAN'S Heady eye! ut ,h. MAN vUh (1)c puhJ t Do you know, t,he MAN In t'.ila town The Mini with much Punh. With trrent Enterprise; ' Has nlways a smile, seldom a fruwu tif course, you enn guess, ' Its HERMAN WISE The CLOTHIER, who does things 'up brown, While he hits THE store. He's the MAN with great vim! llHIermiaini Wise. y j The Reliable Clothier and Hatter. j 1AR TrMTW r r Mil t 11 CTn ptt ASTORIA, ORE. 433 Commercial Street Phone Main 121 Sherman Transfer Co. IHENIiY SHERMAN, Manager Hacks, Carriages Baggag Checked and Transferred- Trucks and Furniture Wagons- fianos Moved, Boxed and Shipped. The Palace Cafe The Best Restaurant Kefalif Meals. 23 Cents Suniy Dinners a Specialty Everything the Market Affords PwlC Catering Cofijpafiy 4BBBBBBBBBBttBBBBaBBBttttttBBBBBBBBBBBM n a a a a a a a a a a a a HOTEL PORTLAND The Finest Hotel In the Northwest The TROY Laundry Is the only White Labor Laundry in the City. Does the Host of Work at very reasonable Trices, and is in every way worthy of your patronage. Cor. 10th and DUANE 6TS. Phone 1991 gmxxmmmiiimiXTrrrmrTTTrrra What two words mean most to your grocer? and what do thry mean? Schilling's Best; and they mean a good deal of business without any trouble. PORTLAND OREGON. If ZEiLIDFIBE INSURANCE COMPANY Of New Zealand W. P. THOMAS, Mgr., San Francisco. UNLIMITED LIABILITY OF SHREHOLDERS Has been Underwriting on the Pacific Coast for twenty-five years. FRESH AND CURED MEATS Wholesale and Retail Ships, LoggiuR Camps and Mills supplied on short notice. LIVE STOCK BOUGHT AND SOLD WASHINGTON MARKET - CHRISTENSON & CO. Reliance Electrical Works H.W.CYW8, MsnsgAr We re thoroughly prepared for making estimates, and executing orders for all kinds of eleotrk-al installing and repairing. Supplies in stock. W Mil the Celebrated SHELBY LAMP. , Call op Phon 1161. 428 BOND STREET Weinhard's Lagser Beer. EXMORE $ CO., Sole Agents Astoria, - Oregon ANDREW ASP, BLACKSMITH. Hating Installed Rubber Tiring Maohina ot th latest pattern I am prepared to do all kinds of work ' i'n that line at reaaonable prloea. Telephone 201. CORNER TWELFTH AND DUANE STREETS.