The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, March 21, 1905, Page 2, Image 2

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    TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1001
THE-MORNING ASTOR1AN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
RESULT OF STRIKE
May, 10. In Memphis."
THE EVIL OF
belonged originally to the dramaU.
presentation of religion. The church
Kach nmmlicr stated that he hud
voted to strike understanding they had
unanimously and that Chief Knglneer
Jciu-ks had not endeavored to Iniluence
BENTON'S NEW VALVELESS
ha failed In its opposition to the the
GASOLINE MARINE ENGINE.
ater, as It always will fall when it op
nosed the natural desires. The theatei
never could have succeeded If they had
'.hem In any way. The mi is aval Ion tiiut
4oimbody had prolttd by the culling
Simple and Reliable. Latest Cut.
Alcoholism is Steadily Increasing
in France.
not satisned a craving and longing of
the huifW soul. The church is not
Charier of New York' Strikers Re
voked by Organization.
Joi
iff of the strike was set aside It was
said, as being for ridiculous consider
IS
perfect, neither In the theater, but both
are gieat agencies for goon."
atlon.
V
2
W 1 V
DRINK
1
1ANI
I I
TUBERCULOSIS AND MADNESS
Misery and Crime on th lnrenM and
Socitty U Called Upon to Dofond
Itsslf Against th. Incroachments of
Chronic Alcoholism.
New Tork, March 20. Alcoholism Is
steadily growing worse In France while
It U decreasing elsewhere, according
to assertions made by Dr. Poltou Du
plessy In a public address, cables the
Heralds Paris Correspondent. The
speaker Is a well known physician.
"To the drink evil," he said, "could
be traced the gradual disappearance of
the family and the deterioration ot
racial attributes. Gradual degeneracy
la sure to result unless alcoholism Is
checked."
Dr. Duplessy declared that drink Is
a prime factor In causing tuberculosis
tnd madness, misery and crime. The
only way to successfully abate the
evil, he says, Is to arouse the public
conscience. The law of social soli
darity, he says, had a scientific basis.
which imposed a moral duty upon the
members of society to defend them
selves and their fellows from such a
menace as that which alcoholism now
presents.
Vesuvius Bucking.
New Tork, March SO. There have
been fiviiuent explosions of Vesuvius
accompanied by Injections of Incan-
cescent matter .visible from Naples.
says a Herald dispatch from that city.
They were produced by the sinking oi
the bottom of the crater formed by th
last eruption.
Falling masses render It Impossible
to approach within 300 yards of the
crater.
Horse Trainer Dead.
New York. March 20. Ellison Clay
ton, one of the beat known trainer
and breeders ot harness horses In the
country, whose stile of American horses
in Russia netted him a fortune, is dead
at his boarding house here from acci
dental asphyxiation.
Sagamort Hilt.
New Tork. March 20. Ground has
been broken for an addition to Presi
dent Roosevelt's Sapamore hill home.
The addition will be 42x38 feet at the
base and will make a great Improve
ment In the appearance of the house.
ROAST CHICKEN.
MINISTER ADMITTED.
Th Church Enters Into Fellowship
With Labor.
New Tork, March 20. A minister
has been admitted to membership In
the Central Labor Union of Brooklyn,
an organisation representing various
bands of skilled workmen on Long
island. He Joined as a fraternal dele
gate and at the request of the Brook
lyn Presbytery which he broached the
conclusion that hitherto the church
has not entered Into fellowship with
organized labor as It should have done.
So far as the union members were able
to learn, it Is the first time that such a
departure has been taken by any simi
lar body In this country. Only one vote
was cast In opposition.
The new delegate is Rev. Varren H.
Wilson, pastor of the Arlington Ave
nue Presbyterian church. In an ad
dress following his election he said the
Presbytery believed that the church
had strayed from the divine teachings
In not taking a deeper Interest In the
welfare of the laboring man. He
thought that the church did not fully
understand the objects of labor unions
and believed that the time is at hand
when it should be enlightened on those
subjects.
Incubator Destroyed by Firs and Brood
Roasted.
Fresno, March 20. Eight hundred
chickens were roasted alive In a fire
near Hanford this morning. The fire
broke out in the brooding house of
what is known as the old Melons
chicken ranch. A defective plug In an
incubator heater blew out and all
the chickens In the brooder, as well a
several hundred dollars' worth of
property, were burned.
The fowls were not destroyed, but
were nicely roasted to a turn, anj
Proprietor Johnson, the owner, has
announced a roast chicken dinner to
all the rich and poor who care to visit
his place tomorrow.
CONFERENCE AT NEW YORK
A Numbtr of Members Engaged in tht
Strike Admit Thsy Did Wrong and
Ar Willing to Make Amends Which
May Rssult in Bsing Reinstated.
Coffin Nails Prohibited.
Madison. Wis.. March 20, A drastic
antl-clgarette bill passed the seiml
.today. U.hnd previously been passed
by the assembly. It makes unlawful
the stle, gift or Importation Into Wis
I'onsln f cluarettes or cigarette ma
terials. The action followed a splrlte.1
.leliate, in which the tobacco trust,
ottlclally known as the American To
Imcco Company, was charged with be
ing the sile objector to the bill.
New York. March ?0. A secret con
ference has been held between J. W.
Hurley of Cleveland, assistant grand
chlf of the Brotherhood of Locomot
ive Engineers and the members of the
division of that order who were In
volved in the lnterborough strike and
whose charter was suspended by Grand
Chief Stone. Considerable encourage
ment was held out to the men. many
of whom are now out of work. Hurley
said those who were not concerned In
the strike will be protected.
"Members of 105 ave," he said, "ac
knowledged they did wrong and have
expressed a willingness to make prop
er amends. 1 think that finally every
thing will be settled satisfactorily to
nil concerned and the division rehabil
itated In time.
"Members of the division not con
tented in the strike will be taken care
of in other divisions, but the division
itself cannot be restored and the mem
bers purged of their offence until, th
assembly of the grand convention In
CALIFORNIA RESTAURANT.
RsopsnsJ Undsr New Management.
John Plaalch has leased U Califor
nia Restaurant and Oystsr Houss and
la now prepared to serve tht public.
The best oysters and meals In tht
city. Family tradt supplied. Good
cooks, polite waltert and prompt terries.
Striktt Hidden Recks.
When your ship of health strikes th
hidden rocks of Consumption. Pneu
monia, etc., you are lost. If you don't
get help from Dr. King's New Discov
ery for Consumption. J. W. MoKlnmm
of Talladega Springs. Ala., writes: "I
had bn very ill with pneumonia,
undr th rare of tun doctors, but was
igettlng no better when 1 bgnn to take
Dr. King's New Discovery. The first
dort gave relief, and one bottle cured
me." Sure cure for sore throat, bron
chitis, coughts and colds, (ioarnntecd
at Chas. Rogers' drug store, price 5.)c
and St.00. Trial btittle free.
AT THE STAR.
MURDERAT
VEDDING
Chicago Policeman Shoots One of
the Merry-Makers.
I AT AN ITALIAN WEDDING
WORKING WOMEN.
An Organization of Female Wage
Earners in New York.
New Tork, March 20. To organize
the working women of New York In
to a union and Inaugurate an aggres
sive campaign in their behalf. Miss
Gertrude Barnum, daughter of William
Barnum, formerly a judge In Chicago,
and who spent some years In the set
tlement work of Hull house in that
city, has opened headquarters on the
lower east side.
As secretary of the Women's Trade
Union League, Miss Barnum has calieJ
a conference to be held next Sunday,
when the problem of working women
will be discussed by persons from all
parts of the country, the general prop
osition being that public opinion should
support the unions in their efforts to
organize the working women.
Miss Barnum declares that a quarter
of a million working girls and women
In New York suffer from every pos
eible Industrial evil. They are, she
says, treated unfairly, work in unsani
tary places, and endure long hours and
low wages and there is a vast amount
of irregular employment.
Half a Dozen Italians Attacked the Po
livsman Because He Had Ordered
Them to Disperse and Beat Him
With a Club Policeman Fired Shot.
Dean Richmond Babbit.
New York, aMrch 20. Grave fears
are entertained for the life of the Rev.
Dr. Dean Richmond Babbit, rector of
the church of the Epiphany, Brooklyn,
known as a lecturer on the negro
question. An operation was performed
on him last Friday for appendicitis,
but he had not rallied from Its ef
fects and the surgeons say that un
less some Improvement Is shown
shortly the patient cannot recover.
STAGE AND PULPIT.
New York Ministers Want Higher
Dramatic Presentations.
New York, March 20. In a sermon
at Temple Emanuel the Rev. Joseph
Silverman has made a plea for the
endowment of a theater whera the
actors church alliance may firry out
its Ideas of higher dramatic presenta
tions. "The stage," continued Dr. Silver,
man, "Is but an outgrowth of the pul
pit, a part of the paraphernalia that
Chicago, March 20. A wedding cele
bration at Clark and Polk streets has
been terminated suddenly by Police
man Henry Decker who shot one of
the merry makers, Vito Maljedo, in
the abdomen, inflicting a fatal wound.
Half a dozen Italians, one of whom
was Malpedo, attacked the policeman
because he had ordered them to dis
perse. Malpedo ran into a saloon and
snatched a policeman's club from be
hind the bar. He then Joined the oth
ers at the corner where they were
wrangling with the policeman. Wield
ing the clubs with all the power In his
arms, be swung ir round and struck
the officer on the head, knocking him
down.
Decker remained on his feet and
used his own baton on his assailant.
Malpedo rushed on him again from
behind and dealt him a terrific blow
that sent the policeman to his knees.
Two men seized his club and pre
vented him from using it. Fearing
for his life Decker drew his revolver
as Malpedo came toward him again
with the club uplifted.
He fired only one . shot. Malpedo
staggered to the middle of the street
and fell.
At the sound of the shot hundreds
of persons ran from the tenements.
Women threw themselves upon the
man who lay wounded in the street.
Th police were notified, and when a
wagon load or men arrived more man
1000 persons, men, women and chil
dren were struggling in the street. Of
ficer Decker, covered with blood, stood
at the sldd of the man he had shot.
and he had another of his assailants
under arrest. After his Injuries were
dressed he returned to his post.
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PLAYED LAST GAME.
Mr. Johnston, Noted Chess Player,
Died in Chicago.
Chicago. March 20. Sydney p.
Johnston, an authority on chess and
for 12 years editor of the American
Artisan, a hardware trade paper, is
dead at his home here, of diabetes.,
Mr. Johnston was the champion
chess player of Illinois.
TWO BROTHERS BUNTS.
Packed houses, and standing room at a premium, greeted the Htiir luat
evening when the new program was launched. It U certainly a dm wing
card for this popular play house. The two blithers Bunts aie certainly
marvelous In their perfoi main-,, and their acrobatic exhibition the Ix-st ever
seen in the city, meeting with continuous applause, Ryan mid Melhouri.,
the comedy sketc h team, are up to the standard and lve a very creditable
performance. The Kionas, as a comedy sketch team are certainly mirth
provokers and keep the audience Ingood humor. Miss Nellie Kim-ison, th
e celebrated premier danseuae, h anartlst and gives a dazzling series o
f pirouettes. Richard Charles, th'-elebrated baritone, in new and popu
lar melodies, Is a greut favorite. The'illl at the Star this week Is certainly e
qual to any given, and that It Is ap-pre'lated Is attested by the large cr
wds that attend.
oggers Attention !
300 Tons of 35-lb. rails for sale.
Good as new. $20.00 per ton.
DELL B. SCULLY,
Astoria Ore.
FISHER BROTHERS COMPANY
Agents The Linen Thread Co.
SALMON TWINE, COTTON TWINE, ROPE
Fishermen and Cannery Supplies .
lim pirti io;crou
of Order,
LuJWrlnj Prl,
More Power with Uu
welfhl.
Uio Lu Oasellss.
Under Ptrfat Ceiv
IroL
Quid Exhsuit
Any Sp(d from 100
to 1000 rtvolullonl
pet minute,
111
IT
8la 1 t 10 II. 1 Nliijrle- CylhMltT. KNAPPTON,
Sl rt to 40 II. II., Hun III lliuler. WASH.
i uu ! ii . - imi mi mn u ii w s i'l a
VO000(OC)00000KOil!0(DOSO0(0(SOii)009
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0
0
0
0
lILEAL
CIGARiS, PIPES.
TOBACCO, ETC.
(j
o
0
0
0
0 KM) ''OMSIPitCIAI. 8T.
WILL MADISON
603
:-i 1 14 i:m.vi:nth kt. .
00(it)0000(iOiSiOrro.i)OC)0Oi$00$0000
AN ASTORIA PRODUCT
Tale Rolivminn tUttr
Host In TIip Northwest
North Pacific Brewing! Co.
txxxxxi
EZZZZZXZXZZXJe)
Staple and Fancy Groceries
9 FLouit, Fi:i:n, ntovisn ns, tohaccd andicioaus.
H .Supplies of nil kin li nt l )iHt prine fur Fmliermeu, Farmara ami Ixiiruehi
3 BranchJUniontown, Phones, 711, Uniontown713
A. V.ALLEN,
'IVnth mikI Comitiercial Stnt td. ASTOUIA. OJlKflO.V.
ZZXZZZZZZZZZZZZXZZZXZZZZT zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzxzxzzzzzz
PliAELUi C00U TRANSFER CO.
Tnlepliontt 221.
Draying and Expressing
Alls'ioilnnhippotl toour cure will receive aperliil tttontlon..
709-715 Commercial Street.
V
Fisher's Operaiouse
L. E. SELIGi
Lessee and Manager
Tuesday, March 21, 190B
HUGH ETTINGER'S
Special production of
YOUR
NEIGHBOR'S
WIFE
TheCleyercst Singing and Dancing Com
edians on the American Stage
16 PEOPLE 16
Master Wilfred Dunbar
a. "BiiHter Brown"
This Comedy is Presented by a Company of Comedians and Vaudeville
Artisis
s iiv vsav.i bv..p, jv t""-1).' -cih. oea( sale OUcDS-
next Monday morning at Griffins Book Store.