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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 27, 1905)
Wr w i nnr . 3 SATURDAY, May 27, 1001 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. The TROY Laundry ; la the only Whlta Labor Laundry in the City. Doe the Best of Work at very reaaonabto Trices, and is in every way worthy 1 of your patronage. Cor. 10th and DUANE STS. Phone 1991 rxxzxx inn n FRESH AND CURED MEATS Wholesale and Retail Ships, LoRginK Camps and Mills supplied on short notice. LIVE STOCK BOUO II? . A ND SOLD . WA&WNGTON MARKET rMimiuinnniiiimnmnnr Reliance Electrical WOrRS " The. The Palace Cafe. The Astoria Restaurant. eeMeeeeea A. G I M R BALL IT ti CiU taa44aeeeUowew r AN ASTORIA PRODUCT Tale Bohemian Beer Best In The Northwest North Pacific Of jNow Zealand W. P. THOMAS, Mgr., San Francisco. UNLIMITED LIABILITY OF SHREHOLDESR 11 n ") j i Underwriting on tha WSMISSSS ELMORE SCCO., SoleAg'ents CENTRAL MEAT MARKET G. W. Morton and John Fnhrman, Proprietors. CHOICEST FBEStt AND SILT MEATS. - PROMPT DELIVEEI ' 54a Commercial St. Phone Main 321. tunnnnniimunumin . CHRISTENSEN ft CO M TDD W are thoroughly prepared for making estimate tad executing orders for all kind of eleotrleal inatallinf and repairing. Hopplle Id atock. .W tail th Celebrated 8HELBT LAMP. Call ap Phonal loL 428 BOND STREET Best Restaurant. Regular Mcalsy25C. Everything the Market Affords. Sunday Dinners a Specialty. Palace Catering Co. , If you want a good, dean meal or If you are in a hurry you ihould go to the Astoria Restaurant . This fine restaurant is thoroughly up-to-date in every detail. QEXCELLBNT MEALS. , EXCELLENT SERVICE ,MMMeeMMfv Has always in stock a ' -fine assortment ot ri 'J Boots and Shoes . BRAND RUBBER BOOTS. 4 and See. Bond Street. ? Brewing Co. Pacific Coast for twenty-five year SmMSSSSSHSSHHSI Larger NOTABLE WOMEN Mme. Emilie Cartier Wean Cross of Legion of Honor. DAUGHTER QF JOHN BROWN Th Great White City pt Roseo lur. rounds By Verdant Hi I If and the Pieturesque Willamette Will Maka tha Ground a Garden of Edan. The IS rat K'apoleon etab!lxhfcd tha fecorarion of Uto croaa of the Legion of Ilottor. It waa to ba bestowed oq those who achieved noble and berola deed. Bonaparte carcely thought a woman would aver receive tba prlx ba Intended apecialljr for aoldiera, yet thl eovetad decoration waa given by tba French republic to Mme. Emilia Carller for bravery and heroism aa cou- tplruou aa were evto displayed on a battlefield. Several women nave re ceded tba red ilbboa of tha Legion of ma. aktan canun. Ilonor, but Mme Carller la the only one of her eei to whom the croaa ha been awarded. . II er huaband waa French coneul at 81 waa, AalaUo Turkey, among the Ar menian. HI vouna wire bad accom panied him to the conaulate, though both knew tba danger In caee or a claah between Turka and Armenian. The claah came. Maddened Turk be gan to alay, cut kill, malm and drown Chrlatian Armeniana in the manner annroved bv the fanatical among fol lower of the prophet The hunted Ar meniana took refuge in the rrencn con aulate. The Carller prepared to de fend both themselvea and th r fa tee. In anticipation of an attack on the conaulate by a Turkish mob Mme. earlier bad Oiled ban with aand, enough of them to barricade ber win dow, t'nder the direction of a ralth ful old aervant abe aUo learned to ihoot, becoming an eipert The mob came.- thundering at the doors, bowling and burling atone and ticks. Mme. Carller left ber Infant on with a nurse and took charge of the main entrance. Her huaband guard ed the aide and rear of the bouae. The aand bag kept th window. The front door waa strong and had cbaina pro. It waa opened Juat aufflclently to admit the paaaage of the noae of rifle or revolver. Behind that door aa tha thrilling momenta paaeed stood tba hero woman with her death apontlng .weapona, picking off every Turk that came In range. At length the moo re tired, and Mme. Carller went at once to her baby. She found the baby had cut hie first tooth. For ber brave work Mm. Emllle Car ller wear th croaa of th Legion of Honor. Woman Trader In Mining Camp. In-1898 Mra. R. S. Hutcheon of Chi cago learned that there waa need of such small necessities aa pins, needles and thread In the mining town of Alaska. Tbey were worth almost their weight In gold and scarcely to be bad at that. . Mra. Hutcheon has the commercial talent. Bhe selected a email atock of gooda adapted to the exigency and went with tbem to Dawson over the perilous route by land and down the Yukon river. . It was a bad trip for hardship, and Mr. Hutcheon waa obliged to do much mental aclenclng of herself to keep ber courage up. But she aold ber gooda at gold duat pricea, catching the mining town exactly on the boom. The enterprising woman merchant came back for more gooda and aold them too. Her first store In Dawaon waa a tent She next built a frame bouae and established In It the princi pal dry gooda and millinery bouae In Dawaon. Her pluck and shrewdness have been amply rewarded. She ex pects to open a branch establishment in the Tanana district She follow the mining boom. The Daughter of Old John Brown. Quietly, aloof from the world, all alone In a cottage at the foot of the mountalna In Santa Clara county, CaL, Uvea Miss Sarah Brown, the daughter of John Brown of Oaaawattomle, Of John Brown' twenty-one children ahe la the seventeenth. In 1874 Mrs. Brown and alt children traveled across the plains from Kansas to California. They finally settled on eonie land in eanxa Clcra cmmfyeM planted orchard;.. f I ill -fa ' ' One by one tfie brotlipre amralatera married and dropped away, leaving 8a rnh and ber nntlier to take care of the farm, which they did. Mra. Brown at tending to the bonne. Barab doing the farm work. Then lira. Brown died, too, and the lonely daughter, approaching middle age, waa left all alone. Eba plow, prune the tree and attend t" the chicken. Yet with all her toil aba baa never yet become rich enough to bay the tittle fruit faro, but rent It from year to year. li AECU WILLI! CAMPBELL. HOME FLOWERS. , ra.r owmtttr oru t. f tt. BM.dfaL - Few murderwra or desperate crlmi oala ever go out from home where thu people are gentle mannered and the urroundinga reflned ' and Inviting. Flower In and around a bom do not get half the credit they deserve aa a civilizing agent The very humblest cottage In all tbia land. If It have a tiny patch of ground about It may be made the center of a bower of beaut. No time to rata flower T If you notice yoo will And that the hardest worked mother yon know often have the lovelieat flower about their cottage. Doe any of ber aet toll more or longer than th Ger man peasant woman who come to our country to rear her children among our pushing, get there race? It Is better and more healthful to let fancy work and atltchlng go undone and work In the soft, rich earth outdoors. So let us clear away the ash heap and winter debris that cumber our back yard and plant flowers. The ash beapa make admirable compoet for rosea. Begin with a few choice hardy varieties of these. Have you an un sightly abed or comer of your house that you wish to cover from view? Plant beneath It the glorious Crimson Bam bier rose. It la so splendid that no word can do Justice to It In the daya of It richest bloom. I have many a time stood In alienee before It drink ing In its beauty In a sort of rapture. It la a climber and runner and will quickly cover everything unsightly. One plant often grow from ten to twenty feet a year. The Crimson Itambler doe not bloom more than a month In early aummer. It almply gathers Itself together and pours out all the fullness of Its rich ness with one Impulse; then It gives us during the rest of the seaaon the ahade of a graceful leafy climber, and that too, la attractive. Numbers of hardy garden roses, however, do blossom all aummer long and till late In autumn. Of thee some of the moot reliable are the well known Glolr de Dijon, rose aalmon in color; General Jacqueminot deep ciimon; American Beauty, deep pink; La France, pink; Safrano, ye! low. The roots of rose plants should be set nine inches below the ground sur face, the earth about tbem tramped firmly and the plants themselvea well watered evening or mornjng. A "rockery" grestly enhance the beauty of a dooryard. It can be merely a pyramid of rough stones with rich earth in the crevices among them and a saucer shaped hollow In the top af fording a tiny bed for pinks, verbenas or asters. A nasturtium rockery la one of the bandsomeet and most brilliant In piling tbe atones lu the beginning leave wide cracks here and there for flower seed. Fill these with loam from tbe woods If you can get It tlon sprin kle it with mixed nasturtium seed, lightly covering them with tbe earth. Next after tbe Crimson Rambler rose nothing la more satisfying to the senae of beauty In color than the vivid, burn ing bright naaturtlum. A clump of acarlet geranluma la thing of beaut all aummer long. For THB CRIMSON BAUBLU. fra trance and prettlnesa both there la mignonette, which may be planted In a deep crevice In tbe rockery too. It la rather the fashion now to neglect and underrate the rose geranium which our mothers valued so highly, yet for green and for pleasant odor in a bouquet It haa never been excelled. It growa In great clumpa outdoors and ought to bava place In oar garden. Sweet peaa are easily grown and yield great return In loveliness aa well aa In their faint delicate perfume. A little later come the brilliant phloxee and the aummer aaters, alao easily grown from the aeed. Later yet even till after frost the chyraanthemum sheds Its brightness and blessing on the earth. If tbe buda of a chrysan themum are nipped off as they form in summer and the plant kept back It can be potted la September and brought Into the house when frost comes, where In a sunny window it can be made to bloom at Chrlstmae time. . fiy Uetjo greet us in sprlnf are tha l J; 7-' WZ. bulbs," dafodTls1Jonijunir an1 narris usesFhee, HEewine tulip tTui.j., uuoaZ be planted In the earth In autumn, tak ing root and thea resting till March and April Pansle are approved home beaatles, too, bnt to make them bloom arty the ed aboald be wa In the late winter la window boxes or la cold frame and the yoong aprouta trans planted into th garden bed. . If you bar shaded apot where little sun shine comes, remember tbe fern Just th wild wood fern that live from year to year and need only room to grow and a little enriching of tbe soil. Lastly, no dooryard effect I perfect without it pce of smooth green grass. MABT ELIZABETH HABT. SPEEDY JAP CRUISERS. ffc. Amu Tfcr Uk Hot Mak. Fast tart. Though tbe Japanese bare not many battleablpa they have an advantage In tbe possession of a large number of modern, vp to date and speedy cruis ers. Most of the cruisers are In tbe squadron under Admiral Kamlmura, and It la said that every ship In hi fleet went into dry dock after the fall of Port Arthur and that not one of hi cruisers hss lea than nineteen knots peed. Tbe Japanese have nine ar mored cruisers and a still larger num- , - - I . - I A r to iff , ' 4 I St. 7 . m, t ILj i. 1 . aid aims a wo rroarna ror oa mm aa , Moats cacnutB asaju. bet of protected cruisers. The former bare a total of 73.636 tonnage a com pared with 14,724 possessed by the Russian cruiser of the same class. The armored cruiser stands next In Impor tance to the battleship. Four of the Japanese cruisers of this class, th Asa ma, Idxumo, Iwate and Toklwa, wer built about tbe same time and are of the aame type. Tbe Asama I on of the speediest of the quartet and can make twenty-three knots. She waa laid down at Elswlck. England, In 189S, baa a displacement of 0,750 tons and a length of 409 feet. The batteries of he cruiser consist of four elgbt-lnch and fourteen alx-tnch guns and twelve twelve-pounders and a' dozen three pounders, all rapid Ore guns. x Tbe fighting top of the Ass ma snown In the picture Is used by sharpshooters and la large enough for tbe employ ment of machine gun In this capacity. A Creepinn Death. Blood poison creeps up towarda the heart causing death. J. E. Stearna, Belle Platne. Mlnn write that a Mend, dreadfully Injured' bla hand. friend dreadfully Injured hi hand. which swelled up like blood poisoning. Bucklen's Arnica Salve drew out the poison, healed the wound, and saved his life. Best In the world tor burns and sores. 25c at Chaa. Rogera' drug a.ore. O SPICES, o COFFEE JEAv BAlflHO POWDER, ial,3EXTlCTS ttso!urtrVii7 nrvtsrFIivor, P0RTLAfO,CC0rl. r First National Bank of Astoria, Ore. ESTABLISHED 1880. Capital and Surplus $100,000 J. Q. A. BOWT.RT. r-relJnl 0. I. f ETfcKttO',. Vloe-Prwldent Astoria Savings Bank Tapltal Paid In 1100,000. Surplus and Undivided Profits $35. T anuwU a Oeneral Banking Bujilnesii. Interest Paid on Time Deposits. IK WILL CURE arty case of KIDNI1T BLADDER DISEASE a) 1 ; V-, that is not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. WISOT.CPT0E2. B. Spiegel, 1204 N. Virginia St EvansvUle, Ind., write: "For over fiv year I was troubled with kidney and bladder affection which caused me much pain and worry. I lost flesh and was all run down, and a year ago had to abandon work entirely. I had thro of the best physidana who did me no good and I waa practically given up to die. Foley' Kidney Cnre was recommended and the first bottle gave me great relief, and after taking the second botti.I w4 otirely cored." TWO SIZES, 50c AID $109. . CHAS. ROGERS, Druggist AT THE STAR All the Latest Attractions From the Best Theaters Week Beginning May 22. Matinee Dally at 2:4$ P. M. De Mora A Graceta Sensational Acrobatic Novelty, HEIM CHILDREN The Cleverest Child Artist on the African Stage CREATOR Ir. His Crlglnal Musical Specialty. The Ideal Entertainers WESTOX AND WHALLEN resent their comedy success, "O'Donavan Dunn, M. P." A. J. ELWELL Pictured Melodies - Entitled "Good Night Beloved. Good Nlght." EDISONS PROJECTOSCOPE Showing latest Motion Pictures "Wanted, a Dog." Admission, Any Seat 10 cents. FRAKK PATTON, Csnhler 4. W. UAKNKR, AUtnt Canhler