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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 3, 1905)
TUESDAY, OCTOBER j, 1905. THE 3IORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. f Attention Blks Don't go to dot Lauter Bach Fet without one of our D We have all kinds and sixes to STEINS ROSS, HIGGINS a Co. WI SILL CH1SX lAHBORH'S BOSTON COiTHS. LOCAL BREVITIES.; Mrs. Tilda Anderson, massage. 1470 Cfend Avenue. Given either at homo or wllleall. Tbo family restaurant of Astoria b recognised aa tht BM restaurant Tbo best meala and the best Mirioo ia As toria. 120 Eleventh street, , Tho Palace Catering company's dining-room U again open under the tame management Everything firtt elasa. Culalao and service unexcelled. Private dining-room for ladles. Wuorl A Akernian, taxidermists, mat treee makers, furniture upholstering, harness repairing, carpet cleaning and laying. Ninth street. TO PORTLAND 11.13. The 0. R. A N. company will continue to tell tickets until October 13th from Astoria to Portland and return for 9213, good returning until October 31, 1003. Znjof Columbia Rim Scenes On tbo decks of the faat steamer Tale graph, leaving Calender dock, Astoria, lor Portland, del!, except Friday, at t P. M. Bundsys, at 2:50 P. M. You reach Portland In ample time for a stroll or for an evening's visit at yow friend's home. TWENTY-nVI DOLLARS .REWARD. A reward of 123.00 will be paid for the recovery of the body of Arthur King Joephson, who waa accidentally drown ed Sunday, September 24th. THEODORE JOSETHSON. We are receiving largo shipments of Th e Choicest Cabbage Grown Leave us your orders for same when buying cabbage for kraut. Another shipment of fine Concord Grapes Jutt in. . 4 ' JOHNSON BROS., GOOD GOODS sil-iaa Twelfth St, Astoria. Come and see ns before It's too late . . . V i . We are Offering Furniture Bargains Never Before Heard of In This City Before moving into our new stora building you can get a big discount on every purchase. Wo aro offering this special inducement in order to save moving the stock. Wa alto offer you a selection from the largest stock of furniturs in the city. A call will convince you. A. ' f. j c urn rn"'' - ff 'ttLvM ' t liw.Hi.lLLoM wi Vfim fit and mouth at any old yrlee. See advertisement for Guardians aale of valuable property on October 28th. Page three, column six, ibis issue. ATTENTION, B. P. 0. E. All member of Atoria Lodge No. 1HO B. P. 0: E. and all visiting members art requested to be prratnt at the meet, ing this evening to take part in the so rial and drawing for card. By order of tbeK.IL J. C. CLINTON, Secretary. MARRIAGE LICENSE. A marriage licence was yesterday U iifd ty the county ckrk to Willi m Hom and Mary Roland, both, of titU county. ' CONTRACT AWARDED. James lfanen has been awarded the contract for placing a hot air furnace and heating apparatus in the Firt Lu theran church. NEWELL- WATSON. The wedding of Rollie M. WaUn, the genial editor of the gewide Signal and Mi Ethel Gladya Newell wa solemn ised at the Occident Hotel, yesterday morning with Judge Trenchant oBlciat ing. TREASURER, J. C. CLINTON. At the annual meeting of the county clerks, recorders and auditors of the Mate which waa held at Portland lat Saturday, ClaUop county's popular and efficient officer, J. C. Clinton was elect! treasurer for the ensuing year. It was Mr. Clinton's intention of taking in the lock bow at the exposition, but at this interesting feature had ended he di vided his time M evenly a he knew how between the clerks meeting and the trail, with odd slightly in favor of the tatter. FORGER CAPTURED. Harvey Doyle, who ia wanted here on a charge of forgery ia in custody at Seattle, whert be waa arrested by the chief of police. Sheriff Linville wa notified of hi arrest yesterday and will ee that Doyle ia returned her for trial. The crime for which Doyle I wanted wa the forging of a check on the Cali fornia wine houoe last April, where ho wa. working at the lime and Inducing Chat. Wise to cah it NEW CLASS. Shorthand and Typewriting Over Grif fin's Book Stor. I guarantee the full course In six weeks. One hour each day or night Private eon. No home study. No tuition in advance. Good position guar anteed. DOROTHY. E, WISDOM. The Atorian 73 centt per month. VATER FRONT NEWS Oceino's CipUin Protests Against His $5,000 Fine. LOG-RAFT STILL AGROUND Steamer Eclipse Condemned by the la- spectors Flight From Lower Bay An chorees Dars Doints Amonc All Sorts and Conditions of Craft The tamer W. IL Kruger arrived in from Han Franciiwo yeterday, In good m-bnoii to join in me big uaui on lue ea raft stranded in Young Bay, after whh-b , futile effort, she took her way to Portland. The steamer Czarina came in from San Francixro yetrday, in ballatt and proceeded to Portland. The Telegraph came down from Fort- land through the rain yesterday with 1W (eoile and went up again with 32 at 2 p. in. ..... Another big effort as made yester day afternoon, on the run of the flood tide, to get the sea raft off the and iu Young's Bay, but it was aa futila as the work done on Sunday. The steam er Lrggvtt, W. II. Kruger, Columbine, Saniou, Astoria, (from Shoal Water Bay.) and Melville were in the pull, but the combined cinch did not move it an inch channel-ward. It i now proposed to dredge alongside the unweildy maa and try to lip hr in the atream, and if this ia not tuorWuI, there ia nothing to do but wait for the big tide of the 2Hth, 2vth and 80th of the present month for another mighty tow. If tlrat fail, she U a victim of the sands, un- ka she ia broken up and rafted back to the cribs at Stella, where she waa framed up. After 17 year of faithful service on thi hay end river and adjacent water, the CaHrnde'r Navigation couipany'a tug Kcliwe waa condemned yesterday by the federal in'pectori of boilers and en- ginea. Fuller and Edward. " Her com mander a 1 VI builder, Captain) Skibbe, waa loth to see the old veatel put out of buoiticM. Her engine will be taken from her and she will go to the boneyard. Captain Skibbe haa not yet been as- oigned to a command by the company, but it U thought he will be placed on the tug CruUer. The 'tug Melville hauled the lat frag ment of the hull of the old steamer "O. K." into channel way at high tide yes terday afternoon, and committed her to the merry of the ebb tide that it wa hoied would carry her out to ea and oblivion. Tho schooner Alexander and Repeat got to ea, from their lower bay anchor age yesterday. The bark Star of Bengal Went over the bar yesterday. TLm ThUlla tilll nau nil I A ma tnAav . l.V . ..'-. I'll. - u vv W w- if thing are favorable. The steamithip Columbia Is due at the O. It A N. dork tomorrow on her way to San Francico. The steainohip St. Paul will dock here en route to Portland, early on Friday next The towing steamer Harvest Queen came down with the barkentine Amelia yesterday afternoon, late. The I -inline went up on time lat ev ening with the following Portland bound people t Mrs, D. B. Harris, Mrs. R. L. Wallace, J. R. Hamman. W. J. Ree, Cant Burkhohler, A R. Wiley, Mia M. Kun- ban, Mi Hazel White, and N. C. Han- ton. - ' , - Captain P. W. Davie of the steam- ihlp Occano, recently on the bar oppo- e this city, and now in the Portland dry -dock, has tiled the following protest again t the fine of $5000, imposed a train 4 the vetnel and her owners, for having Irregular bills of health on en tering this port from Shanghai: (The line waa levied at the custom house in this city.) L F. W. Davie, matter of the Brit ish ateamfthtn, Ore no. of Glasgow, de clare that the Occano waa at Shanghai in hit middle of Aucusii " thai I re ceived a cable from 0e owners instruct ing me to proceed to Kutchinitto, Ja nan. fnr html-cr Mktlif&iiil Ihnra to await r , - - , order. I left Shanghai some days later and arrived It KutcbMUo, and there .... -. . - - received orders to proceed to Portland, Oregon. I have always had strict orders to attend to the bills of health when proceeding to a United States port' I found there wa no C. M. connul at Kut- chiuitzo. Tlte j at that port being expoiied I did not dare to leave ray ve"l to proceed to Nagaaaki; I therefore sent to the V. 8. conMil st Nagasaki for a bill of health, which waa paid for. I did my bet to conform to the V. 8. laws, detaining my steamer for eight hours for the bill of health. I had no intention to break any laws of the United State nor to treat them with contempt, nor was it by any carelemne on my part that the bills of health were not up to the requirements of the honorable collector of custom at As toria, but solely owing to the act of the V. H. cotixul officer certifying to a Jap anese bill of health instead of vending me a U, S. bill of health, a r-in-rUd. "I therefore re'pectfuity protest aa to the fine of .VX) being levied by the col lector of ftifttoiiiN againxt the Otvano ano lier owner, and mot respectfully petition that the flue be remitted." San Francico, Oct i-The steamer Santa Barbara, which went on the rock at Delmar, about 90 miles north of Gol den fiate yenterday, is being towed to thi port by the steamer Pomo. She i heavily waterlogged. FAMOUS EXPERT HERE. Government Mineralogist David T. Day at Seaside to Verify Sand Samples Dr. David T. Dsy, the government ex pert in mineral, who haa become fa mous by his di-tovery of the wonderful raule hidden in the sand of the cost contiguous to this city, is now at Sea- tide, where be will select samples of beach sand, at given loca li tie from which the original specimens were tak en jnd tent to him for analytit, in or der to entablih their authenticity by a re-analyi; not in contravention of the statement of thoe who sent them in, but in Atrkt confirmation of his own finding and to put the question be ba rained beyond all future controversy. He i working hi way up the beach to the mouth of the Columbia river and wilT finih hi reitesrches in a few days and return to Astoria and to hi pot in Portland. " . Following ia ihe report of tle scien tist already submitted to the world and this will be supplemented by a: further and more extended report at the close of the new professional scrutiny s ; "The following results have been ob tained by concentrating tiie black sands: "Forty pounds of black aand, received from Placer, Josephine county, Ore., yielded oveniize on 10-meh screen, 18 pouuds 9 ounces, which yielded 13,754 grams of gold, nuggets. The undertize through a 10-mesh screen weighing, 21 pound 5 ounce, yielded 11.0 grams of nugget gold. Its total weight) being 2.").3.VI gTam, the gold would be worth, if pure, $10.84, giving a value per ton of $842. Another intereting run of 'the black auds wa from the residue of a clean up of dredging peratioM from Rock Point, Ore., weighing 408.6 pound, con taining quicksilver, amalgam and gold. The oversize through 10-nieh screen wa 223 1-2 pound, and yielded 3,!K2 gram, of gold; he undersize was 243 pound, and gave 15,270 grams of gold, making a total yield of nugget gold 19,- 2U2 grams. Thin, if pure, would be worth $54.20 per ton. ' Sea sand taken from near Fort Stev en, Oregon, near the mouth of ihe Co lumbia river, yielded results as fol low, in pound per ton of 2000 pound, on one of the concentrating tables sup plemented by the magnetic machine and by panning the samples. 1 B D 5 5 5 P 8 " 1 "3 e s s : -g : I 3 8-5 M1XKRAL a Magm-tite ....tUH3.O0j572.0O; 44.60) 00,79 (Hiromite and ilmenite (a).163.00jl50.00 9.44 3.00 Garnet 1227.001 6101 29.001135.50 Monazit I .851 .3fl 4.01 7 .42 .07 .01) .40 2.80,284.30 ;! S.711471.70 Zircon j 5.32 guarti 228.00 Other mineral I 1 (b) gold and platinum (c) 1483.001 5.7 1 (a) This product may prove by ana lysis to be mainly ilmenite. (b) This product includes all the min erals that could not be separated into distinct groupes. . (c) A satisfactory figure for publica tion haa not f t been obtained. , Feel tired, no appetite, cannot sleep, work or eat! That's tiredness and will disappear at once if you take Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea this month. 33 cents, Tea or Tablets. For sale by Frank Hart. Morning Aatorian 73 cents a month. FOUR QUESTIONS UP Chamber of Commerce of Astoria Answers Them AIL MEETING HELD LAST NIGHT Interesting Discussion on the Black Sand Discoveries of Dr. David T. Day Business Men of the City is Month ly Conference. The Chamber of Commerce of this city held its regular monthly stxuon at the roomst d 1 Bond street at 7:30 o'clock lat evening, there being quite a representative group of buainess men in attendances; Freftkient -J. ; W. Wekb, presided and Secretary Biggins was in charge of the record: Among the communications waa the following which will aplain Itself as it is read, and it is probable that the manner in which is was disposed of by I'refcident Welch, at the instance of the member present, will find endorsement throughout the city: Newark, N. J, Sept 11, 1905. My dear sir: In hi lat annual mes sage President Roosevelt called the at tention of Con grew to the necessity for federal legislation providing for the reg ulation and control of insurance com panies transacting interstate and inter national business. In compliance with an increasing demand from insurance poli cy holders, and others interested ia the public welfare, I - introduced into . the lat Congrese a bill to this effect, pro viding that there should be established within the bureau of corporations a divistott of insurance,: and that poli tie of tnaurance were deemed to be article of commerce and instrumental! tie thereof. The bill waa- introduced to late to secure final eonsideratian, but the demand for aucb a measure has be come even more, apparent in tho mean time, and I , expect to reintroduce the arae, poibly with slight modification, into the congress which is to meet in December.' ' - .. :.. The bill will be Introduced on behalf of the" policy holders "of all American imturance companiesrin- the firm belief that their present and future interests demand the additional protection of a federal statute regulating insurance transactions between the.Utes,in ad dition, of course, to such supervision and regulation aa constitutionally belongs to the states from .which the companies de rive their hatferv' Furthermore, thait oy eliminating a considerable amount of needle state tierviKlon the following important benefits are expected to re sult: ' .1. An lncrea-e in the security of the policy hoMcra. - k 2. A decrease in the exicne rate and the cot of insurance. 3. A decrease in the burden of need le taxation, h - 4. A decrease ia the amount of cleri cal labor now indispensable to meet the requirement of some 50 states and ter ritories. ' . ' 5. Tlte stamping out of fraudulent in surance enterprise. 0. Adequate national protection for American companies transacting busi nes in foreign countries. Since tliu far interstate insurance transact icas have not been brought with in the scope -of congressional action, I deu to HH-ure an expression of view from the interests-affected by such a measure, and I, therefore, take the lib erty of troubling you with a few ques tions to which I would like to have you reply either ye or no, a the case may be, together with any additional com ment of your own which you may wish to make upon the matter. - If entirely convenient, kindly fill in and return to me the attached blank in the enclosed stamped envelope and ac cept in advance ruy 'sincere thanks fo fhe " This XT"'" 1 Itll your eourteey and co-operation hi w$ effort to secure a eomprekensi cat prein of qualified public opinion Vfesj a matter vitally affecting the welXaosl of the American people. I am, very truly yours, JOHN F. DRYDE3T. P W TiI AVT T . Chamber of Commerce, Astoria, Qb Federal Regulation of Insurance pad. Q.l. Do you endorse the suggestion President Roosevelt, that insurance) panics engaged ia interstate lasi business should be regulated try asol brought under the control of the boV eral government I j Yes. . (12 Do you hold the Insurance nes to be a national rather than interest and properly entitled ta fiat solicitude and care of the national gtt ernment! , Yes ' Q.3 as a matter of personal opuuoav do you hold the buiness of insnraaee tav be commerce, or an integral and iadlt pentable element of commerce, ia tka tense in which this term ia used la ev eryday language? ' Yes. Q.4 Are you In any way apprrhenaiv tha it would be inexpedient or iaadsiav able to increase the power of the Sco eral government to the extent imp ieal ia the regulation of insurance by com gret ,; . No. - JAS, W. WELCH, fc President Astoria Chamber of Cars merce. (Signed.) From Chamber of Commerce, Aators Oregon. (Please answer the four quetiona bf a simple yes or 2p.) After taking care of the foregoing iia portant piece of business, the gentle men present Indulged. in an animate dweussion of the reported findings eff Dr. D. T. Day, the government expert ia minerals, aa to the inherent valaee) of the black sand found along tkla lav mediate coast, and which will be fawsd t. .nnthpr Minm. nt , t. - Astoria n. The tendency of the infemsal taJks had upon this vital heme waa of the extraordinary impulse to be give to local investments and expbttatioa of the sand, after Dr. Day's final sola tkm of the problem and his nltiante de termination of the exact values iarolv ed. . It was. very absorbing and iatat esting and continued until the moment of adjournment. Don't Borrow Trouble. It is a bad habit to borrow anything but the worst thing you caa poaeQjy, borrow, is trouble. When sick, aore, heavy, weary and worn-out by the paiaa and poisons of dyspepsia, billousnea. Bright a dittuw, and similar intenal disorder don't 'sit " down tad brool over your symptoms, but fly for relief to Electric Bitters, Here you will final sure and permanent forgetf ulnese of al your troubles, and your body, win svot be burdened by a load of debt disease. At Cha Rogers' drug store. Price 50c Guaranteed. Three Rules There is a rule in life to live by, Also a rule of three to figure by .v .' But when it comes to - ladies' and gentlemen's tailoring Rule-ofzistheMan Roelofsz Old library Room, 183 nth Street Detohos ' me CAM THAT NEVER OVEI-nUS LAV Q eiiimrSii!!ci!!.i;UDSSsiD: The Can is guaranteed satisfactory bj tit makers. Pump cannot get out of order; it is braced! to the bottom of the Can; it will not wear out it pumps anv kind of oil Can is stronger than any Can made. ' i The top of can is supported from below. - The hinged cover conceals the pump; keq J ifi out dirt; makes it the most attractive Can told, SoldOnly in Astoria by - W. J. SCULLEY, eent 472.C0MMERCIAL ST."