Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 8, 1905)
6) SUNDAY, OCTOBER 1903. THE MORNING ASfORIAX, ASTORIA, OREGON. It look good, but tate better. A new Breakfast CereaL MAKER PUFFED RICE 80 easily dlge.ted that rliltnicdysppla may eat it and want more. So nourishing and satisfying tint the strong well person thrive on It. 2 PACKAGED 25C ROSS, HIGGINS Co. WI SILL CHAM ft IARBOBITS BOSTON COFFEES. LOCAL BREVITIES. Mr. Tilda Androa, tr.es.ag. 1470 Grand Avenue. Given either at .bom or will call. Tk. fimllv restaurant of AatorU U raoognlaed the UeM restaurant. Th beet meala and the beet sank' la As toria, 120 Eleventh etrtet "The rlaeo Catering company's dining-room It gln open under the Mine management Everything flret class. CuUlne and aervlce uneicelled. Privet WuotJ 4 Akerman. txldermUU, mat trr maker, furniture upholstering, harness repairing, rarjet cleaning and laying. Ninth itrret. TO PORTLAND i5. The 0. R. A N. company will continue to k!1 tirkeU until October 13th from A.toria to Portland and return for 12.25, good returning until October 31, IMS, See advertisement for Ouardian sal of valuable property on Ortober 2th. Pege three, column six, this issue. PaHfla Orchestra will give a dance In Pacific hall Thursday night wit. A cordial welcome la extendi to all those holding lnvlutione. "" - TWENTYFIVE DOLLARS .REWARD. A reward of 123.00 will be paid for the recovery of the body of Arthur King Jon-ph.on, who waa accidentally drown ed Sunday, September 24th. THEODORK JOSEPHSOX. Cooking Apples 65c the Box JUST IN FROM THE ORCHARD JOHNSON BROS., GOOD GOODS iil-tu Twelfth St., AitarU.' Splendid Come and sec is before It's too late We are Offering ' , ! Furniture Barg'ains Nover Before Heard of in This City Before moving Into our new ttore building you can get a big discount on every purchaw. Wo are, offering thl epecial inducement lb order to ava moving th atock. W alo i offer you a aeleotlon from th larget atock of furnitur in th city. A call will convince you. y CoKirrt ftoysi MONARCH RECEIVES MEDAL. Hiss. Ileilhorn A Company received noli. that the famous Monarch mulle hi steel ranges, of which they are agent, were awarded a gold imnui ai the Lcwia and I'lark exposition; JEWISH HOLIDAY. Tomorrow U Yom Kippur, on the lewl.h calendar and the day will lie oImmtvmI by .)ewih merchant by the clixing of their stores throughout tne lay. FUNERAL SERVICES HELD. Funeral service were held at noon at I'ohlV undertaking parlor over tin" remain of Mr. Wilhi-lnia fIutfoii. Itev. It v.l.iui-t oflii'iating. Interment wa at iirecnwod. TUESDAY LAST DAY. Next Tue.day will I the last day in which to pay water rent and avoid the 23 mil nuliy. Payment should be made at tin commission' new oflhv in the city hull. LUMBER SCATTERED BY STORM. Purina! the storm Friday night. w-ow of lumber moored to the disk at the A-toria Luulr Comjany, was torn looA and Mattered along the water front. A considerable' portion of the load wa recovered the next day. TAVERN IS ATTACHED. Attachment proceeding againt Au nut KraU. 01 lite lavern, nas ocen Died in the cirniit court at Portland by the NUitey A brook Fuel kmipany. Mr Krali filed an alignment to . J. van Schuyver A lomjiany for the lietieflt of -reditor, but afterward withdrew the lept-r. SAW OCEAN ABOVE ASTORIA. A large crowd of sight-seers came lawn from Portland pn the Telegraph yesterday,' the majority of whom re turned with the lat line elderly gen (leman, who had a large party of ex ursionMs in tow, pointed out the ocean when ecveral mile up the river from Atoria, and a little later attempted to show hi charge the pot where the lightship had gne ashore. Spedal Round Trip Eicumon Rata of I3.00 for tho fair wia A. ft C R. R. Tickita Sold Daiey Until October 13th. Up to and Including October 15th, the A. A C. H. R. will aell round trip ei curaion ticket daily from Aatoria to Portland and return rate of $3 for the round trip on account of the Lewi and Clark exposition. Ticket purchased on or before October 2 will be good for re turn pannage 3d day from date of tale and ticket purchased after that date will be good for return paaga up to and Including October 31. - FwPNiSMiRS. ..r.... - - - arfmath. 1ft w --n. 1L0TS MIME DontTurn'a Hair at Onslaught of the Oregonian. HEIR POSITION IS PROVEN Veteran Muter of th Bar Insist on Their Declaration of Twenty-Four Feet Nothing From Portland to Con trovert th Claim Mad. The otorm that waa lann-bod from ortlaiid and direcU-d at the devoted head of tiie Ur pilot here, a few day ago, till rage with unabated vigor ml furniihe the "aupcrannuated gang" ith a prolillc line of converatknal iiiuiuiiition which will not W exhauted for eonie time to come. Tlie pilot ollice aa agog with comment yettterday af- ti-rnonn and the guiiiull ol diH-oiire endlcw), hut altogether Snterenting. I'll im. line of ahue ia no new thing with 11,-4 veteran of tlY had liiw, and their talk avor of long year of villi llration from the ame old aoun-e, the iregoniun. dm- waMiiied ojil tr oWrved, yes terday, "that he and all hi mate would U thankful to the Oregonian, the fed- ral uoverniuetit, or any other expert lid repoiiille Miuree, if they would mimI Miiiicoiie down here and Mint out o the i.ilol. or any of them, the 2(1 feet of water on the C'oluiiiliia bar at low water Uge; THAT IF IT WAS DONE. THE ASSOCIATION WOULD RESIGN, TO A MAN." Thi wa heard ly M-ven or eight other pilot sitting aUuit and the negative Mgn or word wa wanting, showing that they all feel like in the matter. When .Major Ungfltt left thi com ma nd and the work at ties jetty, be wa a.kcdpojnledly, by . W)JJlbie ery pilot, "how much water waa on the Ur when you climed your work. Major! and the major answered the pilot hy referring him to the marking tn hi, the major's, June report of the Ur survey, and an npection, o(that lleged reliable water-map howiIess, than m ft. The following, taken from ycfttcrday's 1'oltlmid Journal, (whhii i yapping the Miine yap a it big competitor,) is il lustrative of tlie ambiguity of the por tion taken by the Portland paper, and how plainly, that unlike the pilots, they have no real and ahmdute data umiii which to hae their deduction that lucre 1 20 feet of water available at v tide on tlie Columbia river Ur, at this or any other season of the year: "As soon a the weather permits'the united State engineer will make an other stirvev of the Columbia river. Ur to asecrtain jut how much, if any,' the extcinion of tlie jetty ha increaied the depth of the water since the ann'nal Miuiidings were taken in June. It i U lieved that an UK-reaped depth of at leMt two feet will U shown We intend to make f reouent , Wir vey or tlie liartroiii now on. mtui .Major S. W. HNilfr thi morninir. "so that thoe who are directly interested' in liiiiiii!r mav lie kept informed as to the stage of the Water at that pohit Of coure, our oiieration will have to guided solely by the weather. It, i now to rough down that way to do aivurrate work, but a soon as the weather moderates .we will take sound' ing 1 be uiAjor aio uei'larcd that he in tend to adopt a jmliry o measuring tlie depth of the water on the Ur at fre pient intervals perhaps every three months. It i a matter, he explained. Unit every resident of Portland is th crctct either ;dieertly or -tiMlireetry. If the weather is favorable the survey can U completed in aUmt a week, and can be attended .to from time to tihie without interfering with the prosecution of other work at the mouth of the river. Ile-aii!e the Ur pilots gave out an unfavorable report of the situation at the mouth of tlie Columbia, a small delegation, among whom wa Captain IVmlieithy, of the Itiitish steamship Imaiini, called on Major Roessler ye terday afthifMin to lcarfi just how miieh water Is on the bar. The major called their attention to the data e tired w hen tlie last survey was taken in the early part of last summer, but informed them that he was unable to supply additional information on the subject. "Kealising that it is a matter of the icnuttest. importance to shipara,- parti cularly, the major decided and ao in formed them, that he would make ar rangemcnts for taking frequent sound ings. Tlie Ur pilot report .was com per have not yet taken the iiieitkm up with the commercial organization of the city, but aert they Intend to Jo on very soon." Major Koeler ha la-en in command of thi district for over a month, quite long enough to have informed hlinell of the primewt bit of information he poced, if he Mieimeil it at all. namely, the depth ot water on tiie Ur at tlie mouth of the Columbia river, and that he could not, and did not give it, nor anything definite in relation to it, i Irrefragable proof that hi oflioe is without specific knowledge of it; ami in lieu of supplying it, be does the next bet thing and promises to get it soon, and keep on getting it at regular in terval, all of which will be entirely ac ceptable, only the deferred iiifornmtion will never eompn m contention of the Ori-goiiiaii and it eeiior, that there i 'H't feet of WHler on tiie Ur, here, at low' tide. Anotlier pilot of many year and ptemlid reputation in tiii Ur service, aid to a reporter of tiii Jmper, lust night, aproMM of the controvery now pending: 'If. Iat spring, the Oregoniaa, had gone for the engineers, when the pilot ent in a petition that the dredgr U kept at work on the Ur, and they re f ued to grant it, there would hare been no iietion about sufficient water on the Ur at thi time. Now it I looking fr some one on whom to throw the blame, and knowing that the Almighty will not notiee its plea for more water on the Columbia Ur, it blames the pilot, (who by the way, are not in the wrecking buine) because they have told the truth in regard to conditions at the mouth of the river. The Oregon tan is doing more harm to th state of Oregon and the Port of Portland by xiirring tin matter up even for on isKtie of it paper, than years of knock ing by the Seattle and Taeoma press ever did. It i every pilot's interest U do all he can to induce shipping to come to the mouth of the river, and they try Ui do -ot but when they have a pa per that i vit-ioiiftly trying to kill the commeree af the river, instead of fot ering it, ami endeavoring to displace ex perietict-d pilot and put green-born In their place, it shows, upon It face, that tlif eVftaSi 1 hrTrK nTTo TIJTtluj ping that vWts lU port." Notices : Serviee at the Kirt Lutheran church tomorrow as usual. Morning service in Swedish at 10:45. Subject for sermon, "Again at Bethany." Evening service in Knglih as usual at 7:30. Subject for the evening discourse, "Hope." Accord in to announcement the pastor was to have Ucn at South Bend, Washington, but on account of pastoral dirties must remain at home, and will preach tomor row at lsith services, Tlie Norwegian and , DanUh M. E. hureli. Rev. C. Aug. Petersen, the pas tor will preach at 11:00 a. m. and 8:00 m. Sunday school at 10:00 a. m. Young jHHiple's meeting at 7:00 p. m. Firt Congregational church preaching at 11:00 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. oy me imtor, Luther I). Mahone. Morning sub- jeet, "Power to torgive. tvening Whv women do not cvt married. Mimic under the direction of Mrs. Ceo C. Watkins. Sunday school isr.-u m. Why Women Do Not Marry. Some time ago Dorothy Dix told why, in a magazine article, men do not marry. That wa soon followed by an interesting article by Edward Bok on the other side of tlie question, in tlie Udies Home Journal. In addressing liter iv aocietv at the old home of Augusta 4iie Kvans at tolumbus,.(a llev. 1. 1). Mahone, then a soldier in Hie America armv.'wa anked to tell the ladies of the outhland why they did not marry. By re.iiet Rev. Mahone will siieak on that subject tomorrow evening at tlie riri v ongregauonai ... . -it ... a! I hurch. t)f course every old maid or bachelor uirl of the city ought to be present. Grace, Episcopal. Services will be held at !race Epico ial church tomorrow morning at 11:00 o'clock ami in the evening at 7: JO o'clock Sunday school, 12:30 o'clock. And at Holy Innocent' chaped service will be held at 9:00 o'clock a. an.. Rer. W. Seymour Short, rector, officiating. The Methodist and the Baptists will meet in Union service at the Baptist church tomorrow. The Itaptist pastor doing the preaching. The subject of the morning discourse will be "Service," of that in the evenig I.eon from the life of a great statesman. Everybody Is REPORTED DRIED Axel Munson Loses his , Life Prom a Duck Boat SUDDEN SWELLS THE CAUSE Make Boat Fait to Filing at Trap Be low City and It I Overturned Body Not Seen Boy Wai Aloae When Accident Happened, It was reported to this office Ut night that Axel., Muntfv a hid of 13 years had been drowned in tbo Uy jut U- low tlie haduartex of the Union Fish ermans (-operative. J'acking Coinjxiny, yesterday . ioming.( . ,: It seema he had taken a duck-boat and dropped dowa along the dork un til be reached th trap maintained by the aforesaid company; belo it dock. Tlui pre-nnption is he fastened the chain-painter or hi boat around one of the pile of tlie trap, while ha wa fishing, that the eUia slipped down the pile as far a it slack permitted, and while in this condition the swell of a passing steamer, or the ordinary tide at thai point, suddenly lifted tiie. boat with it painter held well down be neath the jiurface, and overturned it, canting the boy into the water from which be could not extricate himself by swimming. Tlie boat was' found bottom-up and moored to the piling as stated and the Never too late to "send" to your grocer Gate Coffee t: t No prizes-no couponi no crockery. Sold onlr in aroma-tight tins. Nerer in bulk. j. a. rotcER m, co. 1 v t rTrrrr-rJ LJfAlflQII 2-0PP0HTUfllTIES-2 OURS TO TOURS TO School 'TAKE- A Shorthand and Typewriting wMn Equip Yourself to Double Your Salary LEARNED IN SIX WEEKS. SPEED 100 WORDS A MINUTE. PRI . VATELESS0KS.I ONE HOUR DAY OR NIGHT. NO HOME STUDY. GOOD POSITIONS SECURED DIPLOMAS ISSUED. Location Opposite Star Theatre Se local ad ia this issue. ) i , .v "1 l 'ill f 111' "l- - ' boy. lias "been miwing from hi bora and haunts ever sinee. He was the son of Fred Munon, tho fi-herinsn, who liver at No. t$ Duane street, and was considered a good! hid. He was at one time mesa-boy oa the Ur tug Tatowh and left scrrice oa her, to attend school when they opened. CITY TEACHERS ORGANIZE. At 9 o'clock yestenlay morning the) teaclier of the city, 33 strong met at the High school for the purpose of or ganizing the Teacher' Meeting, for the, oncoming srhoul year. This they did by electing Prof. A. L Clark, as president; C. F. Wilkmt, Tk-preidcnt, and L X Oilman, secretary, and an executive board consisting of tlie Misses Garner, Winn, Sinnott, Reynold, Badollett and Sands, and Prof. Kester. After aa abl and interesting talk from the new presi dent ami an interchange of views oa things scholastic, and a discussion ot the proposition to secure, at their owa expense, a teacher in drawing, the meet' ing adjourned. PLEASANT AFFAIR DATED. Announeement was made, last even ing by one in authority, that the ladiea of Fern Chapter, No. 38, Order af tha Eastern Star, will give a dam, supple mented by cards, on Friday evening next, October 13th, at Masonic hall, ia this city. It goes without saying there is enjoyment in (tore for who ever at tends. The academic course in the Holme Business College is a condensed college education. It ia peculiarly valuable to those who wish to acquire a good deal of knowledge in a short time. Writ for catalog. 23-33 Y. M. C. A. Building, Portland, Ore. Presstafionfl Cleaning Club Tare Suits Pressed, Tie Preaaod ad Eight Shines for $1.50 per i 1 month. Roelofsz Old Library Room, 18s titk Street TEACH LEARN Wisdom's School. COURSE IN help you a Complete Line cT; Hleating Steves Anything in a first class tov ih- er Wood or Coal or Combined, you wiS find at. Ill Ui mm Kfill 111! aa . i ... . . 3f.tee. mcnted on at some length. The ship cordially invited. - 470 472 COMMERCIAL 8TREr