Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1905)
, 4 - SATURDAY, OCTOBER, 14, IPS THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. A Full Lin. of Van Camp's Pure Food' Products Just In. We Mil your peclat attention to the following article! llmnliiy, 2 cane ,....25o Hiihi, per can 15o Hauer Kraut, per ran 15c We shall be' picavd to show you the gods and we know you will be plea with thrm. ROSS, HIGGINS & Co. WI SILL CHA3I SANBORN'S BOSTON COFFEES. LOCAL BREVITIES. The family reataurant of AatorU U recognised aa th Ilea reataurant. The beet meala and tb beet eervlo la Aa torU. 120 Eleventh street Th Palace Catering eompany'a dining-room la again open under th tame management Everything flrtt class. Culalna and aervloa unaieelled. Private dining-room for lad lee. Wuorl A Akerman, taxIdermUta, mat treaa makers, furniture upholstering, barnrM rrpairlng, raret Cleaning and laying. Ninth atrret. TO PORTLAND li 5 The 0. R. A N. company will continue to aell ticketa until October 13th from Astoria to Portland and return for 2.23, good returning until October 31, 10OS. Join the shorthand class before It is too late. There will I after regrets if you ml such a splendid opNirl unity. Wisdum's arhiMil, opposite Star theatre. Special Round Trip Eicuieuo Kate of lj.00 for tha fair A. ft C. X. R. -Tlckts Sold Dally Until October 13th. Up to and Including October 15th, the A. A C. R. R. will aell round trip s curslon ticket daily from Astoria to Portland and return rata of 13 for th round trip on account -of th Lewi and Clark exposition. Ticketa purchased on or befor October t will be good for re turn passage 30 day from daU of aale, and ticketa purchaaed after that data will It good for return passage up to and Including October 31. CRAB APPLES StXTRE YOURS KOW THE SEASON IS ALMOST OVER! WE HAVE OS HAND A CUPrLY OF Nice Ones JOHNSON BROS., GOOD GOODS tiS-ias Twelfth Strret, Aitoria. Come and see ns before It's too late I We are Offering' Furiiiture Bargains Never Before Heard of in i This City Dcfora moving Into our nw atora building you can get a big discount on vry purchase. We ara offering thl pecll Inducemnt la order to . v moving tha atock. W alao offer you a selection from tha largest stock of furniture In th city. A call vlll eonvlnca you. : Mra. Tilda Anderson, massage. 1470 Grand Avenue. Given either at bom or will call VICTOR VICTORIOUS. The celebrated Vktor Kaies, offh-e and school dek are now on the Astoria market. Chas. 11. OrkwiU, at 137 Tenth tn-et i the sol agt-nt. Call upon him at oniT. CARD Or THANES. The iinih-rolgnrd deire to publicly ex iea their t hunk h to their many friend and neighbors, ami ee iully to the em ployer and the employe of the t'latop Mill Company for their klndiies and oympnthy extended during our bereave ment caused by the ih-ulh of our lute win, William. Mit. and MR. FRANK WVM. ON HER OWN ACCOUNT. Mr. A. H. dewett, who for ome time pat ha inrefully served the A. Dim Imr Company in the capacity ol dre makrr. ha withdrawn from iU employ ment and ha onel dressmaking par lor of her own, iittuir at No. 4"1 Cummercial street, at the outheat cor ned of that thoroughfare ami Ninth street, where he will lr pleased to meet and ere old friend and patron. BIG REAL ESTATE DEAL. tme of the target real estate tran action to take place in tlie lower art of thi entinty for year occurred last week when the Walker farm, which comprises 3)0 an of eicellent farm ing land and i located at the bead of MeamlxMil nuvipition on Uray'e riv er, as purchased by ('hark- W, Itarr, of Astoria, and Mr. Henry llowk. The farm i known to otw of the oldest and lel place on the river. The lore of II. A. Walker, which wa ituated ujMin the place wa purchased by Frank Durrah, Messrs. Ihirrand Hocck w ill take Hl.M-ion of the plm-e alsmt (Moher 13, with Mr. lloeck to peronally su pervise farming affair, while Mr. Walk er and relative, nr.w of Cray' River exw-it to chonue their resident- to 1 southern California Cathlamet Sun, Don't Borrow Trouble. It 1 a bad habit to borrow anything, but tha wort thing you can poibly borrow, ia trouble. When aick, aore, heavy, weary and worn-out by tha pain and poisons of dypepia, biliousness, Bright' disease, and aimilar internal disonlcj, don't ait down and brood over your aymptoma, but fly for relief to Electrio Bitter. Her you will find ure and permanent forgrtfulnese of all your trouble, and your body will not In) burdened by a load of debt dieae. At ChoA Roger' drug tor. Pric 60c, Guaranteed. Cleone your system of all Impurltica, Now i the time to take nolllster'e Rocky Mountain Tea. It will make you well and keep you well. 35 cent, Tea or Tablet. Frank Hart. ASTORIAN PIONEER George W. Hume Talks of Business and Old Times. " ' GOES HENCE ON COLUMBIA Cornea Her to Buy Property But I Overwhelmed With Offer Report Lumber Market Activ on Small Mar gin of Profit Other Comment. One of Atoria' well known pioneer citizen, (ieorge W. Hume, did the Aa Utrian odlce the honor of warming one of it chair for half an hour yesterday morning, and Indulged In pleaant re- mincM-rift chat ariK biine) augge- ion of iritcreMing oit, ( aplain nume arrival here on the Columbia, from Kan Fraiicim-o, or rather from Oakland, where he now maintain hi home, on lii-t Wednexday morning and will de part homeward on the ame hip to day. In the iire of hi remark yeter- lay, Mr. Hume (who i now three-acore- and ten year of age), dew-ribed condi tion here in H05, the, year in which ated at Atoria and built hi firt mill for awing out lumlx-r, on the ite now iM'ciipicd by the tre of the Foard S token Oniipany at Commercial and Sixctceiitii otreet, anil no newcomer icre can realize the growth of the place ven iixm hi telling. At that time he milt a email mill that awed probably IH.INKI feet of IuiiiImt per day, and the undue viehh-d him practically $10(10 month income. He owned the block Hken of, a well a the one north of it fronting uHin the harbor, having paid in the neighlmrhood of $35,000 for the proierty, and when hi milling bui iihm outgrew the old ite, he old the land for $1.V),000 and moved eastward, under the lea of Tongue point and erect el the prima ry plant of the now famoii Tongue Point Milling Company, of which he I the preident and control ling owner, and which ha a dally out put of 200,000 feet and a correlative in come per year. Kven thi big and finely appointed mill need ome more room in which to handle it immense buine, and it m partly to ecure an additional 200 feet of land adjoining him on the eat, to eke out the neceiitie of hi plant, that he came north. Hi failure to ne gotiate the purchase of the needed ter ritory he explain by eaying that the parlie owning the projerty next to him refitxed to cll him anything lc thnn the full 1200 feet of their poeion, ix time moie than he wanted and we willing to pay for, ao the big mill will have to ue what of the earth now lclnng to it and do the bct it can under it limitation. SNaking of the lumler buine on the coMt, a a wliole. Captain Hume ay the market i very active a pro ducing Minti everywhere, by the nea, in the mountain, on the river, but that profit margin are 23 per cent mnallor than thev ehould In owing to the timid ity of many mill men in fixing the sell ing price at a higher, and equally avail able, figure. He wid he wa Ix-ginning to realize he wa a pioneer of the raciflc coat. The Sn FranciiH-o Hulletin included him among the pictured adgonauU, the other day, when it iucd it "Jubilee edition, and he i forced to the conclu- ion he t actually an old aettler though he ha Wn on the coat but 50 year. Hi health i all that a man of hi year and hardy experience in a new country, could expect. He eat three meal a day when he can get them and xleep regularly and retcully, 3ti3 night out of the year; he etill maintain active control of hi ' linliftiie'biwine and ha a well founded MexpecUtion" of dwelling among the people of thi coat for another core of year. He bae thi fheerful expectancy Uon the fact that he ha outlived the five phyician who decreed him to lite grave 23 year ago, when he waa Buffering from prostra tion and paralyni. due to extraordin ary bulnea exertion, alight evidence of which never attack are Mill appar ent in hi movement, but not a sign of the old time malady Is traceable in the alert mind, and virile action of eye and hand. He makes alwut so many trip from California to Atoria during th year, but think he will lengthen the interim somewhat between this call and the next Don't let tha children suffer. If they are fretful, peevish and cross, giva them Hollltter Rocky Mountain Tea. Tha best baby tnnio known. Strength and health follow ita us. 33 cent. - Frank TERSE TALES OF THE TOWN. An adjourned eon of tlie county court will lie held tomorrow for the transaction of routine buine. Yesterday wa payday for tlte school teacher and janitor and about $2000 in cah went into circulation. The Donald -on sawmill at Tillamook, together with everal thouand feet of lumber, waa destroyed by fire Iat Tues day evening. Insurance to the amount of $.1000 was carried. Funeral service over the remains of Andrew Krickon, who died of typhoid fever were held in Pohl'a undertaking parlor yrtrday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, Tlie interment wa In !reen- wood. A MN'ial entertainment wa given in Ma-onic hall lat night, to member of Fern Chapter No. 38, Order of Fjitern Star. Card wa the principal form of entertainment, and dancing was after ward indulged in. New ha lieen received in the city of the death of Wiley B. Allen, well known here, in San Francisco. Death wa due to paralysis. Hi wife was formerly Mis Dora Wilson of thi city. A wife and daughter survive the husband. It i probable that B. F. Allen A Com pany w ill move their stock of paint and wall paper from their present location at 303 Commercial street to the old Commercial club location at the corner of Bond and Eleventh. Negotiation are now in progress with the Flavel es tate, the owners of the place. Deputy Fih Warden Webster returned from Coble thU morning, where he ar retted C. E. Graham for operating a ftshtrap without a license. Graham was taken before Judge McBride, in the cir cuit court, at St. Helens, and cited for appearance, under bond. It is alleged that Graham ha been operating without a license for some time. City Auditor Anderson wa engaged yesterday in sending out notices to proja-rty ladders, of tha aAewsmeret for the improvement of Exchange street, Tlie work from Twenty-First to Twenty Third street will probably be accepted at the next meeting, of the council, but no certificate of approval ha yet been filed for the work from Seventeenth- to Nineteenth. All assessments for both streets will be due on November I. The new book case for the Astoria public library were received at the city hall yesterday morning, and today will I? put in place by the members of tlie library commission. It is expected that by Monday the work will le completed and all the book installed. Tlie cases were shipped from Chicago, where the order was placed last June, and much disapiKtintment ha been offered in con nection with the delay. The case will have a capacity of 4000 books. Captain Storm, Lieutenant Divdge and Ole Gunderon, of the local branch of the Salvation Army returned from a conference of the officer of the state of Oregon, Washington, Montana and Idaho, held in Portland thi week. Mr Gunderson. who has been aigm-d to special work, will hereafter be a regit lar member of the local branch. Daily meeting will le held with three meet ing on Sunday. ' f A test of the value of the sand tak en from the seashore at the" mouth of the Columbia river, will be made by Dr. Day, at the United State Geological Survey, at the quarter on the exposi tion fair ground in Portland, Monday afternoon. The concentration of the sands shows t lie in to be rich in megne- tite, or pig iron, and Monday Dr. Day will run them through the smeltar, to determine the quality of the product, and quanity in which it exist. New Cur for Cancer. All aurface cancer are now known to be curable, by Bucklen'a Arnica Salve. Jaa. Walter, of Duffield, Va, writes; "I had a cancer on my lip for year, that seemed incurable, till Bucklen'a Arnica Salve healed it, and now it la perfectly well. " Guaranteed cure for cut and bum. 25o at Chaa. Roger drug etora. Why suffer with tirednces, men, cross feeling, no ctrength, no appetite! Hoi- lister'a Rocky Mountain Tea will make you well and keep you well S3 cent, Tea or Tablet. Frank Hart Plans to Gat Rich. ' are often frustrated b audden break down, due to dyspepsia or constipation. Brace up and toke Dr. King' New life Pill. They take out the material which are clogging your energies, and, give you a new start, uure neaaacoe and diuinosa too. At Chaa. Roger' MANY COMING 1ST Colonist Travel Is Much Heavier . Than Ever Before. -A. PASSENGER MEN SURPRISED Traffic Official Looked for Falling Off Thi Year on Account of Large Num ber Who Viaited the Fair Present Traveler Are Coming to Remain. , Much to the surprise of the passenger official of the transcontinental rail road the travel on the one-way colonist ticket from the east to the west is greater at the present time than it wa at thi time last year. The official had expected that the colonist travel would be materially decreased thi year, be cause of the cheap excursion rates made to the Portland fair, thinking that a great many who might otherwise take advantage of the colonist rate would start west earlier in the season in or- ler to get the round-trip rate with a 90-day limit. It would seem, however, that the ma jority of the traveler who are coming west at this time are coming to stay, and for that reason the travel is unus ually heavy. The train westbound are carrying, for the most part, people from the states of the middle west, who are coming into the northwest with the in tention of making their future home here. Commercial travelers who make every portion of the northwest aay that during the past few week hundred of colonists have come into the Dakota, Montana, Washington and Oregon, which are reached by the one-war colonist rate. BOOK tSvenson's Book iStore, Fourteenth and Commercial Street 2 0 PP 0 RTU BIT! ES 2 1 Wisdom's School OURS TO TOURS TO TAKE A Shorthand and Typewriting WE CAN HELP YOU Equip Yourself to Double Your Salary LEARNED IN SIX WEEKS. SPEED too WORDS A MUTUTE. PRI VATE LESSORS. ONE HOUR DAT OR NIGHT. V0 HOME STUDY. GOOD POSITIONS SECURED DIPLOMAS ISSUED. - i Location Opposite Star Theatre ' - .See local ad In this-twueV- T I t '' ' The rate will be in effect until tfc last day of October, and judging tram the record already set the colonist trav el of thi fall wiD the the largest tha ha ever been experienced sine tha - way colonist rates have become a lar thing. , ' Full of Tragic ICualag. are these line from J. TL Slaunoa ei Casey, la. Think what might kavw re sulted from hi terrible cough If he) hi not taken th medicine about which ha write! 1 had a fearful cough, thai d3a- turbed n "ight'a rest. I tried every thing, but P"thlng would relieve it, uLl took DT. Kinft'e New Discovery far C nsumption, Coughs and Colds, which completely cured me." Instantly relic ea and permanently cures all throat lung disease j prevent grip and monk. At Chaa. Rogers' druggist; guar anteed; 50c and $1.00. Trial bottU free. WHY? Get ft Hand He down. WHEN Tott can get 'your luita made at price and quality of good whkft wQ compete with any hand-me-down do thing store la the tUt. WHAT? Trousers from 9 3x0 Tf Suits tOM f Overcoats from 10.00 wp Work, quality and style guaran teed. R0EL0FSZ IS THE MA. Roelofsz THE TAILOR. 185 nth Street, Astoria, Oregon. NEWS We have extended our aale to giro you an opportunity to get such books as "When "Knighthood Waa in Flower." "The Gray Clock. " . ""Master Christian." The Call of the Wild." and many others. Last year $1.50 copyrights V. Sale Price 75c TEACH LEAR5 Wisdom's SchooL COURSE Ilf a Ccaislete tins cl Heating Steves Anything in a first class atora ei fib er Wood or. Coal or Combined, yon wil find at. yXU. Scully - Hart. -r . , , -.,...; drug store; E5c, guaranteed. ..4TIM72 COMMERCIAL STREET .,