MONDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1903 THE MORNING ASrOIUAN. ASTORIA, OREGON. ... ... t ' ii i 1 1 . . 1 '1 i- '' SHIPPERS ARRESTED Olympii Arrives fo: New Line Service Tuesday. TRANS-PACIFIC STEAMERS OUT Lively Sunday oa Bar, Bay and River Vessels la and Out Negro Stow-a-ways to Be Sipped Back to China Day's Doing Among Sailors The schoowr Holliswood arrived o - -day at quarantine, New York, after a long voyags? from San Francisco. After A complaint made by Captain Wor- leaving that port the vcesel waa dis- anop, of the British steamship Agin- masted and put into Nin reuro ior re court, led to the arrest last night by 'pairs. The rig was changed to a four-IT-rWm.Ar TVn Bk-lin of the cap-! mealed schooner. The Holliswood left of the river steamers Chas. R. Spenoer. Dalles City and tlie Telegraph. The captains arrested were Joseph Allen, of the Cha. R. Spencer; Charles ! Biggs, of the Tek-graph, and Sid Scam mer, of the Dalles City, the charge against these being that of violatiog the speed limit within tbi city liniita of the river. The direct cause of the! complaint and arrest was found in the complaint of the master of the Agincourt, now lying at the Portland Flouring Mills. From this 'complaint it appears hat the . boats mentioned, which left Portland yesterday morning at the same time, raxed down the .river. As a result of this racing, and tk consequent disturb ing of the river, it is alleged by the captain of tlie Agincourt the stern moor ings of thfe vessel were broken and fur- ' ther damage in consequence done to the bridge and gangway. The damage done to the steamer s a result of the rivalry existing between the river boats wasi sufficient to invoke the law, and now tlta three, cabins are out on $50 ball to appear before the Municipal Judge whn their case for fast running is called. Sunday Oregon ian. - Starr for Seattle, ' The htke steamer Indianapolis, arriv ed in New York from Chicago by way THE ENTHUSIASTIC RECEPTION OUR EFFORTS HAVE MET WITH JUST THAT. . THRONGS OF EAGER AND ECONOMICAL BUYERS KEEP OUR. AISLES CROWDED FROM MORN TILL NIGHT. THE PUBLIC OF AS TORIA IS FAST LEARNING That this Big- Old Store's vertisiruj is Acurate, Its Bargains Real. I AND THE VIGOROUS RESPONSE. TO ONE SALE IS PROOF POSI TIVE THAT THIS FACT IS UNDERSTOOD AND APPRECIATED. For Three Days Longer This Great Sale Continues Today's List Will give you an idea of what you'll save by purchasing Lace Curtains Now ' I .73 Lace Curtains 1.50 Lace Curtains . , 2.00 Lace Curtains ... '7.00 Laos Curtains .. " 8.00 Lace Curtains 13.00 Brussels Net . . r Be sure and pay our Crooery Detriment a visit. arriving daily. HE FOARD S WHERE THE NEW THINGS of Jdoutreel. Tli Indianaolis form erly ran between Chicago and Michigan City. She vm purchased by the Atoka Steamship Company of Seattle, and come here to prepare for th long Toy age to Seattle. Bar Story. Aberdeen people on the steamer Xew berg, from which Second Mate Chris tiansen lost his life in Houuiam barbor just aa the Yeaecl left the dock on ber last voyage, write from San Francisco, that the mate drowned through the ap parent indiffervnee of the crew to locate the life preservers and that the only effort made to save the man wa through the exertion of the pa ssengers. Lon Journey. San Pedro MaT 23 and put into Kio Janeiro for stores, making the voyage from San Francisco in 324 days. She carried cargo of asphalt um. Senator Coming. The steamship Columbia will le down from Portland at 10 o'clock this morn- w - - nig, en route io ran rraneisco. ?ne will meet the handsome steamer Senator coming up, on the P. 4 S F. line, aa the latter leave San Francisco today for Portland, displacing the Costa Rica. Tlie Senator was built in San Francisco in 1S98 and is one of tlie crack steamers which have been plying between Seattle and tlie Bay City. She is of 2400 tons gross register, ?80 feet long. 38.1 feet across the beam and 19.6 feet depth of hold. The w-h! has space for tlie ac commodation of 300 passengers and can show a epeed of about IS knots an hour. Will Be TraM-ahfpped. The two negroes who stowed-away on tV schooner Churchill at Haipong, China and arrived here with her on Thursday last are not ashore in this port, but are held on board awaiting be arrival of an immigration inspector, from Portland, tomorrow, who will see that the colored "gera'en" are trans shipped to China by the first steamer. Thiey are not Ameri can citizens and have no claim whatever on this country and government They Ad- ..$ .59 .. 1.19 .. 1.65 eeesseeeeeeei 4.95 5.95 9.95 New Holiday Good STOKES CO. ARE FIRST INTRODUCED. 1 ft 1 . ....-...LeiA.AA.JL.k.&AAamwamamaaiA are Vesl Indians, one bailing frwa the Barbados and the other from Jamaica. Olympia Arrives, The fine steamship Olympia, from Pu get Sound, arrive.! in hen en route to Portland, yesterday aftermm at 3 o'clock. Her ahlp's-bell struck "6 Wis" aa her bow hawser slipped over the cave! on the Callender pier She came over the bar under pilotage of Captain A. K Cann. After laying here for an hour nho proceeded on to Portland, where she will load, and leave on Tirsdsy a-xt, on her first run in he Portland Im Angeles line, with the Roanoke. They will make a sewn day voyage of it both way, with San Francisco and Atoria as port of call. Forced Into the Mud. The Hamburg-American passenger liner Graf Walderee, while 1-aving New York yesterday for Hamburg, ran aground on the flat off Redhook near Erie Basin on the Brooklyn side of the chaiuvl. Effort to float the big liner were unavailing la-4 night, and an other attempt will be made at high water today. The agint of the Hamburg-American line said yesterday even ing that the cause of the stamcr's grounding was the fact that a tng with three bargea crossed the liner' bows in the channel and to avoid a collision the ship was forced into the mud. FLOTSAM AND JETSAM The British steamship Abergeldie came down from Portland, yesterday morning and left out for China at 11 o'clock . Tlie Herman ship Adolf will Iw down on the hawsers of the Harvest Queen to day. She ha cleared from the Portland custom house on Saturday and has her crew "under hatches" to keep thein from breaking away again. The P. & A. steamship Nicomedia. from Portland for Japan laden with grain and foodstuffs, came down the river yes terday mornig and left out at once, crossing the bar about noon. The handsome oil-tanker Asuncion from Santa Paula, arriwd yesterday at 12:30 p. m. and went on up to Port land withowt loss of time. The big towing steamer came down Saturday night (JtJahama after the schooi rs Virginia and Mabel Gale, and took them, hence to Portland. . The steamer Whittier came in from San Francisco at 2 o'clock yestcfiday af ternoon and went directly to the metro polis. The steamer Wasp came in from San Francisco yesterday morning at 9:30 o'clock and proceeded on up the river to Portland. The steamer Telegraph came down in good season yestewlay from Portland. She is running race on the WllametU mostly these days. But she is the same little cracker-jack for time. The dandy Columbine got back from her three weeks cruise on the Puget Sound waters yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock. Tjlie big handsome Potter was doing her lay-off here yesterday, and quite a crowd of his friends called during the day to pay their n-spect to her alleged purser, Harry Blanchai-d, hut each and all were told, in a hushed whisper, that "he waa asleep." Most of Ihem believ ed it ,too. But there is one, perhaps thee than know bettl-r, and will square it with bim the first time they eateh biin aWre. Owing to a lark of sufficient depth in the upper Willamette river the boats on that run cannot as yet get beyond Salem . -"V .- The German hip Adolf cleared at the Custom house yesterday with 118,783 bushels of brewing barley yesterday valued at $04,150, for Ipswkk. She will k-ave down tomorrow. Word was received yesterday that the lighthouse tender Manzanita had been beached and that she waa DOW being patched. It ia believed by the light house officials that she will be In Port land by Tuesday at theJ latertj and ready to go into the dry dock. The steamer Nome City, owned by tin Oregon &, California Steamship Co., .us now been entered on the Portland 'and San Francisco run find trader her new schedule will arrive in Portland on November 23 and sail on the 23rd. The steamer Elizabeth arrived at Bandon Thursday from San Francisco,, carrying seven passenger and 150 tons of freight. One hundred tons of this will be delivered at Bandon and the remainder goe to Prosper on the Co ijuill river. Among the Columbia's panger to San Francisco, today, are P. F. Megargel ami 1). F. Fa-ett, the aiUs who crossed the continent in an automobile during the past summer'. They intend to go back from the Pacific to tht At lantic iu the sumo way. Tlie five-masted schooner from Port land for San Pedro, with 1.000,000 feet of lumlsT, will be down tonight. The steamer Some City ill l)ve San Francisco on Thursday next, for Portland, to run in a lumber-line be tween that city and San IVdro. The steamer Homer crossed in from San Francisco yesterday morning and went on to Portland. The steamer Atlas U said to In here todtir, from the Sound. due The British ship lllytheswood will disk at he Klmore dock this morning to discharge 800 tons of coal. The steamer Sue H. Klmore is due to arrive from Tillamook City, today. The steam. Northland left out for San Francisco at 11 o'clock yesterday morning. MERRIWETHER UNDER ABREST. Annapolis, Nov. 12. Midshipman Merriwether was placed under arrest to day to await his trial by courtmartial, for engaging in a fistic combat with Midshipman Branch. Sells More of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy Than of All Other Put Together. Mr. Thos. ueorge, a marchant at Mt. Elgin, Ontario, says: "I have had the local agency for Chamberlains Cough Remedy ever since it was Introduced In to Canada, and I sell as much of it as I do all other lines I have on my shelves put together. Of the many doin sold under guarantee, I have not bad one bottle returned. I can personally recom mend thia medicine as I hart used it myself and given it to my children and always with the best results." For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists. J Che. Special Sale of Ladies Wool ShirtlVaists For This Weeh All colors. All wool Albatross. $3,701 to $3.20. Alapacas, $3.00 to $2.50 Fancy weaves $2.50 to 2.00 $1.95 to $1.50 We have the "Black Cat Hose'', ery boys mother's friend. ev- A reduction of 15 per cents on all suits and alterations made without charge 4$ X5h& BEElHIVE WATCH FOE THE BIG SALE AT Morse Dept. Store,! COMMENCING WEDNESDAY, NOV, SEASIDE GHOSTS Their Effect on One Sleepy Coast-wise CI t uen. liuis Knoblmk had a Joke played on him a week or so ago, so those present claim, that the hoys will never k t him forget. It waa at lodge meeting, the buHUifx of the evening having bn completed, and nothing left undone that should have been atteml-d to, and there being still several hours to spans More "midnight yawned and hell itself breathed contagion to the soul." So, just li-fore retiring, Duncan concluded that It waa the night of all nighU when a "ghost might be made to walk and taJk and do all manner of unghostly things," and picked upon Billy Drew as the victim. After arrangng matU-rs, Hilly was invited to retire to the ant room where Iuis was to keep an rye n him until his presence should be re quired before Pluto's Imps, where he woud be Instructed in the black art and tlie mysteries of ghiwtland. It required a Utile longer time man usual to gri ti'iing in shape to properly impress the eanditlate, and during the wait Ixmis wandered off into the laud of "Nod" and Billy etw-aped. Ihiiwan went to the wicket, and throwing his clarion voice into tlie ant room yelled in blood curd - ling tones, "Bring forth the brave! His majesty is prcpaied 0 grind his bones j and drink his b l o o d!" but there wa no repoiie He yelled again, and was answered with a deep snore. Op n- ing iie door, he saw no sign of Billy, who was at home and asleep, he pulled , the guard olf his chair, rolled him over; tl floor, sIimnI him up and let him fall again, when Iuis, nibbing his eyes, muttered, "Don't Mary I Blank it! It ain't Wine to get up yet!" Sad Signal, OFF ON THEIR HONEYMOON Mr. nd Mr. Lei. Dimond Leave This Morning. U-x, Dimond, the poiiplsr baggage man of the A. & C. IL railroad, was married lut evcsiing, to Misa Florence Curnahan, daughter of Hon, and Mrs. (,'. W. ( iiiiuiliun. of Carnajmn's Sta tion. Tim happy young poopUi will leave on this morning's Portland express for Urn metroMdis and th Sound cities for a bridiil trip. Tlie "Isiys" have got a fine banner for decoratng Mr. Dimiid's car, and a dray load of otd shoes that will be strung along the train and track from here to Portland, and t ewch station on route a sjniial and enthusiastic reac tion and send-off awiU tfie young couple. The whole system of passing courtesies' will reach it climai at Port land terminal, where Due baggage men are priming themselves for an outburst of fraternal feeling. The best wishe of this community go out to Mr and Mrs. Dimond for a long and happy life. Cronp. A reliable medicine and on that should alway be kept In the home for Immediate us 1 Chamberlain' Cough Remedy. It will prevent th attack If given a won th child become hoarse, or even after the croupy , cough AQParv Tor.Jttle by Fran Hart 'and leading druggist. Baby sleep and grow whll mammy rest if HoUister' Rocky Mountain Tea ia given. It la th greatest baby medi cine ever offered loving mother. 35 cents, Tea or Tablet. Sold by Frank Hart, druggist ' ; 16 I e PATIENT C0ES CRAZY Jen R. Peterson Loan Hi Mind From Illness. Yel4 rday morning, one Jena R. l'-t eron, a atleiit bf a few day standing at St Mary's hospital, suddenly lost hi mind, and sprang through the window of his ward, upon the balcony ouUiik". His attendant sprang efUr him lnUiit ly and caught him Just aa he waa in the act of hurling himself onto the lean below. After a violent and protracted struggle the attendant oterrmme him and forced him Into the safer quartets of the ward. Sheriff Thomas Unvllle was sent for and came quickly. He took the man In charge, placed him eomforably aa pos ibte in th County Jail and will turn him over to the proper author it lea to day for examination as to hia sanity, Peterson has shown no lapse into sanity since tfie- sudden recession, of hi men tut faculll-s yesterday. Sob lost Mother. "Consumption rur.s In our family, and through it I lost my mother," writes K, B. Reid, of Harmony, M. "For the past five year however, on the (light est alga of a cough of cold I hav taken Dr. King Na. Discovery for Oon-i sumption which ha saved me from serious lung trouble." Ilia mother' death was a sad loss to Mr. Rled, but he learned that lung trouble most not be neglected, and how to cur it. Quickest relief and cur for cought and cold Price 50o and 91.00 guaranteed at Charles Rogers' drug store. Trial bottle free. A Fine Display of Cloisone Vases Ranging in price from $1.25 to $2.00 ; can be seen at the ' A Yokohama Dazar (Commercial Street, Astort WE SELL B0ES FOR LADIES, HOES FOR MEN, E0ES FOR CHILDREN. A Complete Line of Rubber Good. The Bail Band Brand A Few of eur Leader Are: ret tar tvArrrir so ewnv ! IV. A 11 Of n. j. vvvvm buv " u STILS0N SHOE, for Logger. S. A. GIMREv 543 Bond Street 0pp. Ron Higgint k Co. s t 1