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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1906)
4 THE MORXIXG ASTORIAX. ASTORIA. OREGON. TUESDAY, JANUARY ifo. Some of the Good Things Fresh This Season's Crop PIN MONEY PICKLES Very tat, Manjauilla o!im stuffed ih olive. MaaianiU olive. tuffd with Pimento. , Mammoth Queen live, finest ever on the msrlet. j Heinw's Chill Sue. Ileinta'a I di KeUb. Something new and 'ry Hviuw'i Pur Utt Vinegar. Put p in qrt bottle, at A. V. ALLEN Where they keep good thing to eat. ITIONS IDEAL Majoon of Panama Says All Lov ly. UPHOLDS ADMINISTRATION C Termor of fiuna Canal Zone State Things An Progressing Beautifully in Lant f Mosquito, Malaria, and YtUow Fever Very Healthy Place. SEW YORK, Jan. ' 21.-C.ovrnor Charles E. Magoon, of th Panama Canal Zone, who arrived here from Colon y terday on hi way to Washington, met T. P. Shonts, ehairman of tlie canal com- aiiioa. at the Waklorf Astoria last nijjht. Lat-r he talked with reporter and it developed that hw view and Poultney Bigelow of condition on the canal aone aa expred by Sir. Bie kw in a icriea of pullihed artkl. differ widely. Ha aaid: "Mr. Bigelow' visit wa Tery brief. E reached Colon at 10 o'clock in the morning on Thanksgiving day, caught a train that haded him in Panama City at four o'clock, remained there aa hour and a half and returned to Colon. ITe k-ft the Isthmu the nest day at 2:10 'clock. I understand that he spoke of the manner in which the work wa go ' Jag forward; and spoke of seeing labor- era at voiv. At a mauer oi mei. ne wa at Panama n a holiday, when no on worked, so in that respect be i uoiasxa. , . Drvinw I wa appointed in April." continuej Th(( npn re busy. . They are the governor, "and weut down there . ffmn u fQ 2tf wnU , j,, ,,v,r in May. ThU U the first time I have' ,w m h(mwJ in rnniy bamW, been back. -V. lo wnemer uie couni... ... ruUi, fpvt of breatliiiijr ta for each. From twenty-five to thirty negroes n boused in one building. Mure white men are allowed in a single buildinir, but the building are larger. breeding niowpiiUo ar named, develop in habitations, ami are attacked in the towns by fumigation. The. anophoK the malaria breeding mosquito arc pro pagated in th swamp and are at tacked with great suoevsa by draining. A great deal of oil is alo ud. It k our ultimate ott to drain a atrip half a mil wide clear acros the Wh ams to reduce the proportion to a minimum. OHwernor Magoon aid that there are now about I-V0UO laborer eugaged in the canal work and 30,000 other era ployed. In reply to a question con cerning the efficiency of the Isthmian police the governor said: "I have no hesitation in saying there la not a hou of gambling or of ill fame in the canal tone. There bar not been any such nor will there be. The stories concerning the ISO Mar tinique women now in the too aa dia credited by the conduct of th womea themselves. They have ben watched by the police all the time since their arrival Tbei have bven no arrest and no complaiut about them, of the whole number, ltto are living with men whom thev declare to be their hubands They aiM attending to their ordinary household duties, a would women of their own class in any peaceful com munitv. The majority of the remain ffovemment of many wrdrobe and other houe fixing. "The Panama Railroad ommuMW- import and sell such thing a thry de sire to baudle," be aid. "They art not bought with government money at all. There i no doubt they did import 1,000 uit cm. If anything is ne.Jed in that country to pack things in, it U a suit case. Peoule wear collars, cutis, and neck tie ther a elsewhere and they are to be bought, a are perfume and 1 the like, "Remnlinir the work on the canal I can only say that it speak for it They deep in sanitary cots, some oi them double decker. The floor in the b bealthv, I suppose my own appeal ance might afford some indication." Mr. Magoon smiled a he said this. Be ia uoiv than six feet in height, and weigh more than 2110 Minnd. He has a fine tropica! tan and is the pic ture of beltb. nr. i.iiji,, are all watertight, mo-t -The only illne I have hnd 5oa o 1)lPm ,,ig of. iment. , there," he contintH-d. "was a rather tiadi (t WM n(H,..ry at first to ne the attack of malaria, shortly alter reacn-uM ,,iidiiig ued by the French. They ing th? Isthmu. I here was an eP'-! Wvre flrHl r,.,,,,,,!, 1kicv.t. More new demic of y-llow fever wlicn I rrived. . . , tlM. ,inlPi ,n, but it wa suppres-ed. T measure 1. 1 nt ))(f Mitft he M e. adopted to cniiiliat !y have drivli. it out I 'Malaria nn the Isthmu is very lwd. It i a common iliseas.-, and of course, immunity is not apiired. ' It i not o seere, however, as the malaria which developed in nie of the Western states, such Michigan and Illinois when they were first opened up.'" "Tlie utevipuiyia as the yellow fever the -unitarian' ... , i.,.,i,i I ill ist o.'nu'i" Iielieve. BRIGHT IDEA. P ears Pears' Soap leaves the 6kin smooth, cool and healthy. There's no fret alkali in Pears.' Oa'y good soap and putv. Woman's Denartment of Institute 1 Kmd After Founder' Mother. 1'lTTSHl !!!, Pa., lull. 21 Tlie tnis tees of the Carnegie School of Tech imloyy have revived a letted from Andrea- Carnegie, t iiiinkitijr them for ' iiiitiiiilif the wnnialls iiannieni aiie I hi t her. Mr. l arnejiie -as: "I win dcli-jliled with the action of 'the trustees. I'leu-e say that I 'deeolv tiiilclied liV this reinenibrincp of I i I mie tn n-hoiii I owe evervthiiiff that n ie neither ever gine to a "n win adoreil her." STEAMER IS ASHORE. German Steamer Manechen Drift on Alaskan Beach. ! SK.VTTI.K, Jan. A spwinl di jpiitih to the 1'ie.t Intelligencer from Sitka Mill, that the fJerman steamer Miri'ihcn from Seattle to Vladivostok I went ashore in Fal- l!a.V last Thur Taa Castaat We.H.. . . n.s ' day. 'Mi' otli.ers and part of the crew aes Daaar.aT C.r... 'arrived at Sitka Sunday on the Oeor- KEEP YOUR HEAD UNCOVERED. Thar ar manr men who wear tbli kata practlcdly all th time wha awaka, and ar bltisttd with a heavjr shock at hair; ret If th acalpa of thes iuii mn nc bscsme Infested With dandrotl ferma, th paraaltes would multlplr all would nu th final rtult Nw- I O'-xM the engine rrK.m and rttmgtiihh tro'a Herpldd kills thes germa and ' rd the tltes. We have lie n drifting aUmutatea unhealthy bair to abundant ; . " . ..... . . , i ..... inn i he mri'O will lie a loiai i"-s. um the ship may be saved. Captain Hib hard, one f the charters who was on board, said: "We encountered a gale eight hundred miles off Cape Flattery It snia-hcd in tlie deadlight and water growth. Herplcld la a pleasant balr dressing aa wsll a a dandruff cur and contain not an atom of Injurious ub tane. Cold by ledinr drurrtst. 8nd We. In atamp for ssmpls t The Harpt id Co.. Detroit, Mich, jagt Drug Stars, 321-323 Bond St, Owl Drug Etort, 69 Com. 6t, T. I. laarin, Prop. "Special Agent" Captain Hilibard praises Captain Ru dolph, who wa In command, for bis wonderful work in keeping th vessel allt in spit of the terrible gale and fearful cold. STRIKE A FAILURE Structural Steel workers Strike b in a Bad Way. TO ADOPT DRASTIC MEASURES Central rtcratd Ualoa H Been Per uaded to Order Evry Labor Or. niiatioa StiU at Peao With Employ-1 Missouri hv caused CASS POSTPONED. For trt to Break Peaceful Relation. NEW YORK, Jan. 28. A strike em bracing 150,000 men and involving the entir huihling industry of New York Isj h beimf eavcrly aiim-d at by the' Iavtitioa of Standard Oil Sat February Twelfth. NKW YORK, Jan, XU.-Henry Wdl mall, ill whose law'. llh"a Attorney Cem'ial Hadlcy of Missouri took hl testimony in hi priM-ecdings again! th SlatiiUnd Oil Coiiiwny, statel jester day that he had no Information a to when Justice t;ildfrlcv Would an nounce his division in th cont 'iiipt pro ceedings against II. H. linger, who re fused to answer certain quest Inns put to him by Mr. Hadlcy. It ha lsen In tcmU-d by 'Attorney-tieneral lladlcy In resume t ikiug te-tlumuy in this city tonioi.viw, but important mutters in hi in to adjourn the case to February 14. GIRL IS ASSAULTED structural steel worker of the city. Such a desperate tep is necessary, they ay, ia order to preserve their waning organMathm from complete rtiin . ...i. i -- v : v. . I. ... a a result oi a strike in wok-k -., hav been engaged for the pt seven wUk. ' Th dch-gate of the Houncsmiths and Bridgemen' VnUm, whkh embiace the structural steel worker prevailed on the Central Federated Union yelcnla,v to order every labor organitation still at peace with their employer to Weak those peaceful relation and ally them selves with thj. strikers. If they fail to do so they ar to b uspended from the Central Federated Union. u extraia-ditKir situation will be thus createtl. A larg" numlier of ltir unions, among them the tarjenter. ton cutters, roofer , masons, and plasterers, are not only at pace with tha Building Trades Employer' Asso ciation, but many of them are requested on the Joint board of arhitmtion. com posed of both employer and workers. Should they tkk to the structural steel workers, they will not only have to strike, but alo will hav to with draw from and in effect repudiate the principle of arbitration, which they have be-n upholding. Xext Friday will decide tha fata of the proposed great strike. On that day tlx organization which are at work are to apiear before th Central Federated Union nd answer how they are lo stand whether for or agaiut the strike. Samuel Ooinper president of the AiiN-rican Fedeivtion of l.ahor, is also to be appealed to by the structural steel worker. The structural steel worker have been in bard luck ever sine their lead- r, Sam Parks died. In their present trike, which Involves the skyscrapers .i going up al over n ciiy, tnev nave lss-n nearly overwhelmed, they say, by trik breaker, by non-union men brought here from, other ritica. Only vestenkv 400 of tha buildinir strike break rs sed through Jersey City on 'a swamp and taken to llobcrts' theii way here to work on Ihe sky- craper. , Hack of it all U the question of tlie' 'oen shop". " The delegate of th,- structural steel worker warned the Central Fwlerntcl Union yesterday that if tin y were allowed to go down in ruin the employers in every other building trade would fore the open shop on the men thus involving all organized labor in one common ruin. It was in re--pnii-e to that tlir.nt that the Centrnl Federated Union resolved t summon alt its memU-rs to stand by the struc tural steel winters at all hazards. MORE COMFORT THAN EVES. On Sunday, December 17th, tha Dea rer k Rio Grand railroad will inaugur ate a daily line of standard tnd tour ist lteping car between Denver and Lo Angele in connection with th new Clrk road. Both oar will leave Den ver daily t 9:30 a. and arrW at Salt Lak City at 1:35 p. m., th next day. At this point th car will b held over until midnight, thu allow ing through paaaenger th privilege of a itop over of ten hour and a half In Salt Lata City. Eaatbound, these car will leava Lo Angslc at 8 p. m., and arriv t Salt Lak City at 8:30 a. m second morning wher they will remain over until 3:50 p. m., thence to Denver where they will arrive at 4:20 tha fol lowing afternoon. Thi tp-over at Salt Laka City of tha regular line of deeping car promise to b am at trsctiv feature for tricontinental travtlcra, ' Negro Fiend Attacks Ten Year Old Girl. MOB WANTS TO LYNCH HIM Negro Srvaat Maka Criminal Asaault ea Tn-Yar-0ld Daughter f Hi Vaster Ia Saved Fionx Mob by th Girl'i Mother. i nir vi.ii. Jan. i. A disiMtch to the Tribune from Washington, tl say st , Fiillowlng a criminal assault on a ten ear-old girl by a negro, who was ctiiitur.-d bv a mob, the asailant's fate was in doubt ye-terday while the pu eiits of the girl wcr plea-ling for and against burning him at the Make. Mr. Rolierts, weeping, begged that the law I allowed to take it course, and her husliand continued to incite the mob to lynch the negro. She then ap pealed to her husband to aid her in pre venting the lynching. Nhe said that to put the assailant lo death within hear lug of the girl would be almost cruel to the child tlie negro act. Roberts, after om hesitation, tame to hi wife sl.l ami Joined his en treatie with hers. Their united elforts s.nvln.ss.1 in mob that to lvn.h Ihe negro would add to the wmng already dona tha child, and it wa airreed lo turn the assailant over to the sheriff. Mamie Rolrta w attacked Satur day a she was reluming from a neigh- hor' home by Rich Anderson, a negro uiiuWed bv her father. A soon the child reehed her home with the stoiy, HMse with Idiaslhounds began pursuit of Anderson. cautiiied yesterday In home where it was planned to have him hbn tiflwl by th child and then lynch him When the mob arilied at the Ibdi lt'' home the negro confessed hi guilt. A Grim Tragedy. is daily enacted, In thousand of home, a death claim, In eh one, another yictlm of Coniumptlon or Pneumonia. But when Cough and Cold era prop erly treated, the tragedy I averted. F. 0. Huntley, of OakUndon, ino writei "My wif he" the consumption, nd three doctor gv her up. Finally ah took Dr. King Xew Discovery for Consumption, Cough and Cold, which cured her, and to-diy h I well nd trong." It kilU.th germ of all dis ease. One dose relieve. Curnted at 50o and $1.00 by Charle Roper, druggist. Trial bottle free. Mien are quite as eacr as women to cultivate looks. Me know i.I lnin.ire. nf iiH-n In this vicinity that are taking Ifollistj-r's Ibsky Mountain Ta. Smart fellows, .1.1 cents. Tea or Tablet s. Frnk Hart, druggist. Spoiled Her Beauty. Harriet Howard, of Kew York, at one time had her beauty spoiled with skin trouble. Eh write t 1 bad Salt Rheum or Ectema for yer. but noth ing would cur it, until I used Bucklen' Arnica Salve." A quick and ur healer for cut, burn and tore. 25e at Chaa. Roger, drug tora. A PUnoNamher Fret With Every $3.00 Purchtu Clothes Bought it Wise's Pressed Free Except Siturdiy The End of the JANUARY vSALE Drawing' Near While Reductions Are In Force While Assortments Are Good. Or Else You Will De Sorry. ieranam Wise ASTORIA'S RELIABLE CLOTHIER fgi uJby v'.Uthtiffr'ui, It (hn )ir il.lititrj." Wc eU and recommend nd bete itttionery made. Shall be pleated ia kbow you mple at anytim, and htlpyou la your hIccUoo. Also Many Other Goods of Fine Stationery at 25c and 50c Box. SPECIAL SALE MONDAY J. N. GRIFFIN TV CM II IC4I VJ S3 Uccp. The Morning Astoria, tic a month.) Th Morning Astorian, 65c a month , Dr. Reed's Cushion Sole iShoes are Death on Corns. Easiest Thing Yon Ever Put on Your Feet. Sold by S. A. GIMRE, AGENT FOR THE DOUGLAS SHOE 143 Bead gtrt 0pp. Boa H!)M a. Co. ISHER'S OPERA HOUSE , L. E. SeUg, Lessee and Manager I SftaJSS 2-NIOHTS 2, COMMENCING FRIDAY, FEB. 2 MDAiyif,5V.T THE R0SCIAN COMIC OPERA COMPANY. Friday EvenlnSousa's El Cap. tan Saturday Matinee GILBERT AMD SULLIVAN'S "THI MIKADO." SATURDAY EVENING BALFE'S BALLAD OPERA, "TBI BOHEMIAN GIRL." "THEN YOU'LL REMEMBER ME," "I DREAMT I MARBLE BALLS," "THEN YOU'LL REMEMBER ME," LAND OF POLAND," "THE HEART BOWED DOWN." DWELT IN "THE FAIR Kvsnlng I'riisjs Reserved SeU, 1.UU (illsry, 60 otnt. Mnline Prii Adult, 50 ernti diildrrn, S3 rent. I hi awount of th heavy priis. of this sng(niint Ihe free list will b entirely suspended with the exception of tlie Press. Reserved Met 81 Open Thursday Morning, 9 a. m, at IIoflra Candy Store. Curtain, S:20j CarrUges, 10:45. ''