Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1906)
V '4 i j, itod. T Tin: isionxiXG astorian, ASTORIA, ouegon. .TUESDAY, FEBKUAIY l, Igrf. Crockery Dept. of A. V. Allen's Store OFFERS FOR TODAY GROSSCUP LECTURES Platio Number With Every S Purchase at Wlso'a Speakes on'The Individual Man' to Lar je Audience. EY IN YOUR m 1 t STATES CORPORATION EVILS ET 1 mi m i Better come tar!; to get one at thi price; supply U limited, anil ewj dy offe. asl kindsof tinwar. and granitW at price lower than ever told in tbis city. IWt take our word for its coma and '. Barjineekrrs wmtck th. window daily of crockery department, whem bargain ai always, displayed. t FATAL COLLISION Paocfljer Train Strika Crowded StractCar. TWO PfRSONS ARC KILLED Theater Train lanaiag Oat at Chicai. Strike. Street Car With Diaeatr.. IewK-Tw. XiOed and Many In-jurad. CHICAGO, Feb, li-A theater train on the Pennsylvania Kairoad, running the rate of twenty milea an hour, crash ed into a crowded strvet ear in South Chicago but night, instantly killing two prison and injuring twelve. The killed and injured were all occupant of the .street ear. The engine and first coach of the passenger train left the rails and were overturned.' The dead: AIRS. WILLIAM BACOJT, South Chi cs go. MJXXIE WARSUEL, 12 yeara old, Chicago. Th. injured' including the following: J. C MACK, East Chicago, engineer, severely bruised. EDWARD JL DAY, ntotormaa of the Mreet ear, rut about head and body. C. B. BOLLAJt, conductor of the street ear, cut about neck and head. MRS. BLANCHE WARSUEL, severe ly injured about the body. MRS. LOUIS LUCY, injured iutem ally. W. B. LYXCH, injured internally. The passenger train was local. Wir ing Chicago at 11:34 p. m., for East Chicago, Ind. It waa well filled with passenger who weiw thrown into a pant, by the cvlli-ion. The street car was hurled into the air, overturned, and ground to splinters Jiefore the kx-onjo-tive. The erah came almost without warning, and but few occupants of the street ear had an opportunity to lea p from the car before it was struck. Thr passenger of the railway train hur ried to the aait.tartee of those impri ned in the debris and began the work of rescue. Calls for agists nee were sent to tlte nearest pntict station and physicians were summoned to aid the Injured, The engineer of the pe'vnger' train and th. crew of the street car wera jdsoed und'-j nrret. , POWERFUL PATIENT. UawiUing to Submit ta Operation, ke Break Away From Doctor. CHICAGO, Feb. li A dipatch to the Record-Herald from New Orleans, sayat After having been placed on the operating table at the Charity hospital yesterday to undergo an operation which waa supposed to mean lif or death to him, Joseph Donahue broke away from the Burgeon and nunen, sprang from the table, climbed a lad der) to a akylight which b. smashed and waa ehaed about the roof of the build ing for ten minutes before he waa cap tured. Although several bones were) broken and he waa Internally injured in an accident, the patient still had great strength, and the attendants had great difficulty in overpowering hint. TAX CORPORATIONS Folk Favors the Abolishment of Personal Taxes. - PEOPLE'S BURDEN LIGHTENED Governor of Miaaanri Sayt Bernard of State Tax. From Personal Prtptrty and Levying an Seal Estate and Cor poration, Helps Poor. A Healing Gospel. The Rev. J. C Warren, pa'tor of Sharon Baptist Church. Belair, Ga., asys of Electric Bitter! "It's a Oodend to mankind. It rured me of lame back, tilT joints, and compiete phy-icaj col lape. I ws o weak it tonic me half an hour to walk a mile. Two bottles of Klectrie Bittern hare mail me so 'trong I have jint walked thrc- mil in 50 min utes and feel like walking three more. It's made a new man of me." ;ietrt remedy for weakness, and alt Stwiach, Ijvef and Kidney complaints. Sold under guarantee at Ct.ar. Roger' drug store. I'rief 30e. IjlditD. rend tbi- intjtlognr of clianm. llright eye-, glowing li",k. lilt-, a smooth kin witlwmt a lilemMi. i I -lin', pel feet health. For :ile itb every package Illliter's lUx-Vy Mountain Tai 33 cviit. Kiank Hart, d' iiL'iri-t. YOUR HAT CIUCAfiO, Feb. li A dipatch to the Record-Herald from Jeffervon City, Mo, ays Governor Folk lat night issued an explicit statement of his convictions concerning the abolition of personal taxes in Missouri and the shifting of a la rye part of the burden upon the big corporations. He said: "It is atterted by some person that the removal of state taxes from per sonal property, thus placing upon real estate and corporate monopolies the burden of government would beneAt the rich at the expense of the poor. ' "On the contrary, in proportion to personal property tax (and by persona) property i not meant corporate fran chises and privilges falls heaviest on tlu? poor and the. honi-tt. "The abolition of thU tax and put tin? it on corporate privilege cannot lie to tiic advantage of the rich a xaiift the Mir, for the poor mnn has no nionoply privih-ife and no corporate liolilin. "Every funiM-r1, under tlie present ytein, pays on every cow, bore, and hog; every widow or orphan, whoso eute niii-t go tlirouli the prolate oiiirt. niiit pay in full, while too often t!ie man of wealth, having liU p r-onal reality in (melt hmr it cannot 1 reaiiietl, pays practically nothing. I "Some person object to corporations ; and real etnta licarin the liiir'l.-n of state government. But the state ' give to nrMirations, which sre art i I fil ial creatures of the state, rights and privilege which the ordinary citizen ' il not enjoy, and it is only ju-t that ' the Mate khoii'd rwive full return in I the way of revenue for the imweri ' granted." Say That th E la in the Large Cor porationa Li Largely in the Wide Latitude Given Them by the National Govtrnmtatak XF.W YORK, Feb, 12. lecturing on "Tbo Individual Man." Judge Teter S. GixMacup of Chicago expounded yeter day to a urge audience in the People's forum at New Rochelle, his scheme fur popularising the eorporationa. The au dience aeemed intensely interested. Wtliam M. Ivins who waa the Re publican ' nominee for mayor last fall, presided and added local color to Judge Qroaacup'a theme. "The wrong of tba corporation," said Judge Grosacup, "is not in the corpora tion itself, but in the extreme latitude of h state and national government that haa permitted the corporation to become the exdusivo right ot a lew people. If, when thee great transfer, nations were taking place, there had been carried witk It the interest, the proprietorship, the co-oprratkn of the men whose places were being takenu. foe instance, tlie shoemaker had becoine a part proprietor in the shoe factory none of this outcrr and causes lor out cry would exist But such was not the cse, for some reason or other, for some reawn which is n.very gmd reason, kiuked back at retropwtively." Aftef sncakiiiff of tmblie land a re lated lo eoriortions. Judge Grocttp continued: "Wt must invite our citienhip back to Brst principlea again. I do not wlah to be understood aa being against weoUh or the wealthy man. The man who haa by the force of bia character, by honest endeavor, driven his estate to thousands, nay. to mil. tons haa my unbounded respect. I would, however, hava laws enacted which would be operative on the Urge corporwt'ont. as well aa the small ones. We all know that some of our larger combinations are flourishing now under condition, which, if the combinations were smaller would lead to their extermination. I would enact a law which would cause the bandits, the marauders, and the trespassers to go forevef." Judge Grosscup said that his reme would be, first, to hava any body of men who proposed to form a corpora tion aliow that they had the actual as sets, the capital they pretended to have at the outset, than to place proper safe guards around the corporation to sre that it was legally managed, and to simplify the routine, he issuance of stock, and so on, so that the man in the ordinary walka of life could under stand the conditions. '".Many of the corporation have long been in the supect class," he added. - BOOKER T. SPEAKS. a 00TBALL FAaaIITY. . Mar Be a tylkk Owe, Bet It Make TswsiWsv A A man usually buys a bat that's "la tyle," bat tbo modern bat for men baa lota ta answer for. Baldheeda are trowtnc more numef- oua every day. Uata make excellent brswdinf plaoes for tba parasitic germa which aap the life from the roota of tbo hair. When your hair begins to fall out and your scalp ta full ot UsndrutT It Is a . , nor dn that thee countless germs are wily at work. There in but one way te overcome, the trouble and kill the germs that way ta to apply Newbro'a Herptctde to the cwlp-tt will kill the germs and healthy hair la aura to result. Sold by leading druggjsta. Rend Wc. In tamps for sample to The Herpiciue Co., Detroit, Mkn. Kagle Drug Store, 3C1-U3 Bond St, ' Owl Drug Store, 549 Cora, kit, T. P. Leurin. Trnp. "Special Agent" Another Victim Added to List of Deaths From Football. CHICAGO. Feb. 11 -Another nAine va ndch-d to the lit of football fstali tiei of the 1J5 ceason yesterday by the death of John Smith of Austin at Anne Hospital. Smith, who Is eigh teen years old, died as the result of in jurie received in a game, October 2fi, He was kicked in thr stomach and si though be played wveral games after ward, H-iioiis eompliiwtions followed which n 'ce-itiitcil his going to the hos pital srveral weeks ago. Death came sfter thier operations had been per- formed. Mr. Hyde says the doctors have pre scribed chsnge and a rest Tba policy holder will get the change j Hyde al- read- ha the rest New York Press, Herman Wise Has Decided to Wind Up the Winter Season With a RISE OF EXTRAORDINARY PROPORTIONS No Use to Quote Prices. WISES Prices on Fine Clothes Will Talk For Themselves. Heirm&in Wise ASTORIA'S REUABLIiSCLOTHIER V s Clothes Bought ot Wise's Pressed Freo ot Chorgo Addressee Whit. Croaa Industrial A sociation in New York. XKW VlHtK, Feb. 12.-l!Kiker T. Wa-hinglon caike ye.terday before the White Cro lndutrial A"iatioii, at it heiidiUarteni in tbi city. The as vitiation's home otter shelter for re-sir-talile negro girls necking employ ment. Them are many while perm pres ent who have taken an interest, in the work of the president of Tukegie. .Mr. Washington urged th i,e-eitsity of the negro servant lieing a liettcr ecr vnnt that hi-i white rival. "Tbi is one of the places of good work in which I have la-en most deeply Interested," be said. "It icpi cents practical and not imaginary need-. In the city of New York tbeie siw 63.0110 reprventative of our TjiM- liegioe. "The negro population inTe.irs rapid ly, and it is for th welfare of (be na tion that there art iiistit.utiotis like this. In ths great anxiety to gel for ward in modern business and life it i difficult to get one rare to fi-e tlutt it is not the only race. Forty years ago there were six million negroen in this country and now there are Kl.(KiO,000. They must be considered. "In th. large wholesale bu.inc.H they send out drummer with sample of the goode they want to sell, the honest salesman declare that the good repre sented by th. sample are even better than the sample. It is very Important to our race that yon her. in the N'orth should show yourselves worthy samples of Industry and progrrsxivenens. Your responsibility I tremendous. Yon owe it to yourselves ind your people in the rVmth that you should gain the favor aW. opinion o' the peoople of the Vorth." MOBS COMrOXT TBAH IT. On Sunday, December 17th, U Data. Tt aV Rio Grand, railroad will inuur aU a daily Una of tUndard nad tour 1st Wepin( oar between JVatenr and Loa Angelea la eonnaetloa wit th. nw Clark road. Both ear will We. D. ear 40 nt fiJO a. bv, nad nrrlvw at Salt Lake City at liM p. nu, th. next day. At thin point th. ear. will b. hatt veer nntil midsi(kt, tan. allow, iaf through paastngan ta. pHvOeg. of a atop'ov of tan hour, and a half in Salt Lakt Oty. East bound, thee, can wiU tear Loa Angele at I p. m and arrir. at Bait Lak. aty at 6:30 a. n, saoood morning where they will nmala orer until :M p. m the no. to Denver wber they will arriv. at 4:10 th. fol lowing afternoon. Thla stopover at Salt Lak. City of th. regular II n. of sleeping ear promise, to b. an at tractive feature for transcontinental travtiera. r Frightfully Burned. Chas. W. Jfoore, a machinist, of Ford City, Pa., had his hand frightfully burn mA In an rlrotrtnal fiirnaee. Ha annlied Bucklen'a Arnica Palve with th. usual reanlt: "a quick and perfect cur.." fireateit healer on earth foe Iurns, Wound, Sores, Keiema and Tile. 25c t Chaa. Rogers, Druggist. Valentines Tbi year our stock la laefar and nor. varied than ever before both comic and sentimental, ranging in price from k each to 14.00. Then w. hart torn, nov.ltie. in th nay of fancy folding Valentine which i hav. never b-en shown be for. Also new eerie In both romie and sentimental In potal cards. B-th how window hav. been given up to Valentin. Di'play for on. week. Walk by and tak. a look. J. N. GRIFFIN Billy Buster Shoes" They hav. a aol. that won't wear out 5. A. GIMRE, AGENT FOR THE DOUGLAS SHOE 54 Bond Stteet Cpp. R Hii n 4k C U7 4tkaUf ciar1 aC3 LoRcr T T Wll II IUI U Beer. Study the Map Thirteen atates and terrltoriea of the Middle West are traversed by Rock Island lines. There are more cities of 25,000 population and upwards on the Rock Island System than on any other W$titrn roait From Minnesota to Texas, from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Lakes, it is Rock Island country. The Rock Island System occupies a strategic position in the western railway world. Going somewhere ? Get a Rock Island folder and study the map ten to one your destination is on the Rock Island or reached by way of it. Note our several offices maintained in the Northwest: Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Butte and Salt Lake City. . The Rock Island is reaching out for bust, ness and solicits yours. a. h. Mcdonald, Qsnstjl Agent, Rock Island Byatam, 140 Third Btreet, Portland, Ota. - V 1 J - v