a TUESDAY, FEBRUARY i, 1908. POISONED CANDY Three Childern Eat Colored Sweetmeats. WITH DISASTROUS RESULTS Confectioner Sella Candy Filled W-ith Arsenic lo Children and All Will Die Dealer Will lw Al rented and Pioaeeuted. M V YOKK, VI. 21. Alter ruling M ,.! worth of candy, coloied r-d, blue and green, and M " 1,11 . luM.-n of the n. lKl.bolliood at K cent N .,,n,, the lluw t-- children of Hhhv II ipwui I No. 4U Went Wild .tirrt wen- taken with i"lcnl i-oiiviil- .ion. Vivian ,thc eldest girl, aged lx, died in ur.at agony ye.tenUy afternoon utld the live of her hrotlier Ralph, need il, and her 3 year old siter, V tola iiiii ditmlred of. ( oroner Huroer wa notilled of the child', deal h hv Dr. William MacAlpen, who 'aid he thought arm-nleal poison inif caused by eating tli randy wa re .rioii.ible. All autopay will U- made to day. Some of the candy which wa not t-iitrn wu. car i led uny hy Hie ' '"er nnd ha will take it to Columbia Culver it v lor analysi. ' It niiv trace of polnn l found in in O'C ehlhl's orgiin", or the candy l l,.uii.! to riiiititin poloiioii substance, 1 .!.ll nrdrr the nuet of U'l dealer," ..i the enroner. "His tre l near n pnblle school and I learned that be UfMi .UK) and ehildien vlit hi" ), eery day. II- admits making the cmi.Iv himself. The coloring matter he bns In sti'ks from a wholesale candy liHHiiifactiii.r. He has not the .lightest i.h-ii what the ingredients air." Your stomach churns and dij-cts the f.H,d ou cat and If fmil, or toivid. or mt of ord.-r, your whole system suf fri from blmsl poison, llollialcr'i lUa-kj Mountain Tea Verpi ymt well. 55 eeflt. Tea Ml Tahl.-U. S-M by I t. ink Hurt. THE That Skinner Bou And a Wheelbarrow While on His Way to the Store It Geti Him Into Trouble With Peletriam. lCopyr1ht,lWt,by McClura, VMW- A r IT waa a new experience lu uhi nle of Humpy HklniMT, aged fourteen. New experience had tieon I'otriliiK to hi 111 every day nine he waa old tnmiKti to rcnllwt that a licking always followed hi breaking a pane of IH. but tliU we something out f the or- -tttmrrx II.. tlllll ImKH clt Willi II WtHI'llllir row to iti-t a liimhi'l r so f "il for household use, hihI no sooner had In? ataried out tliiui he Im-khii to reel tin' consciousness of power, I'odealrlaua gave thu boy nml 1 wheelbarrow a wiili. berth. IliiHi n nil women kuew thill 110 more deadly combination existed, while younger iiini amaiicr f..U lin.l somcthltiff y't to leartl. I'p near tin corner wiw an oldlab man IciiiiIhk against the fw aa bo rrt)i a rT naotonT him UOWM. urveycil a vacant house with a to rent sign tu the door. He waa wonder lug how many rooms the house con tained and whether It waa haunted when Hnmpjr Hklnner uotlied blm and tried n experiment. He abut bt eyes tightly and tried to urn bow near he could come to the man'a heela with Wa wheelbarrow, He had a distance of forty feel to no. ami be managed mat Momkwl Astoriami Bay imi The Astorian Wants 500 New Subscribers And in Order to Do This the Price Has Been duced Re Be Loyal to Your Town and Begin the New Year by Taking Astoria's Greatest Paper, The Astorian DELIVERED BY CARRIER TO ANY PART OPTHE CITY FOR 65 CENTS MORNING ASTORIAN. tarn no wen that M ran me wheel plump against the loaning man and knocked bin log out from under him. "Hy Jingo, but what are you trying to do?" shouted the man a be strug gled up. "I tlioiiglit I would ae bow near 1 could grow you," wa tlio ralm reply. "Oh. you did, fh? Tbi'ii you willful ly, deliberately mid maliciously ran Hint Infernal tiling against my ifg hope of crippling for life, did you? Hoy, lemma g't Hold or you oncci Hut Humpy drew buck with the wheelbarrow mid alood rt-udy to n-pel an assault, Hiid the muti rubbed bin left li-g and continued: "Are you audi u lunklii'itd that you don't know tlmt 11 wheelbarrow la au Infernal machine' You bav no right running It on tin- sidewalk. Itegonu lib it Imforw I Kit my pnw on you The Idea of turning a boy of your ari liaise to malm ami cripple and alaugh 1....1" Humpy waa suppressed for the mo ment and ot his burrow lu motion after two collisions with the fence and safely turned the next corner-that la. It waa safety for him, but In the turn ing he drove three pedestrians off the walk, and one of them came near fall ing on tho pavement and recovered himself to about: "liov. why didn't they give you a packagt) of dynamite and turn you loose? Hy (ieorge, but lt' got ao that a man'a life Isn't safe even on the rnnt nt hla own house!" Two minutes later the Jackaon boy came down the atreet on the opposite Ide. He bad been to the grocery and bad a dien eggs and three bam of aoap under bla arm. "Hello, Hump! But where ye goln'T be called. "Alter aand." "Come over, and we'll auck aome alga." It waa a great temptation to Humpy. He had aueked t-KK before, and bli Adani'a apple worked up and down as lis rememhi. red how sneedlly and eat- lafactortly the yolks had allpped down hla throat and brought complacency to him for au hour afterward. That was before be had ever started to run a wheelbarrow ou the sidewalk, now erer. Now be somehow felt that egg aucklng was a boyish business and far beneath his dlwulty. He had Been that men and women were afraid of hla Urrow, and he wondered If boys would beIf Tim Jackson would be. The only way to find out waa to make a teat. While the eyea of the other boy were upon blm lu envloua mood Humpy rose up, grasped the handles of the barrow and made a furloua dash across the atreet. Had It been a runaway ice wagon Ttm would have atepped behind tlie nearest ahade tree. A tt was. tbere waa something ao menacing about thtnw that he turned and nV HERE YOU ARE aWW he M t From 75c to 65c a Mob ASTORIA. OREGON. ere toe tvarrow 'area witniii t feet of blm. Humpy uttered warwhoop and pursued, an! egg and aoap were scat tered on the eldewalk. No llvlnir man or Iot can push wheelbarrow very far In a straight ( tine, no matter how alow hla pace, j When be cornea to a run hla counw la iik a rail fence. In going a block 1 Humpy tickled the lega of half a down I men, almost rim Into three atorea and j scared a grocer's home Into a runaway, 1 but hla ardor didn't abate nntll he . struck a fnt man and brought him j down with a great crash. A cobbler ran out of hla ehop and aelxcd the txiy and barrow until it could be ascertained whHher the fat 1 Din n bad been killed on the siiot or only crippled for life and out of the political reform movement It waa 1 wo mlnulin before the oiieaiion win decided. Then the fnt man roue up ! and begun to talk. He called Humpy Ruinner about 150 bad name.. He I threatened him with over 200 different kind of punishment. He abused hla , father and vowed be would never take ; bla hat off to hla mother, and the way be did lip that old wheelbarrow np the j back put a new wabble In the wheel. "I don't know what thla la all about," said Humpy, when the fat man had finally got out of breath. "But you run him over mlt dot wheel barrow," explained the cobbler. "Tint how iwuld I heln It? Haven't I a right to chase a hoy with a wheel-' barrow?" "Maybe ao, but haf you aome right to run a fat man over?" "Hut be got in the way. When be aaw ine coming why didn't he climb a fence or dodge Into a atore?" "Hear the cold blooded young villain talkT groaned the victim. "Why, boy why -why" And then he awelled up again and grew red In the face and gasped for breath and could ay no more. The cobbler went to pat film on the back n.i uni him Into a aewlng machine place where new and secondhand uia chlnea were Hold on the Installment plan, and Humpy look advantage of the occasion to make bla escape. He wax sobered up a little aa he panned on. but only for a short time. He aaw a large dog atandlng on the onrner whllo Its maBter waa in the drug atore to get something for a cold In the head. The dog waa loosing acroaa the atreet at a red beaded boy who waa washing a atore window, and be hadn't the allghteat Idea that his lire waa in peril. No sooner bad Humpy caught sight of the canine than he had a plan. It aa to strike the dog fair in the middle with the wheel of hla barrow and throw him thirty feet high, the aame aa If he bad been caoght on a cowcatcher. It waa a run of a hundred feet with no one In t war and Humpy.trot up onthi team to heat an express, 'me wneei barrow wabbled about, but for the last ten feet It kept a straight course. The dog was still looking at the red headed !, nd wondering If he ever atole har vest apples out In the country, when all at once the wheel struck him. He went down, Instead of up, and Humpy and the barrow went over him. Boy, dog and burrow were plied In a heap. The dog recovered himself first and bit the boy and the barrow, ami Humpy'a bowls soon collected a crowd. Home or. them said that a building had collapaed and killed seven men and other that a street car had run over a coal dealer, but the policeman who came running up soon straightened out thing. "I want, this hoy hanged to a tree for trying to kill my dogV demanded the owner as the cold In his head grew better i-imil tin tliiit."-rri7tied-t?ie (ii!i"-.', "but If I ever catch him out with a wheelbarrow again he shall go to atate prison. Boy. take your Infernal ma chine and make for home!" "Where'a the sand. Humpy 'f aiiked hla mother as lie came limping Into the house. In reply he tmr-it into tears. "Dear me, but what la the matter with you?" The matter Is that this Is no town for a hoy. The people are not willing to let him enjoy hlmseir ami nave a good time!" M. QUAD. Chance For Jh. Mra. Tartun-Mrs. I'pmore ha a etrange dislike for me. Miss Jellers-Yes. and she has only the slightest acquaintance with you; that's what, makes it seem so strange. -Chicago Tribune. The Saered nd Symbolic Tslm. ' From the verr earliest times the palm tree has been recognized as a avmtiol of victory. Among the Creeks and the Homana palm branches were used to decorate the buildings and streets of their cities In honor of the return of a victorious army. Thin cus tom appears to have been taken from the eastern nation, but from what oue In particular no one now knows. At a very early 8e the Hebrews were ac customed to carry palm branches on ail occasions of rejoicings. This cus tom having leen observed on the entry of Christ into Jerusalem, the tree has come to bear a special symbolism among Christians. The primitive church used it to express the triumph? Df the Christian over death througn uie resurrection. As early aa the second century A. V. It became the custom to carve palm branches on the tombstones of those who had died for the faith, and about the tame time ail picture f martyr we figure holding repre sentation of palm branches in theii Laa4. E very For 65c Little Andrew Papa, what do people mean when they talk about the "big stick:" Papa (member of Congress from the Cmptevnth ili-tiiit) Any United Htaten Senator, my win. Cleveland, leader. , h , Little Girl's Obstinate Case of Eczema Instantaneous Relief By Cuticura Little Boy's Hands and Arms Also Were a Mass of Torturing Sores Grateful Mother Says : "CUTICURA REMEDIES A HOUSEHOLD STANDBY" " In reply to your letter I write you my experience, and you are privileged to une it aa you see fit. Last year, afer having my little gjrl treated by a very prominent physician for an obsti nate case of eczema, 1 resorted to the Cuticura Remedies, and was so well pleased with the almost instantaneous relief afforded that we discarded the physician's prescription and relied en tirely on the Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Pills. When we commenced with the Cuticura Rem edies her feet and limbs were covered with running sores. In about six week we had her completely well, and there has been no recurrence of the trouble. "In July of this year a little boy in our family poisoned his hands and anna with poison oak, and in twenty-four hours his hands and arms were a mass of torturing sores. We used only the Cuticura Remedies, washing his hands and arms with the Cuticura Soap, and anointed them with the Cuticura Chnt ttu Cuticura Resolvent. In about three weeks ha hands and arms healed up; so we have lots of cause for feeling grateful for the Cuticura Remedies. We find that the Cuticura Remedies are a valuable household standby, living as we do twelve miles from a doctor, and where it costs from twenty to twenty-five dol lars to come up on the mountain. Respectfully, Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas, Fairmoimt, Walden'a Ridge, Tenn., Oct. 13, 1905." Craipld. Eitmil 4 IUrnl Twtairat for Iry Humor, from Plml lo Scrotal, from Infuwj w STsOt (I. form ol Chtwif C04WI PUli, Vk ffM thi- mU lrwttr,r "h"1 " tOt Chno- Corp., 8ol Vnft., BoMoo, Mm. tf Miiled rrr, " How lo turf TortolioJ, DWprilt Uuinon," uA " Hit (ittn Skin Soak." RUNNING m MM