Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 16, 1906)
THE MORNING ASTORIAN. ASTORIA. OREGON. WEDNESDAY, MAY ifl, 1906. is If n if. i; .i THE MORNING ASTORIAN , Established 1873. Published Daily by 111 J. S. BELLINGER COMPAHY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mall, per year 1740 By mail, per month W By carrier, per month 65 WEEKLY ASTORIAN. B,, mail, per year, in advance.. $1.00 Entered as lecond-class matter June St. 1806, at the postomce at Antorta. ore t oa, under tbe act of Congress ot March S, 1ST. M-Orrtert for the dellTennat of TBI Mors" ma&jTOBUM to either residence or ptace of baaiaeas may be mad by postal card or throat totockooa. Any urerularity to do Hvarr aaoold be imawdiatT reported to the offloa of publioaUoa. TELEPHONE MAUI 661. Official paper or Clatsop county and the City of Astoria. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O WEATHER. 0 O 0 O Oregon and Washington 0 O Showers; slightly warmer. 0 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO REPUBLICAN TICKET For United SUies Senator FRED W. MULKEY (Short term) JOANATHAN BOURNE (long term) For Governor JAMES WITHYCOMBE For Secretary of State FRANK W BENSON For State Treasurer GEO. A. STEELE For Supreme Judge ROBERT EAKIN For Attorney General A. M. CRAWFORD For Supt. Pub. Instruction J. H. ACKERMAN For State Printer W. S. DUNNIWAY For Commissioner of Labor 0. P. HOFF For Congress W. R. ELLIS. Clatsop County Republican Ticket. For State Senator W. T. SCHOLFIELD For Representatives ASMUS BRIX JOHN C. McCUE For Sheriff MERRITT R. POMEROY For County Clerk J. C. CLINTON For County Treasurer W. A. SHERMAN For County Judge J. A. EAKIN Fer County Surveyor R. C. F. ASTBURY For County Commissioner C. C. MASTEN For Coroner C. E. LINTON For Justice of the Peace, Astoria Precinct 9 P. J. GOODMAN For Constable i JOHN SAYRE. Election June 4th, 1906. HAS KEPT HER HEAD. '1- San Francisco has been wonderfully fortunate, in "keeping her head" in the frightful uproar of the holocaust that swept her like a simoon of disaster. Her officers and her people have never given up, for a moment, the splendid control of the situation, and the people, they assumed in the very hour of the visita tion, and it is to this marvelous pres ence of mind that is due, in infinite measure, the superb reaction and the universal praise that is hers. She was "dead game" all through, and cities, like Sm 1 ' - y--"",TfJA men, are commended for pluck. "CITIZEN", SKIDOO! No more shall th mystic slogan of "Oitiyen" offer unibipuous retreat to the nervele voter of Astoria who is afraid to honestly disavow1 his. party and his political principles. No lonjjei' will it serve the slit-k democrat as a nieptphone through which ho may announce his partisan prefc-roneo and hi pet aspira tions. It is a thing- of the pa-t. and th good it did will always he remembered: but the fact that it served for years a a shadowy medium for political trickery will not be so soon forgotten. Every Republican in the city and county know just what the status of it is, now. and lie who wraps its mantle of sneaking ambiguity about hint, hence forth, will get all that is coming to him in the wnkv of distrust and contempt. It kept the democratic "pot boiling'' for a good while, but, in the language of old Sam. Bard of Alabama, "the democrats have been soppiu' with the big end of their tater long enough." and the Re publicans are nil next to the humbug, and intend to "do business" from this dav forth. Skidoo! Cit! THE LOGIC OF IT. Why, in the name of all that is regu lar ,and patent, and honest, should the twenty odd thousands of major republi can votes in the State of Oregon be swept aside to make room for the "min ority party" of the State! What eon cievable basi can be laid for such action! Where is the logic of it ! With a ticket in the field that simply ex hausts the wisdom and good-faith of I the people who chose it to represent them in the official organism, and with absolutely nothing to counter-act it by way of opposition that excels it at any point, this talk of the probable, or pos sible, success of George E. Chamberlain, in the gubernatorial race, is idiotic. The very access of power the republicans know to be theirs should be ample to settle the question even now, the re sult of the polling being merely by way of recorded fact. The republican who doubts the outcome of the election, is inoculated with some untoward "bee," and will bear watching. The very ab surdity of the proposition must beget suspicion of the man who, as a republi can, gives it voice or encouragement. From James Withy combe, for governor, to Republicus. Americus, for constable, the republican ticket, must, and shall, be elected! o BRAINS TRIUMPHANT. Just keep your eye on the President. Watch the development of Bailey's abortive onslaught; and you will soon realize what brains mean in the hand ling of men and measures of supreme importance. Theodore Roosevelt never lies; neither to friend nor foe; and when he is through with the Tillman Bailey combination, the real animus of putting the pitch-fork specialist from Tennessee in charge of such a measure as the rate bill, will be manifest to the stupidest citizen in the country. This is the moment for pyrotechnics, the moment for "dull thuds" will announce itself a bit later. And once again it will be demonstrated that brains and cleanliness and patriotic honesty are inseparable. EDITORIAL SALAD. Alcohol for fuel and manufacturing purposes can be made from corn. 0 So far as reported, the United States government was the only contributor to the San Francisco fund with a disposi tion to pay in stage money. 0 We trust Chicago will be mora satis fied with its new- experiments in segre gating vice than with its old ones in aggregating it. . 0 A cording to reports, Russia is playing a deep game in the East. It will need to be better played than her Eastern game on the deep. A man can deceive himself even kick himself, but it remained for the Pitts burg courts to decide whether or not he could forge his own name. The battleship Rhode Island has been pulled off the bar upon which she in advertently ran. Peace is a hard strain on a modern armored navy. 0 The French people stand by a separa tion of church and state, an idea that has worked well in the United States from the time the country was founded 0 Senator Allison is, of course, excus able for making a positive statement in denial of an assertion that he gtated something positive about railroad rales. A Rochester physician is quoted as saving that "coffee is worse than whis key." His cook must have given him substantial grounds for such denuncU tion. Losers to Iniokmakcrs at , the race track need not feojl their mivney is wasted. The great philanthropist. Mr. August Helnumt. testifies that his con cent gets about ,IO.lXMI a day of it. After all. for everybody to be bh to travel from San Francisco to New York in le-s than three days is mainly a simple mutter of track, roadbed and having the price. - ' o The pai-amount iiiestion in Maine this vear is, "Can Prohibition lx Prohibit ed r" Compulsory total abstinence never can liecoino a fixed policy in n state where the fishing is good, , . The Seaford, Del., girls are selling kissc at a dollar a whack each for the lienetltof the San Francisco sufferers. , wholesale, rates quoted; no goods exeluitged; everything e. o. d.. without privilege of examination. o The virtuous Senate votes an amend ment which will make the rate bill law include an anti-pass provision. So does the Intestate Commerce law. for that matter, enacted in the 'SO. Is any Senator really ure there is such a thing a a pass! As u great and growing town with Ubundant resources of her own. Seattle .ought to be alwve the business of even .indirectly appealing for aid for herself .on account of the earthquake disaster in San Francisco. Kx. 0 ti,.. city treasurer of Newburypoit, Mas., has confessed to a shortage of fsj.yoiH) ilue to errors of judgment re secting the speculative value of mining stocks. Here's a man who might have followed Tom laiwson's advii-e with profit. Senator Bailey's as.prtion that the president is the author 01 the Allison amendment to the railway bill ought to be accepted as a vindication of Senator Aldrich from the awful charge of re sponsibility for it. The newspaper is a law look for the indolent a sermon for the thoughtful, a library for the poor and an adinonisher ior the lawless. It may stimulate the most indifferent, but it cannot Ik pub lished without cost and sent free to subscribers. This i no joke. Foodstuffs, clothing and camp equip age are arriving at San Francisco in such quantities as to lie embarrassing. It is the fir-t time in his whole life that Fred Funston has been unable to deliver the goods. 0 Uncle -lo Cannon pa-sed his 70th anniversary in looking after the House dmimr the dav. and at nw!it tilliiiL' tile role of guest of honor at a great recep tion. It t ikes a seasoned veteran to land up to these tiling-. AVeeetablePxeparatioufor As similating UkfToodandBeula- ting tltf fltnmarhs and Bowels of tawtesTsfton,Clmful ressaivdEeslContairts neither Opruirilorpbiru3 nor Mineral. Not Nahcotic. jtmmmfOUSrMUEWnXMB PwmJaM Smtl' Aperft Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca, sndLoss OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of KTSW YOHK. EXACT COP UFVSAPPCB (ffST I fSifttlsi U ill 1 H II In 1 1. 1 .,.1, .11 ;,i,.,i.ri. .1 l,IJI!IUIJMI,ll lit 1 III' 1 ' ' 1 I t 1 mm 1 PSfflEiA ijji;,ir,;:i,:,nii,'iiiT Imw ii".. I ECHO AGITATES AGAINST GAMES. Umatilla County Attorney Will Ak for Grand Jury Next Week. PKNDI.KTON. Ore, May l.V Pisliict Atlornev i. W. Phelps has announced that he will osk for gland jury til the coming trm of Circuit Couit. which com unices at Heppner next Monday. Al-o that he wi.ll, request one for Ihis pine when Circuit Court coin cues for the term, .lime '. It has been a year since there was a grand jury here, and one will be oilled to allow those who have complaints to present them. A number of cases have been rejected by the district attorney owing to insufficient evidence, and these mav he presented before the grand jury if the complainants so desire, It is al- probable (hat some gambling ' and Sumlav closing eases will he brought up. At Kcho there has lie.u considerable nti guiubling agitation of late, and though the games are hi pended it is believed they will la' opened sigain. In that ease the matter will doubtless) be brought to the attention of the grand jury. SCOURING PLANT IN ACTION AT PENDLETON PF.NDI.F.TON. Ore.. May 13.--With a force of a dozen men, the Pendleton Scouring Mill liegun the Spring run yes terday. There is, approximately 1.IMM1. WHI pounds of woo) 011 hand, and more will In- hipped immediately. After u few day the force of sorters will tie greatly increased, and scourers will be at work. An unusually heavy run is anticipated, a-u Koshhind Hi., have ar ranged to have considerable of their wool scoured here. INQUIRE INTO DEATH. CI!ICA;), May 13.- Investigation in to the manner of the death of Mrs. Ruth t'antel, wife of Overseer 11. K. t'antel of Zion City has been demanded by her biuther, Harry Stevens, of Pa-o Robles. Gil., and it is possible that her body will lie exhumed for a post mortem exiininatioii. Overseer J. li. Speicher, Zion's health commissioner, who issued the permit for her burial there wus nw cause for un inquest, although he would not object to it. KILLED IN SAWMILL AT SOUTH BEND, WASH, Me.MIXXVII.LK, Ore., May 13-Kd. K. Hoskins. son of A. I). Ho-kins. of this city, was instantly killed while working in a sawmill at South Bend, Wa-h.. Monday morning. He served with the Second Oregon Volunteers in the Philip pines. The K'lnain will be brought to Mc.Minnville todav for burial tomorrow. Growing Aches snd Pains. Mrs. Josie Sumner, Bremondd, Tex., writes, April 13, 1902. "I have ued Ballard's Snow Liniment in my family for three years. I would not be with out it in the house. I have used it on my little girl for growing pains and aches in her knees. It cur-d her right away. I have also u-cd it for frost bitten feet, with good success. It is the best liniment I ever used." 25c, 50c and 1.00. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature For Over Thirty Years m liil TNI eiNTAU MMMNV, NIW VOM flT the wA hjh Use MOT! mm M mm w Woman's Kidney Troubles Lydia E. Pinhham'a Vegetable Compound Is Espe cially Successful In Curing This Fatal Disease. Mrs.J.U.Lany and Mrs. S. Frake Of til the dbeeeea known, with which women re tffilcWnl, clmmlo kidney dutcMe la the most feUI. In (act, unless etrly end correct treatment ts applied, the weary patient seldom survives. Belnif fully aware of this, Lydla E. Pinkham, early io her career, gave sihausive study to the subject, and in producing her great remedy for woman's UU Lydia E. I'inkham's Vegetable Compound was careful to see that It contained the correct combi nation of herbs which was sure to con trol that fatal disease, woman's kidney troubles. Lydla B. Pink ham's Vege table Compound Is the only one epc. eially prepared for women, and thou sand's have been cured of oerlous kidney derangements by it. Derangrmrntnof the feminine organs quickly affect the kidneys, and when a woman ban such symptoms aa pain or weight In the loins, backache, bearing-down pains, scalding or burning sensations or de posits In the urine, unusual thirst, welling of hands and feet, swelling under the eyes or sharp pains In the back, running through the groin, she may infer that her kidneys are affected and should lose no time In combating the disease with Lydla K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the woman's remedy for woman's Ills. The following letters show how marvelously successful it is. Mrs. Samuel Frake, of Prospect Plains, N. J., writes: Dear Mrs. Ptnkham: 1 cannot thank you enough for what Lydla Lydla L Plilhta'i Vttetabte Umpoodi I Wbmi Remfy far Wtni'i III A eirs' Two cured In one family. Your D. D. D. remedy l certainly a wutulrrrul iimUi'inn. for wn hti til it In our family with Kri'Kt succeim. My wife Miflcri-cl with u w-vt-ni cum- f wi-mn n Imt fur", whk-li noon (ri-u'l until It cohtihI ull tier fin-c. Sinm her er twitun Uj hwi-ii mi nim-ti Iib roulil nut hoi J tlitiii in, uml hr fiico Imrni-il iih If on fin-. Winn my liuliy w.m uUiiit u yrar unl It i-ontrjco-d a Hlmllur cawi. I roulil not Ix-ar to sit llii-m Biifli-r uml ut oiun ,riK-nnl a Imiila of I). U. I) The r-1 1 f U iravn thi'iu win womli rful ami I i-uulil ' ihi-in Imili iuiroi- wiU ai-h npplicttiiun. in thn- wki' tltni! tlii-r with IhiiIi oun-il rntnii-ti-ly. ami wlml has provi-il iit-nnuricntlv. Hoping thiil you cull kIiow ihlit to koiiix onn who in looking for cure for czeum. und If thry lmv- uny duulnn nUiiii It Iiuvij them wrlui inc. Portsmouth. O.. Muy as. m. ALIIKItT MCM EIl Ktadcrl This is more than medicine talk. It is humanity to enlighten, suflerers about this. The most virulent skin diseases arc conquered every lime- in nil causes- without any exception all cleared away in a lew weeks by the brilliantly clevel new skin piuscription, Its work is hardly equaled by any other wonders of modern medical practice. We guarantee this to be true Enough has bttn frovtn to us regarding the above rase and hundreds of Others to demonstrate beyond all question whatever that any of the known forms of skin disease any eruption or breaking out must quickly give way and disappear under the injluence of this prescription (known as "D. D.D."). Cases of Eczema, Salt Rheum, King Worm, Psoriasis, Barber's Itch, Acne, etc., some of twenty years' standing have been cleared off and permanently cured in a fetu weeks. In many cases from one to Jive years have elapsed and there has been no returning sign of the disease. Hundreds of cases cured since tht preparation has been f laced on Male show no sign at ail of tht freviou afflic tion? and wt fully believe they art permanent curtt WE PROVE IT. To convince you we have arranged with the D. D. D. Co., so that any sufferer from any skin diseases can get direct from the D.D.D.Co's laboratory a large free sample bottle of D. D. D. prescrip tion together with 32-page new pam phlet on skin diseases and free advice on your particular case from the world's greatest skin specialists. CHARLES ROGERS. The MORNING ASTORIAN 65 CTS. PER MONTH Astoria's Best Newspaper K. Pink ham's Veptable C'otnound has done for m. W Imm I first wrots to you I bad uf farad for year with what Ilia itm-tor called kidney trmU and coiikmUhii of Uw fitnale organs, ti bai-k a-ht Trmulfully all tta ( una, and I lufTirtKi so with that twarltift- down fil ing I could hardly walk arrtm tba room. Idld not gut any balUr.so dirldwl t"i t'' dix'torlng with my physician and Uk I.ydla It. I'ink ham's V titbl L'oniiiound and 1 am thank ful to say It has ntiraly curwl ma I do all toy own work, havs no mora ha-kai'b and all Uis bad symptoms hava dlaanrwarwL I ranmit jirala your mIMna imuch, snd would advlw all women sultarlng wlUikldnay troublf to try It Mrs. J. VV. Lang, of 030 Third Av. nue, New York, writes : Dear Mr. I "ink ham :- 1 hava bn a great sufferer with ktdnar trouble. My bark achwt all the tlina and I was dlacouragnl- 1 beard that Lydla K. Pinkham's VeeUbla Compound wimld cura kidney dLoMsa, and I began to take It: and It baa cured ma whan avury thing alw had failed. I bava rarommmMlfd It to loU of peopla aud they all pralaa It vary highly. lira. Plnkham'a BUndlug In Tttatlon. Women aufferlng from kidney trouble, or any form of female weak ness, are Invited to promptly communi cate with Mrs. rlnkham, at Lynn, Mass. The present Mrs. Pinkham la the daughter-in-law of Lydia K. Pink ham, her aaslstant before her decease, and for twenty-five years since her advice has been freely given to alck women. Out of the great volume of ei perlence which she has to draw from. It is more than likely she has tha very knowledge that will help your case. Her advice is free and always helpful. 2). FREE SAMPLE COUPON (Mail This Promptly) D. D. D. CO. Medical Department 116-120 Michigan St., Suite sad C'g'o. I'lcase send me free prepaid a larits sample bottle of 0. 1)' l) pbamplet and ( onmiltiitloii book For yenra 1 have been afilleted with n tikln dlicasn called . and have naver used D, I)- Name Add reus., v "'1