The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, July 16, 1906, Page 8, Image 8

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THE MORNING AST0R1AN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
MONDAY, JULY ifl, 1904.
m
UnAIIAOTHIS'
PINTS .................. 70c. per Dotes
QUARTS 80c per Down
HALF GALLONS $mo per Down
JAR TOPS tsc per Doien
JAR RUBBERS . . . .ioc. per Dosen, 3 Doi.n for se
COVERED JELLY GLASSES 35c and 40c per Dosen
A. V. ALJJBN'S
SOLE AGENT BAKER'S BARRINGTON HALL STEEL CUT COFFEE.
SHAKESPEARE IN '06
"TWELFTH NIGHT"
By Strickland W. Glllilan.
0
S0C1E0F0VRSPEGULTIES
WALL PAPER
Best Selection in the City at the Low
est Prices
JAPANESE MATTINGS
Just the Thing for the Floor of Any
Room; Easily Kept Clean
PREPARED WALL BURLAPS
For the Den or Dining Room. Made in
; Beautiful Shades
A Large Assortment of Room Mouldings and Plate Rails
B. F. ALLEN G SON
Sherman Transfer Co.
IHESRY SHERMAN, Manager
Hacks, Carriages Baggage Checked and Transferred Trucks and Furniture
Wagona Pianoe Moved, Boxed and Slipped.
433 Commercial Street Phone Main 121
ASTORIA IRON WORKS
JOHN) FOX, Pre.
F L BISHOP. Secretary
Nelson Troyer, Vice-Pree. nod Supt.
ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK, Tret
Designers and Manifactnrers of
THE LATEST HIFBOYKD .
CaflniDg Machinery, Marine Ensincs and Boilers
. Complete Cannery Outfits furnished.
CORRESPONDENCE SOllCITED. ?" " ' Foot of Fourth Street,
THE
TWO THINGS
'W.
That make shopping a
pleasure good value for
your money and "It's a
pleasure to show goods"
salesmen. We have them
both. It's no trouble
but ft pleasure to show
you goods, and we see
that you get your
money's tgoifav Ot0V
in and look at our
parlor sets and center
tables this week. The
price, style, and finish,
will astonish you.
ROBINSON
585-590-592 Commercial St.
THE
W.L. DOUGLAS
SHOE
HAS A WORLD-WIDE REPUTA
TION. YOU'LL NEVER BE SAT
ISFIED TILL YOU'VE WORN A
DOUGLAS, THEN YOU'LL NEV
ER WEAR ANY OTHER. JOIN
THE VAST ARMY OF DOUGLAS
T WEARERS AND BE UP-TO-DATE
S. A. G1MRE
SEAMEN'S STRIKE. .
Brer" Sovey, of the Aberdeen Bulletin,
thu writes of the pending strike among
the coast sailors:
"Advice from San Francisco convey
the information that there is no prospect
of immediate settlement of the strike
of the seamen of the coast. It was re
ported last week that efforts to get
the warring factions together would
probably be successful, but it seems that
there was no reason for this sanguine
teehng.
"A. B. Hammond of the Astoria rail
road is one of the member of the ship
owners' associations and he is authority
for the statement that the owners mean
to hold out against the demands of the
men. Mr. Hammond states that the
shipowners are a unit in their determi
nation to conbat the demands of the
sailors, firemen, cooks and stewards, and
that at no time have they considered the
question of arbitration He adds that
the business is quickly getting into nor
mal shape. Most of the steam schooners
are running, and he believes this will
continue if the vessels are given protec
tion.
"The employers have met with consid
earable success in engaging non-union
men, and it begins to look as if the
sailors had no chance whatever of win
ning. That the present strike hag lacked
the approval of the public there can be
no doubt, and this alone would suffice to
ruin the strikers' chances of success."
ONTF. there was a storm
whatever puddle it i that
moixteus the deckle edge of :i
two-by-four country named
tliyi'iu. When the wave hud hut IT
n lorge percent of their nti-iim and the
clouds were breaking away, a Imrefootel
commodore, who was runnmtjjing nmoiijj
the driftwood for a new bath-hip. uw
a drabbled girl drying her pet t icon N i:t
the sou.
"That's a great piece- of flot-atn.M re
marked the nailorman to hinnelf. ''I
didn't know which way I w walking,
hut I know now."
So he wintered over that wav and
heard the girl ay:
''What country, friends, is this!"
There were some sailors around. Im'
of course the commodore outranked
them, and did all the talking. He told
her where she was, the name of the ward
bo, where the potoffice and drug store
were, the nearest trolley station, which
store gave the most trading stamp,
and what day the marked down sale
usually was.
"Whofe doing tle duking foT yon
now!" she aked.
"Orslno. Two attempt luive been
made to have him removed. Our con
gressman has had three petition, each
containing the names of more eop!e
than live in the district Hut Ory
seems to have a cinch of the leaden
tubular variety, ami we upect that he
nnif-t know something we don't know
about our representative. He duke
right on."
"Why, even in the country where I
live I've heard my pa pcak of this man
ursino, I'a said he was a liach then, in
spite of his graft, that would make life
a large, suculent tapioca for some able
bodied girl. Am I right V
"Perfectly, and he's in the same happ;
fix yet. Wouldn't it jar you?"
mis gin stated that her name wa
Viola,, took a fresh hold on her gum,
patted her pompadour, felt to see If her
placket was gaping, and said:
Say. admiral. I've got a scheme. Xo
body in all this bunch of country know
me. I butted in by water last night.
started in on a Nocuin life preserver.
when the ship went into voluntary bank
ruptcy. My brother went one way and
me the other, and so far as each of n
is concerned the other is drowned. He
was hugging a rolling pin or some other
sort of household goods at his last ap
pearance, and I had a plush album for
mine, rinding that I couldn t save both
the life preserver and the family album.
I let the former sink and swam ashore
on the latter, hirst time I ever went
much on my relatives. Xow, my scheme
is to get a job as hired man at the duke's
houe. and get wie enough to him and
hi wava to con him out for a husband.
I am a strong, willing girl of marriage
able age. though I won't be much longer,
I'll put on some boy's clothes and ask
for a job. You look like a close-mouth
ed guy, and I bet you won't tell. Is it
a go!"
S43
Best kind of logging shoes; hand
made; always on hand.
Have Yon a Cough
A dose of Ballard's Horehound Syrup
will relieve it Have you a coldt
Try it for whooping coughs, for asth
ma, for coniumption, for bronchitis.
Mrs. Joe McGrath. 327 E. First street.
Hutchison, Kans writes: "I have used
Ballard's Horehound Syrup in my family
for five years and find it the most
palatable medicine I ever used. Sold by
Hart's drug stors.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
Bond st.; opp. m BroPM You Have Alwajs
Bears the
Signature of
She chucked him under the chin, and
what could he do? It had to be as she
said; for the commodore couldn't help
noticing as her hair dried and the mol
lusks were brushed out of her eyebrows,
that she would be a keen looker if she
hadn't just been in swimming,
"Is the duke man sweet on any skirt
at the present writing!" asked the busy
girl from behind the sand dune, where
he was changing into a Peter-Pan suit.
"He is abundantly, extensively, and
elaborately stung by a girl named Oil
via. Her father was some swell in the
neighborhood, and when he cashed he
left his job to his boy. The boy quit
paying board not long after, and Liv
has been so out of fix over it since that
she won't even look at a man. Of course
that makes Orsy worse, and he keeps
her hitching post worn with bis horses'
halter strap. But nothing doing."
"flee, ain't she the keen one!" com
mented VI, who knew a good piece of
goo-goo work when she saw it, and
would lay aside professional jealousy
any time to admire it.
So up to the Orsino doorbell went VI,
and asked for a job. She sang the duke
a few popular airs, concluding with that
touching thing, "Meet Me in Dn-buquie,
Dukie," which was then in vogue. There
was something about this new boy that
was different, though the duke didn't
get wise even for a minute as to what
it was. The boy talked nica and had a
lot of little tricks that were all to the
very well. So he got hired right away.
About the first thing Vi was assigned
to, as confidential secretary to the boss. I
was to get up some sort of communica
tion with this 'exclusive' piiyia,g(rJ, Yi
winked at herself and started b'rf hcrcf'
rand of mercy with Orsy'g letter in a
f large valise,. When she got to Liy s place
she was given,, the usual not-at -home
gtoryf toft it didtftf -go down. ... VrV-'jtrsu
them vu the top step to wait, h had
brought ft few yellow-hack along and
could linger very comfortably, thank.
"Well, what do you think of that!"
said liv, when the flunkey reported the
new stoop ornament.
When I.iv had got the third porch bul
letln and learned (hat the messenger
from Orsy was eating hi lunch there
using the rainwater barrel for a linger
howl and wiping his hands on the morn
log glories, xhe aid:
"Well. Oiy sure is lu earnest by thU
time, I'm getting him right where I've
wanted him. He ecm to sure .menu
business. I'll we the adhesive kid."
When VI came In with the letter in
the large canvas telescope J,v wild to
hefe!f ;
Oh, the sweet thing! Why ho' got
the duke skinned both way from the
Jack, for look and manner and every
thing else, .iitl Ui.- lien el (ice, von
couldn't shake it with a ton of dyna
mite-. N'o duke for mine, if 1 can put the
handcuff, on thk Iluh uh!"
VI managed the love affair carefully
so that the foxy I.iv could get stucker
and nI ticker on her instead of on the
hike, in the meantime doing all h
could to make herself as necessary a a
morning's morning to the ho himself.
I.iv was a patient as possible with
her butler and a few other cipher who
were foolish about her because manuel or
other toll wa distasteful to them, and
kept on thinking about this cute boy of
the duke's.
U v had hired a girl named Maria, who
was a case, Mie had thrve gentleman
friend beside the policeman and the
iceman, and she kept all of them doing
liarade. Mnlvollo, I.iv' tattler, had
such a case of swelled head that the
other of the help were all Mire at him
so Maria, who could write her mi-tre'
hand to the "t," put up a job. She wrote
letters iu Liv's mitt and left them scat
tered about the place where Mai would
pipe them. Thee letter told him to
lo all sort of foolish things, and he wa
sticker enough to bite and do them
Maria had put the gang wise, and they
very nearly died laughing the next few
days at Mai's caper. To ton it off,
they had an insanity com mission it 'on
him, and the report was that hi head
wa in a worse fix than a packing house
a la jungte. So he wa taken away to
the dippy domicile, where a comedian
rigged up a a priest went and kidded
him. They were the real village cut -up
Meanwhile, things were getting badly
muddled with the leading man and
woman and their understudies. The duko
was getting worse and worse wrapped up
in Vi and thought it was Liv he wanted.
Though VI knew better ond didn't
Worry. Also, Liv was getting to the
sleepless point about Vi, and Vi was
chewing holes in the pillow slip every
night thinking about Ory. Wasn't that
a kettle of peaches?
One of Liv's tagger was o sore at
Vi that he challenged her to a duel. Vi
couldn't play boy on that worth a whoop
and wa wared "to a pale mauve color
trimmed with robin's egg blue.
Hut just then things began to straight
en out. They had to. It was setting
near 10:4.". and the cubs were beginning
to stop in front of the theatre.
Vi' brother Sebastian, enme along,
and they were sui-h ringers for each
other that Liv got stuck on him, and
never knew the difference until after
they were married on the quiet and
then she didn't care, Sebastian was just
in Hinit with Liv as Liv was with him,
so it was mighty fine. Orsy kept up
his spiel at Liv, though it had merely
become a habit, and he didn't mean it
as much a he used to, and Vi kept a
gentling bit on him all the time without
his knowing it. Brother Sebastian took
part in that duel that Vi was so scared
of, because the other man took him for
Vi and tackled him on the street corner.
What Bas did to the other fellow kept
three surgeons busy with their sewing
machines for a week. So Vi had earned
a reputation as a scrapper.
Then came the finish, Liv met VI In
Orsy's presence and called her "hubby."
Vi renigged Indignantly, and tried to
square herself with Orsy, Who was
mighty sore tb think his valet had cut
im out. Liv got on her high horse be
cause she thought her man was renounc
ing ner in company, and nobody can
blame her, either.
But just then Bas sauntered in, his
cleaver still steaming with the corpuscles
of the cluip he had sliced, and in a few
minutes things were clearer. VI and Bas
were as surprised about it as any one,
for each one thought the other wos dead
nd that there were spooks walking.
When it flnully got through the duke's
ocelputal bone what had happened, he
was the tickledcst duke you ever saw.
He said he had bci-n keeping up a forced
feed pressure all the time on that
Olivia stunt, ever since he had taken In
Little Breeches, there. And he told VI
to hike for the commodore's house and
gether dress, so they could be married
before he was out of the notion.
''Moral. When a woman starts after a
man,' h has his choice between prussic
acid and a marriage license.
porting Goods
BASEBALL MITS, CLOVES, BATS, BALLS
AND ALL THAT GOES WITH THE CAME
Pishing Tackle
POLES, toe to IS.0O-FLIES IN ALL THE
LATEST COAST PATTERNS. LINES, 50 TO
I1.15 EACH, LEADERS, REELS. BASKETS,
AND THE INNUMERABLE LITTLE THINGS
TO MAKE THE OUTFIT COMPLETE AND
LURE THE WILY TROUT.
J. N. GRIFFIN
!U. ii.U... u L - 1 1 -.."!- XU,., ,.,.,!.!.. 1 ,lK.iXiAJAmMWUJmm
. TIIF UNION C.kS. FlUiHIUF fflMPAMV (.
. I ML. Ul 11111 V171VJ LI1UII1L WITH fill I J J
? w. ..j c i.. ... r- r" 1
iiatiuc suu aiAuvusi was auu uaiuuuc COgiari.
WE ARI NOW HLLINO ORDERS
FROM OUR NEW WORKS. WRIT!
US FOR PRICES AND ILLUSTRATED
CATALOGUE.
F. P. Kendall. General Sales Agent,
6-W Front St., Portland, Ore, "
The Art of Fine Plumbing
has progresied with the development of the science of
sanitation and we Jjsve kept
pace with the Improvement!,
I Isve Tour Or Is your bathroom one of
the old fashioned, unhealthy kind f
If Too tit m tulnt the "closed lnM
fixtures of ten yean sgo, it would be well
to remove them and Jnitsll la thdr ued,
now? white 'SUadmf Porcelain Enam
eled Wsre, of which we hsve ismples
diiplayed la our showroom. Let us quote
you price. JHustrstcd csulogue free.
I, A. Montgomery, "? Astoria.
1
1
fcM
J
iSILK SALE
TAKE THE TROUBLE TO COME AND SEE OUR WINDOWS, IT
WILL TELL YOU A SILK STORY. WE FIND WE ARE OVER
STOCKED WITH SILK FOR A CITY THE SIZE OF ASTORIA, THERE
FORE WE HAVE DECIDED TO THROW THEM ON THE MARKET
AND CLOSE THEM OUT. YOU HAVE A CHANCE TO BUY SILK OF
HIGH-CLASS GRADE AT ABSURD PRICES, DO NOT HESITATE TO
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS, A SILK OFFERING. THERE WILL BE
NO RESERVATION IN OUR SILK DEPARTMENT - EVERYTHING
WILL BE OFFERED. NOT A YARD OF THESE GOODS WILL BE SOLD
AT THESE PRICES AFTER MONDAY'S CLOSING HOUR.
A FEW OF OUR SILK OFFERINGS
Our guaranteed Taffeta, sold every
where for 59 cents; in ten, brown,
gray, and navy blue, pink, and
green is offered at 39 cents.
Our Chiffon Taffeta, inches wide,
in combination colors, navy and
black, green end red, brown snd
red, black and cardinal; sold for
$1.35; now offered at 79 cents.
Our 75-cent grade of changable
Taffata, in terra cotta and brown,
in combination brown and white, in
combination navy and red, in com
bination blue and white, in combi
nation green snd brown, at 33 cents
Our jo-cnt quality Jsp silk, 17
inches wide, in all colors; nothing
reserved; at th. extremely low
price, 33 cents.
Our as-cent Jap silk, ao inches
wide; all colors; nothing reserved,
offered at 19 cents.
All our fancy silks thst sell for
$1.33, now offered at 79 cents.
Our $1.33 Taffeta silk, 36 inches
wide, at this sbsurd figure, 98
cents.
Lining satins, ao inches wide, the
50 cent grade; all colors, at 3O cts
CREPE DE CHINE
to close out our stock of $1.35 goods, we offer it for 79 cents; 34 inches
wide; pink, pale blue, and scarlet.
imington Dry Goods
Co.
SCOW BAY IH0H BRASS WORKS
ASTOIIIAt OREGON
IRON AND BRASS FOUNDERS LAND AND MARINE ENGINEER
Up-to-Cate Saw Mill Machinery,
, .'. ' . : . , ..-
rnij, oo cents per montn, 18Ul ana Frailkiin Ave.
brushed off her trousccrs and plante J i delivered by carrier.
rrcmpt atteuttcnfslvenitQhl. repair work?
Tel. Main 2431
III