2 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, JULY il, igod. THE MORNING ASTORIAN EfUbiuiita it?). Published Dally by Til J. & DELLINGER COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By audi, per yew . By mail, per month By carrier, per month 17X0 JO WEEKLY ASTORIAK. mall, per year, la advance.. 1.00 Entered aa second-elan matter Jane n, 1Mb, at the pootofflc at Astoria. Ore co, voder U act of Conjrei ol Jlarcb t, Isra tmrOrAm for the deUrcnnc of T Mom nwanoaux to eiUwr retWooce or plaoa of buniiMM oay be made by postal oard or Upouga tetechona, Any Irregularity (a do Urry should be UQPwdiatel reported to the OoaotpubUoatioa, TELEPHONE MAW Mi. Official paper of Clatsop county and taaCltyofAttorta. WEASHEB, Western Oregon and Washing ton Warmer interior. Eastern Oregon and Washing- ton, Idaho Fair and cooler. OUR LIMIT OF PATIENCE. Astoria, like all other communities, has certain inalienable things coming to her; advantages that are inherently hen and are but deferred by obstacles set up by time and circumstance. She knows, that by the law of very nature, she is entitled to every commercial utility on the carda, and that what is denied her is withheld by agencies inimical to her. 'Among other things that are hers by every rule of location and marine pres tige, is the common-point rate on wheat. She knows she is the only port on the American shores of the Pacific that is without it. And she knows the reason. She has begged, argued, stipulated, and suffered for it; ehe has received the cold, repressive negative of the Oregon Rail road & Navigation Company just as long as she can stand it. That corpora tion has deliberately kept this city and harbor out of the legitimate sphere of the state's commerce for years, end the limit of Astoria's patience has been reached. As a rule thw city has always been friendly to railroads and railroad building; she has never thrown her in fluenee against legislation nor other line of projective or creative enterprise in that field of commerce, and is yet ready to do her part for the building and maintenance of all such undertakings, anywhere in the state they may be essayed. But, she is going after what belongs to her in this particular scheme of things, and she is going to get it; it is to be a fight based on the logic of honest dues, and the people of this sec tion will all take a hand in the scrap. The law of referendum is to be invoked and applied with all the rigor of its terms and Astoria is to know once for all whether she is the chattel of the 0. R. & N. or whether she is a free 'American city with a free hand in work ing out her own destinies. The time is at hand, the means of procedure are at hand, the cause is wought of justice, of common sense, of logical, reasonable and feasible attribute, and the people of this city and section are determined to win out. ASTORIA'S DREAMS. The Cityby-the-Sea has indulged, for nearly a century, in dreams of maritime prestige and success; the visions have been wrought of the real fabric of honest inspiration. She once went so far in her idle fancy aa to hotte that Portland niiV'ht 1 Iter friend and contribute to tlw realisation she longed for; that the metropolis, in her great quest for pre eminence, might count this city and see turn within tne purview of her own realm and so ordain thing that a share of the metropolitan increment might fall hitherwsrd to coin and hold the loyal friendline and aid of this com munity. In this latter hope she hat signally failed. It is not of the Portland creed to aid herself by aiding the com munitie that would and should stand by the metropolis. Her cardinal aim has been to build her own walls from the fragment torn from the bulwarks of her weaker sisters of the state; to rear her own greatness upon the depletion of the outlying posts of commerce round about her. We often wonder what Portland would be today if ber foundations had been laid on this peninsula instead of where they were implanted, and why they were not placed here! Well, there is one resource left us, time is of the jssence of )1 things, and the best and brightest of all our dreams may yet find fulfilment at the hand of circum stance wielded in that immeasurable quantity that holds all of the future and its unfolding. 0 000000000000000000 0 EDITORAL SALAD. 0 00 0 0 0000 0 00 0000000 People who have been eating head cheese will be interested to know that, as revealed by the recent slaughter house investigations at Chicago, it is really cheap food. It is made up in hundred pound lots 60 lbs., of hog rind, ground fine, 20 pounds of hog shank, ears, trim nungs, half a doaen calves' or pigs tongues unfit for use otherwise. Added to this is one pound of headcheese seas omng, and three-fourths of a pound of preserve. People who have been in dulging in the luxuary of headcheese, potted meats, sausage and other widely advertised preparations will peruse these revelations with pleasure, that is, if they can Keep their stomachs quiet during the process of digesting the news. Truly, one-half the world doesn't know what the other half eats. o They Both Claimed To Be Gentl men There was a soely looking man alt ting on the end of one of tne benches In the park, and he bad been there only five minutes when a well dmaed and prosperous middle aged man with a cigar In his mouth took the other end. He had not been seated two min ute and did not appear to have ob served the other when the seedy young man rose up and said; "Sir, you appear to be a gentleman." Tea, I am," was the reply after a look. "And I am a gentleman also." Nothing more was said. The smoker moked on, and the other aat down and watched him from the corner of hi eye. When five minutes had passed seedy rose up again and queried: "8lr, am I mistaken In supposing you to do a gentleman r , "Why, no. I am a gentleman, of course." tie sat down again ana looked up among the bare branches overhead and then away over the landscape. The other drew long puffs at his half con tamed cigar and Indulged In thoughts. and three minutes had passed when seedy bobbed up for the third time and somewhat Indignantly said: "Sir, I again demand to know It you are a gentlemanr "I am sure I am," replied the other. "Jfcen give me some evidence of the fact" "Here It Is," he said as be held out the smoking stub. "Ah! Exactly! I thought one gen tleman could not be mistaken In an other gentleman. Very good, sir; very good, but next time be more of a gen tleman and don t smoke the stub so closer Baltimore Sun. OIL TANK REGULATION. That the city of Astoria has the right to protect itself from the dangers inci dent to the presence of huge oil tanks in its midst, is, primarily, indisputable; that they are a menace of the worst sort, in the matter of conflagration, is equally beyond controversy; that the council , will be amply justified in taking strong, restrictive steps looking to the saving of lives and property from such an emergency, no one will gainsay, and it must be done without delay other than what may be entirely reasonable in view of the time and cost incident to their removal. The big plants now here were allowed to enter this city without admin istrative protest and no steps were taken to regulate them at the moment when such regulation was imminent and imperative. Therefore, what is done to place them in an innocuous position and free the city from the chance of fire from that source, should be done carefully and with a just appreciation of the necessities of the case in so far as the time and expense of the task concerns the owning companies. This is simply abstract justice. Perhaps the really youngest soldier in the Union army of the civil war has been discovered at last. They have in Springfield, Mass., a veteran who at 13 years of og was driving the artillery horses at Gettsburg in the hottest places of the second day. But it seems that Gilbert van Zandt, now a vigorous young man of 55, past commander of the Grand Army at Kansas City, enlisted as drummer boy in the 79th Ohio regiment. Augsut 6, 1862, being then 10 years. 7 months and 10 days old. He Berved until the close of the war. During Sher man's march to the sea he was dis patch carrier; his father was sergeant in the same company. He was described in his discharge papers as "13 years old and four feet high." o A newspaper published many miles away from Chicago remarks that "the old-time slaughter house that used to do business in nearly every city and town was not, by the way, as clean as mother's kitchen. No, it was not, and yet that old-time institution was all the example that the men who created the packing business had to go by when they began. It took Paris several cen turies to evolve the abattoirs of recent years from a better start. The packers have got some distance toward a like end within a thil of a century and the city itself where they wrought has not been much longer in growing. o Normal milk contains from 83 to 90 per cent water and from 10 to 17 per cent solid substance, of which about 3.4 per cent are fats, 3.6 per cent caseine and albumen, 4.5 per cent sugar of milk and 0.7 per cent ashes. Not every kind of milk, however, contains these consti tuents in the same proportions. Accord ing to the food, the race, the age, etc. of the animal the composition of the milk varies with certain limits. o The Boston gas board is being peti tioned right and left by companies wishing to increase thdr stock. It ought to be easy to inflate with such a com modity. o The Boston schoolma'arn who threw her purse at . the lone western highway man, hitting him in the face, had at least more pluck than the men on the coach. o Returning the coal-stock graft will not lessen the wrong done by the railroad officials who guaranteed discrimination against independents. o Castro back? It is now Witte's turn to resume the Russian premiership. o - . It is quite impossible for Venezuela to be quit of Castro. V be diTTle th' to' Flnalirla Filoaaflie. Some marriages supposed ma-ade in hevvin raysuit in a ar a mess. Ut's none ar wan half ar wur-rld's blzness, begorrah, how other half lives. Ut's a quare thing, ut Is, thot th' few er frosts a public shpaker Incounters th' more ice he cuts. Mlnny a wan av' th' modhern nov els thrills ye wid th' realization av' th' author's nade av rest at th' tolme he wuz wrltln ut. Shakespeare wuzn't In th' sa-ame class wid play-ay-writhers av th' prls Int. an' ut's a dlrthy sha-ame he Isn't alolve f be congratula-ated on th' fact Payrtnta wid no more slnse than f lave their cblldher f be dhragged up be holred nur-rses Is dotn' th' poor lit tle gossoons a grea-at favor be rtddln' thlm av slch companions an' lxamples as slch fool payrlnts wud be till thlm. Judge. Taking Ho Cnaaeca. During a recent discussion on juve nile crime Charles Richmond Hender son, professor of sociology at the Uni versity of Chicago and an eminent au thority on criminology, told a story of a youngster who was asked If he knew the meaning of "regeneration.'' "Yes," responded the lad, "It means to be born again." "And would you like to be born again V he was asked. "No, slree," exclaimed the boy. "I'm too much afraid of being born a glrli" Lipplncott's Magazine. 01 FOR ALL AND ALL FOR ASTORIA Astoria's New and HOTEL! Modern Mr. Astoria Mant Did you ever figurs how many thou sand capitalist visit .the raoiflo Coast without coming to Astoria t WHY? If only 100 investors earns te Astoria during each year and onry one or two of them invested, would w all benefitted T YOU BET I m Would it Injurs the restaurants and lodging houses now her if th tourists who now stay away would com Astoria! NOT MUCH I :Xi. We cannot bare a hotel In front of very lot $ But every lot will be benefitted by a FINE HOTEL. Have you th nerve to invite your Influential friends to visit Astoria now? Where will they stop in Astoria? 'Opportunity knock but once other Miockers pleas copy. You can't go ahead by sitting still. Respectfully, THE NEW HOTEL COMMITTEE. CreeL irQsfflva I "I told her she was a dream." "What did she say?" "Told me to wake up."-Philadelphia Press. Knew Hint Better Than That. Telephone Girl Double nine six nine Is busy just now. Mrs. Lazlman (at the other end of the wire) You must have made a mis take. That's my. husband's number, and he's never been busy In his life. Chicago Tribune. Inappropriate. "The manipulator of an automobile Is called a 'shofer.' I don't see why." "You don't?" "No. He gives you very little show for your life." Milwaukee Sentinel. She Doesn't See Thing'. FInnegan 01 can nlver git my wife to see things as 01 see tblm. Flanagan Thrue for ye! Ol've heard she's nlver touched a drop In her lolfe. Philadelphia Ledger. A Strong; I'olnt. Senior Partner There's one thing to be said In favor of classical music. Junior Partner-What Is that? Senior Partner The oftlce boy can't whistle It. Chicago News. Morning Astorian, 65 cents per month. delivered by carrier. THE TWO THINGS That make shopping a pleasure good value for your money and "It's a pleasure to show goods," salesmen. We ha v them both. It's no trouble but a pleasure to show you goods, and we see that you get your money's worth. Drop in and look at our parlor sets and center tables this week. The price, style, and finish, will astonish you. ROBINSON it STORE 585-590-593 Commercial St. y v w I Unprecedented Success of 1. 1 i 10 THE GREAT CHINESE DOCTOR V Who is known throughout the United States on account of UAUWwhis wonderful cures. No poisons nor drugs used. He guaran tees to cure catarrh, asthma, lung and throat trouble, rheumatism, nervousness, stomach, liver, and kidney, female com plaints and all chronic diseases. SUCCESSFUL HOME TREATMENT. If you cannot call write for symptom biank and circular, inclosing 4 cents in stamps. THE C GEE WO MEDICINE CO. 1021 First St.. Comer Morrison, PORTLAND, OREGON. Please mention the Astorian COFFEEJEA BAlflJiG POWDER, Fixvcn:;;5EXTFttCT$ AboluftPiffihr. finest Flavor. CLOSSETaDEYESS r PORTLAND OREGON. rw Kidney and madder Troubles RELIEVES ET iFfijX 24 Hours ALL UKIHAKT DISCHARGES T7l. rAM. -"av Beoart qf counterftUt Fornale by ill (lniRidnta, By error of compositor, th price uotl on th Crown piano In yesterday's Astorian should have read If 3 18 Instead of fa 18. This U a bad enough "break" but It Uti't m bad the printer who caused a piano to be offtrcd for 3.18, and the manning part of it cam laterly wlrn a very prudent buyer Mid he liked th piano all right, but wanted to know If that was the bet w could do, We ar prlce-slnaW In pianos no question about that but we've never undertaken to sell an Itmtrument fur s little a three dollars snd eighteen cents-they cost more than that, BARGAINS FOR CAREFUL BUYERS Tho Weser at 9238 Was Sold this Morning to Mrs. A. R. Thomas of aM at at ' al M am sMJSSssss aeasicic, by phone W nave Two More) Do You Want One At tho Same Price? Time Payments. Eilsr piano Hous of Portland is living th peopl of Astoria an opportunity to buy "up-to-date standard pianos (instruments lik th Weber, Haddorf, Marshall k Wtndell, Crown, Bailey, Weser, Lester, etc.), that nave never bco offered in this town at anything like such prices before. It is a serious probUm with the Elltrs house to tsk car of its shipments daily arriving from the different piano maoufac turers; they hav no place to put them in PortUnd until Nov, ist. We can't stop the shipping of pisoos for a fixed number is ordered for shipment . every month th only thing to do is to turn over this stock to our brsnch stores. Astoria is expected to tsk at lesit two cars within the month. Monday w opened our doors, 414 Commercial street (opposite Shtrman's Transfer Co.), with a beautiful stock of pianos sod, the prices crested the biggest furors of all. The prices are esstern wholesale prices with Just enough added to cover th cost of conducting this isle. A beautiful $330 HADDORF for Ijgo STORY Jc CLARE piano; a most rolluhlo tnaks; retails in Chicago, wher it is roaJo, for 1300 the on we have to show is in most elegant haud rarved case I335 A KIMBALL the daintict little lyle you ever rsn your fingers over; retails $423 ...fjoy LESTER, for downright service, l second to none; retails for $130 (hen's a crackerjack bargain) .Jjgd A WESER this is the piano that lsughs at damp westher; It could bo used by mermaids without . injury to itself; regular price, 350 1138 TIME PAYMENTS MAY BE HAD ON ANY OF THESE INSTRUMENTS. STORE OPEN EVENINGS. It. tilers Piano XT TT Mouse IN ASTORIA WITH THE BIGGEST LINE OF PIANOS EVER SHOWN HERE. Commercial Street Opp. Sherman's Transfer Co. 0. Q. A. BOWLBY, President. I. PETERSON. Vice-President. rUANK PATTON, Cashier. J. W. GARNER, Assistant CuhJtr. Astoria Savings Bank Capital Paid In flOO.000, Surplus and Pndlrided Pronts IM.OOO. Transacts a General Banking Business, Interest Paid on Time Deposit 168 Tenth 8tret, A8T0MA, OREGON. Sherman Transier Co. (HENRY SHERMAN, Manaser , Hacks, Carriages-Baggsge Checked and Transferred Trucks and Furnitura Wagons Pianos Moved, Boxed and Shipped. , ' 433 Commercial 5tree phone Main 121 PORTLAND WJRE AND IRON WORKS USEFUL AND ORNAMENTAL WIRE and IRON WORK of ALL KINDS, ' 203 Flanders St., PORTLAND, OR.