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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 29, 1906)
THE MORNING ASTOMAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. SUNDAY, JULY tg, ijofl. n1i ftf If la rhfi.lt Tl ft th!i Utf t" tconUinstht unplcasast Mtrkgtnt priodplt (tannin), on o t rlTtl '.n which coffee narnnomn nmi v . ..... the difference in the first enpfub The chaff BOS been Yon will tas tne : . . . .t ttlnjr process Pack- dnit and tannin-bearing chaft poUNO, 40 CENTS. A. V. ALLIEN SOLE AGENT SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY. ADDITIONAL PERSONALS. J. H. Richards of San Francisco was a business visitor in this city yesterday. Mr. and Mr. Bernard Lindenberjr were homing pasengm on the noon ex pros yesterday, after a few day pleas ure on Puget Sound. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leinenweber, of Portland, were in the city yesterday, guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Kuettner. Mrs. F. D. Kuettner, Mrs. Frank Leinenweber, Mis Reisehel, and Cap ' tains Toiler and Kimball formed J party of excursionists to North Head on the steamer Electro yesterday afternoon. THE TWO THINGS That make shopping a pleasure good rslue for your money and "It's a pleasure to show goods," salesmen. Weharathem both. It's no trouble but a pleasure to show yon goods, and we see that yon get your money's worth. Drop in and look at our parlor sets and center tables this week. The price, style, and finish, wil astonish yon. ROBINSON UllEliSlE 585-590-593 Commercial St. Morning Astorian, 65 cents per month, delivered by carrier. SEASIDE PERSONALS. Mr. Kdj.nr ft Piper is spending a few days at Seaside, furnishing the unique log cabin cottage which Mr. Piper had moved down fivm the Lewis and Clark Fair, and which is one of the mot artistic and attractive places on the ridge. The Vanee family are now occupy ing Kiniii-Kiunic Lodge, which they have recently purchased from the Howes. Mrs. Samuel Xaplitely and daughter, of San Francisco .are visiting Mrs. T. Lowengart. Mr. Xaplitely and Mrs. lxengart are sisters. Judge Reid and family are occupying their cottage here. Mr. Dank Malarkey is spending a few days with his family here- Dr. Oustave Burr spent the week end at Seaside as the guest of Mrs. Edward Cookingham. Dr. Tucker and family and Ned Ad ams and family, of Honolulu, are oc cupying one of the Seaside House cot tages. Miss Anne Falk, of Boise, is one of the late arrivals at the Moore. Mr. and Mrs. M. Phillips and family, of Honolulu, who have been Mrs. L N. Fleischner's guests for the last two weeks, have left for California. Mrs. H. E. Judge has returned to the city to play in the state tennis tournament. Mr. snd Mrs. Peter Kerr, who were at Seaside House two weeks, have returned to the city. Mr. F. L Dunbar, Secretary of State, and his wife are in one of the Seaside House cottages for the summer. John Gill of J. K. Gill Co., spent Sunday with his family, who are in a cottage at Xeeanicum Station. Judge J. B. Cleland and family are in their house here, and have as guests their daughter, Mrs. Baird. and hus band. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cleland snd daughter Ruth are also with them. CORSET C0VER39C BO TOT BXBSOXDEBf To advertise our stamped Corset Covers we will send to any ad dress this handsome CORSET COVER, stamped In extra qual ity French eatsbrio, with n. ootton to embroider, all AjC, for ' The Needlecraft Shop 383 Vaihlnrtoa S)t, Vortland, O. Nothing Makes Life So Sweet. IN THE CITY CHURCHES. M. E. Church. Sermon themes for Sunday, July 29: Morning, "Which is the Great Command ment?" evening, "Eve's Dialogue With the Devil." A cordial invitation is ex tended to the public to attend. Baptist Church. All the usual services will be observed at the Baptist church. The subjects of sermons are are as follows: "The Atmos phere of God's House," and "Why Be come a Christian!" Everybody is cor dially invited to attend. Presbyterian Church. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, "What Is Prosperity!" Sabbath school, 12:15; Y. P. S. C. E., 8 o'clock. Praise service. Special music, four best hymns of 18th century; theme of short sermon, "The New Song." AS EASY COMFORTABLE SHOES. NOTHING MAKES LIFE AS UNBEARABLE AS POORLY FITTING SHOES. COME TO ME AND GET ABSOLUTE SATIS FACTION. S. A. G1MRE 543 Bond St, Opp. Fisher Bros. Best kind of logging shoes; hand made; always on hand. All kinds of shoe repairing neatly I and quickly done. First Lutheran Church. Moraine service in Swedish at 10:45 o'clock, subject of sermon, "From Suffer ing to Glory." Evening service m Eng lish at 8:00 o'clock, subject of sermon, "The Transfiguration." All will be made welcome. Norwegian-Danish. The pastor will preach at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. Evening subject, "A Happy Home." Sunday School at 10 a. m. The dearth of chorus girls for next season's theatrical productors in arous ing managers to unusual methods to re cruit their1 companies. What if beauty is sometimes touched with vanity! It is only the defect of : quality. A spot on a peach does not destroy its sweetness. NEWS OF OREGON AND THE NORTHWEST. HEMBREE TRIAL MAY END SOON DEFENSE MADE THEIR PRESENTA TION OF CASE YESTERDAY IT WILL PROBABLY GO TO JURY TODAY -LOOKS BAD FOR HIM TILLAMOOK. Ore., July 2H.-The prosecution closed its case in the trial of A. J. Hembree, charged with the mur der of his wife and 10-year-old daugh ter on the night of December 2! lust. in their home at Sand Lake, yesteirlay evening, and the defene began the presentation of its case at the opening of the session today. The case will prob ably go to the jury this evening. Hembree may be placed on the stand in his own defense before the c)oe. Cross-examinations by the defense at yesterday's trial failed to break down any of the testimony given by the state's witneses and their statements made the case against Hembree stronger. Drs. I. X. Smith and C 1L fpton testi fied that the bones were those of human beings, and that his opinion ws the skull of one of the women had been crMshed before being placed in the stove. The stove in which the bones were found was presented as evidence in court. Mrs. Hembree's brother-in-law, John Lewellen, testified that the funeral was attended by more than 100 persons, but that Hembree did not go, refusing to do so, but sent his two sons. James Atkinson, who viewed the ruined house and the skeletons a short time after discovery, told of asking Hembree why he had not extinguished the flames, and if he heard no cries from his family. Hembree replied that he had not heard a sound, and that he ued two tubs of water in s vain endeavor to put out the flames. Atkinson says two full tnbs of water were near the ruins. Hem bree also told the witness that he knew nothing of the bones or how they came there in response to a query. The testimony of Mrs. Allen Lewellen, a sister of Mrs. Hembree, showed that Hembree sent his two small sons to her home before the tragedy, which was something very unusual for him to do. S. P. IS PREPARING TO MAKE BIG IMPROVEMENTS, .ICXCTtON OTY. Ore., July 2 Tl S. P. Company U preparing to make (.rent Improvements in its roadbed be tween Marion and Divide, in Southern Oregon, and bus a crew of surveyors now at wmk measuring the bridge and culverts, The company will widen the romllH'd on top to n width of 1H feet. At present the grade is so imrow on top thitt in many place the tie reach to the outer id of the grade, Hy mitkiug the ivadbed wider It will permit more rapid runing of heavy Irsins, It will require thousand of carload of gravel to make this improvement. The com pany ha 11 gravel bed at the llarrisburg bridge, and tuts recently purchased an- 'other bed near1 Kugene. RAILWAY TALK DELIGHTS ! CITIZENS OF ALBANY I ALBANY, Ore.. July 28,-Alhany p. pie are delighted with the apparently authoritative report that the t'orvalli & Eastern Railroad will he built across the mountains into Eastern Oregon next Spring. They have waited many year for this announcement, knowing the con struction of the road would mean gTeat things for this city, but many rumor liae proved groundless. At lut their hope is apparently to be realised. The Minto Pass, to which the road now etxend and through which it will cross to Eastern Oregon, is the liest pa in the entire length of the Cascade range in Oregon. There a road can mi the mountains on an easy grade. VICTORY FOR STEVEDORES. ABERDEEN, July. 2H.-The tern porary injunction brought by the Gray' llavlxfe- Stevedoring Company again! the Sailor's and Longshoremen's unions, was made permanent by Judge Irwin, at Montesano, before whom the case was argued. By the terms of the injunction no member of either organization may interfere in any way with the men in the employ of the Stevedoring Com pany. The Injunction is made to apply individually snd collectively against he members of both unions. Mary had a little lamb, And when she saw it sicken She shipped it off to Tacklngtown. And now it's labeled chicken. "A SOUTHERN ROMANCE." Crowded House Sees Excellent Perform' ance at Star Last Night. The pleasure of witnessing a good performance can surely be indulged in at the Star for every performance given by Mr. Willard's Company has been a genuine treat. "A Southern Romance, has every attribute necessary to please the most fastidious of audiences, being replete with both pathos and laughter. This afternoon "A Southern Romance'' will be produced again for the ltenefit of those who have not yet seen it, and also tonight. For Monday night we are promised a great treat, as the celebrated play, "The Bells" which is entwined ith the late Henry Irving's name, will be pro duced by Mr. Willard and his company, and from all reports Mr-, illard Wil lard has a wonderful interpretation of the character he wil represent. The average pretty girl can teach r. man more about love than he ever knew and she generally goes about it as if she understands all there is in the game. 0 BiBhop McQuaid of Rochester, X. Y., Catholic prelate, says the "time will come when women will vote, and then we will see the greatest voting the world ever saw. We are not afraid of woman suffrage. Our women will save the day to us." If intelligence should be the basis of suffrage then women are more entitled to the right of voting than men, for more women are graduating from schools and colleges than men. William J. Bryan is neither rich nor poor financially. Hi property holdings in the suburb of Lincoln, Neb., are valued at SO. 000 and his downtown property at $22,000. The value of hi bank stock and personal property is not given. Through the vigorous influence of President Roosevelt the Seriate has at last adopted the lock system for the Panama canal. The House was already favorable to the lock type, a cheaper and more practicable than the se-level type. To have dug a canal down to sea-level across the isthmus would have required many years and involved mil lions of extra expense. An Amherst professor says the men of the future will be a race of weak lings if present educational methods are not changed. He insists that there must lie more manual labor and less book work. If he can persuade anybody to work with his hands simply for the purpose of giving some future man a strong constitution he will be entitled to all the medals available and a 1ms relief, at least. The value of the water products taken and sold by United States fishermen in 1005 was approximately $50550,000 and this sum is exclusive of the considerable fisheries of insurar poseion and the im mene quantities of fish taken for home consumption and by sportsmen. The number of persons who make a liveli hood in this industry is about 233,000 and the capital invested exceeds $82,-000,000. CASTOR I A lot Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of : THE UNION OAS ENGINE COMPANY : Marine and Stationary Gas and Gasoline Engines. WE ARE "NOW FILLING ORDERS FROM OUR NEW WORKS. WRITE US FOR PRICES AND ILLUSTRATED : ,t . f yj; 'CATALOGUE, F. P. Kendall, General Sales Agent, 62-66 Front St., Portland; Ore. J1P3L h". rii,,Vmi:i!7Li.'M.n,iinn,ii'i',.:i JMgctat)Ie Preparation for As slmilaUug ihcroodflmlHctfuli-tuglhStumackoill)ov.-cl50f ftomoicsWlcstloaCheerflil ncss and HcstCorttalrts neither OptumiMorphlntf nor rflncraL Not Nam c otic. fBMBjsjnr11' sjsww AtNsfect Remedy for ConstlM- doh. Sotv Stonwuch.Dianrhoea. Warms Convulsions .Fevtrisn r39 and Loss or Sleep. lac Sink Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COnrOF VtAWi. Vcsa crSsi mi For Infantt and Children. 1 The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Id Uss For Over Thirty Years P fy n hi lllnly 11 L SMI. ivu eim Often a person is sized up by his appear ance; by the tone that surrounds him. And more often a business house is sized up by the stationary it uses. A cheap letter head or a poor bill head gives a mighty poor first impression and makes business harder to transact. Good printing costs no more than poor printing. The first im pression is half the battle in business. You wouldn't employ a "sloppy" sales man; why put up with "sloppy" station ery, that gives a ypong impression of the importance of your business. Let us do your printing and help you to make that ten strike. The J.S. Bellinger Co. ASTORIA, OREGON SEASIDE PICTURES A FINE LINE OF PRINTS IN feLACKS AND COLORS, 5C. EACH. MATTED PRINTS IN ALL SIZES, COLORS, AND SUBJECTS, 5C to 50c. EACH, SUITABLE FOR ANY SEASIDE COTTAGE. 0 FOR THE MORE IMPORTANT PLACES ON YOUR WALLS, OUR LINE OF FRAMED PICTURES, RANG ING UPWARD FROM 15c. SHOULD APPEAL TO YOU BUT TO FURTHER INDUCE YOU TO EXAMINE THEM, AND ENCOURAGE THEIR SALE DURING THE SUM MER WE OFFER 25 Per Cent Off Any Framed Picture J. N. GRIFFIN Books Stationery Soviverilcrs SCOW BAY IRON & BRASS WORKS ASTOHIA, OREGON IRON AND BRASS FOUNDERS' LAND AND MARINE ENGINEERS Up;to-Date SaiOtlll Machinery rronipt attention thereto hI. rernlr work 18th and Franklin Ave. Tel. Main 2451