Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 12, 1906)
TODAY, OCtOBia ii, ijsl THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. MRS SNYDER FR Ingenious Attacks of Prosecution Pall Utterly. STAR CHAMBER INVESTIGATION Orewiomi Detail of Examination Count ed on to Creata Hysteria Under Which Admiiilon of Criminal ' i Knowledge. Will Bt Mad. IIIlXSmORO, Ore, Oct, ll. Although put through the wort sweating , aver given ft woman' In Oregon, Mra. 0, I). Snyder remained firm to the 1at and told nothing hut what the related at )riv(u examination, For i hour she wtt on tha ruck this' morning, be ing aVM every question that able at torney eouhj think to Interpol re garding the, death of her husband lat December. 8h repeated the story ai puWIhd yterda.r and declared that that wa alt ebe Anew of the affair. The examination wa concluded at JiUMhlt afternoon. It will be re sumed1 again 'next Saturday morntng, when other wltnewe will appear before DM rift Attorney Harrison Allen, and It (a expected that the new testimony will 1 moet tlonal Mrs. Snyder will ha fact to fat with tha wltnee when their statement are made, It la thought that aha will then break down and tell more of the mysterious murder of her htuhend. . ;- , Mr. Allen refuee to etat who the new witnesses are. hut. It I anld upon good authority, that they are farmer who Ht In the neluhhorhood of the Pnyiler home where the murdered man reelded and where hie remalna were die eovefed several da.va a pro, Thl morning' aweatlng waa hehlnd closed door. M re, flnydep bora op well under the ordeal although the hrolce down several time ami sobbed bitter ly, Once or twice It wa feared that the examination would have to be put off on ewount of the woman'e weeping, but eh falme.f herself end came out with flying colore. :.. Mra. Snyder left on tha 1 140 train thle afternoon for Portland. t . At 9 o'clock Mra. Snyder waa put upon her oath before the PUtrfrt At torney, elttlng a a grand Jury, and her examination by the Wtrlel At tor net. Sheriff Ton nell and Deputy Dla trM Attorney Tongue commenced, pofore her etea were spread ber hus band' clothe and personal enVf. found noon the dead body. Displayed where ahe could gare upon it a ahe talke'd waa her husband's grinning akull, with it gnplng bullefc hole In plain night, Hurrotindcd by and under the Influ ence of thflie grewsoms , reminder ' of her' husband' tragi fata and tha my terloua plot leading up to hie murdor In tha wood near Bethany, Mr, Sny der lobbed hyaterloAlly aa aha gave urh Information a the olllcara were dflle to get from her, The examination waa cowl tided behind cloned door, and tha witness waa '.subjected to one of the moat vere and acarchfng aweatlng processes that the Ingenuity of tha of ficer could Invent. SANKEY AUD SMITH MEET, Intereatlng Tale from Ufa Worts o Good Man, NEW. YORK, 0't. ll -Ira D. Sankey, a noted evngcllt and dinger and "Gyp f' Smith, an English evangelist, met yesterday for the eeconl time In the home of Mr. Sankey, In Brooklyn. Twenty-five yeara ago when Moody and Sankey wer holding revival meet ing In London, they drove Into tha country and atopped to look at a gyp ay camp. Mr, Sankey, atanding In hla carrla? lang to them. . On of thoee mot In terested wa boy who climbed upon the carriage wheel. The boy beggen that he ilncr aealn, Touched bv the bey's sincerity, Mr. Sankey placed hi handa on the boy'a head and aald, "God, make a preacher of thl boy. ' ' It waa becauee of that Inaplration that the boy now known throughout the world aa "Oypey Smith, ran away from tha tmi band, and became a atudent. He vlelted Mr. Sankey yea terday. Mr. Sankey fa 111. Mr. Smith knelt beld tha bed of the alnger, who placed Ml handa on the gypy head and bleared hi work. f TWO STORES-ASTORIA AND PORTLAND ' "'""l IT STRENGTH To Be, Greatly Augmented By New Cruisers. SPEED. STRENGTH COMBINED Any On of Britain'! Latest Deatrue- tivs Agents Equal to Three of tha Preaent Highest Developed Typea of War Vessels, Saleswomen's Peril ERAVE DISEASES, DUE TO STAKDIK3 Faots About Mill MirMev't DaagersM ; HImii sad Completj Curt .: Hart yon ever thought why ao many ' women or glrla rather walk an hour than stand atlll for ton minutes? It is because moat women Buffer from eome derangement oi their ueiiunU organism, the discomfort of which la lcaa trying when they are in motion than when atanding. In some tatcs law compel employer to provide resting place for their fe male employeea. But no Amount of law can regulate the hard task of these women, They must get the atrength which thla work demand or run the risk of -aerioui disease and the aurgeon'a knife. Read the experience of Miss M&rgret Merkleyi S75 8d Street, Milwaukee, Wla.t ,i .-; Dear Mr. Pinkham- .. "Qradual Ion of ttrength, nervousneei, bearinc-down pain and extreme Irritation compelled me to ck medical advice. Tbe -doctor aald I had dlsooiipd orKan and uloer ' atlon, and advised an operation if I wanted to rat waU. I oblectod to thl and decided i eiva Livma Hi. ruiKiimn i veseuioie uom- ound a frUU. I aoon found that all the Rood to give Lvdla imnnd ft trkl. thing said about thl great medicine were LONDON, Oct. ll.-The Dally Tele graph today eey that three armored cruiser now under comtruction, the Indexible and Inimitable on the Clyde and the Invincible at E!wlck, about which much aecrecy hat been maintained by th admiralty, axe in reality battle ahlpa of a heavy broadside fire a the Dreadnaught, but very much faster. These venael in fact will be the roott wonderful ship ever built for any navy, in that they will have greater offensive power than any two battleship now In commiation in an fleet in the world, combined with "extraordinary speed, far In excc of anything hitherto attained. Following are the dimenaion of' these vettseli .' . ', Displacement, 1750 ton; length, 530 feet j breadth, 78J feetj mean draught, 20 feet; weight of the hull Including nrm and backing, 111,100 tons. Each vessel will carry1 eight new 12 inch guna. Although these vessela have each two gun Mesa than the Dread naught, the Daily Telegraph continue, they will have power in broadside fire, due to a new arrangement of the gun, four in two barhettea fore and .aft, with a training arc enabling them to be used on either aide, and four more in the barbette placed in the center; of the ship ao as to bear" on either beam, ahead or astern. They thu will have air gun for lire ahead or aetem-, anu they will be able t bring the entire armament of eight guna to bear to either port or starboard, Consequently he lire of those vessel In chasing will be a heavy aa the head or stern fire of any three foreign battleships, while on the beam it will equal that of any two other battleship. " i 1 These vegsel are designed " for speed of 25 knota and may attain, 27 knot on their trial. They will be propelled ,by ' turbine engines. The construction of the hulls is; on ; the snme principles as adopted by the Dreadnaught, but they are less hoavily armored, . . " IS' 1 ') S. ' :'. -i I tr-.r 1 . A il ft" Is the most servicable overgarment a man can wear. It is two coats in one a smart . ani stylish clear weather TOP COAT, and a thoroughly dependable RAIN COAT, which rain will neither wet or spot. They are especially adapted to this climate because when it is not raining the nights and early mornings are too cool to be without some kind of an overcoat, and when it ii rain ing you know too well the advantages of hav-' ingone. ' , . . ' We are showing the, biggest and best as sortment of patterns and styles ever brought to Astoria, and at prices, the like of which, is making this store famous LOW ONES $12.50 to $25.00 0eon BucIIsIin,, Overcoats If it is somethiag a little heavier than a rain coat and not quite so long you want in an overcoat, you can't do any better than to buy one of our famous "Oregon Buckskin" Overcoats. ajpe price as the suits, euer man 10 Duy 2m Blanket Bi4sitiess Brisk, and Why Nat ? Scarce an hour of the business day passes but that some one is buying the good "OREGON MADE' Blankets. The words "Oregon Made" when applied to Blankets indicates the stand ard of excellence in such the world over. -vThey mean the best of wool and the most pains-taken care in making. We carry nothing but the "Oregon Made" blankets made by the Brownsville and Salem Woolen Mills, the best Blanket makers in the country. We have them in all sizes, . , weights and colors. Our prices are low, a fact which, will please you. 1 MILL TO MAN CLOTHIERS KM II:; I rinn w 684 Commercial Street, Astoria Between 15th and 16th Streets. BERLIN IS MACHINE MADE. Drue, JL UO UKTOl owuu kiuu urauoii, vniMiiVuct headache and nervouanes disapiared, and in a short time I was strong, vigorou nd perfectly well. I wish every working girl who tulTor would try Lydia E. llnkhaml Vegetable Cdtapound." Lydia B. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is a vegetable tonic which invig orate and strengthens tbe entire fe male organtem, and will produce the aarae beneficial results In the cases of other lck women as with Mias Merkley. BAUD CONTEST. The person returning the largest nura ber fo Jose Vila cigar band to the undersigned by October 15th will receive a box of 25o- Vilaa free to the next largest one box l2Jc. Jose Vilas. Save the bands. Viotor Miller, corner Ninth and Bond streets. -.- i-w-f. EnarlUh WrKcr Call It Stiff. MU and nevtUlaesr, Wbh Berlin nuuit las! year W the year before? It la Impossible to say from looking at it. Some of tbo trees) lu the utrects look at least ten years old, but they must have lecn plantea long before the city was thought of. Tbe bouses and the streets and the lampposts and the statues are" nil much too neat and new to have endured ttu rains of more ttmn one winter. It is all, in fact, quite too new to be com fortable One feels afraid to sleep In any of the houses lest rheumatism should be lying lu wait In rooms where tbo plaster has not bud time to harden. I drove from tbe p tutlon In a "drosb VI" with a monstrously old horse. Time had bent his forelegs into a very good Imitation of a switchback railway, and as wo plodded solemnly along the brand new asphalt roadway, with the brand new bouses ou either, side and an occasional brand new electric car, with a brand new driver Ju a brand new uniform, I found myself wonder Ing wbat tho old horse tuiwt thluk of it all One day be may have been grazing in nn open field, and when be passed that way a week or so later he found a new broad boulevard, with hotels and shops and churches and groat blocks of flats, all sprung np like mushrooms. Berlin, then, Is a great deultoo per fect to be satisfactory. It Is tho ma chine made, not the hand made, article It was very decidedly made, not born, Tlioro Is no sponiauolty in It, no life. Compared to, say; Lbttdennt'te like a beautiful mnrblo statueto a liv ing woman. v Berlin Is, In fact, an awful objoct lesson to emperors aud others who try to niuke a capital city out of a respect able village. It is easy to put up im posing buildings If you havo tho mon eyand to cut out broad tree lined roads and have everything neat and nice and fine, but you only make your Village bigger and finer without mak ing it any the more a capital city. There Is no getting away from tbe feel ing that Berlin Is a village- big vil lage, a beautiful, rectilinear, now-out-of-the-bamlbox vlllnge, but a village all the same. London Chronicle. ; beauty and ninitflcvavv U.ia stnl "no bly worth ;n r. Even ue least re- spousive imagination can hardly fail to apprehend eome idea of what tais town must hare Iw.n of old. wlmm Acrngas. with its vast estant find over - 200.00C Inhabitants, looked out across tbe dark bluo waters of tts iire.;k sea or Marc Afrlcauo from a lon!!y wilderness of autterb ter.:;;!es and maiTSifieent build togs of nil kliids. Today it Is worth a pilgrimage irem tha ends of the earth There la perhaps no place of ruin lu the whol? world more beautiful thau this. To se It, as tb3 present writer last saw it, ia a poMea srraset glow, with tho great temples glenmlnj like yellow ivory and the town Itself of a dusky gold and tbe sen beyond and up lands and mountains behlivd irradiated with a serene glory of light, Is to see what will be for V.ts an unforgettable Impression, au ever deeply moving re membrance. To localize the. three loveliest views In Sicily (and I fancy that most travel ers would a Tree with mel I should specify tint froin th? terrace of the Hotel Tlir.tH) at Taorniina, that from the moaasteryAnstelry of Madonna del Tludaro ovor Tyndaris aud the Aeolian isles and that trom tho terrace of the Ilotel Belvedere on the south wall of Glrjrentl, looking out on the lovely temples, tin beautiful uplands anil slopes and th? b!u. s.a washing Porto Empedocle below. Century. , GIRGENTI THE BEAUTIFUL ncaoUfnl Tnnn Thi." Every ouo has heard of Girgenti, ns of Syracuse, before coming to Sicily. Tho most beautiful city of antiquity bus left att endearlug unme, and if the Girgenti of today be far from the Agrl gentum of lloman splendor and still further frpiri " thoAcragns jf jlreek : The Fart For t'.io FlRiire. . "Of course," said tin bachelor girl, "1 would be out of tho frying pan Into tbe Nflre." ;- .Xf , : ' ., (.n . "It's more likely," answered Miss Cayenne, "to be out of the chafing dish Into the gas stove."-Washington Star There will never be universal peace. It Is an idle dream. People will always get married. - , ; C. F. WISE, Prop. Choice Wines, Liquors . and Ogar r' " Hot Lunch at all Honrs Merchants Lunch From 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 p jn. - - 5 Centa ASTORIA Comer Elevent h and Commercial 's..-o... -"-.i- i'i:,,;...;'-.,.,.. 0RSG0N Aregetab!cPrcparationror As similating theToodandReguta- ng tht .Stomnrhand RowpIs nf A MOST WORTHY ARTICLE. When an article has been en the market for year and gain friends ev ery year, it is aafe to call this medi cine a worthy one. Such is Ballard' Horehound Syrup. It positively cure coughs, and all Pulmonary diseases. One of the best known merchants in Mobile, Ala., says: "For five years my family haa not been troubled with the winter coughs j we owe this to Ballard's Horehound Syrup. I know it has saved my chil dren 'from many sick spells." Hart' drug store. . iTrtesTcsSbTvClsctrful- ne?s ajM iKst.tontam? mnmrr OpiuinjMorpbMe cor Wincfal. Not Narcotic. ETT3 Am tfmn-s&miPnznEa Awrfect Remedy for CqasUm- tion.Sour Stotnaeh.Diarrhoca. Worms .Convulsions .Fevcnslv cess ondLoss of Sleep. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. 'IT- IT ll For Infants and CMldren. Tho Kind You Havo Always Docght Bears the Signature of iW EXACT COPY Of VBAPPB8. Q Oso For Over Thirty Years 111 TM OIHTAUII UMNNTt NCW VORN Cm FX A ii f b .-') H-