THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTOWA, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20, 1007. 1 V To be the best I dressed this season go to the 4) w O o .St fl C w i We solicit your ac quaintance JR C. JUDD, Prop J 1684 Commercial St. 69 0 PLAYING CARDS. Peculiarities of Those Used by the Different Nations, "One of the most tntorestlufr collec tions of fotvlRu loot that I've seon recently, said a uiau omllnarlly too busy to make the trip over the sens utciBelf, "Is ru assortment of play lug J J cards from various ynrts of tbe worM. "In every country tlio owucr of tlie collection vlsltwl ami he eut to a ' jrood many plokiM p cards of local manufacture and so representative of the nation. "The Russian cards lire perhaps the moat eluborate. The faces of the kluip J ! and queens are different in euch suit, S Indicating the racial elements that go ! to compose the empire. ! "On the Greek cards classical heroes I i nd heroines are represented. Kestor, for eisuiple, Is the- king of nenrts and Orestes the knave. ' Agamemnon la the ' king of clubs, Hercules the jack of i spade and Minos and Danae the king and queen of diamonds. The Greek ! pack it rather a cheap one aud scarce ly doe honor to the celebrities por trayed "Cadis Is a renter for card manufac turing. The idea of the Spanish card maker seems to be to get as much color on the cards aa possible. The royal robes are of unusual magnificence. Tbe clubs are big bludgeons In greeu and red, and the knave of clubs, gayly caparisoned on a prancing horse, re minds you iustautly of Jack the Olant Killer. The spades are ugly little dag gers, and for hearts and diamonds there are disks and dice cups. The cards In some of the Spanish packs are very mm ana nave a capital spring. "Tbe Madeira' cards come from Lis bon. The figures are more convention al in design than on the Spanish. The ace cards are adorned with typical , Portuguese scenes. "A peculiarity of the pack bought in Constantinople Is that the ace cards. In addition to tbe single spade, dia mond, club or heart In the center of eacbf have diminutive aces at the up per . left hand and lower right band corners. "The Italian face cards portray de cidedly gloomy personages. Each one of the face cards, by the way, carries In small print the name and address of tbe maker. There are tiny packs, an Inch and a quarter by an Inch and three-quarters in size, which can be bought on the streets of Naples for a soldo. These resemble the Spanish cards to some extent, although the royalties are more dignified. "Cairo is a great card emporium, and Mousky street offers rich returns to the card hunter. Fortune telling cards must be in demand there, to Judge from the samples I saw In the collec tion. The Cairo playing carjs come mostly from Germany. They are bril liant in their coloring. Tbe ates carry scenes from lands both west and east "The gem of all the packs comes fmm Switzerland. The cards are small, one and three-quarter by two and a half inches in size, and the back design Is the edelweiss, fbe kings, queens and Ja1w are deligh tful studies in Swiss costume, and the purchase certninly gets his money's worth, to each face card has two lJf figures quite unlike. Ou the aces are Swiss scenes and objects of interest, also two to a card, the subjects Including the castle of Chlllon, the Matterhorn, the bridge at Lucerne and the Lion of Lu cerne." Indianapolis Star. weights In order to press out all the mercury which remains fluid. This Is received in n gutter around the stone. After about twenty-four Jiount It Is gently rajacd upon Its edge, and in a few weeks It Is ready to frame. His Psrstversncs. Henry Arthur Joiim, the noted Eng lish playwright, was giving the stu dents of Vale an address on the drama. "Your American vernacular Is pictur esque." he said, "and It should help your playwrights to build strong, racy plays. Hut neither vernacular nor any thing else Is of moineut If persever ance Is lacking. No playwright cau succeed who Is like a man I know. I said to this man one New Year's day, 'lo you keep a diary, Philip?' ' 'Yes.' he answered. 'I've kept otie for the Hi. st two weeks In January for the last seven years." 1 A Mystery of the Sea . 1 His Good Ntws, "l have," said a lawyer as ho entered his condemned client's cell, "good news at last" "A reprieve?" eagerly exclaimed the prisoner. "No, not a reprieve, but your uncle has. left you 500, and now you cau meet your fate with the satisfying feeling that the noble efforts of your lawyer In your behalf will not go unre-irarded.,,-l.oiidon Tit Btts. Honest Boarder (on leaving Madam, you are one of the most honest jwrsons I bare ever met. Landlady I am glad to bear you say that, sir. Boarder Yes; your honesty Is conspicuous on the very' front of your establishment Your slgu says, "Boarders taken In!" London Telegraph. If we fail to conquer smaller difficul ties, what will become of us when as saulted by greater?-Thomaa a Kfcm- In Job Lots The Astoria Klectrlc Comany yesterday received the sec ond of the three Immense carloads of new machinery for the power plant, whlc hhas been en route for the past eighty days. The last load must ar rive before any of that on hand can be st In pliu-e or utilized, and the Jelay has been a source of extraordi nary annoyance and practical loss to the company. ! Silvering Mirrors. Mirrors are usually silvered by coat- ' ; ing the glass with amalgam. For this purpose a lare, perfectly flat stone Is provided, aud upon it is evenly spread a nbeet of tin foil without crack or 'I Caw. This is covered to the depth of one-eighth of an inch with clean mer cury. The plate of glass, perfectly , ' cleaned from all grease and Impurity, is floated on to the mercury by sliding, si as t: c::cli!(!j all air bubbles. It is tr: ijcC Cjvra l- hiudki-r it with Leave Hospital Gladys Kraser, th daughter of P. Fraser of Ilwaco, who sustained an operation for a disorder of the Internal ear about three weeks ago wa discharged from St. Mary's hospital yesterday, and returnej home. Another passenger on the Nahrottn for Ilwaco was nine year old Oliver Grahiim, who sustained an operation for appendicitis some two weeks ago. at St. Mary's HospltaL LI8TEN and remember the next Ume you suf fer from pain caused by damp wea-ther-r-when your head nearly bursta Jrom neuralgia try Ballard's Snow Liniment It will cure you. A prom inent business man of Hempstead, somewhere Texas, writes: "I have used your lin iment Previous to using it I was a great sufferer from rheumatism and neuralgia. I am pleased to say that now I am free from these complaints. I am sure I dwe this to your liniment" For sain at Hart's drug store. tCopyrlght, by MeClure NwpnMr syndicate. We were making the round voynge from Liverpool to Sydney, calling at Cape Town, and the day's observation bad shown that wo were about half way between Cape Towu aud Australia, when a man aloft sang out that he could descry n ship's boat about two miles away on the hv bow. For eight eon days we had uol sighted a sail. Wo had been na much alone ou that oceau as If hls and men did not ex 1st. .It was driving with wind aud sea, and until we fell off our course and passed It wlthlu biscuit toss we supposed it to be empty. As we pass ! ed it we saw a girl crouching In the bottom, and when we raised a shout she stood up and supplicated us wltb bands and arms to save her. Tbe bark was brought to the wind and a boat towered, and after a little we bad the girl aboard. I say girl, for she was not a day over sixteen and was of German birth, though she could speak English tolerably well. It was only when she was safe aboard that we found she had lost her mind and was like a child. Of course the , first thing was to .tverhaut the boat. She had no uatne. There were a few biscuits leJt. but tie water eg hud lieen empty for at least three days. There were n; oar no spnse clothing -not the pj:htct thlug to give na a clew to th't Identity of tho girl or the name of tbe craft from which she must have cast off. She had uot suffered greatly In a physical way, but was mentally upset and looked about her so strangely that we wondered If she had ever e-u a ship before. She was given a spare stateroom and fell asleep almost at once aud did not open her eyes for n iteeu hours. Meanwhile her clothing had been Inspected for marks or Initials. There were none. While the garments were serviceable, they belonged rather to a wealthy girl than a oor one. It was hoistl that vhen the stranger awoke her mind would U clear aud that Me sl.ould hear her story, but In that we were disappointed. She met us with a smile and asked how she came aboard. She did not even recol lect being fcikcu from tho boat. I said she bad lost her mind. Perhaps It would be nearer the mark to say mem ory, though at tbe same time It could be seen that the hardships she bad passed through had more or less af fected her mind as well. We saw how It was almost at once and did not crowd her. From the first she seemed to feel at home, cslllng each of na by a name she had selected herself, and she had not been wltb us five days before the captain sat down to draw her out. There was nothing to draw. In other words, she remembered noth ing previous to waking up In the state room after her long sleep. She wss told that she must have been on a hhlp and that there must have been caircj for iicr leaving it. She had no recollection of such a thing. She must have been going from somewhere to She admitted It but could National wlts's. Bicycles On "Sale At Oik- Thirty days treatment for kidney, bladder troubles and rheumatism for 11.00. Tour money refunded if, not satisfied. Pinules contain no alcohol. Do not derange the stomach. Easy to take. Frank Hart's Drug Store. Morning Astorian, 80 rents per mont!. sar Df. ifi( MAKES LEAN PEOPLE FAT THROUGH THE NERVOUS SYSTEW IT IS A PURELY VECEtABLE COM POUND. Contains no oils or fats or BDy drug that is injuri ou8 or liable to produce a habit Each bottle contains a month's treatment and costs $1.50 a any first class drug skue. Pre pared by tbe ANTI-LEAN MEDICINE COMPANY, OREGONIAN, BUILDING, PORTLAND. OREGON. w. c. laws a CO. 1 HEATING AND PLUMBINF ENGINEERS Plans and estimates furnished on application. ' All work done by First-Class Mechanics. Sheet-Iron, Copper and Tin Work done in a first class manner, as we do no other work in our shop. not name the points. If she had a fa ther and mother, sisters and brothers, she did not know. We were a rough lot of men, but that girl had the pity and sympathy of every man aboard. The many tricks we resorted to to call her memory back would make a book. The sailors before tho mast were allowed to make suggestions, aud every day some new scheme was suggested. Hho knew the uses of the comb, brush and glass, and she could sew. Her table manners showed that she had been well reared. She would take a book and read for hours, but It was a disputed point with us bovr much she understood. We mentioned the name of almost every town in tjcrmauy, but all seemed strange to Iter. Then we tried Bouth Africa, and our earnestness made her laugh merrily. Nothing was surer than that her father and mother were (Jer mans, but when a German sailor aboard sought to converse with her In that language she pimply stared at him. Wherever our charts showed that the Germans bad a Colony lu the Pacific we mentioned the name, but it did no good. The girl spoke to us only In broken German and was a child in her ways. She regained her health and spirits aft er a few days and then wandered about the decks asking the name and use of everything she saw. She would exclaim In her native language and sing songs In German, but she would not speak it. She called tho captain father and me Carl and was content not to even ask our destination. By and by we saw that It was useless and gave up trying. Kho had her own stateroom, was always ready at meal time, and one not knowing of her af fliction would uot have suspected it from anything In her actions. It was only when she began to talk that you saw her mind was u blank. he was treated as respectfully as If she had been tbe captain's own daughter, and it was a bard task parting with ber at Sydney. She was taken to the German consul there, and be at once bestirred himself to gather particulars. I am telling of what took place over twenty years ago, and yet I have a letter from Australia lying before me as 1 write that says the mystery surrounding the girl, who Is now a middle aged wom an, has never been cleared up. She has never recovered her mind and will continue to be an inmate of a borne to tbe day of her death. Inquiries have been pushed everywhere and In every, direction, but without success. HART, SCHAFFNER $ MARX Clothes (or Men are the Acme of Men's Clothes for Several Reasons. FIRST. Every garment bearing this lsll ii guaranteed to m every thread wool. , SECOND. They are hand tailored through out and the work msushipis (sirfoct. THIRD. They are design ed by (lie highest paid artists in the business aud sw um Hint ''swag ger air" that is so agerly sought for. We could name a dozen more reasons why they lead them all. ;.'-sv I JF ; Copyright 1906 by Hart iKhalfncr fc? Marx FOR THAT SUNDAY DINNER Shipment of fresh fruit and vegetables today. Fancy Asparagus 2 lbs. 25c. Fresh Rhubarb,! 3 lbs, 25c. Hot House Lettuce, Celery, Cabbage and Cauliflower. Sweet Navel Oranges, 20 to 50c dozen. Acme Grocery Co. Phone Mam68I 521 Commercial St. A. BOWLBY, President. PETERSON, Vice-President (RANK PATTON, Cashier. J. W. GARNER, Assistant Csthlar. Astoria Savings Bank Capital Paid in 1100,000. Bnrpins and Undivided 1'roflu 188,000 ! TrannseU a Ut-neml Banking Bunuou. Infarct Paid on Time 1 po.lt TnfifH 8tt, ASTOHIA, OREGON Sole Agent "UncommpnJClothcs." First National Bank of Astoria. Ore. ESTABLISHED 1880, Capital $100,000 THI I GE C. F. WISE, Prop. M Choice Wines, Liquors and Cigars Hot Lunch at all Hours Merchant! Lunch From 11:30 a. m, to 1:30 p joa. 5 Crati Corner Eleventh and Commercial &ST0KIA 0SS009 I