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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (May 31, 1907)
FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1907. 6 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING. HELP WASTED. WANTED GIRL TO DO GENERAL housework. Apply to Mr. Christen FUvel Building, oxsu. WASTED-SALESMEN. If ANY MAO ' 1100 to $150 per month. Son even MOT. Stock ClMBl BTOWa OS BMW watioa. far front J orchards. Cash advanced weekly. Chok of territory (Address Washington Nurwery Company, SonwnidL WaMiwto t-tS-tf FOR SALE-REAL ESTATE. I HAVE TWO HOUSES AND SIX lota la Warrenton centrally located, a F. Morton, too real estat dealer, tit Commorclal street, opp. Astorian ffloe. WANTED-MISCELLANEOUS WASTED UPHOLSTERING AND all kinda of repair work; mattresses made over and returned the same day. Leave orders for Bob Davis, Parker House. 5-26-6L FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS. A FIXE LOT OT LACK CURTAINS at Hennlngsen's Furniture Store, SO Bond. . lma NOTICE. Notice is hereby given to all person wing any money to the old Ann of Foard A Stokes Co., to pay aamc by the irst day of June, 1907, at tie Foard A Stokes Hardware Store. After that date all the old accounts will be tamed over to our attorney, Mr. Abercrombk, for anllecUon. : "" FOARD A STOKES CO. 5-22-10t. H0USX MOVERS. TREDRBCKSON BROS Ws sake specialty of house moring, carpenter, ontraetors, general Jobbing; prompt at tention to all orders. Comer Tenth and Duane. tf loscnxAnoua. NICK PAPAZGERE8. THE GREEK DIVER, fcaa Just received a new diving ma' ehlne from the old country. Dives from 25 to 10 fathoms In shallow water stays down half a day at a time. Leave orders at 417 Bond SL Market, or D. rmlangos, Clifton. UNDERTAKERS. J. A. GILBAUGH & CO., Undertakers and Erufoalmers- Experienced Lady Assistant When Desired. Calls Promptly Attended Day or Night. Patton'Bdg. 12th and DiiBneSts ASTORIA, ORE.UON Phone Main 2111 Y) SPICES, rf COFFEEJEA4 DAiOnG POWDER, ni:cn:aOEXTRACis AboSurtrHiriry, finest flavor. Oftafesf SFrenh,foo3oEefVki cLossnaDEvus r PORTLAND, OREGON. C LAUNDRIES. BOTTOM HOLS AT TH BACX. Your uoerisne with it kaa m doubt lead to much TexaUoa, potaibJy pro fmlty. Broke your fingernail trying to pry it up from th neck -baud, 1 You wont hav that that xpritao U yon tend your shirt to uij we sav you tbia trouble, and danger of tearing the dirt Try u and tee, TROY LAUNDRY, Tenth and Dnan St. PhM itai JAPANESE GOODS. LeS ANDERSON 4CS Bend St, Corner tth. Just reoeived $1500 worth of Ladies' Underwear. Alt the lateet fancy atylea. Also fine line of Wrapper at very ran. enable prioea. Now Spring Stock Of Chinese 811k Shirt Waist. Fineeat New Patterns. $4.50 and $5 Waists for 3 andfi.-o. $3.50 Waists for $2.75 Great Reduction in Tllt-Iienney Shoes 5 to H Shoes For HM, INEXPENSIVE JAPANESE FIXINGS, HAD! OP 1AM BOO, LIGHT, STRONG, IAHD MADE, TABLES, STANDS, CHAM WHAT-H0TJ V)K:CASES,SHILV mo, ETC Yokohama Bazaar 125 Commercial Si. Astoria. pleasant hour entSainment VAUDEVILLE AT THE LOUVBE And Vaudeville that really Amuses and Interests you. . Weekly Changes of Pro gram and Each Change an Improvement SPECIALTIES THIS WEEK SIGNA ROBERTS Magnificent Contralto Singer in all the Current Gems of 8oog and Beal istic Sweedish Charac ter Act r mmmm A, . . lena;oieen Turkish Dancer ELAINE FOKEST High Solano Singer MARIE WANDRUTH Flute Solist. Mistress of all Lady Mel odists FLORIENE Soprano Vocalist ADMI88I0N FREE LINDBECK A WIRKKALA Prop. MEDICAL. Unprecedented Success of DR. 6- GEE WO THE GREAT S'fJyS Who is known L throughout the United K.Lli'A.iLi hit 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 blank and circular, inclosing 4 cents in stamps. THE C GEE WO MEDICINE CO. 162 First St, Corner Morrison, PORTLAND, OREGON. Please mention the Astorian GOLDSTEIN Fine Pants Tailor . 207 flisisiiswsm BmBdkig POgTLARD imitiitii tttf OREQOI KXCLcgrrniT roa m tbaob i t? Morning Astorian, 60 cents per month, delivered by carrier PROFESSIONAL CARDi. OSTEOPATHISTS. OX. RB0DA C. HICKS OSTEOPATH O ffloe Mantel. Bid. Phono Black toil 171 Commercial Bt, Astoria, Ore, ATT0&HIY3 AT LAW. JOHNCMcCUE. Attornky-aT'Law. Deputy District Attorney Page Bdg. Room 37. HOWARD M. B30WNILL, Attorrwy-tfLa. Offlo with Mr. J. A. Eakln, at Ne. CI Ctmmtrttat St. Astoria, DENTIST. Dr. VAUGIIAN, Dkntist Pyhlan Building, Astoria, Oreiron. Dr. W. 0. LOGAN ' DENTI81 Oommeraal St. Bhanahan Build BUSINESS DIRECTORY HOTELS. HOTEL PORTLAND Fines Hotel In O Northwest, PORTLAND, ORI. RESTAURANTS. Tokio Restaurant 531 Bond Street Opposite Ross, Higgins & Co First-Glass Meals. Coffee with Pie or Cake 10c Replarltleals 15c, up First Class Meal 15c Coffee with Pie, Cake or Dough nuts 10 cents. U. S. RESTAURANT , 434 Bond Street Telephone 1681 Main. 899 Bond Street OPEN DAY AND NIGHT THE ASTORIA RESTAURANT MANO H1NO, Prop. The Finest 25c meal nerved in Astoria. Yonr Patronage Solscieed. Courteous Treatment to All. OAMK IN BEA80X ASTORIA, : OREGON. DISTILLERS LOUSIVILLE, - KENTUCKY Old Forester Whiskey High in Quality and Price Tucker Whiskey Best Value on the Coast Major Paul Whiskey Noted for its Fine Flavor DISTRIBUTORS ASTORIA, OREGON THE SAVOY Popular Concert HalL Good music. All are weleomt, Del ner Seventh and Astor, Si M M . M l 111 n I Soldiers Who By WALTER A ltOUT tin ytir a Tftran of g (lie civil war vlUM the batlh" flcld of WiUon Cw-k In Mtou rl. 1ur one of the rllt lm portwnt battto of the war ws iotight. iie was ohjrvd to be intently inet' ln th stonv oronnd on Woody Hill. where Om'ral Nathaniel Lyon, the Un ion comiiinndor, was killed in the fl(!it of Aug. 10, ISfll. "What on earth air you lookln' fur! intiira a farmer who lieved near by. "Met'' replied the searcher. "Oh, I'm jlt a lookln fur. my fait teeth." "Where did you drop 'trot ake,t the fanner, supposing that the visitor had jut lot his teeth. "Well, It was rijjht 'long here some eres." said the veteran. "1 wus So had clrt when I futt went into action here in ol thst my upper piste shook dean outen my hetj, an I been a-needln' them teeth ever sene. ' The late Stephen Crane In the story which made hi reputation as a writer "The Red Badge of Courage,' drew a picture of the imprslon of a youth In his first battle which many veterans have declared to ha a faithful portray al of their own feelings In a similar ex perlence. This young man went into the ht determined not to ehow the white feather, but a the battle waxed warm he wa seized in the ertp of a terrible fear snd suddenly took to his heels and made for the rear. It is quite probable thst if you will corner sny old soldier and pin him down to absolute candor he will tell you thai he wa "eared to death," or words to that effect, when lint he heard the hostile bullets whla and knew thst he must go forward into the conflict. fienerol Grant candidly confid to a highly uncomfortable feeling upon two oeclon of imminent battle, one being his flrt 'experience In the Mexi can wsr and the other his initiation In the civil war after 13 years of peace. He recorded thew sensations in his per tonal memoirs. As to his experience in Mexico he wrote s As we lay In our tents upon the sea shore the artillery at the fort on the Rio Grsnde could be distinctly heard. The war had begun. There was no pos sible means of obtaining news from the garrison, and Information from outside could not he otherwl than unfavor able. Whst General Taylor's feelings were during this suspense I do not know, but for myaelf, a young second lieutenant who had never heard a hos tile gun before, I felt sorry that I had enlisted. A great many men, when they smell battle atfar off, chafe to get Into the fray. When they say so themelvei they generally fail to convince their hearers that they are as" anxious as they would like to make believe, and as they approach danger they become more sub dued. This rule Is not universal, for I have known a few men who were al ways aching for a fight when there was no enemy near who were ss good as their word when the battle did come, but the number of such men is small. After several years' retirement from the army Grant entered the great con Aict of the sixties, his flrt command being the Twenty-first Illinois volun tcers. lie win sent to northwest Mis souri, where a certain regiment was be sieged by the enemy, with Instructions to raise the siege. He wrote as follows! "My sensations a we approached what might be 'a field ot battle' were any thing but agreeable. I had been in all the engagements in Mexico that it had been possible for one person to be in, but not in command. If some ono else had been. colonel and I had been lieuten ant-colonel, I do not think I would have felt any trepidation. Before we were prepared to cross the Mindi'siippi river at Quincy my anxiety was relievej, for the men of the besieged regiment tame straggling into town. I am Inclined to think both sides got frightened and ran away." A few days later Colonel Grant had an exeprlcnce which once- more caused him, in his memoir, to acknowledge that he wat scared. This wai after he had crossed the river into Missouri. His description of his 'feelings just in advance of an expected battle that did not take place luu a touch of humor. This humor is quite justifiable, for the regiment of the future general was en camped at the time in the little villngc of Florida, Mo., the birthplace of Mark Twain, and that individual hiinclf, then better known in the neighborhood n Sam Clemens, who had just enlisted in the Confederate service, was doing his best to avoid an engagement with Grant, as he con'feased many years later, There was a Colonel Harris in command of the Confederate troops In that vicin ity. Colonel Grant went out to corral IIniri. This is Grant's description of what happened and what didin't; "As we approached the brow of the hill from which It was expected we could see Harris' camp and possibly find his men ready formed to meet us my heart Were Afraid, JAMES JANES kept getting higher and higher until It felt that It was In my throat. I would have glv anything then to have been back In llliuoK but 1 had not th inorsl eournse to halt and consider whst to do. 1 kept right on. "When we reached a point from which the valley be low wis In full view I halted. Th place where Harris was encamped a few days befor was Kill there, and th marks of a recent en campment Wir plainly visible, hut th troops were gone. My heart resumed It place, i ..... . "I occurred to me at one that Harris had been a much afraid of tne as t had been of him. - This was view of the question I hail never taken before, but It was one I never forgot after ward. From that event to th cUwe.of, the war I never experienced trepidation J upon confronting in enemy, though I always forgot that he had a much re on to fear my force i I had Mi. The lenson wa valuable." . J Genreal Sheridan, whos first field ervlc was In Oregon chasing the half starved and half erased Pitt River In-1 lians, tells of hi first apparent peril and Ms trepidation. A this affair turned out, there w no fight at all, as the rase of Grant's non-meeting with Harris. young lieutenant, Kherldan had volunteered to rid acroti the wild Indian country with a couple of soldiers to carry meage to a small gsrrlon In the Interior. On the long rid he heard voice In front and through his glasses made out a band of about 3ft Pitt River brave. The Indians, as h knew, wer armed only with bows and rrow, whfln niaht tf.it h . .till It. the , V .? rl J ,h vicinity of the Indians, who, however, had not dleoverd him. He went Into camp in tne womi. and eurn wa m i . i. tji .'i. - . fear of the Indisn that h would not permit a fire to be lit. H and hi two men ate cold bread only, with no coffee, "I felt somewhat nervous," he wrote,' , , , it, .. "and ped an anxlou. night." It turn- ed out that th Indians wer too nearly starved to death to do any fighting and thst they wer looking for whit, men only to H something to eat. General Jame Longstreet, who at hi death was the last survlvlmt lieutenant- general of the Confederate aervlee, had hi first battle In Mexico. LIU Grant, he wa with General Taylor army. He evidently wa a young man of torn sentiment, for it seems t hav been hi wcet heart's plctur that nerved hlra for battle when hi heart, physically j speaking, had failed him. In Ms ac count of this initial experience In con flict h tell of bis command crossing, a lagoon and pausing to dip cups of i water. Just beyond, up nd over the bank, the battle was raging. Long street' eouraue wavered, but this Is what he did i "I thought of her whom I hd left be hind, drew her daguerreotype from my breast pocket, had a glint of her charm' ing smile and with quickened spirits mounted the bank." TECHNICALLY-EDUCATED MEN NEEDED - Not Enough to Meet the Demand of the Industrial World Graduate of the Technical School Sought E8fSy by Employer! Some time ago a large Industrial con eern of the East sent a representative to Pittsburg with th authority to employ one hundred draftsmen and engineer with thorough - technical qualifications, The representative wa able to secure only forty, end these he had to pay any where from fifty to sixty per cent more than they were then earning to Induce them to change. The incident emphasized the great de mand there is for technically trained men in every part of the United States. Not only are their lervices required at high salaries In all kinds of construc tion work, but they are a much In de mand for administrative positions. ' A large proportion of the men at the heads of the various railroad companies are those with engineering educations, and it Is stated on good authority that lxty per cent of the official of th iteel In dustry are technically trained men Such is the demand for the man with a technical education that a writer In a recent number of a national Industrial publication refer to him a th "auto crat dt the .business world," meaning that h may command almost any salary within reason The earn writer cites the fact that industrial employer are eagerly oeking the graduates of the technical schools, and mention an In stance where on firm wanted to employ the entire graduating class of a well- known engineering university No single agency ha done so much to give men technloal training as has the International Correspondence Schools of Seranton, Pa. ; By the unique meth od of this great Institution, young men may gain thorough tecnnlcal training in all the leading engineering trades, an J profession, without giving up any m iiloyinent that they may hsv. In al most all targ Industrial concerns of America the School havt graduate working with th graduate of leading universities. The School can point to thousand of case whm men formerly working a laborer or occupying In ferior position have, through tha i, 0. 8. perfected system of training by mall, become engineer, superintendent, managers, foreman, or head of their own enterprise, In fact, th International Correspond ence (tchooli mU It o ay for th ambitious man, In Mi tpr hour and t small expense, to rN to th levsl of th high-satarled expert that bo msn can now say truthfully that h lack opportunity, Th International Correspondence Schools r represented In Astoria by Mr. II. Harris, who la alwayi glad to liivs any on, fre of charge, Informa tion concerning any of th mora than 30O courses of hom tudy offered by tht. C.S. ' .". SHORT TALKS BY L. T. COOPER. i -i ALL WORN OUT. This I the time of year for th "all worn out" feeling. . You hear it every. whert. ' "I'm all worn out." Did you over atop io imn what It mean Wall, it nana iust thiai 'my liver ladull and not working properly,- my atomach la tak ing too ranch food which It U'nt digesting properly, Pin it clogg4 up from being ta III I.I ' j ' I"' UK m aeaoaa, door with o IlttU freh air all winter long, and my body I full of ImuurU titZ ia Couquenc I'm dull, half feverish and tired all the time.' That I what 'all worn out' really mean. Tsk a tsbletpoonful of Cooper's New DUe0Ter- threVtlmea a day lor two WMkl ,nt au worn out' fUif will certainly leave, r. wgw w. wwb tow. t w wm unit i iunm iivh et,i0II Ih- it0mach that emd 9 wear mt out completely. My re tern waa run down, mr bowel consti- J' , not atck oou6h to f t0 M am noi ambition to tif around. I read of Cooper' New DIs- eovefy and began using It. I am glad to aay that two bottle put ma on my feet and relieved every aymotom of my trouble. It la on of the beet y tern tonic I have aver heard of," John Burger, 1U9 Hopkins St., Clft clnoatl, O. W Mil th famon Cooper remtdte. Charles Rogers Relief from Rh.umatlo fain. 1 suffered with rheumatltm for over two years aay Mr- Holland Curry, a patrolman, ot Key Wt, Fla. "Some time it tettled In my knee and lamd in so I eoulJ hardly walk, at other time It would bt in my feet and hand o X was Incapacitated for duty. One ntght when I wa In sever pain and lame from It my wir went to th drug tor her and cam back with a bot tle of Chamberlain' Pain Balm, X was rubbed with It and found th pain htd nearly gone during th night I kept on using it for a little more thsri two weeks and found that It J rove th rheumatism away. I hav not had any trouble from that disease for over two months." For sale by Prank Hart and Leading Druggist. SCOTLAND YARD INTERESTED. Will Search Incoming Steamer Murderer of Father Kaepar. For NEW YORK, May 30.-Father Kai par, the Armenian priest, who was mur Jered In a West side tenement last Sat urday, and who body, jammed In a trunk, w found Sunday, will - be bur ied Sunday from th Armenian apos tolic church, In West Iloboken. Thu far no clue to the whereabout of th priests suspected murderer hi been found. Advices from London say the detec tive of Scotland Yard are interested In New York's trunk murder mystery and will search the steamers America and Princess Louise which left New York Inst Thursday, on errlvtl there. The Armenian colony in London it U said ar Inclined to bcliev that the murder grew out of a political plot. NOTICE FOR BIDS. Bids will be received by tbo school board of district No. 1 for painting the McClure ichool building, both in side and outside, and for caliorainlng th plaster work. Bid will ba received up to 2 o'clock p. m. on Tuesday, Jun 11, 1007. Specification can be teen at the office of the district olork in the city hall. The right U reserved to reject) any or all bid. Address ail communica tions to A. L, Clark, clerk of th dis trict. Astoria, Or., May 24, 1007. 5-2J ()t.