The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, July 12, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

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    FRIDAY, JULY it, 1907.
THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
THE
MORNING ASTORIAN
Established tlrs.
Published Dally Except Monday by
flk J. S. DELLINGEK COXPAKT.
SUBSCRIPTION SATIS.
By mail, per year
By carrier, per month
..,.$7.00
JO
WEEKLY ASTORIA.
mail, per year, In advance.. 11.00
Kntnwl u iMnnd-eiaM mMtor July
, 1. lb postofflee Ator.ore.
ton, under tbe act or Conaren ol ,
5 iMMlliiiiUlMnuolTll Moan
owiaTMualoeiUMr wsMmms or place of
inaiii M in be Bade by poeui cud or
skrout fcflKe. An breutaraw to d
Hrcry should be Immerttetefr reported to the
flBoe ec pBOucewB.
TUIPBOHX MAUI Mi.
Official vaper or Clatsop oounty and
the 017 of Astoria.
r4
, r. WIATHtR, y rrcv
, Western Oregon . and Washmg-
ton Fair; slightly cooler.
lr Eastern Oregon, Washington
- and Idaho Fair and continued
. wand.
ALL GRINGO TALE.
. Admiral Robley D. Evans, U. S. N.,
"Fighting Bob" of Valparaiso fame, the
best marine scrapper afloat and one of
the ablest commanders in the world,
declares we will have no war with
Japan. That settles it. When this fight
ing son of Columbia takes such a tack
as that, there is nothing more to be
said. He said this thing a ter he had a
confab with his old Japanese chum,
Admiral Yamainoto, who has just ar
rived in New York from Europe, and
they settled the whole business between
them, to the everlasting peace of both
countries. What more do the Gringoes
want! '
If our war policies were left in a
larger measure to the men of the nation
who have the fighting to do, there would
be less war talk and far less war,
though it goe without saying, that
when war did come, it would be abso
lutely justifiable and fought to a
finish. The Gringos of all countries are
the bane of peaceful nations. They
are the war-makers and delight in the
occupation and generally engineer it on
some hypothesis of commercial advant
age, raising all issues as they are
seeded and forcing the hand of govern
ment by indirect methods.
The war talk of We in this coun
try has never been justified for a mo
ment and no one yet knows how, or
where or when it started. It simply
rose to the surface and was avidly
grabbed by a lot of irresponsible people
who made the text of it a wolf-cry for
the hour, without cause justification or
accountability; and this is the Gringo
rule the world over. But when Bob
Evans doesn't see a chance for a fight,
there is no fight coming. He's an au
thority of reliable sort.
fact, advising the higher court, indirect
!y, of course ,to ignore the constitution
at this particular time and in this par
ticular instance, as impracticable and of
no immediate avail In the construing of
thU issue which has been submitted.
Ordinarily the Portland Oregouian Is
a' great paper and docs iU work along
lofty and acceptable lines and is appre
ciated: but for once .at least, it has
stooped immeasurably low, and has per
mitted the use of a policy of indirection
and submergence utterly iforeign to it
caste and calling. And however the
case shall come from the supreme court,
the contemptible" attempt to influence
that court in the matter, will never be
forgotten nor forgiven by the people in
volveA
The Astorian, of this city, has been
fifank in its contention against the
pas-age and permanent effectiveness of
this wretched Catch-penny law and has
said just what the people here thought
of it, unconstitutionally and all else, and
has fought it openly and honestly, edi
tonally and otherwise from the hour it
first heart) of it, and this paper has
nothing to take back. The Oregonian,
on the contrary, wary, negligible, and
consciously wrong, in all its dealings
with the law, has done that which in
rokes the forfeiture of its own self-
respecting writers; it has fought dis
honorably and ha been caught in the
act I
AL FRESCO VERSUS FORMALITY.
This city and county yesterday fur
nisbed an instance in the social history
of the locale that should be eagerly
eized upon by all lovers of the artistic
and who hunger for a change from the
formal edicts and conventions that are
followed so religiously. It was the al
fresco wedding of a happy young couple
of Clatsop in the apple-orchard of the
bride's country home. It was done out
in the open, in the warm sunshine, next
to nature in her homeliest, yet appeal
ing, guise and was a source of free and
lelightful experience to all who had the
good fortune to be present. The idea
a beautiful one and should be con
served. No home wedding can compare
with it in beauty, comfort, and happy
suggestiveness, and the marvel lies in
he infrequent application of the idea.
The same idea was used in this city a
eason or so ago, when the lawn of a
rose garden was used by an Astoria
amily as the scene and setting for the
wedding of one of its lovely daughters
and those who shared the ' festivifies
will never forget the charming exper
iences of the day and hour. We can
well afford to turn to the al fresco
means of carrying out the social phase
our existance far oftener than we
ilo, since iformality is becoming stilted
nd exacting to the point of sacrificing
beauty, interest and comfort, a condi-
ioit impossible under the freer and
impler resort to the outdoor plan.
There is something heartier and hap
pier and sweeter in the doing of things
with the sun or the stars as witnesses
and avouchers.
0
MORE WAR TALK!
Ke Tsuzuki Says there is a
General Misunderstanking
AMERICAJAPAN'SFIRSTFRIEND
Mr Tsuruki Points To Several Acts Of
Friendship In The Past As Evidences
Of The Friendly Feeling Existing Be
tween The Two Countries,
PECULIAR SITUATION.
Harriman Thinks Be May Test
Matter Of Carrying Coal.
The
A SUBMERGED POLICY.
Ever since the text and terms of the
Port of Columbia law (passed under
duress by the last legislature), were
first bruited outside the Oregonian office
of Ed. Wright, the author and sponsor
of the fraudulent measure, that great
paper has followed a covert style and
limp method in its treatment of the bill
and the law and never once ha it beau
editorially declared honesty safe and
applicable in that paper. B ma con
ceived in the interest of a given few at
the metropolis, the ship-masters, who
had to have something to meet the
tremendous changes in the commerce of
the Columbia basin inseparable from
the coming hither of James J.' HTJ1,
with his splendid water-level road down
the Columbia from Pascoj and Mr.
Wright was deputed to do something to
save the situation, and he did it.
Now that the bill has passed into the
realm of the supreme court and is liable
to be very literally overhauled and per
haps absolutely ousted on the score of
its unconstitutionality, the Oregonian
hag been busy of late writing and print
ing a series of editorials, vague in their
application to the ordinary reader but
plain enough and trenchant, to the peo
ple who are honestly opposing this dis
honest measure, replete with all man
ner of cunning suggestion along the
line of waiving the constitution where
it conflicts with the necessities of the
present day, ignoring its terms when
those terms baffle the purpose of a
deeply interested group Qf citizens, re
vising and re-reading the great docu
ment and construing it in the light of
existing demands for its reversal, in
NEW YORK, July 11. Edward II.
Harriman ,in an interview published to-
lay, has something to say about the
proposal to carry coal from this sea
board to San Francisco in foreign bot
toms, which was advanced in his behalf
I by J. W. Jungen the representative at
the inspection of the' Morgan liner Cre
ole on Thursday.
"I bad no idea that the statement
would be spread so 'far and wide as it
has been," said Mr. Harriman. However,
my point is this: Why should I not
send coal around Cape Horn in foreign
ships when the government intends to
do the same thing? consider the mater
squarely. Here's the United States
government with a steamship line thor
oughly American meaning my own
available for coal carrying but instead
of patronizinz this American line, the
government goes ahead in opposition and
engages foreign bottoms,
"Isn't it a peculiar situation? Why
should I not make a test of this matter!
I think that perhaps I shall."
NEW YORK, July 11. Keirok Tsu
iiiki, a Japanese statesman of cabinet
rank, and Ambasador Plenipotentiary
of his country to the Hagge conference
is quoted at length in the Herald today
In a special cable dispatch on the pre
vailing reports regarding the relations
of Japan and the United States. Mr.
Tsuziki, in replying to the Herald's
Hague correspondent, has the fullest
confidence of his country and what h
says may be taken as reflecting the
the views of Ministeria loflkials and in
telligent Japanese sentiment.
Iu beginning his statement, Mr. Tsu
ziki says there must lie a great misun
derstanding somewhere.
"Of all the couutrics in the world,"
he said, "the United State is the very
last Japan seeks any trouble with. Jap
an is a very young nation among the
family of nations. Y'our.g nations like
ourselves are full of sensibility and
deeply seu-ible as to those who have
been our friends iu our struggles and to
those who have Ih-cu our enemies. Now,
ot all 011 best friends nave been the I
United States. That she was the one
power that gratuitously returned to us
her share of the Simconosaki indemnity
is known and impressed upon every
school boy iu Japan.
We remcnibet with gratitude that
Ameriiw was the first country to recog
nize our claims to extra territoriality.
"We remember that during the last
war, when we were engaged iu a titanic
and supremo struggle, the entire sym
pathy of the United tSates was with us.
It laid a deep impression on us as Ame
rica will find in the future.
."The understanding between our re
spective governments is perfect so it is
I most firmly believe between intelli
gent people in both countries."
In reply to a question regaining the
sending of an American fleet to the
Pacific, Mr. Tsuzuki said:
"I say without hesitation that Japan
would look upon the cruise with the
idea t hat no Letter lime than the pie'
sent could be cho-en jn-t when the two
governments are in most perfect ac
cord." Admiral Shiiiiamtira who was with the
Ambassador, when the statement was
made, the correspondent said, coincided
entirely with Mr. Tsuzuki's views.
Have You AnyRea
state
FOR SALE?
I If You Have, Come and See Us
w
Waat
,o I 1
It
We have customers for Astoria
City Property, Warrcnton and.
Seaside Property, Dairy Lands.
Farm Lands, Logged-off Lands,
and Timber Lands
western
fi
el
0.
Office formerly occupied by The F. N. Clark Co., 495 Commercial Street i
CHARGED WITH HOMICIDE.
INVADE SOUTH AMERICA.
NEW YORK, July 11. The first large
party of American tourists to invade
South America has sailed under the aus
pices of a tourists agency. During their
tour, which will occupy 99 days ,the par
ty will visit Brazil, Argentina, Nicara
jruay, Falkland Islands, go through the
Straits of Magellan to Chile, to Peru,
Bolivia, Ecuador and then to Panama,
and across the isthmus to New York by
way of Jamaica.
FOR CLOSE RELATIONSHIP.
PARIS, July 11. The St. Petersburg
correspondent of the Journal says: The
object of the meeting between Emperor
William and Emperor Nicholas which
will take place during the Autumn, is to
discuss a closer relationship between
Russia, Germany and ths United States,
United States Authorities Finally Suc
ceed In Running Down Captain.
SAN FRANCISCO, July 11. C'ai.tuin
Chrmtian J. Klingcnberg, master of the
gasoline fishing schooner Olga, for whom
the United States authorities have been
searching for nearly a. year to arraign
him for murder, has been captured and
will be brought to this city it'or trial
in the United States Circuit Court. ,
A telegram was received today by As
sistant United States District Attorney
McKinley from United States Marshall
Powell, at Nome,- Alaska, to the effect
trfat Powell had Klingcnberg under ar
rest and would start with him at once
for this city.
The indictment under which the pris
oner will be tried for hie life charges
him with having shot and killed Jack
son P. O. Paul, his chief engineer with
a rifle on October 10, 1905. Frank Mil
ler, Frank Carlson and George Johnson,
members of bis crew, are detained in the
Alameda County jail as witnesses for
the government.
Constipation.
For constipation there is nothing quite
10 nice as Chamberlain's Stomach and
Liver Tablets. They nlway produce a
pleasant movement of the bowels with
out any disagreeable effect. Price, 25
cents. Sample free. Frank Hurt and
leadii.g druggist.
SHORT TALKS BY
L. T. COOPER.
FINANCIAL
COLUMBIA TRUST COMPANY
Astoria Savings Dank Building.
Portland Offices . C0110I1 Building.
SLEEPLESSNESS.
General Real Estate, Investment and Trust Business.
! , Property Cared for. Rentals and
l Insurance.
MM. OIO. WlliSU
Take the Postmaster's Word For It.
Mr. F. M. Hamilton, , postmaster at
Cherryvale, Isd., keeps also a stock of
general merchandise and patent medi
cines. He says: "Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy is stand
ard here in Its line It never falls to give
satisfaction and we could hardly afford
to be without it." For sale by Frank
Hart and leading druggists.
TOTAL RECEIPTS OF SPORTS.
NEW HAVEN, Conn., July lO.-Tbe
financial report of the Yale Financial
Union covering receipts and expendi
tures of the four major sports at Yale,
Baseball, football, track athletics and
boating, shows for the final year ended
September 1, 1906, total receipts $103,219
and a profit over expenses, counting
payment 5f a boat club mortgage and
other payments, of $18,807.
Do yon know what makes people lay
awake and toss and roll about at night? ,
Doctors tell yon
there are various ;
causes, I tell you
It's stomach
trouble. I know it
becsuse I've seen
thousands oi eases
and watched them,
A stomach that
is over-crowded
with undigested,
decaying food mat
ter effcots every or
gao of the human
body. It causes
nervousness, headaches, constipation,
Impure blood, poor circulation and dulls
the mind. It makes one restless and un
easy. When your stomach is working
right you feel right. You sleep well and
you eat well.
People eome to ma day after day and
tell me they can't rest after eat'ng.
They have a dull headache. At ,nigbt
they go to bed simply because they are
exhausted. ; They catch lew cat naps
and get up in the morning feeling as woro
out as they did before.
I have recommended Cooper's New
Discovery, a regular diet, regular habits
and invariably these same people come to
me afterwards and tell me they feel much
better because they eat well and sleep well.
Herewith is a sample.
A letter I received from Mrs. Geo,
Weisel, 1121 Providence Road, Scrsnton,
Pa., saysi
"I suffered for three years from atom
ech trouble, inactive liver and rheuma
tism. Everything I ate disagreed with me
end I lay awake night after night. I had
no pleasure in life and could scarcely do
my work about the house. I heard from
neighbor of Cooper's New Discovery
and I bought two bottles of it. It helped
me right away. Now I have a good ap.
Setite and never suffer from indigestion,
sleep well and awake refreshed. I want
to thank you from the bottom of my heart
for what this medicine has done for me."
F. N. CLARK, Pres. J. A. LEE, Vlce Pres.
O. L, FERRIS, See. TrtM.
The Cooper medicines have larger
sale than any medicine on the market.
Our customers spealc highly of them.
Charles Rogers
First National Bank of Astoria, Ore.
ESTABLISHED 1884k
Capital $100,000
1. Q. A. BOWLBY, President,
O. 1. PETERSON, Vice-president
rtlANK PATTON, Oashier.
J. W, GARNER, Assistant Cashier,
Astoria Savings Bank
Capital Paid In (IMWi Surplus end Undivided Profile WMXA
Transact a Qeneral Banking Business, ; Interest Paid on Tims beposltal
m Tenth 8bet,
A STOMA, OREGON
In LEATHER
JL Al tai ,ApE,
Largest assortment in city.
ASTORIA LOCAL CARDS
30 different views. vSeal photos, hand colored, 2Jfor 5c, or
50c for complete set of 30, These are the finest local cards
on sale. See the window.
E. A. HIGGINS CO.,
MU8I0 BOOKS STATIONERY