Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1907)
ran..- u LOG 111 i Mm h&hh MD; COAT HAVE ARRIVED Three months before Mr. Morse decided to go out of business, and before this GREAT CLOSING-OUT SALE was even thought of, an order was placed for $5,000 worth of nice, nobby Fo.II suits and coats for Ladies and Misses. These goods are how in, and they are a splendid line, the best that the eastern manufacturer can ; produce, including ALL THE LATEST PATTERNS AND COLORS. These Goats and Suits have been put in with the other lines, and will be sold the same as if they were a part of the original stock, and ARE YOURS AT EASTERN COST . This is something unheard of before; New Fall Coats and Suits, at the beginning of the season, at eastern dost, and that means a saving of about one-half on the purchase price. Don't Tail to come in and see these lines before you purchase elsewhere. All other lines still being sold at from 20 to 50 per cent discount until closed out. Come Monday and have the first selection OF THESE NEW GOODS V i , o H ' I K . .. ' . X X x I i x I X X - i x FACES FINE OF jjo,ooo. Southern Pacific Accused o( Violating Texas Anti-pass Law. OALVFJSTON. Sept. St. Tha flint vinlntinn of the anti-pas law recently HAS BRIGHT'S DISEASE. Despite Reports the Ex-Prcsident Critically III I PLANS $1,000,000 CAR LINE. it Elkini Company fp Install Trolley Ser vice From wheeling to Pittsburg. NKW YORK. Sot. 21.-"Mr. Clove land in a verv sick nwn, He lias been WHEELING. W. Va., Sept. 21- United Stati Senator IS. B. Klkins, the Southern confined to Ills home for several weeks. iolo,u'1 UW' 0. Kerns'. ex-Senator viiactcd are charged to raolllo Railroad and If the penalties are (with the exception of a few nhort drives enforced to the limit, the line will, in company with a trained nurse. This mount to $230,000, and the aentenr ha enabled the family to keep the aer of w vera I ollU'lali of the railroad to the ! lousncss of his condition from the pub jieninienUry. lie." This statement va made today The charge. Is Imscd upon the trans; 'by a close friend of the ClevehinJ fain portntlon of negro utrlke, breaker froiiqjly. A to tlie nature of the ailment various imints In the state to Calves-' f rom which Cleveland Is suffering this ton, where the Southern Pacific dock- workers are on a strike. Several car load of Imported, workers were shipped across the slate, to many of whom were issued passes, while the others were transported free under agreement and f'd while en route. Organised labor is, behind the prose, tlon, and It Is agreed that several see tions of the anti-pasg law have ben violated. The maximum flue is $5000 for each pass and the maximum penl tentiary term is two vent. The comnnnv contended . that the strike breakers were railroad 'employees, ' but the men made nITldftvits showing they had been hired to work for the frtenmship company, loading vessels on the docks. There are 200 sopurate charges agnlnt the several railroad of ficials. TWO DIE IN WINE VAT. Italian Goes to Death Trying to Save Fellow Worker. FRESNO, Oil., Sept. 21. Alex Franco and Pamlno Asborno, two Italians em . ployed in the Italian-Swiss Winery at . JCIngsburg, were suffocated in a wine vat this afternoon. Asborno, in company with a man named John Ncooi, ww. ordered by Franco to go into the big vat and wash out the Interior. ' When th men went to enter the vat, they neglected to take the usual pre caution of lowering a lighted candle to the bottom. Soon dies for help were licai'd and Nocol crawled out, almost overcome with the fumes and gasping that Asborne was asphyxiated. Franco Immediately prepared to enter the vat. Franco was bogged by the cellar boss not to trust his life to the fate lying within the little black hole, but he was obu Tate and went in. Neither man ever came dUt alive, ) friend stated that it was lTrighf dis ease, ncrompanictl by gout which has already aireeted his lower limb above the knees timl has kept him confined to his lied practically for the past two 'or three weeks. These ailments have been further complicated by troubles from which the ex-presideut has been a sufferer for ninny years. FOUND AFTER ELEVEN YEARS KANSAS CITY, Sept. 20.-Graoe Old ley, the daughter and heir of William J. Old ley, an old stage line driver, who died In Montana in 181)0, has glieen located here lyfter a search, of 11 yenrs. Cidley operated through the Wyoming hills In the eighties. When he died he left his estate to his child, whom he had not seen since the day her mother deserted hiin, when Grace was a baby. Grace Gidley now is the wife of Charlrt T, Dcnew. a Kansas City painter. The es- . . . x . tnte to which she has fallen Heir is made up principally of reality In Billings, Mont. Henry Gasaway Davis, of New York, and young Elkins, of New York, have secured a charter for a trolley line through the counties of Taylor, Hjii bonr and Randolph in West Virginia to lie connected with the Morgantown, Fairmont and Mannington line which is to lie extended to Wheeling and then run directly to Pittsburg. The new road will open a trolley ser vico in the most valuable sections of West Virginia nd Pennsylvania. The road will cost close, to $1,000,000 and will make a' trolley line worth five times intestinal that much. Mr. Davis eUited that he intended to 'make it the biggest electric car line in the -world.. Among the important cities in the interior to be connected are Grafton, and Klkins. the latter the home of Sen ator Klkins, Davin and Kerns. The name of the new company is the Klkins Light 4 Power Co., and the chief olliecis will be located at Klkins. MIDDIES IN HOT FIST FIGHT. Solomon EndeJ, Taunted With Being a ' Hebrew, Beats James S. Spore. ANNAPOLIS, Md. , Sept. 21,-The Naval Academy authorities are in pos session that a hotly contested fist fight between Midshipman James S. Spore of West Hay City. Mich., and Solomon Kndel, of Lake Charles. I.a., took place about a week ago and that Spore had hi nose broken and received other in juries. ' He was in the hospital until this morning, when he was restored to duty Hoth are members of the same class, the second, so the affair has nothing to do with hazing and class feeling.. The origin was understood to be "because of some taunt directed against Endel, who is a Hebrew. As the fight ws of a personal nature and not a clas litatter, the authorities are not likely to deal severely with the participants, ' x ttttrtiat I i 1 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 IM 1 1 1 M SENDS CAPITALIST TO JAIL STEAMER KILLS WHALE. BAD TRAIN WRECK AVERTED. 'OHTII YAKIMA, Sept. 20. Train No. 2, from Seattle, met with an acci dent west of 'here last night tit Stam pede. A freight train was pulled up Vn the siding and the track was left open, and the passenger train ran right on the top of the freight, , The train was run ning slowly at the time, and nobod.r ws badliy hurt. The freight cars were piled up, and a quantity of wheat distributed to the fourwind. .The passengers had a haking up, and one man was out by a suit case being thrown upon him. The accident delayed the train six hours. NKW YORK, Sept. 21. .V big whale got much the worst of it was killed in fact in a head-on collision Sent. 5 with tlii Italian steamship Re D'ltali which docked today after an otherwise uneventful - voyage , from Genoa and Naples. Whether the leviauth rammed the steamship Intentionally or simply was not looking where he was going the officers iwd no means of knowing. The steamship suffered no damage , though the( shock of the collision was notic able and caused much excitement among the passengers. Among them were Agent Cesaie Conti, of the Lloj'i San bido and Prof. Guiseppe Grosso. too KNOTS aN HOUR CLAIMED British. Admirality Considering Revolu tionary Marine Engine. - LONDON,1 cpt. 21. The Tribune print kt&tement that the British ad- mirality la now considering a new form of marine engine, which th inventor, F. fla't man, claims will revolutionize the navigation of the world. It resembles the turbine, with im portant differences. It is claimed that it could dm'e a torpedo boat 100 miles an hour.. Mississippi Court Also Imposes $500 Fine For Ignoring Injunction. GRKENVILLE, Miss., Sept. 21. For the first fame in the history of Missis sippi, the president of a corporation was sentenced to jail today for violating an injunction granted by a state court, when Chancellor Percy Bell in Ch ambers here fined S. Cnslleman, of Belzoni, $500 1 and sentenced him to jail for one week. .Mr. Castlemau took an appeal to the supreme court and this arre'ts his sen tence. His offense consisted in com pleting the tracks of the Delta Southern Railroad at Belzoni across the tracks of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railroad to the Belzom oil mill, of which he is president, in the face of an injunction, WHOLESOME SUMMER DRINKS Grape I Catawba Juice Concord f NON-ALCOHOLIC AMERICAN IMPORTING CO. 1 589 Commercial Street , . THE G EM1 C. F. WISE. Prop. Choice Wins, Liquon Merchant Lunch From and Cigars . n:3o . m. to 1:30 f jl Hot Lunch at all Houra f s$ Centa ' Corner Eleventh and Commercial ASTORIA OREGON REDMOND MAKES PREDICTION. Says Liberals Will Present Full Home Rule Programme Next Year. . . . i ... ; r . . ' DUBLIN, Sept. 21. Speaking at Longfoni today, John Redmond, the leader of the Nationalist party, predict ed that a general election would be held next year. Mr. Redmond said the Liberal party would appear to the electorate on that occasion with a full home rule pro gramme. WHEN YOU WANT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT Write us, we're here for that purpose " The Work We Do Anything in the electrical Business. Bell's House Phones! msiae wiring ana r mures instauca ana Kepi in repair. x We will be glad to quote you prices. OUR PRICES WILL DO THE REST . STEEL & EWART 428 Bond Street ' Phone Mala 3881