Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 22, 1907)
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER n 1907. THE MORNING ASTOMAN, ASTORIA. OREGON. 9 Bartlett Pears i.oo per box Apples, 75c, 1,00, 1.35 Prunes and Peaches For Canning, ACME GROCERY 521 Commercial Street Phone Main A81 i-'t -;i r if .""(' is?.,' WARD'S TURKISH BATHS NEVER CLOSE 539 Commercial St., ASTORIA, ORE. The onjy Turkish Bathe, 'Rns slap Tub and Shower Baths First Class and Sanitary Night Accommodations All Modern Conveniences that are Modern FRANK F. WARD, Proprietor Phono Black 220.'! Look for liit)8ljpi 00 Sidewalk I THE TRENTON First-Class Liquors and Cigars 602 Commercial Street. X Corner Commercial and 14th. ASTORIA IRON WORKS JOHN FOX, Prldnt F. U BI8HOP, Secretary.,' Designers and Manufacturers 01 THE LAT&dT IMPROVED Canning Machinery, Marine Engines and Boilers Complete Cannery Outfits Furnished. COKRESPONnfNC.g SODCITED HW. of Vnnh Htwwt mm OWiA ALCOHOL 3 PBR OK NT. AMgeUiblePrrparatlonfirAs slrallailinlificfbodaiKlRM'itla iingllicSioiradisandBowlsi 1 1 'l"H X 'Wi- J1 Jffl PTVIS1 PrtimolcsDitfcsltonCkfiM nessandResirontalnsnelllw Opium.Morphine nrxMlaeraL NOT NARCOTIC. JtxMlfUtt jtoistStti ymrnytmiiam AncrTecl Remedy forConsflpa Hon, Sour Sloiiwh.Dlarrhon Worms jCMMikwnsJevmsu ncssaiulLossoFSmP. Facsimile Sijosmre of NEW Y0RK. i Exact Copy of Wrapper.' n III 9 i' m m ii ii v.. a mm mm m 'tuns ii , u t u u v ii m m ii 1l m W JL-UMA -a AA SMC , lWlU curlp any cse;'of Kidney, or Bladder Disease not beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. !?. T. Laruln, OwlDrug Store. 'I . ( V' , Astoria, Oregon. X Nelson Troyr, Vlcw-Pr. and 8upt ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK, TrMJk For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature tni ointur mmHwt, mw errr. the - (t$ Use y For Over Thirty Years WASHINGTON NEEDS Wants & Place Where Negro Troops Are Welcome. COMPANY RETURNING HOM RooMvtlt Interested In Waterway Amuemeit Over Canadian Riots President's Adviior on Literaturs Pott Other Capital "Dope." WASHINGTON, Sept. 22.'WANT' KD Location somewhere within the tor. der of llie United (ilitct where negro troop will be welcomed. Addro ''UN' CLB SAM, WAR DKPARTMEXT. WA81UNGTON. V. C" ThU adver tiwiuent uiy yet have to be inserted in the newspaper of the country by the military authorities of the United States, unlet tome community can be fount! that will welcome the black troop. The War Department l mrc hmsly disturbed over the Intern dis like ihown for the negro aokliera in all part of the country, and it k wr mined that titer shall be no repetition of the Brownsville affair. An ordor is sued thla week will bring home from the Philippine the twenty-fourth Infantry After canvassing the country and max ing careful note of the aentiment in different i.iarf'ri, the Department prac tically ha decided on stationing the regiment at Fort Ontario, N. V. It believed that le opposition will be met there than In any other section that could be scluctod, Under the law, four regiment in the regular military etab niMiicnt mum be made up or negro troopers. The men make excellent sol diet when there is fighting to be don, but they have not proved themsrlves to bo lamh in the piping times of peace, or while kept inactive in camp, If some patriotic American citizen can come forward with a plan for the eolu tion of the trouble be will earn the warm gratitude of the War Dcpart-nent Obviously nothing can be done by con great toward changing or modifying the law at the coming scsnion. Xegros have vote.. And vote are something to cut tivato on the eve of a national cam paign. It would w-oiii that the almi.iHra I tiou i taking the most decided itteps to stimulate inlent in the country in the iietion of water tnuiitportiition. President Itoonevelt goe on his trip down the. Mississippi river, from Keo kuk, Iowa, to Memphis, the latter part of this month, and will deliver an ad dress at the" Deep Waterway Oonven tion to In held in the hitter city. John ikrrett, director of the Hurean of Amer. lean Republic, stopped off at Chicago a da' op so ago to boom the question and point out the necessity that exists for getting the watcrtfay of the nited States in a preparedness to carry the greatly increased traffic that will tome as the result of the opening of the Panama Canal. According to Mr. Par- rett, once the Isthmian ditch is com plotcd, the value of products the South American republics will be purchasing from foreign countries will approximate I300.000.0W) a jwr. As the National Uiver & Harbors Congress all ft'ong has contended, the uitod States must be in a position to market Its goods in the cheapest transportation fashion, if it lioix's to capture any of this trade. lloth President Roosevelt and Mr. Bar rett addressed the organization at its last convention In this city, heartily en dorning its object, which is to induce the fedeiul government to expend not loss than $50,000,000 a year on river and harbor work, Vast as this sum is, it will only be one-tenth, of tho .yearly trade of the countries to the south of tho United States. . Otllial Washington is smiling behind Its hand. over the trouble .lohnny Bull Amis himself In us the result of the anti-Asiatic riots in Vancouver. With the race troubles in San Francisco and Bellingliam fresh in mentorv, it pleases your Uncle Sam to see sometliin hup pen that directs attention from its own shortcomings. Especially is this true when it i the ally of Japan. However, nothing but regret is expressed offi cially. Tlinb the fevling against all Asiatics is still strong on the pacific coast is proved by the reply of Governor (iillette, of California, to Chief Terrence V. Powderly, who asked the governor what clas of labor was needed in Cali- e t . iL- it , j 11. . . luriuii, i lie wage unercu aim ine na tionalitios preferred. Governor Gillette replied in substance that all Caucasian races would be welcomed, but that no Japanese need apply. He added that the time has come when many persons pre fer the Chinese to Japanese, as the better choice between two eviU. Thus it may be seen that- race troubles are Cures Bactactnq " Corrects Irregularities Do not risk having Bright'8 Diseawc ' i or Diabetes merely mouldering, and that tbey may burst forth' in further riot at any time. The administration I not exactly at ease over the situation. Announcement , in made this week bhat another Washington educator ha been honored, Ue Is professor of chem istry t the efiorge Washington Univer sity, aid be ha been selected aa chair' man of the Jury of CVmlcal and Al lied Product at the Jamestown Expo sition. The nlverslty it well repreentd on the various iurie at the big Vir- yinia fair. Dr. Truman Abbe, member of the faculty In the university De partment of Medicine, it expert on the exposition' Radium (Committee, while l)p. N. Monroe Hopkins, professor of Chemistry, Is chairman of the Jury on hlectrical Appliances. Dr. Hopkins, In- cidentally; 1 chief of the ele-.trical branch of the nited State Navy. It due largely to' the fact that so many government scientist are found on the faculty of the George Washington Uni versity, that the institution has been drawn upon by the Exposition author. itie for experts in the various bin aches !M'on,l the gup of the average tcien tlt or byman. The University it rap idly 'becoming recognized a the national graduate school because of it powerful faculty and the Immense amount of knowledge ttored In the government de partment and collections, to which it has octet. Indeed, it it now taking step for the collection of an endow ment fund aufflcient to carry ou; it ambition. Through an order of the Interstate Commerce Commission this week, the rates on wheat from Nebraska to the Pacific Coast terminals wa out sharply. The rate hat been 75 cent a hundred pounds; the commission rules that any thing over 05 cent ia excessive. The decision wa handed down n the case of the A. V. Poor Grain Co. against the Chicago, Burington and Quincy railway and others. One of the tubjecta likely to receive considerable attention f rom Congress at the next session U that of industrial education. From all parts of the coun try have come complaintt of the diffi culty of securing skilled mechanic. Many large employers of trained labor believe that the greatest menace to the continued commercial supremacy of the United Slates is the disappearance of the efficient and adapted craftsman to whom many labor-saving inventions have been due. This failure in the sup ply of high-class labor is attributed to the abandonment of the apprenticeship system and the omission to substitute for it any comprehensive plan of prac tical manual training. The Davis bill, introduced last winter, provided for ap propriation amounting to $4,000,000 for this purpose. This bill, with 'some al teration is likely to be urged upon the federal lawmaker again at the next session. The Citizens' Industrial Asso ciation, which is made up of represen tatives of employers, organized labor and the genearl public, is planning to take up this subject at,ti annual con- reuuon at ituwe creeic, ean m uetooer, with a view of recommending a sys tematic plan of legislative treatment by the law-making bodies of both the na tion and the states in providing for schools that will trun out young men equipped to enter the skilled trades. As tills convention is the largest gath ering of the year dealing exclusively with matters pertaining to labor and Fisher Bros. Company Sole Agents for Barbour's and Finlayson's Salmon Twine and Netting ! Hardware, Iron, Steel : : lery. Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Brass : : : Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass and Hardwood : : Grpceries I A Complete Line v Logger an4 Figftier 3rps. Cd4i 546-560 Bond' Streel Astoria. MHvH)HMHtHilMWMWWWHWri') contain reperentatlve of all claattt, it conclusion are likely to carry weight with the member of Congress. In the battleship Kan, the United States ha another splendid addition to it fighting strength, . The sister ship of the Kansas, the first-class battle ship Vermont, was tried out only last week and exceeded all expectations. The Kan sas was given her, speed trial this week and while not equalling the per formance of the Vermont, her test was declared to be altogether satisfactory, A glowing report wa received by the Navy Department from Captain Suth erland, president of the trial board, who was on board the ship during her speed trials, The ponderout big vessel made 17.81 knots with full power, and in her endurance test she steamed for twenty four hours at an average speed of 17 knot flat. Her gun trials were highly satisfactory awo, and altogether Kansas iia reason to be proud of the vessel that will bear her name. , A new phase of the strenuou life led by President Roosevelt ban been brought to light through bit (election of Dr. Maurie Francis Egan, the poet, to be minister to Denmark. Dr. Egan bat been known In Washington a the Pres ident's literary adviser, but the peculiar feature of these relations is that they have been maintained to a considerable extent by telephone. The President Is in reality a Bell subscriber, so was Dr. Egan until he left Washington afew weeks ago. Whenever President Roose velt took up a new book of any conse quence, particularly a piece of fiction or a collection of poems, he was accus tomed to call up Dr. Egan, then prof essor f Kngnsn Literature at one oi the schools of the eapitol, and ajk his opinion on it. Or if the President want ed a book he would inquire if the por f oisor could recommend one. "I had rather talk to Dr. Egan about books than to a dozen senators who were here placemen said President Roose velt not long ago. The two scholars had their last talk over the Bell lines just before the diplomat sailed from New York and when the President was staying at Oyster Bay. ,. Had Tetter For Thirty Yean. I have suffered with tatter for thirty years and have tried almost countless remedies with little, if any, lelief. Three boxes of Chamberlain's Salve cured me lt was a torture. It breaks out a littls sometimes, but aothing to what it used to do. D. H. Breach. Midland City, Abu Chamberlain's Salve is for sale by Frank Hart and leading Drugists. SaJlownen Transformed to Dusky Beauty A dark akin Iwmiw fmcnniti'nir vl when delicately soft, asderspreM QJ I with the ndiant flow which indi a'Ji I catcsahealthT. actireikin. Robert- ia ine keeps the skin refined in quality, 1 v7 1 keeptpowsfreefromdogguigwaits I I and stimulates the tiny capillaries to tal contribute the colorwhich charms ia VJ blonde and brunette alike, Robert j fa b certain protection against tsa, I jj I mi bum and freckles if applied bs- Spreads lilusn imperccptibls theea of gauze over skin surface, formings trudd stimulating and pretervmg a atlicale, lustrous beauty. BTniE and Ship Chand- x of Fishing, Cannery Mill Supplies Oregon J 1 XVs 1 Lams Baefc. ..,,,...fw, , " This Ii an ailment far which Cham berlain Pain Balm has proven special ly valuable. In almost svsry butane it afforda prompt and permanent relief. Luks LaGrangs of Orange, Mica, say of iti "After wing a pits tar and other remedies for thm weeks for a bad km btok, I purchased a bottl of Chamberlain's pals Bala, tad two ap plication effected a cure." Tot lala by Frank Hart and leading Draggiata. , School Shoes FOR The Billy Buster Steel Bot tom Shoes The -Shoe with a Sole that Don't Weir Out S. A. GMRE 543 Bond St opposite Fisher Bros. J. Q. A. BOWLBY, President O. I PETERSON, Vlce-Presklent FRANK PATTON, Cashier. j J. W. GARNER, Asst. Cashier. STATEMENT OF THB Astoria Sayings Bank at the close of huainesa, August 22, 1807. S RESONURCES. Loans and dis counts ....... .$738,850.33 County warrant. . 11,765.65 City warrants..... 13472JJ3 I761.788JI Bank building 61,31.1t Furniture and fix ture 9M7JU Real estate....... ; 10,00aM Cash on hand, and due from bank. . 841.06651 Total 11,084,234.21 iiABiirrrES. Capital paid in.... 1100.000.01 Surplus . . 65,000.06 Undivided profit... 17,737.41 Dividend unpaid.. - WtM DEPOSITS. Subject to check. ,(594,753.02 Time certificate., 27953.87 Demand certificates 26,669.91 Cashiers checks.... 901471W Total.......... $1,0843411 No Students No Cocaine, No Gas. 1 1 1: We will forfeit $1000 to any char itable institution for any Dentist who can compete with us in crown and bridge work, or teetn without plates. Pay no fancy fees until you have con sulted us. Our continued success in our many offices is due to the uni form high-grade work done by years of experienced operators. The prices quoted below are absolutely the best opportunity to get your money's worth which has ever been offered. We us nothing but the best ma terial. : Prices Until Sept. 30th Best Silver Fillings., 50c Platinum Fillings fi-oo Gold & Platinum Alloy FilUngs.$i.5 Gold Fillings. $ao to $5.00 S. S. White Layon Crown $5.00 Gold Crowns, best ask extra heavy $5.00 Bridgework, per tooth, best work.. $5 Best Rubber Plate, S. S. whit teeth $8.00 Aluminum-lined Plate $10 to $15 A binding guarantee given with all work for 10 years.. VEGETABLE VAPOR : Used only by us for Painless Extrac tion of teeth, 50c Read What Mrs. Jessie level Sayta, I had 12 teeth extracted by the use of Vegetable Vapor, absolutely pain less -the most pleasing effect and highly recommend the method. Yours truly. MRS. JESSIE LEVEL Lafayette, Oregon. NERVOUS PEOPLE. And those afflicted with heart weak ness can have their teeth extracted and filled without the least pais whatever. r? 1 Chicago Dental Parlors Ilprthwest Co. (tommarcial and nth, ! The tai-gesi. and best-equipped Dwa tai establishment in th Northwest. Seventeen offices in the United State. LADY IN ATTENDANCE. See that you are in th right offic ! Open Sunday, 9 to 2. 1