The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, September 24, 1907, Page 3, Image 3

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    TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 14. 1907.
THE MOHNING ASTORIA, ASTOHIA, OREGON.
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You can enjoy the most elegant bill
of fare in Alitiki just u well u In
the greatest metropolis.
Preferred Stock
Canned Goods
tuit Wkwtr Um Mt wt Inn
t -
bring to your table th molt delicate
.......... 1. 1 .1.. n...
Nut tpritttv. f'alifiiriiU. Orrunit. tr. Sr'
Each 11 gathered at In tout, wherever i?
n t niiuvrn III" pv'Ii ami is
nocked right titers, only thou ol linn,
Left quality, in lili, rnoti wid veg.
table being excepted for tin Pre
ferred Stock UbcL. iism wuy with
fruits giilheied
with the dew
on end imiked
la quickly and carefully that the garden flavor li pre- '
erved. At an example of elegant diihci, eay to
terve In Alaska aa New York, try thin
iteauora iianrf.
IrtU I lti utwa ulkUl UN o tlrnrr ( tl Dm tout froa .''
Cil(tW Mark ntvtMMM. ) TnlMikllu ikU( 41k,
WUb tank? u4 Mm Mi (.
U11 PnJtrrtJ 5br 04 iarautJfrM ytar Crutr,
AU.M UtWU, Vaalmt Oraeeri, FORTURD, ORMOB, 0,1. A.
INVENTS - TELEPOST
i J-
Great Inventor to Revolutionize
Message Sending.
WILL BE QUICK AND CHEAP
Patrick Delany, Author of Many Ira
Provemeats, But Little Known to the
Public, to Put New Syetera in Um
During Year tool.
UNIVERSAL
Stoves
and
Ban
ges
Every one Guaranteed
We Buy them in Car Load Lots
i The Foard & Stokes Hardware Go
Incorporated
Sacosestrs U Ifcul ft ttakM Ce. T
IMIMIM
M I M
THE TRENTON
First-Class Liquors and Cigars
I 602 C-bmmercial Street.
Comer Commercial and 14th. Astoria, Oregon. I
run unit iihi
rnTAirautx.
First National Bank of Astoria, Ore.
KKTAIILIS1IEI) 1M1.
Capital $100,000
. Q. A. BOWLBY, President. rtlANK PATTON, Oaahkr.
a L PETERSON. Vlw Presldsnt. J. W. GARSER, A'!stnt Cashier.
Astoria Savings Bank
ra.pt! Paid ID IIOOJOHi ' Burplna ana Cnalvlfled: Proritt IM.000
Transit sGenemi Banking Biutnes, Interaat Paid on Time iMpoalU
FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM
Eleventh and Duane streets. ASTORIA, OREGON.
D
The Kind Y011 Have Alwftj-s Botiffht, and which lins been
In use) for over 30 yeara, line borne tho signature of
' and has been nmdo under his per
iytf Bonnl sitpon lnlon since its infancy.
3j j-CtfC4M Allow no one to deceive you iu this.
All Counterfeits Imitations and " Jnnt-as-ifood" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children Experience against Experiment.
Castoria Is a liarmloss substittfte for Castor Oil, Pare
goric Drops and Soothlnsr Syrups. It Is Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
..and allays Feverishness. ' It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation .
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, glvfaig healthy and natural sleep. ;
4 The Children's PaJioeea--The Mother's Friend. , ji ' f ;
. f t.4..e I ' i i v . J i 'i ' M ,;
GENUINE CASTOR I A AYS
... n .a tV . ",. 4
The M You Have Always BougM
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TXI OINTAUM OOKMNY, TT MURPIAV TKClT, NW VORK WH1,
In a country o fertile of grrat in
vemmna anil ciiantcterizd by pro-
greae In the arte and avience which
wnfti atfltlatlti and ilneee proph
y, even a great worker in the field of
orlliiitl lnv"'tlgation and experiment
may well etcape puhlie attention. Con
temporantoua apulauae la monopollaed
by tboae who keep themtelvea in the
.pt light by premature announcement
of thing "almoitt cmip!iledj" it nel
ther come to or i deilred by the real
geniuac who, like the elder Agaaeix,
are "too buy to Ttiake money" in com
merclai explbiUtlona, end wno will not
turn their worfc over to other tor thi
purpone until it I fully completed and
proven. A few word about one of thi
elaa of great Inventor wboe name i
already known from the Atlantic to the
I'auitie. well a abroad, will be 01
intereat a a contribution to American
Induttrial achievement.
In hi cottagf at Nantucket, aur
rounded by aeveral tract of aclentiilc-
ally eulttvated farm lande, amf dl-
tlngtilhed from othT' local farm by the
mat of the Di'Iany wirelr nation,
by telegraph wirca running in varloua
direction and by laboratory building
and eleotriral appliance which a farmer
would hardly know how to utilize), the
aummer vkitor who come properly ac
credited will find Patrkk B. Delany. He
i a large fmmed, good-natured gentle'
man, aomewhat abatraoted and with no
time and inclination for the grutifica
lion of hiUmlve curiosity, but affable
and communicative to thoe w!oe er
rnnd excute their vUH. He wa born
in King" County, Irelan.1. in 1845 and
came to thi country in 1854, and i a
good American in everything except na
tivity. With limited advantage of ele
mentary education and from boyhood
under the neemity of eelf-uepcndcnee.
he (ought employment at 10 a a tele'
graph operator, and aoon gained auch
.peed and accuracy a to aeeure for iiim
at 18 the reponible position prea
dmpatch receiver at Worcheater, Ala,
He wa able to translate accurately
when running from 13 to 20 word be
hind the tender. The diflicultr of thi.
will be appreciated by anyone who ha
tried it. At 20 he wa made manager
at Albany of the New York' and Buffalo
wire! later be became chief operator
at Philadelphia, assistant tupenntendent
of the Southern and Atlantic Telegraph
Company, and superintendent of the Au
tomatic Telegraph Company. Hie rare
menUl endowment meanwhile brought
him opportunities in the field of jour
nnlixm to which he wa for a time at
tractcd: but hi chief Intrest wee in
telegraphy, and to thi he returned with
renewed energy and devotion, and clung
to it when his friend and associate.
Thoma B. Edison, gaye up telegraphy
to pursue the line which afterward
brought him fame. Since 1880 Mr, Del
any has made many inventions of first
importance.
The first of these to atract inter-
nntionl attention was the Synchronous
Multiplex system of telegraphy, adopt
ed by the British government end ex
tensively applied in the Postal Tele
graph System. By this invention six
uiesnsit'S nre hcnt Miuuitaneously over
one w ire easily ns one might be.
The six '"first class circuits" lo each
line created by this Invention, may be
worked all in one direction or in oppo'
site directions, thus ditTrentiatlng it
widely from the quadruples system
which is limited to two messages sent
simultaneously lu oppositite direction.
The British rights on Mr. Delany's
multiplex system were ' purchased from
him by that government for a large
sum of' money. That it was not em
ployed by this country is an interesting
and illuminating commentary on the re
luctance of a vested monopoly to recog
nize value in anything it doe not orig
inate and .control for supression.
As an Ins'tnnce of the meaning of the
name Delany in foreign countries brief
reference may be made to the recent
visit of Mr. John Gavey, at that time
at the head of Great Britain' Depart
ment of Telegraphy. " He had never met
Mr. Delany prior, to his visit to the
latter' New York city office,. 228 Fifth
Avenue. After making himself known,
he most cordially grasped Mr. Delany by
the band and stated that it wa a. mat
ter of considerable importance''-' to him
to personally meet a man whose name
was so well known and honored through
out the clsilllncd world. Then followed
a request, which was granted, to wit
ness, in operation, the Delany automat
lo rapid system of telegraphy.
Mr, Dekny enjoys a comfortable in
come from property purchased since the
Qownmetit U 1883. Tbl fact (in ad
dition telng free from tb dlitremdng
wck or mean to often found oppres
sing Inventors) ha enabled him to de
velop his idea and perfect the later
invention emlnatinu from hi fertile
brain to the hfght obtainable degree
before placing them before the public.
Mr. Delany I now preparing patent
Jtfr in Urge number, dealing with
new and important problem in connee-
nretlon with wireless, automatic rapid
telegraphy,- and other kindred inven
tion.
Ader disposing of the Synchronous
ytem, Mr. Delany next turned hi at
tention to cable nigmtlling and several
year ago (ucceeded iu sending a mee-
ag through the old Atlantis cable
from Newfoundland to London with an
ordinary Morse key a feat never be'
fore accomplished or deemed possible.
An invention of great value was a cable
for underground transmission of elec
trical current Immune to induction,
which is lu extensive ue. An import
ant fact in connection with these anti
induction cable patent is revealed in
the formation of the weli known Stan
dard Underground Cable Company which
bus been for many years engaged in the
work of utilizing to the fullest extent,
for tb benefit of the public the marvels
of thi particular invention. Hi in
veutione of greater or let importance
are too numerous to catalogue and have
been the basl of more than one nun
dred and fifty United State patent.
Hi work in the field of eyncbronou
multiplex telegraphy filled Mr, Delany
witii a desire which became the con
trolling ambition of hi life, that of
developing a ytem of practical postal
telegraphy. By this won not meant
merely a ervice controlled by the gov
ernment, but one so rapid and cheap,
and so tittle dependent upon individual
rfkill in transmitting and sending that
it should supplement, and to a great
degree upplant, butoe correspondence
by mall The condition precedent to
iKce in thi application were numerous
and arbitrary, but after many year he
met them in a perfected ytem of
automatic rapid telegraphy, which will
be known Che world orer as the tele
pot. Up to the present time thi is
the crowning achievement of Mr. Del
any' career a an inventor; although it
i yet to be seen whet he will have
accomplished when hi experiments (un
like those of the Marconi, Da Forest
or other system) with wireless tele
graphy, now in progres at Nantucket,
are completed. Working in hi own way
with kite, before hi wireless station
was erected, he wa one of the first to
receive whet we not Intended for Win
ai all, the official news that the Japan
ese fleet under Admiral Togo had smash
ed the Russian fleet and broken the
power of the Czar in the East beyond
repair. But thst, as Kipling would ay,
ia another story.
The automatic rapid Is now a per
fected system, complete In every detail.
'Hie message is written on a continuous
ribbon or tape of paper as rapidly as
an operator can write with a typewriter.
Anyone sufficiently familiar with the
standard keyboard to "pick out" the
letter he wants, may write hi own
mcnge. It is recorded in a series of
perforation. This is ent to the trans
mitting office and run through a ma
chine which puts it through the wire at
the rate of one thousand words a min
ute. No ikill in telegraphy is required
for transmission, consequently nothing
depends upon the intelligence of the
sending operator. Obviously a message
sent at such a speed could not be taken
in the usual way, by sound reading.
So the receiving device is made equally
automatic. Another machine, receives
the message plainly recorded in Morse
characters, which nre easily transcribed
by anyone familiar with the Morse al
phabet, a matter of a few. days study.
The language in which the message was
originally written, if the Arabic char
acters can be used, and whether the
meaning is expressed intelligibly or in
the unrelated words of a core, are neg'
libile conditions. As long as the supply
of copy is maintained intelligence may
WARD'S TURKISH BATE3S
bM NEVER CLOSE I
339 Commercial Sti, ASTORIA, ORE.
The only Turkish' Batha, Rtia.
sian Tab and ' Shower Baths
First Class and Sanitary Night Accommodations
All Modern Conveniences that are Modern '
FRANK F. WARD, Proprietor
Phone Black 2233
Look for the Sign on Sidewalk
SCHOOL BOOKS AND
SCHOOL, SUPPLIES ARE
ALL HERE v
Exchange Your Old Books
E. A. HIGGINS COm
MUSIC ' BOOKS STATIOSEBT
- See. the Window:..,,
be automatically transmitted at the
rate of speed indicated, received nuto
matically at the same rate with no er
rors than those for which the senders
are themselves resonsible.
By this system one wire is equal to
seventeen wires used Morse 'quadru
ples, twenty-seven used Morse duplex
and sixty-eight used Morse simplex,
This permits telegraphic correspondence
to be conducted at a scale of charges
hitherto deemed impossible, and per
haps rightly so considering the groat
cost of the plant and the heavy opcrat
ing expenses of the established com
panies. Uhe unit charge of the new
service is'tcV be 25 eentj for 25 words,
any distance, with an additional five
cents for an additional ten words. This
development will begin early in 1008,
with the construction of a four-line sys
tem between New York and Chicago,
Its continental expansion will be as rap
id ae possible
i That Patrick Bernard Delany is on
of the greatest living inventors in the
field of, electrical inter-eommumcation
is admitted by experts in all countries.
In his unalterable policy of independ'
ence of the existing telegraph and tcle
ephone monopolies, he has formed alli
ances which assure this in perpetuity!
and tWat the additional fame which will
overtake hlin when las Telepost hae
put the telegraph system on the plane
of a real publio utility, which finds him
at "Derrymore, Nantucket, Massachu-
settes, in .hi vegetable garden or among
BATTEKIES
Astoria Hardware Co.,
113 12th St.
ASTORIA IRON WORKS
JOHN FOX, President
F. I BISHOP, Secretary.
Nelson Troyer, Vice-Pres. and Bupt.
ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK. Tree.
Designers and Manufacturers 01
THE LATEdT IMPROVED
Canning Machinery, Marine Engines 1 and Boilers
Complete Cannery Outfits Furnish J.
CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED Foot of Fourth truer
WHOLESOME
SUMMER
DRINKS
Grape Juice
Catawba Concord f
NON-ALCOHOLIC
tltSHlMSSlMeaMBsMSlsMSSSsSlSMSaWB
AMERICAN IMPORTING CO.
589 Commercial Street
THI
I OEM
- C. F. WISE. Prop. ' v ;
Choice Win, tiqnbrs ' Merchants Lunch From
11:30 a.m. to 1:30 A
and Cigars
Hot Lunch at all Honrs t Cents '
Cornsr Eleventh and Commercial I
WHEN YOU WANT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT
Write us, we're here for that purpose . . I
' Tlie Work We Do !
Anvthin? in the electrical Business.Bell's House Phones
Inside wiring and Fixtures installed and kept In repair.
we wiu pe giaa 10 quote you prices.
OUR PRICES WILL DO THE REST 1
STEEL & EWART ,:
jo t j oiMst . .. Phnnn Main flftt ' X
nig fruit tree is more than probable.
U MXMMOMm
(disposal of this invention to the British