The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, October 01, 1907, Page 3, Image 3

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    wiWAT, octobes i,,i9o7. , , ffHE MORNING ASTOR1AN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
3
Ho StuAint No Cocalni, No Oat.
Mil
Wo will forfeit $1000 to any ehtr
Itabla Initltutloa (or any Dentlit who
oaa eomjwt with ut In nowa and
brldgo work, or tooth without plaki.
ry no fancy foot until 70a hv ooa
ulitd ui. Our continued, luocoso Is
our many oftteti U duo to tho uni
form blgh'grido work doa by jaara
Of oxporUnotd oparator. Tho priot
quoted below ara abolutly tho bot
opportunity to got jour uoaey'a
worth which hit ovor bow offer!
Wo uo nothing but tho bttt ma
Urlala, Prices Until Sept. 30th
Boat 8Um riUlngi oc
NaUanai rUUngi Iim
Gold Platinum Alloy rilllofa.liJis
Gold rilllagi m to lj.oo
S. 8. Wbito Uyoa Crown tj-oo
Gold Crown, boat sifc, aitrt
hoary .....oo
Brtdgowork, per tooth, boat work. ,lj
Boat Rubbor Flat, 5. S. want
tooth
Aluminum-lined Plato I10 to tj
A blading guarantoo glroa with all
work for 10 yoara.
VEGETABLE VAPOR
IVd only by u for Palaliii Iitrte-
tloa of teath, 50c
Boad What Mr. Jtaalo Itnl gaya.
I had 19 tooth oitraotod by tho uao
of Vgolablo Vapor, tbtoluUly pain
lei tha moat pleating rToot and
eighty rooomowd tho method. Your
truly.
MRS. JESSIE LEVEL.
Lafavette, Oregon.
NEBVODa PEOPLE.
And thoM afflicted with hnrt wk
,noia ta ban thtlr toath extraetad
and filled without tha laut pain
wbatoror.
Chicago Dental Parlors
Nortbwtit Cor. Commercial and nth.
Tho ttrgMt and boat-oqulppod Den
tal ettabuihinent in tho Northwoat.
Seventeen oflle In tho United State.
LADY IN ATTENDANCE. '
Bee that you are la tho right offloe.
Open 8unJay, 9 to 1
TEACH WHOLE BOY
Educate Deplorei Half Educa
tion of Children.
NOT FAMILIAR WITH TOOLS
Largo Gatheringi to b Hold to Con
alder Remedying How to EUucato
Young America to Adapt Hlmeelf to
Mumeroui Trade.
NEW YORK. 8ept. 30,-Wlthln the
m'xt two month two big gathering of
btnlnei men, educator, labor leader
and general cltlsena are to bo held to
dlMtu what l fat ooraing to be con
IJnrwil on of the in out priming need
of the Upltd State, a oomprehennive
ytem of Induitrial education.
The flrt of theeo ia the annual con
vention of tbe Citfcen' Induatriel A.
aoclatlon of America, which meet at
flattie Oek, Mkhlgan, on October 7
and 8, and tho aeoond U tha aeaalon of
the National Society fo the Promotion
of Induitrial Education la Now York
City la November, The purpota of the
eond of thew organUaUon ia indi
oated by it nauie, and it meeting will
m gvtt up entirely to addreiae and
dlacUMion treating tb aubioct of In-
jUuatrlal training from variou point of
view.
The convent Ion of the Cltltena' In
duttrlat AalooUtlon I unquettlonablr
tho largeat and moat representative
gathering of tho year dealing aolely
with aubjact related to labor. It la
made up of employee end employer,
member of trade auoclalion and of
labor union, together with a good-aiaed
reprwntation of other cltlzena who
WHEN YOU WANT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT
Write as, we're here for that purpose
Tho Work We Do
4
! Any thing ii the electrical Business. Bell's House Phones
Inside wiring and Fixtures installed and kept in repair.
We will be glad to quote you pnees.
OUR PRICES WILL DO THE REST
STEEL & EWART
449 Bond Street Phono MIB jMi 2
THE OEM
C. F. WISE, Prop.
Choico Wlnea, Llqnon Merchant Lunch From
aadCigara 11:30 a, m. to 1:30 Ja.
Hot laaea at all Boar as Casta
Corner Ilerenth and Commercial
ASTOKIA
ORXGOS
fc" "Wi A
The Kind You Ilav Always Bought, and which has been
ia u for over 30 wears, has borne the signature of
and has been made wilder his per
sonal supervision since lta Infancy.
Allow no ono to deorive you In this.
All Counterfeits, Imitations mid JuHt-M-food " are but
Experiments that trifle with and endurar tbo health of
Infanta and Chlldrcn-ISxuerience agotmt Experuneut.
-,
What Is GASTORIA :
Castorla is at harmless substitute for Castor OH, Pare,
gorle. Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is rieasant. It
contains noithor Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotio
substance. Ita age is Its guarantee. It destroys "Worms
and allays Fevorlshncss. It cures Dlarrlwoa and Wind
Colic. It relievos Toothing Troubles, euros Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho
Stomach and Dowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend.
GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYi
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
TH( UNTftU OOMPNT, TT UIIT .T.CIT, NIW VO.H OrT.
aomo within none of the catesorle.
It tri'at all anxitlon which com before
It, from the viewpoint of the party
whlr li tuiwlly u(Ti'r the mot and I
nnt wnipltly Ignored in dlput m
twwii omployer and employed, the gen
eral ptililla. While other ubjeM, uch
o the growth of the open liop and the
mcortwmtlon of trmiin union, will b
oouldnred la Hi convention, the que-
Hon of irwlmtrlal education will receive
a large ahare of the deliberation. Ad-
ilrenw will be inado liy Dr, 8. C. Dickey,
iicaii of the Winona Technical Inntitut.
M. W, Alexander, of the (Jeneral feWc
trie Co., Vice i'n-ildcnt of tbe Society
for tho promotion of Industrial Educa
tion, Arthur Dean, Bupervlnor of the
IVpartment of Industrial Education of
tli V. M. C. A., and by' icveral large
employer of (killed labor. -
Axilla from thee two larue gather
ing dealing ttpectfically with this ub-
jeot, tho toilc I actively dltcuwed
whervver tbe manager of large indut-
trie, or, atudent of induitrial condi
tion coma together. Under tha leader-
blp of IU president, Jarne W. Van
Cleave, the National Aiaoclatlon of M&n-
ufitctur.iri ha lately taken up the ub
jt with the nlogan, "Send the Whole
Boy to Hchool," linprvlng the need of
educating the hand aa well a tb
bmin. In many place wbera the (killed
trade aro repreeented by thouiand of
workmen in large etablUbinnt the
owner of the indiutrie ara co open
atlng with their employee and with
looal educator to aolva their special
problem, either by tha tabliibment
of trade acbool or by introducing aomo
feature of induitrial training into the
public acbool ,vtem. Such effort, bow-
Tr, art aporadio, and noccatarily looal
In their influence.
One came for a movement o wide
pread and manlfeatlng Iteelf lndepend'
entlv In o muny quarter i eaiy to
dlicover. It I found in an alarming
decrcaia In the deficiency of labor,
falling off that, contrary to praoedant,
bu aocompaued I rue of wage, from
every quarter of tbe country come tbe
complaint that it 1 iuiKib!e to e
cure an adequate ripply of bigh-elaaa
btbor, and that among tbe .killed oper
ative employed, the adaptability which
a once tha pride of tha American
mechanic, enabling a man to turn read
ily from the uae of one kind of machln
err to another, ha diuppeared o that
a acarcity la one line of employment
cannot be met by recruiting from other
line.
In the opinion of many butineu men
and Inreatigatora tbl condition con-
etitutea the most erlou menace to the
coumiercial tulrrenuuw of America.
Hitherto tbe greater output and tuper
lor inventive power and adaptability of
American artuan hav bceu umel a
matter of ooure and lim e balanced tbe
advantagee enjoyed by the manufact
urer other nation in competition
la tha market of the world. With
tbe diapK-arance of tbl advantage it
la held that it will become increasingly
difllcult for American manufactuivr to
meet the competition of the cheaper and
more abundant lalxir of other countries
''The .ituution may be illustrated by
a comariwn of the relative positions
of this country and Germany in the
excellence of mechanlonl art today and
a generation ago," laid a manufacturer
whose products ore old in almoat every
country, of the globe. "At the time of
the Centennial Exposition in 1878 the
German Commission gent over to ob
serve the relative merits of the ex
hibft of various countries reported that
in comparison with the American dis
play the exhibit of their own country
made a sorry showing. Both in quality
and appearance the German mechanical
products were behind those of other
countries, nnd while some of the other
countries were ahead! of tbe Unitnd
State in tbe finish of thoir machinery
the latter vn unrivaled in point of
practical efllciency, in the opinion of
the commission, it largely as a
result of this report and of the recom
mendations of the Investigators he had
appointed that Emperor William I in
stituted the system of industrial edu
cation that hna done more tlmn any
thing else to put the German Empire
in its present advanced condition as
manufacturing nation.
'Two year njto when another group
of German Investigators came over here
they were aide to report 'that their
country bad nothing to learn from us
in tho methods of training labor nnd
marveled that with the great amount
of attention paid to the higher educa
tion in engineering In the United States
no system of trade education hag been
adopted."
The situation, so far as practical
training in the industrial arts is con
corned, is expressed in a different nnd
even more striking way bv Secretary
James A. Kmory.'of the Citizens' Indus
trial Association. . '
"The statistic of education ahow,"
says Mr. Emory, "that between 5,000,'
000 and 8,000,000 children entered in
the schools of this country in the early
week of September. Of this great army
less than 100,000 will enter the colleges
and institutions of higher learning,
Less than 250,000 will continue into the
high schools. The great majority, num
bering probably 5,000,000, will leave
school from choice or necessity between
the ages of ten nnd sixteen, most of
them at twelve, to fourteen. Of these
a small proportion will receive sonic sort
of preparation for clerkships and office
positions from schools of stenography
nnd business. The others will have no
training in tho use of their hands, and bottle free.
will be fitted to rank only a unskilled
labor, the supply of which is steadily
augmented by tha great volume of Im-
migration. A boy out of thl army of
untrained laborer may learn to operate
ingie machine, hut he will be like a
young man referred to in a recent re
port on thl subject who hi worked
for four year in turning out a ingle
park of a machln but had no knowledge
aa to bow H fitUsl with the otfwr
parti.
"Such a man cannot be called a me
chanic. Ik ha Don of tlm fnmlll.nilv
with the use of tool and tha nurnose
of hi work that i needed to stimulate
hi Interest In hi task and to mk. It
ay for him to turn from ono thing
to another. Tb chanceare that be can
not make even the imnlet repair on
tho machine that he operate. Special!
ration l0 Industry and the use of ma
chiner 1 bound to continue and to In
creaae, but the man who ha learned In
hi Impressionable year to tiie his
hands and acquire familiarity in the re
lation of various appliance, ia bound
to become a better workman' than one
who gets hi knowledge haphazard and
without following any aystematic eourw.
That is part of the nurnose f In.iui-
trial education. It 1 to make mechanics
instead of machine of tbe worker, a
well a to impart thorough knowledge
of one particular subject."
Will the work of special Institu
tion may aerve to meet the need of
tho particular localHiea in which they
ara located, or even to aatlsfy tha re
quirements of some restricted indus
tries, in the matter of skilled labor it
I held by those who hare studied thl
question that the only mean of solving
tn pronimn presented by the 5,000,000
aoliool cuildreli who aro erowinor un
with no prospects of special Industrial
training to fit them fop on of the
killed trade 1 by the adoption of a
compivhenslve system of trad educa
tion under the co operation of the na
tion and tho state. Thrs 1 a phase of
tho subject that the Citizens Industrial
Association proposes to take up
with a view of recommending a definite
and practical plan of procedure. Ai
this organization is composed of practi-!
cal men, representing the body politic a
a whole, Hs conclusion are likely to
carry considerable weight. j
M the last session of Congress a
measure known a the Davia bill was
introduced providing for national en
couragement of industrial education by
stipulating that out of the sale of pub
lic lands th aura of ten cents an acre
be set aside for educational purposes.
One-half of this was to be set aside
for practical education in agriculture
and one-half to manual and rade train
ing acbool. It is estimated that the
revenue under this measure would
amount to $8,000,000 annually, which
would allow $4,000,000 for industrial
education. It is probable that some such
measure a the Davis bill will be urged
upon th attention of Congress at the
next session, and that the subject will
be brought before tbe law-making bod
ies of the various states.
HtMMtHHHIMIIMWMMMIMMIIMmtHIMMMI
r ; , . j- ....
I WE TELL THE TRUTH
When wc say that we have
the largest and best selected
stock of Wall Decorations in
the city. . Call and we will
show you. Prices are right.
i Allen Wall Paper & Paint Co. ;
imilMMIMIMMMmiMIMIIIMUMtlMttMMIII
MtMMHMt.TfMTMtMtMtMIMM
I October
Magazines
Now
All in
Latest Fall Special Numbers
E. A. HIGGINS CO.,
f MUSIC BOOKS STATIONERY 1
See the Window
CZAR'S TIMBER YARDS BURN.
Fires Alleged to be Incendiary In Re
venge for Proposed Reformt,
ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 30. During
the past week a number of fires have
occurred in the timber yards belonging
to the crown, including the great works
in the Busulk forest, province of Sa
mara, two works in the province of
Xijni-Novgorod, and the largo depots
in tbe province of Oreil and Olonetzk.
The fires are reported to have been
of incendiary origin, due to dissatisfac
tion with the intended introduction of
reform in the timber yards, which it
has been discovered are gravely mis
managed.
It ia stated that the facta have so
disgusted Prince Vassilchikoff, general
director of land organization and agri
culture thajt he intends to resign.
NOTED WAR VETERAN DIES.
General Charles Furlong, Wealthy Bach
elor, Was Famous Traveler.
NEW YORK, Sept. 30. It was learn
ed today- that General Charles Furlong
.lied hf the New ' Falmouth Hotel.- in
Portland, Me., this morning. General
Furlong was a bachelor. His death brings
to a close the remarkable and pictures
que career of a soldier, traveler and phil
anthropist. His personal estate is esti
mated at from $500,000 to $1,000,000. So
far as known he had no living relatives.
As a tro-veler he is said to have visited
every city in the world having 100,000
inhabitants or more. ,
Hard Times in Kansas.
The old days of "grasshoppers nnd
drouth are almost forgotten in the pros
perous Kansas ot today; although a
citizen of Codell, Earl Shamburg, has
not yet forgotten a -hard "time he en
countered. He says: "I was worn out
and discouraged by coughing night and
day, and could find no. relief till I tried
I)r. King'e New Discovery. It took less
than one bottle to completly cure me.'
The safest and most leliuble cough nnd
cold remedy and lung and throat healer
ever discovered. Guaranteed by Charles
Rogers' dmig store. 50o and $1.00. Trial
WARD'S TUSH BATHS
NEVER CLOSE
539 Commercial St., ASTORIA. ORE.
The only Turkish Baths, Rus
sian Tab and Shower Baths
First piass and Sanitary Night Accommodations
All Modern Conveniences that are Modern
FRANK F. WARD, Proprietor
Phone Black 2253 Look ibr tbe Sign on Sidewalk
IRVING'S
Apricot Brandy
NOTHING FINER
TRY IX
AMERICAN IMPORTING CO.
589 Commercial StreetJ
Astoria Hardware Co.,
113 12th St.
ASTORIA IRON WORKS
JOHN FOX. President
F. L. BISHOP, Secretary.
0 " Nelson Trtrer. Vloe-Pres. tad Supt. J
, ASTQRIA SAVINGS BANK, Traaa. j
Designers and Manufacturers oi
the latest improved
Canning Machinery, , Marine Engines and Boilers
Complete Cannery Outfits Furnish! .
' CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED
Foot ot Fourth Htreet