The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, October 01, 1907, Page 7, Image 7

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    TUESDAY, OCTOBEI i, 1907,
THE MORNING ASTORUN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
STOP WOMAN
AND CONSIDER
Flrrt, that alrocat every opaeaUott
la our hoapltala, prfovn4 apoa
woman. beoma nomry baoana
of negUot ( nth symptom m
Baakach, IrragularltS, Dtaplaoo
mania, Pain la the Bid, Drarylnf
Sanaa tlooa, Dlaainea aad Slaapltaa-
BtM.
Bond, that Lydla I, rtakaam't
Vrtabl OoaipOTad, Boa tnm
aaUv root mm barb, haa aura
Bvorc mm of famal 111 than aar
othr on nMdkita known. It
ttlat, trogtbna u4 mWn womra'i htalta and U laralaabla la
praptriDf woman for child-birth and aarlaf U period of Cheap
Third, tht great volnna of wsaoHoitsd aad grateful tattlmoniala oa
fil at tht Ptukbara Uaoratorr at Lynn, Ma., bub of whloh art from
Una to Mm Mar robliaaao! ay paatal prmlaaton, t absolute avfc
duti of tha valu of Lydla B. Ptakaaai't TfUbloOompoiiad and Ifn,
Ptnkhama ad riot.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
for mot than M yr ha fcaaa on ring Fmal Complaint, mak aa
Di-agglnf BanaaUoaa, Waak Book, FaUlatf and DUplaotmanta, In
flammation aad DUaratioa, aad Organ! Dl, aad it diaaolvaa
aad aipaU Tumora at aa aarly stef.
Mrs. Plnkham'j Standing Invitation to" Women
Woman ttfffnrtiif from any font of fsmal weakness ara Invited to
wriU Mr Pink ham, Iran, Maaa. foradvlo. Sb la tha Mra. Plnkkam who
baa ban advising alok woman fraa of abario for mor than twenty
fara, and bafora that aha aaalatad bar mother-in-law, Lydla X. Flak
Laos (0 advialng;. Thua aha la aapeoially wall qualified to gnld alak
woman back to baalta, Writ today, doqt wait natU too lata.
A HUGE MONUMENT
' (Oontlnuud from pg 1) ' '
SCOKE DAKOTA'S CAPTAIN.
Gtn. Ubler, of Steamboat ServUe, Say
Vcaael'i Lou Incxcuubli.
VASMNGTOf, Kept. 30,-A scathing
letter ha been addressed by Supervising
Inspector-General I'hli-r, of tha steam
boat Inspection service to Captain Kmil
Fram-ke, who commanded Did tteamshlp
Dakota, of tli Grout Northern (Steam
ship Co., when that vel wa wrecked
on tha Japan coast during a vojage
from Seattle to Yokahama lt March.
Tha Hter la vailed forth by the ap
peal of Captain Francke from tha action
of th local ateamboat Inspcctore at
Seattle In revoking hi. licenM. fr. I'b
lr y in hla lttT that the wiwk of
tha Dakota waa ouM bv inroiiiprvhen.
aibln carrlnraa by her comniamlini;
ofllcar, who waa on tha navigating
hrhlga wlM-n tha I atrurk.
Ha citaa tha Uvi that no aoundiiiK
were ma.lo at the time although tha
captain know the vrtarl waa runniiiK
unusually oloe to the hora In an i-ITori
to aava tlma. Ha dtclarl that tha loi
of tha vcmvI Vaa dua tolrly to Captain
JVanoke'a carelrMiiaaa and that there
wora no axtanuatlng eircuuitUneea.
EARTHQUAKE SHOCKS PELT.
Weather Bureau Report! Them ai
curring at a:J P- M. Monday.
Oc-
If yott fMl run down, fagged out take
Holllatra Rocky Mountain Tea. tf
graaUat retoratlv known ; purely vag
etable, no alcohol or mineral poiaoiu 35
(Vina, T-a or Tablcta. Frank Hart,
WAI1IXJT0K, 8e.t. 30. A atnall
earthquake n-wirilcd at the d-lher
biirt-au on the afternoon of Septeinlier
23. The prellmiuary treniort were iiilte
InillMliwt, but tKe principal jKirtion be
urn at aUiiit 4 hour), S4 mliiut- and 14
awimU, p. m... "5th meriliun time, and
mnrked by wave of long perloj ami
aurnll amplitude. The trng motion of
the earthitik waa mrded at 4:57
p. m., with an amplitude of nearly four
tenth of a millimeter in the north
oitth direction, whereaa the amplitude
in tlio et-wet direction waa only
about one-tenth of a millimeter.
Owing to the indefinite time of tha
beginning of the preliminary tremor,
whl.lt may pne.iWy 1 placed around
4:25 p. m", It ' aeareely practicable to
etliimt tha -li-tome of tha orgin, but
it aeeina pretty clear that the earth
quake wa proUbly of moderate inten
sity and at a conidrable dUtance from
Wa.hington.
l)a brvMh I a mot offennlva ailment,
Irritate you a well aa your friendaj
HollUter1 Rocky Mountain Tea Ukaa
the had tta from th mouth, remote
the eauae, puriflea tha breath. 33 cent,
Tea or Tablet. Frank ITart,
Ing addrew of Ilia ceremony, In whlcli
he eulogized th late I'reildent aa
woithy pupil of the great men of the
country who preceded lilm and to whoae
crown lie akled freh laurel.
(lorernor Harrl aaked the audience to
rlo whlla Ml Helena MKlnlcy, the
only aUter of the late Preildont drew
aoide a flag dlwloalng the flgura of Me
Klnley In the attitude of delivering hi
lunt apeech at Buffalo, September 6, 1001.
The flag wa removed elowly and im
prelvly. Till wa followed by the
reading of a poem entitled "William
McKlnley," by Jame Whltcomb Riley.
Prwldent lfarri Harrl then introduced
th l'reldcnt of UnlW State who de
livered fhort oration on "Appreciation of
William MsKJnl."
"We have gathered together today to
pay our meed of reaped and affection
to the memory of William McKinlcy,
who a preahlent won a plae in the
heart of American people luch a but
three op four of the l're.idrnt of thi
country have ever won. lie wa of
Jugular uprfghlneM and purity of
character, alike in public and private
life; a cltiten who loved peace, he did
hla duty fuitlifully and wvll for four
vear of war when the honor of the
nation called him to arm.
"A GongreMinun, aa governor of hi
tat, and finally aa President, he roae
to the loremo't place among our ttaiei
men. reaching a place that would at
infy the keenest ambition; Hut he never
ot that kimple and thoughtful kindnea
toward every human being, great or
mall, lofty or humble, with whom he
wa brought in. contact 'wnicn ao en
den red him to our people.
"He had to srappla with more acr-
lou and complex problem than any
President alnee Lincoln, and yet, while
meeting every demand of itateiinanshlp,
he continued to live a beautiful and
touching family life, a life very healthy
for tlila nation to ae in Ita foremott
citizen ; and now the woman who walk
ed In the ibadow ever after hit death,
the wife to whom hla lot waa a cala
mity more crashing than it could be to
anv other human being. Ilea 'belde bim
here In the ame epulcher.
"It would be hard tot Imagine an
epitaph which a good citizen would be
more anxlou to deaerve or one which
would more happily describe the qual-
itiea of that great and good citizea
whoae Ufa we her commemorate. He
poeed to a very extraordinary degree
the gift of uniting diacordant fore
and ecurlna from them a hannonioui
action which told for good government.
"From purpoaea not merely dlverae,
but bitterly conflicting, be waa able to
accure healthful action for the good of
the at ate.. In both poise and judgment
be roae level to the several emergencle
lMl
n Our Insurance
Department
CHARITY
MAY COVER
a multitude of ain. but it
take an Equitable Life In
aurance Policy to cover the
debt which you owe
Your Wife
Your Children
And Your Estate
There ara many good Companies but
only on beat, and that, of eoum, i the
Equitable Life becauM It bu th greatoat
aecurlty and th gretat earning piwer.
If you Uv you will recalr th money
youiaelf, and If aot, your lored one
will b benefited.
Hat yot aeen
VhQ Equitable Life's
Standard Policy?
Conniltatioo and Offlot Treatment Pre.
western
Pan
A 495, Commercial Street, Astoria. Oregon
ha had to meet a leaader 0 th nation,
and ilk all men with the root of true
gratne in them be grew to tealily
larger Utur under th ttrea of heavy
reapoMlbllitle. He was a good citizen
brav oWfr, a Chief Executiv whoa
wladom entitled bim to th trut which
h received throughout the nation.
"iw wa not only a leader of men
but prominently i helper of menj for
ona of bl most marked trait waa the
Intenaely human quality of hi wide
and deep aympatby. Finally, he not
merely preached, h waa. that mot val
uable of all citizen In democracy
Ilka ouri, a man who In the highest
place aerved a an unconaclou example
to bi people of the virtue that build
and conaerva alike our public life, and
the foundation of public life, the in
timate life of the home.
(Many lcnone are taught u by hi
career, but none more valuable than th
leaaon of broad human aympathy lot
and among citizen of all claue and
creed. No other Prealdent ha ever
more dcaervd to bar hit life work
cliaracterlzed in Lincoln' word aa being
carried on "with malic toward none.
with charity toward all." A a boy he
worked hard with bi hand; be entered
the army a a private aoldier; h knew
poverty) he earned bi own livihood;
and by hi own exertion he finally
roae to the position of a man of mod
erate mean.
"Nut merely wa be In conataat touch
with farmer and town dweller, with
capitalist and wage earner, but bt felt
n intlmaU understanding of each, and
therefora, an intimate aympathy with
each; and V consistent effort wa to
try and judge all by the aame atandard
and to treat all witb the aame juatioe.
Arrogane toward the weak, and en
vlou hatred of those well off, were
equally abborrvnt to hi just and gentle
ouL
"Surely tbi attitude of hi should
be the attitude of all our people today.
It would be a cruel disaster to thi coun
try to permit ourselves to adopt an at
titude of hatred and envy toward uc
ec worthily won, toward wealth hon
estly acquired. Let us in this respect
profit by the example of the republics
thi Western Hemisphere to the south
of us. Some of these republics have
prospered greatly; but there are cer
tain ones that have lagged far behind,
that still continue in a condition of ma
terial poverty, of aoclal and political un
rest and confusion.
"Without exception the republic of j
the former claa are thoae in which hon-
et induitry ha been assured of re
ward and protection; those where a
cordial welcome haa been extended to
the kind of enterprise which benefit the
while country, while incidently, as is
right and proper", giving substantial re
ward to those who manifeat it.
"On the other band, the poor and
backward republics, the republics in
which the lot of the average citizen is
least desirable, and the lot of the labor
ing man worst of all, are precisely!
those republics in which industrr has
been killed because wealth exposed its
owner to spoliation.
"10 tnee communities toreign cap
ital now- rarvly comes, because it has
been found that a soon as capital is
employed so as to give substantial re
numeration to those supplying it, it
xcitcs ignorant nutuity and envy,
Which result in such oppressive action,
within or without the law, as sooner or
later to work a virtual confiscation.
Every manifestation of feeling of this
kind in our civilization should be crush
ed at the outset by the weight of a
sensible public opinion.
"From the standpoint of our material
prosperity thei is only one other thing
as important as the discouragment of a
spirit of envy and histility toward hon
est business men, toward honest men of
means; this is the discouragment of dis
honest business men, the war upon the
chicanery and wrongdoing which are pe
culiarly repulsive; peculiarly noxious,
when exhibited by men who have no
excuse of want, of poverty, of igno
rance for their crimer.
"Men of means, and above all men of
great wealth, can exist in safety under
the peaceful protection of the State, on
ly in orderly societies, where liberty
manifests itself through and under the
law. It is these men who, more than
any other, should, in the interest of
the das to which they belong, in th
interest of their children and their
chilren's children, seek in every way,
but especially in the conduct of their
lives, to insist upon and to build up
respect for the law.
"It may not be true from the stand
point of aome particular individual of
this class, but in the long run it is pre
eminently true from the standpoint of
th class as a whole, no lea than of
the' country as a whole, that it Is a
veritable calamity to achieve a tem
porary triumph or evasion of the law;
and we are the best friend of the man
of property, wo ahow ourselves th
staunchest upholders of the rights of
property, when we set our faces b'ke flint
against those offender who do wrong
in order to acquire great wealth or who
use this wealth as a help to wrong
doing. "Wrongdoing 4g confined to no class.
Good and evil are to be found among
both rich and poor, and in drawing the
line among our fellows w must draw it
on conduct and not on worldly passes
sions. In the abstract most of us will
admit this.. In the concrete we can act
upon such doctrin only if we really
PREFERRED STOCK Fruiu, Black
Raspberries, Red Raspberries, Blu
Berries, Charnei, Lnginberriet. Straw
berries, ate., mak th best kind of pie,
tans, and au sort of dainty dcuert that
can b put together in a hurry whan you I
right kind of good things to atari with.
Preferred Stock Canned Goods
Packet Wtonrar tk Bart ara Owwa
ar alway safe to buy. Only th finest of tound,
berries find their way into Preferred Stock canii p!
pur cane sugar ia used, which account for their delicious
flavor, rr el erred stock bemei ar never "miipn
Tht btrriti art frtm OngmPrtfirrtd Slock
at jnr Gnctr'i,
aui a itwn, riiw inm, roamm, mmobt.
r A
3
have the knowledge' of and aympathy
with on another.
"If both the wage earner and th cap
italist are able to each enter Into the
other life, to meet him so a to get
into genuine sympathy with him, mow
of the misunderstanding between them
will disappear and it place wil be taken
by judgment broader, jutter, more
kindly, and more generous; fop each
will find in the other the aame human
attributes that evUt in himself.
"It waa President McKinley'a partic
ular glory that In actual practice he
realized this aa it is given to but few
men to realize it; that hi broad and
deep aympatby made bim feel a gen
uine sense of oneness witb all hi fellow-Americans,
whatever their station
or Jrork in life, ao that to hi soul, they
were all Joined with him in a great
brotherly democarcy of tb spirit. It
is not given to many of us in our lives
to actually realize thi 'to the extent
that be did; but we can at least have
it before us aa the goal of our en
deavor, and by so doing we shall pay
honor better than in any other way to
the memory of the dead President
whose service yt life we this day com
memorate."
COSSACKS CEASZ CREW.
BISBEE. Ark, Sept. 30,Patrwa
Bill' private car wa overturned aai
two other car wer badly smashed la a
rear end collision betwen a freight tnia
and the "Pawne Bill" ahow train oa
the 2 Paso and Southwestern BaOraai
today. Two women were seriously In
jured and two others seriously hurt la
the excitement following the accident
the Cossack in th show drew sward
and chased the engineer of th taj
train a mile up th track.
VICTIM IDENTIFIED.
NEW YORK, Sept. 30-Xw York k
body which was fou d in the 'river at
Xorth Cove several day ago wa aasl
tlvely identified yesterday by a Mr. Pan
gnet as bis brother-in-law, Svensoa, tt
came here recently from Michigan aai
had only been working on the Columbia
river jetty a few day when he fell eff
the work and waa drowned.
ARM AKD FOOT CRUSHED.
' SOUTH BEXD, Sept. 30.-The man'
while working in sawmill at Wallvills
today, caught hi trouser leg on a set
screw of a whirling shaft and hi foot
wa drawn into a cogwheel. In trying
to free himself be threw his left arm out
and caught it in another cogwheel bad
ly mashing both members. He was
brought to South Bend and his forearm
and thre toes were amputated.- The ac
cident occurred while be was endeavor
ing to repair a log turner.
ISAXSmTAXIOI.
Steamer)
TELEGRAPH
The odIt Bwamboat maUnr a round trip DAILY
TOeptThundftjr Mna Forttuxi aad Astoria
and way pointa.
NO WAY POINT ON tUNOAV
Portland Landlnr, aider Stmt Dock
i Landing, c
Mortal
, Calleoder Dock
Lean Portland 7:00 'a, m.j arrive Aatoria,l:tt
p. tn. Leave Astoria IrtOp. m.; arrive Portland
MB p.
SUNDAY IXCURSIONI
fcasv
Leave
r Portland a. m.: arrive Astoria 1 p.m.
Astoria ( p. nu, arrira Portland f p. m.
TRANSPORTATION
K" Line
The
Steamer Lurline
Night Boatjfor Portland and
Way Landing!.
PASSENGERS. s FREIGHT.
Leaves Astoria daily except Suadiy at
Leave Portland Dally except Saaday,
. at vm. .
Quick Sarrio Excellent Veal
Good Bertha.
Landing Astoria Flavel Wharf.
Landing Portland Foot Taylor St
O. B. BLESSnfG, Agent
Phone Main 1761.
H. B. PASSES,
Proprietor.
E, P. PASSES,
Manager.
PARKER HOUSE
EUROPEAN PLAIT.
First Class in Every Respect.
Free Coach to the House.
Bar and Billiard Room
Good Sample Rooms on Ground Floor
for Commercial Men
Astoria Oregon
I 1
' 1--".; r -' ';
B"i,-rt. "m rir-wan a maun ..-hi m.. iatVi -iVii aaTni i? i
Shennan ftansler Co.
HENRY SHERMAN, Manager
Hacks, Carriages Baggage Checked and Transferred Trucks and Furnitara
Wagons Pianos Moved, Boxed and Shipped.
433Commercial Street. Main Phone tax
TBA1YSP08TATI0XT.
TIME CARD
Astoria & Columbia River R. R. Co.
Effective, Monday, September 0, 1907 Pacific Time. .
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"P'AJ1.
. Nos. 1 and 28 run from Astoria to Clatsop Beach via Ft. Stevens. No.
run from Portland to Astoria and Clatsop Beach direct. No. 24 run
Portland to Astoria only. No. 30 runs from Astoria to Clatsop Beach direct.
Nos. 21, 26 and 29 run via Ft Stevens. No. 23 runs from-Clatsop Beach to
Astoria and Portland direct. Additional train will be run from Astoria t It,
Stevens and return on Sundays, leaving Astoria 11:30 a. m., arrive Ft Steven
12:25 p. m. Returning leaves Ft Stevens 2:00 p. m., arrives Astoria 2.45 p. sa.
Trains marked run dailv;f.elegph ions.
CONNECTIONS At Portland, with all trans-continental lines. At Gobi,
with Northern Paciflo Railway Co. At Astoria with steamers for San Franoiaeo
and Tillamook and Ilwaeo Railway & Navigation Co.'s boat and railway. y
Through ticket sold to and from al I pointa in the East and Europe, far"
further particular apply to, R. H. JENKINS,
H Gen. Ft 4 Passngr. Agt.,
:.i...!..-...;-.i:.;.:2HX.l:iv'V ... . Astoria. Oc. .. :