The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, October 08, 1907, Page 3, Image 3

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    TUESDAY, OCTOBER S, 1907.
THE MORNING ASTOR1AN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
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TPJf
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811 STOCK II
and Rapidly Passing km
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THIS weeks' , sales will mean a great deal to the people of Astoria and surrounding towns. NEVER perhaps
I r : in aU the history of Astoria has there been such reckless price cutting. NEVER have the people had a
better opportunity to save money on their winter goods of all kinds, than just now.
, , ' ' , '. - ' . , .'-. . . -
$ v . ( .....
CAN YOU in justice to yourself and family let this great opportunity pass. If you do you will make a great
mistake and will always regret it.
These are only a few of the hundreds of great bargains that you see on every hand in this store.
Mcn'i 10a Canvas Cloves, 3 pairs for 10c Ladie8 f 1.50 and fj.oo'white shirt waists choice 50c
y ' Ladies $i. 00 wool underwear...... 75
Men's 15c leather suspenders close out at IOC ,75 wool underwear... 59
x.35 silk girdle corsets OV
1.50 fine black mercerized underwear close out LIS
50 and 75c good belts to clos out, choice 25
a. 00 fur toas only ,.; w
Men's 25c elastic suspenders
Men's 50c late style fall caps
Men's zo and 25c socks ....
10c
..25c
12C
Boy's 50 and 65c school pants to close out 25
Boy's extra heavy school hose big values at soc
these will go at close out sale at 12
Boy's 10c suspenders . 3
Boy's Corduroy caps :- 15
Boy's school suits worth $3.50 to t$ will go for .
' $1.$0 to $2.$Q
Remember every article in the house goes at 25 and 50c on the dollar. It makes no difference how good or how
new, we must clean out stock to make changes in the room. All the old shelves must come out, new counters take
places of the old ones. Some lines we will not replace at all. All this must be done for the winter s business.
THE
(Successors to the Morse Department Store)
S. D. LYNCH, Proprietor.
A SILLY
TO LIVE 100 YEARS
"Don't Worry About Age" Says
Lecturer.
DIED MORE THAN 100 TIMES
Harry Gate, of London, Talks Along
Spiritual Lines Before New York Y.
M. C. A., and Explains How Old Testa
ment is "a Fallacy."
XKVV YORK, Oct. 7.-An amazed au
dience at tlio West Side Y. At C. A.,
318 West Fifty-seventh street, was told
yesterday afternoon by Harry Gaze, a
lecturer1 from London, tnat( those pres
ent could live 100, 200, 1000, or eternal
ly, if they would follow faithfully the
simple sybtern of Gaze's secret of per-
pctual life.
"You are old because you think you
are old," said Gaze. "I am young be
cauHe I think I am yoikig. For the main
purt keeping young is only a mental
process. You read the Old Tcstiment
and learned the allotted span of life fof
man is three score and 10 years. It is a
fallacy, as are many things In the Old
Testament.
"I have been lecturing for 15 years
and people tell me I look like a 'kid.'
I do because I have forgotten that there
is any such thing as growing old. I
have refrained from worry and led a
clean life. That is all there is in the
wcret of life.
"Do you ever expect to diet" asked
oneof Game's audience.
"I have died more than 100 times al
ready," he replied. "This is not the
same body to which my mother gave
birth. I died after a manner every few
months and am reborn that is, my
strength, energy, brain and youth are
reborn that often. I am simply reborn
more vlcorous man than ever before
"When a man gets to be 50 he says
he is getting old. When he says so he
believes so. He does not figure on Hv
ing more than the three score and 10
allotted years and as a result does not.
lie is old because he thinks he u and
there is a relaxation. If at GO be de
cided that he was young and would live
to be 200, would refrain from worry and
live cleanly, he would live to that age.
Mr. Gaze says he is going to remain
in New York long enough to teach
society women who now use cosmetics
to hide the marks of years hi secret
of eternal youth. Incidentally Gaze be
lieves that when the world is sufficiently
populated by persons who will live for
ever, nature will see that generation
ends, lie declared that every one in the
audience was a were baby.
"I am 70," said one man.
"Jut in your swaddling clothes," Gaze
replied.
As examples of his theory Gaze spoke
of a Frenchman now more than 170 years
You can enjoy the taost elegant bill
of fare In Alaska just as well ai
the greatest metropolis.
Preferred Stock
Canned Goods
' tMkWlMrtVtktBtlkMTOWS
bring to your table the most delicate v
vegetables, (nuts, etc., trom Maine,
New Jerey, California, Oregon, etc.
Each is gathered at its best, wherever
It is known to grow beat, and is
packed right there, only those of firm,
best quality, in fish, meats and vege
tables being accepted for the Pre
ferred Stock labeL Same, way with
fruits gathered
with the dew
' on and Hacked
so quickly and carefully that the garden flavor is pre
served. At an example of elegant dishes, as easy to
serve In Alaska as New York, try thist .. , t,,
, . siciLLoriD sHamr. ' s -
M.k. tomiM uocii Dick over I an of Preferred Stock ShrlmM.
knt In tot nuce nd idd i dui ol ihtrrr (or a (Uu ol iht JuLco from
i ti.-i t a l. l 1 n,. m . V. -1 1 k.l.l-. Ji.k
lain rf.iciiro .hk iM,wiiin.f amwiu.va.UMi.vw vm.u. m.bu.
cover with buttered crumbi tod teki tutU crumbi ire browa. Ctroltb
lis HrtUr W-wrre Jot., i. , ;
Uu Preferred Stocijuatiff guainteedjhm your Groar,
XUXS LEWIS, WholvMlo Grooe'rs, PORTLAND, OREOOIT1, V. 8.1.
YOUR GOLD COINS.
8m If Any of Them Is Stamped With
the Letter L.
"I got hold of a gold cola a short
time ago, and it was marked with a
letter L, which I supposed had been
stamped upon It by some one who
wished to keep watch as to whether he
ever had It in possession again. I
pasesd It akrag, to my landlord, I think,
and thought nothing more about It for
several months. Then I found out that
I bad been passing 'hht' coin."
"How Is that?" was the question of
a listener.
"All colas, whether sold or sliver,
upon whlcft a larga L Is stamped are
light weight When you get one of
these stamped coins, the only thing to
do Is to take It to some nssayer, who
will weigh If. and pay you about 10 per
cent less than the face value of the
coin for it. He will" then place It In a
crucible to be melted Into gold bullion.
Itself mutilates
amy A.
old and of a girl who was placed in an( these coma and in so doing turns the
IT.. tmmA nat?lnm ttl.A nl OA milnAil AI1mnrttF t!rri VSoolr IntA (i PP11-
JLuiiou iiiouue j .um. vise naw a uiuou tuucuvj a su. v
when committed. She imagined her lov- latton, where some Innocent party will
er vvns coming to meet hen and that.lf
she would remain wonng until he came.
At 7?, tiaze, said, Bhe looked to be only
twei.ty.
INDIANA SHERIFF IS KILLED.
VJXAMUC, Ind., Oct. 7.-Sheri(T C. I.
"When the llcht coins are tendered
for duties on Imports they are weighed
at the custom house, quickly stamped
L for light and returned to the Im
porter. If the latter cannot pass the
coin off, he must take It to the retort
to be melted. -
"The light coins may be rendered
light in the ordinary course of abrasion
, . i i in In circulation or they may have been
Oglesby was shot and killed today at the c 0 n gold
PennHjivama Railroad depot here by , dust ttus brulaed off the coin. The
three tarmps whom he was endeavoring common mode of sweating Is to place
tA nvvpaf. a ft or rnmvinrr to the cround ' a number of srold coins la a sack and
OgelRby raised himself on his elbow and " shake them np for a long time, when
emptied his revolver at the men, fatally ZZZZ""- T
- ,. m , Ol IBS BSCH. -UUl'a uusenei.
itimliiiM nnn anA anerMlv trniindinor in I
Mules and Gray Horses.
"I wonder If that truck driver knows
of any good reason for hitching that
mule with the gray horse?" remarked
a Georgian as he saw such a team
halted at Chambers street and Broad
way. "Let's ask him."
The driver only knew that the team
was always driven together by order
of the stable boss.
"Well," went on the southerner, "since
t was a child Tve always seemed to
know that mules will follow a gray
horse or hitch with him where they
won't have .any truck with a horse of
any other color. I've Been the most
unruly mules behave properly when
In the company of a gray, but I've-never
heard a good reason given for the
fact" New York Sun.
TRAGEDY.
The
and
wounding one and slightly wounding an
other.
The pain in Ma's head has gone,
She's as happy as can be,
Her health is right, her temper bright,
Kinoe taking Hollistep's Rocky Moun
tain Tea at night.
If taken patiently and persistently will
relieve the most obstinate cases of in
digestion, constipation, bad blood, bad
liver no matter how long standing.
That's what . Hollister's Rocky Moun
tain Ten will do. 35 cents, Tea or
Tablets. 1
The only true constipation cure must
begin its soothing, healing action when
it enters the mouth. Hollister's Rocky
Mountain Tea restores the whole system
to healthy, normal condition. 35 cents,
Tea or Tablets.
17 Morning Astorhut, CO wti"
month,' delivered by carrier.
', - 'A
Dual Between Tom Porter
Sir Henry Bellasis
Some of the royalists who were
forced to endure the English common
wealth seemed to console themselves
for the dullness of life under a Puritan
Kovernment by fiehtlnir as many duels
as they could compass, so that Ignoble
squabbles and foolish plots make up
the history of their days.
Tom Porter was or a lamuy wnicn
had zealoiwlv served the king. Under
the new government his occupation was
gone, and he descended to a triviality
of life which finally involved him In a
most pathetic event " This was a duel
which he fought with his friend, Sir
Henry Bellasis, and which, says Pepya
in his "Diary," is worth remembering
for "the silliness of the quarrel, a
kind of emblem of the general con
plexlon of the whole kingdom."
But, silly ai the quarrel undoubtedly
was, it carried in It an element of heart
break. ' . - , " - " :
The two vounit men Involved were
intimate frleuds and companions, but
one day, "being merry in company,"
Tnm TVinr efii.l hA Rhnillll like tO ReA
"'li.. uat.a ,
the man In England who would dare
give him a blow. With that Sir EIenry
Bellasis struck him a box on the ear,
The Inevitable duel followed, wherein
each was wounded. Sir Henry proved
to be seriously hurt, so he called Por
ter, kissed and bade him fly.
! "For," said he. "Tom, thou hast hurt
me. but I will make shift to stand upon
mv Jecs till thou mnyest withdraw, for
I wnnld not have thee troubled for
what thou hastMone."
Porter profited by his friend's gener
osity and escaped to France. Sir Henry
died a few days later, and Pepys con
dudes, "It Is pifttty to see how the
world do talk of them as a couple" of
fooU that k I ed one auotnet out or
love." '.-r ' ' '
A Certain Cure for Croup Used for Ten
Years without a Failure.
Mr. W. a Bott, a Star City, Ind,
hardware merchant, is enthusiastic in
his nraise of Chamberlain's Couch Bern-
edy. His children have all been subject
to croup and he has used this remedy
for the past 10 years, and though they
much feared the oroup, his wife and he
always felt safe upon retiring when a
bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
was in the house. His oldest child was
subject to severe attacks of croup, hut
this remedy never failed to effect a
speedy cure. He has recommended it to
friends and neighbors and all who hare
used it say that it is unequaled for
croup and whooping cough. For sale b,v
Frank Hart and Leading Druggists, v
Quinsy. Sprains and Swellings Cured.
"In November, 1901, 1 caught cold and
had the quinsy. My throat was swollen
so I could hardlr breathe. I applied
Chamberlain's Pain Balm and it gave me
relief in a short time. In two uays I
was all right," says Mrs. L. Cousins,
Otterburn, Mich. Chamberlain's i Pain
Balm is a liniment and is especially' val
uable for sprains and swellings. For
sale by Frank Hart and Leading Drug
, Install English Looms.
Sidney. N. Y, Oct. 7. The silk mill
of the Clark Textile Co. which was re
cently purchased by Julhis Kayser & Co.
has been turned over and possession
given to the new company. New loms
from Nottingham, England, have arrived
during the past week, and others are on
thi way
School Shoes
FOR
BOYS
IJt Billy Buster Steel Bot
tom Shoes '
The Shoe
with a Sole
that Don't
Wear Out;
543 Bond St', opposite ' Fisher Ifrog,