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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 20, 1907)
2 THE MORNING ASTORIAN. &STORIA, OREGblf. Sunday, ccTcrra o, 1907. If You Want Anything BETTER ! GOTO JALOFF'S '. WE ARE READY- WITH THE LARGEST AND MOST COMPLETE STOCK OF LADIES' SUITS, CLOAKS, MILLINERY, SHIRT WAISTS, PETTICOATS, HOSIERY AND FURNISHINGS EVER SHOWN (l IN THIS CITY. EVERYTHING ' , NEW AND FRESH THIS SEASON'S CHOICEST PATTERNS - AND SHADES. IT IS ALMOST NEEDLESS TO SAY THAT EVERYTHING IS MODESTLY PRICED THE TRUEST TEST OF VALUE IS COMPARISON OF GOODS JALOPP( ASTORIA'S LARGEST AND BEST CLOAK, SUIT AND MILLINERY STORE. Pikes the" Same and Always Moderate-Dependable Merchandise, Cain or Credit, ' - . . t -. . . ., - . v t ;'(. -"'',, V '" ' -. TheStyle Store," 537 Commercial Stre et NEXT TO HERMAN WISK JUDGE BOWLBY HAS RETURNED VERY INTERESTING OBSERVA TIONS WERE MADE BY HIM WHILE ON HIS TRIP TO WASH- ' INGTON AND IDAHO. Judge J. Q. A. Bowlyi las jusjt re turned from a trip to Walla, Walla, Lewiston and Spokane and in an inter view with an Astonan reporter stated that all the country in those districts is prosperous. 1 The crop of "grain is abun dant and prices are good. ; Each of the above cities baa held its annual fair, and smaller daces have fine exhibits of fruits. The country from California to British Columbia has made special dis plays of fruit this year, xne iruit yaeia has been large and apples, pears, etc., have made bo fine a showing, in different localities, that the contest, hereafter, will be in oualitv. rather than size. The people at Lewiston are proud of their grapes, and taink tnat tney win ceai California grapes, for wine. One of the important factors tending to the ad vancement of each of the cities, is the railroad and interurban trolley lines, running in many directions from the cities, which bring the people in to trade and make the farm lands valuable. Gar den and orchard lands, similar to those in Clatsop county, are held at from $100 to $300 per acre. In the Potlach district, an excellent wheat locality, much atten tion is. paid to potato growing, indi- Vluuai OWIKlS uavuijj IIVUA M kV v w each. The wield averages 50 bushels per acre, and the price, is 50 cent per sack. Wpat would a Clatsop iarmer wins oi such a small yield and price T Lewiston is reached by boat of the O. R. & S. and the railroad of the Northern Pacific and in a few days the road at' the O. R. & N. will be there also. The people are looking for a road from Huntington, down tne onaKe, ana foK one or two new eastern roads, to come directly across the country, and expect that Lewiston will then outstrip Spokane. The latter place now claims a popula tion of 96,000 and expects the new rail roads from the east to come its way instead of by Lewiston. The mines con- tribute $20,000 per year to Bpoicane De skis the value of the timber and farm in? broducts of a vem large surround ing country and ' notwithstanding the many railroads running into tne cuy, she is oneratinir and extending trolley lines out into various sections an idea of the value of land, in that section, can be gained from the fact that suburban land, three miles from the center of the city, is worth fifteen hundred and two thousand dollars per acre. Judge Bowlsby'a statements are very interesting and instructive. He is a keen observer and his interest in the future of this section of the country prompts him to look into such matters thor oughly. ; On the completion of the bridges from Vancouver to Linton, Spokane, by way of Kennewick,' will have direct connec tion with Astoria, and the prosperity enjoyed by those sections will be dupli cated in Clatsop county. iTliA CfnrA W I .Altf 1 tine Store x i-aaies forVomen Jm Outfitters; ; ML THE NEATEST SHAPES IN 1 FELT and VELVET f i in the much sought for BROWNS, NAVYS AND REDS. We have all grades of millinery, neat and taking styles in new goods, cheaper and far " more satisfactory than haying the lastyear's . hat "done over." Come around while look 1 1 ing for the new fall hat at any rate. : We are receiving hew goods in the Colak '..' Department daily. . ; ,'-' ' v A nice line, of Misses suits came . in yes-, terday. The. New Vassar styles: The . first comers get the plumes. . , ' THE HAWAIIN LADIES . ARRIVE COMMITTEE HEADED BY MAYOR WISE RECEIVE THEM - LUNCH EON AND TRIP AROUND HARBOR GONE TO SEASIDE. . ; The visit of the eight Hawaiian young ladies to Astoria yesterday with AIx. Edyth Tozto Weatherred as chaperon and preceptress, was very.' pleasant event, the details of which were sent in a special cable to the Evening Bulletin of Honolulu last night and these publish ed under- flaring first-page headlines. The party arrived on the noon train from Portland and were met at the depot by members of the reception com mittee of th Chamber, of Commerce headed bj Mayor Wise and escorted to the Occident Hotel where a luncheon was served, a ladies' committee with Mrs G L. Houston as chairwoman greeting the guesU in the parlor of the hotel and entertaining them dufing the afternoon and evening. The ladieassisting Mrs. Houston to do the honors of the occasion were Mrs. W. E. Tallant, Miss Harriet Tallant, Mrs. W. E. Schimpff. Mrs. Dr. R. J. Pilkington, Mrs. J. H. Wlyte. At the dining table, Mayor wise sat as host and before the guests arose, he extended to them a most cordial wel come and explained in choice language Astoria was honored by the presence of that Astoria was honored by the pres ence of the pretty maidens from the far-awayi Wiestern Isle. ' 5 Manager wnyte of the Chamber oi Commerce had prepared for each of the young ladies from Hawaii a beribboned key, the kind that has been adopted as the jewel emblem of this organization, and the mementoes were found by the guests at their plates. v - President Welch of the Chamber of Commerce expressed some pleasing sen timents. : ' ' There were nine of the young ladies in Mrs. Weatherred's party, but only eight of them were with her in the party. Miss Bernlee K. DwigH remaining in her room in Portland slightly indisposed with a severe cold. ' Those with Mrs. Weatherred were Mjss M. Hester Lemon, Hattie I Saffrey, 'Lillian H. Mundon, Katharine Sadler, Rose L. Aloiau, Cali fornia Lucas, Daisvi Todd, Emma M. .Rose. '-':", '"".V: ". . It will be observed that only one of the young ladies has ft distinctively Hawaiian name, Miss Aloiau. After the luncheon was served, the guests met a number of the citizens of the city 'and their wives and daughters, after which" they were photographed by Mr. Woodfield in front of the First Na tional Bank. - " : ? Mr. E. W. Tallant, the well known business man of this city, surprised his fellow citizens by being able to talk with the Hawaiian young ladies in their native tongue, he having lived in Hawaii in 1873. During his residence in Hono lulu he was present at the wedding of the notable Sam Parker whose name is heralded; almost as far as the name of the islands themselves. And to make yesterday's event all the more interest ing, a niece of Sam Parker's was in the party and Mr. Tallant had the pleasure of talking over old times and acquaint ances with her, both in the English and Hawaiian tongues. s Several of the young ladies knew per sonally former Astorians now residing in Honolulu and were more than pleased to meet the relatives and friends of their acquaintances there. A sister of Mrs. Heilborn now resides in Honolulu. The young ladies were each and every one highly educated and some of them could speak as many as seven languages. They are exceptionally good singers and it may safely be said that any one of them knows more popular and familiar American songs, ancient and modern, thaa most people who live m the states. And they know these songs through and through from end to end, not having merely a superficial idea of songs as most of the continent people have. Mr. Albert Tozier, brother of ?Mrs. Weatherred, accompanied the party from Portland, at did Mr. F. R. Johnson, gen oral freight agent of the Canadian Fa ciflc, , and Mr. E. L. Cardie, general freight agent for this road. Several of the young ladies are school teachers and one, Miss Todd, is a wire less telegraph operator, the only women operator of wireless in the world.. During the afternoon the guests were taken for a trip on the river io the launch Patrol, through the courtesy of Collector Carnahan and one of the young ladies, Miss Lucas, learned to direct the wheel before the trip had been nearly completed. - , The party left for Seaside on the night train, Mr. and Mrs. James W. Welch, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Schimpff and Mrs. C. L. , Houston accompanying them. , ' ' ' Today Dan Moore of the Seaside Hotel will take them for a drive to Elk Creek and this evening they will return to Portland. :; ..' . j . i : - After returning from the boat ride yesterday evening the party paid a visit to ' the newspaper offices and to Mayor Wjse s store, jsacu of the young ladies exacted- a promise of, the Mayor that he would , send to them ' an autograph photograph. They were especially! well pleased with the stories he told fthem after lunch and will likely remember these a long while. ... ; ;: ; , Most of the young ladies arecongre- gationalists, although some are Presby terians and Episcopalians, while one h a Catholfc. . The key mementoes which the young ladies took way with them will remain a living advertisement of "Astoria in the faraway American cityi f 1 The trip is made as the result of a voting contest conducted br the Evening Bulletin of Houotulu for the purpose of increasing circulation, much in the same way that such contests are conducted in the states. And one thing is quite sure, Mls Eilyth Weatherred i the princess uncrowned of all publicity wom en on the paclfto Coast, if not then some, The young ladies who made up the party were talented." cultured' and-re fined and while they are making this trip largely) as a matter of education, yet they will not be aole to leara much outside of ,: geography. Their teachers have been too thorough for that. And as a matter of fact there were colleges in Honolulu, established by the valient missionaries of old long before there were even log cabin school In any of the Pacilia Coast states, . And now missionaries are in turn being sent out to China and Japan and the Philip pines from the Hawaiian Islands. If all the peoples of the earth: were as easily assimilated by the English speaking race as are the Hawaiian, then the brotherhood of man would Indeed most speedily be established. AnthropologicallTv the Hawauant be long neither to the brown or Malay race or to any other race so far as classlflca' tions can be made, although they are sometimes classed in the Malay race. As a matter of fact they appear with good reason to be a separate and distinct people from all others, and now they will soon be entirely American, perhaps even to the extent of forgetting their native tongue. And above all, they are peo ple greatly to be admired. The young ladies who visited Astoria yeterday were girls any one might well be proud of. . Change of Firm. Mr. Elio has sold the Bond Street 'os pue ipno3w$i i oi ;.vJS who will conduct it in the future. How to Cure a Cold. The question of bow to cure a cold without unnecessary loss of time Is one in which we are all more or less inter ested, for the quicker a cold is gotten rid of the less the danger of pneumonia and other serious diseases. Mr. B. W. L Hall, of Waverly, Va has used Cham berlain's Cough Ilemedy for years and says: 1 firmly believe Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to be absolutely the best preparation on the market for colds. I have recommended it to dry friends and they all agree with ma" For tale by Frank Hart and Leading Druggists. - The Popular Routt East The new Canadian Pacifio Short line via Spokane saves yon four hours to St. Paul Electric-lighted trains. Buffet-Lwrary-Observation cars, and the best of service. You will save two dollars by purchasing through from Astoria. James Flnlayson, agent. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY. MAUD HELP WANTED MKN AND woman to learn watchmaking, en slaving, Jeweler work, optics; easy terms; positions guaranteed; money made learning. Watchmaking -Engrav in School, 142 Fourth avenue. Beat- STAt THEATRE ASTORIA, OREGON Presenting Vaudeville De Luxe PROGRAM. For Week of October 14th, 1907 ' Overture ...........Ida Purling Farewell week of MR. AND MRS. MESMER The People's Favorites, A curious couple of clever performers In something new and entertaining. Our Favorite Picture Singer , FRANK J. DAYTON Will this week present "Arrab .Wanna Now Comes Those two Eccentric Fellows , MARTIN & CROUCH In Another New and up-to-date Specialty . v THE STAR0SC0PB , Will now take you on a trip through the Swiss Alps, give you a trolley ride in Berlin and show you a German war ship at sea.'''-,"':'.-.. " -'.'; ' - A Musical Novelty ; MISS CHARLOTTE HILL . 1 Xylophone Soloist We now present to you the Creme-De-Ls Creme of Vaudeville" ' TRLXEDA ft ROBINSON In a noval and refined character change singing and dancing specialty , JT. Bz-Miss Trixeda is conceded to be the most artistic, graceful and finished dancer in the theatrical profession, justly termed "The Flexible Marvel.", To leave you in good humor the Staro scope will now present THE HOOLIGANS OF THE WEST Patrons of this theatre will please re port any discourtesy to the management, as our aim is to present to our audience at all times a good, clean, moral, high class performance, and having made ar rangements for bookings in connection with the large Eastern circuits will be in a position to present to the Astoria public the best talent playing the West in advanced vaudeville ; . MATINEES ADMISSION 10 cents :o AND 30 cents ' fclltril 1 Z.Vji Copyrifbt 1907 by Hart Schsffner kS Marl OU want the clothes you buy to satis J fy you, not somebody else; and after you've worn them, as well as before. Harf Schaffner & Marx promises you satisfaction and we'll make good for them oa anything of theirs you buy, Leader In Nobby Clothe MMMMIMHIIIIIIHWMIimMltHMmiMHMHt 1 . NDV TO-DAY. x IToties. Heating stoves and ranges, the but and the cheapest. niUrcbrand & Qor. :':: Ifotlce, : iWe have silver side and ittclhead net ting, leaded lead lines, cotton twins and rope, Plymouth Manila rops, oil clothing and rubber boots and everything for fishermen. T, J. Carney & Co. Oliver typewriters nd automatic stenographers at A. R. Cyrus, 414 Commercial street tt Ths Tyler, The Tyler is still, doing business st the old stand, Sixth and Bond streets. Clarence Tyler makes bis customers feel at home and as a result his business is Improving. The quality of the goods he serves cannot be excelled and the neat ness of the place and the good order prevailing, makes The Tyler a popular resort. When you are In that neighbor' hood drop in and satisfy yourself . ' The Place To Dins. . Where shall we dine? There should be no question about thai If you bare no appetite, but feel that you should dine, drop into the Palace and, if yon meet Arthur . Smith, ask him to pre scribe for you. Hell do it, by laying something tempting before yon and while be does not wish ts interfere wits physicians, prescribing fos dyspepsia, he is In the business to eater to men's stomachs. ' Try him ones and then yon will always dins at the Palace, "-' Social Dance. The girls' basket bail team will give a dance Saturday night, October ICtb, tt the UDoertowa National Hall. AH are cordially invited. Cents, 78 cants 1 ladles free. 10-15-GU New Grocery Store. Try oar own mixture of coffee tie J. P. B. Freso fruit tad tsfsUbka, Bebollet & Co. grocers. Phone Mala 123L $2.00 Saved by Buying Tickets at Astoria. See G. W. Roberts, Agent, 0. R. & Ne Dock. Through tickets for all points la the United States and Europe, Quick tlms and excellent service. Tm Wall Mspa, o- rt J r - -r carefully printed, exceedingly useful (for reference and general Information will be furnished free of charge. Apply to Q W. Roberts, agent aB,cN As tori. StSt. Columbia and Victor sraDhophones and latest records at 434 Commercial street A. R. Cyras. & Christmas Excursions. U Is not too earlv to make youf 'steamer reservations. If you are going to spend Christmas in the Old Country. Th Canadian pacifle gives you tt very best service bT rail and steamer and their rates ars the lowest. TFnr. utlinn Atm a4 ,.11 nartlnil&rS. - - - iotvvV .till Ufe t ' call on James Flnlayson, ageuU; Ator)4. 5weet Apple Cider - -tlOc per Qal. Fine Sourkrout - - Be per qt. A few more boxes of fine Waxen Cooking Apples Only 65 cents ; per box ;ACMB;GROCjBY 521 Commercial Street Phone Main OOl