1- i 4 if J' If j! 1 1 i-'i r, t. .. I h I '! " i e THE MORNING AST011IAN.- ASTOIUA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1907., NEW ARRIVALS We have received our 190S Dinnerware stock patterns in Johnson Bros. Semi-Porcelain. Mentone, Blue and Clover. , Just like the Haviland. IOO PIECE SET $16.00 See Window Display. : A. V. AIJLEN. BRANCH UNIONTOWN PHONE MAIN 713 PHONES MAIN 711. MAIN 8871 Sole Agents for Baker's Barrington Hall Steel Cut Coffee UNDERGO HARDSHIP American Whaling Schooner is Wrecked. ' by the people of Vladivostok where they were taken, juunnsr their sty ti Shantarski Bay they subsisted on sal mon which they killed with stick . Tbey had given up all hope of rescue when the Utr.ua came to their aid. PRETTY GIRL THIEF. TAOOMJl, Oct. 29. The police! be lieve that in the arrest of Edna Mann, alias Edith Mail, alias Minnie Easterly, they hare captured a confirmed klepto maniac. Miss Mann comes from Puvel hip, and is only 17 years old. She is a sweet-faced, well-dressed girl, refined in appearance, with the manners of a gen- Knfcrfated on Salmon Which They Killed i tlewoman. Her family are highly re- SAYED BY RUSSIANTRAN SPORT , With Sticks Had Given Up All Hope "Whan Transport Came to Their Aid Speak Well of Treatment SAN FRANCISCO. Oct 29. Wrecked n the rocky coast of Siberia, during a . hurricane on Aug 30, Capt. Thomas and 13 members of the American whaling schooner Carrie and Annie, were forced to undergo hardships which almost re sulted in their death during a lengthy Stay upon the bleak stretch of shore Bear Shantarski Bay until finally a res ts was effected by the Russian trans port Litzun, in command of Capt. Nicolas Jogt, in the middle of September. The shipwrecked men reached this port yesterday on the steamer Asia. Iter speak in the highest terms of j spectable peoplie of Fuyallup. She has been doing chambermaid work here for some time and wherever she has worked has been guilty, so the police claim, of petty thievrv. Anything she could lay her hands on that was valuable or even looked attractive she took. Much of the plunder she has thus carried off is worth less to her. (With a girl named Florence Trouppe, of Olympia, Miss Mann was arrested three weeks ago. The Trouppe girl was sentenced to the reform school and Miss Mann was ordered to leave the city. She went to Seattle, but returned at once, and continued stealing. her career of SIX MONTHS FOR GILLETTE. NEW YORK. Oct. 29. Former Vice President Gillette of the Mutual Life Insurance Company was sentenced yes terday to six months in the peniten- tbeir. treatment on- the transport and j tiary on his conviction of perjury. r A Woman's Remedy There are times when a woman feels nerrom, irritable, and blue. These symptoms are the result of peculiar conditions which indicate the need of a safe snd dependable remedy to assist Nature in her efforts to establish healthy action to the organs which directly affect woman's health. r HARTJE CASE AGAIN Husband Endeavors to Have 'Case Re-Opened,' SAID TO HAVE NEW TESTIMONY Supplemental Brief Filed With Copies of Love Letters Alleged to Have Been Written by Mrs. Hartje to Tom Ma dine, One of Co-respondents in Case. may be safely employed whenever backache, weakness, a feeling of nausea, f aintness, nervousness, lassitude or other disagreeable sensations foretell derangements that need righting and regulating. Beecham's Fills improve the digestion, brine back the appetite, purify the blood and clear the complexion. They have been used by women of every land, with uniform ' success for nearly sixty years. They are universally re j j . u 1 j 1 1 . .... tuuiiucuucu a luiiu lUAaiivc, au lucai cunailluacr ana A Safe Corrective In Boxes with full Directions, 10c. and 25c. riTTSBl'RG, Oct. 29.-Mrs. Mary Scott Hartje today filed in the superior court, in Philadelphia, an answer to the brief filed recently by her husband in which he requested the divorce to be reopened for the introduction of newly Acquired testimony. Hartje denies all of Mrs. Hartje's allegations. According to a report in Philadelphia, Hartje has filed a petition with the court to strike out Mrs. Hartje's answer because it is irrevelant. Hartje also filed a supplemental brief today with copies of love letter alleged to have been writ ten by Mrs. Hartje to "Tom" Madine, one of the co-respondents in the case. These letters it is alleged by Hartje are of an incriminating character. Mrs. Hartje stoutly denied she ever wrote Madine a letter. She contends she is being harrassed by paid servants in the employ of her husband. Affidavits are attached to her answer showing that Madine has been repeatedly offered large sums to turn traitor to the woman. Madine recently made a confession in Canatk acknowledging an intimacy with Mrs. Hartje. He has since gone to Ireland where he has purchased a hotel. DENIES REPORT. XEW YORK, Oct. 29.-rAt the office of the Union Pacific Railway Co., in this city there was a prompt denial of the accuracy of the telegram from Omaha announcing that all construction work on the entire system has been abandoned. It was said that the dis charge of the employes always took place on November 1, after the construc tion work of the summer was ended, because construction work in the winter was much more expensive and that this year the number of men discharged wss greater because the amount of construe- crwat.fir. Xn riirfjiilnipnt. nf liiiuinpaA In looked for, but rather an increase. OMAIIA, Xeb., Oct. 29. The Union Pacific Railroad today discharged be tween four and eight thousand men from the construction department and every piece of construction on the entire svstem is abandoned. resulting from the killing of Jack Davis, a whits ntnn and wounding of his com panion by negroes a few days ago and the tubiequcnt finding of the dead bodies of two negroes near the seen of the shooting. J-int night; Captain Kogurs, iu charge of the rangers, tele graphed tot more men. WILL CALL EXTRA SESSION, v, - rv Possibility of Supreme Court Turning Down Direct Primary Law. OLYMTIA, Oct. 20.-lf ait iniion to be brought in the. supreme court within the next week to invalidate the new direct primary, law of the state is sue eess'nl, (townior Mead will at once call a special mmIoii of the legislature to pas tt u law to mod the requirements of the dewkm of the supreme court. Wiiile no oflUial announcement has ken made by the governor to this ef fect, clow friends quote him freely to Mint effect, mid admit having talked with him on tho subject. ' One phase of the primary law that requiring candidates for salaried offices to pay a feewas beiore the superior court : of Thurston county yesterday Judge I Jim pointed out to Attorney Gordon Maekay, who attacked the law on this point, that he was practically for and against the constitutionality of the law in this case, and It was then agreed that proceedings should be com menced which would bring before the court the entire set. Judge, linn held in favor of the law on the point raised, and announced that he would hold the same way when the other questions should be presented to him today. He explained this in ad vance, saying that In such large ques tions as this, when the case was cer tain to be taken to the supreme court, he thought it well for the lower courts to hold the law constitutional leaving it to the supreme court to settle. Proceedings Jn mandamus will be be gun today and Attorney Maekay hopes to have the record in the supreme court on appeal within one week. lhe strong point relied upon by At torney Mackay is the alleged defective title of the primary election law. He argues that the law in effect elet-ts u preme and superior court judges, in that the names of onh the men who are nominated are to be printed on the elec tive ballots. This, in practical work ings, elects the judges at the September primaries, as there will be no names of opposition judicial candidates on the No vember ballots. The attorney general will appear in the (supreme court In de fence of the law. ' ' X5he mU , j The Store a Ladies HirWomen beeBJHIVE' 0,"ffl,ers iiFaicy We have an extensive displayjof new goods in Art Wori , ,. . We are agents for f Richardson's Embroidery Silks and have the package assortment of I Wallachian, Biedermaicr and Eye- j let Embroidery with Working Silk and minute instructions for working acting as a high-class teacher. It is time now to plan for CHRiSTMASFANCYWpRK.il RAILROADS ASK DISMISSAL. SEATTLE, Oct. 2'J. Attorneys for the defendants in the suit of the lumber men to restrain the railroads from put ting into force the 20 per cent increase on lumber rates, aked the United State district court to dismiss the proceeding on the ground that there is no jurisdic tion and no service. A demurrer to the bill filed by the lumbermen asking an injunction against the increase was not argueo. . ALLEGED MURDERER CAPTURED. PORTLAND, Oct. 2U.- Toe Andeison, an ex-convict with a doen aliases, hn been arrested charged with being the murderer of Engineer Harry M. Logan. .'onvineing circumstantial evidence has tx-cn obtained by the detectives detailed on the ease. A woman, -who it is alleged saw the prisoner jump from the bridge after the shooting, told her story to the officers and that with the finding of an overcoat which Anderson admits was hU, gave th edetectives the clew which culminated in the arrest of the prisoner today DEMANDS DAMAGES. CLEVELAND, Oct. 29.-Because he returned to the house in which he wa shot in the ear, while in the act of lunching after ritling it, to demand damages from the owner of the looted house, Frank Provrnk now find himself U'hiiid the bar chained, with burglary nd larceny. , -After fillinc aba if with silver an.l other valuable's, ltoV k sat down to eat a cold lunch in the home of Paul J. Beitt ist night. tittf returned to find the .trsngcr,t.hi;borL lhe burglar blew out the ive ihm ;bll tyeitt fired In the larknes. Three hours later Beitt, rous ed by- a jK'f Jjistefrt j appiug at the door, faed tbe,mas bo Jcteaped. my ear," ilie, vjsi.tor, r,, "Weliu'y'Brgotaerve, ald Beitt. The man" raii, but lleiti and a police- man cajjht , him, And"h Va locked up. LoV:MiKtft EAD. CBICAGObcl. W-Wiaf. Deere, head of the KrcalOlV'Kvdrfts'a'eloline. III., who has bconMllI id 'Chicago several months, died af lifeS1 o'efdolc'; today at the Laoota hotel.if He' was born at Han cock, Vermont, fc'ffi? . . RACE SUICIDE IN MIDDLE CLASS. . ITALIAN DONNYBROOK. CHICAGO, Oct. 29. One man was shot and fatally wounded, several others cut and battered and 12 men arrested during a riot today at Halstead and Taylor streets in which 500 Italians took part. The fight started when diaries Specilao and Angelo Goporbelli, between whom a fued existed, met on the street. Specilao was shot twice and will die, friends of both men joined in tlic melee and in a short time a free-for-all fight was in progress. The street car lines were block ed and interrupted and it required 20 policemen to restore order. ' BANKS WILL NOT CLOSE. SEATTLE, Oct. 29. The Seattle clearing-house association today resolved that the local situation does not call for issuance of clearing-house certifi cates and other emergency measures, such as most other cities have adopted. Seattle's banks have only nominal sums on deposit, in New York and Chicago banks, and average between 40 and 50 per cent reserves. Local bankers claim that Seattle can take care of itself. , , , NEAR RACE WAR. SAN AUGUSTINE, Tex., Oct. 29.-A force of state rangers is here awaiting developments in the intense feeling here "The sociologUs !'ilie-charge of race suicide at the doors 'of" ''the multi millionaires," writes AatewJch ardson in an article on "The Influence of the Business Woman on Home Life,' in the November Woman's Home Com panion. "Why do they not investigate the family conditions in the great middle class, from) which are drawn our mot successful women? Here they will nna the great source of danger to the pro limitation of the human race. ''Today it is the young woman and the mature woman of the middle class who are turning their backs on the home wherein lies America's hope of future Greatness. And for what? To exchange the birthright of woillanliood, wifehood and motherhood for tiifl mess of pottage known as a business career. Therein lies the nation's greatest menace race sv'cide." Rings Dyspepsia Tablets do the work Stomach trouble, dyspepsia, indigestion, bloating, etc., yield quickly. Two days' treatment free. Ask your druggist for a free trial. 'Sold by Frank Hart' Drug Store. "TEA - You will find no poor tea in packages bearing: our name. If , ydu 'find; any such, you know what to do. Your grocer return! your money if yon don'f lilto Schilling's Beat; woyayhi. : Can You Rhyme rr rtl.trlhtlted O Wise Customers who can do o ouccofofully With hi unl originality, Jlernmrt Wl"s proposes another new lla. Il ls ' written verse, which Is published below (except the bt line). Every custom who buys' clothing In Vi'i big store, has one guess with each 13 worth of goods. The first three Wise Customers who give the exact line will receive $10.00 Each. The next four WISE customers who furnish the nesreit or cleverest Una tt fit will recslve $5.00 each. ftMMMMMMMtMM A handsome young fir! In Chinook, It wooed by a fellow named Cook; You can easily surmise Why fail suit she denies Because ' MMKtlilHOMMMIMIt t If &t&6 I ttiilltMMtHMMMMIM Addrtll it tMHMiM The completed verse is written, on a sheet of paper sealed iu two envelopes and placed in a safe. On the 1st of December, three well known respon sible persons will open the safe, compare all answers with the original and divide the money. Fisher Bros. Company Sole Agents for Barbour's and Finlayson's Salmon Twine and Netting' Hardware, Iron, Steel and Ship chand lery. Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Brass Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass & Hardwood Groceries A Complete Line of Fishing, Gannery Logger and Mill Supplies SJ I Fisher Bros. Co. 540-550 Bond Street Astorlo - - . Oregon , " IRVING'S Bftmfy' t V i--. NOTHING FINER TRY IT f AMERICAN IMPORTING CO. 589 Commercial Street ' '-- V'.,. f: ;' !:f;;