Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1907)
mm BarriivtorCHall T ?ncf nnr fv-ha find Tavfl prepared in a new way. The cof fee berry is cut up (not ground) by knives of almost raior sharp, nest into small uniform particles. Thns it is not crushed, as by the old method of grinding, ana the Ertle oil cells remain unbroken. The essential oil (food product) cannot eraoorate and is oreserved indefinitely. This is one reason wny a pound ot Harrington mil will make IS to 20 cups nor of frilJ ctrrnffth rnflFw than will anv coffee ground the old way; why k excels all other coffee in flavor and why it,. will keep perfectly until used. Bat the main thing about Barr- be used without ill effect by those wtm find nrHimrv nff Iniiir them, because the yellow tannin Bearing skid, and dust (the only remortd by the "steel-cut" pro cess. A delicious coffee not a tasteless substitute, t " Jric,per pound, 40cents. A. V. ALrUElN Sola Agents. TO THE DEPOSITORS OF ASTORIA BARKS. ' Ton who carry large deposits in the Astoria bank and who are doubtful of their respective conditions should invest jeur money in real estate. Owing to the auditions thai now exist, we have had Sated with us a few snaps by people needing a small amount of cash, prop erty that in a couple weeks' time, when everything clears up. will sell for a great advance over the present prices. These properties can be bought and paid for with checks, certificates of deposit or any other collateral on any Astoria bank. You don't need a dollar in cash if yon have it deposited in any of our local banks their paper is as good as the money. You give your cheek, we'll get the owner their cash. For example, you can buy the whole f block number one in Hustler's A Aiken's addition which will plat into 50 lots which will sell for at least $75 per fct for the small sum of 11600. ( This is the biggest bargain that has been offered to Aitoria people this year. It worth 2500 at least. We have dozens of other just such bargains. Xow is the time to buy, sO don't put it off. , COLUMBIA TRUST CAMPANY, Astoria Savings Bank Bids. SECOND SOU BERLIN Xov. 9. Crown Princess Frederick William gave birth to a son at 8:30 o'clock this morning. The first child of the Crown Prince was bora July 4, 1906. The royal couple were married Jnne 6, 1905. I AM HERE ! 1? V Dr. D. A. San'ourn, the French spee Salfet. has returned to Astoria and is permanently settled.. My remedies are roots, herbs, barks, and berries in the natural form. I also give magnetic treatment to those who require them. 1 guarantee to cure all those that are ; enrable of both ser. ' If there is any who can not come, write me your symptoms and I will send you my lemedies to any part of the United i States. Address Shanahan Building, 678 Commercial street. Consultation free Astoria, Oregon. Km wmm t t IL m , , . MHHHMTTWMvHMHWmWHtlMWT CO-EDUCATION FAILS Some Views on Training Young Men and Women Together. HARD KNOCKS GIVEN SYSTEM Powerful Indictment of Life in a Co Educational University by Woman Novelist New York Educator on Student Love. CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Xov. 9. Are we Americans going back oa co education! "Mor than 15,000,000 children are be ing co-educated in public schools, and the enumerators at the time of the last national census found that nearly '2 per cent of American college student i wre in eo-eJiieauooal lususuuon. Oberlin College opened its doors to both men and women as far back as 1833 and throughout the length and breadth of the country practically all the statt universities are co-educational, let the two-sex plan has been pretty frequent lv- under attack recently. Some things the late President Barper of Chicago University had to say about it was well remembered. Two more hard knocks have just been jriven to the system of imparting col lege education to young men end young women under the same roof one by an eastern college president whose ex perience has shown that men students tend to disappear from the department to which women are admitted; tie other by one of the most brilliant of the women novelists of this university city, who in a book which is creating a sen sation on account of its frank treat ment of social problems due to condi tions of heredity and environment has occasion to paint a somewhat unlovely picture of the result of co-education in leading western university. The question of what to do with am bitious younir women seeking the same advantages as their brothers and cous ins has been met in Cambridge by what is known as the Radcliffe plan, and the woman's college affiliated with Harvard has flourished since the days when it was the "Harvard Annexj" though the attitude of the men students at the old est of American institutions of higher education has always been like that of freshman who when his father asked him what were the sights of Cambridge, replied, "The Radcliffe girls." Whether, however, the broad problem has been solved anywhere is still regarded by practical educators as doubtful There was consequently a ripple ol interest last month when President F. W. Hamilton of Tufts College, one of the larger educational institutions of the greater Boston, came out with a decla ration that the college of liberal arts Is likelv in the near future to contain only women unless some scheme for separate colleges can be devised. The girls drive younir fellows away. Women students began to be admitted to Tufts la years ago. They compose nearly CO per cent of this year's entering class in the col lege of liberal arts. President Hamilton, without attacking the higher education of women in which he thoroughly be lievea, argues against co-education ss applied to the eastern institution of hieh he is the head. A more personal line of- attack ap pears in a novel, "The Road to Damas cus," written by Mrs. H. A. Mitchell Keavs, a resident now of Cambridge but until recently of the university centre of one of the western states. Mrs. Keavs, one of whose earlier stories handled the divorce question with that utter frankness that the women novel ists of today affect, has in this latest book taken advantage of an interesting itudy of the old antithesis of heredity The Brownsville Woolen Mill Store. MALLORY Craveuette HATS $3.50 SOLE AGENTS HERE 4 YOUMAN HATS 03.00 WE'ARE SOLE AGENTS HERE Oregon Buckskin Suits and Overcoats $12.00 ; This is the first time the price has ever been cut on these famous medium priced clothes. In Washington, Idaho or any part of Oregon, these Suits and Overcoats sell from $15 to $18, the sale price here is $12.00. Woolen roods on sale include all our fine wool Under wear, Sox, Shirts, Blankets, Etc,, at 15 to 30 pcr-cent discount IF ITS ntOM JUDDS IT GOOD. inis Hen ills Store d i if inn nuns.. Pmn. 3i Commercial Street r - IIMIIMIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIMH tttf T " tllMiMHMItMIHtMMIIIMHtHltMtMMMMI as against environment to have some thing to say incidentally regarding the 'ocial side of life in the colleges whsre both sexes meet daily in class rooms and elsewhere. Her novel is not dis tinctly a college story. It deals with the larger aspects of life as lived by men and women in a city of the middle est. Some of its chapters, however, .... , i .r give point to the worus e: a memwr i the medical faculty of Syracuse Unl- ersitv to the effect that other prob lems arising out of co-education, how ever serious they may be, are neverthe less "a minor matter compared with the lasting power to harm that exists in student love and marriage. It at tacks the credulity of one not born under the influence of American customs to be told that these colleges deliberate ly foster student marriages, which must also imply student love. In one western college a day is deliberately set apart during Commencement week for the announcement of engagements be twecn the students." Some such situation as this appears to exist at "Waverley University," the institution at which some of the action in Mrs. Keays' book centers. Jut which of the leading state universities of the west is intended has already become something of s speculation among eastern readers of the book; al though s refernce to two-to-nothing football eame played between Waverley and the University of Chicago might eem to give s clew. A woman newly married to a well to- .ln lawver in a western city which could be Detroit or Minneapolis or Mil waukee or Kansas City or any other nlace in the half million class, received into her home durine her husband's absence in Europe his illegitimate son of -whose existence he had never been informed. Her action was put to her as a duty which she felt she could not evade. Fearing to destroy the illusion of married happiness, she was unwilling to disclose the adopted boy's identity toj his father, who with unconcealed dis gust allowed bcr to bring up a found ling with the same care that was lav ished upon their own child. The quali ties that made the husband likable were peculiarly inherited by his eldest son while through one of the freaks of heredity they were notably absent from the legitimate child. The temperament al weakness of the father which had led to wild escapades during his stu dent days was alo passed on to the son. though this the adopted mother sup posed she had sa'ely eradicated as the lad grew toward manhood intelligent, lovable and entirely subject to her good influence. The influence continued in the early days of the boy's stay at the state university at Waverley, but waned in the enervating atmosphere of the phice. For co-education at Waverley seemed not to lie without its perils'1 for the sus ceptible. Quite likely the tenor of the institution as portrayed In "The Road to Damascus" is not characteristic of most western universities. They were not made co-cducational .with such an intent, nor have they grown great on account of their love-making opportunl ties, for as President Angell of the University of Michigan has written ii a recent articlo: "To behold the cam pus dotted with couples billing and coo ing their way to an A. B. is a thing to Venus or Pan. rather than Minerva, and were it the frequent neces sary outcome of co-education the future of the system would certainly be in jeopardy. Ko unimsHy can safely be come s matrimonial bureau nor yet a clearing-house for flirtations." So that) life st tb University of Michigan evidently in't what life at Waverley." the fictitious university of 'The Road to Damascus" is represented to be. For that isn't entirely s health ful studious existence a ludiaMa, adopting mother snd protective sngel of the waK, Jack Homfrey, finds visiting him for the first time st the university althoueh, truthfully, mot of the girls seen hurrying-to and from lecture rooms were of the tort predestined to the earn inir of bread and, butter. When she re marks that she hasn't seen a pretty one Jack tells her freely that It isn't an) place for pretty girls, and that queer things happen now and then at Wav erley. "Why do tbey have co-education then!" she asks lamely. GETTING BEADY. house when it I cold, snd cold sir In when it la warm In the buildns, thus equalizing the temperaturt constsntlr and making the room habitable snd liealth'ul to the point of perfection. Superintendent Clark is bow Install ing s set of book cases st bis office to accommodate the 000 volumne due to arrive here any day from the Ut li brary on the 10 per cent tax of this dUtrlct. From the indicia sboVt noted It will be seen thst the school affairs of Astoria are moving along with harmony and precision. Making Progress The Clatsop Fuel Company is meet ing 'with encouraging success in Its en deavor to perfect an organization, and in the tale of stock to place the com pany on s working basis. Not only are our merchants and business men sub scribing for shares in the concern, buf the farmers and property holders, upon whose land it is proposed to sink wells, are coming to the front and are signing the leases which the company is asking of tliein.. Mr. C. N. Sherman, the oil expert, was over part of the country yesterday in which It Is proposed to bore for oil and gas, and succeeded in getting signatures for tibout W0 acres of land. It is doubly encouraging at this time of financial depression to note the spirit with which our citizens are taking up this Industry. Superintendent of Schools Will Begin Taking Census, Citv Superintendent of Schools A. L. Clark is getting things in readiness to begin the taking of thfr annual school census, and will likely go to work on it next week. He expects to register at least 2000 available pupils, between the lciral aire of 4 and 20 jears, but no iotable increase is looked for. The board of school directors will meet on next Tuesday evening at the citv hall, and will dispose of large ac cumulation of routine aiiairs, inciuuing the current bills of the department. The improvement of Columbia avenue still onemtes aaalnt the use of the - . , four rooms at the Taylor school building and the 80 youngsters usually housed there are still at the Gluey building. Mr, Clark has hope of putting the children back at Taylor by the flrnt of December, If not Thanksgiving Day. He reports that tho now furnace scrv ice at the Tavlor school is among the best afscts of the district and is doing splendid work, and tho chief difficulty experienced with the system is to bitim little enough coal to keep it In the best working order., It Is the new heating and ventilating plant Installed at that building this year by the board at a cost of $3650, and by its processes changes the air in all the rooms of the building every seven mlnutcsj and the fan service runs Molding Astoria n, (10 cents per' month all the time, driving warm air in the delivered by carrior, , Hi Fought at Gettysburg. Darhl Parker, of Favttt. N. Y- was) lt a foot at GattTtburv. writssi lse trio Blttsrs have lions ma mors food than any medicine I svtr took. For several years I bad stomach trouble, . r . m . - and paid out mucn money lor mtoMiM to little purpose, until I began taking . . . . m . . A.I - SSAA Elsoirw lsiiisrs. J wouw not was sow foe hat tbsv haa dona for ma Grand tonic for tht aged and for fsnsals weak nesses. Great alternative snd body bulklerj best of all for Isms back and weak kidneys. Guars ntesd by Char Jet Rogers & Son, druggists, 80 otnta. FOOTBALL FOOTBALL TODAYA. F. & GROUNDS ASTORIA vs. BUNKER HILL TODAY s:3o P. M. - FOOTBALL FOOTBALL t CASHIER AND MONEY GONE. IyAWTOJf, Okla., Nov, 9.-X. D. Rankin, cashier of the Merchants' & Planters' Bonk of this place, who mys teriously disappeared last night with a shortage of the bank's cash of aout $50,000 Is still missing. The theory of suicide, first advanced, is now discredit ed and the police are working on the idea he hat. lsft the country The bank has gone into the hands of a receiver. WILL RECEIVE PENSION. . PARIS, Nov. 0 Among the list of thoxe to whom pensions arc to be grant ed is Major Dreyfus, He is to receive $470 annually. His services extend over a period of 31 years. School Shoes FOR BOYS The Billy Buster Steel Bot tom Shoes The Shoe wun a 9oie that Don't Wear Out S. A. G1MRE 143 Bond St., oppoiitt Either Bros.