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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 13, 1907)
B THE MORNING ASTOIUAN? ASTOUIA. , OltEGON. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER rj, 1907. iiarnivaioi ji- qui Cttall Is just pure Mocha and Java prepared In a new way. The cof iee berry is cut tip (not ground) by knives of almost nuor sharp ness into small uniform particles. Thus it is not crushed, as by the old method of grinding, ana the little oil cells remain unbroken. The essential oil (food product) cannot evaporate and is preserved indefinitely. This is one reason why pound of Barringtoa Hall will make 15 to 20 cups more of full strength coffee than will any coffee ground the old way; why it excels all other coffee in flavor and why it. will keep perfectly nnnl used. But the main thins about Barr- ington Hall Coffee is that it can be toed without ill effect by those who find ordinary coffee injures them, because the yellow tannin bearing skin and oust (the only injurious properties of coffee) are removed by the "steel-cut pro cess. - A delicious coffee not tasteless substitute.' j .Price, per pound, j 4Gc etitis. IMPEACH WITNESS Attorneys for Duke of Portland Gathering Much Testimony CALDWELL NEVER KNEWDRUCE A. V. ALLEN Sole Agents. ASTORIAN IS GIVEN HONORS (Continued from Page 1) if not throughout the Northwest, and we are entirely eon vi need that Astoria will become a most important exporting port, as well as a port of entry for Urge importations, tf "We are working out a plan whereby we expect to fill in with solid ground all that part of Astoria now built on piles. ' ' . ';:-' t-rvfOur people, and especially our County Court, are furthering to the utmost a plan to build the largest possible mile age of good roads in Clatsop county each j ear. We are trying, with the co-operation of the Portland Automobile Club, and the County Courts of Columbia and Clatsop counties to build a good road all the way from Portland through As toria and Seaside to Tillamook, includ ing 18 miles of beach-way which nature has prepared, the finest in the world. "These important matters get a place in our pamphlets, letters and circulars, and help us to rivet the attention on Astoria of those who are interested in the great Northwest. "Printers' Ink, of issue July 7th, in a four-page article on publicity, devoted about half of the space to Astoria, show ing that among certain advertisers, our efforts have something more than ordi nary interest f "Municipal advertising is not the tank of a dreamer. "On the contrary k is a .work so prac tical that the municipality ought to be taxed for it. And St is not improbable that laws to this end will yet be enacted. A city can be assisted in its building processes by advertising, if it has merits which can be convincingly set forth with the necessary discrimination, just as surely as advertising has made money out of the patent medicine business. And a conscientious advertiser should be able to work in the municipal field with a great deal more zest than in any other, because of the substantial elements be can draft into his service. But the ad vertiser who handles a municipal adver tising campaign, must have a genuine enthusiasm for the cause he presents, else he cannot impart the necessary lire to his work, or enthuse others sufficient-! ly to achieve success." j JAPS BUIir DESTROYER. VICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 12.-Mail ad t vices from Tokio state that a destroyer. the best of her class In the .world, will ' be built at Maizuro Naval Yard for tie Japanese Navy. The new destroyer will be 1100 tons and will steam 33 knots an hour. . CARNEGIE MAKES GIFT, 1 CHICAGO, Nov. 12,-Andrew Carnegie 'yesterday made his first gift to the Uni versity of Chicago It is a present of $10,000 to be used for the Wm. Rainey Harper memorial library fund. With this gift the University has a total of $130,000 toward the $200,000 it must raise to take advantage of Rockefeller's recent conditional : gift . of $600,000. Thus far the faculty and students have given $17,000, the trustees $70,000 and the Alumni $10,000. Affidavits Being Obtained to Show That Robert Caldwell Was Not Familiar With the Life and Actions of the Fifth Duke of Portland. NEW YORK, Nov. 12.-Attorne.vs, acting for the Duke of Portland, are gathering every bit of evidence they can here regarding the affairs of Robert Caldwell, who told a sensational story in the London courts last week regard ing the alleged dual life of the fifth Duke of Portland, during the trial of the case brought by the heirs of T. C Bruce, who, it was claimed, waa the read Duke of Portland. Caldwell's life history has been cabled to the lawyers representing the bolder of the title that ia under attack, and it is staled, when Caldwell takes the stand next Fiday for cross examination be will be confronted with a mass of facta that will be used as the basis of an' effort to' shake his testimony that he arranged to bury T. C. Druce when the latter decided to abandon his double life' and live as the Duke only. To carry out the scheme lead waa placed in a coffin and buried aa Druce's body. One of the affidavits obtained here! was made, it is stated, by Nathaniel Inch, who declared that he had two other men now living in New York who worked with the .witness in Londonderry at the time the supposed Duke waa buried and that Caldwell was st no time away from the grain mills where they were employed. Mr. Inch Is positive in his assertion that Caldwell never knew either Druce op the Duke of Portland and that be had nothing to do with the alleged mock funeral which he declared waa conducted by him. Mr. Inch baa known Caldwell for nearly S3 years and bad been associated with him for nearly 40 years. From 1857 he had known the witness with whom he worked in several places, and when the two were in New York they lived together for some time before Cald well married. Other affidavits of an important char acter will be obtained, it is expected within the next few days. ttHHWWWfMMtWWMHH MUmUMMMMIlHHMIMMIMI Woolen Goodls Sale BAYS of the g'reat HENRY C. STAYER DEAD. Prominent Manufacturer of ' Vehicles Dies From Operation, CHICAGO, Nov. 12. Henry C. Staver, president of the Staver Carriage Com pany, died yesterday while on the oper ating table in Englewood Hospital. He was 63 years old. Mr. Staver bad been suffering for a year and a half from a tumor of the abdomen. The physicians gave out a statement that the immediate cause of death was heart failure. The family .was endeavoring last night to locate a son, Lieutenant Roy B. Staver, U. 8. A., whose headquarters are in San Francisco. Mr. Staver, who had been a resident of Englewood for 20 years was known as a leader in local public movements. Among the manu facturers of vehicles he was a national figure. In 1876 he become a jobber of imple ments in Kansas City, a business which was later consolidated with the Jloline Plow Company, after which Mr. Staver became secretary of the J. L Case Plow Company, of Racine, Wis. ; He came to Chicago in 1885 and form ed the firm of H C. Staver & Company, jobbers of implements and vehicles. This firm later became the Staver 4 Abbott Company and ftnaly was incor porated in the Staver Carriage Com pany, of which Mr. Staver was presi dent and general manager until his death. The factor has an annual output of vehicles valued at $1,000,000. Mr. Staver served several years as president of the Carriage Builders' Na tional Association and of the National Association of Agricultural Implement and Vehicle Manu'acturers, TRAVELS IN STYLE. Stowaway Given First Class Cabin on Atlantic Liner. . NEW YORK, Nov. 12.-It is rare in deed that a stowaway travels , like a first cabin passenger, but that is the ex perience which befell Win. Roseman, son of a New York jeweler. Roseman has just arrived from London by the Atlan tic transport steamer Minnetonka. The Minnetonka has been cut - ten hours when Roseman introduced himself to the purser and explained that he was a stowaway and wished to be looked HUNDREDS and hundreds of people in and around Astoria have taken advan tage of this great sale but just as many have not Now stop and reason Good Voolen Goods are much cheaper at any cost than doctor bills. In no climate are good woolen goods needed more than they are in Oregon Now if you want good woolen goods come to the Woolen Miff Store while the Woolen Goods Sale is on arid 'save from 15 to 30 per cent on your winter supply, ' Woolen foods sale prices on the following woolen goods? Woolen Underwear, Sox, f Shirts, Mackinaws, Overshirts, Oregon, Buckskin Suits and Overcoats. RAINCOATS 20 per cent OFF mmi'BammmmmmmMjmmMMmwmmmmm gmmammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmMmmmam aammmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmam Boy's Suits ALL WOOL 25c and 35c 20 per cent SUITS SOX OFF for $7.50 20c pair. maim Woolen JUDD BROS., Props. 557 Commercial Street. i ii ' V after. The purser took the youth to Captain Cannon and the captain learned from Roseman that he went abroad on the liner Oceanic last summer, had a good time in Europe and spent all hli money. Roseman assured the captain that his family would pay for his pas sage, the result of which the stowaway was given a berth in the officer's quart ers and a seat at the officers mess. For five days Roseman had the run of the vessel but after that be was obliged to keep to the after part of the main deck and when the Minnetonka left Quaran tine, by order of the Immigration au thorities, Roseman was' locked up in the vessel's hospital. His relatives will secure bis release today. REDS- HOLD MEETING. Land Memory of Haymarket Anarchists in Flaming Speeches. CHICAGO, Nov. 12. 1000 men and women representing 17 trade unions, singing-, turners and other societies, gather in Brands Hal hist night to revere the memory of the amarchists of the Haymarket. The ball was a creation of red decorations. From the top box on each side of the stage hung large red f lacs along side the stars and stripes. Jos Schmidt, treasurer of the Hay- wood-Moyer benefit Association opened up the fireworks with a flaming speech in German. Music by an orchestra, and choruses of men and svomen followed. ; T. P. Quinn, prominent as a municipal ownership agitator during the Dunne ad ministration, spoke in English. , "The five Haymarket heroes", he said, "were martyrs of liberty not . their liberty, but that of an enslaved people. The policemen who raided the Hay market meeting violated every principle that the men of '76 laid down their lives for. The man who threw that bomb never was found. We sometimes hear apologies for the act, but I never have been one of the apologizers I never will be' ' SMALLER INVESTORS Brokerage Houses Report Sales in Small Lots. VOLUME 0FBUSINESS6R EATER Kings 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's Drug Store, -''. Chapped hands are quickly cured by applying Chamberlain's Salve, Price, 25 cents. For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists, , .. People of Small Means Taking Advant age of Cheapness of Railroad and In dustrial Stocks and Are Baying for Investment, Not Speculation. NEW YORK, Nov. 12.-Brokerage houses here which make a specialty of dealing in small lots of standard indus trial and railroad shares, continue to be swamped with work, and houses with foreign connections report a wave of buying orders for Kurope, which is un precedented. Probably the most strik ing feature of the financial situation at present is the big scale on which this investment , buying, by persons with small savings, is going on. Jame L, Carter, in charge of the stock transfer department of J. P. Mbr gan . Company, is authority for the statement that in practically every im portant railroad stock listed the new stockholders who have recently invested their savings chiefly in small lots, repre sent from 25 to B0 per cent of Ihe total number of stockholders enrolled. Mr. Carter' says that the purchases average not more than 20 or 30 shares to the individual, that they appear to be for investment rather than speculative pur poses and that the orders come from all parts of the country. The transfer office of the United States Steel Corporation Is a week be hind on its routine work. The Union Pacific and Southern Pacific Railroads report an increase In the number of stockholders at the" rate; since the first of the montla. of 300 a day. The Rock Island road has opened between 500 and 000 new accounts in the last six weeks, mostly in the common stock. The num ber of stockholders of the Chicago, Mil waukee & St, 500 In the last two weeks. The activity in Pennsylvania railroad stock has been so great of late that figures of recent date sr. unobtainable. FOREIGN MISSIONS, Methodist Board Hat Debt of $85,000 to Make Up. SEATTLE, Nov. 12. Because of a debt of 15,000 banging over the Metho dist Episcopal Board of Foreign Mis sions In session here, that body must either retrench to the extent of 1 170,000 in making appropriations for the foreign missions field, of violate a strict Inter pretaton of the laws of the church which say that the board shall not appropriate more money than the income of the foreign mission board during the prev ious year. This condition Is due to the separating of the foreign and the home mission societies during the past church year, The committee on general appro priation will report in favor of violating the strict interpretation of the law, and it is expected its action will be endorsed in the morning meeting, because a cur tailment of (170,000 in the Income would mean a vast reduction in the number of missionaries in all foreign fields. The conference Sunday appropriated $20,300 to the support of missionary bishops, $18,000 to the support of retired missionaries and the widows and or phans of missionaries, 25,000 for inci dental needs of missions, , $47,000 for the publication fund, $0000 for young peoples .work, $20,750 for the salaries of fluid secretaries, $33,500 for adminis tration purposes and $10,000 for miscel laneous uses, : WAS A BIGAMIST. CHIPPEWA FALLS. Wis., Nov. 12 Albcrt Bates yeeterday was sentenced to serve one year In , the penitentiary for bigamy. He acknowledged that he had been married often, but thought he had always waited long enough for the preceding wife Jo get a divorce before he married the next one. He did not inquire about the divorce, but took it lof granted that one would be obtained, Elopement with a sister-in-law was the latest, venture in matrimony1 undertaken by Bates. ; " . . ' Cored 0 Brifht's Disease, Do you know that Pinesalva Carboll d set like poultice in drawing out Inflammation and poison f It la antl sept la. For cuts, bums, tecama, cracked hand U ia Immediate nllaf. Sold by frank Hart's Drag Store. , CASTOR I A In lafraU tad CMMren. " Tta Kind You KaTs Abrs E Bears tha Blgnnturs of School Shoes We have secured the agency for Orlno Lnxative Fruit Syrup, the new laxative that irskes the liver lively, purifies the Paul has increased by d)ei(Uve 0Tnn. . ,a . nhro,, . stlpation. Ask us about it. T. F. Lauriu, Owl Drug Store. ' FOR BOY The Billy Buster Steel Bot , torn Shoes ; Thei Shoe with a Sole , , ! that Don't Wear Out , ;S.!A.;G1MRE 143 Bond St., opposite Fisher Bros.