Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 15, 1907)
THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTORIA. OREGON. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER ij, 1907. BamngtortHall. ' Is iust pure Moclia and Java prepared in a new way. The cof fee berry is cut tip (not ground) by knives of almost raior sharp ness into small uniform particles. Thus it is not crushed, as by the eld method of grinding, and the Kttle oil celts remain unbroken. Tne essential oil (food product) cannot evaporate and is preserved indefinitely. This is one reason wfey a pound of Harrington Hall mm make 1$ to 20 cups more of foil strength coffee than will any coffee ground the old way; why ft excels all other coffee in flavor and why it .will keep perfectly mtil used. Sat the main thing about Barr wgton Hall Coffee is that it can be ased without ill effect by those who find ordinary coffee injures then, because the yellow tannin bearing skin and dust (the only inarioas properties of coffee) are removed by the "steel-cot" pro cess, A delicious coffee not a tasteless substitute.- JVica, per poind, 40 cents. WASHINGTON LETTER President's Attitude tor Third I Term Better Defined. TAFT BOOM NOT PROGRESSING A. V. ALLEN Sole Agents. BEST OP PROOF. That Hyomei Will Care AH Forma ef Cattarfcal Diseases. Testimonial could be printed by the Amsands, many of them from Astoria nd aearby towns, that Hyomei is an absolute cure for all catarrhal troubles, ftut the best proof of iU unusual curative sowers is the guarantee that T. F. lewrens give with every outfit that he sella, "Money back if Hyomei does not da all that is claimed for it Bye-mei is not a secret remedy. Its formula is given freely to physicians w&o . want to know what they use warn they prescribe Hyomei. It is 'cwanteed under the Pure Food and jBrag Law by aerial No. 1418. . Br breathing Hyomei, the healing medication goes directly to every nook sod corner of the air passages where tte catarrhal germs may lurk, and dia Uecta and heala. To be convinced of Oia you have only to give it a trial. remembering that if it does not cure, X T. La wrens will refund your money. There is no dangerous stomach drug ging when Hromei is used. Its healing medication is breathed through a little jacket inhaler a few times daily, and ataiest immediately a great improve ment ia noticed and quick recovery fol lows. The complete Hyomei outfit costs but $1.00, and in most cases is sufficient to coat the disease, making it only a dentine treatment but one that is aighly economical Get an outfit today from, T. F. Lewrena if you have any symptoms of catarrh, and see how quick Sf the remedy relieves and cures. ' That remarkable walk only shows that YJ. rv tt- . : . tt.IU ZUJfBVU lltQlUU 19 QU UlUXCi mi mid of "the long journey that be was 1 tion to the Roosevelt policies. It is this &rty years ago. , I prospect that convinces Washington that Roosevelt Favors Ohloan But Republi cans' Are Not Over Enthusiastic Re gaidiog ivweUry's CandidacyPresi dent and Hughes Don't His; WASHINGTON, Kov 14. Cynical Washington ia becoming more thorough- My convinced every day that President Roosevelt candidate- for 1908 is none other than Theodore Roosevelt. Within the past week he has sent word to bis friends and supporters throughout the country that it ia his wih that the deletes elected from their respective States to the next Republican National Convention shall be men who can be re lied upon to support his polMe and who will cast their votes for the candidate who at the time seems best equipped to carry those policies forward. .This report is no idle rumor. Inquiry of the recognized Roosevelt third-term supporters in every State will confirm its truth. It is known here that the President personally has taken hold of the political situation, and that fwm now on he will make things hum. It appears certain that he is despairing of the Taft candidacy. A year ago Mr. Roosevelt started the Taft boom. He let it be known that the Secretary of War above all others was his first choice fop the succession. At that time be meant what he said. He then thought that the nomination of Judge Taft would be easy of accomplishment. Even at so late a date as when he sent his Secretary of War on a jaunt around the world, first to start the new Philippines government off right and then to pro ceed to the courts of Europe to confer with the crowned heads, the President felt confident of bis ability to name the Ohioan as his successor. But something strangely has happened to the Taft boom. It is not rolling with that noise and roar that Mr. Roosevelt had expect ed. Hence it behooves the occupant of the White House not only to inquire into the causes of the threatened col lapse of the Taft movement, but also to attempt first to inject new life into it This be ia attempting to do by send ing the messages out to the third term boomers everywhere to look sharply to it that only men who are known beyond question to be supporters of his radical policies shall be slated for delegates to the convention. What he intends to do with these men after their selection is assured the question of chief politi-al importance in Washington today. The consensus of opinion is that he will be unable, even should he try, to head them off from renominating him. It is assum ed, of course, that after he receives pos itive assurances that the delegations of the majority of the States are to be dominated by the supporters of his poli cies he will then undertake to organize them into a compact wieldy Taft or ganization. - No other candidate now in sight suits the President half so well as does Judge Taft. But if he should fail to split up into warring factions and thus strengthen the opposi Mr, Roosevelt h more nearly convinced than ever he was Unit in order, to ut a continuum1 of his policies unbroken he will have to tnke the nomination himself, The leaders of his party hi Now York will ll upon the president in a few days to lay he'or htm the condition in that State. They will be headed by Timothy L Woodruff, chairman of th XVw Yoik Republican State Committee, who the day after election declared In a publinhed interview his firm conviction that Mi Roosevelt's would be the only name preeiitd to the next Republican national convention. ' .Mr. Woodruff had just won a notable victory in King County (llirmkl,vti,)uually Democratic by twenty thousands, and he attributed hi suece-s to his appeal to the voter to stand bv Roosevelt. A few days be fore the ballot wore east he held a join dclmte in Brooklyn with Patrick 11.' Me Carren, the Democratic leader o( that city, on the question of President Roo velt'a responsibility for the recent liuau clal flurry. MeCarrca had stated in an interview that the entire responsibility for the threatened frightful panic was MV. Roosevelt's. WloodrulT thereupon challenged the Democratic leader to a joint debate on the question. The Re publican leader is now convinced that but for this delwte he would have lo-t Kings County. Therefore he holds that the President' popularity is so great that nobody can atop hi renomination. When Mr. Woodruff visit the White House it is expected that something de finite in the line of the President's atti tude toward Governor Hughe will be developed. It is known here, a it is in New York, that the one man of whom the President is jealous above all other men is Governor Hughes, Mr. Roosevelt thinks, and always proclaims, that he had shown ingratitude and exhibited it in a form unforgiveable. The fact 1 that the New York Governor is quite too inde pendent foe the President. He has never sought advice at the White House on any move made in the way of exposing corruption in high finance in New York and in this way he has refused to share wttb the President the credit of the ex poures made ia the Metropolitan Street RaiMay investigation in the metropolis. It is known here that the President made earnest efforts to learn what Gov ernor Hughes' programme was after the creation of the Public Utilities Cominis slon. This is only one of the many cause of friction between President Roosevelt and Governor Hughes, and the politicans here believe that before the President making game proceed much further Roosevelt and Hughes will be flying at one another's throat. Such a fight would be welcomed by the Democrats, as It would seriously split the Republi cans in New York and brighten the De moeratie prospects in the Empire State beyond measure. ' DIRECTS JURY. Verdict foe Plaintiff Granted in Insur ance Suits. SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 14. -On mo tion of the plaintiffs attorney U. 8,Cir cuit Judge Van Fleet direct a jury sit ting before him to return a verdict in the sum of $2300 with interest at 7 per cent from April 18, 1906, in favor of the plain tiff in the suit of Leon Willard and Com pany against the Williamsburg City Fire Insurance Company yesterday. This was the amount sued for, and the ruling of the court followed closely in line with that of Judge Whitson in the Ber gin case some time ago. There are about twenty similar sujts against the Williamsburg Company in which the defence is the same as in the action decided yesterday. Tne decision will affect nearly all the suits in which the earthquake clause is the main de fense. t J. H. PETERSEN A. E. PETERSEN J Open For Business i UJTML, Astoria's Host Up-to-Date Barter Shop We offer you good service, and courteous treatment. Wc I J make a specialty of children's haircutting, and handle the f ! best line of barber supplies and cutlery. Give us a call, f J. H. PETERSEN SON, Props. 572 Commercial St. Opp. Heilborn's. h4-4 The GOSSHARD Now Being Demonstrated in Our Corset Department. Come and see the corset that gives every woman a better figure. Simington Dry Goods Co. FREEDOM OF SPEECH Civic Forum to Provide Platform for Divers Speakers. AIM IS PURELY EDUCATIONAL Orators of Many Nation, Politic and Creed Will be Requested to Present Views on Many Subjects Public Opinion Read Sovereign of Country, NEW YORK, No. 14. Offering the American right of free speech to sub jects of the most autocratic governments a platform ia being arranged for in tats city upon which orators from all the world may speek their minds on any social or political problem. Cla. creed and party lines have been Ignored by the managers of the Civic Forum, who have today secured many leader in the life of this country as well as others, to addresa it audience. From Charles K. Hughe, who will open the sessions of this new organisation on November 20th. to Paul Milyoukov, the leader of the Constitutional Democrats in Russia, who will travel here to address it during the New Year's recess of the Duma, every one of it ten speakers will lie given a latitude of expression only possible In the United States. Five hundred minister, priests, rabbis and religious leader of every faith will it behind Oovernor Hughes at the open ing of this international forum. Facing them, Carnegie Hall .will be packed with thousands of members of the organiza tion, representatives of every class in the metropolis. Labor men, capitalists, clerks merchants, professors, politicians, students and city employees are today enrolling as members of the Civic Forum. For twenty cents a session any one may obtain a reserved seat in the auditorium; for the sum of two dollors will consti tute any applicant a member, with a chair at each of the ten gatherings. Diplomats of every nation are already anticipating the utterances which orators from their countries may make on the platform of the Civic Forum. "What Is happening in Russia today anil what will happen to-morrow;." is the aubjeet upon which Paul Milyoukov, leader of the de mocracy in Russia will speak. Other leaders of popular movements, statesmen and scholars of the European nations will be given the .wide hearing which an appearance before the Civic Forum in sures. Among the speakers from this country David J. Brewer, of the U. S. Supreme Court, William J, Bryan, Secretary of War Taft and Joseph W. Folk will fol low Oovernor JIugh.es, Each orator will be left perfectly free to choose as a sub ject any great political or public problem Foreign and local correpondcnts and news associations have already made arrangements to send throughout the world the utterance of the American and foreign speakers. The aim of the Civic Forum, its found- ders declare, Is purely educational. Its members recognize public opinion as the real sovereign in this country, and have based their organization on faith in pre sent institutions. The purpose of their institution, they .say, is simply to pro vide the most favorable auspices under which the leading minds in this country are already arranging to attend some of the ten gatherings of the Civic Forum, which have been scheduled at In terval until the middle of next AjmII. Friend of tb movement have today of fered subscription to provide for tb ad mission of a many teachers, scholars and philanthropic worker possible, with such contributions and It regular memUVriOiip fWM ih leader of th movement nop to tecur more sneaker and defray atl necessary etpn. Before th Civic Forum end It slon her thi winter It I expected that a great deal will bar been said upon it platform .of real value to th public. lnle present Indication ar mislead ing echoe of it untrammelled utter ance will reach back to the people of the Old World, SENDS CASH EAST. CUICAOO, Nov, 14.-A dispatch to ths Tribune from Omaha, Neb., aaysi Th immense cash receipt of the en tire Union Pacific Railroad ystra hv been tent to Nw York every day since the money stringency began, leaving th local headquarters of the line short of cash. Tb call Is said to come direct from President Harrlman himself. Th Union Pacific road heretofore has banked It cash in Omaha. A Good Liniment When you need good nliabl ha! ment try Chamberlain' Pain Balm. It has no superior for tprain and swell Ing. A piece of flannel llghtly dump nd wita Pain Balm la uprior to platter for km back or paint in tb sltfe or chert. It also rliv rheuma tic pain and make sleep and rest po tlble. For tal by Frank Hart and leading druggist. BUIoummm and Conattpttloa. For yr I wa troubled wita WIIou. a and constipation, whlea mad Ufa mlsermbl for m. My appetite fild m. I lost my usual fore and vitality. Pepsin preparation and eataartk only msdt matter mm I do not know wbr I houkl bar bans today had I not triad ChambarlalB'i Stomach and Llrtr TnWcta. Th taMata rUv tot IU feeling at one, strength th dig tlv function, Mnlng tb tyrtra to do It work naturalvJdr. Rosa Pott. Birmingham, Ala. The tablet ar for sals by Frank Ifart and leading drug No bom I o pleasant, regard! of tb comforts that mowy will buy, a when th antir family 1 ia perfect health. A botti of Oriao Laxativ Fruit Bjrcp cost SO emta. It will ran vary member of th family of eoMtlpa tion, tick beadach or ttomach troubku T. F. Laura, Owl Drug B'or. CASTOR I A For XafiuU and CMldra. Hi KM Yea Hm A!i2t E::t Bear tha eignaturo of DOWAGER WILL ABDICATE. VICTORIA. B. 0, Nov. 14.-A. C. An gier, editor and proprietor of th London and Canada Express, who arrived yes teniay from the Orient, sayt th Km pres Dowager of Chin will abdicate at the beginning of the Chinese new year at the and of January, according to well Informed Chinese, A Methodist Minister Recommend Chamberlain' Cough Remedy, W have used Chamberlain' Cough Remedy is our home for seven year, and it ha alwav proved to b a reliable remedy. W nav found that it would do mora than the manufacturers claim for it. It ia especially good for croup and whooping cough. REV. JAMES A. LEWIS, Pattor Mllaca, Minn., M. E. Church. Chamberlain's Cough, Remedy It sold by Frank Hart and leading druggists. TEA Wc want your goodwill and your money; not one cent without that good will. ; Your trocsr returns your money If 70s iont like Schilling's Bt; w psr Dim. .jILLINERY 19 ts is "vi s i vi a x 1 m ft a OIUD O SPICES, DAlflNO POWDER. tnrExmcTS AbHluhFurihr. flnisl Flavor. Grtettsr SWjJn.ftasmtk fried CL055ET&DEYTES 3 Big reduction sale of Ladies' and Children's Trimmed Hats, 1 Street Hats, ShirtWais's and Notions. MRS. R. INGLET0N Wclfb Block, Opposite Budget Office. Commercial Street. School Shoes FOR f , - BOYS The Billy Buster Steel Bot tom Shoes 1 The Shoe with a Sole that Don't Wear Out at a 4" k - 3. A. blflUIL 143 Bond St., oppotit Fitter Broa,