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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1907)
SUNDAY,, HOVKMJiER 4, iof. THE K CORNING ( 4STORIAN, :, ASTOrUA, OREGON. ' Gossard Corsets Simington Diy Goods Co. They Lace in Front BiEMII 01 .11 DAT ffike iHis Monday the Ecoita The priccyou pay TomorrpwMondayis but a small part of the irttrlnsic value of :the merchandise offered in this sale. A Phenomenal Monday Bargain Sale of Tremendous Scope and Magnitude. If you wish to share hi these Exciptfdnal Values, you will 'take advantage of TOMORROW. Every article !as represented or money cheerfully refunded r $25 Suits, $14" ',- $35 Suits, $22.50 m High Grade, Hand Tailored Suits Broadcloth and fane mixture, high grade tailored tulU In all tha popular hades of brown, navy, red, green and Hack. Jacket 2 to 3Q laches Jong, tight and ..ml-fittlng effect. j v.lvet and braid trimmedj iklrti are mad in the imj Wt !eW aftaJC- ' "-' f f --T-.l .. "... 9" $7.50 Silk Petticoats, All ar made of superior quality, heavy .ilk taffeta; very beat atylea, beautifully made and finished colore brown, navy, green, red, black and fancy .tripe j selling regular at $7.50; take your .faoice Monday at this low price, each. $5.00 $2.50 Umbrellas Only $1.75 We offer a epecial lot of women's high-grade umbrella, at an ex "ceptlonal jow price; fine silk and linen covering; rust-proof, with paragon frame; steel rods and slide runner; 26-inch size in an exceptional fine assortment of handles; regular values, 260. Your choice m f tomorrow., . .......v........,..;,....... I O One-Third Off on Children's Coats, Ages 6 to 14 Years , .,A complete assortment of cail dren's coata; ages 0 to 14 years; in all-wool mixtures; velvet and braid trimmed; all of thia season's very latest fabrics. The shrewd buyer will take advantage and purchase their children's coat want, tomorrow at this Teduced price. . , Sitta 6 to 14 years; all go; noth . , tag reserved. mi ' 1-3 Off Ladies' and Misses' Caps 60 Styles of Ladies' and Misses' Caps In all this season's beat atylea and materials; serge broaJcloth velvets; plaids and novelty weaves; all newj take your choice at 1 r.r i 'i j s OneThlrcl Off $2.00 Broadcloths, now $1.25 : nn&cirplTTren'cirirroid(!lotni f chiffon br medium "y lght ! wl.l. ranxe of colors to wlect from. Navy, brown, red, green, castop tan and black; wld regularly at 12.00 the yard; 'on ssleMondnj a . r at thU low price... Q I .0 - - - '.- . , , .. Women's Underwear, $1.50, 1.75 Vests and Pants, $1.00 v,., .Women's pure while wool vest and pants j, all tUos; made from the . very i finest. purMWool ) yarn; our regular (1.30 and $1.75 a a Aft values. Monday, . special salt, each U I UU 'n! T u Great Thanksgiving Linen Sale (0.60 Dice Damask Table Linen... , ........$0.45 .03 Satin Damaak Table Linen.. , . .43 .75 Satin Damaak Table Llncu.... ................ 60 1JZ5 Satin Damask Table Linen. .98 1.35 Satin Damask Table Linen 1.00 L50 Satin Damask Table Linen............;... 1.23 1.75 Satin Damask Table Unen.. ............. ..... . .V. . . v: 1.35 1.25 20-inch Napkins 00 1.80 20-inch Napkina U5 1.08 20-inch Napkins .............. 1.67 2.50 22-inch Napkina 2.10 3.00 23 inch Kapkina ....... i....... .......r........l.".. 2.45 ! 4.00 24-inch Kapklni lt.v..... .... 35: 5.00 24-inch Kapkins 7.50 Hemstitched cloths' . 5.00 50c Ladies' Hosiery, only 39t ;. :. .til ,f x boae 3Cc lOOOPairs of, Ladies' Fi-e Lace; lisle embroidered , and gauze boae; ao from the finest yarns and guaranteed atainlew.- - Our regular 50-eent values; Monday. Blankets and Comforters Less $3.95 White Wool Blanket . .....&M 5.00 White Wool Blanket.. 3.00 6.95 White Wool Blanket.............. . . .............A;........ at 6.00 Indian Robes 3J50 ' 1.00 Comforto . .I. . . .....T.....,"69 1.69 Comforts .. ; . , .......j) 140 2.50 Comforts rm..,v ,...W,....L75 2.50 Umbrellas .'. .' .1.75 ... - XAMERICAN ORGANS Uncle Sam's Organ Builders Sur " passing European Brethren. WORLDjSBIGGESTINSTRUMENT Publlo Interest Centered In Large Organ Being Built In Brooklyn Concert Hall Will Have Jive Manuals and 140 Speaking Stopi. ' (U 'i il ';V; WASHINGTON, Nov. 23.-Are' Unole Sam's builders of church and concert organs destined! to surpasa those of Eu rope In the skill with which they put up the largest, most perfect and most admirable of musical instruments? A well-known musical authority, William 0. Carl, says that America,.!, ar In ;tli lead of all other countries In the number ef organ concerts and appreciation of or gan music; and the latest governmental bulletin on tlie manufacture of musical instrument! and attachments shows that between 1900 and 1905 the value of the pipe organs made in this country in creased from $1,188,000 to $2,088,103, This is a greater growth than that which took place In the manufacture of pianos $r of any other large class of musical Instrument! )' lAbreadyi some very . famous organ! (have been made in this country since 1745 when Edward I Bromflold, Jr.,, of Boston act Up tha first collection of 1200 pipes. Just now there Is publio interest in the biggest instrument in the world which is in course of erection for a con cert ball In Brooklyn. ThU will bave five manuals, 140 speaking stops and the various mechaulcal accessories which render the work of the modern organist less laborious than formerly. It will be entirely of American manufacture, as Is another very famous concert organ, that in Jordan Hall, Boston, which was In stalled a short time ago as a gift from lCl.cn D. Jordan, Esq, to the New Eng land Conservatory of Music. This latter instrument, built along the lines of a famous organ at Sienna, Italy, and pro vided with every possible facility for muicftl expression, atamls at the mo dern end of the long line of pipe organs that have been constructed in tha state of Massachusetts since Bronifield's imi tation of an English pipe organ first scandalized the nior rigid Puritans. It was built In the intelligent ' technical way in which the, oensus bulletin just out states,, that "nlmost every pipe organ charge it U haa, altogether fourteen pipe tutiori of musical education .in, whost it is designed to be placed.? ... The instl itles of the room or auditorium In Whloh ;ith the architecture or accoustio quai ls practically built, J order to accord organs In dally ue by pupils and teach ers. This is more than double the num ber of, organ! contained unJor any other single roof In the world. . , The "Great Eastern? among American concert organs was one,, made in Ger many just before American manufactur er!, had sufficiently acquired the confid ence of musicians to , secure important contracts. This. was the large instru ment which Dr. Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote an enthusiastlo and often quoted description, ft was In many ways a fine piece of apparatus, though it had mech anical defects. Its use continued down to 1884, when it was sold to a wealthy citizen of Boston who presented It to the oldest and largest of American music m-l.ooli. It was too big for the building then occupied by the eonrvatory and was held for a few years, to be subse quently wold for the metal and wood it contained. . , . "This was the first important concert organ in the United States. Since 1803 they have been installed in music balls of a number of the larger cities. : Some of the organs which are now being made here are destined for private residences, for it is becoming quite the fashion among the American millionaire to in stall these, big "boxes, of whustles" in their residences. Andrew Carnegie, for example, I. aroused from his slumbers every morning by , organ ' music, and Charles M. Schwab has a $23,000 instru ment in hi New York house. ' 'The wonderful quality of American made organs js testified to by the vet eran composer and organist, Dudley Buck who wrote recently In -The Musi cian: ",, . "When I. toured in America years ago as a virtuoso organist, I always ab jected! having other players near the keyboard, as J had devised certain spec la means of securing striking combina tions of tone-color, little tricks of the trade, which , were regarded as wonders by merely pressing a button. The differ ence in the. action and the electric and mechanical devices now in use is indes cribable. Foreign organists,, whe are un familiar with these devices, can only teach the American organist great many things which he 'will have to un learn or mentally readjust after his re turn to America.?,. ij..,; (Mothera with little children need no jonge fear croup, colds or whooping cough. Bees Laxative, Cough Syrup taste, good. It works off the oold through tha bowels, clean the head. Guaranteed. Sold by Frank Bart'i Drug Store. MORE WATERED STOCK. NEIW YORK, Nov. 23.Wm. M. Ivins, while investigating the affair, of the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company for the rullic Service Commission yester day declared that Mayor Tom L. John on, of Cleveland, and his friends, who formerly owned the Nassau Electric Railway Company,, of Brooklyn, had watered its stocks to the extent of $6, 250,000 and then sold it to the Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company. Thl. was al leged to have taken place in a reorga nization of . the Nassau Company in January, 1809.' " A Significant Prayer. " "May the Lord, help you make Buck len'i Arnica, Salve known to all, write. J, G. Jenkins, of Chapel Hill, If. C. It quickly took " the pain out of a felon for me aud cured it in a wonderfully short time.". Beat on earth for norea, burns and wounds. ' 25 cent! at Chas. Rogen & Son'i Drug Store." ' ' ' TO STEADY MARKET. ' BOSTON. Nov...2irPresident Wm. M- Wood, of the American Woolen Company stated yesterday, ju relation, to the cur tailment of business, that the American Woolen 1 Company was not operating about 75 per cent of its machinery and will continue to jutai! production in consequence of the prevailing business situation, although amply provided with owcrs for future deliveries. This policy averts the accumulation of roods and and preserves the future of the woolen goods market. & THE GEM : fc. F. WISE. Prop! Cbslce Win.s, Llquon . and Cigara .u. Rot Lunch at all Honri ASTORIA Merchant! Latch From 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 f jb. x 11 Onto' Corner Eleventh and, Commercial 1 'I '; OREGOHf ; Rings Dyspepsia Tablets do the work. Stomach trouble, dyspepsia, indigestion, bloating, etc, yield quickly. Two dayi' treatment free. Ask your druggist for a free trial. Sold by Frank Hart's Drug Store. " WHEN YOU WANT PRICES THAT ARE" RIGHT ; j Write us, we're here for that purpose The Work We Do Auythinp: in the electrical Business. Bell's Hon llnside wiring and fixtures installed and kept in repair. OUR PRICES WILL DO- THE REST " STEEL & EWART Bond Street w r Ehona Main S8i 1 E. B. PARKER, Proprietor.' E, P. PARSES, .Manager. PARKER HOUSE ETJR0PEAU PLAIT. First Class In Every Respect Pre Coach to the House. Bar and Billiard Room Good Sample Rooms on Ground Floor for Commercial Men Astoria Oregon