The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, November 27, 1907, Page 2, Image 2

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    THE .MORNING ASTOIUAN. ASTORIA. OHKUON.
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1907.
THE :
MORNING ASTORIAN
Established 1873.
Published Dally Except Monday by
IHE J. S. DELLINGER COUP AMY.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES.
By mail, per year... IT
By eanw, per month... w
WEEKLY ASTORIAN.
By mail, per yr, injcn
.$180
Entered u kmM",
aa, undor ths ctul Couarwa ot slarcn ,
. for lb. dUw 0
M: hoM. Anv IrtwpuarUT In ow
Urarrtbould b immediately reported to th
i TELEPHONIC MAUf 6i. -
' Official paper of Clatooy County and
the City or Alton.
MANY ARE CURIOUS
Washington on Edge as to Con
text of Message,
and no re eon at all for not soinr at
It 1 needed: .Imperatively,', and should
h.iv the countenanc aud material M
of every parent and friend of the young
people in th elty.
There must be nothing exclusive nor
limited about it; it is the cure of most
affair of the kind that they are domi
nated by clique and factions and re
stricted by unwritten rules that govern
to the point of misgovernment athletics
tand for health end there cannot be
real health without the healthful spirit
of tolerance and fellow-interest) one is
as easenti a the other. We My tin
in the broadest voaaible ns and with
out direct application of any ort,;nd Has no Confident a Regarding Legiala-
PRESIDENT SILENT AS SPHYNX
tion That May he Suggested in Mm
tage to CongressMany Men Trying
, to Gain Hint of Context.
Y WEATHER. .
, Western Oregon and Washing
.. a ion Occasional rain. '
Eastern Oregon Fair and
. cooler. , . .
Eastern Washington and Idaho
. Fair. ,. ...
" ; ; TRAGEDY OF THE "KIDS."
All California is torn up over the
tragic revelation from the famoua Uni
versity town of Berkeley, wherein the
- three principal are- student, and none
- . iL. luiteli 4Kai kwral i.irit V
VI llfCEU vwij . ft'-- J J
of years. The whole story ia very piti
. ful and before it last page i written
them must he a voluminous record of
sorrow and shame for the families in
volved, One young man ia in bis grave,
the viothn of murder the girl in the
ease is already a fit subject for the in
sane asylum, and the third, the man
accused of the two worst erimes in the
calendar-, murder and rape, is beaded for
the penitentiary, if be does not reach
the gallows first.
The details as furnished by the young
woman are about a bad as tbey can
well be; and indicate such abnormal ten
dencie in so young a group a to make
one shudder with dread lest other un
suspected children are possessed of the
same wretched ideas and impulses; and
beget the fear that college life on the
"co-ed" basis is not to be trusted any
longer.
. The dreadful story cannot but operate
adversely on the University of Califor
nia. It is a noble institution, with
magnificent history of achievement and
a host of livwr examples to prove its
abounding power and spint in the round
ing out of admirable citizens and splen
did scholars; but such a story as thfe
of young Klienschmidt, Blanche Kerfoot
and Frank Bellows is too profound
reproach to pass human society without
resultant strictures' that will be widely
heeded r for it strikes at the very core
of the co-educational system, and comes
as near negativing the idea as anything
probably ever will
It carries another tremendous lesson
' to the thoughtful American that should
sink deep and rankle until -it inspires a
social upheaval of amendment, and that
i, that we are becoming far too negli
gent of our young people in the matter
of personal license and accountability;
we are too indulgent, for their good,
and our own, in the matter of their
habit of time, association, pursuits,
pastime, and all the governing features
of daily life; the child of today is prac
tically independent of the family, and I
. nas recourse to its tacuny 01 oversignt
- only at moments of peril, of illness, of
discomfiture, and disgrace. This is radi
no 11 t. MTMiw it ia aomnfu 11 ir .
phase of the times in which we live,
and a typical expression of that na
tional heedlessness that marks our ca
reer in a hundred ways just as start
ling as this. We are gradually forsaking
the beet of the ordinary standards that
prevailed but a short generation ago, and
we are going to get our full measure of
payment for the abandonment, unless
. we placate destiny by showing a pro-
founder love and interest for the heirs
of country, home, and dear traditions,
than we are manifesting now, and re
Awaken in them the homelier, safer and
deeper instincts of the home and family,
and invoke, once more the gentle rule of
subjection that ' was once the guiding
principle of American life and the best
grace among its best influences. We owe
the young of today far more than we
are granting, and it will be worse for
us if we do not take over our universal
duty and win them back to simpler and
eweeter things.
. . r,V . o . !
A POPULAR "GYM."
There is every reason in the world for
the immediate establishment of a popu
lar gymnasium in the city of Astoria,
ouly because w dedt to sea tho effort
made permanently sueeewf ul.
It should be open to the, lt boy and
youth ia the city .with a code of rules
operating for all without distinction, and
upon. such terms, a till make it what
it ia proposed, a popular institution; WAS1UXC.T0X,IX G. Nov. 25, With
anything l must, rely for wUbli.h- appIttlA of iU nwtlg of tlm ew
titular irroup responsible fro it. 11 W,,.Ww,t ,B th KW,t trU1-
toi." Vr 4- i i , , , ( v J policy , increase. Oiriousity i being
It Is time this public took sonic steps I whetted to mor edge by the stranire
to provide a emlitatde resort for the Lilenee of the President upon tho qu'eat
n u vjn-k 4. , , nri.-iv. J,lnonin. An-Ur that
happily started there need be no doubt . , ,
to it aliuate patronage, provided " """i'"-"
alwavs it ie launched upon wide and and less mysterious a Mr. Roosevelt
concerning, the topic and 'heir treat
ment in hi annual and special mess-
Ukcs to Consres. Heretofore he has
taken into hi confidence on these Ira-
wholesome basis.'
lanksgiving Sale of Shamrock Linens
: Means luxury without extravagance. Kicn, hue l able wuens, supcro
' r " " desigus, unparalled for artistic elegance. Note well the
' advantages of this great money-saving sale.
60c. Dice Damask fabU Linen, .45
65c. Satin Damask, Table Linen, .49
, -75c Satin Damask Table Linen, .60
I $1.25 Satin Damask fable Linen, .98
$1.35 atin Damask Table Linen, l.oo
$1.50 Satin Damask Table Linen, 123
$1.75 Satin Damask Table Linen, 1.35
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular
Regular Regular
$1.25 20-inch Napkins. . .90
$1.50 20-inch Napkins, 1.25
$1.98 20.nchNapkln$, 1.67
$2.50 '22-Inch Japklni 2.10
$3.00 23-Inch Napkins, 2.45
$1.00 24-Inch Napkins, 3.25
$5.00 24-Inch Napkins, 3.75
$7.50 H emstitched Cloths; 05 !
Simington 0)ry Goods Co-
. EDITORIAL SALAD.
Mith Senator Wmterson to laoV up
questions in bis annual communication
portant matters everj-body who ha hud I to Congre.f w : I
ctaim upon nis time or aviemion. w By the way, it m not to be cen-
Senator Bob Taylor the Congressional J messages, therefore, have been largely lerally known that the mewwee he will
Record might refute the idea that it isldiacounted by the interest, general andlMn,i at the openlns of Congreas will be
a puuucsuioa- wunoei piquancy. i special, involved uay ana weeK oeiore i wrttten because the Constitution feu
, , jtlieir delivery and publication.. But inlmise that duty upon lilm That instru
Work on the JVmuna Canal ia pro- the present instance President Roosevelt I nieut direct merelv that the President
greasing satisfactorUy A complete fed- U M ilnt a tle Sphynx, and quite a shall, from time to time, acquaint th
v. iviuwi. wum u uicTpiic. au sons anu wummmi ui uim m vngres wiin me elate oi me union
organized down there. have tried in vain to get from him n ,her words, the framer of tlie Con-
o son hint, be it ever so vague, as to I, Motion had in mind only that the
A medical journal announces tbatU-hat new legislation dealing with toe chief Executive aliould in thi sense be
color photography has been found use-1 trust question in it relation to inter- only the mean by which the law-makeri
ful in the study of disease. Expert onUtate commerce in hi forthcoming mess-1 with the actual coudition of the nation,
tlie witness- stand" will be more formid-KI) to Congress. But thus far he ha but also to insist upon the enactment of
able thane ever. , I favored nobodv. a far as known, with I certain Umalntion rm.llul tJ Mnnklillnna
; I the desired information. , When aaked wWch mak not iibe with hi notion of
On reaching England the kaiser rani (or an expression that may indicate the the fitnesa of thing in particular and
into a regular untuui pea soup log. but drift of hia mind of tho goal of hi pur-1 in general. No President, with the po
he will feel thqre are compensations pose he shuts up like a dam, to the l.iblo exception of Andrew Jackson, ha
when be sees ni royal uncle new infinite embarrassment of his inquisitor been aa profuse in hi recommendation
$750,000 diamond. ; a . lor abruptly change the subject. , of remelie a ha Mr. Roosevelt. Thi
Presumably it ia understood that it i I statement is baaed nuon th result of
According to a census bulletin etb privileae of the President of the Is careful tudv of "The Mesas ce and
population of the United States in 1900, United State to lead in conversation. Papr of the President,' perhap th
nciuumg uisumr powrions, aa bo,- i jhi j, particularly true of Mr. Rooae- most valuable, because of it nfonna
18240. The prospect of passing 100.-ve!t, jfe ha reduced it to a fine art. tion. volume ever issued bv the trovern
000,000 by 1910 ia good. , . Verily i he the head of the table whert- Uent Because of hi peculiar distinct
ever he mav ait. lie set the Dace Of I ion in this mmnl Wn.Mmrf nn I. nn,iU.I
TWO MOUTHS Hf JAIL. .,, I aiaouwion. and while he doe not show lover President Roosevelt" strange and
Woman Suffragist Took Part in Riot I the utmost pleasure when a visitor dis-1 unwonted silence on the subjwt of what
ia Parliament , I agrees with him, at the same time he I recommendation he propose to mak
XEW YORK, Nov. 28.-Among the ar-1 displays keener irritation whenever a I in his annual message next month.
rivals fm Europe on the steamer I caller agrees supinely with hi every sug
Philadelphia yesterday were Mrs. Cob-1 gestion. lie Is a man of pugnacious ' NINETIETH1 BIRTHDAY.
den-Sanderson, who come to America I character. Nobodv likes a fight better I , I
than he. He would as lief quarrel with I John Bigelow, Lawyer, Journalist and
a clergyman on theology as with a pol
itkian on some public question of tlie
. .. ... . ! .L.
. : 7 V . V i ,i atiW 20. m a room
int on a pet hobby. , Representatives I . .... . .
all aha,l of nninion on evPrv "I beaullIUI llower. the gitU Of
of public interest have I renwmber,n8 friends, John Bigelow, a
SCOW BAY II BBISS ;WS
AHTOItIA, OltKOON
IRON AND EHASS FQUKDEFS- TLAKD AUD rVARINE EKCINEEfS
i,i
t il 4- . , t
. Vv-to-tate haw Mill HsflilnrryJ
18th and Prankllfl Ave,
lit.
pmnipt aurniioii lvn lo l. repair vera
Tat. Main 1481.
JQICf FOX Pw. t F, L. B1800P, See. ASTORU BAVTN'08 BASTS, Traaa.
- KELSON TROVER, Vlcs Pr. acj Supt.
Astoria iron works
DESI0NER3 AND MANUFACTURERS
' 1 OF THE LATEST IMPROVED . . . , , ,t ;
sVafXi, Marine Engines , and Boilers
COMPLETE CARIfEBY OUTFITS FURNISSED. ' !
Carnapondanet SolidtaA. . , Mt of Fourth Straat
Diplomat Receive Congratulation.
to lecture on the suffragist movement
in Kngla.id.
' Mrs. Cobden-Sanderson, who spent
two months in jail for the part she
took in an attack of the suffragists on
the House of Commons stated that the I '
reports of the riots attending political I question
meetings in England, where women de- tackled him within the past fortnight lawyer, journalist, author and diplomat,
mending the right to vote, break upon his forthcoming message to Congress, I yesterday celebrated his ninetieth birth
meetings being addressed by cabinet I but to none ot tnem nas be spoken aiaay. core oi inenus called to pay
members are very much exaggerated. I 'ingle word which may be fairly inter-1 their respects. Mr. Bigelow lias had a
The only thing the women do. she said, preted as indicating ertner his matured
purpose as to anti-trust, railroad t or
tariff legislation or the drift i of
his thoughts on these subjects. Wfliero
fore, all Washington is wondering what
has come over the spirit of his dr-ams,
' One can near all kinds of reports
is to go into the political meetings and
ask questions. , They are ignored and
according to Mrs. Cobden-Sanderson, are
finally ejected. She wiU address a meet
ing at Cooper Union December 12 and
will till of the campaign of the wa iifn
cf England to obtain the right to vote.
varied career. He practiced law after
leaving college and for a dozen year
was editor of the New York Kvening
Post. Frbm 1801 to 1804 lie was Amer
ican consul-general at Pari, and for
the three succeeding years was minister
to France. Ho was an executor of the
BATTEK
i .'
a t
Astork Hardware Co.,
113 12th St.
1 ' tmimiii hi
THE TRENTON I
NAVY PERSONNEL BILL.
here as to what the Presiilent proposes will of Samuel J. Tilden and lias, long
to urge upom Congress touch inj? the been prominent In the affair of the New
trusts, the railroads and the tariff. As York Public Library. ' He i the atitiior
to this "you pays your money and you I of a score of books.
take your choice." , The wise citizen
COAL SHORTAGE IN WEIGHT.
XEW YORK, Nov. 26. The contro
versy over the effect of the navy per-1 is he who can patiently await the actual
gonnel bill, which abolished the distinc- delivery of the message, and then govern
tion between deck and engineer officers I himself accordingly. By this is meant I . RAN FRANCLSCO, Aov. v 2L J. . J.
and provide for the assigament of that what the President may recommend I Moore A Co. yesterday began an ac
officers to either duty indiscriminately, will have a powerful, if not a deter- tion againt Mitsui and Company,
will be settled in the United States mining, miiuence upon Uongress. ine japanese flrn)( fwr t6 of 44 .
COUIt. I new Dotry 01 law-maKers is a more uis 1 goy alleged to be due on short coal shin
An amended answer in the suit of tinctively Roosevelt Congre than any ments from Moji, Japan," The plaJntiff
Charles T. Wade against the Interna- that has assembled under the dome of company save it contracted with the
tional Magazine Company, publisher of the Capitol. It is conservatively est!- defendant firm to deliver coal from the
the Cosmopolitan Magazine for $100,000 mated tftat quite two-third of, th Japanese port to San Franoiseo, Port
damages for alleged libel, just filed, House were elected as Roosevelt men, ir- an Treadwell and Guaymas, and that
bring out this point in the contro- respective 01 tneir nominal party am.ua
versy. .. , I tions. Nobody understands the tremen
The suit has it foundation in an I dou s import of thi condition better
article in the magazine dealing with the than the President. Whether this un
explosion on the gunboat Bennington, derstanding is having what, for lack of
in San IHeim. California, harbor. Julv a better term, may be called a sober
I in six shipments there was a shortage
of from 47 to 238 tons. The los alleged
to be duo the plaintiff is figured on the
price, of coal at the port of delivery.
Rings Dyspepsia Tablets do the work.
Zl, 1905, in which 62 officer and men I mg enect upon mm, is, or course, mereiy stomach trouble, dypepsia, Indigestion.
were killed and 40 injured. The article, a matter of conjecture, lhe consensu bloating, etc, yield quickly. Two day
t 1 claimed, lays the blame lor the ac- opin"'n nre, nuwevw, w inat tins treatment ire. Ask your druggirt for
cident on the incompetency of the en- condition ha increased hi sense la free trial Sold by Frank Hart'i
gwe room , force. Ensign Wa.le was of responsibility and that this in Drug Store.
chief encineer of the irunboaot at th turn has tinged hi thought with a
time of the accident.
PETTY SWINDLER.
COFFEE
You can buy something
called "coffee" at 10c lb
with 3000 miles of R R
freight from the roaster ;
don't.' . , ' : '
Vour grocer returns rour rhoncr II roa doa'l
Ilk. Schilling's nt: w par him.
firmer conservatism than ever before
he has felt. . It follows, therefore, that,
in the judgment of Washington, the Fre- JJJM AJViilOLBS, Nov. 26-A. C-
sident will not appear so radical in his Wpekly, alias T. L Stevenson, arrested
dealings with Congress this winter a in this city on a charge of petty swindl-
he heretofore ha apparently been. In ing, last night confessed to , the police
point of fact, Washington is almost con- that he had escaped 'from an ItMlianii ro
ylnccd that if things political are to Mr. I formatory and thai he was wanted In
Roosevelt's liking he will put the breaks Seattle, Portland, San Francisco, Fresno,
on Ins forthcoming message. In other Ooldfield and Riverside!!.Wbekly,e plan
words, it is generally expected here that, ha generally been to canvas for a mag
in the language of Shakespeare, he "will azine that had no existence, orito collect
coo a gently as a suckling dove" on I subscriptions for a publishing house
I the trust.the railroad and the tariff that had! long since discharged him.
First-Class Liquors and Cigars
6o Commercial Street ' ' Z
Corner Commercial and 14th. ' ' " ASTORIA, OREGON
tttlltlllllHIMIMIll
A.
1
aaaaaa M-r--.aaoaaao
'
A5H60X
iRCJOlUTEUNIVERiAt,
COLD
WEATHER
IS
COMING
See the bargains in
our big
. ; stove department ,
upstairs.'
If your money is in'
; thebank
give us your check. '
Be Foa rd& Stokes Hardware Co "
Successor t Fear gtokaa Co. ' i
tttti tMaia44aatlsa
T ''it; '': 'A 'u
Telegraphic News of the World
In Morning Astorian, 60c
Month