THE MORNING ASTOItlAN. ASTORIA OREGON. FRIDAY, JANUARY 3l loot. THE MORNING ASTORIAN Ettabliahed i7J. Published Dally Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER COMPANY. SUBSCRIPTION SATES. By mall, per year 17.00 By carriw. per month. WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail per yer, In adTanee...IU3l 38, 1906. at the pouiffla at At-lir a. Ore gon, under the act ol co&grsca ot aUrcli J, dMj i a .v - I i . i ii .i .ITn V i m ixaatroaMX to either reeMen.-e or place or i mba K. nnata 1 rM nr through telecbone. any brejularity In d DTery nhould be tasmedlatelr reporwd to th. office o pubUcaUoa. TELETHON MATS 0U. Official Moar of ClatsoT Countj aad lha City Of Astoria. WEATHER. Western Oregon Partly cloudy ,wiUi probable occasional light rain along coast and in Northern portion. . OUR THIRTY-FIFTH YEAR. . Entering its thirty-fifth year of exist ance, the Morning Astoran believes it may justly claim a strength and influ ence, as a communal factor, at least thirty-five times greater than when 'it sought out the field and started to work for it It has never deviated a hair from the title it assumed. It has al ways been a faithful Astorian; and to be that, consecutively and honestly, for thirty-five years, lends warranty to the claim of this paper, that it is first and chief in its line and propaganda. It has seen its vicissitudes and weath ered many a storm and has energed, al ways, renewed, and ready, for its one, original task of boosting this city and county to the forefront of considera tion and success. It has always been kindly and fairly treated, at home and broad, and what of enemies it has made it freely forgives and invites into the "wide circle of its well-known friends. None need remain beyond the pale of the entire good-will of the Horning Astorian. For the year 1908 this paper has made no formal resolutions nor laid out any definite plans of operation, save an unerring adherence to the pobcy of all policies, the good of Astoria and Oat op. With this for a predicate, we in tend to pursue what lines shall com mend themselves as next and nearest to that fundamental idea. We expect to differ, contend and fight before the year has rounded out its history, but we shall do so honestly, cleanly, and openly j and what time is not expended in this line will be devoted to making more friends and cinching the cordial rela tions we already enjoy. We want more friends, patrons and readers, and are not averse to honest critics; we want business and are quite willing to share, with any sort of competing field. We want to see the commercial record of Astoria extraordinarily outclassed in 1908, and will do all that we can to use it to the biggest possible estimate; and to this end we will work hard with all the friends of Astoria, night and day, along such lines as shall prove best and wisest. i To our long list of subscribers, adver tisers, readers and friends (including those critics), we send the heartiest of good wishes for a year of abundance far beyond all previous realization, and the earnest assurance that we may be de pended on to do our share in the plant ing and reaping of the commercial harvest. Scandinavian -American Savings Bantt 300-508 Commercial St. Organised under the State Laws. LOCAL CAPITAL COURTEOUS TREATMENT EXPERIENCED MANAGEMENT CONSERVATIVE METHODS the larger equipment of the best har bors here, with all the agencies that contribute to assured safety, such as navy-yards, arsenals, drydocks, ordnance parks, machinery plants, depots, and storehouses; and this, without over looking Astoria. 1 T 0 AN ARMY OF "TEDDYS." There is a veritable army of baby Americans bearing the name of "Theo dore Roosevelt" this, that, or the other; thousands on thousands of them, and it constitutes one of the most distinct compliments ever paid any man, that the desire to perpetuate his name and give distinctive appellation to the new generation, should be so popularly mani fest. If any noticeable ratio of the young sters so named shall attain to anything approaching the dignity of character their names signify, it will be a pro nounced advantage to all concerned, and if but one of them shall but match the man whose name he bears, the country will be blessed by his citizenship and service. The prototype has set a pace not readily followed, yet possible of emulation; it will always be a splendid standard and should inspire the best and hardest ejort toward achievement SUCCESSOR Roosevelt Eliminated Who Next President is DEPENDSONLOGICOFPURPOSE' SIGNIFICANT WAR ORDER. The summoning of the adjutant generals of the three Pacific Coast states to Washington for conference with the President and the officials of the War Department, with a view of merging and employing the National Guard of Oregon, Washington, and Cali fornia with the ordnance arm of the regular service, is significant, not so much of anticipated war, as of the wis dom of the administration in putting the state militia upon an infinitely bet ter' footing of utility, adapting it to a wider range of operations and increas ing its efficacy along lines to which it is, as yet, unfamiliar, but wholly amen able under proper overtures. We are glad to see this interest in the defenses of the great stretch of Pacific Coast. It means that the coun try has awakened to a correct, if some what late, estimate of the necessity of hntter protection out here. And it were well if this interest shll be extended to INITIAL BUSINESS. Next Monday will open the Initial business week for the city and county and during that period much will be done by way of forecasting the year for Astoria and Clatsop. The council and courts will take up the year's work and formulate the best plans possible for both districts; and it is a safe pre sumption that what is done officially will be for the material interest of all. It may be well to remind all in charge of the public finances, that in the light of the immediate past and its panicky conditions and effects, that no more be attempted by way of public improve ment than is absolutely essential anl that broadcast expense be curbed to the point of requisites generally. We do not know that anything else is antici pated; but we venture the suggestion because we know the doctrine is popu lar just now; and the general spirit of things is an excellent medium to use at junctures that justify it. o GOTHAM CELEBRATES. New Yorkers Spend Millions and a Half for Pleasure. NEW YORK, Jan. 2. Men who are fond of figure aay that New York's New Year celebration cost $1,750,000. It is estimated that 100,000 people took supper at one hundred hotels and resta urants. At one restaurant that night receipt weifc over! $20,000. At tNis restaurant 2000 quarts of champagne were drunk. It is estimated that the diners around town made away with 42,000 quarts of champagne and 66,000 quarts of claret, not to mention the bar rels of other drinkables consumed. Souvenir hunters were out in force and every hotel and restaurant lost great quantities of glass and silverware, the guests carrying away everything from small coffee spoons to silver wine cool ers. Morning Astorian, 60 cents per month Read the Morning Astorian. COFFEE is perishable, it ought to be kept in tight packages, not exposed to air. Your grocer returns yonr money if TO doi'l like Sckillinsr'n Best; we pay him Protection of the People Against Unre strained Aggrandizement and Regula tion of Corporate Activity in the Pub lie Interest Must be His Work. Who is the logical successor of Presi dent Rooeveltt With the President himself eliminated, this question is everywhere asked. Is he Secretary Taft, as is often said! Is he Vice-President Fairbanks? Is he Governor Hughes f Is he Senator Knox J 1 The logic of the succession depends on the logic of purpose. What is the object to be subserved in the choice of the next President? If President Roosevelt were not ruled out by the third term principle and if he were to be re-elected, wh.it would he be re-elected for? Manifestly to carry on the great regenerative work which he has inaugurated and to con tinue the spicial policies with wkich he is pre-eminently identified. That is the supreme thought in the public mind. What are the distinctive Roosevelt policies? Yvliat is the work of the Presi dent that sove,all else has given him his WN) the popular support and that the country desires to see steadily and reasonably pursued? Plainly it is the protection of the people against the un restrained aggrandizement and uncheck ed abiis of corporations and the regu lation of corporate activity in the public interest. Plainly it is the work which has pointed to the prosecution of inju rious trusts and unlawful combinations, and which has brought the railroad rate legislation. The President is laureled 'with other trophies, but it is as the Hewiles who has grappled with the trust hydra and with the railroad discriminations that he has gained his great place in th popular heart. It is this work which 1 to be upheld; it is this high purpose which in its essential spirit and rational action is to be preserved; it is the reform policies wisely directed whic'fl are to be the transcendent issue of the coming President contest; and) it' is the statesman who next to the President Is more directly, sympathetically and re sponsibly associated with them than any other man or than all other men who Is the logical successor. Secretary Taift is just arriving from a tour around the world, loaded with great and 'deserved honors. He is an able. versatile and brilliant administrator. H would make a worthy President, and if he was nominated he would command cordial support. He has been peculiarly identified with the President, in somi things. He has been thy Presidents alter ego in the Philippines, in Cuba and on the Panama. Canal. If the "Roosevelt policies" which are the pre eminent issue, were the Philippine, the Cuban or the Panama policies Secretarv Taft would be the logical successor. But ft happens that the real Roosevelt policies" did not come within the cop! of his Department, and though doubt less in Ml accord, he had no more to do with them than a hundred other men. Not even Secretary Rott ifacile prin who would make a Teally great Presi dent whose breadth and insight and eeps among all Administration leaders, constructive genius art of the Hamll. Ionian order not even Secretary Root is specially identified with the distinctive 'Roosevelt policl," mid. if they are to be the tout, not even he would be the logical successor. The one man who be yond all other so far beyond as to be Vllpe Jirst and the rct nowhere" Is associated with the origin, evolution execution and success of the "Roosevelt policies is Philander Chase Knox of Pennsylvania, Wo do not say this Inconsiderately, The iveord proves 1 it. Nothing can derogate from the greatness of Prl dent Roosevelt's service In this direction. The time had come when In the Interest of general business morality, In defense of the equal rights of shippers, produc ers and consumer!, in protection of the people against corporate power, it ws necessary to call a halt upon evils which going on unchecked would have pro. duced social revolutions. To grapple with ihr-e evils needed the moral en ergy and the aggressive forci of Roosvelt. He made himself the Incar nation of the national conscience. This ii his incomparable distinction, and no criticUms, not even any faults, ran ob scure It. But President Roosevelt, with all his courage and all his determination. could not have accomplished what he did without the legal acumen and thj masterful generalship of a Knox. In ' his very able Attorney General the ' President found a sincere sympathiser' and a legal pioneer of remarkable grasp, i penetration an1 skill. Mr, Knox became at once the expo nent and -executive of the President's policies. Where all others stood mysti fied and uncertain at the complexities and doubts of untried, unconslrued and supposedly inadequate law, he struck out new paths of Interpretation and triumphantly carried before the Su preme Court a new and enlarjred chart of governmental powers. HI great speech at rittsburg in 1M2 was the first beacon which threw Its Illuminating rays along the new course. Confident of the principles thtroin first clearly de fined he entered on the battle ifor na tional control nnd regulation of cor porations engaged in interstate com merce, and his judgment was speedily vindicated by notable victories which changed the whole face of the situation in the relation of the government to the great agencies of trade. Within a few monthi four Importan. lines of attack had been successfully opened agint combinations in re straint of trade the injunctions on rail roads against rebates; the overthrow of railroad traffic pooling In the cotton cases; the indictment and defeat of tho beef trust; and the dissolution of the Northern Securities merger for the combination of parallel and competing lines. These triumphs established th reputation of At'omey General Knox as the most consummate master of the whole subject of the powers of tho gov-J ernment under the interstate commerce; claue and of the most effective method of their application. So high became the estimate of his authority that the 1 i Judiciary Committees of the Senate and House under the leadership of Senator Hour and Mr. Uttlejfield fiemsclvee legislators of great experience fnd abil ityasked him to point the way to the new legislation required. And his an swer wa accepted and became the basil of what is known as. the Elkins law against rebates Nor was this all. Mr. Knox was a pioneer on railroad rate legislation. In 1!K)5 he had left the office of Attorney General nnd 'become Senator from Pennsylvania. As such he stood forth as the first and .foremost champion of the President's policy of railroad rat? regulation. In his speech at Pittsburg in November, W05, before Congress met, he gave a clear elucidation of the principles on which legislation should be based and said: "I am sincerely con vinced that the time has come when Congress must, In justice to the publls exercise more fully its power in respect to railroad rates and regulation," This was the first distinct pronounce ment from any public man which de fined and clarified the essential features of the problem, and Senator Dolllver of Iowa who was active in pushing the rate bill said: '"In drafting this bill the framers of it were guided very largely by the speech delivered at Pitts burg by the Honorable Senator from Pennsylvania (Mr. Knox), a spe.'eh which reads almost like a judgment from the Supreme Bench." The whole record of Mr. Knox on these vital ques tions stands unique and nlono. Secre tary Root in his menorable speech as President of the Chicago Convention in 1004 paid tribute to it and President Roosevelt himself recognized in remark able terms the great work of his coadjutor when he said at Harnisbnrg, October 4, 1900: "During the last few years the Nation al Government has taken very long strides in the direction of exercising and securing this adequate controljover the great corporations, and it Was Under The Leadership of one of the most hon- (Continued on page 7) Going Out1 of Business ' f ' , ' , " , ' Our entire stock consisting of Diamonds. Jewelry, Watches, Silver, ware, Clocks, Cutlery, Musical Goods, Guns, Pistols and Suit Caie. must lit sold within the next 30 days below antunl cost. We have bargains too numerous to mention. .... - ... ... f HERE ARE A PEW $10.00 solid leather Suit Cse. Sate price $4 25 All musical eases at, each . ... , , QQg $12.00 Columbia Guitars. Sale price . . $575 Fine toned Mandolins, Sale price... , $250 Stradlvailus model violin, perfect tone. Bale price $( 50 18 site Elgin A Waltham Witches In dust and water proof ceses. Sale price $350 $15.00 Honor double reed, 0 bxu Acoordian, Sale price $8.75- iligh Power Field Glases. Sale price 5..... $300 Dollar Clocks end Watches. Sale price ggg Exceptional bargains in all un called for pledges. 1 SAFE AND FIXTURES FOR SALE. . Astoria Loan Office BALL BUILDING ' 094 Commercial St. :: i-: AetorU, On. Fisher Brothers Company SOLE AGENTS Barbour and Pnlayson Salmon Twine and Netting MeCormlck Harvesting Machines ' Oliver Chilled Ploughs Malthold Roofing Thorplet Creaui Separator Raeoollth Flooring " , Storrett's Tools Hardware, Groceries, Ship . Chandlery ' ' Tan Bark, Blue Stone, Murlatio Add. Welch Coal, Tar, Ash Oars, Oak Lumber, Pipe and Fittings, Brass ' Goods, Paints, Oils and Close " Fishermen'! Pure Manilla Rope, Cotton Twin and Seine Web Wo Want Your Trade FISHER BROS. Bond Street. WWWW WW WWWW WWWW f l wwwwvv 1 ASW BOX ' RESOLUTE UNIVERSAL GOLD WEATHER IS COMING See the bargains in our big ' stove department upstairs. ' If your money is in the bank give us your'check. The.Foard & Stokes Hardware Co! 'V Incorporated , ..,,;.......,,(.,,, ... Sueceieert to Iftuf StefcM C THAT DINNER WILL NOT BE COMPLETE WITHOUT SOME OF OUR SELECT TABLE ' WINES A PARTIAL LI ST TO CHOOSE FROM. ' SWEEa WINES ' Sparkling See Dry Fragrant, effer- Old Port Tawny, rich, light and vesoent. color. 1 RED WINES , . .' Old Sherry Pale, olean, nutty. ' Zinfandel Clean, light table, wine. Angelicas-Soft, agreeable, full Burgundy Medium bodied, mellow. , i Muscatel Very fruity, sweet. Sparkling Burgundy Brilliant, pleas. WHITE WINES .ant.. ...... Riesling Medium light table wine. Grape Juice, Marasohlno cherries, fruit Sauterne Natural mellow, pronounced and Cognac Brandies, and full flavor. . "'' , line of Cordials. ' Chateau Yquem Full bodied Creme if'Triv. ' . o'Sauternea. .,. 1 i: T.Ti'TI "''IM f PHONE 1881 PROMPT DELIVERY r 1 ' AMERICAN IMPORTING CO: 589 Commercial Street