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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 11, 1908)
THE MORNING ASTOHIAN, ASTORIA OREGON, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1S08. THE MORNING ASTORIAN Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail per year $7-00 By carrier, per month. .60 WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, in advance, $1.50 Inieid m iwobI-1m wtv juiy , 1914, at Ui ouim t Atw-. Ore gon, under the ci of CongreM o( fcarcn s. ib'i) J ty Orrten for the drtimrui ( til Moiut imi&nouAK 10 ilbr rwldeno or place of buriMM Mr to mad by pwul card or through tetoohono. Any IrrwiaUrlty ta de Uvery houldtw ImmediaMlr nportod to Uw ofOot of pubUotton. TELEPHONE MAIN 661. Official paper of Clatsop County and the City of Astoria. 0 0 00000000000000 WEATHER REPORT. . Western Oregon and Wash- A inirtnn Pain. ' ttcr Hrcrnn and Wash- ington, Idaho Generally fair. oooooooooooooooo RULE OF REINFORCEMENT. Among the policies and procedures whereby a city lifts and expands and grows, is that of reinforcing its atti tude by the assumption of preroga tives, which, while not available, for the moment, are of inestimable ad vantage when the hour for their use and application arises. And thus it may be with the Port of Astoria pro vision, now underway. We may not be ready to employ it off hand, and may be glad to wait on other developments before we invoke its terms and privileges, as a matter of civic, or commercial, expediency; but when the day comes from us to use it, we do not want to deplore the absence of all right and precedence and confess ourselves beaten for the want of its authority and utility. We want the order and custom of the thing at our hand when the moment of expediency shall arise, so that we may go forward and Claim that which is ours in law, working and fighting on the sound ground of legality and efficacious equipment. We should strengthen our munici pal and commercial prestige wherever we can do so under the sanction of the law, since every such acquisition gives us an additional grip on unfor seen circumstances and emergencies. It is a good policy; and though we take over a prerogative that may not serve us at the given hour, what harm will its investiture do anyone? What if it lay idle for years? Who suffers anything from it during its inopera tive term? In this particular matter of the port, we do not expect it to lay dor mant for years. -We expect to make good and timely use of it and em ploy it for the upbuilding of the port and city. This presentation of the case is made simply in response to those who are always inclined to meet such issues, here, with the ever lasting question, "Oh! What's the SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK HAS MONEY TO LOAN ON l GOOD SECURITY sentatives to do just the work he has outlined and for which the late "panic" was inaugurated as a primary step. Each man in the country must read tli. declaration for himself and draw the safest conclusions' he may; but we believe that if such is the real coiluilion oi auairs, HU sum ins v. purpose of the rich leaders of the country, and they are possessed ot the temerity to proceed with the program, there will be, while it lasts, a season of an inconceivable hell in this land. use THE CLASS GAUNTLET. Everything from Paris is not to be believed, of course; but the press despatch from there on Saturday last, anent the attitude of J. P. Morgan on the cause, and results, of the late "rich man's panic" and attributing it to a preconceived conspiracy among the men of his class to settle, once for all, the differences and distinc tions between capital and labor and, naturally, to the disadvantage and even the submergence of the working classes, has a tone and significance that demands either prompt denial or as oromct confirmation. The statements alleged to have been made by him are very weighty, in the light of Mr. Morgan s admitted suoremacv in the world of finance and if true, amount to an open chal lenge of the most unambiguous kind. He casts down the gauntlet of capi talistic conviction and declares war to the knife; and does it in terms such as only one in his exalted position would dare to do it. Talks glibly about "submission or starvation" and employs other short-cut language to convey the full meaning he and his colleagues have decided to acclaim. There is but one of two things de duceable from such statements as his; either Mr. Morgan has been played upon by the magazine writers until he has utterly lost his head in the whirl of their fawning adulation and is talking in unison with the folly they inspired; or he is all they claim to be, and more, and is at the head of a combination of wealthy repre- A PACIFIC COAST RECORD. There was a day when, if Astoria had dared to claim a record for im munity from crime and the aspects of crime, she would have been laughed down, from Sitka to San Diego; but that day is long past and now she comes forward with a claim to being the cleanest port on the Pacific Coast in so far as actual crime is concerned. For a seaport of 15,000 people, with hundreds of strangers, sailors and shoremen, entering here each week, she has less to be ashamed of than any place of her kind between the two ports first named, in the way of great or petty crimes. This is not the say-so of a partial few of her home-people, but is based on the quotations of those men whose business it is to make all the ports of the coast and to know the relative access of crime in each; and we are proud of the estimates reached in favor of Astoria and hasten to make the best possible use of them, in justification of the newer program she has instituted for her evolvraent from a status she bore once and too long; but which has been lifted in the past two years and fallen from her like a mantle cast aside. It is no small victory, this, and she is not to be denied credit for her emancipa tion. -o 1 ONLY TWENTY-TWO MORE. It is said there are twenty-two land-fraud cases to be disposed of in Portland, and that they are due in court for trial in April next. We hope the batch will not be held up and strung out over the year, but that all may be disposed of promptly, either by dismissal or such actual trial results as shall definitely and finally oust them from public notice. The people of Oregon are wearying of the eternal wrangle and wordy warfare incident to this mess, and will hail its end with cordial satisfaction. o EDITORIAL SALAD MURDER MYSTERY. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. lO.-An examination of the skeleton found Saturday at Elmhurst shows the corpse to be that of a man of prob ably 45 yeaw of age and of medium build. A minute inspection of the bones was made yesterday by Dr. R. H. Evelcth of Elmhurst who found unmistakeable evidence of murder, the skull had been fractured above the left ear and the bones cut clean as though the man had been dealt a terrific blow with some sharp weapon, such as an axe or hatchet. The legs and arms had been hacked from the trunk, the head had been cut off and the body had been buried in quick lime. Every effort is to be made by the coroner to clear up the mystery that surrounds the ease. SIMPLE WASH CURES ECZEMA. Itching, Burning Skin Disease Rouied Without Use of Injurious Drugs. Great inventors often have bnen praised for surrendering the secrets of their discoveries. Practically the same thing happening in the medical world in the case of Dr. Decatur D. Dennis, the eminent skin specialist of Chicago. Dr. Dennis, in his own office prac tice, discovered that pure vegetable oil of wintergreen, properly mixed with other simple remedies was prac tically a sure specific for Eczema, psoriasis, barber's itch, salt rheum, and other itching skin diseases. But the oil of wintergreen alone was found ineffective. It required other mild in gredients such as glycerine and thy moil compounded with the winter green to produce the real eczema erne. This compounded D. D. D. Pre scription positively takes away the itch at once the instant it is applied to the skin. This vegetable liquid does away with deleterious drugs so long used in an attempt to doctor the blood, whereas- modern science has determined that eczema is first and all tbe time a skin disease. If you want to know more about the merits of D. D. D. Prescription, call at our store. We vouch for this remedy. Charles Rogers & Son. RESCUED WITH BOAT HOOKS. WHAT LITTLE MARY WANTED. And the Rather Unusual Manner in Which She Got It. A former resident of Astoria, now living in another part of the state, was in town the other day, and told this interesting story: It seems that a little girl, Mary Turner by name, had the misfortune to be motherless, her mother having died in her infancy. It caused her a great deal of secret grief to note the comfort and happiness other girls derived from the love and companion ship of their mothers, and she gradu ally came to the conclusion that in some way or other she must get a mother of her own. She spoke to her father about it, but he only laughed at her and she was considerably puzzled as to how she should go about acquiring so desirable if not necessary an adjunct to the family. Her father was a merchant, a firm believer in advertising and an enthu siast on the subject Mary had often heard him tell of the splendid results it brought him so the little girl fi nally concluded that the way to get a mother must be to advertise for one. She wrote out a brief, simple adver tisement, stating her "want" and giv ing her name and address, and hand ed it to her father, telling him to put it in the paper. , Of course, he took it as a great joke, and, happening in the office of a friend of his, a newspaper publisher, showed nim the advertisement, and told him the story. Then they went out to lunch together, not noticing that they had left little Mary's piece of copy on the newspaper man's desk. Somebody around the place, who either did not know any better or who thought it would be a good joke, found it, put it in with the other clas sified advertising "copy" and the next day little Mary's "Want" appeared before the astonished eyes of the community. Of course, it created an immense amount of amusement at the father's expense, and for the next week or two he was almost afraid to show himself on the street on account of the sarcastic remarks and embarras sing questions of his friends and acquaintances. By a strange coincidence a copy of the paper found its way to a distant state and came into the hands of an old sweetheart of Mary's father. She noted the similarity of the name, and could not help speculating a good deal as to the identity of the little advertiser. She could not dismiss the subject from her mind or resist the tempta tion of taking some means to find out the facts in the matter, and as a result well of course you know what the result must have been, or otherwise this story would not have been worth the telling. . The mikado seems to have set out to give American statesmen and di plomats a few lessons in the art of jollying. Lesson number one is an order issued by the Japanese Govern ment which, among other things, ab solutely prohibits emigration to the Hawaiian Islands, expecting rela tives of Japanese already there. The class in Washington is trying to fig ure out how many millions of rela tives the six hundred or so "Japs" in Hawaii probably have. Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy travels with all the precaution that atends the czar of Russia. Why all this all this caution? Surely, no one wants to dynamite the venerable discoverer of Christian Science. "Autoes" may damage roads as the N. Y. State engineer claims; but there can be no doubt abou the assertion that motor cars have done more for im proving highways than anything in a century. The commercial travelers are now going to give attention to seeuring steel passenger coaches. They hold .. i , j tnat tne metai casicei nas aemon strated advantages over the wooden coffin. Freezing of Morse by his "undigest ed" Ice securities seems about com plete, now that the Bank of North America is to liquidate. General Juneau, the head of the Haitien revolutionists, has lost his head. It was a trifle hand On the gen eral but it may bring peace to Haiti. NEW YORK, Feb. 10-Rescue of a drowning man who had leaped in to the water for the purpose, it is supposed, of ending his life, was witnessed yesterday by passengers on two East River ferry boats. .While in mid-stream on the ferry boat John English of the Forty Second street line, Christian Tent of Williamsburg, sixty years old, threw himself over the railing. Passengers on the Eng lish threw life preververs to him and the crew of the ferry boat Jamacia of the Houston street line, passing nearby, rescued him with boat hooks. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Blind, RIeeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. HOLDS UP SIX. PUEBLO, Colo., Feb. lO.-Joseph Russ and six Austrian companions were held up last night by a lone highwayman and in the melee that followed Russ was killed by a bullet from the bandit's revolver. Cured of Colds and Croup by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. SONS OF 0E0R0I 0. BOWDEN. Geo. C. Bowden, of Little Rock, Ark., has used Chamberlain's Cough Remedy in his family for many years, and is seldom without it In the house. He says: "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy ha proved a great relief to onr boys In their throat and lung troubles. A few doses of It will ward off a threatened attack of croup, and a bad cold is quickly cured by its use. I take pleasure in recommending it." The prompt cures of colds and cronpg effected by this preparation, Qie fact that it can always be de pended upon, is pleasant to take and contains no opium, chloroform or other objectionable drug, has made it a favorite with the parents of voting children. When von have a cough or cold, try it and see for Yourself what an excellent medicine it is. Price, 25 cento. Large size, 60 cents. 1 I .. I ITaSM I irT.TA Jil f u til i , 'Ifln-Tl H,!; .k iV 59 i"BCi: 1,7 "r i it. a i rrr.v. ALCOHOL 1 PER CKNT Atg(MulilelTfMnil!onr(rAj similar ificrtodanillMiii llniJUicSiiufteafflllkwebaf IVornolcsDi&'sllonJClifftfiJ ness and fastf ontalns oritur Oitonu.Mc.rphlne iwrMtacnL NOT NICOTIC. MHMSMilHHSMBHM Jl iim? M.UtcSf ArntiH iiU-ftaitkm ApdMRmedy fbrdmsf-, tloa,SourStonh.l)lrrton Worms MWUlstousarvtriM ItfSSmullOSS OF SLEEP. NEW YORK. ' Mm SJsnsa7ff-TOT4 II n mmm For Infant! and Children. The Kind You llavo Always Bought Bears Sign m ature AM 111 Exact Copy of Wrapper. hr Hsu V r n J' TUl iMfqi Thirtu Yoaro I II II t J I UUIU MI VHI MHWin MMMNVi M tfTft I Open and Ready FOR BUSINESS With a full line of spring and summer goods. Imported and Domestic Wool ens in all the latest patterns and effects. A. BACHMEIER The Up-to-date Tailor. STAR THEATRE BUILDING - COR, Ilth AND COMMERCIAL IT Have You Seen The Wash? In Our Hardware Window The Foard & Stokes Hardware Co Incorporated Successors to For.rd & Stokes Co. SCOW BAY BRASS & IRON ASTOHIA, OltEUON IHON AND BRASS FOUNDERS LAND AND MARINE ENGINEERS Up-to-Date Sawmill Machinery. 18th and Franklin Ave. Prompt attention given to alt repair work. - TeL Main 2461 PRANK HART, Druggist Maraschino Cherries ft t . , . , DELICIOUS Try'em 75c and $1.00 a bottle at the AMERICAN IMPORTING CO. 589 Commercial Street J. Q. A. BOWLBY, President. 0. 1. PETERSON, Vice-President. FRANK PATTON, Cashier J. W. GARNER, Assistant Cashier Astoria Savings Bank Transacts a General Banking Business t-Interest Paid oiit Time Deposit Eleventh and Duane Sts. FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM. Astoria, Oregon.