THE MORNING AST01UAN. r STOMA. OREGON.
WEDNESDAY, FEB. 12, 190S.
We Have Received Our New Line
WHITE AND GOLD
HAVILAND
Open stock pattern. Sold any way you wish to buy it,
by the piece, dozen or set.
SEE WINDOW DISPLAY
A. V. ALLEN
Phones v Branch Uniontown
Main 711, Main 2871 Phon Main 713
Sole agent for Baker's Barrington Hall Steel Cat Coffee.
STRENGTH OF NAVY
Statement Sent to the Senate
By Secretary Metcalf.
NUMBER AFLOAT AND ASHORE
successful but that first of all it will
have to be an artistic success.
Mr. Conried it is said, told the di
rectors, that he expected shortly to
be free to devote himself entirely to
the management of the new theatre if
its officials desired him for that post
Action on this and other pending
matters was laid over to a future
meeting.
UNDYING LOVE.
Refutes the Charge That Nearly Half
the Officers Have Been Enmeshed
by a "Social Pull" and Are Enjoy
ing Soft Berths.
WASHINGTON, Feb. ll.-Re-sponding
to a request by the Presi
dent, Secretary Metcalf yesterday
sent to the Senate a statement show
ing the names of the officers of the
navy ashore and afloat The purpose
of the statement is to refute the
charge that has been made to the
Senate committee on naval affairs
that nearly one-half of the officers
have been enmeshed by "social pull"
and are enjoying "soft berths" in
Washington and at the various navy
yards. Figures are given for July 1,
1905, and January 1, 1908. In 190S,
the line officers of the navy numbered
1109 and staff officers 543, or a total
of 1642.
Of this number there were 749 line
drilled troops at all frontier points.
The government proposes again to
send Prince Su to Mongolia for the
purpose of developing plans looking
to organization of defenses for fron
tier districts. A modern drilled skele
ton brigade is now on its way to
Tibet for the purpose of organizing a
Tibetan division. '
The fact that the Indo-Tibet trade
convention has not been concluded
prevents for the present the evacua
tion of the Chumbi alley by the Brit
ish troops. This delay tends to bring
Great Britain into conflict with the
Anglo-Russian convention, which
regulates the respective interests of
these two powers in Tibet, Afghanis
tan and Persia, and which China is
using for the purpose of reducing
Great Britain's rigfit in dealing direct
with the Tibetans to the minimum.
China has admitted the Tibetan text
of the convention on written assur
officers and 282 staff officers afloat, or
a total of 1011. In 1908 the W offi
cers number 1279 and the staff officers
638, a total of 1917. Of this number
914 line officers and 234 staff officers,
or a total of 1148 officers, are afloat.
The percentage of the line afloat in
1905 was 68.9 and in 1908, 73.4; of the
staff 49.1 in 1905, and 36.6 in 1908.
There are now on duty in Wash
ington 82 line officers on the active
list and 14 on the retired list, 75 staff
officers of the active list and three on
the retired list. There is a less per
centage ashore than there has been
for 10 years.
Russian Patriot Makes Love by Let
ter and Lands in JatL
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. ll.-R.
Livingston, who claims to be a Rus
sian patriot and a close personal
! friend of Count Leo Tolstoi, was on
trial before Judge Ellsworth in Oak
land yesterday on a charge of in
sanity preferred by Miss Elizabeth
Mary Wolfe, a member of the
sophomore class of the University of
California. Miss Wolfe caused the
Russian's arrest after he had written
her five letters in which he professed
undying love and affection for her.
She had not been introduced to the
man, did not know him and does not
care to know him, she said.
In court Livingston confessed he
had made a mistake, declaring he had
written the letters to the wrong girl.
He admitted he had addressed the
letters to Elizabeth Mary Wolfe.
"But it was not this Miss Wolfe,"
said the Russian. "It was some other
person. . I have made a mistake. I
know it now but I did not know it
before."
The. still case is still pending.
NEW THEATRE.
Conreid Says it Must be an Artistic,
, if Not Financial Success.
NEW YORK, Feb. ll.-Further
plans for the new theatre were dis
cussed at a meeting of the executive
board of the institution yesterday in
Heinrich Conried's office at the Metro
politan opera house. Mr. Conried's
future connection with the theatre
was also under consideration by the
other members of the committee
present including W. K. Vanderbilt,
Otto H. Kahn, Edmund L. Bayliss,
Henry Rogers Winthrop and Eliot
Gregory. Mr. Conried stated his be
lief in the educational value of the
new institution, especially if conduct
ed on the plans of the Burge theatre
in Berlin, emphasizing the necessity
in his opinion of making the house a
school of diction and of manners and
of maintaining its performances as
models of artistic excellence. He ex
pressed the belief that the institution
might eventually prove ; financially
SALARY $17.50 A WEEK.
Manages to Purchase a Fine Ranch
and Automobile Lands in JaiL
LOS ANGELES, Feb 11. W. B.
Harvey, a clerk in the Central De
partment Store, who managed to pur
chase a fine ranch near Sacramento
and an automobile, although receiving
only $17.50 a week as salary, was ar
rested today on a charge of forging
the name of Manager Eugene Gan
ster. The manager says that Harvey,
by forging his name, made from $25
to $35 a day.
Harvey when arraigned in the po
lice court, would make no statement.
The department store has a system
whereby goods are sent out to resi
dences with the provision that if the
goods do not suit they may be taken
back and they are then turned back
into the stock. It is alleged Harvey
would sell goods, put the money in
his pocket and turn in a balance sheet
in which the goods were reported
as having been returned to stock. It
was Harvey's extravagance that led
his employers to suspect him.
AFRICA FOR AFRICANS.
Daniel Maceo Fitting Out an Expedi
tion to Drive Out Foreigners.
SAX FRANCISCO, Feb. 11.
Daniel Maceo, youngest son of Gen
eral Antonio Maceo, commander-in-chief
of the Cuban revolutionary army
is in Oakland and says he is prepar
ing to fit out an expedition to drive
out the French and. other foreigners
who are bent on conquest from Tan
gier and Africa.
"Africa for Africans," is the slogan
of Maceo, who declares that he hopes
to attain his purpose without recourse
to arms. He states that he intends
to leave Oakland on July 25 accom
panied by 15 supporters anjj go east
by railroad embarking from some
point near New York for Tangier.
"Contributions are being made," he
says, "to our cause by the govern
ments of Cuba, Mexico and Guate
mala while Great Britain has assured
us of her moral support." ' .
HER NOTE WAS FINAL.
The proprietor of a large drug store
recently received this curt and haugh
ty note written in an angular feminine
hand: "I do not want vasioline but
glisserine. Is that plain enough? I
persoom you can spell."
EAST COAST LINE
Has Been Extended far out Into
the Gulf.
KNIGHT'S KEY THE TERMINUS
Cuba in Reality is More of a Neigh
bor to the United States Than Ever
and Havana is Within Reaching
Distance.
WASHINGTON', Feb. U.--Vr
Department officials were advised
this week that the first train had been
run across the Florida keys and that
Cuba in reality is more of a neighbor
to the United States than ever.
Troops and supplies now can be
rushed far out into the water of the
Gulf, should occasion demand such a
movement, and Havana is within
reaching distance. The immence mil
itary importance of this extension of
the Florida East Coastline is appar
ent. The benefits accuring from the
great engineering feat pushed through
by Henry M. Flagler will be enhanc
ed once the road is completed to Key
West. That island is being trans
formed into a garrison of as much
strategic usefulness to the United
States as Malta is to England.
According to advices, the inaugura
tion of the steamship service to Cuba
was undertaken simultaneously with
the arrival of the first train at Knights
Key, the present southern terminus of
the road. The steamer Halifax
made the first voyage, carrying a
large list of passengers. The line
will boast a number of commodious
steamers and will connect closely
with the trains.
Aside from the interest taken by
the War Department authorities in
this railway extension across the
waters of the Gulf of Mexico is the
excitement aroused in scientific cir
cles by the discovery of some ancient
ruins on Knight's Key. The Smith
sonian Institution has been advised of
these discoveries, and a party of gov
ernment experts may be detailed to
make further explorations.
The history of Knight's Key is one
of mystery and romance. The little
island takes its name from the fact
that early in the eighteenth century
a man of proud bearing took up his
residence there, transforming the reef
into an almost impregnable streng
hold. He surrounded himself with
adventurers and engaged in the haz
ardous business of piracy. The busi
ness in those days was profitable,
for the rich galleons of Spain were
prizes worth the daring.
No one appeared to know the na
tionality of this man, although his
ships were the terrors of merchant
men of all flags. He dominated the
restless spirits by sheer personality,
and report has it that he was a rene
gade noble. When he had levied on
the sea traffic of the day sufficient
bloody toll to satisfy his greed he
disappeared as mysteriously and as
quietly as he came. The band fell to
pieces, many of its members deserting !
to other leaders. Their chief in all
likeihood returned to the court from
whence he came, there to live royally
on his ill-gotten gains.
Without a name during its owner's
occupancy, the island was christened
by the few adventurers left. Know
ing nothing of the name or nationality
of their leader, they yet acknowl
edged his superiority and were con
vinced he was of noble birth. Thence
sprang the name, which has lasted to
the present day. Ruins of the cita
del have been found in the jungle on
the island, and it is believed these
ruins will yield up much of historical
value.
Governor Magoon, who is in Wash
ington to report to the President .on
the Cuban situation, is reported as
being highly pleased over the exten
sion of the East Coast Line. The
big statesman is holding down a job
where prompt action may be neces
sary at any moment, for revolutions
grow in the ,West Indies over night.
It is comforting to know that only a
few hours now separate the Cuban
capital from the camps and depots
of Uncle Sam.
To Cuba , the extension ' means
much. It will stimulate travel to it
and to the other islands of the West
Indies, for the terrors of seasickness
practically are abolished. Americans
yet may become as familiar with the
streets of Havana as they are. now
with the boulevards of Washington
or the avenues of New York and Chicago.
Advance
Spring
IP
oods
sifts
: ' ' 1
Wo tiro showing the
nobbiest line of
advance spring styles
ever shown In Astoria.
PATTERNS
11 STILES
EHGlilVE
To Be Well Dressed
This Season See
JUPB BIRO
THE BROWNSVILLE WOOLEN MILL STORE
"If Its From JUDDS It's Good"
MIXTURE FOR THE
OLD FOLKS
MAKES MONEY.
Read the Morning Astorlan 60 cent
per month. Delivered by earryier.
THIS SIMPLE HOME MIXTURE,
TO EASILY OVERCOME KID
NEY AND BLADDER TROUBLE
AND RHEUMATISM.
Here is a prescription that anyone
can mix at home. Any good prescrip
tion pharmacy can supply the ingred
ients named at little cost; being com
posed of vegetable extracts, it is
harmless and inexpensive. Best of all
it docs its work veil, relieving even
the worst forms of bladder trouble,
frequent urination, backache, kidney
complaint, and by its direct action
upon the eliminative tissue of the kid
neys, makes these most vital organs
rid the blood and system of waste
matter and uric acid which causes
rheumatism.
Here it is; try it if you suffer: Fluid
Extract Dandelion, one-half ounce;
Compound Kargon, one ounce; Com
pound Syrup Sarsaparilla, three
ounces; shake well in a bottle and
take1 in teaspoonful doses after each
meal and at bedtime.
A wcllknown local druggist is au
thority for the statement that one
week's use shows good results in
nearly every instance, and such symp
toms as lame back, frequent desire to
urinate, pain in bladder and even
chronic rheumatism are generally re
lieved within a few days, the pain and
swelling diminishing with each dose.
House of Correction Clears 135,000
a Year.
' DETROIT, Mich., Feb. 11. The
Detroit House of Correction, which
for years has been a profitable
municipal institution, cleared last
, year $35,000 which will be turned over
I into the treasury of the city. The
prison had about 450 prisoners all
; through the year, the men being em
ployed principally in the making of
chairs and the women in making and
carding buttons.
Superintendent McDowell, in mak
ing his annual report yesterday, at
tributed a reduction of about 50 in
the average number of prisoners
through the year to t tie fact that dur
ing the most of 1907 there was a very
heavy demand for labor, steady work
keeping many men out of the depend
ent and disorderly class.
The increasing price of lumber and
the rapidly increasing Use of per
fected fireproof system of construc
tion should have much to do in .hold
ing down the amount which the for
ests are calle'd upon to yield , each
year, but so far these more substan
tial materials have ..not decreased the
lumber cut of the nation. ' V
.COFFEE
You are both judge and
jury for Schilling's Best.
Your grocer returns jrour mooer if rou don't
Ilk It; we pay him
TRIUMPHANT WOOING
ManagerFor heaven's sake, 1'rau
lein, what have you done? You've
gone and accepted the hero's proposal
in the first act instead of the fifth!
The Star Hut he begged so nicely!
And why can't I just refuse hipi in
the fifth act?" Flicgende Blaetter.
More than two-thirds of your life
you wear shoes. Did you ever think
of that? -
The Dr. A. Reed
Cushion Shoe i
Wll hutlf tn iua mi . f
- jvi ! VUIIIIUII
two-thirds of your life; ths rest you
sleep.
The W. L Douglas
Has a world-wide reputation. Wear
one and be up to date.
s. aTgimre
543- BOND STREET.
Opposite Fisher Bros.
Best kinds of logging shoes, ham
made, always on hand.
When a young woman tells a clerk
in a shoe store that she is not pre
pared to try on shoes, it means she
has a hole in her stocking.
SCOW BAY BRASS &
111
MS
ASTOIMA, OREGON
MON AND BRASS FOUNDERS LAND AND MARINE ENGINEERS
Prompt attention given to all repair work.
Tel. Main 2461
Up-to-Date Sawmill Machinery.
18th and Franklin Ave,
. . . . . V
WHEN YOU WANT PRICES THAT ARE RIGHT
Write us, we're here for that purpose -
The Work We Do
Anything in the electrical Business.Bell's House Phones' :
Inside wiring and Fixtures installed and kept In repair -
vvc wiii uc fciau iu yuuie you prices.
OUR PRICES WILL DO THE REST
STEEL & E WART
426 Bond Street.
Phone Main 3881 X