THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1908.
1
BK. AMAZON ADRIFT
This woman says that after
months of sut'foriugr Lydin 11,
Pinklmm's Vegetable Compound
made her as well as ever.
Maude E. Forjrus of LcesburgjYa,
writes to JUrs. llnKliam:
1 want other suffering women to
know what Lydia E. Plnkham's Vepe-
table Compound has done for me. lc.i
months I suffered from feminine Hit
so that I thought I could not lire. 1
wrote yon, and after taking- Lydia E.
Pinkhara's Vegetable Compound, and
using the treatment you prescribed J
felt like if new woman. I am now
strong-, and well as ever, and thank you
for the good you have done rue."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years lydia E. Fink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ilia
and has positively cured thousands ol
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation,ulcera
tion, fibroid tumbrs, irregularities,
periodic pains, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indiges
tion, dizziness or nervous prostratioa
Why dont you try it f
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Go) Good Offing But Apparently
Did Not Hold It.
TAT00SH GOES AFTER HER
Nicomedia Leaves Out For China
Amiral de Cornulier Arrive! in
from England Two-Square Riggers
Yet in Port Odds and Ends,
"MOLL PITCHER."
Hiatory ef the Famous Heroine of the
RevoiutioA. ,
"Moll Pitcher" was the daughter of
Pennsylvania German family living
In the vicinity of Carlisle. She was
born In 1748, and her name was Mary
Lodwig, a pure German name. She
was married to one John Casper
Hayes, a barber, who when the war
broke oat with the mother country en
listed In the First Pennsylvania artil
lery and was afterward transferred to
the Seventh Pennsylvania infantry,
commanded by Colonel William Irvine
of Carlisle, with whose family Mary
Lodwig bad lived at service. She was
permitted to accompany ber husband's
regiment, serving the battery as cook
and laundress, and when at the battle
Of Monmouth (Freehold), N. J, ber
husband was wounded at his gun she
prang forward, seized the rammer
and took his place to the end of the
battle. After the battle she carried
water to the wounded, and hence ber
pet name of "Moll Pitcher."'
Hayes died after the war was over,
and she married a second husband of
the name of McCauIey. and at ber
grave In the old cemetery at Carlisle
there Is a monument that bears this
Inscription:
Molly McCauIey.
Renowned In History as "Molly
Pitcher," the Heroine of
Monmouth;
Died January, 1831
Erected by the Citizen of Cumber
land County. July 4, 1875.
On Washington's birthday. 1822.
when Molly was nearly seventy years
old. the legislature of Pennsylvania
voted Ir r a sift of v-JO and a pension
of S4U year.
NATURE'S WARNING.
Astoria People Must Recognize and
Heed It
Kidney ills come quietly mysteri
ously, But nature always warns .you.
Notice the kidney secretions.
See if the color is unhealthy
If there are settlings and sediment,
Passages frequent, scanty, painful.
It's time then to use Doan's Kidney
Pills,
To ward off Bright's Disease or
diabetes.
Doan's have done great work in
Astoria.
Theodore Josephson, SIS Seventh
street, Astoria, Oregon, says: "About
five years ago I used Doan's Kidney
Pills and derived great benefit. I
' was suffering from severe pains
across my back and my loins and at
times so severe that I was unable to
stoop or straighten. My kidneys also
bothered me a great deal, as the
secretions were generally too free in
passing. At last Doan's Kidney
Pills were brought to my attention,
and I procured a box at Rogers' drug
. store. I began using them and my
health is now excellent I take a
few doses of Doan's Kidney Pills
now and then, when feeing any sign
of backache and they never fail to
banish the trouble."
For sale by all dealers. Price, 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name Doan's and
take no other.
At 9 o'clock yesterday morning the
British bark Amazon, Captain Gar
rick, left this port, wheat-laden for
Europe, and was given a good offing
with the tug that took her out. At 3:30
o'clock the observer at North Head
wired the Western Union office in
this that the bark was drifting in to
ward Tillamook Head, and repeated
the substance of the Amazon's sig
nals, which were, in effect; "Cannot
get out unless assisted by tug, or
wind." At 5 o'clock North Head
again sent in a wire to the effect that
the Amazon was "still drifting slowly
in shore, and that the tug Tatoosh
had been ordered down, and was then
off Fort Stevens.
Comment among the people most
nearly concerned ashore, and those
who know what such a drift in this
weather means, was of a sort that
forbode no ill to the Amazon; the
general idea being that an off-wind
would spring up after sundown and
fend off to deep water; and some were
of the opinion that perhaps Captain
Garrick, who was known to be ill
when the left and for sometime prev
ious, was a bit unduly nervous, and
had sent for assistance as the quickest
way out of trouble, though he may
not have really needed, it
At 6:40 o'clock the Astorian office
got into communication with the
Hotel Moore, at Seaside, and from
there it was ascertained at that time
that the Amazon was about three
points to the northward of the hotel
pier about off Gearhart Park, and
probably five miles off shore, with no
sight of the tug whatever. The hotel
people had been more or less worried
over the position of the ship all the
afternoon, but refrained from sending
in any word about her, on the score
of having been thoroughly laughed at
on previous occasions when they had
taken this trouble in good faith, a cir
cumstance they should not have to
complain of.
At midnight the bar tug Tatoosh
arrived in and Captain Bailey report
ed that he had picked up the vessel
and towed her to a safe offing. No
further particulars could be learned
as the captain was tired from his
efforts and his innate modesty, to a
newspaper man, forbids his claiming
any laurels. Nevertheless many who
are interested in the vessel will take
this meagre final report as an assur
ance that the vessel is now safely on
her way.
The French bark Amiral de Cornu
lier, Captain Bidon, arrived in from
Rochester, England .yesterday after
noon, via San Diego, and will go on
to the metropolis on the first hawser
that offers. Her cruise was unevent
ful and fairly fast.
The steamship Nicomedia arrived
down yesterday morning, cargoed for
China, and left out almost immediate
ly. She will be followed on the 22nd,
by the Alsea, of the same line.
The steamer J. B. Stetson arrived
in late yesterday afternoon from San
Francisco, with a fair list of passen
gers, and will load out lumber from
the Tongue Point mills for the return
voyage.
The British ship Claverdon, Cap
tain Thomson, got away at last, yes
terday morning after two weeks delay
here, making repairs and waiting for
a tide that would carry her big draft
safely across the bar. She is headed
for Falmouth, with wheat.
The only square-riggers now in the
lower harbor awaiting departure are
the German bark Reinbek and the
French bark Buffon, both wheat laden
for Europe.
The oil tank steamer W. S. Porter
was among the arrivals" in this port
yesterday, coming up from California
with a full tank of crude stuff for the
Associated Companies.
JOHN HAYS HAMMOND ILL,
SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 12.-John
Hays Hammond, the mining engineer,
was operated on this morning for
chronic appendicitis. According to a
statement given out by his secretary
he is resting easy and there is every
chance of his speedy recovery.
LIKE THE INFERNO.
Qraphie Canorijitlou of a Climb Ovr )
a Volcanic Island.
A climb 'over u volcanic Island tit
Boring kw Is Hum described In Outlug
Magnituo by l'.iert Dunn;
"CHIT aiik awiiy Into chaos. TJp
rlRlit funs of tuffa, crevices IlUe salt
crusted wouuds, chasms with leprous
edges-breuibed all like mad, Less
steam. b"t more crinkly and venomous
gases. rnreiie;i white mid red and
oelier In their depths, they seemed al
most to whistle yet they did net
whistle a furtive, ambient, high
pressure 'ZJsssIukmo!' Was It sound J
Then I would (muse and catch only the
horrtd. overburdened silence,
"The 'thlujj' seemed more friendly.
The sulphur ho longer choked. You
could have passed a burnlug bunch of
miners' matches under my uoso am! I
would have gulped the fumes like
fresh air. Hut the Invisible venom
still belched out everywhere, secret
and furtive; now from jaws and
gashes four feet and more across, no
longer red yellow, but with fangs
cruBted white or brilliant green and
bristling with rapler-Uke stalagmites.
Heat tremors pulsed, as the whole
wore a vast roof too close under the
eye or the sun. And below on the
blasted acre under the beak the pant
ing steam Hushed out the supreme des
olation cromlillng, cllukery and over
parched; trailed nway its smear of the
dull rainbow hues of sulphur from
grotesque mosaics. It was a pudding
of slag fresh from that great furnace
of the unknown fusing point, and how
alien to tlio cold waves and wluds or
the subarctic!"
Proclamation Creating Add!
tions to Trinity Forest.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed
to cure any case of Itching, Blind,
Bleeding or Protruding PHei in 6 to
14 days or money refunded. 50c.
Brain Growth.
The brain tiMially stops growing at
about fifty, nnd from sixty to seventy
It Is more likely to decrease. It bns
been related by Canon MacColl that
Mr. Gladstone's head was constantly
outgrowing, his bats. As late as the
Midlothian campaign, when be was
nearly seventy, he was obliged to have
his head remeasured for this reason
Canon MacColl's court uslou that th!.
continual growth of brain contributed
to Mr. Gladstone's perennial youthful
ness appears not unwarranted. Lou
don Spectator.
' T
Special Announcement Regarding the
National Pure Food and Drug Law
We are pleased to announce that
Foley's Honey and Tar for coughs,
colds and lung troubles is not affect
ed by the National Pure Food and
Drug law as it contains no opiates
or other harmful drugs, and we rec
ommend it as a safe remedy for chil
dren and adults. For sale by T. F.
Laurin.
am
Or-itory.
oratory. Brudder
Jack
"What
sonr
"Brudder Slinmlns, I will elucidate
If you says black am white, dat aiv
foolish, Dot If you says black am white
an' bellers like a bull an' pounds on a
table wlf bofe lists dat am oratory,
aa' some people will believe you."
Atlanta Constitution.
Suffering and Dollars Saved.
E. S. Loper, of Manila, N. Y., says:
"I am a carpenter and have had many
severe cuts healed by Bucklen's Ar
nica Salve. It has saved me suffering
and dollars. It is by far the best
healing salve I have ever found."
Heals burns, sores, ulcers, fever
sores, eczema and piles. 25c at Chaa.
Rogers & Son, druggists.
As It Happeni.
They parted as girls; they met as wo
men. "And what of all your sweethearts?'
asked the oM time chum at length.
"Gone the way of all good things,"
answered the captlvator.
"That tall, lanky blond with th
fierce mustache, for Instance?"
"Went insane!'
"Gracious! And JImmie Bowles 'the
little muskrat,' as you used to call blm
who was so devoted?"
"Killed la an auto accident trying to
save my life."
"Dear me! And your needy artist
swain, who found In you the only cus
tomer for bis wonderful paintings?"
"Became a waiter and married an
heiress!"
"And the kinky haired little French
count?"
"Ban away with my maid!"
"Worse aud worse! And how about
Beggle? You did profess to love him,
you know."
"Now my brother-in-law!"
"Never! Well, that Mr. Hardfllnt,
who used to snub us all, yourself In
cluded? I hope he met his deserved
finish."
"He did. ' Come up to the house and
I'll introduce you to him. He's my bus
band!" Young's Magazine.
A juvenile Wriggle.
Mother (an Invalid) - Elmer, what
did you do with the orange Mrs. Neigh
bors gave you to give to me yester
day? Small Elmer It was too sour
for you, mamma, so I put some sugar
on it and ate It myself. Chicago News.
It Is from the remembrance of Joys
we have lost that the arrows of af
fliction are pointed. Mackenzie.
SIGNED BY THE PRESIDENT
This New Land Brings Total Area
of Trinity National Forest up to
Nearly 1,600,000 Acres Headquar
ters at Weaverville.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 11. -The
President has signed a proclamation
creating additions in the Trinity Na
tional Forest, California, amounting
to 350,471 acres. The additions to
the forest are contiguous tracts of
timberland lying for the most part in
Humboldt and Trinity counties, with
smaller areas in Shasta and Tehama
counties. 1 Ins new land brings the
total area of the Trinity Forest up to
nearly 1,600,000 acres.
Valuable forests of yellow and
sugar pine, incense cedar and few
small stands of redwood included in
the additions are estimated to contain
more than two and a quarter billion
board feet of timber. The market
value of this timber is $4,500,000.
These forests have been neglected by
lumber interests up to the present
time because it was more profitable
to exploit the valuable and more ac
cessible redwood forests lying far
ther west.
These stands which have been put
in the Trinity Forests constitute some
of the most valuable virgin timber
lying outside of the National Forests
and the proclamation putting them
under' forest management will insure
them against destruction and at the
same time make them produce a per
manent supply of timber for the de
velopment of the rich mines in this
section and the uses of the settlers.
There are various agricultural and
dairying communities within and
around the forests and the protection
of the forests slopes will insure a
steady and abundant supply of water
There are many opportunities for the
development of light and power from
the numerous streams which have
their source in this region. An added
advantage coming from the proper
management of the forest will be the
protection 'of the drainage basin of
Upper Mad River, and the probable
checking of floods, which are fre
quent because of the deforested water
shed. Numerous small parks or 'glades"
afford excellent grazing for stock,
and upon this local residents are
largely dependent Large numbers
of stock enter this country for sum
mer grazing, coming from distant
points, hence, in order to protect the
settlers, it is important that grazing
should be properly regulated, both
with a view to the best development
of the range, and the proper protec
tion of the watershed.
These additions will be put under
administration immediately, with
Supervisor F. H. Haflcy in charge.
The headquarters of the Trinity For
est is at Weaverville.
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For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
A
U" For Over
Thirty Years
HI
SOOTHES AND HEALS.
Hyomei Gives Quick Relief
Catarrh Troubles.
in
Be wise in time and use Hyomei at
the first warning of catarrhal troubles.
Do not let the disease extend along
the delicate mucous membrane, grad
ually going from the nose to the throat
thence into the bronchial tubes, and
then downward until the lungs are
reached and you are in danger of
consumption.
Hyomei will cure all curable forms
and stages of catarrh. It is so uni
formly successful in curing" this
common yet dangerous disease that
T. F. Laurin takes all the risk of a
trial treatment.
There is no other treatment for
catarrh that is like Hyomei or just as
good. None can take its place, none
give such quick and sure relief and
at so little cost. Its medications is
breathed through a pocket inhaler
that comes with every outfit, thus
reaching the most remote cells of the
air passages, killing the catarrhal
germs and soothing and healing the
irritated mucous membrane.
Begin the use of Hyomei today and
you will soon find that the offensive
breath, the droppings into the throat,
the discharge from the nose and all
other symptoms of catarrh are over
come and cured, The complete out
fit costs but $1.00 and T. F. Laurin
stands ready to refund the money if
it does not cure catarrh.
Fresh California Creamery
BUTTER
:--t
75c per Two Pound BriclC
Full Weight and Quality Guaranteed.
Acme Grocery Co.
The Up-to-Date Grocers.
ssi coajisKUAb st. rmmz eii
NEW TO-DAY
Money to Loan on good security.
Scandinavian-American Savings Bank.
When You Travel
Be sure that your ticket reads via
the O. R. & N. and connections. It
costs no more than via other line.
Through tickets to and from all prin
cipal points in the United States,
Canada and Europe. G. W. Roberts,
Agent, O. R. & N Dock, Astoria.
Have the tires on your baby car
riages made new by C. H. Orkwitz,
137 Tenth street
Into New Quarters.
W. N. Ford and W. J. Delashmutt,
formerly of the Chinook bar, an
nounce the sale of their fixtures in
that well known business, and that
they will move across the street and
into their new and elegant quarters
just completed, which will be thor
oughly and beautifully equipped with
new appointments from top to bot
tom. They have nothing more to do
with the old stand, and the name of
the pew resort will be made known
in the course of a few days.
New Arrival!
Spring styles of the famous Knox
Hats at the store of Herman Wise.
Second-hand furniture bought and
sold by R. Davis, 59 Ninth street.
The Astoria office of "The Oregon
Fire Relief Association," has been
moved to 179 Ninth street, between
Commercial and Duane. Get your
rates before insuring. We can save
you money. W. M. Whitney, Agent.
2-9-7t
New Mattress Factory.
Have your old furniture and mat
trees made new. 59 Ninth street.
New Grocery Store.
Try our own mixture of coffee the
J. P. B. Fresh fruit and vegetables.
Badollet & Co., grocers. Phone Main
1281.
Special Meeting Notice.
A special meeting of the Columbia
River Fishermen's Protective Union
will be held at their hall on Astor
street, Thursday, February 13th, at
7:30 o'clock p. m. Business of great
est importance to our salmon indus
try will come up. (Legislation.) AU
members in good standing are requir
ed to be present and have book or
receipt along. H. M. LORNTSEN,
secretary. 2-12-2t
"Modern" Delights.
When a man raises under the hands
of a barber he wants the best skilled
treatment to be had in that line. In
Astoria, the man in scared of such
manipulation, goes direct to Petersen's
"Modern" shop, at 572 Commercial,
and gets it in any of the six chairs
maintained.
The Palace Restaurant
The ever-increasing popularity of
the Palace Restaurant is evidence of
the good management, and the serv
ice, at this popular dining room. For
a long time the reputation of the
house has been of the best and it
does not wane as time progresses.
The system used, that of furnishing
the finest the market affords, and all
can be obtained, in season, is a plan
that will always win, coupled as it Is
with the best of cooking and prompt
service. A common saying nowadays
is "Get the Palace habit."
The Commercial.
One of the coziest and most popular
resorts in the city is the Commercial
A new billiard room, a pleasant sitting
room and handsome fixtures all go to
make an agreeable meeting place for
gentlemen, there to discuss the topics
of the day, play a game of billiards
and enjoy the fine refreshments serv
ed there. The best of goods are only
handled, and this fact being so well
known, a large business is done at the
Commercial, on Commercial street,
near Eleventk . w
FRANKFORT, Ky., Feb. 12.-The
ballot for United States Senator
taken in joint session of the Legisla
ture, was without result
Irritation of the throat and hoarse
ness are relieved immediately by two
or three little swallows of Kemp's
Balsam, the best cough cure. Grip
puucnis snouia mane a note oi tni