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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 14, 1908)
Friday, February 14, 1908, r fflE MORNING ASTOMAN, ASTORIA. OREGON. 3 YOU'D BETTER HURRY GOODS CAN'T LAST VERY MUCH LONGER THE, END Of the Great Bankrupt Sale BE WAITING WHEN THE DOORS OPEN- THE BEST GOES FIRST Is drawining near and each day bargains grow bigger. No manufacturer on earth could produce goods at prices we are selling at In all your lifetime you may never have such an opportunity to buy so cheap THIS MORNING PROM 9 TO lO WE WILL PUT ON SALE. . . . . . Ladies 75c to $1 Lawa Kimonos for only..;............ 29c 'Men's $1.50 Fine Wool Underwear ....... 69c Boys' $3 to $5 pvcrestsiji. $1.00 Last of Ladies' white shirt waists, value to $2.50. ...... lOc From Ten to Eleven O'Cloek Men's $J.50 and $2 wool sweaters 0Qc Ladies' best style coats, worth up to $25..... Men's arid boys 35c and 50c caps..!: .Z IBe Ladies' short coats .: i ; jtl.OO ! if PROM 2 TO p WE WILL SELL Ladies' $350 to $5 dress skirts.. . IL..L..JL... 98c 25 Girls good school hate and caps, worth up to $2, for 1QC 700 yards good embroidery insertion, worth 10c to 20c, at yd 3c Lot of 10c and 15c embroideries, 10 yards to a customer 4c COME PREPARED TO BUY WE CANNOT LAY ASIDE OOODS OP ANY KIND 1T Successors to the Morse Department Store COME AND STAY ALL DAY EACH . HOUR SOME GREAT SPECIAL IS CLOSED OUT. NO FARM POR HER. CHICAGO, Feb. 13,-When Mn Charles Adams, 7726 Emerald avenue would not agree to forsake the life of the city and go back with her husband to the farm where he lived until two year ago, he ordered a moving wagon yesterday and by force en tered their house and removed the furniture. Last night Adam alone left Chicago for the country. His wife, ftftcr two years of married life returned to her father's roof. i ..J Ji ou Rheumatism : Diabetes, Kidney Diseases, : Bladder Troubles, i Liver Complaint, i: Indigestion, !: Constipation, Tuiit ill othar diseases arblu lroro Plney and bladder trouble eta bt Ickijr, pennamntlTh and I ABSOLUTELY CURED l f Every sufferer from air of thasst Zjrasd diseases should learn at oaesX of ths sreateat eura known to mod-t tern solenoa. , ; i . w HARRlGTON S ? TABLETS Vr ndontd br DhTsldaaa arsnr whnr. Thev will eur thoutsads ;t Will SURELY CUKJS TOU. Qin1S9 fents Toiav. wwuw Mmmr www- - , - . x. '.to, Vhanl hat at thM tablets. IiX fthey do not ourea you wa will nfrad your money.. ,, -. ; Fill In Coupons and send H to nsl today. - HEKlnGTOH usoicuia GO. Gran J Baplds, Mich, Herington Metlloin 0&. flraad Baolda, Mkn. t aniiloM e Mnta for which nlsaasi sand, postage prepaid, 1 box Earlnf-t ton's laonwi. . - My Nam .....r My Address My Druggist1 Nam FOREST FIRES. The Watenfut Rartflers and the Way They Fight the Flame. In almost any of to western moun tain tn trareter sees the Or warn ing of the forest service, and be Is likely to meet some of the ranger. You will find them crossing tn high Sierra In California, in the Craty mountain of Montana, among tn Olympic in Wasnlngton or following the old Apache trails along th mesas in ArUona. Wherever he la, th ranger keep a keen lookout for tn smoke of forest fires, and in the clear western atmosphere even a little amok column ran be detected from afar. A soon as be discover it Uie ranger take bis ax aud ahovel and goes as only a western horse and rider can. Many amall fires are stopped by this watchfulness, but tbero are other which take many men many hour to subdue. A fir In a chaparral ao thick that a man can hardly force bis way through it and parched by all months of drought inakos hard and trying fighting. Then then are Area in the big timber among th dead trees of old windfalls and overhead Ore that spread faster than a man can run. If unchecked, they will burn for weeks over thousands of acre of timber. , r And all this destruction may be caus ed by a carelessly left campflr or a match dropped from horseback. The sheep men used to set the forest on fire purposely, for the year after a fire th burned acres yield fin forage. Happily thl practice Is discontinued. Sparks from locomotives now set more fire within the national forest than any other cause. Camping parties are the next worst offenders. Indians, stockmon, miners and lumbermen who travel continually In the forests very aeldom leave campflrea to spread and do damage. They know too well the results. For a time almost every year the citizen of Portland, Ore., lose sight of some of the great mountains around th city on account of the smoke from the burning forests. Tbero Is little doubt that since the white man settled in th west more timber has been use lessly burned than has been cut and usefc-Arthur , W. Page in World's Work. . Usual Result. "Well." nskod the motorman, "did you inannga to collect your little bin from that conductor J" , , ..-v ,! . "No." answered the disgusted pas senger. '"! got tlrod trying to collect L II Bl nis nouse, auu uie uuior uajr i caught him on hi car." "What did he do?" "The same thing as usual-put me , :. off. YEAST IS A PLANT. But It Can De Seen as Sued Only With th Mieroseep. Teast la a small plant which can bv seen only with th aid of the micro scope, says Good Health. There are two varietlea, wild and cultivated, for these tiny planta can be improved through cultivation, as larger plnutx can be. Firms which make yeast for the market must grow these plants quite ua carefully as the florist grows bis flower. Care must be taken that they do not become mixed with other varie ties, therefore destroying tho culture. In some laboratories where yeast la grown two separate buildings are kept for this purpose. These are both care fully disinfected, and If It is found that the yeast becomes contaminated In one building the culture is started nnew and tho other building previously disinfected before moving into it This plant, like bacteria, requires warmth, tnoloturu aud food. Tho mate rials out of which tho bread Is made should always be warmed, and the dough should always bo kept in a warm place. The temperature most favorablo is about that of the body, a llttlo loss than 100 degrees. There Is always considerable mois ture lu bread and pleuty of food for the plnnt The food which it requires la sugar. This it obtains from the wheat, there being some sugar in the Hour, and more sugar is also formed from tho starch. . .... As the yeast plants feed upon sugar they break It down into two sub stances, alcohol and a gas known as carbon dioxide or carbonic acid gas. As the gas Is formed it is held by the gluten, which is a very elastic sub stance. When the bread is put into the oven the heat expands the tiny .bub bles of gas, causing th bread to rise or to become much lighter. The alco hol formed, being a volatile product, passes off Into the baklngi Defined. Burglar Trust Manager You will be required to turn night into day, to throw aside all sentiment, . to enter the houses of the best families regard less of their feelings, to act the hypo crite and, if necessary, to go to Jail. AppHcant-Um! , You don't want an ordinary burglar. What you want is a newspaper reporter. Life. xv-Two Power;11 j;s ' Tommy-Pop, what Is the difference between firmness and obstinacy? Tom my's Pop Merely the difference be tween will power and won't power, my ion. Philadelphia Record. How tho Other Half Give. "Thnt sentiment of tender charity are lunate among the poor can be seen from a cue which preaeuted Itself amoug a gou of little children at a school where we visited." writes Mrs. John Van Vorct in Woman'a Home Companion. "They were of the most destitute, tbla llttlo class, but as reg ular as soldiers lu attendance. , After an uuusuul absence of two days one of the Email pupils. Mary by name, was closely questioned by the teacher on her return. Very reluctantly she responded ihat they had been without food at home and that Ehe was ashnm cd to come hungry to school. "No comment was -made before the other children. Nothing further was Bald. , ' , . "The following morning a small pro cession file 1 before the teacher's desk a procesNlon of little people, tiny, poor, Ignorant Yet not one of tbem came empty banded. One brought an apple, one a piece of cheese, one a roll, one a slice of meat And each as she put her meager offering down whis pered to th teacher, it for Mary.'" Save Money by Buying Chamber lain's Cough Remedy. ' You will pay just as much for a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy as for any of the other cough medicines, but you save money in buyng it. The saving is in what yon get, not what you pay. The sure-to-cure-you quality ia in every bottle of this remedy, and you get good re sults when you take it Neglected colds often develop serious condi tions, and when you buy a cough medicine you want to be sure you are getting one that will cure your cold. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy al ways cures. Price 25 and 50 cents a bottle. For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists.- The Louvre Concert Jail FIRST CLASS LIQUORS AND CIGARS SEVENTH AND AS70S STSEETS. Rooms in Connection. " ? Vic Lindbeck, Prop. 1 THE TRENTON 1 First-Class Liquors and Cigars 602 Commercial Street Corner Commercial and 14th. . ASTORIA, OREGON 4. I I lift It 1 11 1 i4 THE GEM C.F. WISS. Prop. Choic Wines, Liquor Merchants Lunch From and Cigar 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 p. m. Hot Lunch at AS Honrs. 1 as Cent . "'"' Corner Eleventh and Commercial. ASTORIA - - . ... . , . . OREGOfr GOV BAY BRASS & II 1 Real Genius. "That artist is a real genius," re marked the admirer. "No," answered Miss Cayenne; "he can't be " a reai genius, or people wouldn't be saying so many compli mentary things about him .before be Is dead." Washington Star. ' Superstitious Golfer. The two chief golfing superstitions are that two up and five to play never won a match and that! It ia unlucky to win the first hole. It 1 hard; to say which la the sillier of the two. London Man. : One1 lie must be thatched with an other or It will soon rain through. Owen. , v. JASTOKIA, OREGON IKON AND BRASS FOUNDERS LAND AND MARINE ENGINEERS Up-to-Date Sawmill Machinery. Prompt attention given to all repair work. 18th and Franklin Ave. - ' TeL Main 2461 John Fox, Pres. F. L.1 Bishop, Sec. ' . ' Astoria Savings Bank, Treas. " 1 Nelson Troyer, Vice-Pres. and Supt ASTORIA IRON WORKS , .' DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS ; OF THE LATEST IMPROVED . . . ; Canning Machinery, Marine Engines and Boilers ' : COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHEa Correspondence Solicited. Foot of Fourth Street Advertise Your Wants in The Astoriari