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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 22, 1908)
THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, r STOMA. OREGON SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 33, 1901. i I.'-'. I it :f(" i! f. Jt '1 :r '-i '!; i honey prmi&m axation Without Representation JRBMLB. StMBWpW Is Tyranny. J I wbm&smmrm nun sucbi Guaranteed Pi4 re Small Bottle 25 cents Large bottle 50 cent Fresh From the Busy Bee Gallon Can 70 cents 1 Gallon Can 1.30 A. V. ALLEN r ..m - Sole nt for Baker's BarringtonHaU Steel Cut Coffee HE GIVES SOME GOOD ADVICE HOW TO RELIEVE CATARRH TELLS OF PRESCRIPTION EASILY PREPARED AT HOME, TO GIVE PROMPT RELIEF. The coming months will be a har vest for the doctors and patent medi cine manufacturers unless great care is taken to keep the feet dry, also dress warmly. This advice should be heeded by Q who are subject to rheumatism, kidney and bladder troubles and especially catarrh. While the latter h considered by most sufferers an incurable disease, there are few men or women who will fail to experience great relief from the following simple home prescription, and if taken in time it will prevent an, attack of catarrh during the entire season. Here is the prescription which any ne can mix: Fluid Extract Dande alf ounce. Compound Kar- gon one ounce, Compound Syrup Sarsaparilla three ounces, onane well in a bottle and use in teaspoonful doses after each meal and again at bedtime. The Compound Kargon in this prescrition acts directly upon the eliminative tissues of the kidneys to them filter and strain from the blood, the poisons that produce all forms of catarrhal affections. Relief is often felt even after the first few doses and it is seldom that the sufferer ever experiences a return attack with in the year. - This prescription makes a splendid remedy for all forms of blood disor ders and such symptoms as lame back, bladder weaknesses and rheu . matism pains are entirely dispelled. , , As this valuable, though simple, re cipe comes from a thoroughly reliable source, it should be heeded by every afflicted reader. UURDERSOPERATOR (Continued from pags 1) Kodak Supplies. A full line of films, papers, cameras, kodaks, etc., just received at Hart's Drug Store. The Jumping Off Place. ' "Consumption had me in its grasp; and I had almost reached the jumping off place when I was advised to try Dr. King's New Discovery; and I want to say right now, it saved my Efe. Improvement began with the Erst bottle, and after taking one dozen bottles I was a well and happy nan again," says George Moore, of Grimesland, N. C. As a remedy for coughs and colds and healer of weak, sore lungs and for preventing pneu monia New Discovery is supreme. 50c and $1.00 at Charles Rogers & Son, druggists. Trial bottle free. the station at Underwood, W. Va. and from there on his acts, according to his alleged confession, were is fol- December 13, in Washington, He fashed some of the checks and money nt. TWember 21. he robbed a station at Bruceton, Pa. December 22 he robbed the station at Hays.l'a. Ke secured some interchangeable mileage books in the last two named places, which on December 3, were sold in Pittsburg. From there he went to Parkersburg, W. Va., where on December 28, he robbed a railroad station, uoing on December 29, to Wheeling, W. Va. On the night of the twenty ninth he went to Claring ton, W. Va. where in a scuffle with Agent Hutchinson the latter lost his life. Then he jumped to Powhattan, W Va., where a mail pouch was cut, but securing nothing of value, he stole a handcar on which he rode in the early hours of the morning five miles id Moundsville, W. Va. where he robbed the express office in the station and then took a trolley car to Wheeling. On December 31, he went tc Pittsburg and a little later to Phil adelohia in both of which cities he cashed express and postoffice money orders which had been secured at v?rious places. On January 3, he robbed the station of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Waverly, Pa. and then walked from there to Ogden Pa., and from there to Doothwin, Pa., securing by robberies in the two lat ter places some interchangeable mil- ease books. On January 8 he trans ferred his operations to New Jersey on the line of the Erie R. R. robbing that day the station at Fairlawn, N. J where he secured a quantity of stamps January 9, he spent at Garfield, N. J., robbing the station there that night and jumping the next day to Carlton Hill. N. J., where he secured some money orders from an express sta tion. A long jump to Strassburg, U. followed and from the 20th to the 25th January he robbed the stations at Strasbtirg, Justice and Era, O., securing express money orders which on January 26th he cashed in Chicago Then followed a trip to San Francisco On Feb. 8. he appeared m Waterloo, Neb., where he robbed the station of express money orders and mileage books, some of which he sold in Omaha and Chicago within the fol- lowine week. February 26 he robbed a small station near Bound Brook, on the Lehigh alley R. R. February 18 and 19 he spent in Boston and Provi dence cashing some of stolen express Will Open Today. The Chinook Bar, in its new quar ters, will open today at 417 Bond street. The fine billiard and pool room, in connection will no doubt be crowded all day. TODAY mowg: THE MAN CHILD FROM KIPLING'S JUNGLE TALES AND DARWIN'S THEORY OF THE MISSING LINK A HIGH-CLASS AND INTERESTING EXHIBITION FOR Sadies gentlemen and children, on exhibition FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY. NEXT TO BURNS' CIGAR STORE COMMERCIAL STREET. Admission lOc Afteriioort and Evening EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY Address of Oscar S. Straus at Ban- auet of Merchant of Boston on the Forming a Permanent Organisation for Commercial and Civic Reform. When your forefathers threw the British cargoes of tea into the Boston Harbor, they gave to the world an example of a new spirit in commerce suirit that placed patriotism above profit and public weal above personal gain. They gave concrete expres sion to that cardinal American prin cipal. "Taxation without representa tion is tyranny. The forms of tyranny change from age to age from the militarism of Rome to the ecclesiastical tyranny that brouuht about the Reformation; then followed political tyranny, which produced our Revolution; then came economic tyranny the oppression of the masses which brought about the French Revolution. I can not take a better text for the necessarily brief remarks' that this occasion permits than the pregnant sentence from Governor Guild's re cent Lincoln Dav nroclamation. He said, "Equal rights were won by the generations that have gone before us; equal opportunities are to oe our eift to posterity." es, equal oppor tunities politically, economically, and individually, whether those equal op portunities are abridged by the auto cratic power of government, of by corporate power in the greedy hands oP private individuals, or by lawless bands of labor agitators it is but a different form of the same tyranny, alike inimical to the power of the State and the rights and privileges of the individual, be he employer or laborer, and to the extent that this power is permitted to exist it closes the highways of opportunity to the individual man, be he a graduate from Harvard or the son of a motorman on your street cars. Now. my friends, I have not come here to talk politics, but to talk busi ness; but the first requisite of good permanent business conditions is eood morals not one kind of morals for the farmer who drives his cart of produce to market and another kind of moral for the railroad which brings the products of the farms and fac tories from distant points. Equality of opportunity and rights is as neces sary on the one highway as on the other. No unreasonable conditions or restraints must be placed upon either. There are combination which promote trade and combina tiens which restrain trade; to check both is harmful, to permit both is more harmful. To adjust our laws to perserve corporate industrial and in dividual rights, and by all means in dividual rights, and to curb wrongs whether corporate or individual, is of the highest concern, not only to commerce, but to the stability of the commonwealth. 1 understand that the purpose that you, who are the foremost merchants and business men of Boston, have in view is to form a more effective work ins body, to the end of promoting the commercial and civic welfare of this ancient and honored municipality. As the executive head of that Depart ment of our Goverment charged with the administration of affairs pertain ing to commerce and labor, I have come here .not only, to signify my deep interest in your purposes, but to lend whatever encouragement that may be in my power to this import ant movement for the protection of business and civic interests. I trust you will extend your sphere of use fulness bevond the limits of your city and your Commonwealth, and cooperate with the Department of Commerce and Labor, in order that the activities of that Department may be placed in closer touch with the commercial interests of the country. In December last a conferance was held in the Department, at Washing ton, for the purpose of organizing a National Council of Commerce, in order to bring about a closer relation shin between the Government Depart ment having to do with commercial affairs and the various boards of trade chamber of commerce, and trade organizations of the country. The rapid extension of British and Ger man trade throughout the world is due in no small degree to' the helpful exoneration of trade bodies with rvf J mm o firs JT l r-if i n r H i TM. limerick lucks one line of completion we will give a half pound Ghirardc Ill's Cocoa can full of silver dollars foil frt h l.t line submitted to complete it. In case more than one person submits the line selected as best the money will h i1ivlitril nro rata. ("' . One i.rrson mav tend n many solutions as they wish, there I no limit. The correct answer may be sent In any form, but we prefer that it be written upon the back of a label taken from any l can of Ghirardclli's Cocoa. Answers must be mailed on - ..-.. or before April 1st, plainly addressed A sickly young itwdaal at Yala to Ghirardelli's Contest Deosrtmsnt " r" ' 20 Montgomery Street, San Francisco. Here's the "Limerick But a wit "ColLf. Widow," SoJd, "Cut It out, Kiddo, n sjssa v . MM (Um Thaa a Omt a Cup) Is made with scrupulous, conscientious care and old fashioned attention to deanKness, purity, goodness and quality. No Cocoa at any price can be better or more delicious. Your grocer sells and recommends it. xx Government agencies. No country possesses more intelligent, educated and progressive men of business than our own, and yet we have lacked a medium for that systematic cooper ation which is so helpful, not only to our Executive Departments, but also to Congress, in formulating policic and legislation affecting our do mestic and foreign commerce. I trust, therefore, that you will brins vour organization into eneciivc cooperation, and that the example vou set will be followed in other com mercial cities, and that you will not allow your activities to be curbed by the doctrine of State rights, whole-1 some as that is within its sphere. Commerce knows no such limitations; its interests are as broad as the coun try; they are world wide, and it rights, privileges, and obligations should be equally Federal and equally world wide. Commerce and industry stand to day on a higher plane than in any other age, and they arc contributing more to the true grandure of nations and to the true welfare of the masses than cither the miljtary spirit or the spirit ofconqucst. Commerce has placed more of the comforts of life within the reach of the masses than has been enjoyed by them in any past age. And I say this, not over lookina the fact that there is still much misery, and that the demand of labor for better wages and for more of the comforts of life is more urgent than ever before. But that is one of indications of progress, that the mas ses seek higher standards of lite anu living. The true welfare of a nation is not measured by the number of mil lionaires, but by the condition of the millions. The development of our nation in four generations from three millions to ninety millions is the greatest mar vel in all national history; but a small fraction of this growth is due to conquest it is due to the planter, the pioneer, and to the industrial oromoter. It is due equally as much to the twenty-five million workers and their descendants who came to us during the past one hundred years from foreign lands as to the de scendants of the Pilgrim and Puritan fathers. It is due to the co-operative energy of labor arid capital. To pre serve that co-operation is the prop lent and duty of our day and genera tion, and the only way it can be pre served is on' the basis of right and justice to both and from both. Bis marck said that, "The logic of history is as exact and exacting as Prussia s counting office." And what does that logic teach us? That the rights of the individuals must at all hazards be preserved, and not be trodden un der foot, either by the tyranny of labor or by the tyranny of capital and to the extent that any1 govern; ment municipal, state, or federal either through impotence, weakness or indifference, permits these wrongs to go unchecked and unpunished, it prepares the way for its own down fall. The ages of the conquest have passed, and left their wreckage of bloodshed, misery, and want in every clime. We are living in a commercial era the happiest that has ever dawn ed upon free nations an era that does not depend upon force of arms, but upon markets; an era which makes for peace and prosperity among nations. , That nation is the best customer which is freest, because freedom works prosperity, industry, and wealth. So true is this that the measure of a nation s commerce i directly' influenced by the measure of a nation's freedom. The successive supremacy in commerce of the Ital ian Republics, Holland, and Great Britain, as compared with the com mercial backwardness of the despotic countries of Europe during the same periods, expresses almost in exact figures the measure of freedom in those respective lands. ' In conclusion let me say I congratu late you upon the purposes of your organisation to promote the com mercial and civic welfare. They are bound together by an indissoluble tie. PACKY McFARLAND WINS. MILWAUKEE, Feb. 2I.-Packy McFarland won the decision over Freddie Welch, of England, in a 10 round battle here tonight. It was the fastest and most scientific fighting ever seen here. - Welch's defense and footwork was marvelous, McFarland won on aggressiveness. - ' No medicine has aver dons mors to wards wsrdlnff off orio and pneumonia and relieving tbo distressing grip cough. loan Kemps Balaam, the best eouga eura, Don't forget the Football Dance in Logan's Hall tonight. 1 ilr . si n i mm, . . ST -V, U """J i;i 1 m m Al.cniim. .t pro ntn AVcgelabkrVeparaflonfrA!-simll,ilimMfoFlnvf(ir?ti(!,T ting die Stoatacbs aodOowehaf Promotes Dteesltonflif etfur r ?s nrA firotf nntalns neittar Omum.Morphine ftorMlnail' aHWWMMft I f aSMMtMBBM ... Jpiet.oiltl- , in! IWjrlv rnrCflnsflM Hon", Soitr SionkXu.Dlarrtoti VyoricsJConivulsions.revcnsB- raeSMc Signature of NEW YOBK. For Infanti and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears' tl Signature j . iir Aj- Use For Over Thirty Years -OMaiMttitMttNMOT" kup U HI WutfT M Ui H MSt mm mm A under the Exact Copy of Wrapper, YMI TU OOMMNT, i i onv. e: 13