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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 8, 1908)
O CP1CEV o CCTrZEJEA CAlflHOFOYDEn. CLQSSCTftKVES DOOTl AN9. OCXOON. . -- , The Old Reliable Painless Chicago Dentists Cor. Commercial and Eleventh St. ASTORIA, ORE. Phone 3901 Headquarter PORTLAND, ORE. Are equipped to do all kind of Dental work at very lowest price. Nervous people and those afflicted with heart weakness may have no fear of the dental chair. ' . 22 K. crown.. 3JW Bridge work, per tooth 100 Gold fillings .. 1M p Silver fining 50c to L00 Best robber plate W OO Alnminum-line plate $10 to $15.00 These offices are modern through out. We are able to do all work absolutely painless. Our success is due to uniform high grade work by gentlemanly operators having 10 to 15 years- experience. Vegetable Vapor, patented and used only by us for painless extraction of teeth, 50c. A binding guarantee given with all work for 10 years. Exami nation and consultation FREE. Lady in attendance. Eighteen of fices in the United States. Cor. Commercial and Eleventh Sta, over Danziger store. COLLEGE FRATERNITIES. CHICAGO, Mar. 7.-The gravest indictment which has yet been drawn aeainst thesecret societies in the Chicago High Schools in the hands of President Schnyder, president of the Board of Education. It is contained in a report of an investigation made, at President Schnyder's request, by the dectives of the city police department In substance report charges that gross immorality is practised at several of the fraternity houses. Six specific instances are cited in which women (not connect in any way with the schools) have been found, har bored in the houses, the boys in each case being members of the fraternity which maintains the building. President Schnyder has had the re port for several days but has declin ed to make it public. At its meeting yesterday the school management committee to which the "anti-frat" resolution had been re turned by the board at its last meet ing passed the measure again by vote of 4to 2 thus making it extremely pos sible that it will be passed finally by the board at its meeting Wednesday night THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. MM WATERFRONT ITEMS SUNDAY, MARCH I, IMS. The Cutter McCulloch Leaves tor Neah Bay. MYSTERY OFTHE CASTLE ROCK Schooner Matthew Turner in From Bay City Senator Departs South- Rose City and Roanoke Due To Morrow Other Interesting News. The handsome cutter Hugh Mc Culloch went to sea at 2:30 o'clock yesterday afternoon on her way to 'Neah Bay, where she will await the return of the Thetis from the north, after which she is supposed to return to this port for station duty. The S. F. & P. steamship Senator was an early get-away for the Golden Gate City yesterday morning long before daybreak. The fine steamer T. J. Potter will be at the O. R. & N. pier this morn ing in the place of the Hassalo, which will go on the ways for the next few weeks for repairs to her shattered machinery, wrought by the blowing out of her port cylinder-head on Thursday last The French barks Bayard and Bou gainville are in this harbor loaded for Europe and are scheduled for des patch today. The British ships Nereus and Ver bena left up for Portland on the tow lines of the steamer Oklahama yes terday morning. The steamship Rose City is due at the O. R. & N. pier tomorrow morn ing about U o'clock from the Bay City. The steamship Roanoke is billed to berth at the Callender dock tomor row afternoon, from Port Los An geles, San Francisco and Eureka. The four-masted schooner Matthew Turner crossed in yesterday morning from San Francisco, and will load lumber for the return voyage, at the Tongue Point mill docks. The British bark Castle Rock now out 167 days from Sydney, Australia, with coal for Girvin & Eyre, at Port land, and upon the fate of which there is much speculation, has been given up as lost by the best informed men hereabout. The voyage, even at its longest, rarely exceeds 60 days and the extraordinary lapse of 107 days is unaccountable upon any plau sible pretext. She might do the re markable stunt performed by the British ship Allahabad over 20 years ago, when she rode into this port just 180 days from Hong Kong. Every body had given her up for lost and some had almost forgotten her in the rush of other and nearer interests, when, as from out the very core of account to those with an inclination to high jumps and the like. v. i His fall was only seventy feet, yet that would be more than enough to satisfy a temperate person. He has narrated his sensations in minute de tail 5;:- At first, says the Gateway, he seem ed to himself to be (lying through the air. His (all really could have occupied only a few seconds, but his train of thought was long and full of interesting detail. "I clearly saw," he says, "the pos sibility of my fate. I said to myself: 'The rocky wall from which I am now being hurled prevents my seeing what is at its base. The snow may be melted there, or there may be none; if there is any, my life may be saved Otherwise daeth is inevitable. " 'If I am conscious on reaching the earth 1 have by me a bottle of aromatic and my alpenstock. I will still grasp it, for it may serve me in good stead.' 1 thought, too, of re moving my eyeglasses lest their splin tering might cause injury. "Other and gentler thoughts for those I was to leave behind came upon me. For myself I felt indiffer ent, caring really little whether 1 should be much injured or not; but from motives of consideration for others I felt impelled, as it were, to make light of the matter. I seemed to call aloud, 'I am not much hurt.' I recollected that in five days more I was to have delivered an in augural discourse, and thought of the grief my death would cause to those near and dear to me. Anon, lying as it were, on the limit of a far dis tant horizon, appeared distinct and divers images and episodes in my past life. The whole mental picture stood out clear-cut and illumined by divine and mysterious light. "All things seemed lovely and of good report. There were no misgiv ings, no anxieties, no sorrow, pain or terror." "There were no sensations of con test or strife. All was merged in feel ings of genial good will and kindly feeling. Such feelings predominated over all and formed what was truly a unique and lovely picture. "Gradually a heaven of glorious blue, flecked with crimson clouds of gossamer lightness, surrounded . me. In them I was wafted ,to and fro, borne up from below, but painlessly and pleasantly, while a vast and mov ing snowficld seemed to accompany me. Anon, the perception of objects, subjective thoughts, a medley of vari ous feelings, seemed to circle in con centric maze around as a common center. "Then came a dull thud, which I heard very distinctly, but did not feel and. my. fall wa ended. At that instant a dark veil passed before me. "I called aloud three or four times, 'I am not much hurt,' grasped my glasses, which lay near me, and touched my limbs to make sure they were not broken. "Then I saw my companions slowly approaching. They told me a good half-hour had elapsed after my fall before I spoke. "I had lost consciousness, and that explains that dark veil. Later the power of thinking returned. I was conscious only so long as I was fall ing of the perception of beautiful images. At that moment 0! contact with earth they disappeared." On another occasion Dr. Heim was injured in a carriage accident. He A'TTotre Dame Lady's Appeal. To all knowing sufferers of rheuma tism, whether muscular or of the joints, sciatica, lumbago, backache, pains in the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured all of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all sufferers FREE. You cure yourself at home as thousands will testify no change of climate being necessary. This simple discovery banishes uric acid from the blood loosens the stiffened joints, purifies the blood, and brightens the eyes, giving elasticity and tone to the whole system. If the above interests you, for proof address Mrs. M. Sum mers, Box R, Notre Dame, Ind. space', she was seen threading the city said that Lhe distinctly heard and tuuuicu iiic uuiica tidtiuics seven chnanel on the hawser of one of the Flavel tugs, as bright and chipper as a new yacht, her sails brailed up in snowy bunts, her brass-work gleaming, her decks glistening, her running-gear all coiled down, and everything in admirable ship-shape from stem to stern. For exactly one half of that unconscionable time, she had been bucking a nor'east monsoon in the China Sea, and at its close her master found his vessel a few miles to the sou'thard of the port of de parture, with all his voyage ahead of him, and that was impeded with long drawn storms and deadly calms. This may be the story of the Castle R6ck, but it will be a revelation, when it comes, of absorbing interest. Captain M. T. Jones is listed as the master of the missing ship. Notice to Mariners. Oregon and Washington Columbia River Entrance, pages 48 and 55. Columbia River Outside Bar Whist ling Buoy, PS, reported not sounding March 1, will be replaced by a per fect buoy as soon as practicable. Washington Juan de Fuca Strait, page 84. New. Dungeness Sand Spit Buoy, 2, a first-class nun, reported missing March 3, will be replaced as soon as practicable. The frost has been working all winter to throw the grass roots up out of the ground. Beat him at that game by getting out the roller and going over, the fields before they be come hard and dry. FALLING FROM HEIGHTS. A German scientist Prof. Albert Heim, who fell over a precipice in the Alps, but lived to tell the tale, makes that story a very encouraging in all which he received. He quotes the evidence of an Italian who had a smilar experience. For Diseases of the Skin. Nearly all diseases of the skin such as eczema, tetter, salt rheum and bar bers' itch, are characterized by an in tense itching and smarting, , which often makes life a burden and dis turbs sleep and rest Quick relief may be had by applying Chamber lain's Salve. It allays the itching and smarting almost instantly. Many cases have been cured by its use. For sale by Frank Hart and leading drug-g.sts. KNICKERBOCKER TO OPEN. NEW YORK, March 7. An order was granted today by Justice Clark for the reopening on March 26 of the Knickerbocker Trust Company whose suspension last October precipitated the' panic of 1907. The reopening of the bank will release to the welfare of the community assets aggregating $46,370,620. TEA How little it is! How little it adds to the weight of the cup! It has cover ed the sea with ships for a hundred years. Tour (Toen r.turni jrotr bom M lea Scat tks ScUIlinf ' Bm!) in ft i IriilMla WM M F Is at hand. Our new stock of Fine Suits and Over coats, fresh from HART SCHAFFNER & MARX is now ready for inspection, and for your wearing. The new styles are very smart. We'd like to have you see the various models we show in the variety sack A mm.- H i 'On V yf ygj y If suit. They are certainly copyright 1908 by iim sch-trncr & Marx very snappy Suits-$ 18.00, $20.00, $25 and $30. "Very best" in men's wear for spring and summer. LEADER Itl NOBBY BLBTHES NEW TO-DAY The Clean Man. The man who delights in personal cleanliness, and enjoys hn shave, shampoo, haircut, and bath, in As toria, always goes to the Occident barber shop for these things and gets them at their best To The People. In submitting my name to the elec tors of the Fifth Judicial District for their consideration for the office of District Attorney of said District, I desire to say that if I am nominated and elected, I will, during my term of office, honestly, vigorously and imoartialy perform all the official duties pertaining to said office, with out fear or favor, endeavoring always to accord to every individual, irre spective of party, politics or person alities, square deal under the law, keeping always uppermost in my mind the interests of the tax payers ot said District and State. E. B. TONGUE. Merry Widow-Where? The Bon Ton of course shows this popular hat first See our window display. Georgia Pennington, 483 Bond streett "JUST fN AND JUST RIGHT" Finnan Had die Cromarty Bloaters Smoked Chinook Salmon AcmeGroceryCo. THE UP-TO-DATE GROCERS 521 COMMERCIAL STREET PHONE 681 Badollet & Co., grocers. 1281. Phone Main Kodak Supplies, A full line of films, papers, cameras, kodaks, etc., just received at Hart's Drug Store. For Good Wood From the Tongue Point Lumber , ureet A L 1 ......il. Pall' company, io-incn iw icuui. up Frael-Eigner Transfer Co., Phone 221 Just received a new line of umbrella covers. See C. H. Orkwitz, 137 Tenth When You Travel Be sure that your ticket reads Ti the O. R. & N. and connections, it costs no more than via other lines. 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. "Modern" Delights. When a man i asses under the hands of a barber he wants the best skilled treatment to be had in that line. In Astoria, the 'man in search of such manipulation, goes direct to Petersen's "Modern" shop, at 572 Commercial, and gets it in any of the six chairs maintained. New Grocery Store, . Try our own mixture of coffee the J. P. B. Fresh fruit and vegetables. The Palace Restaurant The ever-Increasing popularity oi 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 fael being so well known, a large business Is done at the Commercial, on Commercial street, near Eleventh. Many a man Vho strongly objects to pumping water for a half-dozen cows, thinks nothing of sitting around for half a day pumping his neighbors. Now mind this: Make two sow ings of clover seed, one now and one early in April. Use half red, other half alsike. Do not miss the alsike. Are You Hi? WHY NOT CONSULT .0,8. Fowler ii at Occident Hotel? She will tell you frankly whether you can be cured or not, and teach you to become your own physician in five lessons. Her classes on the use of electricity to cure disease started Tuesday, March 3rd, at 2:30 and 7:30 p. m . Health consultations and1 pher ological examinations daily from yy a m. to 9 p. m. until March llth.