1 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, MARCH U, 1008. 60 THE MORNING ASTORIAN Established 1873. Published Daily J&cept Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. Bv mail oer year.. ..I..... By carrier, per month... ....... WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, in advance.. ..$1.50 Entered as second-class matter July 30, 1906, at the postomce n vsiona, Oregon under the act of Congress of March 3. 1879. : tT Orders for the delivering of The Morning Astorian to eitner residence w place of business may be made by postal card or through telephone. Any urenularity in delivery should be im- mMtiatelv reDorted to the office of publication. . .Official paper of Clatsop County and the City of Astoria. TELEPHONE MAIN 661. THE WEATHER Western Oregon Showers, cooler, except near coast. Western Washington Showers. Eastern Oregon Fair. ' Eastern Washington Fair. Idaho Fair. A TECHNICAL VICTORY. ' After all the abuse and reproach cast upon the Appellate Court of California for its alleged adverse rulings on the pleas sent up to it by ex-Mayor Eugene Schmitz, of San Francisco, the Supreme Court, in the appeal filed by the prosecution, de clares the intermediary court to have been absolutely right in its finding! and denies the prayer for reversal. This is not only a legal victory for the Appellate Court, but a technical triumph for the criminals at bar; and a back-set of no mean proportions to the men who have figured as the champions of law and order and morality there, including the invin cible Heney and the well-meaning Spreckles. The whole mis-carriage illustrating the farcical ends to which the law, in its innumerable and vic ious interpretations, can be carried with enough wit and coin of the realm. . justice must oe done, ot course, even though the moral conviction of the scoundrels in question be world wide and complete; and yet there is a great measure of good to be real ized from the serio-comic play of events there. The dirty manipulators have been , ousted and it is hardly likely they will carry their pleas for restitution to the limit of contesting the status of their successors; and this, of itself, is comforting, or should be, to a community that has sounded the depths of every known civic evil in the past 23 months; and has freed itself even through the blunders of its deliverers. SOANDINAVIAN-AMERIOAN SAV. BANK v.- " -v., ... ' f- l ' Vt'-;- Courteous and Accommodating Liberal Methods .Conservative Management v" 'He'a down the itreet,' was the reply. ' 'sellin' yer kissei for two apples' apiece. Better shet yer eyes agin. The next three boyt it terrible ugly. !.""., 1 O PSHAW I One of the consul vto Persia, dur ing a recent visit home, laid at a din ncr in Chicago: , v - "The present Shah will never : be the emial of hla predecessor. What a character the late Shah wail He west, she will be denied nothing in the line of genuine and approved entertainment THE WINNING TYPE. AMUSEMENT-LOVING ASTORIA Astoria is unhappily situated, just at present, in the matter of the grati fication of her amusement-loving pro pensities; she is off the direct line of the common circuit over which the best schemes of entertainment travel; and it is regrettable in the extreme that she is denied anything in this line, for she is quick and responsive to such pleasure-calls, at all seasons. It is one of those communal at tributes that should be cultivated to the limit, since it serves to soften and placate other and harsher tones in the public character of a place and people. ' Popular love of amusement and Sport is an unequivocal asset to any city or town and should be fostered unremittingly, always with the ten dency to the cleaner and higher levels of the cheerful cult, and always with the dominant idea of putting the fresher and harmless schemes of pub lic enjoyment above the grosser phases of indulgence. We wish it were possible to have every fine play and game and lecture here, that reaches. Portland; and yet, are thankful for such of the best as we do get. The deprivation is very real to Astoria. Her people are gen erous patrons in all such lines and should have more of the opportuni ties afforded larger places, as much for the real beneficient effect of the higher grades of amusement as for the compensation of an admirable and universal local spirit. Some day As toria will cease to be a tangent-point, off the beaten paths of the great cir cuits and when she comes into her own as an accessible port and sta tion on the highways of the North-1 The despatches from San Fran cisco tell of a young man, the son of an admiral and principal owner of a great ship-building plant there, who, in the prosecution of his mechanical studies, has shipped to sea on the maiden voyage of the monster me chanism he himself worked upon in the shops at home. This is the type of young American that wins out. r He has worked at his trade long enough to learn to love it, and loving goes about making himself an adept and a success. This man will be heard from in the days that are to demand the highest qualities in his line. His trade is one of the most intensely practical in the whole gamut of human activity; and he is practical enough to aspire to its very pinnacle of trained proficiency in order to meet the last limitation of its de mands upon him as a representative. The glory of the thing is all to come; what he is doing at this time, is but the hard-headed, logical, manly route to specific accomplishment by-and-by. The glory, if any there be, lies in be ing sensibly devoted, to a masterful and honorable trade and man enough to know it from its base to its climax of achievement He'll get there, al right I There are many like him, and yet far too few. cents, or, including the cost of set-never opened his mouth without say ing something worth repeating. "Lady Rrummond Wolfe once got permission to visit the Shah's harem. She took a friend, a Miss Blank, who was about to be married. ; The two English-women, wandered over the splendid palace, among the hundred of beautiful young girls, and pres ently the Shah encountered them, Come here,' ' I be ; said to Miss Blank, In his crude French. ' "She approached. He .: looked closely at her. 'You are about to be married? he said. " 'Yes, YouY Highness.' " 'It's late!' ' ting, 14 cents. It lasts about two years. Compounding interest at S per cent, the annual charge of such a post is 7.53 cents; that is, it costs 7.53 cents a year to keep the post in ser vice. Preservative treatment costing 10 cents will increase its length of life to about eighteen years. In this case the total cost of the post, set, is 24 cents, which compounded at 5 per cent, gives an annual charge of 2.04 cents. Thus the saving due to treat merit is 5.49 cents a year. Assuming that there are 200 posts per mile, there is a saving each year for every mile of fence of a sum equivalent to the interest on $219.60. In the same way preservative treat ment will increase the length of life Prof. H. A. Howell, of Havana, Cuba, of a loblolly pine railroad tie from five years to twelve years and will reduce the annual charge from 11.52 cents to 9.48 cents, which amounts to saving of $58.75 per mile. , it is estimated mat liu.uw acres Recommend! Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. "As long ago at I can remember my mother was a faithful user and friend of Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy, but never in my life have I real- EDITORIAL SALAD Wish they would change the name of that newest marvel of mining camps. Kawnide is far irom elegant and then, too, the suggestion of "skin" may unjustly reflect on what promises to prove a truly rich mining camp. English want Churchill's story of Africa in a blue book instead of magazine to preserve the dignity of the writer's office. .Odd none ever has respect due the White House be maintained similarly. The jurors who reached a verdict by tossing a coin and were fined $50 each by an indignant court, will have time to study whether their test proved, "heads you win, tails we lose." Havana Electric Company's annual report shows a potent reason for the intervention dividends paid, deficit eliminated and surplus created all under United States law and order. Match concern income for last fiscal year was $2296,000 this at 5000 matches at 5 cents. Yet the night is not yet when we shall not be stranded and howling for a light. Allegation in a receivership case was that $15,000,000 for collateral to secure a bond issue was sold for $250,000. Almost a submarine scan dalso watery one might say. DECAY IN WOOD PREVENTED. It is estimated that a fence post, which under ordinary circumstances will last for perhaps two years, will, given preservative treatment cost ing about 10 cents, last eighteen years. The service of other timbers, such as railroad ties, telephone , poles, and mine props, can be doubled and often trebled by inexpensive preservative treatment. To-day when the cost of wood is a big item to every farmer, every stockman, every railroad man agerto everyone, in fact, who must use timbers where it is likely to decay this is a fact which should be care fully considered. It is easy to see that if the length of time timbers can be used is doubl ed, only half as much timber will be required as before and only one-haif as much money will need to be spent in the purchase of timber. Moreover many wods which were after a long time considered almost worthless can be treated and made to last as long as the scarcer and more expensive kinds. , Of the actual saving in dollars and cents through preservative treatment, fence post such as was mentioned at the beginning might serve as one example. The post is of loblolly pine, and costs, untreated, about 81 are required each year to grow tim- ized its true value until now." writes ber for the anthracite coal mines Prof. H. A. Howell, of Howell's alone. The average life of an un-1 American School Havana, Cuba. "On treated mine prop is not more than the night of February 3rd our baby three years. By proper preservative was taken tick' with a very severe treatment it can be prolonged by I cold, the next day was worse and the many times this figure. Telephone I following night his condition was and telegraph poles, which in ten or desperate. He could not lie down twelve years, or even less, decay so land it was necessary to have him in badly at the ground line that they the arms every moment Even then Fisher Brothers Company IOLB AQENTI Barbour and Finlayson Salmon Twlm and Netting x McConnick Harvesting M schlnei , , , MM(noia,Koonnff ;. f..i ;5 f ,: ;; Shrplei Cream Separator ' j . Riecollth Flooring . V, 1 St Storrett Tool Hardware, Groceries, Ship Chandlery Tan Baric, Blue Stone, Murlatle Ac)L Welch Coal, Tar, Ash Oars, Oak Lumber, Pip and Fitting, Bras - " Good, Paint, Oil and Ola - Fishermen's Pur Manilla Rope, Cotton Twin and Seine Web Wo Wntit Your lYodo : FISHER BROS. BOND STREET, have to be removed, can, by a simple tretament of their butts, be made to last twenty or twenty-five years. Sap shingles, which are almost valueless in their natural state, can easily be treated and made to outlast even painted shingles of the most decay resistant wood. Thousands of dot 1 4 ' iars are lost every year oy the so called "bluing" of freshly sawed sap- wood timbers. This can be prevent ed by proper treatment, and at a cost so small as to put it within the reach of the smallest operator. , , , In the South the cheap and abund ant loblolly pine, one of the easiest of all woods to treat, can by proper preparation be made to take the place of the high-grade longleaf pine for many purposes. Black and tupelo gums and other little-used woods have a new and increasing importance because of the possibility of preserv- tnem trom decay at small . cost. In the Northeastern and Lake States are tamarack, hemlock, beech, birch, and maple, and the red and black oaks, all of which by proper treatment may help to replace the fast-diminishing white oak and cedar. In the States of the Mississippi Valley the pressing fencepost problem may be greatly relieved by treatment such as cotton wood, willow, and blackberry. :U: Circular 139 of the Forest Service, "A Primer of Wood Preservation," tells in simple terms what decay is and how it can be treated, describes briefly certain preservatives and pro cesses,, gives examples of the saving in dollars and cents, and tells what wood preservatioa can do in the fut ure. the circular can be had free upon application to the Foester, For est Service, Washington, D. C. his breathing was difficult I did not think he would live until morning. At last I thought of my mother' remedy, Chamberlain' Cough Remedy, which we gave, and it afforded prompt re liefand now, three day later, he has fully recovered. Under the cir cumstances I would not hesitate a moment in saying that Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, and that only, saved the life of our dear little boy." For sate by Frank Hart and leading drug gists. ; .! f BOOKS "Uther and Igraine," 'The i leopard's a Spots," 'The Chief Legatee," "The Filigree Ball," TTheChoii Invisible' "The Battle Grouiid," "Letia Rivers "uranaiii of eiaverhpuse," "Hearts Courageous? . . . . . o. w. SUCCESSOR TO E. A. HIGGINS CO BOOKS . : i.. MUSIC STATIONERY 9 nO IM ..(.' WHITMAN HE GAVE HIMSELF AWAY. Apropos of the movement in New York toward the abolition of race track gambling, Mrs. Jack J. War ren, the witty Vermont reformer, said the other day in Burlington: "Race-track gambler always claim that everything about the game is square. ' Cross-examine them very closely, though; looks into all their methods; question them on every point, and usually, like Col. Toddy of Tin Can, they'll give themselves away. "Col. Toddy of Tin Can was a whist sharp. ' 'I once, and once only," he said. in the smoking room, 'had all thirteen trumps dealt me.' 1 'You, I suppose, were er the dealer?' some one said. "The colonel turned purple. " 'No, sir,' he .roared. 'No sir, blast your impudence, I was not the dealer!' "The other nodded calmly. " 'Then may I' ask,', he said, 'what Happened to the trump which the dealer turned up?" " STEEL & EWART Electrical Contractors r ,i .11. fi CALL AND GET OUR PRICES 426 Bond St. Phone Iii388i John Fox, Pres. ii r. u tJJsnop, sec. Astoria SawinM Rank T. .. ,. nelson iroyer, vice-rrea. and Supt THE MERCENARY WILLIE. Craig Wadsworth, the best cotil lion leader in America, admitted at dinner in New York that men were colder and more mercenary than women. "It is born in us," said Mr, Wadsworth sadly. "Even as child ren, When I was a boy," he said, "I had a little friend named Willie. Willie appeared one day with a fine apple.!..,,,,, r . " 'I'll give you this apple,' he said m' to a little girl, 'for twenty kisses. "The little girl was amazed. That was not at all like Willie. Neverthe less she consented. , " 'Shut your eyes,' said Willie. Sit down here and shut your eyes. , And mind, if you open them, the bargain is off. "The little girl obeyed, and slowly, VICTORY SO-CALLED. James Carroll, the amateur light weight boxing champion of San Fran Cisco, said at the end of a recent women's boxing and fencing exhibi tion: "Physical culture among women, women's growing strength and pluck, lend interest , to marriage, change marriage complexion. j 'How is poor Smither gettin' on?' said one man to another. 'Well,' said the other, 'Smither is now almost recovered from the beat he gave his wife last Saturday night.'" ;: -''' ; RICHARD SAMUEL DEAD. SAN FRANCISCO, March , 10.- Richard Samuel, one of the very few survivors of the famous, "California Hundred," that represented this state in the Civil War, died at the Soldiers' very slowly, the kisses began to fall Home at Yountville in Napa county, upon her lips. , One. two, three, four, Sunday, tie was a native ot Illinois, a lang pause five, six another long pause seven pause eight, nine, , ten intolerable pause, , " 'Oh, Willie hurry!' ". 'I'm not Willie. . "The little girl opened her eyes, in astonishment, . and drew back , her pretty mouth from the advancing lips of a strange boy, a very common, shabby sort of a boy, whom she had never seen before. . ., ' ",'Why, where's .Willie? she said. 68 years of age. COFFEE I Your .grocer! must sell poor coffee; we can't : all be comfortable: but he needn't sell it to you. j Tour roctr return roar money If ton don't Ilk Schilling Bst; w pir him. ASTORIA IRON WORKS , w , , ,.,. DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS 1 f , 'OF THE LATEST IMPROVED . . . ' Canning MacHkry, Marine Engines and Boilers COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED. Correspondent Solicited. .. . Fwt ol Fourth Bteiiat. PQP a. i 111 '.,! 7.- .... . -I i I iesofTrw Investors .191'. .; v - j'i , ; ... ' and Home- ' 1 '''' t',;'''; ' Edition of Morning Astorian i l it) i i Can be had at this office, all wrapped abd ready for ; mailirii5c a copy, 2 for 25c 'A""ti i,''''i1 -t- iv ;i Why. u'n n ?; !;.."ri'.': i ; 41uU''7h;':': ' 1