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THE MORNING XSTOIUAN. ASTORIA, OREGON.
THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1901
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For Infants and Children.
Tho Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears
Signature
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ness and Loss or Sleep.
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For Over
Thirty Years
Exact Copy of Wrapper.
G9JMU9Vt MV WM ttfTV
t ALDERMANIC ELECTION.
CHICAGO, Mar. 11. The ques
tion of Sunday saloons will not be on
the ballot at the Chicago aldermanic
election April 7.
The saloon issue as a general city
issue will be wiped out by a decision
of the election commissioners hold
ing that the question of enforcing a
law is not proper for submission
under the public policy act.
There remain the individual con
tests in which the personal liberty
advocates and the liquor interests will
endeavor to defeat candidates for the
city council whose records do not
suit them, but the general issue which
was in a formative stage two months
ago, has disappeared.
SUGAR AS FOOD.
PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS.
PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed
to cure any case of Itching, Blind,
Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to
14 days or money refunded. 50c
k YORKTOWN AT FRISCO.
- SAN FRANCISCO, March 11.
The gunboat Yorktown has arrived
here from La Union Salvador, putting
in at Magdalena Bay for target prac
tice on her way up in the matter of
scoring, the Yorktown, it is said, was
next to the Albany, which outclassed
all the other ships of Admiral Swin
burn's squadron. The Yorktown will
stay here several weeks.
No Use to Die.
'I have found out that there is no
use to die of lung trouble as long as
you can get Dr. .'King's New Dis
covery; says Mrs. J. P. White, of
Rushboro, Pa. "I would not be alive
today only for that wonderful medi
cine. It loosens up a cough quicker
than anything else, and cures lung
diesase even after the case is pro
nounced hopeless." This most reliable
remedy for coughs and colds, la
grippe, asthma, bronchitis and hoarse
ness, is sold under guarantee at Chas.
Rogers & Son's drug store. 50c and
$1.00. Trial bottle free.
SURRENDERED BY BONDSMEN.
LOS ANGELES, Mar. ll.-Bonds-men
of Charles Lawson, charged with
uttering a worthless check on the
Jefferson Bank of St. Louis sur
rendered him to the sheriff yesterday.
Constipation, or Irregularity, la very
often the cause of sick-headaohe. Lane's
Family Medicine is the great preventive
and cure of headache. Druggists sell it
for 28 cent.
SCHAEFER VS. HOPPE.
CHICAGO, Mar. 11. Jacob Schae
fer, holder of the world's 18.1 billiard
championship, will meet Wm. Hoppe,
who has challenged for the title, at
Orchestra Hall tonight in what prom
ises to be one of the greatest exhibi
tions of modern billiards.
Used With Discrimination, It la an Aid
to Good Hoalth.
"There la a prejudice against sugar
which Is not justified by physiological
reasoning." says the London Lancet
"Sugar is one of the most powerful
foods which we possess, as It Is the
cheapest or at any rate one of the
cheapest In muscular labor no food
appears to be able to give the same
powers of endurance as sugar, and
comparative practical experiments
have shown without the least doubt
that the hard physical worker, the
athlete or the soldier on the march is
much more equal to the physical strain
placed upon blm when he has bad In
cluded In bis diet a liberal allowance
of sugar than when sugar la denied to
him.
"Trophies, prizes and cap have ton
doubtedly been won on a diet In wblcb
sugar was intentionally a notable con
stltucnt It has even been said that
sugar may decide a battle and that
Jam after all is something more than a
mere sweetmeat to the soldier. The
fact that sugar la a powerful 'muscle
food' accounts probably for the disfa
vor into which it falls, for a compara
tively small quantity amounts to an
excess, and excess is always inimical
to the easy working of the digestive
processes.
"Sugar satiates; it is a concentrated
food. Where sugar does barm, there
fore, it la invariably due to excess.
Taken In small quantities and distrib
uted over the dally food intakes, sugar
contributes most usefully In health to
the supply of energy required by the
body.
"And it Is a curious fact that the
man who practically abstains from
sugar or reduces his diet to one almost
free from carbohydrates in favor of
protein foods, such as meat often
shows feeble muscular energy and an
Indifferent capacity for physical endurance."
ON THE WATERFRONT
Why 8ilenee Reignod.
"Darling." he cried In tones of deep
emotion, "at last you are safely In my
arms and nothing shall part us more."
The object of his touching words and
passionate embrace made no response,
but remained cold and silent Tears
welled Into bis eyes.
"Dearest" he continued, "how can 1
prove my love?. Is there no sacrifice
I can make for your sweet sake, no
suffering I can endure?"
This final appeal was irresistible.
"The , best thing yon can do, my
man," said a gruff voice, "la to come
along with me." And a brutal police
man unfastened him from the lamp
post and led him silently away. Lon
don Scraps.
Water.
, Schoolmaster (at end of object les
son) Now, can any of you tell me
what is water? Small and Grubby
LTrchln Please, teacher, water's what
turns black when you puts your 'ands
In It Dundee Advertiser.
The attire of some men would seem
to indicate that their tailors can't tell
the difference between a fit and a con
vulsion. New York Times.
TEA
Schilling's Best is in
packages ; never comes
out of a bin or canister.
Tour grocer returns row mooejf If foa doa't
aTult:wepy bin '
Fast French Wheat Ship Emllie
Galline Here.
CUM Mc FARLANE ARRIVES
Johan Poulsen in From Bay City for
Coble Elmore Here Outward
Bound F. S. Loop Comes Down
River Random Notes From Docks
The schooner V. F. Jewett arrived
down from Prescott yesterday, load
ed with lumber for the Bay City, and
is at anchor in the channel, awaiting
despatch over the bar, which was in
an uproarious condition yesterday.
The French bark Emilie Galline,
Captain Arnaudtzin, came down the
river yesterday and is all in readings
for Europe, with her big load of
wheat This is the vessel that has
made the enviable record of taking
her second cargo out of the month of
the Columbia within 11 months, both
under European consignment
The steamer Johan Poulsen arrived
in at 8 o'clock yesterday morning, and
after stopping at the Callemler for
an hour, went on to Goble, whence
she will load out lumber ' for San
Francisco.
The steamer Sue H. Elmore came
down the river early yesterday .morn
ing bound for Tillamook Bay points
and is at the O. R. & N. piers, waiting
for a passable bar. The extension of
her run to Portland will not help in
the least to get her over the bar any
oftener than she used to make it from
here.
The Franch bark Amiral de Cornu-
lier is still up the river somewhere,
thuogh she was expected down yes
terday morning. She is bound for
the United Kingdom with wheat
The temporary shut-down of a
couple of days at the Tongue Point
mills .will interfere with the finishing
of the J. A. Campbell's largo, and
she will hardly be ready for sea be
fore Saturday.
The big British tramp steamship
Strathblane is still in the city channel,
waiting till the 15th inst, to haul into
the Tongue Point docks for her part
cargo of lumber. In the meantime
she is having her huge hull painted.
The British ship Largiemore will
finish discharging 1000 tons of Aus
tralian coal at the Elmore dock to-!
day; and if room can be found for,
another 500 tons or so, she will leave
here, and then move on to the me
tropolis.
The Callender steamer Vanguard
will probably be back from Portland
next week, after having undergone a
general overhauling and furnishing
up.
The tug Melville, Captain Pete Jor
dan left down the bay yesterday af
ternoon, to grapple for the stream
anchor and chain attached, dropped
there some days ago by the Ameri
can barlcentine J. M. Griffith. ,
The steamer F. S. Loop arrived
down the river yesterday and went
to the Tongue Point mill docks for
100,000 feet of lumber, which, once
aboard, she will depart for San Fran
cisco. The steamer F. A. Kilburn has been
sold to C. P. Dow, of Portland, and
he will put her on a San Francisco-Eureka-Coos
Bay-Astoria-Portland
run as soon as possible. She is an old
timer in this port
The famous Dollar fleet has had
another addition, in the vessel Stanley
Dollar, named for the younger son
of the family. She was launched at
Seattle on Tuesday, at the Moranl
yards, Mrs. Dollar breaking the bottle
of champagne against the ship's
stem. She is of 2500 tons burden, and
will be sent out on the same world
wide and variable lines of commerce
her 10 fellow-ships have followed.
The fine newj lumber schooner
Capistrano is due down from Port
land on Saturday next, laden for the
Bay City, on her maiden voyage.
The Oregonian's "marine" reporter
yesterday morning reported the ar
rival of the "steam schooner Roan
oke" in port there. Word has not
been received from Captain Dunham
as yet; maybe the wires won't stand
for the message, ' ' ,
The British bark Crown of Ger
many has completed loading at Port
land and is in the stream there await
ing despatch, and is next in line for
tow to this port and the bar. She is
wheat Indcn for Falmouth, for orders.
Wilson Bros., the well known boat
builders are just finishing off the fine
motor launch "J. L. C." (named for
John L. Carlson, whose property she
is), and her trial trip will be taken
probably next Sunday; by which time
Mr. Carlson will have come over
from Seattle. Captain Erick John
son, who is down from Juneau,
Alaska, arriving yesterday, will have
command of her on her voyage to the
far north which will be made under
her own power. She is 70 feet in
length and has 60 horsepower en
gines, and is a dandy generally.
The Kamm steamer Undine is still
doing the Lurline stunt in good
fashion Captain McCuly laid off here
all of yesterday to serve as a witness
in the divorce suit of Turner vsi Tur
ner, and joined his steamer last night
in time to take her back to Portland.
The Lurline will relieve her some
time next week. . ,
The British ship Clan Buchanan,
Captain Thompson, 33 days out from
Santa Rosalia, crossed in at 4 o'clock
yesterday afternoon, after a pleasant
and timely voyage with all well on
board. She is consigned to G. W.
McN'car, at Portland, and will load
wheat for the U. K.
(Later) The steamers Loop and
Elmore went over the bar last night j
on their south -bound routes to San
Francisco and Tillamook.
The North Shore Transportation
Company, owner of the steamer
General Washington, has increased
its capital stock from 16,000"to $40,-
000. The capitalization was too small
originally and the increase was made
for the purpose of placing the com
pany on a sound footing for future
improvements contemplated. Busi
ness is good, yesterday being a profit
able day, the Ceneral Washington
carrying her limit of freight, and a
large passenger list
The Russian bark Albyn crossed in
from Callao yesterday afternoon and
is at anchor in the tower harbor. She
goes to Portland to load lumber for
Cape Town, Africa.
,THEyiYE-BDICT OF
u GCJR PVTfcbNS
No one has ever complained cither di
rectly or indirectly against 'the quality
of our food products, and once you are
acquainted with our quality you will
have no complaint on the prices either
Acme Grocery Co.
- THE UP-TO-DATE GROCERS
521 COMMERCIAL 8TREET
PHONE 081
THE THIEF.
CAPT. .R. Ik THOMPSON DEAD.
SAN FRANCISCO, March 11.
Capt. R. N. Thompson, founder of
the Oregon Steam . Navigation Co.,
and one of the prominent capitalists
in the city, died here yesterday at the
age of 88 years. , '
More proof that Lydla E. Pink
b&m'a Vegetable Compound re
tores women to normal health
Mrs. Mattie Copenhaver, of 315 So.
21st St., Parsons, Kans., writes ;
" For two years I suffered from the
worst forms of feminine ills, until I was
almost driven frantic. Nothing but mor-
Ehine would relieve me. Lvdia E. Pink
am's Vegetable Compound brought me
health and happiness, and made me a
well woman. Every sick woman should
benefit by my experience."
FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN.
For thirty years Lydla E. Fink
ham's Vegetable Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ilk
and has positively cured thousands ol
women who have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, ulcera
tion, fibroid tumors, irregularities,
periodic paiim, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, flatulency, indigee
tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration.
Why don't you try it?
Don't hesitate to write to Mrs.
Pinkliam if there is anything
about your sickness you do not
understand. She will treat your
letter inconfldence nndadvlse you
free. No woman ever regretted
writing her, and because of her
vast experience she has helped
thousands. Address, Lynn, Mass.
A Man With Superstitions As Well
As Powers Of Character Analysis.
Henri Bernstein, the brilliant young
author of "The Thief," is an interest
ing refutation levelling and destruc
tive of the marked individual types,
which were so plentiful and so di
verting in more leisurely days.
Mr. Bernstein, it seems, while
scarsely "a character," immediately
impresses even "the man in the
street" by his personality, which is
one of fine distinction. He is a man
of splendid presence and elegant
manners and his friends say that he
expends as much thought upon the
cut of his clothes or the turn of a
cravat as upon the arrangement of an
act or the drawing of character.
His "The Thief" has established Mr.
Bernstein as the most inventive and
most resourceful of modern play
wrights. He has the finest sense for
almost mathematically built climaxes
of any present day writer for the
stage; yet Bernstein is anything but
practically or scientifically inclined.
Rather is he a mystic with sharp eye
for observing human nature but per
sonally more subject to extra human
influences than any person who
comes under his own microscopic
eye.
Thus Bernstein will never content
himself with a name for one of his
plays until he has found one of six
letters or less. He is sure no suc
cess can come to any of his plays if
its title, aside from an article, an ad
jective or some other qualifying word,
contains more than six letters. Thus
the original French title of "The
Thief" - - Le Volcur - - delighted him,
and especially so docs "Samson," the
newest and best of his plays, they
say in Paris, and of which Charles
Frohman has obtained the English
and American rights. '
The following is related by his in
timates as typical of Bernstein: One
morning, after having breakfasted
with two friends, one an art printer,
the other a publisher, and both very
dear to him, Bernstein came to the
theatre attired in a handsome suit
of dark maroon. To most minds a
maroon suit, of course, i a badge of
eccentricity. Bernstein probably had
lately read of maroon suits and de
cided that what might 'to-day seem
eccnctricity, in other days would de
note an elegant taste. Hence he had
set about to establish the fashion of
maroon clothes for men, or rather
had courageously made himself , a
disciple of a vogue whose disappear
ance from the boulevards of Paris
sincerely grieved him,
Charles Frohman feels a warmth
of interest in Bernstein that is only
less cordial than the attachment he
feels for the greatest common Eng
lish playwrights, J. M. Barrie. There
is as little in common between the
French and English playwrights as
men as there is between their man
uscripts as plays. But in popularity,
extravagant almost to the point of
eccstacy, Bernstein is to the French
what Barrie is to the English theatre
going public.
Two Ways.
Howell There are different ways for
man to advertise his business. .
Powell Tee. Some men use the
newspapers and others marry. Smart
Set
The Commercial
NEW TO-DAY
QO-CART3 THAT GO.
A mother's pride in her dainty baby
finds expression in the folding go
cart In which the infant traverses it
limited way in the world. The per
fect thing in this line, at rational com
is to be found at the Zapf Furniture
& Hardware Company. They are
prettily upholstered, rubber-tired and
fold compactly. And best of all,
they are selling like hot-cakes, at
$7.50. Look them up at once.
The Clean Man.
The man who delights in personal
cleanliness, and enjoys his shave,
shampoo, haircut, and bath, in As- j
toria, always goes to the Occident
barber shop for these things and
gets them at their best
To The People.
la 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
impartialy 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, a square deal tinder the law,
keeping always uppermost in my mind
the interests of the tax payers of said
District and State.
E. B. TONGUE.
For Good Wood
From the Tongue Point Lumber
Compsny, 16-Inch stove length. Call
up Prael-Eigner Transfer Co., Phone
221
When Yon Travel
Be sure that your ticket reads vi-.
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. C. W. Roberts,
Agent, O.R.AN Dock, Astoria.
"Modern" Delights.
When a man i asses under the hands
of a barber he wants the best skille4
treatment to be bad ia that line. ,24
Astoria, the man In search ofsuch
manipulation, goes direct toPetersen's
"Modern" shop, at 572, Commercial,
and gets it in any of the six chairs
maintained.
t New Grocery Store.
Try our own mixture ot coffee the
J. P. B. Fresh fruit and vegetables.
Badollet & Co., grocers. Phone Main
128L s
Just received a new line of umbrella
covers, See C H. Orkwitz, 137 Tenth
street ' ' ..' ..
Kodak Supplies.
A full line of films, papers, cameras.
kodaks, etc., just received at Hart's
Drug Store.'
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 faut being so well
known, a large business is done at the
Commercial, on Commercial street,
near Eleventh.
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
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 alt
ean 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"
Will lady who bought the cream
cake at the St Agnes' Guild sale two
weeks ago please return the plate to
Miss Crang's Art Store.
Vs-
The very best board to be obtained
In the city is at "The Occident Hotel I
Rates very reasonable. I