SATURDAY, APRIL A, 1008. MliC! 1ELL RETIRES Wholly Voluntary and Was Due to III Health. WON DICTINCTION IN 190 Lewli the New Preiident is Conald ered a Brainy Man But it Per hapi Quicker to Decide Than the Much Loved John Mitchell. INDIANAI'OLIS, Al, April 3. Aftrr a decode ipent in active work at tlic executive head of the United Mine Worker of America, during which time he ha iittuincd a reputa lion a the nation's foremost labor leader, John Mitchell today stepped down and out and wan succeeded by Thoma h, Lewis of Ohio. , During the time thai he hai been president of the miners' union, that organiza t in hail grown from a small and in- nignificant body to one of the strong est labor unions in the world, with total membership of 360.000. Mit chell's retirement was wholly volun tarv. and was due to ill health. If he had wished, he could probably have retained his position through out his lifetime, so nonular is he with the members of the union. The greatest event of Mitchell's career as a labor leader was the strike in the anthracite district in 1903, the most memorable the coun .try ever saw. It was inaugurated by 1'rcsidcnt Mitchell, the demands being an eight-hour day, higher wages and union mines, It lusted from April until Novem ber, when President Roosevelt ap pointed his famous arbitration com mission and a settlement was effected to last three years. At the expira tion of the three years, the contract was renewed and now expires next year. The settlement was considered favorable to the miners, Many rumors are in circulation as to Mitchell's future. lie has been mentioned as a possible Democratic candidate for governor of Illinois, his home being in Spring Valley, III. It has also been stated that Mitchell would be asked by President Roose velt to go to Panama and make a report on labor conditions in tne canal zone. The retired labor leader will be one of the delegates to the natural resources of the country, called by President Roosevelt. John P. White, of Iowa, is the new Vice-President. He has been Presi dent of the Iowa miners. W. D. Ryan of Illinois, long con nected with the state organisation of miners is the new Secretary-Treasurer. Ryan is a Mitchell man as Is White. Lewis, the new president, i con sidered a brainy man. lie studied law and came up from the mines like Mitchell. He has some elaborate plan for making the organization bigger and stronger and hi ambition is to gain the confidence ol the pub lis In the my Mitchell has held ft, Lewis hat been ipoken of as i fierce radical and some liirprite has ncni expressed mai a rauicai couw be elected to such an Important posi tion by men who have had the ter vices for years of to conservative a leader as John Mitchell. As a matter of fact Tliomat Lewis it not a rad ical in the usually accepted tense of the word. He Is perhaps quicker to decide than the much-loved Mitchell, whom he has, on numerous occasions ' f ' opposed, and his manner of handling the various questions which confront labor leaders is perhaps somewhat less conciliatory toward opponents; he also in very strong willed, but his reputation as a "fighter" is due more to III work for what he thought right within the organization, than for any disregard of the proprieties In his re lations with employers. Lewis lives at Bridgeport, Ohio, and has been vice-president of the mine workers since the election of John Mitchell to the presidency. He therefore is not unfamiliar with the work he has been called to. In a speech made to the recent convention of miners at Indianapolis, after the tellers had announced his victory over William D. Wilson, Lewis said: "I desire to set at rest any fears that may exist. I desire to say to the American people that if I am a radi cal I hope to be always so, for I will stand and defend the just rights of those whom I have the honor to rep resent. I hope to be so conservative that we may be able to decide when to accept the things that we believe justly ours as laboring men of the country." II ! a i t .ii.wi.li. n i ,mmn it-ii t iiii i I" i ' i J THE MORNING ASTORIAN. ASTORIA. OREGON SPASM OF VIRTUE Prohibitory Law and Race-Track Gamming Threatened. RACES CLEAR $5000 A DAY It la Safe to Say That a Prohibitory Law Would Undoubtedly Past Congress if it Were Once Before That Body But it Wont be. DEATH WAS QN HIS HEELS, Jesse P. Morris, of Skippers, Va, had a close call in the spring of 1906. He says: "An attack of pneumonia left me so weak and with luch a fear ful cough that my friends declared consumption had me, and death was on my heels. Then I was persuaded to try Dr. King's New Discovery. It helped me immediately, and after taking two and a half bottles I was well man again. I found out that New Discovery is the best remedy for coughs and lung disease in alt the world." Sold under guarantee at Charles Rogers & Son drug store. 50c and $1.00. Trial bottle free. Within the last five months small investors in dividend-paying railroad tocks arc said to have increased by 100,000, The general public is evi dently not afraid of recent railroad legislation or the 2-ccnt rate. Irritation of the throat and hoarse nest are relieved immediately by two or three little swallows of Kemp's Balsam, the best cough cure. Grip )v Hurry and Worry are twin causes of many ail ments that affect the stomach and nerves. Keep the diges tion strong and the nerve3 steady by the timely use of BEECHAMS FILLS ... i- w, 10c. nd2Sc Most victims of appendicitis are those who arc habitually constipated. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup cures chronic constipation by stimulating the liver and bowels and restores the natural action of the bowels. Orino Laxative Fruit Syrup does not nause ate or gripe and is mild and pleas ant to take. Refuse substitutes, T. F. Laurin Owl Drug Store. lot hi hint, fii had! Try JELL-O, the dainty, appetiz ing economical dessert. Can be pre pared instantly simply add boiling water and serve when cool. Flavored just right; sweetened just right; per fect in every way. A 10c. package makes enough dessert for a large family. All grocers sell it. Don't ac cept substitutes. JELL-0 complies with all Pure Food Laws. Seven flavors: Lemon, Orange, Raspberry, Strawberry, Chocolate, Cherry, Peach. Special correspondence. Washing ton, D. C. April 3,-Thc District of Columbia is at present suffering in tensely from an arrested spasm of virtue At the opening of the session of Congress we were threatened with a prohibitory law. I hen came a strenuous and sustained attack on the race track and the gambling connect ed therewith. Finally an effort was made to do away with buckctshop gambling. Up to this writing all these attempts have proved abortive. The races are being run daily to the delectation of the multitude and the eminent satisfaction of the book makers. The bucketshops are open and doing business and the saloons are working from four a. m. to mid night. On the whole it does not seem that we have gotten very far toward reform. It is to be hoped that before au tumn Congress will have enacted a law to put a stop to betting at the races, Washington is peculiar in. its population and because of this fact suffers more from the racing in the Spring and- Fall than would likely be tthe case with any other city of the same size. The larger part of the population, and especially of the race goers, is composed of employe of the government, receiving a stated salary on which they and their fami lies are absolutely independent. Con sequently almost every dollar lost at the race track goes out of circulation. The argument is frequently advanced that the "races bring money to Washington" This is the sheerest sort of nonsense. The $2 per head contributed by the patrons of the track pays the purses and all ex penses connected with the operation of the track. For. every dollar that is brought here and spent here by the bookmakers, touts, and race track followers, who depend upon betting for their livelihood, at least $2 are taken away from the permanent pop ulation of this city. To say that the races cost Washington five thousand lollars per day, net, for each day of both the Spring and Fall meetings, s a very low estimate. Frobably en thousand dollars a day would be nearer correct. On the opening day there were more than sixty book makers. Most of these came from out of the city and had with them a clerk and chashier at $10 a day each, If each bookmaker won only a total of three thousand dollars of the pub lics money. The greatest evil in con nection witn netting at uenning is not the loss of the money involved. but the disrespect into which the law has fallen. .The absurdity of a aw which forbids betting on the races within a mile of the city limits of Washington, but which permits ' '. t h t. Ml km a u 3 V Cardiff Coal & Coke Go's Stock at $3.00 Per Share The Price of This Stock Will Positively Advance on Monday of Next Week ll!J P0SITIVELY THE LAST "ME THIS STOCK WILL BE OFFERED AT THIS PRICE. If you want any of it this week, hand your application to J. C. Lee or C. II. Callender or mail it direct to the Cardiff Coal Co,, Room 517 Chamber of Commerce, Portland, Oregon. ' Remember you can't buy it next Monday at $3,00 per share and we are not going out of our way to sell it to you at that price this week. We will still continue calling attention to our coa! until we have everybody in Astoria burning - , CARDIFF GOAL Pi Mliram-,tll , :-i ""g' S5is5ss3 that speculation is both wholesome and necessary, and defending such operations. Stock gambling is now about the only generally recognized, legalized form of gambling and it is likely to be a long time before the people abandon it. The movement for prohibition in the District of Columbia seems to have fallen into inocuous deseutude. Early in the session the brewers and liquor interests were greatly exer cised over the possibility of the pas sage of a prohibitory law, but their fears have been allayed. It is safe to say that while a prohibitory law would undoubtedly pass Congress were it once before that body, it does not now seem possible that a vote will be taken on a prohibitory law at this session. THIS MAY INTEREST YOU. No one is immune from Kidney trouble, so just remember that Foley's Kidney Cure will stop the irregularities and cure any case of kidney and bladder trouble that is not beyond the reach of medicine. T. F. Laurin Owl Drug Store. Probably it is your stomach and not your heart that causes pain in neigh borhood of the heart If it is, Lane't Family Medicine will give relief. 25 cents at druggists. . ' FIEND DROPS DEAD. CHICAGO, April 3. A despatch to the Tribune from Bedford, Ind., says: ' Charles Fisher, aged 17, dropped dead yesterday in the Street. He was addicted to the cigarette habit and had one in his mouth when death came. WOT 2 Ei I" ft "! LPLbJnlbiJKa MM ! r it To? ME? Oh I'm Going to Whitman's Book Store to get some of those "Good Goods" Cheap-before they are all gone. Better come along, r Whitman's Boole Store 'or she cannot helt it. Women are often cross, irritable, hysteric, and declare they are driven to distrac- it in parts of the District outs.de of tion at the Slightest provocation. Fisher Brothers Company SOLE AGENTS ' Barbour and Finlayson Salmon Twins and Netting McCormick Harvesting Machines Oliver Chilled Plought ' Malthoid Roofing Sharpies Cream Separators Raecolith Flooring Storrett't Toolt j Hardware, Groceries, Ship Chandlery Tan Bark, Blue Stone, Muriatic Acid, Welch Coal, Tar,! Ash Oars, Oak Lumber, Pipe and Fittings, Brass i Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Fishermen's Pure Manilla Rope, Cotton Twin and Seine Web We Want Your Trade , ! FISHER BROS.! BOND STREET i the mile limit, and which forbids the loktraker to stand still and take ets, but which permits him to shift from one foot to the other and do business, cannot be defended by even the most enthusiastic race track gambler. As far as the crowd which the races attract to Washington, the town would be vastly better off with ont it. In the main it is composed of loud-mouthed, loudly dressed gen try, whose talk is extremely horsely and interlarded with profanity, to gethcr with a number of women of whom the less said the better. That there are distinctly reputable men and women interested in racing no one will deny, but it is manifested to the most unsophisticated observer that they are largely in the minority, The sooner Congress puts an end to race track gambling in the District, the better off all parties concerned.' Not long since it looked as though some legislation might be expected looking 'toward the" regulation ,or Men eannot understand whv this should be so. To them it is a mys tery because in nine times out of ten this condition is caused bv a Berkras feminine derangement A remedy is necessary which acts directly upon the oreans afflicted, re storing a healthy normal condition to the feminine system, which will quicily dispel all hysterical, nervous and irritable conditions. Such is LYDiAE.pirmi.Ar.rs VEGETABLE COMPOUND The following letter serves to prove this fact. Mrs. Mattie Copenhaver, 815 86, 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 morphine would relieve me, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Comnound brought me health and happiness and maae me a wen woman." FACTS FOR SICK WOMEN. For thirty vears Lvdia & Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, nas been the standard remedy for female ills. prohibition of speculation in stock and has positively cured thousands of and particularly in grain and cotton; women who have been, troubled with The President has spoken out strong- placements, inflammation, iUlcera it now looks as though Congress will fcff-down feelins. flatulency. inditws. do .nothing in this direction at the tion,dizziness,ornervous prostration, present session. The stock, ex- j Why dotlt you try it ? changes throughout the country have f lnkham Invites all sick bpen very busy procuring the lblt :JirS8?S cation of ' articles tending to show health. Address. Lynn. Mas. Blank books Up to the highest standards Bookbinding After strictly modern methods Printing Of every description Our Facilities Are the Best And we promptly execute all orders J. S. Dellinger Co. Ajstoria , Oregon