SUNDAY, APRIL 12, 1908. ! 2 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. THE MORNING ASTORIAN Esullished 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. -By mail, per year...v $7.00 By carrier, per month. , .ou WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per y.ar, in advance.. ..$1.50 ... - Entered as second-class matter July 30, 1906, at the postofhce at Astoria. Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. tr Orders for the delivering of The Morning Astorian to either residence Tr place of business may be made by postal card or through telephone. Any regularity in delivery should be im mediately reported to the office of publication. TELEPHONE MAIN 661. . magnificent THEN?. use of it, WHAT THE WEATHER . Western Oregon and Washington- Showers. Eastern Oregon and Washington- Fair. THE WILL OF THE PEOPLE. There is one feature of the referen dum that will make itself felt in time to come, and tbat is, that a law com ing up from the people direct and unanimously, is a mandate that may not be dealt with even by a supreme court with any grace whatever, since the people are behind the court and the constitutions of the states and na tion. Only an invasion of the federal constitution by the terms of a state enactment may serve as warrant for judicial denial or barrier. All this is yet to be threshed out; -the referendum principle is too new to justify positive assurance of its organic invincibility, but it is inevit able all the same, and the sooner it is cleared of all doubt, the better. The people are restive under assumed or unwarranted criticism of their de liberate acts and, as the power they possess becomes more conspicuously realized, the sharper will be the popu lar anger against such interference. The inference, given out at the fisheries mass meeting in this city on Friday night last, that the gill-netters' bill for the stopping of salmon fishing at'tide-water limit, may not be enforc- able owing to any cause whatever, is a case in point; and will serve the uses of argument If that bill is enacted at the June polls by a major vote of the Oregon electorate it will be the primal, legal expression of the people, and the people are the law; they must amend, qualify, recall, veto and repeal their own acts; other wise the essence of the referendum is destroyed utterly. No institution of the people shares any responsibility with the people in the framing, enacting and perpetuat ing of their own edicts; no court, no commission, nothing lesser than the organic whole, may enter denial, pro test or bar, within the jurisdiction the people stand for; all else, in that purview, are creatures and creations of the people, who remain unques tioned until they shall have trans gressed the higher law of. a more commanding organism. LIGHTING NIGHT CHANNELS. Some clever genius In the Eait has evolved a splendid scheme for light ing river and harbor channels by elec tricity at night, thus dispensing with all need of pilots on vessels . that operate in such waters, and making it feasible for ocean liners to enter any port so equipped. The , lines of light are laid on the exact and ap proved courses given by the Govern ment and arc attached to a continuous cable, the powerful and submerged lamps reflecting their rays up through the waters, making a clean, safe route for classes and sizes of vessels that can operate in the depths so lighted, The system can be applied for any distances, by the use of auxilliary power plants at intervals along the river or bay-side, and over the bars at harbor entrances; and is alto cether one of the latest and most wonderful applications of the electric principle. It is such things as this that make the world move; that measure the dailv oroeress of the modern, and makes for the glory of mankind, and incidentally, for the American people. AT THE CHURCHES IF! If, when the Republican national convetnion shall have assembled at Chicago in June next, and organized, and the great play of human interests begins to move in manifold and force ful measure; when the profound am bitions and inspirations of the hour gradually unfold and assert them selves; when plot and counterplot, design, scheme, game and chance, are shifting to and fro, building, wreck ing, barring, fructifying, under the opportune and inopportune influences set on foot by hundreds of men with hundreds of diverse ends; when de feat and disappointment, attack, and return-assault have engendered the sum of bitterness that must play against the larger and nobler in stincts and operations of the day; when every human passion and grace and foible is in inextricable action and wrought to fiercest and finest expression; when all is turmoil and strife interwoven with the heroic and manful exigencies of the time -arid place, there shall occur one of those pschycological pauses; a lingering silence surcharged with the contend ing elements of real joy and real pain, and the moment is given over absolutely to what of new import may impend: What, if, at that supreme moment, the name of Theodore Roosevelt is injected into the barren, yet receptive instant, from the tongue and voice of some strategic master who realize the crisis and makes First Lutheran. Morning service in Swedish at 10:45; evening service with holy communion in English at 7j30. The Luther League Circle meets for de votional exercises at 6:30 p. m. The "Passion Week" will be observed as a week of prayer by this church. Service every evening except Satur day at 7:30. The evening service on "Good Friday" is held in tfie German Luther Church. The services on Monday and Wednesday evenings are in the Swedish language. A cordial invitation to attend the above services is extended ta all. First Methodist. ; Sermon themes as follows: Morn ing, "Waiting on the Lord"; evening, "The Judge on the Bench Indicted by the Prisoner at the Bar." Good mu sic and singing led by a chorus choir at both services. A cordial invita tion is extended to the public to at tend. C. C. Rarick, minister. Norwegian-Danish M. E. Services at 11 a. m. and 7:45 p. m. Sunday school at 10 a. m., Mr. Albert Carlsen, superintendent. The choir will sing at the evening service. O. T. Field, paston Christian Science. Service - in I. O. O. F. building, rooms 5 and 6, Tenth and Commercial streets at 10 a. m. Subject, "All Sin, Disease and Death Real?" All are invited. Sunday school, 11:30. Read ing room same address, hours 12 to 5 daily, except Sunday. Presbyterian. Palm Sunday. Morning worship, 11 o'clock, "The Messiah." Sabbath school, 12:15; Y. P. S. C. E., 6:30; evening worship, 7:30, "Who Crucified Him?" Quartet at morning service. Male chorus at night. All are invited. W.m S. Gilbert, pastor. Baptist Sunday school, 10 a. m. and B. Y. P. U., 6:30 p. m.; morning worship, 11 a. m. Subject, "The Christian Church." Evening worship, 7:30 p. m. Subject, "Can I Know God?" Everybody invited. Conrad L. Owen, pastor. A GREAT PLAY IS PRESENTED MESSRS. DONALD AND BELL GIVE AN EXCELLENT PRES ENTATION OF "GIRL OF THE GOLDEN WEST AT THE STAR THEATRE. CUSTOM HOUSE, ASTORIA, Oregon, Collector's Office, April 9, 1908. Supplies for Revenue Ves- sels. Sealed proposals for supplying, rations, and coal to vessels of the Revenue Cutter Service, regularly stationed, or temporarily, at Astoria, Oregon, and delivered on board said vessels at that place at such times and in such quantities as may be re quired during the fiscal year ending June 30, 1909, will be received at this office until 2 o'clock p. m. of Tuesday, April 28, 1908, at which time and place they will be publicly opened. Blank forms of proposals for coal, and rations, showing conditions as to coal, and component parts of ra tions with specifications, may be had upon application to this office; pro posals must be submitted on these forms. Separate bids will also be re ceived at the same time and place for lubricating and illuminating oils. The right is reserved to reject any or all bids and to waive defects if it is deemed for the interests of the gov ernment to do so, and no contract will be put in force until Congress shall have made an appropriation for the purpose. ' " ' F. L. PARKER, Acting Collector. Much was said in advance of its presentation of the play now running at the Star and at hat, not enough. Since-its first production by Mr. Belasco in New York over two years ago, columns of newspaper space ami pages of magazine article have freely boasted of its merits, and it was with some satisfaction that art Astorian re porter witnessed its portrayal by the Donald-Bell Company Thursday night (and again last night, for that mat tcr). The story tells of a young girl (Miss.' Phillips), whose father has died and left her in charge of his saloon, a rendevous for prospectors, ranchmen, .gamblers, cowboysr etc., in the heart of the Colorado mountains back in the days of '49. The sheriff of the county (Mr. Bell) is in love with her, and seems favorably received till the advent of a notorious road agent (Mr. Donald), wlio, unknown to both the sheriff and the Wells-Fargo de tective (Mr. McCowcll), visits the saloon and after a scene with the girl, is invited to visit her at her cabin late that night. In the meantime, the, detective a cowboy (R. Rutlcs) and the sheriff have gone out Into the hills on a still hunt for their man. The second act opens in her cabin on the hill the road agent calls, and after one of the prettiest love-scenes imag inable, starts to leave, but is driven back by the storm which has come up unnoticed by them. She tells him he must stay all night; he takes her bed behind some counters, and she curls up to sleep on a pile of rugs in front of the blazing fire. Here the first interruption comes in the entrance of the sheriff, the detective, the cowboy and the bartender at her saloon (Mr. Tyrrell), not however, till she has bidden him in her room. His pres ence is disclosed to the bartender by the discovery of a cigar stump which the road agent has dropped, but he (the bartender), says nothing, being himself in love with her. Before they leave, they disclose to her the true character of the man, and leave her to go out once more on their man hunt. She calls him out, upbraids him for having deceived her, and in one of her strongest scenes, sends him out on the hills to meet the death she knows he cannot escape. He leaves there is a brief pause a shot a groan, and he staggers in the doorway, ?nd drops, shot from the distance by the sheriff. Seeing him wounded, all her love for the man, and her forgetfulness for his char acter .forces to the front, and as the sheriff knocks for admittance, she carries him above the doorway into an old clothes loft, then admits- the j sheriff, convinves him his man is not , there, and he turns to leave. He stops j at the door, directly under the hidden ! man,' his hand extended, to say good bye, s"he is just about to grasp it, when a drop of blood strikes him upturned palm, disclosing the hiding man above. , He is brought down, and in one of the best scenes ever enacted here, the girl offers to play him a name of poker, three hands, to see whether she gets the road agent, or the sheriff gets him and her. Through the long game, a pin could be heard to drop, so wrapped up was the nu dience in the scene. The first hand, thev each held two pairs of aces, an she wins on a pair of queens against his pair of lacks. The second hand falls to him, holding a pair of sevens to her pair of deuces. The third hand is dealt, he looks at his hand, and finds he holds a diamond flush, With a nsp she fall forward,, fcig ing faintness, calls for water, he turns a fraction of a minute to get It, when she throws her cards to the floor, extracts a prepared hand from her stocking, and wine the game by three tens and a pair of queens cheating deliberately for her lover s life. i The third act, one week later, takes us against to the saloon. The sheriff ha kent his secret, and that very morning has started the road agent out of the country. But he failed to count on the Wells-Fargo detective who follows the escaping man, brings him back handcuffed, to hang. The gilrs appears, and the gang decide to let her and him have a moment alone. They do so, and return to find her praying for him. The scene touches the hearts of all but the sheriff who cannot interfere, as he was captured outside his county. She prepares to leave, to bo to a new life with the now reformed road agent, takes leave of them all. turns to the sheriff, who responds only in a silent toast with the glass of whisky he holds. The curtain falls with the liquor running from the slowly upturned glass the man and the girl united at last. "The Girl" is Ann Phillips and was the best thing she has done yet; Mr. Donald not only played, but looked the "knight of the black mask" to perfection; as Luke Short, the sheriff, Mr. Bell proved that in heavy acting, as in comedy, he s thoroughly at home. Mr. Donald and Mr. Bell had the best parts, but seldom is a play seen where all the smaller parts are responsible ones. Mr. Tyrrell, Mr. R. Butler and Mr. McCowcll all there seemed to be built for the characters they de lineated. Mr. C. Butler did an excel lent Chinese comedy part; Pearl Mc Cowcll played the love-sick widow in her usual good manner; and Miss Davenport handled the small part of the Indian girl perfectly having an excellent make-up. All in all, it was not only the best play yet given by this talented com pany, but one of the very best dra matic performances ever given in Astora. and is worthy the patronage of anyone who can appreciate a work of decided worth. Before the People '.. "..'V. - w . Cards of Candidates In the Coming ,. COFFEE You can buy something called "coffee" at 10c lb with 3000 miles of R R freight from the roaster ; don't Your (Toccr return i four money If 79 doo'l Ik Schilling's Beit: par Urn. The Weber wagon For either one horse, or two horses. A good, ' strong, light wagon, The Foard & Stokes Hardware Go Incorporated Successors to Fo-.rd & Stokes Co. M PRACTICAL POINTS ON BANKING NO. 2., Household Checking Accounts. Every woman who makes purchases, or has occasion to remit by mail, will find a. Checking Account with this Bank valuable and convenient a saving of time and carfare a safe guard against loss of funds. Your account, subject to your check is very cordially invited. SCANDINAVIAN-AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK, 506-508 Commercial St., Astoria, Oregon. '11- VOTE FOR ! - if ' I n 4 4 I jj Judge W. E. fyirke RepubPcan Candidate for Repre sentative, Primaries April 17, 1908. JUDGE WILLIAM E. BURKE SEASIDE, OREGON Candidate for Representative at the Republican Primaries, April 17th. PLATFORM. I favor the retention of C. W. Ful ton in the United States Senate, but will obey the Instructions given by the people of Oregon next June, on the following bill: 'That we, the people of the State of Oregon, hereby instruct our Rep resentatives and Senators in our Legislative Assembly as such officers, to vote for and elect the candidates for United States Senator from this State who receive the highest number of votes at our general elections." In addition will favor the enact ment of the following measures: 1 Four-year term for county offi cers. 2 Collection of taxes by the County Treasurer. 3 Divide Fifth Judicial District by joining the Counties of Clatsop and Columbia. 4 A prosecuting attorney for each county. 5 Safeguard deposits in banks. 6 'Pure food law, and regulation of weights and measures. 7 Preserve natural resources of State including water powers and limit franchises to twenty-five years. 8 Better protection for salmon. 9 Voter not to be required to re register except as he changes his place of residence. 10 Continuation of Roosevelt Pol icy, t'ort ot Astoria, &ca wall ami Deepening of Columbia River Bar. To The People. In submitting my name to the elec tors of the Fifth Judicial District for their consideration fpr the office of District Attorney of said District, I desire to say that if I am nominated and elected, 1 will, during my term of office, honestly, vigorously and impartialy perforin all the official duties pertaining to said office, with out fear or favor, endeavoring always to accord to every individual, irre spective party, politics person alities, a square deal under the law. keeping always uppermost in my mind the interests of the tax payers of said District and State. E. B. 'TONGUE. VOTE FOR Vote for 1 r.f r . tf , j ... . . 1 . .. J :. Candidate for Repub lican Nomination for Railroad Commission er. : For Congress, , . T. T. GEER (Candidate for Republican Congres sional Nomination in the Second Dis trict. Liberal Appropriations fo Waterways, Equal Opportunities an Privileges for Labor and Capital, an Governmental Control of Corpora tions. HIGGINS & WARREN FIRE INSURANCE ELEVEN STRONG COMPANIES Savings Bank Bldg. Ground Floor Geo. 5. Sliepard Republican Candidate For Represent tative in Congress. A Champion of the Columbia River Bar Improvement, and In Favor of Postal Saving Bank. , s Primary Election, April 17th. VOTE FOR V' 't .0 JOHN C. McCUE Republican Candidate for Re-election For Representative. Primary Election, April 17th. Vote for JUIES J. BIO ' Republican Candidate for Representative to the Legislature. Primary Election April 17, 1908 VOTE FOR (! to $ y C. A, Leinenweber For Republican nominee for Repre sentative to the Legislature. Primary election April 17, 1908. I' ii i , v i If' - 1 ll" ,' 1 , h f " ) : . : I . J n t .... .: VOTE FOR ! J.A.GILBAUGH At Primary Election April 17, for Republican Nomination for COUNTY CORONER VOTE FOR ; ! ; ljjva undine j'j, James w. Weicn '' Republican Candidate for Repre sentative.' Primaries April 17, 1908. Send the Morning Astorian to your friends in the -East.