Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 22, 1908)
J THE MORNING ASTOMAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1908. THE MORNING ASTORIAN Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINOSK w. eTTtjcrPTPTTON RATES. 0uuvv.. vi K R mail, ner vear x ...map nr iflonth .OU 0jr wint r wirtrirT.V ASTORIAN. By mail, per yur, in advance.... $1.50 Entered as second-class matter July SO. 1906, at the postomce ai nswn Oregon, under the act of Congress of March i, J&vy. " tr Orders for the delivering of The Morning Astorian to either residence w place ot business may db raw uj postal card or through telephone. Any Irregularity in delivery should be im mediately reported to we oince w. publication. TELEPHONE MAIN 661. THE WEATHER Western Oregon and Washington- Showers possibly attended by warm er; warmer. Eastern Oregon and Washington, Idaho Showers and thunderstorms; cooler. ' . THAT COMMON POINT. . Astoria has no particular interest in the grain rate that shall apply to the city of Portland in the future and cares nothing if that city shall get her grain without any tolls whatever. What this city and port wants is the seaboard-terminal, common-point rate on grain from the interior, that ap plies to the Sound cities and San Francisco. We are entitled to' it to pat us on an equal and just footing for the shipment of grain hence, for eign; and we are going after it stead ily and consistently. The day is not far distant when the right of Astoria to this rate is to be tried out and the effort will cover the whole range of fight and appeal, hence, to railraod and Government headquarters. The Oregonian sets up the feeble plea that to ship grain 100 miles fur ther down the river on a down-grade, water-level haul, on the same train thta brings it to her doors, must of a verity add materially to the cost of transit; but fails to mention why it does not increase the rate over the heavy, sHort-train grades, that lead into Seattle and Tacoma on an un disturbed margin; nor what becomes of the ship's expense-bills over that same 100 miles' when she goes to the metropolis after the grain she might load within 11 miles of her offing; nor that her transit is doubled on the river as against her brief detention and cargoing here. It will all come in due time; and we shall be glad to see Portland get the benefit of any and all differentials that may fall to her; but for the sake of the Eastern Oregon farmer and his neighboring compeer of Idaho and Montana, we want the "common point", along with the grain, or so mUjCh of it as can be handled out of this port with despatch and economy. That is all we ask. The first ship loaded out of Astoria will fix the business at this port for all time to come, however slow it may be in maturing as a policy. saloons of Astoria must close her metically on Sunday, and for the 24 hours of that day. If that law is obeyed the intervention of the harsh er code need not, , and will not, be resorted to; for it is not the wish of the whole people to drive law-abiding business out of cxistance; but the constant and defiant breaking of that law invites the greater force and summary terms of local option, and the saloon man has himself to thank for all that follows. No business that cannot be regulated by decent limita tions has any right to existance and prosperity and the sooner this is un derstood to be the conclusion of the people generally, the better it will be for all concerned. We believe the moment to be in opportune for the introduction of the local option program to the business centre of Astoria; there are too many large and valuable business projects afoot that are liable to be frustrated and even annihilated; and the men to adjust the matter at once, and perhaps for all time, are the saloon men who have heretofore re fused to close their doors when the law bade them, a course of action at once an injustice to the men in that business who are trying to observe the rule, and an insolent challenge to the people and the power they hold m reserve. Wherefore, obey the law, and we are with you; break it, and we are against you! LOCAL OPTION FLURRY. The law of the land has placed in the hands of the people a weapon of rebuke and reprisal devised to oper ate exclusively against the saloon in terests of every community in Oregon when there shall be a demand for its application, to-wit, the local option law. Like all other special laws it should be used with exceeding care and time liness; sentiment is not all there is to the application of the law; there are always the elements of justice and fair-dealing and orderliness, in the in voking of these peculiar and definite edicts, these single idea processes, wherewith society is invested; and the spirit behind their establishment is "ot one of devastation and oblitera tion, but rather that of an agency to compel and maintain that regulation that makes all businesses decent and fairly acceptable to society. It is safe to say that an extraordi nary majority of the population of this city and county are not in favor of the exercise of this law at any time, if the saloon people will obey the other phases of the law regulating their business; the main thing alwayst in the treatment of these phases of public expression, is not to invoke them in the first place; to stand pat upon the laws already in force and do the simple and honest trick of obey ing, where obedience is the cheapest and easiest, as well as the legal, thing to do. The law says, just now, that the POLITICAL GHOSTS. It is high time that Astoria was ex orcising its political ghost 1 It has hung spectrally over her best interests for time out of mind nd warped her best prospects and ambitions until they have fallen un served and futile; it has denied and denuded her industrially, commercial ly and politically; it has thrust its dismal and grisly hand in the path of her prograss and barred her from achievement so often that she has come to feel there is no such thing as success, nor compensated enter prise, nor a definite share for her in the good things of the day. It is the ghost of selfishness that stalks in all towns and cities of less than metropolitan dimension; the in carnate type of bossism; the "leading citizen" who uses his advanced posi tion to swing all things to his net and nest; the "boss" who bends every thing to his peculiar sphere and makes his sanction and support the issue of the hour; the man and men who put their personal interests first and be fore the public needs and values; whose only idea in the disposition of large' and popular concerns, is where they touch the line of his private domain and personal relationship, with no further thought of its wider and wholesomer bearing; whose sole use for the masterly position that time and public confidence has con ferred upon him, is the right to dic tate to those who have honored him, for the saving and bolstering of his especial aims and holdings. Astoria mut divorce business and politics. - She must shake off'the hold of the selfish leader and hark back to the commoner and happier code of work ing out the general good rather than conserving the particular and private interests of her "ghosts." The sooner she disclaims and ignores this type of niggardly public spirit the better for all concerned, even for the man and men who have been used to dictating her courses and her failures. She must rise above the one-man plane and do her commercial and in dustrial stunts without taking cogniz ance of the toes she is standing on in the course of the task. What serves the whole city serves its best and least citizen, and while (the ad vantage is common and at times in determinable, all hands must stand pat, make the most of it, and be glad it is done. Chuck the political ghost of re stricted, selfish domination, and move forward on all honest and promising lines with Astoria for a slogan in place of some man's personally in spired whisper, however influential he may be reckoned. Astoria first, then the private citizen! Let's wash the slate! Chabmerlains's Has the Preference Mr. Fred. C. Hanrahan, a promi nent druggist of Portsmouth, Va says: "For the past six years I have sold and recommended Cham berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarhoea Remedy. It is a great remedy and one of the best patent medicines on the market. I handle some others for the same purposes that pay me a larger profit, but this remedy is so sure to effect a cure, and my custom er so certain to appreciate my recom mending it to him, that I give it the preference." For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists. Headaches re brain signals that your system is in some way disorganized and unless the cause of the trouble is removed they will become mora and more frequent, and gradually increase both lit duration and intensity. The sympathetic nerves are weakened by the repeated attacks, and the malady finds an easy lodgment whenever the bodily and mental conditions favor its return. On the first sign of headache you should at once take D pais Complete recovery from sick headache, bilious headache, nervous headache, throbbing headache speedily follows the use of these famous pills. They settle the stomach, stimulate the liver, act mildly on the bowels, improve the blood and quiet the nerves. The tonic and strengthening properties of Beecham's fills build up the bodily health and fortify the system against subsequent attack. For all headaches, disorders of the stomach and nerves, Beecham's Pills are '. The Needed Remedy la boxes with lull directions, toe. and Me. SELLING) BATHS IN PARIS. There is plenty of water in Paris and quanities of it are used on the streets by men with lines of hose made in' metallic sections with, flex ible joints, each section mounted on wheels. But it is almost impossible to get water above the street level and quite impossible to get any quan tity of it hot under normal conditions. Only a few of the very newest houses in Paris have water above street level. This is true of hotels as well as of private houses. A hotel keeper may send up a quart of hot water to your room, but filling a tub would proba bly be beyond the capacity of his' establishment. Many Parisians bathe in big bath houses, which line the Seine, In places these houses occupy a greater part of the river. But if a Parisian wants a hot bathe at home, he turns to the peripatetic bath tub. This originates in a bathing establishment of which there are many. The bath man, as he leaves this establishment, has two straps over his shoulders and he stands between the shafts of a two-wheeled cart. On this cart is a tank surmounted by a substantial bath tub, provided with castors. In front of the tank hangs two large metal buckets and a yoke. The bath man draws this apparatus through the streets to your house. When you want a hot tub, you order one delivered at a time fixed. The bath man comes around with his apparatus, stops in front of your house, lifts the tub frbm the top of the tank, puts it over his head like a hood and carries it upstairs to your room. Returning to the street he draws hot water in the buckets, hangs them at each end of the yoke which he carries across his shoulders, and so conveys water to the tub. When the tub is full he retires and .you take your bath. Then 'he comes upstairs, empties the tub by means of his buc kets and carries the tub and buckets away. His passage through the streets is an everyday sight to the Parisian and arouses no comment. Technical World Magazine. (Rene Bache in the Technical World Magazine for May. That military post is situated on the top of a con siderable hill which affords an exten sive area of level ground most suit able for tests of the kind demanded, All three of the machines are op erated on the aeroplane principle. That is to say, they have no gas bag, and depend for their flying power upon huge wings. They are, In short, artificial birds of huge size, and util ize the air currents to uphold them while aloft, the power of propulsion being furnished by automobile en gines of a type which economizes bulk and weight to the utmost prac tical extent. In these respects the three accepted machines are alike. In details of their construction, however, they dif fer widely from each other. But it is not possible to describe them save in such general terms, because every thing that relates to them is being kept carefully secret. Models of them have not been submitted to the War Department, but such plans as have been offered are regarded as strictly confidential under the terms of the contracts made by the government with the inventors. The first of the three contrivances, for which contracts have been signed, is the invention of the Wright Bros":, of Dayton, Ohio. Their bid was $25, 000, for the construction of an aero plane machine which should be sat isfactory to the War Department ex perts. The i second accepted bid was that of A. M. Herring,' of No. 1931 Broadway, New York, the price to be $20,000. SOLDIERS WILL FLY. Three flying machines have been accepted by the War Department,' and trials of them will be made some time in June or July, at Fort Myer, Virginia, across the Potomac from he city of Washington, so writes f House-Cleaning Time . s Mattings In all UllllSllw'S fIIffil thing new. Go-Carts Baby We have an excellent line in Baby Go-Cartsthe celebrated Allwin it is one cf the easiest riders in carriages. Prices $2.50 Up Specials in Iron Beds We have the largest assortment of IRON BEDS in the City and your wants can be easily satisfied in this line. ' Prices are always the lowest. You will save moneylby buying your furniture at Iff 1W III H 630-634 Commercial Strbet i Decorate Your House with Decorato Renew Your Old Furniture with i Lacqueret For Constipation. Mr. L. H. Farnham, a prominent druggist of Spirit Lake, Iowa, says: "Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets are certainly the best thing on the market for constipation." Give these tablets a trial. You are certain to find them agreeable and pleasant in effect. Price 25 cents. Samples free. For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists. TEA There's plenty of hv. bug in tea; not opc ounc in a ton Schilling's Best. Toor grot pi r!ur! youf inoae it jfoit dn lk Ui pay lititt v ! ; i : Foard & Stokes Hd w.! Co. carries a com- ; ; plete line of Oils, Paints, Varnishes and j; I anything the trade wants. I The Foard & Stokes Hardware Go incorporated Successors to Fo-.rd & Stokes Co. .. .New .Music New J music arriving daily. Come in and try (hem over on piano. Few better ones in Astoria. Morn ing is the best time. Price ALWAYS 1-2 marked or printed price. - L FINE! BOX PAPERS Just received 500 boxes of latest effects from 19c to 75c per box. Better paper than has ever been shown here before. Whitman's Book Store MRS. PAULINE MI LLER-CHAPM AN, Mezzo-soprano Dramatic, Who Will Appear in Recital at the Astoria Theatre Wednesday Evening, April 22 1 THE G E M ' C. F. WISE, Prop. Choice Wines, Liquors Merchants Lunch Frtm ') , and Cigars 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 f. m. Hot Lunch at All Hours. 9 Cents ' Corner Eleventh and Commercial. IST0RIA - . . ... . OXIGO THE TREWTOW, Flrct-f Ines I iitnnfc anil ficfarc t 602 Commercial Street Corner Commercial and 14th. ASTORIA, OREGON , X Behnke Walker . THE LEADING BUSINESS COLLEGE v , F.LKS BUILDING, PORTLAND, OREGON . OUR FACULTY IS STRONGER THAN EVER We have just, secured the services o two high-salaried, . practical men, as well as leading business educators, ffom , the , East. We leave no Btone unturned. We are now giving ygu the best that money can procure. . , . . .'' H. W. Behnke, Pres. SEND FOR C ATALOGUE I.M.Walker, Pritv