THE MORNING ASTOMAN, 4ST0RI A, OREGON. SUNDAY, MAY 24, 1908. BOWSER'S ANNUAL' Old Philosopher Goes Forth to Hunt the Festive Rabbit. PHONES WIFEY OF PROGRESS Tittt Hep He's Pull of Enthusiasm and His Trip Is Bound to Bt a Success; ut, at Usual, th (JntxptcUd Hap yens. Copyright. 1908, by T. C. McClur. From the time lie came home to din ner until bedtime arrived Mrs. Bowser was putEled over Mr. Bowser's atti tude, lie was good natured. He chuc kled at Intervals. She looked up to find aim grinning. Now and then when be ttought he wasn't observed he would Bit up his arms like one sighting a can. She puzzled and bothered over the matter all the evening, but asked s questions, nor did she learn of the Bttle scheme he had on hand until Kit morning. Then at the breakfast table he smilingly asked: "Mrs. Bowser, have you any idea natday this Isr fs no day in particular as far as I emembe,', she replied. "It's a great day, Mrs. Bowser, n great day. In fact, it may be said to be mat of the great days in American his- "I AM OUT HKBS IS THE COUNTRY." stay. Didn't you observe anything pe Bar about my attitude last night?" "Tea, I did. You acted like a boy that had found a cent on the street" "And I felt like one. I was full of anticipation. I was jubilant I was wnthusiastlc. Today, Mrs. Bowser, is the anniversary of my annual rabbit Aunt Today I hie me forth to the an imal slaughter, and at the same time I teep my eyes open for the first spring robin." Ton mean you are going out into the eountry to plow your way through snowdrifts three feet deep all day and ttxue home without having even seen a UueJay?'K "1 mean, my dear woman, that I am going out into the country to shoot a nimdred or more rabbits and have neaps of sport. There is some snow, tot that belongs with sport, and don't you worry about blue jays. The ques tion is. How many rabbits can we Jake use of in the home larder? I want to see the butcher this morning as I go out and arrange with him for nrfiat's left over." "You are determined to go?" she tvked. "Nothing can stop me." "Then you can send home about .twenty-five rabbits by the farmer's tram you hire, and the other hundred m so can be left at the butcher's. If nre get tired of eating our share I can X?Te the rest away to the poor. Please hoot them through the head as far as joo can, so as not to muss up the ieat You'll find telephones at almost very farmhouse. I wish you'd keep cue posted as you go along." . "By George, but that's the way to talk!" exclaimed Mr. Bowser as he arought his fist down on the table. "I utaought you were going to be mean mid sarcastic about It Xow I can go ifortb with a jubilant heart and knock ver 100, 200, 500 of the plumpest, fat tiest rabbits in the land. Yes, I'll tele phone you every hour. It will be almost aw if you were with me. Say, now, but .we'll make this the greatest annual ftrant I ever had, and rabbit fur will ibe flying up and down this street like (thistledown in a gale of wind." Wifey Encourages Him. ; Mrs. Bowser had started out to be sarcastic, but had ended in encourag ing him. The wife v?ho sees that her Jmsband is bound and determined should fall in line with his ideas, naif sn hour after breakfast Mr. Bowser stood before her arrayed in his shoot 4bg suit, and he was in such good spirits that she was almost glad to see Sim go. He departed to take a subur ban car and be landed among the snowdrifts five miles away, and he lad been gone hardly more than an Soar when he called her up by tele phone to say: "I am out here in the country. Have 3ust met a farmer who says that there ire niore'n a million rabbits a mile (farther on. He says he never saw such plump, fat rabbits; says they Just wait for you to shoot 'em. I ar ranged with the butcher to take seventy-five, but you can send word over that I'll make it 200. It's glorious out ilere. Goodby."- Mr. Bowser had indeed met a farm er on the highway, and the farmer bad told him as above. He was a gun! hearted farmer and also a good He hadn't seen a rabbit all i . . . .j -. nut ne leit ue ougnt to encourage man that had come six miles on an annual hunt. An hour after the first telephone 'message came the second ar rived. Mr. Bowser said: "The million rabbits had all gone by the time I got to the spot; but, oh, you ought to see the tracks left behind aucn large tracks, such generous tracks, so many tracks! I am at n farmhouse where the farmer says that ho has made a hundred dollars a week this season shooting rabbits. Ho isn't ft bit jealous of me. He says for me to go ahead and shoot a thousand If 1 want to. It's only out In the country that you find such large hearted men. Tell the butcher to make arrangements to take at least 300. I am well and happy and ntn now bound for a spot where the rabbits for ten miles around congregate to be shot The farmer will hire me his team after the slaughter." The reason Mr. Bowser wasn't heart! of again for the next two hours was because he was looking for the spot of "congregation. In looking for this he had to plow through a piece of woods, skirt a marsh and cross three open fields where the snow lay two feet deep. Once In making this Journey he tnougnt be beard a blue Jay cry out. aud again he thought he caught the noise of a woodpecker on a dead tree, but he wasn t quite sure In either case, He reached the spot at last to find the rabbits gone. The convention had met and adjourned. He then walked to a farmhouse and telephoned: - "I was just too late again, but I have lost none of my enthusiasm. Annual rabbit hunt is bound to be a success The rabbit is a shy, coy cuss, but so Is Bowser. Have Just had a bite to eat at a farmhouse. The farmer's wife says that she counted more than 2.0(H), wu in one drove the other day. She says that the great thing In rabbit hunting Is perseverance. I am now about to beat up a piece of woodland where a hunter from the city loaded four wagons in an hour the other day. I expect to load at least two. Tell the butcher to make the number 500." Hears a Strang Voic. naif an hour later there was another ring, but it was not from Mr. Bowser. It was a strange voice that said "Hello! Am I speaking to Mrs. Bow ser?" "Yes." "Wife of Samuel Bowser?" "Yes." . "Short, baldheaded man?" "Yes." "la he out on his annual rabbit hunt today?" "Yes. Is anything wrong?" "Thats what I wanted to ask you. There Is a man wandering around here who says his name Is Samuel Bowser. He Is talking about blue Jays, wood peckers and rabbits, and we thought ne was loose In the top of his head It s all right, however, if you say so." "Has lie shot any rabbits yetr asKed Mrs. Bowser. Lord bless you, ma'am, he don't know a rabbit from a red calf!" ine next message was from Mr. Bowser himself. His voice had lost something of its jubilation, but he was still game. "Xo rabbits yet." he phoned, "but I am on the trail and expecting to come across them any moment: also to see a robin. Have Just Ijeen talking with a farmer who says that the rabbits must have heard that 1 am out here, but he tells me not to give up. 1 shall stick to the trail. The rabbit is coy and cute, but Samuel Bowser is coyer and cuter. When I once get to work, the slaughter will go on for hours. 1 may not be home for two days. Tell the butcher well you needn't tell him anvthlns this time. He said be would be pre pared to take any number up to a thou sand." There was one more message. It was noi irom Mr. uowser, but from a farmer's wife, and she said: "If this is Mrs. Bowser, let me say mat my nusoanu and two sons are now chasing your husband across the fields. He shot our cat and fired at an old gander, and if overhauled they will tie blm up and take him to the nearest Insane asylum. If you knew he was loony, why did you let blm come?" M. QUAD. ri CONFIDENCE GAME, ..I,. It Was Boldly Planned and Suc cessfully Worked. THE VICTIM BADLY CAUGHT. A Daring and Braian Smallpox Swin dle by Which Two Cltvtr Sohsmsr Flesced a Hslplsss Hottl Ktpsr Out of $5,000. A Woman's Way. When a man goes out to buy a col lar he comes back with a collar and pernaps a necktie or two. When a woman starts out to buy a collar she returns exhausted with a new silk waist, a pair of gloves, some skirt binding, a cake of soap, a paper of pins, some window curtains, a sewing machine and a refrigerator. Mark Twain in Tom Wood's Magazine. A Wonder. Bill Is he clever with his pen? Jill-Very. Why, he can hold his fountain pen behind his ear without getting ink all over bis cheek! Yon kers Statesman. For a burn or scald apply Chamber lain's Salve. It will allay the pain almost instantly and quickly heal the injured parts. For sale by Frank Hart and Leading "Druggists. For Rubber Stamps and Typewriter Supplies see Lenora Benoit, public stenographer, 447 Commercial street WHEN ON SUNDAY MORN YOU "WAKE UP" AND YOU HAVE NO DRESSY MAKE-UP, YOU SHOULD, ON MONDAY, EARLY RISE AND TEND THE " SALE " OF HERMAN WISE. "I dare say you never hoard of the great smallpox swindle," said the hotel manager. "The facts of that remark able affair were withheld at the time for the most urgent reasons of policy, aud even now I prefer to toll tho story without uaines or localities. It hap pened In tho full of 1880, when a cer tain hotel lu a large western city was crowded with tourists. One day at the height of the season two gentle manly looking straugers put up at the house aud were assigned to what we call a 'double room.' About a week later cue of them appeared at the of fice and requested a private Interview with the manager. '1 regret to Inform you.' he said after the door was closed 'that my friend is down with a so vere attack of smallpox.' "The proprietor uenrly fell out of his chair. There was. known to be smallpox In the city, and the bare sug gestiou that the dlseaso had appeared in the hotel was enough to empty It In a twlukllug. To let the news get out meant the loss of thousands upon thousands of dollars. It meant the . I . , , ... ruiu oi i no season s uusiness. 'lie must be quietly removed at once," snKl the proprk'Uir, trying to control his agitation. 'Removed!' exclaimed the other. Taken through the cold air to a laza retto! Why, man. that would be mur der! I'll not permit It! "The hotel keeper was thunder struck. 'Do you mean to say he must stay here?' he gasped. " 'Certainly,' said the stranger. "It was a ticklish situation. The ho tel keeper dare not enforce his sugges tion, while to let the case remain was like storing gunpowder In a furnace room. He pleaded, protested, Decreed. threatened and blustered, but all in rain. The man was firm as a rock. 'If you attempt to eject my sic: friend,' he declared, 'I'll publish your Inhuman ity to the entire community.' Finally it occurred to the distracted proprietor to see first whether it was really a case of smallpox, so be sent for a physician, swore him to secrecy and bustled him up to the room. The doctor took one look at the disfigured face on the pillow and reported that the malady was there In a malignant type. He advised the man's immediate removal at any cost 'If you keep him concealed,' he said, 'the disease may spread, and It would ruin you for life, You owe something to your guests Again the proprietor interviewed the friend, and again the latter refused to budge from his position. Where can I take him?" be de mnnded. 'You know very well I can't get comfortable quarters for such purpose, and I won t have him butch ered in a pesthouse to please any land lord on earth!' The hotel man felt his hair stand on end, but concluded to let things stand as they were until morn lng. "Next day he sent for the sick man's friend and asked him whether be had any suggestions to make. " 'Yes, he replied. 'I thought up a plan overnight, which you may adopt or not, as you like. As I said before,' he continued, 'It is useless to try to rent quarters for such a case. We might, however, buy a small cottage and take him there. I have figured the thing up. and the total expense would be about $5,000. If you are willing to hand over that amount I will take him away and assume all further responsibility. I make the of fer entirely out of sympathy for your guests.' "The landlord looked him in the eye I, too, have thought the situation over,' he said, 'and I'm convinced It's a confidence game pure and simple. I'm convinced there's nothing the mat ter with your dear friend upstairs, but I am also convinced that the slightest breath of the affair would greatly damage the reputation of the house. As a business proposition I consider it worth $.",000 to get rid of you.' "The other man smiled ironically. 'Call a cab and get out your money,' he said, and Inside an hour the incu bus had been spirited through a side door swathed in blankets and driven away. !'As the landlord shrewdly surmised. the whole thing was a confidence game, and he learned the particulars later on through n sport he had once befriended. There was nothing the matter with the rascal upstairs except that his face had been pricked a little with a quill dipped la croton oil, some thing that makes a horrible looking pustule, which disappears in a few days and leaves no mark. I always thought the hotel man showed good sense in taking the course he did. He was caught In a trap and took the cheapest way out The bare rumor of even a suspected case would probably have involved a loss of $50,000 or $00, 000. It was far better to pay the $5, 000 and charge It to education." New Orleans Times-Democrat CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS HELP WANTED AGENTS-$105 PER MONTH IN troducing our line of embroidered shirt waists and luce curtains at bar gain prices; samples free. Thomas Co., Desk 468, Dayton, O. WANTED BOY TO LEARN THE printing trade. Call Astorian office. PROFESSIONAL CARD). ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW CHARLES H. ABERCROMBIE Attorney-atUw City Attorney Offices : City Hall UNDERTAKE. .T A. llf I1A t'lll an v i.,.f,, v v a j VS.. iriMtartiiker mid KiiilMUmera. KxicrlMioMl I-iuly AMlxtuut U licit lHoMlrcd. WANTED A CAPABLE COOK, clean and reliable. Inquire of Mrs. Samuel Elmore, at Grand avenue and Fourteenth. 5-19-tf. MISCELLANEOUS. WANTKD-BETWKF.N JUNE 1ST and 15th, a furnished house for the summer; good, careful .tenant. Ad dress II. G. Smith, care Warren Packing Co., city. Cinenions and Roller Canaries, price $2.00 each. Phone Black 2434. Ad dress 1765 Duanc street. 5-20-6t. JOHN C. McCUE Attorney-at-Law Deputy District Attorney. Page Building. Suite 4, HOWARD M. BROWNELL Attorney-t-Law Office with Mr. J. A. Eakin, V. 420 Commercal St., Astoria. $2.Q0 STARTS A FINE LOCAL business, daily profits $5 to $10; par ticulars free; write today. B. F. Loos VV, .HVMIVil a. MASSAGE. DOCTORS PRESCRIBING MAS- sage, call Olga Landen, Finnish masseuse, Pythian bldg, Commercial street Cull Promptly Attended Day or Night. Ttittoii lldtr. 12tliiMid'I)iiiMie8t4 ANTOKIA. OKE.UON Phone Alain '21 11 FOR SALE. FOR SALE CHEAP, 2 BOATS and nets. Apply Astor House, 22 3 OSTEOPATHS. DR. RHODA C. HICKS Osteopath Office ManscM Bldg. Phone Black 2065 573 Commercial St.. Astoria, Ore. TRANSPORTATION. The"KMLlne PASSENGERS FREIGHT - i r in , gwni iisif "IiiisMiii altlli iji ilsnT ttM" " FOR SALE, OR USE-The black stallion Prime Albert, now quar tered at the barns of the Sherman Transfer Co., is for sale, or for use. Apply to John L. Johnson, owner, at the barn. 5-6-3w. DENTISTS DR. VAUGHAN Dentist Pythian Building, Astoria, Oregon FOR SALE-REAL ESTATE. DR. W C. LOGAN Dentist Commercial St. Shanahan Bldg. FOR SALE LOCKSLEY HALL Hotel, Seaside, Or.; this beautiful spot under the pines and overlooking the ocean is for sale; best money' making property in the West; over 100 rooms; modern in every way, For particulars apply to Mrs. L A. Carlisle on premises. FOR SALE -SMALL ROOMING house; partly furnished; must be sold at once, parties leaving town. Enquire 154 9th street. ' 4-I0-tf. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. FOR REM. Subscribe for The Morning Astorian FOR RENT- ROOMS SUIT- able for housekeeping for small family. Apply Van Dusen, 119 1 1th street. 5-9-tf. FOR RENT THREE UNFUR nishcl housekeeping rooms; elec tric lights and water. Apply 10th and Bond, Opp. Occident Hotel. 5 24 6t RESTAURANTS. TOKIO RESTAURANT. 351 Bond Street Opposite Ross, Htggint & Co. Coffee with Pie or Cake 10 Cts. FIRST-CLASS MEALS Regular Meals IS Cts. and Up. Coffee with Pie or Cake, 10 Cts, First-Class Meals, IS Cts. Steamer - Lurlinc Night Boat for Portland and Way Landings. Leaves Astoria daily except Sunday at 7 p, m. Leaves Portland Daily except Sanaa? at 7 a. m. Quirk Service Excellent Msals Good Berths Landing Astoria Flave! Whart Landing Portland Foot Taylor It J. J. DAY, Agent Phone Main 2761. V MEDICAL. ! . 12th St.,' Below Commercial L If. -3Wi UnpreotuaaUd SuiXMStft' f DR. C- SEE VOl TBI GKIAT CBIHISI DOCTOl SWno b kaowi tthroniiliout the United Btau on aocouat of kls wonderful tm, No poisons or drugs usw.. Be nuu I tee, to euro oaurrb, asthma, lung aad CORNER NINTH AND DUANE. Board $5.00 and up. 5-9-tf. Shnrt I Inlorc nnA n.icta .. il . l . . v.v.j buu vjraicia mi mrvmi trouDie, TQeumatism, nervousstsa. INVESTMENTS. THE BEST INVESTMENT IN Oregon today a piece of irrigated land will double your money rpiick. Near market; no residence required; easy terms. Address Astorian W. 5-24-6t All Hours. The Best the Market Affords Good Service Fresh Oyters always on hand from one pint n,. TONNIE THEAUDEAUS. FISH MARKET. HOUSE MOVERS. FREDRICKSON BROS.-We make a specialty of house moving; car penters, contractors, general jobbing; prompt attention to all orders. Cor ner Tenth and Duane streets. PROPOSALS. OFFICE OF THE CONSTRUCT- ing Quartermaster, Fort Stevens, Or., May 4, 1908. Sealed alternative proposals, in triplicate, will be re ceived at this office until 2 o'clock p. m., June 1, 1908, and then publicly opened, for the rebuilding of a 3-inch plank, or the construction of a maca damized 12-foot roadway, approxi mately 2850 lineal feet in length, at Fort Stevens, Or. Plans can be seen, specifications obtained and full in formation furnished at this office. The United States reserves the right to reject any or all bids or any part thereof. Envelopes containing pro posals -should be marked "Proposals for construction of roadway" and ad dressed to the Constructing Quarter master, Fort Stevens, Or. Seattle Fisb Market 77 Ninth St., near Bond Fresh and Salted Fish. Game and Poultrv. Groceries, Produce and Fruit Imported and Domestic ' Goods. P. Bakotitch & Feo, Proprs. Phone Red 2183 ' MISCELLANEOUS. HOT OR COLD olden West Tea Just Right i CLOSSET & DEVERS, PORTLAND, ORE. jstomsb. liver and kUnn. imU rom. S plaint and all ehronlo diMam. SUCCESSFUL HOME TSSATMEXT, If you cannot call write for symptom blank and circular, Inclosing 4 osaU (a tamps. THE & GEE W0 HXDICIHE CO. 1121 First St., Corner Morrisuo, , PORTLAND, OREGON. Please mention tb Astoriaa. LAUNDRIES. Those Pleated Bosom Shirts The kind known by dressy men in the summer, are difficult articles to launder nicely. Unless you know just ' how to do it, the front pleats won't iron down smooth, and the shirt front will look mussy. Our New Press Ironer irons them without rolling or stretching. Try It TROY LAUNDRY, Tenth and Duane. Phone Main 1091 PLUMBERS. . A. Hi PLUMBER Heating Contractor, Tinner -AND Sheet Iron Worker - . LL WORK GUARANTEED 425 Bond Street JUST A R R I VE D Goldfish 25c and 35c Each Hildebrand & Gor Old Bee Hive Bldg. WINES AND LIQUORS. Eagle Concert Hall (320 Astor Street) Rooms for rent by the day, week, or month. Best rates in town. P. A. PETERSON, Prop. DAIRIES. ThcVcrmont Dairy I am prepared to furnish pure milk and cream. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone 14 Farmers line. W. J. INGALLS.