WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1908. 12 lThis Page Reserved for A Trade Stimasf it T iUtlQ j Gigantic Slaughter Sale THE MORNING ASTOIUAN, ASTORIA. OREGON. I KAN PI Sale Begining ' ' , . ' ' .''V'". ATURDAl June J Ladies, Don't Do Read Our AD in i Friday's Astorian mm i PIONEER TALK FROM CLATSOP WARRENTON'S CHEERFUL ANb PHILOSOPHIC VETER AN, DR. B. OWENS ADAIR, HAS A WORD WITH HER OLD FRIENDS AT THE PIONEER RE-UNION. The following is the text of the spirited address made by Dr. B. Owens Adair of this county, before the Oregon Pioneer Association, and h is sure to be read with very definite interest by her home-friends and colleagues: "I have the honor of making my best bow to one of Oregon's native and most wortny sons, Colonel Mil ler, your president, and to you, my pioneer friends. I greet you with a Beart full of appreciation, knowing well your true value and worth. Who, better than myself can understand and appreciate your toils, your straggles an your successes in makr ing this one of the greatest States in cur Union. x "I have been asked to give you a rambling talk of a few minutes' dura tion. I will choose for my text 'Sixty years ago.' What has come to us since 60 years ago? Looking back-j ward from this hour it seems but yesterday. But looking forward from then tiTl now, it has been a full age. The road has been long, rugged, and j circuitous. The changes ' from then until now can never be fully under stood or appreciated by the youth of this age. Sixty years ago when we came here, we found a wilderness in all its virgin beauty and wildness, with only the red man, with his toma hawk, his bow and arrow, and the wild beasts that roamed the forests at their own sweet will, to give us welcome. Then we looked forward to a yearly mail that must come around the 'Horn' in the old wooden j bottoms, or across the plains with J the emigrant train. But were wej unhappy then? Not a bit of it. We, found plenty of work for our hands ( to do. The devil had no need to find employment for us. There were no trusts in those days; no grafts or grafters; no labor unions; we had neither locks or bolts; we had no use for penitentiaries nor insane asylums. The latch string was always found on the outside and a heart full of welcome within. But since 60 years We Are Headquarters Mason Fruit Jars Pint jars, doz Quart jars, doz One-half gallon jars, doz Jar caps, doz Very best jar rings, 3 doz. A. V. ALLEN Sole Agent for the Celebrated H. C. Fry Cut Glass. PHONE 711 PHONE 3871 UNIONTOWN BRANCH PHONE 713 27th a Thing until you ago all this has been changed. We will say for the better. Our yearly mail has been multiplied by more than 360 times. The old pack train of jaided horses and mules, and the old emigrant wagon propelled by the faithful oxen and sometimes by the precious cow that was called upon to do double duty; not only to fur nish milk for our children, but to work in the yoke as well. All these have been supplanted by the iron horse that comes speeding across the continent, snorting smoke and fire from its nostrils. He comes lad ened, not only with precious human beings, but with the wealth of our own and other nations as welL But far in advance comes the speedier telegraphic dispatches. From nation to nation, from continent to conti nent, the messages fly on wings of lightning. Oh, what a wonderful discovery; what a wonderful power is electricity. Only about 25 years ago the telephone was invented. In 1879 I went to New York and there, on a street corner was a telephone on exhibition. For 25 cents you could talk with the man at the other end of the line, 'away down town', four or five blocks away. The people were lined up like going to a circus, waiting their turn. I fell in line and abided my time. And never shall I forget the sensation that voice pro duced upon me. It was so strange, so unnatural; I could not understand one. word he said; and it seemed to me that I was listening to a voice from some unknown world. "And from this imperfect machine has come the graphophone, mega phone and other phones together with that wonder of all wonders, the wireless telegraph. Oh! stop! stop! and think of it for one moment. There in mid ocean is a great ship in dis tress; hundreds of lives are in peril; out goes that noiseless call for help. 'Help, help us help!' Back, back, flashes the message tof love, cheer; 'rescue is on the way. Oh, this is an age of inventions, discoferies and of wonders; one great event crowding upon another in such rapid succes sion that we cease to wonder. And all this, all this since 60 years ago; who can tell what 60 years hence may bring? I prophecy that in 60 years we will be holding communica tion with our neighbors the planets. "The only sad part about it, is that we pioneers cannot hope to live 60 years more. But while we do live, let us be happy and enjoy the fruits and flowers of our labors, ar.d while we are keeping up with t'e times, doubt not.. Oh don't let us forget the past. Let us live our lives over and over again in memory and in $ 75 .85 .-. - 1,10 .75 .25 thought, jotting down every incident of importance, for that is history. You have made the early history of this state. Don't let it die with you. Preserve it and hand it down to pos terity and you will receive the honor to which you are so justly done." Pertsvers. I have often heard people In mature life say, "If I bad only kept on as I had begun, if I had only persisted In carrying out my ambition, I might have amounted to something and been Infinitely happier." Multitudes of people have led mis erable lives of regret, with thwarted ambitions constantly torturing them, simply because In a moment of weak ness and discouragement they turned back. If there la any time a person needs nerve, grit and stamina It Is when tempted to turn back, when the coward voice within says: "Don't you see bow foolish It Is for you to try to do this thing? Tou have not the means or the strength. How foolish to sacrifice years of comfort and pleas ure at home among the people who love you for the sake of doing whnt you have undertaken! It Is better to turn back and acknowledge your mistake than to go on and sacrifice so much." Whatever you do or how heavy the burden, do not lay It down at such a time. No matter how dark the way or how heavy the heart, wait until the "blue" depression or the dis couragement lias passed before taking any decided step. Success Magazine. Customs of the Street. In crowded city streets, especially In Ixmdon and Tails, when a driver Is baited by another driver ahead of bim he throws up bis hand or his whip per pendicularly as a warning to the man jack of him. Thus warned, the next .Iriver checks liis team and then holds In unnd or his wblp as a warning to the man back of him. Thus there iLifrlit be seen going up one after an ther In a line stretching hack hands whips to the number of half n dozen more as the drivers were successive halted or slowed down by tho block In i':-.o:i. So of drivers of horse rnwn vehicles. whose drivers common- Hit high whore their hands or whips ! w:;u above their bonds. This lgnuliiis is done somewhat differently y the drivers of automobiles, who sit ow. ho in such circumstances what n? u;::onioll!e driver docs to signal V.o man hack of him that he Is held P Is to stretch his arm out outside of !s vehicle horizontally to the right.- I nsbington Post. ' Subcribe for the Morning Astorian, You must compare the prices with the good to appreciate the coloi sal savings to be made at this sale. No one who is anxious to make his money reach its extreme pur chasing power will miss this opportunity. If it's only out of curiosity, come and see what magnificent chances to save money we are offering. Hear in mind that this sale is limited we can not continue it a day longer than July 4th. The price has absolutely no relative proportion to the valuein mak ing our reductions we have been guided only by our desire to make space for new goods. , ' ' It is utterly impossible for you t6 appreciate what marvelous bar gains these are, until you see the goods and the prices together. If you've been waiting for the most favorable time to buy, you better buy now-no lower prices can possibly be made this season. Think for a moment what these marvelous price reductions mean to you, and you will lose no time in taking advantage of them. This is the economy event of the year, when thousands will re spond to our remarkable offerings. There is a double satisfaction for us in our semi-annual sales we dispose of our surplus stock, making room for new good, and we give to our friends the opportunity to save a large amount oif money. The buying has been persistent our store has been thronged with customers still thousands of attractive bargains are here awaiting you. A mammoth sale of over $10,000 worth of the finest of high-grade clothing furnishings of exceptional quality. Hats of the newest styles; none of which have been In our store before the present season. The word bargain never before obtained the significance which it has at this 'sale, At this great sale, wee want our friends those who are regular customers at our store to take advantage of this great money saving chance which the end of the season offers. The Worlting'men's Store Chas. Larson, Prop. 518 BOND ST. Cores Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic Constipation. Pleasant to ta&a T. F, "If ths Eys Is IVWsd" Necessity gives to the eye a precious power of seeing, and in the same way It gives a precious power of feeling to the whole body. Sometimes it seems as If the very substance of my flesd were so many eyes looking out at will upon a world new created every day. The silence and darkness which are said to shut me In open my door most hospitably to countless sensations that distract, inform, admonish and amuse. With my three trusty guides touch, smell and taste I make many excur sions Into the borderland of experi ence which Is In sight of the city of light. Nature accommodates Itself to every man's necessity. If tin eye is maimed so that It does not see tho beauteous face of day, the touch lie comes more poignant nud discriminat ing. Nature proceeds through practice to strengthen and angment the remain Ing senses. For this reason the blind often hear with greater case a.d dis tinctness than other people. The sense of smtfl becomes almost a new faculty, to penetrate the tangle and vagueness of things. Thus, according to an Im mutable law, the senses assist and re enforce one another. Helen Keller's "Sense and Sensibility" In Century Magazine. , Knew the Animal, Bacon Were you ever In a runaway accident? Egbert Well, my horse ran awa with me once, but I think It was more by design than accident on the part ot that horse. Yonkers Statesman. Morning Astorian, 60 cents per month, delivered by carrier. Full As Associated Press reports and local. THE DOG SOUL. Everybody knows that a faithful dog cither has or ought to have a soul and be immortal, but it has been reserved for an English, physician, whiting in the Annals of Psyscical Science, which together with the Proceedings of the American Society for Psychical Research, embodies in an authoritative form the results of psychical research,, to describe speci fically the passing of the spirit of a Laxative Fruit Syrup LAUREN OWL DRUG STORE. THE ROAD OF A THOUSAND WONDERS Shasta Route and Coast Line of the iTh rough Oregon Over 1300 miles of . scenic beauty and interest attractive nd Instn tive. This great railroad passes thr ough a country unsurpassed for its scenic attractions, and introduces the traveler to the vast arena soon to becorrfe the scene of the world's greatest industrial activities. There is not an idle or uninteresting hour on the trip ,and the variety of conditions presented excites wonder and admiration. Special Low Rate Tickets now on Sale al AIITicktt Office ifBBsOp Portland toLos Angeles andjReturn Long limit on tickets and stop-over privileges. Corresponding rates front other points. Inquire of G. W. Roberts, local agent, for full particulars and helpful publications describing the country through which this great highway extendi, or address , WM. McMurray ' General Passenger Agent, Portland. favorite fox . terrier. J. Ambrose Thompson, M, D., writes of his little dog: "A severe attack of pneumonia de veloped on Sunday; on Monday she was coughing up bloody phlegm; gradually became worse; too late even for minute doses of heroin to benefit, and apparently dying. She had , been kept away from her five pupics some hours, and was extreme ly anxious to get to them. When too weak and restless she was laid in front of the stove, her head resting on writer's hand, bloody froth oozing from mouth; the pupies whining for their dying mother; and her anxious look, towards them was clearly notic ed; but dissolution was near, and she Cleanses the system thoroughly and clears sallow complexions ci pimples and blotches. It la guaranteed and California could not raise herself. Suddenly her head relaxed and something passed from the body. At that moment Mrs. ' Thompson, who was kneeling, dis tinctly felt something passing her, and the dog "Teddy" who lay with ' his head resting on Mrs, Thompson's feet and dress, behind the little mourn ful scene, suddenly jumped up and gave a bark, and looked anxiously and fearfully towards the box where the pups were. At that moment the , pupies were appeased. The writer cannot sufficiently recall if it was At that moment he felt : 'ElizabcthV heart-beats cease, but her eyes were twitched, and strong convulsive , grasping lasted some time; then all was still."