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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1908)
Parker House Restaurant Opened under new man agement. Lady cook. Noth ing but whitelielp employed. Popular Prices, ill Dr. Reed's Cush ion Sole Shoes are ,1 Death on Corns Easiest thing you ever put on your J m i j i m !, ooia or S. A. GIMRE Agents (or the 'Douglas Shoe 543 Bond St., op. Ron, Higgini & Co. HOT OR COLD Golden West ... - w Tea Just Right CLOSSET & DEVERS, PORTLAND, ORE. TRANSPORTATION. The "K" "ne PASSENGERS FREIOHT m i nti Steamer - Lurline Night Boat for Portland and Way Landings. km Leaves Astoria daily except Sunday at 7 p. m. Leaves Portland DaQy except Sanday at 7 a. m. Quirk Service Excellent Meals Good Berths Landing Astoria Flavel Wharf. Landing Portland Foot Taylor St J. J. DAY, Agent Phone Main 2761. MILITIA FINE SHOTS National' Guard Armed With Springfields BETTER OFF THAN THE NAYY National Guard, Like the Army, is Equipped With Modern Springfields But Navy and Marine Corps Are Fitted Out With Krag-Jorgenson's WASHINGTON, P. C. June 19. It in an interesting fact that the Na tional Guard of the various states and territories arc equipped with better rifles than the U. S. Navy and Marine Corps. The former, like the army, ha been armed with Model 1903, popularly known as the New Spring field, while the navy continues to use the Krag. Thin is not. however, the fault of the naval authorities, who would be only too pleased to change to the new rifle but alas, there is no money available. It would cost about $1,000,000 to equip the navy and marine corpse with New Springfields and a Congress did not appropriate the money and no other fund is avail able these branches of the service will continue using the Krags. The teams from the navy, marine corps and naval academy which will shoot in the national, matches at Camp Perry, however, will use the, new rifles the department having purchas ed a hundred of them from the war department, to be used in the trials now in progress and in the matches. There is a warm but generous rivalry between the army and the navy over these matches and extensive prepara tions arc being made by both services to win the National Trophy. The army brought from the Philippines a dozen of the best experts stationed there to compete for places on the in fantry and cavalry teams, while the navy has detached from the fleet now in Pacific waters the following: En signs Dortch, Doherty, Wilcox and White, and Midshipmen Osborn, Lewis, Woodward and Amsdcn. They will proceed to Annapolis where the contests for places on the naval and naval academy teams will be held. Karly next month both teams will go to Comp Perry, Ohio, where they will practice constantly until the matches. The army teams will be trained at Fort Sheridan and Fort Ethan Allen, and then proceed to Camp Terry. Last year the navy team won the trophy and a midship man won the national individual rifle and the national pistol matches. The army proposes to carry off the honor if possible, while the navy intends to hold them. It is not likely the naval militia will be equipped with the new army rifles for some time to come. Oc cupying a somewhat anamalous posi tion they cannot be equipped from the reeular fund available to the land forces and the total appropriation for the naval militia is only $100,000 which must be divided among nine teen organizations according to their strength. Should the' commanders desire it, however, it is understood a portion of the quota for their com mands may be used for this purpose, The state of Ohio is making elab orate preparations to entertain the crack military shots of the United States at the National Matches in August the more so as it will pro bably be some years before the matches are again held on that range There will be almost a thousand team members and substitutes in at tendance on the National Team Match , alone, representing almost every state and territory, and all branches of the regular services to gether with a team from the army in Cuba, There will probably be eight hundred entries in the National In dividual kiflc Match and half as many or more more in the National Pistol Match, In addition. there will be hundreds of marksmen who are ineligible for these matches but who will contest in the matches of the National Rifle Association and the Ohio State Rifle Association and the during the preceding two weeks. Ap proximately one hundred army offi ccrs will be detailed to supervise the National Matches, together with a regiment of regulars to act as mark er, mid scorers. The state has pur chased 66 acres of additional ground in the west of the range wlnclt win admit of firing at all ranges from a . . MM. - . inno common nnng point, me new uw- yard butt will be 800 feet long, of re iiiforei'il concrete and equipped with telephone connections, buszers, etc. Jiint north of the rail road terminals a new mess hall is being constructed. It will be 76 by 172 feet, two stories in height with an extension for the kitchen. The upper story will pro vide a large drill hall without pillars. This building will also be of re-in-forced concrete. On the lower floor WOO men can be messed at one time. For the national matches Congress tnaib a miecial aonronriation of $12,- 000 to provide for the messing of the competitors, which mess wilt te con ducted by any army. Another import ant improvement is the construction of a stand pipe with a capacity of 75, 000 gallon of water, all water used at the camp being carefully filtered. An intercepting storm-water sewer is be ing constructed to drain the camp. It will empty into a large basin and the water will be pumped into tiiC lake, which insures a perfectly dry camp. All roads arc being macademized and parked and cinder foot-paths are be ing constructed to all parts of the range. These improvements will cost the state about $35,000 in addition to the cost of the additional, ground. In July the 2nd Infantry will be at Camp Perry for qualification of its men and it will probably be designated to re main during the matches in August. Considerable saving in ammunition to the states will be effected by a re cent decision of Assistant Secretary of War Oliver who has held that where an officer or enlisted, nian of the National Guard qualifies as an ex pert rifleman or as a sharpshooter, he enters the next seasons practice with the qualification of the grade next be low, so that under Special Course C the expert of last year will have to qualify only in this case, and the sharpshooters only as sharpshooters and then experts, instead of having' to qualify in all three classes as marks men, sharpshooters and expert. THE ROAD OF A THOUSAND WONDERS Shasta Route and Coast Line of the Southern Pacific Company iThrough Oregon and California Over 1300 miles of scenic beauty and interest attractive and instru ; tive. This great railroad passes through a country unsurpassed for its scenic attractions, and introduces the traveler to the vast arena soon to become the scene of the world's greatest industrial activities. There ii 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 at AII Ticket Office L9BB.OO v Portland toLos Angeles and JReturn Long limit on tickets and stop-over privileges. Corresponding rates iron other points. Inquire of G. W. Roberts, local agent, for full particulars and helpful publication? describing the country through which this' great highway extends, or address .;...WM..MeMurrasr ' SnC :' " General Passenger Agent, Portland. A MODEL HOME. A house of cement; a house with out a chimney; a house wUh plenty of artificial light and heat and yet without a bit of fire; a house without coal; without ashes; without danger ous gases; such is to be the house of tomorrow. So writes Frank N. Baus kett in the Technical World Maza zinc for July. This is indeed and ideal house, and it is not impossible to have, for, with little trouble one has just been com pleted at Carrollton, Ilinois. While this wonderful home is the only one of its kind in the world, it is a good example of what the average Ameri can home wil be in a few years from now. Wood is fast becoming too scarce and too high in price to be used as common building material, and the time is already here, when, for econ omy's sake, architects arid contract ors arc figuring to construct all build ings of steel and concrete. As the supply of coal diminishes the cost is advancing so that everything possible is being done to husband "the supply and to see that none of the precious stored heat is wasted. Electricity, generated by water power, is even now taking the place of coal as a source of power, and the time is not far distant when it will rank first as a source of heat. This model twentieth-century home at Carrollton, is thirty-four by thirty feet, two stories high, with attic and basement, and has eight rooms on the two main floors. While Edison's idea of a concrete house to be poured into one big mould was carried out in its conctruction. The foundation and walls are of concrete blocks. These blocks were moulded right on the ground as they were required, so there was no waste of material. The floors are of hardwood and interior is finished in plaster and oak. Such a house requires but little wood in its construction. The style of architect pre is of plain, substantial mission type, this idea being carried out throughout the interior. The house is fmntH with a larcre oorch. and the whole construction, or rather the entire cost, was less than $3,000. The house is described at length in the balance of an interesting, well illustrated article. MOM'S 01 FORDS We never sold women's Oxfords as fast as 'we are now selling' them. Perhaps our Ox fords are the best. We think they are. The styles of workmanship could not be better. Every woman likes them so much daintiness so much beauty about them. Oxforis in Patent Kid, Corona Kid and Colt Skin. The mew Golden, Brown, Tans also lace blucher or button. Handsome creations in Ribbon Ties with French or buckle Cuban heels. Oxfords should be fitted correctly we are experts at fittiiis. No gaping or slipping when we do the Oxford fitting. Wherity Ralston (Sl Co. I Astoria's Best Shoe Store 479 Commercial St. Aloria Oregon f of the Southwest pass of the Missis sippi river. So writes Howard W. Blakeslec in the Technical World Magazine for July. This channel, which is capable of giving passage to the largest steamers either afloat or projected, cuts through the bar which the Mississippi's, vast silt deposits are always heaping up at its mouth. It lies in a sort of middle ground be tween the sea and terra firma, in a region which is still receiving from the river the final touches of its con formation, and in which the work of construction was hampered by pecul iar difficulties. The engineers in charge of this work constructed at the shallow mouth of the pass two nearly parrellel walls, lying over half a mile apart, and each between three and four miles long, which served practically as backbones to guide the mud depositing of the river. These walls, known as jetties, by confining water irave tt a ramuity of now which, aided by dredging, is scouring out a channel, to have a minimum depth of thirty-five feet and a central depth considerably greater. The min imum depth will obtain for a width of somewhat less than 1,000 feet. With introduction, the writer describes in interesting fashion the engineering- .ntriiri'sp which is to make tne mouth of the Mississippi navigable The article is well illustrated. : DEEPENING A RIVER. The barrier which for a century partially has abstructed the entry of deep seat traffic into North America's greatest river waterway will be re moved this summer by the comple tion of a jetty channel at the mouth TELEGRAPH MACHINE "A revolution in the sending and receiving of telegraph messages is gradually taking place throughout the United States owing to the telegraph printing machines which are being in stalled in the metropolitan offices of the telegraph companies," says the July Popular Mechanics. "In sending, the messages are 'punched' or spelled out in the Morse character on an endless tape. The tape is then fed into a sending ma chine where a wheel moves it along and in the right direction. The holes i the tane allow contacts to be made which control the receiving mechan ism. "The receiving machine' is some what like an electrically controlled typewriter. Electrical contacts made through the holes in the tape cause the proper type bars to be struck. So fast is this automatic working that the girl operators can receive , and send from 200 .to 400 messages in 9 hours with one machine. The ma chines work duplex, two messages be ing sent at the same time." The ar ticle is illustrated. Fisher Brothers Company SOLE AGENTS Barbour and Finlayson Salmon Twins and Netting McCormick Harvesting Machines Oliver Chilled Ploughs Malthoid Roofing ' Sharpies Cream Separators Raecolith Flooring StoiTett's Tools Hardware, Groceries, Ship Chandlery Tan vBark, Blue Stone, Muriatic Acid, Welch Coal, Tar, Ash Oars, Oak Lumber, Pipe and Fittings, Brass Goods, Paints, Oils and Glass Fishermen's Pure Manilla Rope, Cotton Twine an4 Seine Web We Want Your Trade FISHER BROS. BOND STREET June Official Tide Tables Compiled by the U. S. Government for Astoria and Vicinity. JUNE. 1908. JUNE, 1908. High Water. Data. Monday 1 Tuesday 2 Wednesday Thursday . Friday . . . Saturday SUNDAY Monday ., Tuesday 9 10 11 12 13 ..14 ..15 Wednesday Thursday . Friday Saturday SUNDAY Monday .. Tuesday 16 Wednesday 17 Thursday .......13 "rlday 19 Saturday 20 SUNDAY 21 Monday 22 Tuesday 23 Wednesday 24 Thursday .......25 "rklay ...........26 Friday ..........26 Saturday ..27 SUNDAY 28 Monday ......... 29 Tuesday ........30 A. M. h.m.1 ft. 1:40 2.15 2:50, S:80 4:15 6:08 6:16 7:52, 8:62 9:50 10:48 11:42 0:00 0:42 1:30 2:16 8:10 4:08 5:15 6:30 7:50 9:05 10:15 11:15 0:06 0:44 1:20 8.5 8.1 7.7 7.4 6.8 6.3 6.0 6.0 6.2 6.5 6.8 7.1 9.3 9.3 9.1 8.9 8.4 7.8 7.2 6.8 6.8 6.8 8.7 8.6 8.3 P. M. h.m. I tt 3:08 3:50 4:30 5:04 5:46 6:35 7:22 8:08 8:55 9:48 10:32 11:18 13:32 1:24 2:12 3:04 8:50 4:42 6:34 6:28 7:24 8:16 9:09 9:58 10:45 12:06 11:28 12:65 1:35 2:15 2:50 7.2 7.0 7.0 7.1 7.3 7.3 7.5 7.7 8.1 8.4 8.8 9.0 7.3 7.5 7.9 7.9 8.0 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.4 8.4 8.5 8.7 8.8 7.2 8.9 7.3 7.8 7.3 7.8 Low Water. Date. Monday ., Tuesday 2 Wednesday 3 Thursday 4 Friday 5 Saturday 6 SUNDAY 7 Monday 8 Tuesday ........ 9 Wednesday- 101 Thursday 11 Friday 12 Saturday 13 SUNDAY 14 Monday 151 Tuesday 16 Wednesday 171 xnursaay 18 Friday 19 Saturday 20 SUNDAY 21 Monday ..,,22 Tuesday 23 Wednesday 24 Thursday .......25 Friday ..........26 Saturday ...... .27 SUNDAY ......28 Monday 29 Tuesday .. .10 AM. p. M. h.m. ft h.m. ft 0 0 0 0 1 1 3 2, 2 1 0 0 -0 -1, 1. 1. 1. 0. 0. 0. 2. 1. 1. 0 0 ft -0. 0. 0 8:401 9:24 10:06 11:00! 11:56! 12:34 1:32 2:28 3:2 4:20 6:12 6:00, 6:54 7:45 8:40 9:36 10:40 11:481 12:52 1:54 2:58 4:00 4:50 5:42 6:30: 7:10 7:60 1:2