E .Sf-W w-- W. k? JW.,UiM.flM-,.J JtffcttiM' WFMtlFSW r (f -j - 4 THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. SUNDAY, JUNE 28, 1908. 1 Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. BELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. .. ....$7.00 By mail, per year ' By carrier, per month w WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, in advance S1-50 Entered as second-class matter July 30, 1906, a the postoffice at As toria, Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3, 1879. Orders for the delivering of The Morning Astorian to either residence or place of business may be made by postal .card or through telephone. Any irregularity in delivery should be immediately reported to the office of publication. TELEPHONE MAIN 661. THE WEATHER' Oregon, Washington and Idaho- Fair and warmer. THE GREAT LINK. The magnificent bridge that spans the Columbia from Vancouver, Portland-ward, is finished. It constitutes another monumental link between the Pacific and Atlantic; fills another gap in the commercial wastes of the world and is still another tribute to the genius of expansion that had made the name of James J. Hill imperish able among men. It is a fitting ter minal for the splendid railway it serves, the Spokane, Portland & Se attle, and is full of significance to the whole Columbia valley, of which As toria is the logical seaport. There was no fuss made over the great finale; the last rivet was driven almost without public notice, and the stupendous work closed in the grim and determined course of business; but the "hurrah" is yet to come. We hope to sound the inital note from this end of the river, on one bank or the other, and it will be heard from one end of the shipping world to the other in terms and tones that will never be forgotten so long as a bot tom seeks cargo in the Northwest of America. We are biding our time, with undiminished faith in the exact and elemental conditions that sur round us. It comes at a propitious moment. The declaration of the real utility of the great jetty at the mouth of Co lumbia jibes handsomely with the completion of this superb structure, and together they smooth the way of commerce to and from this normal gateway to four States that comprise the Inland Empire and the actual Northwest of the nation. It is one of the great episodes of our history. And we set store by it. VACATION DAYS. The schools of Astoria and Clatsop are closed for the summer vacation period, and three or four thousand youngsters are free to indulge the myriad diversions and charms of the delightful season. With their elders they will be seeking the pleasures that come with the summer weather and conditions, and turning to account of health and recreation the thousand and one allurements of the hour, and happily for them, summer is just far enough behind to yield them the en tire guerdon of its time and talis manic treats. The joy of the young is one of the delights of middle and old age. To know of their happiness and to render it to them, are among the pleasant things that fall to those who still re member the fresh and delicious days of youth despite the harsher exper iences that have come to them. For the host just "turned loose," the Morning Astorian has only the best and brightest hope for not only the pending summer, but for all the years that shall be allotted them; that they may make Astoria famous and prosperous and find themselves that quota of prolonged happiness and success that belongs to the good and true citizen. THE DIFFERENCE. The difference between Astoria, Oregon, and Princeton, New Jersey, , is that the President of the United; States may walk and ride the streets of this city without so much as a policeman to look after him, let alone ' a regiment of troops to line the lead ing thoroughfares to guard him against the anarchistic fanatics tha,t dwell there. There is something radically wrong with an American community that is not safe enough for the chief Amer ican of the nation; and the pride of Princeton must have suffered a twinge when it was made manifest that Theodore Roosevelt had to be pro tected by a detail of soldiers, while there in attendance upon the obse quies of his fellow President, Grover Cleveland. But we can rely upon one tremend ous certainty, that whatsoever town or city in the United States ever suf fers the disgrace of a Presidential killing, at the hands of men that town has nourished, will never outlive the shame of it. It will be marked for all time to come. PORTLAND, TOO!. The Oregonian (newspaper) of yesterday, has a strong protest against the insurance graft that is becoming one of the rankest menaces to business in the State. And we are glad to note that "there are others." Astoria has borne about all she can of this oppression and there is going to be "something doing" if relief is not granted in short order and ra tional scope. The evil has grown slowly, but it has waxed exceeding hard. And now that the two biggest cities in the State are lined up for a scrap against the down-right imposition the insur ance barons at San Francisco have perpetrated, we expect to see a gen eral uprising all over the common wealth; and the quicker the better. There are some profoundly interest ing statistics on the fire and life in surance business of Oregon, at the office of the State commission, at Salem, and a deliberate study of them will furnish a mass of fine fighting material. SUNDAY AT THE CHURCHES i Memorial Lutheran. Grand avenue, one block west of Fourteenth street. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m.; evening service at 8:00 o'clock. As the organization of the Memorial Lutheran Church has been completed, we now invite all Luther ans who prefer the English to wor ship with us. Gustaf E. Rydquist. First Lutheran. Sunday school at 9:30 a. m. No evening service as the pastor will hold service at the Memorial Lutheran church. First Presbyterian. Rev. L. M. Boozer of Boise City, Idaho, will preach morning and even ing. Morning worship at 11 o'clock, evening at 8:00; Sunday school at 12:15; Young People's Meeting at 7. You are kindly invited to all these meetings. Holy Innocents Chapel. Second Sunday after Trinity. Morn ing service, 100 a. m.'; Sunday school, 11:15 a. m.; evening service, 7:30 p. m. First Methodist. Class meeting at 10:15 a. m.; Sun day school at 12:15 p. m.; Epworth League at 7:00 p. m. At 11 a. m. and 8 p. m. we will unite in services at the Baptist church. Morning theme, "The True Christian Life and Ideal." Evening theme, "Christianity or What?" A cordial invitation is ex tended to the public to attend. C. C Rarick, pastor. Norwegian-Danish M. E. Services at 11 a. m. and 8 p. m.; Sunday school at 10 a. m. Scandinav ians cordially invited. O. T. Field, pastor. Christian Science. Services in I. O. O. F. building, corner Tenth and Commercial streets, rooms 5 and 6, at 10 a. m. Subject of the lesson sermon, "Christian Science." All are invited. Sunday school at 11:30. Wednesday evening meeting, 8 o'clock. Reading room, same address, hours from 12 to 5 daily, except Sunday. FASTEST THINGS IN WORLD. The world is in a hurry. Whcrc ever we go we see trains whirling by, autos speeding in clouds of dust, men striving on foot, on wheel, on horse or in water, to make speed records. So writes Thomas D. Richter in the Technical World Magazine for July. But we do not realize what may be done while the minute hand of the clock revolves or in an hour of the twentieth century haste? Standing at the cross-road, we see a more black speck in the distance growing with seeming sloth. We hear a purring sound, increasing, develop ing, then leaping into a roar like thunder. Volumes of dust rise like smoke from the mouth of a fire- KUPPENHEIMER CLOTHE FOR THE FOURTH Clothes don't make men but they go a long ways toward making a good impression a word to the wise is sufficient. 572 Bond breathing monster and the twentieth century dinosaur flies, screams past merely an automobile racing at a rate of from eighty to one hundred and twenty miles in an hour. We stand at the railway crossing. In the distance an indistinct object winks into view, far beyond where the two lines of shining rails meet together upon the track bed. On it comes with a swift spreading ciscum ference; it whizzes by in a breath-taking rush and is gone almost before we realize that it is a modern electric train. Such a train in Germany has been run at the rate of 130.4 miles an hour. On the sea shore we hear a scream, thin and piercing. A boat siren shrills its warning. Something rises from the water, snortinar. splashing and tearing frantically through the ocean waves. It is past and ere we get our glasses to bear upon it, it is distant again, Merely a racing motor-boat, trying to make more than thirty miles an hour on the watery turf. Let us pause and take breath. Are we sneed crazv? Sit back and take a bird's-eye view of this old earth and von surelv must conclude that some thing is the matter. Some strange and potent germ has gotten into the blood of the denizens of this planet, inoculating us with a mania-speed mania. It has fairly turned the brain of Mother Earth. A discussion of the sneed craze and its results follows, ilustrated with photographs of the "fastest thmgs in the world. WHAT GHOSTS ARE. Science, exact and practical, has come to the aid of the "psychical re search" investigators with an entirely new theory in regard to ghosts. io writes Rene Bache in the Technical World Magazine for July. The dis covery, though as yet only hypothet ical, is that such phantoms may m fact exist, and that they are sufficient ly material in their nature to .lmit 'if study and even of detailed analy sis. Acording to this idea, indeed, the ghost of reality is properly to be re garded as a chemical phenomenon. It has a recognizable substance, however tenuous and intangible, and may act ually be reproduced experimentally in the laboratory. For authority on this point, the writer is permitted to refer to one of the foremost of living chemists, Prof. Charles E. Munroe, Dean of the D. C. He is not only a believer in Thf Houm of Kuppcnhtimer Chicago Without a rival in quality at $18 to 30 Without a superior in style at any price H. Jeldtiess & Sons ghosts at all events, in the possibil ity of such phenomena but he says that they can be made artiiicialy. It is, he thinks, not at all unlikely that the laboratory process for making coun terfeit spectres is merely a rcproduc tion of nature's own method of ghost manufacture. Apparitions, of course, are usually associated in one way or another with tragedies. Somebody, for example, is murdered under exceptionally dis tressing ami picturesque circum stances, and the corpse being hid den by the pereptrator of the deed the ghost thereafter haunts the scene, forlornly striving to attract sympathetic attention, and unable to find rest until the body shall be dis covered and provided rith Christian burial. "Astoria, Or,, June 23, 2908. "The Morning Astorian, "Astoria, Oregon. "Gentlemen and Friends Being one of the winners in the Morning Astorian Contest, I wish to thank every friend, who helped tne to win the gold watch. Yours respectfully, "LKLAII GILRAUGH." "Astoria. Ore., June 4, 1908. "The Morning Astorian. Dear Sir: In reply to your favor of the inth inst., I wish to state that it is with the greatest pleasure I ac cept your most splendid prize, the Reo Automobile, offered me, as the winner of the recent contest. To you, as well as to my many kind friends, I extend my sincere thanks and appre ciations for all kindness and favors shown me. Yours respectfully, "MISS MAY I'AKKISK." WOMANLY WISDOM Rack and forth in the rocker,. Lost in a reverie deep, The mother rocked while trying To sing the baby to sleep. The beby began a-crowing, For silent he could not keep; And after a while the baby Had crowed his mother to sleep. The sweetest, purest ornament that a woman can wear, and of which she should feel proudest, is the clinging necklace of her baby's arms. Don't discourage the. boy when lie comes to you with his cares or troub les. Sympathize with him, and thank God he confides in you. You can make pretty and durable table mats of the bottoms of used kbb i KIALrf Of any Household ELECTRICAL DE VICE including SMOOTHING IRONS HEATING PADS TOASTERS CHAFING DISHES TEAPOTS i COFFEE! PERCOLATORS FRYING PANS . SEWING MACHINE MOTORS YOU call us up WE will doolie rest ASTORIAjjBLBCTRIC CO. grape baskets, Tear off the sides and cover the bottom part with white linen or table oilcloth. Hang a palm leaf fan by each bed. It is a comfort to have a breeze at command when you wake in the mid dle of a sultry night, and the cooler air and the reirtilar motion of fanning often soothes one to sleep. Sonic folks are troubled by pota toes turning dark after being boiled, especially at this time of the year, If they are peeled an hour or so before they are cooked, and left to stand in cold water, they will keep nice and white. Rutter may be kept in warm weath er if put in a bowl that is covered with a plate and set in a pan of cold water. Then fold a towl and lay across the plate with the corners hanging down into the water, and put the pan in a cool, if possible, a drafty place, and the evaporation will keep the butter firm. To keep flies from roosting on the screen door, ready to come in when it is opened, take a piece of an old wind ow shade, or else a folded piece of manilla paper as long as the door is wide and about half a yard wide, and E C. F. WISE. Prop. Choice Wlnea, Liquors and Cigar: Hot Lunch at All Hours. Corner Eleventh ASTORIA, - - Entrance to Callander's Dock cut into narrow strips to within two inches of the top, then tack across the top of the door. The gentlest bree, or the movement of the door, when opened, will keep the flics away. This is why his marriage was a failure: lie did all the courting before mar riage. He never talked his affairs over with his wife. He thought of his wife only as a cheap housekeeper. He never dreamed that a wife deserved praise or compliments. He married an ideal, and was disappointed to find it had flaws. He paid no attention to his personal appearance after marri age. He treated his wife as he would not have dared to treat another wo man. Farm Journal. COFFEE Five degrees of excel lence: good; better; fine; finer; finest: all Schilling's Best. ?ui iToc.r returns jour bom? U aea't tkt Iti w par him OEM Merchants Lunch From 11:30 a. m. to 1:30 f. m. aj.Centi and Commercial. - OREGON