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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1908)
rpTti? ntMAJTrn actoiitam AQTimiA nTiKfiON. SATURDAY, JULY 18. 1008. JNew YorK JNews setter 5gamrigw, m n, Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail, per year By carrier, per month WEEKLY By mail, per year, in advance 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 bypostal .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, except near the coast. ALOHA!, ALOHA!!. The great white fleet has arrived at Honolulu and has gracious welcome of a warm-hearted people who never failed, in all their history, to yield generous interest to the man, or ship, who sought out their beautiful Island home. The man or woman who has lived in the Hawaiian Islands can easily picture the scene made by these splendid ships as they rose from the horizon and approached the bay at the foot of Diamond Head and thej city that nestles there. The great,) wide blue sea, calm as a mirror, I peaceful as a sleeping child; the moun tainous island, green, from the white foam-crests that mark its touch with the ocean, to the red ana Drown summits of lava that buried the ver- j dure a thousand years ago; the gom- en glow of a tropic sun over all; and K chhm tQ buy. and h has the ad the soft, alluring cry of "Aloha!, jditiona, virtue that we who wouW Aloha!!" as it rose and fell from therefuse t0 take pay or and use the thousands that lingered on bay MO!teiephone( wouid scarcely be depriv sea coasts to give greeting. The Pc-jng ourseves 0f anything, considering ture, once seen, is never forgotten, no . of fc service now ren. matter what of strife and pain and ! dere(i loss shall follow; it is one of the ex-j The teiephone trust is qujte able periences of life that stand out vividly, I tQ rep,ace the present system here sheerly, happly, for all time that twith a faf bettcr one; but it f0n0ws left the one who met it. . (the old and hackneyed rule of all Civilization can do much, but t 'trusts and "jockeys" a, lot before if rarely eradicates the instictive natural jyidd3f 5ince too rcady an acquiesence qualities of. a gentle race, and it s might be fead ag a confession 0f the well it does not. And no genter, !justice o the deman(i we are making, kindlier, more fascinating people everTrusts nevef gjve up anything they dwelt on earth, nor gave greeting tocan avoid; thejr rule Js t0 take not the stranger, than these Hawaiians; i givCj and the only known process of we may absorb them, gradually elimi-jcompulsion) jn their casCj is t0 or(ier nate them in a racial sense; but time j ou tbe home and office 'phones itself will never destroy the grace and throughout the city at once, thus dem grade of their utter friendliness to !onstrating the popular sense of injus the granger; it is chiefest among the,tice and carrvjng conviction direct to cardinal attributes of the race, and a!the source apparently most lacking it. beautiful thing altogether!. j jt may be something of a sacrifice, but it can be borne for a few days, , CLE ELUM'S HORROR. j weeks ,or months, if it is followed, as lit surely will be, by the acquisition of The sympathy of the whole North-'a decent and appreciable service, eith west will go out to the stricken fami-!er at tue hands of the P. S. company, lies of Cle Elum in the ravage that'or some other agency. This whole sought her out at dawn on Thurs-1 matter ;s simpy a question of doing day morning. the right thing. The telephone peo- Of all the horrible things that be- ;pe have had countless public benefits, set humanity, the powder explosion is 'bere anj elsewhere, and it must be the most flagrant, the most indeter- ma,ie to understand that the people minable, the most unsparing. Human !have rjgnts and claims that are going care and foresight, nor human law, 't0 be met. They have done this thing ho fihlp to fend acainst the CClllS HJ fv uw'"- 1 ,J - -r i CreadlUl aisimcgiauuii ui ""- remote as it may be from the ordi-'wjth . l nary haunts ot men, u seems mc ci.o.s of explosion never arrives until there I are the enough people around to maKe hazard and the fact terribly sig nificant. Not once ,n a hundred year , does the hi eous agency do . .t. njj with a single sacrifice to the record always there must be ten, or a z- en or hfty. or more, io ma. dread re-action and add to tne ac-i' and add to tne ac-i' cursed fear of it that lias "wasiinakes enough dessert for a large eXiV a Mfl PVer hilt in' If we 0 our frenzied activities long enough to , . . think and do the right thing thl3 relation, we win stop tne wansu u the stuff, and hold it in water-storage at the source of manufacture; or bet- .'1, M1 oKeililtplv ter siiu, we win autuiuuu i. aujv.w.. SIIU, WC will tvuau.au,, ... , an universal commercial agency.; is is a ridiculous suggestion, of as Thi rourse. but there is no telling the range of common sense to which hu manity may soar when the dollar has come to occupy the lower standard in the scale of human life and human peace. STAY WITH IT!. Now that Astoria has taken the telephone bit in its teeth, it were well to stay with it!. Of course there must be a certain amount of champing but the main thing is to shut our teeth down on it and hold fast until a THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. $7.00 .60 ASTORIAN. .$1.50 new and better deal is given us and we are prompted to relinquish the grind. We believe the issue will find ..... .it ts quickest solution, for all concern- i. Hu . ed, in the strategic force of patron-' age withheld; that the withdrawal of ftW nr 800 instruments from the received thelhomes and offices out of the thousand 1 I . .... jor more now in use here, will do more to emphasize and stimulate the issue than anything we can do, and, the country as well will have to close .. . . . . i.i..!. i . . ...,f.. i.Anhir. it nas the virtue ot leaving us tree from legal entanglement and all side issues and interests, while going straight to the solar plexus of the company. There is no such leverage as an abated, or an eliminated 'pa tronage to bring the biggest and the smallest dealer to terms. It is the old, old story of the "boycott," of course; but in the present instance, it commends itself admirably, because it leaves the patron absolutely free from 'all responsibility and reduces the situation to the mere plane of barter, in which both parties are free as air, , t.,.nv,nn, rrtrnanv fn .,11 ami cnr nthpr ritips and towns and As iui tuiw onu is uit viij the poorest telephone service m 1 . . . n. ...i. tlle state, siay wnn n; dai iz ...ert Can be Pre- . add bo51ing v cool Flav(jred I rtrrhf CTBIkMfnpA 111St flffht! , . ewP(.tene(1 iust rieht: per- . 6 ' . n,rU9 ; . ,0 ta lect lu eve. y nfl .w.. r - o - amily- All grocers sell it. Don t ac - cept substitutes. JELL-0 complies - . Laws Seven VT1LU OH IV". - ; flavors:Lemon, Orange, Raspberry, . Strawberry( Chocolate, Cherry, Peach Twenty-Five : " ; I ' . , Cents is tne rnce oi p ... The terrible itching and smarting, j incident, to certain skin diseases is; 1 almost instantly auayeu. uy appiuiB Chamberlain's Salve. Price, l CCIUS. lu. oaiv. uj x.w.... ... T7 cn . K.r iTi-nilr Hart anr i' leading druggists. COFFEE Why bcftilling's Best ? Because it is best and your money is yours if you think you don't find it so. Twf tner return T mnf il fm 4m1 Dm Hi par bia NEW YORK, July 16,-Whilc per- that it will turn without noise or jar. haps not quite in the Sodom and ! There will necessarily be many novel . , x. , , , 'feature. Altogether the ' house, Gomarrah class New ork is almost, ... , . . . . ... . I which exclusive of lnnu will cost hopelessly an ungodly city, declares a,MU(t $Mm wji (or a time at least Rev. Charles F. Aked. widelv known I ho m nf ihe ureatest curiosities in as the pastor of the church of which John D. Rockefeller is the most prom inent member. Dr, Aked has startled the somnolent" quiet that usually de scends on Fifth avenue churches at this season by pointing out in an ar- tide which is to appear in the August j number of Appietons magazine mat building it because lie can see no rca- church membership in this country in j son for always gating on the same proportion to population has fallen outlook from each window, and being off 8000 per cent, since the first half roasted or fro.cn in any particular of the last century. It -is highly ( room as the wind and sun may dictate. significant in Dr. Aked's opinion that, It is now expected that this first re- this loss of position among the ( yoking house will be completed next churches has been a progressive one. spring. As he puts it, if their gain In propor- j tion to population during the first If there ever was a vote which half of the century is represented as 80, during the second half it is repre sentcd Dy -n, Hiring uic pasi , , 1 ... ,,. K f.inr mill iliirmiT the . sented by 20. during the past 20, u t , ,i i..,:. .1,. years by four, and during the past , tcn ' s hy At this rat it js'velt. In spite of the repeated denials easy to figure out the time when, from Washington the manufacturers church pews will be entirely tenant- ,v"- , assertion that if the present course o COI1tinucs the churchcs not onI of XfW Vork bllt of the rcs, 0f their doors within another century. He frankly avows that the church is regarded by many persons as a ' "back number and he seems to agree that this view is justified in many in stances, for he says that the churches must change their methods or they will be abondoned entirely. T he ath- letic English divine who preaches every Sunday to the greatest aggrega-1 alticipation of KooseVelt's nomina tion of wealth gathered in any one ti))) fmmd themselves overloaded and church in the country proposes to;bucamc Mu in ,,)e Tcddy rcar ,nar. follow up his first assault in Apple- ( ke, . jjcacrs who had been equally tons with other red-hot attacks on the inefficiency of the churches them- &cgan Q a,temp, t0 cana.l contracts, selves. Already several suits have resulted, the largest being brought by a manu- New York is going to build a state jfacturcr to compel a dealer to accept prison which will be a veritable ( and pay for more than $50,000 worth palace of crime with all the modern jof Teddy Bears which he had ordered conveniences. It will include many , Mr. Roosevelt's approaching retire nt tVi fMt,,ra which contribute to mint in nrivate life threatens ruin to the success of the city's biggest hotels the Teddy Bear industry, 'and it is and in every way will be a jail so certain thai could he have been in tomntinir fhat it is fpared that manv rlm-or! to run the solid Teddv Bear crooks will be moved to adopt the vote would have been in line for him. new prison as a permanent home. 'Apparently the only hope for the Sing Sing is famed in story and has)0nce prosperous bear makers is to sheltered more notorious criminals j invent an equally popular Taft cmb than any similar institution in thejcnt. country, but now it is to be supersed ed by a $2,000,000 structure on the onnosite side of the Hudson. For months a committee has been search ing for a site and the one chosen is, it is claimed, unrivalled in location even by any summer hotel. Around this $2,000,000 establishment will be a mile-long stone wall thirty feet high, on top of which it has been face tiously proposed to instal a promen ade which in criminal society would correspond to the famous board walk at Atlantic City. One of the advan tages of the new site prominently mentioned in advocacy of its selection is Highland Lake, which, within 'i stone's throw, affords fishing and boating. There is to be a library more fully stocked than that of many a city, and a series of vaults for the safeguarding of the valuables of con vict inmates. Whether these vaults can be used for the storing of plunder with which a criminal may get away, , t '.nendinir his release, remains to be r - - a acterniincci. music, ..... ...... hath mid tpli't.hcncs are onlv cold baths and telephones are only a few of the minor features. Altogether this new center of the most exclusive life of the criminal 400 is expected to prove so' attractive that the police declare there will be a little difficulty in making the arrests which will lead to an opportunity to obtain a suite Iv. if ' m. cst int of interest about this city 1 . soQn be ,he revolving house tQ be conBtructed by a New r . newest thing in domestic construe' tion. which in its own field will be more of a novelty than the forty- , . ... t. siory SKyscrapc.s ...c ... uic-i.a, t c so bum tnat it c. around at the will of th an be turned the owner. Any . room in tne nouse or any spot on me , brouKht to benefit by the shade in summer or the sun in winter The wind will blow and the sun shine in any apartment as the owner may wish. This strange house which is to be cither rpund or octagonal in shape will be mounted on ball bear ings with the motive power furnished by electricity. All that it will be nec essary for its owner to do to face any point of the compass will be to press a button. Its construction will be built on the plan of a railroad turn table and the builder has promised thi part of the country'. The owner has already been flooded with bids for exclusive rights as to pictures, exhibi tion purposes and the like. The man who is going to live in this novel house, however, taken' matters very very calmly, explaining that he is only cmiy absolutely be controlled by one ' man. that vote is the TeUIv. Bear ilillii, ...... - - " "J- , d-,,. vote, and the man Theodore Roose- .... nmi venders of Teddv Pears conttnu- io mucve up io u.c wim mumm ,. Pr-.i.u,,. wnutil find the nomjnat5on trust upon him. In such . () coue tl,cre wouM have jlcen tremendous demand for furry . . .... . i. . . : ,ns wt,ich have come to be ac- et.,,tcd ajl t,e Roosevelt emblem. The r...i. ,uP nonul,ation of Tuft was I to knock the bottom out of the Teddy . ltcar market, until there is just about as tmicn demand for them as there a fo mjiroad stocks during the M.intifni-turpr who jc as, f.,f , , . hlisv ,ur,,;ni, m,t o-oods in , f tb:rd term immediately Probably the most novel scale of prices in New York is that embodied in the schedule just issued covering the price of kisses. The value of such oscillatory salutations has long been a matter on which the courts of the city have differed widely. The price as dctcrnvned by them has varied from a minimum of one cent to a maximum of several thousand dollars. But while law haa never been able to establish a schedule commercialism urged ..n hy charity at last has. At an entertainment to be given next week to raise funds for the benefit . ..... ...... . n! ot 1 lie (lesmuie crippicu cmiuic-n i the city kisses wil be sold by a young woman who has volunteered her ser vices. The following is the remark able price list which she has cstab- inanntr entirely new: Hoys under 19 years of age, 15 cents Young men between the age of 19 and 25, 5 cents. College students, 80 cents. Men from 25 to 40 years of age, $1. Old men, $1.35. Theatrical managers, $2. Millionaires, 95 cents. Children, 10 cents. Politicians, free Just why millionaires should be ac corded such a low price is not known, but it is claimed that this surprising list has oeen systematically worked out, and that the figure in each case is calculated to result in the greatest number of s.'ter. Was in Poor Health For Years Ira W. Kelley, of Mansfield, Pa., writes; "I was in poor health for two years, suffering from kidney and blad der trouble, and spent considerable money consulting physicians without obtaining any marked benefit, but was cured by Foley's Kidney Cure, and I desire to add mv testimony that it may be the cause of restoring the health of others." Refuse substitutes. T. r. Laurin, Owl Drug Store. ' War Against Consumption All nations are . endeavoring to check the ravages of consumption, the "white plague" that claims so man victims each year. Foley's Honey and Tar cures coughs and colds perfectly and you are in no danger of consumption. Do not risk your health by taking some unknown preparation when. Foley's Honey and Tar is safe and certain in esults. The genuine is in a yellow package . Although a good part of the market for Washington coal In California lias been lost through the increased pro duction of fuel oil in that state Wash ington shared In the general Increase in the production of coal in l7. The total output tor the year wan 3,6H0.5.12 short tons, having a spot value of S7,679,HUI, tin Increase of 404,348 short tons, or 12.34 per cent in quantity, and of f 1,771,367; or 29,98 per cent, in value, compared with 190(5 The avcniRC price per ton advanced from $1 .80 in 1906 to $2.09 in 1907. During the first ten months of the year the coal-nuuing industry of the State was in a highly satisfactory con dition. In November and December, however, owing to the financial dis turbances, the output of the mines was curtailed about 33 percent. But for this the production would proba bly have exceeded 4,OX),0O0 tons. The number of men employed in the coal mines of Washington increas ed from 4,529 in 1906 to 5.945 in 1907, and the average number of working days increased from 266 to 273. The only decrease shown in the statistics of coal production in Washington in 1907 as compared with 19U6 was in the orodiKtivc canacitv of the em ployees, the average yearly tonnage per man having declined from 723. tons in 1906 to 619 tons in 19117. Tl he average daily production per man de creased from 2.72 to 2.27 tons. Nearly all the mine of the State arc operated on ao ciuht hour sche dule, 5,594 men out of a total of 5,945 employed working eight hours a (lay in 1907. Washing apparatus has been in stalled at 15 plants in the State, and the total amount of coal washed dur ing 1907 was 799.015 ton yielding 644,01 tojis of cleaned coal and 154, 514 tons of refuse. D, C. Hotting, State mine inspector, reports that the total number of acci dents in the coal mines of Washing ton in 1907 w 131, of which 36 were fatal. The death rate per thousand of employes was 6.06. and the number of tons mined for each life lost was 102,237. This makes an unfavorable comparison with the casuality statis tics for 1906 and particularly with those for 1905. In 1906 the death rate per thousand of employees was 486 and the tonnage for each life lost was 148,917; in 1905 the death rate per thousand was 2.73, with a tonnage of 220,379 for each life lost. The coal beds of Washington arc found in the western and central por tions of the State, and are mined in five principal fields the North Pugct Sound field, including the coal mines f Skagit and Whatcom counties; the South Pugct Sound field, comprising the Pugct Sound basin, just east of Seattle; the Roslyn field, in Kittitas County, on the eastern slope of the Cascade Mountains; and the South western field, embracing the counties of Lewis and Cowlitz. - The coals of Washington range from lignite to bituminous coking coals, and including some natural coke and anthracite. The bituminous cooking coals of Washington are the only coking coals on the Pacific slope of the United States. They arc found in the Wilkeson-Carbonado district, in the South Puget Sound field, and also in the North Puget Sound field, but coke is now made only in the dis trict firsr named. The Wilkeson-Carbonado coal runs high in ash and is usually washed before coking. The lignite or subt.ituminous coals of Newcastle and Renton, in the South Pugct Sound field, are generally of high grade and well suited for domes tic use. The steamship consumption in the trade with Alaska and the Ori ent is now the most important mar ket for the high-grade bituminous coals of Washington. An advance chapter of the volume Mineral Resources of the United Sta tes, calendar year, 1907, on the pro duction of coal, by E. W. Parker, giv ing the statistics presented above, to gether with similar facts in regard to. the other States, will soon be pub lished by the United States Geologi cal Survey. G. B. Burhans Testifies After 4 Years G. B. Burhans, of Carlisle Center, N. Y writes: "About four years ago I wrote you stating that I had been entirely cured of a severe kidney trouble by taking le33 than two bot tles of Foley's Kidney Cure. It en tirely stooped the brick dust sedi Ill ' J MfcjyjJV V V 'SI UWk W ment, and pain and symptoms of kidney disease disappeared. I am IU1IVJ tot Vli - glad to say that I have never had a return of any of those symptoms during the four years that have elaps- ed and I am evidently cured to stay cured, and heartily recommend Foley's Kidney Cure to any one suf fering from kidney or bladder trouble" I V II tl 11 J 11 DtM e u u La w My stock of men's and boy's iboes is unsurpassed for qua lity. Close buying and low expenses enable me to sell tbe best qualities at lowest prices. s. a! gimre 543 Bond Street TRANSPORTATION. The II KM Line FREIGHT PASSENGERS t J. Ai JPWW Steamer - Lurline Night Bo&t for Portland and War Landings. Leaves Astoria daily ticept Sunday at 7 p. m. Leaves Portland Dafty ticept Sanaa; at 7 a. m. ' Qalrk Service . Eictllent llaala Good Berths Landing Astoria Fbml Whari Landing Portland Foot Taylor 11 J. J. DAY, Agent Phone Main 2711. DAIRIES. TheVermont Dairy All milk aerated before bottling. Specialty made of one cow's milk for infants. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone 14 Farmers line. W. J. INOALLS. WINES AND LIQUORS. Eagle Concert Hall (320 Astor Street) Rooms for rent by the day, week, or month. Bes rates in town. P. A. PETERSON, Prop. MISCELLANEOUS. HOT OR COLD Golden West Tea Just Right CLOSSET & DEVERS- PORTLAND, ORE. MEN AND WOMEN. Vm for otlntarl dlchrM,lDflnilliallon Irrlutiom or uloerttloM ot Diucoud nielnbrntiM. fulBaliia. Dlt1i.a and tint a.tfln. 1TH E EVAHS GHEM lOAlCO. ut or polonou. F 1 sola oj iiruiciiu, am In ,.,. In t.r.nnjtv. br ipr". prepaid, (or I . on, or 3 hottii'na.ii). Circular nut on reiiuwt- Notice. On and after this date. Tulv 16. 'WW 1908, no claims will be paid by the Post Exchange, Fort Columbia, a, si?t, MAVilUtlSjV) A ul V Wash., for purchases made, except on order o the Trxchange officer or Stewar(J ther(of 0f Qn wftten order rom, the same. GEORGE B. TUTTLE, Exchange Officer. 1 7-16-6t g b I la I n .......