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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (July 28, 1908)
. ..WARRANTED PURE.... Bernett's Extradt We have jusft put in a complete line-all flavors A. V. ALLEN Sole Agent for the Celebrated H. C Fry Cut Glass. PHONE 711 PHONE 3871 UNIONTOWN BRANCH PHONE 713 i PERSONAL! MENTION Mr. and Mrs. I. Breslauer of Chico, re in the city, the guests of Mayor Herman Wise. Mr. Breslauer is o as extended wedding trip with his wife through the western states which will include Yellowstone Park. ' Harry Gray, formerly of this, city w a prosperous merchant of Pen rfleton, was in the city yesterday con ing up from the beach where he has keen getting a little fresh air. He reports everthing prosperous in the Inland Empire and there is only one tting he misses up there and that is Astoria's delightful climate. Rev. R. F. Lash of St. Johns, Ore., was a over Sunday guest of his laughter, Mrs. Eugene. Bussing. Mr. lash will return home via the Spen cer today. H. P. Alberg, of Gray's River, was a busiess visitor in Astoria yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Ole Vestnes, with their children, left last evening for their Minnesota home, after a pleas ant visit with kinsmen in this city. George Edkin, an employe of the Oregon Asylum for Insane, was a cmniering tourist in this city yes terday. Mrs. F. J. McShatko and baby were jassengers for Portland on yesterday , wmring's express. H. B. Parker, the lively octogen aria, was a passenger for Portland a Sunday evening's train from this arty. Judge King of the Oregon supreme court, was in Astoria over Sunday and went to the beach with J. H. Smith. F. A. Fisher and family are on an oting. They will camp out at Sil w Cliff Point on Elk Creek. ed entirely. He was sent to St. El: zabeths, the great, insane hospital at Washington and remained there un til ten days ago when he had so far recovered that his mother was allow ed to bring him back to Brooklyn, The old terror was still with him Hi smind constantly wandered and he would soring from his bed at night with cries for Jim, his "Bun kie," whose life was sacrificed. in the awful massacre, in far away Samar, Last night he escaped his mother': watchful eyes and took the poisons which the doctors fear will cost him his life. DEATH IN QUICK SANDS. DO NT RUB AND SCRATCH CURE THE SUMMER ITCHES AD Forms of Itch Caused by Warm Weather and Perspiration Can Can Quickly be Cured Mosquito bites nettle rash prick ly heat hives and all forms or itch can be instantly relieved and quickly cured by a simple wash of oil of win- tergreen and other purely vegetable compounds. If you are troubled with prickly heat, hives, rash or any form f itch common to hot weather, do not rub and scratch, thereby increas ing the itch and irritation, and many thnes resulting in a poisonous sore. Apply a few drops of this liquid and instantly the itch is gone and you feel soothed, calmed and relieved. If squito bites, summer rashes,' poison ivy and the like will no longer trouble; in fact the second and third applications will begin to' allay the eruption. This liquid is known as D. D. D. Prescription. It is the standard re liable eczema remedy and we posi tively vouch for its effectiveness in all stimnier rashes, mosquito bites, poison ivy, etc. Charles Rogers & Son's, druggists. 1 Sister 12 Miles Away Faints At The The Same Time And May Die, EAST ST. LOUIS. Us, July 27.- While her twin brother Fred was be imr sucked to his death in the 'quick sands of l ong Lake, near Mitchell Illinois., yesterday, Merle Huber 17 years old who was twelve miles aw ay, at home alone shrieked and fell to the front forch in a faint. Neigh bors ran t oher assistance and reviv ed her. , "Fred is dying, I can hear him cal lin sto me. He is drowning. Let me go to him" moaned the girl. Merle made frantic efforts to leave the house but was held back by friends who assured her that Fred was all right. The girl could not be quieted. Five minute-: Ver a message came from Mitcheil that pred Huber hH been drowned. When the news rea ched his sister, she j gain fainted, and up to a late hour last night was in a critical cond'fon. MAKES GOOD SWIM. PREYED ONE HIS MIND. American Survivor Of Filipino Mas sacre Tries Suicide. NE WYORK, July 27.-The terri ble massacre of the men of the 9th infantry at Ballinga Island of Samar on Sept., 28, 1901 by treacherous Fil ipinos, when Captain Connell and more than forty others of the com mand were boloed is pathetically re- William Duffey Buffets Heavy Tide Off New York. NEW YORK. July 27.-A swin of more than 12 miles was made by Wm IuiTev a well knowr. swimmer Duf- fey's swim began at the Brooklyn Bridge and ended a mile off Coney Island in the face of a hewy tide that swept in from the lower bay Saturday's ctorm h?d stirred i Atlantic and a 'Sv.igc tide wa: run ning ":! day, ngai-.st 1 :ch it -,va ' dif ikti't even for launches to sc. tboir noss, and as a lesult Deft'cy's at tempt i'. make a lecord swim had X be abandoned fii'er he had froced his way along for four !iours and twenty minutes. .Mr. DuiTey, who is 55 years U'.. on ly a few yea so .swam f.--n the Prook'yn bridge to three miles he ymd Sh'.al's light IS 1-2 miles in five hour3 mmI a quarter. HIS DEATH MYSTERIOUS. San Francisco Man Dies In Massage Parlors. SAN FRANCISCO, July 27. Wm. Haic ,a prominent real estate man of i!ns city, son of the late Superior Judge Wm. Hale and a direct descen dant of Nathan Hale of Revolution ary fame, dropped dead yesterday in the parlors of Mrs. Nina Williams, a Masseuse. Heart failure was the cause of death. A black wallet in which the deceas ed usually carried a fairly largo sum of money h;.s disappeared. It was ! i iound (v the body or at his heme. The family of the dead man say they know no reason for his presence Schenectady in September, tnd an other sera in Pittsburg in October. According to communications re ceived by the Public service commis sion there will be no lack of men to fll the positions." The public service commission In itj plans for the tests ii counting on the use of manikins made especially for the purpose, to represent a child, a youth mid i full grown man, but If all the manufacturers succeed In hir ing living dummies there will be no necessity for the use'of figures. STARVING TO DEATH. Cousin Of Jay Gould May Become A County Charge. LOS ANGELES, July 27,-Mel- ville A. Gould who says he is a sec ond cousin of the late Jay Gould is dangerously ill at the county hospi tal. He h 70 years of age and is suffering from lack of proper nour ishment. The old man has been living in his own cottige on East Fifty Eigth street and has been cared for by his foster daughter whom he had befrien ded in former years. She is said to be no longer able to care or him and he must become a county charge. There is a mortgage on the cottage and if he dies there will be hardly enough money to bury im. He once aas wealthy. Most of his property was turned into cash in order that he might speculate in mines. He lost thousands of dollars trying to devcl ope a coj per claim which proved worthless. , . WHY SEND A WAY FOR ! Loose Leaf Devices AUTOMOBILE HITS WOMAN. Mrs. Harrell N. Lyon Of St Louis In A Critical Condition. ST. LOUIS., July 27.-F. C. Pep per, president,' Christian Pepper To bacco Co., last night, in his automo bile, ran down and probably fatally wounded Mrs. Harrell, N. Lyon, wife of Dr. H. N. Lyon at the crossing of Union and Dclmar Avenues. Dr. Lyon saw the accident from the rear plat form of a street car from which Mrs. Lyon had just alighted and attended to his wife's wants until an ambulance arrived. ( Mr. Fepper, in his efforts to stop his automobile sustained a fracture of the wrist and three broken ribs. He is under anest. called by the case of one of the sur vivors df that tragic day, Patrick Mc- at the massage parlors. The woman Guire of Brooklyn, who is in a hos-jr.rys that he had been there befcre pital dying from .poison taken with suicidal intent. McGuire was only 18 years old when he enlisted in the 9th infantry and was a member of com pany C of that regiment at the time ef the massacre at Ballinga. He did fs part in the valiant attelupt the survivors made to drive off their foes and was one of the 18 to escape. But the horrors of that day when he saw forty of his comrades cut down in cold blood with practically no oppor tunity to defend themselves preyed n McGuire's mind and even after he returned to his mother's home in Brooklyn the horror did not leave Um and. two years ago his mind fail- for treatment to cure a headache. A RISKY BUSINESS. Men Offer Themselves As "Fender Dummies. NEW YORK,, July 27.-Being a fender dummy at ?2 a day is a new form of livlihood opened for men out of w3 k by the manufacturers of Street Car fenders and wheel guards throughout the country. The mann facturers are pn:par'sg for a series of tests of their device under a call issued by the public service connn r- on. These tests tre to be he'd al - SERPENT OF AESCULAPIUS. Worship of Snakes Led to Adoption of the Mystical Symbol. It has been pointed out by Dr. Bou din that the worship of the serpent was so universal iu antiquity that all temples came to be known as "dr.i- conia" (serpent houses). However that uiay be, serpents were kept In uiauy of the temple ef an tiquity, notably In those of Apollo, whose son, Aesculapius, Is represented In ancient statuary carrying a serpent lntwtned round a staff or round his arm. The serpent. Indeed, came In time to be the special mystical emblem or sym bol of the Aesculaplan art. The serpents of the ancient Greek temples were In all probability relies of that primitive serpent worship which was at one time universal amwij prehistoric peoples and has not died out among many savage races at the present day. And "voodoo," or "obi." serpent jvor- Bhip Is still said to linger in the Wewt Indies among the descendants of slaves. - In Haiti especially, where negroes were dumped down from Africa by the old slave traders and were kept In re serve before being sold to masters in the surrounding Islands, voodoo has defied Roman Catholic missionaries and priests for ages. A French naval officer who vluited the court of the Haitian potentate Soulongue In 18-19 described n voodoo ceremony where cannibalistic and other orgies were In dulged in. It is noticeable that the cock nnd black goat which were solemnly eaten on this occasion were both of them sacred to Aesculapius. Flenre we may Infer that the Aesculaplan eultus was originally an innocent form of voodoo and at the same a primordial religion. The extreme antiquity of serpent worship seems, indeed, to be hinted at in Genesis, where the devil appears In the guise of the snake god Intent on the ruin of man. In the story of the brazen serpent healing qualities are attributed to the linage. Lancet. A PECULIAR SPIDER. He Catches Birds as Big as Larks In His Mammoth Web. Far up in the mountains of Ceylon there is a spider that spins a web like bright yellowish silk, the central net of which Is five feet in diameter, while the supporting lines, or guys, as they are called, measure sometimes ten or twelve feet, and, riding quickly In the early morning, you may dash right Into it, the stout threads twining round your face like a lace veil, while, as the creature that has woven It takes up his position in the middle, he generally catches you right in the nose, and. though he seldom bites or stings, the contact of hla laxee Wy and long lees We manufacture them right here in Astoria at Lowest Prices. LOOSE LEAF LEDGERS ' LEDGER SHEETS TRANSFER BINDERS INDEXES DUPLICATE BILLING SYSTEMS MONTHLY ACCOUNT SHEETS ETC. We have all the latest improved machinery for turning out this class of work. Give us your next order. TheJ.S.DellingerCo. Blank Book Makers and Printers Is anything fim' plWsant. If )'oti for get yourself nnd try to cnteh lilui, bite be will, and, though not venomous, his Jaws arc as powerful as a bird's beak, and you are not likely to forget the encounter. The liodles of these spiders are very handsomely decorated, being bright gold or st arlet underneath, while the upper part Is covered with the moat delicate slate colored fur. So strong ore the webs that birds the she of larks are frequently caught therein. nnd even the small but powerful scaly lizard falls a victim. A writer saya that he his often sat and watched the yellow monster measuring, when waiting for his prey, with his leg stretched out, fully six Inches-striding across the middle of the net nnd noted the rapid manner In which he winds his stout threads round the urlfortu unte captive. He usually throws the colls about the head until the wretched victim H first blinded and then choked. In ninny unfrequented dark nooks of the jungle yon come across most perfect pkeletous of small birds caught In these terrible snares. Three Days Only $1.25 and $1.50 Books $1.18 Each . Anne of Green Cable, Montgomery The Avenger, Oppcnheim, The Chaperon, Williamson The Stuff of a Man The City of Delight, Miller Mr. Crewe's Career, Churchill The Wayfarers Cutting The Barrier, Rex Beach Cheerful Smugglers, E. P. Butler The Yoke, Herbert Wales Cynthia in the Wilderness. II. Wales Mr. & Mrs. Villim. Author Yoke Three Weeks E. Glyn Siter Carrie, Dreiser Fruit of the Tree, Edith Whaton The Helpmate, Sinclair The Iron J Iccl, Loudon True Stories of Crmie, Arthur Tram The Red Skull, Fergus Hume $1.25, $1.50, $1, 75c Books 49c Violet Ink the Cheapest. ixkk nere. you, a literary man can't afford the extravagance of violet ink." The literary man tore thoughtfully a pendent piece of leather from the sole of his shoe. "I know," he admitted, "that vlolcl Ink costs thrice as much as black, but black corrodes a pen In a week, whereas violet Is noiicorroslve, and with Its use It Is possible to make ono pen last six r seven months. The late Hiisseil Safje, who used violet ink ex clusively In his office, revealed this fercit tr.:th to me during my brief cler leal cnreVr In bin offlcc,"--ExeImiige. Didn't Want to Be Singular. It vm In the drawing room after dinner that they dlscuprt'd an absent maiden frioi'd's bad points with the iisicil grim nnd scathing glee. Having thoroughly dissected her personal ap pearance, they next paid attention to her mental shortcomings. "She Is a very singular girl." spake the one. Yes, indeed," "responded her com panion. "Hut, then, that Is not her fault, for I never saw a girl so anxious to be plural."-Argonnut Where Pat Made Mistake. "Oh," sobbed Mrs. Casey, "some wan told me husband, Pat, that he c'd have his pants pressed be lettln' th' steam roller run over them, an' Pat trold th' scheme!" "Well, phy do ye cry?" asked the mend, Mrs. Garrity. Cruise of Motor Boat Conqueror Passenger from Calais A. Griffiths The Rome Express " The Treasure Trail, F, L. Tollock Stand Pat-Poker Stories The Black Barque, T. J. Mains Road to Paris, Nielson Phillip Winwood, NT. Stephens The Mystery of Murry, Davenport The Bright Face of Danger, Stephens The Flight of Gcorgiana, Stephens .Kindred of the Wild, Robert! The Scats of the Mighty, Parker The Spoilers, Rex Beach Gentlemen Player, Stephens My Strangest Case, Guy Boohby . Long Night, Weyinan Azalim, a .Romance of Old Judea The Slaves of Success, E. Flower The Spoilsmen, E. Flower Castel Del Monte, Gallmcr Lne Letter of An American Girl WHITMAN'S BOOK STORE For THIS WEE KONLY 10 Per Cent REDUCTION 10 Per Cent . Off on all - COTTON HOSE Now is the time to supply your needs. , The Foard & Stokes Hardware Co. Lawyer (at the theater ori the first nlght)-I can't Imagine how the piece can be drawn out Into five acts. Author -Oh, that Is very simple. In the first act, you see, the hero gets Into a law suit Chance For Imagination. Newspaper men were to be excluded from a fdmous trial. "That's good," one of tbera remarked. "I hate to be hampered by facts In writing up a case of this klnd."-Exchange. , The Wife Did It All. Hewitt Couldn't you get-the person you called up by telephone? Jewltt Oh. ves. TTewlffnnt T iii.n.'f i.Qn tS;" wa,,edf thirlV?,!i forgot you 8ay nnythln- Jewitt-it t take th' pant- off flrst!-Judge. wife I called.-New York Press. 0lit. eO YEARS' V .. EXPERIENCE D Tiuoe MAnna '?rtV1 COITIOHTS &C. Anyone lending nkfllfh nnd doiorlntlnn niny (iiil.'klr Miwrutln our r n fr wfi-Hlior iu mention ! probnlilf Ptf i ' ' i' C . rn ill ti n Until ntxIotlronnDdeiitliil. HANDBOOK on I'utvnta lent fr. tldoU wmej fur icwurinit pitlont, Pntimtl tttkim through Munn & Co, rcoalPi frnal twtkt, without chnrua, lu tno Scientific JMrfca A nmdiomoly H1titrtd weeklr. T.irmnt eta SUIHlltm "I ny uwiii,iui j"ui i.i. , in., , ( reur: four moiitbi, IU bold bjr til newadentart MU V.ft 361BroadwiY. Npu Ynrfc Briuoh OOue. 036 F Bt, Wuhlnirton. D. V-