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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 5, 1908)
THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREGON. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 5 15 Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail, per year $7.00 By carrier, per month 60 WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, in advance. ..... .4 $1.50 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. THEr:WEATHER Oregon, Washington and Idaho Fair tonight and Wednesday; north westerly winds. BOUND TO GET SERVICE. The Astoria Common Council has granted an open franchise to the Northwestern Long Distance Tele ohone Company, under the terms of which a complete and new service to be installed in this city within seven months (which, under permissable leeway and lapses will probably run to ten months); and the Pacific States Telephone Company is mov ing "heaven and earth" to renew and advance its plant to a point of mod ernity; so, that by the first of Jan uary next, we are likely to have all kinds of tip-to-date service, along with the rather comical, and certainly annoying, mix-up, enjoyed by those i cities and towns in which the dual systems flourishe (?). But, with all the discordance in prospect, we are sure of good serv ice; something we have yearned for many a dreary day, and we may meet the incongruities of the "double lines with the patience always given to new and strange troubles, finding comfort in the ease and despatch of communication when you know which line to use. Thus, from a dearth of service, we are about to have a sur feit of it, with the enhanced costs. Alright, we'll make the best of it and thank the powers that be for a shift in the nature of our troubles. the law, as such, is framed to deal exact justice to all, the frequency of the rich man's plea, has had a tend ency to warp the administration of NEW YORK LETTER XEW YORK, July, 4.-With the prospect of king the first printed pa ges to penetrate the .uppermost polar region, two sets of American books are to-day sailing the northern seas, snugly set up in the hold of Lieut. Peary's stout ship "Roosevelt." Re ports that these two of their $3,000 floating libraries were going into brisk circulation among the arctic ex plorers when the party finally cast off for the pole have reached the head quarters of the American Seamen's Friend Society in this city to-day. That some of this nation's literary marks may eventually be planted be side the flag at the "farthest north" is the object of the determined crew who are to enjoy their solace in the bitter solitude of the next two years, Months before the "Roosevelt" wa finally commissioned for its latest dash toward the pole, the preparation of these libraries, which were to oe cupy the minds of the men through th Inw a trifle ftnf rtf ntnmh ac if ... - ,... .... , the long polar night, was carefully be fS OUR HIGHWAYS. Our suhurban friends are complain ine bitterly against the ardent, pro vocative and perennial thistle, of all varieties; and our urban fellows are equally protestant about the ubiquit ous wood-pile that affronts them at everv turn in the citv's streets. The wood-pile's destiny is easily fore fasted; it will go to the cellar, thence to the stove, thence to the circum ambient air, in due and reasonably short time. But, the thistle is an other and graver proposition. We 'shall mourn our present neglect all in good time and cherish it alone, with no one but our fool-selves to blame; Which in the case of the wood-pile, is not so, for we have the delinquent citizen who is directly responsible for that, if anything goes wrong, by name, street and number and com mon repute, and may make it inter esting for him if the occasion de mands; but the thistle is nature's own gift, and the tiny seed comes and goes on the summer winds, unseen, un sought, unminded until the threaten ing plant is above ground with all its suggestive destructiveness in plain sight and as plainly inviting de struction itself, the which we ignore in the rush of larger (?) affairs, from season to season, until it masters our land and us and puts us squarely on the defensive in more ways than one. These are but two of the endless list of troubles, public and private, that afflict us; and the thistle really deserves more attention than we give it; but all in good time we will be come alive to its menace and go about our campaign of obliteration in earnest. Our momentary neglect simly increases the scope of that task, and this is the way of the world with all its serious engagements. capped with its extraenous and spec ious bearings. Hon. William H. Taft, republican nominee for President of the country, is a lawyer and a good one; he has seen enough service at the bar and on the bench, to apprise him of this in congruity; and being man clear through, he now finds himself in a position, to enter a plea for the proper balancing of the codes, and he in tends to prefer it at the meeting of the Virginia bar association, of which j he is to be an honored guest. We are anxious to hear from this presentment. He is making it as a high-minded lawyer, rather than as a candidate for political preferment and he will argue it profoundly and sound ly, since his auditors will be of a class to stand for nothing short of this. He will champion the poor man and his known disadvantages at the bar of the land, and suggest specific remedies, and at the same time pro claim and prove himself the friend of the "under dog." It is a great task, one surrounded with danger, and alive wih opportun ities for misconception and biased conclusions; the occasion will be one to try the amour propre of the pro fession as it stands in Virginia, since those to whom he shall talk will be of opposing political strain, and every man of them will have to keep the noblest tenets of his noble profession before him constantly and finally in order not to transgress the ethics of the situation. But they will do it, alright, because they are well trained lawyers to whom pleas for simple justice are as bread and meat and the crux of all they are committed to. The event cannot fail to have a wide influence upon the country for the simple reason that the huge majority of our people are "poor" in the res tive application of the term and are directly in interest in the matter as he shall offer it. Nothing helps the industrial situa tion so much as the certainty of re publican success in November.' Bryan's name was hissed at the Hearst convention, but there was no attempt to break the hour-and-a-half record. MAN'S DAY IN COURT. There are few of us, indeed, who, in the course of life, do not "have our day in court." Some people, practi cally, live in court, and move and have their being under the aegis of the law, while others are content, gratefully content, to figure there but once in all their careers. The rich man being a person of larger affairs and wider connection in com merce and business, is there far oft ener than the poor man; and while If the democratic party ever fuses with Mr. Hearst again it will have to forgive and forget a large assortment of epithets. Mr. Hearst appears to be hostile, but Mr. Bryan can fall back on the fact that the democrats recently car ried Walla Walla. Mr. Hearst refers to the Bryan party as Falstaffian. Those men in buckram vanish at a wonderful rate in the November count. Mr. Bryan talks of looking to the Middle West for a majority, but in choosing a national chairman he turned to the state of New York. A season of drought is reported in Nebraska. In view of this condition Col. ,Bryan is anxious to be notified, in order that he may embark upon an other tour of the water tanks. Subscribe to the Morning Astoria, COFFEE Schilling's Best is a business-like name; you know what it means; and it means what you want. Ili: K, t.t; gun. From a list of the 618,400 vol umes which they have placed before 4-12,230 sailors on every sea in the last fifty years, the officers of the American Seamen's Friend Society chose two sets best calculated to sup ply the hungry brains of the isolated explorers. Those books of travel, ad venture, history, religion, fiction and biography which have come back most thumbed from almost a hundred thousand fo' castles were finally se lected. In two of the society's ship shape book chests the collections were arranged and sent to be set up in the mess room of the Peary ship at Shoot er's Island, where it was being final ly outfitted. A dictionary, bible, at las and Pilgrim's Progress were in cluded with the fiction favorites of the seamen. It is the more sober works that stand the mei in best stead in the long test' of the arctic night, Lieut. Peary declared before leaving this city to join his ship. In his last "Far thest North" expedition the explorer found one of these American Sea men's Friend Society libraries a stea dy resource for his men, marooned in the ice packs. The books which ser ved through that long night siege from October 12th to March 6th are to-day lying in their weather-beaten case at the headquarters of the so ciety. The lighter fiction is much more free from the tell-tale dogears which mark heavily the more serious volumes that were thumbed over and over in the frigid solitude. If Peary succeeds in planting these treasured volumes beside the Ameri can flag at the pole, the twenty-six thousand libraries which the Ameri can Seamen's Friend Society has kept afloat for half a century will have pen etrated every region on the globe known to the seafarer. From almost every state in this country applica tions to set one of these book chests on its constant course have now been received. F.ach library is registered and regularly reported in its wander ings to any one who may pay twenty dollars to launch and keep it afloat. To President Roosevelt, who as a boy of ten presented one of these libra ries for the society, the sight of the two book-chests on Peary's ship was as familiar as it has now become to hundreds of thousand of sailors the world over. DIARRHOEi There ta no need of anyone suffer trig long with this dlseaae, for to effect a quick cure it la only necee eary to take a few dotea of Chamberlain's Colic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy In fact, In moat catea one doao la aufneienu It never fnlla and can be relied upon In the most severe and dangerous casta. It la equally val uable for children and ia the meana of saving the Uvea of many children each year. In the world'a hlatory no medicine haa ever met with greater success. PRICE 25o. LARGE SIZE 50o. mm m aW m' k m W1- HVwM a " Minna. . . 1 A. I ha IN ONE OR MANY COLORS LARGEST FACILITIES IN THE WEST FOR THE PRODUCTION OK HIGH GRADE WORK I1TII it La it mini bidik t SOLDIERS WORK HARD. National Guardsmen Find It Isn't All Play. TACOMA, Aug. 4. An inkling of the hard work to be done at Camp McKinley, American Lake, came yes terday with the tirst drill, tvery unit worked faithfully. Company and bat talion drills were the order for the in fantry and cavalry, and formations by batteries in attack for the artillery. The first really big event of the en campment comes Thursday when the first, third and sixth battalions of the Second Infantry, the Fourteenth cav alry, fourth field artillery company B. engineers company and hospital corps and company E. 'enginers will deploy in brigade against an enemy outlined by patrols. Colonel T. C. Woodbury of the Third Infantry will be in command. The first day's work of the Wash ington National guard has been a complete surprise. Despite the fact that none of the companies have had battalion drill" since the camp of instruction two years .ago, and but very little of it then, their apparatus and conduct on the field this morning shows that they have been making a close study of the battalion drill regu lations and understand them thor oughly. The Oregon guard arrived yester day and the first day's work will con sist of battalion close order drill and advance, rear, flank guards and patrols. FINANCIAL J. Q. A. BOWLBY, President O. I. PETERSON, Vice-President FRANK PATTON, Cashier J. W. GARNER, Anlatant Caihla Astoria Savings Bank Capital Paid In $115,000. Surplus and Undivided Profit, 1100,000 Transacts a General Banking Buiineii Intercut Paid on Time Deposits FOUR PER CENT PER ANNUM. Eleventh and DuaneSts, Astoria, Oregoa, I A fx, lagaaT ...j LITTLE OVER 3 CENTS A DAY A Small Savings Bank. A Small Savings Account. An Example in Thrift. A Small Fprtune. A happy home. THE BANKING SAVINGS AND LOAN ASS'C'N. 108 10th St. Phone Black 2184 First National Bank of Astoria DIRECTORS Jacob Kawm W. F. McGregor G. C. Flavfx T. W. Ladd S. S. Gordok Capital 3100,000 Surplus 21.000 Stockholders' Liability IOO.OOO :STAHLIMHi;i HH4, Subscribe for The Morning Astorian. 60 cents per month. Contains full Associated Press reports, besidea all the news in the local field. SCANDINAVIAN-A M E R I C A N SAVINGS BANK ASTORIA, OREGON OUR MOTTO: "Safety Supercedes All Other Coneideratloa." Sherman Transter Co. HENRY SHERMAN, Manager. Hacka, ferriages-Baggage Checked and Transferred-Trucka and Furaitwa Wagons Pianos Moved, Boxed and Shipped. 433 Commercial Street ' . 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