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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1908)
SUNDAY, OCTOBER. 11 GSitlBfiilm Only a Few Days More OF THE Established 1873, Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail, per year ..." ..." "....$7.00 By carrier, per month M THE MORNING AST01UAN, ASTORIA. OREGON. . WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By nail, per year, in advance......... $1.50 Entered as second-das matter July 30, 1906, a the pottoffice 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 SU THE WEATHER Oregon Probably showers; slight ly coier. BULGARIA The population of Turkey in Eu rope is a little over 6,000,000 and that of Bulgaria nearly 4,000,000. Of the nearly 4,000,000 Bulgarians but about half a million are Turks. The Govern ment of Bulgaria has long been whol ly independent of Turkey, but by the treaty of Berlin it pays to Turkey an annual tribute. Why it should pay tribute is hard to explain. Infact, the only reason why it should do so is that the European Congress of Ber lin .following the last Russo Turkish war, said it must pay it. For that mon ey Bulgaria gets nothing, for the Tur kish Government has neither the de sire nor the ability to give anything whatever in return for the money. Bulgarians hate Turks and Turks hate Bulgarians. And no more tri bute wil be paid. , It is not possible for Turkey to coerce Bulgaria, and the feeling is such that the Bulgar ians are aching to have Turkey at tempt coercion. Of course, it is unfortunate that these things should happen while the Young Turkish patriots are trying to create a decent government for their country, but Bulgaria is for Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary is. also for it self, and this transition period is just the chance they were both waiting for, when Turkey is least able to of fer resistance and there is ao agree ment whatever among the great pow ers. In neither case will there be any noticeable change in political re lations. Bosnia and Herzegovina will be governed as a province of Austria-Hungary, instead of by the Emperor-King as a separate and au tonomous district. Bulgaria will stop paying tribute. That is about all there is of it, and it looks as if "Eu rope" would scowl and make the best of it. in 1896 when he made his memorable campaign for free silver. They are as wide apart on this question as are the poles of the earth. These two recog nized leaders of the two great politi cal parties have no views in common on any of the old issues, nor have they anything in common in their views on the Philippines. And on the latest issue of Mr. Bryan's they are just as far apart as was Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis back in 1861. ROOSEVELT AND BRYAN. The efforts of the demc era tic press to couple the names of President Roose velt and Wm. J. Bryan is about as successful as that of a few years ago to couple Mr. Bryan's name with that of Senator Ben Tillman. Mr. Bryan encourages this effort by compliment ing President Roosevelt and asserting that the President stands for the Democratic platform and policies. But there is no excuse for misunder standing the positions of either Presi dent Roosevelt or Mr. Bryan. They have both been very free in expres sing their views on all public questi ons and their expressions are public property. On the tariff the Presi dent has expressed himself unquali fiedly as a Protectionist, and said that the tariff should not be revised until revision would do more good than harm to the great interests of this country. It should then be. revised in harmony with the protective pnn ciple. ' i'PllH Mr. Bryan is one of the most rad ical opponents of protection. He de clares that protection is robbery and that, the tariff should be for revenue only, There is no more harmony be tween Roosevelt and Bryan on the tariff than there is between Speaker Cannon and John Sharpe Williams, or than there was between Wm. Mc Kinley and Wm, D. Wilson, who was an open advocate of free trade. . There is the same, radical disagree ment between President Roosevelt and Mr. Bryan on the money ques tion. The President is just as staunch an advocate of the gold standard as was President' McKinley, and Mr. Bryan still believes that he was right The cheapest things are often the dearest. Time flies, and no airship has been able to beat it. The poorer a man is the more he favors an income tax. If there is any knocking to be done let opportunity do it. Some men sit on others while try ing to stand up for themselves Keep an eye on your friends; you know what to expect of your enemies. Much of a man's interest in a wo man is due to his inability to under stand, her.' , It is easier for the tailor to meas ure a man than it is for him to meas ure his bank balance. Mischief in your own children would be downright wickedness in the chil dren of your- neighbor. ; If a young man shows a decided bent to get rid of his money it won't take him very long to go broke. A woman should never marry a man to reform him until she can make a satisfactory omelet out of bad eggs. When a woman has occasion to vis it her poor relations she always likes to talk about the trouble she has with her hired girl. COFFEIT Your grocer must sell roor coffee; we can't all be 'comfortable; but he needn't sell it to you. Tor f roer return rear oey II jot n ScUIUbc's Bt; w par Urn. NEW YORK LETTER NEW YORK, Oct. lO.-With half a cozen private detective agencies and the police sifting every clue on the face of Manhattan today, it is ex pected that one of the most bold and clever gangs of letter-file thieves will be exposed before the end of the present campaign. Preying upon the private documents of what they con sider big game in the present politi cal crisis, an aggregation of the most expert crooks of the country are as serted by the detectives to have un derway at the present moment a gi gantic plot of burglary and blackmail. 1u the mysterious machinations of these daring operators the investiga tors are to-day laying the blame for the present rifling of the letter files in one political headquarters as well as other conspicuous losses of the correspondence of corporations. For years the police have had an eye on a particularly clever clique in the underworld which followed this very method in-non-political fields. To-day they declare they will track and break it up at all hazards. Should they suc ceed, everybody in town is eagerly awaiting developments. . ' BALEFUL BIRDS. '., Scarcely less grave than the prob lems of handling this harbor's sweep ing, influx of immigrants is the ques tion of dealing with the alien host of sparrows wheh is numbering many mllions as it settles down upon the streets and parks of the metropolis today for the winter season. Half a century ago a handful of House Spar rows, imported from England, were let loose in one of Gotham's church yards, the ; only representatives of their race. To-day the descendants of these baleful birds have taken pos session of every outdoor inch of the island, driving the native songsters from their field of usefulness and stunting and defiling every growth of the city's rare vegitation. New York has fdund no use for the English ' CtMMM ci 4, Ever Held in Astoria The Workingmen's Store Is the Place For Genuine Real Bargains in ...Clothing, Furnishings and Shoes... bd'r rr- r?i.. Greatest reduction on seasonable goods ever offered in A sloria. Read this li& and come at once or you will regret it ' o - $4.50 Mackinaw Coats , $4.00 Mackinaw Coats $4.50 Mackinaw Pants , $4.00 Wool Pants ..... $3.50 Wool Pants $2.75 Wool Pants $2.50 Wool Pants $3.00 Sweaters . $2.00 Sweaters $1.25 Sweaters $3.50 Sweater Coats . . $3.00 Sweater Shirts . . .50 Woolen Soxs .25 Woolen Soxs .... $3.00 Flannel .Shirts ... $2.50 Flannel Shirts ... $2.00 Flannel Shirts . . . ,..$3.50 ...$3.00 ...$3.50 ,..$3.00 ,..$2.50 ...$2.00 ...$1.75 ...$2.25 ...$1.00 ,.. .75 ...$2.75 ,..$2.25 ... .35 .20 ,..$125 ,..$1.85 ,..$1.50 $2.00 Dress Shirts $1.50 Dress Shirts $1.00 Dress Shirts .75 Work Shirts .50 Work Shirts $1.25 SUk Front Shirts .75 Shirts . Men's $5.00 Dress Shoes.... Men's $4.50 Dress Shoes. . . . Men's $4.00 Dress Shoes... Men's $3.50 Dress Shoes.... Men's $3X0 Dress Shoes.... $7.00 Logger's Shoes $6.50 Logger's Shoes $6.00 Logger's Shoes $4.00 Working Shoes $3.00 Working Shoes .... .. ....$1.50 ....$1.15 .75 .... .50 .... .40 .... .75 .... .40 ....$3.50 ....$35 ....$3.00 ....$2.65 ....$2.25 ....$5.50 ....$5.00 ..'..$4.75 ....$3.00 ....$2.25 Men's $8.00 Rubber Boots $5.00 Long Yellow Oil Costs $2.00 Three-fourths Yellow Oil Costs.. $1.75 $4.00 Suit, Scotch Wool Under- . wear No. 17 $3.30 $4.00 Suit, Winsted Under- i wesr $3.00 $3.50 Suit, Wool Under- ; wear , . $2.50 $3X0 Suit, Wool Under- t; ; wear .....$2.25 $2.50 Suit, Wool Under- ' wear . $1.75 $1.00 Suit, Cotton Underwear... .80 25 PER CENT OFF ON ALL SUITS, PANTS, HATS, TRUNKS AND SUITCASES Tine WorMn'mem's Store Chas. Larson, Prop. Next to Ross, Higgins & Co. Sparrow and is mourning the loss of the good American breeds which he has ruthlessly driven away. To teach every citizen to know and value his own sparrows and other birds the National Association of Audubon So cieties has just begun a wide cam paign of education from this city. Every dweller in this metropolis ov erridden by the foreign pests is in terested in this latest movement of the tireless Audubon workers. ' GOUGING GAMBLERS. Tight in the toils of a, sweeping crusade aginst gambling houses, the professional gamesters of this town are to-day wriggling to evade the po lice on the one hand and the probers of the police on the other. Not since the days of the Committee of Fifteen and the Jerome slidge-hammer raids has the tenderloin, been so stirred along these highways whfre bars and bolts and bargaining wuh the blue coats have protectcda wld whirl of gambling all summer.'1 Bingham and Jerome are grinding hard and fast as upper and nether millstones be tween which it will ko hard with a crooked commander of precincts where the law has been lax'y enforc ed. The men behind the many pala ces of chunce have heaped a fine har- lily.' Ml mfrJ? WmMfhm lllf 9M IS vent since spring and the whirl of the wheel kai reached everyone who rai sed through scores of side streets. The broken bookmaker has been dri ven to the green cloth for a liveli hood and swelled the list of practis ing gamblers. Altogether it is con sidered high time that this hising scandal be stopped and that the pro tecting police bo made the victims instead of the confiding players. SPINAL SPECULATION. About the tiny torso of little Mr. Harriman the eyes of all New York arc focusing to-day. As hang the siim' of the puny magnate, so, it would appear, hangs the wagging of the money world. At the hint of a knot in the Harriman opinal chord, stocks sagged in sympathy the other day, while their course now holds ac cording to the various denials or con firmations of the original story of the malady of the diminutive, financier. As Harriman is always hid to the eyes of the general public here, his present eondition is still a mystery. Just now the crippled limbs of a couple of base ball players share public interest with the plight of Harriman. Whether the Giants of the Wall Street League can play the game with a disabled star as handily as the baseball nine remains to be seen. PUMPKIN PIES. Twenty thousand golden pumpkin pies have each day begun to slip down some hundred thousand throats throughout Gotham and the real nest of the fall season has at .last laid hold of New Yorkers, The fac.t estab lished by figures, that one person in forty eats a piece of pumpkin pie ev ery day in this town is not astonish ing to the observing, who have watch ed the rural tidbit find its way into ; the heart of the city-dweller during the last dozen years. To-day these yellow orbs of lusciousness out-nttni-ber, five to one, the apple, mince and cocoanut confections on the shelves of bakery, lunch room and kitchen: Most metropolitans have memories of the real luxuries of. the country and among these pumpkin pic stands first. HERE'S HOPING THAT THIS THE LAST JUG. Fifty Years a Blacksmith. , Samuel R. Worley of Hixburg, Va., has been shoeing . horses for more than SO years. He says: , "Chamber lain's Pain Balm has given me great relief from lame back and rhcuma- 'tism. It is the best liniment I ever used." For sale by Frank Hart and leading druggists. V