V ill K MdtIMM, AMuiii v -TUKlA, OUKCiON. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1903, OILIiiOY SALE ! t Special Sale of PATTERN HATS At the La Mode 082 Cocimerci;U St, . mt Established 1S73. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DKLLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By mail, per year . . . . By earrie-, per month .$7.00 .60 WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By moil, per year, in advance .41.50 AMUSEMENTS. l yf Entered as second-class mutter July 30, 1906, a the postoffke at As , toria, Oregoa, 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 irregularly in delivery should be immediately reported to the office of publication. ''.,.'.. TELEPHONE MAIN col. THE WEATHER- Oregon and Washington Fair ex cept along north coast. SAMUEL ELMORE. There is an immense amount of satisfaction everywhere in the city of Astoria now that it is practically cer tain that Samuel Elmore has consent ed, even conditionally, to run for the mayoralty. The mere mention of his name, five days ago, was the cause of illimitable expression of assurance and gratification among the business men of the city as to the future pos sibilities of administrative security and economic regulation; and the far- ther the matter goes the greater mat sense of civic ease is apparent It is idle to assert, or attempt to confirm, the qualities that beget this confidence; every man in this section knows what is meant when he is spoken of as the highest type of a businessman, and whar those gifts will mean to the city ye be given a council that will stand with him in the conduct of the policies he will in troduce and assist in their applica tion. Commanding the wide interest Mr. Elmore does in this city and country tributary, no man need look for any thing but wise and careful govern ment, always with the good of the city foremost in the calculations and motives that shall inspire ; his acts. The suggestion of his candidacy has already cleared the atmosphere to a point where nothing is needed but his election to obliterate every doubt and dubious element in the civic problem; and this, without ref erence to politics in any direction. Mr. Elmore has already been ap prised of the direct concern of at least 00 of the leading men of mer cantile and professional standing in this ' community, by petition and personal declaration, and this group is strongly representative of the business and property interests over which he will preside if he permits the matter to come to a happy issue. "HOBSON'S CHOICE." Richard Pearson Hobson, Alabama Congressman, Democrat, par excel lance, and paid orator for the Demo cratic National Committee in the JVest and Northwest, enjoys the peculiar distinction of being able to entertain all manner of men with political addresses in which, at no point, does he name William Jen nings Bryan nor his running mate, John W. Kern. It, is another, and vivid, case of "Hobson's Choice"; but one that needs explanation, and which, he does not seek to explain, even inferentiallyr ; He alludes infer entially, however, to the;, two gentle men, at the head of his ticket, and only in that manner, .Judge Taft he names constantly -and respectfully. It is strikingly1 evident' to the analytical mind that while the vali ant captain is a ardent Democrat, Bryan and Kern are not his "choices" for the great offices they are out for; a conclusion which makes his public appearance as a party, and partisan, pleader, radically incongruous. 'JQje Republican who would dare to do this thing would be hailed from the stump in a flash, either by an expressed and instant resentment at the hands of his first audience, or at the quick command of his National Committee. No such anomaly would be permitted for a moment in the Republican field, and the woder is that the wise men at the head of the Bryan campaign will stand for it. Local Democrats are busy as bees trying to account for the uncommon and pronounced laches, and are hav ing a hard time of it. They endeavor to charge it up to a whimsical spirit, to unintentional oversight, to mere inadvertance, to anything on earth but definite and deliberate purpose; but the unprejudiced public is not to be put off, with vaporings and non essentials in so raw a case, and in sists that Captain Hobson's choice in this great issue lies widely remote fro mthe men he is supposed to be supporting. It is a matter pregnant with cause for thought, and all As toria is thinking of it, as are certain other Oregon communities. Great Publlo Improvements. All the way from South Africa come J. S. Schoeman and Mrs. Schoeman to study for the benefit of their own coun- of the United States. They find tn progress here the greatest work of reclamation and Irrigation ever un dertaken by any government In ancient or modern times. It Is a work which President ' Roosevelt has Justly said comes next to the homestead act In its Importance to the American people. Sixteen states and territories are bene fitted by this tremendous Improvement, and thousands of families have found ed homes on. the lands already re deemed from the desert Great and beneficent as this work Is, It is but a feature of the general policy of Republican administrations from the period of reconstruction and especially within the past twelve years to do the best possible for all the people and for all sections of the Union to make the United States, east west north and south, a country worth living in, and to develop to the utmost the resources of the soil, of the forest of the mines and waters of every re gion within the bounds of the republic. The present political campaign will decide whether this policy la to con tinue, whether the nation Is to go ahead or to . halt whether we are to have progress and prosperity under Taft or reaction and ruin under Bryan. The very . platform en; which-Bryan stands and by the language of which he has repeatedly declared himself to be bound denounces Republican ex penditures in general, including those for irrigation, as "unnecessary and wasteful." Bryan, If elected, would be as much bound by the platform as he is in the campaign, and this mighty undertaking, by which arid portions of sixteen states and territories are being converted into thrifty farms, would undoubtedly suffer'. The people of those states and terri tories are not the only parties interest ed in preventing such a calamity as stoppage or delay In the work of recla mation. ' Every patriotic and broad minded voter in the United States ought to be and will be influenced in his attitude toward the presidential contest by a determination that not only the reclamation service, but every other great scheme of national better ment begun and carried on under Re publican administrations, shall con tinue and that the work shall not be banded over to the avowed enemies of progress. A vote for Taft and Sher man will be a vote for the earnest Mir prosecution not only of the task of re deeming arid landsi but ot every" pub lic Improvement directed by ' federal authority. h i ' Saved His Boy's Life "My-three year old boy was badly constipated, had a high fever and was in an awful condition. I gave him two dozens of Foley's Orino Laxative and the next ;raorning the fever was gone and he was entirely well. Foley's Orino Laxative saved nis life." A. Wolkush, Casimer, Wis. T. F. Laurin, Owl Drug Store. COFFEE, and tea; Schilling's Best, is sold by about 9000 grocers west of the Rocky Mountains. , Your rrocer return! roar Boner If roa don't Ilk It: pr hni. ' i BAE INGRATITUDE. Young Chicago German Forges Name Of His Benefactor. CHICAGO, Oct.', 23.-Charged with victimizing a friendly employ er who had given him expense money so he could complete his education in the English language, Frederick Gijsen, graduate of a German Uni versity and son of a Belgian army of ficer, was arrested for forgery in' Chicago yesterday. He was indicted later by the grand jury. Gijsen is ac cuesd of forging the name of E. A. Bean, vice-president of the New Prague, Flour Mills Company, New Prague, Minn., a check for $500 which he cashed at the First Nation al Bank Tuesday. ; Gijsen came here from his native country four months ago and went to New Prague with letters tf recorn mendattion to Bean who hired him as a private secretary oecause re could speak several languages. When Bean sent Gijsen to St. Paul, Minn;, Saturday, to master the English lan guage thoroughly he gave the man $40 to pay his preliminary expenses. Before Gijsen left it is alleged he stole several checks from Bean's checkbook and instead of going to St. Paul, came to Chicago. Knowing Bean had an account at the .First National Bank, Gijsen went there and presented for payment a check for $500, to which Bean's name is said, to have been forged. He was given the money. j?. ' ! , ' J .' Last night Gijsen told about his parents in the fatherland. He sa'd his father was a respected citizen of Aalm in Belgium and for more than 20 years was an officer !n the Bel gian army and is now pensioned, said the prisoner. RAILWAY ATTACHED. Popular Eastern Line Attached For A Paltry $18,000. NEW YORK, Oct 231 n . an ef; fort "to collect a judgment for $18, 000 anainst the New York, New Ha ven & Hartford Railroad. Depuy Sheriff Burns yesterday attempted (to attach the entire railroad. The de uty went to the offices of the 'rail rail and served the attachment, 1r.aurer Thomas F. Paradise, an nouncing tha he would levy on O'e office fnrniture. : Being told that the furniture would n.t ci ver the amount he stated chat he would levy on the railroad. Hs then left the treasurer's office with the intention of attaching one of tin trains standing ready to leave the sta tion While officers were explaining to him that the rolling stock of the road was aH mortgaged, and there fore could not be attached, the road's attorneys secured a stay of execution itrm the Supreme Court. The judg ment represents a verdict of $17,500 'costs obtained by William Car roll,, whose legs were cut off while he was repairing a car in the com pany's yeards. RACES TO INTER-MARRY. Former Chicago University Profes sor States Philosophic Ideas. KANSAS CITY, Mo Oct, 2.1. Professor Charles Zueblin, former- .11 1? - . ' ' ' ( .a A HOPELESS TASK ly of Chicago University, lectured at Central High school on "Fraternity," last night He was strong in his de nunciation of the treatment accordei the negroes by the "So-called Anglo Saxon race, ' whatever that is." It was the professor's belief that this life is a game of give and take; that each person should give what he ca to his fellows and take all he can from them in return. :." " "The wise man knows no boun dary line of convention or prejudi ces," he said. "It. is Jlke standing on the top of a great high mountain. All around him one can see the hun dreds of people, pygmies, but he can tel! no difference in their color, their size, their beliefs or their political ..... ... standing. He takes what he can from them as a whole and as individuals, and so again broadens his own life." The Professor declared that en lightenment of the world would not reach its highest stages until the whites, blacks, red men, yellow men and brown men had 'all swept away the bonds of racial prejudice and be come reconciled on the same social plane with one another. On. of the things necessary to this advance ment is the intermarriage of the ra ces. ' ' SERVING THE COUNTRY. New York Boys Choose The Differ- ent Branches of Service. ? NEW YORK, Oct.T3.-That 1,272 boys and young men who last 'year sought the aid of the Children's Aid Socjety 'afterwards .enlisted n( the United States forces, 'either the army, the: navy or the marine corps, is the statement made by C. Loring Brace, the secretary of the Society. Most of those enlisting were boys and young men who at various times were cared for in the Newsboys Home. Her bert Van Dyke, employment agent of the sociey, has during his 2$ years of service, inducted thousands of young men who seemed of little us in. other walks of life to enlist.. He Jooks u? the record of the young men and se cures the consent of their parents or guardians where there are any, and where there are not has himself ap pointed special guardian, of any of his boys who wish to enlist. During his service with the' society he ha been so appointed guardian of more than 5000 boys who have enlisted. Mr. Van Dyke takes pride' in the statement "that of this entire number not more than 10 have been represen ted to him as having desterted from from the service. ' KING OF THE GYPSIES. Bands Of Rovers And Goor-For-Naughts Are Gathering. ST. LOUIS, Oct. 2.3-"King" Joe Adams and -his band of roving gyp sies expect to spend the winter in St. Louis County and perfect the or ganization of" the. National Gypsy Association of America, with St. Louis as general headquarters. The chief and five- families arrived yes terday from Dubuque. ' ' These are merely the advance guard, according to Adams. Two or three hundred more families will ar rive from the ' four corners of the earth to make' quarters here.' As soon AHEAD. as all the tribes arrive, the annual conference and governmental cere monies will be held. Several marriag es arc scheduled before the tribe breaks camp again. An application filed at Clayton, March 5, for a pro forma decree of Incorporation will be pushed as soon as the gypsies get settled. If, the de cree Is granted, Joe jAdams-wilj be clothed with more power over his people than the; head of a monarchy COAL FOR FLEET. AMOV. Oct. 23.-The coll'er Man shan Jas I 'arrived here with coal for tHe: American baUleships and will . ..". :. n . await the arrival of-rthe fleet. Iflflstipatton f fay hi pcrmanoiily wercomely prefer fersonal effort WitKtKc i op4$Wce tJ tko two Tnilv Konrlic'tal Wotivfi fmcJy, bjrrun ojpt axil U'uVr wKica enable onetoom tttv.r ' doily no tKot assUtame to na ture may l radua'i aifpenScaVwh Houmer netf) aitKeUstef Vfmeaiei,w))enYe4)u')rcJ, aretoasMst tiAire anj iot tt nupylant tKe natuxi. A)ictionfttvKtcK must depew ulti ttatey upon proctr nour lament, proper forta,(d riKt livin nerll. Iogettte tencUl effcat, genuine - ( , , , California Fig Syrup Co; cniy EOLP BY ALL LEADINC DRITGCIVTS cue sue only, rur price 50f Bottle ASTORIA F. M. HANLIN, iiiirsiiaif, JOSEPH and fj ' li, li LJ31 IF: ni l . VLy- Lay and an exceptionally talented company in Richard Brinsley Sheridan's classical comedy, ? ,; ; s W f A i PRICES: 50c, 75c, $1.00, 01.50 ..Astoria Theatre.. Astoria Theatre ONB NIGHT ,,j SUNDAY : OctS ;i'WILtiE;rt)UNLAY IN GEORGE M. COHAN'S Brilliant Comedy Hit With Music II. me lloheymboners" . : Elaborate Production Cohan Songs, Cohan Boys, Cohan Girls, Cohan Noise. , The Cohan Songs Hkt Tm Popular Man," "Make a It of Noise," "Kid Days," In a "One Night Stand," "Nothing New Be neath the Sun," "The Mysterious Maid," "'Don't Go In the Water, Daughter," "San Francisco It My Home," "An Old Fashioned Walk." , " ".-.' The Incomparable Company, and the Bisque Baby Ballet. Prices Evenings, 25c to $1.50. Ma tinees. 25c to $1.00. ' Mall orders filled flow. THEGRAND THEATRE v; ' Commercial and Ninth Street TONIGHT THE BLOODSTONE .:. ,. or the RING AND THE PROPHECY WHERE'S THAT QUARTER? FUN ON THE FARM TRUE HEARTS VIEWS OF CHINA This Theatre is equipped with the latest and most improved electri cal Machines. Don't fail to see these pictures. ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROGRAM MONDAY, THURSDAY AND , SATURDAY ADMISSION, 10c Children, Sc THEATRE Lessee and Manager. WILLIAM W. nn ri i :'. tit . .. flmoljer ?i