SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1908. THE MORNING ASTORIAN. ASTORIA. OREGON. , . . ... tljlr Si its lMm-'- . : Established 1S73. Published Daily EcPt MondJblE ji S., BELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. j7QQ By mail, per year " " '" "' ,60 By carrie-, per month ............. WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail, per year, in advance i Entered as second-class 'matter July CO, 1905, a the potoffice at As toria, Oregon, under the act of Congress of March 3. 1879 , Orders for the delivering of The Morning Astorkn to either residence or S e of b sLss may be made bypostal ;card or through teUphon. Any irregularis in delivery should be immediately reported to the office f publication. TELEPHONE MAIN 65L ? THE WEATHER Oregon, Washington and Idaho Fair. THAT $600,000. One of the bcit posted of Astoria's citizens, yesterday, told a reporter of the Morning Astorian imi ' beginning of the year 1908, over $600 000 of the private wealth of this city has gone to Portland for invest ment; and that more is constantly being negotiated in this direction. . This is not pleasant news; but it is perfectly logical , Portland is one of the great and live centers, where active capital is wanted and appreciated and upon which adequate returns are achieved; it is growing immensely and rapidly and if its present ratio is maintained it is destined to become one of the greatest of the Pacific metropolis. No one -may blame the Astoria capi talist for taking his money there for investment when practically all its promises are made good, , and even bettered; while at home there is noth ing to invite, nor repay, investment This is a condition that must be changed if we are to ever hold a place among the big and busy and prosperous cities of the northwest. Our limit in a business way seems to have been wrought; we can dp no more without development and the fewer elements of production and manufacture - that come with the great commercial agencies such as steamship and railway lines, the uti lization of the soil and the organic trades and business that run parallel with these fundaments. The question is a grave one and needs the best thought and study our people can: give. Think it over awhileL WHAT IS ITS VALUE?. The .Morning Astorian asks in the name of Republican Astoria and Re publican Clatsop, what the majori ties of 500 in the former and 800 in the latter, are worth to this people?. What the significance of these major political advantages to the party pos sessing them, since it permits the minority to dissipate and annul the municipal majority every time it sees fit to do so?. .Why the Republican party of Astoria never uses, nor as serts, its power and prestige in the city, but rather, deliberately ignores it, or hands it over to the Democrats, who use it for all it is worth (to them) and leave the bills to be set tled by the overwhelming, two-to-one Republican majority of taxpay ers and voters?. The situation offers an anomaly that defies explanation; save on the ground that a "hoodoo" exists and cannot be shaken off. . In point of wealth, population, commercial in fluence, and all the potent agencies employed in the play of politics, the city dominate's the county utterly; the vitality of the Republican party is furnished by the city; and the core and center of all partisan and po litical , movement and achievement lies within municipal boundaries; yet ' the strength, the utility; the essential influence of ' Republicanism . here. falls flat ''and profitless every time it is invoked in behalf of civic interests in Astoria. " Why is it so?. " We do not believe the sum of vir tue and wisdom and integrity and capacity is herded and held within the compass of the minority in As toria. We cannot subscribe to the doctrine that the majority of our people are irresponsible, incapable; administratively weak and senseless ly indifferent. Nor do we desire to adopt the almost unavoidable conclu sion, that the "dominant" minority is less honest and contributes more to the creed and graft of the hour and is therefore bolstered in place and authority. We do know that the problem offers some very ugly in ferences, and none of them to tne credit of the party.that permits the oemetuitv of the shamemi ana in congruous condition. The time is at hand for self-analysis all along the Republican line in this cityf for a well-centered, , definite, determined movement toward the restoration of the control of the actual majority; and it were well for Republican As toria to do its thinking quickly and rationally and retrieve an ascendancy they have given away, or sold up, or passively yielded, to a minority that is making blamed bad use of it UNIFY THE ELECTIONS. The tendency of the day, in every State in the Union, is to the nmfica cation of the electoral work and budget; the simplifying and cheapen ing of the processes and costs of the franchise, and the merging of the system to a single day and a single bill of costs. It is Wee all else the modern has to do and pay for; it is being wrought to a stage of effic iency and economy and despatch that is purely business-like; and State after State is falling into line. The day will soon be here when the elec toral work of the Nation, State, County, City and Precinct, will be centralized to a common period that will have divested the electors of the everlasting worry, loss of time, and irrational public expense now pre valent As things stand now we are afflict ed from three to six times t $ year with these unescapable demands up on the public conscience, purse and time; and there is no real reason why the whole thing may not be safely mimified in every relation; nor any obstacle in the way that an enlight ened public disposition may not over come. As a matter of fact the peo ple are wearying of ' the multiplicity of the elections that are thrust upon them, and the system itself is amen able to many a change for the better, chief of which will be the uniting of the franchises into one universal ex pression at a given hour of time and at a minimum of public agitation, time-loss and cost Let us study the matter and try to realize the advantages it offers!. If You Are Over Fifty Read This Most people past middle-age Suf fer frooi kidney and bladder disor ders which Foley's Kidney Remedy would cure. Stop the drain on the vitality and restore needed strength and vigor. Commence, taking JFoley's Kidney Remedy today. ' T. F; 'Lau- rin, Owl .Drug Store, i Z . .. NEW YORK, Nov. 6.-Interesting tatitics have just oeen mcn:u ere .which show the surprising growth and magnitude of tne auio industry in this, country. The present capital of this business is $94,000,000 with invested in kindred trades and $57,000,000 in garages ami retail salesrooms, making a total oil $187,000,000 in a business practically unknown ion years agol More than 58,000 persons are employed in au to factories throughout the country; 29,000 more arc employed indirectly makinn parts anil anotner i,3w in garages and salesrooms, making a total of more than im,wu employes. Figured on the regular basis this in dustry, therefore, is the support of nearly half a million persons. There are now 253 builders of automobles in the United States of which at least 125 have passed the experimental stage. The output tor ias year was about 52,000 cars, the largest in the history of the industry, which up to date has turned out altogether near: ly 200,000 machines. Careful esti mates for the coming year place the outout at 75.000 cars of which four factories will produce about half and one alone 12,000 autos. During the history of this industry $28,000,000 worth of foreign cars nave oeen im ported, but to-day America is export ing far more than she imports, liigni years ago the sales of American cars totalled less than $8,000,000; last year they were more than $105,000,000. Perhaps the most ssgnihcant teature of the whole development of this in fant industry is found in the fact that the great majority of cars now manu factured sell for $1500 or less, show ing that the auto, at first only the toy of the wealthy, is fast becoming an accepted means of transportation among all classes. Saturday, November 7(th? AT 8:15 P.M. EARNEST' PAANANEN in a grand OLIN REGIT AIw.- Assisted by Miss Esther Sundquist and Mrs. Chas. Abercrombie, pianist PROGRAM 5. 1. Canzonetta ........By Gabriel Marie 2. Russian humoreske . i .............. ... ............ .P. Tschaikowsky 3. Hungarian scene ................. .Keler Bela 4. Violin Concert vl. ........ .-De' Beriot Violin solos by Ernest Paananen and Miss Esther Sundquist, assisted by Mrs. Charles Amercrombie. " , '' " " 'v; - Finnish Popular Air's for violin,.-...... . .r. . .... ... Perpctua Mobile ; --....i . . '....'. Carl Bohm Mazurka de Consert. . . ,'. . .-. .'.7. .V. .'. ;..Ovide Musin PRICES: 35 cents and 50 cents. SEATS O N SALE AT OWL DRUG STORE The Color Line New York News Letter The bieKest club in the world hs just been organized here. Its bigness consists, however, not in the num ber of its members but in their size, the organization being known as the Fat Men's Club of New York. The first requirement for membership is a weight of at least 300 pounds and in the first election of officers just held the ten officers elected have a total weight of 3435 pounds, or 343 pounds per officer. For obvious rea sons the club has taken ground-floor rooms. Altnougn it is nor a xrusr, the first by-law states that the ob ject of the club is "to further the de velopment of corporations, in ad dition to a weight of 300 pounds re quirements for eligibility to member ship are a waist measurement of at least 46 inches, This of course is the minimum and the by-laws adopted at its first meeting indicate the advan tages of further avoirdupois. It is provided that any man of good ap petite who weighs 450 pounds is eli gible for honorary membership and will be entitled to cast one and two- thirds votes. The by-laws also pro vide that any Ynember losing ten pounds in weight shall be suspended until he recover it. These by-laws can be changed either by a two-thirds vote by numbers or by a vote of two- thirds of the weight of the club ir respective of numbers. For the latter contingency a pair of hay scales has been provided. The president of this club is a light weight of only 380 pounds. The sergeant-at-arms weighs 510 pounds. , . . - s ; According to experts on nerve dis eases, JNew xork is tne nervous cen tre of the country. Certain investiga tors who have interested themselves in the question, of the amount of nervous energy expended in, various cities of the United States have com piled a table which places New York first in an alarming manner. Accord ing to the table this city leads all oth er cities to a surprising extent, since for each 100 units of nervous energy expended in New-York other munici palities rank in the following order: Chicago 81 units, Pittsburg 80 units, Philadelphia 64 units, San Francisco 60 units, St. Louis 49 units, and New Orleans 41 units. Of course there, are various other : intermediary cities' but New York is so far ahead of the rest that the conservaton of its nervous energy has became a major problem, especially in view of the doubt as to whether New York gets a proportion ately. greater retorn for its nervous expenditure ,as . compared to other cities.. Various solutions looking to more quiet life have been suggested. The Rev. Dr. Aked, Rockefeller's pastor, in an article for Apgleton's magazine, suggests more faithful church . attendance. "The . Americans who live hardest," says he, "are those who attend church least." Inversely, therefore, New York must be the wickedest as well as the busiest city in the world.. Aside from this, how: ever, doctors assert that if the city does not let down in its nervous ex penditure, its municipal . supremacy will soon be a thing of the past., On of the last vestiges of British royalty in New York, once the Tory center of the country, before it be came the United tSates, has just dis appeared. The big English , oak known as the "Prince of Wales Tree," which has stood in Central Park for nearly half a century has just been cut down. Curiously enough the axe which brought it low was wielded by a loyal Irishman. The "Prince of Wales Tree" or King's tree as it was sometimes called, was really a Hying monument to the pleasant relations existing between England and Ameri ca at the time of its planting by a royal " hand. It was during the visit of tfie then Prince of Wales, now King Edward VII, to this country in I860, when he traveled under the in sognito of Baron Renfrew that the famous tree was set out. It was done at the suggestion of Mr. A. H. Green, then controller of the parks. Many prominent men were present at the ceremony to observe a future king shovelling dirt with ' an ordinary spade into" the bote in which the tree was set. At ,the same time when the English oak was planted Baron Ren frew" also set close by an American elm. The oak is gone now in spite of all the efforts of arboriculturists to save it, but the elm is still flourishing. The trunk and larger branches of the famous oak have been preserved and will be cut up into souvenirs. The, famous question, which even tually went to the Supreme Court, as to whether frogs' legs should be classed as poultry or fish, promises to pale into insignificance when com pared to one which is now troubling local custom appraisers and causing epicures to tremble lest they be de prived of a famous delicacy. The point of argument now is whether under the Dingley law, caviar, which is a preparation of the eggs of the sturgeon, should be classed as fish Fish enters this country under a high duty; caviar, as fish eggs, free from duty. The contention of the custom appraisers is that the eggs of fish from which fish arc hatched are na turally fish, and therefore dutiable as such. On the other hand the impor ters insist that fishes eggs arc no more fish than hen's eggs are poultry. They hold that an egg which can never hatch into a fish, as in the case of caviar, cannot possibly be a fish, any more than a hard boiled hen's egg could be a chicken. This diffi cult question- which is now on its way to the Supreme Court will eventually evoke an answer just about as com plicated : as the solution of the fa mous question as to which came first, the egg or the chicken. DO IT HESITATE fJ&TL iff 1 JUST ARRIVED I Shipment of Norwegian Bocll Beer $2.00 the Dozen. As displayed upon our shelves, will give you every shade of paint that you may require for any purr-nsc in-door, oi out. These paints are well ground in fine Linseed Oil, with selected white lead. They are uni form in quality and spread very smoothly, covering a large surface The durability of this paint is well known in the trade. Convenient sized cans in all popular colors. If you will try these once you will al ways use them. , AUeA Wall Paper and Paint Co. Cor. UTH AMD BOND AMERICAN IMPORTING CO; j s Phone 1881. 580 CommcrciaSt. J ; j Importers and Wholesale Uquor Dealers, AMUSEMENTS,. ASTORIA THEATRE Sunday, Nov. 8 H. A. PRAZBB PRESENTS , MR. "'; JAS.J.CORBETT In the Broadway Fardal Success FACING THE MUSIC Superb Scenic Production. A Great Cit. t 300 Performancei Madison Square Theatre, New York 150 Per Formancet Powers Thea tre, Chicago. Prices,50,75,$1.00 and $1.50 IN FIVE MINUTES YOU WILL BE RID OF STOMACH MISERY NO DANGER OF DYSPEPSIA Your Druggist Has a Pleasant Tast ing Preparation Called Diapepsm Which Cures You Before You Real ize it Ri3 Yourself of Stomach Trouble Forever. Some people think they have In digestion, others Catarrh of the Stomach, others Nervousness, Cancer or Dyspepsia, etc. Call it this if you will, 'but the real name for your trouble is Food Fermentation, with only partial digestion. Everything you eat turns to either Acid, Stom ach gas or Stomach poison, which weaken the digestive organs, causing a lack of gastric- juice. , Your food sours, is only half digested, and you become affected -with loss of appetite, pressure and fullness, after eating,' burning 'sensation, a feeling of vomiting, heartburn, water brash and ' tenderness in ' the pit of - the stomach, slimy tongue, bad faste in the mouth, constipation, nausea, belching of gas, dizziness, sick head aches, mental depression and many other common symptoms. You can cure all this by not eat- wig, by not putting any rood in your stomach to ferment;' but how about the nourishment' needed to sustain your bodily strength? If you are a stomach, sufferer, , cither man or woman, young or old, whether you call it Indigestion or any other name, go now to your druggist and give 50 cents for a case of Pape's Diapepsin. Every possible kind of Stomach trouble is readily cured by Diapepsin, which takes right hold of the food in your stomach .and digests it alone, without the help of the stomach, just as if your stomach wasn't there. rAfter a few days' use of Diapepsin your Stomach will again be in good working order, your meals will thor oughly digest , and your intestines will be clean and fresh, and you will have no use for laxatives or liver regulators. , - Hexamethylenetetramine ..The above' is the name of a Ger-, man, chemical, which is , one of the many valuable ingredients of Foley's Kidney Remedy. Hexamethylenete tramine is recognized by medical text, books, and authorities as a uric acid solvent and antiseptic for the urine. Take Foley's Kidney Remedy as soon as you notice any irregulari ties, and avoid a serious malady. Ti F. Laurin, Owl Drug Store. .: . STEEL & EWART Electrical Contractors Phone Main 3881 .. . . 426 Bond Street wmssatBasgk MS SCOW BAY BRASS & 111 II ASTOltIA, OHKUOW Iron and Brass Founders, Land and Manns Enginecrt. Uo-to-DU Sawmill Machinery rrompt ttwniion given w wjiw 18th and Franklin Ave. work. Ttl Main S461 Sherman Trahsier Co. HENRY I HERMAN, Manager. Hacks, Carriages Baggage Checked and Transferred-Trnf ki 14 FtraJtwi wagons nanos Movea, ooaea ana ouwymu. , 451 Commercial itrett - Mala Pfc W FINANCIAL, First 1 ational Bank of Astaria Jacob Kamm J. MILLINERY SALE Our Entire Line of Millinery at Cost. La Mode 682 Commercial St, ' V Astoria, Oregon. DIRECTORS W. F. McGrecor G. C Euvel W. Ladd S.S. Gordon :, Capital ........ SIGSOO Surplus 2500 Stockholders' Liability ........ 100,000 J. Q. A. BOWLBY, President a I. PETERSON, Vice-President J. W. GARNER, Assistant ashlar FRANK PATTON, Cashier HOT OircOLD oiiifest - . 6S Just Right CLOSSET & DEVERS, v, , , p PORTLAND, ORB, , , .,, IT'S A GOOD THING TO REFER to the reputation 'of a store before making any important purchases therein. Before you buy is the time tb look up the matter. Ask questions. Find out if the store you intend pa tronizing keeps its pledges. Be sure that you learn if it sells the qualities it claims; if it treats ts customers honestly and fairly, then, if satisfied, buy there. Do all the asking you wish about us among your .; friends, and that you will result in your, com ing here regularly. , . . , Come in and sec our $125 Kitchen Range. "THE BIG .STORE." ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - S232.C00 Transacts a General Banking Business Interest Paid on Tims Depos'ts Four Per Cent. Per Annum Eleventh end Dtune 8ts. .... Astoiie, Oregon scandinavian-a ae r i c a n Savings bank ASTORIA, OREGON ' OUR MOTTO: "Safety Superctdei All Other Conilij.rnio." ' , ' V, , ....'.FOB A..,. ' VICTOR OR AN EDISON PHONOGRAPH 7; : -)GO:TO(- . : " ; ' olinsonPlionograpli Go, Parlors Second Floor Over Scholfield ft Mattson Co. John Foi, Pres. , F. L. Bishop, Sec. Astoria Savings tfmit, Treas. Nelson Troyer, Vice-Pres. and Supt ASTORIA: IRON WORKS DESIGNERS AND MANUFACTURERS " s r , , , OF, THE LATEST IMPROVED . .-7 Canning iVMchlneryr Marine Engines and Pollers . COMPLETE CANNERY OUTFITS FURNISHED. Correspondence Solicited. . . Foot of Femth Street .THE1, ! ; First-Class Liquors landDCifJars ; , &2 Commercial Street . Corner Commercial and 14th. ' ASTORIA, OKSGON