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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 28, 1909)
N , " I U4., OIU,.M. SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1909. LINE AUTO.M 11 IK iHM." OUR OF ill- t'.I- ; '.'P' s. $1350 SI 1.00 $11.50 ATO SI)t Swing Established 1873. Published Daily Except Monday by THE J. S. DELLINGER CO. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. By vail, per year Sy carrier, per month . WEEKLY ASTORIAN. By mail.' per year, in advance.. $1.50 Entered a second-class matter July 30, 1906, it the postoffice at Astoria, Oregon, voder the act of Cong-res of March 3, 1379. 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 f publication. TELEPHONE JHE WEATHER Oregon and Washington Occa sional rain; colder in the east por tions. ASTORIA'S OWN YEAR. Quiet as the times seem at this, the opening of the year 1909, it is behev ed to be peculiarly propitious for As toria, Gatsop county, and the mouth of the Columbia river; that the close of 1909 will find this entire section well launched, on a tide of actual and significant work and business that will contribute largely to a successful future. With the Harnman protects now fairly defined west of Portland, in this and Tillamook, counties; with the electric system, in and out of this city, brought to a pass where the money itself is the next step toward" the practical development of the en terprise and every pledge at hand that money is but waiting the final ac tion of the City of Astoria, and that action due in a few days; with the assurance from headquarters that the Astoria & Columbia River road is to be heavily re-inforced as to road bed and rails, and new and fine train ser vice to be added; with plenty of mon ey to advance the jetty work, and plenty more for dredging the Colum bia bar and making a fiat demonstra tion in favor of this export and im port avenue; with lumber beginning to move Eastward again, all idle plants opening up over the North west and the Astoria mills already running steadily and heavily and the Hammond mills to be practically doubled in efficency and output; with the fisheries at a point where they may be better handled through what promises to be a banner season, it really looks as if this is to be As toria's Own yeaf. TJpon such a predicate as this, it does seem as though we might rise to the promise and make the best of it all. We certainly have no right to grumble and grouch and, so far as the popular sentiment can be as certained, no disposition to. We seem to be moving, for once, in an orbit of our own, free from the hampering in fluences that have impeded and dis couraged us in the past; and it will be a strange and unfortunate thing if we do not turn these good things to some account for city, county and port!. THE LIQUOR RE-ACTION. No man, in rational touch with the day and its manifestation, public and private, will deny for an instant, that there is a far-reaching re-action against liquor and the part liquor plays in the history of the hour. This realization is not confined to the ranks of the abstemious or those I A R $7.00 j60 MAIN 661. who do not drink at all; it is very general, and includes the great host of drinkers of all degrees. The con viction seems to be gaining ground that liquor lies behind, beneath and in intimate relation to, the adverse conditions of business and society generally, and that it is fast under mining every circumstance and bear ing upon which we rely for existance, happiness and progress, with the re sult that genuine fear is at last alive, and men who think at all, are cogni zant of a national civic peril and ready to meet the situation with any (sacrifice that will remedy or save it- Men of all classes, drinkers and non-drinkers, are unifying daily on all the expedients such as local op tion, prohibition, temperance move-1 ttients and restrictive policies; men who for years have scoffed at them all and laughed them down, are today giving serious and wholesome atten tion to the pleas, in all sections of the country. There is no gainsaying cause nor effect nor remedy, they are plain and monumental facts and their recognition is one of the healthful J signs of the times; just as are the ap paling ranges of crime, insanity, di vorce, moral degeneracy, illiteracy and the abnormal advance of the un fit to place and power. From every quarter of the land comes the same story of awakening; of salutary conviction and wide spread effort at redemption. Astoria will give her testimony in the start ling premise before she is many days older; and, with all such demonstra tions, will be irresistable and conclu sive- We must have some higher and safer plane to move upon than liquor inspires or begets, and it will be found when the time comes!. TAFT AND REVISION. President-elect Taft is already up against the thorns that beset the na tional chief executive. He is pleading against mis-representation .already, on the score of his attitude with re gard to tariff revision, although the country was supposed to know from his plain utterances on the vital sub ject, that he stood for an early and rational overhauling of the system, and its quickest dispatch in the inter ests of business all over the country We believe that his proposal to put the matter into the hands of a com mission with wide and final powers; uch as the inter-state Commerce Commission is charged with, is the safest and quickest way out of one of the greatest and gravest muddle? our people can invoke. It will, to a large extent, remove the issues from politics; it will take out of the hands of Congress, where it is invariably made the ba ?is for all manner of dealing and double-dealing, and give that body ALL THESE CAN BE HAD AT THE F URN ITU RE GO. more time for affairs that need atten-1 tion and dispatch; it will make the question one of the business issues. ; and put it where it may be discussed ' and disposed with cleanly and health- j ful treatment; and give the people j directly at interest a simpler and readier method of placing thcii claims and urging them with sonu show of effect and justice. The tendency of the age is to se lect commissions in, the handling of all great public issues and depart mental schemes; and the tariff is en titled to this same high and exclusive arrangement. The sooner Mr. Taft's idea is practically embodied in such a creation, the sooner the country will be freed from the incumbus and bane of the tariff as it exists now, a Con gressional prerogative, first and last Of course it will have to go there for final approval and constitutional ac tion; but that is of small concern, if the interminable preliminaries can be taken care of elsewhere. WING SHOTS. Billy Sunday has been horse-whipped by an alleged maniac, for the tac it insult to womankind contained in some of the blatant stuff he has got ten off. We have very grave doubts of the insanity of the man who ap plied the lash; and none" whatever of the incentive that moved him. A black-guard in the pulpit is ever a fit subject for such demonstrations as this, and this particular black-guard has no claim to exception that we know of. The "blind pig" seems to have blundered into the wrong patch down this way. The courts seem to have a ring in his nose with a taut guiding line attached to it. When we have occasion to refer to the grand jury, in the future, we can 'hardly fail to revert to the gentlemen who officiated in that capacity at the Spring term of the Circuit Court for 1909. This grand jury has certainly left its impress on the public mind and conscience; as much to the peace and satisfaction of that public as to the distinct credit of the G- J. itself. A condition made possible by the devoted work of District Attorney E. B. Tongue and his assistant, Mr. Brownell. We have a fleet of nine ships now in the lighthouse service here. By the way, this is not the first time the States of Oregon and Wash ington have gotten together on the salmon interests! They merged in the winter of 1905 very conclusively and satisfactorily, as is rightfully suggested by Dr. Jay Tuttle, who was a conspicuous member of conference at that time. the joint 1 . ; them, toegther, and not before, and For a little and remote river town.K win ct bttter results whcn the our neighbor, Cathlamet, can raise 0rics appointed know we are look and maintain, about the coarsest, bit-1 ,n after the money we W and terest. most determined, and disreou- lwhiit is accomplished with it, for cv- table, public snarl, upon a private predicate, we ever heard of. It matches the Vendetta, and easily pa rallels the "Molly Maguires." Subscribe to the Morning Astorian jcomplished; and until we men, en the local news; full Associated Press gaged in the salmon industry, take reports. Delivered by carrier, 65 cents more interest in the business than per month. Covers the entire lower CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. Tte Kind Yon hn Always Ectl Beau the Signature of $20.00 FRANK SEUFERTlWRITES A BREEZY LETTER HE BELIEVES SALMON INTER ESTS CAN BE MERCED IN HARMONIOUS ACTION THE DALLES. Or., Ftb. 26, 1909. Editor Astorian: Well after the twenty odd year of storm I am confident wc will at least have two seasons of peace on the Columbia river among fishermen. Al though the adopted law of the two states is not what 1 would have made, it is the best that could have been ac complished at one time out of so many waring interests. I am in hopes a few years hence we will make a few moves more in the right direction of salmon protections and the care of the young fish after we hatch them- I am ready to co-operate with Astoria at any time for what is good and whenever they disregard 'men who insist on agitating all issues I am willing to work in the same har ness for making the Columbia River salmon industry greater than it ever was, and do all in my power to ac complish it in the shortest space of time. I have a great many honest friends below tide water and a few foolish enemies, and, I am not the least turned from what I think right by a few shallow minded persons. I am ready at any time to help arrange a salmon organization to, which ev ery man engaged on the Columbia river or its tributaries can become a member, whether he operates a gill net, set net, seine, trap, purse seine, or wheel, or hook and line, as long as he 'is willing to advance the sal mon industry, and is willing to pay a small fee so that the members can appoint, committees to see that the money we receive from the taxpayers of the state is well expended in build ing hatcheries and the money that is raised by license fees, is made to op erate the hatcheries right, and we receive the best rsults for the amount expended; and, if we haven't money enough to do it right, let us go down in our pockets and furnish it for the next few years and for once do it right, and then see if the results will not be far different than we have ac complished in the past ten years since we first passed the license and hatch ery laws in 1898. As fishermen and canncrs, we can not idly sit down af ter having paid our annual license fecs an'l trust to God for results; we will get the results when we work for cry man in the business today knows that we have spent over three hun dred thousand dollars of license and tax payers money in this state, and he would be ashamed if he had spent his own, to report what little he had ac- wc do we art not entitled to anything better. In all these years but one commit tee visited Ontario Hatchery, once, and the lack of proper management brought forth so much comment that the Master Fish Warden never did extend any more invitations to a body of practical men to see where their money was being dumped. $11.50 $4.50 I hope that in the near future (he men engaged in this industry will I'm J it a pleasure to see that their seed supply is properly looked after and the young fish are fed until such time as we can expect the best results and that you, the Astorian, will do the very best in your power to accom plish that, in which your city is most interested, and the wealth that swims to your door. And that your best citi lens will aid your good work, not by .fit a. ( i t loousn taws out up-noiuing jut laws made jointly by both states, to that good will and free intercourse of trade may be made profitable to all. "Yours truly, "F. A. SEUFERT" JANITOR ARTISTIHNOS RECOGNIZATION AT LAST AFTER MANY YEARS CHICAGO GERMAN RECEIVES LARGE COMPENSATION. CHICAGO, Feb. 27.-Acceptatice "f a painting executed by Charles E. Halbcrg of Chicago, once janitor in a bank, by the Guttcnbera Art Mu seum, one of the world's noted gal leries, has come to the Chicago paint er as the realization of his life dream. Besides the gratification of an ambi tion which has burned for 45 years, Mr. Halbcrg has received the decis ion of the museum with patriotic zest, for he is a native of Gutten berg. Necessity forced Halberg jo leave his home and become a sailor. Twenty years ago he left the sea, came to Chicago and obtained employment as janitor in the Austin State Bank. Through the kindness of its officers, he was permitted to pursue his art studies in a room in the cellar. Some of his paintings have been accepted by the art institute. A letter has just reached him from Axel Leonid, di rector of the Guttenberg museum, announcing that his painting "Atlan tic" has been passed on favorably by a jury of critics and would be added to the permanent collection. NEW TO-DAY Notice to the Public. I desire to inform the public that I will not be responsible .for any debts contracted by the firm of Olsen & Ecklund doing business at 110 Fifteenth street, unless same is au thorized by me personally. CHAS. ECKLUND. Feb. 26, 1909. Try our own mixture of coffee the J. P. B. Fresh fruit and vegetables Badollet & Co., grocers. Phone Mair The Modern. The best and most up-to-date ton sorial parlor in the city is The Modern. Perfect comfort and service guaranteed to all. Excellent baths. Wood and Coal. If you want dry fir cordwood, In side fir, bark slab, or boxwood, ring up Kelly, the Wood and Coal Dealer, the man who keeps the prices down. Coal at $7.00 per ton in your base ment or $6.00 at yard. Main 2191. Barn, corner 12th and Duane. The Proper Place. Go to the Occident Barber Shop if you are particular and desire first- class service. Satisfaction guaranteed. An expert bootblack and porter has 'also been engaged. Folding CarrUgi $17.50 Brownrjedbody $12 .mmBBmm Jeka Fa, Pres. f. L, Bishop, Nelson Troyer, ASTORIA IRON WORKS DESIGNERS AND MANUP4CTURER& OF THE LATEST IMPROVED ... Canning Machinery, Marine Engines and Dolicrs COMPLETE CANNERY Correspondence 8olklted. . Sherman Transier Co. HENRY SHERMAN. Manager. , Hacks, Carriages--Baggage Checked and Transferred Tracks sad Fariituv Watona Pianos Moved, Boxed and Skipped. 431 Cnenmarcial Street . . Mala PWa 1 MMMMM MOMttttttlHtlHHtMIMHIMIMM THE TRENTON ! First-Class Liquors and Cigare, I t l 03 CoraroercU) Street Corner Commercial and 14th. . ASTORIA, OREGON MMMMMIMMsSMMSsMSMMMMMM SCO! BAY BRASS & ' AHTOHIA, OUKOON : Iron and Brass Founders, Land and Marine Engineers. Up-to-Date Sawmill Machinery Prompt attention given to all repair llth and Franklin Ave. work. Tel Main 2441 FINANCIAL First National DIRECTORS Jacob Kamm W. F. McGregor G. C( Elavil J.W. Ladd S. S. Gordon Capital $100,000 Surplus 25,000 Stockholders' Liability 100,000 ' KSTAHLIHHKM 1HMH. 1 J. Q. A. BOWLBY, President O. I. PETERSON, Vice-President ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS - $232000 . Transacts General Banking Bnsinass Interest Paid on Tim Depos . Four Per Cent. Per Annum Eleventh and Dun Sta, SCANDINAVIAN-A M E R I C A N SAVINGS BANK ASTORIA, OREGON OUR MOTTO: "Safety Supercedes. All Other Consideration." Howlto Operate t Moving Picture Machine at Home How to Rent or Buy a Moving Picture Machine. How to Make' Big Money at Entertainments and Amusement. How to Obtain Positions Wh ich Pay $35 Per Week. Tow to Become Finished O perator.. " We Give Instructions That A re Simple and Interesting. We Have the Newest Metho d of Teaching by MalL I We Send You on Receipt of $1.00 Complete Instruction. We Teach Operators - How t o Pass All Examinations, We- Represent ths Leading F Urn Exchange. Remittances to Independent Theatrical Exchange, 400-403 Burke Building, Seattle, Wash. WARDEN SCHOOL, OF OPERATORS Sec Astoria laving Ikaw, Treat Vlce - Pres, and Supt OUTFITS FURNISHED. Foot of Fosrtk Street ..- t Bank of Astoria J. W. GARNER, Assistant Casklef FRANK PATTON, Cashier Astoria, Oregon i mi r