FRIDAY, APRIL 23. UDDHO -BUS Will BE THE LARGEST VISITOR TALKS FINELY OF ASTORIA - J0 Vhc fcjJU Ladies ' Outfitters The Store For Women ,1, 't V THE MORNING ASTORIAN; ASTORIA, OREGON. Children's and Misses' Wash Dresses ' ; Prices ranging from 25c to $5.75 The New Styles in Jumper, Dutch Neck and Sailor Suits. OCEAN,BAR, BAY. DOCK AND RIVER NO OTHER PLANT ON THE COAST WILL EQUAL THIS CONCERN. The purchase of the 900 feet of river front property immediately ad joining the Hammond Lumber mill holdings on the west, is transac tion of greater importance to Astoria than it is generally understood to be by the public. In. a word it means that the Ham mond Lumber mill is to become the largest on the Pacific Coast. The capacity of the plant is to be enlarged from approximately 150.000 The O. R- & N. Company has caused to be clearly marked on its dock at a point just west of the Union Meat Company establish ment, a line o white paint to mark the limit to which the various hotel busses of Astoria may lodge them selves when visiting the wharves for passenger traffic. The first trip of the Major Guy Howard, the post steamer which lands at that point on the waterfront, a number of soldiers came up from the forts, and discov ering the broad white, straight line, asked Captain Gordon "what it meant?" and received the prompt and explicit information that "it was the line fixed by the post authorities by which to determine the real sta tus of the boys as they appeared there for transportation ; back to the forts; that if they could walk the four-inch streak successfully, they were amen able to passage, down the river, and if they could not maintain the line n00n iate, from the supply cruise to Captain C Hallberg departed from this port yesterday morning with the fine gasoline launch "Bay Ocean," for the run to Bay City in Tillamook Bay, where she will be used in the work of development of the new ocean resort underway at that place. The steamer Lurline resumed her run to this port yesterday and had all kinds of business of business when she arrived down at 5 o'clock. She returned at her schedule hour on 7 with good business. At S o'clock last evening the Ore gon fisheries patrol launch, the As toria. Captain Brown, left up for Portland, and the Stella launch Nora went up to her home port at the same time. The tender Heather arrived in from the Sound country yesterday after across the 60-foot dock, they would not be received on board, nor at the forts;" all of which the boys took good naturedly. and have ever since" adhered to, the most of them making prime successes of the feat with their feet - " ' Inspectors Ames and Weldon yes terday put the new Callender tug Myrtle through her paces and passed her as a complete and regular steam er in accordance with the provisions of Uncle Sam; and it is likely she will be put in commission today or tomorrow. Messrs. Ames and Wel don report that there are very many new steamers being put up in. their district this year and that the best sample they have seen, so far, is the H. B. Kennedy, from a purely scien-j tific standpoint, being as nearly per fect in every detail of construction ! many of the contiguous coast points. At a point a little south of Cape Flattery she picked up a dory, or halibut skiff, which anchored in the open sea, and swamped by the rough waters; its net being set. and not a soul in it The case is a mysterious one and will be duly investigated, as it should be. PERSONAL MENTION A. E. Huffman, of St Louis, was in the city yesterday, a guest at the Hotel Occident. R. D. Campbell, of Portland, spent the day in this city yesterday. A. H. Greenberg, of Portland, was doing business in this city yesterday.! 'Jim" Wallace formerly of thi city and equipment as anything in her put now of the metropolis, spent the tin in thi rmtntrv. Thev returned Haw h,r virHav nn hnaine hnK tn thir Portland offices On the 6:10 ; f to 250,000 feet for a 10-hour cut. The capacity for av 20-hour run wilt be fully 450,000 feet and It is expected that it will run 20 hours per day con tinuously, and there will probable be expended in making these improve ments as much as $150,000. the con tract for all of which has already been let even down to the driving of piles, so it is understood. There will be some innovations, such as automatic sorting tables. The wharf and booming capacity will be doubled and altogether the Hammond Lumber mill will become the largest on the Pacific Coast. The company will have 1600 feet of water front, much of which will be from 28 to 30 feet deep at low tide, easily ac commodating the largest lumber car rying vessels now to be found in the trade. A. B. Hammond is expected here about May 1 from San Francisco to look over these improvements per sonally. The American Lumber Company from which the Hammond people bought the tract, have held it for about 10 years. Frank Patton is the president and C. L- Houston the sec retary. Originally there were IHXJ feet in the tract but the Hume Lum ber Company, when they owned the Hammond mill several years ago bought 200 feet of it to make a slight addition. The tract extends 2000 feet out from the shore line. The transaction is one of the greatest importance to Astoria In re cent years because it means much to NEW TO-DAY KeHey, The Wood Man, Wm. Keller, the wood and coal dealer, is prepared to supply the pub lic and all his old customers with the best slabwood that Astoria has evr seen. He promises not to join any combination to raise ' the price of wood and he will keep bis old title of "the man who keeps the price down." Ring up Main 2191 for particulars. tractor, left last evening for Med- ford, to negotiate some more busi ness in his line. Mrs. W. H. Dutton, of Portland, I was in the city yesterday, having !come down from the metropolis to train last evening. The feature of the day in marine circles hereabout was the arrival in this port yesterday of two foreign square rieiiers, the French bark Ja- cobson. from Mollendo, Peru, in bal- , be present at the Johnson-Stevens last; and the French ship Berengere. wedding, and to visit her cousin. Miss J in ballast from Pisagua, Chili both, Clara Munson, of Warrenton. entering the Columbia for lumber J L- F. Buck, the traveling represen eargoes for South African delivery, tative for the Portland Flouring Both vessels had ordinary passages ( Mills, was in the city yesterday, on ap the two coasts. They will go up , business. stream on the first towing hawsers ! R. B- Hayes, who travels for the that are available. j Honeyman Hardware Company, of j Portland, spent the day in Astoria The steamship Breakwater, Cap- i yesterday, tain Macgeen, arrived down yester- j Frank Atwood. representing Fail day morning from Potland, with 793 ing & McAllen, was a business visitor tons of freight and her cabins full of in this city yesterday, people, bound for Marshfield, at 4 Mr. and Mrs. J. Callaway were o'clock. After lyinK at the O. R. & passengers from Portland on last N. piers for 20 minutes, she left down night's express. and out and crossed the bar an hour 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. The very best board to be obtained in the city is at The Occident Hotel." Rates very reasonable. Phone Or Write. , Phone Main 881 or write F. A Fisher, Twelfth street, about Ideal Vacuum Cleaners. Earl A. Fisher- Mrs. J. H. Smith, and Miss Mil- :dred Smith, arrived down from the 'metropolis on the 9:50 train last I'night. later. The steamer South Bay, lumber laden, went to sea yesterday, -bound for San Francisco. She arrived down at 1 o'clock yesterday morning. The Nehalem tue Geo. R. Vorbure went mit over the Columbia bar .at everybody, as well for your parlor 1 for your ramping. bound for her home. CENTRAL DRUG STORE. . THE PRIMUS. Come in and see our new Primus stove. No smoke, no odor, burns with coal oil and costs you only about one cent an hour; is fit for ILK HOSE SAL $1.50 silk hose on sale now of the season to match the summer gown Have you seen our new line of Dimities and Embroidered Mulls. Just the colors 89c t d j 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. Try our own mixture of coffee th' 1. P, B. Fresh fruit and vegetables Badollet & Co.. grocers. Phone Mai- AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF WHAT MAN SEES IN THE FUTURE. "Do I think Astoria is going to be a place of great importance in the near future?" replied one of the big gest investors of the Northwest, resi dent in Spokane and Los Angeles who recently visited ibis city and went over all of the possible invest ment opportunities with Mr, Frank Patton of the Astoria Savings Bank and chairman f the Promotion Com mittee of the Chamber of Commerce. "I certainly think so and I speak advisedly," said the visitor, "because I have given the Astoria situation careful study for many years. I am coming back here again in little while and will give this interestng locality my best attention from close range. "But I don't mind telling you why I believe Astoria is to he a great port and a big city. The reasons are so simple I should think everyone in Astoria capable of making an intelli gent investment would know them. "In the first place Astoria has ac complished wonders during the ten years it' has had a railroad, more than doubling in population and quintupling in taxable values. For one railroad and only ten years of rtime this is certainly pretty good headway. "I feel confident from my investi gations that Astoria will have two more railroad lines within- a very short time the Harriman system from Portland, Hillsboro and .Tilla mook through Jewell to this city, and the Northern Pacific from Kelso to the mouth of Deep River on the North Bank of the Columbia and thence north through South Bend and Cosmopolis to Gray's Harbor. Why, I expect to see a ferry in oper ation from Astoria across the Colum bia to the North Bank where there will be another good sized city in a few years. But the North Bank City would be entirely of advantage to Astoria and in no sense a disadvant age. It would help every merchant and every owner of property in As toria and do no one any harm. "The completing of these two rail roads will make Astoria a more cen tral point for any kind of trade and commerce than Seattle. Certain in vestors used to claim that Seattle could not be a big place because it was out at one side of everything, that it was isolated, but that sort of talk has no foundation in fact, as the history of Seattle has proven, the same proof having also been furn ished by such important cities as New York, New. Orleans, Galveston. San Francisco and Los Angeles. "Furthermore it is down on the cards that a coastwise railroad will be built all the way from Seattle through Astoria to San Francisco. Then the perfect summer climate of Astoria and vicinity will make Clat sop county one of the most popular. resorts to be found anywhere. And the biggest towns of future Oregon will very likely be those along the coast, making Astoria's trade tcrri- A Cleaner That Cleans. W. H. Fellman, the furniture man is at the head of the carpet cleaning industry in Astoria, because he pos sesses the best and only Vacuum car pet cleaner in the city. He will send it to any house, on demand at mod erate rates, and clean your carpets on the floor, without an atom of dust ap pearing anywhere in the process, and to the saving of household drudgery in this line for the women of the homes. It is the cleaner that cleans, and opt rates quickly silently, and ad mirably. Drop in and leave your order. "CALIFORNIA RAISIN DAY." California invites all the world to eat California raisins on April 30th every day, for that matter, but par ticularly on April 30th -which has been added to the calendar of festi val occasions as a day of rejoicing. Eat California raisins on "California Raisin Day," April 30th. CASTOR I A for Infants and Children. Eia Kind Yoq Have Always Bongtf tititb tht gtg&dture be able to boast of one of the largest saw mills in the entire country. One of the results will probably be to build up the Tongue Point section of the city at a much more rapid rate. But perhaps the most important result will be to accentuate the ad vantages of Astoria and the lower river for lumber mill and lumber mill product sites. It does not seem that a man would have to be very smart to understand that logs can be towed cheaper down stream than up stream, yet A. B. Hammond has been the first large, successful lumber man to utilize this knowledge, turning an ab stract theory into dollars and cents. And now that he has given Astoria the largest lumber mill, other lum bermen will of course sit up and take notice. Most anybody can do a smart thing easier after he has seen some one else do it. A. B. Hammond should be given the glad hand when he comes here a few days hence and Mr. McLeod, his manager, could well afford to hustle out and take a bigger part in local community affairs. Always Something Newt There isn't a town on the whole Pacific Coast that can boast of a more original clothing merchant than As toria's Reliable Clothier, Herman Wise. After the January clothing sale, be went east and bought an entire new stock of suits; the latest and largest assortment ever brought here. However, there is a general busi ness quietude throughout the country and merchants are sitting still, wait ing for things to improve. But Wise wont wait; he's not of the waiting temperament; so he in vented a new idea. He has pinned in the breast pocket of each suit and overcoat a check for from $2.50 to $10 which will be de- AlietA f rntn tli nria nt Um ei as overcoat a Wise customer may select, EVEEY GOOD PESESSiE- , among men appreciate the comfort of a perfect fitting suit. The basis of all good dressing is clothes that fit, as we cater to good dressers, it has been our aim to supply tr most satisfactory clothes we could obtain. For that reasou we han dle a full line of So & M good, comfortable fit, in every particular, whether you wear single or double breasted we can satisfy you. We have all the latest shade of greens, grays, etc. Hats Caps Shoes Shirts Underwear Ties "YOUR CLOTHIER" If Not Why Not? tory second to nine. "Astoria must always remain the greatest port in Oregon because Providence in shaping the Pacific Coast made it such. In a year after the dredge Chinook is put to work you can have 40 feet of water across the bar into the Astoria harbor. Ten years from now it will take that much water to handle the ships that will then be carrying the commerce of the Pacific Ocean. The Olympia is now being built with 50,000 tons dis placement and 371 feet draft and even that big vessel probably does not mark the limit of size in maritime construction. And it will never be possible to accommodate vessels of even half this size with a channel any further up the river than Astoria. "The Farmers' Union understands this freight situation, very evidently, judging from the suit they brought before the Interstate Commerce Commission asking for the same rates of freight on their grain to As toria as is now given to Puget Sound points which are on an average t further distance than Astoria from the central grain producing points. "I would rather hold property for an investment in and about Astoria, at the prices I now find obtaining here than in any oihcr city of the Northwest. "That is what I think of the In vestment possibilities of Astoria," WIRELESS NEXT. CHICAGO, April 22.-After today 773 milej of the Illinois Central Rail- , road, from Chicago to Cairo and from Carbondale to Kast St. Louis, will be operated by telephone in , stead of by telegraphy. Within a few I weeks the system will be Installed 'also on the Paducah, Mississippi & Louisiana divisions, a total of 627 i miles. REALTY TRANSFERS llirdctte M Boyle to her husband. Robert L Boyle, numerous lots int Hayueer Annex to Astoria; $10. John H Trullinger and wife to Ann K Mack, tract on water front in Uniontown; $6000; also lot IS, block A, annex to Trullingrr's addi tion to Astoria;. $1000. Walter C Smith and wife to Kate D Harriman, lot 6, block 27. The Plaza; $225. Walter C Smith and wife to Ida Alice Wilson; lots 3 and 4, block 1, The Plaza; $600. Foley's Honey and Tar is safe guard against serious .results from spring colds, which inflame the lungs and develop into pneumonia. Avoid counterfeits by -Insisting upon hiving the genuine Foley's Honey and Tar, which contains no harmful drutrs. Owl Drug Store, T. F. Lanrlni H W If l a II mm SUITS' lw 1 oil f K 5 tyle-25. More smart styles in good tailored spring suits and coats, late express arrivals of the later and better styles now on display in our suit section and you get lower prices as well as better Style, you had better drop in and see them. Sale Continues all This Week. se window display Simingtons