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About The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930 | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1909)
WrttflirtVSrtj&itftt WtfittWHrewai wn W36,awS jWi-fSstH! ww;n- ;..' iM v-vm! .,tii'i THE MORNING ASTORIAN, ASTORIA, OREtlON. FRIDAY, APRIL 30, 1909. CORSET COVERS 75c Corset .Covers , 55c ,J1.00 Corset Covers 80c 6?c Corset Covers ..,..50c 45c Corset Covers .....35c 35c Corset Covers ...,25c 15c Corset Covers ....... .10c 15c Corset Covers 10c JOc Corset Covers v..,. 20c 25c Corset Covers ......18c Ladies drawers $100 Ladies Drawers 75c 65c Ladies Drawers .1 50c )c Ladies Drawers 25c 35c Ladies Drawer! 25c MISSES' DRAWERS 50c Misses Drawers 25c 25c Misses Drawers 20c GREAT BARGAIN SALE WATERMAN'S NINTH COM. BIG CUT IN MUSLIN PRICES REDUCED . . . . UNDERWEAR 2O AND 3o PER-CENT NIGHT DRESSES $100 Night Dresses .... 89c 98c Night Dresses 80; $1.00 Night Dresses 85c CHILD'S DRAWERS AND SKIRTS $1-25 Night Dresses 99c 40c and 25c Your choce at 15c $1-60 Night Dresses SU9 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY H JO I M CHIMIES. ?5c Chimies cut to .....55c $1.00 Chcmics cut to 80c PETTICOATS 85c Petticoats 70c 65c Petticoats 50c 85c Petticoats , 7(h $1.50 Petticoats . $1.25 $2.00 Petticoats $1.69 $1.10 Tetticoat 98c SPECIAL SATURDAY SALE Cut in Crockery Assortment M aud 33j pcr-ccnt Off MILK BOILERS MIXINO BOWLS 30c Milk Boilers cut to 20c each SOc ,ixi,, Bow'4 eut 10 t tn n 1 . . . t -Mc Mixing Bowl cut to 25c 25c M,lk Boiler, cut to 18c each MxJng Bow,, cn 0 20c Milk Boilers cut to 15c each '20c Mixing Bowls cut to 15c 25c Mixing Bowls cut to ,20c 35c Mixing Bowls cut to 21c PIE PLATES 40c "xi"i Bowls cut to JOc 30c Mixing Bowls cut to 20c 10c Pic Plates cut to 5c each 20c Mixing Bowls cut to 15c Free ! Free ! A Choice Souvenir Painted with a scene of the Columbia River Free with every dollar purchase on Saturday Aay I Will be given with these , sales. See Our China Window 232E2S orrciATSop plains MORRISON-MINTO FAMILIES HAVE REUNION AT OLD HOME-SITE. The Morning Astorian is glad to give due publicity to the following letter from Hon. John Minto (than whom it knows no better Oregon citizen), telling of the happy gather ing of the Morrison-Minto dans, on the old home-place down in Clatsop. It is such reunions as this that make sound and saving history for the State, and lend eamxple to other old and honorable families to keep the fine record going for general benefit of those younger and growing families to which the com monwealth must look for the main lines at Pulaski Tenn., Nov. 22 1S63. with papers giving the field positions of the Federal troops. He was hand ed as a spy five days later by order of j General Dodge. "Had I a thousand lives, I would lose them all before I wolfld betray my friends." were the words spoken! HUNTING FOR BURIED WHOOPING-COUGH SOCIAL. CHICACO, April 29.-EHaabeth Webber, four-year-old, will be th-s hostess at a lunch party next Satur day, afternoon in Wilmette. The event will be formal farewell of the epidemic of whooping cough which by Davis as he sat on the edge of :!ninE MEN SEEKING FOR HID-i1"1" Pfevled in the village for some coffin, condemned to be executed. after General Dodge had offered hira his "horse, side arms and an escort to the Federal lines" if he would tell who the traitor was from whom he obtained the papers found on him when captured. WESTERN LEAGUE OPENS. DEN FORTUNE ON SITE OF FORT TICONTEROGA. ALBANY, N. Y, men from Cleveland, Ohio, are watch ing closely the rebuilding and restor ing of For Ticonderoga in the hope of recovering a large fortune in gold LIXCOLN, Neb., April 29.-The nd valuabIe PPtjr. they be umpire's cry of "play ball" resounds ! ',ev was buried bv "Iativ ' th thrmiD-hont the Western Leitrne c r- ""8 time. Eligibility of the guests rests on whether they have had the whoop ingcough. Children who are still ' afflicted with the malady may attend las well aa those who have gone through the stages of the disease. The April 29,-Nine number 0f children who fell victims to the epidemic during the last two months is estimated at close to one hundred. CAUGHT IN "THE DOOR". NEW YORK, . April 29.-Georee cnit today and the baseball , season of i Iu,,onary war- Tbe old fort is bei" Beoning of OtTcnback, Germany, who 1909 starts on the five months pet- jrestrl nlr the direction of Mrs. arrjved Tuesday on the steamer . d...i 1... . ..... .. Stephen H. P. Pell and the expense k'Wr ViIhlem II en route to visit tae very; . ,is beinor borne bv her father. Cnlnnel i- V-i.: : A, ,i , . ea so auspiciously tor tne western an umrc v.iin.Su u.i..i ... League. Weak spots have been , lvODerl snompson, 00m 01 ew f yis island on the order of the tier strenirthened in all teams, and it is orK utv- oinct tne work was oe- m3n COnsul general and has been ONE KILLED AND NINE TEEN WED BY BOI DASTARDLV DEED IN CHICA GO IS ATTRIBUTED TO UNION LABOR. teftance of her nobler history. letter reads as follows: "Editor Astorian: "A family meeting of the kin of an honored pair of pioneer home building of the American occupiers f Oregon in 144 met at the Morri son homestead on the 27th in obed- believed that at least five of the eight The . . . . ... , clubs must be reckoned as contend ers for the championship. Sioux City and Omaha retain their veteran organization of last season, and the first named city is picked as the favorite for he championship. Des Moines and Lincoln have ap parently strengthened their teams gun the nine Cleveland men have bee? ordered deported on account of hav aoont tne tort constantly and ha jng embezzled $1000 in his native observed closely all the excavatiois cjty. je j, accompanied by another which have been made. They have a young man, Ludwig Hermann, who map and a secret code ot directions was regitered on the steamship under an assumed name. At .Ellis Island h . it , . .u .u . and are likely to prove strong factors "Honor they father and mother that . m. ... ' . . ..... in the fight for the pennant The thy days may be longer in the land j r, vt. . ' ' . so promising and Topeka and Wich- "Those present were: John Minto, . v " . r . , which they say was left by their re lative as a guide to the spot where the treasure was buried. THE LAURENTIC LEAVES. LIVERPOOL. April 29-Amid ita are newcomers in the league, so! loud cheers from a large assemblage. jonn w juioio, aie Minto. wura ft fa difficult o p paftthe magnificent new triple 5crew Irwin. Clifton Irwin. Mary E. Carna- (. .jn the nampionship ; steamship Laurentic. of the White nan, aiarina v.arnanan. Virginia Behanna. Harry Behanna. Florence Dimond, Irwin Dimond, Gertrude Carnahan, Benton Morrison, Eliza beth Morrison. H. M- Hamlin, Helen Campbell, Wm. Morrison, Elizabeth Morrison, Nancy Irwin Morrisoii, Sarah Carnahan, Lois Carnahan. "The 42 or more absent by business and distance, are scattered over the States of Oregon, California, Idabj, Washington and Nevada. Doing their share of producing fiftyrfold the sup race. I Star line, sailed out from this port In the opening games today Om-in her maiden voyage to Quebec anl aha plays in Denver, Sioux City In Montreal today. The event was a Wichita. Des Moines in Pueblo, and ! notable one, and the many Canadians Topeka in Lincoln. The schedule is 'and friends of Canada m the mother for 154 games, with Sept. 28 as the country made it a red-letter day. The ctosine date. I steamship sailed with a full passen- !ger list and a large cargo of freight, 1 The Laurentic, which was recently j completed at Belfast, is propelled both by reciprocating and turbine is said to have admitted that he be came involved in Germany and for that reason came to America. He wa employed in the municipal office in Offenbach and the affidavit of the German government is that he padded the payrolls. Herman's companion was not detained. THUGS ALMOST KILL. RE-UNION OF BOARDERS. . , 1 engines. Her departure marks the NEW YORK Apr.1 29-The wdo-v ; . . . . w... - n ply of human needs, the native race of Judge Cochran, formerly of Arch minion new Canadian servicj they supplanted produced; exercisirg street, Pittsburg, will hold a reunion She wi be folIowe(1 by the new Me. one hundred-fold more of mental Thursday afternoon for the men who gant;c jn june These two vessels and llXW-fold ot were boarders in ner rmsDurg nomc power in so doing; Invented aid to labor. All this in 15 or 20 years ago. The reunion and obedience to the God-given impure dinner will be at the home of her to 'Go forth, multiply and inhabit the daughter, Mrs. E. C. Seaman, in earth. West Thirty-seventh street New "JOHN MINTO " York. "When Mother" Cochran coi.- ducted the boarding house in Pitts- UNVEIL S. DAVIS MEMORIAL, burg most of her boarders were rail- road clerks in humble positions. NASHVILLE. Tenn., April 29. A Those who will have dinner with her statue of Sam Davis, the noted Con- tomorrow have attained distinguished federate scout who gave up his life positions since then. They are T. W. rather than reveal the source of in- Gallagher, general freight agent cf formation he had gained inside the the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Como will be the largest employed on the St. Lawrence service. j HUGE REALTY DEAL. NEW YORK, April 28.-What is said to be one of the most important realty deals in recent years was com pleted late Wednesday when the firm of Gimbel Bros, of Philadelphia sign ed a lease for the property on Broad way between Thirty second and Thirty-third streets, on which they - . ' : 1 1 . ' . !. 1 1 1 : Federal lines, was unveiled here to- any with headquarters in Baltimore; uu.m. slay with interesting ceremonies. The T. G. Smiley, general freight agent of of a department store. For the firt rnrial nr-cmie a eonsoicuous site the Western Maryland at Baltimore: 21 vears of the lease the total rentals en Capitol Hill and was erected with Oscar A. Constans, general freight wi!I amount to more than $12,000,003 an appropriation made by the Ten- agent of the Baltimore & Ohio at nessee legislature. It consists of a PitTsburg; J. F Rowland, traffic man Bronze statue of Davis, of heroic pro- ager of the Brunswick Steamship portions, surmounting a granite base. Company New York and J. F. Con The statue was modelled by George stans general freight agent of the Julian Zolnay, the St. Louis sculpto-. Chicago, Peoria and St. Louis road at Davis was captured in the Federal Pittsburg. Visitor In New York It Let Upon In Terrible Manner. NEW YORK. April 29--John C. Hayes, superintendant of the Peo ple's Coal Company of Scranton, Pa was attacked by two highway men in East Eighteenth street before day light today and so brutally beaten while being robbed that doctors in the Bellevue Hospital say his condition is serious. Alter oeing xnocxea un conscious with a club, and kicked un til his face and body were lacerate J and bruised, the footpads hurled him to the bottom of a basement. There he was foytid sometime later by ten ants of the house who heard his groans. The thieves obtained a gold watch, a $500 diamond ring and $50 in cash. Mr. Mayes was in New York c business. CHICAGO. April 29,-With one man dead, nineteen persona injured and three shops cither totally or par tially in rui4 ! as a result of a bomb explosion attributed by the police to labor troubles, detectives say that they arc unable to find c!rs pointing to the ijuilty persons. Chief Schcttlcr will decide tod.iy whether the record of three bunib ex plosions in three days is to make nec ccssary the appointment ot a regular bomb detail of detectives, simitar '5 the gambling stiads, to get immedi ate action on all explosions. ASTORIA S COLUMBIA RIVER R. R. Will sell cheap round trip excursion tickets to Denver May 17th, v July 1st and August 11 th On June and & 3rd, July and &jrd and August nth and Iith, veryV low round trip rateawilt be (made to St. Paul, Uuluth, Omaha, Kaunas City, ' St. Louis, Chicago , and all eastern points, Through Rail'and Steamship tickets sold to , all parts of the worli. For full particulars call or address 0. B. JOHNSON, OenM Agent A. & C. R. R. 12th St.. near Commercial St AITORIA. OREGON. Scow Bay Brass & Iron Works ASTORIA, OREGON.' Iron and Brass Founders, Land Marine Engineers and Up-To-Date Sawmill Machinery 18th and Franklin Ave. Prompt attention given to all repair work. Tel Main 2401. STRICKEN WITH RABBIES. ANN ARBOR, Mich.. April 29. The Pasteur Institute of this city has received notice that a mother and her 1 ten children will arrive here today ' from Ludington, Mich., to take the pasteur treatment. They arc afflicted j with a peculiar ailment supposed to' rabbies and believed to have been j contracted by drinking milk from an j infected cow. FINANCIAL. EFFECT EASTERN TRAINS. NEW YORK, April 29-The pub lic Service Commission has sent a communication to the Erie Railway Company asking it if it is not pos sible to run one of its trains a little faster. This particular train, on 1 branch line, traverses the 14 miles be tween Middlcseown and Pine Bush in Orange County, and makes the run in 88 minutes according to the time able.' This is at an average speed of mile in six minutes and fifteen sec onds. net. This and four subsequent twenty one year terms, making the lease ex tend over a period of 105 years will stantinople on, Saturday. obligate the lessees to make a total payment of $60,000,000 or $70,000,000 in rentals alone, exclusive of taxes and other charges. The property covers eighty thousand square feet, or thirty two city lots. Yon are cordially invited to call and incpect . cur new line of , EA JTQ (PAIJfTEQ OHIJTA ' now on display. We "nave taken tne agency for the (PACIFIC COAST OHIJTA CO. and ezvecially call vour attention to JlOJJOQfEAJl work which me can also furnish and guarantee the most perfect workmanship. A. V. ALLEN AMERICAN IN TROUBLE. VICTORIA, B. C, April 29.-An American barkeeper at Cheefoo whose name is not given by news papers received is in serious trouble, being held for the murder of a Chinese Sampan coolie. He had hailed a Sampan outbound to an In coming steamer and the coolie, not heeding his call, he discharged a re volver and hit a Chinese in the back, the wounded man succumbing soon afterwards. A preliminary examina tion was held before the United Statis Consul and he was remanded for trial. THE SON IS SAFE. NEW YORK, April 29.-The Rev. Dr. Henry C. Dwight, one of the secretaries of the American Bible So ciety, has received a cablegram from his son, Harry Dwight denying a re port that he was wounded at Con- Dr. Dwight said that his son was undoubtedly binder fire. Press reports early this week said that he was in a boat on the Bosphorus near the scene of the battle and Dr. Dwight said that the story was probably correct, as his son was a special representative of two American magazines and would have made an attempt to get some photo graphs of the engagement. Dr. Dwight was himself a mission ary in Turkey for more than 30 years. The son was born in Constantinople. People past middle life usually have some kidney or bladder disorder that saps the vitality, which is naturally lower in old age. Foley's Kidney Remedy corrects urinary troubles, stimulates the kidneys, and restores strength and vigor. It cures uric acid troubles by strengthening the kidneys so they will strain out the uric acid that settles in the muscles and joints causing rheumatism. Owl Drug Store, T. F. Laurin, CATARRH MICROBES. A Dead Microbe is the Best Microbe -Hyomei KUU Them All. Hyomei (pronounced High-o me) is killer of catarrh germs, because when you breathe it in, its antisep''C and germicide properties reach every nook and crevice of the mucous mem brane, from the mouth and nose deep into the lungs. Hyomei brings the Australian fo ests ot pine ami eucalyptus to your home. It is made of the active prin ciples extracted from these trees. No one who lives in or near these forests suffers from catarrh- No one who breathes in Hyomei the real forest air of Australia, will haVe ca tarrh for long after the treatment starts. If you want to cure catarrh, croup, bronchitis, coughs, colds, asthma, hay fever, or relieve consumption; try Hyomei, the common-sense cure, the cure that reaches the spot. A complete Hyomei outfit, includ ing a hard rubber inhaler, costs only $1.00, and extra bottles of Hyomei, if afterwards needed, cost but 50 cents. Guaranteed to cure, or money baor Sold by leading druggists everywhere Sold and guaranteed by T. F. Laurin, Owl Drug Store. IITl don't pay you to keep your papers at home when you can get a Deposit Box at $2.25 a year with THE BANKING SAVINO & LOAN ASSOCIATION 168-lOth Street. Phone Black 2184 First National Bank of Astoria DIRECTORS , Jacob Kamm W. F. McGregor-- .G. C. Flavel J. W. Ladd S. S. GoitDvN Capital : $100,000 Surplus 25,000 Stockholders' Liability : 100,000 FMTAIIUHIIKI 1MMt, Morning Astorian, month. 60 cents per SCANDINAVIAN-A AER I CAN SAVINGS BANK . ' ASTORIA, OREGON OUR MOTTO: "Safety Supercedes All Other CotuideratW ). Q. A. BOWLBY, President O. I. PETERSON, Vice-President J. W. GARNER, Assistant Cashier FRANK PATTON, Cashier ASTORIA SAVINGS BANK CAPITAL AND SURPLUS $242,000 TansacU a General Banking Buiinesi Interest Paid on Time Depoaiti 8AFETY DEPOSIT VAULT8. FouriPer Cc nt. Per Annum Eleventh and Duane Sti. - Aitorla, Oregon Sherman Transter Co. HENRY IHERMAN, ManafM. Hacks, Carriages Baggage Checked and Transferred Tracks aaf Faratare ' t TV W J . a a f a font--ninoi iviuvcu, noxca na. anipMO. 433 Commtrciil Street - Umin FtoM em i B.x 7i iJJ I'M k 1 ij .i mi ni i VMIV Mi!. y win m w f cure any case of Kidney or Bfadder Disease not beyond the rtach of medicine. No medicine can do more. T. F. LAUREN OWL DRJG STORE. 1 W .Cures Bnckachf Corrects f Irrepularitiea Do not risk having Bright'a U isea or Diabetea .t.t..j