OLTR JOB DEPART3IENT I . , , THE ATHENA la the LEADING PAPER of the "East End" of Umatilla county, in the very heart of great wheat belt ; is read by everybody. Subscribe for it. VOLUME 6. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, AUGUST 11 . NUMBER 38 pattern, ana other machinery fl. ' ' "- I ' E f 1 .Pi . V - - ' I i ViT rnesf Job Type. IL ii 1LJI JL .Ji. A Ji J1JU----JL N I Ji JL JL Ji k-J K0 w c uUAllANTLE our work. - . j J 1893. t . 'I The Mull. Stall close for Pendleton, Portland, nS all point east, except the Dakota, Minnesota and WisconRln, at 5:30 p. m. For Walla Walla, 8pokanend North Paci fic point at 7:15. - Mall aives from Pendleton, Portland and the east 7:45 a. m. . From aalla Walla, Spokane and North Pa cific point at 8:15 p. tu. Office hours General delivery open from 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sunday, 8 to 11 a. tn. Money order window open from 9a m. to 4 p. m, Geo. Hanseli Postmaster. IODCF. DIBCCTOKY A F. 4 A. M. NO. 80 MEETS THE . First and Third Saturday Evening of each month. Visiting bretheren cor dially invited to visit the lodge. 10. 0. F. NO. 73, MEETS EVERY , Friday night. Visiting Odd Fellow in good standing always welcome. AO. U. W. NO. 104, MEETS THE Second and Fourth Saturdays of 3-ch month. L. A. Oithens, Recorder. PYTHIAN, NO. 29, MEETS EVERY Thursday Night. ' PROFESSIONAL CARDS. P 8, SHARP, Physician and Surgeon. Calls promptly answered. Office on Third (Street, Athena, Oregon. JJR. CARLISLE, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Calls promptly attended to day or night. Office: Main Street, Atliena, Or. jyR, I. N. RICHARDSON, OPERATIVE PBOST1IETIC DENTIST. ATHENA, OREGON. E. DE PEAT. IAWYEB, Practices mall courts of the state of Oregon. Athena, Oregon. - H. H.HILL, WATCHMAKER AND JEWELER. Fifteen years experience In all kinds of waicn malting ana repairing, saueiacuon guaranteed. Nest to M. Flnneran A Co.'s " tbena. Or. J A. M0FFITT. Physician and Surgeon, 0vRASE8 OF WOMEN A SPECIALTY. Office with Dr. Bharp, 8rd Street, thena. k , , 4SSleeps in offloe. GEO. B. BATES, CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. GENERAL JOBBER. Estimates furnished on all kinds of wood work. Header beds and cook houses built on short notice. Prices : reasonable. Box 46, Athena, Oregon. PROF. J. S. HENRY, INSTRUCTOR --ON- PIANO AND ORGAN. unit (m A itiAnn nvi TViof Q v'tt DTIfl Wpfl W 111 UC U AtUClK w iii.iphj " - ncHdays of eacn week hereafter. L?ave aider who Jr. Kozensweig, l v. w.nwi aiu T F. Fftr. Evanselist. Of Des Moines, Iowa, writes under date of S. B. Med. Mfg. Co., Dufur, Oregon., - f - fJont.lpmen: ' j ' ' , On arring home la9t week, I found n well and anxiously , awaiting. Oar little girl, eight and one-half years old, who had wasted away 10 39 pounds, is now well, strong and . -. ii i l i ' ft vigorous, and wen nesnea up. o. B. Cough ; Cure has done its work well. Both of the children liice it. Your S. B. Cough Cure has cured and kept away all hoarsness frnm me. So cive it to every one" with greetings, for all all. Wish- . mg you prosperity, we are V mini. Mr. A'. Mks. J.F. Ford. If you wish to feel frenh and cheerful, and eaay ior me opruig wum, j."" system with the Headache and Liver Cure, . oy tHKinK two or uirce uwn oitu vt cv. -' 50 cents per bottle by all druggists.- Bold under a positive guarantee by the riomrcr Arug own:. ST. NICHOLS : : : : SHAVING PARLORS NEXT TO" HOTEI . II" Scrofula,"; i Mali(jnar, j C Mirer:-, : Tetter. r- Salt Rhef 1 n.ryijjei , -. -. . Eruption - Y 0. V.'ork Guaranteed :C L. REEVES, ,. i . Proprietor. A HISTORICAL SPOT The Savior of the . Northwest Territory - . ' i OCCUPIES AN UNMARKED GRAVE Tho Red Apple Won End of an Old Feud Ttte Missionaries. Walla Walla Statesman: While on the tour of the line of the Willis Land and Improvement Company s ditch last Sunday the party stop ped at the farm of M. W. bwegle, about six miles below Walla Walla. Thi spot has been made historical as being the scene of the famous Whitman massacre in November, 1847, "and there still remains the mounds of earth which were thrown ud as breast works for the purpose of defense against the hostile sav- 38. Two posts set in the ground mark the spot where the noble Whitman fell. Other minor land marks are also pointed out to the visitor as being directly connected with those memorable times and scenes in our early history. Here to be seen, still green and thrifty, the oldest apple tree in tha Walla Walla valley; a tree planted by the hands of Whitman himself. ' But the spot that has the most attraction for the visitor of today, and which causes the involuntary raising of the hat in respect of its hallowed association, lies on the right hand side of the road, about two hundred yards from the 'ence. Here, surrounded by a picket fence, lie the remains of Dr. Marcus Whitman, together with fourteen others who lost their lives the famous massacre. The grass and weeds ot years have grown o'er the spot and it is a per fect wilderness. Not even the ru dest, kind of a headstone marks the grave of the man to whom, more than any other, the United States is indebted for the possession of this rich northwest territory a man who laid down his life that we might enjoy the fullness of the a d which we had spyed out. Jt g indeed a sad commentary upon OUT gratitude and sense of obliga tion due that such a state of affairs should exist. Jt should be the de light of every citizen to contribute to a fund o erect a monument that would be in keeping with the mer its and fame of the illustrious dend, and we hope ere long to see active steps taken to achieve the result. The Red Apple Won. Two large apple trees stand side by side in an orchard not far from Sydney, N. S. W. On one'hung fruit which looked like hails 01 gold in the sunlight. The apples on the neighboring tree were a bright red. One day the owner of the orchard sent his men to pick the fruit. It was sent , to the World's Fair and he followed them out among the trees to see that the work was properly done. , ' ( When at last the apple3 were packed in tho barrels the fruit grower decided that these barrels should separate in the orchard and . . .1 v.:v.: noi meet, again unui on iue exinui tion tables in the Horticultural Building at the fair. The red ap ples were to go .ast and the yel low apples were to go West. The golden truit was loaded in to a 6teamer and started toward the Suez canal, while the red fruit was started the same day m a ves sel across the Pacific ocean. The fruit-grower marked "No delay. Perishable goods," conspicuously on each barrel. He wanted to as certain which was the quickest route to the World's h air, and tne result is given in the Chicago isews Record.- The barrel of yellow apples passed through the canal, through the- Mediterranenan sea, ; up the French channel and finally reached London. - Here it was taken from the boat and sent by railroad to Liverpool. Then the barrel of New South Wales fruit was loaded into an ocean racer and started on it way across the Atlantic to New York, whence it came to Chicago by railroad. It was just "sixtj'-days to an hour -yesterday when Thomas Pugh, the assistant general super intendent of the New South Wales exhibit received it, , . ' In the mean time the red ap pies had crossed the i acihe ocean to Sari Francisco in twenty days Then they were sent by freight to Chicago. After numerous delays along the way theapples arrived. They had been fifty-two days on the way and bad been admired b World's Fair visitors for almost two weeks before the golden apples which grew on the tree beside them in Australia were placed on china plates and set on the table besides them in the New South Wales fruit dipplay. - - The apples, which hid traveled through Asia, Europe, Great Brit ain and a portion of the United States, were in a good state of pre servation, and their arrival - was the cause of no little excitement among tho fruit-srrowers in the Horticultural Building. End of an Old Feud. J. S. McCabe, a rancher living about eighteen miles from Olym pia, was shot by a neighbor, George W. Melville, , Tuesday, and died a few minutes later. , Both men are prominent in tha county, and have evtensive ranches. The tragedy has created intense excitement, and is supposed to be, the out come of an old feud incurred by Melville's recent suit against the Northern Pacific, in which McCabe appeared as a witness against, him. Scune time ago they had a person al altercation, in which Melville was sued for assault. The sheriff left tonight for Ten ino to bring Melville to Olvmpia. The only witness to the tragedy was Tom Conboy, whose statement was received here by telephone. He and McCabe were going to the meadow, when Conboy called McCabe's attention to something n the brush along the fence, They recognized Melville with a Winchester resting on one of the rails and pointing at McCabe. McCabe remarked to Conboy that he did not think Melville would shoot, but he had no sooner given utterance to the words than Mel ville fired aud McCabe fell, dying few minutes later. Melville went to Tenino and said he would wait the arrival of the sheriff. McCabe is about 56 years old, and eaves a wife. Melville was about 68 years, and leaves six child ren. MISSIONARIES IN CHINA. . Copy of a Proclamation Posted on the wails ot a umnese uity . The Woman's Foreign Mission the Presbyterain ary society, 01 church of New. York has received a etter from the Rev. W. J. Drum- mond, its missionary in Nanking, saying that in the city of Gu Hong, 30 miles east of Nanking, a native was caught recently pasting up the following placard: "Foreigners in China spare no amount of money to buy land and erect preaching chapels, dig out men's eyeballs, collect marrow from their bones, decoy and carry off children, seduce and deceive women, and practice all kinds of evil. Execution is too mild a pun-. ?hment for such crime.' lhe other day persons came to Gu, say ing that they were going to erect a heavenly lord chapel (heavenly lord is the term here applied to the Koman Catholics). Just now the city and country, whether near or far, have all agreed not to allow the secret purchase of lands. If any evil disposed person is covet ous enough to secretly sea his land or house so as to hand down an evil inheritance to the neighbor hood, we, the people of this city and country, together with one heart, will take and publicly beat such a one, together with the man who acts as middleman in the sale. We will burn their houses and pos sessions; we will instantly heat them to death and give their bodies to the dogs and pigs. No oppor tunity for repentance will be gran ted. This is -exceedingly impor tant. Those who rent will be dealt within the same way as the mid dleman spoken 'J above. There is no other way of preventing these foreigners getting a footing. You must all bevery careful and watch ful. This is the united decision of all the people." l he British consul wrote to tne magistrate of Gu Hong, and he or dered a proclamation issued deny ing .the truth of the charges and threatening punishment. It was found afterward that the author was one of the officials. A Typographer's Error. Typographical; errors are fre quent in these days of much print ing, but jit is safe to say that the following'errorS will, never be sur passed in this or any other age: "May they always live in peace and harmony," was the way a mar riage notice should have wound up; but the. compositor, who couldn't read manuscript very well, put it in type and horrfied the happy couple by making it read, "May thev always live on pease and horn my." . . . . " His Home Destroyed. Lee Butler's house, in the Birch creek neighborhood, was de stroyed by fire a few days ago, during his absence in the mount ains. Mrs. Butler was camping on the creek, about a mile distant from the dwelling, and saved only a few articlesjused at the camp. The house was insured for abont $400 in the State Insurance Com pany, through J. M. Bentley. An adjuster has been telegraphed for. PORK CORNER BROKE An Avalanche in the Chioogo Board of Trade. l MANY ARE BURIED UNDER IT. Criminal Contagion Cheerier an Editor Free CoinageJ Tuesday was one of the most disastrous in the history of the Board of Trade at Chicago. Weal thy firms and individuals were bowled over like nine pins, and price of hog products tumbled like an avalanche. Old members who have been through the tumult of many a collapse in both grain and provisions stood aghast at the ra pidity with which the price of mess ork went down. A sheer drop 8.25 per barrel inside of three- quarters of ,an hour is something not witnessed every day. Soon after the opening this morn ing Secretary Stone appeared in the balcony and" announced that those having trades with the well known firms of J. G. Sleever & Co., E. W, Bailey & Co., and A. Helmolse & Co., should dose them out. Pork dropped from $19 to $10.50. Then a reaction carried the price back to $12 and things were mov ing along smoothly when suddenly came a thunderclap in the shape of the annoift "lent in quick suc cession of tho j res of the North American Provision Co., a packing concern with a capital of a quarter of a million, in which John Cudahy is largely interested; of Wright & Haughery, a broker firm, chief! t engaged in receiving and shipping wheat, but who are understood to be interested with Cudahy in; his deal in the provision pit, and nnal ly Cudahy himself the great pack er and "daring operator in provis ions, a man intejested in the pack ing trade in a half dozens states. Criminal Contagion. . ? It is a common , experience that when cine of a party yawns anoth er is liable to. There is" an ' in stinctive suggestion to " " look when the crowd are gazing on the 6treet, This elementary power of suggestion becomes morbid in the' case ofthe habitual thief. Seeing any desired object suggests taking it; there is a spontaneous, feeling too tempting to resist. If questioned closely why he takes it, the man's last and repeated answer is simply that he likes to. It was the cus tom in Denmark during the last' century to have a, processsion of psalms, rnin criminala from nrieon to a sefmon was pieached. The con i.iin in. l.i. n in ;vliuii-vjiii ulma uiuu tagious suggestion made from this display made condemned criminals ambitious to die amid such pomp. The result seemed to be a' large increaso of murder in the country. At one time martyrdom became so contagious m the church that it was forbidden. Religious history contains many examples of ex cessive enthusiasm arising from nervous contagion. In massacres,, after a few men have been killed, the sight of blood intoxicates the- crowd, who rush upon the pris oners with fury and reckless mur der. ' Auhry defines the will 'of 4 a crowd aa a resultant of all the ac tions and reactions of the indi-. vidual wills in contact. This col lective will can be led by suggest ion to act contrarily to the prin ciples' of many of the individuals who compose it. What an excit ed crowd will do no one can pre dict: the most timid man has been transformed into a beast. In the French revolution certain r. men blamed the assassins severely; bul later these same men," nnding themselves, from curosity or by accident, in the presence, of a mass acre, were overcome by . the ex citement and participated in the slaughter. In atrowd some peo ple are taken with dizziness; others, not knowing what is going on, are influenced by the noise, or mysti fied, and give way to the' least im- puIhioii, imitating those around them, not knowing why; they may take arms without suspecting results, It is thus that riots some times arise. - ; ; : : ; : ' i . In Europe, where dislike or hit-, red exists between nations'the im mense standing armies are a con stant suggestion of future utiliza tion; .they are a menace to the temporary . equilibrium of- the forces of hatred. The frequent out bursts of anarchists or socialistic radicalism in .-the destruction of life or property are symptomatic of the neurotic temper of the times and are a sign of a deeper social disease arising from the unfortun ate condition of many in poverty or on the verge of poverty. Such discontented persons are sus ceptible to - dangerous sugges tions, which can be fanned into a flame by the daily reading of de tailed accounts of crime against government, property, life. Every daring robbery, every throwing of dynamite, or other riotous acts, is almost' certain to be fallowed by similar crimes. A woman who throws vitrol upon her lover- the practice is common in' Paris 18 seldom convicted. She ia described in the newspapers, the color of her hair and her' other charms are dwelt upon; her letters and her photograph are published. Wo men with more imagination than intelligence are fully prepared to imitate the heroine when any pe culiar grievance or temptation af fords occasion? The force of such suggestion has been known to re sult i-. epidemics of vitrol throw ing. Dr. . Arthur MacDonald, in the National Review for Novem ber. Cheering a Poor Editor. "The early bird captures . the worm; and again, "one bird in the hand is worth two in the bush." Tho Dalles Times-Mountaineer tells the following good bird story: A bright little feathered songster walked into' our sanctum yesterday afternoon and chirped cheerfully as it skipped on our exchange ta ble and settled itself contentedly on some of our "esteemed contem porarties." We. presented it with a bowl of water and. it drank its fill and then took a regulation bath. After this it went into the composing-room, mounted the forms and then gave forth a song of glee. There are very few ele ments and superstition ir. our re ligious predilections; but the visi tor was made welcome, and, after it was considered that the bird had stayed a fashionable time to be considered a "call," it was given its freedom. Afterward from the spreading branches of a cotton- wood tree opposite its song was joyous, and it seemed, to warble back. "Thank you for - your enter tainment. When summer suns are warm and summer skies are blue, I'll call agaiu to cheer you in the arduous duties of voiir thankless task." ' ' - V: - FOR FREE COINAGE, .j Senator Hill, is Preparing a Bill for the , Coming Session: " ' An Albany, N, Y., special to tho World saysj Although Senator Hill declines to talk about silver his friends say that his thoughts are concentrating upon the sub ject, and that he is . at work upon a free coinage bill to be introduced atthe coming session, and, of course on a speech in support of it. . It is understood his- measure Will be to establish free bimetallic coin as existed prior to 183, and that in- , stead of the present ratio, of 16 to - ... - 1, the senator will advocate a ratio of 15. to 1. This would per mit anyone possessirrg 30. grains of silver to take it to the United States mint and receive in return one silver dollar. The speeches delivered by Senator Hill at El- mira Dec. 14, 181)1, and at. the Kenmore banquet Dec. 31, 1891, justify the belief that he will ad- . . . i.! vocato a restoration oi irue wmio: tallic coinage, and that ho is pre paring to do bo is indicated by the fact that be has kept at work' all through the summer as - well as by 6tatement3 of his friends. ' Work at the Cascades Locks. The high water in the river stops all work at the locks in the bed of the government canal. ' Us ually, at this season of the year, the Columbia has resumed its low est stage of water; but spring was very late this year, and snow re mained in the mountains for an unprecedented period of time. It may bo two or three weeks, possi bly a month before the Day broth ers can work to any advantage in putting ' in walls on tho second lock. As soon as conditions are favorable a large force of men will be put at work and the improve ment to navigation will be rushed rapidly to completion. Making all allowances for delay it may be 6afely calculated that in two years the river will be opened fiom Tho Dalies to tidewater, and river craft will leave that city and transport products to the ocean without freaking cargo. . Fraudulently Landed. Atel-gram Irom. Chicago an nounces that out of the 505 Chin ese landed on World's fair certifi catep, as they -were called, but .eighty are in the World's fair at Chicago today, and there is no telling when - the eighty Chinepe left will scatter out of that city fnd locate ' where "they ' please. Six monthe ago Chun rak Kwai a San Francisco Chinese and Chou Ball, his partner, in China, - ar ranged to bring the Chinese to this pott I hey brought them over and custom officers now sav that no less than f JWeach or the sum of $50,000 was paid by the people landed, to Kwai. ADRIFT ON THE SEA. Gruesome Tale of a Seal Hun ter of Victoria. . GOT LOST FROM HIS SCHOONER. Tho Spies Badly Treated-Mnst Economize Attempted Shooting. Theodore Anderson, one of the. crew of the Victoria sealing schoon er Arietis, was among the passen gers from Japan by the Canadian Pacific Railroad Company's steam ship Empress of India, recently arrived v He it was who, with two companions, lost the schooner in in a fog and wa3 only rescued after Isidore and Johnnie, his com rades in misfortune, had succumb ed to hunger and exhaustion. Anderson still suffers from his ter rible trip, and will be unable to engage in any hard work for some time to come. He thus tells the story of his trip, simply butdram aticallyf . "We left the schooner at 5 o' clock on the morning of; June 1, the vessel then being about eighty miles off Yen-os-Kima. Steering due west until 11:40, we got a doz en or more seals but lost sight of the schooner. Then we pulled to the windward for a mile or bo, and started for where we left her by the compass. She must have shifted, for we could find no trace of her, after pulling hard until 7 in the evening. We listened for the boom of a gun, but not a sound came over the waters for fully three hours. Then we did catch the sound far away to the northwest and started to trace it up." All night we kept pulling to the north west, and listening for a-second re port of the gun. We didn't get it till 9 in the morning, and then it' seemed just as distant as the day before. The water every hour was getting worse, and wo could see there was a gale rising, so we did the best we . could to prepare for.it. .We took the fifteen Bkina that were in the boat with the mast and oars and tied them se curely to the painter for a Bea anchor., A. shark, however, soon made way with the skins and we were obliged to replace them with our guns. As we were lashing the ammuna ion box also to the ropo we capsized. The air compart ments in tho ends righted the boat at once. All threo of us got in again and. started to bail the boat, but sooli had to give it up as a bad job. In spite of all wo could do the boat capsized repeatedly, and each time left us weaker. Tho fourth time Johnnie was lost, I noticed him a short distance be hind when I was swimming for the boat, and just as I glanced around again on getting to , the boat I eaw the swish of .a shark s tail and knew that Johnnie was done for. The same shark got all our provisious when the boat went over hrsfc. lhe sixth time we cap sized Isidore was lost. He was too weak to make the boat even if he could see her in the darkness, , "A 8 midnight came on it grew calmerj -and after bailing out with the compass.' box, which, being lashed to the boat, did not carry away, I sat down to wait. Two days and two nights I sat. thero helpless and alone, withont a par- ticle.of food, a drop of water, an oar or a sail. Then I was washed upon a little island. I crawled out on hands and knees and a little way up tire beach found two bask ets of gulls'- eggs which tho nat ives had been gathering. I hey returning seemed to undorstand, and when I said 'Yokohama,' nod ded their heads and. beckoned. Then seeing I was too weak to walk, they took turns carrymg"me. They took me to their fishing vil lage", and from there I went inland over the mountains on a little animal something like a donkey, but not one I never saw such a beast before. Tho next place I reached was Yen-os-Kima, where I was taken in charge by the nat ive police and sent by them to Yokohama. The British, consul naid mv ex nenses across and saw that all my necessities were sup plied." The Spies Badly Treated. , The citizens of bumtei are giv ing tho state whisky spies a deal of worry. Yesterday Constables McCartv and WcBt obtained an order of search and seizure from Judge Frasier, and went to the premises formerly used by Dave Morris as a bar-room. Assistant Attorney-General Busman accom panied them. They broke! down the door, and found nothing but some old stock that had been seal ed and stored away before tho dispensary law went into effect. Morris, with his friends, ordered the .pies out ofthe building. One of them was slow. Morris kicked him'down stairs. The crowd was with Morris, and they jeered and hooted the constables. When one of them undertook to resent it he was badly, beatem Constable Hal loway was followed through' the town by a crowd of boys. They pelted him with bad eggs, an he sought protection -from an alder man, beveral arrests will, toi low. Attempted Shooting. Union Journal: ' Daniel Sny der, a . blacksmith in the employ of D. S. Andrus, was arrested. Mon day morning by officers Adams and Brown for attempting to shoot W. F. Wardsley, general passenger ar d freight agent of the W. & C. R. ' On July 21 Snyder called at the.ticket office and deposited $75 with Mr. Wamsley for tickets to bring his wife and family from a town in South Dakota to Walla Walla. He stated to Mr. Wam sley that his family were destitute, in fact were starving to death, and he wanted to get them to Walla Walla as soon as possiblev Con trary to the rules of tho company, Mr. Wamsley telegraphed the. agent ; of : the Northern Pacific in the town where Snyder's family were residing to furnish them with tickets to Walla Walla upon ap plication, stating the money for the same had been deposited ilh him. Since that time nothing had ' been heard, about tho matter, neither had Snyder received any communication from his family. For the past few days the matter has been worrying Snyder consid erably, and, early rMonday morn ing he called upon Mr. Wamsley and asked if he received any infor mation regarding tho" ticket.' He, replie4 in the negative and Snyder departed, apparently satisfied. At 11 o'cloclf, however, he returned in a very excited planner. Mr, Wams ley wfti. coming out of the ticket office at the time and 1 Snyder met him at the door and drawing a" re volver, pointed' it at him at the same :time pulling the trigger.? But for some- reason pistol failed jto fire, and . before the man could make another attempt Mr. Wamsley made his escape." MUST ECONOMIZE.-. Many Employes of the World's i - Dismissed. , Fair; Pruning down expense contin- ! ues to be the active occupation of the World's' Fair management. Each dav the number of em cloves u becoming smaller, and it is believed ; that by the ..last of tho week the great White City will bo working ? on a bedrock basis financially. - It has been decided to reduce the se cret service force, tho number of gate . men and ' ticket sellers, the Columbian guards and to mater--" ially lessen the number of passes, ' and it is believed that before the close of the week the committee on ceremonies will have been abolish ed. Thore is talk that the foreign affairs i department may also be done away with and that the dut ies now performed by that depart ment will be placed in control of the director-general. In this way the management will save from a half to three-quarters of a million dollars during tho next three months. It is said on the author ity of Lyman J. Gage, a member of the finance committoe, that the payment of bonds will begin soon, probably within ten days and that of ; itself shows that finance are . down to an economical. basis- "The xpenses," ho says "are about ' $15,000 a day, which is as close as could be expected in a plant of such magnitude. Of coiirsothe at tendance will determine the final outcomo.of the fair financially, but with conservative management bonds ought to be paid with a pos sible surplus besuleS." , ""' . -i Stricken Blind. ' r ,A strange case, and one that ia exciting much attention among the physicians m Idaho, . is thug re ported by the Lewiston Inbune: "George D.'Finn, who lives on the rimrock north of town, was last Saturday stricken . perfectly blind. ; He1 states that last Sat- urday morning, between 8 and 9 o'clock, he went out to mow sumo hay for his team, and after mowing somo little time he felt a warm sensation across the middle of his back, and- soon . he had a vomi ting spell. , He then returned 'to the house about , sundown, He went to bed and was soon asleep. After sleeping some two hours he woke up,' and thought' he would ?etup And light the .candle.' 'He ounq tha matches and struck one, bnt could not eee anything, so he returned to the bed and laid there alone from Saturday night '' Until' Monday evening, -when a ra&n that used to work for him : : made his appearance,": : - ; . IfYoti want the' news of the city and county,take a dose of the PRtS. '.'','. ': ... " 1 1 9