Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1893)
.) V. 'I r 'A .' i t . fei f -AttMS.- - . - "'" - :!! in 3i . i S , , l0 S a ! .. i I .IV ll'iCtf " ! !; i hVflif.-,4.(fht of :. . .! ui'id or, partiny abarj in MafSsachu.ytis were re . .. ; to .Use state botftl of agricul . s- ia Iny.'. over thrie "hundred in .evv iUmp ihire and s hiany jnore in Vevruout ami in Connecticut. In torn'. mntiugoH thih Angular state of af fair the Mahsachusetts.bnreau fyi, sta tistics of labor, notes an increase in this class of property i in,,, tQwjiijhjps where the value "of the manufacturing product predominates and a' decrease ' in those townships in which the .agri cultural product exceeds La value that" l , of the factories., Touching the causes of this abandonment the report says:' " There is a strange fascination ia city life which" has always existed and which , leads many-' who are under its spell to prefer poverty and privation in the city to independence .and comfort in the country. This fascination is in- tensified by the ' undoubted benefits which the nJodern City offers lo "those within or near it.' And yet it must be admitted that the promise; which leads to the abandonment of country lifo is frequently unfulfilled.' - The movement from the country toward the city may affect, indeed has affected, the labor market in two ways; it may lead to a dearth of agricultural labor in the de pleted districts, thus adding to the burdens which in too many cases the farmer already bears and it may in tensify the competition to which the - city laborer is subjected,, both as to employment and as to wages; This competition reacts upon those' who come to the city for the purpose of im proving their fortunes, only to find the , N opportunities' open to them constantly. growing less, On the other hand, the life of the farmer, notwithstanding its . burdens, was never so easy in many re- tspects as ..at present, "ine improve ' merits due to modern Invention have lightened farm labor, while the rail road, the telegraph and the press have brought the most retired farms into r t communication with the activities of , the age. JIhe farmer may not be able : . to amass wealth, nor can the majority of those in cities hope to do so. He is generally sure of a comfortable living as the reward of his toil, and the con- . tingencies that affect his employment are usually no greater than those af r ' footing employment in cities. If op . portunities for large profits are not open to him he is relieved .from the risk incidental to such opportunities. That some of the burdens under which .-' he suffers might be and ought to be ! removed is undeniable; but there are those in the city, ; working for low wages, liable to periodical ' employ- " rnent, to whom life on the abandoned TJln would offer an agreeable change; anthey must first be convinced that e a change is desirable. ' HE TRUSTS IN HIS DOG. "''.-'"''j.,H rnat natations Betweea the Caiar of "' .'."..; C-Ilunla and a Danish Hound. . Erin who wrovereign In Europe who stands Indiana roffa need of a friend and 'compan oar scouti whose fidelity and loyalty are boyii of a suspicion is the. unfortunate to wato 'ur' wno' 's predecessors on the v ui- .hrone of Peter the Great, has so often .. ..wad himself dhred and. .betrayed coinpuc. ju8t thf)86 of h eourUcr8) M& ofnt" aki Vs and evenhisrelatives upon whom though Jt ud bestowed the greatest amount ttrcp-ft i.i mines. , v ; " . ; , V. were t . . "'er tlw circumstances it is ttot neig . hingsayg the New Yok Ttilj. nin,v" if t "he should place his principal aftei'iH'i' di"'3 on ft superb and huge Danish in n ( 5 .Jth short, mouse-colored . hair 0 ' W a ff If t of ' his father-in-law, , King Christian,-, of Denmark, is the 7tT" fiiiccestiior' biSt similar hound, which lost its li f iri'the terrible railroad ac cident at Uorkii wheri the imperial . train was entirely destroyed, the czar and eaarina escaping all injury fcavc , the shock tp. their nerves ia the most miraculous manneri , .Alexander's pres ent dog Is not only by his side when ho walks out, asleep beside his bed ht night, but is also present' when he grants audiences, sniffing at strangers in an inquiring and sometimes suspi cious manner," which- hi not without cxerelning a certain influence upon the treatment accorded by the czar to his . visitor.' . " ' ' , ,,. ' ' . , j " . Male and Female Brain. ; A physician who has had much expe rience of the insane has examined the brains of one thousand six hundred subjects. He comes to the Conclusion that nature makes palpable differences luitween . male and. female brains. First, there is a difference in weight, the male being heavier,, possibly by ouo Ounce, relative liKveight of body; second, 'while the ntal lobes saro equal in, the. sexes,-. nr varietal ore larger in, the male and the occipital in the female, who, consiiu 'tly, , has quicker perceptions; third, Vfcj female brain is, less convoluted ia n- gray matter and has less service; fourth, i'w blood supply . is more copious, in tin- anterior lobes , in the male and , the fwsteripr has a larger supply in, the fe "inalo, and these parts have different activities. 1 The blood of tile female is also poorer in corpuscles, there being half a million less in a cubte milli meter, lie fears that, the tendency of too much education or intellectual de velopment in women is to make them lo,e beauty.: He instances the &iro women of India. They are supremo. They oo the men, control the affairs of jthe home and nation, transmit prop erty ond leave man nothing to do. The resun is that they are the ugliost women on earth. , - The Sultan's Kew Boat. ' The sultan of Morocco has bought a new torpedo boat, and the name he fhas given it, in Moorish, means: "The bearer of good tidings from Islam to . the four quarters of the globo." An English weekly suggests that if the sultan goes in: for a really big iron-l clad he . will probably call it (inl Moorish of course) "Something to knock the globe into four quarters t. nolo into any other expensive iroaelad Hi we and sink her." p. r f. . J. Bloch , & Co ha ve j ust re ceived a large Block of ladio's ami of th latest (.lcslgns, and are selling then cry cheap., bee them before basing for the fall and winter. I The closed season on deei b g me llie first .of November. iNugenmi Barker hhop. "yTiK,tiiuiiest etreet sign that e?er Euug over a New York door is that of a barber on Hudson street near where the city's thoroughfare get' tangled up in uch confusion at . Abingdon square. The owner pf the shop ia a' darky and ia very fond f ; big words. So when he had hia sign painted he had it made to read, "Tonsorial Parlor," instead of just plain-"Barber Shop." This sign- hung for nearly ? a year. .Then some wag probably told him that there was a taorcf .'elegant ' wording which might draw custom to Ids shop. " Within a week a new sign, resplendent in red, white and Une, hung ,out proclaiming that a ."Tonsorial Abattoir", might be found within. . It is not known whether the shop is more liberally, patronized under its new designation as a liair dreesing butcher shop or not, but cer tainly the darky is veiy happy over the length and impressive appearance of tha new , word on his sign. New York Press. , .i .. . . , . v " A Crease Filter For Boiler. ' . , A, filter for removing grease, which often passes into boilers with the feed water, consists of a metallic chamber or filter box in which are a series of gratings, and between these gratings are placed layers of wire gauze and flannel of a spe cial texture, which forms the filtering me dium. . The feed water from the donkey pump enters the filter box from one side, passes upward through the filter cloths find thence out to the boiler, the scum passing away through another outlet By this means it is found that all grease and greasy matter, as well as other im purities, are arrested by the filter cloths, tvhich can be readily taken out for clean ing or renewal. The filter is equally ap plicable to land and marine boilers. New York Telegram. 7 ' fi : ' " ; ' , ' The Australian Kea. i The Australian kea has been written about considerably, and a, writer in The Cornhili Magazino ascribes ti them an, intelligence which can bo called nothing but devilish. He says the kea was once a harmless bird, but with the introduc tion of slaughter houses it has developed a taste for animal food, and especially for kidneys. They like , the kidneys of dead sheep so well that when these failed they proceeded to eat out the kidneys of living shesp, leaving the poor beasts to die a most agonizing death. A Spot of Oil In the Sea. Ten miles south of the Sabine river and a mile off shore is a natural phe nomenon known to sailors as, "The Oil Spot." No visible boundary divides it froih the open sea around, but even dur ing a storm, eveg though the waters bo come red and turbid, they remain com paratively calm. St. Louis Kepublic. i ltailroad Etiquette. Mr. Ctunso You should never ask a railroad man if the train is on time. Mrs. Cumso But ; suppose I want to know? i '' '. ; Mr. Cumso In that case ask him how much lute it is. Truth. , . .. . Gold and Silver Paint. "Let me toll 'you how va buy gold or silver paint," saJs a lady.' VDon't get it mixed or in thojlittle bottles of powder and liquid that -come prepard(l,in boxes. Got the Kold.KiA-r'or lrnn?;9TK)wder by' the oun and jtix thP ' ltwdiftar geparR&iiiyjw uiacy otinvig ay time as you'Wisli -Ytfct know th,bpttle of liq- wAl jievijr laets ;;is long a-j-our powder because K ones away ant elaborates 30 rapidly. In ttiis sm you get any amount you wish.- .Mix a small amount at a time, uho it' as quickly aa you can after it is prepared ana always keep your bot tlo corked." Philadelphia Times. ' A SljUfveloui Memory. , ,,. ., t ." ..; ., A memorys a good , tiling; to culti vate. Most people have passably good memories, , many tj have, extraordinary ones, and some have iione at ail. One of the causes , of the popularity of tJie late1 'Jainpa Q-. Blaine was his temarka hie memory for names and faoes' i It fis said ihaVMr. Blaine could recall" the faces and names of pei-sonshe had mot only casually 10 years .and more after the first meeting, not having encounter ed them in the inteival. Harper's Young People, ;.'; , ' Snake on the Itlm of Shoals. The Islos of Shoals, more rocks stand ing 10 miles from the New Hampshire coast in a cold sea. are aUvowith snakes. On a hot day one will see dozens of them running in and out of the boggy places or sunning themselves on the bare ridges. They are nothing to be afraid of, how ever, for they are of only one variety the common little greon snake that sel dom grows to a length of 2 feet. v A Humor na to Mcn'k Evening Dre. . : It is once more current in society that the Prince of Wales is endeavoring to modify men's oveuing dress and that the usual swallowtails are to bo replaced by a "black or dark colored short coat ,.u also that knee breeches are to be worn. ' , ? ' ;' ' v ' ;. ' , McS wine's gun is a prodigious' cavity in tho cliffs on the coast of County Done gal, Ireland, iuto which the tide rushes Vith such force as to produce a sound liko the booming of a cannon, which can be heard 20 or 80 miles awaVi ; ; " "Were the" "' superfluities of a "nation valued and nmde ft perpetnul tax or be nevolence, there would bo' more alms houses, than poor, more schools than scholars and enough to sparejor govern ment besides. Peiin. -. ' Too many of us in, our eagerness after facta simi- for the sake of storing up Knowieugo negiecu me necessary nieiii meapi of making onr knowledge useful.- ktltarboard a,d Larboard. fA7 ' VXXl Ul'0n b Tlie Italians derived "stftrbtMrd" from f atiostaborda, "this side," and "ltirboard" I - ... . - 1" from from qnella Iwrda, which nitons "that Bido." Abbreviutod these" two phrases apiieara8Btbordattndla lrdft.7Their close resemblance caused so niSny mis take that the admiralty ordered 7 the "larboard" to be discontinued and "port" substituted. "Port" for "larboard" is said to b first used in Arthur . Pitt's "Voyages" in 10S0. Philadelphia Press. . Twitting on FacW. , , V "Van Wither made an unfortuuate re mark at Smunor's -wedding ytssterday." "What did ho say?" . ". "Congratulated him on tho treasure he had won, and every one but Van knows Sumner married hot for her money. Trntti. ' A SUPERNATURAL 8TORY, Tha Contents of a Paper Found oa the Fr . eon of an Iotaoe Kalcld. -. . , , t Here ia a story of the supernaturaL It happened more than 100 years ago, so that yoa may hope that it is not true. Yet in those days the invention of news was not yet known, and the paper which contains this story was a sober and hon est journal. One of the patients in a madhouse a parish madhouse, I think that of Launceeton escaped. That was new thing. : They ell wanted to es cape. As the woman, although, yery mad indeed, was qnite harmless, they, went about their search in a leisurely fashion. At last they f onnd her drowned in a shallow ditch and carried her back to the madhouse. ' ' On preparing the unhappy woman for the grave they found in her corset then called her stays something that rustled. They cut the thing open and discovered a small parcel rollod up tight in some waterproof stuff whatever was then in-' vented. , The parcel was a document written on -parchment. It was written very small and misspelled, but this was how it ran: . . t - . "The man came along after dark. ,He stopped at our door and said he was a stranger, and would my aunt take him in for the nighty- He' seemed a sailor and said he was respectable and showed money. 'Elizabeth,' said aunt, 'he can have your room, and yon shall sleep with me.' . There were two bedrooms in the cottage, up, a ladder, both garrets. Dur ing the .evening he sent . me .put. for drink, and lie had a lot and was drunk, but he got up the ladder safe and so to bed. In the niglit I heard aunt get out of . bed.- There was a moon shining in the skylight window. ; . ', . r- ' "She took something and went into the man's room. Then I was frightened, 'and sat. up in bed, and I heard a sound as of a blow and nothing more. Present ly aunt came backhand in the moonlight she saw me sitting up in bed. ' 'Get up,' she said;' 'go down stairs and get, if you can, a light.' ' So I did and brought the rushlight up the ladder. . Aunt had the Bible in her hand. 'Swear,' she said, 'that you will never tell any one what has been done.' So I swore, trembling, and wished I might go suddenly mad if I told 'Then,' says she, 'I've killed the lodger His pockets were full of guineas, and I'm a made woman. But you must help me.'.' ' ;! ' ' 1 " : - "So she made me help to drag the body down into the room below and out in. the garden, where we dug. a hole under the cabbages and laid it as deep as we could. Then we covered; all up and went back to the house and waited till ' daybreak. As soon as it was light we washed up the place, and nobody ever found out. One night, when I was a woman grown, tho dead man came to my bedside and said, 'Tell the story,' and I said, 'I cannot, be cause I swore.' He said: 'If you tell, you have sworn to go mad. If you do not .tell, I will haunt you till yon do go mad.' "So, as I am bound to go mad either way, I have written the story down and sewn it up. , When I am dead, somebody will find it and will dig up the poor man and bury him iu a churchyard. The house is situated" Thus the narrative. And they dug up the garden in the place indicated and found tho dead body in what had boon sailor's clothes. Walter Besant in Lon don Queen, , .,-..;- ..- -I riaya For "luting Girls. .. , , ,May wise mothers think . that the theater should "bo reserved for adult life. Thoy regard it as a stimulant and to bo unnecessary for tho growing mind. It may be compared to those drugs which relieve headache by affecting tho heart. Still the mother "who would make of her girl "a woman J holy and wise" will not exclndo tho theater. But outside of some special representations of Shake speare she .will , select only simple plays, such as "Rip "Van Winkle," "Sweet Lav ender,'' wholesome comedy where tho deep passions of life are not exhibited, -where the sinful follies of youth are not presented for sympathy and for ; commis eration. , ' - ; ' There is one other class of plays which she may some time allow for the same reason that he cheerfully provides ro mance in books, 'and that is the real, old fashioned nielodrama in which the hero is triumphant, the villain" is brought to justice and all comes out right in the end. ' Such a treat is like the "frolics" at surprise parties and straw rides, which were enjoyable because of their rarity. , New York Times. ., . " , - Mourning Paper. V 5 Mourning paper is a satire in itself.- It wears the doepest possible black margin for the-first six mouths, say. Then it grows a little' narrower. Is that a sign that you are not mourning so much- as you were during . the first half year? Next year it is narrower still. The grief is greatly mitigated. The third year it is a mere streak. Your sorrow does not amount to much now! The next year the black border has entirely disap- peared. Does that mean that you have , forgotten your bereavement? That would. be tho logical interpretation, and yet in J the case of how many Whose stationery has gone through this diminishing per spective to the vanishing point the sor row has been even more bitter after years perhaps than it was at first. Bos ton Transcript. . , ." ' ... A singular accident occurred to Cobb t ,Harns near Oneonta, Ala., lately. He was riding a mule, -when the auimol sud denly threw his head up, striking Harris on the chin and breaking his jawbone. , J.T. FORD. Evangelist. 3f D.'8 AlolneS, Iowa, writ tinder iliite of ' MwroU 2!, ISO . S. 13. Mew. Mfq. Co.. , ' MTV W entlemen On arring home last week, I found 11 well and anxiouely , awaiting. ar little eirl, eight and one-half ears old,, who had wasted away to !2) pounds, is now well, strong and vigorous, and well tleshed up. S. Bi Cough Cure has done its work well..; Both .of, tho f children Ike it.t Vour S. 13. Cough Cure has Duted and kept away all hoarsness fr(Bn mo. So give it to every one. willr greetings for all all. Wish ing you prosperifv, w6 are Yours, Mk;& Mkp. J. P. Ford. ' If yon wish lo fv fresh and cheerful, and i1y for tho HpriiiK'a work, Pleantw your ivsiom with tlir iloHtliu-hu nod I,lvr Cure, dy IiiIUixk lw or three tluMxtOtuh wren. .. , AO cenU'ycr bottle by all dnigjlsl. - OT1EY; To Loan on Improved Farms. Property at Low Rates. .. Can get Money Jn less time than anyone . Else can get it. I HAVE For sale a number of ' Choice Farms, including One of ihe best farms in Uma tilla County; Two miles from Athena. .".. . A NUMBER-v Of choice Residence Lots . In Athena, on easy terms. I WRITE Insurance" in the following Leading Companies: London and Lancashire, Lion, Imperial, Caledonian!, Liverpool, London Globe, and the Continental, the , Great farm Company. T. D.HARPER, Athena, Oregon ST. NICHOLS : : : : SHAVING PARLORS, NEXT TO HOTEI First-Class Wcrk Guaranteed C. L. REEVES, A (Specialty : Proprietor ATHENA' RESTAURANT . , v Mrs JjAUpTTsr, Propr ietreps. T ' i . pan be recoiuTHendr J - to-the pub lic as first-claps, in every , 1 ' , particular. None but White Help Cpaploycrt, MEALS AT ALL HOURS. ' DAY OR NIGHT. ,L;.r" . :"r .;. -;-y, M .,-. '"'. '.. 'i t-J ' ':V (1 -i" V:".:j,- Slippers for Special ,Oc5sipns .""'" ."-.' V..:;'.''; mis tyter ?i I THE- ST! NICHOLAS HOTEL j. W.' Frooma & Son,' Props- ,The Only First-Class , ; , H otel; ' 'in; the pity. ; ry' tnd the only one " that can ao"n,r'wate oommfiroial men and traveler. ; 1 HE ST. HICKOL .HOTEL. Can be recommended for .its clean and ' J well wentelated rooms,"iii which will ' v i be found werythinfl congenial riie' fining rooms' ate nnder.th lupervision K of Mr. Frooire and thei table is up-. j plied with the best the market ' ' ':";; . affords." .' ",4;. " : :' .ATHENA.1 OREGON.. ' r ? .: ; " " , "'"'':' PROP.J. S. HENRY, 1 I 4 -1 PIAMO AND ORGAN Will be in Atliona on Thursday' and Wed oodnyt of etton w-jek hereafter. Lave order wltb JK; itoncnsweig, at ti V. JiollU' Athena. THE- G0ML1EBG1AI LtTery, Feed 4 Sale ST Athena, Oregon. The best Turnouts in Umatilla County. Stock boarded by , ' Day, WeeK or Month. Special attention given to, Commer cial travelers. Give me a call." G.M. FROOMF 'j' ",":' St . . ... x - ; : ' . mi , .... . r " k r I AT 50 CENTS p I Per Bushel on All SubscriDt i i ARE YOU A Send Postal Card for ' " '' 'miii Accounts. -rai-.r--:,, 7f-?vio ;-MfiSJ; :" - ' - CPS . Repeating, li I fM WINCHESTER km Vlfo; r . MonPL IR73 I 'J . VltIGi!ESTER REPEATING 'ARMS COi NEW IlAVENi CONN. yvwwaWrfyuwMWtfw What Is the condition of vours? It vour hale ttrv. harsh, brittle? Docs it split at the .ends? Has it a lifeless appearance? Does it tall out when combed or brushed ?. Is it full of dandruff? Does your scalp itch ? 5 inury or in a neatea contrition t it tnese are some or ';yoursymptomsbewarc2c3intinie oryou will become bald. iSkbokumRMtHair Grower i Sl what Ton neod. Its Dn.iductln.l Ir. : asa l.lfn t. but ttm rostilt nt ulontifln reait!h. KuowIedKe of. tlw (llfeiisJ30f tii'ii'KiraudKiilp U-Jto thadiscov- W" try ot how to treat them. "Slcockum" toui ilu. neiilitr m!neralanor oils. It UnotaDye.butadtlielitful'yeoi.lluir cn-J, .vtresh:tg Toaie. By stimulatfnir 2" tha follicle, it tov$ JaUw j iiji; cii: :j eh.nirun' and fitova hair on bald m heads. . ., i . HT Keep the scalp clenn, Lialthy, r.:ii iri'.c from irritating emotions, by 1 tn use of ioolmiit Sim ij(,p. lttleiiiv,.'(urcw.i t'.stuls, which lata, on and dettrvg the hair.- i If your drusrclM cannot sui'rti'iie jos ti.'rect to us. ftwl we will fftrward Jt prepaid, on receipt of piite. ot3vi.r,yl.irj;K.-.tMo: 6 r;.0!). Boap.Suo. j6 parjar;for$3.U. ... .... ' 3 thf? sironKilii t' rav npnwwj rn tr . TBABE BABK , T. . -7-;--- xoooocxooQoocwjbooooooc)Qooeoooo Do You FEEL SI - , ) Disease commonly comes on with slight .; i symptoms, which when neglected increase in extent and gradually grow dangerous. Hpa SUFFER FROM HEADACHE, DtS- PEPSIA or INDIGESTION, . . . B job tf BILIOUS. COHSTIPATED, or ha6 ieA ft!C T ft mil re- LIVES COMPLAINT, ... . XE KIPANO TABULES If jour COMPLEXION IS SALLOW, tr joo yZun P'KfSJC: THOIII CO . SUFFER DISTRESS AFTER EATHG. ,TH5E; hirAf.b TADULtb SSPSW& D0R: t.e: m?AUS TABULES Bipans Tabuhs Reguato Urn ;vi:i;i'i'iiiii:iw GIVES SAVE RELIEF. iilki I iUU" m. : - 2 . - "4,. (S . t: Pi ion ' s f HUNTER' illustrated Catalogue , of , s in naUL.J ' i - 1 i flcs Repeating; Shot 0uns vt 5 v-. -- - rn DIOMlIC Tltnif I fC TE KIP AfjO TABU LES System and Preserve the Health. to take - .QUICK TO ACT 6 MANY A DOCTOR'S BILL. 3cIJ bj f fists Everywhere. AT IKE FESS CFFIDE. . A V WV ft Si 5 !iAUiiToiil& caui Grain pealef ARE STILL . Li GRAIN BAGS FOR ' iat.r - . I : DAVE TAYLOR AGENT. Athena, - ; - ; . Oregon. -r- CHAS. C.SHARP, Successor to N. A. Miller,. PAINTER sPAPERH ANGER Eetinjateg on all WorK Furnished. "(''".- "i "' . " " " ; ; i ... V , . ; House painting, Decorating, Paper ...-,- " . 1 Hanging a specialty, Car- riage Painting. UOTOGRAPIIS! PHOTOGRAPHS! - . ' Photographs inEvO'V ' Call on . . 1I1ATTQ THE BOSS -Iff it i i u. PHOTOGRAPHER. MiicceMor to t'umiuIiiRs, .Main St. Athena. Coppying and Enlarging, Viewing at ea- .. ' onable rates. , Call and see him. ', Cox, McRae & Co., ' "Dealers In- HARWARE FARM INC JMPLEMEHTS RUSIIFORD WAGONS, 1 . , , ; i GATE CITY HACKS WOODS- HARVESTING P , IKERY,' AND EXTRAS OF r i , - flee? -i J , van. aiija uet y Cd'x, McRae iCo. X TtlE ' .ATHEtIA LIVERY STABLE Smeth'ermen?& '.Foster, Prop's. , h. (vccccsojf to,J. A. Kelson.) ' j' - - - , HONE BUT FIRST-CLASS, RIGS . . 'AND SAFE TEAMS;,, V.. ' ' v - STOCK. BOARDED BY . THE DAY :;week or ram ' ;vfl - Give Me ' a' Trial. .. , - .. .. , ... Coiner Fourth & Current, Athena'.'" V "ii :.-i i mm 5 , ni CM All A, KANSAS CITY, ST PAUL, CIIICGO, ST. LOUIS, - - i .J.,, AND ALL POINTS EAST, NORTH AIJD SOUTH ' TimeTableof Trains: . -. ' . . .; ; ." .-. Passenger,':' ',.. . Wo 5, from Athena to Spokane and' interme diate points, leaves - 7:45ara Kft i. fl"OITI Athenft frt Pnrtlnnrl anA lnt.n.wwl. iate points, leaves . . . - :39 p m Freight: No , from .Pendjctfcn to Spokane, Ifaves Athena . 400 pm No 43, from .Spokane to Pendlton, leaves Athena - - t 4:45pm PULLMAN SLEEPERS, COLONIST SLEEPERS," : RECLINING CHAIR dRS 1 . ' and DINERS .... Steamers . Portland to San " Francisco every,4 Days. ' TICKETS '.AND PROM EL'HCPE For rate and general information call on A. R. Bradley, Depot Ticket Agent, Athena. Oregon. W. H. HURLBUT, Asst. Crtin. Paw. Kgi.ZA AVrashlngton 8t,.Portlana, Orrgon. i 1 I t. ""- J " Vi, - H v V r "? u-.A'"