r Athena t FOR THE : : : : t J if. FOR THE . ... ... ft Price of one (SL.'jOIii idmuvt Benefit of our Republican reader and ,fet the Press and the raclflc Farmer. j othera, the Pasas and Oregon lan for 12. I VOLUJIE 8. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 17, 1895. NU3IBER 22. f I.OIMSI BIKECTOBT A , F. ft A. M. NO. 80 MEETS THE , First and Third Saturday Evenings of each month. Visiting bretheren cor dially Invited to visit tha lodge. 10. 0.F. NO. 73, MEETS EVERY ; Friday night. Visiting Odd Fellows n good standing always welcome. AO. U. W. NO. 104, MEETS THE Second and Fourth. Saturdays of j mouth. ' Fred Rozenswieg," Recorder. ATHENA CAMP, NO. 171, Woodmen of the Worid, met 1st and 8rd Wednesdays of each month, VlnlUng Choppers always wel come. -s, c . G. C. Osbcbn, Clerk. TVTmAN. NO. 29. MEETS EVERY I j Thursday Night 8, SHARP. . ; Physician and Surgeon. Calls promptly answered. Office on Third Btreet, Athena, Oregon. D Off R. L N. RICHARDSON, ATHENA, OREGON. RDePeatt, 5 ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. , j V Athena, Ore. I THE ATHENA RESTAURANT MRS. HARDIN,- Proprietress. ; : : : H. P. MILLEN, Manager. i Can be recommended to the publio as l , being first-class in every i particular, i . . -: m . We, . Employ. X' White help only. MEALS AT ALL HOURS I? Ti . ............ .........r THE GOLir.lERGIAt LIVERY FEED and SALE STABLE J 't p , The Beat Turnouts In Umatilla County : Stock boarded by the day, j p, t week or month. :Jr' J j MainStreet, : , Athena. THE ST. NICHOLS HOTEL J. W. Frooms & Son, Props- ;;pnly First-Class Hotel in the Qty ' III 1 1 THE ST. NICHOLS 1 Is the only one that can accommodate T' commercial travelers. :' . Iff ,.;;v - ' Can be recommended for its clean and 'Tj., "' well yentelated rooms. j Cor Main and Third, Athena. 1 YOU KNOW You can buy the best 3-ply Carpet for 80c; good Brussells for 50c Rugs, Lace and Silk Curtains and House Furnishing Goods con siderably cheaper than any place in the State of Oregon, of Jessee Failing at Pen dleton? : : : : : : Sewing Machines Warranted 10 Years For $25. 1' 4 S ! i ,4 V I jess;; r aiusu, reuuiewu, ur g- v . n . T Jl.l.- J-k Do You Believe in Silver? Hso ... Read" tlie Portland Sun. LOW PRICES . I ARGE BUSINESS CONSEQUENTLY BIG STOCK AT Pendleton, C00 Men's Shoes. (MOO Boy's $1 U - Suits. For vj)l 20 in Colored 24 in " )tyno muslin 021 sA I i Uo canton flannel fT I GINGnAM v4-x JLa We Want Your Gash "Biz The Boston Store. MAX LEWIN'S , LEADER OF 1 K Green Plantation Costa Rica Coffee 4 J lbs. . . , Borax Soap, per box , Favorite Savon Soap, per box. ........ . . . r Small White Beans 20 lbs Red Beans 25 lbs Dry Granulated Sugar 18 lbs Celebrated Antelope Tea per lb, .Mapel Syrup per gallon can..-.. A fresh line of Candies, Nuts, Dates, Figs, Oranges and Lem ons constantly on hand, i j ; Main Street, v.' FOR SPORTING GOODS ! SHOTGUNS, RIFLES, , . I . REVOLVERS j i - : AMMUNITION; SHOT, POWDER, FISniNG TACKLE. ' TaMe and Pocket Cutlery, ; - i - Barb Wire, Coal Lime Cement Tents and Wagon Covers. TMI flD ''THE HARDWARE MAN," iHl LUlij . : : - : Pendleton, Oregon. flRST-RETMSL Of ATHENA,' Pays " L. D. THE ATHENA MARKET 1 ' FRANK BEAL, proprietor. FRSH e MEAT ALWAYS o OM HAND Highest Cash Price paid . j . -?s5- for Butcher's Stock. .... Lash strictly YOU GET THE VERY BEST AND LOTS OF IT, ; WHEN YOU SPEND MONEY WITH BEALE Kais Street, Oregon. Boy's $125 , Knee Suits I China Silk 35c Japan " 50c 00 CASH GROCERY. LOW PRICES. $ 100 125. 100. 1 00. 1 00. 100. 35. 125. . . ........ . . . . . , J-:." VS..-' South side Slain Street. CAPITAL STOCK, SITBPLTJS, $ 50000 $21,000 interest on time deposits. Proper , attention given to collections. Deals In foreign and domestic exchange. , Livily. Caabier, Athena, Oregon We buy for Cash and sell for Athesa, Oregon FOR THE BLOOD : .htVJ '..'J The Best Spring. Kedlclns Just now everybody Is thinking about talcing something for the blood. A Spring medicine as we speak of it. Ana it's a good thing to do, but you want to get the proper medicine. If you consult your physician he will tell you to Wntro gqgd liver: and that, because the liver has every thing to d With the blood. If the liver is sluggish Vie system is clogged, the blood becon is impure, and the whole bod suffers Every medicine recom- : men Jed for the blood is supposed to work on the liver. Then get at once the "King of Liver MEDicirES'! : BiOIinOHS LIVEB HmULHTOR !t:- Vvorlc well, and tones up the s v (;ni. . I : i j ' " Better than Pills." 4.1.! . had U lid or powder. CALLS IT A DISGRACE. The Baker City Epigram Exposes the Sturgill Bar Fraud. The Baker City .Epigram is in receipt of a communication asking for the facts concerning the report ed Sturgill bar strike on the Snake river. Inasmuch as the Press copied the reported find, it will aU so give the other version of the af fair as published in the Epigram: "It will be seen at a glance what effect such a false .report has when sent broadcast through : the press. About ten days ago the Democrat published what it - claimed as a truthful report from a reliable per son of a rich strike at Sturgill bar. It was claimed that $14,000 was picked up off the bedrock, in nug gets of all sizes, and that thousands of dollars were still in sight, it gave inference that there was plen ty of the same kind of ground, etc. Of course the publication did little injury and created little comment in this community where the pa per is knowffastitterlyjUnre4itrrle and the editors, at times, hardly re sponsible for what they write. But when it got out of. a small circle, through the medium of other pa pers, the harm is at once apparent. During these hard times men are deceived and lured , from their homes and families by such artic les in the . hope of bettering their condition. I hey argue that where such rich strikes are being made thev surely could find something or at least secure employment of some kind. The Epigram is informed by parties in from that Bection that the story was a falsehood and that while the mines in that neighbor hood were being worked successful ly not even an unusual cleanup bas been made this season. Such a course is a disgrace to journalism It would have shown a little differ ent spirit had the Democrat prompt ly denied the reoort when it had ample opportunity to ascertain that it was Jaise,": ' ; 1 r- ; NOTICE BY PUBLICATION. A Decision Affecting Settlers on Lands in Congressional Grants. A decision of Secretary Hoke Smith that is of considerable im portance to settlers oulanda within the limits of congressional grants has been received at the Oregon City land office. This decision was given in a case appealed from the commissioner of . the general land office by the Willamette Valley fe Cascade Mountain : Wagon Road Company, in the case against , Geo W. Hager, a homesteader. Thi secretary says that he -"is satisfied that the previous decision of the department,' holding that tho fail ure of the company to', respond to the settlers publication of notice to submit final proofs precludes the company from making objection thereafter to the allowance of such entry, is clearly contrary to the de cision of the supreme court and to the established rules of practice, and, therefore, such decision is everruled.' , - ... In the opinion filed tho secretary says the right of the company did not attach' to any particular sec tion until after, selection; that the filing of the map of definite loca tion and the construction of the road did not operate to . withdraw the lands from settlement and en try. The withdrawal become ef fective when filed in the local land office and it then operated to re serve for the benefit of the company the odd numbered sections within the six-mile limit of the grant, and thereafter such would not bo sub ject to settlement and entry under homestead and pre-emption laws, He says: "If the land withdrawn was not subject to settlement and entry, and if no legal or equitable right could thereafter be acquired by settlement and occupation so as to defeat the company's right of sel ection, 1 cannot see how the com pany s right could be defeated by failure to appear at the. local land office and object to the final proof in response to the general notice of publication. The withdrawal by the secretary was intended to with hold these lands from settlement and entry, for the benefit of the company. Furthermore, the with drawal of these lands for the bene fit of the company was a matter of record and the company should have been especially cited to ap pear. ihe publication of notice of intention to make final proof is not sufficient notice to a claimant of record, but simply to such claim ants as cannot be discovered by an examination of records of the local land office. i( While I recognize the propriety of the withdrawal made by the ex ecutive to protect the company in the exercise of its rights to make selections in. satisfaction of , its graut, I am also impressed with the importance; of requiring the company to make . the selections necessary to satisfy its grant as epeedly as possible in order that the surplus remaining in the lim its of this withdrawal may ; be re stored to settlement and entry. The reason alleged by the comp'any for failure to make selections to satisfy the grant is that the govern ment has failed to have the lands surveyed. This reason no longer exists. The act of August 20, 1894, authorized the deposit of a sufficient sum by the owners .of grants of public lands, fpr the purpose of having a survey of the townships within the limits of their grants. If this company refuses to accept the benefit of this act, it will be re quired to make its. selections from the surveyed portions of the lands along the line of its road, , and , the withholding of the unsurveyed lands, along the line of the road will be revoked. It will therefore be notified that a survey must be made of such lands as it desires to survey on or before ' November 1, next, and to make all selections necessary to satisfy its grant with in, ninety days thereafter,; and therefpifc-4lje withheld lands will be revoked." . . ; PIONEER ASSOCIATION. Annual Meeting Appointed for dune 6 -y , and 7 at Weston. K The annual session of the Uma tilla County PioneerN, Association will be held this year at Weston. Senator Price is president and Rev, Wv.il. rrttett secretary; Mr." Pro ett being Bick and unable to attend to his duties, T. J. Gallaher has been appointed as secretary pro tempore. Mr. Gallaher hands the Press the following official notice of the meeting; : Weston, Or. May 11. . The fourth annual reunion of the Umatilla County Pioneer Associa tion will be held at Weston, Ore., June 6 and 7. There will bean interesting program.- Everybody is invited to como and bring their baskets well filled and have a real old fashioned hand shake. Any one having relics of pioneer days S lease bring them along and notify . J. Gallaher of Helix, the society historian, a If any member of the society have died the secretary.'W. H. Pruett, should be apprised of the fact. ; T.J. Gatxaher, ' Secretary. INFECTED NURSERY STOCK. Fruit Commissioner Dosch Finds a Bad . State of Affairs at Canby. ; Since the discovery of so much diseased fruit trees ii Eastern Ore gon by Fruit Commissioner Hobbs, which it was stated had been ship ped from Canby, Commissioner Dosch, in order to ascertain the facts in the matter, visited Canby and mad a a thorough ex amination of the nurseries in that vicinity, says the , Oregonian. He found the stock in these nurseries pretty badly diseased. Quite a number of trees were "heeled in," preparatory to shipment, of which about 90 percent were dead, and of a large lot in nursery, rows, 75 per cent, were diseased. The nur serymen were honest in their be lief that the trees were healthy un til they were shown to the contrary by cutting the bark n the nursery stock. t Adjoining nurseries were visited and found to be in about the same condition, except one or two large blocks of prune trees. Pure Rich Blood is essential to good health, because the blood is the vital fluid which supplies all the orgms with life. Hood's Sar eaparilla is the great blood purifier. Hood's pills are purely vegetable, harmless, effective, do not pain or gripe. . - - Dr. Price' Cream Baking Powder World's Fair hlhet Medal sn4 Diploma. Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report MM Li VlC7 THE TRUTH ABOUT TRILBY. From the Lips of a New York Gam n Mickey. "Say, Mickey, wat's Trilby?" "Hully geel Trilby aint' a naw- thin. Trilby's a dame. Why don't you read, Jimmy?" "Well, den, who's Trilby?" " "Oh, youse fellows makes me tired. Youse don'tknow nawthin.' I read de book up at de doctor's. Trilby was a dame wot was bro't up in de Fourt' ward m Pans. Her old man wuz a preachet, but got ter hittin' d6 bottle to lively, and he old ludy slung gin in a joint. Dey got stuck on each other and hitche up, but de booze got de best of dem, and dey croaked in Paris and left two kids. De girl was Trilby, but the boy kid don't cut no ice in de story. De girl wuz a dandy, and some painter bloke got stuck on her shape, and made a model of her to draw from. Den dey all got a-paintin' her and mak in' chalk images of her left foot or somethin,' an bo she met three Eng lish guys who wuz in Paris learn in paintin.1 There wuz a big bloke, bigger'n Corbett, and a Scotch mflg and a little dude. Of course, Trilby's old man bein' Eng lish, she fell right in wid dis push, and soon she wuz mendin deir socks and right to home wid dem, "Bimeby the big fellow got spoon ey, but youse kids can't understand that part of it. Anyway, the little dude wuz the winner, Dat's jufct like do wimmin; dey don't know when dey got a good thing. , If she'd made a play for the big guy I think he'd a flew the coop with her, and den de story would't ha' been ritten. But the kid wuz the winner, ez I sed; but she gev him de marble heart because she know'd she'd been sittin' round wid the painters widout "no close on, and his folks mighn't like it. ' So den a dago wat wuz a great musicianer got in wid de gang and, of course, he got stuck on Trilby, too. He wasn't no good except fer playin. the pianer, and wuz always pullin' some one's leg and. wouldn't give any one the . glad hand Who wuz fool enough to cough up-well-, any way, when the kid told her ho d skip if she didn't marry him she weakened and said all right. "Den de kid's ma came over from London and put the blinkers on the whole racket and made Trilby fire him, see? Den de dude took sick and de dame went on de bum fur awhile, when she met de dago and he mesmerized her, samo as de bloke did does guys up at de museum last week, and hully gee, how she could sing when she was asleep-noi I mean when she was under his influence Well in a few years she made a big hit all over Europe and come to London, and wot d'yer think? Do night she wuz to make her dahoo-dat means her first appearance, see?-didn't de dago drop ded in the box Beared t' deth of the big feller I wuz tell in' yer about wot was stuck on Trilby in Paris, who wuz in de theayter dat night! Gee! den dare waz fun! She couldn't sing a little bit, because de dago wuzn't deie to mesmerize her, and she got sick and the little dude got sick. But, anyvay, they both croaked. But youse couldn't tumble to dat part of the story. But if youse could read and understand dere's lots I couldn't tell about dat would make yer leak even if you wuz tuff. The big feller wuz a corker, and the kid wuz a game one. too, but yer can't phaze wimmin. My Maag is jest de same way, Hully geel" Sun day Call. The Way It Turns Out. The fresh newspaper man is thus dwelt upon by Walt Mason in a recent issue of the Nebraska editor. In a Nebraska town there dwels a man who has long held that he could dit an ordinary paper suc cessfully and not devote more than one hour a day to the work. "It is nothing," he has been accustomed to say, "to write a column or two of comments on the events of the day." Not long ago the editor of one of the papers in that town was called away for a week, and the man who knew it all was presuad- ed to take charge of the editorial columns in his absence. Tho first day he did very well dashing off a column and a half without trouble. On the second he prespired freely, although the room was cold, before he got to work: on the third day he walked the floor and pulled his whiskers out by the handful, and on the next he wrote about half a .7 mm w column and nearly broke a blood ' vessel in the effort. On the re-' maining days he used the scissors exclusively, and said that ha would not be an editor for all the wealth-' of the Indies. There aro lots of , men who think they could, edit papers while dozing in hammocks. ' THE SMARTEST MAN ON EARTH. A Few of the Traits and Powers Which , Are Rooted in His Brains. ( There is a man who can write a song and sing it or play the music .' of it. . v; ; He is a yatchman and an eques"-' train v : . , . He can talk rapidly in five mod ern languages and read both Greek , and Latin. He can play chess and poker; ' He can paint pictures and criti- cise those of other artists. ; . ; x ; He understands engineering, and; . is an experimentorin electricity' He is a theologian and has com- ' posed a prayer. He can command a ship or a . regiment, a fleet or an army. .' He can scare people. He can make speeches that strike hard. . He is a horse breeder and keeps a stud. He can talk about the art of , cookery. . .. He possesses a literary taste, and ' has read piles of books. He is a friend of peasants and monarches. : He is orthodox in religion. , ' , f. He quaffs both beer and cham-.' paigno. ' ; , ' ', . He can teach editors how to run their papers, daily or weekly.! ' ,"t He thumps the guitar. . ; ' ; He is rich, and the father of a. ? growing family, and a terror to his, foes. vJ.:'-;,i ' ' ' ' Yet he is only 36 years, old. ; - One would think that he was a Chicago man or a Bostonian. ; Yet he is not. ; , , . . There may be other ' interesting people in the world, but they palo their ineffectual fires in hiB pres-.', ence or at the mention of his name. He is a scion to the bouBe of Hohfinzollern. He is the German Kaiser, William II., who, since he was crowned between six or seven years ago, has kept all ' his traits, . talents, and power in full display , before the world and Bismarck. ; It would be impossible to indi cate more than a few ot the accom plishments of this foreign contem porary in small space. 1 he book ought to be written by himself. Explaining How It Happened. The Telegraph Age tells how a telegraph editor in a Boston news paper office wrote a note of remon strance to the telegraph operator, because the setter of his copy had entirely omitted the letters "f" and "k," where they should have ap peared., The operator applied to . this note as follows: "Mr. Editor: Mistaaues are lia- ble to happen in the best regulated phamilics and to typewriters as well. It is, indeed, a very un phortunate aphair, but the 'eph' n n rl rYi rvl 1 Aiif art7 ft a lnaf This morning I called at the oph- ice ov the gentleman phrom whom I rent this outphit, but phailed to : phind him in; in phact, the 'oph ico cid' savs he will not return nhor , phi ve days. I do not lique the loox . ov this variety ov spelling rnyselph, but will get the specials aphtera phashion. I, myselph, consider this no joque, but a serious aphair. -Phaithphully yours, J. Logan.1' Persons who sympathise with the afflicted will rejoice with D. E. Carf of 1235 Harrison street, Kan sas CAlv. TTa In an nld mifrVirfir from inflammatory rheumatism, but not heretofore been troubled in this climate. Last winter he went . up into Wisconsin, and inconse quence has had another attack. "It came upon me again very acute and severe," he said. "My joints swelled and, became inflamed; sore to touch or almoBt to look at. Up on the urgent request of my moth er-in-law I tried Chamberlain's Pain Balm to reduce the swelling and ease the pain, and to my ag reeable surprise, it did both. I have used three fifty-cent bottles and believe it to be the finest thing for rheumatism, pains and swel lings extant. For sale by Os burn. Buy Cook's "Dead Shot" squir rel poison 35 cents per can, three caus jor buiu im is positive guarantee by P. M. Kirkland and i G. C. Osburn. r . i. i i ...