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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1896)
(D ."7 x 7 jr 'V- 1 THE PRESS has the ATHENA PRESS Published Every Friday Morning By J. W. SMITH, Proprietor. F. B. Boyd, Editoii. Entered at Athena pontofflce as necond-cliuw mall matter. . Subscription testes: Per year, tn advance, - Hlngle coplen. In wrapper, 8c. 11.50 Advertising Kstes: fcocai reading notices, flint insertion, 10c per line. Each subsequent Insertion. 5e, All communications should be addressed to he PRESS, Athena, Oregon. ATHENA, FEBRUARY 21,1896 The editor of the Bella Plaine (Iowa) Union says: We took din ner at a fanner's house not very long ago and here is what we noticed: The cloth that covered -tti table was made in Ireland; the dishes on which the meal was served came from England; the fried ham, for which the hostess had paid 15 cents per pound, was not unlikely part of the same hog that he had sold a few months be fore at three and one-half cents; the pickles were made.in Chicago; the kraut at Dubuque; the bread and pastry were made from flour from Minnesota, the shortening was packing house lard from Chi. cago: the canned corn was from Waterloo; the sauce was dried fruit 'from California; but butter was apologized for as being made by "a neighbor, their own cows being dry; the salt came from New York state: the coffee from Brazil, and actually the only blessed thing connected with that meal which was produced on the farm, was the blessings asked on tho food, and the appetite that consumed it. And this man was working like a lave raising corn and oats at 15 cents, and hogs at $3.25 to pay bills for this kind of living. This is all wrong.' Just so far as intelligent care and skill exercised both in the house and out of it will permit, tho raw material produced on the farm Bhould bo there so used and converted into finished products as to supply the homo needs of the farmer. This is one of the beat arguments in favor of farm life that the man on the farm can, if he will, have the first fruits of the poultry yard, the dairy, the field, the garden, the orchard, and not only tho first fruits, but the opportunity, if he so will, to prepare and to store these products ' that it shall be harvest timo for him overy day in the year. A By stem of agriculture which will contentedly raise 15 cent oats to pay for 15 cent ham has slipped a cog, and needs overhauling. A practical illustration of how the endless chain of grcenbackism ' is enriching British usury at thib country's expense was unexpected ly developed the other day in New York. When the steamer St. Paul ran ashore on the Jersey coast, she had in her hold 11,300,000 in gold. This gold was taken out and re turned to the sub-treasury at New York, where it was found, upon examination, to be the identical metal that had been taken out of the same sub-treasury for export a short time before. It had been sent to Europe and shipped back im mediately, bearing all the costs of freight and insuianco and dangers of loss by shipwreck, Thus was inadvertently exposed the game of hide and seek by which the bond subscribers, foreign and domestic, have been attempting to cover their tracks. That gold had been drawn from the jlnited States treasury and shipped to London for the ostensible purpose of meeting the ordinary requirements of ex change, but in reality it was taken out to precipitate another call for a loan by this government, and to be returned to the treasury in pay ment for its equivalent in bonds. Ero jiow it has probably been restored to the treasury reserve, but only to be drawn out again via the greenback route, just as soon ns the requisite amount of currency can bo scraped up and presented for redemption. The most grievous feature of this expose is the reflection it casts upon the mooted advantage of hav ing our bonds sold by popular sub .caption, instead of to a syndicate. It shows that the new loun, like circulation, 'its advertising rates are all that have preceded it, is paid ultimately, except an inconsider able fraction, with gold withdrawn from the treasury itself. It also emphasizes the fact that so long as the greenback redemption system makes the periodical issue of bonds necessary, just so long will it be impossible for us to prevent the money-makers of London from profiting by it. Englishmen may, through their financial agents here, maintain a run upon our treasury if they please, and we cannot put an end to it Belong as the legal tenders are outstanding. It is rather a costly price we are paying for the poor privilege of seeing a clownish congress do nothing. Telegram. TriiittE is a systematic plan being carried out by the goldites and bosses of the Republican party to insure. Dolph's re'clection to the United States senate, says the Oregon Scout. The campaign is being organized on a senatorial basis. Mitchell men, or those favorable to silver, are not wanted, and their names are being scratched from the list of possible delegates to the various county conventions, and when candidates for the legis lature are nominated by the Re publican conventions of the various counties it will be found that they are all solid for Doloh. People of tho state have been wondering what the meeting of the Republi can leagues in Portland, was for, as nothing was done at, that meet ing. outside of singing a few doger al rhymes, other than to agree to not express an. opinion and leave the platform for-the convention to formulate. The Dolph men placed a gag in the mouths of their un suspecting brethren who have been advocating free silver and who - - 0 would be favorable to Mitchell Evidently this was the only object in calling that meeting, and the scheme wuh succespfully manipu lated bv the bosses. You have not heard a chirp from a silver Repub lies n ii nee that meeting, and wil not hear it during the campoign The bosses are on top and Dolph will be returned to the senate Time will verify tho truth of these remarks. . It appears the , present law ap propriates $136,000 for seeds, and Secretary Morton refuses to use the monev for that purpose. Some ., m m congressmen have gone so far as to say that they will impeach Morton unless he carries out the law, and expends $ 130,000 in tho purchase of seeds. Whether congress has tho power to compel him to act, is a ouestion that has not yet been settled. It is charged that Secre tary Morton has insinuated that certain congressmen have been guilty of selling seeds allotted them for distribution. This, of course, is indignantly denied. But whether true or otherwise, the custom should bo abolished. No possible good can arise from it, even to the members themeelves. We believe that for every constituent who re ceives a package of seeds, and who is gratified at the compliment, as many others are displeased because they too have not been so favored But why should the people's money be takbn to enable congress men to make presents to their con stitiients? That's the question It is all wrong, and we sincerely hope th.tt Secretary Morton will be able to down the practice now and forever. Oregon Independent. ?ow comes the report that Swede has discovered the North Pole. Perhant lie has. but we should like to see his discription o the pole. What kind of a stick is it? Whether it is mado of Oregon pine. How it atands the wear so many revolutions. Whether any traces of the Garden of Eden have been discovered. Whethar any of Adams tracks' havo been seen. All these things would be interesting to know. Let this Swede unburden himself. If the country around the pole is any more prosperous than, this, we are off. The East Oregonian reprinted a portion of an editorial which ap peared in last week's Press, but for reasons best known to itself culled the article to suit its own purpose. Such methods of journal- J ism ill becomes a newspaper that even professes to be upright and houorable to even a limited degree. The portion f the article which the East Oregonian did not see fit to run in its columns, read: "The Pendleton East Oregonian and Tribune have about quit their discussion of which has stolen the most from the taxpayers of the county by charging exorbitant prices for doing tho county's print- ng. One thing is very apparent to every one who has read what they have said of each other, and that is, that both have been proven guilty." -' Secretary Morton has refused to purchase seeds to be distributed by senators and congressmen among their constituents. And because he so refuses, he is receiv- . m. , t ing roast alter roasi irom genue men who are desirous of supplying their.friends with garden and other gee Is. i Secretary Morton is right. He want-) to break up a custom that has grown into a monstrous evil. This distribution of garden seeds among the people by congressmen is nothing more nor less than a species of bribery an open bid for their votes. This, perhaps, might be all right if the members purchased the seeds themselves. But ' when they vote away the people's money for such an object, It becomes 'a sin that has no right to be continued. Today's paper contains an ar tide from the pen of one who groans under the nom de plume of "Taxpayer." He is evidently con versant with ihe methods of the present system of assessing proper ty and holds out a remedy, which in his estimation would be a sure cure, and effectually . and forever eaualizo thing pertaining to the assessment of property by simply "turning the rascals out," and sub stitute rome ono else, ana u we read between the lines correctly, "Taxpayer" wouldn't object serious ly to being the subatitule. The Athena Press believes it will take something more than "a change" to renovate arid reconstruct our method of assessing property. ;t The Townsend Nail Works. lhe Jeuerson county superior court has ordered that the affairs of the-insolvent Port Towneen'' nail works be immediately wound up. and appointed D.M. Littleneld receiver for the company. The works have not been operated for several years. Promoter and Man ager J. M. Lively informs the Leader that he had arrangements already peifected for starting when the receivership was consummated, and that he has made a cash offer of $10,000 to Mr. Littlefield for the plant. He states that a man is now on the wav who would back the institution, and that if his plans are brought to maturity operations would commence at once and 500 kegs daily be turned out until next fall. "Such a condition of the nail market as existed when the Port Townsend works were in operation - and became entangled financially." says Mr. Lively, "will probably never again be known certainly not for a number of years. At that time the price of nails was 11.40, while at present the price is $2.1)0, and a contract for a big out put couri be" made at the present time-for that price. Ibis wou.d How an absolute profit of $1.50 over the returns recaived for the last output, which, it will be seer at a glance, is a big enough thing in itself." Port Townsend Leader Governor Lord expects to fill the vacancies on the board of regents of the university of Oregon and the state agricultural college, in a few days. He says both appointments will be made from Eastern Oregon as that part of the state is without representation on either board since the death ot Mr. bturgis and the resignation of Mr. Frenrjh. "Bacteria do not occur in the blood or in the tissues of a healthy living body, either of man or the lower animal?." So says the cele brated Dr, Koch. Other doctors say that the best medicine to ren der the blood perfectly, pure and healthy is Ayer 8 Sarsaparilla, Much ot life's miserv is due to indigestion; for who can be happy with a pain in his stomach? As corrective and strengthener of .the alimentary organs, Ayer'a Pills are invaluable, their use being always attended with marked benefit. Notice. All accounts due P. M. Kirkland are now at the First Nationa Bank for collection, and all are re quested to come forward and settle at once. P. M. Kirklaxiv W. E. Young has added con side erably to his stock. Young's goods are noted in this end of the county for their superiority in workman ship and quality. within the reach of THL FIRST CIGARS. The Harana Variety Waa Bsiokae tn Pari Loaf Ago as ISIS. Wl ion were cixrars first smoked? Ac cording to a French authority who has been making investigations in tms sub ject, the weed in this shape waa not in-rn.-W.ed into France till the return of the French army irom Spain In 1823. This fact is on the autnortty oi Uippo lyte Hager, the dramatic author, who writes thus in bis memoirs: "Our return from Paris waa by way of Orleans. On the route we met quite frequently officers returning1 from Spain. They .had generally cigars in their mouths a new habit, since be come general. From this point of view the campaign oi 1823 had tne good financial result of establishing a .new branch of import trade." Another document, however, carries back the use of the cigar to a slightly earlier period. The "Hermit of the rhanaee d'Antin" (1818). eoine to see his nephew, a -young officer at Paris, finds him at his hotel In morni: ? cos tume and smoking a Havana cigar. tv. a taafo for ciirars seems at this time to have been sufficiently extended to make them a common article in the stock of every grocer who was careful to cater to the wants 01 nis customers. CASTE FOLLOWS THE NOSE. . Anthropologist 8sr tbe Mom Tells the Culture of Man. Anthropology, said Sir William Flow er, is becoming of the highest impor tance in politics. If we take a series of castes In Bengal, Behar or the northwestern provinces and arrange them In the order of the average nasal index, so that the caste with the finest nose shall be at tho top, and that with the coarsest at t'xo bottom of the list, it will be found that this order sub stantially corresponds with the accepted order of socinl precedence. The castcless tribes who have not yet entered the lrahmanical system oc cupy tho lowest place in both series. The fisher castes arc a trifle higher in the scale; the pastoral, the cultivating, and a group of cognate castes from whose hands a ltrahman may take water follow in due .order; and from them wa pass to the trading and the landholding classes and the upper crust of Hindu society. Thus it Lv scarcely a paradox to lay down as a law of the caste organization In Husteiu India that a man's social statu "varies in inverse ratio to the width of his nose. German Account of the Starry Flag. A Oermnn Periodical has the follow ing story as to the origin of the Stars and Stripes: The idea pnginatea witn Tnn named Marker. He was born on the Island St. Croix, of the Danish West Indies, where his lather ana grandfather had lived. In 1775 he left his native island and proceeded to Philadelphia, newas among the first to join a company of volunteers for American liberty and independence. For valor shown at Oriskanyhe was elected captain, and to show his gratitude he .designed a flag, in whose upper corner Tie applied the thirteen stars, emblematic of the thirteen orig- iUiaiUiUiUiaiiiiUiUiitfiiiuuiUiaiUiUiuiuiUiH BaaiaaeeeeaiaaieoieittttK- i.is. ., l7ItttltttlltMttltf Itllttllf TTriTrTirTTrTTriTrTiriHTUTir w v v 9 6r v If w w v w K A.t FISCHER'S NEW a full line of Harness and Saddlery Goods are to be found. ALL COMPETITION IN PRICES AND GOODS will be met. AH work will be guaranteed as to quality and workmanship. Try the new shop. Nobth hub Mais Street - - .Athena, Oregon. Deafness Cannot be Cured. bv local epolletUloiw m tliey rannot mu-li the diwti.iett portion of tlifwr. Tlwrvteonly ot way tocurc (leafiww, nnd IJiKli by conxtitnt loimi reim ilim. lmruras I eiuini by an iit numedwmlltlonofthe mmvua Unlit of lb Kustacblnn Tnbo. When Hit IuIk Utnllnmvd you havo a rumbllnjt eounti or Imoorfivt hear ing, and when It 1 oiS irvly elosotl. Deafness I Um 'mult and unit th Information etn lie taken out, and thin tu miton-d toltu normal condition, hearing will be deirovodftrwver; nine ensn ont ot' ten are caused by cat tarn, which Is nothing but an inttamed condition of the niucuttM surfaces. ' , We give One Hundred Dollar rpwnrd for anv eaxeof lHwrueMcaiiiwd by catarrh) that cannot t Jrured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bond for circular; free. . ... .1. I'll KN EY 1., Toledo, O. e.e,Sold by all l'rmjglsU, T.. Dr. Price' Cream Baking Powder WerU't Fair highest Medal and Dirr. all. THE PRESS inal btatcs of the union. This was the first occasion upon which - the "star spangled banner" waa unfurled. The original flag of Capt Marker is sup posed to be in existence in some nation al collection of relic of the war of the revolution. ' FEMININE INGENUITIES. . The Qaeer Cte tho Women of Pern Hake of Shawl Pin. , Of the multifarious uses of the hair pin, some, at least, are well known. They are suggested by a French travel er's description of a pin which the In dian women of Pern wear as a fasten ing for their shawls. Its head is in the shape of a spoon. In fact, it is a spoon and a shawl-pin in one. It is odd, the Frenchman says, too see a woman pull out the pin, letting her shawl drop from her bare should ers, and proceed to nse it for eating her soup or porridge "After the repast she passes the bowl of the spoon carefully between her lips two or three times, gathers up her shawl, and fastens it in place. - - The same women nse their slippers instead of pocketbooks a point in which they may be said to have the ad vantage of their North American sis ters, who, having no pockets, or none within comfortable reach, are Com pelled to carry their purses in their hands. .'.- The money of Lima consists of bank notes, which go very well into the bot tom of a slipper. As to the effect npon the bills, perhaps the least said the bet-:' ter. There is an old saying that money always smells sweet. - ' New Terror for Drench Convicts. Life in the French penal colony at New Caledonia has been pictured as so agreeable, both by reason of the cli mate as well as the leniency with which convicts have been treated, that transportation seems to have lost most of its terrors. Criminals do not con ceal their preference for a long sen tence in the beautiful Pacific island to a much shorter term with hard labor in one of the penitentiaries at home, and when perpetrating a misdeed have sought as a rule to render their offense as serious as possible, so as to entail transportation if eaptured. , It is with a view of putting an end to this senti ment that the French government has now decided to stop sending convicts to New Caledonia, and is making ar rangements to deport them instead to Gaboon, the fever-stricken and most pestilential of all districts of French Congoland in Africa. There is still a deal of good hunting on the Delaware peninsula, although the region has been steadily shot over by a sporting population for the last two hundred and fifty years. Dela ware has stringent game protective laws, and in the lowest county of the state there are great swamps that still harbor a considerable variety of game. The same is truej of several of the Maryland eastern shore counties, and the two Virginia counties have prob ably as good aquatic hunting as is to j be. found anywhere on the Atlantic coast short of a few almost inaccessible paints north and south. ' riir Tir Tir ur iw in tti nr nr nr THE 5V- . HARNESS SHOP Notice f Publication. Ijind Offlee at tadrande, Oregon, Jan. 81, Notice Is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of hix intciitiou to make Anal proof m support of his claim, a:sd that suid proof will be made oefore ih bounty Clerk or Ciiiatlila county. Oregon, at IVudfeUtn, Oregon, on March a, ISsW, vi: JOHN C. VOX, Hd. entry No, 7X4 for tho lots 1,2,7 and 8, sec. 15. tn. n. i Sa. K. V. M. ' He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon and cnltivatton of said land, vUj Thomas 1. Page, illiaui Brace.of Atheiuv, Oregon, tleorge l . Dennett, Itanief Brigs. Weaton, Oregon. Any rcraon who desires to protest against the allowance of such proof, or who Knows tkf any suosiamial reason, under tne law and the regulations or th Interior IH'partmcnt, why such imof should not be allowed. wfHbeeA'eh an opportunity at the above mentioned time and place to cross-examine the witnesses of said claimant, and to onereviaeuee la remittal oftnat submitted by claimant. B. K, Wujsos, Kogister. "touches the spot." 9 PENDLETON'S BIG STORE. mm OOCIO' is now selling during this month, nearly everything in the house AT REDUCED PRICES SHOES (0 CLOTHING . has reduced prices and odd suits where we have but one or two of a line left are closed at cost. DRY GOODS. Have all special prices during this Sale, and the lists of which can be seeriatthe counter. . WINTER GOODS especially have felt the sharp cutting of prices. . We don't carry over unseasonable goods for an other year, but close them out and buy new. SCRIP -as advertised, is given during this Sale. jpfiyMention this paper It BOSTON STORE a .... W. P. LEACH, LEADING FURNITURE DEALER it II Carpet Remnants . . -. i HALF PRICE 11 WALL PAPER THE SAME. H JESSE FAILING, - THE ATHMA MAEEBT FRANK BEAL, proprietor. -AFRESH MEAT ALWAYS o ON HAHD Highest Cash Price paid - We buy for Cash and sell foi for Butcher StPek, Cash strictly : YOU GET THE VERY BEST AND LOTS OF IT, WUEN YOU SPEND MONEY WITH BEALE Maim Street, FIRST HMTIOML t rtrrr OF STEMS. Pay lit d-r '1 MILD. Lit IF YOU WISH TO borrow money on real estate, Sell or buy farm or city property; have your life in-" sured; have your property insured against fire iu the best companies in the world; invest money at juuun.miKv im uve iii wen eecurea; nave Deeds, . Mortgages, Contracts, Leases, etc., drawn correctly, catt on W. T. OILMAN, Athena, Ore. He represents the following first-class fire insurance companies: Phoenix, Home, Royal, Ger- "au ticuuuian ana ionmvest. iie writes hi3 own policies and guarantees correctness, 7 and at the lowest rates at which responsible com panies will take risks. He has the agency for the Equitable Life Insurance Co., the best of any , $1.50 .per year. ? when you are trading at -SUCCESSOR TO N. A. MILLER; THE Main Street, Pendleton, Athena, Oregon South side Main Street. CAPITAL STOCK, SURPLUS, - ,'. $ 60000 $31,000 interest on time deposit. Proper attention collection. Deals In foreign and domextic exchango. klt. Caabler, Athena, Oregon :r-- . a if