VOLUME XV. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 16, 1903. NUMBER 41 FOR i THE CHEAPEST LINE OF MERCHANDISE EVER I OFFERED i TOf THE PUBLIC, SEE PRICE LIST ON LAST PAGE OF THIS PAPER; r f Just About Sine Groceries In any line we can suit you. Prices at the lowest ebb. We are after your trade" and will get it if fair treatment and LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES will serve as an inducement to get it. Once We've Got You, W Got You IN STAPLE GROCERIES our goods are Standard Brands. By this we mean that they are the kind recognized and sold in the best stores in the country. IN FANCY GROCERIES we are caterers to the most fastidious wants and can supply you with most anything. Gents Furnishing Goods Our stock of SHOES, IIATS, GL0VE9, OVERALLS, JUMPERS, SOCKS, etc., is very complete. A glance through our GENT'S FURNISHING DEPARTMENT will prove it. BUILD PARSONAGE Christian Church Will Ex. -pend $1,500 at Once. The Christian church people will im prove their property in this city by erecting a parsonage that will cost, when completed, about $1500. The matter of building the parsonage was taken up recently aud the decision to build : was announced Sunday at the morning service. The contract will ' be let at once and the new home tor the pastor and family will be finished as Boon as possible. Material will likely be on the ground next week. The parsonage will be located on the lot west of the church. It will be a handsome residence and the location is a moat desirable one. Suitable houses for rent cannot be obtained in Athena and this more than anything hastened the decision to build at once. For the present, Rev, Jenkins and family have apartments in Mrs. Mclntyre's residence on the West Side. FELL TO HIS DEATH. MATILIi IMPLEM PENDLETON, ATHENA, HELIX. CANTON and DUTCHMAN Gangs, Sulky and Walking Plows - v - UWM&k mm "1 SUPERIOR DRILLS, BAIN and FISH WAGONS, BARB and WOVEN WIRE FENCING. Wc have just received a car of Barb and Woven Wire Fencing. Get our prices before buying irist ilia lmplmn era v H fl lUieU t (SOpJ the Work of Samuel Adams, Thomas Paine, John ' Dickinson and . Patrick Hsnry. 2. Lexington and Concord. 3. The Battle of King's Mountain. 4. Virginia's part in the American Revolution. . Essays are limited in length to 8,000 words; must be written on one side of the paper in the student's own hand writing and must be accompanied by the certificate of , the principal of the school attended by the author, to the effect that the author is a bona fide student in the school and has been in attendance therein not less than four weeks during the school year of 1903-4. Essays must be forwarded to the chair man of the committee in charge, Wal lace McCamant, 34 Concord Building, Portland, Ore., so as to reach him not later than February 1, 1904. In award ing the prizes the committee will be governed by these three considerations: 1. Historical accuracy. 2. Manner of treatment. 3. Orthography, gram mar, syntax and punctuation. Any additioual information which may be debired will be cheerfully furnished. The essay which is awarded the first prize will be published in full, with the name of the author, in the public press. A. J. Wise, Formerly of Weston Meeti With Fatal Accident. Andrew J. Wise, a coast pioneer of 1849 and an old-time resident of the Weston neighborhood, was fatally in jured in an accident at his home near Perrydale, Polk county. It appears that Mr. Wise had gone to the barn to feed and water his horse and climbed into the hay mow. In some manner he fell through to the floor, and injured his spinal cord, causing paral ysis of the brain. When picked up he was only able to speak a few words, and upon being carried to the house, sank into a deep sleep from which be never woke to consciousness. ' Mr. Wise was a native of New York state, about 72 years old, and came to California in the golden days of '49. He crossed the plains several times be fore the advent of the railroad and lo cated in Oregon, near Perrydale, in 1875. Three years later he moved to this county, settling north of Weston, and returned to Perrydale in 1886. Mrs. Wise, who survives him, is a daughter of Grandma McGrew, of Weston. tottars South Side Main Street, Athena, Oregon. . FOR SCHOOL CHILDREN. Society of Sons of the American Revo lution Offer Prizes. The Oregon society of Sons of the American Revolution has several times in the past offered prizes to the school children of the state for essays on sub jects connected with Revolutionary his tory. The results in the past have en couraged the society to renew the offer at this time. Prizes of $25, $15 and $10 ' respectively, will therefore be awarded for the three best essays in the order of merit, written by students in the public schools of Oregon, on any of the following subjects: 1, The Arousing of Public Opinion; MILLS AND LUMBER BURN. Whitehouse-Crimmins Co. Walla Wal la Plant Destroyed. The big planing mill establishment, manufactory and yards of the White-house-Crimmins Co. were destroyed to tally about 1:30 Sunday morning by one of the most spectacular fires Walla Walla has ever seen, probably incend iary in origen. The loss is estimated by Mr, White house at about 850,000. The insurance is about one-quarter of the loss. Owing to the variable nature of the stock and the high rate which applies, lumber stocks are not of tea heavily insured. The blaze started at 1 o'clock with what seemed a waterspout of flame shooting skyward, seemingly the result of a liberal amount of kerosene poured on a pile of lumber. With a stiff south west wind it spread among the inflam mable material so swiftly that the lum ber yard, with its magnificent $30,000 stock was doomed almost before the fire department arrived. The most trying time of the fire was when two blocks of houses facing on Second street and Cherry street became imperilled to such an extent that the in habitants packed their treasures in box es, quilts and trunks and began to carry them out. It looked then as if several blockaxnust go and the great crowd at tending was afraid. Chunks of biasing coals as big as hen eggs were carried Lfor a .block or, two. and landed on dry shingles, where a small blaze would start a moment later. The pail and garden hose brigade saved many a struc ture. City Records Up in Smoke. The old city hall, containing 87 years' records of the municipality of Baker City, was destroyed by fire at 9:30 Sat urday night. At the urgent request of the citizens the city books were to be experted and the accountants were in the midst of this work at the time of the fire. The old safe was too small to hold all the city records and some of the most valuable of the city papers were left outside. It is openly declared by many prominent citizens that the fire was started by some one interested in having the records out of the way. Hones Have Tumors. Last week Veterinary Surgeon Chris tie removed three tumors from horses i : . u i.. - nu.: T)..j:. Hans Struve and Virgil Moore, the three weighing 42 pounds or an average of 14 pounds each. The doctor states that these tumorous growths in horses are very common and that the largest he has removed during the last few years was pne weighing 22 pounds taken last year from a horse belonging to Charles Wilkins. Pendleton Tribune. WO SICK BENEFITS Position as Taken By Grand Chancellor Maloney. "In Wonderland." 'In Wonderland" is the title of a lecture that will be delivered in the Christian church next Sunday evening by the pastor, J. W, Jenkins. The lec ture pertains to the island of Jamaica, where Rev. Jenkins spent some years as a missionary. The lecture will be made doubly interesting by the use of stere opticon views of life and scenery on the island. A collection will be taken for the relief of sufferers from recent tor nadoes there. Prunes in Demand. A Minneapolis dealer is now in La Grande, buying up the prune crop. He expects to secure cars in Union county, and is furnishing the boxes free and paying $8 per ton on board the cars for the crop. The shipments will go to Minneaplis, Butte and Northern Wy oming, COUNTY fARM A GOOD INVESTMENT County Commissioner Horace Walker was in town Wednesday from Helix. Mr, Walker takes active interest in the welfare of the county, and is sanguine that the purchase of the new poor farm meets with the approval of the taxpayers of the county. In former years it cost the county from $5,000 to $7,000 per ysar to take care of the poor. The farm stands the county about $6,000, and there is enough fruit, vegetables and pork raised on the farm this year and taken care of by pauper labor to keep the inmates. Besidos this there are several hundred tons of alfalfa hav that can be sold now for $12 a ton. Another year the poor farm will almost maintain the poor of the county. The road problem is a hard one for the county court to solve. Mr. Walker savs that he favors, at the proper time, the purchase of a rock crusher by the county, for the purpose of placing crushed rock on the county roads, where needed He would suggest that large bins be erected at different places in the county where rock can be secured. In these bios crushed rock can be stored for use on the roads as needed. This is a nft-tliod pursued in Willamette valley counties with success. The Grand Lodge of Knights of Pyth ias has been in session in Portland this week. Several departures from the old regime have been advocated in reports of the officers of the grand lodge, prin cipal among which is the proposal to do away with sick benefits and to elect the Vice Grand Chancellor and Grand Chancellor by popular vote of delegates attending the grand lodge, Heretofore all grand lodge officers have advanced from grand outer guard, "passing the chairs" up to grand chancellor. Regarding opposition to sick benefits J. W. Maloney, grand chancellor, in an interview with a Portland paper is quot ed: . i. "We have had a good year," said Mr. Maloney, who arrived from Pendleton Sunday. "There has been a steady in crease in membership, 258 being the net increase. The order now represents about 5,000 members in this Jurisdiction. "In my annual report I shall recom mend that there be no undue haste in the future in securing additions to the membership, but that quality rather than numbers be the determining point when applications come in to the lodges. It shall be the desire to approximate the , teachings of the order, and to elevate the level of membership to that aimed at in the ritual. "I believe much in the holding of dis trict conventions, and shall recommend the creation of a district convention fund br levvine an extra per capita tax of 20 cents a member, that amount to be re paid to the district paying it, if it hold a district convention. I shall tell the grand lodge that I believe the sick benefit provision, that appears in the by-laws of most of the subordinate lodges is the cause of much dissatisfaction, disruption and conten tion, more so than any other thing that is now in force. Some lodges have al ready taken steps to abolish this sick benefit, and I boliove the movement is based upon sound policy that will pro duce good results." Among the grand officers elected are Emil Waldmao, of Portland, Graud Chancellor Commander. Two Umatilla county women have been elected to hold office in the grand lodge of Rathbone Sisteis, Mrs. Mable Chastain of Milton, is Grand Chief, and Mrs, . L. Barnett of Athena, is Grand Mistress of Finance. A Fine Concert. Of the Koox-Kantner Concert Com pany which is billed for the Athens opera house on the night of Oct. 24, the Portland Oregonian says: One of the star attractions at the Newport beach this season was the concert given last night by the Knox-Kantner Concert company. Mr. Knox's impersonations never failed to win tremendous applause and every feature of the program was . cheered to the echo.