4 SJSJvtl- W IfaJZETTT i5T VOLUME XVII. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY. OREGON. TUESDAY. JULY 25, 1905. NUMBER 52. ED. MAN ASS E "? at In all to Make Room for fall Goods. ED. MANASSE ; ' Agent for Hutterick's Patterns. . The , ( "GARLAND" Trade Mark rcprcsenti the ncme of Quality, Finish, Dura bility, Convenience , ? Call and See Our, . Lawn Mowers Garden Hose Screen Doors i Hardware and Plumbing Supplies , SOUTH SIDE MAIN STREET. ATHENA. OREGON FOR SUNDAY CLOSING ATHENA A "DRY" TOWN AND Yk'H CLOSED SUNDAY;; Indications Are That There Will Be " . No Exceptions, But a Com- ! piee Tieuu.- ; '. WILLIAMSON'S SECOND TBIAL. 5 i y ,- , 5'-. Athena saloons were closed Sunday for the first time in many years and it is asserted that other business houses will be notified to close and observe the Sunday law. ----..--- - - The saloon men closed upon notifi cation of District Attorney Phelps, who it is said took action through complaint of a law and order league of which J. M. Hayes, J. W. Jenkins, Ed Baker and others resideing in this city are prominent members. The closing of the saloons through the distriot attorney's offloe is the result of nonaction ou the part of the city officials to whom members of the' league sometime ago appealed., . , i ' . It is known that Mayor Taylor and at least a portion of the couucilmen favor the policy of closing one closing all, and the saloon men having closed their places of business will no doubt make an effort to have the Sunday closing law , strictly enforced on other branches of business in the city., Aside from those who are members of the organization responsible for the steps taken to enforce the Sunday closing law, the general verdict is that closing the town at this season of the year, when Sunday trade and traffic is demanded by the farmers, will be the cause of much lbss of trade to Athena business men, and result in much inconvenience to machine men. Particularly is this considered to be . the situation when the fact is :taken e into consideration that other towns in the oounty are not closed on Sundays. It is understood t hat all business men will be notified during the week from the district attorney's office that complaint has been made and that all places of business in Athena must be closed on Sundays. One saloon man stated that the liquor dealers had only the best of good feeling toward the business men of the town, but if the saloons had to be closed other lines of business must expect to be made to observe the same law, and that for one, aud speaking for himself, be proposed to see that all,! were' treated alike. - -lt-j-. . ti- : - ' Sio-To-Uae ror Fifty Cent. Guurinueeil tobucco habit cure, make weal, nensirow -itxx! vure. 5Uo.il. All drumiisl Its the careful buyer of Har vest supplies that we are after at the present. We ask that you call and investigate our stock and get our prices. "First class goods" and small profits" t our motto ELY & SO OTT PEOPL'ES GROCERS THERE ARE TIIES When all that is good in Groceries and Staple Provisions fail to appeal to you as appetizers. THAT TIME IS HERE, tor the season of - . Fruits And -Vegetables is at its zenith. Our FRUITS AND VEGETABLES C03IE DIRECT FROM THE RANCH and therefore are fresh and. palatable. DELL BROTHERS CATERERS TO THE PUBLIC IN GOOD THINGS TO EAT Athena, Oregon. STBAW ON THE ROADS The Theory In This Case Will be M- terlally Vhanged. The second trial of WilliamsoD, Van Qesner and Biggs on the charge of subornation of perjury, has com menced. . "' r United States ' District Attorney Beney has stated the case of the gov ernment to the jury, clearly, fully and forcfully. : i '' ' The defense, through Judge Bennett has told what ground will be taken by his clients in ' the battle ' to be fought put once more, : and has at tactked the position of the govern ment aud its attorney, has disclaimed guilt on behalf of the three accused men and has declaimed with fiery denunciation . that the government and its detectives have harried the men accused from pillar to post like worried rabbits in front : of blood thirsty dogs. " ; ; . All is ready for the old story to be told again. In the meantime the prosecution has told ; the jury what it intends to prove and this statement reveals the fact that the defendants will have to face new evidence not brought out at the former tiral and Will be put still more upon their mettle in establishing their inno cence. 1 Mr. Williamson ' .will; be proved to have been in Prineville on June 15 and to have stayed there until June 24, when the trial has come to his connecton with the conspiracy, so that when he testified in. the last trial not to have remembered his where abouts he will have this time either to admit or bring counter . proof to deny. ' This f act alone, it is argued, strengthens the case of the govern ment inasmuch as the presence of Williamson in - Prineville at ' that time brings him into touch ' with . the knowledge of the conspfraoy alleged in the iudiotment. The theory of the case will be changed, - according to ; a ; statement made by Mr. Heney, and ; the con tention of the government will be to show that the perjury was committed by the entrymeu at the time they made final proof, and not at the date of filing oh their claims. 1 It is possible that this theory will be argued before the court when the testimony is com menced. In that Case Judge Bennett will contend that the indictment is defective and shouid be dismissed, owing to its obscurity and uncertain- ness of meaning. : Renn Not Injured Arthur Renn, a Pendleton boy who was a member ot the crew on board the ill-fated Bennington ' when she blew np, was not injured A particle, says the East Oregonian. - A message Was received from ; the young man himself, ' saying that he had been aboard but was unhurt, though many had been killed and injured. . A little later messages were received from Captain Young of the gunboat and from the chief of police of San Diego, saying that the boy was uulu jured. 1 Both of these parties had been wired to by the anxious relatives as soon as the news reached them of the disaster. ' . Bucking the Northern Pacific. Spokane is very - much wrought up over the proposed changes of its tracks in that city by the Northern Pacific The road proposed to close certain streets and to build certain subways in and through the city. This is op posed by the citizens, though the road has promised to spend about $500,000 in the city in improving its property, and they demand that the N. P. peo ple leave all the streets open and that all the track be lowered in the business part of the city.' . . . r For One Dollar. , - Until Monday, August 28, you can send the Press to any address outside of Umatilla county one year for one dollar. This special reduction in the subscription price of the paper is made with the view of making your friends and relatives in the East acquainted with Athena, Umatilla county and Oregon. Included in the year's sub- sciption at $1 will be mailed a copy of the special harvest edition of the Press, which will be issued the first week in November. Now is the time to subscribe. ' Farmer! Making Travel More Agreeable for Themgelve. , ' Walla Walla county has begun the annual campaign to straw the dusty roads of the county to make them pass able for the immense amount of wheat that must pass over them in the nest two months. Special effort is being made to interest the farmers in the work instead of sending gangs of men and teams to the different parts of the county to do the work. As soon as the farmers finish their threshing they or their men and teams are hired at the rate of $3. 50 a day to furnish and spread the straw on the roads. In the old way, when a man and team, paid for at the rate of $1.60 or there a bouts a day, were sent out to the country the farmers asked $2 a lend for their straw before they allowed it to be put ou ,tbe roud. By the pres ent plan each framer is hired to pre pare the road along his line fence, and by obtaining the direct benefit of this method he gladly gives his men and teams at a low rate and donates the straw. " Fish Law Being Violated. Information reaches this office tha' the company owning the big dam at the power plant has failed-to provide a flshway to enable the fish to pass the obstruction. This is contrary to the law and the company should be com pelled to meet the requirements of the law in this respect Many large fish collect below the . dam seeking to ascend the stream to spawn but are unable to do so ou account of the dam. We are informed that many trout are being caught with grab hooks and spears, which is also contrary to law. It is certainly high time that our game warden was taking some action in the matter. -Milton Eagle. Ernest Evans 8kips Oat. :" 'f THrnadf IT trail a f Via ohonn mnn nffnt i -aa uwv u uutjf vuv auwujar ma .va. horrnwinir all hn oonld on the 1803 head of sheep he owned and mortgaged a field of grain in which he is said to have only owned a half interest, has departed for parts unknown, says the Pilot Rock Record. Mr. Evans has had domestic troubles and was given to gambling, which combined, proved his downfall. He was generally con sidered an honest man aud a good manager,' but was uuabie to curb his passion for the gambling table. It is said he has left behind several unpaid grocery., bills. .Herbert Boylen has taken charge Of the sheep for the mortgagees. . Parker Narrowly Escaped. , Alton B. Parker and his grandson, Alton Parker Hall, were rescued from drowning off Esopus island, ' op posite . the . Parker home at Pough keepsie, JN. by i!dwara iritz, a photographer. . Yonug Hall was on Parker's back, and the judge was choked until unable to swim in tha swift current and called for help. Unable to breathe Parker threw the lad off. The latter sank but was brought to the surface by Fritz, who helped both ashore and they were re susciated. Palouse Grain Lou- The excessive heat has greatly dam aged the spring wheat crop in the Palouse grain district. In some lo calities a loss of 25 per cent is esti mated, in other sections the loss is es timated at five per cent If the hot weather continues the aggregate loss in the (Big Bend and Palouse may reach a million dollars as the crops this year were exceedingly ; heavy. Fall wheat is entirely out of danger. Harvesting will begin within a week on fall grain. " . , 7,; After Waiubnrg Plant E. W. Cnmmings, the man who put in Athena's first water works sys tem, has made a proposition to pur chase the Waitsburg water plant He pledges better water at the same rates that are now being charged. HE CUT HIS THROAT W. E. DERRICK, MILTON FARM ER, COMMITS SUICIDE. Despondent Over Loss of Money in ..( Banning a Large Steam Threshing Outfit Yellow Fever in New Orleans. ; New Orleans July . 24. Tonight Mayor Behrmau issued a proclama tion to the poeple of this city urging them to heed the advice of the health authorities relative to the sanitation of their premises aud calling special attention to the necessity of placing screens upon their houses and nets over all cisterns and pools of water which might breed mosquitoes. At a meeting of the state board of helth to day it was decided in response to num erous requests for information to pre pare and send out a detailed state ment of the situation.' This will in clude an official statement that up to this date there has been seventeen cases and six deaths from yellow fever. , Grover Martin Released. Urover Martin, convicted of man slaughter for having killed O. N. Prestou, is no longer in the county jail, bail having been provided for him Saturday afternoon, says the East Oregonian. Five thousand dollars is the amount which Martin was requir ed to give in order to secure his re lease while waiting for his appeal to be decided, and this sum was provided late Saturday afternoon by Thomas Spence aud U. H. Boerster, of Milton. Immediately after the bond had been signed Martin was released aud left on the six o'clock train for bis borne at Milton. , A Milton special 'to the Pendleton Tribune says W. E. Derrick; a promi nent young farmer who Las been liv ing at the home of his parents about eight miles noithwest of Milton, com mitted suicide Saturday . , afternoon about 1 o'clock by cutting 'Lis throat with a razor. ?'. , Derrick, who was about 25 years of age, the son of. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Derrick, promineut people of that ' neighborhood, has been .running a threshing outfit for the past two sum- mers. This business venture on the . part of the young man did not prove a - success aud it is understood that he has been ' losing money every year. He became despondout over his financial circumstances and finally, in a fit of temporary insanity it is be lieved, he killed himself on the bed in his room. At noon he ate lunch with his mother and then went to his room. It was noticed at the time that he ap peared "blue," , but nothing was thought of his condition as he had been in the habit of haviug these at tacks quite frequently, especially this spring. About two hours later his mother had occasion to go to her son's room for . something and found him quite dead, lying in a pool of his own bload, a deep gash in his throat which had evidently been inflioted with a razor which lay beside him. Coroner Henderson was notified of the suicide shortly after aud went to Milton on the evening train to hold an inquest over the remians.' Rates Too High. At Walla ' Walla numerous oom plaints are being heard from' inde pendent wheat shippers and farmers about the high warehouse rates charg ed by the three leading ' wheat com panies of the country. Last year the rates were raised to 50 cents a ton storage from harvest until Junuary 1, following, and from then on 10 cents a mouth a ton storage until the crop was sold. " Under the new rates the companies charge 50 cents a ton even though the wheat is. merely trucked through and weighed before being put on the cars. The shippers offer no solution to the problem other than to .build independent warehouses for their own use. - Those who have their warehouses and the mill warehouses charge the same rates as were in force before last year, aud are receiv ing a large amount of business in con sequence. ,: , ; : . ; . ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY. Lewiston Interstate Fair. The county commissioners at Lewis ton have appropriated $1250 for the Lewiston Interstate Fair & Racing as sociation to assist in making the fair this fall a success. ' Chris F. Osmers, secretary of the fair association, states that the fair will be larger and bet' ter this year than ever before. A better racing program is promised, also a better livestock exhibit, while the side show attractions are to be first class. The Nez Perce county ex hibit will also surpass all former efforts. . ' Celeftllal Medicine Company All Thin ' m Week In Athena. The Celestial Doctors are up to date in treating all kinds of old chronic complaints, and the remedy for act ing kindly in assisting nature back to the normal, healthy standard, is chosen for special conditions. If American products are the better they are prescribed, and Oriental products are. prescribed when indi cated." Successful results is the aim of these doctors and investigation will show you , that they get It. Tape worm removed , with two doses of medicine iu two hours without fast- lug. Minor surgical operations per formed without pain '-. aud anesthetics to be iuhaled not necessary. Asthma cured by a remedy found which es tablishes co-ordination of nerve force, or in other Words, puts the flighty nerves in gear. Office, Room 1 in St. Nichols Hotel. Amusing show each evening, near the hotel. Warehouses Destroyed. Property worth between $12,000 and $15,000 was destroyed in'Sherman county Sunday aftemoou in a wind storm that lasted about five , minutes. Six wheat warehouses were wrecked or blown from their foundations, and the residence of J. M. Parry, -post- . master at Moro, was partially tipped over. No lives were lost so far as known, and no further damage was done. Three of the warehouses were located at Moro, one at Klondike, one at McDonald and one at Demoss. No Secret About It. It is no secret, that for cuts, bums, olcers, fever sores, sore eyes, boils, "etc. , nothing is so effective as Buck len'g Arnica Salve. "It didn't take long to cure a bad sore I had and it is all O .K. for sore eyes," writes D. L. Gregory, Hope, Tex. 25c at Mc Bride's drug store. Cliiirate Tnr flowel ".Tllh Caecareub Cannjr Cittlmrlir, euro innnUpullon forever. fcc.TOc )f a C Kj, fall, (truh'Kiiiuinifunrt moneir. ; I I