Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1907)
ATHENA PRESS Tuesday and fridsys K B.BOYD Publisher In Russia you are entirely free to rote Just as the government desires. Any man can tell a lie, but it takes a born diplomat to Induce people to be lieve It The London Lancet says the Christ mas pudding Is not Indigestible. Not unless you eat it Besides, the army can take care of Poult Blgelow If he goes snooping round the isthmus again. Evidently the people of England re gard the old plan for a tunnel under the English Channel as a terrible bore. Count Zeppelein has spent all his for tune trying to sail through the cloud All bis palaces are now castles In the air. A man named Gong has recently been married. When his wife strikes him for money, the whole town is likely to hear It Spain's lemon crop has been ruined; but we have never had to worry much about the lemons Spain tried to hand us, anyhow. 1 As to the Jamaica earthquake, it is feared that the worst is yet to come. Alfred Austin is said to have written a poem about it A French scientist has discovered that insects have no minds. What's the matter with the Insects? Do they moke cigarettes? Prominent among those who will not be present at the next distribution of Carnezie medals for bravery will be found the captain of the Larchmont Mr. Harrlman says "a successful man has no chance these days." Truly, there does not seem to be much of the ele ment of chance In the little game Mr. Harrlman plays. Although there Is a possibility of our getting Into communication with Mars, It Is not likely that we will ever be able to borrow an occasional hod of coal from there during a fuel famine. Health departments throughout the country are warning everybody to look out for the influenza germ, although not one In a thousand of us would recognize the little pest If we were to see It The Mississippi Supreme Court has ruled that a boy has an inalienable right to climb a tree. But there Is also the father's Inalienable right to thrash blm for tearing his clothes while doing It Ooldwln Smith wants to know why, If the theory of evolution is correct, no more monkeys are developing Into men. Perhaps It Is because so many of the sons of men are cvolutlng the other way. deadliest on record. 10? mothew re-1 celved Jie bonus. The mortality was 44 In the thousand, as compared with the previous 122. There Is something very attractive in a form of Infantile Insurance which pays, not upon proof of death, but upon evidence of contin ued existence. Shall the patient be told what alls him and what drugs have been pre scribed for him or shall the physician maintain a dark and mysterious silence except as to the amount of his fee? This Is the question which was pro posed by no less a personage than the President of the American Medical As sociation the other day. He did not an swer his own interrogatory, but his ob servations Indicated that be favored a policy of greater candor upon the part of the physician. There is obviously something to be said on both sides of the question. It is true that the patient wants to know what is wrong with him and at first sight it may look as If the physician ought to satisfy the desire for information. But there are good and substantial reasons why the doctor does not do so. For one thing, the chances are that he does not himself know what ails the sufferer. For an other thing,. It might do the patient more harm than good to be told of his disease. The first-named reason In volves no reflection upon the skill and learning of the .doctoT. The physician never lived who could unfailingly diag nose offhand and from one observation. Fever, for Instance, marks the onset of dozen different diseases and until distinctive symptoms develop the medi cal man cannot tell which one of the dozen diseases Is In progress. Under such circumstances his obvious course Is to maintain a dignified reticence un til he actually knows what Is wrong. To guess and guess wrong would be dis astrous. When we come to consider the matter of Informing the patient concerning the drugs that have been prescribed for him the considerations favor a negative conclusion. There la a psychic as well as a material force in a medicine whose constituents are un known to the patient All doctors know it The bread pill and other "placebos' prove It Tell a man that he is taking calomel, for Instance, and he Is likely to protest thatcalomelalwaysdlsagrees with him and never did him any good. Give him calomel accompanied by the assurance that here Is a most potent drug whose name he need not know and his sense of the marvelous is excited. He Is likely to put faith in the drug for the very reason that he does not know what It Is. That Is half the bat tle, Our modern physicians may not acknowledge It, but they practice faith cure more and more every day. The power of suggestion helps the calomel when the patient does not know what he Is taking. All things considered, therefore, the weight of evidence is In favor of the policy of mysterious lence on the part of the doctor. It not only aids the patient but t helps the doctor, for the less he says the less he will have to explain if things go wrong. t . THE . We have read of a man who the other day fell down stairs and broke his neck while, trying to kiss a woman. It would simply be a waste of space to point out the moral to this sad accident The tailors in convention assembled have decided that the styles for the coming season must be different In ev ery respect from those that have pre vailed during the past year. The tail ors know how to promote their business. Says Mrs. Carrie Catt : "A wife must train her husband and keep him trained Just as one trains a young mule." Far be It from our Intentions to say any thing that would seem like a contradic tion of Mrs. Catt, but we would like to ask what the average wife knows about training a mule? In real or supposed imitation of col lege youths, still more youthful students In high schools and preparatory schools have adopted strange head-gears. In stead of the modest boyish cap and the neat soft or stiff felt hat for "dress up," some fantastic boys have topped themselves with slouch-hats, variously dlstortod in the shape of the brims and even decorated with markings and devices. The principal of one hign school has asked his boys to cast off the crazy head-coverings. The matter of decency and simplicity of dress la real ly Important The boy who deliberately wears something that draws attention to himself may be pardoned by any one with humor enough to understand boy ish folly. Nevertheless, the habit of unobtrusive dress is a good one to cul- , tJ vate early. Huddersfleld, England, has lately been the scene of a curious and interest ing experiment made by the Mayor. In Longwood, poor district of the town, the rate of mortality among young children had been 122 In the thousand. The new Mayor, Mr. Broadbent, brother of Sir William Broadbent, the king's physician, decided when he took office to do what he could to reduce this high death rate. The plant he adopted was the offer of a guinea to parents in certain specified districts for every child born during his term of office and liv ing at the end of a year. In spite of the fact that serious epidemics of whooping-cough and measles prevailed during the year of the tests, and that ths summer of 1908 was oat of the Tery Lucid. A lady left her home for her annual visit to her mother. Before her depart ure she told her husband that if he wanted anything that he could not eas ily find he was to write to her for dl rectlons. "Don't turn the house upside down, as you generally do," she said. "I will answer at once and tell you Just where It la.' Soon after his wife's departure a neighbor came In to borrow pattern of a dress. The husband wrote, as he had been requested to do. This was the answer by return "You will find It hanging on the wall by the garret stairs, or In the box on top of the sewing machine In Ellen's room the green box, or the red one, I forgot which. Perhaps though, it Is on the top shelf In the cupboard In our room left-hand side, If I remember cor rectly, but look on the other side, too. If not there it Is In the bottom drawer of the bureau in the hall. That' Is where I keep my patterns, and don't untie all the bundles. It Is among them some where. Perhaps It is In the second drawer. It Is somewhere upstairs, any way, so dont rummage downstairs, P, g, Now I come to think of It, I may have lent It to my sister Ann I" When Chloroform Wm New. Here Is a curious little story about Sir James Simpson, the man who in troduced the use of chloroform Into surgery, and a peril which he escaped, as recorded by Lyon Playfair. Simp son when busy with his researches In to the subject of anaesthetics called one day on Playfair and asked If he had anything new likely to produce anaesthesia. Playfair had Just pre pared a liquid which seemed worthy of trial Simpson, who knew no fear, pre pared instantly to test it on himself. This Playfair refused to allow until It had first been tried on rabbits. Two were procured and placed under the ef fects of the anaesthetic. Next day Simpson proposed to try it on himself. "We mlgh.t as well see how the rabbits have fared," said Playfair. They found both the animals dead. The two most popular English books In Russia at the present day, according to the Dally Mall, are Milton's "Para dise Lost" and "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes." Interesting data gathered by the Pub lishers' Circular show that during the last year seven new works of fiction have on an average appeared every weekday and two new editions. There has been a decrease in biography, his tory, belles-lettres, theology, books on art science, travel and In poetical and dramatic works. Fiction is the literary food demanded by the public and fiction all forms is being abundantly sup plied. An amusing commentary on Pierre Lotl's languishing romance "Lea Desen chantees" Is presented by a reviewer In Putnam's Monthly. It appears that Lotl as a matter of fact had a number of Interviews with three young Turkish women In a Constantinople barem, though his acquaintance was carried on without any of the mystery or adven ture so elaborated in the novel Lotl discussed his projected "Les Desenchan- tees" with these young ladies, but their sentiments prove to be scarcely as dell cate as he might wish. They regard themselves as real collaborators, and because M. Lotl has not forwarded them a share of the royalties there has been talk of a lawsuit The new subscription edition of the works of George Eliot has aroused fresh interest in the personality of the woman whose first fiction appeared when she was nearly 40 years of age. Dickens wrote to her praising her truth, delicacy and pathos," and knowing her only from the "George Eliot" on the title page he declared that "If these moving fictions origin ated with no woman I believe that no man ever before had the art of mak ing himself mentally so like a woman since the world began." Froude wrote to her, "I do not know whether I am addressing a young man or an old," but in his delight and admiration he urged "George Eliot" to come and ac cept his hospitality. In writing of James Whltcomb Riley In the Books News Monthly Hewitt Hanson Howland says: "As a maker and teller of stories Mr. Riley Is incom parable. He was born with the gift Never too many, never too long, always suited to the moment and fitted to the scene, his story -punctuated conversa tion is ever a delight His method of introduction Is original and artistic There are never any 'that reminds me' or "you remember" beginnings, but with a full appreciation of the value of a good opening sentence he will say : 'When Bony Meak' (that's a typical Riley name) 'was first assistant post master at Idavllle he used to tell,' etc. Bony gets the credit, you see, and Riley a heartier laugh for having given It to him.". Mrs. George McCracken, under the pseudonymn L. A. M. Priestley, in "The Love Stories of Some Famous Wom en," nas selected eignt women or strong character and told how and with what effect they have fallen In love. Eliza beth Barrett Browning and Isabel, Lady Burton, are quoted as women of strong personality, who wedded men of equal or greater caliber and found hap piness In marriage. George Eliot, in her Irregular alliance with George Hen ry Lewes found domestic bliss marred by social disapproval, Mrs. Slddons overshadowed her husband, Mme. Ro land married a great man, to find him to be emotionally her antithesis ; Char lotte Bronte, after amazing the world with Jane Eyre, married a country curate of blameless life, who, the au thor claims, disapproved of her literary habits. 1ST. 1IIGH0LS HOTEL J. E. FROOME, peop. Only First-class Hotel in the City. t .... I THE ST. NICHOLS ! X Is the only one that can accommodate 4 anmmarnl&l travelers. V 8. F. Sharp PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention given to all calls, both night and day. Calls promptly answered. Office on Third Street. Athena. Oregor w i Can beiecomended for Hi clean and I w Cob. Main ahdThibd, athxma, Or. 4 COMMERCIAL LIVERY STABLE HARBY M BRIDE, MANACER Best Stock and Rigs in the City. Competent Drivers. Stock Boarded by the Day, Week or Month at Reasonable Rate. NORTH SIDE STREET, ATKEAN, ORE 1 "Saving at the Spigot Wasting at the Bung" That's what buying poor paint means. Paint , may be low- priced by the gallon and be extravagant to use owing to to it's poor covering power and wearing quality. After the paint is applied it's too late to save. Start right and use TVff Qiimitfftr MIn t mite PrIKTT f-"' MADE TO PAINT BUILDINGS J?4- WITH, OUTSIDE AND INSIDE. It covers more surface, spreads easier, and lasts longer than any other prepared paint, or hand-mixed lead and oil. I COLOR CARDS I Umatilla Lumber Oregon Snowline UruGri Pacific Through Pullman standard and Kieepinii cars dally to Omaha, Chicago; tourist sleeping car dally to Kansas City; through Pullman tourlHt sleeDlnir cars, personally conducted. weekly to Ohlca?o, with free reclining chair cars, seats free, to the east dally irom renaieion. ARRIVE Dally. 11:65 a. m. Extracting; Money from a Tramp. When Bishop Talbot, now of the cen tral Pennsylvania diocese, was "the cowboy bishop" of Idaho and Wyoming he never overlooked an opportunity of securing contributions for the mission ary work In which be took such delight On one occasion, while attending a meeting of church dignitaries in St Paul, he was chatting with some other clergymen on the steps of . his hotel when several hoboes came along. One of them approached and asked for aid. Bishop Talbot took him aside and after a short but earnest conversation the other tramps saw something pass from hand to hand. "What , did he give yon?" asked the other hoboes when they all started away. "Didn't give me nothing," was the disgusted reply. "I gave him a dollar for his blamed new cathedral In Laramie." 12:30 p m 4:63 p m TIMS SCHEDULES ATHENA, ORE. Walla Walla, Day ton, pomeroy, Lw iston, (;ouaz. pun man. Moscow, the Jouer d'Alene dis trict. Spokane and all points north. Walla Walia - Pen dieton Mixed Fast Mall for Pen dleton, LaOrande, Baker City, and all )oinrsei8i viaiiun for Umatilla, Hepp- ner. The Dalles. Portland, Astoria, Willamette valley Points. California. Taooma, Seattle, all Hound Points. Pendloton - Walla Walla Mixed DEPART Dally. 11:63 a.m. THE TUM-A-LUNl LUMBER CO. JACK WEIR, MANAGER Athena, Oregon , , , - v Building Material and Fuel Yards at Walla Walla, Touchet and Lowdon, Wash!, and Athena, Adams and Freewater, Oregon. ciBtieBBaciBBBaiesBcsiB aa ESTABLISHED 1865- Preston-Parton Milling Go. 4:63 p. m 6:30 p m J. 8. Doble Agent, Allien Flour is made in Athena, by Athena labor, in the latest ' and best equipped mill in the west, of the- best selected Bluestem wheat grown any where. .Patronize home . industry. Your grocer sells American Beauty for erw&acK Merchant Millers aiid Grain Buyers Waitsburg, Wash. - r ' - - - ; Athena, Oregon 4 H aBECBBBBCIBflBBBB flBBBlllllB D) CON. E7mTAe3 MO POISONS. CONFORMS TO NATIONAL PURE FOOD AND DRUG ( LAW. The Original Laxative) Couth Syrup containing Honey and Tar. Art Improvement over all Coufh, Luntf and Bronohlal Remedies Pleasant to the taste and good alike for young and old. All cough - .... .1 V. 1 K Y -i u - I r v and contains no opiates. Prepared by PINE-VLE MEDICINE COMPANY. CHICAGO, V. S. A. SOLD IN ATHENA AT HAWK'S PIONEER DRUG STORE I bob l p mm. 11 1 till i 1 r a viiii-fi mi i y i It Looked Small to Him. There was a small Scotch boy who had the quality of astuteness highly de veloped. The boy's grandmother, says the Llrerpool Post, was packing his luncheon for him tp take to school. Suddenly, looking up Into the old lady's face, he said : "Grandmother, do your specs mag nify r ! "A little, my child," she answered. "Aweel, then," said the boy, "I -W...M 4naf II Irs If If n wnnlit tV them off when yere packlrg my I Poor Marksmanship. "Gee whiz 1" said the nervous pas senger, "you only Just missed that man back there." "Yes, I know It, and that's the sec ond I've missed this morning, con found It." returned the chauffeur, In dignantly. "Must be something wrong with the steering gear." Chaparral. . Clock Owned by John Wesley, . A clock once owned by John Wesley and presented by him to the John Street fcietbodlst Church, In New York City, Is still doing good service In the church at 44 John street. loonch." A farmer occasionally become ex cited over taxes, and political coVrup tlon, but he Is never thoroughly wrought up until he has a horse sto len. -- FOR AND ALL e8oe.B-eeiJS DISEASES HIE uu AFJD eeaso AND L, PREVENTS 1 u'sU y "Two years ago severe cold settled on my lungs and so completely prostrated me that I was enable to work and scarcely able to stand. I then was advised to try Dr. King's New Discovery, and after using one bottle I went back to work, as well as I ever was." W. J. ATKINS, Banner Springs, Tcao. PRICE 50c AND $1.00 IX SOLD AND GUARANTEED DY X W. Ms-MoBAIDE