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About The Athena press. (Athena, Umatilla County, Or.) 18??-1942 | View Entire Issue (March 24, 1911)
OUR WHIRLWIND SALE began like a tornado Saturday morn ing cTHarch 11th. The following pric es will give you an idea of the kind of bargains we are offering $6.50 Corsets 75c ' Broken lots, iaolndirjg Bon Too and tloyal Worcester; also a few Adjastos, almost all sizes, worth up to $8.50. Whirlwind price - 75c. $17:50 Women's Winter Suits $.75 One entire rack of winter Baits and separate coats; all extra good values, good colors and a full ran nf sizes. They mnst go we need tbe room. Wdirlwiod prioe - - $4.75 Checked Gingham Aprons Regulation kitchen apron in bine and white checked gingham. Yon couldn't buy tbe material ty tbe yard for tbe Whirlwind prioe 23o $1.25 Lingerie Waists 67c Lingerie waists rimmed with lace, embroidery, etc Slightly soiled, but perfeotly good as ever when lanndried. Valnes up $1.35. Whirlwiud pride 67o fSOc Ribbons 121-2c Every imaginable shade, from fonr to six inches wide, worth from 25o to BOo. Whirlwind prioe - 12 l-2o Staples Staples Former Prioes. Whirlwind Prices. 38o 10-1 Sheeting - - Sio 85o 9-4 Sheeting - - 20o 350 6 4 Sheeting - ' - 270 15o 4-4 Lonsdale Sheeting - 12o 150 4-4 Berkley (Jambrio - 12o 15o 4-4 Nainsook Cambric - 12o 12 l-2o 4-4 Hope Mnslin - - Oo 12 l-2o 4-4 Faith Muslin Oo lOo 4-4 Hurricane Muslin 8o 15o Towels - - - - llo 15o Turkish Towels - llo 15o Toweling llo 13 1 2o Toweling Oo 7o Toweling 4o Calioo. BEST ... 50 So Cotton Cballie, 23 yards $1.00 8 1-3 Apron Uingbams, 15 yards $1.00 Dress Ginghams lOo, 12 l-2o, 18o, 35o yd. Dress Goods 1000 yard of storm Serge. Extra ordinary. Best known for its genuine wearing quality, 42 inohes wide. Comes in black, navy blue, brown, grey, green, etc. Worth 85o yard. March Whirlwind sale - 67o Wool Batistes 500 yards of Wcol Batiste in all tbe shades. "Pastel" and tbe dark ones, a very light material for dresses, etc 40 inobes wide; worth 50oyard. Maroh Whirlwind sale - - 41o Table Damask Since op' Great White Sale, this de partment has been low. We have a few pieoes of fine .Damask left though, which we offer at a bargain: 4 pieces $1.50 yard Damask yard $1.17 4 pieoes 50c yard Damask yard - 41o Also a few lengths at a March Whirlwind prioe. Napkins to match and napkins not to matob. $3.00 Napkins Whirlwind sale $2.48 $4.00 Napkins Whirlwind sale $3.83 $5.00 Napkins Whirlwind sale $4.12 $7.00 Napkins Wbirlwind sale $5.08 The Peoples Warehouse Save Your Coupons Where il Pays to Trade The Mask&Harris nONT.SflOUUUI SUM Hud IIThisisnot ' ., le r. CUD for You Alone If you have your clothes made to order, they look it from every view point. If you wear ready-made clothes, they look it from every" standpoint; one costs no more than the other. Which will you have? Where's the clothier that can show you 1500 different kinds of suits, all your size. I have them. I guaran tee you a perfect fit, dependable quality and depend able Workmanship. I buy woolens direct from the mills and pay top prices for every piece of work done, which insures the best results in tailoring. I drait pat erns for any style coat front you desire. I also cany the famous Kohn clothes, and while a little higher in price than some others, are worth the difference in hand work, good shrinking and shape-retaining clothes Ladies' Suits Coats, Skirts and one-piece Dresses made to order I have installed a French Dry Cleaning Machine at. my shop and will be able to handle work equal to any city, at reasonable prices. Woolens sold by the yard. J. CONLEY, The Tailor AN UNKNOWN RACE Traditions of the Hohokam, Who Wort the First Americans. In the beginning the Hohokam dwelt In the land. They were the first Amer icansbefore the pilgrim fathers, be fore the Spaniards, before the Indians. They were the unknown people who lived In the United States so long ago that their name is utterly lost In the sou: Invest old tribes of Indians like the Zunls and Navajos know nothing of (hem save by vaguest tradition. The Plmas and Papagos of southern Arizona, who occupy part of the land (hat once was theirs, know that an other race possessed the country long ago. More they cannot tell. They and their fathers for hundreds of years have seen what we see the scanty remnants of ancient villages. For the inhabitants of the villages they have no name except the Hoho kam that Is, the "unknown." The modern archaeologist describes the implements and pottery of the Hohokam. He cannot do much more, for their houses are laid low. Except in a few places, such as the ruins of Casa Grande, near the Gila river, the very walls have vanished. Casa Grande itself may be the work of a people later than the ma'n body of the nohokam. We can never know the whole story. Yet little by little we may learn its chief facts. Arizona and the adjacent regions are full of ruins unknown to scientists and even to the people who live within a mile of them. They are so nearly obliterat ed that there seems at first sight little to repay study. Archaeology begins the task of recon structing the past. Geography must finish it. Modern geography enables us to determine the mode of life which must prevail, especially among primi tive peoples, under given conditions of physical environment. If we can cor rectly picture the geographic environ ment of the Ilohokam we may learn much of the history of our earliest fel low countrymen. Ellsworth Hunting ton In Harper's Magazine. BOILERS AND BODIES. Alike In Many Respects In the Treat ment They Require. The boiler has a certain temperature corresponding with the working pres sure it is desirable to use and for which. It was constructed. The body has its normal temperature. Any variation above or below this means too high bodily pressure or a reduced vitality. The fuel put Into a boiler should be that which it Is designed to burn. Dif ferently constructed boilers will not economically burn the same fuel. The body should receive the food It is best able to assimilate. Diverse con stitutions require diverse nourishment A boiler should be fired1 with small, equal quantities of fuel at stated in tervals; large masses Irregularly fed are fatal to satisfactory results. ' The body should be fed similarly; overloading the stomach produces im perfect digestion and deranges our physical systems. Boilers are Insulated by brickwork, cellular asbestos, etc., to prevent loss of heat by radiation. Cellular tissue and fat aid in main taining our normal temperature. Some boilers well designed produce good results with a small fuel con sumption; others are less economical. The more perfect the boiler the less the consumption of fuel. Some individuals are so constituted that they exist on small quantities of food; othera in the same circumstances consume much more. The more per !oct the physical development the less the food required. The above data, intelligently used, govern good boiler practice. The above will also secure health and good digestion. Popular Magazine. Why the Trunk Was Slow. "I had a most delightful time last summer," gushed Miss N'oling, "but I was dreadfully inconvenienced at Leaflandville waiting for my trunk. I went there by the N. T. C. so as to take advantage of the scenery along the route, but I had to send my trunk on the slow B. C. and E." "But why couldn't you have sent your trunk on the N. T. C. too?" mur mured Miss Sterling. "Because," explained M13S Noling, glad to show her superior knowledge, "I learned from a friend of mine that the N. T. C. is not a trunk line." Brooklyn Life. He Promised. Sutton No. enn't spare the money very well, but I'll lend It to you if you promise not to keep it too long. Gay boy I'll undertake to spend every pen ny of It before tomorrow - Getting the Particulars. Nellie Hasn't Mr. Felewalloy pro posed yet? Nora No. but he hi is gone as far as to ask what time wo lavo breakfast and whether mother Is a good cook. Exchange. Bad men excuse their faults; aood men will leave them. Johnson. Notice to Creditors. Notioe is hereby given that the undersigned has been appointed Exeo utor of the last will and testament of A. J. Wagner, deceased, by the Coun ty Court of Umatilla County, State) of Oregon. All persons having claims against said estate aie hereby notified to pres ent the same, with proper vonobers at tached, to the undersigned, at Athena, Oregon, or to R.aiey & Baley, his attor neys, at Pendleton, Oregon, within six months fioni the first pnolioation of this notice, the first publication hereof being made Maroh 84, 1911. Aoy J. Wagner, Executor. NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT. In the Coonty Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla Conntv. In the Matter of the Estate of Emery LaHue, deceased. Notioe is hereby given to all per sons whom it may oonoern that Sarah LaHoe, administratrix of the estate of Emery LaHue, deceased, has filed her final aooount and report in the admin istration of said estate; that the oonrt has fixed Monday tbe 27th day of Maroh, A. D., 1911. at the hour of 2 o'olook in tbe afternoon as tbe time, and the County Court House at Pen dleton, Umatilla County, Oregon, as tbe plaoe where all objections and ex ceptions to the said final aooount and repoit will be heard and the set tlement thereof made. Dated this the 24tb day of Febru ary. A. D., 1911. Sarah LaHue, Adminsitratrix. Peterson & Wilson, Attorneys. - NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the County Court of the State of Oregon for Umatilla Connty. In the Matter of the Estate of James S. Henry, deoeased: Notioe is herety given to all persons whom it may oonoern that Elizabeth Henry has been appointed exeoutrix of the last will and testament of J S. Henry, deoeased, has qualified as suoh and had letteis testamentary issued to her. All persons having olaims against tbe said estate are hereby required to present them, with proper vouobere, as required by law, to tbe said exeoutrix at her home in Athena, Oregon, within six months of tbe date of the first publication of this notioe, wbioh said first publication is made on this tbe 17th day of February. A. D., 1911, and will appear in the Ath ena Press newspaper for fonr oonseo utive weeks, the last pnblioation ap pearing on the 17th day of Maroh, A. D., 1911. Dated this the 17th day of Fetru- ary, A. u., ivu. Elizabeth Henry. Peterson & Wilson, Exeoutrix. Attys. for Exeoutrix. K' PRIZE WALL PAPERS It SJjTw These famous patterns are handsomer ilj'iK ftSrrisiSl. an ketter nwde than those of any Mis?! p jP jlJjjSfcsS other manufacturer. They consist of all M 3Si IliKviW 6rades from the most inexpensive Kitchen rp5j Vyfln sf an' ' ec Roonl PaPers t0 the choicest Halls, Kfw4f Rfti WlfFn "Kfh Daing Rooms and Parlors, representing a Src'J& 'f3f ftffj Al l Hi stick ol over 3,000,000 roUs- llll'tl. mi 'ill! IPl Don't buy old shop worn goods when lJp I, 11 1 Ml WE CAN SAVB YOU 50 PER CENT. . PLWM If II n any one of our 600 patterns manufactur- M' KaE 1 ; 111 J! 3 ,?d expressly for . spring .... nMlSWK4' S 1 i 1 1 1 biSLf' ORDERS TAKEN FOR ONS ROOM OR A WHOLE HOUSE, SPgl Sll "fi? i. J DESIGNS AND COWRW Professional fi. V. Sham PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Special attention given to all calib, both night and day. no.llanrnmnt.lv fl.naW0.red. Office On Third Street, Athena Oregor G. S. NEWSOM, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Weston, Oregon. Calls answered promptly night or day. PETERSON & WILSON Attorney s-at-Law Athena, Oregon. - Pendleton, Oregon Homer I. Watts Attorney-at-Law Athena, Oregon. JOS. C. BADDELEY, D. V. S. Proprietor of ' City Veterinary Hospital 703 Chase Ave. , :: Phone, Main 34 Walla Walla, Wash. Will make calls to tAthena and Vicinity- C. W. LASSEN. M. D. V. Official Stock Inspector. Graduate McKlllip Vetinary College, Chicago Phone Main 87, PKND1ETON, OREGON Veterinary Surgeon & Dentist j Trifc w ST. NICHOLS HOTEL J. E. FBOOME, prop. ' . Iff Only First-class Hotel in the City. Iff THE ST. NICHOLS It the only one that can accommodate commercial travelers Iff Can bnteoomemled tor lie clean and well veutllated room. ECoa. MAIM AND Third, Athsita, Or. TROY LAUNDRY For GOOD WORK HENRY KEENE, Agent, MARION JACK, Pres. M. L. AKERS, Sec-Treas. Pendleton Iron Works We Make all Kinds of Farm Machinery to Order and We Guarantee the' Goods Repair Work on all Ksnds of Machinery a Specialty" Structural Iron Casting and Foundry Work CltyM eat II C. L. MAY. Prop. NORTH SIDE OF MAIN STREET The Best Meat to be found in Town. Come and see me. I will treat you right. C. L. MAY, ATHENA, OREGON ,lPnfeiI HflKBtK 5HUP Everything First Class - Ho d ern and Up-to - d a te SOUTH SIDE MAIN STREET ATHENA c E A Peep a! fce inside of . THE IMPROVED VIKING SUIT Pitcnt applied for tt Besides double seat and knees it has a patent lining reenforcement throughout Biyefed buttons Extension walsl-banis Doubts seat from scam to sea Double knee from seam to seam All Seams taped, siifched and stayed three limes '. Thu ticket on t suit be guarantee of mufactioo B ,ecke4ayerGipompany 'est lYIade uhilcW JlrJ mk 'il i IIP i !i m- e i-A I &3 o Olothing Parents, Rote the extra lining attachment covering parts which are not made doable, thus relieving a great deal o! the strain attendant upon the seams and other parts. Seats, knees and arm-pits are points necessitating particular attention. They are made of only reliable materials, perfectly put together and in style, right up to the min ute. The label tells sewed in every coat. It is plainly the duty of every mother before buying to carefully analyze the above. Come in and convince yourselves of its genuineness. JOB PRINTING yp1 Neat Workmen Past, Modern Presses High Grade Stock ' This month's Butterick Patterns arc 10c and 15c none higher.