Buy Your Groceries from Your Home Grocer VOLUME XXIV. ATHENA, UMATILLA COUNTY. OREGON. FRIDAY, JULT 26. 1912. NUMBER 30 .. OFFICERS F. WILSON, President, , . KOEPKE Vice-President, . S. Le GROW, Cashier, . A. ZERBA, Ass't Cashier. , DIRECTORS .. S. F. WILSON. H. KOEPKE, W. S, FERGUSON M. L. WAITS, F. S. Le GROW. FIRST NATIONAL BAN OF ATIIENA CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $100,000.00 We extend to our Depositors every cAccommdation consistent with sound Banking. 0 S3 Paint Protection ' The paints we proffer the public hereabouts have a bull dog grip on the situa tion. That is, they hold fast hang on, endure, last long, worth while considering, ; because some paints look pretty for awhile, then fade blister and fall off. BUND Y PAINT STOEE BagnHaraiiiiHiiiiiii ii -, r-aBnamtH a THE TUM-A-LUM LUMBER GO. . Lumber, Mill Work and all Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES ' Posts and Blacksmith coal A. Mi Johnson, Manager " r ' Athena, Oregon : ' THE ATHENA MEAT MARKET I'Athena BakervJ We carry the best That Money Buys Our Market is " Clean and Cool Insuring - Wholesome Meats. ii rr i icirin n Main Street, Athena, Oregon I . A. f. Crusey, Proprietor All Bakery Products are Fresh Daily. We carry a fine line of Confections, and serve light Lunches. Soft drinks and . Ice Cream. Cream iced in quantities for customers. 1 NH-RIISSFS N ft II W W W W ka W III,. 3 THE HEW PARTY EMBODIES -A PROTEST AGAINST Genuine Rule of the People Themselves to Be Achieved and cTVlaintained. . In bis first speech sinoe fas returned from Chicago Colonel Roosevelt has set forth bis reasons for leading in the formation of a new party. "No man knows better than I," said Colonel Roosevelt, "that enthusiasm and high prinoiples oannot be eSeotive without organization and work. A great responsibility rests en you men here Who are undertaking the organ za tion of a new party which is to e literally the party of the people. r"It will fig ht on live iesnes and not dead ones. It will embody a protest againstrthe corruption in toth of the old party machines. It will be a par ty into which ex-demoorats and ex republioans, witbont regard to their past." are to come in on an exaot equality and to have each the same share in the party management. "When we get started it will be a party not only representing the people at eleotion time, but will .represent them in party management. We are going to see to it that it is organized so that it will be impossible for any fifty-three men, ohoseu four years be fore by politicians, to stand superior to all the voters of a great state like California and that if that state has not shaped its laws aooording "to a given call of 53 private men the state shall not be disfranchised. , "No good will come if we meiely substitute one set of bosses for an other," ooDtinued the colonel. "We intend to build a government, with out and within the party, on the lines of general popular rule and. of sooial and industrial justioe for farmer, wage earner,' business man and pro fessional man alike, to be achieved not through the boss, not tbfougb the indireot'control of party organization by special privilege, but to be achiev ed through genuine and not merely nominal rule of the people them- TRAIL OF Cloudburst 'and Hail Storm Strikes Butter Creek and Reservation. The Batter Creek country was visit ed by a severe storm Saturday evening wbioh resulted in oonsideratle dam age to property and orops. A wall of water swept down Butter Creek valley and swept all before it. The storm oame over the Biroh Creek district, destroying .props. Wind, rain and bait in the southwest part of the Um atilla reservation wrought damage to the large wheat fields of that seotiou. Among the heaviest individual losers by the storm are John Crow, bis son, Claud Crow, John Rothlin, George Ferringer, William Wright, John Todd. Tom Thompson, Sam R. Thomp son, J. W. Maloney and A. B. Cooley George Ferringer places bis loss at 19000 and J. W. Maloney will lose between two and three thousand dol lars as the result of the storm. Sam R. Thompson, who is farming the Blakely plaoe at Eastland as well as land on the reservation, figures that the storm cut down bis yield on the former place at least ten bushel to the acre, while L. C. RotbroPff, wbpse land adjoins the Blakely farm on the west, suffered as severely. The bar ley on the Roulstone place to the north was also badly damaged. W. W. Harrah, Wild Horse ranoh er, lost two horses in a cloudburst which swept down at bis plaoe, tie bad ten or twelve bead tied to a cou ple of feed raofca when the water pour ed down the gulch and both wagons and animals were swept away. The East Oregonian says: Butter 1 THE QUALITY gBQGEW STOB 1 PROMPT DELIVERY WHERE PRICES ARE RIGHT pofc 3 Ji The Freshest and most Choice the Market affords in 7f T!YAU UlUUJILU Hi n i$ $6 Best that Money can Buy Always Found Here DELL BROTHERS, cTiSSSc,N Athena, Oregon g Creek valley is theaoene of devasta tion as the result of the Saturday storm wbioh sent an immense wall of water down the valley, sweeping it for miles almost clear of signs of hu man presence. Before its force bous es, barns, outbuildings and fences want down and were swept away in the flood and bad it not taen daylight when it ooonrred and bad not settlers ridden in advance of the oncoming water, many. Uvea would undoubtedly have been lost. At the Charles McCracken plaoe, not a board of the many buildings is to be found, house, barn, and all outbuildings and . fenoea having been swept away and broken up. Heavy farm vebioles were carried long dis tances down the valley, and the con tents of the houses were scattered in every direction. The same thing happened on the Campbell plaoe on wbioh Frank Jones and family were living. , Nothing was left standing. , A similar fate was ex perienced by S.. G. Ligbtfoofc while James Nelson lost everything except hjs house wbioh held its foundation in the flood, ' All of his farm vehicles Including two hacks, a boggy, three wagons und several raoka were wash ed away and completely demolished. Called Anarchist, Suicides. "One of the men at the plant oalled bim on anarohist last Saturday, be oacse he bad on a red sbitt, and that is what caused him to do it," so I: bed Mrs. Peter Jakey 6f Walla Walla Monday afternoon after she had. been told that her Lusband had banged himself in the malt kiin of the Walla Walla Brewing company's plant where be was employed as head cellar man. Jakey, a German , by birth, . was 0 years old. fellow workmen bad not iced ho was aoting peculiarly for the past few days, but little thought the brooding spirit provoked by a passing jest would result in suioide. . Shortly after 1 o'olook Monday a signal was sounded to the basement by one of the first floor employes. 1 he signal which always brought an answer from Jakey remained unanswered and u searoh was started. Reception to Prof. Smith and Bride. Says the Weston Leader: A very pleasant reoeptlon was tendered Fri day evening by the Ladies Band to Mr. and Mrs. Edgar L. Smith', at the home of Mrs. Minnie Walker on sooth Water street. The spaoious lawn in front ot her residence - had been strewn with rugs and lighted by Jap anese lanterns, and presented an invit ing appearance. Here the band mem bora sad a few other friends assem bled and weloomed the guests of hon or'.. Games were played and ice cream and cake were served. The band In dies presented a handsome mirror to their director and bride. A STORM ON GALILEE. v Fierce While It Lasted, It Went at v , Quickly as It Came. The sea. of Galilee is not always calm. The mountains immediately nd Joinging it are 2,000 feet high, ami through their deep gorges the storm winds are sucked into the hollow of the lake, so that sudden squalls come literally out of a bltro sky. Ono charm ing spring morning wo started out to sail from Tiberias to Capernaum. There was not a ripple on the water or a cloud In the heavens. But when we were a quarter of a mile from shore out boatmen noticed a band of rough-water rushing toward us from the other side of the lake. In spite of our remonstrances they immediate ly gave up the plan for making Caper naum, took down the sail with such frantic haste that they nearly upset the boat and then rowed for the lnnd with all their might and with such ex cited urgings to one nnother that we thought them a cowardly crew. But hardly had the boat been beached in a sheltered cove when the wind was howling down on us from the moun tains and the heavy breakers were foaming along, the shore as far out into the lake na we could see. A quar ter of an hour later the sea of Galilee was again as level as a mirror, and only irsoft, warm breeze was blowing over the smiling waters. Travel Mag' azlne. ' SEWERS OF PARIS. How This Great System Swallows Up tho Litter of the Streets. ? The Paris sewer system is said to be the finest in the world. The observant visitor in the French ca.Ulal soon notices that its people havo somewhat different ideas from ours ns to the use of sewers, for he will see porters throw big bundles of paper down large open ings left in the curb, and even rags und garbage. ; On Shrove Tuesday there is a car nival along the Paris boulevards. From noon to midnight the crowd throws paper confetti in such quan tities that the broad streets are cov ered with many tinted paper snow when the last revelers leave for home. The visitor wonders how this mess is to be cleared up. In the morning, how ever, every scrap is gone. If bo bad stayed out late enough he would have seen the litter swept and washed right Into the sewers. Terhaps that takes him underground to visit them, one of the sights of Paris, There ore nearly 2,000 separate channels, some great aqueducts navt gated in a boat, with walks on either side. -They carry the telephone ana telegraph cables, electric light wires, gast mains and pneumatic letter tubes, Telephone Review. Weary It's a poor rule tunc aoesn t work both ways. Willie G'wan! It's a poor rule t work at all. Toltfo Blade. ... WORDSWORTH'S RECITATION. The Way the English Poet Received Ralph Waldo Emerson. When Emerson, the great American writer, came to England he paid a vis it to Wordsworth, says an English magazine. Wordsworth had Jist re turned from a Journey and was in his garden writing a poem on what be had seen. The visitor found the great poet a white haired, tall, sparely built man, of a rugged, rustic type, with nothing, unless it were the fine eyes, to hint of the poet. Wordsworth made no ceremony over the visit of the man from a far land, but said Instantly when he was called to greet him, "If you are interested in my poetry perhaps you will like to hear these lines." Emerson politely agreed, and this is what happened. Emerson has himself written the story down for us. The old poet thought for a few moments, then stood forth and repeated with great animation an entire poem he had written. "The recitation," the American phi losopher wrote afterward, "was so un locked for and surprising Words worth standing apart and reciting to me in a garden walk, like a schoolboy declaiming that at first I was near to laughing; but, recollecting myself that I had come thus far to see a poet and he was chanting poems to me, I saw that he was right and that I was wrong, and I gladly gave myself up to hear." STOVES OF IRON. They Superseded the Roman Stuba In the Eighteenth Century. A heating apparatus called a "stuba" (stove) was widely used among the higher class of Romans before the be ginning of tho Christian era. This class of heaters was fixed and immova ble, besides being in several other re spects wholly different from the mod ern stove. In Germany and Scandina via they were used in bathrooms and hothouses during the middle ages. They were usually constructed of brick, stone or tile and were of immense size. They sometimes covered the whole side of a twenty or th'rty foot room and often extended out into the room as much as ten feet, tn which case the smooth, flat top was used for a bed stead, tho heated surface imparting an agreeable feeling of warmth during those cold nights of long ago when such things as covers were quite rare. Cardinal Polignnc of France was per haps the first to attempt the construc tion of a stove wholly of iron, this at about the beginning of the eighteenth century. The first real improvement over the old Roman "stuba" was brought about by Franklin in the year 1745. One of his efforts produced a typical base burner, almost perfect and a model of workmanship. Stoves were not used in private houses to any great extent prior to the year 1830. London Standard. . ' ,. . Traveling Stones. "Traveling stones," from the size of a pea to six inches in diameter, are found in Nevada. : When distributed upon a ' floor or other level surface within two or three feet of one another they immediately begin to travel to ward a common center and there He huddled like a clutch of eggs in a nest A single stone removed to a distance of three and a half feet upon being released at once started with wonder ful and somewhat comical celerity to Join its follows. These queer stones are found in a region that is compara tively level and little more than bare rock. Scnttered over this barren re gion are little basins from a few fe?t to a rod or two in diameter, and it is in the bottoms of these that the roll ing stones are found. Tho cause for the strange conduct of these stones is doubtless to be found In the material of which they are composed, which ap pears to be lodestone or magnetic Iron Ore. Harper's Weekly. A Legend of Agincourt. For many centuries we English have plumed ourselves upon the victory of Agincourt. Indeed it is from , King Henry V.'s address to his soldiers on that occasion, as given by Shake speare, that the motto of this journal is taken, "Familiar in their mouths as household words." But the French have an account of the affair not so much to our credit It was arranged, according to this fable, by the two leaders that only the nobles on each side were to fight. King Henry V. then artfully ennobled his wholo urmy and hence got the best of the enemy. Shakespeare unwittingly gives a little countenance to the legend when he makes the king declnro in the abovo mentioned address, "Bo ye ne'er so vile, this day shall gentlo your condi tion." London Standard. Realism With a Vengeance. "A great deal of fun has been poked at the realistic school of art," says a New York artist, "and it must be con fessed that some ground has been giv en to the enemy: Why, there recently tame to my notice a picture of an Assyrian bath, done by a Chicago unn, and so careful was he of all the details that the towels hanging up were all marked 'Nebuchadnezzar in the corner in cuneiform characters." Lippincott's. Thoroughly Qualified. "And why do you think," asked the president, "that you would be an orna ment to the diplomatic corps?" "Sir." replied the applicant, with pardonable pride, "for four years I had the honor of directing a church rholr."-Philadelphia Record. Labor to keep nllve In your breast that little parkof celestial firo, con science. Washington. ANCIENT ARITHMETIC. Problems Schoolboys Had to Solve Thirty-eix Centuries Ago. There Is a ray of vindictive comfort for the modern schoolboy in the fact that for over 3,600 years his schoolboy progenitors have been worried by just such problems In arithmetic as annoy him most Among the archaeological discoveries made In Egypt is a papyrus roll, in excellent condition, dating from about 1700 B, a This roll, which had a long heading beginning, "Directions how to attain the knowledge of all dark things," proves beyond doubt that the Egyptians of that time had a thorough knowledge of the elements of arithmetic. . , Numerous examples show that their principal operations with units and fractions were made by means of ad dition and multiplication. Subtrac tion and division were not known in their present form, but correct results were obtained nevertheless. Equations are also found in the papy rus. . Here is one that brings the Egyp tian schoolboy home to us: Ten measures of barley are to be di vided among ten persons in such man ner that each subsequent person shall receive one-eighth less than the one before bim. Another example given is: There are seven men; each one has seven cats; each cat has eaten seven mice; each mouse has eaten seven grains of bar ley; each grain of barley would have yielded seven measures of barley. How much barley has been lost? The papyrus also contains the calcu lation of the area of a circle, attempts to square the circle and finally calcula tions of the cubic measurements of pyramids. New York Tribune. PUT Oil BALLOT SUPREME COURT DECISION ON UNIVERSITY REFERENDUM. People This Fall To Pass on $500,000 for State Schools- Justice Eakin Dissents. ENLIVENED THE SCENE. But Hero's improvisation Did Not Help Leander Much. Innumerable are the tales of actors in difficulties. Here is one related of Christian Brandos, the dramatist, who in his youth belonged to a strolling company which played pieces of an extremely primitive kind. On one occasion the play was enti tled "Hero and Leander," tho dialogue being left pretty much to the discre tion of the players. It had been agreed, however, that Hero was to be coy and not confess her love for Lean der till he had again and again ex pressed his readiness to be hanged, burned nnd drowned in her behalf. But the lady was soft hearted, besides being exceedingly fond of Brandes, nor could she listen unmoved to the first passionate pleadings of the youth, who explained that he had swum across the Hellespont to see her, , "My dear Leander," she exclaimed, "I can not resist you. Accept my hand and my heart." -" ' Leander knew not what to say. ' AH his prepared phrases were useless. ' The manager came to his aid with a loud whisper addressed to Hero, "In the 'fiend's name, improvise a few words and retire!" The poor girl, turning to the audi ence, repeated her lesson. "la the fiend's name, I improvise a few words and retire," and then tripped , oft the stage, greatly relieved. London Graph ic. . . . A Rossini Joke. Rossini promised a place la the opera orchestra to a trombonist and then forgot about it, says the Musical Courier. At one of his dinner parties tho butler announced the visit of this same protege. Rossini hastened to wel come him and, relieving him of his in strument, disappeared a few moments, to return with his friend. Handing the instrument to the trombonist with a re quest to let the company hear him, Rossini prepared to listen. Trombone to Hps, tho musician rose dismay, no sound, cheeks bulging, eyes distended. In vain the unhappy man makes super human efforts to produce harmonious sounds. At InstI Oh, effort supremel With a sound like a hoarse gooso cackle there shoots from the trombone a mass of sticky macaroni. "No harm, my friend," said Rossini;' "you have proved yourself a strong ' musician." And the next day the coveted position was offered to the trombonist Boston Transcript Sunlight and Germe. Here is an instructive experiment made recently on the effects of sun light Some germs of the terrible dis ease, anthrax, were sown on two plates of gelatin, and while one plate was kept in the dark the other was placed in tho sunlight The germs grew, and at the end of ten minutes there were SCO colonics or groups In the sunshine plate and 400 colonies in the dark plate. One hour later the result was: In the sunshine plate, none; in the dark plate, 2,020. No disease germ thrives in sunlight Modesty. Modesty is ono of the sweetest and most desirable qualities one can pos sess, and yet too much modest)' hin ders advancement When this qitality is overdeveloped it antagonizes aggres siveness, without which oo grout sue cess can bo attained, . I Parried. Wife A tree, you know, gets , new ilothes every year hat; parasol, every thing. Ilusbaud Yes, darling and makes them all itself. In an opinion written by Justice MoBride, the supreme court has re vetsed Judge Galloway of the Marion connty onnrt in the University of Ore gon referendum case and dismissed the scits. This means that the refer endotna against the university appro priations of over 500,000 will go on the ballot. Chief Justioe Eakin gave a dissenting opinion, upholding the decision of the lower court.- This is the first time in his servioe on the su preme benob that he has written a dissenting opinion bIodk. The most sensational featnre of the majority opinion is toe aeoiarauon that the law does not mean it is nec essary to have a copy of the warning and petition on each sheet of the ref erendum petition. ' la bis opinion, Justice McBiide says that if sheets ate fastened together and a hunoh of them is attached to a copy of the pe tition, that is all neoessary to make them legal. The opinion takes coRmzanoe of the forgeries of the names, as proved iu the trial, and reads a leofnre to II. J. Parkinson for partioipatlng in a move ment whioh originated out of com munity jealousies, as this did, but the opinion says after deducting the forg ed names enough remain to cause the petitions to go on the ballot. Chief Justice Eakin says be basqs his dissenting opinion ou just one question, the form of the petition. He holds that every statet should oou taln a onpy of the petition and points out that the law specifically provides that 20 liues shall be loft in whioh the signature of each Bheet must be writ ton in by the circulator and sworn to, and says that this is plain intent to have the warning and petition on eaob sheet. "This whole act is bristling with precautions against fraud in its use," says Justice Eakin, "and this is the most important of them the assur ance that the man who writes bis name as ono of the 20 on the sheet signs the petition." WOULD ELECT POSTMASTERS Latest Wrinkle In Progressive Platform Comes From Iowa. What 8he Might Catch. She They say there are Reims In kisses. What do you suppose a girl could catch that way? He A. hus band. Exchange. The lowa state convention of the progressive partv adopted a platform containing a plan declaring for the direot election of postmasters by their constituencies. The convention chose also a fall set of delegates to the national convention in Cboago, headed by Judge J. L. Stevens of Boone, organized a working state committee and provided for con gressional district and county-organ-, izatiou. The platform is mainly de voted to national issues. It condemns the republican national convention and republican national committee at Cbioago, severely censures President Tatt and douounoea what is alleged to te bis subservienoy to the special interests; eulogizes Colonel Roosevelt as the "foremost man of the '.world,"' and deolares for his nomination and1 eleotion; urges presidential primaries,; direot eleotion of Uuited States sen-, ators indorses the initiative and ref erendum, asks for physical valnatiin of railroads and a proteotive tartf "suited to the fostering of labor' iu domestio manufactures, agrioulture and other industries.", . - Resist: thy inclinations In tbo begin iiiug. Thouius a KeuipU. i Declines Nomination, Jerry Stone of this city reoeived the Domination for representative at the Prohibition convention. He declines in the following letter to the county ebairmna: ,' . ' Athena. Ore., Jaly 23, 1012. Justice T. L. Cbilders, Chairmau Prohibition County Conmittee Free water, Ore. Dear Sir! Baviog been informed that I was nominated for state representative, by the Probibi-i tion convention recently held in Mil ton. I feel it my duty to Inform yon that while I folly appreolate the fav orable consideration of my . name for the bouorable position, fot Various reasons I oannot in Justioe either to the Probltition patty, my frleodn, or myself, consistently accept the Dom ination. I must decline. It aspeot folly, Jerry Stone. , '. Mondav Children's Day Secretary W. A. Kits oi toe waua Walla Connty Fair Association has announced that Monday, September 16, the opening, day, will be Child ren's Day, following a custom estab lished some years ago, and it is piob atle eaob day of the big week will be set aside for soma special occasion. Saturday, the oloaiog day, will as in past years be set aside, tor the farmers of the Inland Empire and a large at tendanoe ii expected. The program on that day will be arranged with a view to entertaining residents of, the farm ing districts, a street P4t(W tticg a feature cl tho afternoon. ,