l3uy Your Groceries from Your Home Grocer VOLUME XXIV. ATHENA UMATILLA COUNTY. OREGON. FRI DAY, DECEMBER 27. 1912. r -w t er v - OFFICERS. S. T. WILSON, President, H. KOEPKE Vice-President. E. A. ZERBA. Ass't Cashier. DIRECTORS S. P. WILSON, H. KOEPKE, W. S. FERGUSON M. L. WATTS, ' F. S. Le GROW, ATIO imbai OF ATHENA ..- CAPITAL AND, SURPLUS, $100,000.00 ..We extend to our Depositors everK 64ccommdation I) - consistent with sound Banking. . THE TUfM-LUM LUC1DER GO. ... Lumber, Mill Work and all Kinds of BUILDING MATERIAL PAINTS, OILS AND VARNISHES Posts and Blacksmith coal - , r A. M Johnson, Manager ; Athena,.. Oregon ' 5SKSISSWHBHII THE AIIIEUA : PEAT MARKET 11,1 f( F . We carry the best That Money Buys Our Market is Clean and Cool Insuring Wholesome Meats. D. II. MANSFIELD .Main Street, Athena, Oregon 5,. 1 "florae of QliAUTY" Groceries We Wish You a . NcW.Ycar Start it right. Place your first or der for Groceries for 1913 with the home of Quality Groceries, and stick to your good resolutions. r TRY TlIESE-TilEVU PLEASE! Ilonopole Corn B " Tomatoft Peas " , Beans Schilling's Teas B Powder Spices Coffee (C nriTT rn ATTTino a .i a uubu miuiuiiiio, iitJiuiiii, uruuou . . CATEi:i:i3 TO THE TUDLIC IN GOOD TH1NG3 TO EAT Uliomisi OSOi It Is Uncle Sam's Most Reliabjs Lighthouse Keeper. NEVER FALTERS IN ITS WORK. By the Aid of the Wonderful Sun Valve It Lights tho Acetylene Beacons as It Set at Night and Extinguishes Them as It Rises In the Morning,, The sun la the most trustworthy ot lighthouse - keepers. The sun or the heat from it lights many hundreds of beacons along our coasts and water ways evening after evening and ex tinguishes them punctually every aim ing. -They are guides on land and sea that are never touched by human hands from one month's end to another,. The. way in which the. United .States gov ernment, through its lighthouse board," has utilized the services of the sun and made.: that great-lamp of heaven a -faithful and unerring servant Is most interesting? .,''..;: ,' ' V-f ""'''-' The discovery of acetylene gas was the first step toward retiring the lonely keepers of the little lights .in faroff places. Modern magic was not slow in recognizing the fact that by the ap plication of certain -well known scien tific principles the lighting of the great chains of beacons that girdle the coasts of the two seas and the gulf and cover the great lakes and every1 navigable stream in our huge country; could be much simplified. V '-'.?' ' v The United States did notbecome in terested in the acetylene light and its .automatically generating gas buoy until about the year J900 and did, not adopt it until 1908. Then the engineers of the lighthouse board devised , some wonderful Improvements, among them ,the utilization of the sun. ; '-. , The self lighting and self extinguish ing acetylene beacon ia a very simple thing,-, but if depends almost entirely, on the "son valve," which is one of the most wonderful but; least complex of the.achieyementa of. modern science. .v In the first place, the source of ligbf for ; these , lone beacons Is; dissolved acetylene, which la stored tmder pres-, sure In. steel cylinders. . One of tnesa, cylinders can be ' charged with enough gas to last a small beacon three years. Usually, .however, in. the case of float in? buoys, a six months' supply is all that is: necessary, as such buoys are overhauled and painted twiqea year. Knowing the size f the ilame' and its hourly .consumption of gas, it is very easy to compute how long a cylinderful will last and how, 'often, it will need to be visited.' That is all the care the light will need. "The sun, vaJve does the rest .' ' - The scientific principle upon which the sun valve depends is that llgh.t waves become transformed in different degrees, according to the nature of the Intercepting body. ' Sunlight upon dark surfaces is converted into heat, and heat produces expansion. This expan sion is especially perceptible In certain metals. "'rcc. In a carefully sealed and substantial ly mounted glass jar nearly a foot high and about one-fourth that In di-j auieter a thick, black rod Is placed per pendicularly through the center. It Is supported by-three slenderer rods of highly polished copper. The big black rod Is of copper also and is coated with lampblack to make'' it absorb light to the greatest possible degree. The sup-, porting rods reflect light without ab sorbing it and do not expand or con tract to the samo extent as the largest rod. .' "'"'';..',.:" . V1 ' ' The thick black piece of copper in the center of the Jar Is extremely sen sitive to light and heat.' As the Bun rippears and the atmosphere grows warmer In the morning this rod length ens. f It pushes down into the mefal chamber In which the glass Jar rests and touches . the . end of a lever. , It presses down on this lever, which is controlled by a spring and cuts off the Dow of the gas to the lamp. . Y , When the sun disappears from view. In the evening and the temperature of. the air fails the process ia reversed. The rod contracts and releases its pres sure on the lever, allowing the gas to; flow upward to the lamp. ; The gas is ignited by a little pilot flame that Is. never extinguished. Thus the beacon Is lighted at the proper tlm and is put out when it Is no longer : needed, al though' along desolate coasta it may! never gladden the human eye for ; months at a time. I k V;.- - ' ; ffhe engineers of the lightliouse board say that the precision of this device Is almost incredible-. It can be' used with equal certainty' in equatorial heat and in polar cold,' for It responds with the utmost accuracy to small variations In temperature. It is used on' lonely Is lands in the rociflc. '..There ;are nearly o hundred of these sun valve beacons in Alaska. In summer they are aids' to navigation, and in winter they guide " the travelers on dog sledges over the frozen wastes. Harper's WT;ekly. Deadly. " "' . , "I understand that a n amber of wo men have learned to s moke , cigars," said the frivolous observ- ;r, 1 "I don't believe It," rep lied 5Ir, Meek ton. "The kind of cigm b that vomen buy nolHMly could imok e."-"V'otili.Ing-ton Ptar. - v Sarcaeiic' Fofsiy-I'd Lave you to understand. ' that I'm not uch a fool as I l,ok 8nrest-'i?H; then, yon have much to be l'.i.inkfnl for. . J:i !i( nr- like aea. water, the more ym (irliiU tl.f thirstrer you bc-coma.-. I New Years Calling How It Originated and Is ; , Carried On ' , : AlHk NEXT to C3irls'tma the mqst Joy ous annual festival has been the ' advent ot the new year." This haB .been. so ever since the Christian era. .. As far back as the history of man can be traced the New. Tear day has been ! an occasion of feasting and rejoicing. ; From the old est authentic record, it has been trans-, mitted. down to our times and Is still observed. .The feast was Instituted by Numa : and was dedicated to. Janus, who presided over the ,new year Jan.. l, 713 b. c. .": ".-v ' ;v ,v -;1 ; In the middle ages tt was religiously observed by the flow of wine, and the eating of baked meats. t The chief tains of, the European tribes 1 appointed it as tho day of receiving their captains and, vassals, Their chief was not ad verse to receiving some token of re gard from his people to remind him 'ot, them during the remaining: 864 days. The people soon learned to consider it good form as well as good policy to, bring with them a substantial remem brance. ' ''.....,;..,,':'. '! ,; ". "Queen Elizabeth made New gear's, day a general court occasion,. In which she. greeted her loyal subjects and're ceived their gifts." It was customary to present Queen Bess with the finest raiment procurable. ; All the courtiers tried to outdo each "-other in selecting the most magnificent textures for'thelr royal mistress. Sir" Walter Raleigh one New Year's morning outstripped them all by presenting . her majesty with a pair of woven silk hose, the first ever worn In England. '.V; ' "r - Ia ndrtbern climes the New Year has always been one of the chief gnta days of the season. ' The town folks always call upon the chief, magistrate and drink his health. The Idea of paying New Year calls in this country in a general way for years was confined to New York state, though other states adopted it -and practiced the custom to i moderate extent The early settlers of Jolly old New Amsterdam made the advent day of the coming year the hap-1 piesfc of the annus. In those primitive times everybody, knew each other from one end of Manhattan! Island to the other. After . paying- their grave re spects to the governor they visited each other. ' . ; When the English came to New York they continued , the ancient custom, which helped to cement the good fel lowship that has Bince prevailed be tween the two races.. For years the popularity of; New Year as a day of feasting became so prominent that Christmas was lost sight of, - Year by year the calling custom grew In favor. The young, women would try to out do each other in the sumptuousness of their table and elegance of their toilets, In the beginning of the. lost century the young' maidens took pride In the fact that the clothes they wore and the tables they set were the work of, their own hands.,' The gallants Would start out early and go over a list of a score or more, ; paying' their respects to the matrons first and winding up, at the home of their chief attfacter. Every body who was anybody in those days drank. '.'': ' ''v.. ';. va ' ;-:'-',;' ; tn fact, It was considered a duty he owed to society and to his hostess to drluk whenever be was asked and fill the bumpers up to the brim. vAs the city increased In size the custom in- A SEW TEAIt'S OALI. IH OLD HEW TOBK. creased in popularity and the calling acquittances of the people la magni tude. The fair New Yorkers entered Into friendly rivalries with one anoth er os to who should receive the largest .number of cAUera. v' The "upper crust" celebrate New Fevr at their country homes. Occa sionally a solitary caller may be seen walking through a fashionable avenue anxiously looking for a house where he onci was a welcome visitor In or der to pay his annual respects, but nothing jrreets him but closed doors, and window : . Because the fad has become passe with the fashionables It does not fol low that there Is no calling done. The so called common people keep up the aueWmt custom aud look forward to It for half the year. , ; 1 '" ' ia times uone by it was one or me 'Wsiiitcst of r.ittUMxi. and many who , xHwVti-ii !i kct iff tn;; thitt It nny y tt i revive J wltij the unpleasaat fe Hun Kjft out A BIG GOLD BRIGIC The Trap That Jernegan Baited" "With Salt Sea Water.. : SCHEME OF.A CLEVER ROGUE. The Smooth Swindler and His Accom plice Showed How Easily They Could Extract Gold From the Ocean Fleee-i ed Their Dupes and Then Decamped," "Various inventors' 'have been working for years "on the. theory that there la plenty ., of ' gold in sea water .If only Borne process, ot extraction could be de-. veloped. , "'".' ' : ' ,:v, --.i Some years, ago the Rev. Trescott J. Jernegan. was the salt water wizard of the hour, From the dny hi bubble burst and he Jeff for; Europe, nobody seems to know . what has become of him. Jeruegan, who posed as a clergy' man, and C. E. Fisher, once a floor walker in a New York department store and before that a diver, got. to gether in the fall of lSOfl aud for a whole year carefully considered ; the problem" of extracting, gold from, salt water. It is true, their whole flold of thought compassed the Use of salt wa ter as an. accessory only, the real ma-; teiial from which the gold was to be extracted being the American people. Very artistically Jernegan, to whom was left the matter of -publicity, per mitted some vague rumors to leak out, "A reading clergyman had a marveW ous money making device.. The world was soon to be stunned by a fact that would make the possessor of the wig lual secret so rich that all, the multl jniliioiiaires would, ,be;paupersv in com parison" When . they had stirred u, public curiosity sJcrnegan and" Fishej . went to New England and there set up some mysterious machinery. "v" 4 On Narrngansetttay'was an old hal dismantled wharf, and at the sea end of this the two erected a cheap frame shanty about 8" by 10 In size, with n square hole cut through the floor and looking directly down into about fifteen feet of water, An 'electric wire from ft small battery was run along the pit ing of the wharf and attached t6 a mysterious ; box, with heavy' iron clamps and holes all through, to pei mit of free passage of the water back and forth.. '::'. ':-; ''1'"i '"': , : tinnlly the great secret was divulged, These two men had discovered a way of taking all the gold they wanted from the salt, water at' a cost so trifling that it was ridiculous to mention it Two wealthy persons, one a rrovl dence Jeweler and the other a - New York florist, were approached Jerr negan with what seemed to be such a trustful and childlike proposal that they both embraced It eagerly. It wa that, all his apparatus being ready foi experiment, they would come to tin shanty on the wharf prepared to go through ft night's vigil and witness th result, accompanied by any scientific friends they cared to bring along. ;'; The Idea, as outlined by Jernegan; was to send a current Jnto a pan oi mercury held within tho box, the recep tacle then being sent to the bottom ol the sea and drawn up after several hours, wben it would be found .'that the mercury had absorbed, gold , from the ocean. - : When the night of : the esperiment came the box was ; prepared . in the , shanty, two '''chemists,, friends of the capitalists, bringing their own mercury with themV The box was lowered. t the bottom, and then tho party of live began their wait, j Soon after daylight Jernegnn: announced tlint it was time to draw the" box up Benin. This-was ti'.uv. .'vi:il whore purty eagerly sel t')'v(.).-k to find out whether any gold iistd ix'oii received.-, When the chemists announced that gold to the value of $14 was found mixed with the quick silver all were stunned by the discov ery and realized at once the vast pos sibilities In more extensive operations, the original experiment having been practically made with a toy apparatus. The story spread like wildfire, and the modest. Jernegan was prevailed upon to organize a company. Stock was sold, and after gettlngjiossession of thousands of dollars, the promote! sailed away to Europe. ' The success ol the great experiment was 'explained afterward.. Fisher, the diver, had gone out from the. shore In his diving suit, opened the ,rbox and, takiug out the mercury that had. been brought by the 'chemists, substituted a. vial of his own that. 'had been strongly impregnated with gold. vV''-"' .''."4'-.,'1 ' -' . Both before and since the Jernegan fraud many attempts have been made to extract gold from salt water, some of them fraudulent, some genuine and bused on seientiflkv grounds, that have from .time , to time, .appealed even to deep "students; ; , But all sor far have failed, dismally. Though traces of gold ore to ' be found in salt water, com' inercial application is practically ImpossibleNew- York. Tress, r ' s . . Tiff! rrn htm on? lift H. I n 1112. kUiiiii lis Density, Its Thickness arJ V.i Pressure It Exerts. A BAR TO WORLD EXPLOSION THEY WERE VERY RICH.' . What Elie They Were Was Quaintly v.-'. Told by Mary Lyon, s " When in 1837' Mary Lyon founded Holyoke cojjege she collected the mon ey required for its first building In anm ; .that ranged from Q cents to f 1,000. Sho gat 1,800 pei-tons to sub scribe, iter feat gave the new enter prise an unusually wide foundation in the public Interest, but she did not ac complish it without much- hard work or .without gaining wide experience of human nature. . " ,-;',".-' '-,'. ' s One evening Miss Lyon, arrived, In the ; village of ; Ashfleld, Mass., at a home where she was always welcomed, gladly. She was full of hope and en thusiasm. Would the squire take her at once to W., where, she had learned, there , was a family ot wealth that -might give liberally toward the semi narybuildlng? .. .. "Supper and a good night's rest, Miss Lyon," was the" reply, "and then my horses shall take you there.". The next morning as they wero start ing the squire's wife laid a gentle hand on ' Miss Lyon's , shoulder,- with the warning: "Do hot expect too much, my dear Miss Lyon; We know" the people. I fear you will not be successful." .''With' a beaming face, Miss Lyon re; piled: "Oh,, I 'am told they are very rich.! I am sure they will help liber- .any."',' ; :,,";:'"-'' : -'" , When she entered the house ou het return Miss Lyon went quickly to hef friend, and, grasping her arm, while "conflicting' -emotions played over hot face, she said: ;. ' v' ' V; i "Yes, it is all truoi Just as I was told. They live in costly house, It is full of costly things, they wear costly cli)th(!s"-tlien, drawing nearer find Olmost closing her eyes, sho whispered with uuforgetable emphasis, "but, oh, they're little bits of folks!" Youth's Companion. , ' ' ; ' .'A Constant Sufferer. . ., "Is yrur mother n Hiiffrngette, Bob- erl V v , ';. -: . . ' , ,. . "Yc; -HlUf's. always suffering. If il tilti't with her shoes or her corset it's lcctmse wtuichody that owes her nu inritntlon lmd a party and didn't nsk her to lt.."--(;cngo Itecord-IIeinld. -:y . Wilson.' Is thcn. beMt eiiulppod' man .nominated for the presidency , '-slnco Lincoln. ; ,; .. v ,'' The Reasons Why Thla Old Planet of Ours, With All Its Pentup Fiery, Volcanlo or Gaseous Forces at Work, Could Never Bo Blown to Fragments. Some writers have accounted for tho asteroids on the theory that they are the fragments of a world that from some unknown cause has been explod ed In its orbit. Similarly, many have thought that perhaps at some distant time, when the seas shall have been drunk up into the cracked and thick ened crust of the age shrunken earth and tho volcanoes those vents of the fiery Interior-shall have become chok ed and extinct, the pentup gases gener ated from the descending moisture by tually explode the old earth like a veritable bombshell. But that can never happen. In 1883 Krakatoa, a Bleepy old vol cano on a small Island In the strait of Sunda, between Java and Sumatra, began to show marked signs of uneasi ness. .Round the volcano the quaking earthopened enormous fissures in the bottom of tho sea, down which rushed Niagaras of water. Then tho flssurjs closed and confined the engulfed flood in the hot subterranean depths. ; The water was ', quickly converted into steanf, , the steam Into dissociated gases, without room for expansion. It exerted a .pressure equal to . that of the strongest dynamte. . The great chimney of Krakatoa, sealed : since the ' memory of mani barred the normal path of escape. Higher and higher mounted the pros-, sure under the huge mass of the vol cano; then,' of a sudden, came a blast that actually shook the earth. 1 Never before in historic time had there been such a shock. The whole top of the old mountain was blown Into the eky. The recoil was distinctly felt clear through the terrestrial ball, ' ; 1 .. Tbia great cataclysm has been cited as bo indication of the power of the pentup forces that may Bome day dis rupt the earth itself. Let os examine the underlying principles that must guide us in passing Judgment on the correctness of this theory. v 1 An explostve compound Is a combnst , tble combined mechanically or chem ically either with oxygen or with an oxidizing substance that will burn with out the help of atmospheric oxygen. . Among the most powerful high ex plosives are nltrogclatln and picric acid, each of which has a density more than one and a half times that of water. The products of their combus tion ere nearly all gaseous, whereas the products' of the combustion of ordinary black gunpowder are less than half gaseous, v The larger part Is the solid matter that makes the smoke. . The energy that a high explosive can exerf depends on the volume of the gases 'liberated and the temperature to which, the heat of the explosion can raise tbem. V. 4 "','".' '' .: i?-. "f The exact temperature of the gases liberated by a high explosive ht the in stant of detonation Is not . absolutely known," but may' be approximately learned through chemical experiment Nor Is the amount of pressure known with absolute certainty. It is probable, however, tlmt nitroglycerin, nltrogoln" tin and picric acid, when detonated. In a confined space, exert a pressure some where, between 300,000 and, B00.0O0 I L f-ml nftJTfc'r will i P -'ii,B ' '"uii"" ' , . s. ; y'rrnm r j I I WW plil SORE THROAT; i ' k'l1 ' 1 ll k ;j!jlmottriMH6S. jC2' If ' I'll I I il IVV ' " V -!' ; II Cll2IwtCll2!i tittViWtu3 C0 ' ','.- v ;.;yjj I j III Ijjj : ': R l- - ' V -'i ' i mdnrjcnuf nAimuun, : :: ." '. " A III I IilylOf 1 X " -V W DiMolnM.lowa.U&A. i - ' X nl 1 ' ' li! lUNEQUALLEP X ' -'fomuiEllWlW CEKTir yA UNECtUALLED I AS A. V'!!!,. - . V'l t06p.fTii b) OuatorUia c, ,,;'ijsAA A PLEASANT ' il hiiihhhiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiiifecjnto j EVERY BOTTLE GUARANTEED: