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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 7, 1904)
Miss Alice M. Smith, of Minneapolis, Minn., tells how woman's monthly suffering may be quickly and permanently relieved by Lydia E Pinkham's Vegetable Compound "Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam: I have never before given my endorse ment for any medicine, but Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound has added so much to my life and happiness that I feel like making an exception in this cose. For two years every month I would have two days of severe pain and could find no relief, but one day when visiting a friend I run across Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com wound, she had. used it with the best results and advised me to try it. 5 found, that it worked wonders with mo ; I now experience no pain and only had to use a few bottles to bririg about this wonderful change. I use it occasionally now when I am exceptionally tired or worn out." !Mis3 Alice M. Smith, 804 Third Ave., South Minneapolis, Minn., Chair man Executive Committee Minneapolis Study Club. Beauty and strength in women vanish early in life because of monthly pain or some menstrual irregularity. Many suffer silently and see their hest gifts fade away. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound helps women preserve roundness of form and .freshness of face because it makes their entire female organism healthy. It carries women safely through the various natural crises and is the safeguard of woman's health. The truth about this great medicine is told in the letters from women being published in this paper constantly. Mrs. C. Kleinschrodt, Morrison, 111., says: Am v v pain. I am tor sometime." and sickly, discouraged with life and no hope for the future, when proof is bo unmistakable that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will cure monthly suffering all womb and ovarian troubles, and all the ills peculiar to women. $5000 FORFEIT 'f we cannot forthwith above testimonials, which will prov I.vll:i RICE SHOWERS FORBIDDEN. Rallvrny Official In Connecticut Town Pat an End to a Crow. intg .Nniaanc. Rice-throwing has become a nuisance at Hartford, Conn. So many couples have been married there recently, and their friends have been so demonstra tive at the railway Ftation, that Superin tendent Davidson, of the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, has de cided to put an end to it in the precinct which is directly tinder his supervision. Recently he happened to be in the union station when a bride and proom were being pelted. Passengers had to keep off the station platform till the couple were within the car, and then, in the hurry to get aboard, several slipped on the rice. Mr. Davidson promptly issued an or der to the station master to call upon the police to arrest all persons who com mitted the nuisance of rice-throwing. Half an hour later the station master enforced the order, and caused the ar rest of a young man, but on the ground that the order had not become well known the youth was released. Here after all offenders will be prosecuted. Chinese Pish Fnrmlar, Those ever-Ingenious people, the Chi nese, are jrreat at fish farming, and one of their little dodges for hatching young fish is most ingenious. Taking a fresh egg, they suck the contents through a tiny hole and refill the egg with tiny eggs of the fish they want to hatch. The hole is then sealed up and the egg placed under a sitting hen. In a very ftw days the fish ova are so far advanced that one has only -to break the shall into mod erately warm ater and the' little fiah spring to life at once. "Dear Mrs. Pinkiiam: I have suffered ever since I was thirteen years of age with my menses. I hey were irregular and very painful. 1 doctored a great deal but received no benefit. "A friend advised me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, which I did, and after taking a few bottles of it, I found great relief. "Menstruation is now regular and without enjoying better health than 1 have How is it poRsible for us to make it plainer that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound will positively help all sick women ? All women are constituted alike, rich and poor, high and low, all suffer from the same organic troubles. Surely, no one can wish to remain weak prndnco the original letters and slgnaturs of their absolute eennineness. Piiikliam MeiliHne Co., Lvnn, Mass. THE SLOWLY RECEDING MOON. Lunar Body May Have Htn Born of Oar Earth Million of, Tears AtfO. Looking back through th mists of time we see the moon ever drawing nearer and nearer to the earth. Our satellite now revolves at a distance of 240,000 miles, but there was a time when that distance was no more than !: 00 .000 miles. There was a time, mil lions of years ago, no doubt, when the moon was but 100,000 miles a way; and as we look further and f urt her bnck we see the moon ever flrnwir.g closer and closer to the earth, until at last we discern tin critical period in earth moon history when our g' be was ? pin ning round in a period of about five or six hours, writes Kir K.bett Hall, in Rooklovert" Mngaxine. The moon, in stead of revolving where we now find it, was then actually close to the earth; earlier still it was, in fact, t-ouching our globe, and the moon and the earth were revolving each around the other, like a football and a twinis ball actually fastened together. It is imxssii)le to resist takinc one step further. We know that the earth wn. at that early period, a soft molten mass of matter, spinning round rapid ly. The speed wemi to have been so great that a rupture took place, a por tion of the molten matter broke away from the ptu-ent globe, and the frag ments coalesced into a email globe. That the moon was- thus born of our earth uncounted millions of years ago is the Karon which mathem&tiee de viate It lekroi from the murmur ( the ifcfce. NEW CURE FOR CONSUMPTION. Oermaa rtiysletan Declares That Kackalyptu Fumes Will De stroy the Disease fieron. A remedy claimed by itc inventor as anentirely new treatment for consump tion is attracting the attention of lung specialists at llerlin and the medical profesaion generally. It consists of the inhalation of vapor produced by heating a mixture of eucalyptus oil, sulphur and charcoal, and it is stated that it is more effective than any serum remedy hitherto tried. Robert Schneider, a druggist, of Berlin, conceived the idea while trav eling in parts of Australia, where the eucalyptus tre grows luxuriantly. Consumption ia almost unknown among the inhabitant oi these dis tricts and sufferers from the disease who go there improve speedily. Ilerr Schneider upon returning to Berlin communicated his idea to Dr. Sommer feld, a physician of high repute, who experimented in hospitals for six months. As a result 60 of 100 patients treated by him were completely cured. The inhalation of the vapor kills the bacilli. In some cases the patients were kept in an atmosphere impreg nated with the fumes night and day until they showed signs of relief. Dr. Sommerfeld will read a paper on the subject before the Berlin Medical so ciety at the end of April, claiming that the new curative agent, which is called Sanosin, constitutes an enormous ad vance in the treatment of tuberculosis. WIRELESS SYSTEM ON SHIPS. IT American Line of iNeAmers to Install Apparatus on Several of Its Steamers, The American line, which has had for some time the Marconi wirelee tel egraph system in operation on the steamship Philadelphia, has issued a handsomely illustrated circular show ing cuts of the Marconi station and of the St. Louis at sea, announcing its determination to equip the St. Louis, the St. Paul and the New York at once with the system. In addition to the facilities offered to passengers in the way of sending or receiving telegrams while at sea ar rangements have been made with news companies for supplying current news, which will be sent by wirelee tele graphy to east-bound steamers from the Poldhu station, on the coseit of England, and to west-bound steamers from the Siaeon6t station, Nantuck et. The steamers of the lines when fitted with the wireless telegraph ap paratus will be practically in continu ous communication with either shore stations or with passing steamers. SHADOW EXPERT ENGRAVER. Car Which Is Taken When a New Seal os? the United State Is to Be Cngnvtd, Secret service operatives will short ly arrive at Philadelphia to shadow Max ZeiWer, an expert heialdic en graver. Not that Mr. Zeitler has done wrong, but he is about to recut the great seal of the United States, and the government during this process employs a greater force of inspectors to keep an eye on the single workman than in the construction, of a $5,000,000 battleship. The firm to which the contract for the seal has been let was compelled to name the engraver when it bid for the work. This exaction is required so that the necessury protection may be afforded to the design which is ex pected from Washington in a few days for the guidance of the engraver. The new seal also will be carefully guarded. The present seal has become so worn by years of constant use that the new one will 1 completed to replace it as soon as possible. TELEPHONES FOR PATIENTS. rkllndettphUi Hospital Kskes It Pos sible for Slek Ones to Yleit with Distant Friends. Within a day or two it will be pos sible for a patient in the Methodist hospital in Philadelphia to talk from their bed with relatives or friends outside of the institution, and to re ceive m.-sageR directly from those who, for various reasons, might be de barred from calling in person. This will be accomplished by the in stallation of a new telephone system connecting each building, ward and private room in the hospital. When the system is in use, a patient whose condition does not prohibit his par ticipating the benefits of the scheme may converge freely with anyone who is in touch with a telephone, either in the city or at pointe hundreds of miles away. Bxaetly So. Those old maids who assembled in New York the other day sneered at President Roosevelt's remarks con cerning large families and said that he had no business to talk about the love liness of having ehiWren, because he was not a mother. and therefore lacked the experiene necessary to disc Uf the subject intelligently. Still, say. the Chicago ReordrBarald. rt would seem that th old bwWs have little-to be? of aoixeroins Ua kind oi axpetiattoa. MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS. The municipal expenses of New York are approximately $100,000,000 a year. Of 23,000 children placed In families by the Children's Aid society, only 60 have been arrested and sent to reform schools. While London has. 47 telephones per 10,000 inhabitants, Paris.71; New York, 150, and San Francisco, 706, Stockholm reaches the figure of 9S0. Berlin has its first female barbers the wife and daughter of a hair dresser. In Bohemia, Hungary and. Scandinavia there are many women barbers. In the year ending April 1, 1900, Ber lin imported from Italy 50 car loads of cherries, 357 of table grapes, 245 of summer fruit, etc. In the following 12 months the business doubled. A Leipsic physician expresses' the opinion that on account of their deli cate sense of touch blind persons' are specially qualified for practicing m-s-age. In Japan this is dona very largely. In the clear atmosphere the other day Bostonians could see from Bos ton two mountains, Wachusett and, Monadnock that is, those Bostonians who took the trouble to climb Mount Bellevue, West Roxbury, could. If all the reports that have reached the police within the past few days are true, diamond stealing by serv ants has ranched the proportion of a mania in New York. Three young women employed in as many fashion able homes in the up-town section are now under arrest on this oharge. A Vermont town supports two pa pers which live in friendly discord. The Herald printed a meaningless item about one Slaets S. Weneht, a Syrian, and the News copied it, without the formality of giving credit. Gleefully the Herald now points out that the fictitious Syrian's name spelled back ward proclaims the truth, well known locally that "the News steals." WOMAN A PESSIMIST. After a Certain Jse Ther Fas est Show Sio-ns of Mental Worry svad Dietresn. The average woman is a dyed-in-the-wool pessimist. Almost every woman over 30 years of age looks distressed. Her brows are bent, her mouth drawn into a tight line, and there are deep furrows down her cheeks. She looks exactly as if sh'e were considering how to provide a dinner for 25 cents that will satisfy twenty-five small children, when in reality she may have nothing more serious on her mind than buying & pair of socks for George. No wonder women grow old faster than men, for they hug their worries to them and let them show in their faces. There was once an elderly servant who was superstitious to a degree and who always expected the worst to happen. Did she find a needle on the floor, did a picture fall in the house or a bird fly into one of the rooms, she was instantly plunged into woe. "We're going to have a heap of bad luck!" she would say, and then she'd be lachrymose until some one had the toothache or the cows got into the corn, when she would consider the demon luck ex orcised or satisfied for a time and grow as cheerful as it was her habit to be. Some one once asked her if she did not have any good-luck signs. "Why, certainly," she replied, "but they don't count I don't believe in the good-luck ones," which, by the by, is thoroughly characteristic of the sex. Here is a woman who suffers suf fers is the word from insomnia. "I can't imagine why T don't sleep," she says to her friends. "I'm sleepy as anything when I go upstairs, but then T begin to wonder if my son Arthur, who travels for a drug firm, is on a train, and in a minute I see him just as plainly bleeding and mangled in a wreck. When T drcide that he is really dead, I think of John, and worry because he hasn't a better josition. Then Molly comes into my mind, and I feel sure that one of her children must b ill, T feel so blue about her. I fret over Lucy's throat a bit then, and by this time T'm wide awake. Tt's the straneest thine-! I don't understand why I should be sn wakeful!" Her physician does, however, and now he's prescribing for her a course of cheerfulness and of "looking for the bpst." It's a medicine that most women need their faces show it but there are few who are sensible enough to take it. Dearth Canted by Mosquito. Mosquitoes are -now charged with communicating erysipelas as well as malaria and yellow fever. A New York physician has issued a death certificate in the case of a 14 months' old babe, in which he says "Death was caused by erysipelas due to the bit of a mosquito." It is only fair to the mosquito to record that the board of health officers refused to accept the certificate until a coro ner's physician had, Investigated and oooludrd tkat i there Wat no other apparent t cause for tha- death than the ra eTHo Wta. Youth's Companion. NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION (Isolated Tract) Public Land Sale. '. Notice Is hereby given that iu pursuance of instructions from the ' Commissioner of the General Land Office, under authority vested in him by section 2455, United States Revised Statutes, as amended by act of Congress ap proved February 26, 1895, we will proceed to otter at public sale at the hour of 10 o'clock a. m., on the 29th day of June, 1904, at this office, the following tract of land, to-wit: The ntf of uwJi of section 33, tp. 5 s r 26 W. M. Any and all persons claiming adversely the above described lands are advised to tile their claims in this oHiee on or before the day above designated for the commencement of said sale,, otherwise their rights will be forfeited. MICHAEL T. NOLAN, Register. ANNE M. LANG. Receiver. U. 8. Land Office, The Dalles, Oregon. May 12, 1901. TICKETS TO AND FROM ALL POINTS EAST VIA GREAT NORTHERN RAILWAY SHORT fLITSTE TO ST. PAUL, DULUTB, MINNEAPOLIS, CHICAGO And Points East. Through Palace and Tourist Sleepers, Dining and Buffet Smoking Library Care Dally Trains; Fast Tiire; Service and Scen ery Unequaled. For Rates, Folders anCi Full information re gardin tickets, routes, etc call on or address J. W. Phalon, T. P. A,', H. Dickson, C. T. A 122 TMRDJST. PORTLAND. ;A. B. C. DENNIS! ON, G. W. P. A.," 812 FirstA venue, - - -1 Seattle, Wasfe OREGON ShopjLine and UNION PACIFIC Onlv Line EAST via SALT LAKE M DEJiVEB TWO TRAINS DAILY. Daily TIME SCHEDULES .?""T.. Departs ., Arrives Hefpner, Or. Fast Mail For 9:00 a. m. East and West Fast Mail From East and W eBt 5:35 p.m. Express For 8:15 a. m. East and West Express From East and West 5:15 p. STEAMER LINES. San Francisco Portland Route. Steam sails from Portland 8 p. m. every 5 daj'B. Boat service between Portland, Astoria, Orogon City, Dayton, Salem, Independence, Corvallis and all Columbia and Willamette River points. SNAKE RIVER ROUTE. Steamers between RIparia and Lewlpton leave Riparia daily at 10:40 a. in. except Saturday, returning leave Lewiston daily at 7 a. m. except Friday. J. B. HUDDLESON, Agent, Heppner. A. L. CIIA1G, General Passenger Agent, Portland Genuine Comfort is assured in the luxurious Library-Buflet-Club Cars and the roomy compartment sleep ing cars on the North western Limited "Tlie Train for fonifc I" every night between Minneapolis, St. Paul and Chicago via Before starting on a trip no matter where write for Interesting Informs tiou about comfortable traveling. H. L- SISLER, 132 Third Street, Portland, Oregon. T.tW. TCASDALE, General Passenger Agent, St, PaUMInnn. (