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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 10, 1904)
A ale Student3 Work Their Way Through College. LESSON FEOM ORIENT :"Srve f Waltcra, Drive Mlllc Wbroih, Act an Pull llcnrvrs And Do Other ThiiiK to Vay Their lOviii'iinet, ( V w if (mi. 70 freshman, or one-fifth of the k'I.iss. in the academic department at V Hie this year expect to earn all or part oi' the money required to pay the expense o: their iirst year in college. In the whole u i. ersity. Prof. C. L. Kilchel, of the help bureau, reports, about 200 men v i.'R if the exptriment of trying to ,-; '.hc-niffclvts this yt ar for the first t-: i no academic department the i- :, has voted alcut $30,000 this ..olarships for needy students, a vni be pi ven out principally iht bureru of self help, re New York Sun. the students left for the lor.g !: st June about 300 applied for - ' ;e summer, and Prof. Kitchel : ' inf? returns of the work done it'll. The long vacation is re- t: '.if poor student's golden oppor- li . for the more he earns the less li ; hare to work for a livelihood dur-i- . i he college year. man has reported that he earned :f: In tutoring a young man in Wash ir . for ten weel-s. Another has cored jo 1 r--e young children of a Yale pro it : ' iring the summer months and "has considerable to his stock of . tnoiii'', . P. veral men have been driving milk "wnrr.ns in the early morning hours and "har--rsiert hay between times. One stu-der- was head waiter at a hotel, at Ply mor.'h, Mass. A Yale graduate who is an Invslid and resides near New Haven, has bef " "-"-fling through Nova Scotia and hn? ' - J with him a Yale mam to act as .our- ?.rd guide. A half dozen Yale men have been act 'ing as pallbearers at funerals during the jfon and have found the work so profit able thar they will continue after college opens. The Silver Bay religious confer ence at Lake George attracted a score or oiore of needy Yale men and all had a .successful time there. One student has been making out bills -f fare at a White Mountain resort al' the season and he has been bo successful ihat the leading Yale "joint" of the town nas hired him for the coming year to vnake out all its menus. All the summer resorts from Block Is . and to Kennebunkport have had small ..'olories of Y'ale men acting aa waiters, ;ler! s, cooks and general helpers. It Is estimated that the students of the caderoic department have earned dur ing the year just closed about $40,000. Cast year 37 sophomores earned $10,002 and 2S seniors earned $8,067. These fig ures include only those who made re ioTts to the bureau of self help and not fiill who earned part of their tuition. Besides the routine work furnished each year for needy students during term liime, which includes waiting on table, oaring for furnaces, lawns and horses, 'loing street car service, clerical work and reporting, there is a new field open this year in the line of chauffeurs and already several Y'ale men have qualified themselves in this capacity. An increasing number of students this -year have come back to college with -.automobiles, and Prof. Kitchel expects -chat there will bean opportunity for sev eral expert chauffeurs to earn good money this fall in managing fractious machines and teaching the novice to handle the vehicles. '"This," observed Wu, as he lifted a 5xx-like affair from his trunk, "is one of the greatest wonder of America." "It doesn't look very wonderful," oinmeuted Tsi Ann, tucking- one foot ,up where she could sit on it and the throne at the satntt time, relates tlie Chicago Tribune. "Wo, but even in America no one can understand it. Listen. "Don't put that thing to my ear," cautioned Tsi Ann. "Is this another of those telephones?" "O no. This is worse than the tele phone. It is a gas meter." 'A gas meter ? What does it do?" "'The consumer?" , "'How c'-.es it work?" "'That ifc a mystery. It is only known "Uiat it woiks alwayg'nnd untiringly. Jt works while you sleep and while you wake. It never stops. It is con structed after the Newtonian theory f creation. It has something in It hat just keps it whirling on and on, Mt so much per revolution, and nobody knows what keeps it moving, and no body can stop it." ".That's funny." "Funny, ye. Hut try sad in Amer ica. Listen to it. Hear it running rirht along. Thank Confucius and the JK) j-ods of the Pale Green mountains! The gas company never will get the har.ee to read what this meter ha recorded." "But," said the empress, "is there no escape from this in AmericA?" "Non." '"It must be worse than manifest des "It is." "Wu," remarked Tsi Ann, with that intelligent smilo which has enshrined tr in the hearts of curio collectors, ""VVu, I am glad you were sent to Amer ica. At one time I almost had decidd to become civilized." "So had I," acknowledged Wu, "but the bite of the dog, as the foreign dev Is put it, will cure the hair." System of Exercise Claimed to Quiet Most Unsteady Nerves. Co men from Class of Hindoo Occultists unl Ik HcIiik Taken 1 1 1" This Country with tireut Kiituuslasm. & We pay 4 PER CENT Interest Exercises for fat, exercises for im perfect digestion, txercises for that tired feeling these are our common portion. Auic-rie.M 3 hae been body jiiiluii.g by i i culmrc with as o::U.;ir,g irr.Nistu.ef: of l.V.. "Cures" .i half the ills thst flesh if Mr to have ac;xi lour 1 ia vt-rious "ir ovf mcnts," and it hs sccntd that the cold u.orn iry tub ai,.l the ID-minutes' "drill" was :o become as universal as breakfast it it If. Hut now comes an exercise system, reports the New York World, which is claimed to have an almost occult in ihipnce; to promote personal magnet ism, to ciuiet, strengthen, and steady the cicst erratic ner , es, and to promote urvit power of mental concentration in the flightiest. This new and peculiar fad is, aa might be guessed, oriental in its origin, and either because of this or because of ome realization cf real possible bene fits it is being taken up with enthusi asm. Oriental nerve control is taught by Hindoo occultists, a class of teachers who are generally recognized to have delved with great ar.d tangible results in the realm of mysticism. Its remarkable feature is Its great simplicity, for the system consists of a 'ew exercises in breathing accompanied by a mild admixture of oriental philos ophy. These are based upon the fun damental truth that all vital forces in the body center in the lungs and that I.reathing according to certain rules will generate new and healthy forces in the body which find expression in the ab sence of nervousness, strong personal magnetism and the ability to concen trate the mind readily upon a given sub jest. v The first position in the principal ex ercise for developing control is taken with the heels together and hands hang ing at the s ic'f b. The position should be erect, without stiffness, and the mind should dv.fll upon the philosophy of nerve control while the lungs inhale and exhale deeply. When both mind and body seem con jentrated upon the matter, with a long Inhalation the arms should be raised slowly at the sides in a relaxed posi tion till on a line with the shoulder. This attitude is retained for a few sec onds, while several breaths are taken. Then, with lungs full of air, the arms should fall slowly to the sides, with the elbows held In toward the body and the hand and forearm forming a curve. During this gentle movement the breath should be exhaled so softly that the effort has the effect of being un conscious. One has a drowsy sensation which, in a little while, gives place to one of Increasing physical control and greater mental balance. The erect position should be retained in this movement and a finger of the left hand pressed against the right nostril. ThiB exercise is the same as the first, and may be practiced first with the right arm and the right nostril closed, and then with the left arm, having the left nostril closed. When a pupil has thoroughly mas tered this exercise tensity is combined with it by holding the right arm in a horizontal position and a left finger against the right nostril while a deep breath is being taken and held for about five seconds. Meanwhile the ex tended arm should be made to stiffen from the wrist to the shoulder and then from the finger tip to the wrist while the lunrs are I'.i 2 xpanded with the imprisoned air. I. iho first hsson five seconds is consider; d long enough be fore relaxation occurs. As the breath is gradually expelled the arm should re lax from the shoulder to the wrist and from the finger tips to that point. As the arm slowly becomes lirjp the elbow 6hould be drawn iu toward the side of the body and the fingers curved upward. After exercis ir.g each arm in this man ner ten or twelve times the two arms may be raiiee. together. i For nearly 24 centuries the Greeks and Persians have been at loggerheads with each other, and, now at last, they have decided to become friends again, reports the New York Herald. During this entire period there were ro diplomatic relations between the two fov.r.trles, and for this reason unusual ir.tcst attaches to the r.ev-s that an onvoy from Persia is now on his way to Athens for ths purpose of presenting his credentials as ambassador to Ring George. The rupture between the two nations occurred in the year 491 before Christ, when Darius, m of Hystaspps, sent an embassy to Greece, with inotructlons to dfrr.and homnee from the high-spirited Athenians. The latter promptly refused to offer the customary earth and water to the Persian monarch, and war was at once declared. Trom that time. 2,353 years ago, until now, the Greek and Persian courts have held no official in tercourse with each other. DTD IT EVER OCCUR TO YOU THAT THOSE PEOPLE WHO LAY ASIDE A TOR tion of their iurom against a d iy of Hfvdrsitv, seldom experience hrd timn. Whereas, those who spend all tin v iit 'e naually hard np. You hnv- probably noticeJ, tco, that moDey thnt lies urourd the bouna or lbt is stored in Hie puree or pnek4 geuer-lly kers on the move often spent for 'nuiifecessnr)" tbiik?s. This should remind you of the Rdit,bility of sivii. a porti m of yop.r me una reyu Inriy, acd must also impnes you with the impurranon of depositing )ur b'iviuss in n stro. g bflDk, If yon have been reluetant abmt opening hu aejeonut, either b-caiiHa you wro unfamil iar with banking methods, because no bank seemed nenr enongh, or hformpe amount of your savings did not seem large enough, permit ui to urge the cuns' l'T'ition of this bank ih h el suable place iD which to open an becouut- NOW smoe we a iu euoh a good pohiti n to re of service to yon. The opening of an account is n simple matter. Let us know whut a nouut yon wish to deiosit don't be aebamed of small fmon-i'H, us a great mtiny itcponi.tR i re opened wi'h a few dollars and we will send you a eiwnnt i e oanl p.n.l full inf rruatirn regarding the reu IhUi ns of the bnuk. Money can be enM tent by reei'seo' m P"'l notes, or express orders, and eobsequent deposits or withdrawals cau thus be O'ui veniently rasde Sums of $100 and over, which yon may bn keeping for investment in real estate or in foieb other way. need not be kept idle in the meantime. Secnrity for the unfety of such de pi'B is found not merely in the ohnracter of this bank and its officers but in its amp e financial responsibility the whole rf its cipital und bu equal amount from Uo P"ckho!ders. When deposited for u stipulated time we are able to pay as much as FOUR PER CENT per ennnm 'nterest. If you think yoo'd like to havn a bank aooonnt, don't hesitate to write and ask for any farther information which yoa miijht like to have before opening an acoe.unt. Wo take ad vantage f f yonr opportnoitiea wbil- von think abont it, and avail yourself of the security and facilities afforded by THE BANK OF HEPPNER. We charge 8 PER CENT for loans We have the 1905 dollar for Sale. Get the Portland spirit and help make the fair a success. to NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. Land Office at La Grande, Or., Sept. 27, 1904. Notice is hereby given that the following ..n. k. untile of his intention to make Anal proof in PPort of his claim, and that said proof will be made before awter crawiora, couiny uier. vv ner, Oregon, on Nov. 15, iyo4, viz: Frank R. Matteson, Of Heppner. H. E No. 13170, for the e se 8eC. 13. TP, 3 Buum. mute 3 He names the following witneBBes to prove his continuous residence upon uutuin"vu of said land, viz: n.oi. John Bueeick, George Moore, Paul His.er and Mat Kelly, all of Heprner, Or. oc6-novl0 - - E. W. DAVIS, EegiBter 1 Heppner Qssett wk!y Oreconlsa Alwcrs reliable Ths Weekly Orej oniaa, XOUCE FOR PUBLICATION. DEPARTMENT OP THE INTERIOR LAND Office at The Dalles, Ore., Oct. 27, 1904 Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of her intention rn make final proof in support of herclaim, and that said proof w 11 be made be lore Vwter Crawford, rounty Clerk, at Hepp iler, Oregon, on the 13th day of December, 1901. t0Eva M. Cowdrey, formerly Eva M. Emry, of Hardman. Oregon, on i homestead en O No. 7017, for NKHE4 and NH Sw of Section 26, Ti 4 South. Range 25 E , W. M, She Erne's thoNollowing witnesses to prove her coiitli.uous residence upon and cltltlon of raid land, to-wit: Holly "f' fnr Knighten, William Reamer and trank Cramer, MSE"5lm MieffiL T. NOL.N, Renter. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR LAND () t.ce nt LaUrande, regon . Oct 1-, 1!H4 Notice is hereby given that the- fo owing named settU-r h s filed notice oi I, is lute ntion to make final proof In "I I'or of his flai'T end that said proof will be maae ben.'r'e tnel'ounty Clerk f Morrow Co. Ore ; at Ileupner Oregon, or. D"f mter .', l'.W. iz. BH K 'no. W John B Nolan of Hepp.ur Oregon, for the Lots 2 and 8 U E5 an1 Wl .' SKI, t'e'' 5. TP. : " i -H r" N . re. Hn.e the following lt. o prove ,Ucoi"liiiic.us rel.ienc-e upon s.M cuUiv. no . ait laud viz: John a, BiM.ck. I. O Juh".h 1! Withercll, Ocore Moo.e. all ot S-Decl0"'0"' E. W. DAVIS. Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Public Land Sale (Isolated Tract.) V 8 Laud Ollice, The Dalles. Oreton. h Luua ' October 31, l'.WL ...,w. fJ .rrvnv HtVKN THAT IN U.:1a;:eoi;,t,uetio-.rVn,:heC.,;, , public ,,1- at t ,,; omre - t..e r to-wit: jWl, S, u of sec! ion 2!, Meridian At .vandal- persons claiming ad .1,1,. above -d.-senbcil lanos v Htott. claims in thi ollice on or be 'J1'-". ",.itlel. deKianale.l for the con."' r (1 o-herwise their Michael T Nolan, Register. Nov3-Der AVMIKIHTHATOH'H KUTWE. U the Couoir Court oi Mo.ro Cu-ty. Ore lEe m.Ue, of tl K.U ' F- W"C"- sssarasas - the first publication of tsnotire. First publication N.S. Admini-trntor of tl.e' Estate of Ocorgo F. 'ffilnTtf-V. attorney, for said ad- niiuisTraiiou. domestic Peace in the family is not to be ex pected where a poor cook stove is used. That is only natural. Secure DOMESTIC HARMONY by furnishing your home with one of those magnificent Snpedor or Majes STOVES OR RANGES Economical in Fuel, Satis factory in Results, and as cheap and good as a good grade of Stoves can be sold. FOR SALE ONLY BY iam ft Bisk Heppner, Ore. LEADING DEALERS IN Stoves and Kitchen Outfits PLUMBING A SPECIALTY GILLIAM & BIsBEE liiiiniinii'Mia Call at the Gssette ome. - - our clubbine - - j joalan. Si 1C