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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1909)
1 ihe Heppner Gazette Etrfebfisber March 30. JSS8. ISSUED THURSDAY MORNING. Fred Warnock JtnteieO at the Fo6toflice at Heppner Oregon, as second-class matter. Thubsday Jar). 21. 1909 Tbere is certainly plenty of Dooioture cow. With tha spring ?ike weather, cropi and grass are growing rapidly. The hills are al ready beginning io look green. One of lli e ITaiiis' has been turn ed looee a'.d it i.a thought that the brother partner in murder will not fven be tried. What is the use of Seeping rp the persecution of Ihavr? He didn't do anything 8at kill a man. The person who was so kind as io steal a subscription statement in order to get a printed heading of the Gazette and then forge the Gazette's name to an article of eo eial scandal, which was sent to one f Portland's leadiDg newepapers. got fooled. The whole thing was eo rank that it was leturned to the Gazette. A poor fool bhould be pitied. JCKIUIIT OUTLOOK f'OK WOOL. "Woolgrowers who have returned Irom the recent meeting of the Na tional Woolgrowera' convention at Jocate'Io, Idaho, are greatly en couraged over prospects of good prices ior tha coming wool clip. The convention at Pocatello was attended by growers from all over the country, es well as buyers from the leading firms in the United State, making the oppSrtunities for getting information as to con- ditions as good as pobsible to iiud. f Dr. S. W. McClure, of rendle-1 ton, who is at the head of the Ru-! reau of Auimal Industry, is of the j opinion that wool will bring from j lb to L'0 cents, basing his predic - tion upon prices already being of-i fered. The I'ocitfllo convention eeems ; !o Lave already brought good re mlts. According to Dr. MeClure, buy- era were on the ground, keen for the pure-base of eny clips oJTered and lidding from IS to 21 cents. They were anxious by offering the higher price to keep the wool from going into the national warehouse, which teema to bs an assured euc- 9?BS. GROCERY TALK As a matter of fact its hard for one store to sell everyone. While we would like to, conditions are such that make it impossible, but wherever you buy are you getting all that you are entitled to for your dollars? Do you ever compare prices? Do you play favorites or do you go where you get the most for your money. We believe we can truthfully state and back it up with figures and lacts that we sell you merchandise for less than any othei store in this section. It is true we cannot do it and put it on the books for six months or a year; that's the reason why we can make you much closer prices than the store that puts the sales on the ledger instead of in the cash till. Think it over. If you are buying from us now you know, if you are not give us a trial and see for yourself. Marquardsen's Dept. Store At the close of the meeting 23, 000,000 pounda of wool had bt en subscribed to the next season's business and about 10,000,000 pounds more have been promised. The scheme has met with a hearty reception among the wool men who declare that it has already advanced the price of their clips from 4 to 5 cents per pound. Many Oregon woolffrowers have joined in the scheme. S K AT OK V II A r.I ! L It 1, A 1 3 i . The election on the first ballot of Geo. R Chamberlain for Senator, is a matter of little surprise. Sim ply the fulfillment of a signed promsse, no more strange thnn the payment of a signed promissory note at the bank. Mr. Chamberlain, a Democrat, was elected by Republicans, not be cause they wanted to vote for him, but because they were forced to under conditions brought on by themselves. The Republicans of Oregon elected a Republican legislature and with the same voice assisted by the Democrats, told the mem bere of tha legislature to elect a a Democratic senator. The Democrats of Or. gon were right down to business all the time. The Republicans might have been better off with less politics and more business. The result at leas1 famishes soma food for thought. Tha lesson ought to be a good one. The Gozel'e believes ihatagreat majority of the voters of Oregon today would rather sea a Republi can than a Democrat eo to the 1 r''"1 enwf ,mi 11 WftSi ""I'sible in Iho P'esent nuxup. J j What Mr. Cjambeil iin can nud will do i'ur the state yet remains to n seen. No on't can deny the fact of Mr. Chamberlains ability. 2so one ran h lp b:it"admire his career f'r the Araci lean people like the man who gets there, lie has suc ceeded always against odds. Pos sibly he can at Washington. For the good of the state we hope he can. The proprietors of the Wbodburn eawmill have tun all summer and fall an 1 they have orders for COO feet with bu Ming not yet fully begun. They have (Iodg a good business awl expect to do a bigger one. Heppner, School Hygiene. ( Dr. N. E. Winnard in Oregon Teach ers' Monthly.) War has been declared throughout the entire civilized world, not a war of nation against nation but ail the nations of the earth united in one mighty army to do battle against a common enemy, the mionbe, an ad versary bo small as to require a high power microscope to see him. Though so small he is en enemy not to be de spised when we think of the hundred of thmsands of victims he destroys every year. He is all the more danger ous because nn-een. Unobserved lie rests upon Ihe edue of the public drink ing cup aiting Ujh opportunity to enter hthe moutn of the thirsty 'n veler or t ho sweet, innocent little did I, from whence he soon finds hi way to the vital organs of 1 is victim and destroys the life as certainly,, if not as quickly, as the bullet r the emnon ball. He smiles with Satanic pleasure as the sickly mother kisses her bibe. He laughs with g'ea as he an 1 his imps perch upon the lips (f the sweet but sickly young woman, for like the spider and the fly, well he knows another victim will soon appear. He has al ready solved ihe prob'em of air naviga tion and sa is about in is ship of dust ready to destroy II wh have the temer ity to breathe the germladen atmosphere With the commo uiucli-deepUed house fly or ruof qui to as his ch -ri.it lie goes from on- place f j'tti to another, visit ing cess pools, i loeet vau is, dejecta from typhoid inval da, he eput . from victims of diphthe ia and t .bvcu'osi and, when he is s: fficiently 1 aded, he s ar- away to the d nn r table to wal ov r the food or swim in he milk or c flee. The germ of tubercuUsis alone causes oie-seve .th of all t' e deaths in tha Uni ted Stat' s, yet ii is a preventable disease Have we not just c.iuse for declaring war on such an enemy ? Will you not enlist and help in the g-eat cause? A teach erB you should lie espec'al'y interested as young people are pa l;cu!arly suscep tible 'o mxrob'c diseas.s. The eccher should not only ba well informed in physiology and hygiene but should mk) personal u-o of the same so as to eti j y vu.-o:n hai'th an I thus be a living eximpie of the valaj of that which she endsavo s to teach. A sickly teacher has no place in the ordinary school i ooiu. Some Plato havs passed laws prohibiting liibercnlar teachers ii'om ho'ding positions in the PchooU. In New Voi k city there are .-eliools for tnbercubir children presided ever by tubetciil r teachers. Do you as teachers take 'ho proper am :ti:i! J (''erci-; i'l the o.eti air ? 0 you wilk or ride or play tr.inif.s in tt:e fresh air '.' llj on kiTp ynur windows, open day a:;d rrght? A-o you regular, in a'l your hahit. anil do y ii get the regular amount of H'eep at the proper time, or do you stav out until the small hours of the morning and then expect o J FURB8MDO m . TT ' TT, -mm - .Kin Fnra And 1 WE BUY f, io t mom mor.PT m.11 i hn.T Writ, f.r Pr.oe Lit, 1 r-v HUNTERS aTRArrEHo'uulUt ti&m - 'i.v Oregon do justice to yourself or the school the next day? Recreation is necessary but it shoul i be of the kind that gives elas ticity to the st p, a glow to the cheek, and a sparkle to the eye. It is very important that the schoo building should be properly heat'd, lighted anrt ventilated. The most diffi cult problem is that of ventilation. Builaings are often so constructed that proper ventilation is almost impassible. Light should enter the school room from the left and rear of the pupils snd there should be at least thirty inches of win dow surface to each squre foot of floor space. The walls 6hould be snioo'h, i painted, and a plain suiface sa as to catch little dust as nostible a-.d facil-j itate Cleaning. The seats acd desks should be the kind to favor the health ful pn-ftion of the pupil and at the same tinif I'onduce tt his com'ort. To learn, the-e must be concentration of the mind. Iio.v can anyone concen'rate his mind when he is in bodily discomfort from heat or cold or an uncomloi t: ble scat. In this great campaign against the spread of dieease the teacher plays an important pai t. Perhaps no me class of our citizens can accomplish as much toward stamping out tuberculosis as can the teachers who prenide oyer sixteen million pupils. This is certainly a cam paign of education. Nearly every itate in the Union now lias a law requi-ing iriHtt nct'on in physiology and hygiene in ( all of the grades, primary as well as high school. If it was confined to the higher gredes many wou'd receive no instruc tion, as of the five millions who enter the pumary grade only one mlllio 1 ever reach the grammar gride and of that million only one quarter ' of a m llion ever reach the high school. Teachers and pupd should be made to real'ze that hea th is the first consid eration, without which education h of little value. Miny educated men have undergone such a strain of examination and study that on leaving school with their diplomas they were unfit to do the work for which they had teen educated Physical educa'ioi should be taught in the normal schools so the teachers may beoome experts in judging the j hysical condition of the children. They could soon learn the signs of failing health so if a pupil should begin to fall behind in his studies the teacher could know whe ther it is on account of ill health or bad habits. In Massachusetts the pupils are required to undergo a physical examina tion at least once a year. The teachers are fclo supplied with circulars teaching then, how to detect infectious diseases, al?o dipeases or defects of the ey, ear, nose, skin or neivous systems. (2 li'e a percentage of children are de-fir-ient na account of defective e es and adenoid'. Tuberculosis H the most dan gerous disease to w hich hcIiooI hildren are exposed Among the predirip'ising causes of this malady are : l-'isf, badly ve )tdatt-l school rooms ; second, over taxing I he child's brain to the detr inierit of the hndilv health and the unhyj: enic dress of school girls. The direct caiwo (Cciiiclurteil on I'iirc- eiKht) for yiro to oh in Raw Tnn nd Tti.Ui. to 11 than to M.rk. - t h,-porl. Mi-; Jw.j n na ira vou r . Announcement Innteresting Facts About Banking Tn oacli issue of this jiapoi-, we arc oinu' to dis cuss tho intcivstiiij;' matters about banks in . n cral ami our institution in particular, which con cern the practical, every day sort of person in this eoinmunit v. We will tell you soniethinr about the early stages of banking and the advances made; what ele ment's make a strong bank; the bank's relation to the eommunity; how a bank benefits the people; why you should have a. connection with this bank. These talks will be in a series of simple, straight forward explanations of banking. You will find them interesting and instructive. Read every one. First National Bank of Heppner Stockholders Meeting. Notice is hereby given that the regu lar annual meeting of the stockholders of the Heppner Mining Co. will be held at the office of Sam E. Van Vactor, in Heppner, Oregon, on the second Tues day of February, 1!09, being the 0th day of February, 1909, at 2 o'clock p. m. This meeting is for tbe purpose of electing officers and for any other busi ness that may appear. I). 13. RTALTEK. Tree. T. W. AY KRS, Sec. Dated at Heppner, Oregon, January 14. 1099. Notice. No'ice is hereVy giv n that I have tiled my lina' account as executor of the cft,:tc of Kliiha 'J. Sloan, deceased, ar.d t!u,t on she 1st day of February, A. D l9..!t, at the hour of 10 o'clock in tie f irenoo 1 of said d.iv, the County Court of feaid rounty will hear chjectiona to mid final i.ecoutit and pel tie the same. This notice n puLluhed by order of C. C, I'a'terson, County Judge of Mor row County, Oiejon, made and entered on the L9tb day of December, A. D., l'jCH. FRANK SLOAN. Executor of the estate of Llisha U. Sloan, deceas d, i);it(d this 8th day of December, A. D. , 1908. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, United States Laud OUice, Tho DhIIob, Oregon. Dec. 19, 1W. Notica is hereby frivon that John W. Trwh, of Heppner, Oregon, who, on June 17th, 11U, made Homestead Entry No, 14:5.'!, (or SE SF.4 Sec tion ,V. Townhhip23 , KanKC'J:, K. W. SIeridin has filed notica of intention to make final Com mutation proof, to establish claim to tho land above described, before J. P. Williams, U. H. Commissioner, at his oflice in Hoppner, Oregon, 01 tlie Hth lHy of Ftbronry, liKiD. Claimant names its witiinHses; Arthur Hunt, Williuin Kumlicrlaml, Spencer Akers, and Sliermaii I.eillor, all ol Heppner, Oresoii. I)ec2t JanM C. W. MOOUE. Kesisler. STAR HOTEL JEFF NEEL. Proprietor Everything neat and clean at popular pricrB. Cor ccr Chase acd My Sle.. Heppner