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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 22, 1909)
ANcgrtable Preparation for As similating foe Food andKcgula Ung the Stomachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion.Chcerful ncssandncst.Contains neither Opium.Morphine norIincraL TOT NARCOTIC. Pumpkin Seal'' AnurSmd. Clnfidam? Maufcrsrmt i A perfect Remedy forConslipa Ron, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions.Fcverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. Baked Tamale. Boil until tender one small chicken or that amount of any tender meat. The meat from soup bones Is fine used this way, and veal is as good as chick en. In fact, you can use to advantage any tender leftover meat. Strain off the broth, remove the bones and break into small pieces. Put into, a frying pan two tablespoonfuls of lard or drip pings and when hot add two table spoonfuls of flour and let brown a little. Then add the meat, salted to taste, with one cupful of broth and two tablespoonfuls of chili powder. Stir and cook ten minutes. Set off to cool and add a small cupful of raisins (whole) and about the same of olives. Now make a stiff batter of three cup fuls of cornmeal and one of flour, salt ed, into which is rubbed three-quarters of a cupful of lard or drippings, mois tened with one beaten egg and one cup ful of broth. Line a deep pan with the butter and bake one hour. Delineator. Calling Names. The late Teleg W. Chandler, who was hard of hearing, was one of the most effective of war time speakers. Every occasion illustrated his elo quence and demonstrated the quick ness of his repartee. At one meeting he was frequently interrupted by a blackguard at the rear of the hall, who kept shouting, "Why don't you go yourself?" For a time Mr. Chandler's d-eafness prevented him from catching the exact nature of the interruption, of which he had been for some time conscious. At last Mr. , Chandler caught the words of the disturber. Then, in the mildest accents, which emphasized the force of the words, he said, "Young man, If my ears were as good as yours and as long as yours I shouldn't be here tonight!" Argonaut. Evolution of the Modern Play. With the decay of dialogue in im portance less attention has been paid to delivering it so exquisitely as to give value to it for Its own sake. And so by degrees we came to the mod ern play, in which everything is sac rificed to vraisemblance. soliloquies are tabooed, and people talk as they do in real life naturally and entirely to the point Era. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ickaciiim. mi; SPOT ) l Can lip Dour, So Score of Ilrpp iht Citizens Say. Tij cme el) aching bai:k, The pains of rheumatism, The tire l o'it fefling", You must le .eh tlie fipat set at the ca'iee. In most rases ti" tl e kidneys. 1 loan's Kidney Tills are for the ktd rieye. Tho. Morgan, Heppner, Ore., savs: 'I Oel it my dutv to speak a good word in favor of Doan'e Kidney Tills. 1 auf fered for several j-ears from kidney com plaint and rhennintifm. The attacks were bo severe that I was laid up for a week or ten davs at a titn. I finally learned of Doan's Kidney Tills and pro cured a box at the Flocum Drag Co. Ttiis remedy went at once to the seat of the trouble and gave me great relief." For sa!e by all dealers. Trice 50 cents. Foeter-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, cole agents for the United States. Remember the name Doan's-and take no other. UN: I 1' 1 P I 'iSA i & ' Si! Ml For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought ' Bears the Signature of In Use For Over Thirty Years THt OCNTAUft OMMNV, NCW YORK ClTY. MAKING GOLD LEAF. The Metal Is Beaten For Hours by Men, Then Finished by Girls. In one of the downtown business streets may be seen sticking from one of the upper windows a massive arm and hand, the hand grasping a huge hammer and the whole sign gilded. It is the sign of the gold beaters' estab lishment, where thousands of the gold sheets are turned out after having been packed by girls. Gold leaf Is packed more by the aid of the breath than by the bands. The operation of transferring a sheet of almost transparent gold leaf from one place to another Is so delicate that it is possible to do it only by a light puff of the breath. It takes most girls six weeks to acquire this knack, and some girls are never able to acquire it. The gold reaches the beaters first in wide bars or nuggets and has to be weighed, melted and made into inch wide ribbons before anything else is done. The ribbon is then cut into inch squares and beaten with a hammer wielded by a man. When each leaf has been beaten thin it is transferred to a mold, where it is beaten four hours more. The beating Is done with a wooden hammer weighing from seven to eighteen pounds, on a sheep skin cushion, which rests on a granite block. The gold used for beating is usually 22 or 23 carats fine. A little alloy of copper or silver is added to make it spread. It would be Impos sible, the beaters say. to handle per fectly pure gold. After the gold has been beaten It Is handed over to the girls, who lift the unshaped leaf from the mold with a pair of wooden pinchers, flatten it out on a sheepskin cushion by gently blow ing on It. cut It to a perfect square, replace it between the leaves of the book and flatten It out with the breath. There are twenty-five leaves In a book, and a skilled girl can pack sev enty books i;i a day. tVr which she gets from 2Vi to 3 cents a book. New York Times. Logical Result. On the notice board of a church near Manchester the other day the fal lowing announcements appeared to gether: A poi ito pfe supper will be held on Saturday evening. Subject for Sunday evening. "A Night of Ag ony." Manchester Guardian. FOIEYSKIBNEYCURB Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right Coffee Just Coffee, but perfect Coffee. v Your grocer will gind it better if ground at Home not too fine. ,1 J WW I Ml MOUNTAIN OF BORAX. K Deposit of Great Vafue In Heart of Death Valley. With the exception of the Grand canyon there is probably no more fa mous locality in the west than Death valley, known as the "vale below the sea," and. although there are a num ber of Mount T.lancos in the Great American desert, the Mount Blanco of IVath valley is the greatest of its name. It rises like an enormous white breast against the terra eolta ridge of Funeral range, close to Furnace Creek canyon, a great rent that cleaves the east rampart of Death valley. Around it is rolling waste of bald yellow hills, none of which is a mere knoll, and it towers a good 1,000 feet above them. The lowland of Death valley, sinking for several miles westward, is prob ably 2,o00 feet lower. No one ledge or series of ledges any where in the world contains the im mense amount of borate quartz shown In the surface of this mountain of colemanite. It is a body of ore meas uring 1,000 feet in width and 5,000 feet in length, pitching into the mountain range at a thirty-three degree angle. It is a borax quarry whose limitations cannot be even roughly conjectured, but it must exceed by thousands of tons any known borate deposit. De troit News. VERSAILLES. The Old Royal Palace Is Now an Art Gallery and Museum. Versailles is about twelve miles from Paris, but all the intervening country Is built up, and it' seems almost as if a distant part of the city. Here was one of the great royal pal aces much frequented by the kings and especially by Louis XIV. and all those who came after him. Its gardens and forests are beautiful, and the old pal ace is now kept as an art gallery and museum and filled with pictures and statues, much of the old furniture for merly used by the royal occupants re maining as when they used it. Some of the most dramatic events of the revolution occurred here. The entire property belongs to and Is cared for by the government of France and is open to the public without fees. Twenty-five miles north of Paris is Chantilly, the ancestral home of the Prince de Conde, the great Conde, which in olden times vied with the royal palaces in the grandeur of its entertainments and the distinguished character of its guests. The last owner of the property, the Due d'Aumale, willed this fine estate to France, so that Its palace, with its magnificent art treasures, and the great forest are now for the enjoyment of all. Paris Letter to Denver Post. How the Burmese Made Fire. One day a Burmese messenger brought me a note. While he was waiting for the reply I observed an object something like a boy's pop gun suspended around his waist. On asking what it was he showed me that it was an Implement for producing fire. It was a rude example of a sci entific instrument employed by lec turers at home to illustrate the pro duction of heat by suddenly compress ed air. A piston fitted into the tube. The former was hollowed at the lower end and smeared with wax to receive a piece of cotton or tinder, which when pressed into it adhered. The tube was closed at one end. Placing the piston at the top of the tube, with a smart blow he struck it down and imme diately withdrew it with the tinder on fire, the sudden compression of the air having ignited it. I was so much struck with the scientific Ingenuity of this rude Implement that I procured it from the Burman and sent it to the Asiatic society of Bengal, with a short description of its uses. "Recollections of My Life," by Surgeon General Sir John Fayer. Troubles Due to Legacy. We have never known any good to come of a legacy. Henry got $500 In the mail one day, and his troubles be gan on the spot. He bought a horse. The horse kicked one of the children and ran away, breaking up an eighty dollar buggy. Henry sold the animal for half what he had paid for It and bought him an amber stemmed pipe and a gasoline route with the remains of his fortune. The first day out he bit the stem of his pipe iu two, the falling sparks set the gasoline afire, and the wagon was entirely consumed. To comfort himself Henry got drunk, and that night he fell off the bridge inlo the creek, ruining his best suit of clothes. When the legacy got through with him he was $''3 In the hole. Newark News. Chicken Homiletic. A country minister in the course of his dining out t n I he circuit came to a hoiue where a roast chicken was serv ed for dinner. He had previously en countered a suit's of rib corned beef dinners, and t lie chicken looked good to him. "Well," he facetiously remarked, 'here's where that chicken enters the ministry." "H pe it does better there than In lay wf rk," rejoined the small liny, of the family. Boston Record. Domestic Scheme. Mrs. II. Why are yon so very fond of oriental rugs? Mrs. R. I'll tell you a secret. The dirtier they get the more genuine they look. You've no idea how much sweeping that saves. Cleveland Lead er. Don't waste any time looking back at your mistakes. There is more fun In looking up the mistakes of other people. Chicago News, HE BROKE A SPRING. ' T And the Owner of the Wagon Was Grateful For the Truth. In a small southern Indiana town is i liveryman who has ideas of his own about conducting his business. Not long ago an Indianapolis drum mer, known for his ability to get over ground in a hurry, had one of old Henry's rig with which he drove to a neighboring totvn. Tart of the way was over a corduroy road. The drum mer's business detained him longer than he expected, and when he finally got back Iu the buggy for the return trip he found that he would have to drive some to catch a train. He made the livery outfit scamper along the road at a lively pace. Final ly, when he struck the corduroy road, he felt something snap and 'knew that he had broken a spring on the buggy. He saws visions of having to make the damage good to old Henry. When he reached the barn he jumped out and said: "Henry, I broke a spring. How much do I owe you?" "How did you break it, Gus?" asked the liveryman. "Driving like the dickens over a rough road," the drummer answered frankly. "Then you don't owe me anything." "Why. how's that?" "Well, that's the first time I ever had a spring broke that way. It's a new way o' breakln' them. All I ever Jiad broke before was broke drivin' easy over a smooth road." Indianapolis News. A STOP WATCH. Lets of Ways In Which It Can Be Made to Amuse Its Owner. "Having a stop watch." says the man who has just bought one, "reveals a whole lot of ways of amusing your self that you'd hardly think of before. "Since I've had a watch I've been able to while away a lot of time not a pun, either. For Instance, walking In the city where the numbered blocks make calculating easy, I am continual ly holding the watch on my pedestrian efforts. "I figure first how long it takes me to walk a. block. Going at top speed so that some folks think I'm mad, I have been able to do eighty-eight yards in twenty-nine and .two-fifth seconds, or about seven miles an hour. "Then, of course, I time all interme diate distances up to a mile. I've learned pretty well just what four miles an hour means, and I want to tell you that folks who speak so glibly about doing that ought to hold a watch on their performances to see what it means. "The other day I got up a few sprint races between some boys just so I could time their running. I find there's a lot of fun. too, in making imaginary bets with myself how long it will take me to catch up with some one else walking in the same direc tion or how long it will be before a car gets to a certain crossing. "Also a stop watch is a great thing for timing how long you can hold your breath." New York Sun. The Game of Cricket. Cricket dates from the reign of Queen Elizabeth and had Its origin in rounders and stool ball. Lord Chester field was the first man of weight to take it up seriously and Eton the first public school. In those days scores were notched upon tally sticks, the ball had heavy cross seams, the bats were curved, and the fielders stood al most in Indian file. The early laws of the game had their inception at the Star and Garter Inn, Pall Mah and one of the few of these original laws which obtain today is that of the tossup. The wickets were twenty-two Inches high and the ball six Inches in length. The first county match was when Kent played England In 1711, and on this occasion vast sums of money changed hands. Wide Doorways. In the making over of an old house, as also In building a new one, it Is al ways a good plan to have the door ways in the rooms on the first floor made unusually wide, almost as large as the rooms themselves, for In this way a greater sense of space and airi ness is given even when the house is not large. Portieres may be hung in these roomy doorways to keep away drafts and to give a certain privacy, but in warm summer days and also when entertaining a large number of persons the portieres may be drawn back and almost the entire ground floor thus transformed into one large room. Baltimore American. Jealousy. "My dear," said the wife of the emi nent professor, "the hens have scratch ed up all (hat eggplant seed you sowed." "Ah. jealousy!" mused the professor. And he silt down and wrote a twen ty page ariii i" ihe Development of Envy Iiillif Minds of the Lower Grade of Bipeds.' ' That Treating Habit. Whafs the matter? Did Ihe barber try t scalp you V" It wasn't the barber's fault. I treat ed a friend to a haircut, ami he insist ed that I have another with him. I couldn't refuse." Kansas City Journal. So He Keeps His Seat. 'Would you give up your seat to an elderly woman y "And have her know that I regarded her as elderly? Not much! I like to lw gallant, but caution is my strong Dolnt." Philadelphia Ledger. FOimHOIJEMAn CASTORIA Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of FSOrESSZOITAZi CAKES Sam E. VanVacior. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Office on west end ot Ma; Street' Heppner Oregon. C. E. ' WOODSON. A TTORNE Y- A T-LA XV Office In Palace Hotel Heppner, Oregon W. L. SMITH, ABSTRACTER. Only complete set of abstract bookt in Morrow county. Heppner, Oregon Frank B. Kistner PHYSICIAN AND SUROEON. Office in Fatternon & Son's drugstore Resideuce in Morrow building ove1 Patterson & Son's Drugstore. R. IV. HICK0K Grainbrokcr IIkvtxer, Oregon S. E. Notson ATTORNEY AT LAW. Offlcein.Odd Fellows Bldg Heppner, Oregon DR. METZLER. DENTIST Located in Odd Fellows building. Rooms 5 and 6. DR. M. A. LEACH DBNTI8T Permanently located in Heppner. Office in the new Fair building. Gas ad ministered. N. E. WINNARD, M. D. physician ac smuton Graduate of: Lenox College, 1885. Chicago Homeopathic Med College 1890. Rusk Medical College, 1892. NOTICE FOU: PUBLICATION. Deportment of tbe Interior. I nited States Lund Office, LaQrande, Oregon, Jane 7, 1909. Notice is hereby Riven that State of Oregon has filed in this officeits application, Serial No. 06038, to select under the provisions of the Act of Congress of August 14. 1848, and the Acts 'upjilementary and amendatory thereto, the sWK SW'4 Hec. 17, NWtf NW, 6WH N' and NE SW See. 20, T, 8 8., K. 29 E. W. M. Any and all persona claiming advert ely the lands described, or desiring to object because of the mineral character of tbe land, or for any other reason, to thedisposal to applicant, should file their affidavits of protest in this office, at any time prior to the approval and certification of said selection by the Commissioner of the General Land Office. June 17-Jn!y 22 F. C. BRA M WELL, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION 'Isolated Tract.', Public Land Sale. Serial No. 01688. United States Land Office, The Dalles, Oregon. May 24. 1909. Notice Is hereby given that, a directed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, under provisions (f Act ol Congress approved June 27, 1908, Public Nj. 303, we will pffer at public ale. to the highest bidder, at 9:45 o'clock a. in., n the 6th day of July next, at this office, the following tract of land, to-wit: NWJ Section 24 Tp. 2 S. R, 26 E. W. M.; Any persons claiming adversely the above described lands ara advised to file their claims or objections, on or before the day above desig nated for sale. May 27-.Iuly 1 ('. W. M"ORK. Register. OFFICERS V. O. MINOR, President I. H. McH A LEY, Vice-President W. S. WHARTON, Cashier VAWTER CRAWFORD, Asst. Catliier Bank of Capital, Fully Paid, Undivided Profits Four Per cent Interest paik on Time and Savings Deposits Your Banking Solicited The Pastime Finest Line of High Grade Cigars in City Candies, Nuts, Soft Drinks Billiards and Pool F. E. WESTERBERG, Prop CHICHESTER SPILLS DIAMOND' BRAND LADIES t AnV onr MrnnrUt for CTII-( I IAMOND 1IRAND PILLS : Gold metallic boxes, sealed Klbbon. Takb no other. -1 . mnA mmt r.xm ('.IT T.f 1)1 Alio Ml RUANDPIUH, for twcnty-fWo years regarded as Best, Safest, Always Reliable. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS S EVERYWHERE fsK NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, United States Land OiHice LsGrande, Oregon. May 10, WOK Notice Js herebv given that State of Oregon? has filed iu this oHlce an application, Heiial No.. 06535 to select under the provlnions of the Act of Congress of August 14, 1818 and the Act supplementary and amendatory thereto, the NW!i of 8EK of Section S, Township 4 South liaiige 27 East Willamette Meridian. Any and all persons claiming adversely th lauds described, or desiring to object because of the mineral character of the land, or for any other reason, to the dlnposal to applicant, should file their affidavits of protest in thfst office, on or before the 10th day of July 1909. May 27-July 1 F. 0. BRAMWELL, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of tho Interior, U. S. Land Office at Lu Grande. Oregon, June 21,1909. Notice Is hereby given that Ada J. Woodward, heir at law of John M. Waddell, deooased, t.f Heppner, Oregon, who, on June 12, 190t, marie Homestead Entry No. 10315-Berial no. 03419, for NE!i SEa. WW BEi Hec. 12, NW'j NE'4 Section 13, Township 2 South, Range 28 Eant Willamette Meridian, has filed notice of inten tion to make final five-year pro f, to establiHli claim to the laud abovo des rfbed, before W.. O, Hill, County Clerk, at Iluppner, Oregon, oil the Kith day of August. 1W)J. Claimant Mines as witnespol: Walter Liirktiia", John BroBraii, Georre Vii. boii, and Walter Kilcnp, all of Heppner, Oregon. Jly!-AiiBl2 F. C. HRMWKLL. Register. (Isolated Tract.) NOTM 10 I'OU I'l liLICATlOK. Public Lmd Sale. Serial No. U2017. U. 8. Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon. June 29th. 1939. Notice is hereby given that, as directed by the Commissioner of the General Land Office, un der provisions of Act of Congress approved June 27. 1906, Public-No. 303, we will offer t public sale, to the highest bidder, at 9:45 o'clock a. m., on the 10th day of August. 1909 next, at this office, the following described tract of land, to-wit: E' 4 NWW. 8w54 NW'i, Sec. 28, Tp. 5 8. R. 25 K. W. M. Any persons claiming adversely the above described lands are advised to-file their claims, or objections, on or before the day above desig nated for sale. June8-Augl2 C. W. MOORE, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Serial No. 0479. United States Land Office, The Dalles. Oregon, June 26, 1909. Notice is hereby given that the Northern Pa cific Railway Company, whose rt office ad dress is St. Paul, Minnesota, has this 2ud day of March, 1909, tiled m this office its application to solect under the provisions of the Act f Con gress, approved July 1, 1MW (3'Stat. 597, 620 the N W4 SW!i Sei. 3:1, T. 4 S.. R. 26 E.. W. M. Any and all persons claiming adversely the lands described, or desiring to object beuanee of the mineral character of the land, or for any other reason, to thn disposal to applicant, t-honld flic their affidavits of protest in this office, on or before the 3rd day of Aug., 19c9. Jnne8-Augl2 C. W. MOOUK. Register. T Generations v of live, 'wide awake American 13oty3 have obtained the right kind cf FIREARM EDUCATION by being equirped with tho unerring, time-honored STEVENS All progressive Hardware and Sporting Goods Merchants handle STEVENS. If you cannot obtain, wo will ship direct, exprejs prepaid upon receipt of Catalog: Price. Send 5 cents in stamps for IMVazts illustrates uttaioi,. i Replete with T IS V K N S and general firearm in. formation. Strlkingcover in colois. J. STEVENS ' ARMS & T0CL CO. f. P. 0. Box 4099 , Gucotcs FJli, fiUs. DIRECTORS W. O. MINOR J. II. McllALEY W. G. SCOTT C. E. WOODSON W. S. WHARTON Heppner $50 000 00 2259 33 :hrs-tkr's A lu Kkd nndA with Blue Bay of your f i K.I