HBPPN'ER HERALD. TtEPPNftR. OREOON FIELD It! BIG ML CLIP TO BOSTON HAS FOLLOWED THIS PLAN FOR SEVERAL SEASONS WITH GOOD RESULTS- '200,000 POUNDS IN CONSIGNMENT v. Stanfield Clip One of Largest Oregon Sheep go to Hunting ton to be placed on Early Range. Stanfield Standard. R . N. Stan field has ' consigned his Umatilla county wool clip with Crimmins & Pierce of Boston and the wool consist ing of 200,000 pounds of coarse and fine wool iB being shipped east from the west end of this county. The Idaho and Malheur county wool be longing to the same owner has not yet been consigned owing to the fact that wool has not been sheared. Pre sumably the clip will be consigned after shearing. In consigning his wool Mr. Stan field is not taking a new venture as he has folowed the practice of con signing for several years past and has achieved satisfactory results by so doing. The wool goes to the Bos ton market and sold by the brokers when conditions are considered ripe for securing the maximum price. The Stanfield clip is the largest in this section if not eastern Oregon and the shipment of the 200,000 pounds of consigned wool makes the largest transaction in wool this season. The next largest deal was the sale of the Smythe Bros, clip of coarse, 175,000 pounds. Since shearing his Umatila county sheep Mr. Stanfield has been shipp ing his bunds to Huntington and from there placing them on the early range in Idaho and Malheur. He has thus far shipped 18,000 head. EDITOR ON WARPATH Charges Postmaster Myers With Pernicious Political Activity Editor Putnam of the Medford Mail-Tribune has filed charges with Postmaster General Burleson against Postmaster Myers of Portland, alleg ing pernicious political activities. Putnam charges that the Portland Postmaster used his office to further his political ends by persuading Ore gon postmasters to sign the petitions of H. M. Esterly, candidate for nomi of H. M. Esterly, candidate for demo cratic national committeman, and G. A. Cobb, candidate for the nomina tion for Governor. COMMITS SUICIDE Dead Young Portland Man Found in Condon Hotel Edwin Hodge Worsham, of Port land, shot and killed himself in a room at the Summit Hotel in Condon last Friday morning. He was a nice appearing young man and had gone to Condon looking for work. He had Condon looking for work. He had about $35 in money in his pockets. FRUIT DAMAGED Apples Badly Hurt in the Grande Ronde Valley Heavy damages from frost has been experienced in various fruit raising sections of Oregon the past two weeks. The damage wes severs in the Grande Ronde Valley, where it is expected the apple crop will be 85 per cent short. STRAWBERRIES LATE Cool Weather at Hood River Delays Shipments Several Weeks. Cool weather has delayed the strawberry shipments from Hood River. Shipment is. expected to be gin about May 20, and the crop is 3stimated at 100,000 crates. WOOL SALES' HEAVY Not Much Being Held For Regular Sales Dates. East Oregon iun. There has been so much wool Bold" already in eastern Oregon and the selling is now under way so actively that it is possible there will be little wool left for sale when the regular sales days arrive this year. The wool of the Heppner country is plainly going fast and a considerable inroad has been made on the wool of this immediate section. In the Shnniko and Condon districts, however, there is a tendency to hold for the sales days and the. regular sales will be awaited with interest. A Bale has also been set for Juntura on the lino of the Oregon-Eastern in Malheur county. The list of sales days aside from the Juntura sale is as follows: May 21, Pilot Rock; May 22, Echo; May 23, rendleton; June 2 Heppner; Juno 4, Shaniko; June 6, Baker; June 8 and 9, Ontario and Vale; June 15, Pilot Rock (second sale); June 16, Hunt's Ferry; June 17, Mtolius and Madras; June 19, Shaniko (second sale); June 23, Con don; (June 25 Heppner (second sale); June 30, Joseph; July 1, Enterprise and Wallowa; July 2, Buker (second sale); July 7, Bend; July 9, Shaniko (third sale.) , Blue Mountain Eagle. The county court was in session last week. Where we do not know. County Judge Mc Haley and Commissioners, Al Porter and Sid Green left here on horseback to hold a session of the court on the roads of northern , Grant County, They first made a personal examina tion of the roads near Dayville and then were to look over the roads near I Alonument. As there is some road work to be done near Ritter they will take in that portion of the county and they will finish by examining the road from Susanville to Austin. It is a good thing that Grant county jlected some pretty good buckaroos for this job otherwise they ' could never get oyer the county. A short time ago they made a trip to the southern end of the county to view the roads. There is a lot of informa tion concerning the roads that the ourt wanted and the best way to get t was to mount a "Pinto" and go get t. At least that is the way they figured it out. RACE MEET AT JOHN Big Event DAY in Looked For Track Fine Shape. Blue Mountain Eagle. Joe Combs, manager of the big race meet that is planned for John Day in June, says that there will be the biggest string of runners on the John Day track that natives ever saw. All ready he has had application for 40 stalls and from the way that the game is fram ing up it might comu to pass that the meeting will tap off (!0 horses. There are about a dozen horses now on the grounds in training. The truck is in fine shape and has been worked care fully for the last six weeks. MISS WILSON REMEMBERED Pendleton Folk Send Wedding Present to Mc.Vdmi's llride. When Miss Eleanor Wilson, daugh ter of the president, was married to Secretary MeAdoo today, she found among her wedding gifts a Pendleton woolen mills Indies' bath robe similar in quality to the robe that was pres ented to Miss Jessie Wilson at the time of her wedding lust full. The robe was sent to Miss Wilson with the compliments of the Pendleton Commercial Association. By resola tion of the bonrd of nm lingers, the gift was given with good wishes of the club and the people of Pendle ton. Upon leaving fo Freewater where he will assume the pastorate of a church, Rev. E. W. Warrington, who lubored for four years at" Pilot Rock, was given a fnrewell reception in the Oddfellow's Hall at which every available seat was occupied by friends. East Oregonian. Judge G. W. Phelps, Dr. F. E. Boyden and William Humphrey left this morning on a trip to McKay creek, the purpose of the party being to reduce the trout supply in that stream. Mike Summers, a Gilliam County pioneer, died at Condon last week leaving a wife and five children. The schools of John Day and Lnnyon City will be consohdat ed as the result of a meeting held Monday evening, says the Blue Mountain Eagle. The towns are only two miles apart and it is felt that more eminent ser vice will result from consolida tion. John W. Mnidment, a promi nent citizen and pioneer of the Lone Rock Country, will be a candidate for the Republican nomination for Commissioner in Gilliam County. VAl'GHTON, BALLPLAYER NOW WITH PENDLETON Nuughton, who played short stop for Heppner last 4th ef July, and in the Hoppner-Condon games, it play ing this year with Pendleton in the Western Tri-State League. Satur day's East Oregonian has the follow ing to say regarding his playing. "Naughton was the only Buck who did not figure in the hit colum yes terduy but he worked the pitcher for three complimentariea. Ai a lead olT man, Naughton is without a peer in the league. "DRUGLESS MEDICINE" ANDBLOODLESS SURGERY" By Dr. J. Perry Conder. (Continued from last week) In discussing these disorders we believe that you will at once see meddlesome surgery and temporary pallative medical treat ment does not recognize the primary cause of the condition and of fers no permanent relief while this method removes the cause by mechanical manipulations, accelerates the blood flow passing through the organs at fault, increases the strength of the nerve force, restores the tone to flabby tissues and increases the vital energies so essential to health. This system of "drugless medicine" and "bloodless surgery" accepts all tiie isolated facts and princi ples of ananomy, physiology and pathology and has wrought these facts and principles into a consistant, homogenious system which is able, not only to overcome much sickness and deformity without the use of drugs and knife, but indeed to cure in a large share of cases much more successfully than can be accomplished by old time methods. TO CURE GALLSTONE GO AT THE CAUSE Gallstones are an obstruction to elimination. The gall formed by the fiver loses its fluidity and forms stones in the gall-bladder instead of passing out naturally into the intestines. A person who has suffered once from gall-stone colic lives in fear of another at tack. The fact that one stone has found its way down the little duct to the intestine indicated that the bile-forming organ the liver is not able to perform its functions properly and that there may be a hundred of other stones lying in the gall-bladder wait ing for a chance to start trouble. Medical physicians have endeavored for years to find a medi cine that will disolve these little concretions, but all remedies have proven of no value. Surgeons perform serious operations for the removal of these stones but as an operation does not remove the cause of the stone formation it certainly is not a satisfactory pro cedure. At best it is but relief not cure. Gallstones are com posed chiefly of cholesterin, bile pigments and lime salts, sub stances which are held in solution (or fluid state) in normal bile. A sluggish circulation of blood through the liver or an interfer ence to the nerves supplying the gall-bladder or the gall-duct will produce a stagnant, concentrated, thick or non-fluid condition of bile; it follows that the cholesterin, bile pigments, etc., are no longer held in suspension but are first precipitated into a deposit (like mud in stagnant water) and then-rolled into hard, stony masses, varying in number, shape and size. These are accretions and tend to grow in size, j In all cases of hepatic colic, anatomists find lesions of the spine and ribs in the region from which theliver and gall-bladder get their nerve supply. By deft gentle manipulation the drugless physician can relax and dilate the duct and hasten the passage of the stone or stones during the acute attact of colic, and then by re moving the lesions in the spine and ribs, establish normal nerve action and blood flow to the liver and ajacent structures, thus re moving the true cause of the disorder. The liver will then pro duce normal bile, and gallstones will not form in it. It is so much better to correct the cause of mischief m this way than tem porize with merely "doctoring" 'efforts. The typical symptoms usually are: excrutiating pain radiating to right shoulder blade, pain over the stomach and passing into the thigh, bile-stained per spiration, abdomen extended, vomiting, costipation, a weak rapid heart, difficult breathing and prostration. The tissues are par ticularly hard upon pressure over the region of .the gall-bladder and the small end of the stomach, ADENOIDS WHAT TO DO WITH THEM Adenoids are small, soft, flabby foreign growths in the back of the nose and throat. They do not belong to healthy bodies. Adenoids may result from several conditions: they may follow almost any of the acute diseases, such as scarlet fever, diptheria, measles, etc., or may result from a series of ordinary bad "colds ;" they may appear without any cause which parents would be able to recognize. Deficient circulation, especially any congestion which persists for a long time, may. be responsible for adenoids, as well as for certain forms of nasal polyps. Disturbed relations or false positions of the small bones in .the neck may be an all im portant cause of the disturbed circulation and partly responsible for the adenoids and associated inflamation. Adenoids cause varying amounts of trouble. They cause "mouth breathing" in children with all its ills ; they interfere with proper nutrition of the brain ; they keep up a constant inflamma tion of the throat; injure the voice, cause deafness, and prevent the proper nutrition of the entire body, either directly or indirect ly. These liabilities mean that they ought to go out. They ought to be gotten rid of. Adenoids often prevent the child from hav ing any clear or quick ideas of the sayings of the teacher and par ents. Often he gets a very undeserved reputation for disobe dience and obstancy and heedlessness, due to his partial deafness and natural mental sluggishness that is apt to go with it in early life. OFTEN RETURN AFTER SURGICAL REMOVAL In ordinary surgical practice it is not at all rare to find reports of adenoids returning after removal, sometimes several times, but I have my first case to see or hear of them returning after they are removed by this method. Will gladly refer you to a number of people where I have removed the adenoids and treated the con dition which caused them to form in such a manner as to effect a permanent relief. Am treating quite a number at the present time and if you wish to investigate for yourself it is a good op portunity. Usually when adenoids are present the tonsils are enlarged and inflamed. The surgeon is very apt towish to remove the ton sils also ; but this is not a good thing to do if they can possible be saved. The removal of the adenoids and the correction of the trouble is followed by the recovery of the tonsils in a very large majority of cases. Always, the tonsils, which are a normal part of the body, should be kept intact as long as possible. Overzeal 0U3 surgery removes many a tonsil which "bloodless surgery" could normalize and save. "MOUTH BREATHING- A SERIOUS HANDICAP Children who breath through the mouth are especially liable to certain troubles. The condition is usually easily corrected in the beginninp, yet the effects are so serious and so far-reaching that it is a" great pity that the habit should remain so long uncorrect ed as it does in many a child. The child with open mouth, reced ing, undeveloped chin, hanging, feeble-looking jaw, looks defi cient in intelligence and in efficiency. Everybody naturally treats him as if he were deficient as he is, in fact, by his handicaps and thus feebleness of character is emphasized. The muscles which hold the mouth firmly closed are those which are used in every expression of determination and ambition. The person who lets his mouth hang open has these muscles weak and poorly developed he is unable to "set his jaws and go to it," and this inability isapt to-be associated withweak, flabby, unstable will power, andwith dulled, selfish, inefficient, unhappy living. BERLIN'S CIVIC SYSTEMS. Professor Asserts German Capital Far Outstrips American Cities. Professor Lingelbach of the Univer sity of Pennsylvania in a lecture de livered recently said that Berlin does not Intrust the management of munic ipal affairs to the whole population. The government of the city is carried on by business men through .the citv council of 144 deputies, which Is held responsible. It appoints a mayor for twelve years and an administrative body of thirty-four, eighteen of whom are paid good salaries to give the city the benefit of their technical knowl edge and experience. "Berlin's housekeeping is remarka ble, as seen In the Immaculate parks and streets, public squares and civic centers," Professor Lingelbach went on to say. "The noiseless and efficient collection of garbage, ashes and paper is made by night. The streets are cleaned, the gutters disinfected and the city made fresh and tidy for the day's work. The supervision over the food supply Is real and effective. The Prussian policeman takes his business seriously. "The successful conduct of business affairs requires centralized responsibil ity in the hands of experts. This our American plan, with its checks and balances and subservience to a state charter, makes Impossible, and it is, therefore, unreasonable to expect our cities to go into municipal activities to the extent done by the German. We must keep in mind two facts first, that in" American cities responsibility is not centered in the council, as In Berlin, and. second, that every voter has nn equal voice in the direction of city affairs. "Germany has got entirely away from the concept of the state, so prev alent in the first half of the ninetetatb. . century, that government existed only to protect life and property. Impose military services and levy taxes, in stead there is everywhere a clear rec ognition of the rights and claims of so ciety us n whole, of the social con sciousness that has completely super seded individualism and of the fact thnt many of the services once regard ed ns independent are really of neces sity collective In their Interests and therefore must be controlled by the so cial group. Business rather than poli tics prevails in the city management, social duties and social rights take precedence over individual rights. In deed, social service is the conspicuous characteristic." Danish Workmen's Houses. The Co operative Building Society of Denmark bus recently planned and put Into execution a garden suburb for workmen. The town is a-model one p.nd very picturesque, each house havv ing a red tiie roof, a veranda and a garden. The sitting, rooms in the houses are exceptionally large, and the kitchens are fitted with gns stoves and all modern conveniences. There are a big playground for children and a large green covered with trees. Forty-six houses have already been erected. CLOTHES FDR THE MAY-DAY OF LIFE Spring is hereand we're all young. Even those who've passed the half-century mark feel the thrill of the season, when "the young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love." We feel young; we want clothes with the "go" of youth. n Universal Tailoring is pre-eminently the young man's line. Among the 450 styles your dealer ,will show you, there is novelty enough to satisfy the most demanding. The fashions have those swinging outlines and pleasing details the young man looks for. Every fabric is Pure Wool and the tailoring is done by hand. Guaranteed. " Have your measure taken today by LOUIS PEARSON My N e w 0G Has Just been finished by the printer and is now ready for distribu tion. All parties inter ested will be furnished with a copy of same. Mail Orders Will be Promptly Filled ,Lio G lJ 3 . ILi City Meat Market Wholesale & Retail Butchers KINSMAN & HALL, Props. Phone 563