Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, June 29, 1897, Image 2

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    155 ai gg 83 sd as ail
ftglppRffl $ 1 lit
A decent department decision
holds that a blind man cannot
serve in the capacity of postmas
ter. Strange! Has the blind man
been guilty of reading postal
cards?
The editor of a farm journal
tenders the young people this
piece of wholesome advice:
"Never make love in a corn field.
Corn has ears and is easily shocked
You should make an oat of this."
A man who has no time to read
the newspapers, says Press and
Printer, can usually find a little
leisure in which to buy an excep
tionally fine gold brick or a par
ticularly choice variety of green
goods.
An exchange says: "The man
who has enemies amounts to some
thing, lie is a live man. He is a
fighter. People don't kick at a
corpse. A live man can swim
against a current a corpse floats
down without hindrance. God
bless our enemies. We love them.
They make life worth living.
liUFFOONEity and cheap witti
cism are sometimes effective un
der certain circumstances but
hardly so in the senate of the
United States. Senator Vest has
found this out in the failure of his
attempt to lessen the influence of
those democrats who voted for
protection by dubbing them "cot.
ton-tailed democrats."
Senator Vest's crocodile tears
have ceased to flow with reforence
to the Bugar features of the pond
ing tariff bill since the newspapers
callod bia attention to the f..ct
that the increase in the value of
sugar-trust stocks under his manip
ulation of the Wilson bill was
ten times as groat as it has boon
since tho Dingley bill was taken
up.
A woman's character is likened
unto postage stamps. Ouo black
murk ruin it. Man's like a troas
ury note; no matter how many
stains it lian, it will pass at par.
When a woman falls from grace
Lor character is generally mined
forever. On tho other hand a man
may straighten up and be received
into tho best society again. All of
which is too true but being true
does not make it right. Ex.
W'nEN Prof. Roentgen an
nounced his diaeovery of tho X
ray, eighteen months ago, his films
were exposed for two hours. Now
a radiograph is taken in three
or four minutes. Prof. Roentgen
unod a preparation of barium,
which conts $1.23 a grain, but Kdi
son fouud that the tungUte of
calcium, costing a ninth as much,
answers tho purpose. No doubt
other important improvements in
tho proees will be made duriug
tho next year.
The free-silver democrats who
rejoiced in alliancfl with wtulim
lant fall will intort-Hled to know
that the ni.MlM.f. he-road j,.p.
uliHts whoaro BHMured of tho con
trol of lh coining convention of
populihts at Memphis are out in a
ptonunciamento againt further
monkeying with tha semifut dol.
lar, and ropose to go to tho full
riurrno oi an aosoiute lut paper
currency. Tom Watson, who lends
the middle-of-the-roaders, says io
a recent istus of Lis paper:
"We genuine populists contend
that LatiKtn which is go.! fur 40
cents is good for 100 cents. H
tho principle of lUtUui is sound,
it is sound all the way. If the eov
eminent stamp can make 40 cents
out of nothing, it can taxkd 1U)
csots out of the same mtrial."
Business indications from all
parts of the country continue ex
tremely encouraging. This is
found both in the statements of
daily papers of all political classes,
and especially in the reports of the
financial reviews which make a
special study of the field through
the unusual facilities which they
have built up by long years of con
tact with business people in all
parts of the country. Dun's Re
view, whose statements on this
subject are accepted as an accurate
financial picture of conditions, in
its issue of June 19th announces
that the failures for the week were
but 198 as against 276 for the cor
responding week in the preceeding
year, and adds: "The gain in
business has become clear to all.
There is evidence of greatly en
larging business in every impor
tant department. More establish
ments have been Bet at work and
more hands employed, while re
ports from various cities show a
very general progress and a con
tinuing large distribution through
retail trade.
A miserable im poster, says an
eastern exchange, is working his
game on some of the neighboring
cities, selling from house to house
a salve which he gauarantees to
cure warts. All sensible people
know that the only way to remove
a wart is to rub it with a raw po
tato, which is afterwards to be
buried by a cross eyed negro in
the noitheast corner of a grave
yard at midnight in the dark of
the moon. As the potato decavs
the Wart will rliHnnnnnr Tliia
f juui, J. UIO
wart salve put up in tin boxes is a
delusion and a snare.
The new Chinese consul-connm!
, , 0 .
has issued a proclamation, copies
Of Which he is Hfil.rHner in liit.
- ' O w "ID
countrymen throughout the Uni
ted States, urging them in eonao
their feuds and to respect the laws
of this country. He warned them
against becoming entangled with
white lawyers, who be savs. will
do his people no good. If an era
of peace and uprightness is finally
established by the Chinese in this
country, the consul-general savs
he believes he can obtain a modi.
fication of some of the restrictions
against immigration.
The workers in the cotton mills
of New England are already able
to note the contrast between a re
publican and a democratic adminis
tration in the fact that the usual
summer suspension of work, which
has prevailed each year under the
Wilson law, is to be omitted this
season and tho mills run on full
time duiing the summer.
Ki-flinlloiM of a Bachelor.
From the New York Prea.
Flirtation li marriage antitoxin.
The svernae woman outsrnwa fi.h.
fulness before aim pnti her bair np.
Tbe devil probably tolj Ere thai an-
plee were flood for tbe complexion.
Love doei'l bruin in friendnhlD
o ofteo ai friemUblp begins lu love.
Wben women beKin to amok tobannn
tbe men can all use aaobet powder.
After people have uhmoJ a oerUIn
te of fatneaa, they always bein to
look like Hub.
A roao alwaya inerrei In tha
ky Dial be IiiikIii, ami s woman in tha
mi key aha criea.
Ever woman lives all her life iih
the fear tbt if the dirt flnt ber husband
HI get married again.
Wben Btirl ninth SI tliodub aha araa
going to cry, if it j. jD a uoTel. it ia aai.l
that aba bad tears iu her Voloe.
A woman can never resist a rm,l
that is said to m muni fur th. ,.-..
w .... iuv WJ IIIU
phobia, s apralned ankle and f.llino
hair.
A woman ran ne er nniinntaii.l
ber husband doesn't aot delinbted bo
he calls him back s blook to see that
the penliiuis lis ve groan a a bole half
turn.
When s girl ia sixteen aha ihinka
most about a mso's hair aud erea: h.n
he's twenty ah thinks most about his
eioines; when she's thirty she Ibiuks
most about bia bank sooount.
This i topsy-turvy world, says an
exelmnge. One man is struggling for
Ju.lioa and another Is tl-ein from it
Oua is saving hd a house and
another Is trying to srll his for less than
it Oit. One man ie spending all the
money he can make in taking a girl to
an entertaiitmrnl and tstidlng flowers
la tbe hopes, eventually, to make her
bis wife, while his neighbor Is spending
be gold bs has to a,( t dlfor(,,, 0
man escapee all the diaeasss man ie heir
to, end gets killed os the railroad. An
other goes without being burl, snd dies
with the whooping toogh. Bach is life.
Hakla s Aratra K1,
Tbs Heat Halve In the world for Cuts,
..,u-, o,(rM, uoers. Halt Hbeu
im.iiki..- A "" vu. i wi nanus,
I hllblaina, Corns, and all 8k la Kroo!
ti.a. and p.M.,,y cures ",l,, ,
z:i r?;. r'
... .r,f IHrn Mrs or 00
hf rrun ml. ! i- . .
, 7 "'iMri in give
" u: ,njoa reruoa
Jed.
J S a
Thought for Thinkers.
Folly ie soon learned Cowper.
Envy is a kind of praise. Qay,
Affection ie deformity. Blair.
Bread ia tbe staff of life. Swift
Beauty ia truth; truth, beauty.
Keats.
To err is human; to forgive divine.
Pope.
Labor is tbe girdle cf manliness.
Fairer.
Decision is tbe soul of dispatch.
Baoon.
Habit is ten times nature. Welling
ton.
A little learning is a dangerous thing.
Pope,
Whoever is contented, he is rich.
Firdasi.
Not failure, but low aim, is crime.
Lowell.
A light heart lives long. Shakes
peare. Lack of desire is tbe greatest riobes.
Seneca.
Virture is tbe title to nobility.
Moliere.
Strength of mind is exeroise, not rest.
Pope.
Tbe virture of prosperity is temper
ance. Baoon.
Confidence is a plant of slow growth.
Wm. Pitts.
Life is not altogether a jar of honey.
Farjeon.
Be wise today; it is madness to defer.
Young.
The Toilers' Home.
Home is the wage earner's paradise.
Wben on returning from his daily task
almost worn out he finds his wife cheer
ful, a substantial well-oooked supper on
tbe table, plain though it be, his chil
dren olean and orderly and his bouse
neat and in good trim, bis arms grow
strong. In such a presence he soon
forgets his weariness, and after a night's
refreshing sleep in a clean bed he feels
as thoroughly equipped for another hard
day's toil as David did wben, with five
smooth stones in his shepherd's bag, be
went out to meet Goliah. God bless
the homes of tbe toilers of Amerioa!
Tbey are the foundation of our free in
stitutions, the laboring man's paradise,
the hope of tbe oountry. And God bless
tbe wives and mothers wbo turn their
thoughts from tbe fashions and gayetiea
of society and give their heart's best
energies to husbanding the earnings of
their companion in toil and to tbe mak
ing of happier homes for them and their
ohildren. Detroit Free Press.
Tbe most pernicious kind of economy
is to deprive your family of a local
paper. Tbe wife does not get out to see
aud learn as do tbe father and children,
and benoe is deprived of an enjoyment
that serves to relieve many hours when
sbe is alone or with tbe small ohildren;
and tbeu tbe home paper is an eduoator
of tbe ohildren, as tbey will rad of tbe
people and inoidents with which they
are acquainted. There is nothing that
oan be introduced into a family that
will teach tbe children to read better
and faster than the borne paper. Ex,
LETTER M8T.
IKTTERS ADVEIHTSED AT HEPPNER
J Or., June 28, 1W.
Allen, Torn Kiiyes, Mrs. Paulina
HHti'a, Mllliain Oman, Mm. Anna
lliTiimii. Mm HtanaKC 4 Cramer
Hurdle, Mita Jane.
Whmi ratlins (or those lettnra nleana nni
Mvertiied. J. P. Wn.LUm. P. M.
rHoodT
Men to take after dinner; apaav
prevent dltrea, aid rimes- aV .1 I a
tion, cure constipation. h III 4
Purely vegetable; lo not nrlxi Si
or tom pain. Hold by all drug,!lt. V eenti.
I'rejwrvd onljr by C. 1. Hood Co., Lowell, Dm
SHERIFF'S SALE.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT CNDER
anil ly virtue of an execution luiiied oot
of the circuit Court of the Hlate of Orciion for
the County of Morrow and to me directed and
delivered, tiixin a judirment rendered and en-
lereu in miiiI court on the INth ilny of May, 1'J7,
fti favor of L Feldntan anil W. II. R. Cole.
ilaiulilla. and AKaiimt W, l Haling-, defendant,
or the urn of One Hundred. Twenty Two and
ht HO Dollar! In I1, ft. Rold coin with Intercut
thereon in like sold coin at the rate of Kntlit
er rent per annum from the '.th day of April,
ini;. ami trie further aiiin of Klahleen Dollan
coati and dlihuraemeti'a In which Judgment It
uroereo. mr ine court mat tha prope'ty
atlr.t'hcd 111 said aetlon and hereinafter de-
acrltml. to-wlt: Houth half of the Kouth-Kt
Wuirterof Kectlon VM and the North Eaat Uoar
l r of ertion KJ and tha Mouth Half of tha
Ko 'th We.t yiiarter of (tectum Wand the Weal
llallol the miuth Kaat uuarter of Hecllon X2.
and the Houth Half of the Houth-Wrtt Quarlrr
ol Ks tlnn :tl, all in townahlp nna (I) moth
rauan if eaai nniaineiie niennian, .Morrow
counly, Or.-non, l aold to aatlaty aald luclic
nieni, coaia ami accruing coal a. i will, on
"atuntay the Hlat day of July, 1H7. at 2
o'cliM'k p. in. of aald day at tha front door
of tha court honaa In Heppuer, Morrow
county, orcKon, aell all the riant, title and
luieteal ol the aald v) , u eallus In and to tha
aluive deai'rlliel uroerty at public auction to
to tha ill i! Iieat and brat bidder for caih In hand.
Ihe p'o ela to lie applleil to the aatlafaetlon of
.Id e (edition and ail coal a, and coat a that may
ae.ru a. K. I. MA I UK K.
Hherlff ol Morrow eoiiutv. llreaoii.
taUst June vn, Imff. ,Vi7
. Notice of Intention.
I.akp Orrn I at Tmi ii.i . OaannM.
June '.'nd, If T.
VOTICK 1 1IKHKBY tllVKN THAT Till
il follow In named aettler haa filed notice of
Ilia Intention to make final proof In auppoit ol
li.a claim, and that aald proof will Ih made
Ufore i. W. Morrow, county clerk, at Heppuer,
Oregon, OU Auauat 7th. I'v'T. vl'
M A K I II A I . ll-MNH,
lid. K. No. M, for ihe Ht, NW and HW,
lre I, 1 p a K JR K W M
lie iiamea the following wltneaee to prove
hla contiitiioua maldem-a upon ami cultivation
oi aald land, via: Heujainlii H I'arker. J, P.
went, Neleon t uinptoa aud Camuel Kualrr.all
ol llardnian, Oregon,
4 AS. r. J1IHIHF.
A Reg-later.
How to
Get Rich axW
$25 will cam you
$7 weekly
Willi our plan ol ioveetmeot,
yon eanaot oa. Two men
mail tMM aod SG60 laat month
on $ IS. Yon ran do likewlae.
If you don'l loveat, and keep
your money to your pocket,
Ton ill ba poor ill your life.
Try tit with 13 tad lee what
we ear. do. Absolutely no
riak. Write tor particular! Io
Guarantee Drokcraa Co, Offloea, 213
and SIS tiyra UuilJlBf , Lm Aog-ah-a,
CaltfoTiti.
An Unpopular Hatch.
The betrothal of Princess Maud to
her Danish first cousin, who is three-!
years her junior and not in the line of
succession, is extremely unpopular
everywhere in England. She is the
one member of the Marlborough house
family who is reputed to be above
mediocrity ' mentally, and the public
had the idea that she would do some
thing worth while in the marriage
market. Her choice is so disappoint
ing from every point of view that some
excuse skeins to be necessary. The
story has been started 'that her be
trothed is Russia's secret choice for the
Bulgarian throne, and that Ferdinand
is to be frozen out to make room Xor
him this winter.
tr 1
Pulled Two Teeth for Revenge.
Dr. Dougal was a famous Scotch phy
sician, and as eccentric as learned. One
day a man came to consult him, in an
agony of pain, and, after an examina
tion, the doctor told the patient he had
an ulcerated tooth and advised him to
poultice the jaw. An argument ensued,
during which the sufferer cried out:
"What do you know about teeth?" At
this, the doctor seized a pair of for
ceps and Bhouted: "I'll draw every
tooth in your head!" The alarmed pa
tieut ran out of the house, with the
doctor in pursuit, who finally overtook
him in the market place, and took out
two of his teeth, in the midst of an inter
ested crowd.
THE BIGGEST CAT.
It Is Thirty Inchea Long and Weighs
Twenty-Fonr Fonnds.
J ust plain "Tom" is the unpretending
name of probably the greatest domestic
cat in the world.
Edward Simmons, a fish and oyster
dealer of New York, is the proud pos
sessor of "Tom." This giant of cats
ia 30 inches in length, from his head to
the tip of his tail. He is a foot high,
and weighed last spring 24 pounds.
The recent hot weather has caused him
to drop a few pounds of flesh, but has
not impaired his health or happiness.
Thomas is black and white, and is
rather peculiarly marked. lie has two
complete rings of white around his tail,
which makes him look like first cousin
to a raccoon.
Mr. Simmons picked up the cat two
years ago while walking along South
street. Thomas was but a stray kittea
then, so that his pedigree has never
been ascertained, and it is not known
whether or not heredity has had any
thing to do with his enormous size.
A Diamond Wedding.
An event at all times sufficiently rare
to create interest, and more especially
in this country, has taken place in the
small village of Gloignes, in the depart
ment of the Oise, says a Paris corre
spondent. An old couple, M. and Mine.
Andry, amid the rejoicings of the whole
parish, celebrated recently their dia
mond wedding. The husband first saw
the light in 1810, and his wife was born
five years later. The cure who offici
ated on tbe occasion of the golden wed
ding of this happy old pair presided
again. M. Andry is still a hale and
hearty old man, and hopefully looks!
forward to still some years of married I
life, although his spouse is somewhat
feeble, and required the stalwart arm1
of a grandson, who is a non-commissioned
officer, to lean ou.
Human NatureT
A new and handsom- apartment
bouse on the upper west side WaK
.noccupied for seteral months because
of the high rental demanded for flats.
- .8iu, .ay, me .ew York Tress
Wegant flats of eight and nine room,
with beautifully decorated butier'sZ:
try.
In loan 41,..-, ,
flat ww, takea! It, isn't given to eve v
occupant of a flat to h.. . Z l 1
flat
" "mil UVYfJ WPOUI m. ......
pantry. "ulKr
Long Telegraph Line.
The longest telegraph line In the
world, above ground and without a
breok, has just been completed in
Australia, that land of long distances.
The line runs with a circumbendibus,
from Kockhampton, in Queensland, to
Broome, in western Australia, and
crosses about two-thirds of the entire
continent. The total length is borne
thing over fl.ooo milca.
The Greedy Crocodile.
The moment that a young crocodile
breaks its shell it ia to nil Intents and
purpoHe as netive na it is at any time
during its life. It will make straight
Tor the water, even if it be out of sight
and a good distance off, and it will pur
sue its prey with eagerness and agility
during the first hour of its free exist
ence. The War to Advance,
The following new story ia told of
the lute Lord Aiupthill. When he waa
a junior clerk in the foreign office, Lord
I'alinerstton, then foreign secretary, in
troduced an innovation whereby in
stead of being solemnly eiimmoned by
a verbal message the clerk were ex
pected to answer hia bell. Some haugh
ty spirit rebelled against Wing treated
like footmen and tried to organize re
aiHtance, but Odo Run ell, an he then
was, refused to join tbe rebellious move
ment, anvlng that whatever method ap
prised iim most quk'kly of Lord
l'alinerston'a wlahee waa the method
which he prelt-rred. The aggrieved
clerk regarded him ai a traitor to hi
order, but he died to ambassador.
Nt'laon'a old vessel. Uie Komi roy ant,
baa Wn rrfltfed again at a coat of $100,
oco for exhibit at the coming Kiel naval
exhibition. Her timber are in good con
dition in apite of her 107 years. She
waa .eiwui a nagfhip for only one year
It wna front the tardnrm of the
Kotldrrivaiit thnt. l'rim Pjirraj.f-lfill aul
iniriil of Uw republican flert, a primmer
of war, wna hanged without a trial.
It was on the iin.i IcnWk of the Fou
(irovaiit that Sir lialnh Alvn-mmha
died of hia wound after defeating the
rron. h at Alexandria in li01.
MARDLEHEAD BOYS.
Marvelsaa Depravity with Which Thef
Have I teen Charged.
Speaking of boy remind me, iy a
writer in tbe Itnaton (iatctte, of toy
whlcJt Tolly told the other day, when
she came up from Marhlrhrml N.rk to
cheer my malarial gloom. It aiem
Marblchead boya have the reputation cf
worat In Se alale ami
- A woman In a t rench ho.,,n. ,a,
aa !....,..,.... u.al a. a a
- ....voiiKu -iiico tin, retiatcd alllrcal
n.cnt for four !. she ua a.k.Hl
.. an. i,cr fongtie.at.d It xa noticed
ht y .ill, the putting out of lhp ton
.,vw lrica, ana with auc-
ceam In other eaae. All that la nec
enry apparently I to atrongly puah
the tontrue out of the mouth and hold
haa h..n . i i ...
n o, for a minute or two. Ii i ,1
-ori:.tc,i r.ow to try the an me ihtff
It. B-i:Torati eon?,. whoopinir
ccufrh. inJ rMikl; Vy Irrt.j.irtb'e
Tho Uvea of Infants Preserved
by Artificial Means.
(clenoe'f Snbetltnte for Nature Doing
Wondera for Prematurely Born
Huntings In New l'ork
Cltj.
"He was incubated," the proud moth
er of some great man of the future will
say of her son. For the baby incubator
is a success and has come to stay. The
doctors declare that incubators have
already been the means of saving the
lives of one hundred infanta in New
York. In fact, the new-born baby who
under old-fashioned methods has no
chance of living, now, if put into an in
cubator, stands about an even chance
of becoming a healthy, crowing young
ster. Baby incubators are now in use
in two hospitals in the city.
A cozier place for a baby could not
be imagined, says the New York World.
Here the embryo citizens have every
opportunity the world affords to hold
on to life and to grow healthy and
strong, while in the tenements where
their parents live the lives of the frail
little things would have been snuffed
out in less than a day after they first
saw the light.
The incubator is used only for prematurely-born
babies and for babies
which are so weak that the wise young
woman doctors are pretty sure they
will die if left in the open air. Strange
ly enough, the incubator is shaped
something li'.:c a coiTH, -vhile its par
ticular.aini is to keep babies out of cof
fins. There are two kinds of baby in
cubators, and they differ somewhat in
construction. The babies are taken out
of the incubators at the Maternity hos
pital to get their nourishment directly
from their mothers, who live in the
building; but the mother in the Post
Graduate hospital may not see her off
spring from one week's end to an
other. Therefore the youngster must be fed
by artificial means, and, after much
experiment and study, the doctors have
completed au incubator by means of
which the baby is nourished without
being removed from its snug little nest.
The moment a baby for the incubator
arrives at the Maternity hospital the
white-capped nurses and the doctors
gather about the little wooden box,
which rests upon a stand some three or
four feet high. Baby is swathed very
carefully in warm clothes, and is then
weighed, clothes and all, before he is
laid inside and the glass cover is placed
over him.
Underneath the board upon which
the little mite rests are three bottles
that are kept constantly full of hot
water. The air passing in from below
flows over these and through an open
ing in the board into the chamber
where the infant is. A thermometer
;eeps the attendant continually in
formed as to the temperature, and a
little aluminum anenometer in the
small chimney through which the air
escapes, and which furnishes the
draught that keeps the baby supplied'
with fresh air, always indicates wheth
er or not the circulation of the air is
good.
The weight is a very important mat
ter. One baby in the incubator is
weighed every day. A healthy baby
should show a slight diurnal increase
in weight, and if the doctors find that
the diminutive patient is not growing
heavier they seek remedies for his in
disposition. This is the truest method
they have of ascertaining the baby's
progress, and therefore the greatest
care is taken that its clothes shall al
ways be of the same weight, as two or
three ounces is a considerable Increase
for a young man or woman whose ag
gregate weight is only six, seven or
eight pounds. About seventy per cent,
of the "incubated" babies have lived,
and at least fifty per cent, of these
would have died but for the incubator.
The incubator which will be in the
babies' ward of the new building of the
Fost-liradunte hospital is a great im
provement on that at the Maternity
hospital, although it lucks the senti
mental surroundings of the one in
charge of the young woman doctors.
The incubator is set upon bicycle
wheels, so it may lie moved about when
ever desired. The fresh air is heated
by passing between two strata of hot
water, rises up both at the hend and
the foot of the mattress and is kept in
motion by an aluminum fan run by
clockwork, thus preventing any possr
bility of the little patient's suffering
for want of air. 1 here is also a tube
for the supply of oxygen, liberal quan
titles of which are good for babies who
are hanging on to life by the merest
thread, and it is lielieved this improve
ment will save a great many lives that
would have been lost in the old incu
bator.
By means of a clever mechanical de
vice the weight of the baby is always
registered, so that the physician mat
discover the slightest varint ion at an
time. Infants are subject to tuWreulai
diseases, which develop before the doc
tor knows what is the mutter. Ot
course, the incubator muht Ik; opened
in order to feed the baby it. nrtitk'ial
food, but by mcuiis of a deft olkling n
the cover the entrance of nny eold itii
from the outsido is prevented. Th
temperature of the InsMe of the incu
bator is kept as near ninety-etgm de
grees as poMsible.
The Fost-tiradunte hot-pltal get more
subject for IncuimtorH than the Mn
ternity hospital, and the task of brng
Ing the little one by slow stages t
vigor and health is the more diillc 1
because the mother r.re not present V
nurse them. The learned doctor o
this institution have literally Miatchc
life from the jnw of death on mon
than on occasion.
OF AMERICAN WOMEN
Mrs. Ei.i.kjj h-km kr Mmv ...
reeded to the law pr.tfllif of lu r late
hushand, lieu. Mashv. uml la mix of t)
niit auccfhuful lawyers in Wa.h
ington.
Mb. E. I). WATT, of Omaha, haa tw...
elected supreme oracle of the order
anown as the Koyol Neighbor o
America. A woman orator in uoh a
order ought to a aueceM.
.Mia Li.i.a JArKMi.ii. the !aiuhtrro
llie proprietor' the Ile'.le M.-a.le t..
farm, iimnum a the dairy 011 the eMute
winch iU UK a pruut of tU.ut fitflilet
thousand d dlara a y ar.
Ml Nil I IK tUaa. hein-t to ll... .
nt.t fiibulo.w fortune made hi liar
ale, ban never had a buo'.t velvet dreaa
at that luxury ah luxKt mu .i K.. in
eluded In the trouwau now beinjf pro
pairvu ior ner.
mhr. Mahv "AtarK. of Atlantie
rity, J., reeontlv aprt'ie I to the ri'
eotin.'il f,r Hrm! mI:i t -v ir' out f.
luouul ol lu r Uxcn In d-.iitfeity work
eu ia itncta. m coiaj aay it hut
'" rrfim fat4.
PRIMITIVE WOMAN WAS NEW.
Indian Bellea Prove That the Flrat Pot
ter Waa a Woman.
The discovery near Maurice river, in
the neighboring state of New Jersey,
of large numbers of stone implements
used by Indian or other tribes in the
long gone centuries bring into notice
the primitive woman, eaya the New
York Tribune.
In New Jersey, as everywhere else in
the world, she appears to have been
industrious and energetic and ingen
ious. Among the implements discov
ered which she employed in prehistoric
New Jersey were flint knives, with
which she cut meat and probably veg
etables; flint scrapers, with which she
cleaned the skins of deer and bear, wild
cat and other animals, preliminary to
drying and smoking them for use as
wearing apparel; clay pots and pans,
pipkins and dishes, which she made in
primeval potteries, at fiTst the sun dry
ing them and thereafter burning them
in hot wood fires. The pottery shows
here and there artistic yearnings on the
part, of the unknown makers, more un
couth and rudimentary than those of
the ancient cliff-dwellers, but never
theless they disclose the artistic senti
ments and confirm the long list of ex
amples collected by Prof. Mason, of
Washington, showing that the first pot
ter, the first modeler, the first sculplor
and carver and the first artist was a
woman.
A MOUNTAIN MYSTERY.
Arizona Residents Puzzled by a Strange
Mountain Formation.
For the last half century the Ameri
can residents of Tucson, A. T., have
been trying to solve the mystery oi
what appears to be a hole through n
mountain peak in sight of the town.
In the clear air it looks to be only p.
short distance away, when in reality it
is at least 40 miles.
By the aid of a good marine telescope
the mountain can be brought to within
a few miles, but not near enough to
tell the exact nature of the rock forma
tion. A first peep through the glass
would lead one to believe that there was
no mystery about it. . The hole appears
as plain as possible, but several days'
study of the spot will develop the fact
that the hole does not always look the
same.
Many days when the sky is dark be
hind the mountain the hole will appear
a brilliant white, like a snowdrift, an?l
on days when the sky is blue it will often
look so dark as to be almost invisible.
These facts have led many to think
that it is an immense piece of mica ly
ing with its polished surface toward
the sky and reflecting the cloud forma
tions of another part of the horizon,
instead of being the light seen through
a hole. Viewed with the naked eye,
the hols simply appears as a whit
spot, but the telescope reveals pine trees
and other details, although very indis
tinctly. The range of mountains in which
the strange peak can be seen is known
as the Catalinas, and numerous parties
have made the attempt to climb it, but
all have failed on account of the steep
and rugged m-eclpices in the vicinity.
Copper In the Tlaauea.
For several years past the working
chemists have claimed that native cop
per may be found in minute quantities
m the tissues of every known species
of plant and animal. Since January 1
commission appointed by the British
Association for the Advancement of
Science has made 60,000 examinations
and chemical analysis by a great va
riety of procesises and has not failed
to find traces of copper in a single in
stance. They found it in the coloring
of flowers, in the feathers, beaks and
eyes of birds, in the human brain and
blood, in the blades, grains and roots
of wheat, in the scales of fishes and ser
pents, In short everywhere.
lew Tor. Weekly Tribune
With the closfl nf tha ProDi.iara:,.! . n-.
recognizee the (act that the American people are now anxiou. to give
ri5L h7 VDd bQ8ie htereaU. To meet this coition,
wSJt a ,e89;P6C8 ro". ta another State or
. ,
day, and won ita greatest victories.
. , J7J?M,We effrt wiU 1)6 PQl ,ortb' money freely snent
to mate THE WEEKLY TRIBUNE pre-eminently a ' '
a
National Family News
interesting, instructive, entertaining and indispensable to each member
We tarnish "The Gazette" aod y weeklii
hiuuiio uiio
Do
- AIVANCIt.
A.ldraas all OMer to ,
THE GAZETTE.
'''amTaTJaa'J
"""gXl Main Street,
THOMPSON & BrNTNTQ
Cummings & Fall,
PROPRIETORS
Of the Old Reliable
Gault House,
CHICAGO. ILL..
Half block west of tbe Union Depot of C. B. A
Q C. M. & Bt. P., C. & A., P. Ft. W. A C.
and the C. Bt. LiP. Railroads.
liATKH aCoo PBR DAY
Cor. W. Madison and Clinton Bts.,
CEXXCA.O-0.. IX.X4.
BIDS FOR BUILDING WANTED.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE
building committee of the Odd Fellows!
hall at lone, Oregon, will receive bids for the
erection of a 2tix;'i6 hall, everything to be fur
nished by the builder. Plans ana specifica
tions for hall can be seen at J. A. Woolery's
store at lone. Bids to be opened July 21, 1887.
The committee reserves the right to reject any
or all bids. By order of committee.
656-83 J. A. WOOLERY.
SHERIFF'S SALE.
NOTICE 18 HEREBY GIVEN THAT UNDER
and by virtue of an attachment execution
issued out of the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon for the County of Multnomah and to
me directed and delivered, upon a judgment
rendered and entered in said court on the 14th
day of June 1897, in favor of John Borwlck,
Slaintlft, and against A. Taylor and Christy
akes. defendants, for the sum of One Hundred
and Fifteen Dollars with interest thereon from
the 14th day of June, 1897, at the rate of 8 per
cent per annum, and the further sum of Twen.
ty-Pive Dollars with interest thereon from the
14th day of June, 1897, at the rate of 8 per cent
per annum, and the further sum of Ninety
Three and 45-100 Dollars, costs and disburse
ments in which judgment it was further or
dered by the court that the property attached
in said action on the 23rd day of January, 1896,
and hereinafter described, to-wit: The North
East Quarter of Bection Thirty-One (31) Town
ship Two (2) South Range Twenty-Six (26) East
of the Willamette Meridian in Morrow County,
Oregon, be sold to satisfy said judgment, costs
and accruing coBts I will on
Wednesday, th 21st day of July, 1897,
at 2 o'clock p. m., of said day, at the front door
of the court house in Heppner, Morrow County,
Oregon, sell all the right, title and Interest of
the said A. Taylor and Christy Oakes In and to
the above described property at public auction
to the highest and best bidder for cash in hand,
the procetds to be applied to the satisfaction
oi said execution and all coBts, and costs that
may accrue. E. L. MATLOCK,
Sheriff of Morrow County, Oregon.
Dated June 17th, 1897. 54-6S
Lone Book stage leaves Heppner at
7 o'olook, a. m., Tuesdays, Thursdays,
and Saturdays; arrives at 6 e'look, p.
m., Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
Will make connection with branoh train
wben desired. Fare $2, each way.
Freight oent per pound. J. H.
Bellenbrock, Prop. Offioe at Harry
Warren'a drng store. tf.
Call at Low Tillard'a for all kinds of
wet goods, at bis new plaoe in tbe City
hotel building. tf
I For Bale or Trade.
If yon want Heppner property don't
fail to oonsult J. W. Morrow. For tbe
right person, one wno wants to garden,
milk a few oows, raise chickens, etc., I
have a fine proposition to offer one.
Once developed will produce revenne of
$1200 yearly. Will be sold on easy
terms, would oot object to taking 160
sores as part payment. 523tf
for
mi
sever
CoU
ead
ELY'S CREAM BAI.M Is positive cure.
Apply into tha nostrils. It ia quickly absorbed. 60
cents at Diwplats or by mall : samples 10c. by mall.
KLY BKOTUKH3, M Warren bu New York Ciur.
FOR
Farmers and Vlllaaers,
FOR
Fathers and Mothers,
FOR
Sons and Dauoliters,
FOR
All the Family.
iw lucepuon 10 tbe present
'"
Ml lUr J3.UU.
You Want a RiV
Don't You Want a Place to
Put up Your Team ?
Are You in Need of a Saddle