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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1904)
',' f -a. u-.,m , :V..: GIRL'S SE&RET. "Aunt C;isie came to visit us and sit saw i was nervous, had the fidgets all th tui' ; 'k1 she asked me many questions, :ru1 f.r.il!." said, ' Why, you dear, syeet girl, it's ii' t your temper that's had, it's your constitution that's out of kilter. You sit rijrut au now and write a letter to Dr. Pn-ice. ".t HmTalo, X. Y., tell him all your syn i toi.ss and so I did. It wasn't long before 1 had a long reply, carefully going over my case and telling me just what to do. I d.V.e uiy present happiness and little Cupid's return to the very day I sat down to write '.hat letter to Dr. Pierce, for his advice was so good and his ' Favorite Pre scription ' worked such a complete change in me that now my former cheerfulness ,uul r;tiod health not to say anything of pood looks rue restored to me. I have jumi'io-r.ed Tom hack to my side and we are to .e married in June." Th;: proprietors and makers of Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to pa v $500 for any rise t f Leucorrhea, Female Weakness, Pro!-psiis, or Palling of the Womb, which they cannot cure. All they ask is a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. It is natural that a woman who has been cured of womanly disease by "Favorite I resrription " should believe that it will cure others. It is natural too that she should recommend to other women the medicine which has cured her. It is such commendation which has made the name of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip tion a household word for the past thirty ligfit years. A if. Prisoners Sentenced to Solitary Con finement in Frunce ot Allowed to Speak, Head or Work. The Law Times makes the following comment on the sentences passed on the Humberts, the notorious French jnwicdlers: "Some of the comments in I he press on the sentence passed on Mme. Humbert and her husband (the other pair of culprits came off more 2ightly) betray a very imperfect appre ciation of its nature. Five years' re elusion, or solitary confinement aa It is understood in France, is not only a rigorous but a terrible penalty. Our own code offers no parallel to it and it 1b probable that a life sentence of penal servitude in this country would be far more efiaily endured. The solitude of the prisoner in reclusion is all but ab solute. The strictest silence is enforced. Presumably the consolations of religion whatever that may amount to in so dreadful a situation are not entirely -withheld; otherwise the prisoner is for Mdden to speak, eyen to his guardian. Books are denied and (which must be almost the worst infliction of all) the nost complete idleness is enforced; no employment of any description may mitigate the appalling vacancy of days, veeks end years. Half an hour's ex trrue is allowed daily, in a hood which covers everything except the eyes. This horrible life In death may end In the tomb, but it is more likely to end In the padded cell of the maniac." Fcter Thnt Seldom Dlra Oat. Do you know there is such a thing as "newsp-;p r faver" and that It just worms and burns its way into a fellow's pysu-iu .'ind remains there-as long as life !a.:r-? It is a fact, says the New Or leans Times-Democrat. Men who work iroun-i newspaper offices know it to be true. They know it is true not only to the men who work in the business, but many others who never happen to get into the business at r.U. There is an old ! '-gpnd to the eut-ct that if a man once take the Mississippi river water he will krep conijn.iT back to the same old rivfr. no matter where he rocs. It is the sari? way in the newspaver business. Taste it cr.re and you have cot It in your system for good. SOME FACTS ABOUT LONDON. WbUk So to Show That the British Capital Is a ni C4y B l, yuad Question A child is born every three minutes, nd a death is registered every five minutes. "The city contains over 700 railway station,, nearly SOO mile of railway line, and 11 railway bridges span the Thame?. Ifciily l.OOO.OOO persons travel on the underground railways, and 2, OOO.OoO in 5.0(H) omnibuses. 7.000 han ff.iii", 4.XK 1-a.bs and 7.000 tram cars. The tital population i between ;.ViO.Oftf.i and 7.000.000. Four thousand postmen deliver 10. Onn,tj(Vi letters weekly, walking a dis sance equal to twice the circumference of the p-lobe. Sixty thousand letters are writteni a day, consuming 30 gal lons of ink. Ten thousand miles of overhead tel rirrafih wire almost shut out the j-rri'iVy canopy which spreads above the l'T.'Vr. streets, and the number of telewraph mesfaces received in Lon don last year was over fi.000,000. Ninety million jrallons of water are consumed daily. London (orrepond- tce St. Louis Post-Dispatch. STE AMEll (J li A YE YARD New Jersej Town Where Many Old Eastern Vessels Lie. Well-Known HIver Craft That Hairs JJcconie Worn Out Kind a Rest ing l'ljvoe on ( lie liiiri tan's Hanks. It appears to have been left for the residents of the littJe town of l'ertli Aiiiboy to prove thnt-the Hindoo belief in the transmigration of souls is a re .ilitv, at least, as far as boat are con cerned, says the St. Lou Republic. Steam craft which in years gone by made jreat record- in tbe local water and later were tirasrged out of the busy swiii tired of the struggle, are to-day so inttel) a art of the liaritau river town that their names are house hold words there. The graveyard of old veels has had a day of resurrection. The valiant spirit of each has left cold boiler and paralyzed engine to take up its abode in dwellings, decora tions and the hundred mid one tilings into which its dismembered hut resur rected body has been transformed. During the lat tew years: many well known boats have been brought to gether on the shelving banks of the Karitan river, whera the junkman de cides their destiny. The giantess of them all is the famous old Albany boat Drew. ( lose beside her are the tire-ravaged hulls of the ferryboats Elizabeth and Plain lie Id. The worn-out ferryboat Central and the ill-fated Northtield are rubbing their noses in a friendly way with the rise and fall of the tide against the Drew's port quarter. y The half-burned Thomas McManus keeps well under water on the river side of the. fleet. The side-wheel steamer Golonia. of Philadelphia, which was condemned as unseaworthy after the last internation al yacht races, and the famous old ferryboat Chancellor, the only craft to cross the bay during the blizzard of IfcS, have botb. settled high up in the sands. These bo-abs represent more than $-1,000,000 in original oost, and are in all stages of dismantlement. Probably one of the greatest boons that ever cam to Perth Amboy vra.a the steamer Drew. She was towed to her present berth, a little more than a year ago. From the outside she appeared to Ue a great unwieldy hulk of little value, but within she has proved to be a veritable treasure ship. Houses have, been built from th well-seasoned planking of her super structure The panel work and rich carvings of her 400 and more staterooms have been used for interior decorations, and the staterooms thrnselve for store houses. There is one stateroom which has been left just where it was when the old river boat made her last trip. Money cannot buy it from the junk man. The pleasant memories of his hon eymoon still linger with it. From one end of the craft to the oth er it is the only spot which will not feel the sharp edge of the wreckers' tools. With the exception of that part of the Drew which has been used 1 the junkman himself in the construction of living quarters for his men and a combination office and storehouse, in the heart of the town, ail the material has been sold at a good price. An elderly widow is the proud owner of a comfortable home made entirely from the Drew. Her dog and chickens are also snugly housed within a portion of the resur rected craft. So extraragant were the builder of the boat in the selection of materials used for her construction that carpen ters and decorators of the town have purchased almost the entire super structure, although it is as yet not more than half dismantled. In the building trade there is a de mand for "Drew timber" and among decorators a call for "Drew trim mings." The foregoing is the spirit of th Drew- made manifest in Perth Amboy. It is not confined there alone, how ever, for all over the country there is a demand for some part of her con struction. The giant part of her engines have already gone to the steel works of Pennsylvania and Connecticut to be fa.hinoed into car wheels, axles and building material. NEGRO A SMALL EATER. Whn Wsll and Hularlr rd the lllaak Wan Hat Lm Than th Whit Man. "There is a very popular, but rery erroneous belief that the negro is a heartier eater than the white man," said an observant citizen, according t) the New Orleans Times-Democrat, "but after some little observation 1 have come to the conclusion that the negro is really a much smaller eater than a white man. My atten was called to the matter some ' -o St-natr sissipj)., Hun i.ked me if 1 had no ticed the fact that negroes, as a rule, when well fed, and when they could g.t their meals regularly, ate less than white 111011. 1 frankly confessed hat 1 had noticed no such thing, and .-aid further that I did not believe it was so. Of course, my conclusion was merely a hasty generalization, and was due mainly to the popular belief. My interest in the matter, was roused by the rather lirm state ment made by the, Mississippi states maw, and so I made a series of ob servations, the results of which have been a revelation, for they have up set the opinions of a lifetime. I am now in a position to assert that if the negro id well and regularly fed he will eat at least a third less than a white man." VENTILATION IN THE HAT. Good for tfhe Hair and Add Not a Little to the On in fort of the Heud. "Some customers have nonsensical notions about the proper way to venti iate a hat," said a fashionable hatter, to a New York Times man. "In fact, they are so whimsical about it that we make the hats without a ventilator and try to suit the wishes of the cus tomer after he has handed his money to the salesman. Many customers will not have a hat ventilated at all. Well, they miss a great deal of comfort and take long chances for baldness in old age. The English style, and the only one that some buyers will adopt, is a ring of perforated holes in the crown of the hat. In my opinion, it is just as well to have no ventilator at all as to put it there. The best way is to have two hole, one on each side of the hat, just above the band. Then you get good circulation all the time. There are ways of punching the holes artis tically so that, they do not detract from the appearance of the hat. Put you would be surprised at the number of men who will not have them, some be cause it is not fashionable, and" others because they think the hat will not wear so well." Gnnbnat on tJie Ohio. Gunboats were common on the Mis sissippi river forty years ago. In recent years the river has seldom floated ships of the navy. Conse quently, when the monitor Arkansas, one of the newest ships of its class, steamed up the river recently on its way to St. Louis, it attracted much at tention. It astonished and delighted the people of Evansville, Ind., by mak ing an excursion up the Ohio as far as that city, for not since the civil war had any ship of the navy touched at that port. Both the Mississippi and the Ohio are deep enough to float a much larger vessel than the Arkansas. MUSCLES IN TENSION. Are th Ons That Tlr Soontit Al though Dolnif Mo Work at the Tim. The Rerue Scientiflque has ben ask ing what muscles tire soonest, with the conclusion that it is not the musclas in use, but those under tension, al though doing no work. The writer urges us to use the arms and legs less and the back and neck more, for on them comes the greatest strain. He has been asking men of all occupations the same questions: When you have worked much where lo you feel tired? Before you were trained, did fatigue show itself in the same regions? All the answers point to the same conclusions. The baker who kneads dough all night complains of fatigue in his legs. The blacksmith is tired, not In his arms and saouldcr3, but In his back and loins. The young soldier after a march, is especially tired in the back of his neck, cvn if he has carried no knapsack. The oarsman who is fn perfect train ing, after prolonged exercise gets tired in his calves and instepa. These facts point to the conclusion that In any continued effort we should try to alter the habit of contraction. That is to say, the body, like the mind, needs change of work. WHAT OLD AGE IS LIKE. AVIttr Definition by an Affd Frnh mnn Respect in Whleh It Most Differs from Youth. The noted French advocate, Maltre Labori. who defended Dreyfus and re cently the Humberts, Is noted in Paris more for his polish and neatness of his speeches than for his eloquence. An American journalist who heard Labor! in court one day says the ad vocate's address was full of grace, wit, tenderness. He quotes a passage relat ing to old age, wherein 1' rdl, with a smile, said: "Old age we shall none of us quite understand that until we have attain ed to it for no one. of us here is old. But the other day I Tisited my uncle, a very aged man. 'What is it like, uncle?' I said, 'to be old?' "And my uncle answered: " 'It's like this: When one Is young one's polite attentions to women are taken for declarations of love, but when one is old one's declarations of love are faVen for rf-'-- -tfPT. - la -a "w m a TI10 Kind You Have Always in uso for over 30 years, and -V-2- sonal supervision since its infancy f'tktCLtM Allnitr iwi mm r lono!vft vnil ill this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-as-good" are hut Experiments that triilo with and endanger tho health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ago is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS 7 Bears tbe The Kind You Have Always Bought in Use For Over 30 Years. THC CENTAUR COMPANY, TT MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY. lt, irY,-- Pirst Rational ank OF HEPPNER. O. A. RHEA. T. A. RHEA. President .Vio-Preeident Transact a General EXCHANGE ON ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD BOUGHT AND SOLD '7, f Collections made on all polntson reasonable terma. Surplus and undivided profits J35.000. Itedured Passenger Kates. The 0. R. & N. Co. will make the fol lowing low rates to the following places : Baptist Young People's Union ot America, International Convention, De troit, Mich, July 7-10; Annual Meeting Graml Lodge Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, Cincinnati, Ohio, July 23-28; Imperial Council Ancient Arabic Order of Mystic Shrine, Atlantic City, N. J., July 13-15; National Encamp ment Grand Army of the Republic, Boston, Mass., August 15 20; Knights of Pythias National Encampment, Lou isville, Ky., August 15, 1904. The following rates are from Ileppner. To Detroit, Mich., and return, $73.90; to Cincinnati, Ohio, and return, $71.65 ; to Atlantic City. N. J., and return, 885.65; to Boston, Mass., and return, $86.95; to Louisville, Ky., and return, $70 65. For further information as to dates of sale, stopover privileges, etc, call on or addresH J. B. Huddelston, Local Agent, Ileppner, Oregon. A Business Proposition. If you are going East, a careful selec tion of your route is essential to the en joyment of your trip. If it is a busin ess trip, time is the main consideration : if a pleasure trip, scenery and the con veniences and comforts of a modern railroad. Why not combine all by us ing the ILLINOIS CENTRAL, the up-to-date road, running two Ttraina daily from St. Paul and Minneapolis, snd from Omaha to Chicago. Free Reclin intr chair cars, the famous Buffet Li brary smoking cars, all trains vestibuled In short, thoroughly modern through out. All tickets reading via the Illinois Central will be honored on these trains and no extra fare charged. Our rates are the same as those of in ferior roads why not net your money's worth ? Write for full particulars. B. TRUMBULL, Commercial Asent, Portland, Oregon. J. C. LINDSEY, T. F. & P. A.. Portland, Oregon. PAUL B. THOMPSON, F. A P. A., Seattle, Wash. "nAi JU-tnM Bought, and which has hecn. has home tho signature of has been made under his pcr- Signature of O. W. CONSER Cashier E. L. FREELAND. .Assistant Cashier Bankinq Business. THE mmmm ROUTE Through personally conducted Tourist sleeping cars between Portland and Chi cago once a week, and between Ogden and Chicago three times a week, via tbe Scenic Line. Through standard KleepinKcaMdaily between Opden and Chicago via the Scenic Line. Through standard sleeping cars daily between Colorado Springs and St. Louis. Through standard and tourist sleeping cars daily between Han Francisco and Chicago via Los Angeles and El Paso. Through standard sleeping cars and chair cars daily between Kt. Paul and Chicago. Be sure to see that your ticket reads via th Great Rock Island Route The bet and most reasonable dining car ser vice. Middav lunch 50 cents. For rates, folders and descriptive literature write to L. B.GORHAM GEO. W. BAINTER. GENERAL AGENT. TRAY. PASS. AST. 250 Alder St.Portland, Ore. IJefore You Order Tombstones, Marble or Granite Work You will do well to see Monterastelli Brothers and get prices. Thej Lave a fine stock on hand. JIAI STHEKT, HKPPXEK, ORE. If yoa take tnia paper and The Weekly Oreg-onlan you won't bave to beg your news.