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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 21, 1904)
1 H ow About Printing? The Gazette office was never better equipped for Artistic Job Printing than it is to day, having just received a large supply of NEW AND UP-TO-DATE TYPE which added to our already complete office, makes it one of the best shops in Eastern Oregon. Do you need LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS or ENVELOPES. If you do now is the time and the Gazette is the place to htive it done. Can supply you with anything in the CATALOGUE OR POSTER LINE In fact we are prepared to turn out any job from a small card to a full sheet poster, and you can have col ored work if you prefer it. If you do not believe it, try us. Make a specialty of PRINTING BRIEFS Perhaps you are in need of some legal or land blanks, which we always carry in stock. Send for catalogue. We have a complete line of both LEGAL AND LAND BLANKS Come in and examine our line of cards and wedding stationery. THE GAZETTE HEPPNER, OREGON a Gazette, $1 per Year Bead the Gazette's Clubbing list QBOSHE IIS & ZOLLINGER Have just opened pew saloon at the oomerof Eain and May streets. Finest Liquors and Cigars Pendleton Beer on Draught Hot and Cold Lunches Heppner, Or. norm REAL ESTATE BARGAINS Offered by Whiteis & Patterson 4 Real Estate Dealers. MANY RARE OFFERS MADE IVatcli This Space Each Week, aa Many Ranches Will bo Listed Here. 1120 acres, part good farm land, rest fine grazing land. One fine seven room house, three houses for tenants, good barn and out buildings, fine orchard, 700 acres government land fenced, nine miles fr oid Hamilton. About 40 acres of good timber on land. $7.00 per acre. Easy payment. 640 acres, good houses and barns, finely watered, 200 acres meadow land, timber on the land will more than half pay for it, adjacent to outside range, fine ranch for some ons at a reasonable price. Five miles from Lone Rock. 200 acres l)a miles from Lexington. A snap for a short time. 1120 acres 3 mies from Lexington, fine wheat ranch, nearlv all under cultivation, some improvements. Will be sold on reasonable terms. 640 acres 2 miles from Heppner, fine wheat' ranch, plenty of good spring water, all under good 3 wire fence and cross fenoes. Will re sold at a bargain. 1210 acres, 800 acres plow land, 3 dwelling houses, large barn just com pleted, all of 300 acres can be irrigated, all under good 3 wire fence, adjacent to g)vernment range, fine tock ranch. Snap. 320 acres, wheat land. 260 nereu nnrW cultivation, all under good two wire tence. l'nco fAK)0. This is a oargain. V e have a number of good houses and lots in Heppner for sale very cheap. JUST STARTED . . . rennan. Practical Horseshoer Entire Attention deyoted to Horse shoeing. No other work. SPECIAL SESSION OVER BUG. Lower Main street next to Mead ows' Livery Barn. i.J a fell w - -Hfc 1 i'VSA THE SCENIC LINE TO THE EAST AND SOUTH Through Salt Lake City, Lead yille, Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Denver Offers the choice of three routes through the famous Rocky Mountain seenry, and five Distinct Koutes East and South of Denver. 3 Asy TKAlVs IH II. V... Between Ogden and Denver, carrying all classes of modern equipment. Perfect Dining Car Service and Personally Conducted Tourist Excursions to all Points. Stop Overt Allowed ON ALL CLASSES Of TICKETS For all information anil illustrated literature call on or address "VV. C. MoIJHIDE, Gn.NKBAL Ar.F.XT 142 Third St. PORTLAND ORE LffUlatar of Loalta.ma Call4 to the Doll Wowrll. A little bug, almost too small for Indi vidual notice, is taking up the time of several great states, and has even caused the Indiana legislature to be called Into special session. This Kttle boll weevil, says the Baltimore Sun, seenia a very small matter to the people of the coun try at larpe, but to cotton growers Its coming is fraught with prodigious evil. For years it has been the boast of Tex as that she could raise cotton enough to supply t'.-.e world, end s?' '.::d rvpear to Lv: satlsPM with rr:-.i"c abruf a third of all the American staple. But this lit tle weevil crawled across the border from Mexico and has swept the cotton fields like a pestilence. Each year the domain of the weevil is spreading, and Us kind is multiplying by billions. No i-ffectivp means ha yet been found to chock the spread of the pest, and the en tire cotton belt is alarmed. The Louisiana special commission has recommended to the legislature that a non-cotton growing belt be created between that state and Texas, by which it is expected to starve out the weevil and stay its further progress northward. Already the loss by this insect is prob ably $25,000,000, and experts of the na tional and state government are doing everything in their power to devise some means to check this Texas terror. LIFE ON OTHER PLANETS. All tbe Progrfu of Selanee Um Mot Drouifht 17 Any Knowi- tie of it. Upon the question whethr life-bearing planets can exist in other solar sys tems than our own the answer of science is clear and distinct, says Prof. Maun der, in Knowledge. It is precisely the same with Prof. Newcomb recently gave concerning the possible inhab itants of Mars: "The reader knows just as much of the subject as I do, and that is nothing at aa. ' Within our solar system we can indeed fcrm come crude estimate of probabilities; beyond it; nothing. All the amazing progress of modern science, all the revelations made by the spectroscope or by photography, all the advance in biology have not brought us one step nearer an answer to the question, "la this the only in habited world?" We stand essentially where Whewell and Brewster did half a century ago, or we might indeed say where Galileo and Capoano were 300 years ago. We can indeed spin out the discussion at greater length than our predecessors, and can introduce a fax larger number of more or less irrelevant facts, but of serious argument, either for or against, we are entirely destitute. Temperature and Llf. The range of temperature suited to terrestrial life is comparatively narrow. All vital actions are suspended tempo rarily, some permanently, if subjected to a temperature near the freezing point; while the highest that most organisms can bear somewhere between 95 de grees and 113 degrees Fahrenheit. Only the spores of certain bacteria can sur vive boiling. It is, therefore, probable that if the general temperature of the earth's surface rose or fell 40 degrees is small, amount relatively), the whole course of life would be changed, even perchance to extinction. DISTRIBUTE DISEASE Street Cars as Disseminata of In fectious Maladies. i Vitiated Air and HxpeotiKratLoaa Ucn dr Theae (Vrovfranp Fruit ful Source of Ctlop !vm1 of MtrliiM-t KoJea. Tn the larger cities of this country the street cur is as potent a factor in the dissemination of communicable diseases as many of those usually cata logued in the standard works of hy giene. In these large reenters of popu lation the condition is one of an ex cessive number of passengers crowded into a limited number of cars. In some cities this continue throughout the entire day. and in all of them during" the morning and evening hours. Dur ing the period of congested traffic, the ear are crowded to the limit, every seat being occupied, and the aisles and rear platforms literally packed with all classes of our variegated popula tion, says the Interstate MediealJour nal. The ventilation of thee ears is in ferior, both on account of inattention to this important matter on the part of the builders of this class of rolling Mock, and also because the pasenger differ so widely as to the proper tem perature ami circulation nece&sary to their comfort. Tuberculosis is undoubtedly propa gated through the medium of these ears, which become infected by the promiscuous expectoration indulged in by nTsnnintives, mt w ithf tanding notices of w:rninr. H.mnmn, of Cleve land, recently examined 2. specimens of sputum found in street cars (15 from the interiors and ten from the rear plat form ) : the t uherele bacillus m nrr "a ;'-- in-fTcre. Other ?! and the bacillus influenzae. These conditions, the person-to-per son contract, and the breathing of vitiated nir frequently laden with contagious exhalations and with dust from dried sputum, nre most favora ble to the distribution of contagions diseases. Of course, it is only prob lematical as to the number of small pox cpses vv.hich were infected through these conditions during the reeenf epidemic, but it is certain that hut few better ormor! unit ies of in fection are offered than through the street-car contact of all classes Other transmissible diseases can very easily be, and no doubt are, com-( nmnicatcd in the same way. The solution of this problem is not easy. Street railway companies nre not, inclined to relieve the present situation without compulsion. Health oflicers, however, have authority over the sanitation of these public con veyances. This authority in most municipalities gives sufficient power to prevent undue overcrowding of ears when such prevention wolild be for the protection of public health. When necessary, as in times of a general epidemic, such authority should be exercised. ITnder all cir cumstances regular disinfection of street cars should be practiced in an efficient manner. In this way the cars can be made biologically clean, and the health of the community bet ter protected. There is just-as much occasion for this procedure as there is for the disinfection of Pullman cars, now energetically practiced at different points. Investigation has developed the fact that there is but one city in the country, PhiladeN phi a, where any pretense is made of disinfection of street cars. The Union Traction company of that city disinfects its cars with carbolic acid. This possibly answers for the killing of bacterial life on the floors and walls of the cars, but does no good for the contaminated places w.here dust has settled, and which nothing" but a gaseous agent would reach. 11 r n In WorkliiK In Delirium. Medical records in the various hos pitals show that though quite forget ful of recent happenings, aged persona recall long-past events in correct or der, and even live again amid scenes passed utterly out of recollection be fore the disease of senility appeared.. A woman of 70. delirious from pleuro pneumonia, repeated poetry in Hin dustani. It developed later on that up to the age of four she knew only that language, but afterward had for gotten even that she ever spoke it. Another peculiar case on record ia that of an illiterate maid servant who, while in the delirium of fever, recited Greek and Hebrew for hours, although when in health she knew no word of either language, her ravings being due to the brain impressions left by the readings heard many years before ol a learned rabbi whose servant she had" been. Driven to Despetation. Living at Bn out of the way place, re mote from civilization, a family is often driven to desperation in esse of accident resulting in Burns, Cuts, Wounds, UI oere; etc. Lay in a supply of Backlen's Arnica Halve. It's the best on earth. 25c at Slocum's Drug Store. local ih.icki:ts. Heppner Quotation on Slupleir llouglit and Sold Here. RETAIL GROCERY PRICES. COFFEE Mocha and Java, best 40c per pound ; next grade, 35c per pound ; package coffee, Lion andArbuckle, tV packages for $1. RICE Best head rice 10c per pound ; next grade 8 cents per pound. SUGAR Cane granulated, best $6 W per sack ; do 13 pounds $1 . SALT Coarse 75cper 100; 40c fttl pounds. FLOUR $4 25$5 00 per barrel. BACON 150 ISc per pound. HAMS 1017c per pound. COAL OIL $1 o5(?$l 75 for 5 gal lons ; $3 50 per case. vkqetari.es. POTATOES 34c p r pound. CABBAGE 1 c per pound. ONIONS 2c per pound. FRirrs. BANANAS 40c per dozen. LEMONS 30c per dozen. ORANGES 40c Q? 50c per dozen. LIVESTOCK AND POfLTRY. Trices paid by dealer to the producer. CHICKENS $3 50 per dozen. BUTTER ranch, 40 and 50c per roll. BEEF CATTLE, ETC. COWS $2 50(af J per hundred. S1SEKS $3&3 50 per hundrel. HOGS Live, 5c;dressed, 6lc pounds VEAL Dressed, tic per pound. SHEEP $1 5U$2 50. HAY AND FEED. CHOPPED BAHLEY J27 5!) per ton