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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 1, 1904)
tiik WOOL SITUATION. CSrcut 81.ortfr Threaten, the SUtstcrn Will. "Dlainondfleld Jack" Kcwardcd JTIan who Snved nun. ! -'7 . There is r.o dis v:,v' ' putins the fact that SfiW- man's heart is often reached through the stomach. Harry "e housewife who can K her husband's appetite with well cooked food for the table Many a man is crouohv, ti-ilv. nervous, suflennjr. from dis tress after eating, heart palpitation, and all throuuh the overworked stomach. IJr Pi-roe's Golden Medical Discovery, which helps the digestion of food in the stoni ich assists the blood in taking up the proper elements from the food, helps the liver into iieii njr, -'-'.- --- the poisons in the blood and vitalizing the whole svstetn. This assimilation helps in the ovi .'ion of the red blood corpuscles, the iim-.ms in the system are eliminated, the heait gets the right kind of blood and the V' n 'feels invigorated and stronger in con l'unce. As a tissue builder it is far me,, nib e to cod liver oil or any alco holic eoiiimmnds or tonics, because it gives the blood and the tissues the food elements thev n quire and maintains a person 8 nutrition bv enabling him to eat, retain, det and' assimilate nutritious food. It overcomes the gastric irritability and evmrt ; of indigestion. Because of Uie good t t .'om using Dr. Pierce's Golden M -die Discovery upon nutrition and the buildi ' no of the tissues, catarrh, con sumpti om, weakness or debility and symp toms f fever, night-sweats, headache, etc., cii Mpear. t-I be' -vp that it is generally conceaeq in Golden Medical uiscovery vp ibr a man to take suffering from i-Miiey trouble, or any of the afliic t'rom overwork or neglecting a 'Insscll Hill, of 332 Barrie Street, rio. Recording Secretary Impe - Federation Learue of Kingston. Br. Pi best r. hvli" tiou colli. Kin -4: rial 'K;. 1 ha vi few y me in: acid iii ,.o OF THE CENTURY. J CtlCI 1 nun V - - -t 4 a Hnnn T" t n TiRSt iid have always found that it gave relief. It expels excessive uric - tern due to improper digestion, relieve- Hie kidneys from congestion, tlnvei headai and baefcacne away, luuui-trs iK.. nd tout - un the general system. I consider it . fi,1P Tt! : ('. v for young or old men, sure to build up a ruii-down condition of the system." T.- Wonderful Career of the Great Trotter Dexter. JSr. Jonas Hawkins, of Oranpre coun ty, obtained from a strolling1 gypsy 'buncl a brown mare, 15.2 hands, witdi four white feet. lie used her, snys Scribner's Magazine, for a family nag. ; and by Seeley's American Star got a black filly, foaled in 184S, which was named Clara. The filly became the proierty of his son, Jonathan Haw kins, and she grew into a mare of 14.3 hands. She had a star, snip and three white fet, and was driven pretty hard on the country roads by her young mas ter. In 1S57, by Uysdvk's Ilamble tonian, sdie had the paragon, Dexter. The brown gelding, with blaze and four white feet, was purchased by Mr. George B. Alley, for $400, and he subse quently became the property of Mr. A. F Fawcett. Dexter, under the tutor ship of L'iram Woodruff, made his first public appearance at Fashion Course, May 4, 1SG4. He met and defeated, dur-ing-'his short but brilliant turf career, such horses as Cen. Butler, Georjre M. ratclneii, Jr.. Lady Thome and Gold smith Maid, and he probably was in the cnjovmeiit of more world-wide fame than any horse foaled on Amer ican soil, lie brought Budd Doble into pnblic notice, and the sight of tlu? ...ka.foi in.iir.Tio- comixitr with tre- HUl u-iuwvm r . a 1 .r.finnc -f itmp flown lUtlWlUUC iv. - inspired the loftiest dreams. The peo ple swung their hats and shouted: "Hurrah for Dexter! Long live the horse of the century l . I VMtle Fire KxtlnnUhe. rf eoBtlT lire extinguishers and hundreds of fire buckets are picked up j..tMiJ overv year by the agents . anu u"uw - . - ,, of the insurance patrol. They are all rendered worthless by neglect. Acids w.i. ,r into the formulae of most oatent extinguishers eat away the tin eoverlngs, and there Is nothing to be ' - tn rlpetrov the apparatus. because It becomes a peril In Itself. The water buckets, which should be emptied nd refilled at least once a week, simply S.t out and become usekss.-Phlladel-phla Press. The Term 'IMinket." Blanket bears the name of Thomas r; -.nket, a famous English clothier who d the introduction oi wuuieu. - a1 i.md In the fourteenth century i - On Hncp nf Aver's Cherry Pectoral at bedtime prevents night coughs of children. No croup. No bronchitis. A Cherry Pectoral doctor's medicine for all affections of the throat, bron chial tubes, and lungs. Sold for over 60 years. I hve nted Ayer'i Cherry Pectoral Jn my famlW fore.Kl.t yean. There Is no J " . drtn. aius. . . " 2Sc.. 50c., ?1 W. All 1rngg'" T.owll. M for Niht Coughs KX71i7o bowels cotn with ene of The extraordinary wool situation in the East ie s 'n med 1 !-v by U,e Sl.ephoid's Bulietia of Iio-ton, as fol- lows : The situafmn in a most re- !a.kV,l one, being seldom if ever be f re paralleled in th l''-t ry of the t .e. The den, and has ronlinned c Hvefor.oWatime, and this year's .Mr-have ben taken ho freely by large ,...-n.i,rrs that there remains now in rh aboard market but a small per rentage of t e sto.-k usually on band at tl.i tim of the year. Tn Uo.t. there is less wool in the Boston market today than is usually f'.und there at the beginning of rebru dication of a a--y. mere i" vWrv lartre consumption of wool during n.A nx mx months, as the mills are -,iovinK eeneraily a good bu-iness. and the prospects a-e that there will be an excellent heavy-weight season tor tne maniifacturerB as the result of the clean in,: up of the stocks in the hands of the trade caused by the exceptionally cold wither experienced last winter. With a large consumption of wool facing the trade, and with Buppliea re duced to such low limits, there is in creased anxiety as to where they are to obtain sufficient stock to meet the wants of their usual customers. The buying of the past few months has been mostly by the large consum ers, and while the wants of the Utter mu8t.be, by this time, pretty well sup plied, the fact that a number of them are still in the market looking for desir- 11 able selections, and that the smaner concerns have not yet by any means supplied their wants, renders it pretty certain in the minds of the wool mer chants that they will be "down to bare boards" before the clip of next year be comes available, and that to meet the needs of this country it will be neces sary to import large quantities of foreign wo 1. Bat it is not easy to secure large and desirable selections abroad except at continuously advancing prices. This i especially true of coarse wools, which haye enjoyed the best demand for the past two years. Seldom have foreign markets been so well cleaned up as they are at present, the war in the East having stimulated a demand for many Tines of wool which are usually available for export to this country. The situation, in fact, in creases Bt adily in strength as the weeks pass by, and hollers of what wool remains here are reluctant sellers except a advanced prices. It is perfectly natural, therefore, that there should have been more or less suppressed excitement in tbe wo-1 trade the past werk, and that in their desire to make suitable provisions for future wantB, some wool men k!ioj d have yielded to the temptation to con tract for the 1905 clip. This has been done to some extent in Idaho and Utah a wed as in Oregon and Ionian. Never before, at such an ear y date, has the attempt been made to c ntrect for wools of the fo'- lovunij season, and it is, perhaps, need l:ss to state that tluso contract have in a number of cases berU made at very iigh prices. The coLBervative members of tie trade, however, regret this tendency, a it indicates to their minds the increaee of a epeculatiVJ spirit, which, if con tinued, may r suit in a pcramble for the clip of r,i xt year, even before i' i- off fbe sheep's bark. It is, cf course, absolutely iroposrible to determine what the character of the next year's clip will be whether it will be we'I grown or short, whether of strong or weak staple, whether oi beavy shrinkage or light shrinkage, whether 1-uger or smaller in quantity; and to contract for next year's woil un der these conditions comes about as near being a gamble as any business operation in which a merchant can iu-dulge. Mitchell in Washington. i r il J S.lt l.nk. N,.v. 24 "Uiamonanem JacV'navm. the central figure in one of the most remarkable criminal cases on record, hts given the man who drew hi death warrant at A'binn, Idaho, six L I.h T ... 1 tl Of years ago, raining pujcko $10,000. Judge O. W. Powers, of Salt Lake, is the recipient of the gift. In 1898 J udge TQ,a arith W. E. Borah, of Idaho. RRRisiel the state in prosecuvux "Diamondfie'd Jack" for murder, se cured a conviction and by order of Judge StockfUger, drew Davis' deah warrant. Afterward, having been convinced of TT Davis innocence, Judge rowers , peared before the Idauo board of pirdons to urtre that Davis be released. This was done, and about two years ago Davis came to Salt Lake penniless. Judge Powers loaned him money enough to get to Tonopah, Nev., and Davis departed with the promise that he would repay the money. Since then Davis has prospered. As ! one of the criminal locators of the fa mous claims at Goldfield and Diamond field, be secured large holdings in the camps, changed his ways of living and is Paid to be a leader of the law and or der element in the mining eection where he resides. Recently Jndge Towers received a letter from the secretary of the Dia mondfield Gold Mining Company in closing 2500 shares of stock, with tbe statement that it was tbe personal gift of Davis. The shooting for which Davis was thrice sentenced to death was a double killing committed in Cassia county, Idaho, in 1896. The legal proceedings ran through six years. The case at one time reached the supreme court of tie Uniteu States and almost attained the proportions of a political issue in Idaho. Washington, Nov. 24.-The Presi dent, after hnld-ng conference now and then with membeis of Congiess from alt parts of the country, thinks the Present time too early to comment on tariff revision in his annual meseaee. It is therefore certainly too s on, indi vidual Senarorn and Representatives think, for them to express opinions favorab'e to viion. Almost to a man thev agree that more light nonet be she! on the question before committing themae'ves to an out and out policy of revinion. - Senator Mitchell, of Oregon, who ar rived today, an ounces that there is no revision eentiment in his stale. As near as he could tell, be thought the Pacific States would p efer letting weli enough alone. rent was used an hour. Derome says the "pain wss horrid t first, but after the first few shocks there was no pain at ail." The boy's physicians give plight hope of the recovery of the u-e of his limbs. Some time ago, another a-t student, naked and hound, was thrown Into a class of female students. Derome's father will piosecute. Call to Livestock Men. Urutaltty In Art institute. San Fra-ciaco, N.v. 25. As the le sult of a brutal hazing by the students at Mark Hopkins Ait Institute, Albeit Derome is para yzed in his lower limbs. Derome, after suffering a terrible beating, was btrapped, bound naked to a metal-aeat(d chair and subjected to an electric current, causing his legs to execute the "rouse'e dance," similar to that applied to dead f.ogs. The cur- IIOBSE BUSTLER UIL,TV. PLEADS Youth Face Penalty to Save Mem ber of firant county " Denver, Nov. 20.-The ca 1 for the an nual meeti-g of the National Livestock Association, in D.-nyer. January 10 to 14 1905, has been isned. Th ciU 8tates that the principal bawnesn of the convention wil be the consideration of a renolufon which wi 1 be proposed by the executive committee for the ap nointment of a committee to evite the consti ution and by-laws of the contti- tU'in. A warm controversy is going on in Klauiath county over the big ditch through Klamath Falls. That it will be a great agency of development is generally ac kr.owledgftd, bat a portion of the people of Klamath Falls think it is being given too great and per manent privileges. A recotrntxea utnorlty-Th Weekly OrtgronUin- NOW IS THE TIME For Your New Fall Suit New Stock for Fall and Winter just in. LOUIS & PLEISS. TAILORS TjtfPPNF.R - - OREGON Read the Gazette's Clubbing list Canyon City, Or., Nov. 25.-The first week of the regular term of Circuit Court in the Ninth Judicial District, George E. Davis, Jud, came to an end today. A special term had been ii -j l- oa-liar tr diSDOSB Of a C VlieU OI1B WBOv oni - part of the unusually lartje amount of business n hand. Judge R bert Aiken, of Baker Cty, had been called to pre side by Judge Davis, who was inter ested as attorney in some of the more important cites prior to election last June. These could not all be cleared from t .e docket at tho special term, and have been continued u.to the tegular term Among the most important of these was the damage fuit brought some time since by the T-cific Livestock Compinv against Kenneth Murray, al leging treHpas". The d hndanfs sheep had been herded on the livebtock com pany'B range in Logan Valley, aud euii was brought to recover 7o0 damage. Trpiurv allowed S5uJ, when the case appeanl. The Supreme Court ordered j it sent back f,.r trial in the lower court. The ja y in the pn sent tetm found for the plaintiff in ti. sum of $165. In the criminal docket, young beorue Eliott, accused of having romm.tt.d larceny by stealing and selling to horses f-oto the r" ' Jwrtheri. ... I Grant, was found guilty. The deft- c- . ant had videntaily been coa. hed by the older and wider members of the. KauK to plead guilty, thus avoiding an investigation that would undoubtedly have involved them in th pame enm He admits being a member of tbe gang of rustlers, that have become unbear able in certain sections of the country. Wtetherauy further investigation will be made is not known, but the biy has nU nf Rha.lv ourchases having been made by persons living near Baker City. 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