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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (March 30, 1905)
Th crown of womanhood i9 motherhood. But s';.-ffy lies the Lead that wears the crown or anticipates this coronation, when thv is a lack of womanly strength to bear the btndens of maternal dignity and duty. Tin.- reason why so uuny women sink under tlie Mrain of m otherhood is because they are unprepared. "I unhesitatingly advise expectant moth ers to use Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescrip tion, "writes Mrs. J.W. G. Stephens, of Mila, Northumberland Co., Va. The reason for this advice is that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre scription is the best preparative for the maternal function. No matter how healthy and strong a woman may be, she cannot use '' Favorite Prescription " as a prepara tive for mnternity without gain of health and comfort. But it is the women who are not strong who best appreciate the great benefits received from the use of "Favorite 1 i-sciij;tioti." For one thing its use makes the baby's advent practically painless. It has in many cases reduced day of suffer ing to a few brief hours. It has changed the period of anxiety and struggle into a time of ease and comfort. The proprietors and makers of Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription now feel fully warranted in offering to pay $500 for any case of I.eucorrhca, Female Weakness, rrolapsus, or Falling of Womb, which they cannot cure. All the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors, of Buf falo, N. Y., ask is a fair and reasonable trial of their means of cure. Que or Graveyard. A steamship filled with bones ar rived at Mew York. The bones were rha Ri.-piptnns of cattle gathered on tuts feioai plains of South America. They are shipped here to ba ground Into fertilizers. The longshoremen find in nearly every cargo a human bone all that Is left of some poor fel low who died on '.he plains. They are responsible for a queer little grave yard near the ffcitilizinK plant. The workmen have strict orders never to grind up a human bone. It is taken out to a little fenced graveyard and buried. Many "of the graves are not more than two feet long, but they ara as carefully covered as though they contained entire skeletons. N. Y. Times. It Mnkea a I)lf?eru. "Jenkins is a queer duck." "What's he done now?" "Why. last night he fretted and fumed, and finally slanged, because his wife took three minutes to dress for a car ride out to the park, and last week he sat in an open boat in tbe hot, broiling sun from two o'clock until six without getting a bite, and enjoyed it." Raltimore Newt. araa la Par la. A recent arrest of an aged vagrant led to some interesting revelations in regard to an association of beggars which has its headquarters in the Sor bonne district of Paris. The members are fairly numerous and the leading spirit is a man uf education who has been reduced to beggary by drink and gambling. Every morning a meeting is hold a.:;l the operation ? of the day planned out. Sone members are sent so utifi iu the lieh quarter of the r.fl.prs o the Plaint ill others are sent on Chai.iiij Llj ;:, Monteau, while s special liii-.-iuns t;.U: udiy poopie, v .;:: -;; letters. In - . ..!" n.oct again and the s-'olls rue c ; i l!r divided, the usual daily share of wh member being from live to Fix d ;l'.ar3. The Vine Ti.i- vh. ;, decide.: to f... ami Ita Products. u:: ts of Zurich have . !;C !m and library "u-.i .r.. va wi.:c:i every phase of wine ("i:.ro will b-? rerre.-eiiU-d. One special iciuiu will be books and print , 1 another will err.s!rt of th m : r il , ancient an 1 modorn, used in tl e man.'faciure of wine. Indeed, the museum is to be at once historical, ar tistic at J scientific. THE HABIT i U nt Say OF DREAMING. cuuudiuu Miner round a Monstrous Lump of rreeioun Metal. A prospecting miner returning-, wor ried and disgusted, from an unsuct-essf u 1 season, stumbled across a bowlder so rich in gold that in an instant he is 11 millionaire, says the New York Jour nal. It reads like a fairy tale, but it happens to be true. There is satisfactory evidence of Hie truth of Martin Xeilly's wonderful find. It was on Monday, April 27, that Neiliy was returning- to liossland, 1?. C, after in unsuccessful prospecting1 trip in tbe Salmon river district. He bad reached the Columbia river at a point six mi i s north of Trail Landing-, 15. C. at about noon, and, selecting' a site on the b.tnl of the stream, at the foot of Lookout mountain, sat down to eat his dinner As he. munched his humble food ho noticed a hug-e bowlder, half buried in the sand, in a dry portion of the river bed, not far from where he sat. When he had finished his meal he walked over to the boulder, examining it in a casual manner, and then, as his experienced eye detected signs of the precious metal for whieh he had vainly sought for months, he attacked the great gray mass with his pick, working with feverish energ-y. He almos; swooned when a fragment of rock eanu away, showing- distinctly the traces of gold and copper. "I am rich," he shouted. Then lie proceeded to take specimens of the ore from a dozen places on the bowlder staked, out his claim, hurried into Ross land, arriving late in the afternoon.and recorded the claim. The next day he had his specimens assayed by different experts, who found that the ore ran in value all the way from four to fifty eight dollars to the ton. When he told of his great fortune there was a wild rush to the plae?. A .surveyor accompr.r in ?-riiy to his bonanza, and, after making measure ments, declared that the bowldej weighed approximate!;' 20,000 tons, and that, m round numbers, it will prove to be worth $1,000,000. FOLDING KITES. A Novelty from France That Closes Like an Umbrella. A novelty from Franc is a folding kite. Folded up it looks somewhat like a small rolled-up umbrella ; opened out ready to fly its shape is like that of the kite commonly known as the bow kite. It has a single upright stick, which is .10 inches in length. The bow is formed of two light steel ribs, one on either side of the stick, which are raised into place and bowed into form, as the ribs of an umbrella are raised; there are braces running from the ribs to a metal 1 band which slides on the stick, like the sliding ferrule on the handle of an um brella; when the bow is raised and in place it is held there by turning a little metal button attached to the kilo .-ttit-i: under the band to which tbe braces are attached. As the ribs are raised their inner ends, where they meet at the stick, near the top, bow up into a light metal holder which projects slightly on either side of the stick and wh'ch holds the two parts of the bow in line. The kite is covered with light muslin; they are used in covering the kites muslins of various colors, so that some of the kites are red, some blue, and so on. The tail is of .string with little parti-colored bunches of muslin cut tings attached along its length, as lit tle bunches of pn per are sometimes at tached to string kite tails; at the end there Ls a little bag in which may be placed a marble or other weight, i 1 more ballast is required, in a high wind. A tornado which swept through the southern part of Randolph county, Alabama, killed eight per sjup, wounJfd many and destroyed a great deal ot property. The native police of India (with gerai-military functions,) number 150,000 men, of whom only 50,000 cirry arms. It is officered entire ly by whites. At Huntington, W. Va., B. F. Keeny, a wealthy bachelor, about to go on the operating table for appendicitis, married Miss Stella Wileon in the operating room, so she would inherit his property in the event of his death. He died on the table and Mrs. Keeny falls heir to his large estate. Medford will be the first town in Southern Oregon to secure a branch road. The construction of a road 3 miles in length, leading from this ci y to the great timber be't on tbe Upp r Rogue River, has been practically as sured by tbe subscription to $25,000 worth in the Medford & Crater Lake Railroad, made ud by tbe citizens of Medford during the past week. It Saved His Leg. P. A. Danforth of LaGrange, Oa. suffered for six month9 with a frigbtfu runnicc sore on hi! lee: bat writes that Buoklen'n Armoa Salve wholly oared it in five days. For Ulcers, Wounds, Piles, it's the beet salve in the world. Care guaranteed. Only 25ots SoU by Slacam Drag Co., Druggists. All Editor's Opinion of tbe Royal Gorge. Edyth Tozier Weatberred, in de scribing a recent trip over the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad, says in "Tbe Exposition" : "At last the goal of the ambition of i i -1 years has Deen reacneu marvelous, wonderful, grand and inspiring Royal Gorge is on either hand. The only dis appointing thing U you only have one pair of eyes, while the train darts in and out of the tiemendoas chasm. It any who h ve never seen it are wondering bow it looks just go and Bee. Thous ands have tried to describe it, yet every attempt falls short f givingthe subject ustice." If you contemplate a trip East, wrie W. C. McBride, 124 Third street, Port land, Oie., for booklets picturing Colo rado's famous scenery, and any other nformation you may desire. 88. YOUNG SCHOOL-TEACHER. Ia Onlr Thirteen Years Gift and Haa Larruped I'ayll Who Wu Twice 111m Weight. It Is an Indication of In- anltj. The fullest examination into the na ture and origin of dreams has been made l.y M. Monau, the French scientist. He divides dreams into the dreams of h-.a!ii and t.he reams that are the re sult of the diseased state of the mind Tr body. In regard to the latter it need lily be remarked that persistent drtam iig is one of the most invariable symp toms of insanity, and it is a psycholog ical fact if genius is near allied to mad m : x, .T'Tilus i:.'!-t be expected to dream more than ordinary men. With regard to the dreams of health, tLey arc the re sult of an imperfect state of conscious ness or an imjjcrfeet state of sleep, ac cording as we look at it. It is o jvious that the mind of the clever man, that is constantly occupied with many schemes mid thoughts, is more liable to be awake w hen his body is asleep than that of the Milliard, whose mind ia often asleep when his bdy is awake. Thus the leep of the plow boy has become pro verbial on account of its undisturbed nature. In most cases a man of lively imagination aod quick brain is undoubt ey more iiabie to dream than the j dullard. The youngest pedagogue in Missouri, and perhaps in the United States, is teaching a country school near Gaines ville, in the Ozark mcuntairiS. He is Glenn Harrison, aed 13 years, says the Kansas City Journal. Glenn is the old est son of Guy T. Harrison, a lawyer. He completed the course of study of the Gainesville pubu; schools in March, 1902. The same month he took the ex amination given candidates for third grade teachers' certificates in Ozark county, making a good average and se curing a ciuu(.d.c. lit continued to study, and just after he Lciame 13 years old he took the txaminvJon for a sec ond grade certificate. This time his av erage grade was the highest made, being 96 per cent. Mr. Harrison bclievtd his promising son was too jouDg to teach, and refused to let hhn accept several offers. But one day when hie lather was absent attending court, Gknn took the job of teacher of a rural district, the di rectors of which came and offered him the place. He began work before his father returned, and the latter, finding him so ambitious, decided not to inter fere. Glenn now haa 29 pupils. The ma jority are larger and older than he, hot he maintains a degree of discipline which many older and more experienced teach ers may well envy. "How are you get ting along, Glenn?" aaktd bit mother one day, when he came home at the end of a week's work. "I had to whip sev eral of the boys," the youngster replied. It turned out that among others he had larruped an obstreperous youth that weighed 180 pounds. Glenn doesn't weigh much more than half that State of Ohio, County ot Toledo j Lucas uouncy, Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he 1 senior partner of the firm of F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business In the city of Toledo, county and state aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of catarrh that caunot be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Frank J. Cheney, Sorn to before me and subscribed in my presence this tith dciy of December, A. D IsSG skal A. W. Glrason. Notary Public. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, ami ci'tR directly on t!.? blood and mucous surface? oi the system. s?t" 1 for tes'-lmonials free. F I. !iiSKV & Co., Toledo, O Sold by all dnu' 'sts, 7"ic. Take iiall's -."mil y Fills for Constipation. 3 m a a ; The Kind You Ilavo Always Bought, and which has been, in uso for over 30 years, has borno the signature of and has been made under his per- - yg. sonal supervision since its infancy. ' ' Aiiow no one to aeccive you in tnis. All Counterfeits, Imitations and Just-as-good ' are but Experiments that triilo with and endanger the 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 Fevcrisliness. 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 Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. TMC eKNTAUR COMPANY. TT MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK OfTV. 0! i ATIONAL HANK OF HEPPNER. U. A. RHEA ProRidett T. A. RHEA Vio President Cbsbier E. L. FliKELAN.l. .AHeiHtbnt Caebier Transact a General Bankinq Business. paid on Time Deposits. Four per cent. EXCHANGE ON ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD BOUunT AND SOLD Collection! made on all pomteon reasonable term. Surplus and undivided profits 135,000. .J: Jcvi.1 flr Attention T r armc We are prepared to furnish the tanners FORMALDEHYDE For the prevention of .smut in wheat. It is cheaper, more effect ive, and much easier used than blue vitriol. Call at our store and get literature and di rections how to use it. Price 50 cents a pint. HOTEL HEPPNER, OREGON Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel MODERN CONVENIENCES ELECTRIC LIGHTED . . . Dilfr New M-riMKfiuptit. Thoroughly RuovHtt-u aiid Refiil Ud. Rret iViecif iu Uo Cty. Flili. METSITC, Jr., l'rop. io cts. a copy $1.00 a year SloGuin Drug Go RELIABLE is " the cleanest, most stimulating, meatiest general maga zine for the family," says one of the million who read it every month. It is without question The Best at any Price 99 Great features are promised for next year six or more wholesome interesting short stories in every number, continued stories, beautiful pictures in colors, and articles by such famous writers as Ida M. Tarbell, Lincoln Steffens, Ray Stannard Baker, John La Farge, William Allen White, and Charles Wagner. Get all of it right into your home by taking advantage of this Special Offer Senfl $1.00 before January 31, 1905, for a subscription for the year 1905 and we will send you free the November and December numbers of 1904 fourteen months for $1.00 or the price of twelve. Address McCLURE'S. 48-59 East 23d Street, New York City. Write for agents' terms. ! HEPPNER GAZETTE $1 A YEAR