-4
The Heppner ,Gazett
Kutublior.P'' March 80, 1H88,
XSSUED THURSDAY MORNING.
Fred Warnook
ate red t the Pottofflre at Heppner Oregon,
econd-clMi matter.
Thursday June 4, 1908
HAKE TIli:4li:ST Of IT.
The majority of the people ol
Morrow county said last Moudaj
By the ballot that they wanted
dfry county.
Wow that the new condition h
radical change from what we hnvt
Seen used to, confronts us let u
aaake the best of it.
Darius the period of reconstruc
JPn or adjustment in becoming
zecotieiled to the new condition
it is very likely that a lack of con
ftJence or uncertainty will have
wee effect upon business iuterests.
Complaint will ouly add to the
burdens.
The prohibition novemnt has
daring the campaign previous to
t&e election, and will for some
tine to come take a prominent
iace iu the public mind.
Nearly all of the counties ad
jninipg Moirorw are dry and we are
a!) iu the same boat. ,
Th8 matter has een discussed
ihejougbly from almost every
sndpoiut and the people have-f
ld plenty of time to think.
The law is hero. Respect and
abeyance of the law is the founda
"Sob of good government.
There is only one' thing to do
aad that is to let common interest
auita us all.
lt us quit howling and work for
ror own interests by working for
-ae-ppaer and Morrow county.
Sheep shearing is now practic
Uy over in Morrow couuty.
Mayor Fains worth aud family,
nd Mrs. L. E. Bisbee went to
Portfand Monday. -
Mrs. Geo. E. Miller is spending
he week at the home of Eben An
Irews near lone.
PLAYS AND.PLAYERS.
"Tom, "Dick aud Harry," wltli a trto
of funnmkera, Bickel, Watson find
Wrothe, nre pleasing big bouses ou th
road.
Henry C. Mortimer baa boeii engaged
to originate a role in "The Lucky MIsa
Dean" at the Madlaon Square theater,
New York.
THE CULT OF SILLNCE.
Tret Intcrovnra DetTreen Concern
lal Spirit la Without Worda.
Now, to keep one's freshness there
ought to bo a zone of silence around
every human being during some part
of every day. It la significant that the
great religions of the world hare come
out of silence and not out of noise, and
Money at 8 Per Cent.
The Dalles, Oreuoo.
NATURE'S CRUELTY.
There is one wet proposition
fiat we can all agree on and tuat
i the rain.
N. A. Kelly Mead.
N. A. Kelly, a well known resi
dent of Morrow couuty, died at the
ifeppner Sanitarium, last Thurs
day. deceased was born in Rutland
County, Vermont, March 23, 1S43.
He- married Emilie Sherman Oct.
2Sv7. To this union was born
a daughter, Ettie, who died in
Heppner iu 1830, and a son, B. B.
Kelly, who survives him. Mr.
XeDy also leaves a wife, three
brothers, and one sister. The Bis
ter 3s in Montana, one brother in
Illinois, one in ' Vermont. The
aLiie? one from Iowa came to Ore
goo and was with him in his last
'freaks of illness.
Mr. Kelly moved to Illiuois after
Jt& was married and afif-r a short
jeeidence there moved to Iowa.
In 1877 he was advised to try the
Oregon climate for asthma. About
leven yet.rs ago the old asthmatic
trouble came on again and he suf
fered greatly with it at times the
jemainder of 1m life. Mr. Kelly
nteied the city hospital March 7,
and a.er a thorough diagnosis was
jooEii to ;u e an internal cancer,
of which he died May 23. His
suSeriLg was intense but he bore
iO all with remarkable endurance
lad patience.
Mr. Kelly was a successful stock
aiser and a man of great hospita'
ity and toda many remember his
Imdness to them when tlev were
in bis home on Willow creek.
The remains vcra laid to res'
iesid-; hi.-- daughter in the Masonic!
leinetery, May "0, 1908.
the Ichneumon Fir Make Its IVaS
oral Enemr Serve Ita Purpose.
The Ichneumon fly of Ceylon Is the
natural enemy of the spider. This In
sect Is green In color, and In form re
sembles a wasp with a marvclously
thin waist It makes Its nest of well
worked clay and then goes on a hunt
ing expedition. Its victims are In
variably spiders of various kinds, but
all are subject to the same mode of
treatment A scientific st(ng Injects
some poison which effectually paralyzes
the luekless spider, which Is then carried
off to the nest and there fastened with
a dab of moist clay. Another and an
other victim is brought to this chamber
of horrors. Then the prescient mother
ichneumon fly proceeds to deposit her
eggs, one in the body of each Bplder,
which can just mve Its legs In a vague,
aimless manner, but can offer no re
sistance. I This done, the fly returns to her work
as a reason. She prepares more clay
and builds up the entrance to this
ghastly cell. Then she commences a
new cell, which she furnishes in like
manner and then closes; then she adds
yet another cell and so proceeds until
ler store of eggs are all provided for,
and, her task In life being-accomplished,
she dies, leaving her evil brood to hatch
at leisure. In due time these horrid lit
tle maggot3 come to life and find them
selves cradled jn a larder of fresh meat
Each poor spider is still alive, and his I
Juices afford nutriment for the ichneu
mon grub till it Is ready to pass in the
chrysalis stage, thence to emerge as a
winged fly fully prepared to carry out
the traditions of its ancestors with re
gard to spiders.
the finest creative work is done, aa a
Henry W. Savago has sold the South rule, in seclusionnot necessarily apart
850,000 to loan on improved farm
atiui". No loan mad for more Mian 40
pe- cent cash value of land. Write for
particulars.
J A 1'UUTHlr " ' - -
Koomn 3 and 4 Odd Fellows Building! tOUr '? "Edmuud Burk. During the
African rights of "The Trlnce of Pll-
en" and "King Dodo" to James Nel
son of Johannesburg.
Joseph Coyuo appears as ou Indian
squaw In a burlesque of "The Squaw
Man," which is one of the features of
"Coming Thro the life."
Chauueey Olcott has resumed his
next three months he will till engage
ments In the principal southern cities.
Joseph Cawthorn will begin rehears
ls-of a new play, "Apartments to
Let" by John J. MeNally, on Jun. 89.
Mr. Cawthorn will appear as a Jan
itor. '
John E. Hensnaw, Agnes Cain Brown
nd other meinbers of "The Sho Uun"
eoinpany were entertained at dinner
In Duluth recently by the Japanese
consul.
The chief sensations that run through
"When the World Sleeps" embrace the
burning mills, the escape from the
county jail, the chase of the fugitive,
the midnight murder and the swin$ for
life.
FACTS FROM FRANCE.
ANTIQUITY OF FISHING.
The Art of Angling la aa Old aa the
Human Race.
The art of angling no doubt had its
origin in man's necessities. The earli
est record of mankind makes reference
to the taking of fish for food. 7'here
are frequent allusions to It In the Bible.
Job, 'In the oldest book of all, says:
"Canst thou draw out a leviathan with
a hook or his tongue with a cord which
thou lottcst down? Canst thou put a
hook in his nose?" Homer, iu the
'Iliad," speaks of Cshiug in these lines:
As bearing: death In the fallacious bait.
From tho bent angle sinks the leaden
weight.
And it Is recorded In tho "Odyssey:"
As when the anglrr, hln long rod in hand,
On a projecting rock assumes his stand.
Casts to the fiery fry the baited snare,
Thon fling3 the wriggling captives in th
air.
Tho Romans, Greeks and other races
of early days around the Mediterranean
practiced tho art of angling. Plutarch
tells of a prank played by the fair
Egyptian, Cleopatra, while out fishing
with- Antony, "They wagered on their
angling,... and her divers did hang a
salt fish on his hock, which he with
fervor drew up."
The ruined walls of Herculaneum
and rompeli abound in frescoes of
fishermen. All along the track of his
tory are found traces of this gentle
recreation, showing the gradual im
provement from the hook of bone and
rude equipment of the cave man to the
elegant accessories and belongings of
the modern angler.
In Paris the average price of pure
milk is 33.8 cents a gallon.
The average member of residents to
the acre in Paris is no less than 128.
There are nearly 700,000 apartments
pr lodgings ItJ the French metropolis
ivhich rent for less thcu $100 a year.
About 17,000 bring $800 or more.
All the theatrical aud amusement an
nouncements of Paris are posted ou
pillar billboards that are placed at in
tervals along the boulevards. It is
against the law to disfigure walls with
posters.
Ail Tarls is reading and discussing
the memoirs of the Philadelphia den
tist, Dr. Evans, the friend of Napoleon
III., which have just been published
and which contain a most excellent de
scription of the last days of the second
empire.
from men nor in solitary places, but
away from the tumult and away from
distracting sounds.
It la In silence alone that we come
Into possession of durselved. The noises
of life disturb us aa a cloud of dust in
tervenes between the eye and the sky,
There ought to be a cult for the prac
tlco of silence a body of men and
women committed to the preservation
of tne integrity of their souls by nel
ther hearing nor making speech for
certain periods, pledged to the culture
of the habit of quietness.
Maeterlinck has pointed out the fact
that the best things are never spoken,
and the truest intercourse between con
genial spirits Is carried on without
words. If we said less and thought
more there would be far fewer things
to explain, many sources of Irritation
would be dried up at the sources and
the prime cause of irritation, which Is
nervous exhaustion or excitement
would be removed. Outlook.
ON THE FARM.
HOW NATURE PROVIDES FOR US.
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Criticism, like charity, should begin
at home.
Apologies are like tears. They should
be suppressed.
Don't sit down too long to rest if you
have any desire to reach the top.
No man likes it when callers tell his
wife that she is wqtking too hard.
Don't tell your troubles. Tho exer
cise they get in the telling makes them
grow.
A woman can make an enemy of an
other woman any day by looking sym
pathetically at the other woman's hus
band. '
The trouble with the boomerang you
send out against an enemy is that it
will fly back and hit jou at a time
when you are most defenseless to meet
It. Atchison Globe.
IMPERTINENT PERSONALS.
.Apple Care For Drunkards.
"For ten years," said a physician, "I
have advocated apples as a cure for
drunkenness. In that time I have tried
the apple cure on some forty or fifty
drunkards, and my, success has been
most gratifying.
"Lot any man afflicted with the lovo
of drink cat three or more apples daily,
aud the horrible craving will gradually
leave him. Its cure will be greatly
helped along If he also smokes as little
as possible.
"I knovr a woman who cured a drunk
en husband without hi3 knowledge by
keeping always a plentiful supply of
good apple: on the dining table. The
man ate these apples and finally stop
ped drinking altogether." Philadelphia
Bulletin.
Hetty Green nud Mark Twain have
each celebrated a seventieth birthday.
Mark has a lot of friends and Hetty
has a lot of money. Puck.
Secretary Loeb is now the father of a
son, In accordance with his usual cus
tom of doing all he can to promote the
pmsideut's policies. Kansas City Jour
nal. John P. Holland, the inventor, says
that men will fly within a year. But
it is recalled that in 1900 Mr. Tesla
was going to be talking to Mars within
twelve mouths. Kansus City Times.
The new British cabinet contains tb
following writers: John M or ley, James
Bryee, Augustine Birrell and Winston
Churchill. Hail Calne and Marie Co-
relll must feel terribly slighted. Balti
more Sun.
MODES OF THE MOMENT.
Recital.
made
given
Arrangements are being
or a musical recital to be
xere on J- nJay eveumj, Jnne 12.
fv ?Ji.- Klla Ay err, pianist, and
3!i3.T j'Jna M :h r, foprano, as
sisted by Oihro G. Crawfcrd, of
lLia city-.
The rff ital will ttke place at
.Roberts Hall, and an admisbion of
S cents will be charged.
Practical Eye Waah,
A HI tie salt and water used as an eye
wash will cleanse and strengthen In
flamed lashes and rest tired eyes. It ia
safe to use it at any time that irrita
tion Is felt. A New York surgeon pro
scribes the ocean for bad eyes, partic
ularly young eyes. "Get off," he says,
"whenever you can and let the salt
and the sea breeze wash and blow
around your eyes. It will do them
good. It will dislodge the germs of
Matelasse makes the handsomest and
costliest of all the new lounging
robes.
Very short coats reaching just to the
hips are seen in some of the newest
tailor mades.
The empire coat Is the thing this win
ter, and some, very graceful models
have been exhibited.
Long black gloves, long enough to
wrinkle up on the arm. are being worn
with all sorts of gowns.
Tho new linen turnover c-u;lars are
fully two inches deep aud are decorat
ed with tiny linea covered buttons.
Buttons are used in every conceivable
way. Tiny lace or pearl ones trim the
sheerest of bluuses, and big ones, elabo
rate or plain, trim coat? and suits aud
dresses.
The Humming Bird Flower.
Alletedo avasisis, the wonderful so
called humming bird flower" of the
plains of eastern Turkey, stands unique
ana alone among the many specimens
of floral mimicry that have been classi
fied by modern botanists. It is a beau
tiful blossom of variegated hues, the to-
dlsease, for the air breathed by half! taI leD?tl1 f the entire flower being
the world is germ laden, and sore eyes
are more quickly caught than small
pox and more fatal. It will brighten
and strengthen them and prolong their
beauty and usefulness."
Tb new "or both tiem:Bplire in Th
fWeekiy Oregons&n.
Tha J eppner Oasette tha nrwa f Ifor
oawa and thought of the world. Both at
apcclal prlo. Inqulr or addraaa Tba
uoour one ana tnree-quartcr inches. As
one might Imagine from its name, It la
an exact image of a miniature hum
ming bird. The breast Is green, the
wings deep rose color, the throat yet
low and the head and beak almost pure
block. The only particular In which It
la not a perrect bird is that the stem
givea it the appearance of having but a
alngle leg and foot
- 1 Gaaetta. Heppner, Or.
The most independent man on rth u
the farmer, for he makes the earth yield
him almost everything needed for llfn.
He knows that as he sows ao will he
reap. He usually keeDs stronc and
healthy from constant strife with Nature
In sunshine and in pure air. At night
when work is done, he finds most refresh
ing sleep, such as only a tired man
knows. In the same way that the earth
yields food for man, so does it provide
remedies for human ills. Thousands of
households throughout the farming dis
tricts of the United States know the
value of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical-Dis
covery. It is Nature's most valuable andL
health-giving agent made without the
use of alcohol. It contains native medi
cinal roots, and is the concentration of
Nature's vitality as found in theAmeri
can forests- This remedy has a history
which speaks well for it because it was
given to the public by Dr. R. V. Pierce,
founder of the Invalids' Hotel and Surg
ical Institute, at Buffalo. N. Y., nearly
forty years ago, and has since been sold
by druggists In ever increasing quan
tities. Dr. Pierce found that the bark of
the Blaek Cherry-tree, the root of the
Mandrake, Stone root. Queen's toot,
Bloodroot and Golden Seal root, made
Into a scientific, non-alcoholic extract by
the use of glycerine, made the best altera
tive and tonic The refreshing Influence
of this extract is at once apparant in the
recovered strength of tho patient tho
vital fires of the body burn brighter and
their Increased activity consumes the
tissue rubbish which otherwise may
poison the system. This alterative and
tonic extract has beenfound to stand
alone as a safe, invigorating tonic, as it
does not depend on alcohol for a false
stimulation, but is Suture's own method
of strengthening and cleansing the sys
tem. It tones up the stomach and purines
the blood in Nature's own way. It is well
known all over tho world as Dr. Pierce's
Golden Medical Discovery. The name
was given to this vegetable compound
because one of the important ingredients
was Golden Seal root. Such an
authority as Dr. Robert Bartholow, of
Jefferson Medical College, says of Golden
Seal root, "very useful s a stomachic
tonic. Cures catarrh of the stomach and
headaches accompanying the same." Dr.
Grover Coo. in his iook Organic Medi
cines, speaking of Golden Hoai root, s:ivs
that "as a liver invicorator it has few
equals." Further he says, "in chronic, in-
nammption or inc. bladder v' deem it one
of the most jel;b!o agents of cure. As u
tonic in the convalescing stages of fevers
pnaumonin. dysentery :ra other acute
diseases Hydrastis (Co'dcn Seal root) is
peculiarly appropriate."
Dr. Coe continues: "We wciuld here
and that oi.r exiierienr-e ins demon
started th Hydrastis or Go'den Seal root
to be a valuable remerlv in bronchitis,
laryngitis, and other affections of the
respiratory organs."
Prof. Hobart A. Hare, M. D., University
of Pennsylvania, says of Golden Seal :
Of service in chronic catarrh of the
stomach and bowel following abuse of
aiconoi, a tonic alter malarial fever.
Has a distinct, anti-malarial Influence.
Good In all catarrhal conditions, as
uterine catarrh, leucorrhea, etc. Is a
curative agent in chronic dvspepsia."
Prof. John M. Scudder in Speeilic Med
ication says of Goldenseal: "It stimu
lates the digestlvo processes, and increases
the assimilation of food. I!y these means
the blood in enriched, and this blood feeds
tho muscular system. I mention the
muscular svstetn because I believe it
first feels the increased power imparted
by the stimulation of increased nutri
tion. The consequent improvement on
the nervous and glandular systems are
natural results.
"In relation to its general effects on
the system, there is no medicine in ise
ahnut which there In sici general unan
imity of opinion. It is vnivcrsally re
garded as the tonic useful In all de-
bi 1 1 tin ted states."
Dr. Pierce's Pavorfte Prescription spe
cially put up for woman's ills for those
distressing dragging down ailments
peculiar to women I also a temperance
remedy that is best known by its cures.
With Dr. Pierce's medicines, their In
gredients r.re matters of puMic knowledge,
being printed on each separate bottle
wrapper. Thus invalid sufferers are
taken into Dr. Pierce's full confidence.
Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page illus
trated Common Sens Medical .Adviser
will be sent free, paper-hound, for 21 one-
cent stamps, or ciotti-bound for 31 stamps.
Address Dr. lt.V. I'ierce, Duffalo, N. .
Ileal Philanthropy.
Mrs. A. That woman next door wen I
and got a hat exactly like mine.
Mrs. B. Did you make a fuss about
It? ,
Mrs. A. No. I g..ve mine to the cook.
Royal Magazine.
' Tie star
Drilling placid Co.
is erecting a plant at
PORTLAND, OREGON
for the -manufacture of their
world famous
PORTABLE WELL
DRILLING MACHINES
for water, oil, gas, etc., etc.
A moderate amount of
money will start you in
a profitable basinets, ,
STAR PORTABLE
DRILLING MACHINES
have been proved by
Competitive Tests to bo
The Best In The World.
For f ull particulars -regarding
well drilling machines,
tools, supplies, etc., write to
THE STAR DRILLING MACHINE CO.
PORTLAND, OACQOV.
or
AKRON, OHIO,
Heppner Loria No. 258. B. P. O. Elki. Reg
ular meeting nighU second and fourth Thurs
day of each month. Harry Johnion, & &
Thou. Brenuan, Sec,
Liberty Meat Market
v
Boyer & Wherry
Fresh and Salted Meats
Fish on Fridays
Highest market price
paid br fat stock"
HEPPNER. OREGON
The O. U & N. Co. advertises a fare
to Twin Falls Idaho, for the opening of
the Twin Fills. S linon liiver Land &
Water Co's project. June l.at $25.95.
Continuous passnge in both directions,
with a final return limit of ten dava
from date of sale. Children of half
fare age, half of the above rate. Sale
date May .'iO, 1908.
Weekly Orefonlan Heppner Qasett.
Pacific Lodging
House
C. N. SHI1NN. Prop.
Good clean rooms,
none better in town.
Come and Stop With Us
MAIM STREET. HEPPNER, ORE.
We Believe
)Vo believe in the goods we are Keliing, in the
people we are selling' to, and in our ability to
get results. AVe believe that honest goods
can be sold to honest people by honest meth
ods. AVe believe in working, not waiting, in
laughing, not weeping, in boosting not knock
ing, and in the pleasure of selling goods. AVe
believe that an order today is worth two or
tiers tomorrow, and no man is down and out
until he has lost faith in himself. . AVe believe
in today and the work we are doing, in to
morrow and in the work we hope to do, and
in the sure reward which the future holds. AVe
believe in courtesy, in kindness, in generosity,
in good cheer, in friendship, and honest competition.
Tho
mson
Bros.
Dealers in
General Merchandise
Heppner,
Oregon
4.3 J 4J J i 3"
GILLIAM & BISBEE
3
9
HARDWARE
Tools, Machinery,
Fencing,
in fact, anything ,
in our line.
Come and get
prices.
GILLIAM & BISBEE
9
Irof PoaitlTe.
Uyker My landlady Is a cruel heart
ed woman.
ryker Why do you think so?
Hyker She says she enjoys seeing
ber boarders have good appetites. De
troit Trlbuaa. .
PflLflCE HOTEl
HEPPNER, OREGON
Leading Eastern Oregon Hotvi
MODERN CONVENIENCES
ELECTRIC LIGHTED . . .
Under" New? Management. Thoroughly
Benovateujjand Befiitted. Best
Mer.li in the City.
M1DD0CK i CO. Prop.