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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 23, 1908)
For that Dandruff There Is one thing that will cure It Ayer's Hair Vigor. It is a regular scalp-medicine. It quickly destroys the germs which cause this disease. The unhealthy scalp becomes healthy. The dandruff disap pears, had to disappear. A healthyscalp means a great deal to you healthy hair, no dan druff,no pimples.no eruptions. The best hind of a testimonial "Sold for over sixty years.'? by J. C. Ayr Co., Lowell, Mm. Alio mauuftoiurai' ut A 9 SAR5APAE1LLA. ' pii i s. O CHhKHY PECTORAL. V St. Helen's Hall, Portland, Or. Retident and Day School for Girl. Catalogue on Request. Slandering the Klernal Vlty, "When .von were hi Kome, of course, ton did n the Komnns do." "Kr yes; I had to. I ran out of money, and had to find koiiio way to ex tract it from the rich Americana that wera visiting the city." Chicago Tribune, ( Iilpprr. "Will you saw some wood for your dinner?" "Xo'm, I don't oat wood." Houston Tost. Habitual Constipation M i Vi l I lay oopprmnrwituy oiercouu? by proper personal effWts'witlitlie Assistance of tlioonp truly benoirml tovntue remcily, Syrup oj oiul Lluirnj Senna, union e-nnlilos ou?toorm regular lialuts doily sothut assistance to na ture may lie gradually (Wjenspdith ulien no longer needed as the host of remedies, lien rpojutrod, a re to assist noturo and not to supplant the natur al u actions, wh'tt l must depend ulti mately upon proper nourishment, proper efforts, utul riht living gcneraHy. TooYt its benejieiut ejects, always Miy the Rename 'i manujncturt'd (j the California Fig Syrup Co. only SOU? BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS out' stzeotily, reuiur price 5UC p llotUe. A formal declaration of party princi ples specified as the party platform was as unknown In the early days an was a convention. The noiment, the jolliest, the most exciting and perhaps least logical presidential campaign was that of 1840. William Henry Harrison, hero of an In dian victory at Tippecanoe, a plain old man, who had lived, his opponents sneer ingly sold, in a Ior cabin decorated with coon skins and had drunk hard cider, was selected by Thurlow Weed as a better candidate than. Henry Clay. To defeat Clay in the Republican convention, the unit rule was adopted. The issues between Van Buren, the Democratic candidate, and Harrison were not clearly drawn, but the adventitious circumstances of Harri son's early life were skillfully utilized for theatrical effects. "Old Tippecanoe" was the slogan. Processions, miles Ions, with log cabins, cider barrels and coon skin caps on poles, stretched from State to Slate, (lee clubs were a feature of the campaign and the Indian fighter was fair ly sung into office. So vigorously did the Whigs sing their favorite refrains that echoes of the songs still linger. What has caused this preat commotion motion motion motion, Our country through? It Is the bull a rolling on For Tlpperanoe and Tyler, too, And with them we will beat little Van, Van, Van. Is a used up man. Farewell, dear Van, You're not our man To guard the slilp. We'll try old Tip. ' In the campaign which resulted in the election of Benjamin Harrison the fact that he was a grandson of old Tip was not forgotten by his adherents. Many slangy, even irrevereDt references fixed on grandpa's hat as a fit subject for campaign quips. In 1844, the year when the Democratic convention brought the first dark horse into the running, the songs of the majority were : O, poor Henry Clay, poor Henry Clay, You cannot be our President, for I'olk Is In the way. and Hurrah for I'olk and annexation, Down with Clay and high taxation. When John Hanks., cousin of Abraham Lincoln, carried two weather-beaten rails Into the Wigwam the structure especially built for the Republican convention held In Chicago, in May, 1S00 Lincoln be came the "railsplitter" candidate as Har rison had been the log cabin and Jackson the hickory candidate years before. In the convention of 1800 began the modern custom of cheering and counter cheering. The Seward contingent gave a parade the day of Hie couveintion. While they were marching Lincoln supporters filled the Wigwam. With the naming of the candidates began the cheering. When Seward was nominated and seconded the shouting was absolutely frantic, shrill and wild. Rut when Lincoln's nomina tion was seconded the West was heard from, and gave a scream that was posi tively awful, and accompanied it with stamping that made every plank and pil lar in the building quiver. On the third ballot Linco'n was nominated. The shout ing was so deafening that the cannon which was discharged on the roof of the building could not be heard inside. RUNNING AWAY FROM HOME. more. They have restrictions of all kinds placed on the order of their dally lives,, but they are used to It. Indeed, they have arrived at a sort of mental state la which they look to the author ities to tell them what to do, and how to do It, in every contingency. "Ver boten !" is the German word that has the greatest vogue, so far as I was able to see. "Forbidden !" stares them in the fuce everywhere. They are regu lated in al! sorts of ways, down to the manner they shall conduct themselves in their houses. There is a certain time for Ivatiiig rugs, a certain time for playing the piano, a certain time for everything else. You can move your household goods only in a certain way. You cannot shake a dust rng out of the window. You cannot do this and you cannot do that, and, they told me, after once you get accustomed to it, it is a comfortable way to live. It absolves you from thought if you know what hours there are for doing your work and how you must do It. If a cub knocks you down in the street, you are arrested for obstructing the trullic. Your place is on the side walk. Kvery P.erliner does exactly what he is expected .to do, and you must ao tins same. As an example of how well trained they are, they are not obliged to have guards on the underground trains in Herlin. The Berlin folks know they are expected to shut the doors, and they shut them. If you observe their regulations you "are not disturbed, but if you violate one of them you instantly get into more kinds of trouble than you had imagined could exist. All you are expected to do is to walk a chalk-line, and you can be happy, If the regulations allow the kind of happiness that agrees with you. Samuel G. Blythe in Everybody's. MSB a i? rtir Food Products Libby's Vienna Sausage You've never tasted the best sausage until you've eaten Libby's Yicnna Sausage. It's a sausage product of high food value Made different. Cook ed different. Tastes different and is different than other sausage! Libby's Vienna Sausage, like all of the Libby Food Products, is carefully prepared and cooked in Libby's Great While Kitchen. It can be quickly served for any meal at any time! It is pleas ing, not over-flavored and has that satisfying tastel Try itl Libby, McNeill & Libby. Chicago. gin Gray-Haired Man Kemembera a Hoy Who Tried It Forty Years Aro. "Whenever I read in the newspapers that a boy has run away from home to fight Indians or seek some other sort of adventure, it takes me back forty years,' said ttie gray-nairea man in the club smoking room. "For I ran away from home once. Just as I suih pose every other youngster does, once at least, only In my case I wasn't seek ing adventure, I was escaping tyranny "It seems foolish now, hut It was all very real to me then. The tyranny consisted of the one fact that I got my first licking, and I guess there's no doubt that I deserved it. But I couldn't see it that way then ; I was very bitter, aud the one Idea I had was to get away where life was free ond tyrants were not. "The impulse to depart on my trnv els was carried out so suddenly that I found myself wandering far away from the house before it dawned on me that 1 was ill provided for a Jour ney. In fact I had gone Just as was, with the smart of my physical as well as my mental wrongs still cute. "As I went I pondered over the mat ter of provisions, nrd the Idea came to me that I would make my first stand in a cranberry bog right on the farm. With this as a headquar ters I would make raids on neighbor ing orchards, and if the worst came to the worst I supposed the cranberries would support life. "Well, I reached the cranberry bog presently and bivouacked. Here I should spend the first night under the friendly stars. I picked out a soft place for a bed and sat down to wait the coming of night. "Now, cranberries are not very fill ing, especially In the raw, green state, but I managed to eat some of them. And then It began to get dark. "Well, sir, the shadows fell quickly on the bills about me and the air grew chill. Fantastic monsters reared their horrid beads on every band. The free life began to pall. "So It won't surprise you to learn tbat a very little boy ran home crying before the supper things bad been clear ed away, and that he never ran away again." DISCIPLINE IN BERLIN. Germans Not Only Obey Ralea, Bat An Vmbmppy Without Then. The Ber liners, and the rest of the Germans, are the most governed people on earth. They like It and bowl for i The Dannoch. One of the hardiest, bravest, anu most difficult to handle among all the western tribes was the small but val orous baud known as the Bannock, Banuk, or I'anaitl. This little tribe, never numbering more than 700, has for many years Inhabited the country between the Snake river and the moun tains which mark the boundary between Montana and southern Idaho. Of Shoshone race, but braver am. more turbulent than any other Sho shone tribe, the Bannock fought the Blackfeet and drove them back when they came over the mountains, domin ated tamer tribes of Idaho and Ore gon, and made themselves general nui sances when the white man took the country. The Bannock troubles culminated in 1S7S. when they broke out In open war, drawing many of the Piute and Sho shone along with them. After consid erable fighting their young chief, Buf falo Horn, was killed hy frlendlv In dian scouts, and the Bannock warrior? surrendered. All of tae Rannock tribe, except : fragment at Lemhi, now make their home on the Fort Hall reservation. Some 500 of them still survive, but nre slowly decreasing" In numbers. They do not take kindly to civilization, but soeni to have accepted the Inevitable. nnd behave fairly well of recent vears Messrs. Palerno and Clnngoloni, the Inventors of "tachyol" (fluoride of sil ver), an antispetlc employed In surgery, have found that a solution of 1 part In 500,000 of water will destroy all germs, including bacillus subtills, its germici dal effect being much greater than that o chlorine, bromine or ozone. To lessen risk of loss of submarines, torpedoes used in naval practice and other objects liable to sink In the sea, a French oceanogrupher attaches a ves sel of oil having a long and short time tube one-tenth of an inch in diameter. When submergence softens the gum seals of the tube, oil rises from the long one drop by drop, locating the sunken object by the film on the wa fer's surface. The German government more than a year ago Imposed what seemed to be a moderate tax on railroad tickets. The result of it has been a diversion of travel from the higher to the lower classes, to such an extent that a de crease of about $2,500,000 in the pas senger earnings of the Prussian state railroads alone is attributed to it. Nearly at the same time a new schedule of charges for passengers and baggage was introduced, which oa the same railroads reduced earnings about $1,500,000. But this was expected. Dr. II. C. Stevens, of Seattle, reports recent experiments which show that objects seen by Indirect vision ordin arily appear larger In the right half of the field of vision than in the left. With a smaller number of persons this is reversed. From these facts he de duces a possible origin of right and left handedness. Right-handedness, or Its reverse, develops at about the age of seven months. Dr. Stevens suggests that they may be due to the phenomena of vision just described. By a reflex effect the infant reaches after the ob jects best seen with the arm nearest to them. In his book on the great veld of German East Africa, Herr C. G. Schil lings gives a vivid description of the shimmering, undulating sea of light which bathes that country, causing light-colored objects often to appear black, and making distances so decep tive that when but a few hundred paces away It Is sometimes impossible to distinguish a rhinoceros from an ostrich or a termites' nest. Water on this veid is often the greatest of lux uries, "as precious as life Uself, ever when obtained from small mud pools.' Yet the country, when viewed from hill tops or from tall trees, exhibits a won derful panorama of wild life. Elephant there are not dependent upon grass but will strip trees of their bark oi branches when hard pressed, and thej ! are sometimes found in company wit! ' giraffes. In some of the small lake. Eo IL OLD SORES No old sore can heal until the cause which produces it has been remover. External applications of salves, washes, lotions, etc, may reduce the inflam mation and assist in keeping trie place clean, but cannot cure the trouble because they do not reach its source. Old sores exist because the bloodis infected with impurities and poisons which are constantly being discharged into the place. The nerves, tissues and fibres of the flesh are kept in a state of irritation and disease b3' being daily fed with the germ-laden matter through the circulation, making it impossible for the sore to heal. S. S. S. cures chronic sores by its purifying action on the blood. It goes down into the circulation, and removes the poison-producing germs, impurities ami morbid matters which are responsible for the failure of the place to heal. S. S. S. makes the blood pure, fresh and healthy; then as new, rich blood is carried to the spot the healing process begins, all discharge ceases, the inflammation leaves, new tissue begins to form, the place fills in with firm, healthy flesh, and soon the sore is permanently cured. S. S. S. is purely vegetable, the safest and best blood purifier fr young or old. Book on Sores and Ulcers and any medical advice free to all who write. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA. For Baby's Batbj for Baby's Clothes; for an Eye Wash, Mouth Wash, Sterilizing the Dottle, V.'eshicg Napkins. Sample Borax, Booklet and Lace Centerpiece design. 1( c, Pacific Coast Borax Co., Odkldnd, Cal. Local uenlH waulod. rite for u.onry u-hkmj ua. WHEN YGU COME TO PORTLAND ARRANGE TO STOP AT THE CORNELIUS PARK AND ALDER STS. A New and Modern European Hotel, catering particularly to State people. A refined place for ladies visiting the city, close to the shopping center. Rates reasonable. Free Bus. H. K CLARKE, (late of Portland Hotel) Mgr. Ho v.-.Mm e. nr nro:i. AMcyw -: cii l.( ndville, ('cioriiiio. Kpet-iinei prliefl: Ooi l, PII vcr. ij ail, SI ; (.oui, ; 'liver, 7 ; o!U, b i.-j Zluoor (ij'pir.tl. Cvariiilc t'-:s. ii.tiil!' en etoixs and lull prii-eilft si-nioa triplication. Control and I 11 pire wi:rk hoikiu-U. l.elbrotice: Caxbotmie Lunal Hank. THE EAIfT dnftroy all th tlicfl nod atfonl comfort toeserj home in dluiug rooix,, Hleeplti room nnd verf plnr-e where fitug firi troublHttomr. &yytK& M CJonn, newt hum gjy will not will ot llljun; mii mug. Soap has been known to the world for jfttbc c djo .UlUou, 3,000 years Mothers will find Mrs. Winslow Soothing Byrup the best remedy to use for their ch:ldia during the teething per,ocl. The smallest hone iu the human body is contained in y drum of the eai-. riTft Bt. V!tns Dance and all Nervons Dlnfos f permanently cured by Ir. Kline's Grtiit Serve Restorer, fond for FHF.E f 2 trial bottle and treatise. JJr.IL ILKilno.IxL. 6a Arch bU, Phila-.tu. Glass bathtubs are coming into general ise in Germany. EAHOID SOlliaS, 149 CeSalb At., Brooklyn, B. T. "THE SCHOOL OF QUALITY" Better each year, and larger. We now have two floors C5x 100 feet. Thorough work tells the story. It counts in the end, and vye admittedly lead in this re- Shake Into Your Shoes ATlpn'a 77nfr.-EARf a nowdnr for the -fpr Tt fiiri painful, swollen, smarting; sweating feet. Makes spect. Get our catalogue, penwork, etc., new snoes easy. toia Dy ail uruepsts ana M ,1 inW fr vmirclf c in r,,na1it Stores. Don't accept any substitute. Sample , Ult" J"oge 'or OUrseH as to quality. FREE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Anybody'" Darling. Male Voice Hello! Female Voice Hello! "1st this you. dnrlinaV "Yes; who are you?" Yonkers Statesman. A. P. ARMSTRONG, LL.B., Principal Tenth and Morrison Portland, Oregon Deafness Cannot Be Cured bv local applic ations, as tlicy cannot reach tlie diseased portion ol the er. ' 'lliere is only one way to cure deafness, ami that is by constitu tional remedies. Deafness is mused bv nn in- of the Kilimanjaro region hippopotam. i llamd condition of the niutous lining of the i-.UMur:i ih n luoe. iietl i nis ut o; is iiiiinmc'i may be watched by a concealed ob server at as close quarters as In zoological park. von have a rumbling sound or imperfect liear : me, ft id when it is entirely closed, Pcnfnc is C. Gee Wo Tiie weil known reliable CHINESE Root and Kerb DOCTOR Him mnrie n life etudy of roots ami heibs, and in that Si udy discovered mid Ih id. to the world hitf wonder. Order of the Uoliieu llorxexhoe. No Mercury, Poisons or Drugs Used He Cures Without Operation, or Without the Aid ot a Knifaj lie ftonrnnteee to Cure inturru. tA:rttmiBv Lung, the result, ami unless the l'nflammatiOrn'aii be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever: irti" ciises out of ten are en-ised bv Catarrh, uhinh in nnthiniT hut a i i n fl a ,i r.l t 1 1 i , . ,t tlirnat U !,.,..., , i tv,i, . .. .-, laK 1 1 1. How tnnnr nersmiq Iiqvp w-nr h-irl ! the mucous surim-cs. Btoiniicli. I.i.-er. Kidney' Tronli,..,,lo Lost Manhood. now many persons uae eei Heard t VVp wii pivcUnG Hundred Dollars for am-, t"1? w H,kmw AU tr'1"'6 of the Order of the Golden Horseshoe, ! ease of Deafness (caused bveaterrh) that can-1 A SURE CANCER CUKE the first order founded in America? j .,7 Ca,Hrrh ure Send fo1 . Just Rcived '-S. Sure In 1"1'4. when Virginia extended- gol(1 t)v'pn,e'';j5,'sC-I:XEY C ''ToIedo' ' I if Tor ap.K afi.iiti't' p'on t delay. from the Atlantic Into the unknown j h'lle IlairsFanuly'ri'ils for constipation. I CONSULTATIONMEE West, few of her Colonists had cross-j " ! Uyou cannot - call, write forovmpton bim,ls7i!idclro ed the Blue Kidge or the Alleghenies. Purely Matter of choice. j tttk c. 'ck k" 'cm'h TNT'SKTr i ctf co. So full of d inners from s iv'-es mnl 1 'o I nave ro pity tins dim ror gas that iwi . iim m., i or .aornson, i'oniiu.d, Oregon, I never used i "Not unless yon choose. There is no wild beasts and so full of natural difll . . nillliU tl'OU 1 ui tiiic.-.urn .if tluieo . i i liie nannoek are very dark or face, nnd , , l" w,w"- ; compulsion about it. We nierelv shut off of medium stature, while their physique: l,Ie "fig"t-S that Governor Spoiswood. vn;n. if vou doa-t pav jt."Chh.ago is wiry and sinewy, afc might be t.x-!settin out to tlis,'OVt,r il l:lfs. looked Tribune. peeted with a fighting race, equally ex-' on the expedition as so hazardous that j pert In horsemanship and mountain he took wit!l ulm 11 Euard of "soldiers. J climbing. peniiemen. aim pioneers, armed ami j carrying provisions. These scaled the A I.ont Art Keilineovertl. ! p;lss jtn j,rplt hardships and perils. In Science. Frank Delia Torre an-j and returned after the Governor had nounees his rediscovery of the famous : cut the name of King George iu the Venetian varnish, which has been the j rocks on the highest peak. , despair of violin makers for nearly j He then constituted the society, oi 200 years. Shortly after the discov-1 order, of the Golden Horseshoe. Kach ery of America the gondolas of Yen-1 man who had staled this high puss was lee were regularly coated with a trans- j made a member of it, nnd to each one parent, lustrous, orange-red varnish. he presented a golden horseshoe. On This flame colored material made ; the side was inscribed in Latin: "Sc everything beautiful upon which it was it pleases him to cross mountains." painted. After the Venetian city fath-! Any men thereafter who could provt ers decreed that all gondolas must be j that he had read with his own eves P N U I'iei.te Mention This F:u er. No. 30-08 T"lTtIEN wrli'ng to p.1 vertiserg please J t i mention thig p.-iper. rfifeii HIIMBVii H u ' i.-'t it i i i w a. m v ev-i PI LJ1PIIU black the wonderful varnish was turn ed over to the violin makers. Some Italian furniture of the seventeenth century still extant is coated with it. When the violin makers had used up the supply on the last Cremonas, no more was to be had. Investigation led Mr. Torre to conclude that the raw materials of this varnish must have come from Africa, and he believes that he has at last found a gurft varnish identical with that used by the Cre mona makers. It looks like the old varnish and seems to have the same wonderful effect on violins covered by It. the name of the King on the height was entitl :ed to become a member of this order. Not Ple-aaant. Bacon I see a German scientist - serfs that thoughts can be photographed. Egbert It wouldn't be possible. however, to make some of 'em lock pleasant. Yonkers Statesman. A Fitting Term. "How would you designate a tatlor'a Jag?" "I don't know of any particular name unless you would call It a tight fit." Baltimore American. WTien you see a boy with curls and a Bash, it is a very good sign that the father doesn't have his way In the house. And the honesty of a poor man 1 seldom questioned. Dei ious Definitions. Colic: The only thing that will tackle a baby without first considering the consequeuces. Chimeras: The food of indolent the orists. Humor: An anvil upon which to crack a smile. Matrimony : The sea that swamps many a courtship. Sympathy : A convenient thing for a silent partner. Miser: One of the things that will keep In any climate. Dude: The excrescence of insuffer able conceit nw b m Fo? Infants and Children. MI 1 a fWfffii i Ins Kind Ycu Hava ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT. Avertable ftcparationfor As similating terotfandRiti.'ia ling tiic Siomac'is aulBowls oi Incomplete Signal. The ingenious Charleston News and Courier suggests that the new spring hats would gain in distinction if they sported a neat two-foot flagstaff. And right away somebody will warn to suggest a sign language for the flag In the hat. Of course the flag at half masi might indicate that Its owner was a widow, and a reversed flag would mean that the lady was In distress. Cleveland Tlaln Dealer. One quiet cooking lesson beats two noisy music lessons. 15a5 in - u IYomoles DisjcslionJChecrRl ness and RrsLContains ncittvr Opium .Morphine nor Mineral. rot Narcotic. HnW- Aperfect Remedy for Censfift lion . Sour StomoOi.Dlarrtra VormsjCom"ulsionsjtnsfr ness andLoss OF Sleep. Ac Simile Signature of KEV YORK. anueundtr the Exact Copy of Wrapper. Signature rkj Use V For Over Thirty Years T nmnia oaraatr. at errr.