' .... .... nrnnn rw.. UiLIOUSNESS, UTER COMPLAINTS, SICK HE ADACHE, COLDS, pImPLES, .U8KIN AFFECTIONS, and DISEASES ARISING from DISORDERED STOMACH. r mv. WPAppSp The Genuine BAMBVROTEAUtfdyf ThLLOW WRAPPERS 80T.! BV AH frIUlOCIST AXI nwC,,. ;cllfci W) "QU EN HAIRINE" 1ft restore and promote the Hair has no cipial. It ii u pi.ma.o(vaselino f'trm). Knur applications Kill stop Llio hair falling and prevent Hand mil'. Jt cures scalp disease, and Kill positively grow a luxuriant growth of hair unless hereditarily Imld, Ttaldnes is not an indication that tli- room are dead. Nature old not provide thai we should wear a covering fur the head. When the, epidermic (kiu) is alive, so are the roots, and "Queen Hairiuo" applied to the surface opens the foliiri.n, and gives nourishment and vitality to iho roots. One bottle will convince the most skeptical of ii fncriK. Try it. Frice, $1.00 per IJottlo. ' C:UEEN ANTI-ODOR" (powdered form) applied to the parts allays excessive perspiration, and p'TiiKin- nllv cures offensive feet, armpitM, - A loost delightful and harmless remedy. Price 50e. 'H ' ON DO LINE" (liquid, pure and harmlemi, when applied to the skin restores and beautifies t'.r 'oinoh-xinii; removes and prevents Tan, bunburn, freckles, Pimples and lUackhemls, This re uoimed preparation cannot be ei celled. A. single applicatinn has a marvelous e licet, and each l .liii.nal one improves the complexion. Try it; if not delighted with it, return the bottle, and we wp) n-'urid vonr money. One KoUle will restore the complexion. Price, $1.00 Q -JSEN Toilet Co.: Your preparation formulas after a careful analysis), I am free to sar, are harmliiJ-s, and certainly effectual if uwd according to directions. J. V. Hesse, fil. D.. 4M Kreemau Ave. Heuilt by I'. O. Order, Hegurtered letter, or Draft to hume office, and mention this paper. QUrtEH TOILET CO.. 174 RACE ST., CINCINNATI, O. (Local Agents hr.i-V 9 i ltLl, Sampler 01 our (Jootlk and Uow to be Beautiful " lent for two stamps. CHRONIC & NERVOUS DISEASES CURED DT Or. 6. F. Webb's Elertrlc Body Brtls and Appliances, tIz. Catarrh, Ku oi mint lam, Sciatica, Aiuciiorrhana, Spermatorrhea, Prolapsus, Chlorosis, Painful Menses, LoueorrlKjon, Sorninal Weakness, EUVcts of Onanism, Incontinence, PulpiCUioti, Paralysis. Nnrvous Dobillty, titoj'iliiy, imputoncy, liubetis, Noiiruitlieniit, Sic It If Alulae inj, Vuricocule, I lorn i a, Insomnia, Lumbago, Bpinul DiSOaBO. Dyspepsia, ( onstipatlon. Kidney Complaints, General Dubilily, Loss of Memory, IjOfio-Motor Ataxia, j'pilopsy, etc., etc DR. G. F. WEBB, Inventor and Patented, United and Foreign Countries. fy8end for Catalogues and Testimonials. QUICK TITWCE ! TO San Frnnolsco Aid all points in California, via the Mt. Hlmstn ruuie oi iiih Southern Pacific Co. The (rreat hitrhway throuuh California to all point East and South. G rand Been lo Itouto Of the Pacific Coast. Pullman UufTet Sleepers. Socond-cIuBS Hlenpera Attached to express trains, affording fioporior aocouimodfitioiiH rr atHion(i-cutn pRHrtniiKTM. Fur rates, tickets, sleeping ear roeorvutione, to,, call upon or address K. KOKIILICll, Manngcr, K. P. ROGERS, Asst, Uon. F. it P. At., Portland, OreKou. S. P.FLORENCE, STOCKRAISER 11KPPNEU, OltKQON. Cuttle hrandednnrl earmarked as shown above. HnrneH V on riht shnitldor, Mv onttle range in Morrow and Umatilla coun ties. 1 will pay fltifl.W) for the arrest and con vielionof any person stealing my stock. 11 On Sale OMAHA Kansas City, St. Paul, sst. rotiiw, AND AM. POINTS ESST. NORTH P SOUTH. IjoiiveB llcppnor, 8 H. in. 0:50 p. ui. Arrives I'lilltiinii Hlot'pi'ra, Colon I Mt wloepor), Reclining Chair Cars and Diners. rurtliioil to 8au every four day. FrHuoinco Tickets Europe. Ktir iBtei and geueral infonnatlort cull on Hi-pot Ticket Agent, ,1. C. TLA.HT, Hejipncr, Oregon. W II lirRI.Ul'KT. A.t. Oflll. I'm. Am. 2.V1 Wa.hington St., rilKVLAND. UBIHON. H. UlBokmiin A Co. have an piolusive MerohauJiae atom Stockmen nrninol do better tliau patronize U Blafkman 4 Do., of Ueppuer'i l'ioneer Drick. KM i CTiiiatTJ CONSTIPATION. INDIGESTION Perhaps You Don't Know. Us, BUT SURELY YOU KNOW OF OUR REMEDIES. We extend an invltntlnn lo call and see free tosts at our Clinic " A rcado Chamber." Hours 1 to ;i p. m. Lady Attendants, ' We till mail orders same Hay received (neeim-iy staled, Wat paid). If iit hs represented we will rctiniil our ruoitfv, ' QUEEN ANTt-HAIRINE" remove Beard or Superfluous TTair lrom the race, im k umi Anus, or Moles ami Hirthmark. Madcin.o a pasta, only a lew minute application Is required. It is powerful, yet mild in its efTeet. It dissolves and destroys the follicles of the hair without the sliMe-a pain, injiirr or discolora tion tollie mostdeltcctenkin. Trv it. One Price. 81 "(H) uer Ib.itla Cm DEAFNESS W0HDEEFD1BUT TRUE! ELECTRO-MEDICAL SCIENCE STILL TI1IUMPIIANT ! Tho Deaf Made lo Hear by Electricity ! luventcJ In April. 1801, Pntimted In June, yot'llluuKiiiiilN Prorlnim its Houdtir. fill anil l'orfprt lU'sults I Till! ONLY EUCCTJBSrnii TREAT. MlilJT IN TUli WOULD I Anv ono. i or ynnnff, wliown oar (lrinii in iinlirokoii cfin l' niiulo lo licar anil l onvi'i -mi in onlinnry Ume nnd lie cured tiy lir. i- V. Wdl.h'n Hluctrlcal AiipiimliiH inr'J'roiitinir llnitnriw. An r.lcc-lrn-Mp'lii'iil Hly lliitmry Willi np TiliuncnB HivuntO'l i-ipwinlly inr tri'at IllB 1 iL'iU'lli'as and lllll disrusi'S Wllich prndnccii it. Hi'lid In eentR for my Klcftro-uedloal Thi'ory ilinl I'rili.'ti descliliinlf treat. rr.fnt. 1- patj(;8. Addross E. B. BLISS, General Arjt. IOWA f ALLS. IOWA, States L U M B E 11 ! IK HAVE FOB BAI.K AIX KINDS OF UN tV dreHBPd Lumber, hi nillun of. llisppncr, at wliat is known tin tiio SCOTT SA-WJVXXXjXji. PER 1,0(10 FEET, ItOUQIl, " " "' CLEAR, 110 01 17 00 TF DUl.IVKRUn IN HKPPNEK, 1 WKI per 1,000 lent, addltionni. I. HAMILTON, Prop. H ri m tltoti. Ma t i ' ir Seientiiio Amerlcaa Agency for COPYRICHT8, etc. For informntlon nnd frofi nimilhnoh write to MliNN A CO., :llil lluoADWAV, Nicw YonK. Oldimt tniriiau for iici iii inir pnt'MiU, In AniorlcA. Kvory piili'nt takcii out. bv lis in brouiilit betore tliu pilbiio by a niitiiic itlven truo of uliiirto lo toe S' ft e tiffin' "mertritw tjiirk'Oftt clrenlntlon of nny ndlflntlflc pnpnr In tha )rm, iHonnuiiy iniisiriiiiMi. ixo iintniiKiifc in nliniiUt Hh nftbout It. Wnckly. W.OO a y.'nr; ll..o kit ninnlhs. AJdresH M II N W A CO. PUULiMiKltt., iliil llroadway. Nvw Vork. NOTICE OF INTENTION. IjiiuI Ollk'e at l.n ( i rnnilf, dr., Juno :io, W.I2 NntliHi In hinvliv iriven tlnlt tho iollowinir niuncd Hottlor Iiiih lili'd notiroof liiH iiiti'iition to make lhiiil proot In Hiipport of li 1m rliiini, imo that mild proof will be made before the Count! Clerk of Morrow eouiity, at lleppner, Oreyon, on AuRust l:(, 1MIJ, vl.: EDWARD 8. Pl'IiAN, I). S. No. WfUO, tor the NE!, Sec 111, Tp I S, R "I r., ti m. lie million ttie follow ne w tnewioB to orove 111, I'lmtliHioim reNiduneo upon nnd eultiviitlon ol aulil land, viz: lloiner Uriiy, S D. lavlor. F. Sorowle. Char ley l.onK, ill) o( lleppner, Oregon. Hll-.'ll A. Cl.KAVKR, KKU1NTKR. NOTICE OF INTENTION. LixiHl Olllee at l.n Orimde, Or., Julv 1, 1S1VJ. N"ttrein hereby Klven tiint thy tollowluK limn iMfttler luiH llled nnlleeof his Intenli.m 1. iiuike eonunuted ttiml proof in Hiinnortul hi lalnl, mill tliat Kilid proof .i 111 lie made belnr. tlieenuiity elerkot Morrow county, Or., Ht llepp uer, Or., on Aiiiiimi l.". I't.1, il. : WILLIAM DIXON l.Oltll Hd No. rvJSII lor llie.Mi, N !:,. See nnd YM, SHi,, See l. 'I p -i ,s, It AS E. W M. llMituiies the followliiK w ituesseR to prove IiIh coutlnuoiis renideuee upnn, and eultiviitlou ot, .aid land, vi: Henry Jonea, Arthur Smith, lnae rhippR, Uoliert Joliukon, all of lleppner, OreKou. Wll liaiu W. Sim, take notice. A. Ci.favku. Slll.-.ll KfKlatcr. NOTICE T1M11ER Cl lIT'llE. Uind Olllee nt Tho Dallen, Or., June :10, lS'.ii. Comphilut hnvlii); been entered at this olllee by John 11. Ill, key. of Morrow Coimtv. Oreiroll. iinliiHt Edward C. ljiwlent,, lor fiillure'toeoiuply Willi law H8 to I turner Culture Kntrv No. J77I. dined Nov. w, 1.17, upon tin- K1., N wv. and El5 SW K, ol Sec 7, Tp : s. ii '.v. K, In Morrow Co., Or., Willi a view to Hie eancellntlon of mild eutrv; eonlcMtiuu alleuiui: that huI.I Edward C. IwIonn lum fal led to break or cause to he broken live acres on said tract w lllilu one year inter his timber culture entry of said tract, the said parties are hereby sum mimed to appear at thisolliee on Hie '27tli day of Auk., lyii, at lOo'ohwkH. in., to re spond and furnish testimony eonceriihiR said aliened lallure. J. . Morrow, County clerk, Is authorized to take testimony In this case, at his ollice in lleppner, ut lo a. m., Ainr. Jn, Iv.i:'. John W. I.kwis, Wi'd't KcKlater. Ol AHDIANS SALE. VOT1CK is IIERKIIV i IIVKN Til AT IN PTII i 1 f an order of the Counlv Court ot the County ot Clackamas and state of Oreium, duly made and entered on the Uth dav oi Jul v IM'A 1 vi ill on Saturday, the -.'7th day of Aujiust, IS'.1-', at the hour ol one o'clock V. M. ot said dav, at tlie trout door of the Court House, In Hepp uer. In Morrow County and Shite of Orcaoll, of fer for sale to the htnliest bidder, subject to con tinuation ot the Conn, the following- described property, lo-w It: '1 he southeast one iourth of See. '.SI of tow tiship I. south of ranite J7 east of the W lllamette tiieridinu, 111 Morrow County and Slate ol Oregon. Terms of sale: One half cash on dav of sale, and balance either cash, or If purchaser prefer, iiiortnaKe for one vear on the premises, to draw Interest from lis dale at the rate ot ten percent, pcrnuuuiu. purchaser to laiy tor uiakiiik; deed and mortgage. Makuaukt Bahbatt, lltuirdtan of John Henry Rarratt, a minor. Dated Ihls J.uh day of July. IS'iJ. 10 17 'T&J&i' TRADE MARKS, 9SWJ"A nr-!ICN PATENT mixed feedin: Bow to Mix Various Food, to the Rest Advantage. Wheat bran ia one of the few mate rials that can be purchased and fed out to the stock on the farm. It is one of the few materials that can be fed to stock and yet return nearly its full value in the manure. It will help to make bone and muscle in your growing stock, and hence can be fed to an ad vantage to them. With all the classes of stock sheep, cattle, horses and hogs it can be used to a good advantage in making np a good variety. Combined with sheaf oats it makes a good ration for sheep, horses or cattle. With oil or cornmeal, or either hay or good corn fodder, it makes one of the best rations for milk cows during the winter. With corn and oil meal it makes a good feed for the brood sows and the growing pigs. Combined with oil meal it makes a good feed with hay, wheat or oat straw or corn fodder, less ening very materially the amount of grain necessary to keep in a good, thrifty condition, with tho advantage that in feeding tho quality of tho manure will be improved. With the rough foods, such as corn, fodder, straw and hay, the best results can be Becured if these are first run through a feed cutter. They can bo more thoroughly mixed together than if the roughness is fed whole, while there will be less waste in feeding the rough ness. It can be purchased in considera ble quantities and if stored in a dry place will keep without damage. It is very important, however, to keep it dry, or it will mold and spoil. Where there is considerable roughness and but little grain, bran can be used to an advantage in feeding and often this class of foods can be used when of others more or less would be wasted, while a better variety can be supplied to the stock, and this will help to keep in a good condition, especially in the winter. Farmer's Home Journal. AuHtrlan Morso Breeding. The stud at Mozohegyes has been es tablished for more than 100 years, and breeding is carefully restricted. Pedi grees are kept for generations and the breeds are established, and there are as numerous divisions as in the trotting families of America. At Mezohegyes the stallions are divided into four classes, those in tho first division, some nineteen in number, being used for Btud purposes at the parent farm. Of this lot nine are English thoroughbreds and ten half bred that is, the progeny of English or French thoroughbred stallions and the native Hungarian mares. The thor oughbred stallions were selected be cause of their breeding, racing perform ances, soundness and individuality, and none but sound mares are ever mated with them, it being the policy of the govornmont to breed horses without a blemish of any kind. All these stallions are exercised daily for two hours. The stallions in the second division are let out to private breeders, who pay from 300 to 800 florins a season for them. In tho third division aro to be found those that are kept at the military sta tions scattered all over the country, and are let at fees varying from two to five rlovins. Those in the fourth division are the stallions that are sold to the com munes or divisions into which Austria and Franco aro split up. Of the second class some 2,700 Mezohegyes stallions are standing at the low fees named, and oftener two florins is paid than the larger sum. Tho Austrian horses have wonderfully kind dispositions, 100 stal lions frequently Btanding side by side at Mezohegyes with nothing but swinging poles botween them. The horses sold to tne communes are disposed of at much below their real value, the prices being set by the minis ter of agriculture, it being the ono ob ject to encourage the Austrians to im prove the breed of the horse. Repre sentatives from the communes inspect the horses, make their choice, and pay down one-quarter of the price, which is nover altered, before taking the horse away, and the balance is paid in three annual installments. This privilege is very much valued by the communes, who invariably buy up all the horses. Several horses aro purchased by one commune, and as one district near Mezohegyes consists of 40.000 inhabi tants, who own some 27,000 horses, the necessity of such extensive buying is apparent. The mares are generally kept in groups, or what is termed a haras, of about 100 mares each, guarded by mounted soldier chicos when turned out on the plains. Tho mares are in three divisions, the first being the Gidrans, so called from the founder of their race, a pure bred Arab, his progeny again being crossed with English thoroughbreds. They are usually about 15.3 hands high and handsomely turned, aro easily matched, and aro generally a dark chest nut in color. They have great bone and substance, and to an English or Ameri can eve should be useful in tho hnnt- ir held. Thev are said to produce ex-. celleut chargers, with tho best of tem pers. Tho second division of brood mares contains Anglo-Norman mares descend ed from a stallion named Nonius, im ported from France in IBIS, his progeny being crossed with English stallions. These mares are from sixteen to seven teen hands high, chiefly browus and bays, and they produce superb carriage horses to the cover of thoroughbred stallions. Another division contained smaller mares descended from Nouius, and the bust is fomposed of the descend ants of a Hungarian horse called Furio si!, his progeny being crossed with half bred and thoroughbred English stal lions. It is perfectly safe for a stranger to go among the horses in the held, and thev submit to having their feet ban dleij. showing no signs of viciousness. Nineteenth Centurv. l ire Stock l'oluU. A dispatch to a New York newspaper avers in the most solemu manner that Mr. E. E. Eshleman, "a well known and rfcputable miller" near Lancaster, Pa., is tho owner of a bisexual rooster. This miraculous bird has been penned up and carefully watched and found to lay reg ularly two eggs a day. Ho did not cackle over them, however, in which respect he showed his sense. External ly he boars every mark of a cock, crows loudly in the barnyard and scratches gravel for his hens like any other male fowl. Yes! This beats the old speckled hen of the rhyme, the one that. used to lay two eggs a day and Sundays she biiii th-rea. DRAFT HORSES AT FAIRS. Contuls AVhlcli Will Make Iheni Intrr estiiiir to the Crowd. Suppose the stake offered equal to that offered fur the trotting race, with simi lar rules as to entry fees, forfeitures, etc., and a draft contest arranged in place of a speed contest and advertised upon the big posters with bold faced type, would it not be competed for and would not entry fees nnd increased gate receipts reimburse the society fur its venture? The idea may be best present ed for consideration and criticism by giving in detail the classes to which it would be applicable. Take a state fair for consideration and for smaller fairs scale down the prices according to their resources. If it offer a prize of $'.'00 for the different races, offer a like sum as a prize in the sweep stakes and aged stallion classes for draft horses, and specify that other things be insr enual the stallion drawing tho heaviest load Bhall be awarded first premium, the second, third and fourth falling in like manner to those entitled to them. Offer a like prize for draft teams walking a mile with a load of two tons and for teams trotting a utile with a load of one-balf ton, the test in each case to determine the award, other things being equal. These contests to be judged, timed and recorded on much the same plan as the trotting races. This plan will doubtless be met with many objections. It will not be approved by owners of dude stallions that they consider too fine to ever wear a collar or strain a muscle in proof of the claim that they are draft horses. The man claiming to have a trotting stallion has to prove it by making him trot. Why not prove you have a superior draft stal lion by making him pull? Tho te:;t will not harm either one and it is as impossi ble to tell by mere appearance whether a horse has great strength as it is to tell whether one has great speed. Others will ridicule the idea of trotting races for draft horses as something absurdly foreign to their line of usefulness, and scout the notion of cultivating speed where strength is the essential point. Yes, power and endurance to handle the heavy loads seera to be the desider atum. But in the questibn of economic draft time is always a factor, and tho team that can move the greatest amount of freight between two points in a given time, as a week or a month, is the best, bo the draft team, par excellence, must not only have strength and endurance, but speed the fast walk for the heavy load, and the lively trot for the light loads and empty return trip. Breeding for heavy draft alono will give us slow, heavy, sluggish animals, while if we try to counteract this ten dency by cultivating activity, sprightli ness and nerve, not only will the heavy ones be more economical draft horses, but the lighter ones, of which tliero will always be a good many, will beiter till tho bill for handy, agreeable business horses. The greatest danger to the draft horse is not that he will not be big euough, but that he will not bo good enough. So the assertion seems warranted that races, and tests involving activity as well as strength, are for the best inter ests of the heavy horses and their breed ers. A. W. Haydon in Breeder'sUazette. Spring Chfelceuit. Now is the time when the poultry keepers need to "be on the alert. April or the early part of May is nono to early to get chickens out, whether intended for the Thanksgiving or Christmas mar ket, for exhibiting at fall fairs or winter poultry shows, or intended to be kept to furnish eggs next winter while the high prices prevail. But more important than early hatching is the keeping up a con stant growth through the summer and fall. They need food abundant and varied in kinds to make this growth, and they need it regularly. A liearty feed "now and then" is not enough. See that they have enough three times a day, one of those times being as early in tho morning as they are stirring, and the other just before they house up toi tho night, with the third about midday between the two. While they are small, and before they begin to roam about in search of insects and green food, give five feeds a day, or food once in two hours. Do not give food of a fattening character, but vary it. Do not allow them to crowd one another in the pen nights, and see that there is pure water and clean gravel for them to have free access to. Take especial pains to keep all vermin away from them. Lice kill more chickens every week than do hawks, owls, skunks and weasels com bined. American Cultivator. l.lvo Stock Points. June is the month in which to breed for fall pigs. Fall pigs do best when farrowed in September. If the lambs are not doing well wean them early and let them have good pas ture along with oats, oil cake and bran. If, however, they are thriving, they may run witli the ewe as long as it is profita ble without weakening her down too much. Use only soft twine for tying wool. Binding twine cuts wool. Tho weaning time fur lambs is from early in May till the middle of August, according to the age and condition of the lamb. Potatoes fed to a cow will increase her flow of milk. Why is not a draft horse race pre pared as one of the attractions for fairs this fall; There would be quite as much fuu in it as in a race between thoroughbreds. Hogs running on clover pasture should have besides a grain ration. Peas in the northwest mako an ex cellent food for hogs. The best time to turu the hugs upon the green pasture ia when the peas are in mils. Give Glauber salts to pigs which are constipated. Mix it in milk. The dose is one-fonrth to a half pound fur a grown hog, and less according to size. Sulphur fumes are perhaps the best disinfectant and destroyer of chicken lice known. One way to rid a low built honhouse of lice is to cover it with a canvas and burn sulphur in it for two hours. Sulphur fumes will destroy any living gorm. Grade or mixed blood stock when crossed with inferior animals will not transmit tho qualities of tho superior breed in all cases. Tho older a breed is the greater is the certainty that it will transmit fixed qualities. The wool clip from Queensland, Aus tralia, is much cleaner this season than it was last year. RYk. GATHERED CREAM. Why Butter from Gathered Creuro Is Not Always a Succoss. All the articles that are now written for the dairy papers are about separators and testing the milk, as if there were no other methods used. There are still some creameries where the system in yogne is the old fashioned method of gathering cream, and good butter can be made by that process if the patrons will only take proper care of the milk and cream. But there is where the sep arator system is better than the gath ered cream system, as the cream is un der the control of one person from tho time it is separated until it is churned, whereas on the other plan the cream is kept by many different persons, and each one has a different method of keep ing it some with shallow pans in the kitchen, some in a cellar with decaying vegetables and others who do not even wash out the cream crock every time it is emptied. But the majority of the patrons keep the cream in good order. One poor lot, however, will taint the whole lot. When tho cream is only gathered twice and some of it only once a week, a is the case in the winter season. Borne of it is sweet, some sour and some of it frozen solid, according to tho conditions under which it is kept. The butter maker has to understand his business to make anything like good butter out of such cream. The butter hicks flavor and keeping qualities nnd will get strong and rancid in a short time. 1 have made a practice of salting the cream in the vat this last year, with good results. I use two pounds of salt to the 100 pounds of cream. Put in the salt as soon as the first load c-f cream is received. One can usually tell about how much cream you will have. A little more or less salt will not do any harm. The cream must be thoroughly stirred to mix it all alike, and the more stirring the better. The salt all runs off with the buttermilk, so you have to salt the butter as though you had not salted the cream. The buttermilk is just as good for the hogs. They drink it just as well as without salt. The salt takes the bit ter taste out of the cream and improves the flavor of the butter. G. B. Lawson in Creamery Journal. Which Pays Best? A short time ago, in answer to a ques tion, The Rural stated that there was very little if any profit in milk at cents a quart. How does it compare with butter at 20 cents? Some of my neighbors tell me they prefer to sell the milk than to undertake the work of making butter at these figures. W. D. C. Selling milk at 2 cents per quart pays better, for the time being, than making butter to be sold at 20 cents pei pound. But that is a very incomplete statement of tho case. If you go into the business of selling milk to the city market you must so arrange your dairy as to produce almost as much milk in the winter as you do in the summer, and to do this yon must feed heavily for nearly six months in the year. If yon sell your milk to a butter or cheese factory you cannot get an aver age of 2 cents per quart. If it were simply a question of selling all your milk at 24 cents per quart, and produc ing as much or as little as you pleased and producing it when you pleased, it would be fairly profitable. But you can not do that. In favor of butter making it is to be said that it takes nothing practically from the soil, while selling milk depletes it as rapidly as does al most any crop. A good butter maker in these days ought to get more than 20 cents on an average for his butter. There are hundreds of them, yes, thou sands, who average at least 25 cents pel pound for their entire production. Rural New Yorker. Hot Weather Advice. As this is the time of year when we get a good deal of sour, thick and bitter cream, we hope the following sugges tions will not be considered as out of place. The creamery desn-es and would like to receive only thin and sweet cream. It is probably impossible to keep it all sweet at this season of the year without ice, but it can be kept thin and in proper condition for churning by observing the following rules: Keep the cans in tanks well filled with water, changed at least twice a day. Three times morning, noon and night would be better. The tank should be kept clean and scrubbed out once a week at least. Cream should not be allowed to re main on the milk more than twenty-four hours at the very longest. A better way, however, and one followed by some of our intelligent farmers, is to skim at twelve hours; that is, skim the morn' ing's milk in the evening and the even ing's milk in the morning, and if you are not satisfied that the cream is an out, let the cans remain another welve hours and skim again. Kepp the cream in a water tank, or, if possible, in a still cooler place, but al ways in cold water. By observing the above rules the cream can be kept thin and most of it sweet. Our drivers are instructed not to receive any cream that is lumpy or bitter or tainted or other wise unfit for use. Woodville Cream ery Company. The ripe Line M'ou't Do. The latest story is that milk is to be delivered in New York city by pipe line. Yes! Any kind of receptacle in which milk is kept or through which it is passed should be boiled up daily in soda water to make it clean and healthful. Imagine a hundred miles of underground pipe being thus cleansed every day. It won't do. Tell ns something easy. Milk pumps have never been a decided suc cess on account of the difficulty of cleansing them, how then can milk pipes be? It is a curious sight to witness one of the new fanglcd accumulators making bntter. You put the milk in, then set the thing going. In a short time you will see something flowing from the three tnbes attached to the machine. First from one conies cream and from another skimmilk, then from the third butter granules. It is said that a hand power butter accumulator will shortly be perfected for .use in farm dairies. The present type is only for creameries and hire dairies. Feed the cows while you nulk them. They relax their muscles and let the milk flow freely while they peacefully chew away on their food. ELECTION XOT1CF. N Jotlee of special town election for tlie purpose. town of lleppner, Oreirou. TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN : Notice Is herebv driven that a special election will be held in "the town of lleppner, at the council chamber, on thelth day ol August. 1M'-', between the hours of s o'clock a. m. and ti o'clock p. m., of said dav, for the purpose of authoriinir the town council to borrow the sum of l."..00O uOand to Issue bonds ot the town llierelor, lor me pur- pose of supplyiuK the town with w ater, and also ! to iiiiwiu-cr the rnnii' to low a tux to ereuie siukinjt fund for the redemption ot sukl bonds In twenty years from August 1st, iwy, and to pav the interest thereon until redeemed, and to approve ordimmee No. 31, The foliowluK officers of election have beeu appointed judges of election. Judges of Election .Ko. Matlock. (v.". A. Kikk, Clerks of Election I L a n is Matlock, )J. i Williams, . A. RoBKttTfi, Recorder, Dated Heppner, Oregon, July 2, 1HM. OOS-tf A line lot of imported Shot Gnus at Thompson & Go's ut baiguiu prices, do jobbers profits. n STOCK BKANDS. While you keep your subscription paid up yoc can keep your brand in free of charge. Allyn. T. J.. lone, Or. IIornee (i(J on left shoulder; cattle Hme on left hip, under bil on ritfht ohx, and upper bit on tho left; nuige, Mor row (Tiinntv. Armstrong, J. l, Alpine, Or. T with bar un der it on left shoulder of horsed; cattle same on left hip. Allison, O. Ut KiRht Mile, ur. t attio pnmrt, O Don left hip and horttps same brand on right shoulder. Kane. Einht Milo. Adkins, rC. Dayville, Or- HtrRiKhi murk ncropp the thigh and two crops and a alii in tw riht ear; horHOn, x upnide down on the riht Hhoulder. hunire in Grant county and Boar vnllov. PO addrosB also at Hfirdnirtn. AdkniB, J. J. i neppnor, Ur. lorfies, JA con nscted on left, tiank: cattle, same on left hip. Ayers, Johnny, Lena, Or. Jiornos branded trinnffieou len hip; ciittlo same on riht hip; also crop off riirht ear and upper bit on same. Blyth, Percy H., Heppr.er.Or.--HorseB. Homan cross on right shoulder, llange in Morrow county. Hieakman. Geo., Hardman, Or. HoreeB, r flan on left shoulder: cattle same on riaht shoulder. bannister, J. W., Hardman. Or. Cattle brand ed ti on left hip and thigh: split in eaeh ear. Brenner. Peter, Itoi seherry Uri'ifon Horses branded PH on left shoulder. Cattle flame on right siue Burke, M St C, Long Creek, Or-Ori cattle, MAY connected on left hip. ciop off left ear, un der half crop off rit;ht. liorss, same brand on letft Bhouldsr. Kango in Grunt and .Morrow connty. Howaman, A Mount Vernon and TturiiB, Or. Cattle, A B on right hip, two crops in each oar; same on horsus. on right shoulder, itango in (jrunt and Harney cotiutieH. Brosman, Jerry, Lena, Or. Horses branded 7 on right shoulder; cattle B on the lift side. Left ear half crop and right ear upper slopo. Barton, Wm., Heppner, Or. -HorseB, J B on right Ihiga, cattle, same on right hip; split in each ear. Brown, Ifla, Lexington, Or. Horses IB on the right stifle; cattle same on right hip; range, Mor row county. Brown, J .P., Hoppner. Or. -HorKeB and cattle branded B with ox-yoke aboveon left shoulder. Brown, J. C, Heppner. Or. Morses, circlt 0 with Oof in on ter on h'ft hip; cattle, same. Brown, W.J. , Lena, Oregon. Horses W bar over it, on the left shoulder. Cattle name on left hip. Boyer, W. G,, Heppner, Or. Horses, box brand on right hip caUle, same, with split in each ear. Burg, P. O., Heppner, Or. Norses, P B on loft shoulder; cattle, same on left bin. Bmwnlee, W. J., Fox,Or( 'altle, JB connected on left side; crop on left ear and two splits and middle piece cut out on right, ear; on horses same brand on the left thigh; Kange in h'ox valley, Grant county, 'ain.K. Caleb.Or. Y Y on horses on left Btifle; U with onartor circle over it, on left shoulder, and on left stifle on all colts under 5 years; oi, left shoulder only on all horses over li years. AH range in Orant county. Chirk, Wm. II., Lena, Or. Horse. WHO con nee ted, on left shoulder: cattle same on right hip. Itni'ge Morrow and Umatilla counties. Cale, (.'has. It., Vinson or Lena, Or. HotBot H C on right shoulder; cattle same on right hip. itange Morrow and Umatilla counties. t'ochran, Chan., lone. Or. Horses, HP con nected on left shoulder; cattle, i) on both left hip and stiiie. Range in Morrow county. Cannon, T. B.,Long Creek, Or.--Xou cattle on right side, crop off right ear and slit in left ear. Our horses same brand on left shoulder. Kange in if rant county. Cecil, Wm., Douglas, Or.; horses JP on lef shoulder; ca'tle same on left hip, waddles on each jaw anu two bits in ttie right ear. Curl, T. It,, John Day, Or. Double cross on I each hip on cattle, swallow fork and under bii in right ear, split in lef t ear, Bangn in Gram county. On Bheep, inverted A al'd spear point on shoulder. Kar marko.i ewes, crop uu left ear. 1 punched upper bit in right. Wethers, crop in right and under half crop in left ear. All ratigt in Grant coniitv. Croshy, A. A., Heppner, Or. Cattle branded -!-(or H L connected) on the right shoulder. Cook, A. J. .Lena.Or. Horses, ttlon right shotil .ler. CaUle. same on right hiu: ear mark eanart 3rop off left and split in right. Curriii.lt. Y., Currinsvilie, Or. - Horses, on left stifle. Cochran, J IT Monument, Or Horses branded r I & A on left shoulder. Cattle, sume on right hip. swallow fork in right ear and crop otf I eft. Cox & English, Hardman, (Jr. Ca'.tte, C will in center: liorseB. CJfi on left Mp. Cupper, II. A., Monument, Or. Horses H C on Itft shoulder, cattle H C on left side, swal low fork on right ear. Cochran, K. K., Monument, Grant Co, Or. Horses branded circle with bar beneath, on left shoulder; cattle same brand on both hips, mart under slope both ears and dewlap. Chapin, H., Hardman, Or.Horfies brandoa on right hip. Cattle brauded the Bame. Cross, H L, Dayville, Or Cattle branded -f- two crops and a split in left ear; on horses a reversed Z on loft stifle. Also have the following brands on cattle: 72 on left hip, 7 on right hip. VI on left shoulder, two parallel bars on left shoulder. Ear marks, two crops. Doonan, Wm., lleppner, Or. Horses branded OO with bar over them, on left shoulder; cat tle same on left hip. Douglass, W. M , Galloway, Or. Cattle, It 1 on right side, swadow-fork in each ear; horuos, It 1) on left hip. Douglas, O. T., Douglas, Or Horees TD on the right stifle; cattle same on right hip. Duncan, W. P., John Day.Or. Quarter circle W on right, shoulder, both on horses and cattle. Kange Grant county. Driskell, W. E., Heppner, Or. Horses branded K inside of U on left shoulder. Cattle same on left side of neck. Ely, J. B. & Sons. Douglas, Or. Horses brand ed ELY on left shoulder, cattlo same on left hip. hole iv right ear. Ellioti , Wash., Heppnor, Or. Diamond on right shoulder. Eisk. lialph. Prairie City, Or Horses, It F on right shoulder; cattle, on right hip. liange in Grant county. Eloek, Jackson, Heppner, Or. Horses, 7F Counected on right shoulder; cattle, same on right hip. Earmark, hole in right and crop ott left. Florence, L. A,, Heppner, Or. Cattle, LP on right hip; horses F with bar under on right shoulder. Florence, 8. P. Heppner, Or Horses. F on riifht shoi.idet : cattle, E on riuht hip or thigh. Gay, Henry, Heppner, Or. UAJ on left shoulder. Goble, Frank, Heppner, Or. HorseB, 7 F on left stifle; cattle, same on right hip. Oilman-French, Land and Livestock Co., Fos sil, Or. Horses, anchor tj on left shoulder; vent, same on left stifle. Cattle, same on both hips: ear marks, crop otf right ear and nnderbit in Inft. Kange in tiiiiiani, urant, trooit ana aiorrow counties. Gentry, Elmer, Echo, Or. Horses bnmdt'd H. S. with a quarter circle over it, on left stifle Uangein Morrow and UmatillacountieB. Giltwater, J . C, Prairie City, Or, On horses, 0 O on left shoulder and stine; cattle, on right aide. Kange in Grant county. Hams, James, Hurdman Or. Horses Bhaded 2 on left shoulder; cattle same on left hip. Kange iu and about Hurdman. Hajes. Geo., Lena, Or, Brand JET connected, with quarter circl over it, on left shoulder. Hiatt A. B., Kidge, Or. Cattle, round-top A with quarter circle under it on the right hip. Kange in Morrow and Umatilla counties. liinton Si Jenks, Hamilton. Or Cattle, two bars on either hip; crop in right ear and split in left. HorBes, J on right thigh. Kange in Grant county. Hughes, 8aniuel, Wagner, Or T E L on right shoulder on horses; on cattle, on right hip and on left side, swallow fork in right ear and slit in left. Kange in Haystack district, Monvw county. Hall. Edwin, John Day.Or. Cattie E ki on righi hip; horses same on right shoulder, range in Grant county. Hughes, Mat, Heppner, Or. Horses, shaded heart on the left shoulder. Itange Morrow Co. Hunsaker, B . Vagt:er. Or. -Horses, H on left shoulder; ca tie, 9 on ieft hii . liardisty, Albert, Nye. Oregon Horses, AH connected, on left shoulder; Cattle on the left hip, crop off left ear, Humphrevs, J 11. Hardman, Or. Horees. H on let) tiank Hiatt, Wm. E., Ridge, Or. Horses branded bar cross on left shoulder: cattle same on left hip. flayea, J. M., Heppner. Or. Horses, wineglass on left shmihiei cattle, same on right hip. Ivy, Alfred. Long Cret-k. Or Cattle 1 D on right hip, crop off left ar and bit in right. Horses same bnmd on left shoulder, Kange n Grunt conntv. Hnston, Luther, Eight Mile. Or. Horse H on the ieft shoulderand heart on the left slide Cat tle same on left hip- Kange in Morrow county. Jenkins, D. V..Mt. Yenion.Or. J on horses un left shoulder; on cattle, J on left hip and two smooth crops ou both ears. Itange in Fox and Bear vall.oa Jankin. o. 31., Heppner, ur. Horses, horse- shoe J on left shoulder. Cattle, the sum a, Kange on Eight Mile. Johnson. Felix Lena, Or. Horses, circle r on left stine; cattle, same on right hip, UHder half cmp in riBht and si.lit in left ear Kftimv. Mike. Heooner. Or.-Horses brands ! KNY on ieft hip cattle same and crop otf left) Mr: nndor olooe on the right , ! Kir. J. 1$ 00 ' Rellor. hichard, Blanton. flrftiit county, (r.- E K in tapiare, cattle on I ft iiip; hor.ee Mime ' on left Blioulner. Hantfe H.Pf vnllov. Kirk. J C, lleppner. Or. Uuiwt. 17 on either flnu k : cat 1 1. 17 tin nuhl aide. Kirk. Jesse, lleppner. Clr.: horse 11 on left shoulder; catlle t-uuie on light side, nnderbit on rlsrlit ear. Knniberland,W. CL, Mount Vernon, Or. 1 L on cattle on risclit and left eiiiea, swallow fork in If ft ear and unler eiop in rik-lit ear. Hnr-ert aame brand on left shoe liler. Kanae in Ur.iLt cour.tv. Keener. Eli. lleppner. Or.-Horses J L, and ;rw, "UU"- m LeHiey.M C, Mounmem, Or A triangleftwith all Uuhh extending pa t body of figure on s hor ses on left shoulder, ou cattle diamond on left Bhoulih'r, split in righ.aua u6i tit m left ear Ka"ge iu Grant couut and to parts of John Day Lea hey, J W. Heppner Or. Horses branded L N on left shoulder; catlle same on left hip; wat -tie over right ey three slits in right ear. Loften, Btepnen, I-ox, Or. M L on ieft hip on catlle. crop and split on right ear. Horses Bailee brand on left shoulder. Kongo Grunt county. Liouallen, John W., L-f Or. Horses branded half-circle JL connected on left shoul der. CaiUe. same on left hip. Itange, near Lex ington. Lord, George, Heppner. Or. Horses branded double H connect Sometimes culled a swing H, on left shoulder. Maxweil, M . 8 , Gooseberry. Or. Horses brand ed long link on left Bhoulder; cattle, sume on lef j hip. Ear mark, under bit in ieft ear. Minor, Oscar, lleppner. Or. Cattle, M Don right hip; horse. Mon left shoulder. iiorgnn, . JN., rleppner. Or. Horses, M ) on left shouldet cattle same on left hip. McCumber, Jas A, Echo, Or. Horses. M with bar over on right shoulder. iViann, B. B., Lena, Or. Horses old mareB ZZ on right hip; young Btuck, small zz on left shoulder. Morgan, Thos., Heppner, Or. Horses, circle T on left shonJdor and left thigh; cattle, Z on riKtii. ungti. Mitchell. Oscar, lono. Or. Horses. 77 on rirht hip; cattle. 77 on right side. met laren, v. ii., Brownsville, Or, Horses, Figure ft on each shoulder; cattle. M2on hio McKerll.W.J. Mount Vruill llr-VInn nattU ou right hip, crop in right ear. half crop in left same brand ou horses o left hip. Kange in Graut county. JHeCarty, Uavid H., Echo, Or. Horses branded DM Connected, on the left ttlinulrinr? mitrlo tnnia on hip and side. mouirr, trank, t ax Valley, Or. Mule show with toe-Cork OU Cattle on rihs nnd nmlar in each ear; hoiBes aame brand on left Btitle. fllcHaley, G. V., Hamilton. Or. On Homes, 8 with half circle under on left fihouider;on Cattle, four bars connected on top on the right side Itange in Grant County. Neal. Andrew. Lone Kock, Or. Horses A N con necul on left shoulder; cattle same on both hipp. Newman, W. K., Heppner, Or. Horses N with half circle over it on left shoulder. Nordyke, E., Hilverton. Or. Horses, circle 7 on left thigh: cai tie, same on left hip. Oliver, Joseph, Canyon City, Or. A 9 on cattle on left hipion horsea, same on lef t thigh, Kange in Grant county. Oiler, Perry, Lexington, Or. P O on loft a ho u, dm. Olp, Herman, Prairie City, Or. On cattle, O LP connected on left hip; heroes on left stifle and wanle on nose. Kange in Grant comity. Pearson, Olave, Eight Mile. Or. Horses, quar ter circle shield on left shoulder and 24 on left hip. Cattle, fork in loft ear, right cropped. 24 on left hip. Kange on Eight Mile. Parker & Gleasou, Hardman, Or, Horsea IP on l'ft hiiouider. Piper, J. H, LexingtoD, Or.HorseB, JE con nected oi left shoutder; cattle, same on loft hip. under hii in each ear. Patherg, Henry Lexington. Or. HorseB brand ed with a Koinai, cross on ieft Bhomder; cattle branded with Komau cross, bar at bottom, ou left hip. Pettys, A. C, lone, Or,; horses diamond P on shoulder; cuttle, J Jl J connected, on thu left hip, upper slope in left ear and slip in the light. Potter, Dan, Lexington Horees branded MP connected on left shoulder; cattle, same on right hip. Powell, Jonn l'., Dayville, Or HorBes, J P con uec ed o left shoulder. Cattle OK couuected on left hip, two under half crops, oue on each ear, wattle under throat. Kugc iu Grant county. Kickard, G. D., Canyon City, Or.E C on left -dioulder, on horses only. Kange Canyon creek and Bear valley, G rant county. Hood. Andrew, Hardman, Or, Horses, square cntsi- with quarter-circle over it on left stifle. Keninger, Chris, Heppner, Or. HorBes, C H on left uhouldei . Kice, Dan, Hardman, Or.; horses, three panel worm fence on left shoulder; caUle, DAN on right shoulder. Kange near Hardman. Kudio, Wm, Long Creek, Or. Brands homos It oi right shoulder. Kange. Grant and Morrow counties. Koyso, Aaron, Heppner, Or Horses, plain V on ieft shoulder; catlle, same brand reversed on right hip and crop oil right ear. Kange in Mor row county, Kttwh Bros., Heppner, Or. HorseB branded X on the right. Bhoulder; oattle, IX on the left nip, crop otl left ear and dewlap on neck. Kange ic .uorrow anu adjoining counties. Kust, William, Pendleton, Or. Horses K on lef t shoulder; cattle, K on left hip, crop otf right ear, underwit on left ear. Hheep, It on weather, round crop off righ ear. Kange Uma tilla and Morrow c ninties. Keaney, Andrew. Lexington, Or. IlorBM bmuded A K ou right shoulder, vent quartet circle over brand; cattle Baine on right hip. Kiingo Morrow county. Koyse, Wm. H, Dairyville, Or Hit connected with quarter circle over top on cattle on right hip and crop off right ear and split in left. Horses aame brund on loft shoulder. Itange in Morrowi Grunt and Gilliam counties. Kilter, J F, Kitter, Or Three parallel bars with bar overou horseB on left hip; on cuttle, lefl dido, two smooth crops, two splits in each ear, tiange in Middle Fork of John Day. Ueetor. J. W'., Heppner, Or. Horses, JG ok left shoulder. Cai tie, 0n right hip. Spicknall. J. W-, GooBeberry, Or. Horses branded 31 on left shoulder; lange in Morrow county. Cipray, J. F., Heppner, Or.-HorBes branded fr8 connected oi. right shoulder; cattle same on both nips. Sailing, C C Hoppner, Or Horses branded 8 A on left Bhoulder; cattle same on left hip. hwaggart, B. F., Lexington, Or, Horses 2 with daub under it on ieft Btitle, cattle H with uash under it on right hip, crop off right ear and waddled on right hind leg. KangB in Morrow, Gilhainund Umatilla counties. fcJwnggart, A. L., Ella. Or. Horses branded 2 on lei t shoulder; cettle same on left hip. Crop on ear. wattle on left hind ieg. Straight W. E., Heppner, Or. Horses shaded J S on let Btitle; cattle J Son left hip, swallow fork in righi ear, underbit in left. Hwaggart, L, Alpine, Or.-Horsos, 8 8 on right dhoulder bapp. Thos., neppner, Or. Horses, 8 A P on left lap; cat tit same on left hip. Nhirtz, James, Long Creek, Or. Horses. 3 on leit stille and over 2 on left shoulder, Hhner.John, Fox, Or. NO connected on horses on right hip; cattie, same on right hip, crop off right ear and under bit in left ear. Kange ui Grant county. Smith Bros., John Day, Or H Z on cattle ou le t .shoulder. HtephtMis, V. A., Hardman, Or-; horses 8 Son right stifle; cattle horizontal L on the light side Stevenson, Mrs A. J., Heppner, Or. t attle, H on right hit ; swallow-fork in ieft ear. Hwaggart, G. W Heppnor, Or. Horses, U on left siiouidei ; cattle, 44 on ieft hip. Stewart, Geo., Hardman, Or. Horses circle oi left shoulder. Htone. Ira, Bikleton, Wash, Horses, keystone on left shoulder. Smith, E. E. Lone Rock, Or. Horses branded a crossed seven on iefi shoulder; cattle same ou left side, Kange, Gilliam county. Hperry, E. G.. Heppner, Or. Cattle W C on led hip, crop off right and underbit in left year, dewlap; horses vV C on left shoulder. Thompson, J. A., Heppner, Or. Horses, Z on left shoulu, r; cattle, 2 ou left shoulder. Tippets, s. T.t Lena, Or.-Horses, O- on left shoulder. Turner R. W., Heppner, Or. Small capital T lelt shouidei, horses; cattle same on left hip with split in both ears. lln rnton, 11. M lone, Or Horses branded H i connected on ieft stifle; sheep Baine brand. Yanderpool, H. T.. Lena, Or;-Horses HV cor necLed on right shoulder ;cat tie, same on right Walbridge, Wm., Heppner. Or. Horses TJ L on the left shouidor; cattle same on right hio! crop oft left eur and right ear lopped. WilBon.John Q Salem or Heppner, Or Horses branded J y on tho left shoulder. Rau'ee Morrow county. W nrrtu, W B. Caleb, Or Cattle. W with quarter circle over it, on left side, split in right ear. horses same brand on left shoulder. Katun in Grautcouuty. Wood. F L, Dayville, Or Heart on horses on lef stifle; on cattle,; on left Bide and under bit in li-ft ear. Kange in Grant county. right Silas A. Heppner, Or. Cattle branded S V on the right hip. square crop oil right ear and fpht in left. Wallace. Francis, Mount Vernon.Or-Squareon cattle on the left hip, upper slope in ihe left ear and under slope in right ear. Same brand ou horses on right shoulder. Range in Uarnev and Grant county. ' Webster, J. 1,, Heppner. Or.-Horses branded w-th har over J on right shoulder; cattle sama on right hip, crop off left ear and split in ch itange. Morrow county. Wade, Henry, Heppner. Or.-Horses branded ace of spades on leit Bhoulder and left hiu tattle branded same on left side and left hip. Wells, A. S., Heppnor, Or.-Horses, 0vo on left shoulder: can e same. W olhnger, John, John Day City. Or On horses three parallel oars on left shoolder; 7 on sheep bit in both ears. Kange in Grant and Malhuer counties. Wylai.d, J H, Hardman, Or. CircU c on left tin ti n, Woodward, John. Heppner, Or. Horses CP connected on left shoulder. WnikinB, Lishe. H eppner, Or.-Horses branded L E connecteo on left etifls. Wallace, Charles, Portland, Or. Cattle Won right thigh, hoi in left ear; horses, W on right shonlaer, Bom same on left shoulder. Whittier Bros., Drewsy, Harney eounty. Or Horses branded W B. connected on ieft shoulder "imams. asco. Hamilton, Or. Quarter cir- 1 ""w""" nip, ooui cattle and i ""'rTf. wrmii. wuuiy. . i . dUams. J U Long Creelc, Or Horses, qtiar ter circle over three bars q left hip; catGe sains an'1 ht !n Bange in Gnuit n.nntr. lTa' , : A., Heppner, Or. Horses running A A on shoulder; attle. same on right bip. T&J,S-rey,0r--,lo,'b'd!'