OFFICIAL PAPER. CIRCULATION MAKES Buy advertising space because rates are low generally the circulation is a sight Imrer. Circulation determines the value, of advertising; there is no other standard. The Gazette is willing to abide by it. The Paper. Without it advertisers get nothing for their money. The Gazette, with one exception, has the largest circula tion of any pajier in Eastern Oregon. Therefore it ranks high as an advertising medium. lbs HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1892. TENTH YEAH NO. 516. JSomo People sigr he' Willi SEM 1-V KliKLY GAZETTE. PUBLISHED Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAH W. PATTERSON Bus. Manager. OTIS PATl'EHSON Editor A iS.tO par year, fur six mouths, $1.(10 (or turee minims; in advance. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "EAOliE," of Long Creek, Grant Comity Oregon, is published by the same coin Danv every Friiiav morning. Suhsoription crir'e f-J per vear. Foradvertisiinrnites.aiiclress CiallT Ij'. PATTEBSOIT, Editor and Manager, Lour Creek, Oregon, or "Gazette,' lieppner, Oregon. THIS PAPKH is kept on hie at S,. C. Pake a 1 Advertising Aiwuoy. IU and 65 Merchants KxoIibiiks,Hbii Kraucisco. California, where co,. tracls for advertising can be made for it. T,i C I'ENTI.AND, SECRETARY OF THE Vj, Oregon Press Association, 211 Ash Street, between Kirt and Second, Portland, Oregon, is our only agent located in that place. Advertis ers should consult him for rates and space in the Gazette. THE GAZETTE'S AG iNTS. Wanner, Arlington, Lung Creek Echo, Camas l'rairio, Matteson, Nye, or., larduian, Or., Hamilton, Orant Co., Or lone, Prairie City, Or., Canyon City, Or., Pilot liock, Davvllle, Or., John Day, Or., Athena, Or Pendleton, Or., B. A. Mnnsaker ...Henry lieppner The Kngle Bob Shaw Oscar De Vaul ....Allen McFerrin ...... H. C. Wright J. A. Woolery ...Mattie A. Rndio T. J. Carl R. R. McHaley 8. L. Parrlsh O. P. Skelton J. E. Snow F. I. MeCallum .. John Edington Win. O. SlcCroskey Mount Vernon, uraniuo.,ui. Shelnv, Or Fox, Orant Co., Or ...... Eight Mile, or Mrs. Upper Khea Creek, Dmiglim, Or Lone Rock, Or Gooseberry Condon, Oregon Lexington AN AOKNT WANTED IN KV Postmaster . ... Miss Stella Flett j. r . Allen Andrew AKhbaugh .... B. F. Hevland S. White . . U. M. Johnson V. P. Snyder .Herbert llalsteaa . . ..W. B. McAllster EBY PBECINCT. Union Pacific Railway-Local card. No. 10, mixed leaves Heppner 8:20 la. m. " (! " ar. at Arlington 11 W a.m. " ' " leaves " : P- . 9, " ar. at Heppner 1iM p. m. daily except Sunday. Easl bound, main line ar. at Arlington 10 p. m. We8t "leaves 4.i0p. m. Nisht trains are running on same time as before. - heppner-monument stage. . Stage leaves for Monument daily, exce) t Sunday, at 6:30 a. m. Arrives daily, except Monday, at 5:00 p.m. or-r-xcx-A-L xiiseotoet. U nited States Officials. President,, "jVon V loe-rrwiaent.. f r. , w w r Kr I! TSSury.:::::::::::::chrie- Foster Secretary or interior jy y;,v. : Secretary of Var Btenneq,Vyln5 Secretary or Navy ...... . i; .- PoBtinaster-ljeneral mmiu " State of Oregon Governor SHcr tary of Btate TreHBilrer. . Supt. Public Instruction S. Pennoyer ,T. n . Phil. Helschan . E. B. McElroy ( J. H. Mitchell J.N. D.dph t Ringer Hermann iw.H.EUis Frank U. Baker Senators Congressmen Printer.... Supreme Judges.. F . A. Moore W. P. Lord li. 8. Bean Seventh Judicial District. Circuit Judge Ww'Hrw.U,n Prosecut ug Attorney w. H. Wils ,n Morrow County umeiai JointSenator... Representative County Judge ' Commissioners, J. U. Baker. Clerk Sheriff Treasurer ...Henry Blackman J.N. Brown jnlius Keithly Filter Brenner J. W. Morrow Geo. Noble. W. J. L ezer Assessor . .R. L. haw - trorveyor... rr , - School Sup't TW'Avere 3? Corouer T. W. Ajere, jr HEPPNEQ TOWN OFFICERS. ...T.J. Matlock l',Min"ihnmV"!VV.".!'.'."b. E. Farnsworth. M ITchtenthai, Otis Patterson I', (iarngues, Thos. uorgan ana trana uiuiaui. Recorder.. .A. A. Roberts. Treasurer Marshal . . . . . B. G. Blocum J. W. Hasmus. Precinct Offli'erp. Justice of the Peace : V Constable J.J. Roberts United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OR. J. W. Lewis T. 8. Lang Keoeiv 1 tA GRANDE, OR. A;iiand::.v:;.v::.v::.v::::::::Kr BBCSBI SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.30 o clock in their Castle Hall. National Bank build ing, bojouming brothers .'ordiallv in- ;r..J ... u,,an,l F.MII. VORUZ. C. C. T 0. AUBREY. K. of B. 4 8. tf KAWLINS POST, Ni). 81. G. A. R. Meets at Leiington, Or., the last Batnrday of sad, month. All veterans are invited to join. C. C. Bonn. . Geo. W. SMITH. Adjutant, tf (Commander. riaor'ESsxow.A.X'- AA. EGBERTS, Rf-al Estate, Insur- ance and Collections. Office in Council Chambers, Heppner, Or. swtf. rnn7cn axle GREASE BEST IS THE WORLD. ItawDBQuaJitiea.renniuryaseiactnallr m,Ua.tia two bo. ot any other brand. N fleeted by he. THt CLM tlftlw FOR 6 ALE BY DEALER9 GEyERALLT. Tif Where? At Abrabamsick's. In addition to his tailoring business, he has added a fine line of underwear of all kinds, negligee Bhirtt, hosiery, etc. Also baa on hand gome elegant patterns for snits. A. Abrahamsiok, May Btreet, Heppner, Or. VALUABLE PRESENT. A. Year's Subscription to a Pop ular Agricultural Paper GIVEN FKEET0 OUR READERS By a special arrangement with the publishers we are prepared to furnish FF.EE to each of our readers a year's subscription to the popular monthly agricultural journal, the American Fakmmi, published at Springfield and Cleveland, Ohio. This offer is made to any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearages on subscription and one year in advanoe, and to any new subscribers who will pay one year in advatice. The American Farmer eojoyB a large national circula tion, and ranks among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re oeive the Amkrioan Farmer for one yeBr, It will be to your advantage to oail promptly. Sample copies can be s 'en at our office. From Terminal or interior Poiuts the I i A I LROAD1 Is the line to take iotsE It is the Dining Car R"ute. It runs Through Vesti billed Trains every day in the year to St. Paul and Chicago (No Change of Cars) Composed or DINING CARS unsurpassed, PULLMAN DRAWING ROOM SLEEPERS Of Latest Equipment TouristSleepingCars Beat that cao be constructed and in which ac commodations are both Iree ami furnihwl for holders of first or eei ond-claeB tickets, and Elegant Day Coachs. A Continuous Line connecting with all Lines, affording Direct and Uninter rupted Service. Pullman Sleeper Reservations can be Secured in advance through any agent of the road. THROUGH" TICKETS To and from al points in America, Engla id and Enrop caa be purchased at any Ticket otiice or. tniB company. Full information concerning rates, time of trains, routes and other details furnished on application to any agent, or A. D. CHARLTON, Assistant General Passenger Agent. No. 121 First St., Cor. Washington, tf. PORTLAND OREGON The original rs DICT10 H HRY . T-fcV HPKPT At, A li It A NU KM E NT WITH THE li niii.Hshtrn. wo are able 10 obtain a number Of IP auove OOuK, unu liropurre iu luiuiou n copy to eHcb of our subscribers. Th riintionarv is a necessity In every home, school and business house. It tills a vacancy, and furniBhes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes ot me cnoicesi noons coum supply. Youugaud old, educated and ignorant. rien ann pour, bjiuiuu iivc it wuhiii tunv-ti, anu refer to its contenls every day in the year Am unine have asked if this is really the Oric- .nnl Wfthster's Liiabridned Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the mil. lidhers the fact, that this is the very work complete on which about forty of the best years ot the author's life were so well employed in writing, it contains tne entire voeaouiary 01 about 100,000 wordB, including the correct spell ing, derivation and definition of same, and is the regular standard size, containing about 300,000 Bquare inches of printed surface, and is DO una lii ciom nan morocco auu oLteu. Until further notice wo will tumish this valuable Dictonary First To any new subscriber. Second To any renewal subscriber. Third To any subscriber now in arrears who pays up and one year in advance, at the following prices, viz: Full Cloth bound, gilt side and back stamos marbled edges S:-oo. Half Mo occo, bound, gilt side and back stamDS. marbled edges. Si. 50. Full Sheep bound, leather label, marbled edges, $2.00 Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. -AB the publishers limit the time and nnniipr of books thev will furnish at the low prices, we advise all w'ho desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to It at once. FBEE TO IE AFFLICTED. All who are miffering from the effects of Youthful Errors, Loss of Manhood, Failing Powere, Gonorrhoea, Gleet, Strioture.Syphilisand the many troubles which are the effects of these terrible diKorrlem will receive, Fiiee or C ha roe, full directions how to treat and cure themselves at home by riling to tbj CLIPOBXIA MeDICAI, A!fD Hl BOICAI, In- fikmabt, 1ii29' Market Street, Sun Francisco, California. 465-ly. Northern Pacific Unabnd For Bilious Attacks neartburn, sick headache, and all disorders of tha stomach, liver, and bowels, Ayer's Cathartic Pills are the safest, surest, and mcst popular inedicirse for family use. Dr. J, C. Aver & Oa, Every Doe Kff-jctiue, The 6ol ebrated French Gure, "rr1 "APHFiODITINE" S,SS It Sold ok a POSITIVE GUARANTEE to cure any form of nervous disease, or any disorder of the BEFORS generative or AFTER (ant of cither sex whether arising from tb xcessive use of Stimulants, Tobacco or Opluci, or through youthful Indiscretion, over indulg ence, &c, such as I.OSS of Brau Power, Wakeful, neu, Bearing down Pains in the Back, Seminal Weakness, Hysteria, NervouB Prostration Nocturn al Emission. , Leucorrhcea, Dizziuess, Weak Mem. ory, Ixissof Power and Imnoteucy, which if ne glected often lead to prematureoldageandinsaQ lit. Price 11.00 a box. ( boxes for 15.00 Bent by mail on receipt of price. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE forevery 15.00 order, to refund the money if a rerinaiueut cure is not effected. Thousands of testimonial! from old and young, of botb sexes, permanently r iredby aphroditinb. Circular free. Address THE APHRO MEDICINE CO. WXSTXRN BRANCH, BOX 27 PORTLAND, OR Sold in Heppner by Slocum-Johnston Drug Co SHILGH'S CONSUMPTION CURE. The success of this Oreat Corgh Cure Is without a parallel in trie history of inedioiue. All druggists are authorized to sell it on a pos itive guarantee, atestthatno othercurecan successfully stand. That it may become known, the Proprietors, at an enormous ex pense, are placing n Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada. If you have a Coufh, Kore Throat, or Bron chitis, use it, for it will cure you. If your child has theCrouii, or WhoopIiijcCougli, use it promptly, and relief is sure. If you dread that insidious disease Consumption, use it. Ask your Drilgyist for SHILOH'S CURE, Pricel0cts.,60ots. anclfl.W). Ifyour Lungs are sore or Back lame, use Shiloh'a Porous Plaster. Price Mots, For sale by all Drug gists and Dealers. The wtotfeflwVW ! Bit .. are very hmn-1, yet (.hr-cc;. f,m y iv tiles of tllG linger Ti.H'ii J'ill .v.:i;h f, Iiaie beenso prp fi.r tl;ir ly . f. Their Ri?. ur.:i f-TV-.tir-t-cit;!! tvi.ti- mend them r ive of c-(j.iilr -c and persons vit!i ivtn!; stoijiili-tn. ipu Sick Headaelae e Cn tf!f-ynroinvnfuab:castV.rvt 'v.o t!:o " cud pansiofV'liW-iorallywi.h'Mit !;.-: a a p trt iniiiif. iJc;t,h Nizes oi'l'iiiJ.'s K?.i lu.rosoltl by 1.1.. (.. TJi.sts. Itoso Rii:u',. i net, sac. Viilw, nv ut in na a ui., , . i, Tried For 20 .Years ! UKEiii'iisipL. The original and only genuine Compound Oxy gen TreatmHnt, that of Dra. Stirkey A llen, i a Kcientific Hdjustnient of the element of Oxygen and Nitrogen maKnetizd, and tlm compfiinul in so condensed and made portable thut it is sent all over the world. It has ben in use tor mnre than twenty years; thouBands of patiHn'a have been treated ann over one thousand phyiciinB have used it and recom mend it a very significant fact. The (jrfat success of our treatment haa (riven rise to a host of imitator, unscrupuloua pprntns, some culling theit preparations Compound Oxy cn, often Bppropriatin our testimonial and the names of oar patient, to recommend worth less concoctions, Hut any substance mad else where by otherB, and called Compound Oxygen, is spuhons. "Compound Oxygen Its Mode of Action and Kesults, is the title or a nooK or :'. pagoe pun lishwi by Drs. Htarkey A Falen. which gives txt ail inonirers full information as to this remarknble curative agent, and a record of surprising cures in a number or chrome cases many or them after being abandoned to die by other phyHicians. W ill be mailed to any address on application. Drs. STARKI-Y & PAI.EN, 1529 Arch Sr., Philadelphia, Penna. Please mention this paper. 514-M1. w. test Grove Poultry Yards. ESTABLISHED IN 1877. Wyanrlottes, Plymonth Books, Litflit Brnnmba, luwe and iui;l Comb Brown LchorBS, Pin triie Coobins, HoiKJaoe and Sil verSpangled Hunibuie. 1.000 YOUNG FOWLS Ready for Delivery. BOOK YOUR ORDERS FOR CHOICE SELECTIONS. I GCABANT E SATISFACTION TO EVEKY CUSTOMER. Send for Catalogue. Address J. M. GARRISON, Box 55. com.3'j6. Forest Grove. Or T, SOMB EAGLETS. From the Long Creek Paper. Tims. Quiiid, a stookman of Morrow county, whs in our midst this week. Hnnrv Blackwell made another ship. mentot'SUO head of cattle to Portland this week. Charles Lewis, assistant cashier iu tup First National Bank of Heppner, is visit ing his parents in this city. J. W. Smith arrived from Heppner, Thursday of last week with freight. He left Monday again for another lohd. Johnny Chrisman left -Monday for Hepp ner. Amnni? his load ol freight he will bring in a 32UU pouod WvjR. safe for the town of Jing Oreek. 1 Heppner raoe horse men will all attend the Long Creek raoes thi"J'ohf ; Several of the purses are hnng espeoiallv for Morrow county uorses. A. Abrahsmsiek, a merchant tailor of Heppner, arrived in Long Creek Wed nesday. He is on a tour through Grunt county selling ready made clothing. Senator Blaokman anticipates mating a tour tlironyh Grant and Harney coun ties this fall to ascertain what his con stituents desire at the session of the leg. is! attire. Grant county people are all seekiugthe onol shades of the high mountain langes of Greenhorn. It naoommoo occurrence every day for buck loads to pass through Long Oreek pleasure seeking. The constable at Alba has a warrant for the arrest of Jack Tarpy, known in Long Creek as the party who entered a boxing contest with "Kid" Wilson here last wiuter. Long Oreek parties having returned from 1,'eel, informed the Eali that Tarpv was stocked with liquors to ruu a saloon at thut plaoe. Last Friday evening he got too many oocktails nudei bis own bel', and in a drunken rage got in and mashed all of his own bar fixtures. Next morning lie bundled up and left for unknown paits with all the proceeds of the business, and to tla.e, has not an swered for the offense. loo Itewiinl 1UU. The readers of this paper will be pleas ed to lenru that there is at least one dreaded disease that science lias been able to cure in all its stavi'i. and thai is oaturrb. Hall's Catarrh Cure is tbeonly positive cure known to medical fraterni ty. Catarrh being a constitutional dis. ease, requires a constitutional treatmeut Hall s (Jatarrh tiure is taken luterniiiiy, aotmg directly upon the blood and ma oons surfaces of the system, thereby de stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by build ing up the constitution and assisting na tore in doiog its work. The proprietors have so mu;h faith in its ourntive pow ers, they off r One Hundred Dollars for anv case thut it tails to cure Bend lor Addrea, tedo. O. F. J. uur.'iinr L c.,To SJf"Solrl by DroggiBts, 75c. UPPER KHRA CREEK. Mr. Bill Casey gave this vioinity a call today. We had quite a little rain last Wednes day night. Mrs. Go8iiey has been on the sick list, but is improving. Mr. Frank Baird was in our neighbor hood last Monday. (fveryone is about through harvesting in our part of the country. Mr. James Talbert was in our neigh borhood last Wednesday. Miss May Tolbert is visiting friends in our neighborhood this week. ' Mr. Wm. Gosney made a business trip to Six Dollar last Monday. Mrs Henry Mikesell has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Wm. Gosney, for a few days. We understand that John Depew, was in our part of the country last Saturday, looking for a ranch. Mr. B. F. Hevland mude a trip to Hep ner this week. Upper Rhea Cheek, Aug. 13, '92. Live Stock Points. Never despair. Never give up, no matter what happens. There is always success for you somewhere. Find it, The more cheery and hopeful you can force yourself to be, the more surely success will come. When you intend to raiso a calf, let it run with the mother cow till her milk gets good, then take it away and begin to feed it. In feeding a young calf it is better af ter you have taken it away from the cow to let it have a part of her milk for a few days. Then if you cannot afford that longer, mix linseed meal cooked to a jelly with sweet skimmilk at the rate of a pound of the jelly to fifty pounds of the milk and feed this to the calf. It makes a fairly good substitute for unskimmed cow s milk in calf feed ing. Later you may add to the linseed some oatmeal with the hulls carefully sifted out. Let us have a great big chicken show at the World's fair. Begin to prepare now for it. A calf is old enough to begin to take solid food with its liquid nourishment when it begins to chew the cud. The life of a working bee is only fonr or five weeks in the flower season. Six weeks, therefore, will serve to change the breed of the whole hivefirf if an Italian queen is introduced at this time. She lays from 1,000 to 2,000 eggs a day. Handle the ndderand teats of a heifer that is intended for milking from the time she is a calf. Pet and tame her from the beginning. The farmer who turned his attention some years ago to the breeding of large, high stepping carriage hornts Is now reaping his reward. City people are calling for them in constantly increas ing number. The first thing an Ameri can city man does when he gets rich is not to go back and buy the old farm, as he dreamed he would in youth, but to get a handsome city houie on a fashion able avenue and set up his carriage. How to L'se Kerosene in Cleaning. A little kerosene on a rag will help in cleaning almost any metal and save much energy spent in robbing. The bathtub, the big boiler in the kitchen, tin pails, coal scuttles almost anything of the sort will yield to a little kerosene. CO-OFRATIVE CREAMERIES. Am Knormous Amount ot Labor Saved When They Are Socccssful. The co-operative system must continue to grow in magnitude until a large por tion of all the milk produced is worked tip at central points. Centralization is the order of the day, and nowhere is it more evident than in dairying. There will be some increase iu the system where private dairymen supply indi vidual customers with butter, but there is a limit in this direction, while for the factory system 1 see nouo. The bringing together of the milk from off a hundred farms to one central point means that a hundred farmers' wives are relieved from irksome labor, and in place of a hundred kinds of but ter in as mmy style packages, each pay ing heavy express charges, there is one lot of uniform quality, shipped at low rates in the refrigerator car. In the creamery I see the saving of an enor mous amount of energy on the farm which will be set free and utilized in the direction of better dairy farms, pleasunter homes and improved social conditions. Who shall control the creameries? Upon this important question 1 have ar rived at no definite conclusions. There is a natural desire among farmers in these days to control their own business, and who can blame them for it? The farmer's occupation in a measure pro vents him from being a careful, shrewd business man in the usual sense of that term. His work is to produce rather than to barter. In consequence of the desire among fanners to manage their own business, we have seen scores and hundreds of co-operative creameries spring up in the west. Because of en mity, jealousy and lack of business ca pacity we have seen a large per cent, of these factories become bankrupt and pass into other hands. If our farmers would only have more patience with each other, and would put the same energy to work along business lines that is now given over to neighbor hood quarrels, co-operative factories would rule the day. Here and there we find co-operative factories successfully managed which stand as monuments of neighborhood good feeling and brotherly confidence. May their number rapidly increase. Pi'ofessor Henry. About Itrlck Cheeses. Mr. W. J. Kuckhan, of Minnesota, asks how "brick cheeses'" are made. As we understand it, the milk is coag ulated the same as for general American cheese making, but no acid is developed in the curd. The whey is drawn early, curd is worked down fine with the hands, and before acidity is perceptible the curd is put into wooden boxes about by 7 niches and some (I inches deep. The boxes have no bottoms, but stand on a board, so the whey can drain. Enough curd is put in the box to make a cured cheese that will weigh from four to six pounds. Usually the curd is not talted in the mass, though a few do partially salt before pressing. A fol lower tits inside the box, on which a brick or something of equal weight is laid to do the pressing. They are turned after awhile and pressing continued. They need no bandaging. When taken from the press box next morning they are rubbed with salt. The salting is continued thus from day to day till they are considered salt enough. They are cured several weeks in acellar that is midway between moist and dry. We do not understand the curing cellar is ever artificially wanned. When ready for sale or use all tho "brick cheeses" we have ever sampled have a flavor a little suggestive of that of beef just a little "off flavor." lint that constitutes part of the excellence of the cheese for those who buy and eat it. They are cheeses that most always sell well in cold weather. The dealers in them tell us tho production is over done in the hot season sometimes, and they go down cheap because of tho diffi culty of keeping them. Hoard's Dairy man. Notes. The dairy business annually makes Wisconsin the richer by over $30,0(10.000. Two hundred dollars' worth of wheat takes off a large amount from the fertil ity of the farm, while $200 worth of but ter takes off almost nothing. England imports yearly 9' pounds of buttur per head for her inhabitants. When the fanner ships a thousand dollars' worth of wheat he pays freight on thirty tons of his product. When the creameryman ships a thousand dol lars' worth of butter he pays freight on two tons. Here is a difference, even counting in the extra cost of the refrig erator car. Creamery butter always brings from four to five cents a pound more than dairy butter. This ought nut to he so, for the home dairy has some advantages impossible for the creamery to seen re, such as uniformity of milk for one. Tho difference in the price, however, meas ures the difference in the skill and care employed in tho manufacture. One thing is certain, butter in Amer ica is generally better than it used to Iks, I whether made at home or in the cream- ery. The creamery and the dairy school together have brought about this good ' result. The time will presently come when nobody can secure a place to work in a creamery unless he or she is a graduate of a dairy school, and farmers' daughters will all strive to take the dairy course. Then the United States will beat the world on butter. Let us show at the Columbian fair what we : have accomplished already. The demand for condensed milk is . increasing. But the plant for making 1 it is expensive. In one day 13.000 pounds of butter are I often sold on tl Klgin board of trade. PROFIT IN HOGS. A Man Who Makes Them Par on Clover Pasture. April 10, 1891, 1 bought forty head of hogs, paying $117 for the bunch, or $2,925 per head. They averaged ninety pound per head; that made them cost me $ 3. 25 per 100 pounds. These hogs 1 put after a bunch of cattle and they staid with them until May 11, 1891, when 1 put the cattle on grass. I fed the hogs twelve barrels of corn at $3 per barrel during the month of Way and up to June 20; then I contract ed them for $5.25 per 100 pounds to be delivered July 10. Thus, you see, I had twenty days to feed them and corn 1 could not buy, so I went to town and got 2,000 pounds of oilineal which cost $24, 1,000 pounds of bran which cost $5, 1,000 pounds of shipstuff which cost $6.50, a total cost of $35.50. 1 put my hogs (which had been in a woods pas ture) iu a clover field, and not very good clover at the best, and they then weighed 130 pounds per head. I began feeding twice a day on a mixture of oilmeal, bran and shipstuff wet up just enough for them to eat it well, and kept it up until the day to deliver. Then I had 200 pounds of oilmeal, 100 pounds of bran and 150 pounds of shipstuff left. The hogs averaged, on July 10, 188 pounds, and brought me $9.8S9 per head, or $375.79, as two of them had died in the f?ed lot. The figures are these: Cost price of forty hogs $117 00 Follovvingcattlc 80 00 Twelve harrela of corn at tf per barrel. . Oil f.0 2,iKl pounds oilmeal 'H 10 l.KKlpoumlsshipstulf 0 TO 1,000 pounds of bran 5 00 Cost to produce.. ,.S2M fO 8cllintr price ,. 8,5 70 Profit $151 29 These hogs at only five cents per pound would have brought $i!o7.20, nnd that less the cost, $224.50, would leave $133.70; and at $4.50 per 100 pounds they would have brought $321 48, which would have left a profit of $90.98. Now the outlook in the future is more favor able than last year, and com can be bought at $1.50 and $2 per barrel, where last year it cost $3 and $3.25, and hogs are scarcer than at this time laBt year and stock hogs are just as cheap as last year. I think we farmers would do well to keep our stock hogs and feed them oil grass for the summer market, and when we sell I do not think we will say as of old that we have been robbed of our com and hogs. I do not mean to say that the market will be better or as good as last year, hut I think it will justify the feed ing of two dollar corn on clover pasture. At least I am going to try it. I am go ing to feed eighty head of hogs some large ones and some small ones so if there is a good market early I can put my large hogs off on it and my small ones later, Cor. Breeder's Gazette. Wisdom Indeed. Some men with ten acres under plow are miserable till they are iu debt for a gang plow, a four horse binder and an in terest in a stallion and a steam thrasher. Two hens and a rooster are enough to make some of our enterprising western farmers sleepless till they own or are in debt for a forty dollar incubator. Last spring we were talking with a machine "expert" (expert in more ways than one), who was on his way to a cen tral Dakota farmer to sell him a steam thrasher. Tho same man had told us the fall before that he had sold this very man all or more machinery than ho could ever hope to pay for, and bo we asked him what security he expected to get. "Well," ho said, "I happened to hear that iiis wife's father had given her a good span of horses and 100 fine sheep to start them again, and if I get there first they aro mine. 1 know I can sell him a machine; he is no hand with such things and 1 shall clean him out in a year." Dakota Farmer. Ko-.v the Term "Wildcat Wells" Orig-I-nated. In 1847 a party while prospecting for oil in northern Pennsylvania carried their supplies with thfin. A wildcat, made havoc with their provisions, and though they killed the animal and struck oil, they were obliged to return to civili zation to replenish their stores. The prico of beef cattle has not licen what breeders hoped it would be. Why not try dairying and cheese and butter waking for a change? THE FACT REMAINS No amount of misrepresentation of the facts by jealous competitors, or juggling with fig" ures, or pretended analyses and certificates, or distortion of any kind, can change the fact, that the Royal Baking Powder has been found by every of ficia! examination to be the high est of ALL in leaver.! riff power, and of absolute pur ity and wholesomenef ';. ROYAL is the best and most economical. WuRLD'S FAIR NOTES. Harvard University wants 7,000 square feet for its intended exhibit at the World's Fair. The Fine Arts buildinu at the Woild's Fair will have a mosaio floor, the con tract for which has been let at $16,98'J. Ontario, Canada, breeders of thorough bred animals have already applied for 163 horsea, 193 oattle, 278 sheep and 91 swine. The colored women of Minnesota have offered to assist in the decoration of the state's building at the World's Fair, and the offer has been aooepted. A "model of the figure of Lot's wife iu sail" will appear in the Kansas World's Fair exhibit to represent or illustrate the Salt industry of the state. The Chamber of Commerce, of Calais, Fruuce, has contributed 2,0u0 francs to wurds the expense of making a show i f French laoe at the World's Fair. The German exhibit at (he World's Fair will ouutuiu an aiohiteoturul display including drawiugs illusirating 200 or more of the most notable buildings iu tha empire. An Indiana stoue quarry oompany is having a life size figure of au elephant chiseled out of a solid block of stone. It will be 11 feet high and weigh 30 tons. It will be exhibited at the World's Fair. Rhode Island will present its World's Fair building to Chicago after the Expo sition closes. The structure will be very pioturesque in uppearauce, being a re production in part of the famous "Old Stone Mill" at Newport. Mure than 200 panels of native words will enter into the interior decoration of the Washington World's Fair building. Some of them will be oarved and others decorated with paintings of Washington soenery and groupings of flowers, fruits, grains, fish, game, birds, etc. Au international oongross of charities, correction and philanthropy will be held at the World's Fair, to consider ques tions relalinp to the care of criminals, paupers and unfortunates. Thecougress will begin June 12, and last one week. Ex-r.-esideut R. B. Haves has been in vited to preside over its deliberations. Dr. DriiiniiioiMrs Lightning llemedy for Rheumatism has received the unqualified endorsement of the med ical faoiilty os being a safe and remark ably efficacious preparation for the relief and speedy cure of Hhenmatism. Its work is so speedy nnd miraculous that benefit is felt from the first dose, and one bnl tie will cure any ordiuary case. Sold by druggists. Price $5 for large bottle, or sent by prepaid express on receipt of nrioe by IJiuminoud Medioiue Co., 48 50 Maiden L'lue, New York. Agents want ed. ROHIN.HON'N HOItSKS. "Why, some of those trained horses are regular Iujiu cayuses," remarked a man at Robinsou's circus. So they are, and they have all tho symptoms of onyusei. Quite a bunch of them were bought from the Umatilla In dians in 1885, and their brands have not yet washed off. One with the old pio neer braud of Cutmoiith John, a very pretty pinto pony, now well trained, was purchased for $10 in that year ncd is now valued at 3500. The cnyuse could have remained nu the Unmtijla reserva tion until old age claimed him, and he would not have enhanced iu vulue, but with a little time spent in training linn ho is made one of the 400 in the horse aitua. John nlwuys was easy on his horses, and would never lot Hum out un less he was scouting or oarrying impor tant disiiatcftes. It used to be thought that the cayuse would not make a good ctrens boss, but be does. Pnvallup Com-meroe.