Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 2, 1892)
Give your business to Heppner people and therefore assist to build up Hepp ner. Patronize those who patronize you. " ' PER BAPS A MORAL RIGHT, BUT A LIOaL wrong. Tbat the negrots of the South do Dot Tole, and if tbeir vote are accept d, are n')t oonoted, is conceded by democrats. Even the most radicHl republican can appreciate tbe position in which the hit people of tbe Smith are pluoed, and hould cot wonder at tbe pretent stutr of affairs. Tbe white people of Dixie are in oon atant dread of negro snpremaoy. This prond people, generation after genera tion, were wont to ontiaider the negro as an inferior to themselves, calculated to make a good eervaut but a poor runnier, and tbe writer, from experience, believes that they are not far wrung. That the institution of alavery was wrong, none of them deny, and they would not if tbey ooulil, return lo those benighted du), "befo' the wb, sab." Tbey see too plaiu ly the curse tbat it bus stumped upon that sunny, beautiful aud produotiye country, to ever long for a resumption of tbat, which not ouly our country, but the whole world, has stamped atiacouraed. When the war of tbe rebellion ceased, tbe United States found on tbeir hands nearly four millions of blacks, free, but Without citiieuabip. Tbe fourteenth amendment of tbe constitution was fol lowed in hot bnste by the fifteenth amendment, granting all oitizeno, regard less of rnoe, oolor, or previous condition of servitude, full rights of franchise This was brought about too so iu. Tl.e colored man should have bad time t have fully oonteniplated tbe responsibil ities thrust upon bim. Not only bia ed ucation bud been neglected, but he, from bis surroundings, aud condition as a slave, knew or cared for nothing but to gel along with as little work as possible, to sing aud to danoe. Tbe short fare anil laok of luxuries while a alave OHiieed tht black man lo supply his soauty larder b taking that which was not his own, to the detriment of his morals. This wax tbe condition of the negro when find called upon to assume the reeponaibili ties of full American citizennbip. No one will deny tbe faot that Ha condition has improved some, but iu tbe far anil remote dintriots of the Mouth, be is yet woefully negleoted. Before the fourteenth and fifteenth amendments were added to the cnnstiu tion, in the apportionment of emigres sional districts, ihey counted the wh..li number of free persons (excluding Indi ans not taxed), those bound to service for a term of yesrs, Indiana who are tux ed aud three fifths of all other persons These "other persoUB" referred to were slaves, aud though it was the oonstitni tion, gave the slave slates n biinidvnutngi in cougrenemen, as Well as in electoral yolcB. In many places tlie"lbree-Bfth(i" of all other persons composed the largei part of congressional districts. It there fore left as the real voters but a very fe thousand whites, while in i-eotioiis hen there was no slavery, ibe districts pn nmde up of oilizcus--voiers. J'lie ine quality whs apparent. This, and main other matters of like import, furnished r. bone of contention fur years iu our con grcBsimi'il bulla, until open rebellion re sillied iu an attempt to establish Cul boumem. Today the iiu quality is even greatei thau befoie the war. With the negruei ootiuted, not an three-fifths, but man foi man in the apportionment, their repre sentation, in oongress, and in the elector al college, is manifietly greater iu pro poriinn thnu before. Tins is right, but wheu in the seleolion of i.ftWrs, ouly the Votes of the white prpulaiiuu are count ed, thtu it is wiong, legally so too, re gardless of what moral light may be ad duced from the situation. It gives tin houth fully thirty five congressmen Hud many eleotoral votes more thnu the same number of voters get iu other states out of that Beolion. This is Ibe result of wrong legislation. The people of this nation might have kuowu that Bouihern pride would neyei put up with negro doiniuntiou iu am foim. Tbey had ample o, pnrlunity to find out what eoit of metal they weie nude of dowu th.ira iu 18iil-65, and should have been cautious about indicting upon them what would briug about the perpe tiation of a legal wroug. It in like a sohool master making a rule that he kuowa bis pupils will not keep. Con stant viohitious of the laws have injured them, not ouly iu their own estimation, but in the opinion of ti e world at large. 'Ibe truth of the matter is, our naiiou should bsve established an educational qualification for tbe voter years ago, and it is not too lute )et. It will go n long wuya towards sclving the lace problem. Besides, it will render the South more law-abiding. It will have a tendency to keep the ignorant classes, nlio are crowd ing iu from Europe, uhere tliev belong. and, iu all, render tbe ballot purer aud belter. It will lead to more intelligent thought, elrioter uuturaliz ition laws anil go faither than anything else to settle sectional strife. Tim signal ofliiie at Portland reports ts follows ou lam week's storm: A storm of unusual development has moved from the ocean on the northwest onto the cohsi, and ts oru'ral tonight at tin mouth of the Columbia river. The barometer has lallin wilh maiked rap idity, aud tonight is situated at V8 '.'Ki ; it is now stationary at Portland, aud will most likely rise tonight. Ouoe the ba rometer was lower than it is tonight, Sod tbat was during the yrtat storm if January 9, 1880, whin ibe bamim ur stood at 28 6u0. Under the iiillnence if the storm the temperature has risen, ai d tonight it is above the normal, Tl e winds are bigb at Walla Walla aud Foit Canby j at ti e other stations tin y are light. Heavy rain has fallen iu North ern California, and raiu bus fallen over Oregon and Washington. Storm siguu'e were ordered up for heavy soiiih.ry gales at all sound, strait and ocean ports iu W tuhingtou aud Uieguu. Tbe atorui is well developed, aud will be severe before it psf-srs over. The worst of the storm shoi. Id be over by 8 p. m. Mou day, though raiu will cutinue. Thb Portland Uispatoli.tbeouly simon pure, democratic daily in tbe state, says that the threatened shortage of money in the national treasury is nconsioued by the McKinley hill, winch bus reduced the tar iff income of the government. Tn help maileis, it is pioiicidto ti ke the taiiff ff ihose things which we produce and manufacture, and put it on those which we do nor, nor cannot raise or manufacture. From all accounts, it will be fully two veiiM before the boys will tackle either the cKinley bill or Bill McKinley, and by the lime they get ready perhaps it won't he ad usable to do much of anything at all, Iu the menu lime, tbe natural expenses of our gov ernment will have readied I he maximum and be growing smaller in proportion to the population. There is little to fear iu Ibe way of a deficiency, or a revenue tar iff either, for that matter, for they will find it not beet for parly success to make tbe change. And "getting there" is all there is to it. If tub R-cord calls f unity to friends a crooked poliiioal oareer, we are guiliy. We baye been true to our real friauds iu tbe past aud shall follow that oourse in .he future. Tbe Keoord's litjt of repub lican monstrosities, moludiug the(uefuri nns (?) McKinley bill" aud the almighty "furou bill" are not hull so rotteu as the proposed Mills bill, or even the manipu lation by which the Smith gets over for ty more electoral votes than tbe number of actual voters warrant. If the Record editor wants exeusos for dr ppiug over, it has fouud enough. ApvmtTlSElts get Value received from circulation. Tln-U .z tte has thelurgea', semi-weekly circulation of any paper east of the Cascades, with, perhaps, one exception, and therefore our cd umus are iu demand, while those ol utighboriug uapers go begging. Tukhe is a move ou foot to have cou gress give some atteution to roads. That this is in line with the teuur of Americans on publio improveuieutH, all will admit. Petitions are beiug oirou latcd, aud should ba sigued by every patriotic oiiiz-u. Tun election ol 1'ieroe, in tbe iutereHt of all parties, is beiug contested. Thai is the only way to settle the diBput. about the legality or the ticket priming, whether his name should have uppeureu ou the ballot more lliau once. Thb Bilver conference is likely to adopt homethiug for the benefit of silver. Nothing short of free coinage will satisfy a majority of the people iu ibe West. Give a calf plenty of rope and he wih hang bimaelt. Give some people plemy of latitude aud Ihey will do I htiUiHi-l Ve il p iu six weeks. T IB latt Ht i.H t hut ine extra session, il called at nil, will not meet till Outnln i next. TaulT refium inuai wait. 1 lilt i Rn i,d count l Koisas, so far. gives that state one llariisou elcctoi aud nine populists. An organ is an orgtu, aud that is ah you cau make out of it. Tint h gislatnie of Wyoming is rcpub I icuu. Jay Gould is dangerously ill. THE 81I.VKU lNKUIliNOE. From the Hull Lake Herald. A thousand linos dining the last foui yeaiB The Tribune has pointed out tint' the fall of every staple niticle in price almost exactly onrrtspouds with the fall iu silver, and that people having deb's to pay in gohl have to sell iibout twio. as iiiuoh of what they have to buy money with lo pay tbeir debts tin they would, ex cept for that; that, in point of fact, the capacity of the debtor to pay bis debts was reduoed 70 per cent by the demone tizatinti of silver, and that that account ed for the increased mortgages of W-sl-eru homes, tbat it accounted for the in creased ratio of criminals and Innatiui tnrown upon the public forsupport; and et both parties iu Wnshingtou have ig nored the mighty warning contained in those words, and have perststeutly de feated every IT rt to obtain le.udutiou to oure that nuparalleled evil. The Tribune warned the republican party four years ago and two years ago and oue year ago, that they, biting in power, would be held accountable for not re storing silver; Unit the hard times would be usoribed by the democratic press and their orators to the tarilT; that at last the people, smarting under I heir troubles would accept that interpretation ami would wreak revenge at the ballot box Still their chiefest orators and writers persisted iu telling the people that the were In favor of au honest dollar; that n sliver was lo be ur-ed as money, 1 lien i.s much silver as sold as a Conuuodiiy would buy a gold dollar li list be put in the sliver dollar, ignoring the fact thai the value of money is regulated solely lit the n cognition of the world, and thai w hen silver was at a discount wheat and com end cotton mid land and ever) thin mad. iu ttie factory or giowu iu the soil were at the same discount Aud those s nit people, iu looking over the return aud try mg lo ascertain w here the trouble had been, prob .b'y mver thought that the whirl winil had been reaped simply because the foremost republicans in the Kast, against all common tense ami against all justice, pnsisied in parading the honesty of their position, aud in charging that the men of the West weie engaged in a no more laudable enterprise than iu trying to uulond scveuty cents' worth of silver upon them for a dollar, Aud they forgot that the farmers in the West were oiilii tiling wheat and corn and cotton and dairy products, aud ev erything they could raise, at the same ruinous discount, ami because of it such dvspair had cou.e to theui that they w ere willing to vote for any change, no mat ter whether it brought increased disas ters or not. We had hoped that broanse of tbe fam ine beyonrl the sea last year, which sup plied to tbe farmers of tbe West a fair market for their crops and wbich gave them, by accid' nt, prosperous times, that President Harrison would be able to pull through, because, iu his own slow conservative way, we know he wants to make such an adjustment of silver an will satisfy not only bia coun- trtmen but the world. But it was not ennuuti. While it is true that the men nfthnWest now, wi.b the lit tie money tiiey bve, buy more of anything tbey want than they ever could before, they cannot get ahead aud make such pay- meutn on mortgages on their homes as will uive them a satiafac'ory hope of some time getting out of dtbt and out of trouble. Had 'be elect iou hsppened a year rrgo this fall, the overthrow would have b.-en e en more complete turn it now is. As it was there bad settled in the minds of a majority of tbe men West of the Mississippi river a determination to have justice or to bave revenge, aud it was with that feeling in tbeir souls that they went to the polls. THE JiEAL KEAtSON. From the Suit Lake Herald. It will go down into history, we pre sume, that tbe result of tbe lute electiou in the United States was due to a revolt agaiust tbe tariff It will not be true, all the same. The tariff all through tbe war arrd for years afterward was very much higher than it is at present; indeed, almost every article used by tbe people wastnx d; the tax further went to the incomes of Ibe people aud to the luxuries which they possessed, and jet the ooiin- try was prosperous. The trouble is not that at all The Tribune years ago pointed out what would come sooner or later if the policy of both parties contin ued iu the line they were following. It was not Mr. Cleveland's cry for tariff re form which beat him four years ago; it is not a revolt against the tariff which has beaten President Harrison this year. The values in a country correspond ex aotly with Ibe amount of money in cir culation among tbe people, and when sti ver waa demonetized aud gold began to be inflated for that was what followed wheu it began to take more wheat and aorn and ootton to pay debts in gold than it dul before, just that momeut the trou ble began. Tbat bus been growing stead ily worse and worse. It tins oansed in numerable mortgagen to be spread upon property. It, has caused such an appnr ent depreciation in values that the peo ple had become well-nigh distraught, and not oouip'ehending w here tbe wound was, they voted for a change. They voted for a ohange eight years ago; tbey voted for it again frrur years ago; tbey voted for it agaiu thin year, and no tin. kering with tbe tariff will give the demo oratio party lunger than four years un less they do the right thing by silver.be caiiBe, sb tbiugs have crj stalized. silver has now reached about where it has id most ceased to b- considered money b; the world, and that iu iff.ot destroje hull' the real money of l he world. That is, it reduces the basis on which mm d hiiMtiess to half the sizi that it was be fore, ami it is simply impossible to pre vent prioi'B falling 5l) percent. The) have fal'eu 40 per oent now, and on some articles 60 per cent If iu 1H73 a farmer could nay n $100 d.btwiih 100 bushels of w heat, today it takes 200 ami more to pay that same debt. Th.it is, the world has been put to tradeon a falling maiket. We will t ike bank Btookn, forex traple. We will suppose that iu 1873 a man with 1()J0 onpitril had bought those stocks ; Unit in 1880 ihose stocks hail been worth hut $8)0, and that today tbey would have beeu worth but a tnfl-t over 8500; thai is, that they li id bwa filling 2 per cent per annum steadily since he made his investment. He naturally would want to lay bin misfortunes to the tariff or something else. Aud that would bave been exnotly siioli a trauiacion an the bmiiiess im-n geuenilly of the United States, have beu engaged in, especially tile farmtr population of tbe United States -th we who livrt by working their land ami trying from tin pr iceedd of their land mid their labor to in ike a liv ing, and a little more. See how it would have affected a man who owned a farm worth $10,000 iu 1873; his farm today would be worth but StiilOO. Suppose on Unit farm be had a m irtgage of $j0J0, payingS per cant pur auuum iutoreBt ind suppose with nil bis labor he con Id h ivn kept up the interest, how would In bve stood tod ty? For all his uineteen years' labor he would huve had but $1000. left. It is that wh ch hsi caused the revul sion ; uot agaiust the republican party, lint against the parly iu power. It wan fiat which oansed the defeat of Mr Cleveland four yenie ago, and though the tact whs poind d out to the leaders of 1 lie republican party, every one oT them in the East seemed to be stone blind. The only at swer that the men of the West got to their petitions for re dress was Unit tbey were a dishorn at oiotid. trying to unload upi,u h.n-st men 80 cents worth of silver for a dollar. They have got their lesson. No tinker ing with the tariff will fix it, broanse, in point of fact, the cry sbnvit ihe McK n ley hill was a alinmelul bugaboo. The tariff law has held in the country lbs money which, without the tnriff, wonld have been sent hj, but the only d ff, r enee is that il is now iu Ihe hands of tl.e rich, whereas, ixcipt for the tariff, i' would have been iu Ihe hands of the men in Ureat lintain and France, who oao make goods cheaper than tbey cau be made in the United States. We give tbe democracy notice that if the international commission does not adjust silver on some basis through which the world osn obtaiu recguition of it as money; that if they pnrsue the policy which is outlined by their pint form, to slnsh at tbe tariff, and do uolb ing for silver, their overthrow four yesrs hence will be more overwhelming ibaD is Ihe overthrow of the republican party today, lhat is the key to thesitiiatiou. If they shuw uu more wisdom than has QTJAHTKHLY KEl'OUT District No. 32 of Morrow County, Oregon. SCHOLARS' KAMEj. Curtis Uhea ... Nettle Maiou.. Jesale Mason.. Lena Mason . . . Anna Cecil Eva Rhea Bert Mason .. Lena Rhea. ... 90 76 9S 87 90 82 96 10 90 86 SO 96 75 80 ... 90 75 95 83 72 90 90 94 05 90 100 93 98 100 78 85 98 tbe president and bis close advisers if, in short, Mr. Cleveland's oomiog admiu istration shall go on on tbe lines that the present administration and hiB form er administration were ran, regard ing silver all tbe triumphs of today will be turned into a defeat as gloomv four yearn from today as is tbat of tbe repub licans now. Presidi nt Harrison was di rectly warned, and so was' bis cabinet so were tbe republican leaders generally, throughout the East- but tbey scoffed at tbe advice, and oonld uot distinguish that there was a diflerenoe between sil ver aud oorn, or between silver and oot ton, or between silver and wheat; they could never learn the lesson tbat there is something divine abont tbe precious metals, and tbat neither gold nor silver can be degraded w tbout tbeir carrying down with them in tbeir disgraoe the very pillars of Ihi government tbat un dertakes to disgraoe them. Let the dem ocracy beware. ARLINGTON NOTES. A VetV HOI-UAH hi, tttipn.iaa n..l. a.a giveu to Her. J. N. Deuuison and wife oy uieir inencls last Wi-ducsdny evening. McaniM Rlafea St lt..w r.,.1.1 r.. A ... n ago, some 700 oalves to F. X). Arnett. of U ..I .... ... uniBiirt., lunutMUH, at prices ranging trom 15 to $6 per bead. Grandpa Sweet and bin fair young bride bave given up housekeeping anil are now stopping with Air. Bddford, for morly of the Jonlau House. Mr. Charles MoFarland has fitted up the parlors in Ihe old Beunelt bouse Himself and friends cau be found there at. all hours of the eveuiug, when uot a-l ep, reading electiou returns. Dr. K. A. Enston, the genial prnpne tor or the Orand Hotel, is up the road peddling washiug machines Mr. East on tins invested quite a antn of money iu thin pateut smoo ttie election of Cleve land. He ban not made much money iu hotel business, heuce this new soherne. Mins Mhaw, after having bad au exam insiiou. was dismissed Irotn t lie onstody of Marshal Carter prntty near an noon as she got here. Mib Kramer or Mm. Oliu- tou couldn't nob OannaM tli nUur.ru uguiiiHt her. The aoenner left here name utiint. roor James oau't rook baby to sheii any more. The steam ferry in again making her regular trips, Cup.. Baker in charge. IV ui ihiii lurinii goose nul ling not very it. fi'able. The ferry is doing a laud ' fllce business this week in dossing -took A fw days ago s me 8 000 -beep were crossed, and today a bind of near ly 4.000 came over from the Washington side, sol I by .Hrs. F-ick, 8 ayth ant Jnnir-s Cti'iu'uuham to Aader.-on fc C tr ot her. I'nese sheep w,ll 1m sent E nt to led Thee parties are feeding now some be 15,000 head. HAIL ItlDQE. Wheat is comiug np. School is now out, on Hail Ridge. It has beeu oold and windy for some time James Inskeep is running sheep now. K. L. Kilbourne has bmgbt a baud of sheep of tiin owu. li ember the Sabbath day and keep it holy unto tbe Lord. Mr. D.tvidsnu'n folks bave moved on the Hidge from Keardon, Washington. Lost Jack. Nov. 25, '92. HAVE AN EXTENSION Of Time, And Who IWrves it Mora Than The Beltlm ? Through tbe kindness of Jacob Bort zer, of Shelby, we are permitted to print the follox ing from tbe general landoflioe: Department of the Interior, General Lmd Office, Washington, D. C, Ootober 7. 1892. Mr .Iac b Bobtzib, Shelby. Or., Sir: In reply to yonr letter of Aug. 22. 1892, 1 have to atate that settlers on forfeited railroad lands lying bttweeu Wallula Jiuntioo and Portland, Oregon, have nu extension of one yeai 's time to pay for tbeir lauds nnder a law passed at the first session of tbe Fifty-Second Congress. This law applies only to the third sec tion of the act of for e it lire of Sept. 29, 1890 and extends the time of payment until S pt. 29, 1893, to actual settlers who were residing ou or improving their lauds when the forfeiture took place. . Very Kespeotfnllv, Wm. Stonb, Aoting CommiBaiouer. Deafness Cannot be Cored By local applications, as they omn I reach the diseased portion of the ear. I'here in only one way to cure deufuen-4, and that is by constitutional re edies D-u'iier-s is Oiiiied by nil intl imed o n dition nf the inuooiis lining of the en i'achiai! tube. Wheu this tulre gets intiuiiied you have a rniuhliug sound or imperfect hearing, and when it is en tirel) closet) rleafueea is ibe result, and unless the infl luiation can be taken out and ibis tube rpntored to its normal oonditioit, hearing will be destroyed for-evr-rj nine csea out "f ten are calved b) ouiuirh. which in nothing but an iutlam ed condition ot the mucous nmfaces. We will uive one Hundred dollars for any case o' dcufne'(oiU"ed by catarrh) that oarinot lie oured bv Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for cirvnlirn free. F. J CHENEY Co., loledo. O. tifS.ild by druggists, 7do. Bnddrn Chances. A cold, or exposure, may oanne the poisonous acids in tbe blood to clog Its circulation. This is rheumatism. Dr Drnmmond's Lightning Remedy bas cured thousands. It will onre yon. There is no other remedy that gives the sufferer such quick satisfaction. Tbe price of a bottle in 8") and that is the cost of a onre. Drumraoud Medioiue t Co.. 48 5(1 Maiden Lone, New Yort. Agents warned. 49 98 97 99 98 90 9H 100 99 Andbkw Swanson, Teacher. U ' l I V or c r-v -ln i 1 1 Srl,. X t. I V V. An Apprehensive subject by Means of a Prehensile Tail The Monkey is Not Afraid be cause his Tail is a Oood One. We are Not Afraid because our Tale is a Uood One. t is No rraleof Woe ! WE TELL OF IBAEGAINSc Splen lid Goods, Fair treatment ; satisfaction to custom ers, and of reasonable prices and good money value. It is a Tailless Tale. A tale without end. bpo hibp it is a tale tbat will bold A pleasure to show goods. Special iudncementB to oash buyers. Cull at DUSOLUrlON OV COPVTUNEKSH1P. Notice is berebv giveu that the part nership exisliug between Arlbnr Coflio and Frank McFnrlnud. under the firm name of Coffin & tVloFurlnnd, was din solve I February 1, 1892. by mutual Con sent, Artnur Coffin retaining the Arling ton biiHiuess, collecting nil acootints due and pa)iritf all liabilities of same, and Frank MoFarland retaining tbe Heppner business, collecting all noeotiuts due and pavlug all liabilities of same Arthur Comu, Frank MoFarland. Referring to the above, Frank MeFar. land, Homer McF. rla id and Emil C. Vornz Imve formed a co partnership run der the firm name of McFarlaud Mercan tile Company, commencing business September 1st, 1892, to be incorporated The new firm will continue in the gen eral mercoaudisiiig tnisiuessat the samp loontiou, National bank building, lowei Main St., Heppuer. Oregon. Frank McFarland, Homer VIcKarlanI, 542 648-w Emii, P. Voruz. 15 HEWAKD. This amount will be paid for the re- oovery of a chestnut sorrel gelding, branded a diamond F. connected, on light hip and I S on left stitl- ; has a wire out on one front foot; is seveu years old, weighs 900 to 1000 pounds, star iu forehead. Ihe unove reward will be paid for her delivery to me at Alex Thompson's ruuoh. Joseph Dubois, 641-tf. Heppuer, Or. 15 HEWAKD. Lost or stolen, one bay horse four years old, branded cross ( ) with bar above H on right shoulder Had white lace. will give the uhove reward for bis return to J. L. Howard's ranch oo Little Butter Creek, or for information leading to his recovery. I. L. Howard, 638 bw Uallowa, Ore. Strated. A four-year-old ateer, brand ed ti I' on tbe ribs on right side; also same brand on right bip and on right ntttle; big split in ngbt ear. Any lu'or illation leading In reo .very of same will be cheerfully rewarded b Bob Dkxtkr, 538 sw Heppu. r, Or Mountain House. Mr. Joseph Crauk has lately leased tbe hostelry kuown as the Monntaiu House, refitting aud re furnishing it throughout. Board snd hed. per weik 86; board without lied. $4 So; meals aud In-d 25 cents each, Mr. Crauk asks a portinu of the patronage, helievtng that be cau give an ood ser vice as auyoue lu Heppuer, and for less money. 4o-sw, D11DNKF.NNK8S. or the l.lylOR HABIT, Cared at Hauie In Ten ia)s by Adnonis-tt-iiittf Dr. Hallies' lioldea .netttlo. It cau be giveu in a glass of beer, a onp or ounce or tea, or in food, will. out tbe knowledge of the patient. It is absolute ly Harmless, and will etfeot a permanent and speedy cure, whether the patient is a moderate diiukeror an alooboho wreck. It bus been given in thousands of pases. and in every instance a perfect cure baa followed. It never fails. Ibe system once impregnated with tbe specific, it becomes an utter impossibility for tbe Irqnor appetite to exist. Cures guaran teed. 48 page hook of particulars free. Address the Goldbn Specific Co., 185. Kace Street, Cincinnati, Onto. Ripans Tabulos are aJwa) I readjr. ' 82 2-3 S14-7 81 0.7 81 1-2 82 1-2 91 1-7 91 12 87 - i v. irrj . mmtk ; Survey pnsumption J What shall stay 'sail Scott's Emulsion of pure Norwegian cod liver oil and soda has cured us cf consumption in its first stages. Have you a cough or cold acute or leading to consumption? Make no delay-but take Scott's Emulsion cures Coughs, Colds, Consumption, Scrofula, and all Ana-jmlo and Wasting nieaaciAi. Pr-ivnntn wantlns in Children. A!:uo-t u. palatable as mlllt. C:'t only t!ie ccnu'.ne. I're- pared by cott & Howne, Chemists, Now York. Bold by all Druggists. DON'T BE : Bv traveling fakirs. C. C. Wildev & Co , of Walla Walla, Wash., "re the largest import ers direct from the Eastern factories in the Inland Empire of AND We can save yon from 825 to $100. We parliea We handle Ihe very heat makes ot instruments, ana warrant luem lor five years, and guarantee lower prtcen than nu bonne on this eoant for sams quality We buy rtireot fioin Chickering & Sonn, Wejman 4 Co., Con over Bros A Co, Smith & Barnes, pimms Packard, Slory A Clark and Chicago Col taife Organa Sell Okhi 8 from $lb0 to j3UO ; Pianos from 3 i0 to $7i)0. Writ nn for catalogue und prioes. It will pay you. O. O. Wildey & Co. 535w Walla Wmia, Wash TO PEOPLE OF HEPPNER And Surrounding Country, -: We are 0om elled lo announce that our entire stock of :- Clothing, lurnishing Goods, -m II ATS, CiPS. BOOTS, SHOES, Truuks, Valises, and also a full line nf Ladien' Goods, nnoh as Dress Goods, Furn ishings, Fancy Goods and Notions ot ail kinds MUST BE SOLD 3o.Within the Next 30 Days. 30. At prices never beard of bfore in the history nf merchandising. Thanking you for past patrouuge, we would like to see you come aud :Gret Ihe Benefit of Our- Glosiig 1 -AT THE EASTERN CLOTHING HOUSE, N. LEVI ROBISON", Proprietor, HEPPNER, - - . OREGON 'PHACTICAIi- House and Sign Painter. PAINTING IN ALL Paper Hanging Graining, Natural Wood Fiuiehing and BOX 135, : ' : Footwear TTl" 'Tly h,,n nnrl pwt-.hl'whmftnf nf TTnnTrpr haw f . TTU'V'H fri.m ttli' aw.i'r.T' Miritl Klrwo' fnthai .,. iM'tp i-dm, 'ox nor There you will find the Best and Cheapest in Heppner. M. LICHTENTHAL & CO., Alain Htreet, Heppner Of. DAN OSMERS. Columbia Beer Hall! JEXT DOOR to Heppner Candy Factory mi Main 7.;. SbX?U KZP r l"nd Fine Liue f Liquors, v t,ies, Cigars, Etc. We have Reduced the Price of 'the Buchler Beer to 53 Cents Per Glass, Ou diftujjlit, fresh ami ci ml. Lunch of nil kitidn. Hope to see aJl their old friends and mmiy more. OSMEKS & HUGHES, Props. TTEPPNER and LONE ROCK . H H rtTAGE IIlsK. r. :viKii.so:v, Prop. M MPPi ?n.Tn'"'U' a' Jh'irs lay, and S diudays. L-v,s L ne Rnck , Mondajs. WfoVmia,. and Fridays. Mak,s onnner tion .,th the weekly hue to Fossil. Keasouahle oharges for both Passengers : 643-ttsw SLOCUM-JOH.NSTOX L D. BOYED IIE That dreaded and dreadful disease! its ravages? Thousands and hypophosphites of lime Scott's y pi gj J sion JS. - BAMBOOZLED. ship snhj-ot In approval to any responsible TH.Jd mill AHELajft.1 Out : Sle THE ( ITS BRANCHES. - and Decorating. Polinhiog, Oaloimining, Glnziug, elo. 646 sw : HEPPNER, OB Footwear! t., H. H nrk.n n A n 'w. MAT HVOHES. and -:- Freight. DRDO CO., Agents, Heppoer, Or. Contractor I Bier.