1 1 1 1 II 1 1 IJ I MM I I I HI 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M HMM I MM : j IF YO U DOS ' T READ j I THE GAZETTE j ; You don't get the news.? OFFICIAL PAPER tM4ll MaJMII'IVr, fl I'M 1 1 1'UVMII'I-VM'I M-l HIM'ilia ; .. .. KEEP YOUR EYE ON i THE GAZETTE 3 Z The paper of the people. ijiimiti 1 1 1 1 hi miiit 1 1 iiiiitrrinitifiiiiitiii ni 1 1 1 n i ittwr it TWELFTH YEAR I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY. JUNE 12, 1894. WEEKLY rfO. fiW. ( 1 8EMI-WKEKLY NO. 238. SEMI-WEEKLY GAZETTE. Tuesdays and Fridays BY THE PATTERSON PUBLISHING COMPANY. ALVAH W. PATTERSON...... ..Bus. Manager. OTIS PATTERSON - Edltor At 2.80 per year, ftl.2& for six munths, 75 ott. for ttiree munuta. Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. The "B&0LB," of Long Creek, Oram County, Oregon, in published by the same com pany every Friday morning. subscription rice, l'2 per year. For advertising rates, addresi iXallT Ij. PATTBESOIT, Kiiitor and Manager, Long Creek, Oregon, or "tiazette,' Hoppuer, Oregon. rpHIB PAPKR is kept on file at E. C. Hake's X Advertising Agency, 64 Bnd 65 Merchants Exchange, Ban FrauciBOO. California, where cou racta for advertising can be made for it. THE GAZETTE'S AG fiNTS. Wagner B. A. Hunsaker Arlington Phill Heppuer Long Creek, Thetagle jcho Postmaster Camas Prairie, Oscar De Vaul Nye, Or H. C. Wright Hardnmu, Or., Postmaster Hamilton, Grant Co., Or., Postmaster lone T. J. Car) Prairie City, Or R. R. McHuley Canyon City, Or., 8. L. Parrish Pilot Rock, G. P. Skelton Cayville, Or., J. E. Snow John Day, Or., F. I. McCallum Athena, Or John Edington Pendleton, Or Postmaster Mount Vernon, GrantCo.,Or Postmaster Shelby, Or Miss Stella Flett Fox, Grant Co., Or., J- F. Allen Cight Mile, Or., Mrs. Andrew ABhuaugh Upper Rhea Creek B. F. Hevland Douglas, Or Postmaster Lone Rock, Or R. M. Johnson Gooseberry J. R. Efteb Condon, Oregon Herbert HalBtead Lexington JaB. Leach AN AGENT WANTED IN KVEEY PBBC1NUT. Union Pacfic Railway-Local card. No. 10. mixed leaves Heppner 9:45 p. m. daily exoept Snnday 111, ar. at Willows Jo. p.m. 8, " leaves ' a. m. " 0, " ar. at Heppner 50 a. m. dallj except Monday. East bound, main line ar. at Arlington 1 :2o a. m. West " ' " leaves " ISM a. m. West bonnd loral freigh leave Arlington 8 S5 a. m arrives at The Dalles 1:15 p. in. Local passenger leaves The Dalles at 2 :UU p. m. arriv s at Portland at 7 M p m. OFFICIAL JDIKECTOXaTT. United States Officials. 1'iwident Qrover Cleveland Vice-President .-.Ad oi Blovenson un...t.,PV ,.f miuIa Walter U. Gresham Secretary of Treasury John G. Carlisle Secretary of Interior .... Hoke Smith Secretary of War Daniel S. Lanionl Secretary of Navy. Hilary A. Herbert Potmaster.(eneral ....Wilson S.Hissell Attorney-General Kichard 8. Olney Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton State of Oregon. Governor , B. Pennoyer Secretary of State ur. vy. jicuriue Troaaurer Phil. Metschan Bupt. Public Instruction B. B. McKlroy j J. H. Mitohell Senators j, j. Dolph 1 Bingor Hermann Congressmen ( W. h. Ellis D..,n.. Frank C.Baker 11AJW1 , l a m I F. A. JW.P. f li. 8. 1 Supreme Judges.. Lord Bean Seventh Judicial District. Circuit Judge WJi'5reha" ProBeonting Attorney W. H. Wils-.n Morrow County Otneiale. j,,mi Senator Henry Blackman Henry Blackman J.N. Brown I.epreBenuiiive -",r'.r, ,. ...,, I.,,!.,. Julius Keithll Commissioners Geo. W. Vincent J.M.Baker. r-iwi. J.W.Morrow Sheriff.'.'.'...' ;( Noble. Treasurer "; -. H. L. haw Surveyor ...Isa Brown School Sup't .W.L, Baling " Coroner T.W.Ayera.Jr BEPPNEB TOWN OyFIOEBS. jlHy0i J. R. Simons counciimeu i "V.""" Vfi'A r; Lichtenthal, Otis Patterson, Julius Keithlj, T A t..l...i.t.n .T I. VaittfHf. Recorder ArAaBbi rreasurer E G. Slocum Marslial J- w- Rasmus. Precinct OfBeere, Justice of the Peace Constable ...F. J. Hallook .C. W. ltychard United States Land Officer. THE DALLES, OB. J.W.Lewis... Register T.S.Lang lteceiver LA GBAKDl, OB. B.P, Wilson Register J.H. Kobbins . . Receiver SSSBET SOCIETIES. Doric Lodge No. 20 K. of P. meets ev ery Tuesday evening at 7.3U o cloca in their Castle Hall. National Bank build ing. Sojourning brothers .ontiailv in vited to attend. J.N. Bbown, C. C. W. V. CBAWFOBD, h.. of It. SB. tt KAWL1NS POST, NO. 81. G. A. R. Meets at Lexington, Or., the last Saturday of ach month. All veterans are invited to join. t c. Uron. Geo. W. Smith. Adjutant, tf Commander. ti f? l k'---fl 7 n f..i t-4fj C?3!s, Tradj-msks, Design Patents. Copyrights. And 'iV. In:er.t bcsinesB conducted for MCCEHATE FEES, j .:- r: -.t: cni ad',1ce firiven to inventors withoU F CLAifVIS CO., 2CHPj WEOOERBURM, MRUflgiCg Attorney K. T Washington. D.C !"' : . 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This offer is made to any of our sub scribers who will pay up all arrearage m subscription and one year in advanoe, and to any new subscribers who will pay one year in advanoe. The American Farmer enjoys a larj e national circula tion,' and rnuKs among the leading agricultural papers. By this arrange ment it COSTS YOU NOTHING to re- oeive the American Farmer for one year, It will he to your advantage to oall promptly. Sample copies oan be seen at our office. Ttie O r-I I rx c 1 Webster's Unabridged DICTlDHflRY. R Y SPEClAl. ARRANGEMENT WITH THE publishers, .ve are able to obtain a number of tr above book, and propose to furniah a copy to each of our aubscrfbers. The dictionary is a necessity in every home, school and business house. It fills a vacancy, and furnishes knowledge which no one hun dred other volumes of the choicest books could supply. Young and old, educated and Ignorant, ncn ana poor, snouiu nave n wimiu ruucu, uuu refer to its contenls every day in the year. As some have aBked if this is really the Orig inal Webster's Unabridged Dictionary, we are able to state we have learned direct from the publishers the fact, that this 1b the very work coraDlete on which about forty of the best years oi the author's life were so well employed in writing. It contains tne entire vocabulary 01 ahout 100.000 wordB, tncludltiK the correct spell ing, derivation and dentation of same, and is the regular Btanaara size, containing aoom 300,000 Bquare inches of printed surface, and is DO una in cioin ami morocco ana aLeeu. Until further notice we wilt furnish this valuable Dictionary 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 acl stamps marbled edges $i-oo. Half Mo'occo, bound, gilt side and back stamps, marbled edges, $i .50. Full Sheep bouna leather lael, marbled edges, $2.00, Fifty cents added in all cases for express age to Heppner. -As the publishers limit the time and number of books they will furnish at the low prices, we advise all who desire to avail them selves of this great opportunity to attend to it at once. SILVER'S OI1A.MPION in-'-Nf, THE DAILY-BY MAIL. Subscription price reduced as follows: One Year (by mail) : : $6 00 Six Months " : : 3 00 Three Months " : : . 1 50 One Month " : : 50 THE WEEKLY BY MAIL. One Year (in Advance) : $1 00 The NewB is the only consistent ciampion of silver in the West, and should be in every home (n the West, and in the hands of every miner and buBlneBB man In Colorado. Send in your subscriptions at once. Address, TII33 NEWS, Senver, Colo LUMBER! 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Pa INDIANS KEAL AND IDEAL The Halo Which Romano Haa Given Poor La When the Truth Is Told the Nobis Bed Man Becomes Anything Bat the Grand Creature Imaittnatlan Has fainted lliin. The student of ethnolopy finds no more fascinating branch ef humanity than the Indian. Not the race as de picted by Catlin, Schoolcraft and Drake, who have painted him in glow ing colors, but the Indian as he exists to-day. The time has come when the truth about Indian life should be told. The gentlemen mentioned gave much thought to the subject of which they are the accepted authorities, but he who goes among Indians as a student will at once perceive that the whole study of the red men has been one of externals to the exclusion of the more secret and inner life that discloses the real character of the race. The fol lowing paragraph appears in the intro duction of Drake's masterpiece: "There was found in him (the In dian) an unbounded hospitality, . a friendship vouched for with life itself, an unfailing remembrance of a kind ness done him, a nobility of soul that held it firmly to his ideas of honor, filled him with reverence for the sages and heroes of the tribe and inspired in him an ardent longing to emulate their renown. In social and domestic life kindness and self-control were constantly manifested, wrangling and strife being unknown in the Indian dwelling." It is difficult, says the Pittsburgh Dispatch, to conceive of a more incor rect statement of the case regarding the mental attributes of the Indian. In addition to tlie error that has been constant in the minds of the people, through such statements and ideas as romantic and prejudiced writers have given out as ethnological data, there has been a fundamental error in the study of Indians in classing or group ing them all together. It is true that there are certain constant character istics among the Indians, just as there are in the Caucasian race, but it is also true that the mental and physical dif ferences between tribes are more marked than between the European nations. It is through reading such authors as viewed the outside or apparent life of Indians that the world to-day knows almost nothing about the dominant characteristics of the re4 man. In civilized circles the belief is current that the perceptive faculties of the Indian are highly developed; that he is acute in all things, and that his mind almost intuitively -grasps phil osophical subjects; that he is a born orator with a natural rhetoric; that he pierces the fallacies of sophistry with almost divine powers of analysis; that he has evolved a religious system and worships one God under the title of Great Spirit. These are the mental at tributes with which he has been clothed by those who have been accept ed as authority. His physical powers are no less those of a demigod. He is supposed to be a bundle of muscles and nerves, capable of almost super human endurance. His eye is so true that he distinguishes objects and tells their characteristics before they come within the range of vision of the whites. Owing to his unerring aim his markmanship is phenomenal. His idea of location is so highly developed that he finds his way over untrod plains and mountains, and notices the slight est displacement of stick or stone. What are the facts? The Indian is not an orator. He expresses himself with extreme difficulty and in the sim plest manner. He has neither rhet orical nor analytical power. His philosophy is of the crudest sort, and he has no religion. He docs not wor ship a great spirit except as he has been taught by the whites. His men tal powers have nothing supernatural in them. Physically he is the inferior of the whites as he is mentally. His muscles are weaker and his nerves more easily unstrung; his eye is less keen than that of the white plains man, and he is a tyro at marksman ship; his idea of location is bounded by his environments. He sees few sights, hears few Bounds, smells few odors, and tastes few flavors. The re sult is that his whole life is narrow, as the facts presented to him are lew. His perceptive faculties are of a low order and his powers of discrimination small. This, however, is a rule which, like all other rules, has exceptions, for there are now, and have been in the past, elevated minds among the In dians. HOTEL GUESTS. Woman Who Will Have What They Want and Men Who Won't Register. The average guest at a first-class ho tel puts his fist on the register and takes what the lord of the rooms gives him meekly and uncomplainingly. There are rooms and rooms, just as there are hotels and hotels; and when the hotels are crowded it takes an ex perienced and determined man to get the best or a woman, says the Wash ington Post. No hotel clerk has ever yet stood up before the onslaught of a lovely fe male bent on having a front room lighted on both sides and not higher than the third story. But there is another class of the dwellers in tents the men who never register. Every hotel has them, and Washington hotels more than any other ?ity. Here it means the game of politics. T!e man who wants an of fice, and is afraid his rivals are going to put up combina;io.t,s against htm, will slip into the hoSci and tell the clerk thai he does not want t) b seen or put on the book, and the clerk telle him that it is all right. In some cities such actions would be rightly regarded as suspicious, but not in Washington. The leading hotels will average two a day during the first year of a new administration; after that they drop off to two a week, but it is a peculiarity of Washington hotels. AN ICELANDIC INCIDENT. Primitive Modesor Dealing with Criminals In the Northern Islands. The laws of Iceland, according to a writer in Pearson's Weekly, are so fully recognized that the services of a police ofiicer are hardly necessary; criminals arrest themselves, and the authorities have little trouble in se curing the punishment of an offender. A young Icelandic friend of mine, says the writer, going across the desert from Reykjavik, met a man riding a pony. Such meetings are rare in these parts, and, like ships on the sea, the two hailed and spoke. And this was the manner, and substance of their con versation: "What's your name?" ,( "Stefan." "Whose son?" "Thorstein's son." "Where are you going?" "To prison." "What for?" -V "Stealing a sheep." "No one taking you?" "No, the sheriff was busy, so he gave me my papers the warrant for the arrest and sent me on to prison by myself." The men exchanged snuff and a kiss, and parted. A week later the young Icelander was returning to Reykjavik, and near the same spot he met the 6ame man. "What!" he cried. "Stefan Thor stein! Wny, you said you were going to prison!" "So I was, and I went, but they would not lot irve in." "Why not?" "Because I had lost my papers, and the sheriff said he could not take me without my warrant." "So they won't have you in prison? "No." "And you are going home again?" "Yes." POUNDED THE DOG TO DEATH. How a Monkey Made Good Use or a Billy Like a Policeman's Club. "The most novel fight I ever wit nessed," remarked a traveler to a writer for the Cincinnati Enquirer, "was between a bulldog and a monkey, down in Cuba. A friend of mine had a bulldog that had licked every canine on the island, and he was very proud of him. A gentleman from South America said that he had a monkey that could whip the bulldog and the owner of the latter laughed at the idea. After some talk a wager of five hundred dollars was made and the only advan tage that the monkey was to have was that he was to be allowed the privilege of using a baton, about the length of a policeman's club, but not so heavy. The fight was in a public place, and in a nit that was surrounded bv an iron grating. There was a big crowd out to see the fight. Of course everybody thought the dog would chew up the monkey. After a few minutes, how over, the audience was surprised at the sagacity displayed by the monkey. The bulldog would make a rush at the monkey, and the latter would jump aside and allow the bulldog to hit his head against the iron gratings. This was kept up for twenty minutes or more, and then the dog be gan to get tired. The monkey began to fight. He would let the dog make a rush and then jump on the dog's back and strike him several times with the baton. This was kept up for an hour or more, and finally the dog fell on the floor completely exhausted, and the monkey actually pounded him to death. The monkey would strike the dog sev eral blows and then place his ear to the canine to see if he still breathed. Finally the owner of the dog agreed to give up the fight, but the owner of tlie monkey told him that he was too late, as the monkey would not quit until he had killed the dog. This was one of the peculiarities of tho monkey. They always kill their victims. The owner of the dog said he did not want his dog killed, and insisted on taking the monkey off. While they were talk ing the monkey belted the dog several times with his baton, placed his ear on the dog, and with a sudden jump leaped on the shoulder of his owner and commenced to use monkey lan guage. The dog was examined and found to be dead. The people ap plauded the victory of the monkey, and it looked as if the monkey under stood it." THE INDIAN AS A FIGHTER. Be Likes Warfare, Kieels In It and Is an Kxcellent Marksman. "The Indian is the most vioious fight er on earth," said Maj. Harbour, late press agent of the world s fair, but former plainsman, to a Washington Post reporter. "You read in the ac counts of the South African war where a hundred or two Englishmen go out and whip five or ten thousand black men. There is no uncivilized people on earth, no race which is utterly igno rant of what we call the science of war, that can for a minute compare with the Indians as warriors. JJo frontier general would think of lead ing his troops against a body of Indians where the odds were greatly against him. Why? Because the Indian is naturally a fighter and a marksman, and because he has been quick to learn what the white armies have taught him in warfare. "Take that fight in which Hitting Bull was killed. That was a skirmish, it's true, but It illustrates my point- There were just sixteen men on each side. The battle lasted not over five minutes, and eight were killed on each side. Those Indian scouts rode straight through the camp of Bitting Bull, and engaged the old demon himself and fifteen of his picked warriors in a bat tle in which no man knew he had more than an even chance of surviving. "I've n-en them. They love to fight. Their ambition is to win glory in fighting. Their traditions urge them on to fight- It's their only really aris tocratic business" Ti.ey are physically well qualified to fight; they know how, and you can t they do fight when they get at lt rz l)"a . oir is the man to fix np your watch or clock, da keeps a fall stock of everything pertaining to bis business. a Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report 1 1 v ABSOLUTELY PURE TROUBLESOME JUK0ES. Some Remarkable Cases Of Obsti nate Talesmen. One Man May Have the Othar Eleven at Bis Mercy Flattery Sometimes Used as a Means of Conviction. Jurymen are sometimes quite uncon scious of their own determination of spirit. One of them, says the London Illustrated News, Croake James tells us, once explained to the Recorder, who had noticed his peculiarity, that his behavior was entirely misunder stood. "No man, sir, is more open than I am to conviction, and to do what is right in every case, but I have not met with the same consideration from others. 1 1 has generally been my lot to be on a jury with eleven of the most obstinate men imaginable, who will not listen to reason." It is fair to say that 0.-ce in a hundred times or so this minority of one proves to be in tho right. Lord Lyndhurst mentions a case in which, through the opposi tion of a single individual, the jury, who were otherwise all for a verdict of guilty, could come to no agreement; but on the prisoner being tried again he was unanimously and, as it turned out, justly acquitted. (Hi the other hand, some jurymen have too low an opinion of what some philosophers call their ego, and are willing to depute their duties to an alter ego. When Justice (Joultl had been about two hours trying a case at York he noticed there were but eleven jury men in the box. "Please, my lord," roplied the foreman, in answer to the judge's natural inquiry, "the other has gone away about some business he had to do, but he has left his verdict with me." The most remarkable case of a jury 'standing out" against what seemed unrefutable testimony, and all through tho resolution of one man, oc curred before Chief J ustice Dyer. He presided at a murder trial in which everything went against the prisoner, who on his part could only say that on his going to work in the morning he had found the man ding, and tried to help him, whereby , had become cov- red with blood, but when the man presently died he had come away and said nothing about it, because he was known to have had a quarrel with tho deceased, and feared that he might get into trouble. The hay fork with which the man had been murdered had the prisouer's name on it. In other re spects his guilt appeared to be clearly established, and the chief justico was convinced of it. When this is the case a Judge likes to get a conviction. I have sat beside one myself, who on the second day brought his black cap with him, neatly folded, and placed it In the drawer before him ready for use, and r-sry much annoyed beseemed to be when the jury returned a verdict of "not guilty." This was Chief Jus tice Dyer's case, and when, notwith standing their being locked up all night without fire and candle, his jury could come to no deci sion, and eventually came to the wrong one, he put some searching questions to the high sheriff. The cause of the acquittal, said that offi cial, was undoubtedly the foreman, a farmer of excellent character, es teemed by all his neighbors and very unlikely to be obstinate or vexatious. "Then," said the judge, "I must see this foreman, for an explanation of the matter I Will have." The foreman came, and after extracting from his lordship a promise of secrecy proved at once that the prisoner had been rightly acquitted, "for," said he, "it was I myself who killed the man." It had been no murder, for the other had attacked him with tlie hayfork, and (as he showed) severely injured him; but in the struggle to get possession of the weapon he had the misfortune to give the man a fatal wound. He had no fears as to his being found guilty of the murder, but, the assizes being just over, his farm and affairs would have been ruined by a confes sion, through lying so long in jail, so he suffered matters to take their course. He was horrified to find one of his own servants accused of the matter, supported his wife and chil dren while in prison, managed to be placed on the jury and elected fore man, and resolutely held out in favor of the prisoner's innocence. He added that if he had failed in this he would certainly have confessed to his own share in the business, and the judge believed him. Every year for fifteen years his lordship made inquiries as to the foreman's existetioe, and at last, happening to survive him, he consid ered himself free to tell the story. Awarded Highest The only Pure Cream of Tartar Powder. No Ammonia, No Alum. Used in Millions of Homes 40 Years the Standard. THE SURPLUS GIRL. Better for Her to Work Than to Be Thrown Into the River. The tendency of an increasing popu lation is nearly always to an overpro ductionor at least to what is gen erally considered an overproduction of girls, and the result is a problem which has been the cause of much vex atious and unsatisfactory thinking in all ages, says the St. Louis Republic. The Chinese have a solution which they look on as finul, but in many other countries there is such objection to the idea of throwing surplus girl babies into the river that it can hardly op erate with the same success which at tends it in China. As they are not thrown into the river they grow up and then they must get a living in some way. This has occurred to Lady Emily Dilke, and has moved her to make an investigation of their condition. The picture sho draws in the Fort nightly Review is a gloomy one. She concludes that the secret of England's manufacturing supremacy is the cheap labor of women and girls, and she ia also of the opinion that the results of setting the women and girls to work to eke out the earnings of the head of the family "are simply suicidal." It is no doubt true that the success ef English manufactures depends largely on the cheap labor of women and girls, and we venture to say that it is to some extent true of every successful manufacturing country. It is certainly true of the New England states, which are notorious for their overproduction of girls. It is not necessary to dwell on the evils incident to any Industrial system which relies mainly on such labor. They are apparent. But the assump tion that they outweigh the benefits is rash indeed. The increasing employment of women and girls in production means that through the advance of civlliza- tion, resulting in the invention of highly improved machinery, work can now be doue by women that was for- mcrly far beyond their strength. -When one girl ean operate a machine that will do the work of five fully de veloped men it is useless to expect that the five men will be employed in place of the one girl and the machine. It is also illogical and short-sighted to look on the Improvement in machin ery which increases the demand for fe male labor as an evil in itself. The English or the German peasant girl who works on tho farm does much harder and more brutalizing labor than the girl of tho factory. Many evils at tend the employment of girls in oper ating machines. No father who can support his daughters should allow them to go into a factory. The girl is most fortunate who can afford to grow up with no other business than that of "housewife." liut as all are not su premely fortunate it is well to recog nize that what may seem an unmixed evil may be really a minor benefit. It is better for girls to work in fac tories and Btores than to be thrown into tho river, as happens to them in China, or to be obliged to use the mat tock and spado In the fields, as they are in Europe. We aro not doing nearly as we 11 as we might in this matter or in any other, but still we are doing a great deal better than professional pessimists are capable of understanding. THE MOVING WORLD. A telegraph messenger boy in Bos ton rides around town on a bicycle, delivering his telegrams. A man in California has invented a device that will prevent gas from es caping when it is blown out. A process of eliminating smoke from the combustion of coal has been discovered by an Ingenious German. A MAN in Florida named Hell is planning to build a big hotel among the branches of a grove of live oaks in that state, which are of great size and height The largest cantalcver bridge in tho country is to be built over the Missis sippi river at New Orleans. It will cost five million dollars and is to be built by Chicago men. Todoooan expresses have been a feature in the Boulder district of Montana the past season, and have been very useful in conveying freight to points off the main road. Frknoii ingenuity has contrived an improved stone-cutting saw of re markable efficiency a circular saw having its edge set with blacl dia monds in the same way as the straight blades; but as the strain on the dia mond is all in one direction the setting can be made much firmer. I3ST Subscribe for the Gaerttb. Honors, World's Fair. Baking Powden