1 ,. V' Eight-Page WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 Leads In Prestige Leads In Circulation Leads In News OFFICIAL PAPEK Eight-Page WEEKLY GAZETTE' Subscription Price, $1.50 The Paper Is Published Strictly In the Interests of Morrow County and Its Taxpayers. the Official and Recognized Represent ative Journal ol the County. SIXTEENTH YEAR I1EPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1899, NO. 713 THE HEPPHER GAZETTE . Published Every Thursday. BY OORLIES MEliRITT, Editor ani .kCa.xa.a.g'ar. . SUBSCRIPTION One) Year - - Six Months Throe Month RATES SI .SO 73 BO Advertising Rates Made Known on Application. Entered at the Postofflce at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. ornoiAii isxuEcrosTr. Fnited States Officials. President William McKinley Vice President Garret A. Hobart Secretary of Htate. W. It. Day NnornUu'y of Treasury Lyman J. Gage Socretary of Interior Cornelius N. Bliss Senrxtary of War Kuanell A. Alger :ioi!retry of Navy. John D. Long I'orttinaster-General.. Charles Emery Smith Attorney-General John W. Grifrge dcratary of Agriculture ....James Wilson State of Oregon. ijpveraor W. P. Lord rk-oretary of State II. It. Kincaid 1'reanorer Phil. Metsuhan Supt. Public instruction G. M. Irwin Attorney General C. M. Idleman Senator, jG.W.MoBride pressmen jl,6 Printer W. H. Leeds iU. B. Bean, F. A. Moore, C. K. Wolverton Sixth Judicial District. tUrjnit Judge Stephen A. Lowell P.osonat.ing Attorney H. J. Bean Morrow County Officials. J 'int Senator . J, W.Morrow K orasnntutiro L. Freeland 0 'My Judge A. (i. Bartholomew ' Commissioners J . li. Howard J. W. Beckett. " Clerk Vawter Crawford " Sheriff E. L. Matlock " Treasurer M. Liohteuthal " Aeseesor A 0. Pettey " Surveyor Julius Keithly " School Hup't Jay W. Bhipley " C jroncr Dr. E. K. Hunlojk HBPPNEB TOWN OFFIOKHS. &loi Thos. Morgan (lo'.DcUmen K. J. Slocum, M. Linhtenthat, J. R. Kiinons, J. J. Koberts, J. W. Hasmus and E. (I. Spovry. K coriior ... W. A. Richardson TreHR irer L. W. BriggB Marshal George Thornton Preciuct Officers. 1 nstice of the Peaoe W. K. Kicharrlson 0 nstable G, 8. Graj United States Land Officers. THE DALLES, OR. Jay P Luoas Jtegister Otis l'attsrsou Beoeiver LA OBANDK, OB. K. W. Bartlett Register i. O. Hwackhuaie.' Receiver PBOFESSIOUAIi CABSS, D J McFaul, M- D. HEPPNER, .OREGON. Office hours, 8 to 10 a. m.. and 12 to 2 p. in., at resilience, and 10 to 12 a.m., and 2 to 5 p m , at office in the rear of Borg's jewelry store. C E Redfield ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in First National Bank building. Heppner, Oregon. Ellis & Phelps ATTORNEYS AT LAW. All business attended to in a prompt and satisfactory manner. Notaries Pub lic and Collectors. Office in Natter's Building. Heppner, Oregon. J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and U. S. COMMISSIONER. Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. S. A. D. Gurley, A TTORNE Y-A T-LA W. Practlcloner in all Brate and Federal Courts. ARLINGTON OREGON A. Mallory, U. S. COMMISSIONER Is authorized to take all kinds of LAND PROOFS and LAND FILINiiS Collections made on reasonable terms. Office at resilience on Chase street. Government laud script for pale. D E. Gilman GENERAL COLLECTOR. Put your old books and notes In bis hands and get your money out of them them. Makes a specialty of bard collec tion!. Office in J. N. Brown's building, Heppner, Or Dr. M. B. Metzler DENTIST Teeth Extracted and Filled Bridging a specialty Painless Extraction Heppner - - Oregon. G. B. Hatt TON SO RIAL ARTIST. ' Shaving, - 15 Cants Hair Cutting, 25 " Shop, Matlock Corner, Heppner, Oregon. HEPPNER TRANSFER CO.'S Belled express is coming. Does deliver work on short order, 10 cents and np- wards This wseon is So. 4, and lesve your order with it. or at ' Central" tele phone ortice. Wc Move Anything! The Kind You Have Always In use for over 30 years, - and has Hnnn.1 Allow All Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex periments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THE CCNTAUN OOMPANY, TT MURNAV TPttTCT, NEW YORK OITV. First ational Jank OF HEPPNER. A RHEA.. , President A. RHEA. . Vio President Transact a General Banking Business. EXCHANGE ON ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD BOUGHT AND SOLD Collections made ou all points on reasonable terms. Surplus and undivldad profits 3ico' A BEAUTIFUL DISPLAY Is that of plain and decorated Chinaware & Queensware At Gi m And by the way fiey have anything you can call for in the line of Hardware, Stoves and Tinware. 60 WHERE YOU CAN GET WHAT YOU WANT. Gordon's Feed and Sale Stable Has just been opened to the public and Mr. Gordon, the proprietor, kindly invites his friends to call and try his first-class accommodations. Fl.0aa.t3r of Hajr a.xa.d. S-xaAa. fox Sals Ptable located on west side of Main street between Wm. Hcrivner's and A. M. Ounn's blacksmith shops. HBBHTY MAHKKT THE OLD SHOP! Is the place to go to get your fine pork and lamb chops, steaks and roasts. Flah Every Friday. 11 Flue sugar-cured hams and bacon. Pure leaf lard, kettle-rendered, old style. Highest cash price paid for at stock. Benj. Mathews. HEPPNEK-CANYON CIfY Stage Line B. F. MILLER, Prop. Cheapest and most direct route to John Day valley. Canyon City mining district, Burns auu other interior points. Stages leave Heppner Dallv, Sunday ex cepted, at 6:30 a. in. Arrive at Canyon Oily in 24 hours. Leave Canyon City at 4 p m arrive at Hepp ner in 24 hours connecting with trains. Heppnkr to milks fa a j! Hard man 20 11.50 Monument M 4'0 H.milton 65 4.75 Long Creek 75 6.50 Fox Valley M 6 00 John Day 2 8. 00 Canyon City 104 g 00 Stages connect with trains at Heppner. Note. Having stocked tip this line with new covered coaches and good teams I am prepared g4vo nnt-ci8s service to me pumic. ARLINGTON-FOSSIL STAGE LINE REED k O. OOILVIE I'ropric'ors. FARE FROM ARLINGTON TO Fossil (60 miles) . . . I'. 00. Round trip 00 Mayville(Mmiie). 40 Bonnd trip 7 00 Condon (. milia).. 800 Koundtrip 600 Clem (28 miles).... 2 00 Koundtrip S 50 Olex (1 miles) 190. .....Koundtrip SM fltaee 1mv-! Arlington -very morning ( Sunday ni'f fit, rl) lit b nVWk; i rlnf at (Vnd n 3 p. m. vid ;rriv" af Fo i! at 7 P. m. Com' rHnl pnrpd coaoliesaod eare fttl, etperffljei drivers. Bought, and which has been has borne the signature of been made under his per- RiinArvisinn lnrA it a liifn.ncv. x- j . no one to deceive you in this. Signature of i 7 G. W. CONSER CaRhiei E. L. FREELAND. . Assistant Cashier I. A, Abrahamsick Merchant Tailor Pioneer Tailor of Heppner. His work first-class and satisfactory. Give him a call May Street. Columbia HtiU Closed. No one appears to know when boats will begin t run on the Columbia again, says the Evening Telegram. Tbe river above Tbe Dalles was still frozen over Saturday. Tbe ice was thiok enough for ebeep to be driven nomas it. The Colum bia valley is practically free from snow, bat in tbe bills and outlying country snow continues to fall. Weather iudioi Hons for Eastern Oregon are for colder weather by tomorrow. If this comes true tbe ioe will remain in tbe river for several days yet. West of the mountains and all up tbe Willamette valley ideal Oregon weather prevails warm rain and Chinook winds, and tbe average Oregonian is profuse in his praise of tbe weather. Mr. Pague says tbn rains may cense by tomorrow. What he is going to call it after that time he has not yf-t stated. Bismarck's Iron Nerve Was the result of his splendid health. Indomitable will aod tremendons energy are not found where stomach, liver, kid neys and bowels are out of order. If you waot these qualit'es And tbe success they brin, nse Dr. King's New Life Pills. They develop every power of brain and body. Only 25 cents at Hlo enra Diug Co'. Yfllowstone Park Map, The No'tberu Paoifk rniiwiy ha-jntt issued nv map of th? Yeil-iwafoce Park, th it should n in d I. It is a relief map In colors, is srieutifloall) mad, an 1 is eomple'e in topography and nnnvnoU'iire. Thn nnp is ab ia 22x23 inches in tize aud is prir-tfd on h".v) psper this making it suitable for fram ing. Tbe map is specially adapted for school an! o;ss rooms and wi!l be mxiled in t'lbn to B'j d.1r by Ci)s. 8. " g"nrl paa-ei.gr snt of the N-Ttbern PaciSr), St. Paul, Kiui , open fFtwipl Of tt eTf. bi a s bisoee s PENDLKTON STATION BURNED. Records and Drawings Destroyed Cause of Fire Unknown. Morning Oregonlan. PkndiiBton, Dec. 12 Early tbia morn iog the Oregon Rtilroad & Navigation Company's passenger station Bod bag gage room, and tho general ofiioeg main tained hers by the corporation, were destroyed by fire. At the present time no trains run through the city al night, and at 1 o'clook this morning there were none moving about the yards. H. H. Hallock, the night operator, was at work in the eat.1 end of the depot, where the telegraph office was located, making oat bis night report, when he beard some one ponading vigorously on the window and saying that the depot wag on fire in the baggatie-room He at onoe tele phoned to the hotels, and, while his in formant went to tarn in a fl-e alarm, he harried to the baggage-room, which he found in flames. By the time be reaohed that end of the platform the flimea were bursting through the walls, and, in a few moments, the entire west eud was burning fiercely. The building was about 100 feet long and of only ona s'ory, ex cepting in the east end, which was two stories high. Although the fire department respond ed promptly and bad eeveral streams of water soon play iog on the burning struct ure, tbe fire continued to ran along the whole length, until tbe entire building was wrapped In flames. On the ground floor was tbe office of General Roadmaeter W.Bollius.in which was a large quantity of valuable record material, drawings, etc , all of wbiob were consumed. In tbe second story General Superintendent of Bridges and Buildings Cameron bad bis offices, and bere also was much material in tbe shape of plans and drawings. Some ot these were saved, though only a comparatively small amount. In both offioee were such records as referred to the detail workings of tbe departments controlled by these superintendents, and tbeir loss will seri ously embarrass the officials. .. In the baggage-room were 15 pieces of baggage, five being sample cases belonging to L Samuels, of Cincinnati, who lost four. Only two trunks were saved from tbe baggage-room. , Mo one seems to know bow tbe fire originated. The loss o i the builling was about $5,000, and tbe loss on the fijtnresill joonside.rab'y ioreaa this amount. NO NlfiVV FINDS IN GltANT. Ri port of Gold Discovery a Mistake. -Ilea Nearly Frozen to Keath. Morning Orcgonian. Long Cheek, Jan. 14 Tbe county oourt of Grant county has ordered a tax levy of 20 mills on tbe real uud personal property, for county purposes, and 5 wills for school purposes. Warrants aggre gating 5,118 were ordered drawn on tbe treasurer to meet expenditures for the two preoeding months. Mail contractors on the various stage lines to and from Long Creek are having great difficulty in getting through tbe mountains on acoouot of tbe drifting snow. Until last nigbt no mail was re oeiyed from Heppner or Canyon City since Monday. On tbe Dkiab route last night Charles Taylor lost bi; way and wandered around in the bills tcr hours, and when nearly frozen accidentally ar. rived at a sheep oamp and was directed to this city. The statement wblob has been made by portions of tbe press of the state to tb9 i ffeot that a rich gold field bad re oently been found near Canyon Oity is a mistake. No new oity has sprung up, nor have any claims recently been lo cated. J. Garst, V. Offiaer, 8. Offloer aud E. Officer, residents of tbe Dunville section of this oonnty, passed through Long Creek today, en route to tbe Atlin lake gold fields. PULLMAN TOWN TO BE BOLD. Illinois rJaprtme Court Declares Against the Palace Car Company Ownership Special to the Globe-Democrat. Chicago, III.. January 7. The Pall mun Palace Car Company is going oat of tbe business of conducting a model town. The model city that was George M. Pallman's pride will nu longer figure an an asset of tbe company, and this is the result of tbe proceedings instituted by Attorney General Molo ey, in 1894. to compel the oompany to do only the busiuess authorizd by its charter the manufacturing of railroad cars The suit was one of tbe incidents of tbe big strike of 1894. Pullman was tbe realiz ition of tbe late George M. Pallmao's dream of a model community. It is situated ou Lake Cftlumet. aud extends from tbe lake to Pullman boulevard, aud from 1031 street to 110! h street. The Und originally be U bgcd to tb Pullman Lntid Association and tbe Pii'lman Palaoe Car Company, ti May, 1880, the wo'k of building the tone whs begun. M"r than oOO men wre employed in the preliminary work, and this force was increased la 2000, and the oity completed wi bio two jeers. Under the decision of the Hnpretne court, the Pullman company is con strained to dispose of the plaots of tbe Pullman froo and Steel Company, tbe Pullman Brick Company, and Ibe Pull man Gas Company, and the Arcaile hiiildinir. Ibe Hotel Florence, the market hnildiDgs, two churches, the pnMie school botiiw. the wxter mains, 20IX) rlwel'it'gs, severd hundred acres of land t.d 300 town lots. The population pf PnllrflHJ i 12,000. WORK ON COLUMBIA SOUTHERN Suspended for the Season Country Tapped by the Line. Work has been suspended on the con struction of tbe Columbia & Southern railroad for the season, says the Worning Oregonian, after tbe track bad been laid from Wasoo, the 1897 terminus, a dis tance ot 10 miles to Moro. Over 200 men were employed on the grade during tbe season of 1897, and tbe total length of tbe line thus far constructed is 29 miles south ot Biggs, tbe juootion with theO. R.&N. Tbe oostot tbe construc tion of this section is estimated at $60,- 000. The priuoipal promoters ot tbe new line, P. T. Lytle, of Tbe Dalles, and D. C. O'Reilly, ot Portland, expect to ex tend tbe line in 1899 as far south ss Priueville, a distance by rail ot J 75 miles from Biggs. Tbe grade follows tbe meaudeiings of the most convenient streams in going toward Prineville, and will thus be somewhat longer than tue direot distance between tbe two points. This new road has tlready opened op a large area of farming oountry in south ern rjberman oonn y, and its oontmued oonstruotion will tend to develop a large buncbgrass area in Eastern Wasoo and Northern Crook and it will bring tbe whole ot Central and Southeastern Ore gon much nearer to Portland, as It will save a great deal of expensive wagon-road freighting ot wool, and.'ivert all tbe Mal heur aud Harney ooucty trade from Winnemucua, Nev., to the proper and lees expensive obannel toward Portland. Farmers in the grain growing districts adjaoeot to Wasco aud Moro are already receiving several oents more in aocord auce with Portland markets per buebel on tbe grain stored in their looal ware houses Iban tbey were two years ago. when a long wagon road haul was nec essary in getting tbe wheat to Jrant or Biggs stations, ou tbe Columbia river, and there is considerable more demand for farm lands in tbe fertile Grass Valley region, on the part of oasb purchasers. Tbe extension of Ibe liue, according to survey, will be by Rutledge, Kent and Bakeoven postoffioes, and into Antelope, thriving town in eastern Wasco, which now contains a prosperous population of 600, and aspires to be county eeat ot tbe proposed oonnty of Stockman. From this point to Prineville, tbe line passes through a rolling banobgrae region, well wtMNdr but tnkb.Br rough lor tann ing on a large euale. When the road reuclies 1'rineville it will bring tbe traffic ot all of southern Crook and tbe entire oouutiea of Klamath and Lake to Port land. Most of tbe business ot these two latter oouuties finds its way to Sun Fran cisco, either by Winnemuco ou the east or by Alger on the west, in either case involving loug, dangerous and difficult trips to the respective stations, and long hauls by rail to the bay of San Franoisco afterward. THANaPUHTINa INSANE. Governor User's Plan Not Looked on With Favor. Governor Geer's purpose appears to be to curtail slate expenses wherever be oau, without impairing tbe servioe of any ot its publio departments. Among the reforms be has in view is one to have insane persons oonveyed from vari ous parts of tbe state to tbe asylum by attendants of that institution, instead of by deputy sheriffs, as is now tbe prac tice. He also deprecates the praotioe as be ing very indelicate ot having women taken to tbe asylum by men. At the sheriff's office today it was eai that the governor s proposition would not save tbe state a dollar in most instances. All the sheriff now receives for oonducting an insane prisoner to to Salem is the bare aotual expenses oonnecfed therewith. Besides that, tbe state pays into tbe oonnty treasury $6 to reimburse tbe sheriff for two days' servioe of one of his deputies. "Tbe law requires insane persons to be taken to tbe asylum at onoe after their oommitmeot," said Deputy Meyer. "This oould not be done aoder the proposed reform," continued be. "Take Union oonnty, or, tor that matter, any of tbe oountles far remote from the asylum; it would first require two or three days to advise tbe asylum author ities tbat a patient was awaiting tbem there. Tbeo it would take several days before an attendant could oall for him or her. Tbe cost of maintaining such person would in the meanwhile run into quite a considerable sum. Tbe consensus of opinion among disio tereeted people is tbat tbe governor's plan iu ibis respect Is not piactickble. His Life Was Saved. Mr, J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen of Hannibal, Mo., lately bad a wonderful deliveranoe from a frightful death. In telling of it be says: "I was taken with typhoid fever, tbat rao into pneumonia. My lungs became hardened I was so weak I couldn't sit op in bed. Nothing helped me. I expected to soon die of consumption, wbeo I beard of Dr. King's New Discovery, One bottle gave great relief. I continued to use it, and now am well and strong. I can't say too mncb in its prates." This marvelous medicine is tbe surest aod quickest core in the world for all throat and lung . trouble Regular sixes 50 oeuts aod (1. Trial bottles free at Hlooqrq prug Cj , E07 bottle guaranteed, BTATE LAND DKPABTA1ENT. Governor Lord's Discussion of the State Land Question. Oregon has been tbe beoefioiary ot large land grants for various objects, and muoh legislation has been devised and enacted in regard to tbem, but oar state has not realized tbe benefits and advantages which it should bave re ceived from tbem. All tbat oan now be done is to take oare of and dispose ot what remains, so as best to promote tbe objects aod distribute tbe benefits ot these grants. It is greatly to be regretted tbat tbe law did not make better pro vision for tbe segregation and mapping of state lauds, tor indexing all sales of them and disclosing tbeir looation, and further providing that tbe officers in obarge of tbe land oflioe, when requested by a purchaser, or other interested per son, should give tbe information asked, as appeared on the reoord. It would bave eaved purchasers muob unneces sary expense, and greatly aided in con ferring tbe benefits desigued to be given by the grants. But, without legal pro vision, tbe land department oflioe ought to have adopted rales and regulations that would bave served this purpose. The reoords of tbe office ought to bave been kept in snob a way tbat a person desirous of purchasing a oertain piece of state land oould easily ascertain its looa tioo, whether it was taken or was tor sale, without incurring the unnecessary expense ot hiring a tbird party. By neglecting to do so, it was only possible tor Its officers, or those who badaoquired speoial knowledge of the looatiooot state lands, to consult tbe records as kept and ascertain tbe desired facts. So oh a mode of doing public business offers too muob temptation for wrongdoing and scandalous practices to justify its fur ther oontinuanoe. Some of ourstatutes, however, seem to bave been expressly designed to enoonrage spoilation ot state land purchasers. Tbe aim ot tbe present land board has been to make tbe land oflioe serviceable aod Inexpensive to those having business with it, and, under the direction and management of its effl cient olerk and bis subordinates, tbe reoords bave been classified aod ar ranged, indexes and notations on the maps have been made, and rnles and reg ulations have been adopted, designed to simplify and expedite tbe public busi ness, and make inexpensive tbe doing of business id tbe ls)nd department. Iu oouuecti.n with the state lauds, it needs to be meutioued tbat loans of the school funds, in many instanoes, owing to the bard times and over-valuation of the land, bave proven bad investments aud entailed losses upon 'the sobool fund. In many of these loans the borrowers bave defaulted in payment ot interest, and the state baa been oumpelled to take tbe security and to pay the oust ot tore closure proceedings. These judgments represent, in addition to tbe principal loaned aud tbe oosts of suit, a large ac cumulation of interest, wbioh lessens to tbat amount the sobool fund iuterest to be annually distributed for the educa tion ot ohildren in our common eohoola, Another source of loss and annoyance is tbe sale of lands for taxes two or three years overdue, without notice to tbe board, thus entailing further fipense iu redeeming tbem. Tbis loss ought to be obviated by such legislation as would make it unlawful to sell tor taxes any seourity held by tbe state, without proper notice to tbe land board in all ioatances, where the taxes are io default, and in snob oases making it tbe duty of tbe board, upon such notice, to oause tbe taxes lo be paid aod obarge tbe same to tbe interest aocouot.and at onoe proceed to procure a decree with the taxes iu oluded. In making oolluotious, it has been tbe policy, of the board to deal as leniently as ciroomstanoes would permit with debtors to tbe school fuoj during tbe financial and industrial depression wbioh so seriously affeoted the values of property and oontracted tbe means ot earning maney. To loan tbe sobool fund and avoid losses is difficult. Tbe persons oomposiog tbe board, though tbey be oapable io other walks ot life, may not possess tbat business sense aod judg ment that is especially required in mak ing loans. Tbeir sources ot information, respecting tbe value aud sufficiency of tbe seourity offered for tbe loans, are through agents in tbe different oouutie upon wh' se judgment tbey mostdepeod, aud who are liable at times to reoom meod loans tbat are oot desirable through entreaty of friends and a yield iog disposition. Tbe speoial agent appointed to seleot lauds, under tbe act ot 181)5, has prose, cuted his work energetically aod efil oiently, adding many thousand acres of valuable land lo tbe publio domain His report is full of valuable suggestions relating to tbe disposition ot our public lands, not least among wbioh is bi reoommendatioo that the sot, oreatiog his ( Aloe aud its duties, having aocom plisbed tbe object for which it was en acted, be abolished. There being, there fore, no further need for the oontinuanoe of tbe sot, I oonour in bis suggestion aod recommend its repeal. Voloanlo Eruptions Are graod. but tkin eroptions rob life of joy. Bncklen's Arnica Balve cures them; itlso old, runutDg and fever sores, ulcers, felons, boils, corns, warts, oats, braises, burns, scalds, obapped baods, chilblains. Besl pile cure on earth. Drives out pains and aohes. Only 25 oeot a box. Cure gquraqtced. boJ by Blooum Drq;f Co, BAKER COUNTY'S DEBT. Too Much Government and Too Little Taxa ble Property. East Oregonian. Baker oounty owes a debt of 82f0,0OO. Government in Baker oounty hns always oust more than oould be raised by taxing ordinary property. In abort, Baker county bag bad too much government ar d too little taxable property to support it. But Baker oounty ia running over with natural wealth. Baker county con tains a number of mines that have net yields ot 100,000 lo 1(300,000 annually. . , A few days ago from 20 tons of ore, taken from one ot these mines, $63,000 ;n gold was secured. Tbis partioulsr mine is said to yield fully $300,000 a year. This wealth is not tbe product of labor. It is natural wealth, wealth created by nature. It was never intended as the property of a few individuals. There fore, a goodly share of it should be laken lo meet tbe expenses ot govern ment. Wealth of tbis kind, obtained in enob abundance, is tbe proper fund to draw upon in order that government may be curried on. Enterprise and in dustry should oot be made to oarry all tbe burden ot government. Fortunate "finds" ot tbis kind should be shared with the onmmunity or government. The Est Oregonian is confident that not a mine in Baker county is taxed as much as $100,000, while some ot them are valued at high as $1 000,000. While other property in Baker oounty is taxed on 60 lo 75 per cent ot its true or selling value, produotive mines are probably not taxed at all. They should be taxed tbe same as other property, aooording to tbeir value, based upon tbeir net annual output, whioh can be ascertained by the assessor with little exertion. Probably if this were done the publio wou d not read so much io the news papers about tbe fabulous riohes of oer- ain mines and other biles in tbe ground. If Baker county will intelli gently proceed to take her own a share of tbe returns ot her very produotive mines through taxation, witbio a years sbe will not bave suob a debt, which, at all times, stands as a denial ot her riobes, as well as a barrier to honest industry and legitimate enterprise. Wipe tbe debt put, and at tbe same time either prove that the riobes of tbe mines, we bear so muob about, really exists, or destroy tbeir inflated values' through the olab ot taxation. Inflation s the consort of Speculation aod second oonslo to Theft. WARM AND WELCOMED Balmy Chinook Made Green the Grass of the Heppner Hills. Morning Oregonian. People who are unfamiliar with the great stnok raising industry eist of the Cascade mountains can hardly appre ciate the value of a warm wind there. Tbe obinook winds wbiob come to that section are the salvation of tbe oountry. They suddenly start np in response to general request when tbe whole country is oovered with snow, and in a few days' blow, without the aid of sunshine, they will wear out and melt tbe snow and agaio brings green grass to the surface. And II is ireeu grass that tbe stock oountry waots. Henry Blaokmao, of Heppner, ex state senator of Morrow and adjoining oouu ties, is io Portland, and gives an inter esting aocount of conditions np there. Tbe welcome obinook wind oame Mon day and oontinued over Tuesday, and by Wednesday the eigbt inobes of snow was melted off tbe south slopes of Ibe Heppoer bills, between tbe town and tbe western spur of tbe Blue mountains. A few miles north ot Heppner, near Judge Dutton's ranch, the warm wind spent itself and tbe suow still stood. Where it had melted, it soaked. into the ground, nourishing the grassroots and oaosing no floods, and Willow creek at Heppoer did not raise. On Wednesday tnorniug there was a fresh fall ot soow at Hepp oer, but a obinook wind melted it all off tbe same day. Tbere bsve been no losses of sbeep ia tbe Heppner bills, and there is plenty ot bay In feed through storms. Tbe wool situation at Heppner remains about tbe same. Growers are still holding for from 13 to 15 cents, and oo receot sales bave been made. Three carloads of wool have reoeutly been shipped from Hepp oer on consignment, representing the clip from 11,000 sheep. Heppner town Is in good shape, its merchants are doing a good business, and its 1200 people are prosperous. Everybody tbere is pleased with tbe new time schedule, wbicb makes it pos sible and pleasant to make day trips be tween Heppoer and Portland. Passen ger trains now leave Heppner at 10 a. m. and arrive at Portland at o:lu p. m. Leave Portland at 2:20 p. m, reaoh Heppner ut 10:15 p. m. Tbn railroad oompany bas the thanks ot the Heppoer people for snob, a satisfactory schedule, for formerly it was an all-Digbt journey. Dp tbere everybody is saying a good word tor the O li. A N. Cj., praising i's polioy and taklug pride Iu Ibe faot tbat it is an Oregon institution, and its liber, ality lo the Iowa is highly appreciated. The Heppner branch has always been a splendid feeder for the O R. . N. sys tem, end furnishes vast quantities of wool, wheat and livrstook, aud the supplies for an Immense surrounding region are distributed from Heppner, the railroad lerminqs;,