1 WEEKLY GAZETTE .-'OFFICIAL PAPER I V WEEKLY GAZETTE - - - - : r- t-r-i ; : ; , .MBBgBsgMglSgsWfWT SEVENTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER MORROW CQUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JULY 13, 1809, NO. 738 , PEOFESSIOITAL C-A-RaOa. BOH. W. R. KLLIS. DEATH BY A TRAP GUN. MR. BOIRDMAN PROTESTS. A UORBK ROUNDUP. r : : T " ' - 1 -. ; i C E Redfield ATTORNEY AT LAW. Otlico 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. C At Charlton ATTORNEY AT LAW NOTARY PUBLIC Collections promptly attended to. Heppner, . . . Oregon. S; A. D. Gurley, A T'fORiVE Y-A T-LA W. Practicioner in all 8 uto and Federal Courts. ARLINGTON OREGON A. Hal lory, U. S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC Is authorized to take all kinds o LAND PROOFS and LAND FILINGS Collection? made on reasonable terms. Olllee at residence on Chase street. Govi r.unont land script for sale. D. E- Giltnan GENERAL COLLECTOR. Put your old books and notes in his hands and get your money out Of them them. Makes a specialty of hard collec tions. OHice 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 Tonsorial Artist- Shop, Matlock Corner, Heppner, Oregon. A, Abrahamsick Merchant Tailor Pioneer Tailor of Heppner. His work first-class and satisfactory. Give him a nail May Street. Gordon's Feed and Sale Stable HasluBt been opened to the public and Mr. Oordon, the proprietor, kindly invites his frimids to call and try his first-class acenmmnriatinna. nwaa.ty.of Hay Q-raiaa. fox Sail Stable located on west side of Main street between. Wm. Scrivner's and A. M. Quun's blacksmith shops. For the ladies A fine horse and lady's saldle. tlBBHTY MARKET THE OLD SHOP! Is the place to go to get your fine pork and lamb chops, steak and roasts. Fih Every Friday. Fine sugar-cured hams and bacon. Pure leaf lard, kettle-rendered, old style. Highest cash price paid for at stock. Bock & Mathews. m CITY Stage Line B. F. MILLER, Prop. Cheapest and most direct route to John Day valley, Canyon City mining district, Burns ana other interior points. Stages leave Heppner Daily, Sunday ex cepted, at 6:30 a. in. Arrive at Canyon City In ii hours. I.ave Canyon City at 4 p. m., arrive at Hepp ner in 24 hours connecting with trains. ilKITNER TO MILES FARE 20 llflfl .V) 4.00 85 476 75 6.50 n 6 on 102 8 00 104 B 00 Hardman Monument Hamilton inng Creek Fox Valley John Day Canyon City Stages connect with trains at Heppner. Not. Having stocked np this line with new covered coaches and good teams I am prepared give first-class service to the public. ARLIN6T0N-F0SSIL STA6ELINE OFoSlLVIEjPPriet0r' FARE FROM ARLINGTON TO Fossil (60 miles). ..1500 Round trip 19 00 Mayville (53 miles). 4 00 Round trip 700 Condon (39 miles).. S 00 Round trip (00 Clem (28 miles).... 200 Round trip 850 Olf x (19 miles) 1 50 Round trip 8 50 Stage leaves Arlington every morning (Sunday exopted) at 6 o'clock; is doe el Oondon at 3 p. m. and arrives at Fos sil at 7 p. m. Comfortable covered coach,? gpg C5f9 The Kind You Have Always in use lor over so years, ST - v w v-v. nj juu i, ma. 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 CASTOR I AIRWAYS ' Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THt OIHTU 8MHIH, TT MURV TmiT. HtW YORK 8ITV. - plBST ATIONAL JANK OF HEPPNER. O. A. RHEA Pretiident I i. W. OONSER...'. Cashier T. A. RHEA Vio President E. L. FREELAND. .Assistant Oasbiei Transact a General Banking, Business J, I EXCHANGE ON ALL PARTS OF THB WORLD BOUGHT AND BOLD ' Collections made on all points on reasonable terms. Surplus and undivided profits 835,000. GOLD GOLI) GOLD You can save it by trading with 1 4 n Who carry a billiam COMPLETE II1VE Of Heavy aDd Shelf Hardwaro, Graniteware, Tinware Agricultural implements, wagons, hrcks, lite., Jfaints and Una (the best in the world). Crockery and Glassware. ' ' ! 1 Give us the cash and you can get as good and as mauy Hoods Irom us as you -can get lu'd down in Heppner from anywhere. This we guarantee. That 14-Year Old Kohn's Best," .... On Tap Down at The r. TELEPHONE SALOON see IT i RARE GO on J ' New 8taad, City Hotel Bnildioff, LOWmivAfiD,Prop, WHOSE BUSINESS If a man's in love that's bis busiDeesj If a girl's in love that's ber busioees; If Ibey set married it's our business to farnisb their heme from kitcbeo to perloras we oarry a most oomplete stook (. Furniture, Carpeti, Mattings, Wall Paper, Stoves, Ranges," Graniteware,' Thkm, ti And it.syonr bneiDPSs to drop in, examine goods and get prioea. J WELLS & CO., Heppner, Or. 11 . U 11)11 m A New and Sofas Parlor Tables -Dining Room Tables Iron Bedsteads Bedroom Sets Mattrasses, all grades. Pillows. J. XJnclejrtalcejr,. New Place of Business next dcor to Gilliam &,Bisbee's Main Street, Heppner, Oregon. Bought, and which has been has borne the signature of ' - ana has been made under his per sonal supervision since its infancy. Signature of "As Stuff, i i t :: ISJI?: Complete StocK Upholstering Picture Framig Sewing Machines Wheeler & Wilso Latest Improvements L. Yeager, Disb'ee Orates at the Sherman County Celebration on the Fourth . Sherman County Observer. It would reqiire mora time thun we oommaad today to enter into detail of the oelebration ia Sherman county this week at Moro. Oar city barns were filled with county b.irss. Around our hotels and private, tables were feasted many hundred neighbors farmers, their wives and families; who oam3 to join with ns in celebrating the great National holiday.-. All wbo were here, especially all who heard the oration of Hon. W. B. Ellis, must agree that this Republic never retreats. He said : "Why should it retreat. . The republio is Ibe highest form of civilization and oivilizatioo mast advance. The re public's young men are the most virile and nnwasted of the world and they pant for enterprise worthy of their power. The repablio's preparation has been tbe self-Jieoipline of a oentary, and that preparedness has found its task. The repablio's opportunity is as noble as its strength, and that opportunity is here. The republic's duty is saored as Ub opportunity ig, real, and Americans never desert their duty. The demon strations in tbe United States last Tues day, here and elsewhere, teach that there Is not, anywhere on earth, a nation with which we would change plaoes. In tbe epirit of Lioooln's words, "With malice toward none; with charity for all," the United State is spreading the blessings of oiviliz ition and enlighten meat among the rso?s of tbe earth, aad never was its mission of peaoe preserver and civilizer io widely and so gratefully recognized as it is today." The applause aocorde i to Mr. Ellis in Moro plainly show that tbe sentiment of 8herman county people barmonizas with tbe sonti ment that God did not make the Ameri can people tbe mightiest human force of all time simply t feed and die. He did not give out race tbe broin of organize tion a d heart bf domiaion to no par pose and no eud; has - given as a past equal to onr talents. He has appointed tor as a destiny eijTal to .oar endow ments; has m Bile ns tbe lords of civil ization that we may adinibistar civiliza tion. ON IS DttlNK TO EACH MAN.. And This Barkeeper Allows no gmokins- Queer Inn in London Attracts Castoin. Just off busy Bisbopgate. London, in a email and somewhat "slumy" street, there stands a public house remarkable for the fact that in it one is allowed to have only one drink and no smoke. The proprietor of this quaint hostelry, obviously a worthy citizeo, seeing that he himself invented, so to speak, this original system of doing basinets, has been in tbe oooapation of tbe house some twenty odd years. Thither go all sorts and conditions of men, from Ibe silk-hatted city man to tbe railway porter, warehouseman or mere mesaenger. . All have : just their one drink and go out. Nor is it possible to trick tbe proprietor by ordering, say a bottle, and oslling it "one drink." Mo; this one drink means a oertain measure of beer, wine or spirits, sod that a moderate one. On the walls of tbe one bar, wbereio all and sundry are treated alike, bang tbe printed rales of tbe establishment in a frame, :, They set forth bow that the proprietor, deeming Ibat be may conduct bis busi ness as be thinks best, and having at bear! the cause of temperance, begs to oall attention, etc. Then follow in numbered order the sevoral rnles. Be fore a customer oan have a seonfl dnuk be must go away and atop away for at least thirty or forty minutes. One result of the slriotly enforced rule against smoking is that the atmo sphere is wonderfully clear, atd fresh. Of ooursa do person is served should he appear to be ever so sligbtl under the influence of aloohol. Tbe result is per feet order and a snbdaed quite. The hours of closing, too, differ from those of other bouses , ia tbe trude. Eleven o'clock sharp sees tin bouse shut on five nigbts iu the week. Oo Satur days the boir is 12, and on Sundays, 10 To Ibis house the obif rabbi grants bis special permit every Footecost to sell "Kosher" rum to those of the Jew ish community of tbe neighborhood. Of ooorse, over and above the regular customers anoy people are attracted to this ioo out of pare oarioeity, The tight-seeing and novxlty-bnnting Ameri can finds it out ia bis rambles. Should the ourofity monger, however, try to ooai the men servers behind tbe bar into a breaob of tbeir stern laws be is court eoosly refused. Tbey are never osngbt capping, try them ever so often. Tbe list of carefully complied rnles oonclodes with sn intimation that such customers as do not oare to conform thereto are "respeet'nlly rfoneatH to transfer their custom to some other establishment." Working Night and Day Tbe bnsiest and mightiest little thing that evr wss made is Dr. King's New Life Pills. Every pill ie a sugar-coated globule rf bealtb. that ebangrs wpaknrss into strength, listlessoase into energy, brain-fag into mental power. They're wonderful io building np the health. Only 35o p Y1, So'3 fcj 8!"CJm Di-ok Co, An Unknown Bicyclist Bitot and Killed at Bozeman, Mont. Bniru. Mint, July 4-Aspaoial to the Miner from Biz -man says: ,: A bioyolist was shot and killed last night bat venn 6 and 7 o'olook in the evening, about two miles northeast of Chestnut. Ha was attempting to enter the cabin of William Adanii, which is olose to the Northern Pacific railway and had just pried open tbe shutter to tbe window when a trap gun was dis charged and be reoeived the full foroe of its ooctents in bis left side, from whiob h9 died io about half an hour. . Thie oabin has been robbed several times and Adams bad taken this means to protpo his property from tramps with the above fatal results. The unfortu nate was a large man of about 40yeara of age, light oomplezion and mustaobe, well dressed and riding a Rambler bioy ole. His body was brought to Bozeman this afternoon by the ooroner tor identi fication. The deo eased was probably some tourist riding through the oountry and was too tired to ride to tbe nest town and so tried to enter tbe cabiu for tbe night. Tne authorities are reticent. is It Malaria or Alum? Popular Science Monthly.' ' ' Languor, loss of appetite, indigestion and often feverishuesa are the common symptoms of a physiological condition termed "mslaria." All these symptoms may be and frequently are theeffe'otof alum bakiug powders in food making There is no qneetiou about the poisonous effect of alum upon tbe system.- It ob- struots digeatioo, prostrates the nerves, coagulates and davitaliZ3S the-blood. All this baj been mide cle.ir, thanks to physioims, bu.irds of health aid tool commissioners. . 8) "highly injurious to the health of the oommunity," doss the eminent head of tbe University of Penn sylvania, Dr Barker, consider the alum baking powders, that he snys "their sale should be prohibited by law." Under these ciraamitanots it is wortn the while of every housewife to employ the very little care neodsstry to keep so dangerous an element from tbe food of her family. , . .-. t... A pure cream of tartar baking powder, whiob is tbe only kind tint should b used, ought to oost about 45 to 50 oants a pound. Therefore, it you are panu.j muoh less, something is wrong; if you are paying 25 oents or leis par pound, tbe powder is certainly mide from alum. Always bear these aimple fno's iu win I when purchasing baking powder. 8M A LLPuX AND VACCINATION. Uoanlmons Verdict ia favor of Vaccination Disease Cora is From Porto Rico or Cnba. No part of tbe oountry is free from smallpox. Nearly every state reports a larger or smaller number of oases. Ac cording to tbe latest report of tbe United States marine hospital servioe, there have been in this oountry 7418 oases of smallpox sinoe December last, and 355 deaths from tbe disease, Tbs govern ment urges tbe vaooination of all offloers and orews of merchant vessels arriving in tbe Atlantic and Qnlf ports, and oalls tbe attention of health boards, both state and muoioipal, to tbe need of general vaccination among tbe people. Cases of smallpox have recently been reported in New Haven, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Louisville, Pittsbnrg and Niagara Falls. Tbe disease appears to be especially prevalent among soldiers, the oases in Baltimore being at Fort MoHenry, and those at Niagara Falls mostly In Fort Niagara. Tbe inference is that tbe dis ease was brought to this oountry from Cuba and Porto Itico, and is spreading from oeutert so formed. It is impossible often to diagnose a cass of smallpox until it has gone so far as to become contagions, and the best quarantine is tbe teaohing by boards of bealtb of the absolute necessity of vaooi nation as tbe most effective preventative Tbere has been much debate whether vaccination was really a prophylactic, 6r not, and the debate still runs high ia England. Bat tbe weight of authority there, as elswbere, is greatly oo tbe side of vaooination. Opponents of vaooina tion assert tbat the real oause of lbs de cline of smallpox is not vaccination, but better limitation in general. Butter sanitation has, indeed, buen a great helper; but tbere have bwn too many tests of the ellicienoy of vaccination to permit aoy theory against it to prevail. Io some oases, no doubt, there have been bad results through introduction of sypbililio or other poison , bnt the Medi cal Iteoord says tbat Ibe oases in which evil results have followed are few and tar between, aad by tbe ude of animal virus instead of tbe humanized, and by tbe proper antiseptic care ia vaooination, which is really a minor sargloal opera tion, all of these ill effects can be avoid ed. Oregonian, Brave Men Fall Victims to stomach, liver and kidney troubles as well as women, and all feel the result in loss of appetite, poisons in the blood, backache, Dervousuus, head ache and tired, listless, run-down feel ing. But there's no need to feel like that, fiislun to J. W. Gardner. Idaville, Iod. lie says: Electric Hitters are inst tbe thing for anoan when be is all run nuwu, auu uuu i care wneiner ne lives or dies. It did more to irive me new alremth and good appetite than anything I could take. I can Dow eat aoythiug and have e new lease on life." Only 60o at Hlo- caa Drag Co'j, Every botile fjqrftq(ed. Prominent Stockman from Montana Beceives Pecalar Treatment. -J M. Boardman, of Deer Lodge, Moatana, has a strong protest to make against the manner ia whiob the laws of Oregoo are enforced, that is, the law relating to the preservation of the moun tain roads. He has no objection to a reasonable interpretation of the law, but claims tbat a road supervisor is not all powerful, aad that suh bo offioar should not be given the privilege of holding up people as tbey pus ' aloog tbe puhlio highway, .v. -i -.. i This is tbe rather vigorous view ex pressed by Mr- Boardman to tbe East Oregonian, in speaking of so experienon he and bis foreman, W. M. Butler, had while taking to Peudleton the big band of cattle which Mr. Boardmaa has just shipped. . His story is as follows: , ' I and my foreman and a number of oattle men were bringing in the oattle, apd were in tbe oountry between the north and middle forks of tbe John Day river. , We were 'avoiding tba- grades in every place possible, and whenever it was absolutely necessary to go along tbs road, we Strang ttn oattle out and kept them in the middle of the rond. We were eareful to observe the law in every particular, and did as we believe, no damage to the road, or at least, vary Hte. ...i...... , "The supervisor of tbat district io Grant county, Mr. Bringbam, came to me, aud Bpoke of tbe matter la a man ner by no means indicating an intention to proceed to mxke any arrests, and said he would go and look ul tUe road and if there had been done any damage. Tbat was the last I saw of Mr. Briugbam, until we reuobed Ukiab, when be put in an appearance armed with a warrant eaoh tor tbe arrest of me aud my fore man, Mr. Butler. He read the warrant to me, and then said that I could have the option of submitting to arrest, or paying 820 dollars damages to the road, with $15 added as costs for going to Loog Greek and coming baolt to Dale and coming on to Ukiab. He had gone to Long Creek to swear out a warrant for my arrest. "1 was, of oourse, compelled either to pay tbe $35, or remain and fight the oase, and, having between 1300 and 1400 oattle oo tba trail, I oonld do nothing but pay the money. "We have brought cattle over tbe same roads before, and have been held up on former occasions. Tbe road su pervisor appeals to assess tbe damages to the road as be sees fit, and there la no help but to submit to bis diotation. ... "I desire to say that cattle buyers need not necessarily come to Pendleton, bat o n drive to Huntington or Ontario just e well and will do so, if there is going to be any snob holding up of people passing along tbe highways." , W. M, Butler, the foreman, said: ' Two years ago, I brought for Mr. BotrJman twice as many cattle over tbe same road, and hiied a man to put the road buck into shape again, a man wbo lived out in tbat part of tbe oountry. He went over tbe road and looked at it' imd offered to do the work tor $7.50. whiob I paid him. . Tbere were, as I saiJ, twice as many oattle, and it is probable tbs damages, was at least as as great as it was this yeer." : Mr. Boardman has bought a very large amount of oattle in this section, during the past few years. He baa paid to the oattle raisers in two or three counties hereabouts a total of from $250, 000 to $300,000, and rather prefers Pend leton as a shipping point, on aooounl of tbe superior facilities afforded here. But be does not propose to submit to arbitary arrest, and states tbat in this instance the supervisor gave no intimation that be intended to take any snob ooorse. He oould bave bad tbe tbe matter adjusted without the resort to arrest, and would bave paid any reasonable amount of money. He loti on ates tbat be will in tbe future take his oattle around tbe other way, and give PeDdluton the cold shoulder, but aug ments that it would be profitable for people here to take up Ibe matter, and see that bis experiences are not made the experiences of other oattle men wbo are ooming to Pendleton to ship their bands. , A l'ronrflve Railroad. Tbe Itio Grande Western railway, otherwise known as ''The Ureal Halt Lake Route," is and bas been, siooe the opening of tbe "Ogden gateway," the popular trans continental route betweeu tbe Pacific northwest aud tbe East. To add to its popularity, arrangements bave been made Io make its train servioe awl equipment superior to any of its i competitors. Already tbe running time or its several express trains bas been out down so that passengers from Portland reach Chicago in less lhao four days, and New York in less tbso five days. Effeotive May let, a perfsol dining oar service will he eslabliehed. This will make the trp via Sail Lake City the ideal one. To further add to the cum fort of its patrons, handsome exoursion lourisl oars are beiog built for tbe run between Portland and Chicago. With the dining oar eervice established and tbe new tourist cars rnoniog, tbere will be little to be added to muke a perfect train For information as t rates, etc., apply to tbe nearest ticket office of either O. Ii. Ik N., or Southern Psoifio, or address J. D. Mansfield, general agent 1(3 3d iml, Portland, Or, Visit to tbe Hors Ranges of Montana in the . Year 1899. "Did yon ever see a horse roundup?" queried the stockman of a Philadelphia reporter. "No? Well, you've missed the sight of your life. A oattle roundup ain't in It with a horse roundup, and I ought to know, for I've been in some of the biggest of both kinds. A cattle roundup ia exciting enough, perhaps, with the saddling, up, the drive, the night herd, the stampede and all that, but if you want real action you want to see a horse roundup. , I guess it would be pretty hard to find a horse roundup nowadays. If horses are valuable they don't let 'em loose like that and real wild range horses are hardly worth rounding up any more. When I was up in Montana in '82 there was a horse roundup on nearly every range. . The Swedes and Norwe-. . gians were coming into Dakota and taking up the wheat lands. They had to have horses, but ' they couldn't pay over $75 or (100 a team, so they bought almost anything in the shape of a horse that was broke enough to to put a har ness on. "Range horses were pretty cheap up in Mon tana then, though they were worth more then ' than they are now.- Borne buyers used to put out a standing offer of $25 a head for any likely, looking wild animal over 8 years old. They'd ' collect hundreds of these, take a bunch of horse . wranglers and riders with them and drive over land to Dakota.; The men would be breaking horses to ride and drive all the way down., They'd go to some Dakota town and rent a corral. Here they'd have headquarters. They'd ' break horses day and night, and it would't cost much for feed, because they'd herd the bunch out on the prairie. It nsed to be a great sight, this breaking, but that isn't what I started to , tell you about. For ten years before this the ranchers had been raising horses in northern Montana just , like they raised cattle. That Is, they'd let them , run loose all the year round. In the summer they'd have a colt roundup, only they'd pull it olf toward fall, just before the beef gather. The horsemen would hold a meeting and agree upon the boundaries of a big cirole, say 2U0 , miles across. Each one would furnish so many : men and saddle horses and they'd start on a certain day on the outside of this circle anil . drive all the horses they found toward the cen ter, whore there was a big corral. This corral had big wings built, one from It leading to the gate, because driving horses was a different thing from driving even the worst kind of cattle. "Tbe men as they rode from the outside of the circle would start the bands of wild horses to ward this corral. They'd start them as gently as they could, but the horses were as wild a deer and they'd run like the wind. Each day the horse wranglers would get nearer and nearer the corral. The circle would get smaller and smaller and it would begin to look as though all the horses in the world were grazing and running In those hills and valleys. After two or three days the wild stock would get more aooustomed to seeing the horsemen, and they were easier to drive. . "By the time the cirole was drawn within five or six miles of the corral things would get exciting. There would be 6000 or 7000 head of horses Inside the line and it puzzled the riders to keep the lot from spreading. The bands which had been accustomed to run together would keep pretty well bunohed, but the gold Ings would break away once in a while aud hunt a fight with some strangers. It was quick work for the riders and took lots of saddle horses, for everyone rode at top speed all the time. "These horses were a pretty sight, with shag gy coats, long manes and talis sweeping the ground. Once In a while a range stallion would be found herding his faintly and ottering battle to a man on horseback. Sometimes we had to shoot them, thoy made so much trouble. Then came the cutting out of the mares and colts. The colts would be branded and they and their mothers driven back to the range. Next came the cutting out of the three, four and five-year-old geldings, for sale to the buyers, who would drive them to Dakota. These were kept in the corral until tbe corral was full, then the bunch , would be started out, closely herded night ai.d day by the horse wranglers. "It was an exciting time when 603 or BOO wild geldings were let out of the corral. The men would sabdle their very best horses and range themselvos on either side of the corral. The gate of the corral was then opened. Out would come the horses, wild with fright and eager for liberty. All the men could do was to ride i t their sides and behind them, keeping the herd headed In the desired direction. Their hoof beats on the prairie sounds like rolling thunder and the earth shakes when they went. At the first bnrst they go like the wind and It takes a good rider and a good borse to keop anywhere near them. Their manes and tails are so long, their eyes ar bright and keen and they are accustomed to racing across the broken country. They run for several hours after leaving the corral. Then they quiet down and the horse herders ride them around In a circle, holding them until another bunch conies form the corral the next day; "Hometlmus 2000 of those wild geldings would be getliered together before the start is made for Dakota and the herders had their hands full day and night. It was all excitement, for meu - were roping and riding wild horses all the time to take the places of those which were played out on the drive. Behind the herd followed the four-horsed grub wagon, with the cook and camp outfit, but meals wore mighty Irregular and one was lucky If he found his bed at night. "After a few day's driving the horses would become quiet and the work was easier. There used to be a great deal of trouble about stealing horses on these drives, for if the herd happened across a little hunch of horses somewhere on the prairie the bunch was very apt to be ab sorbed by the drive and the rancher would never hear of it again. Some ranchers would go to the roundup Just to see that none of their horses were driven away, and others would follow the drive through their own ranges to keep their horses from Joining the emigration to Dakota Sometimes a few horso owners would combine and hire a man Just to follow these drives aud bring back stolen stock. There used to be a killing once in a while over a 25 cay line, but not very often. They wereu't worth enough. "These drives are not mado nowadays, be cause there la no market for this kind of horse anywhere. In some parts of the northwest they do not even brand the colt. A herd of 20,000 head of these horse were sold In Oregon a few years ago for 20,000, or 1 1 a head. They are disappearing, however, because the ranger hail to improve the stock to make it pay to care lor it, and the average range horse of today is from if I to joo pounds heavier than the range horse of 12 or 1.1 years ago. ' Millions Given Away. It is oertaiuly gratifying to the public to know of ooe concern in tbe land who are not afraid to he generous to the needy and suffering. The proprietors of Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption, congbs and oolds, have given away over ten millions trial bottles of this great raedioine and bave tbe satisfaction of knowing (I has absolutely onred thous and of hopeless oases. Asthma, bron chitis, hoarseness and all diseases of tbe throat, chest and longs are surely onred by it. Call on E. J. Slooum, druggist, and get a trial bottle free, regular size 50o and $1, Every bed lie guaranteed, ot KIOa refunded, . . -