Portland Library I jWLm OFFICIAL WKKKJLv PAPER t I. Subscription price. $1.50 " Ji K I. SUKLYCAZETT Leads n Prestige.... j ff 't I 0 9 k"01 "C!' 'EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY. MAYilTi " i vs f InaHa I . ... vjivwiii ur UUNSTHL'HUJNAL Is published every Thursday by " .! twa t " 111 j, LIBERTY. ' . I rSmfffll Entered at the Postofflce at Reppner, Oregon, oBvuuu-uituiB matter. Sixth Judicial District. Otromt Judge Stephen A.. Lowell riiiBTOuung axiorney H. j. Bean Borrow County Officials. Jint Senator J, W.Morrow K tpresBntatiTO. E. L. Freeland CjnrjtyJudge A. G. Bartholomew ommiesionere j , Li Howard - J. W. Beckett. Sietlix Vawter Crawford Sheriff A.Andrews Treasurer M. Uohtonthal " Assessor J. F. Willie Surveyor Jnlins Keithly ' Hohool Sap't Jay W. Shipley 01 , F "oner Dr. E. R. Hnnlook Stock Inspector Henry Scherzinger HEPPNKB TOWN OmOKRS. Mayor.. ; F-ank GillUm Counrilraen 8. P. Garrigms, J. R. Simons. J. J. Roberts, E. W Rhea, Geo. No'-le and Thoe. Quaid. Knoorder J. p, Williams rrSRHiirer L. W. Briggs Marshal George Thornton HBRPNKR SCHOOL DISTRICT. Directors Frank Gllli.-m, O. E. Farnsworth, J M. Uager; Clerk J. J. Roberts. Preemot Officers. .Iceticeof the Peace..... W. A. Richardson unstable G, 8. Gray United States Land Officers. TBS DALLES, OB, Jay P Lnoas Register Otia Patterson Receiver LA GRANDE, OB. K. W. Bartlett Register J. O. Bwaokhamer Receiver It is a fact that farms can be bought in Morrow county at such low prices that their first coming crop will pay for me iana. PSOPESSIOKTAi CA-HXIS. 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 mauner. Notaries Pub lic and Collectors. Office In Natter's Building. Heppner, Oregon. J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and U. S. COMMISSIONER. . OtHco in ralace hotel building, Heppner, Or.' A. Mallory, U. S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC Is authorized to take all kinds of LAND PROOFS and LAND FILINGS. Collections made on reasonable terms. Office at residence on Chase street. Government land script for sale. D. E Gilman GENERAL COLLECTOR. Put your old books and notes In his hands and get your money out of them Makes a specialty of hard collections. 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. J. E. Sharp Successor to Harry Mills. Tonsorial Artist Your patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed.. Hot and Cold Baths. Main Street, . . . - . Heppner. J. R. 5M0ins & Son General Blacksmiths Horseshoeing a Specialty Wagon Making and Repairing. All work done with neatness and dispatch. . . . Satisfaction Guaranteed. Upper Main Street, Heppner, Ore. All Heppner people who have stopped there speak well of the HOTEL ST. GEORGE Pendleton, Oregon. GEORGE DARVEAU. Proprietor. European plan, erected in 18C9, elegantly furnished and heated by hot water. Corner Main and Webb streets. H blocks from depot. fTTmiiiiiiimimiiifiiiiiiiiimmiitiiimiiiimMimiiimiiimim fid Vegetable Preparationfor As similating theToodandReguIa ling the Stomachs andBowels of ProtnotesT)iestion,Gieeiful ness and Rest.Contalns neither Snim,Morptiin0 nor Mineral. ot Narcotic. Rtape afOldHrSAMUHEHCHEIl Alx.Senna JioJulU SJli -' Anise Seed Uppermint -Jh QntonateSeit, Him Seed -Clarified Sugar . hrivyreaitlmr. Aperfecf Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Storaach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. in EXACT COPV OF WHAPPEB, p B T"' CINTU eOMMHY, NCWVOIIK CITY. (ft. A Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel Every Modern Convenience. Drummers' Resort. Stockmen's Headquarters. One of the finest equipped Bars and Clubrooms in the state in connection. . . . First-Class Sample Rooms. For Business Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West. -awW FLOUR The Heppner Flouring Mill Company Have peifeoted arrangements to ran the mill permanently. They have secured the services of a first ol ass miller, and wheat BnfDcient to make am keep on hand a permanent supply of Flour, Graham, Germ Meal, Whole Wheat, Bran and Shorts Of the very best quality and gnaranteed to give satiBfaction, We are bere to buy wheat and exohange with the farmers, sod solicit their patronage. AT T. R. HOWARD'S STORE, Main street, you can find iQ Groceries, Provisions, Glassware. 1 Tinware and Furnishing Goods, All well adapted to either City or Country Trade. Staple and Fancy Groceries- rme lean and Vojjees. T R. HOWARD, Heppner. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Ik Kind You Have Always Bought. The Running Stallion SOHISTITZ Will make the season of 1900 at Binns' Btable, Heppner, on Saturdays and Sundays; at the ranch in McDonald canyon the balance of the ween. Good pasture free to mares. Schnltz is a cnestnut sorrel, 1000 nounda. loaica i He comes of a family of race-win ncrs. sir Pmniqua, dam Ilia. Mil run record 1 40i. Terms -?25 for season, payable V, at time of service, Daiauce at end of season. Dee Matlock. Bears the Palace Hotel J. W. MORROW. Proprietor. Strictly First-Class FLOUR Gopd Goods.... Fair Prices.i Oration by Matlliew T. Hushes, Gradnate of the Heppner High School. We, the people of the United States, iu order to form a more perfect union, establish jnstiee, insure domestic tran quility j provide for th common defense, promote the general welfate. and sneure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this constitution for the United States of America. ' ilns the preamble to that ereatest written guarantee of personal rights and liberties, is the legitimate growth of those principles born in ancient Greece, nurtured in early Rome, strengthened and exemplified in mediaeval Enmn. and which reached Kb highest Btate of development in modern England and America. . , ' Personal liberty and a liberty lovinn people were not rare in ancient times, but it remained for England and Amer ica to place before the civilized world examples of constitutional libertv. The ancient Britons were followed bv the baxons, a people from northern Germany. They had no written laws, but obeyed time honored customs which had all the force of 'statutes. Matters concerning the public were discussed by each tribe at meetings held in the open air and where every free man had an equal voice in the decision. In this we can see the beginning of English constitutional liberty. Its growth has been the slow work of centuries, but the principles underlying it have never been changed. At every turn pi their progress the English people and their descendants throughout the world have claimed the right of self government and when that has been denied them, they havft risen in arms and foncrht to regain it. When William tiie Conaueror subjugated England, he brought -with him the methods of self government to which he had been accustomed in his native country. . . It is claimed bv those who arewnl! informed ontfie subject that England owes her liberty to her havina been conquered by the Normans. The son of Win the Conqueror granted to the people, the h'rM charter of liberties. This being, the earliest written guar antee of a good government to the peo ple by the king, marks an important era in the struggle for freedon by the people. It established a pre cedent for those which were to follow and which finally led to the great char ter wrested from King John a century later. In 1213 a council composed of dele gates from all parts of the kingdom was held to consider what claims should be made againt the king in the interest of the people. It was the first assembly of the kind on record. A conv of the charter granted by Henry I. was ob tained and used as a model for di awing up a new one of similar character, but n every way fuller and stronger in its provisions. Two years later this docu ment was presented to King John. who. after vainly protesting, was forced to sign it on the field of Kunnymed. One of the most important of its articles was that no man shall be deprived of life or property ; injured in body or estate save by the laws of the laud. In the latter part of the centurv the king was overthrown. Simon de Mont tort, a leader of the people, called a parlnnent which differed from all its predecessors in that rei)reHentativH of the people were summoned In l.nmh.n to unite with the nohl PR ami r.'A.rif in their deliberations. Later, persona who hail neitlmr Imwl nor title, but paid taxes, obtained rep resentation. This was the beginning of what Abraham I.iiwnln kit .untnrioa later called "a govern uiei.t of the peo ple, Dy the people, for the people." Another uri-at aten tr. tional liberty was the beginning of trial ny jury, in ancient limes disputes were settled bv trial of battle in which those concerned fought and the oiih who was defeated was adjudged in the wrong. Darin the reiin nf warn III. this method was greatly changed and instead it became the custom to summon witnesses who gave their testi mony neiore a petit inry. This was the beginning of our modern method by which a iurv hrinirs in a vorrl deduced from what thev person&llv know, but from evidence sworn to bv witnesses. An event of greater imuorlannn than any question of crown or party was now at hand. Thin tlm ir,,,!,,,.. tion ot the printing press into England. rnor to tins a nook oi any kind was a luxury laboriously "written bv a fw for a few." Hut from this time ture was destined to play an important part in the march of modern civilization. The people read and studied for them selves, thought for themse'ves, gained knowledge and "knowledge is power." In the latter part of the 18th century new word was discovered, (mm this on our attention will nt Via r.nn. fined to England alone, but include that western continent where English enter prise and love of liberty were destined to find a new and broader field nf activity. The people of England who were being oppressed now had an on- Irortunity to emigrate to a country which promised all the liberty they wished. Jamextown. the fnt enlnnv founded by the Englinh in America. was for a time under the control of the mother country, but in les than 12 years it had secured the privilege of making its own laws, thus becoming a elf governing cmrnnnity. A few years iater another hand of emigrants landed on Plymouth kock and formed a colony on the basis of Portal lawa fur tha nn. eral good. In England a MriK'il between nurli. ment and the king bezan. (.'has I. now king, levied illegal taxes and extorted loans. Parliuieut assembled and pre sented to him s petition of rights which stipulated that no taxes should be lev led without the consent of parliment and that no man should be unlawfully imprisoned. The struggle continued until a civil war was precipitated. The commons under the leadership of Oliver Cromwell arose in arms and in the battle ot Naseby gained a decisive vic tory over the king, who was taken prisoner and was soon after executed us a tyrant, traitor and a public enemy. Cromwell's purpose was to establish a government representing the will of the people more completely than it had ever ueeu oeiore. ins administration was characterized by wisdom and success almost without precedent in the history of England. But at his death, there being no one Cfcrfiible of going forward with the great work of tefo mation, the country again became a monarchy. The "Habeas Corpus Act" which stipulated that no man should be im prisoned except by due process of law, was passed in the latter rrt nt hn 17h century. Ttiis put an end to arbitrary confinement of men for months and even years without any form of trial. Ten years later the crowning step in con stitutional liberty was taken when the peop e forced the king to sign the "Bill of Rights", which guaranteed the right of petition and freedom of speech. When UeorgelU amended the throne his ambition was to secure absolute con trol. He secured it, and with it a de nunciation from the House of Commons. The chief consequence of bis absolute control was, however, the great revolu tion in which her American colonies gained their independence. Today the motto of England and America should be "Liberty is Responsibility", for the PeOnlp. nf hnth 1-nnnt.ia. n pa V.n...wl u.. their nation's history and declared prin ciples to use their opportunities to gov ern well and build nn tha t'nr.:lnm ( justice and good will upon earth.. nir xnomas Moore, on the subject of liberty, says: "I saw the expectant nations Stand, tn euti'll tha Kn.nmn flame in turn : T huw rmm i har.,1 to hand, the clear, through struggling, giories num. irons Albion first, whose ancient ahrinA woo t n.n;.r.n.i n.uu . - , : luiuinnou r iwj n fire already, Columbia caught the boon divine, and lit a flame, like Albion, steady. Take, freedom, take thv ant round: when dimmArl. rnvivu When lost, retlim. till nnl a ahrlnu nr. earth be found on which thy glories Bhall not burn." THE PINING CARS Of the Northern Pacific for the improved and new train service tuliino oH'c.r i,.rii 29, are thoroughly modern, electric list ted. and will ha ianS. ItieV Will AITOmmmUti. tl.irtv . " ' ..... wuivu j oint.ii ii. six peiflons at one time. ! , HUKKP HALK.cl. Business in buying and shiimirg was rather brisk this week. Mike Kinnev. of Sand Hollow, sold 2500 Awefl and Iambs to II. 8. Scott, of Wvominir. at $2 a head all around, count noses. Mike Marshall, of Black Horse., sold 2500 ewes and lambs to the same buver at same price. Tom Gilfillan sold 2400 ewes and lambs to A. M. Jenkins, of Indiana, at $2 a head all around. Pat McDaid sold 2400 ewes and lambs to the same buyer at same figures These two lots of sheep will be ranged in the Blue mountains this summer b Thomas Gilfillan, and by fall Mr. Jenk ins will have bought a place Bomewhere in the Heppner Hills, and will locate with his family, which he will bring here from Indiana. He will engage in sheep-raising. On Tuesday John Meeks shipped 3700 ewes and lambs to Dakota. They loft Heppner in 15 double-decked cars, and were bought here a few weeks ogo. On Wednesday R. 8. Scott shipped from Heppner to Wyoming 5000 ewes and lambs. George Gray yesterday turned over the 5000 yearling wethers he had bought at 2.30 from Win. Penland and O. E. Farnsworth, to C. A. Shurte, agent for Mallory & Zimmerman, of Chicago, and they were shipped from Heppner. OLD MAIDS INVALUABLE. The May issue of the Ladies' Home Journal is a gem of beauty and good reading, and in it Margaret E. Sangster writes. "I like the term 'o'd maid ' A spins ter means any unmarried woman: a girl may be a spinster. An old maid is, well just that. She may have her little ways, and thankful she Dill ha that no one is privileged to Interfere wuh them. If she keeps house. many an old maid does in these days of independence, it is very dantily done, with an exquisite finish and neatness surpassed by none of her sisters. Prob ably the lady has plenty of people to stay with her nieces to chaperon. nephews to champion, invalid relatives to coddle all sorts of people to counsel and comfort. In society she is siriDlv invaluable. As an unattached person who at any emergency may be called upon in the family by any one in need. brother or sister, father or mother, to take the helm, she Is simply worth her weight in gold." Beware of a Congh. A oongh is not a disease bnt a symp tom. Consumption and bronobitis, which are the m-st daogeroni and fatal dm eases, have for their first indication . persistent oooch. and if rirrmarU i ..... m toon as this oongh appears are easily nnred. Chamberlain' Congo Remedy baa proven wonderfully aiinn.a.f,,i gained its wide reputation and extensive sale by its snooest in earing the difmeses which cause coughing. If , t hn efioial it will not oost yon a ceut. For ale by Cunser t Warren. LOAN WANTED. A man who owns WO acres of u,uu land and much other property wants to borrow 3000 on 2 years' time at 8 per cent. Anvbodv who such a loan, send word to the Gazette office. The absolutely pure BAKING POWDER ROYAL the of all the baking world celebrated for its great leavening strength and purity. It makes your cakes, biscuit, bread, etc., healthful; it assures you against alum and all forms of adultera tion that go with the cheap brands. ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER CO., 100 LATEST WAR NEWS. t j n. no ,, 1 h? T dW,hr Lra' Rber,f: wrote b,s first dispa.ou.oa Trao.vaai territory yesterday, be was 77 miles from 1 Pretoria. His immensely superior j or es had passed the V river, tbeir loir T,D n bflH01:- '"r' no s The Boer, retreated almos without a show of defense. General Frenoh and General Hotnilton sppar- ently did not fire a shot. Some 500 or 000 Boers are oneratinir esst of Viybarg, rallying the dissfTeoted ana watching an opening to out tbe railway and to harass General Hunter's advaDfling division. The Boer rear guard is at Moverton 10 milps south of Vareeniging. Their maiu body is moving toward tb.9 Klip river hills that cover the south side of Johannesburg. Lord Robert's 30.000 nfantry, 20,000 horss and 150 gans ere moving on Johannesburg and Pretoria, through a parched nd doserted oountry. At I'rctiirla, The situation bat become very critioul. President Kroger yesterday admitted for the first time that matters are very grave. The Boer determination is to trust every thing to a lust etund on the Gatsrand mountain), to tbe north of Potsohefostroom, where 3000 Kaffirs are dlgglDg trenches. To that point every available man and gun has b en sent. I be whole of tbe western border of tbe Transvaal from end to end ia de fenseless, and General Baden-Powell can maroh in when be likes. Lord Rob erts, oo the other baud, will encounter the greatest resistance. Tbe Boer en deavor is to lure the British into an. pearing to threaten Johannesburg with an attack, an eioiue thus being given them for tbe destruction of prop erty. Tbe Transvaal government will not dare destroy tbe mines and property without an excuse. Much dynamite has been saut down the line, and 100.000 oases lie ready at Zuurfontein, near Jo hannesburg. General Botha and General Meier have pleaded for the preservation of property. Both are large landed propri etors and fear confiscation, bnt I bey have not received atigfaotory renliei from President Kroger. loferoal Invention. Meoy French and German adventurers have oome forward with schemes for for blowing up the British troop, tome of these having rroeived a taoit permit tion to experiment. One German inven lion tt tor tbe use oo a railway, where it lies perfectly dnoealed until the weight of a passenger train nolodes (La charge. General Meir save surrender would ha at onoa proposed by the Boert, but that everybody fear tbe ignominy of being the one to make tbe nrnnnalliin. ti ded ares that he is assured that his meo ill not lland. President Hivn and M Reitz. the Transvaal tiatt tecretar. ara strongly opposed to peaoe, bat Mr. Kroger H not so muoh against it. Krngcr's I'rm'.lauiatlna. President Krnirer't nrnnlamat inn In the burgbers asking their vote for or against ooDtinninff tha ar ia nmln,. stood to tay they can quit now with the protpcci or retaining irieir rar.na or nnntinna In lha hit tor uml Dnmnn i oorrei t in LorJ Hubert's army that the Boert intend to snrreuiler. (Several correspondents wire the Lon don DBIiers that there ara 1IMI 000 fnruion. en in the Boer rank: hut this in hardly credible. London, May 30. I,ord Roberts i bivouacking in tbe inbiirhs of Johan ' netburg, and iuteuds to make a victor-' most celebrated powders in the rap Alum baking powders are low priced, as alum costs but two cents a pound ; but alum Is a corrosive poison and it renders the baking powder dangerous to use in food. WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. ious entry at noon today. Judging from his dispatch, he must have private infor- mtt,ion re"diD Pi of tha ,Hrij8cm ln tbe forti b(j doeg 10 expeot ofipo,itlOD. Lord UobertV oayalry has fl.wed on bey,)Dll JobBDDe8bur A portion a understood to he at ZuurfJein, seven miles north of Johannesburg and wi.hin on ,.i . n.. The Boers, who were expected to flht along tbe lioe of hills known as Klip Riversburg, abandoned the eastern range near R. rd Robert's advance line, but they moved their ground on the extreme right, near Van Wyok's Roost, when they met General French's turning movement. Tuo fight oontiuued all day, and tbe result is as yet more oonjeoture. Whether Pretoria will ha dofeuded is nnoertain, although a Pretoria message, duted Sunday, piotures tbe work of de fending the capital as going on "with feverish activity.', Pretoria is situated in a wilderness of kopjes aod ranges, and is provided with defenses that re quir al least 20,000 men to man them properly. There amy still be one bard nut for the British t o orack. A Kleh Mini's Project. A riob man's statement that he intend to devote almost bis entire fortune to charitable works has amused much dis enssion. This is beoause it will accom plish muoh good. It is a praiseworthy eudeavor, but there ere many other agenoiet which accomplish just as muoh good. '1'nke Uoatetter's t-toinaob Bitters lor instance tbe great American rem- edy. For fifty years it has oored oon stipation, dyspepsia and all tbe ills wtnon arise from weak digestion This medicine will keen the Rtnmiinli in antA thape and the bowels regular. II is a wonderful restorative Ionic and health builder. It is also a preventative for malaria, fever and sgue. Ask for it, and insist upon having it. See that tbe Pri vate Reveuue Stamp oovers tbe neck of the bottle. UKI'l'NKIt CHniC II EH. M. h. church ('. I). Nicll..i tor. (Services at 11 a. m. and 7:.'io'p. pas- ivev. ii. i. uowan, ot 1'nneville, will preach at toe M. E. church Sunday. The third quarterly conference will be held Monday at 2 p. m. The Dulles Ministerial Association and the Dist. Epworth League Conven tion will meet in Heppner next week. upening sermon Tuesday at 8 p. in. Arrange to attend these meetings. M. E. church, South F. F. St. Clair, pastor. Services at 11 a, m. and 7:30 p. m. "Alllictions and their Uses," at 11 a. m., and a Children's Day program at H p. in. Speeches, songs, quartettes, etc., participated in by a number of bright little (men l!..rH,i 1 1,, ( ... ..ugitun, Carrie ht. Clair, Hena Meadows, Ella AyerN. K ma Mrliridn Dui.u u.t and Mable Howard all will have some thing to say. Kev. Gibbs, the presid ing elder, will address the little ones for 15 minutes. Everybody welcome. Christian church Sunday School at io a. m. Baptist church Snndu s;,.i,..i at in a. in. Services will be held in the Catholic church on Sunday June 3d, at 10 o'clx:k, a. in. NO TRKSPASSING. All persons are horehv cuUini down anv trmn nr nil trespassing upon my premises. do- scribed as follows: the south of the southwest ' and the southwest, i of the southeast Section 25. und the nnntl,uf M nf 4 the southeast 1 . of tim'tlrti "i; t,,a-.,ui.;.. a south, range 27 east W. AI., in Morrow county, M miles southeast of Heppner, near the now Slocuui sawmill. i. W. Re a.