Portland Librarj WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 OFFICIAL PAPER I WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription Price, $1.50 Leads In Prestige.... Leads In Circulation. Leads In News 1 " th umammi The Paper Is Published Strictly In the Interests of Morrow County and Its Taxpayers. la the Official and Recognized Represent ative journal 01 tne county. EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1900, NO. 787 The Heppner Gazette la published every Thursday by J. W. REDINGTQN. Entered at the FoatofAce at Heppner, Oregon, aa eecond-closs matter. Sixth Judicial District. (Uroait Judge Stephen A. Lowell nowwur.ing Attorney ii. j, ueaxi Borrow Connty OfUeiale. J lint Senator J, W. Morrow R ipresontative E. L. Freeland C nntyJndge A. (i. Bartholomew " ( Jommisdioneri J . L. lloward " Clerk Tawter Crawford J. W. beekett. " .Sheriff A.Andrews " Treasurer 11. Liohtenthal " Assessor J. F. Willis " Barveyor Julius Keithly " "icnool up't Jay W. Shipley " C or Dr. E. R. Hunlo ik Stock Inspector.. Henry Schcrziuger HEPPNBB TOWN 0FFI0F.RS. Huoi Frank GiUUm Councilman 8- P. tiarrigucs, i. n. Simons. J. J. Hnberts, Hi. W Uliea, ueo NoMe and Thos. Ouaid. Heoonier J. P. Williams Treasurer L. W. Brings marshal ueorge rnorutou HBRPNER SCHOOL DISTRICT. Directors Frank GiUirm, O. E. Farnsworth, J M. Uager; Clerk J. J. Roberts. Precinct Officer?. Justice of the Peace W. A. Kiohanlson I onatable 6. 8. liray United States Land Offioers. THE DALLES, OB. Jay P. Lucas , Register Otis Patterson Keceiror LA GRANDE, OB. E. W. Bartlett Register 1. O. Hwttckhamer 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 the land. 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. Cilice In Natter's Building. Heppuer, Oregon. J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and U. S. COMMISSIONER. Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. A. Mallory, U. S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC Is authorized to take all kinds of LAND PROOFS and LAND FILINU8. Collections made on reasonable terms. Office at residence on Chase street. Government laud 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 bard 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. Simons & 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. TPnmnnaan nlan. erected in 1869, IjLII VJW" f " w elegantly furnished and heated by hot water. Corner Main and Webb streets, 1 blocks from deputi AVegebiblePrcparationfor As similating theToodandRegula ting the Stomachs andBoweh of Promotes Difestlon,Chcetfiii iiess andRest.Contalns neither Sjnim.Morphine nor Mineral. ot Narcotic. ReamtfOldlk-SMVmnVBm Pumphm Smi' Alx.Smna JtMh SJU -ylnre Setd Jhipernunt -JhQuimUeSalm fUrmSctd -(UmudSuottr hUmrn riarm Anerfect Remedy forConslipa- rion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of NEW "YOHK. xxact copy of whappeb. ' Can! W3$& Hotel. 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. ... mirst-Oioss Sample Rooms. For Business Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West. For Spring and Summer Wear ill. LICHTENTHAL, 9 tj,6 pIoneet goof an(j gnoa Deaior 0f Heppner, has The Latest Styles of Footwear for Men, Women and Children. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Old Stand, Main Street. Repairing a Specialty. AT T. R. HOWARD'S STORE, Main street, you can find 9 Groceries, Provisions, Glassware, '-vPJ Tinware and Furnishing Goods, All well adapted to either City or Country Trade. Staple arid Fanaj Groceries fine lean and (Jojjees. T. J, HOWARD, ,.-.Jwfj,Lm.mm in. For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of The Kind You Have Always Bought. ni TMI CtNTAUR OS.PUy, MOTDM OITT. The Running Stallion SOHNITZ Will make the season of 11100 at Binni' Btablo, Heppner, on Saturdays and Sundays; at the ranch in McDonald canyon the balance of the week. Good pasture free to mares. Bchnltz is a chestnut sorrel, 10(10 pounds, foaled 18W He comes of a family of race-winners, Sire Paniquo, dam Ilia, Mil run record 140. Tonus for season, payable !4 at time of service, balance at end of season. Dee Matlock. J. W. MORROW. Proprietor. Strictly First-Class - Good Goods Fair Prices.i AY JOYS OF CHILDREN. "How can I amuse the children during the summer-time?" Children are so full of life, bo eager aud interested in new things, so restless, that amusement furn ished at home is a requirement In home amusement there is little danger of excess as children usually encounter injurious amusements when allowed to seek them from home. It's an old adage which says it takes a genius to amuse a child, but if children are given tools and allowed to use their own ideas to within a proper limit, they will amuse themselves and enjoy many hours of pleasure. This is a real comfort to the mother and the children will be more agree able and get along better than where they are constantly being waited upon or entertained by their elders. They will need a change of playthings, a- diversion being as necessary to them as to older people; they should be given means to create new amusements or given new objects, to admire and look over. t Nothing pleases the little tots better than a pile of sand uuder a shade tre; they will make many architectural wooders aud with branches and flowers to stick in the pand, they will plaut orchards, gardens and form beautiful parks; and if given bricks, blocks and water they will build houses, bridges and form rivers. This will not require much expense, but it will amuse the children a good part of each day, and a few loads of clean sand are easily hauled to any Heppner home from the sand pile above town. UNDER THE OCEAN. Prof. Boutan, the gifted French man, who uned to take so many graud photographs of the grand scenery along the Columbia, has been taking some submarine views, and says: "I soon touud outlbat the bot torn of the sea, especially near the coast, is not flat and monotonous, as one might, imngiue. It is very uneven, and presentH most pictur esque and varied landscapes. If one happens to have descended on a sandy beach, one sees, as far as the eye can reach, a submarine meadow covered with lung grasses, all bent over io the direction in which the current is running. Here and there deep ravines cut up the green surface, while farther away are noticed steep masses of rock formed by fallen blocks or tony precipices. Every bowlder is covered with its dress of sea weed, and in the crevices between swarm a whole fauna of inverte brates." IN EARLY SUMMER. It is now the old how wanders to Borne qniet fen or break and returns with seven piglets toddling cutely in her wake. In the spring the good dog Rover hide behind the huKhea damp, waiting always, waiting ever, for a chance to nil a tramp. In the spring the bull so gentle, which has been a pet for years, gores the poor confiding farmer, sits on him and eats hia earg. In the spring the youths and maidens go t picnic in the woods, packing with them in their bankets sandwiches and other good; and they fall into the river, and the chiggeia eat them up, and they come back from the picnic swollen like a poisoned pup. In the spring the wily stranger comes to sell a patent oat, and he gets the names of victims to a thousand-dollar note. In the spring you make a garden, full of things you like to ent, and the chickens come and scratch it all to thunder and repeat. Io the spring your lawn is pretty and yon point to it with pride, till some cattle come and spoil it in the silent eventide. In the spring the groanir.it husband eats his victuals in the barn, for hia wife must clean the mansion, and she doesn't care a darn ; and the yard is full of car pets, and the trees are full of sheets, and he has to live on sauerkraut, cistern water and sliced beets. Oh, a woman's in her glory when she tears things all apart, piling beds and chairs and pillows in a way to break your heart. And at night the groaning husband has to sleep upon the porch and he feels so plum disgusted (hat hp can't enjoy his torch. When the blamed old cleaning's over, then the wile is taken ill, and it keeps the hUHttand busted buying dope and drug and pill. Printing Without Ink. A company baa been formed to control the process of printing without ink, by rising eleotricity and chemically prepared paper. Id a short time, it is txpeoted, his innovation will be completely intro .1 need, and old methods revolntioDiswd Tlwe is one thintf, hownvcr, that has ra aiatrd all innovations; that it Uostetter's Htomacb Bitters, whiob baa many imi tators, but do rcjaali at a cure (or Btomaoh, liver and bowel troubles. This peerless remedy haa been the standard medinine ol the Amehcao people for the past fifty years. It in wonderfnl medi cine for dyspepsia, indigestion, btliooa ness, insomnia, constipation and eerv- nnaneas. It aleo prevent malaria, fever and aena. It keepa the atom nob in gond condition, and the bowefa regn lar. Try it, and you will not be dia appointcdi GIRLS WHO WORK. Writing upon this most import ant subject, Col. Vischer says: While many young girls with g.od homes and well-to-do parents are entering the business world, that they may have more money to spend upou themselves than is furnished them, there is a vast army that must work to live, and daily exertion is made to find i a poeition io an office, lu a store, etc., overlooking the needs of the pec pie in their own neighborhood, which would possibly be the work they could do best. The girls that are compelled to work, that help to form the great band of unem ployed, have the sympathy of all true people; and we shudder when we look into their faoes which plainly bespeak their great disap pointment, as each day they make an application for some position and fail to secure it; it's try and fail until they wear a weary look and in their hearts we find despair. They lose faith in the goodness of the world and they see no beauty or meaning in life. Our institutions, our stores and offices are overcrowded, but it is almost impossible to employ effi cient domestic service; numerous vacancies occur daily, but compe tition is small in this branch of business as our girls do not want to do such degrading work. (?) What a wrong idea! Housekeep ing is such importaut work and we may Bay, too sacred to be bandied with indifference or neglect. All honest work, which must be well done work, is honorable; if a girl can be imbued with this idea, she is well equipped for any emergency of prosperity or adversity. The girl employed by the lady in the house and the one employed by the lord in the office are both hired and paid; the same safeguard and requirements of discretion must be maintained; specified duties are expected of each and each mudt obey certain laws. The clerk or : office girl must please many people; her hours are usually long and the work..' tire some; if she has no home or is away from home she must pay her board, her laundry and; her lodging bills; she has no time to devote to sew ing or to mending aud it is by the greatest effort that she can meet her clothing expenses. The girl that does housework will some times find the lady bard to pleaBe, the lord peculiar and the children vexing. What a boon to the woman that is forced to do hei own work, simply because she can uot secure sufficient help, would be the neat, bright young girl, lady like and refined, who would wil lingly and cheerfully learn to do her work well; she would certainly be a joy forever. "Uh for a common-sense girl! said a weary mother with little ones to care for, "to help with the woik; one that I could trust; one that was not neglectful or indiffer ent; one whom, when the work was done, I could find a congenial and intelligent companion, whom the children would like and with whom I would like for them to asaociate. If I keep help it must not be a coai Be, iguorant creature and im pudent in the extreme; who, if I speak kindly to her, will repay me by being hrat at the piano, first to the table, first in conversation and first in everything in which she is least expected.'' b or girls that must work there is an opening in domestic service; would it not be better to accept this and bring this work to its proper height than to remain poorly fed and thinly clad, waiting for some vacancy to occur for which there will be hundreds of applicants. HEI'PNEH CHURCHES. M. K. church C. I). Nickelen, pas tor. Services at 11 a. m. and 7;'M p. in. At 11a. m."The Tower of Example"; 8 p. m. "The Gallows of a Prime Min ister." M. E. church, South F. F, 8t. Clair, pastor. .Services at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. "Divine Healing versus Christian Science" at 1 1 a. rn., and "Profit and Loss" at 8 p. in., next Sunday. Every body welcome. The district conference f r Spokane district, Southern Methodist church, just closed its most successful seaaion at Iceland, Idaho. Great crowds, much enthusiasm, saveral access'ons to the church, and $1000 subscribed for the new school enterprise at Milton, Leland leading with nearly ItiOO. Heppner can and ought to heat that easily, and she will. Christian church Sunday School at 10 a. in. Baptist church Sunday School at 0 a. m. AT H0USEL00. Residents of the vicinity of Houselog Flat have been arranging for a neigh b'jrhood celebration of the Fourth there, but when they reali.n what a grand celebration there is to be at Heppner no doubt moat of them will come here. ft eppner't celebration is going to be mane enjoyable to all, and everybody will be made welcome. AJwr MliavltTna Wtchlr Ornon!n( SONGS FOREVER HUSHED. Here, related in the hard, un sympathetic language of com merce, is the tragic story of a crime against Mature and the Common wealth: Milford, Del., June 7. Contracts were closed here today for the bodies of 8UU0 birds to be killed for New York milliners at from 10 to 50 cents apiece. The contracts call for meadow larks, bluebirds, red-wing blackbirds, crow black birds, English sparrows and baby owls. This reoital means that a cruel robbery is about to be committed in Delaware a robbery which is made doubly wicked by the fact that it is perfectly legal. The bird life of that state is to be sacrificed to the whims of fashion. The farmers are to be deprived of 8000 of their most efficient crop-protectors and the landscape despoiled of a charm which nothing can replace. The birds called for by this con tract are nearly all of insect-destroying species. They exercise a function in the economy of Na ture which is almost indespensible to successful agriculture, and aside from their practical value, they constitute a part of the common property of the people which no person has the right to destroy for Belfish purposes. The lark that feeds in Farmer Brown's meadow and nests in Farmer Smith's grove belongs alike to Brown and Smith, but in no greater degree than to the veriest traaap who walks the public highway. The owl that roosts in Gray's forest and fattens on the mice in Johnson's graiu- helda is the property of the com munity. So are all the birds , of the air. Thev belong to the peo- pie, and whosoever destroys them commits a crime against the com monwealth. The responsibility for this mon strous destruction of bird-life is easy to plaoe, The birds would not be killed unless they could be sold. YELLOWJACKETS. As fcheep-camp-tenderg and sum mer sojourners in the mountains will now be meeting the stingy yellowjacket in his home, it will be interesting to know that it only re quires a certain number of stings to become so accustomed to the business as not to notice them. A Salem scientist, Prof. F. C. Per- pine, has given much thought to the matter, and sent circulars to bpe-keepers all over the country, asking about acquiring immunity from bee poison. While 144 beekeepers stated that they were immune to the sting of bees, and nine that they were naturally immune to the poison, 26 replied that they could not ac quire immunity. The number of bee stings necessary to produce the much-desired immunity appears to have varied considerably; some times 30 were sufficient, but in other cases the individual had to undergo the ordeal as many as 100 times before his system became acoustomed to the poison. All sorts of remedies were used, rang ing through tobacco juice, trench brandy, rum and water, but the favorite appears to be spirits of ammonia. It was at one time believed that the pain of the bee sting was duo to the presence of formic acid, but as the bee poison is now found to withstand heat, which would effec tually volatilize formio acid were it present, this idea no longer holds good. The opinion now generally accepted is that the toxio substance present partakes of the nature of an alkaloid. BASE BALL. When the Heppnor team goes to Arlington tomorrow, a good game is expected. All over the coast now In terest in base ball is greater than it has been for some time. The California players are making a tour of the Puget Sound cities, and from there they will go to Spokane, wheie they will play July 3, 4 and 5. The Spokane club has invited the Multnomah team to its city for tbe Independence day games. The Portland boys will doubtless accept, and a triangular competition will prob ably be arranged between Spokane, Stanford and Multnomah. A series of games between these three clubs would prove interesting to base ball enthuaiaats. At the present time Spokane is bubbling over with athletic enthusiasm, and the players of the Spo kane club can put up fast ball. Mr. W. g. Wbedon, oasbier of tbs First National Bank of Wioterael, Iowa, in a recent letter givel some experience witb t carpenter iu bit employ, that will be of value to otner mechanics. Uetayt: bad a earpenter working for ma who wat obliged to stop work for several dayt on acooant of being troubled with diarrhoea. I nieotiooed to bim that I had been similarly troubled and that Chamberlain's Cholio, Obolear and Diarrboer Remedy bad cured me. He bonghl a bottle of it from tbe droggitt here and informed me that one dose eared him, and be ia again al work For tale by Hunter Warrtm ENJOY THE LITTLE ONES. B. S. Pague, the weather-man, whose bright boy has brought joy to so many public gatherings, in writing on the home, well says: How few parents realize all the enjoyment that was intended for them in their children. It makes my heart ache to think how soon the babies change into sturdy boys and girls and again into men and women. Now while they are small they are all our own, we make their whole life, they have no sor row or pleasure but what we give l hem; but very soon the out side world will enter into their lives and we can not be everything to them again. It is a great pity parents do not realize this more fully and make greater efforts to make this time a pleasant and beautiful one. It takes such a little to make a child supremely happy and they repay any efforts we make for them a hundred fold in their happy faces and sweet voices that it is a pity we do not find m6re opportunities to enjoy their pleasure. So many mothers consider themselves too busy or nave more important work to do than to make their children happy. It is a great mistake and there ia no higher sphere in a woman's life than to love and make happy. K we devote more time to the chil dren and less to outside work, such as clubs and lodges, there would be a vast improvement in many homes. There should be more thought spent on this subject than is commonly given it. There is nothing on earth so pure and sweet as a little child. They are sent to us as pure and undefiled as the angels with God and the task of training them to happy, useful and christian lives is a most serious undertaking and should be considered as a great privilege given us. NEWS FROM NOME. A dispatch from Vancouver, B. C., 17th, says: The steamer Alpha has arrived from Nome and brings news that the gold fields there are richer than supposed. From a single claim, worked by 20 men in the employ of Jack Brady, $15,000 was taken out in one week and the same claim panned out $56,000 within the month. The Alpha broaght down $250- 000 in gold dust. There were five pas sengers on board who owned the dust. The Alpha loft Vancouver April 5 and reached Nome May 25, landing 153 pas sengers and their supplies on the beacb. The people of Nome had been anxiously awaiting the arrival of the early steam ers, and a guessing contest, with a $3000 prize, had been arranged for the cam- ng of tbe first vessel from the south. The Alpha was carried by the ice to the Siberian coast, and for five days was packed in the ice unable to move. She finally made Nunivak Island, where she found the San Francisco whalers, Alexander and Jeanette, with about 100 passengers each, also trying to reach Nome. After spending three days more in very heavy ice near tbe Pribyloft islands, the Alpha finally made Nome, whither the Alexander bad preceded her two days. Nome wa rather dull during March and April, work being entirely suspend ed on account of cold weather. Several times during the winter the settlement narrowly escaped total destruction by fire. All the boildings are said to be flimsy structures, and no fire protection is afforded. The extent of tbe gold-producing area of Nome seems much greater than was at first supposed, and all over the coun try men are reported to be washing from 15 to 20 cents to the pan in gold. IONE ITEMS. tone Foit. Mrs. Chas. Cason, of Lone Rock, ia visiting her mother, Mr. M. E. Hale. Born To the wife of Walter Cason, a 10 pound girl. Chas. Sperry has sold the Douglas warehouse to V. S. McNabb and A. C. Morgan. Miss Millie Pettys returned home on Wednesday afternoon's train from the valley, Joe Haney and two daughters, Daisy and Mable, left for Pendleton, expecting to make their future borne at that place.' Bud Haney and family went to the mountains Wednesday to spend a few weeks rusticating. C. A. Rhea left for Portland on Mon day morning on business, Ed Engleman exhibited a fine sample of Little Club wheat in lone on Tuesday. It was grown on sod and if condition continue favorable will doubtless go 20 hushels to the acre. It is fully headed out and ia very plump berry. RANCH FOR SALE. ' A good, productive, well-improved place of 121)0 acres, 8 miles eaat of Hepp ner : all fenced ; 155 acres uow in grow ing heardleaa barley, aud 100 acres of good hillside plow land; good ti-room house and 2 big bams. Two creeks and a county road run through the land, and there are 3 good wells. This is a very productive place, and ia offered at $15 an acre. There are horses, hogs and cowa to go with place at market rates if pur chaser wants them. Apply to J. Wj Ketliugtoui Uaaet ollice, lleppneri