The Heppner Gazette Thubsday, August 9, 1900 Republican Ticket. For President, WM. McKINLEY, Of Ohio, For Vice-President, THEODORE ROOSEVELT, Of New York. For Presidential Electors, 0. F. PAXTON, of Multnomah County, TILMON FORD, of Marion County, J. C. FULLERTON, of Douglas County, W. J. FURNISH, of Uma tilla County. Tbe pious gentleman in Illinois who rents a pew in a fashionable church for $2500 a year, and then sublets half of it for $5000 seems to have a head for business. Bos ton Globe. The nations of the world may after all find it right to. follow the footsteps of our fore-sighted presi dent and go slow and be sure on this Chinese business. It is deep water and contains maDy a dan gerous eddy. Ve know little of the Chinese., but , we know more than aoy of the European powers. They talk in England and else where a good deal about the disci pline of European armies. Bat at Tien Tsin the only soldiers who held to the high standard of army discipline were the Americans and Japanese. Our boys in blue fought as well as the English, or Russians or Germans, but when the fighting was over they did not forget that they were soldiers and gentlemen. They did no looting. Chicago In ter Ocean. TYPICAL AMERICAN STUDENTS Two Uiil(.'iill."1 Ftntncs on KxhIMMon lo ISimtoll Tlio Wlmciiitlmis of lOacll. Two iuti'ruMtinfc Htatues, the result of much Imnl work, wore put on ex hibition in Jtohton recently. One wat that of a you ivr iimnund the other that of a girl. They were designed to represent the American college stu dent, not the idcul American student of either sax, bat the actual, typical student, the measurements used hav ing been the average, or mean, of de velopment of students from various parts of the country. The statues aro described by the Rochester Post and Express as representing "fairly well built young persons, symmetrically de veloped, and without serious physical defects." The llgnrea have an easy pose, standing firmly and gracefully. The fuses, which were modeled after composite photographs made from the students from whom the measurements were taken, aro handsome and thought ful, with a marked air nf refinement. The face of the young man Is the hand somer of the two, but that of the young woman is nearest the classic standard. In the former's figure there are some marked departures from the standard. Tho hands and knees are large, while the wristH are small.' The height of the male is five feet eight inches and of the female five feet three incites. The male represents a weight of one hundred and thirty-eight and one-half pounds and the female one hundred and fifteen pounds. Each figure represents measurements taker, from forty-two leading parts of the body aud these show the average de velopment of each sex at the age of twenty-ono years. It Is worthy of note that the typical American student ha a better physical development than that of the lirltish or German, as it shown by comparison with measure menU made recently it those coun tries. AFTER THE WARS. Va.b has cost France 0,000,000 Uvea In this eentury. The first steam vessel to engage in a naval battle was operated by the Spaa lsh in the Don Carlos civil war of 1830. Thrhk are M.179 federal graves ia the seven national cemeteries In Ten nessee, and there are perhaps the bones of many hundreds lying beneath the sod whose resting places are for gotten and unknown. A Ni'MHK.ii of distinguished New Yorkers have iuvited Senator John H. (Jordan, one of Lee's right hand gen erals, to deliver a lecture on the clos ing days of the confederacy, giving a personal estimate of Lee and Grant. Fiia.vcis Mahion's sword maybe seen in the capitol at Columbia, S. C. It has parted company with its sheath, a part of the ivory hilt Is gone, and the blade is badly rust-eaten. Tho clerks in the office of the secretary of state slice watermelons with it! Loiti) Uoiikuts' services in India are to be commemorated by an equestrian statue on the Muidati, at Calcutta. Al ready between l"l,(MH) and 4, 000 has been Bubscrilted by the native princes and personal friends, and it is thought that the fund will reach a large amount. A Powder Mill Eaploalon RemovM everything io light; i do drastic mineral pills, but both aramiguty dangerous. Don't dynamite the delicat nanhlnar nf vnnr bad With Calomel. eroton oil or aloes pills, when Dr. Klng'a New Litre talis, whicu are otie as a summer breeie, do the work p-rfeoH. Oorea headsohe, oomtipatlon. Only 25 . ... a r - at uooser a warren iiug km. THE WAR IN CHINA. Tien Tain, Aug. 5. This morning at daylight 16,000 allies attacked the Chinese at Peit Sang and forced the enemy from the trenches. Tbe Ameri cans who paiticipated were the Ninth and Fourteenth Regiments, Reilly's Battery and tbe Marines. A heavy battle is still in progress. News from the Japanese Leagtion has beeo received up to Aug. 1. Therefore tbe edicts announcing the safety of the Ministers on that date are confirmed. The Pekin relief column is reported to have Buffered a check. Tbe Chinese are said to have adopted Tugela tactics, and after several hours of fighting, to have retreated. A Shanghai correspondent savs: It is clear that the march to the relief of Pekin will be anything but a walkover. Japanese scouts bave discovered a large force of Chinese southwest of TiervTsin, and another large force in the vicinity of Lu Tai, to tbe eastward. It is learned now that the members of the Tsnng li Yamun who were put to death for their alleged pro-foreign proclivities were not beheaded, but were cut in twain, this being the severest penalty under the Manchu code. Sheng declares that tbe Grand Council at Pekin was ignorant of the orders for the execution. Minister la Peril. Wasnington, Aug. 7. The following cablegram from Minister Conger was re ceived tonight by tbe State department : "Tsi Nan Yamen, Aug 7. We are still beseiged. Our position is more precarious. The Chinese government is insisting on our leaving Pekin, which would be certain death. There is rifle firing upon ua daily by tbe Imperial troops. We have abundant courage, but little ammunition or provisions. Two progressive members, of the Tsung ti Yamun have been beheaded. All connected with the legation of tbe United States are well at the present moment." China Will Keslst London, Aug. 8. "In case the troops advance the Chinese must fight. The suggestion that the allies should be allowed to enter Pekin in order to es cort the Ministers to Tien Tsin is abso lutely impossible." This is the dictum of Li Hung Chang. It was received last evening from tbe British agent at Shanghai. HOME INDUSTRY. Few people realize what an extensive establishment the Heppner Steam Laun dry is. It has the latest and most im proved machinery, and does all kinds of laundry work In first-class shape. Its wagon calls for and delivers laundry, No need sending away from borne for washing. All white labor under the able management of Fred Krug. REFUSED TO BE RESCUED. A Parisian Actress Faced Death Hatha Than Hull In German Ship. "One of my moRt exciting adven tures," said Mr. Strakosh to a Washing ton Post reporter, "was an incident which happened when I was managing the South American tour of Mine. Sarah Bernhardt. We were on the British steamer Cotopaxi and a good stout vessel she was but somehow or other, as we were passing through the Straits of Magellan we ran into a sand bank. The steamer drew eighteen feet of water, and had, unfortunately, en tered the straits at low water. Every one balieved that we were shipwrecked, that our engagement at Chili would never be fulfilled, and that we were doomed to stay where we were for three weeks for you must know that It Is only usual for the steamers of this line to pass there every three weoks. Sarah was distracted. She tore her hair, she beat her breast in her inimit able manner, and she used the well, classical language for which she Is noted. There we were and there was no prospect of relief. This was about nine o'clock in the morning. The scene can better be imagined than described. The ladies were in tears and frightened out of their boots, and even the men of the company felt uncomfortable. The assurances of the captain that all would be well were of no avail, and everybody was in despair. At last, about noon, the smoke of an approaching steamer was seen in the distance. Everybody's hopes revived. Aid was at hand and we would be rescued from our unpleasant position. Time went by and the steamer drew near. As she approached the Cotopaxi hoisted signals of distress, and she bore down upon as. But as soon as her flag was recognizable pa triotism got the better of fear. The vest ael flew the German colors. Sarah did not hesitate a moment Her alarm dis appeared. Rushing to the captain, a blulf English sailor, she flopped on her knees before him and Implored him for the love of Qod and of France not to tender her over to the tender mercies of her enemies. She would rather stay shipwrecked all her life, abandon her profession and lose all her hopes of artist ic and financial success than set foot upon the deck of a German ship. Surprised at her change of tone the captain consented and told the German captain that his passengers did not need assistance, and the Teuton sailed away. Rushing down to her eabin Mme. Bernhardt brought out a silken French trl-color which had been pre sented to her by some admirer aud as the German sailed away she hoisted the flag of France and waved It tri umphantly at the parting foe. About seven p. m. the tide rose and we floated and reached our destination in safety- How's Thlir We offer one hundred dollars reward for any case oi Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. F. J. Ciu'ney A Co., Props, Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, bave known F. J. Cheney for the last .15 years, and be lieve him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. Wkkt A Thvax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Waldisq, Kinnan A Mar vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internal ly, acting directly upon the blood and mucoua surfaces of the system. Price 7!c per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testimonials free, Hall's Family pills are the best. LINGERING LETTERS. Postmaster Vnhn wants owners for letters addressed as follows: Barker, John Blackburn, John Bledsoe, James Brener, John Case, Henry Conley, Arch Cummings, Georgia Day, John Dewer, Charles Donaldson, Mrs J T Hall, F C Harris, Mrs. Annie Hamilton, J G Hines, R G Jacob, H D. Jackson, George Leathers, Nick Mangelson, Nelse Mason, Mrs Myra Mayars, Mrs W Melson, Miss C Motter, John T Murphy, Mrs Vina Nal, J T Norton, Miss R E Palmatier, George (2) Palmatier, Miss Minnie Paul, Ed (2) J'ierson, George Rogers, Mrs Harvey Ram peck, Fred Stafford, Sam Stanley, Malon fttanage, T Staraha, Joseph Starika, Mrs J Smith, L Smith, Mrs Mary Thomas, M A Vincent, Geo Wells, L B Williams, John S Wilson, R 8 Wyland, John Ask for "advertised." KKCENT ABKIVALS AT PALACE HOTEL Win Courtier, Eight Mile C M White and wife, Condon Thos Duncan, San Francisco T R Hanke, Portland H Brash CL Daring " Jas McVeigh, Ohio A Anderson, Pendleton Cbas Anderson, Condon J H Perry and wife, Portland J S Gumee " E C Holt " P M Morse, O R & N W 0 Haines, Portland E Rheinstrom " Joe Meyer " HSMcCormick " F H Isenberg " H H Laughiin and wife, Portland Ed C Ashbaugh, Eight Mile W F Ball, lone N A Leach " F D Simmons, Portland Elijah Howard, Colfax, Wash Forty Years Among Cannibals. Tbe Frenoh adventurer who was a oaptive amonf oannibals In Central Af noa tor forty years, has deoided to write a book, which will no doubt prove in teresting. We can sympathize with bis release from his terrible captivity, wbioh must bave beeo as. joyous sa that of a man who finds himself suddenly released from tbe captivity of a refratoorv stom soh, bv that peerless remedy, Uostelter's Htomuch Bittttrs, which has done more to promote health than any other io existence. This i the medicine to take, if yn are a snffsrer from dyspepsia, oonetipatiou, indigestion, bilinnsness, uervnusneHB or insomnia. Don't fail to give it a trial. Ask for Hostetter'a, and do not Roa'pt a substitute. The sennine has Private Revenue Stamp over the neok of bottle. McCLURE'S MAGAZINE. The Midsummer Fiction Number' of Module's Magazine, with a cover by Louis Loeb, suggesting by its rich, warm coloring the lassitude of the sea son, and with astrong lint of well-known adepts in the art of story telling, pro duces at once a pleasing impression To this number Frank H. Spearman contributes the first of a new series of railway stories, telling of the exciting race of a train of Yellowstone Park ex- cursionistH with a runaway "freight" Jack London, the young Californian, has in this issue a tale of the perilous jour ney of a Klondike miner and his Indian wife to obtain relief for a starving camp; this story is imaginative in the highest degree, and possesses striking local color and extraordinary pathetic force GRAIN BURNED. The Walla Walla Statesman esti mates that 10,000 acres of grain have been burned in Walla Walla county this season. Most of the fires bave been started by sparks from traction engines passing along the roads. When in pain, call on Dr. Metxler the dentist. Don't wait for the painf but get him to fix your teeth before tbe pain begins. COUNCIL MEETING. Council met in regular session Mon day night, with Mayor Gilliam, Coun oilmen Garrieues, Noble, Rhea and Simons present. Petitions of J. B. Natter and Frank Roberta for renewal of liquor licenses were granted. Foot bridge was ordered to be erected across Willow creek betweeu the resi deuces of Geo. Gray and Wm, Barrett. A new bridge was ordered built across Willow creek m front of R. C. Wills' residence. Following bills were allowed : Light A Water Co $ 93 00 Geo. Thornton, marshal 60 00 J. P. Williams, recorder 1(1 65 L. W. Briggs, treasurer 8 33 K. Beaman, freighting 19 35 S. McBride, filing saw 35 II. Bright, labor 2 20 L. P. Junes, street work 2 50 Wills & Patterson, lumber 72 W. L. Mallory' " 11 52 Luther Hamilton, special officer. 6 00 P. C. Cresswell, same. 2 00 Mr. Proebstel, same 2 00 Mr. Whitmore, same 2 00 If you take tbta paper and The Weekly Omronian you won t nava to beg your newa. HErPNEB SHIPMENTS. That Heppner is a very import ant shipping point may be seen rom tbe following ngures, whicn show shipments made by rail from here during the past year: Wool, pounds 3,SM5,75U Cattle, cars 220 Sheep " 175 Wheat shipped out of Mor row county over Hepp ner Branch bushels 200,000 WHEAT, WOOL AND STOCK. Portland, Aug 8. The wheat market is still quiet, buyers and sellers alike showing but little disposition to do bus iness. The Liverpool market opened s shade firmer after the protracted holi day, but tbe American markets were not doing much. Nominal quotations locally are 54 and 55c for Walla Walla and Vallev, and about 57 and 58c for bluestem. Very few sales are reported, and the market has a decidedly tame aspect. Freights are inactive at un changed quotations. Wool Valley, 1213c for ooarse, 1516c for best; Eastern Oregon, 15 16c; mohair, 25c per pound. Sheepskins Shearlings, 1520c; short wool, 2535c; medium-wool, 30o0c; long wool, 0O$1 each. San Francisco. Aug. 8. Wool- Spring Nevada, 1315c per pound; Eastern Oregon, 1015 ; Valley, Oregon, 18 20c. Fall Northern, mountain, 10 12c; mountain, 810c; plains, 810c; Humboltand Mendocino, 1314c. Chicago, Aug. 7. Cattle Receipts 3000, steers, steady to strong ; butchers' stock steady to slow. Natives best on sale today, one carload at kd.du; good to prime steers $5.405.90; poor to medium, $4 755.35; feeders, f4 00 4.65; mixed stockers, $3(33.75; cows $34.50; heifers, $3(34 90; canners, $2.204.75; bulls, $2.754.50; calves 25c higher than last Tuesday $56.50; Texan fed steers, at 4 305 .20; Texas grass steers, $3.254.25. Sheep, receipts, 14,000. tehee p and lambs 'steady to shade lower; good to choice wethers, $4.404.65; fair to choice mixed, $3.354 25; Western sheep. $4.40(84.60: Texas sheep, $3.15 4.20; native lambs, $4.305.40 ; Western lambs, 4 .655.49. WOOL. The Boston wool market is quiet, al though the demand continues slowly but steadily to improve. As reports from mill centers indicate that stocks of wool are setting lower, there is a dis position among manufacturers to enter the market. Prices are practically un changed. - Territory ; scoured basis Montana and Wyoming, fine medium and fine, 17 (iplHc; scoured, due; staple ozenwe. Utah, fine medium and tine, lol7c: scoured, 50c; staple, 5253c. Idaho fine medium and hne, 160170 ; scoured, 50c; staple medium and fine, 1617c. Australian, scoured basiB, spot prices combing, superfine, nominal, 8287c; good, 8082c. His Life was Saved. Mr. J. E. Lilly, a prominent citizen o' Hannibal, Mo., lately bad a wonderful deliversnoe from a frightful death. In telling of it be says: '! was taken with typhoid fever that ran into pneumonia. My lungs became bardened. I was so weak I couldn't fvxn sit up io bed Nothing helped me. I expected to sooi die of consumption, when I beard of Dr. King's New Visoovery. One bottle asv great relief. I continued tn use it and now am well and strong. I oan't say toi mnoh in its praise." This msrvellont medicine is the surest and quickest ourr in tbe world for all tbrost and lung trouble. Regular sizes 50o and $100. Trial bottles free at Ooneer & Warren Drug Co. Every bottle gnsranteed. PUT OUT CAMP FIRES. Campers 'are directed to exercise greater care in the setting of fires while in the mountains, and see that their campfires are always put out before they break camp. District Attorney T. G. Hailey calls attention to the pres sing necessity for the observance of this idle. Sunday near Bingham Springs be saw a fire that spread considerably and that will become dangerous to ex tensive interests if it be not attended to at once. Hs says : "People should bear in mind that there are strict laws regulating tbe set ting of fires, and providing penalties for all who cause their setting and fail to extinguish them. It is a small matter to see that the fire is pat out, when breaking camp, and this is especially needed this year when everything is so dry." "tttZznUp. 99 Jnat a MttU oil oo tbe exurfae at the tight time may mean tin dati create be- rife sad (Wtfc to the paaaencrers aad craw. What U is to the friction of tbe daUeate parts of the engine. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery la to the deli cate organs of ute body. It tasts their labor, pre vents the loss of power and watt of energy caused by frictiom. Many a man who was all ran down, whose limbs ached when he walked, whoat back ached when ha laid down, who breathed with dif aVculty, aad com ti ed oooataattly, has been perfectly cred by the aae of Doctor Pierce's Oolden Medical Discovery. It por rfiea the blood, strengthens the stomach aad heals weak lungm. Accept no aV etitnte foTOoMe Medical Discov ery, " nor any med ieine called "just aa good" by the dealer. Mr. Cku Hnwtdk. ut Leeos. Mwab Ca. Mkb.., write: I have eever felt better ta my thaa I do bow. I have takes Dr. Pierce Oolde-a Medical Dfacooery naht alone. I sew walk anna well with a cane, aad hope to throw eeaa that awav baton lone, and a I ha bad to na erutebca for nearly two jreara, I think I an doing tna. I do not ooagh now and I can aleep lib a achool boy. Yon miut know that I have been treated ia twe hoaoiiala aad by three think yoar medkHne the only medicine for aw. 1. rterce's Medical Adviser in paper cover, ia sent free on receipt of 21 one- cent atampa to pay expense or mailing omly. Aiiresa Dr. K. V. Pierce, Buf. nuo, i. y. if LADIES' HOME JOURNAL. Four short stories, tbe beginning of one serial, and the concluding chapters of another gives tbe August Ladies' Home Journal claim to the title of Mid summer Story Number. There are be sides upwards of thirty other features : "College Girls' Larks and Pranks," "Tbe Haunted Houses of New Eng land," "My Summer with some Chip munks," "A Missionary in the Great West," by Rev. Cyrus T. Brady, "How a Girl Can Work Her Way Through College," "Conversation and Good Form in Public Places," etc. Pictorially the August Journal is made unusually sumptuous by the work of nine illus trators and by innumerable photo graphs. "Through Picteresque Ameri ca" will command particular attention, and Howard Chandley Christy's "Amer ican Girl in Society" is another notable artistic feature. A waltz, "Golden Poppies," is attuned to the slumberous summer days and is exceedingly pretty. From cover to cover the August Journal is entertaining und attractive. By the Curtis Publishing Company, Philadel phia. One dollar a year; ten cents a copy. "My baby wbs terribly sick with tbe diarrhoea," says J. B. Doak, of Williams, Oregon. "We were unable to cure bim with the doctor's assistance, and as a last resort we tried Chamberlain's Colio. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. I am happy to say it gave immediate relief and a complete cure. ' For sale by Con- ser & Warren. ANOTHEB FAST TRAIN. The Rio Grande Western Railway, "Tbe Great Halt Lake Route," has re sumed its fast train service to the East, making tbe run from Portland to Chicago In three days and a bait. No ' layover is oeoessary, and only one change of oars is made. Those who desire it have the privilege, however, of a daylight stop over either at Salt Lake City or Denver. Three daily express trains are rnn, leav ing Ogden, Utah, at 7:15 a. m. and 1:15 and 7 p. m. The morniog train oarries a tbrongb standard sleeper to Chicago, via the Bnrlington Route and tbe night train one via tbe Chicago Rook Island & Psoifio Railway. The tourist sleepers and obair oars run daily as formerly through from Portland to Denver.'' Twioe a week tourist rnn through from Portland to Boston. All trains carry dining cars, making tbe trip across tbe continent, via "The Great Salt Lake Route," most desirable. The Rio Grande Western Railway is the only road running through Salt Lake Oity, and with its connections the Denver & Rio Grande and tbe Colorado Midland takes tbe passenger through the famous Rocky Mountain soenery of Colorado. For rates and all other information, address J. D. Mansfield, General Agent, 253 Washington St., Portland, Oregon Don't Be Doped There have been placed upon the market several cheap reprints of an obsolete edition of " Webster's Dictionary." They are being offered under various names at a low price By dry goods dealers, grocers, agents, etc., and in a few instances as a premium for subscrip tions to papers. Announcements of these comparatively Worthless reprints are very misleading; for instance, they are advertised to be the substantial equivalent of a higher-prioed book, when in reality, so far as we know and believe, they are all, from A to Z, Reprint Dictionaries, phototype copies of a book of over fifty years ago, which in its day was sold for about 16.00, and which was much superior in paper, frint, and binding to these imitations, being hen a work of some merit instead of one Long Since Obsolete. The supplement of 10,000 so-called "new words," which some of these books are adver tised to oontain, was compiled by a gentle man who died over forty years ago, and was published before his death. Other minor additions are probably of more or less value. The Webster Unibrldied Dictionary pub lished by our house is the only meritorious one of that name familiar to this generation. It contains over auo pages, with illustra tions on nearly every page, and bears our imprint on the title page. It is protected by copyright from cheap imitation. valuable as this work is, we have at vast expense published a thoroughly revised successor, known throughout the world as Webster'a International Dictionary. As a dictionary lasts a lifetime you should Get the Best. Illustrated pamphlet free. Address a It & MERRIAM CO Springfield. Mass. The Heppner Gazette Steam Printing Is well equipped to turn out all kinds of Book and Job Printing. GEORGE WASHINGTON'S QUEUE. It Hid a Lnxnriant Halt of titrafubt and Very Dark Hair. The Father of his Country concealed a luxuriant suit of hair beneath his queue wig. Many now wish tha old fasbion were in vogue, to conceal thinned hair or baldness. Yet no one need haye thin hair nor be bald, if be cure the dandruff that chubbs both. Dandruff cannot be cured by scouring the sculp, because it is a germ disease, and the germ bAS to be killed. New bro's Uerpicide kills, the dandruff germ no other hair preparation will. "De stroy the cause, you remove the effect." There's no cure for dandruff but to kill the germ. CHEAP CORNER. The large corner property east of J. M. Hager's store and opposite the resi dence of C. A. Rhea, is now offered at the low price of $850. Apply at Gazet ofHce. "Meet Us on The Midway. The Event of the Times. Great Street Fair and Carnival Occupying many solid blocks, . taking in an entire street from curb to curb. Portland, Oregon, Sept. 4 to 1 5, 1900. Under the auspices of tbe Port land Elks. Surpassing in mag nitude and erandeur, anything of the kind ever attempt ed on the Pacific coast. Something to remember up to the date of your heart failure. The Straata of Cairo Ths Oriental Theatre Thai German Village The Danolng Girls An Arabian Pageant Crowning the Queen Rex, King of the Carnival, Attended by His Magnlfioent Court The great parade oi the Elks and other orders. The Italian Park and Fountain. The magnifi cent triumphal arch and grand Midway filled with wonderful attractions. Mining, Mercan tile, Agriculture, Borticnlture and other in dustrial exhibits. Tbe Women's Favilion, de signed by women, built by women and decor ated by women for the exhibit of women's industrial work. Tie grain palace built of Oregon and Washington grains and grasses. Music, Gayety and Fun. Night turned into day. Lowest rail and water rates ever given to Port land from all parts of the Pacific Northwest. imona s ross uut saws a Sewing Boss Washers Hose and At Ed. R. "Cyclone" Threshers Automatic Stackers, Wind Stack- nrs. Horse Powers, Threshermon's Supplies of All Kinds. rnirvri nun nD for catalogue and prices, rBSITLAws, Uc, GILLIAM & BISBEE, Agents, HepDner, Ore. Don't tie the top of your Jelly and preserve Jars in the old fashioned way. Seal them by the new, quick, absolutely aum i thin coaung oi puro, refined Parafflne Wax. Has no taste or odor. Is air tight and acid proof. Easily applied. Useful in a dozen other wnvn ahnllt lhA hnnH. Full rii-af.inna with each pound cake. Bold everywhere. Made by STANDARD OIL CO Nothing so 6ood as a pure malt beverage to refresh one after a hard day's work has ever been discovered. And there is one malt beverage that Is better than others that is J. B. Natter's beer It goes right to the spot, and Is served np at Natter's Brewery, on upper Main St., Heppner. where an Ice-cold cellar in the solid rock keeps it always cool. 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. 2l33.ty of Hsty eixid. Q-xaAa. fox Savle Stable located on west side of Main street between Wm. Scrivner's and A. M. Ounn's blacksmith shops. For the ladies A fine horse and lady's saidle Heppner Gazette only 4 bits for 3 months. SEASHORE. If you are going down where cooling breezes blow by the briny deep, call on E. W. Crichton, at Telephone dock Portland, and in his usual whole-souled way he will ticket you through to the beach by the famous White Collar line of floating palaces. He is a joyial man to talk to. Machines mm UiVi3M,ir. J in H . fat KM Sanitary Stills I aci Sprinklers w J Lawn Mowers j Bishop's. isseii Engines Traction or Portable, 5iinpJo or Corf pound, Wood or Straw Burners. HllXr'l i ftt ItUy LvLIL MJ Kll Plant