OFFICIAL PAPEE WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription Price, $1.50 Lead In Prestige.... Leads In Circulation. Leads In News The Paper Is Published Strictly In the Interests of Morrow County and Its Taxpayers. , arwMiigmwiMLwjjiJi.iJiiiii la the Official and Recognized Represent ing auHinsi ui ins vouniy. EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1900. NO. 811 WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 The Heppner Gazette Ib published every Thursday by J. W. REDINGTON. Entered at the Postoffloe at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. C E. Redfield ' ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office In Firat National Bank building. Heppner, . Oregon. G. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in Natter'a Building. Heppner, Oregon, J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and U. 8. COMMISSIONER. Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. A. Mallory, U.S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC la authorized to take all kinds of LAUD PROOFS and LAND K1LINU8. Collection! made on reasonable termi. Otlice at residence on Chaae 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. Gentry & Sharp Tonsorial Artists Your patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed.. Hot and Cold Baths- Main Street, near Palace Hotel, Heppner. Nothing so Good as a pure malt beverage to refresh one after a hard day'a work baa ever been discovered. And tbere la one malt beverage that la better than others thatli J. B. Natter's beer It goea right to the spot, and ia aerved up at Matter's Brewery, on upper Main 8t., Heppner, wnere an ice-cold cellar in the solid rock keeps t always cool. Gordon's Feed and Sale Stable i Has Just been opened to the public and Mr. Gordon, the proprietor, kindly invites hie friends to call and try hie first-class accommodations. 'Flmxi.ty of Hay sua.4 Oraln fox Sail Stable located on west side of Main street between Wm. Bcrivner'a and A, M. Ounn'i blacksmith ahops. For the ladles A fine horse and lady's aaddle A. Abrah'amsick Merchant Tailor Pioneer' Tailor of Heppner. His work first-class and satisfactory. Give him a call May Street. New Lodging House. I have re-papered and re-. famished the well-known MouQtair) House And it is now ready for the accommxiation of lodgers by the day, week or month. Good rooms and clean, com fortable beds. Lodging 25 cents. I. N. BA8EY. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. NOTICE J8 HEREBY GIVES TO ALL pemons having claims against the estate of H v. Merritt. deceased, to present the same with the proper vouchers thereof to C. E. Red field administrator wiih the will annexed, of the estate of said II. P. Merritt, deceased, at his SI are 0( doing business in the city of Heppner, orrow county. Htate of Oregon, within six months from me oawj ni oi uuvrc. Dated November 7, lSWO. C. E. RanviiLD. Adminietretor with the Will annexed of the estate o H. P. Merritt, deceased. 7-11 WASTED-ACTIVE MAI OF GOOD CHAR- established manufacturing wholesale boose. sonniTftar sure pay. Honesty more than ex SSeVc? "TX'onr reference, jany bsnk in Juy Enclose self-tddressed stamped envelope Manufacturer, Third Floor, DearbornM.. Chicago. The Kind You Have Always in use for over 30 years, and 1&fflifts. sonal supervision since its infancy. . , cccAAz Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-good" are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA iCastoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It Is 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 CASTO R I A ALWAYS Bears the Hie Kind You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. - THC CENTAUR COMPANY. TT MUM rjt. Palace ... 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 Iooms. For Business Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West. For Fall and Winter Wear M. LICHTENTHAL, -The The Latest , Styles Men, Women and SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Old Stand. Main Street. Repairing a Specialty. HOME INDUSTRY. . ,.-v. .. s . FLOUR Heppner Flouring Mill Co. Has secured the services of a first class miller, and keep od hand a full supply of FLOUR, : GRAHAM, : GERM : MEAL, WHOLE WHEAT, BRAN and SHORTS Of the very best quality and The mill exchanges with their patronage. W. L. Come to Morrow County for low-priced lands. Values are sure to double up. Nev er again will land sell Bought, and which hag been, has borne the signature of has been made under his per- Signature of KIT. NEW YORK CITY J. W. MORROW, Proprietor. Strictly First-Class Pioneer Boot and Shoe Doaler of Heppner, baa '' '.-.: If of Footwear for Children. ' FLOUR guaranteed to give satisfaction. the farmers, and solicits HOUSTON, Manager. so low as it does now. THE CAMP-BOBBER. By Dick Bkamam. Across the river, 'way over on Hinton creek, Where the hills are high and the canyons steep, Where rimrox abound and bears are quite tame, . - ', .". .v I met a man, Bill Duncan hla name. We aat up on a rocky hill, one sunny day. While the sheep fed around and had their way. "My sheep wont lay in caray," said Bill, "They'll break their necks to get up the hill." I went up there again some other day. For my sheep always wanted to go that way. I looked down and thore waa Bill Coming right straight up that rocky bill, . "Good morning, Dick, I killed the bear With thia little gun he got hla share. Down by the rim, by that black stump I downed him. - - - : t You may think I can't run By jingo, I just nearly spun. ' Bight over the ground I made for a tree, ' , For that big bear waa after me." I went down there that very same day, And aure enough, there he lay. A great big brnte, J00 pounda or more t Be bad killed many a sheep, of that I'm sure. I went down to the river to pitch my tent ' Where Dearborn comos down and the river makes a bend ; Some scalawag stole my blankets there. He was a human, not a bear. So if you want to go over there this coming year, Be well prepared to fight the bear ' And some low-down, oruery scamp Who will come around to rob your camp.' MUST ' HAVE BEEN. , " Edith (to Ethel, who has just re turned from a sea trip to San Fran) O, Ethel, were you seasick?" Ethel Seasick! Why, Edith, I went into the stateroom and sat down on my best hat and I didn't care. - ..!. SHEEP. Bud Willingham has returned from a trip to Portland, where he took a car load of fat.old. ewes for mutton. ,They did not appear to be very rapid sellers, but at the Union Stock ' Yards he dis posed of them at $3.10 per 100 lbs; they averaged 96. pounds. He alno took along some fat hogs and cold them at $5.50 per 100 lbs. , One of John McCarthy's recent buys was 600 yearling past wether mutton sheep at $3.15 per head. J. I. Carson was to leave Portland yesterday for Montana, where he was onto a snap with no pullets. He had been posted on 5000 yearling past weth ers that he could buy at $1.50 a head on account, of grass and feed being short in Montana. He was going to buy them and 'ship at'a rate of 20 cents a head to Baker City, where he would buy some big haystacks and winter, and drive east in the spring. Major Ormsby, of Casper, Wyoming, has sold to the Standard Cattle Com pany, of Ames, Neb., 3000 wether lamos at $2.40 per head. . According to a decision given Nov. 14 at Fresno, by TJ. S. District Judge Well born in the case of Lee Biasingame, it was held that the act of June 30, 1898, authorizing the Secretary of the Inter ior to make regulations for the protec tion of forest reserves, is constitutional, because, in effect, it delegates legisla tive power to an administrative officer. The decision, it is claimed, practically throws open to the sheep men all the reservations, though they are still liable in .civil suits for damages for trespass. United States Attorney Flint will ap peal. ' I. Babies and children need proper food, rarely ever medi cine. If they do not thrive on their food something is wrong.; They need a j little help; to get their digestive machinery working properly. COD LIVER OIL WITH NYPOPHOSPHITES Of LIME 4 SODA will generally correct this difficulty. ; . 1 ; If you will put from one fourth to half a teaspoonful in baby's bottle three or four times a day you will soon see a marked improvement. For larger chifdren, from half to a teaspoonful, according to age, dissolved in their milk, if you so desire, will very soon show its great nourish' ing power. If the mother's j milk does not nourish the 1 baby, she needs the emul sion. It will show an effect at once both upon mother and child. 50c slid $i.oo. ill drought, SCOTT 4 BOWNE, Owroirti, New Yofk. BOSTON WOOL MARKET. Boston, Nov. 27. The wool mar ket has been cleared by two large sales, and there was a firmer feel ing, although no one is looking for a marked advance. The terri tory wools led in sales, fine medium and fine calling for 49c. Fleece wools are quiet, but prices are firm. Quotations are: Territory, scoured basis, Montana and Wyoming, fine medium and fine, l721c; scoured, 2839c; staple, 5051c. Utah tine medium and fine, 1617c; scoured, 4749c; staple, 50c; Idaho fioe medium and . fine, 1516o; Bcoured, 4647c; staple, 50c. Aus tralian, scoured basis, spot prices, combing ruperfine, 7475c; good, 65 70c; average, 62 67c. ',. Nov. 28. The American Wool & Cotton Reporter will say of the wool trade tomorrow: "The wool market has been rather more active in the past week. There has been consider able quiet looking around for all classes of wool, and the demand has been strictly for consumption. Reasonable prioes have been of fered and have been accepted. A larger business would probably have been transacted had it not been for the extremely unfavorable weather, which has militated against an active demand for goods. Advices from the "West continue to indicate a very bullish feeling. Owners of wool oontmue to hold it at high prices. Prices are naturally in favor of the buy ers, although there is no pressure to sell wool, and quotations are unchanged. "The sales this week in Boston amounted to 4,175,000 pounds do mestic and 550,000 pounds foreign, making a total of 4,725,000, against a total of 3,452,000 for the previ ous week, and a total of 13,915,000 for the corresponding week last year. "The sales Bince January 1 were 132,951,000 pounds, against 327, 982,576 pounds for the correspond ing time last year. SFLENDID STEAMER. The Elder is one of the most beauti ful boats afloat in northern waters, and makes regular trips between Fortland and Sao Francisco. She is a palace on keels.- When you make a trip down the coast see Agent Kernan, at the Heppner depot, and he will ticket you through. Cold Steel or Death - . "Tbere is bat one small obsnoe to save yoar life and that is tbrongb an opera tion," was the awful prospect set before Mrs. I. B. Hunt, of Lime Ridge, Wis., by ber doctor after vainly trying lo oure her of a frightful esse of stomach trouble end yellow jaundioe. He didn't oount on the marvellous power of Electric Bitters to oure stomach and liver troubles, bat she beard of it, took seven bottles, was wholly oured. avoided surgeon's knife, now weighs more sod feels better than ever. It's positively guaranteed to oure etomaoh, liver and kidney troubles and never disappoints. Price 50o at Oonser & Warren Drug Co. t ( I IVfQOh SORTING. ' SAnswering in inquiry the Wool Re porter; says: 51 Today about 45b per hundred Is paid for the general sorting of territory and fleece wool. Sometimes a lot of wool Is found which is more or less covered with paint or tar, and in such a case 12)sC is allowed extra. ' A boss wool sorter can he hired from $2 to $2.50 per day. ' Since the better grading of wool htis-come in vogue, many mills have dispensed with the sorting proper al together, simply hiring some one to cut strings, open the fleeces and throw out the coarse tags and dung locks. Such a man can be hired for $1.50 per day, and handle from 600 to 1000 pounds of grease wool jer 10 hours. KBUGER SNUBBED. -Berlin, Dec. 2. Mr. Kruger has abandoned his proposed visit to Berlin, owing to the receipt of an official intimation that Emperor William regrets that, in conse quence of previous arrangements, he will be unable to receive him. The Boer statesman will, therefore, proceed direct from Cologne for Holland. lie telegraphed to this effect this afternoon. , j The Cologne Gazete, in an in spired communication, Bays: "Mr. Kruger's visit is not agree able to Germany, his aim being to obtain intervention in South Af rica. It would be a grave political mistake it would be even a great crime to allow him to entertain even a spark of hope that Germany will render him any practical sup port," This declaration is accom panied with reproaches, Mr. Krog er being charged with "having encouraged a useless guerilla war. fare and haviDg disregarded Ger many's advice when he might have still followed it." FOOTBALL. The Thanksgiving day game on the Heppner depot grounds was witnessed by a large crowd, but the LaGrande team put np a very poor game. The Heppner boys had It all tbeir own way, aD'l the snore stood 64 to 0. The present understanding Is that The Dalies team will come here and play Ueppner ea Pee. 14, -Absolute y Purer- For the third of a century the standard for strength and purity. It makes the hot bread, hot; biscuit, cake and other pastry light, sweet and excellent in every quality. No other baking powder is "just as good as Royal," either in strength, purity or wholesomeness. Many low priced, imitation bakltiR' powders are upon the market. These are made with alum, and care should be taken to avoid them , as alum is a poison, never to be taken in the food. ROYAL BAKINQ POWDER CO., 100 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. IDEAS ABOUT WOOL. The great staple, wool, is today affected by a greater variety of circumstances than can be cited in the case of most commodities, says the American Wool and Cotton Reporter. It is of course affected by the general business condition of the country. But apart from this, it is very powerfully afifocted by the state of the weather. There has seldom been a more unseason able period than the one we have been passing through this fall. If the winter months should con form to the fall months in this particular, the sales of wool would, we should suppose, continue com paratively small. But the weather is ol course a very uncertain factor, and there is fully as good reason to suppose that we shall experi ence a bitter winter as that we shall the opposite. The ' fact that the weather has so far been against the wool market does not of itself preclude the hope of an active trade later in the season. The market is no doubt affected by still another factor; via., the over-speculation of recent years. It might on a first glance seem as if the effect of this should be about overcome by this time, but a care ful scrutiny of the facts in the case perhaps warrants the opposite con clusion. We have always main tained that the real nature of the wool problem could not be ascer tained merely by the study of con ditions as they existed in one or two years. The market is very apt to be influenced by factors which have been working unob served for a long series of years, and it is possible that this was never more true than at the pres ent time. We do not profess to say what has become of all the wool that has figured in the Boston wool sales in the past four years. Uow much of it is still in dealers' hands, how much in manufacturers' store houses, how much of it is in the form of unsold finished goods, are questions which no one can answer. One thing, however, seems pretty clear, viz., that nowhere near all the wool sold since the beginning of 1897 has yet appeared on the backs of the public. WHY DO DOGS BARK? Why should a dog like to guard his master's house? When dogs run wild, four of the pack are told off aa sentinels, one at each point of the compass. While the rest of the pack sleep theBe guards keep awake, ever on the watch for ene mies. So soon as danger is scpnted the sentinel burks, and the rest of the pack wake each other in like manner. That is why, when one watchdog barks, his neighbor docH likewise. A New Vear'a Guide. Tbere ii one book ever one ihonld make an effort to get, (or the new yeir. It ooutftina dimple and valuable bints conoerniog health, many amufiing aneo dntee, and much general Information. We refer to Hontetter'a Almanao, pub lished by The Hoatetter Co., TittBburg, Pa. It will prove valuable to any house hold. Sixty employes are kept at work on thif valuable book. The fauna for 1901 will be over eight millinnn, printed In the English, German, Freucb, Wulna, Norwegian, Swedish, Holland, Bohemian- and Spanish language. It con tains proof of the efficienty of nostetter'e Htomsoh Bitters, the greet remedy pre pared by the publishers, and is worthy of oareful preservation. TLi) almanaa may be obtained f'ee of or., at aoy druggist or gener! dealer Id tbeoouotry, SCALP LAW. J. N. Williamson, of Crook coun ty, writing to the Oregonian, says: Without going into details as to the enormous destruction of prop erty by predatory animals in Ore gon Eastern Oregon in particular or undertaking to give a detailed history of the many local attempts at so-called "self-help" all over the state to rid ovrselves of these de structive pests, I will make the statement that none of the bounty law's promoters have ever claimed that its direct benefits are equally distributed between the different counties. Neither can I call to mind a single law in this state wherein money is appropriated that such money is distributed equally between the counties.. Hhould strict adherence to such principles be insisted upon, and followed out, the doors of every state institution in Oregon would be closed, the state penitentiary and insane asylum included, on the 1st day of J anuary next. Such a proposition is preposterous and needs no argument to contravert it. Marion county is said to inter pose a serious objection to the state scalp bounty law. I am the last man to go back on Marion cwunty. And, while it is not con sidered in good taBte for a legislator to be announcing in advance what measures he will support and what not, I wish it understood here and now, that if $900,000 or thereabout of state money is not enough to be spent in one Oregon county, I am willing for old Marion to stick her spoon in some more, for I waa reared in that county. Multnomah county bases her grievance upon the ground that she does not get as much direct benefit from that law as Eastern Oregon. Now, that is bad really, too bad. Bid it ever occur to the man who would advance such an idea that a very large part of the city of Fortland would not be on the map today were it not for Eastern Oregon? Did such a man ever take a position anywhere along the Columbia gorge and note the pass ing steamboats and count the miles and miles of freight cars that pass each way every 24 hours, loaded with merchandise from and pro duce to the city of Portland; and all, or nearly so, from Eastern Ore gon? Does he realize that while Portland claims third place in the United States as a wheat-exporting point, that there are single coun ties in Eastern Oregon which fur nished more of that wheat the past summer than the whole Willamette valley put ogether? Did he ever consider thiil all we have, and are, begins in Portland and ends at the name place? And that Portland, which ia Multnomah county, owes it to herself as well as to us, to allow us to do business on busi ness principles? No, there can be no question whatever about the merit of that or a much similar law. It might be a good idea to amend it in soma particular, but so long as Oregon is Oregon, so long as this state is compoHcd of such widely diversi fied industries, and covers such a vast and varied territory, some such measure should be found among our statutes; not only should tio found upon our statute books, but shoald be enforced for there's the rub.