OFFICIAL Lead In Proatlo Leads In Circulation Leads la News Is the Official and Recognized Represent ative Journal of the County. EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER,, WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 J c ! I; in I. , ) i I, I I j It . I ' ; The Heppner Gazette la published every Thursday by J. W. REDINGTON. Entered at the . Fottofflce at Heppner, Oregon, as second-class matter. OSTICIAi DIJSIOTOBT. United BUtes Officials. P mirtent. .... William McKinlejr Vine Presldant T. RooserMt Secretary of State W. B. ttajr Secretary of Treasury Lyman J. Gage Secretary of Interior.. Cornelias N. Bliss Secretary of War E. B. Root Secretary of Nary John D. Long Postuuistor-Oensral...... . .Charles Emery Smith Attorney-ftenetal John W. Urines Hnoratnryof Agrianltnre James Wilton Com. General Land Offioe Dinger Hermann State Federal Offielala. Senator!., t O. W. MBrln '? Joseph Simon Congressmen. . I Thos. H. Tongae M. A. Moony Internal Revenue Collector.... ....D. M. Dnnne District Judge. ....C, B. Bellinger Circuit Judge W. B. Gilbert .District Attorney J. H. Hail V 8. Marshal Zoeih Houser United State Land Officers. TUB DAIXX8. OB. V Jay P. Lnoss Register I Otis Patterson Beceirer J LA OBAMDB. OB. - ,'...! W-i Bartlett Register J. O. Swaokhamer Receiver Orecoa State Officials. tiovernor. . .- ...T.T. Geer ceoretaryot State F. I. Don bar Treasurer.. ; F S. Moore oo pt. Public Instruction J. VI. Aokerman Attorney General D. B. N. Biackburn Primer W. H. ieeds ( K. H. Bean, Supreme Judges.- i F. A. Moore. f C. E. Wolrerton Ul-rk Board School Land Commission Juait Chamberlain Game Warden AlnhrOnirnhv ' Fish Com .If. C lieid, attoria eterinary Snrgeou Wm, McLean, Portland Sixth J adlclal District. Circnit Judge. W. R. Ellis Prosecuting Attorney T. G. Hailey Horrow Count Officials. Jo nf Senator J, W. Morrow KipresentatiTe. A. B. Thomson Oo nty judge A. O. Bartholomew " "-Mumissionera J.L. Howard . Ed. C. Athbausb. " iork Vawter Crawford Sheriff J. W. Matlock ' freasnrer M. Liohtenthal Aweasor B. E. Willis ' Surveyor J. J. McGee " School Sup't Jay W. Shipley " C -mr Dr. E. R. Hemlock Stock Inspector Henry Scherzlneer Deputies J. P. Bhea. lone Ike Vinson, Galloway HEPFMSB TOWH OfnOZRS. Uayoi Frank Gilliam C it D I i UUUllUUTUttU.... 3' L UHiriKU'B J. a. Bimons. j.j. Roberta, J. W Uhea, ueo, No 'le and 'ihoe. Quaid. - Ituoorder .-J. P. Williams l'laneurer L. W. Briggs naranai ueorge mormon RIBPNIB SCHOOL DISTRICT. ' Directors Frank Gillirm O. E. Farnsworth, j. Ju. uager; uierk J. J. Boberts. -Preetnet Officers. J i ticeof the Peaoe..... ....J. P.Williams C nstable G. B. Halt ; FSaOIMCSSIOlT.A.IU OA.B9S, C E Redfield ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office in First National Bank building. Heppner, Oregon. . G. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office on May street, Heppner, Oregon, J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and V. 8. COMMISSIONER. Office In Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. A. Mallory, V. S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC Is authorized to take all kindi of LAND PROOFS and LAND FI LINUS. Collections made on reasonable terms. Office at residence on Cbase 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 6ood as a pure malt beverage to refresh one after a bard 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, wnere an Ice-cold cellar in the solid rock keeps t always tool. WANTED ACTIVE MAN OF GOOD CHAR acter to deliver and collect in Oregon for old established msnufactnring wholesale honse. 10 a year, sure pay . Honeety more thsn ex perience required. Our reference, any bank in city. Enclose self-addressed stamped envelope Maaufactorers, Tblrd Floor, 834, DeertoraSk. Cbieegei liiltiiiiiiiiiiiMilimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiiiiiiui'iiiTiiiiiit iiiTTmrcTiTimTuTflTT IliriiiTiiTinWinuilMii'MiiiliiiiiW'iiiPTMTimiiit ' AVcgefahlePreparatLonfor As similating the Food andReguIa ting the Stomachs arriJBoweis of . iB.mAJ..tJ.x"jiii ifitirjhi i Promotes Digestion,Cbeerfur ness and Ttest.Con tains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral jNotXarcotic. afOUJlrSAMVIZPtKHKR Alxjenn Apcifecl Remedy for Conslipa Tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoca Worms .Convulsions Jeverish ness and Loss of Sleep. - Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. rr1 i EXACf COPY OF WRAPBD. : WW-- ' ' j vraS Hotel. A Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel Every Modern 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. For Fall and Winter Wear Al. LICHTENTHAL, s The Pioneer Boot and Shoe Dealer of Heppner, has The Latest Styles of Footwear for Men, Women and Children. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Old Stand, Main Street. HOME INDUSTRY. FLOUR Heppner Flouring Mill Co. Has secured the services and keep on hand a full FLOUR, : GRAHAM, WHOLE WHEAT, Of the very best quality and The mill exchanges with the farmers, and solicits their patronage. W L. HOUSTON, Manager. Come to Morrow lands. Values. are sure to double up. Nev er again will land sell so low as it does now. V.. St. IS I For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signature etHTsua eeMranv. m vena errv. J. W. M OFj ROW, Proprietor. Strictly First-Ciass Convenience. Rooalrlna a Soaolaltw. FLOUR of a first class miller, supply of : GERM : MEAL, BRAN and SHORTS guaranteed to give satisfaction. County for low-nncen1 1 Bears the t l Jv In ml Use For Over I Thirty Years aril TH Ob,' woi iu 01 KudleniOg wtiite I Ob, breezes blithely bringing- A message of delight! : From leafless bill and valley Bat one retrain I bear: , "A merry, merry Christmas . And a glad New Year t" r From humble borne and palace The kindly voice is breathed, . From forest arch and pillar, And meadows snowy wreathed, An echo from the angels, A pean of good cbeer: -Hark ! "Merry, merry Christmas And a glad New Year 1" Oh, light of heavenly gladness That falls upon the earth 1 Oh. rapture of thanksgiving " ' That tells the Savior's birth I . The golden links of kindness ,; Bring heart to heart more near. With "a merry, merry Christmas And a glad New Year!" MR. KUNAGH'8 MISFORTUNE. A Portugese named Kunagh who has been herding sheep for Aoton Vey, on Butter creek, left there on horseback Tuesday and came to Lexington, where he acted strangely. He left his horse in the stable there and came on toward Heppner afoot. He stopped at Oscar Minor's ranch in the early evening, and acted so queerly that the folks telephoned up to Marshal Thornton, who went down and brought him up town. The unfortunate man said that he bad ate some cake on But ter creek that he thought had poisoned him or lodged in his chest. '. He also seemed to have an idea that 5 demons were pursuing him. He was taken to a restaurant and sat down to a good turkey dinner, but would not touch any of it, and jester day declined to eat and said be was not hungry, as the Butter cieek cake was still lodged in his chest. Eunagb is said to have always bien a very industrious man and to have herd ed for his uncle-in-law, Anton Vey, for several rears. It is reported that he saved $4000 from bis wages and had it deposited in the Pendleton bank. The examination of Mr. Kunagh oc curred yesterday afternoon M Judge Bartholomew and Dr. H unlock , and he was committed to the asylum. : Sheriff Matlock and Fred Bock started with him this morning. ; SHEEP. The first eastern aheepbuyer of the season, J. B. Smith, of Jimtown, Da kota, is here, but thinks prices are too high. Morrow county will have 100,000 year lings to sell off next spring, and prices are expected to rule about the same as last year. Joe Hayes knows of 20,000 mixed yearlings that might be contract ed for now at $2.50 a head after shear ing. T. J. Allyn Monday sold 700 Iambs to O. E. Farnsworth at $2 60, and the latter bought 4100 mixed lambs from Lum Rhea at $2.50 after shearing. Wm. Barratt bought 1400 lambs from Tom Quaid at $3 with wool on, March 1. The most beautiful thing in the world is the bnbv, all dimples and joy. The most pitiful thing is that same baby, thin and in pain. And the mother does not know that a little fat makes all the differ ence. Dimples and joy have gone, and left hollows and fear; the fat, that was comfort and color and curve-all but pity and love-is gone. The little one gets no fat from her food. There is some thing wrong; it is either her food or food-mill. She has had no fat for weeks; is living on what she had stored in that plump little body of hers; and that is gone. She is starving for fat; it is death, be quick I Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the fat she can take; it will save her. The rtnnins has this oic'ira sa it, take no other. If von have not tried It. srnd tor free sample, its agreeable taste wilt surprise yon. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists. 409 Peart St., N. Y. 60c. and I.OO all druggists. lEfBShtuiitw -,., Vt,, between Cape Town and almost entirely severed, partly by to. operations and partly by rains. Since the Nooitgedacht affair Mr. Kruger has become stiff-necked. He now scornfully rejects all private sug gestions in the nature of peace over tures. ' General Reginald Pole-Carew. who has returned from South Africa, will marry Lady Beatrice Frances Elizabeth, eldest daughter of the Marquis of Or monde. He is 51 years of age and she is under 25. Lord Kitchener has arrived at De Aar, Cape Colony, and is taking measures to crush the Boer invasion. The London Standard, referring to the canal difficulty, expressed the hope that President McKinley will show himself wiser than the inconsiderate Senate." .The Daily Chronicle bluntly admits that the "Nicaragoa cloud has become very serions." It sees no compro mise between allowing things to slide, thus "causing another miserable loss to our honor and reputation," and an un conditional refusal of the new amend ments. Assuming tbe latter alternative to be adopted, the Daily Chronicle asks : "What force has Lord Salisbury to back up a refusal ? Our army is shut np in South Africa and China, and our navy is needed to protect communica tions with both. Seldom in its stormv career has the conservative government been placed in a more dangerous di lemma." $200,000,000 is tbe maximum sum the Administration wants the powers to de mand ot China as indemnity, yet the figures are likely to be manv limps that amount. The United States Army has a deficiency of $11,000,000 for transpor. tation and army supplies, and most of that is charged against China. A de termined effort will be made by the President and Secretary Hav to induce the powers to consent to the arbitration of tbe indemnity question by a court to be appointed in conformity with tbe provisions of The Hague treaty. Paris, Dec. 24. 30 cars, forming part of the U. 8, government exhibit at the Paris exposition, were suddenly laid under exbargo today at Harvre, the railroad company declining to surrender them, pending payment of a claim of 1710 francs. How to Care Croup. Mr. K. Cirar whn liwaa nam. A m n n ! n . uvu. auiBuin( Duobess county, N. I., says: "Oham- hnrtiiin'a P.nnaK U.ivi&Hn i- 11 I, 4 medicine I have ever used. It is a fine unuuren remeny tor croup and never fails to onre." When given as soon as 1 mm n ri 1 1 11 nsutf.maa rea aa m .11 the 0 roups cough baa developed, it will fid,cu' " i.uie Booaia De born ft in mind nnd a Hnftft.A iKa nnu ww"iw va sue WUfsJ U Remedy kept at band ready for instant wo ma duuu aa ftuvne symptoms appear For sale by Oonser & Warren. WHEAT, WOOL AND STOCK. Portland, Dec. 25. Wheat Walla Walla. fi4rtK4U..- v.i. lev. nominal. 60B3c: hlnatm zaa,e.7n per bushel. Wool Valley, 1314c for ooarse, 1516c for best; Eastern Oregon, 1012c; mobair, 25c per pound. Sheepskins Shearlings, 1520c; short wool, 2535c; medium-wool, 3050c: long wool, 60$1 each. San Francisco. I)n 91 wi Spring Nevada, ll13c per pound; "" vioKuu, lutwit; v aney, uregon, 15 18c. Fall Northern, mountain, 9 10c; mountain, 810c; plains, 810c: Humboltand Mendocino, 1012c. Chicago. J 24. Pattln nanin. 0300; market generally active; prime sioera to.wiffo.zo ; poor to medium, $3 75 4.85; stockers and feeders, slow, $3.50(84.40 : cows. 12 Mam or hoir.. $2.004 50 scanners, $1.752.40; bulls! caives. o.40; Texan fed teer004.00; Texas grass steers, Sheep, receipts, 7,000. Sheep and lambs 10 to 25c higher. Choice wnthnra tt 7.W1 an . I..:... choice mixed, $3.253.80; Western sheep, $3.754.60; Texas sheep, $2.25 3.65; native lambs, $4.265.50: West ern lambs, $4.755.40. r j . . Baennoea a u, Km got caught by tbe leg In a stors uu aqueaiea louaiy for mercy, says s Maine exchange. The proprietor of tbe iwre warenoa tne rat, which continued squeal. Finally another rat crept .antiouslv out and walknH tin is Vi ( a .m- , - " V MM- ortunate companion and evidently took he situation in. for thev ienmH talk With each Other and irrdrad .t t, conclusion that tho nanti. rl fat's chances were desperate, for tbe second one Degan to gnaw the unfortunate rat's letr off. alio wl no- it tn aid, limping away on three lpgs, the ovner teg remaining m the trap. It al moin Beemoa as 11 they had deliberated jver the case and bad reached the only soasible means of scane. Hard oo the Dueks. A sinrular story comes from Green point, N. Y. A large mansion in tht vicinity took fire, which originated in the main chimney, and the flames were spreading rapidly. A young- man ran to the duck pen and secured a numbei of the largest fowls. Then he took 1 ladder, and mounting to the top of tht house went to the chimney, from whlct names and smokes were pouring, anc dropped the ducka one after anothei into the fiery shaft. This had the effect of checking the flaoMts aad tbe &t wai swbud her ouiy ' . ter had toil Jf C v and the only bit 01 iv fl' ing into their dark lives ''. shed by their loving companion ship. But the girl had always been weakly. Under the heart broken mother's eyeB she faded ana wasted sway with consnmp lion, anu at last thA tlnir nntna when the wan face failed to answer with a smile the anxious, tear blinded eyes of the mother. The poor youner creature was dnarl. For many months the pair had been supported by the elderly woman's sewing, and it was in the character of employer I had be come acquainted with Mrs. C. and uer siorv. tsv an onoa.ionni visit to the awful heights of an East aide tenement, where they lived, by a few books and some nomfort. ing words I had won the love of tne dying girl. Her grateful thoughts turned in hor last, h to the small number of friends she possessed, and she boson tWit her mother to notify me of the day of tne tuneral and ask me to attend. That summons reached me nnnn one of the wildest days preceding iinrisimas. a sleet that was not rain, and a rain that was not snow. came pelting from all points of the compass. 1 piled the glowiog crates; I drew closer the curtains and shut out the gloom of the De cern oer atternoon; 1 turned on the gas and sat down, devoutlv thank ful that I had cut all connection with the wicked weather, when nn installment of it burst in upon me in the shape of Parepa Rosa. She was Ennhrosvnpi Parana, nf that time, and the operatic idol of the city. And even as we congratulated ourselves on the rjrosnect of a Ho- lightful day together, here came me summons tor me to go to the humble funeral of the poor sewiDsr woman's daughter. I turned the tear-blotted note over and groaned "This-ia terrihW unir! T' Tt'a just the one errand that could take me out today, bat I must go." And then I told Parepa the cir cumstances, and speculated on the length of time I should' be gone, and suggested means of amuse ment in my absence. "But I shall go with you," said the great-hearted creature. So she re-wound her throat with the lone white comforter, nulled on her worsted gloves, aDd off in tne Btorm we went together. We climbed flight after flight of nar row, dark stairs to the top floor, where the widow dwelt in a miser able little room not more than a dozen feet square. The canvas back hearse, peculiar to the twenty-five dollar funeral, stood in the street below, and the awful cherry stained box. with its ruffle of glazed white muslin, stood on un- covered treaties in tne center 01 the room above. There was a mother, speechless in her grief, beside that box, a group of hard-working, kindly, hearted neighbors sitting about. It was useless to say the poor woman was nreoared for the inpv- itable end; it was cold comfort to speak to her of the daughter's re lease from pain and suffering. The bereft creature, in her utter loneli ness, was thinking of herself and the awful future, of the annrnacli. ing moment when that box and its precious ourcien would be taken awav and leave her whollv alone. So, therefore, with a sympathizing grasp ot tne poor, worn, bony hand, we sat silently down to "at tend the funeral." Then the minister camn in n dry man, with nothing of the ten. uerness 01 nis noly calling. Icier than the dav. colder than Hip storm, he rattled through sorat selected sentences from the bible, and offered a set form of nonrlol. ence to the broken-hearted mother. Then he hurriedly departed, while a hush fell on ever v bod v pathorpd in the little room. Not one word bad been uttered of conHolatinn. of solemn import, or befitting the oc casion. It was the emptiest, hol- lowest, most unsatisfactory mo ment I ever ramnmhar. Tlirn Parepa arose, her cloak falling about her noble figure like mourn ing drapery. She stood beside that miserable cnerry-stained box. ohe looked & moment on the waster!. ashy face, upturned toward her from witnin it. She laid her soft, white hand on the forehead of tha dead girl, and lifted up her match less voice in the beautiful melody "Angels ever bright and fair, Take, oh tane her to thy care." The noble voice swelled to. ward heaven, and if evnr tlm choirs of paradise paused to listen to eartn music, it was when Pa re oa saner so &lnrinnnlv Iichi'iIh that poor dead girl. No words THE . COLUMBIA. In an article on the Indian name of the Columbia river, the Spokesman-Review of Spoksne, Wash., says that when the first white explorers came into the country the Indians dwelling along the stream had various names tor tne great waterway "Spoka tilicum," or friendlv water: "Wahn- na," or big river; and for the nnner stream the melodious name "Mult nomah was sometimes used. The earlier navigators nnrl t- plorers found in difficult to unite ' upon a name for ' this majestic river. The older charts marked a considerable stream fallr'no- int the Pacific, and termed it the Rio ae Aguilar, in honor of a Spanish lieutenant who is said to have sailed into these waters in the 16th century. It is the sreneral blif of historians, however, that Agui- ; lar paused before rnanhinir an northern - a point, and that the IIS . river ne discovered was one of the smaller streams flowing down from the mountains of Southern Oregon. Other charts indicated the River of the West, the River Thegays and later the River Orecon. Th origin of the latter name is lost in mystery. Jonathan Carver, who penetrated the wilds west of the Mississippi river, durine the 18th century, is thought to have been tne , nrst to employ it. In his auaint and interesting hnofc Via stated that the Indians he encoun tered in the Rooky mountains told him of a great river rolling far to the westward, and this rivar hn called the Oregon. ihe most plausible theory of the origin of this name is that, it was bestowed by early Spanish nayigatora in honor of the Proving of Aragon in their "native land. The name Columbia, it ia harrllir necessary to add, was bestowed by the river's discoverer, Captain Gray, of Boston, who Bailed in over the bar in May, 1792, in the sioop uoiumbia. SHOUT SKIRTS. Bicvclhie and crolf have bean the emancipators of women in more ways than one. Besides tak ing them from the louDge and the novel, and giving them the exhila ration and solid pleasure that comes with outdoor exercise, the requirements of these sports have necessitated the reliiquishment of tbe tight corset and trailing skirhi. Alter women nad once experienced the comfort of licht short ckirta. it was natural that the heavy trail ing garment sbould be relegated to us rignttui place tne drawing- room. Since the wearincr of short skirts on the street is now dictated by fashion, economy and comfort, it is rather a matter of wonder to see the number of women who still cling to the crippling, impeding, old-fashioned dress. Scores of them still promenade streets clutching their draperies in the awkward way that is so familiar. is it not astonishing that these foolish followers of a foolish cus tom, thou oh thev have in the riant violated the laws of cleanliness and health by traumg their draperies through the tilth of the streets, now refuse to accent the rolipf offered them, even though it is done with the Baored sanction of I ashion? When one sees the neat skirt that clears the ground two, tnree or six inches, according to tbe age. figure or taste nf thn wearer, and contrasts the light, qnick step of the owner to the weary walk of those impeded alike in hand and foot, one wonders in deed. It would seem as if these miwguided creatures should be made comfortable in spite of them selves, and that it would be well could a law be papsed banishing forever from the streets the long skirt that bears dirt and disease in its wake. A New V ear's Guide. Tbere is one bock every one sbonld make an effort to get, for tbe new yesr. It oontsins simple and valuable biota concerning health, many amusirjg sneo dotes, soil mnch general information. We refer to Llnstetter's Almanac, pub lished by The Uostetter Oo., Pittsburg, l'a. It will prove valuable to any boose hold. Hixty employes are kept at work on this vsloable book. Tbe issne for l'JOl will be over eight millions, printed in the English, Oerman, Frencb, Welsh, Norwfginn, Hwedish, Holland, Bohe mian snd Hpanitih languages. It con tains proof of the eflicioty of Hosteller's Hlomwoh Hitters, the great remedy pre pared by the publishers, and is worthy of oarefnl preservation. The almanso may be obtained free of cost, at any druggist of general dealer in tbe oouotry. 1