nrU r. Portland Library OFFICIAL. WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1,50 PAPER Beppner Raises Wool to Warm the. World. Last year It shipped away 3,245,750 pounds, and Morrow County rafced 950,000 bushels ofwaea In 1900. ........ Morrow Connty'i climate la most exoel lent, and you can buy larma and ranches bere cheaper than any w here else on earth or in all Oregon. Population 5000. There are vacant government lands, timber, foothill and prairie, and land may be bouabfe at 1 26 to 110 an acre. Morrow County has 263,535 sheep, and the Beppner Warehouse! now . Contain 2,500,000 pound! of 1900 wool. Dads in westtoe.... Dads In Circulation. Dads in News Is til Official and Recognized Represent j . ative Journal of the County. . IjTGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1901, NO. 821 TAe Heppnen Gazette Is published every Thursday by W. RE DING-TON. Sntered at the only TJ. 8. Poitofflce fn Heppner as second-XV matter . . C ETRedfleld ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office la Fint National Bank building. Beppner, Oregon. G. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office on May itreet, Heppner, Oregon. J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and , U.S. COMMISSIONER. Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. A. Alallory, U. S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC la authorized to take all kind! of LAND PROOFS and LAND FILINUS. Collections made on reasonable terms, Orttoe at residence on Chase itreet. . Government land script lot sale. - D E Gilman - GENERAL COLLECTOR. Put your old book endnotes In his hands and get your money out of them Make! a specialty of hard collection!. Offlee in J. N. Brown'i building, Beppner, Or Dr. At. B. Metzler . -DENTIST- teeth Extracted and Filled. 1 la bridging a specially. Pninlosa "EYtrafltinn. 1 Heppner Oregon. Gentry & Sharp - Tonsorial Artists , Your patronage solicited. Satisfaction guaranteed.. Hot and Cold Baths. Main Street, near Palace Hotel, Heppner. Nothing so Good ai a pure malt beverage to refresh one after a hard day'a 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 n at Setter'! Brewery, on upper Main St., Heppner. wnere an ice-cold cellar in the solid rock keeps talwari cooi. BARGAIN. For sale at $1100, 100 scree n the edge of Heppner. Town lote may be eold from it at once. Owner will give 1100 for the hay now growing on it. Apply Gaiet office. I, ... ' , ' 1 I j i . ! 1 1 'ill ell" (liiiiiiiiiMiMifmWliiiiiiiuiim'iM'iiuiii'ntii niiimmnit ni,imim Afegetable Preparationfor As similating Hie Food andKegula ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes DigestionheerPur ness andBestContains neither Opium.Morphine norliieraL not Narcotic. Aperfecl Remedy forConstipa tlon. Sour Stotnach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and Loss of Sleep." Facsimile Signature of , NEW YORK. TTT SXisfboFt or WRAPPER. Palace ' ?ifflSLl.f : 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.... First-Ciass ) Samil3 Rooms. For Business Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West.- evw-t For Fall and Winter Wear Al. LICHTENTHAL, . - M 1 ; 1 ! t The The Latest Styles of Footwear for . ' Men,8-Women and Children. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Old Stand, Main Street., " Repairing a Specialty. HOME INDUSTRY. FLOUR Heppner Flouring Mill Co. J Has secured the services of a Brut class miller, ' ; and keep on hand a full supply of FLOUR, PGRAHAM, : GERM : MEAL, VVHOLE WHEAT, BRAN and SHORTS ' Of the very best quality aud guarauteed to give satisfaction. , ,Tbe mill exchabges with the farmers, and Bolicits their patronage.; , : r W L. HOUSTON, Manager. Come to Morrow County for low-priced lands. Values are sure to double up. Nev er again will land sell so low as it does now. For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought .Bears Signatura: In Use For Over Thirty Years in THC CINTAUn COMPANY NCW VOHK CITY. J. W. MORROW. Proprietor. Strictly First-Class Pioneer Boot and Shoe Dealer of Heppner, has FLOUR cur THE COW WITH THE CALF. In the magnificent holiday edi tion ; of the Breeder's Gazette: Erroesth Seton-Thompson, the fa mous student of wild animals, tells thestory of the range cow in a most interesting way, and among other things says: One day as my wife and I were riding by a small bunch of stock on a western cattle range I said: "Now see how ' these animals will obey me." Then I addressed the cowb: "All you cows whose calves are hidden away m the grass- please1 come forward when I give thB signal," and I begaa a long, high pitched bleating, the note of a calf in dire distress , -. "Baa-a-Baa Baa-a-'V. and as I bawled', there' was a great oommotiou. Some of ths cows whose calves were with them snorted and looked about. Each calf ran to its mother, whereupon she became quiet; the steers tossed, their heads, looked about sus piciously and snorted, but settled back to feeding. Four cows, how ever, sniffed and looked quickly this way and that, then with heads and tails up and a great deal of angry action came trotting toward us. "There, said I, "these four have had calves bora - within the last few , days. The calves are not yet able to follow their moth ers so remain 'cached' in some sheltered hollow." As the angry cows came nearer, we turned and rode off, but I kept on bleating, and the oows contin ued to follow. We urged our horses to gallop. Three of the cows gave op the pursuit but the fourth followed for nearly half a mile,., part of the , time at a inn.. Then I ceased bleating the dis tress note, agd thir last cow, the youngest of the four, hesitated, snorted, looked back then to the right hand, and leaving us she set off at a trot for a distant line of willows, where undoubtedly her new-born, probably first-born, calf was concealed, or as the herdsmen say, "cached." ' The habits of the range cattle now are do doubt much like those of their wild ancestors. They wander about in small herds com posed of cows, calves, steers and a bull which is their master, though not necessarily their leader. When a strange herd approaches there is a good deal of bellowing and sniff ing; they all line up, the bull ad vances and very often a fight en- Rheumatism. Nobody knows all about it; and nothing, now known, will always cure it. ' Doctors try Scott's Emul sion of Cod Liver Oil, when they think it is caused by' im perfect digestion of food. You can do the same. It may or may not be caused by the failure of stomach and bowels to do their work. If it is, you will cure it; if not, you will do no harm. The way, to cure a disease is to stop its cause, and help the body get back to its habit of health. When Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil does that, it cures; when it don't, it don't cure. It never does harm. The genuine has this picture on it, take no other. If you have not . tried it, send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT &BOWNE, Chemists, t 400 Pearl St., N. Y. 50c, and $i.oo ; all druggists. sues between himself and the leader of the other band. These fights are seldom very serious. Once or twice I have seen the strange band led by a steer which came uf with a good deal of dem onstration toward the leader of the first band, but when he got near enough to see that his foe was a bull his courage forsook him. He ran away and his friends fol lowed him. Sometimes the bulls do not care to go with the other cattle. ,They are then peacably disposed, towards each other. In. deed it is quite a common thing to see-two bulls keep together like brothers. Whenever two large animals are seen together in. the distanoe with, none others near, it is taken for granted tbey are bulls. The old males whose, season of usefulness, is over are commonly solitary. The matins, season is rather ex tended,, doubtless much, more so than among their wild ancestors, fot domestication baa a singularly deranging effect on the reproduc tive functions. But late summer oouplings are apparently most usual, as well as most desirable, for the period of gestation, in the words of an old Yorkshire man, "three months back and three weeks forrard,' i. e., reckoning one year after the date of the union, and that brings the - calf in the middle or late springtime when food is abundant and the weather fine. When the cow feels that her time has come, she leaves the herd and hides in some sheltered place'l till the calf is born.' He arrives in1 the world nose first and looks much like a tightly bound little bundle, impossibly small one might think ever to grow into a huge bull, but bis mother gets up presently and proceeds to lick him all over, gen erally uttering a sort of hankering grunt, an expression of motherly love. Under the gentle message of her tongue, the little calf visibly expands. His hair fluffs out, hiB blood circulates more satis factorily. After he has been mas saged thoroughly from head to foot and this may take an hour or two he tries to get on his feet, hind legs "first, but his mother's massage becomes so vigorous just then, that be is commonly licked off his feet more than once. But he gets stronger and visibly bigger every hour and Boon succeeds in standing up, with his legs very widely spread. After the calf has been ut a few minutes, he seems possessed of his first idea, his miserable little tail is jerked and at the same time up goes his head under his mother's ohin, for she is still brushing him down. The calf feels that he has not got what he wanted and he does not even know what it was. He makes another butt upwards with his nose, again duplicating the action with bis tail , But again he aohioves nothing. A little later he tries further along and perhaps gets his head under his mother's shoulder where be takes sv mouth f ul of hair,, but lets it go., Instinct ively be works back till be gets to her udder and after a few utterly unreasoning jabs with his nose be mouths a teat, begins sucking and so enters on the second stage of life. ' At first of course the calf is un able to follow his mother. He is left in the hidiDg place where he lies still and , fiat, while she goes off to graze, rarely very far away, and always ready to return at the slightest appearance of danger. Usually her choice of the hiding place is so good that the calf es capes all enemies and gains strength enough to follow his mother about. But sometimes it happens that a watchful coyote marked the cow down in the thick et and knew by his Dose or by former experience that a little one was to be there brought into the world. He dare not go near the cow, but he does not go away for be is in the chronic hungry state of the coyote and bere is a delicious feast in sight, and in easy reach, too, if only the mother makes the mistake of giving bim a chance. He has a wholesome dread of her. He can only hang about, lick his chops and hope. Hours pass by and the coyote iagettiDg dreadfully hungry. - But be hangs around, keeping out of sight, believing his time will come. It was mere ac cident that first betrayed to him the calf a hiding place and there is one other cuanoe Deeded to bnog the calf within his power, that is the absence of the mother. There is only one thing that can bring this about, and that is the remote ness of the water supply. Kre many hours pass the mother most go to seek ber daily drink. Usually the water is near, but this time it happens to be over a mile away, After glancing about keenly for foes, a glance which the coyote es capes by crouching, the mother, not without some misgivings, sets out across the plain to the water. ing place, ine seen' yellow eyes of the coyote kindle as he sees this Wild Reports De- ned The Health Committee of the Heppner City Council hereby emphatically denies the report printed in the Pendleton East Orego nian to the effect that smallpox is epidemic here. Like . many other places all over the country, Heppner has been having its share of the so-called Filipino itch, and has had about a dozen cases, and has some now; but all are very light cases and are being strictly quar antined. There have been no deaths and no serious sickness, and most of the patients have been able to cook for themselves. We respectfully ask the outside world not to believe the wild reports about, smallpox being epidemic in Heppner. FRANK GILLIAM, Mayor. S. P. GARRIGUES, ; J. J. ROBERTS, J. R. SIMONS, : H ealth. Committee. ! SCHOOL MONEY. I give below a statement of the County and State school funds paid to the several districts of "Morrow county. funds apportioned Jan. 7, 1901. Columns No. 2 and No. 3 are statement of the entire amounts of state and county funds paid to the several districts for school year 1900-1901, column No. 2 including totals of state and county funds. . ,. . County Diet. No. Fund 1 923 44 2 f..., ....ioi.,.,.... 128 44 3 107 24 4 94 52 5 92 40 0 00 (14 11 . ......... 109 30 12 , i 340 80 14 00 60 15 73 32 10 83 02 17 115 72 19 119 80 21 83 92 22 71 20 24 92 40 25 58 48 26 119 90 27 60 00 ? 73 32 29 Ill 48 30 83 92 31 109 30 32 06 00 33..... 9 93 35 346 80 36 149 64 37 122 08 38. 40. 41 . 96 64 181 44 79 08 92 40 86 04 68 46 77 56 189 92 47 20 81 80 98 76 90 28 122 08 lOt) 36 42. 46. 49. 50. 51 . 62 . 5. 54. 65. 50. 59. 60 100 88 Total for school year 1900-1901... $10,102 13 $236U 12 112,469 25 Bespsctfully submitted, J. W. Shipley, County Supt. . for he knows that at last his' She is terribly distressed ; for a time chance, his only chapce, has comeJ!Hhe run8 Bbout' bawling In a peculiar, When she i. far in the UJ-. quits his lurking place, keeping well out of sight, trotting quickly along the hollow, straight for the hiding place of the calf. The little fellow sees or hears this approach of what is instinct, ively known for an enemy. It crouches closely, laying its head flat on the ground, and lies like a stone, showing how well the aoeient lesson has been learned. Bui concealment is hopeless, the savage enemy knows the very spot in the thicket where his unpro tected victim lies, and in a moment be bounds up from the grass and springs on it The calf realizes that hiding is no longer possible, it leaps to its shaky legs and bleats its loudest for its mother; "Baa, Baa, Baa, Baa," it cries as it vainly struggles to escape. In a moment the coyote has pulled it down. Other coyotes are likely to be near and in a few minutes tbey are tearing the warm bloody meat from the tender bones. The cow can hear a long way off the dis tressed cry of her calf and would at once come tearing to save it. Indeed, a strange cow or steer would also come at the cry and drive the coyote away. But the foe is a cunning one, he knows bow to bide his time and now there was none to interfere ; the cow comes back only to find a few bloody bones where the left her little pink-nosed baby, Column No. 1 is a statement of thecauntv column No. 1. Column No. 4 shows County Fund State Fund $613 88 ? 65 13 40 23 31 29 29 80 32 78 41 72 208 00 7 45 10 39 23 84 40 19 49 17 23 84 14 90 29 80 5 90 49 17 7 45 10 39 43 21 23 84 41 72 11 92 4 47 208 00 70 03 50 00 32 78 02 38 20 80 29 80 25 33 22 35 19 37 08 34 13 41 22 35 34 27 28 31 50 00 41 72 35 70 Total for 1900-1901 $2748 60 202 35' 226 85 187 55 181 00 104 10 233 40 067 00 82 75 122 05 154 80 253 05 260 15 154 80 115 60 181 00 76 20 260 15 82 75 122 05 239 05 154 80 233 40 102 40 23 22 067 00 817 85 272 70 194 10 456 10 141 70 180 50 161 35 134 91 135 15 482 30 86 07 148 25 200 65 174 45 272 70 233 40 207 20 $2134 72 237 186 62 150 26 , 151 20 161 32 191 68 758 40 75 30 105 60 130 90 206 80 210 98 130 00 100 60 151 20 70 24 210 08 75 30 105 60 190 74 130 96 191 (18 00 48 18 75 758 40 287 82 222 04 1H1 32 363 72 120 84 150 70 136 02 112 56 115 78 , 383 96 72 60 125 90 160 38 146 14 222 04 191 68 171 44 left undevoured, and this she stares at and licks repeatedly, Just as she used to do when it was alive. Then she will turn and walk away, looking back to see if it is not following her, and utter ing a low moaning bellaw at intervals. Any coyote she chances to see, she pursues with murderous intent, but they can laugh at her attempts to catch them. For some days she is in a very bad physical state; milk fever sets ia in some form tne mother craving far her little one is aggravated by ber con dition. She goes to every sasali calf she sees until near enough to smell it. Home cows at this time go away when they find the calf is not their own. Some will even give the unwefcema stranger a thrust with the horns, but some cows are disKsed to squander the unclaimed love on any little one, aad suckle it and thus find both mental and physical comfort in mothering. During the next few days she goes back many times to look at and hunger orer the remains, hut time does ita work tiiickly with her. The first day she was there continually, the next the mother was at the tragic spot every hour or so, by the end of a week the head and bones have loet all original semblance; then direct appeal is goae, and their memory fading. Nature has sent physical easo, the little one is for gotten ; but from that time on the heart of the mother Ih ever liable to he stirred to fury by tlmt high-pitched HhriH"liaa," the bleat of a ralf in terror of its life, and that was the bleat that I nsed that day to soparate the mother cows from the rest of the herd.