The Kind You Havo Always Bought, and which has been in wse for over 30 yenrs, has borne the signature of - and has been made under his per- fT j47?2ir sonal supervision since its Infancy Lafyf, low no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and" Just-as-grood"are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children Experience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria 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 Fererishness. 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 CASTORIA ALWAYS I Bears the The KM You Have Always Bought In Use For Over 30 Years. THC CCNTftUN COHMNT, TT MURRAY TRICT, NM YOUR CITT. r DOLPHINS. The Specie That Play Around the Shores of Brittany. Dolphin hunting as a sport Is old to the Maloulns. the Inhabitants of St Malo. Several species of dolphins are to be met with near the shores of Brit tany. The largest Is known to science as Delphinus delphls and differs from other varieties by its long jaws, very like the beak of a big bird, and armed with abotit sixty teeth as hard and sharp as steel. Its length may reach nine feet, and It weighs from 300 to 400 pounds. A swift swimmer, it preys on the schools of herrings, fol lowing them right up to the Scottish waters. In spite of its greed it Is noted for its mild temper andfre quently amuses itself by playing around ships in the open sea. Then there is the Delphinus tursio, or souf fleur. This is smaller, and its beak is shorter, though armed with strong, powerful teeth that enable it to attack a big fish, pinning it down to the rocks with such force that its nose is often deeply marked with numerous cuts. This dolphin hates the very sight of a ship and never comes close to one. Finally there is the porpoise, or mar couin, the smallest species of the genus. Much sport may be obtained tiy hunting these various dolphins. "Wide World Magazine. 1 The Difference. Marriage is a good thing for single tnen," said the bridegroom elect "Hum! Yes," remarked Mr. Hen peck, "for single men only." New 5ork Times. The disappointment of manhood suc ceeds the delusion of youth. Disraeli. A pjrt fcotuee'ef GENUINE gpCASf ' CYRUS NOBLE direct to yon t VJ Hi all charte paid to the near V T t railroad expre -efflca. You must have the beit guaranteed to be absolutely pure aged in wood and We b"eCVRUS NOBLE direct from the distiller have bought it for 44 year. Don't let them sell you something else " just as good." ..,,..' Buy the best it's the cheapest in the long run. Bottled by the distiller. Guaranteed 10 the United States Government and to you to contain nothing except pure straight aged whiskey. . For the 6rst lime since 1864 (44 years) in such sections as the public it unable to t purchase CYRUS NOBLE we will sell you direct 4 quart bottle, for $4.90; No danger ol re6lled bottles but the GENUINE CY RUS NOBLE the best , ....Ho ihi- Ket cellinl brand in the whole world. W. J. VAN SCHUYVER & CO.. 1 05-1 07 Second Street, Portland, Ore. , ESTABLISHED m HETEHENCE ANY SANK OR TRUST COMPANY M OREGON II CUT T THIS UMC AMO MAIL TO-O.T "4 W. J. Van Schuyrer & Co, rwtM Or,. Endow) plox find $4.90 lor wiack ploM tcad GENUINE CYRUS NOBLE, p. a Ada 3HS2 Signature of HIS UMBRELLA. It Was the Cauee of Airing Family Secrets In Public A young man was riding in an omni bus. He took the corner seat and held in his hand an umbrella which had been given him as a birthday present. On the seat facing him was a lady with a precocious boy, evidently about five years old. The youngster regarded the young man with attention for a few moments, and then his eyes wandered to the umbrella. He gazed at It In silence for a, second; then he wriggled in his seat clapped his hands and shouted: "Oh, mamma, don't that look like pa pa's umbrella?" "Hush, hush, my child!" said the mother, patting the prodigy on the head. "Papa was looking for his umbrella this morning, mamma," continued the child wonder. "Yes, yes, but he found it," said the toother hurriedly, as the conversation was becoming of interest to the occu pants of the seats. "Why, mamma," continued the youngster, "you know he didn't You told him that he didn't know enough to keep an umbrella. Why, mamma" At this stage the small boy was car ried howling from the bus. Pearson's Weekly. " He Mingled.' "Did you meet any of the members of the nobility when you were in Europe 7' asked Miss Gushleigh. "Sure. I sat between an earl and viscount at a prize fight one evening." Chicago Record-Herald. aw at one by expraat pKpaid. four quart. ON A MODERN WARSHIP. The Feelings of a Commander De acribed by Himself. How the commander of a modern big American battleship can feel is dis closed in the following, taken from a letter written by such nn officer: "There are more than 000 men on this ship, uud on the theory that au official of the government is a servant of the people I am the servant of these 000 men and am bound to see that they are kept in food and clothing and baseball bats and abundantly supplied with occupation. Perhaps 1 should feel more Independent if I didn't have to listen respectfully to the orderly every time he comes in and makes one of his infinitely numerous reports aud put men In jail when I don't want to. "Some of these 000 men look more dignified and independent than I feel. 1 wonder whether I look dignified and independent.' I suppose I ought to do so, for to swing a steel mass 504 feet longsuecessfully around like monsters and to make 15,000 tons writhe around the corners of narrow channels Is something of an art, after all, and one not possessed by many of the inhabit ants of the globe. "With all that swinging of steel monsters around there go the responsi bility and the knowledge that if the ship runs aground the whole civilized world will be acquainted with it in side of twenty-four hours." DEADLY HORNETS. The Ones That Buzzed About the Young Soldier's Ears. A great general was taking his regi ment into action. He sent forward a detail of men to make gaps in a rail fence to avoid the heavy loss sure to result if the whole body of men paused to tear it down. The coolest and finest man in the de tail was a young soldier who had never been under fire before. When he began pulling down the fence he fancied he had disturbed a nest of hornets, as he thought he heard them singing fiercely about his ears. But the lad was not going to run from hornets when there was more serious business ahead. Ignoring the angry insects, he open ed the fence and rejoined the regiment without being stung. In a day or .two he vas surprised to hear that he was to be promoted. "But," he said modestly, "I don't think I deserve promotion over the oth ers." "My boy," replied t the general', "I saw you pall down that fence. You were the coolest man .under fire I ever sawT The man gasped, stared and turned pale. "What!" he exclaimed, regardless of grammar. "Was them wasps bullets?" Miners on the Corner. "Those men," said Sherlock-Holmes, "are colliers. You can tell It by their attitude." The men, very clean in white shirts and black overcoats, squatted on their heels on a sunny corner. "Any other men," continued Holmes, "would stand. They would lean against the lamppost or the wooden Indian of the tobacconist. But these men, in the low galleries or tunnels of coal mines, for lack of space must work seated on their heels squatting, as we say. And this position, which would be come a .torture to you or me in five minutes, is to them, from long usage, comfortable and customary. It is their favorite position at all times. "Hence when you see men idling on their heels on the street corners you can always set them down as miners. If they are bowlegged the case against them is doubly strong." Buffalo Ex press. The Lady Was Not the Ghost. An Irish family once had a ghost so troublesome that they sent for detec tives. One of these men late at night fell asleep in his chair. The lady of the house chanced to come Into the room and could not resist the tempta tion to groan and rattle her keys. She had never played ghost before. It was momentary indiscretion. But the po liceman did not and could hardly be expected to believe this. He Bald It was hardly worth while to bring him from Dublin, and he withdrew in dudg eon. Yet the lady was not really'the ghost. He was sulking in retirement; hence doubt has been cast on the ghosts of haunted houses even among reflecting minds. London News. Civil Service In England and America. The difference between the civil service examination in England and In America Is important and to the advantage of the English. In the United States the object is almost ea tlrely to discover the immediate fit ness of the candidates for the work they are expected to do. In England the object in most cases Is to measure what their ability to do the work will be after thoy have learned It. From "The. Gov.erument of England," by A. NOTICE FOR PCBLICATIOX. (Isolated Tract.) Public Land Sale. Serial No. CIR TJnitad SUtea Land Oflice. The Dalle, OrrgOn Apnl 9, 1P09. Notlre in hereby given that, directed by the Commisftiorif r of the General Land Office, under proTinion of Act of CongrpM approved Jine 27, lJ0fi. Public No. 303, we will offer at public wile to the nlRhent bidder, at 9-30 o'clock a. m. on the l!Hh day of May, 1809 next, at this office, the following ;tract of land to wit: NK4 c. 25. tp.2 8. R.24 E. and lot i. BEJ4 NWl NWt SEH wm. SO tp. 1 8 R 25 E. W. M. Any perftoDi claiming adversely the above described lnd are aWised to fil thir claim, or objection, on or before tie day above desig nated for Mia. Apr 15 May 2U C. W. HOOBK. Register. FOLEYSIflDIfEYCUIlE Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right i ETIQUETTE. An Old Fashioned Man Frees His Mind About Its Absurdities. "Whether to eat fish with a fish knife and fork or a fork and a bit of bread, whether to serve champagne in a tumbler or a goblet It is quite ab surd to regard one of those courses as right uud the oilier as wrong and to admire or despise a person according ly. The average rule of etiquette has nothing to do with courtesy, with good breeding, and It Is no criterion of courtesy cr of good breeding. " The speaker, an old fashioned gen tleman from the country, knotted the ends of his napkin more firmly about his neck. "Smile at me. nephews and .nieces," he resumed, "bo-aue I tuck my nap kin under my elthi. Yet why should I spoil my black broadcloth coat with turkey stains or smears of cranberry sauce? It is a rule of etiquette, you say, tliat the napkin may only be placed across the knee au absurd, ephemeral rule! "It was a rule of etiquette in France during the reign of 'Le Koi Soldi,' the great Louis XIV., that when the king visited a sld; subject the king, too, must lie down in a bed, on the ground that it would never do for a subject to maintain a more Informal attitude than his naster during the audience. Louis XIV., visiting the Marshal de Villars after Malplaquet, lay in a bed beside the suffering soldier in that way. "Behold the absurdities of etiquette and let me do with my napkin what I please." New Orleans Times-Democrat. THE FOREIGN LEGION. A Peculiar EscJy of Fighters In the French Army. The French foreign legion Is a het erogeneous organization. It is com posed of disappointed men of every country political refugees, military fugitives. In fact, all varieties of the world's restless citizens go to make up this wonderful mongrel fighting machine. "Xo questions asked" might well be the regimental motto. Each man signing his bond of service sells his soul for five years at the wage of 1 sou (about 1 cent) per day. The officers are French, but the men hail from everywhere and nowhere. Under various names the French le gion has existed since the eighteenth century and was finally constituted as at present in 1830. It consists of twelve battalions divided Into two regiments, mustering a total strength of 12000 men. Eight thousand are kept In the far east, the remainder serving in northern Africa. In the early days the regiments were divided into "na tional sections," men from the same country being kept together. This resulted, however, in continual racial disputes, and each company con sequently was given a cosmopolitan composition. Since its formation the officials have guarded closely against desertions, and as the legion only serves in French colonial territory where the centers are remote and transportation is difficult a successful desertion is a rare feat. Chicago News. A Dickens Manuscript. H. F. Dickens, K. C, tells an inter esting story concerning the original manuscript of his father's famous "Carol." The novelist presented the MS. to Thomas Milton, an old school fellow. In 1875 Mr. Milton sold it to Francis Harvey, a bookseller, for 50. Then it passed into the hands of George Churchill, an enthusiastic au tograph collector. Mr. Churchill treas ured it until 1882, when circumstances compelled him to part with it. After photographing every page of it, it was sold to Mr. Bennett, a Birmingham bookseller and curio dealer, who eventually found a purchaser, who readily signed a check for 200 for it Finally it was bought by Stuart M. Samuel of Kensington Palace Gardens for 300, who is said to still retain the precious document. London Tit-Bits. A Slight Misunderstanding. Little Helen Bentley of Los Angeles, aged five, dearly loves her grandma, who has been living with her and her parents. Becently grandma went to Seattle for a visit and caught cold on the way. When she arrived there, she wrote back to Helen's parents that she had reached, Seattle, but had had a hard fight wit the grip. Helen want ed to hear what grandma had to say, and the letter was read to her. Soon afterward she saw one of her neigh bors and exclaimed: "Oh, Mrs. Smith, we've had a letter from grandma. She got to Seattle all right, but she had a terrible fight with her valise!" Los Angeles Times. What Counts In a Story. As I heard a fatuous raconteur tell ing a story I had heard In one form or another for many years I could not but recall the statement of some one to the offect that there are but five stories extant and that all wo have are merely variations from the original five. As General Taylor, who is some thing cf a story telcr himself, puts it: "The Ktory doesn't amount to any thing. It's the edition that counts." Boston nerald. Cures Biliousness, Sick Headache, Sour Stom ach, Torpid Liver and Chronic SrSEr Pleasant Plan for Summer Comfort Don't add the hentofa kitchen fire to the sufficient discomfort of hot weather. Use a New Perfection Wick Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove und cook in corn fort. With a "New Perfection" Oil Stove the preparation of daily meals, or the big weekly "baking," is done without rais ing the temperature perceptibly above that of anv other room in the house. Another great advantage of the NEW PIMECTIOR! Wick is its handsome CABINET TOP, which gives it every convenience of the modern steel range. Has an ample top shelf for warming plates and keeping cooked food hot, drop shelves for holding small cooking utensils, and is even fitted with racks for towels. Made in three sizes, and can be had at your dealer The Eating the Pie. , "I remember one man from my home town," a western senator said recent ly, "in the good old days before civil service examinations, whose dream of earthly attainment was a government place. When his party was finally successful he immediately set out for Washington and was 'on the Job' long before the 4th of March, but there seemed to be a hitch somewhere. All through the spring be was about town. By June he was seedy, but still ap peared to be 'gam-' Finally I found him in the gallery of the senate cham ber apparently endeavoring to kill time. "'Well, have you given It up? I asked, trying to be sympathetic. " 'Oh, I got the Job, all j right.' be re plied, with a satisfied smile. 'I'm working now.' "Success Magazine. Uncertain. The secretary of one of the college classes at Princeton, in sending out each year a list of questions to be an swered by members of the class, in order that the results may be duly tab ulated and set forth in the university annual, Is said always to Include in his list this question: "Are you en gaged?" It would seem that one of the mem bers was cursed with doubt In this re spect, for In the blank space given over to ttm query mentioned he made his return as follows: "Do not know. Am awaiting letter." Harper's Magazine. Transformation. ' Mr. Fred Stone, the singing come dian, and Mr. Eugene Wood.' the writ er, met on, Broadway recently. They stopped for a moment to exchange a few cheerful views, when a woman in a particularly noticeable gown passed. Simultaneously Wood turned to Stone, Stone turned to Wood, then both turn ed to rubber. Everybody's. - Patchwork Education. What the modern child lacks most is the power of observation. He is satu rated with smatterings of every kind of knowledge, lives a strenuous life and cannot find time for observation and assimilation. Madrid Mundo. The Last Word. She And do you believe that a wo man always turns to the last page-first when she picks up a book? He Well, I have no reason to doubt it I know It Is the nature of the fair sex to want the last word. Pick-Me-Up. Sunday's Journey. "Father," said little Rollo, "what is meant by 'a Sabbath day's Journey?" " "I am afraid, my son, that In too many cases it means twice around the golf "links." Washington Star. A HTnt. ' "You seem to be very fond of your dolly," remarked the visitor, "Yes." replied small Margie. "She's so different from most people. She never interrupts me when I'm talk ing." Chicago News. Dwell not too long upon sports, for as thoy refresh a man that is weary so they weary a nan that is refreshed. Fuller. OASTORIA. Sean the ItiB Kind You Have Always Bought Laxative Fruit Syrup $2r Por Sole y Hloou'ii Drue Componyi Blue Flame Oil Cook-Stove with or without cabinet J. op. ii not s address our nearest agency. perfect istion r high or low is therefore free from disigreeable odor and can not smoke, tare, convenient, ornamental me iaeai iignu ( If not at your dealer's address our nearest agency. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Incorporated) a recugnisea authority The Weekly Oreaonuut. Sam E. VanVactor. ATTORNEY AT LAW. Offlce on west end of May Street Heppner Oregon. C. E. WOODSON. ATTORN EY-AT-L AW Office In Palace Hotel Heppner, Oregon E. J. KELLER Auctioneer Out of town sales promptly attended to. Charges very reasonable.; Ione, - Oregow. W. L. SMITH, ABSTRACTER. Only complete set of abstrsoi books in Morrow county. Hkppneb, Obboon. DR. ALEXANDER REID THYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office Morrow Building Residence Church street Calls received at Patterson's Drug Store- Frank B. Kistner PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in Patterson A Son's drugstore Residence in Morrow building over Patterson A Son's Drugstore. R. W. HICK0K Grainbroker . Heppner, - Oregon S. E. Notson ATTORNEY AT LAW. Offlce in Odd Fellows Bld Heppner, Oregon. DR. METZLER. DENTIST Located in Odd Fellows building. Rooms 5 and 6. DR. Al. A. LEACH DENTIST Permanently located iD Heppner. Office in the new Fair building. Gas ad ministered. N. E. WINNARD, Al. D. FMY8ICIAN A: M ft;l:o Graduate of: Lenox C( liege, 188. Chicago Homeopathic MedCollege 1890. Rusk Medical College, 1892. Cleanses the system thoroughly and clears sallow complexions of