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About East Oregon herald. (Burns, Grant County, Or.) 1887-1896 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 21, 1889)
O regon H erald E ast BURNS, GRANT COUNTY, OREGON,^THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1889. o. 18. $2.BO a Year. east and runs very nearly straight ly 16^\lra8s. red-top, 31 in. liight, BURNS ADVERTISEMENTS. to the water, a distance of j mile ! 150 spear» to single root, or from from its mouth. It will average .50 • one seed; 30 acres in. feet wide and 20 feet high and is VERY THURSDAY F. W. K itterbusch : near Saddle THE TOWN OF BURNS ..e of Its Natural Advantage» Wa I Some very uniform in its structure, the Buttes; July 20; Barley 41 inches ter, Soil, Climate, »ml Produc GRANT CO. OREGON. I l_. walls running up about 6 feet on I , high; a small piece put in to test tion!« ThouHanda of AS IT IS VOICED BY THE HERALD. Acres Open for either side, and then commence to agricultural value of bottom of the Settlement. and P roprietor . arch over, and certainly form the slough on swamped land. BUSINESS MEN ABROAD BY LOOKING OVER ITS COLUMNS WILL SRE THAT finest arch in the whole fitmily of J ohn A dams . Near Burns; Ju-! Burns cuntsius ION RATES: CHEAP HOME. caves that were ever discovered. (ly 24; Oats, 78 in. high, Wheat, 60: 1 newspaper; 1 hotel: 1 brewery; 1 undertaker; 1 meat market; J lawyen: 3 physicians It is grand almost -beyond de in., and Barley, 40 in. in hight. I I surveyor; 1 land agent; 1 drugstore; 1 jeweler; Lblacksmith; 1 livery stable: 2 genera! mer scription, and rivals Different Mani-: S imon L ewis , Silver creek, July chandise stores; 1 hardware store; I saw-mill; F"MRRenter; 1 saddled: harness shop; 1 gro moth cave in its smoothness of 30, wheat 40 inches, with full heads cery store. Also, 1 Odd Fellows lodge; 1 reading mom; 1 school; 1 church. EM^Mail a copy of T he H erald to Advertise your town, in the East. •APER LAWN. character and uniformity. The of fine large grains. required to give notice by first 250 yards the bottom is as Barley 58 inches high. paper does not answer the her does not take his paper smooth as a floor, then are found fruit trees M rs . S imon L ewis , July 30 13 the reason for its not being THE SECOND YEAR OF to do so makes the post- A llailrtMul, County-Seat, and Iutnd- and ornamental shrubs were plant piles of rubbish or debris that have arge yellows beets, the largest one Ofliee. i the publisher for payment accumulated by falling from the being 9 inches in length and 14 ed freely by farmers in the spring; orders his paper dlscon- all arrearages, or the Pub- Visit the Herald Office to Bee Rampies the settings last fall survived the . ceiling above, 100 yards or so apart, inches in circumference; the flavor to send it until payment is of Products. severest winter (1888), that Har j the last one being something over excellent. e whole amount whether it Ice or not. There cau be [The two large editions of T he H erald con ney valley, in fact, that East Ore , 100 yards from water. M rs . T. J. S hields , Silver creek, nee till payment is made, taining the Harnev Valley advertisement being There is no diilicultj- K'a.:h.:!;g i July 30, cucumbers of good sixe, As an ho takes a paper from the exhausted, to meet the demand we republish in gon has ever known irectcd to his name or au- our regular edition, and hope the water, it runs back on either eM<‘h reader agricultural I crisp and tender, Began on Thursday, November 29, 1888. i has subscribed or uot. is will mark the article and mall bis copy to a region it will be readily seen that 1 side in a trough from the main pool1 M aupin B ros ., one mile north of I I friend iu the East.] Ry ! the distance of 100 feet, settling Burns, Aug. 2d, barley 44 inches, orders his paper stopped the Yalley offers inducements rare d the Publisher continues Now is the Time to Subscribe Harney Valley in Grant county, ly excelled. The farmers who have down on either side, leaving the er is bound to pay for it if with fine head of grain; 18 acres in. ipostoftice. This proceeds Oregon, embraces an area of 2,400 i sowed grain this year will be able floor crowning. man must pay for what he S. J. M othershead .—Aug. 4, square miles, or 1,536,000 square to dispose of it at home, as a good j The water is remarkably clear; l timothy 43 inches long, and appar e decided that refusing to acres of land, bounded on every side AND TO RENEW EXPIRING SUBSCRIPTIONS. one can see the sand in tie imttoni ently not nearly grown. MILL I periodicals from the post ern uncalled for, without I by mountain ranges, and lofty ele-1 has been erected at the depth of 4 feet, uid it ap at considerable C has . Z iegler .—Poison creek, j is prims facia evidence of vations, and is an almost entirely expense in the Valley, near Burns, pears to have no outlet, aiit is per i level plain, plentifully watered by by N. Brown. A new merchant and fectly still and quiet; it is good Aug. 8, White Sheaf Australian I wheat, 53 inches high, with heads | CLUB LIST: the grist mill is a guarantee that the ■ drinking water. averaging 5 inches in length, full 15.75 Ury, oue year BILVIES AND BI.ITZEN RIVERS This wonderful curiosity has to of large grains; 6 aerees in; he is 4.75 lias, “ — industrious farmer will be able to —> and their tributaries. ■ Magazine, one year ■ 3.75 The former be seen to be fully appreciated. It dispose of surplus grain. And as a 8.75 Magazine “ | raising it for seed. 3.75 I has its source in the spurs of the Lady’s Book •* is truly of basalt formatbn and is STOCK-RAISING A. H ills , of Poison Creek, Aug. | 4.00 lore “ __ . •»- I Blue mountains, south of the John llustrated Newspaper 5.75 country it cannot be surpassed, quartenary, the walls aie honey ' 11th, Chili Club wheat, 48 inches I 4.75 Day river, flows a general southerly Fupulur Monthly since its water, grass, and salubri combed in majiy places; tie wall on long, with large full heads; 14 acres Is lhe representative, at all times, of the Interests of the People 8.75 Unday Magazine 3 75 course, passing down the cen er of Magazine ous climate takes horses, cattle, the south side sets on a horizontal j in; not irrigated. At all times advocating measures that look to the “greatest good to 3.00 £aH . 6 00 Harney valley, and empties into sheep and hogs throughout the year basement of eruptive rocks. the greatest number,” in accordance with the principles of Democracy Red clover, 42 inches high; very , 3 25 Examiner.............. Lakes Harney and Malheur. It is (from January 1 to __________ z | This magnificent cave has evi- I l fine. December 31), 6.00 laminer 8.25 a rapidly flowing stream, about 80 without grail/ or anv other than dently been used in time by the In New York World 3 00 ■ree Frets Manifold C L'yelopedia,. .2.90 miles long, and contains every kind wild grass feeding, and when the dians as a fortification; the en- 20 Books Almost Given Away. Bluiue after r Vol. I, 55 cents; , of fish, including the salmon trout, winter is milderthan common, stock trance has been walled up with volume, postage. AS A LOCAL NEWSPAPER, I and other varieties of game fish. looks better in early spring than in stone, and there are, also, tvo walls Can take advantage of the follow-, ito above works can be ex The Dunder-and-Blitzen river, or ing good thing: *ie Reading Room. Eastern localities where they are or breastworks on the inside, run T he II erai . d acknowledges no superior in Eastern Oregon. It pointe “Blitzen,” as it is shortened by com grain-fed during the winter; and the i ning from each corner of the en- T he H erald and 20 complete with pride to its well-tilled columns the past year, and to its evident mon usage, is about 50 miles in texture and flavor of the meats trance diagonally near the center stories by the best authors for $2.70, progressive influence upon the prosperity of the great Harney valley. >f periodicals are solicited length, flows in a northerly direc compare favorably with the best in some 50 feet long; this was for a or less than the regular delinquent As in the past so in the future it will strive to make prominent note B, a copy of their work for on—We file, and bind the tion and also empties into the lakes. the market. There is no room for second defense in case they were price of T he H erald alone, under of every enterprise calculated to benefit the people; to record every y half-volume, and pay for These rivers and their numerous certain conditions: large stock-raisers, as the territory driven back from the moutn. advance made in showing up the resources of the Valley; to advocate tut. ' tributaries have their water sheds is fully taken up by three or four __ . of j 1st. If you nrc in debt to us for Law and Order under all circumstances; to frown upon all attempts Around ... and above the mouth IING RATES. within the county, and the lakes firms that hold all available ranges, the cave there are considerable fine last year’s subscription, you can I to foment discord among the people in the interest of any individual, having no outlet, serve to furnish but the stock such as is commonly chippings where the aborigines have I pay $2.70, which settles your bill clique or faction; to give the news of the day impartially and as subterranean irrigation to the whole raised by farmert, will do well. The sharpened their stone iiHphmients I for 1888 and gives you the 20 books. fully as industrious etlbrt and the aid of friends may enable us to valley. increase in population j which were made out of obsidian, 2d. If you have already paid : obtain it; io give all the Local and Personal gossip of our section, LAKES HARNEY AND MALHEUR ! your subscription in advance, then suitable for publication, with all else of interest in this department; during the past two years has been or volcanic glass. cover an area of more than 150 rapid, and is of that most desirable I think that the water is in the get us a new subscriber at $2.50, squa e miles, and are connected by class in an agricultural region, viz: I end of the cave, but can not tell cash paid, and you shall have the IT WILL BE AN EPITOMIZED HISTORY OF THE VALLEY. ion to all yearly ad ver« a channel about 20 yards wide and the small farmer whose industry without further exploring, or write to Publisher. 20 books. They receive the produces the best of grain, stock. extra, according to space; 200 yards long. I was informed by two parties J 3d. If you have already paid admitted. waters of both Silvias and Blitzen and living. The houses and barns ; that fish have been caught in the vpe all our advertisements your subscription for the past year Four publications, fl each. rivers, but have no outlet and never are generally frame; corrals and cave that were of blue color and and for the present, then pay $2.50 I Who know that in the rapid growth and wide proclamation of the Being situated on a level other enclosures, are rail and wire ' eyeless. d local columns, 10c a line. overflow. in advance for 1890 and you can advantages of Harney Valley lies their own best road to prosperity , and death an noun ce- plain, and having low shores, these fencing; abundant water supplies ” ' i is aMtrtteu m news. get the 20 books. lakes have not such picturesque from wells of living water, which is j products exhibited this season . cred to religious, social, 4th. If you owe $3.00 on last . Should Subscribe for the Herald Themselves, scenery as Crater Lake, to recom reached at a uniform depth of 6ix As no fair is held in this valley year’s subscription and have not mend them to tourists, but their to fifteen feet. AND SEND EXTRA COPIES TO EASTERN FRIENDS. for the public exhibition of the I ! settled for this year’s, then come! SIGN ADVERTISERS. value to farmers is inestimable. MAIL AND RAILROAD FACILITIES. growth and excellence of its pro in at once and by paying $5.00 you i soliciting your patrouagc Right here, however, permit us to Hir readers p< sted aa to the Harney valley has a tri-weekly ductions, T he H erald opened a col-. ie firms to deal with, cor will get receipts for 1888 nnd 1889 I suved by referring to the mention a natural attraction pos mail-service from the four points of umn to .ill producers, farmers and | 1 I based upou our circula- sessed by lands adjacent to these the compass, there being a general __ __................. .. ............. stockmen, in which to give a writ-! and get the 20 books besides. niug counties: lakes that will draw hundreds of Good literature is good company I distributing office at Burns. Ship- i ten "description" of aR that final ads. at no price. “I was The East Oregon Herald |at less than 10 cents per excursionists from the East in the ping is done at present at Baker worthy of mention. Monstrosities __ ______ in the household, and T he H erald ; rly, or 20 cents, transient, near future: Standing in the door City, Huntington, and Ontario. All ghould and not Biiuuiu be MV classed vianseu as ub such, buvii , unu uvt as soon as the late political cam H rs successfully maintained itself through an ordeal of local opposi 1 32 extra charge per ln- ways of farm houses about sunrise, the family supplies, necessaries, and j as samples. This elicited the fol- i paign closed set to work to secure tion, vindictive and unscrupulous to a degree seldom equalled in Lsitiou a atanuing reader from all the leading publications in d. each w eek is ruu in w ith distant objects, towns, farms, moun luxuries, common to Eastern towns. ' 1 lowing response: tain peaks, and bands of cattle and are abundantly furnished by the the country, East and West, advan country journalism; has advocated unflinchingly the rights of all M rs . I one W hitino . — Near Bums horses grazing on the ranges, are general merchandise stores at rea tages for its readers. Having done , the people of East Oregon generally and Harney Valley especially B WORK June 20: Barley, six acres, sown on our part, it only remains for them against the machinations of all organzed jietty cliques that Bought pictured on the atmosphere and sonable rates. tfo® executed with neatness ground under cultivation the past to help themselves from what is I by fraudulent misrepresentation to advance the private interests of a rise up from the ground like magic; ble rates. BURNS AND HARNEY years; stalks (exclusive of roots) ! offered now, as the subscription sea ; few at the expense of the ninny. Believing that “The sober Becond Pamphlets and these white representations are are the two principal towns of liar- 13 [ Letter Beads, ¡thought of the people is always right and always effective,” and that so truly drawn that a member of a ney valley, where, as will lie seen 42 inches in length, heads well son will soon close. Cards, Tickets, Dodgers, Etc. ¡“Truth is mighty and will prevail,” T he H erald has steadfastly fol- family living several miles away by our advertising columns, about' filled, grain fine and large; planted It is not every country paper that I lowed the right , and the people have given it a moral and material in April. regularly on fl’e for re- from home, can distinguish the per all lines of business are near equal is favored by leading publishing sup|Mirt that renders its permanency beyond question. As it han R»well Newspaper Ad- Barley planted late, in April, on re iJK sons of the family as they walk ittlice st.. New York. to the present demand—teachers, ■ 1 houses as T he H erald has been, worked indefatigably and unselfishly in tbe interest of the jieople, it about the yard: as brother from fa lawyers, doctors, printers, druggists, new ground, 12 inches high. and it is so favored because it is re now asks for patronage that will yield something more than a bare M rs . A lmeda S tenger . — Burns, ther, or mother from sister.' merchants, carpenters, surveyors, il I » vy ixi ö j _ _ _ rnciAL I RECTORY. cognized as a vigorous worker for THE SOIL AND CLIMATE June 22: Barley, sowed last year, its local interests, political, religious existence. It has become valuable to all as a general newspaper, and blacksmiths, butchers, saddlers i ’ «»a» 14 » «va» 4«»«1 on cultivated ground; 36 inches and moral. of Harney valley are an exact coun grocers, builders, jewelers, etc. Grover Cleveland Is now a fixed Institution of the Valley. Each of these two towns is the ' high; stalk bulky, grain well filled. Vanrancy terpart of that of Umatilla county. Thue. F. Bayard Alfalfa, cut above the grourd; A BIrd’eaye View of the World. Oregon, the best wheat-growing center of the section of the valley . ( haa. K. Fairchild W.T. Vilas county in the state. Very little has contiguous, and each has its local, fine, strong, in blossom, 27 inches There is a wide spread demand by al) readers Wro. C. Endicott T he E ast P regon h eraild | ' * * for a work that shall furnish com ! and ' students high. W. C. Whitney been done towards wheat-raising value, that will serve in the future ; pactly »nd attractively, all the essential facts I I Don M. Dickinson anti statistics of the different regions of the | A. J. B rown . — Near Harney. June A. II. Garland here, as yet, but those have been to render ah calthy degree of com-. world and the races inhabiting it All this in ; | 23: Alfalfa, in blossom, average formation haa been industriously sought, care-' successful tluft tried it. Wheat petition between them. BEGOR: fully tested and proved, and is brilliantly told I J. N. Dolph, finds a ready home market at 5 The expectations of the ambi- , stand 38 inches high, in one haudy au<l haudaome volume by Ones* lias, from the initial number to the present, jiersistently and impres | J. II. Mitchel), cents a pound—$3 per bushel. Oats tious advocates of the natural ad- D r . T. V. B. E mrree .—Near ime Reclua, the famous French geographer and sively maintained that the Harney country was one of the finest Binger Hermann, Sylvester Pen noy er. and barley grow equally well, and vantages offered the people by Har- Harney; June 23: Lettuce, Oak savant. Geo. W. McBride. The author has really succeeded to a surpria- agricultural regions in the Union, needing only the presence of indus G. W. W ebb, degree in aurumpliahiug his purpose it is trious farmers to develop its wonderful resources. bring 3 to 4$ cents per pound. Al ney valley will be realized in less Leaf variety; root 4 inches around; ing To prove the truth J. B. McElroy, a wonderful book and there is none like it it falfa anti red clover grow luxuri than twelve months by the estab- leaves green and brown variegated; is just what its title represents it to l»e— a lxM»k of the strong language in its columns, the proprietor gave up a part Frank l'akei ) R S. Strahan, around the world—but it is the world seen antly; timothy and red-top thrive lishment of a stalks white, crisp and tender; all . } Wm. I*. I-ord, through eyes of the largest intelligence and de of his office room to the exhibition of the products of the Valley, ) W. W. Thayer, with Inimitable vigor, freshucas and and urgently asked for specimens cf actual growth and for everybody finely. Pasturage is excellent; nat new land office measured 20 inches straight across scribed grace, combined with studious and al district : ural grass abundant, and is cut for in Harney valley, where there are the face of the head from tip to tip picturesque Attached to each specimen was the name painstaking accuracy The result is the story to call and inspect them. J A F ee , the world. The more the volume is looked hay that sells nt $12 and $18 per lands of tbe the public domain as fine of outside leaves (exclusive of Of This was a L. R and . into the greater in the sense of its wide scope of the producer, often with the mode of cultivation. aud its masterly preparation read tangible, practical presentation of the matter, which any one could ton in the winter. All cereal crops as those already taken up by the ground leaves.) ------------- 4. -- Attractive -- ° u i i . . . ing for the family gathered around the evening first-comers, sufficient to furnish verify. How successful this movement has been, hundreds can testify. ¡Second head, laiue variety, 10 1 fer'eui it is ala.! a handy b«N>k fur Immediate re G. W. G ilham thrive • • «__ ..... .. llm I.,»nan 11II tn i liata nornau ’ e t..r for"tl7r bus> man urtiourmil.f who would i Hluminata N R M axey WITHOUT IRRIGATION. thousands of families with homes. inrhofl 1I1V1ICB uvruB». bi» daily news with more accurate information All T he H erald asks in return for its efforts to serve the |>eople, is . P hil . M etc mar In winter the weather is cold but Also, a county-seat for N. H. B oley TllOfl. H askell .—One mile of In brief, a great deal of hard work, pninauk- an increase of public patronage—a modest request when it is consid T air 1C 1 U. ing. and skill have gone into thia work, which I J. IL M c H alkt , pleasant, the usual effects of alti HARNEY COUNTY DUrnfl; June 26: Alfalfa, in bloc* Jg no catch-penuy coucern, presenting a hud ered that it returns to each patron more than his money’s worth. Ç H. II. D avis , I died mass of pitch forked fart» to the innocent If each resident of the Harney country will subscribe or renew for tude being checked by the gentle which will bring the administra »0111, 42 inches high. J. >1. N eal reader under pretense of cyclopedic informs The snow tion of affairs pertaining to this It in what it professes to be: a short view himself and take one or more copies to send abroad, it will bo extend II. G ray chinook, or west wind. M rh . T hos . H askell . — June 26; | of bun all the . H T ihmn peoples and countries under the sun. Ft al a E. Il A V KM fall is sufficient to preserve wheat great valley within easy access of Goocebernec on a Single branch; : I ... a., artanged Ml,,I aud «liara.mta.al digested I that a «rra.mt great rl.-nl deal of of T he II k H ald ’ s sphere of usefulness as to enable all to claim that it . . ...ofa«l a««H im u «.•■» Inx knowledge kn««wli*zi»«* !■ useful* and interesting is DKriefl packed T. H. CTRL and supply moisture that is not every citizen of this section; and the the large English variety; branch! handily in * limited space While a child LAND office : OREGON PACIFIC RAILROAD furnished by rains. In summer would never tire of the fascination of the facta - . .. ... O 8 IIICIK inches ’N IIHIM, long; O 5 IM-Urillg bearing twig» kwsjco to ui ’ A. F. SNELLI MC. ny 371 illustrations oi which 99 are Is a true Advocate of the Harney Country. COIltainjng ]51 very illuminated W. M. T ownmend there is a pleasant breeze constant now in course of construction wi 1 the branch full page, the most thoroughly read man will find on every j»age something, the importance ly blowing, which tends to keep pass directly through Harney val large berries; weight of whole, one-] of which he never fully realised until agro- agreeable weather, no matter how ley, and after that what more is half pound. fraphleal expert presents it with scientific ef AILS. ect in attractive phraseology. The man who hot the sun’s rays, and the nights desirable? this work Is a genius in such effort. Flowers: A boquet of cut flowers, prepared vale : ar no weak t|»ots in it. The publishers cool enough to make covering de Under these conditions it is not from Sweet Williams grown from There lays. Saturdays,« p m have done their best for the mechanical part of days. Fridays, 4.:»am sirable—in fact, one can sleep un necessary to say that the first to work and their enterprise leaves nothing to last year’s seedlings; 4 colors, ma the desired in that respect. T he H erald presents unusual advantages. It is centrally located in der cover comfortably the year procure homes will be the first to roon, 2 shades, magenta, and pink be The yon city : J. Dewing Company, M3 Market st., Hau idaya. Fridays,« am. a new and rapidly growing country, where manufactures of all kinds reap the harvest of the forehanded, round. Franc iaco. Cal are the sole agents fur the work I de Saturday s I0:4ô p m. and white variegated. I this side of the Rocky Mountains, and all sppli are needed. We will soon have direct railroad communication with TIMBER.---- SAW-MILLS. for the fact is self-jvident. The cations for agencies should lie addressed them. NR VILLI: A box of growing plants; June Portland and the East. Live business men of both sections should There is no timber in the valley invitation to come among us and Srrl« nt I’«», use T iik H erald ’ s columns to secure this great and growing trade. except along the water course, settle is particularly extended to 22: 2 sets of carnation, ready to , Lat« laa««a »< «R. lar Amari»»« <o»,-rl»»< >..«l<. REVIEW: Its rates, proportioned to its circulation, are reasonable. where there is a light growth of the industrious of all classes of bloom; 2 thrifty ice plants; 0 petu sraatur't Brl'lr. by Mrl. Ale». McVol»h Miller. Ip m. nias. 1 in bloom; a very handsomeljr birch and an unusually large, heavy farmers and stock-raisers. --------------- (o>---------------- Bl A Wndilvil Miau«. by T W Hanjhew. made-up box, grown from the seed. kRKER. I’ottmiUer Veil, v.ruell. by Mr« xumn-r M«y<len. growth of willows. But the adja Hunnl« J.an, by Mr». K Burke Aug. 11, garden beans, 7 inches Bnineite «ruf Blunda, Mr» A1.X. MrVeljb Millar TERMS, I* ADVANCE: GREAT .NATURAL CURIOSITY. cent mountains are heavily tim A stormy WerLImr b) »<wr K. BfT»i>. in length; crisp and tender. bered with fir, pine, juniper, moun KxraoBKB st u. c. mrecAs Gratia « Tri»l«. by 1-ucy K«r><l«ll ! ouilort. M rs T. A M c K innon .—Near Will She Win? by Emm» i.arrixin June« One copy one year. ............................................................................. 12.50 tain-mahogany, etc. Saw-mills are MalheurC’ave is located on a sage The Widow ■ Water. by K.aa A»hl.l«h Two copies, one year.......................................................................... 4 50 rude. by< h«rle«T M»nnei. io. 77. I. o. o. r. located in the pineries, and the lum brush plain about 1 mile from the Burns, June 27: Boquet of Carna Ottavi»'« Badi) Matched, by Helen i ora in Pierre tions, raised from last year » seed ihr Three copies, one year.......................................................................... «.on lall, every Saturday at ber, which is of the best quality, Phantom 0lfr. by Mr» M. A. Vietar. head of the south fork of tbe Mal lings. Very large and very fine. L Me KIN NON, N. G. Five copies, one year............................................................ . ............. 10.00 The Bride Elect, hr Annie Ashmure. sells much cheaper than in tbe heur river. Elorrnee Falkland. by Burk- Brentford. T he H erald with any Periodical or Magazine at clubbing rates. T. A. M c K innon .—Burna; June Tbe Virginia Helreee. by May A«ne« Hemin*. East. There is a small basin at its Sibyl'« InSnenee. by i.eorm- Sheldon 29; Barley 52 inches high. GARDEN VEGETABLES Huóaeof beeret», by Mr« Harriet lawlr s«rt«. mouth. ’Cail on or address by Mr» .Her MeVelrt Miller. July 30, wheat 43 inches; and Roaamrmd. produced in the Harney country The cave is 20 feet wide and fl The »rice nt the «bore boli I» r. ren'« nrh. IT CHURCH are large, finely flavored, abundant feet high at its entrance, and has timothy with heads measuring from anle»« oth-rwla- «pwHBrd. «nd «111 I« »ent by D. L. G RACE, mail. r-«tB«e free, un rerelja offrire Men We will on ap an incline downward for the first 8 to 10 inches in length. lion Tn« Hta.LD when orderin« •»»>»• boo«« Barn,. an<l a coiu- and easily raised. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. STREET A SMITH Vabll»»«. N»w Vor». I T hos . f*TEriiE«s; near Burtii; Ju. iru iS erection. plication give the addresses of sev- 200 feet, and then turns to the north HERALD. , GRACE, I 1 HARNEY VALLEY. eral gardeners here, who will an swer in detail all inquiries on that subject; the white, or Irish potato is grown with little cultivation, and is superior to that grown in Ohio, Ill inois, Missouri, Tennessee, or Kan sas, we personally know as regards size, “mealiness,” and flavor. small fruits , such as strawberries, currants, blackberries, gooseberries, grapes, etc., will, from what evidence we have been able to gather the past year, be a success, as the native plants are hardy and good bearers. THE EAST OREGON HERALD, 2VL1 Rustlers MEDIUM OF ADVERTISING,