a 9 i o 8 WEEKLY o - a v ' o ' 1,1 : Devoted Especially to the Lire Stork awl Agricultural Interests of Eastern Oregon. w z - " VOL. I. HEPPNER, UMATIfiLA COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, JANUARY hCTBJE O c LP D 0. Oo C3 THE GAZETTE 18 ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY AFTERNOON, BY 9.3. V. REDINGTON, At $2.5(1 er year, $1.50 for six months, .l for threo montiis. PROFESSIONAL WARREN CLARK, ; Justice of the Peace, Main Street, - Hefpner, Orego.w r KG Ah HU8INES8 of all kinds exeented Collections promptly at- tended to. J- Willi dlKpatcl W. WILLIAMS, liouse I'aiiifcr, I'spor Hanger and Grainer, TVKRVTIUNfl in the Painlinir Line done with -l-i neutnusH uud dispatch, and Satisfaction wuarHntetii. . T. L.. JQHNKTON, V AWjYE R QFFH'E tmekf IHxluj Heppner, - , i land office.' Oregon. L. h. MoAbthiib, Q The. Dulles, Or. . McARTHUR : U. W. Uea, Heppner, Or fc REA, , . ; : ATTORNEYS AT LAW, , 1 FA VINO formvd a co-partnership fi the I 1 practice, of law in the. ( ircilit Court of the btutuof Oregon for the county of Umatilla, ml persons who hiivo business in Hie said court will have the advantage of JuiIk" McArthur's assist- mv in the trial of their ensaa by placiiiK tnoin in charKe of ii. W. Ilea, at Heppner, Oregon. L. W. DARLING, Justice and .Notary Public, ; Lone Rock, Wasco County, Oregon. LAND FILING, FINAIj PROOF Etc., a Specialty. I iOI.LKCTIONS Made, i:di Deeds HI d ! fll.'-lt it her -1 1 I. . nS- MALLORY. justice IIjjtxek, and Notary Public, OUKGON. 1 AND HUHJNKSS a Sj.ecialty. J i made. CollwlfcOIlB PHILIP L. PAINE. Alforney at Law & Notary TuMic Heppseu, - - -'- OniN. 1ANI) hiiHiiiPHrt j male. attondiHl to. Collect ion OEO. W. WRKUIT,- .MTIillNO-AT-LAWANIlNOTAIlYlTIILIC, 1 ' IAj practirn in lioth Htato nd Kulcral vV Coui tK. 1'iiiof of claiiiiH taken. 'I'itlen to 1 ..i:d inventiKatetl. Iteal entati- liuiiiBH atteudl (i.. Colhx'tioii" and con vi yanrinu; safely made at An iisoiiahlo rale. All tiUHind entruMed tu nie vill nn'oive prompt attention. OHiee on .Main THOH. MORGAN. uctionter, llErrxr.it, - Oregon. (Oflioc with A. Mallnry.) 1KOMl1T ar.d nrourato aUontiuii iven liiihinewH in liin charKt:. to all J. W. REDINGTON, Notary Public, Corner Yellowstone Avenue ami Main Street, Heppuir, Omu.' 1HK lnminmco ctTectixl in llelialile Com- pamen. ED. R. BISHOr Notary Public Heitnek, , - and Land Agent, Obegon 7 OANS Netfotiatod. ColliH-tionH Made, and a. 1 J Kcneral HinkeraK" HuKinesx uiteudtHl to. 0 MISCELLANEOUS. M. UCHTENTIIAL. Boot and Shoe Shop, 'Main " St., Ht'jptu r, Orvyon. Hoots and Shoos Made to Order. Repairing Xeutty E.eevuted. Satisfaction Guaranteed O NOTICED -TIMBER CULTURE. Land (Mi-o at The Halle, Or., Nov. 27. '83. Complaint havinu been entered at tais otliee by ieo. . liwh nmiiiiNt Kphriam Kten for failure lo comply with law ax to timlier-ciiltiire entry No. B354YI. dated tct. It. 1I. uihui the N K '4 Sec. -V. Tv 1 N. 11 3rt K. iu I'matilia i-oimty. Or., w ith a vii w to the cancellation of wi'd entry: contestant al leKinir thut xaid Kphriatu K.st.n Iuih failed to imMik or catiNv to Ik broken tive arrett of aid tract iluriiiK the WH'imd year, ard f nihil to culti vate ilurinx the xecord year the live acres phnvnl Ihe hr-t jear. The said artiei are hereby buiu inomHl to njipwir at t)i otKce of (i. W. flishon, Notary at lli ppner. tr. on the 1st day of Febru ary, 1M. at 10 o'clock M., tr renpft'd and fur liihh testimony couceruinf Miitl alleged failure. K. L. Smith, Keiiinter. C. N. ThorshI'UY, Kecoiver. StMl When you have any wool, hides or HltH to st'll below, consign them to the reliable firm of Herreu & Hussell, 16 No. Trout St., Portland. l'ETEU HOKCi, Heppner, - - . - , Oregon, DEALER IN Watches, Clicks, Jewel ry clmcihysf, Cameo and Diamond Gold liinijs, Gold and Silver IVtlBeJu'8. . .. -am All titlier articles usually kept ii a Jew elry Store. HEP J I RING A SPECIALTY 4 CTOIIK with C. M. Mallory, May Strc-t. All work giiaraiiK'fd. vlul-tf. PIONEER HOTEL, Hcpincr, - - Or cyan. CHAS. E. HINTON, Fi-oprietor. ),,(- The IIouho for the Farmer. Tlio House for the Horseman, The House for the Ciittlemg. The Hniwe for the Shoepman. The House j hers all are At Home. " . .. - ItoouiB Neatly Furni)ud. Tablh Always Suppleii With thb Beht ) the Market AFFoitns. ) : )o( Ifarillir reKiiint'lt (siu-ifuof thin Liriiml.U- V nf.u.n house, and Roiif int.i Hip jinicl hasu.nnit ittntin, 1 would t)n i;hid to inept my old fiionds. and will 1'iuii'avor in the future", as in tin nant. Jjj.i.nti.rtj,Oi all in th nuwt imn tnlilo manner. 3vliiH'-tf. ' CITY MEAT, MARKET, Witt. J. Me. Met; I'roprielnr, Hcjipiif r, Oregon. Dt-ef, Vrk lttttl'8. and Mutton at Ueniumable CITY IIQTKLr ' Hcppiu'r, Oreyi.ni, 11 MINOIi, 1'HorUIKTOl!.. Commereiiil TravelerH will ITi)dtrntuuJ that thid is the ONLY HOUSE That FnsNiHHES Sample Fvoofs. GO TO . i:. Nordyko To Get Your Wagons I'atched. Bring Your Purses along with you, and don't you forget it. SING LEE, Was hingan Cvtits Dozen May Street, HEPPNER, ' OREGON. Heinember th? Old Stand -OF 0 Hepp-ykb, Okeoox. WUCRB YOU WIIjL FID Old Judge and United we Stand, .1 SPEClALTY.- O rpHKSK brands lire favorably known by jiideg 1 fjof (toihI LiquorH. viul-tf. ESTKAV NOTHK. Taken up by the nnderiinieL aud iHwted c ponlina to law, one rHil-b!ack colt, two yearti oid la spring, branded K on left shoulder; with bol tail. Said animal can lie seen at my place on Little Kutter creek, about bve miles liclow Ieua poe.tortice. Said colt is appraised by A. Mallory, Justice of the Peace, at tto.Ki. W. U. HOVER. JU'ppccr, Oan., rec. 17, 3. iV-U DEATH OX THE r RAMIE- It is morning on the prairie. : To the east is the rosy sunrise take ten minutes off the race after and the dim, far-away outline of a high noon. At 10 o'clock they mountain range; to the north ajhave gained half a mile. Then shadowy line which .may the pace is even and neither loses hills or timber; .to the west ami. south a broad, level ocean tfE green grass which has no limit. It seenis as level as the floor to the eye, but it is cut up with dry -ravines ami cBtdSies, and there are sharjiHlg"s!over level and rulge and Always to and dips mid Bunkeri sti'ts ' I the east; T,ie slln mounts higher ThPstrTa-rtV HOW 8ml then the and every blnd of grass is loaK( hunter glances back with a faint with diamond dewdrops. I here f no bird to chirp, and no crickets i call out, but there is no feeling oi luiiolinoua flim wlin fmp tl ,i ,. 1 . 4-1TV l of the prairie is lost in qui$t amazement. There is an awe until him akin to that which man feels' when he sees the ocean mashcl m mighty fury. The one is an exhi- bition of Divine anger the othftr of Divine peace. See! A rough-clad, f ull-beanled man, of iron muscles anj fearless courage, suddenly rises from a hol low, tosses aside his blanket, ami slowly turns his head in every di rection to scan the green grass sea. At the same moment his horse emerges from a dip which has heretofore sheltered him, and with a whinuey of recognition and pleasure advances straight uj)on his master. Alone! Man and horse are the only living creatures in sight. Tftvy are as much lost to the world as two grains of sand washing to and fro in the Atlantic. The mas- ter's haud steals up until it rests upon the horse's neck, and the faithful animal crowds a bit nearer. Both are awed by the broad ex panse. The nughty-jgrandeiir of A attire steals in upon the man's soul, and it seems to pass like an electric current to the horse. He raises his head. His nostrils ex pand. His eyes growrJiviwr and larger. Surely ae must ee the picture flpreud ovit before him thoro, niul soiiiethiiiii of its benntv launt be Xult. ' . - See that! The man s iianti goes up to shade his eyes. Hois look ing straight to the west. Jlestanus like a rock, and his eyes are as keen tis an eng'o s. Ilie noi'se is looking in the same direction, ears pricked forward, lips quivering and i , , j i j i every muscle in ins legs tignteneu up as it lor a race. VY hat is it: A flatter on the surface of the prairie caught the man's eye for an in stant and thfti disappeared. It was two miles away. It Mas only a trifle ;-but on that trifle depends his life. A shipwrecked sailor catches his breath at sight of every white cloud creeping above the water line. The hunter of the prairie ftfts hin9t pound at the flutter of a bird's wftg-tha bark of a coyote- the hoot of an owl at sight of a hoof-print or a broken bush. These may mean nothing, or they may mean an am bush a race for life capture and torture. "Yi i" Ihc level-seeming prairie is broken two miles away by a dry ravine deper than a man's height This curves and bends and leads on for miles. . Scrambling out of its depths, and ech one sounding his war-whoop as he mounts his pony, are a score of Indians, For -two days the hunter had Swept the horizon in vain. He was alone on the great ocean. Night had been tranquil ami full of sound sleep. Here, now, rising like spectres from the earth before him, is a band of blood-thirsty de mons raving for his life. The sight stuns him for few seconds. Then with a growl of chagrin and defiance, he flings the saddle upon his horse, picks up his rifle, and while yet the Indians are a mile and a half away, he mounts and heads for the east A race for life has begun. The hunter's horse strikes into a long, steady gallop, which would kep him alongside of a train of cars. ,lTiere is a chorus of yelk Jom the redskins fts they make the first rush. Then the silence of the prairie is brokeiPonlby the thud! thud! of horses' feet The very silence is ominous, aud speJ' eo0f a grim determinntin to run the victinjpdown. e Steady, now! liejhun ter's horse devour j mile after mile or tne creen tirntnu'tinu; nt fhi - ri'sl - iaH - swell now almost hidden in a mp now for on irstant out of sight of those who follow. . ' q lhey gaiff The hunter plans that they ! Lvery yard they gain re- quires an extra speed that will or gains. lhere is something terribly something grim in following a man to his death. Mot a shout not a call not a rifle-shot Thud! thud! thud! hope that the pursuit has ueou abandoned. No! He might as well expect a wolf to quit the pur- suit nf n Wnmulod rlppr lnsivin rr ifj life-blood to stain the grass at every KF 1.1. ..,.1 4-1, ot- H.yQ, rod. v It 18 high noon. . jft Ilie pursuit began over sixty miles away, but the breeze brings to the hunter's ears that same monotony of hoof-beats, ami he glances back to see that same dark line strung out at his heels. It has become a question of endur ance. It lie can tire them out he will escape. He shuts his teeth anew, reaches forward to caress h horse He is down? A badger-hole caught a foot as the horse sped on ward and man and animal roll to the ground. The race is finished. The poor beast whinnies an apol- Q' for his fall ns lie flounders nbout with a broken leg, and the exultant shouts of the redskins hardly reach the hunter's ears be fore he is down alongside- tjie crip pled horse and his rifle aimed at the approaching foe. It is another . bright, peaceful day.' Here are the same pure air, the same blue sky, the same pan orama of grass and flowery and dimly outlined mountains. A band ot hunters are crossing fno prairie at a steady gallop in stead of a single man riding for his Mfe. A vulture res up with a hoarse scream a second a tb.-i.. aud the odor of decay liorsos. llio band halts, lidos tt the tuft, and presently all look down upon a sight which tells its own story. The swollen carcass of a horse, the scalped and disfigured body of a hunter trampled grass spots of blood broken arrows the earth uptorn by hoofs. One with stouter heart than the re dismounts and picks up a dozen flattened bullets and u score of arrows. Then he circles round the spot and gathers up the empty shells thrown out by the hunter's Winchester. Bullets, arrows and shells are deposited in a heap by the corpse, and the man points out one three five seven spots on the prairie where he trampled grass and stains of blood show the fall of horse or man. Then in a voice in which sorrow and pride were mingled he whispers: "Poor Tom! But he died game!" Women may train their daugh ter? in all the ways they imagine to be pleasing to men; they may teach them to wriggle and squirm, and reef in their waists, and roll their eyes and lisp out insipid nothings between earjfjine-staiued lips, and vet men will desert them to flock frbout the girl who is fully and completely independent of them, and cares very little whether they fall in love with her or not. It is natural forSfeTFrxi" u anT what theji cannot get too easily, an women cheapen -themselves who thus "stoop to conquer." A female miser, sixty-eight years of age, was found dead in Loudon a few days ago. She owned eral houses, one hundred acres of land and 6,000 in cash. . She had written the Lord's Prayer on both posts of the garden gate as a charm against thieves. So afraid was she of burglars that when she had oc casion to go away fjjom home a day r so, she carried her scanty furni ture with her, even the kitchen utensils. She died of cold and, hunger. The Chicago Herald as it that the divorces keep ahead of the marriages. Recently there were fifty-three decrees of divorce is- sued and licenses. . a careful wiil have forty - threo marriage At this rate according to computation Chicago no married people in r - lj agars. A lot of fancy illuminated cards Txith fur l. ..... l i: :.. . - "'mui-.ii una caning, jiimi icurncu the Gazette office. Q little, shall. I LI i i IX III B HLT PXliR HILLS j . ! FOR THE GAZETTE, At the head of yon s;ic-brush ravine, The humble sheep-camp stands; Tho epherd, from long keeping butch, Has grimy clothes and hnuds. Far away from the haunts of men, To all his follows strange He looks askance, with threatening mion At the settlers on his rauo. Upon the ridge, a mile away, Where coyotes nightly howl, He spies a crowding neighbor's band, And both sheepherJurs grow!. But they will meet again some day, The time, perhaps, is near When each shall swear eternal troth, And both will treat to beer. A FATHERLY DRUMMER. At the metropolitan city of Wal a young woman went to la Walla the depot the other day to meet her father. As the train came, in she saw a middled-aged man who resembled Tier parental relative; and she rushed into his arms, hud dled down on his bosom, kissed him on his mouth, on his ear, his chin, and all over the patent cellu loid. He was not her father, but a middle-aged drummer for a to bacco house. He took a long breath, looked around at the other drummers and winked as to say, "0 1 am such a daddy." Of course the scene could not last always though he wished it could. After a hearty hug, she looked up in his face and shrieked: "You are not my pa!" He said prolfably she was right, as he had been on that route only eleven years. She asked Gi is ktp told her not to mention it. Ve public men should always hold ourselves in readiness to support those who need jt. She sniled.fisweet smile, and went out into the wide world, nnd tbp. ilvnrriinpr went to the hotel with tiie other drummers- -twenty kisses and six hugs ahead of the game. They asked him if he did not feel ashamed to have such a mistake made; and he said no; it was all ligjit; of course it might look rather queer, bust ssich things very often occurred with him, and thev were lialfle to happen to any QgiKxl looking man. Besides, iKwas prolWblethogirl enjoyed it. l hen tlioir od-Pil him wiiv lffi did not wear Lis dinmoift Wcstpm on such an occasion? He looked at Ins shirt front and it was gone! "While she played the daughter she stole his dhjjr.ond pm. He fainted, and when they brought A PASTOUAL poem. J BY 3. H. 9 flfiilE, . x i. "T.. ii ... f,,n;KsenouLr HUH IU 'r num. xw w t i....w, I died with my face to the foe." Book and job printing of all kinds nt Gazette ollieo. HO W TO HUG. At Echo, the lively little city on the Umatilla river, a young man recently spejit an evening with his girl, and while the family was present in the parlor, he was de mure and bland and childlike as could be wished. The mother came into the room after the fam ily had retired, to get a handker chief she had left, and the young man wns seated, in ft chair in the middle of the room, while the girl was seated on a sofa, and nothing that the mother could see in the actioifwfoeilljor led her to think they were mare than passing ac quaintances. It seemed to her as though the young people had met before, but there was no evidence that they were very well acquaint ed. All night, after he had gone, the girl complained of a pain in her side, and in the morning Dr. Brownell was called, and he found that two of the girl's ribs were broken. How' it was done nobody knew. That evening the young man called and was astonished when in formed of the extent of the girljji injuries, and wondered howt could have happened, though the mother Matched his face dose as he spoke and detected not only a blush but a profuse perspiration i' n 411.1 ii . . i on ins iaeer one nau peen a gin lf, and though she never had any rins uroxen, sne nau ueen hugged some. It was a trying po sition for all of them. Tho father was away on a trip to Alkali, and when he came home the matter hada to be explained to him. He was told that the ribs just simply broke themselves, nnd that neither the mother nor the girl nor tho young man could account lor it, and yet all three blushoi terribly. The father patted his girl on the head and told her she would be better when she got over it, and then called the young man into the kitchen. The young man was so weak he. could hardly walk, and when ha tvt down he took out his Jiainikei'ciiief aud iuejji -him brow and wished he was dead. Tho father looked the young man ompr and was sorry, lie finally said: "Y'oung man, I guess 1 can give you a few points on hugging. You must first learn that a .girl is not PeonstBUcted on the same principle as an n'on fence or a county brite. A girl is a delicate piece of mechanism, like a fine watch, full . of little spngs, wheels, jewels, etc. The breaking of any one of these would cause hr to cease her keeping time, and necessitate her being taken to Mr. Uorg for re pairs. In hugging a girl you don't want to get at it as if you were raking and binding or catch ing a sturgeon. I know that where a family sits up late with a young couple and spoils several precious hours of hugging, that unless tho young man has got a good head when left alone with the object of his affection, he is liable to overdo the matter and try and make up for lost time. He seems to want to hug up a lot ahead, and grabs the girl as though he wanted to break her in two. This is wrong. You should go at it calmly and de liberately, even prayerfully, and be as gentle as though she was an ivory fan. The gentle pressure of the hand that a girl loves, even the touch, is as dear to her as though you run her through a stone crusher. You should not grab her as you would a basket fit ont, and leave marks on her that will last a lifetime. A loving woman should not be made to feel that her life is in danger unle.4C& wear j a corset made of boiler-iron. IaUpe this will be a lesson to you, f.nd here- ar if you cannot r, feelings i will provide coi.trol your e a wooaen Indian for you to practice on at first, until you have .developed your muscle and got tired, and tl&n -v?e can turn our daughter loose in a room witn i i you and not feel that it is necessary to keep a sur geon haiPly. In allowing yQ to kop comjny with my daughter I do not agree to provide you with a human gymnasium in a Mother dlulCSl rapper and wearing ln"g- V'u cau 1'e.a,li1' Bfce Umfc u girl wouiu not mm a season through if she had to have ribs set once a week. Please think this thing over, and if the girl is well h next Sunday you can drop ..q - ., xT . in ami irv some more xios. xuw you go and hug ram xomptms safe for an hour or two, and have 1 it repaired iu the morning." O C33 o o eooffixd e e Q C O o O O O .0 o o