v. T 9 0 0 o 0 C3 0 o e WEEKLY Devoted Especially to the Lice Stock and Agricultural Interests of Eastern Oregon. 0 Xf VOL: I.1 : J ? IIEPPNKU, UMATILLA COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1884. NO. 4G. 9 0 o 0 o o 0 Q O 3 J OO 00 o THE GAZETTE j IS ISHCEU tSVKBY TIIUHNDAY AFTKHNOOS. BY j I J. W. REDINGTON, . j At H.M iM-r yrar, 1.3U for itifnoiitrHi, lltr three nutfitliH. 00 PROFESSIONAL,. T. i L.. JOHNSTON, LAWYER, jKFICE htu-k i.f Hishop's land othee. Ueppnek, OilECiON. WARREN CLARK, Justice . of- -the - Ppcc, . Main Htkekt, Heppsek, Okkgox. T ML HCH1NKS8 of all kinds executed A J willi dispatch. Collections promptly at- Ici.dcd pi, ooo . o w. WILLIAMS, House rainier, l'icr Hanger and (ii'ainer, lleppner, Oregon. "I."" VKEYTHINO in Hie PuiJitiiiK Line done with J J neatness uiul dixpntcii, and Satisfaction (itiaruntecd. Ihe Dam, or. jieppner, jr. McARTHUR & REA, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, HAVlNti formed s eo-partiierxhip for the practice of law in the Circuit Court of the Mulnof Ori-Kon for the county of Umatilla, nil persona who have business in t lin Baid court will I hi v the mlvuntaH of Juibie McArthnr's assist ance in t lie trial of their cases liy placing them in charge of (i. W. Kea, at Heppuer, Orexon. L. VV. DARLINO, 1 Justice and Notary' Ttiblic,' ' Lunk Rock, Wasco County-, Okkuon. ' " or LAND lTLIN(UiaNAL PROOE, t o j Etc., it Specialty. M)l,I.K(Tl(!?;H?l!Hff, iffd Deed aid other iA'Kiil Instruments drawn. BlTi-lt MALLORY lustice and Notary lublic. o llEPPNElt, .... OlIKOON. I AND HUSlNlitfS a Specially. Collections J maile. riirLTl' L. PA INK. Attorney at Law & Notaiy Tublic to o I Nl business attended to. Collections iffifSffl S0o .... GKa w. WRKiHT, ATTOHNKV-AT-LAW AM) N0TA11V n iSl.IC, AVIIX practice in both State and Federal t Courts. Proof of clainiH taken. Titles to Land inveHtiiraled. Ileal estate business attei;dcd to. CiillivtiiumHt.il coiivcyiiiirii'K wifely made at reasonable rates. All business entrustiil to me will receive, prompt attention. Orliceon Main treet, lleppner, tSToii l'Uf 0 THOS. MOR(AN. AllCtiollL'Isl', 1IK1TNKK, Okeoox. Idlliee willi A. Mallory.t ' 1)lt()Ml'T ai d Hccnrate attcntUin K'ii to all business in hischarre. Notary Public, Cwrner Yellowstone Avenue and 'Main Street, Hoppm r, Ogu. J"MUK Insurance effivtetl in Kelialil Com panies. edTr. Risiior. " Notary Public ami Land Agent. 'HurrxKii, Oiiwks o IOANS Neotintid. ColVvlions Made, ar.d a j nein nil Hnikeracn Husiiw'sn attei detl to. ;'M IS-.Et-fc1MEOU&- 0 ' M. I JC'IITKNTIIAL. Hoot and Shoe Shop, Main Sl JIi-pi'iuT, Orctoii. l?o)tsaml Sluxv Made to Oi-ilei-. a ii't Hiiriioj Xi'tttljf E.iti'Httil. Satisfaction Guaranteed NOTICE OF INTENTION. It ilOtliciyit TheDalles. tr., Jan. l. fvoliw is liefTliv ifiven tUit the fnllowii.K -auul settler has filed not ire of his intention to 6)nnkc lir al pns.f in supi-ort ,f his chiiiti. unit llintsHid rMif will be made fx-for CltTk of eiiniy Court, at lleppner. Dr., on March:!. I.M, viz: FriYiwtH Unfit, llomesteml No. l.'H. f,w Ihe W NK K '. NV , Km-. W. Tp 8 K Si K. Me name the h.llow lei! witness,! to ffttivi, bin ,-otitinuoun residence uiKin, and cnltnulion of, siiul Innd. vii: Jose)h Kefter. .1. M. Worden. Jolin Hei.dni, Thoiuas riinith. all of lleppner, I'nmtilln wmnty. Or, K U HsilTH, Henister. When yon have any wool, hides or pelts to tell In-low, consign them to the reliable firm of Herrvu Jc Has:R'll, lo No. 1'rout St., Fortlund, JJOIiGf. HErPNEItj OltSlON, PEALEB IS O WatclicH, Clocks, Jewelry i ; . . e.,:&e; : ' o ' :- I ALSO o Ainrlliysl, Cameo and JJifituoud 0 i I O'old Iihiy. Gold and iSilrcr II 'alt-hen. ; . .i - 0 ' j All other nrticles nsnally kept in Jew elry Store. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. CTOKE with C. M. Mallory, O work Riinninteitl. May street, .n Tllll-tf. PIONEER JIOTEL, CP ft ,09 m HOOOI llvpimvr, -. - Orctjon. CHAS. R HINTON, rropriottir. ' ' ( : '' The House for he Farmer. The House ftrr the HorHeman. The Hotine for'the Cattleman. The Houhc for the Sheepman. The House uher all are At Home. lioomo Neatly Furnished. ' TABbK Always SurriJEi) With the Dust """"""" uii-;i.-u.,S.-?i?kKT Aff't?ts. ; 0 -.-ot U Having nMimrd cliHrirtioOhic fnvornbly knowtt huiiHc, inn! pone intu the notol buHiiintw hkhui, I would kUu! to mHct my old friorda, nd will HiuUnvor in thn futun1, iih in the imsL.tooiitPrtain all in the moht HLcrmihU umnnor. Q IviUjil-tjT. CITY MEAT MARKET, '. J. .MeAltv, Proi icfor, lleppner, Oregon. q Uvvf, !'i k ( MnWjji at licummiiOfe ArifCN. CITYCIIOTEL, M : O 0 M J h'ii)i9; Urcyoii, O E. MINOK, PiioriiiEToR. Commercial Travelers will Understand thitt this 0 is he ONLY HOUSE That 1' i n.MSHKS, Sample Rooms. 00 TO 00 Xtu'dyke 'J (let Yovjg Wagons 1'ntcheil. Uriii' Yonv Purses along with yon. .ninl don't you forget it SING LEE, Washingand Ironing, VI C'rut t Dttzeu. . May Street, HlS'PNEl?, OREGON. Remember the Old Stand - OF o - HErP.VEIt, Oheoon. WilKKE you will pixi Old Judge and United we Stcfnd, OO o A SI'ECIALTY. r . 'pHKJSK bmnds are Favorably known by judges X of liixsj Ij iuors. Tlnl-lf. tans' lave StH-itn. The cheapest, the freshest, the purest Tliey never fail to grow am! give a lib eral crop. S00 rlower seeds, 3tXl vege table seeds, 65 fields seeds, 20,UH) cata logues to give away, st ud for one. LtK?al Reuts wanted everywhere. J'bed N. Lya, Raralwo, Wis. KTi:it 900 CRAS FOR CASH. o Slaughter Sae ! at 0 0 0 Ms Marked- TO THE 0 9 ooo 1 oAves t Sc vn t el 1 ! Call and Investigate ! J. L. Morrow & Son,. eso aea oo lleppner, Orej. r N DREAM LAND. yaere 8uules8 rivers weep , Their waves into the deep, ( bhe sleeps a oharraed sleep; Awake her not. Led by a single star, Sue came from very far lo seek where shadows are a aHer pleasant lot. . She left the rosy morn, She left the fields of corn, Fur twilight cold Bnd Jom And water springs. Through sleep, as through a veil, filie sees the sky look pale, And hears the nightingale That sadly sings. i Vint, reef n nrfont rant Shed over brow and breast; , Her face is toward the west, The purple lane. She can not see the grain Rrjiening on hill and plain; Sho can not feel the rain ' Upon her hand. Rest, rest, for evermore Upon a ruossy shore; Rest, rest at the heart's core Till time shall cease; Sleep that no pain shall wake; Night that no morn shall break Till joy shall overtake Her perfect peaoe. 09 RIDIXG AX ELK. , William Wnrruck, better known is Blowhnrtl Bill, arrived in Hepp ;ier esteid;vywith a wagon-load it game sholjbeyoiid Black Butte. Amid nature s beautiful parks in the Blue mountains there are many strange things occurring. Ihe incident related below may have happened and maybe not It is uncertain. But the fact remains Hint Bill is,generally a very big liar. He says: Last Monday 1 was up fiilow Trail canyon on the look jut for game. I sawfresh signs jf elk, and I cliuibeifup a rock to takea look around. Lhe rock was ibout 35 feet high. I got to the top, looked around, and saw that there wifsn't any game in sight Then I started to go down the ofe er side. It was very steep on thftl side, and I reached out and caught the iimbs of a big jumper tree that stood up against the side of the wM-.k 1 hadn't scarcely more than douethis than my feet slipped from under me, and I swi'g out oflsthe rjj.'k.is.M. weight was too t. i, ... i:!Tf.,. t i. i i i WIlUL'll 1UI lilt) Aim US A I1UU JIUU Ol, jl I went down almost as though Iwas lead, taking the limbs" with me. .Pdidn't s-ike ground though, and now, come to think j over, I i,sh I hal An elk with seven prong horns was hiding under the rock in the shade of e!ia:2Srip and I fell square on his cshoulders. I guess it would be'hard to tell who was scared the most, me or the elk. Tl;e elk started as though he was shot, and this saved me the trouble of doing anything of the kind, for he set back his head and brought them big horns of his iTCTuare down on my legs, anil held me there as last us u l was glued to his back. The wits teem ed scared out of that elk. He didn't seem to care where he went, or where I wanted him to go. Oyster Can Canyon seemed to please him very well for a little while, or until my dogs got aftere him. He didn't appear to have anv regard for his safety, and , i i f. i seemeil omy lowing ior danger ous places to run along. I wasn't afraid for the elk, but when at times he skirted aloiPjfthe edges of precipices, where the fall would be anywhere from three to five hundred feet, I was somewhat afraid the darned elk would loosen the grip of his horns on my legs. hen the elk would leap over a fliirwui I was scared, you bet 4Ve went up to the head of Wildcat Canyon at the start, a distance of about ten miles, then over by Tup- ler Butte and down to nil creek. ben the elk-got out by Montana Sock canyon he seemed only freshed up for the run, and only more anxious than ever before fr taking in the fine scenery that Heppner hunters so much enjoy. I had grown very tired of it, but this did not trouble, the elk. As we turned back in the direction of the Matteson coal mine, and had ruli altogether about 53 miles, we almost run over Edgar Matteson, who was out hunting, and as quick as a flash Edgar sent a bullet right back of my leg and through the heart of the elk. That stopped the came. T wn not surprised af Edgar saving my bacon,, for he did the same favor-for a Columbia In dian who was feeing run away with by an elk six years ago. My elk weighed about a ton, and Edgar and I had all we could do to pack the meat home on our backs at one trip. HUXTIXO- THE BUFFALO. In going clown the Yellowstone Montaua, niHlncT(W8theYastre - in gion lying between Glendive and Mandan, oivtis struck with the evident scarcity of game. This famous region, where two or thres years ago herds of buffalo, antelope and deer were seen on every side, is now to all appearance stripped of its game. The fact is, the slaughter of buffalo and deer has been immense for the past two years, and particularly of the for mer. It ia estimated that during therpast winter there have ibeeB p thousand hunters engaged in the business of slaughtering buffalo along the line of the Northern Pa cific between Mandan and Living ston. An eagle-eyed hunter gave me the following interesting de tails as to the modus operandi in slaughtering herds of buffalo. In the first place, the experienced hunter uses-tjje Sharpe rifle, 40-90 calibre. With this he can kill at 1000 yards." When he sees a herd of buffalo he usually slips to con venient range, from 400 to 500 yards, anil always selects a cow for his first victim. He does this for the reason that the cow is followed by both her yearling and two-year old calves, and they will usually stand by her to the last But un der no circumstances ill the ex perienced hunter kill his buffalo' outright. If he does, the herd will stampede at once. The policy is to wound fatally, but so that the animal wall"d?ish round in a circle before falling. This it always does when mortally wounded, and after a few moments lies down The remainder of the herd care not alarmed at this; biftcontinue to graze, or look on dazed specta tors of the tragedy being enacted. After his first shot the hunter pausci3Qtil9otiiels restot&Cnnd again fires at another cow, with similar results. He always aims to pVt hisJjall just behindcthe fore snouiuer, wnicn win cause ueau in five minutes at furthest. When the cows have all been slain, lie then turns his attention to the calves, and lastly to the bulls. The experienced hunter cenernllv baits Sk entire herd, unless he is so un fortunate as to drop his game im mediately, when all tfie" stffvTfe stampede at once. The buffalo dSes not sctrT at the crack of a gun. Ha has decidedly more cour aoetjiau discretion. It is only Ijwhen the crack is followed by an immediate fall that he realizes its deadly nature and takes alarm. The policy of killing the cows first and then the calves has resulted in thecjilmost utterxextinction of the female buffalo. Herds of melan choly bulls can still occasionally be seen, sometimes m bands of twenty or thirty, and often without a s'fligle cow. - O As we have said, the bulls are now about all that are left o the buffalo. They -largely owe their safety to the fact that their hides are less valuable than those of the Lj;ows, while at the same time they are jnore difficult to kill. The hide of the bull is only dri&h to thfj huSJiiCf AmQ1.80 while that of the cowobiasags C$3.25pnsd that of the two-year-old caSis worth from $1 to $1.5). But of late there has sprung up quite a demand through the east for the head of the buffalo bull. The well-preserved head of an aged bull decked out with glass eyes and horns, will readily sell for $24 in the eastern markets. Conse quently, the buffalo hunter of the future will wage a destructive war uooii the bull tribe, and these ven erable i-elics of a by-gone era will also pass swiftly away The chairman of the committee on foreign affairs reported a peace ful state fl affairs existing be tween the United States and all otheintries, and recommend as follows: "An exchange of pumpkin pies between the United States and Canada, as a further bond of love and friendship. That a com mission be appointed by England and America to re-write 'God Save the Queen' and 'The Star-Spangled Banner,' and make from the two nn iitrnati()iin'l!Tintlfem. to' 1)6 called: 'Heaven Save0 us Both.' That we import more French mus tard, Dutch cheese, Holland gin and Italian organ-grinders, to shw our good feeling towarcl those re spective countries." Barbed wire, nails, spikes, hinges, etc., g W.J. JjCCZIT a. RUXXIXO A II EX-R ASCII. i . K vrestier lias un- iie(lBl,k"ml le' xt KA,sf "1MU a 11. n i -inc iiuiitiiL iir-iiiuf, ninru tnx K benrs the title "How To Mnke $sA0 a Year From Twelve Hens." We tried this getting rich out of the hen business last year, and whilo it looks nice and pretty in gilt let ters on blue binding to save )?500 a year from twelve hens, our ex perience was different We se cured, last spring, a collection of lady hens and a male companion, and domiciled them in nn extensive hen -paature in the venr of our preinises.' We figured it all cnt that with six eggs a day and occa sional vacations which would bo paid for in chickens, w.e would soon have money enough to go to Europe orrun for office. Early in the season the brown Leghorn troops fought nobly, and we began to look around with the idea of getting a safe to put our egg money in. Just at this juncture wheat stepped up to ifrl a bushel, and our hens ceased laying and turned their attention to their ap- petites. During the interim (interim is a word that we found in the oftico when we bought it), one of our hens had succeeded in pre'senting to the worlcPa dozen little brown balls, which imagination told us would make excellent chicken pies along in Pecember. Imagination lied to us, however, for in less than four weeks every one of the little brown darlings had been referred to the0 interior department of a confoundwl skunk, and there was seven weeks' lost time to be charg ed 5j to that hen's profit ami loss account. A e forbear telling Cof our midnight ramble in the dewy mazes of our garden, clad in mod esty and a night-shirt, with n re volver filled with 32.100 cartridge's553 and a heart filled with ani'mosity CCD toward that skunk. We draw a , curtain o'er that scene. W.hen fjjl cam and after we had bought eggs to feed ourselves and wheat to feed our hens for awhile, we retired from the hen business, tuM wliaH e made up O our rojnd that it takes something mXre than a book anil a dozen hens to make i?500 a year. Of 9eSt4wenakcwM-t?&tsw'hj can play the ame for all it l.s o worthy and make it pay. But for a greenhorn to think that twenty- o four hens are worth a cool thou sand dollars a year ti?him, is all ixjppy-cofk. If you make liens lay every day, and bring chickens up on a bottle in some secluded corner where skunks cannot get at them, it would pay for novices to establish hen dairies. As it is, howeyer, we novice) hadCiaetter save our money from buying such books as the one describT?!, to buy eggs with, and let those who uu- .lerstand egg harvesting tfo cthe f ) work. There is too much respon sibility too much getting up nights to shoot skunks, and tw, few egiiPti?inltolfr3Q inducements to amateurs. "I know," said a little Walla Walla girl to her elder Csister's U-oung man n the supper table PtKwtlSHvl join ouroietyfur"" saz the protection of little birds, be cause mamma says you are very fond of going on larks. The youth promptly handed over rq!.") njece as nn initiation fee, and Pinks in due time he will be a full-fledged ornithological liumnu- ltarian. . . As regnrds height, the Scotch are first, Irish second, and Ehglish tliird. As regards weight, the Scofeli nijp first, English second and Irish third. The weight and height of Americans would bo given, but there is no necessity for terrifying Europe just at present Distracted parent: "My daught er hasoiio talent for music, and yet by her constant practicing she per sists in making herselta nuisance to the family. What would you advise ?" Family counselor : "Mnr ryher into some other family." Three million dollars is said to be the fortune of Miss Ayer, the daughter of the patent-medicino man. There are lots of young men in danger of suffocation, or at least panting for Ayer. In our day there is too mucjof the notion prevalent that the holder of even a petty office is above the people, not under them. o K CD f o O oo aooe