0 o 0 e .JR. JSP e e CO oca e o m I o o e THE GAZETTE. HEPPNER, THURSDAY, FEB. 7, 1884. SETTLERS, ATTENTION! Land Filings Five, and Proving Up at the Sane Pric. For the pout four months the editor of the G.K- sktte has had all the tools with which to do land fling and proving up, bat he hM never odver- f ixed the (act, acT it would be interfering with others and outside of his legitimate printing business. But now that a little ring of Heppner land ognnts have combined to ruin tho little busi ness the publisher of the GUzettk has worked to build up, we will proceed to carry, the war into the goremment dirt department. The ring U cluuxing J2.50 for filings and (10 for proving up, over and above the feos to be sent to the dis trict hind office. Now, to make a stand-off on the f reozs-out game the ring is trying to come on us, we will do filing Bud proving-up froo of all charge except cost of advertising and the fees that have to be sent to the district land, office, Thus, the pre-emption proof that has been eost-J ing you f 1S.50 all tola, can nov be had at the (iA- Zittc office at actual cost, $8.aQ, and yon can make a pre-emption tiling for $3.2.1. We tuke this stpp not because we love the settlers more but because we love the ringstere less. Return ing good fur evil might be all right for some old fossil who bad no paper bills to pny, but with ,uh it is played out. Local and General. When you want to insure your proper ty against fire, call at the Gazette office. Over in the Frineville country last week, Steve Staats accidentally shot .and killed hirnselfQ . Settlers who" tfant surveying, filing or proving up done Should call on Judge L. W. Darling, at Lone Rock. Now is the mild winter of our content, for we know that good overcoats can be Inmght at low prices at J. L. Morrow & Sous. p Let the winter be open or shut, flan nel underwear will beQjoinfortable, and the place to get it in at J. L. Morrow & rjon's. The reason Mr. Bishop's advertising 4'ard appears this week is that it was not ordered out uutil after the outside of the paper had been printed. Over toward Rhea creek Mr. T. L Johnston now has one of the finest 320 m;re ranches iu the country, with two streams of running water on it. The Gazette is not yet froze out, and until it is it will continue to give Ed Bishop and his little self-nominated clique all the hell it lias in its ammuni tion boxes. IThereSjquite a variation in the mud Otranip printer is made of. (Sometimes a vervsruall refrigerator will freeze him oiat, and sometimes it is the that gets froze. refrigerator This print-shop still has a couple of cords of wood left, and Uncle Charlie Wallace and the French Count ofler to let it have six ooils more in case of any sudden freeze-out 0 Q When yon want a good rig to go any where, or a saddle-hdrse, or want to feed your team when you come to town, re member that Nelse Jones has the only livery stableiii Hepjyier. Pat McMahon was down Saturday from his headquarters in Quaid oanyon, jind gave us a friendly call. When we get froze out we know we are welooine to a square mjl at Pat's cabin. Sheepmen say that the Merino bucks from Riiustack Ranch, iu Hayrock Val ley, give good satisfaction, and their herders say there is a heap of satisfac- tioff iu the stoves sold by W. J. Leezer. Having learned in the long ago how to thumb the vtiiit a jaekas.t battery, we will conjmue to pour hot shnl iuttlie self-nominated enomy's eatnir while we liaveoany spit left JayutS&tou our spVmge btafT. We have to thank our old Idaho friend, A. F. Parker, of the Walla Walla Dailv Statesman, for a kind notice of the nCU'-s ZETTK and a scathing overhauling of the petty jwjiticiuus who are trying to freeze it o'ul. Ed Bishop may think he can freeze out the Gazette by turning it into an ice berg, buCbefurd ve get through with him we win make mm tuiiiK there is a heap of red-hot fire iu a froze-out ice berg. The big egg meutioi3'drast wek has been presented by Nick Williugham to the Gazette curiosity shop, where it looms up over our costly pine-hoard desk like Pain's bald head over the church orga. Our old S.ilem Sunday school teacher, Major F. E. Hodgkin, Assistant Secre tary oQState, has our thanks for a copy of the mammoth edition of the Oregon Vidotte, got up by himself nnd Bro. Norton. Jim W y land returned home Tuesday front k two-months' visit to Webfoot, b.'ingiug up with him the price of a j ear's subscription from our old chum, l;b Ball, who heard the shop was to be froze out. Attor the jackass liatterv of the G-i- i.kttk office gets wurmSKfpS3?E!SWWp.B5ftp5-rti of theories have been Mm Jul Bitihop and his little clique of offiee Keekers will get some doses that it will t.ike something stronger than sore throat i ledioine to cure. Up to date 17(!7 esteemed contempo raries have suggested that Uncle S.un oould get rid of his surplus by starting a newspaper. We amend by suggesting that he unload by giving his soldiers do cent pi$and more grub. "WLat is this, father, a loecfrnotive?"' "No, my child, it is a cooking-range, which your mother finds more useful than a locomotive. While she keeps it going she will never get froze out, for I bought it of W.OJ. Leezer." Iiast Sunday a band of 200 meadow larks were busting their stomachs sing ing up iu Tom Quaid's field. He has cut the brush at the lower eud of his i noich so that the birds will all have to come and sing around his house. Fxl Bishop ininht make a good hand to reuse the skids at the little sawmi 1 he has projected up in the mountains, but ;w a comity clerk he would be about as iiincli of a success as the editor m the j. Jazette would bo as a preacher. When a legal sneak comesarouuJ and ,otks you to subsoril) for uud i.dvertise iu a jolitical disl.rag he isopleased to (fall a "newspaper," tell him you wish to continue owning your owu soul, and are not ready to make an assignment. lf there is a man, woman or child in (he world to whom the Gazette or its editor owes a cent which is justly due, k-1 he or she, as the case may be, bring jn a bill and get the pay. This is no tU tlay ojcr, bat holdgood for all time. 6 At Dresent Hepunerwer.ther is rathe winterish. with about (our inches of snow on the ground. If anv subscriber fails to get hU copy of tho Gazette, let him send word to this offioe and we will send out a tracer to findtrat where it was hornswoggled. Notwithstanding the fact that a self nominated stiff nnderhandedly inter fered with his insurance, Mr. W. J. Leez er continues to keep a large stock of stoves and everything in that line at his mammoth Heppner Hardware Empo rium. Hireling Hallock could be hired to do most anything. It is only a few years since Will Gilmore andWill Walbridge hired him to jump into Willow creek with his clothes on. And the darned fool did it several times at four bits a jump. Bill Ayers, one of the oldest settlers in the country, was over from his Butter creek ranch last Saturday,' As he be lieves in a man owning his own soul, the 'G'SzETTEaplatform suited him, and he whacked up a year s subscription to the paper. Farmers and sheepmen ought to keep scrap books, and fill them with agricul tural matter clipped from papers and magazines. They'are fine things to start fires cool mornings when no pitch is handy, besides being good things to fire at dos and coyotes. Mr. E. G. Sloan's, dog, -"Old Shep," died this week, aged 14 years, 9 months. All these long years he has been a faith ful family friend, and finally passed peacefully awnywithoift a struggle. It will be well for Bishop's political dish rag if it dies as easily. Old Noah Webster, in his big diction ary, defines a politician as one versed in State government. Great Gods, but wouldn't the old man change his defini tion if he were to drop down in Heppner and see the caliber of some men who call tbennelg'es politician? It having come Jo pass that every skyster lawyer, lauSpagent, note shaver and botch printer is nominating himself for an office, the1 engineer of the Ga zette Hereby nominates himself as town puinp-iiiftpector, and hopes he may fall down some well before he is elected. Select perfectly s nnd apples, wipe them off well, soak them in oats, stow them away in a safe place, then forget the plaoe, and they will keep forever In the meantime you will want some canned fruit ofr fancy groceries to live on, and the place to get tSat line of goods is at Minort Dodson's. 'Hireling Hallock fcdjl a Heppner mer chant that the Gazette had no friends to depend on. Very true, kid; this paper lives on legitimate business, not on the charity of friends, and when its editor returns from a long stage rip to Pettys Yjille on o. p. money, he don't have to go all over town liek-spittlinjfevery man he meets. While we expect to get even as far as possible with Squire Mallory for the pait he is taking in trying to breeze out the Gazette, we hope to continuation goj'l terms as man and man with the others of the Squire's family. As a lib-er.il-minded soiiof the old, gentleman's says, "'It is no hide off the seat of my brpeches." id time we miSht write up some stuff that vould make interesting rending to Hefipner'a self-nominated oflloo-soekors. But when a fellow has to keep his owu books and be printer's devil and several other things at the same time, ho can't do more than 25 hours'ierib'oling a day without missing a meal or two. Thewinme of the editor of this sheet flies at its nihsthead, ffnd'he AMoue s re sKusible Jor the utterances it makes. If anyone don't like the truths he tells he may be found iu his ink-barrdl'at any time, office hours all day and half0 the night. JohuL. Sullivan may be able to lick him, but John L. Sullivan will never be able to scare him. CO The editors of thfl .nmjecied poetical digh-rag have SfrculafeJV?? iBftfflfJf Heppner business men to sell t!ie?r sonls by pledging their eutire support to the thing they call a "newspaper." These 'editors" should now ask our merohants to donate them their entire stock of canned salmon and codfish, to produce brain-power enough to run the shebang. O Our nervous friend. Ed Binlinn.via about as fit to be the next clerk of Uma tilla county as the editor of the Gazette is to bo a teacher in a Sunday sohool. And cvervbudv who knows the editir of tho (1 kvwr'rv. liiiAira that ltaniu ntiinl t& fit to be a Sunday school teaoherPas fa the Jersey gentleman that Tom Ayers has in his pasture up by Sara Dou.dd s m's. c A few weeks ago young Hallock hrd a few ictas that J. K. Gill furnished him to sell, and he wanted to advertise the fact. Out of charity and resntfor his family, he w as allowed to use the Ga zette's type and press to print some posters. Shortly after this, true to his b leaking nature, he went around back biting this office nnd pulling wires to freeze it out. Of such is tho kingdom of two-faced hvnocrites. vanced as to the oaus9 of the recent gor geous sunsets, lue real fact of the matter is that we hnve not seen Bny from Heppuer, owing to the high hill skirting the town on the west. A gorgeous glow has been observed hitting the top of Sam Donaldson's hill of e-enings, but that was caused by Charlie Mallory leav ing his east door open when he had ac red-hot fire in his cpokstove. o Jude Dutton is a good judge of fine stock, and knows blue blood when he sees it. His latest addition to this line of goods is his thoroughbred shepherd 'Ring." who looks like a likely enough dog, but is really the darndest fool in seven. states. When you. sf-e a black pup witlri white hair collar on his neck jumping around after his tail like a r reuuh dancing master giving lessons in hop schottische, that is the thoroughbred "Ring, and heSis almostsassbigisaafoe the Judge's self-made brother-in-law, and hesis Blmotsassbigaaofoda8ssfa!31ic&afteroh;eil' f rozeawtwroaawsaso Last Saturday a prominent business mau of Heppner kindly offered to let the Gazette have C-VK) as a starter with which to stand off any freeze-out game. While we appreciate such public-spirited generosity, we re-H!0tfnLly decline to oompronuseganAjJwJy but ourselt in this matter. The enterprising citizens who furnished for a year the free use of funds to start the paper will all be repaid be fore their year is up, and the Gazette will run on the principle of very tub on itsown bottom." If its publisher busts, he will bust only himself. It is easy enough to borrow money, but we know from the pant ton months' expe rience what darned hard scratching it takes to pay it back, An Editor's Eiprrirare. jts The fenoe and post qnestiotfjis an im portant one, especially in "a country where most of the land lays out doors, and we should all come forward and give nnr TmriinA fur th fnidance of our fellow.;(8ufferers. A man in Webfoot i set some fir posts and they rotted off in two years. Then he went to Cedar Camp, 30 miles away, out a lot of cedar posts, hauled them home and planted them. He thought they would last forever, but they didn't No; they rotted off in eight years. He tried the coal tar racket, dipped and boiled them, but they rotted off just the same. The editor of the Ga;, ntTTR hna hati a different experienced Ninety days ago he planted 100 fir pote on his buncbgrasscranch in Wind can yon. Tart of the nostholes were org and the balauoe were made from anpld dry wash-out sawed up into two-foot lengths. And now, after standing in the ground for ttbree long months, those posts are no more rotten than when they warn nlnnfail in tliA (lurk of the nioon. The blisters made on our bands ghilej tamping them have passed away, but me posts still stand, monuments to band work. But we don't expect them to last forever. If we did, we would bury them near some mineral spring and get them petrified. Or burn then&up and put the ashes where it oould not blow swny. Our columns are open to anyone who wants to compare notes on the post-hole question. - ' Self-Preservation. g We regret very much to have to show up the shortcomings of an old man like Squire Mallory. He has patronized the Gazette and helped to work itontof debt, and our relations with him have been uniformly pleasant. But now ;he has signed an agreement to freeze out the Gazette by taking away all the set tleBoLadrertising as far as lie oontrils it, and he may expect to see the first raw of nature assert itself. When a man takes from a mule the barley the auimal has honestly earned, he may expect to get kicked, without regard to age, sex, or previous condition of servitude. This is honest animal instinct, on whitih layout the editor of the Gazette don't propose to get left by any other mule in the country. I'eople's Property, Many persons have made bitter com plaints about the way their mail has been handled by Heppner's postmaster. The Gazette wants to do the fair thing in the matter, and w ill give plaoe in its col umns to any citizen who has any real grievance to set forth. It will also give space to the postmaster to tell his side of the Story and answers any ohnrges that may be brought against him. Per haps by thrjwing a little lighton this postoflice business we can find out whether the institution is the property of the people, run for the accommoda tion of ''tru? people, oPwhether it h the property of Uncle Rufe, to be given out as a family heirloom. i A Stand-Oy. Our veteran friend, Robert Temple, who, although he has his failings like the rest of us, is at heart a true man and hiiphonorable gentleman, was dawn from his Vkinner Fork sbeeprnnch last Saturday. He now takes "and pays for three Copies of the Gazette to be sent to friends, and proposes to subscribe for six moro copies before allowing nay note-shavers to freeze out the mstitiv tion. Mr. Temple a mauw.ho has waded through mud, snow, ice, and grape and canister iu theservice of his country, and anything he saj's mnv be relied on. 0 o His Mite. Heppner's energetic postmaster. Mr 0.H. Hallock, has contributed his mite towards freezing dSit the Gazette by stopping the advertisement of his little drug Btore. He may have done this be- causeoadvertising brought him, too many customers, and caused him too mnnh jumping around his counter, which ho iu Opposed toHeBnreliy would "notary t81 unique u umtijjHper on account of any thing it mightOsay cabout his self -made - , . i.iii , . son, wnile lie knew those things were too true. Mr. ttallock may have a dit ierent mea nDout tne noble game of rreeze-ont after Uasu Mallory guts him irozerput or ins nine posiomue. ' o. e ,, t) Foot Hnee. At Newton Ranch last Saturday. W W. B. Cuuinghame backed his brother, Mr. Boyd Cuuinghame, against Mr. Hoaeason, to run from his house to the gate and back, a distance of ona mile and three-quarters. A very close race ensued until a quarteCf a mile from the winning post, when Mr. H. retired, ow ing to severe cramp. Mr. Jack Avlns Hcuumpauieu mo looii-rucers. air. H bq8 that he would have been beaten anyway, as tue pace was too quick for mm. Mr. uumnguame s time was 'J nun utes, 15 B90o:idi. Above the Fog. JP Jack McKeusie was in town Raturday, having cyue down from SohooihonaA Hat, where be and Dave Gaunt are en- gagea in putting up a lot vti cordwood for next winter. Gus Hale and Bill uranK are also at work n tne some neighborhood. While periodical fog have hung over the plateaus and rW. hills the past few weeks, the sun has shone warm and bright on the Flat, nnd the boys found it very comfortable with out coats, being above the fog. The best woodain the oountry comes from School house Flat. I. amber at Idurt. Wm. A. Kirk and Wm. L. Houston have bought Park Garrigues' sawmill, and just as soon as the weather will per mit they will start up and go to grinding out lumber, thus ending our famine. These gentlemen will run the business with eiierirv and entemrise. and have kindly.acreed to crive the Oazettt; eui- tor a lou wheeling smoke from tneir Dig To Wool Mm. As will be seen by advertisement in another column, Messrs. Christy & Wise, the well-known wool commission mer chants, are now ready to handle the wool of the Heppner Hills-country. The representative ofQthis reliable firm, Mr. E. H. Clarke, is at present over in the pnll-loosa country, but will soon return to Heppner to make any cash advances sheepmen may require. m-. I ueerr Wanted. We want a logger right away to tike a contract to haul to our null from 50J,000 to 800,000 feet of logs which are already cut. Kirk & Houbtak, Successors to S. P. Garrigues. Cl'KEENT SAYlXliS. facWbirh Some Heppner People Titiatt-Oatt Lad. "And so mj pious friend, Mr. PsiTie, want to be a district attorney! Well, rwwotnj) ranks a hell of a district attorney!" A Heppner Lawyer. "Those people who ear I am not an efficient and accommodating official, had better beware.'1 Heppner Postmaster. 'W-e-14 now, I tell-rea! I may be the ancle of a sair-made stiff, bat that a not my fault. Don't blame me."-Uncle Charlie. "People may say I am stinker from 8t ink villa, but that don't injure my chances of freea iB out President Arthur. I am little the nurtest man this 19th oentnry has thus far pro duced, and I owa most of this town, from Bill Kirk's new house down to Tom Morgan's bam.' -1H. Hireling Hallock. "The part of this town that young Hallock don't own, I do. I wonder if my reputation will be hart by the too-true things the Gazettb is Printing about me." E. Ramrod Bishop. "I0oueht to have a little office, for Mr. Rlaine is my friend, andanow Hunire Mallory is my friend. although only two months ago he wrote a letter to the Qazkttk in which he called me a cu? and a pettifogger. P. Lubricator Paine. STOCK BRANDS. Subscribers to the Gazkttb can have their brands published free&ofocharKeohH .111I11 11 . IU. Adkins, U. J, on riRht shoulder, horses; on right side, cattle. isrundage, Hi. A. Cattle, U ti on right thigh, right ear cropped and wattle be low it; horses, U Z on right thigh. Cunmghame, W. B., Newton Kanch. Horses, N with figure 2 under it on left shoulder. Cattle, same on left hip and thigh, left ear square cut. Cox x. English Cattle, C with lu in center. Cason, J. P. Horses, C on left stifle m - ii i . mri aj .. i i . : o j..,wt cuvuo, j uuuuectcu uu icit u'l', o uu- laps on neck. e Douglass, W. M. Cattle, It JJ on right side, swallow-fork in each ear; horses, li JJ on left hip. o W5 Krpnnh. A. II. Horses. A F nnrslftft shoulder; cattle, same Tin left hip, up-M per bit in left ear. Florence, S. P. Horses, F on right shoulder; cattle, F on right hip or thigh. Gay, Henry. GAljon left shoulder. Gilmore, J. W. Cattle, upper slope off eaolPear, wattle right sideXof neck, J G on right hip; horses, cirolo dTt on left shoulder. Harbin, E. v. Horses, J and roTilofck combined on left shoulder. Jones, J. H. Horses J with shade over it on left shoulder. Address Hardman. Johnson, Felix. Circle T on right hip, cattle; same on left stitilefoiwhi8es9S9 Jtirk, J. C. Horses, li on. eitlier flank. Cattle, same on right side. Lyon, J. J.w-Horses, M with bar under it on right shoulder. Mallory, Chas. P. Horses, 7C on left thigh. Mason, Jos. Cattle, JM connected, upper crop iueach ear, dnlap on throat; horses, JM on left shoulder. Address Pettysville. McClaren, D. G. Figure 5 on each shoulder for Jior.tes. Cattle, M2 on hip. Nordyke, E. Horses, circle on left thigh. Cattlt same on left hip. Oiler, P. Horses, PO connected on left shoulnler. Rogers, Cass. Cattle, 7 on left hip or thigh; ear mark, crop on right and under slope on left. Horses, i on lett.bip. Hector, J. W. Horses, JO. on shoulder. Stalter. D.B. Horses and cattle -7 on left thik'h. Krwrrv V. O.Ciittln. W C on left hinlt Crop Oil rigUli HUtl luiumuiuu kh mi dulap; horses'? W C on left shoulder. Wallaoe, Charles. W on rightothipli, hole in left . ear, cattle. W on right , , p i .i ... snouiaer, some same ou ieii buuiuucvkq horses. M Williugham, J. W? Horses, BUD on left flank. 0 Walbridge, Wm. Horses, TL on left i tip o 6 g sxjBvq, A (jenernl Settle-1' p. To all whom it may concern :dfceba8 sold cjut in the livery and saddlery and harness business, and desire to settle up with everyone, and all who are in debted to us by note or account, and knowing tho same to be due, will please call on W. A. Kirk, at theGffioe of Wright A Ayers, and settle the same as, soon asjwssiJlD W. A. Kirk. Heppner, Oregon, Sept, 28, 1883. Xuiwry Stork. I will take orders for such nursery stock as I have uot already oq hand for spring sales. Twenty years acquaintance with nursery men in the East enables me to place orders with Tirnis who will ship only reliable stock. iuARLES H Fell. Heppner, Or., Dec. 26, Partnership Notion. Xotice-is hereby given that Mr. Pbil. Heppner has been admitted into part nership in the Alkali House of Heppner & Blackman. Heppneb & Blackman. Alkali, Jan. 1, 1884. Owing to the threatened freeze-out, the editor of this little sheet has had to friit in considerable time lately iu sawing wood nthe backyard, and therefore has not been able to dish up much re uliug matter for this issue. But if the weather warms up so he can leave the woodpile, perhaps by next week he may find time to write up something which will be in teresting to Ed Bishop and his little clique. CITY HOTEL UR? Choice Wines, Liquors & Cigars. MINOR & HALL, Prop's. ESTRAY NOTICE. CTakna npajidfposW by the nndsrufc-red, 1W lug about fonr milesnnorlb of Heppner. Umatilla Count,, llraifnii nna7Jik'nT tlwat 10 Of 12 TKTS old, and her eal'f. a suoiuil heifer now about 10 smonths old. ( ow brandetl rgiire l on jen niu; lert ear cropped and nmlen-li'pe in Tigm ear; can uot marked or brandtd. 8uid cow and oalf wers this diiy appraised at tha sum of J2H by A. Mal lotr, Jusiioe of tiie Peace. Dated at Heppner, this 1st da- oi Fobranry, 1W 4tU9 Ci0. W. 8HIPHT. . Staffed Clubs. To fivery cash subscriber to the Heppneb 9 Gazkttb we will, besides sending tbem the paper for a year, give them a year's subscription on othe papers with whom we club, at the following redneed rates: Gazette Bnd Portland Weekly Stand ard, 1 year, ft 00. . Alkali. The Old Established I-Iouse of HEPPNER & so, O CO Dtnlwrn lit O e GifNERAL MKHCHAN-D1SE. Sole Affcrtts foP Henpngr, aiiil Vicinity -forthe- Cel o hdc a t e d - AND Knapp, Burrell Sc Co's.cAgricultural Implements. Commfssion and5 T'bndtng Merchants. m ShipfCare of H. & B., Alkali. O a FULL LINE OF SHEEP MENS' SUPPLIES VERY CHEAP o A HIDES. AND 9 PELTS BOUGH1 FOR CASH UU 1KAL1Q. leftiyeppner, Umatilla Co. Belvedere Saloon, Vm.E. Theodore. Pro'p. O )KEE1'8 only the( e S o ooct-oo eesess rPX Co. .cod .op -ocp o cm n Very Bestot Whiskeys, o e o -lol-8- The Belvedere Cigars, e With Havana Filling, rv. llie Finest in Hi'ppjicr. Fine New Billiard Table for Amusement ot Gitent. the Seeds! Seeds! o Miller Bros., 209 Secud Street, Tortlaud, Ogn., DEALERS IS EVEBT KIND OP FIELD, VbaP FLOWElt, YEOETABLK? GR-SS and O CLOVEIl SEEDS, ETC., ETC. A large stsck of LOCUST AND e 130 ELDER SEEDS For Timber-Cultures ou hnnd. Send for Catalogue. Mention this paper. 45-57 NOTICE OF INTENTION. Lend Office at La Grande, Or.. Jan. , 4. 'St. Vnt-oe is hereby riven that the. followiii. smed settler has Bled notice of his intention to m ike final proof in support of his claim, and that skat; A vt.-ktf Will ha mi 1 before John 8. Vineor Notary Publio at Vinson, Or., on Fob. , ISW, TU! William JSmith, D. 8. No. Iltt, fr the KHNE JiJW !, NE U. and N W U BK H Sec. 24, Tp I B, B OT E. W. M. He names the following witneeses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultivation or, :a i A Ja.,mm Humer. Joel Thrasher. Wm. H. Kobinaon. tieorgejiinville. all of Vinson. Ord 161 H. W. UwiOHI. Beister. Gazkttb and Chicago Weekly News, 1 year, f&25. . ' Gazkttb and Farmers Companion, 1 year, ?3.0U. . He.trt Blackmas, Heppner. BLACKMAN, J3 a i n Wagon, o - Alkali,' WascocC6.o o Ju LLjM J3 K li ! ! O 9 . All kinds of BER, SHINGLES, ETC., kept constantlvon hand. 1 j 'j We have recently received a large and complete stock nf FIRST - CLA SS LU MJB E li, SHINGLES, CtibAR rOSTS,ET., 0 Which wjrwiMJseat lowest pos eible figures. Give us a call. 0 DANIELS & HERJIEN Castle Kock. New Livery, Feed and 0 Sale Stablep ALKALI, -O OHEGOX. R. li. HOOD, Trop'r. O :o llort. Bought and Sold on Com mission. THE HEST ATTENTION GTA'EN TO HOUSES LEFT IN MY O CHA1CGE. TtTms Keasonnble. O Stock Shipied to any part of tho Ooun try as Ordered. NOTICE OF INTENTION. ndOfficeatUOnind.?r,Jan.25.,. o Notice is heivbjr riven that the rollowintr named settler has tied notioe of his Intention lo make 8nal proof in support of his clniroO si.d that said proof will De maoe w-roro i. ri . m.ii op. Notary Public at Heppner, Or., on March S, 1M, vis: e Orerton J. Miilkey, D. 8. No. 4002. for the N M NE '4 and N 4 NW U Her, 8, Tp 4 8, K 27 E. W. M. He names the fol lowing witnesses o prove his continuous' n-si. dencenpon, and cultivation of, ne'd land, vis Joseph Arbuckle, Wm. Lnnceford, W. J.t'anodr, Wm. Walker, all ot weppner. ir. 4.V.V) H. W. Dwioht. Beirister. NOTICE OF INTENTION. Laid Ofwci at Tbk Dalles, Jan. 4, lHh. f Notice is hereby rlven that the folhiwlna natned settler has filed notice of hie intention tn ranks final prtmf m support of his claim, ard that j I ' 1 1 1 1 1- k.fIM k M. Ion Notary at Huppner, Or., on Feb. -), Vrj, viz: (Mcarii. Jforaen, Pre-emption 'o. 2421. titr the BK Bee. ). Ti 1 N. B W K. He names the following wit Deeees to prove his eontinuons residence ujxm, and eulli v ition of, said land,cvii: ('lias. Wallace, Klisha Winslow. T. Armtrir, It. lleiideraon, all of Heppner. Umatilla t'o Or. , 12-17 L. L. Smith, Regioter, ft SSuUJl'Ufli "1 2 o 0 seam , so o O O CD CO o e e