Ob o o oo oo a e a e O 'Z:l " r O O WEEKLY oo e O O 0 a Devoted Especially to the Live Stock and 1g'ncultuval Interests of Eastern Oregon. - 6?' o CD , . - JSC oo " VOL. I.;- o LisIIEPlliRv UMATIUCOUXTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1S1. NO. 49. e o o OOO CO oo ' 0 es CD t O O oo4 e THE GAZETTE IS ISHUED EVERY THTHSDIT AFTKHNOOK. by e J. W. JREDIXGTON, At .3ti per ywir, TlAI fur nix month. M for tliree miml It if Ml liideiieiident Local PatxT. wianKAri own until, jmynw IUm'huih on the dol lar, in run io a UwitimntH butiinpsn enterprise, and not tm h charity ultop or bnjKUitf inHtitution. It will wiir tlie collar of nodi(iie, party or faction, Jmt will work for the bfttt intereMtn of the peuph. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. ' DCRIO LODGE, No. 20.' KNIGHTS . of P Y Till A S, Mtieta every Tuewluy evening, nt 7:30 sin every TueHduy evening, nt ik, in (WLri-.'jag. Main St., He CiierH iu ifolJSrfi and in;' will receii nor. AH brother iu jrolaiVT and ijik will receive a o clock. In ( anlLi "law. Main ht.. Heon- hnnthtly welcome. P. L,. Paine, C. C. T. Ji. i MLiQv. otrjl. and B.1 WILLOW LODGE, No. . 0. 'of (). F., GO, Jlwln Wecln-lHV fvoniniw in (hid FpIIowk' Hull Members of tho Onler are cordially invited to Kt- IH11U. 9, WA. K.IBK, H.M. , ( '. W. ToUNfJOKE.', lire. tivK. HEPPNER. LODGE, NO. .4, .1. M., 3U, MeetMHt MnHonio Hall, Leezer KuildiiiK, on the H rnt and tluru HuturdHyH nt encli montli, nt 7 if, M. E. . Sloas, W. M. HEPPNER LODGE, No. : . a ofG. T., 450, Mtiet bvitj: Friday pveniiiK nt 7 P.M., in Odd rtuws nan. J. 11. HPEMir, w. l . X. Hf W. WniUHT. 8er PROFESSIONAL. ry ew WARREN CLARK, " Contractor and 'Guilder, IIkppxek, .... Ohegon. Country Work a Kfieeiidty. If you want any tliinK liilt, obtain my prictj beforo koiiik vhe v!nre. THOS. MORGAN. 'Auctioneer.' OA. O Obi)om. ' '(Offiov next T HuildinR.) 1lt()MlT aim nn-iirate attention buainoHR in bin cliarxi). Kiven to all O GEOTAV. WRIGHT, AnORXEV-AT-LlWAXD WAHV lTBLIC. "IV'tj practice in both Stat atul Federal M Courttt. Proof cf clainih takitn. TitleHto Ijmd inventiKatetl. W"") eftate IniKiiiw-tHatteiuliHl to. Collections and eonveyaneinjf afely madu at I'HiHonable raten. All lnniitiw enlrueted to mo will re:eive prompt attention.. Oflice on Alain troet, Heppner, (rt'Kon. ,.. HMf W. WILLIAMS, ' ' " ' ' ilffisV rsinlfrr.i'tti'er (jjaiiwr a"' llrainci', Ileiiimor,' - - ')retroit. "i IVUKKTniNH in tlm PainUnu Line done with J iiHiitntuM and diNpaU:h, und BtttisfaotioH 4iuaranteed. i li. L. McAiiTUfci, The Ualb, Or. Mc ARTHUR (. W. Hka, lleppner, Or, IffiA, ATTOItNE H AT LAW, 1 1 AVlNtt formed io.iartnersbin for the I 1 pmrtice of law in the Circuit Court of tho Mutt of OivKon for the rounly of Umatilla, all poiKou who have brntintw in tlie said court wilJ Fiave tliadvimlJto of Jih1k Sk Aithnr'a amist uncv in the trial of their casen bjQdacin tliem in charRi of (t. W. Hen, at'Uoppner, OreKim. L. wT DARLING, 'Justice -and .Notary' l'ublic- IxiNU Rock, Wahco County, OitEOoN. J j AND F1LIN(, llAL PllOOl Etc., a Specialty. , s ioi.ij:ctions Made, and Doxls anil oilier V7 l(!id liiKtrumentB drawn. nlMt T. L. J0HNSTO5, LAW Y E I'urpNEii, Okkoon. "M ISCELLANEOUS. M. LICHTKNTIIAIv. Boot and Shoe Shop, Main SI., 1 leiUmei'POivyuH. o IJiKils'.nul S1hh Made to O ' Iiitttinmj .etitl'i EJtcutttt. Satisfaction Guaranteed N OT ICE O FIN TENT ION. - Ui:dO trice at The Pal!.. Or.. Jan. 22, 'N4, otni- w hervliy aiven tlint thp fiiMiiwiiiir riMied ttliT huN hlrd notice of bin intffition tt make final (TtHif in xu(Mort of bin claim, and Ihalwiid proof will be "lule bvftov Clerk of Comity Court, lit Heppner, Wir., on March i. y'u: Feermtiit (liven. Homestead No. 1214. for thefy i NK ' K NW Sit. IU. T US, H Jii K. He nameo the follow nit witiienn-H to iirovp his com imiuii" rwidi'iipn upon, and cultivation of, aid lamU viz: Joseph Keffer, J. M. Worden,' John H'jylrix, Thomas Nuith, all of lleppner, Umatilla comity. Or. 44-tK . K. L. Smith, Hetriiiter. Mrs. H. A. Hayman is now prepared t ) weave carpets, and anyone wanting mything done in thitt line will plense five herst OltEQOX, i-HEAUCIK Watches, Clocks, Jewelry -ALSC mvurthysf, Cameo and Diamond e Cold Itiitys, Gold and Silrcr , Wulchcs. All other articles nsually kept in a Jew elry Store. ' . j , i . . ,; Q : . : REPAIRING A SPECIALTY. vith C. M. Mallory, May Strept. All giiuranteeiL vlnl-tf. PIOWKKR IPBTKK, Heppner, - - QreijotZ CHAS. E. HINTON, Proprietor. . )(0 ' : The ILgse for the Farmer. TliesHouse for the Horseman. ' The Hoiwe for the Cattleman?6 The House for Mie Sheepmai The Houne tiere all are At Home, , Hoonm Neatly KuniWiwl. Tahib aO ats Supplied With thb Bkst the Market Affouds. llnviiif; reunied elin w of (bin favorably known iuhm, and Kone into t.ho hotel btiHinerm aKatn, 1 wonkl bo k'h'I to meot my old friendu, and will endeavor ui the future, tm in the past, toentujtain all iu th mom aio'eeublo manner. vliniMf. giTY meat Market, Win., J. Mi'Alt'i; Proprietor, . Hejijmcr, Orcjron. licef, I'trk 4Mul an ul 1'casuuu little. CIW HOTEL, It'lneiQ Orctjtm, . MINOR, Phoprietok. -:o:- Commercial Tmvelers will Understand thtit this is tho - ONLY HOUSE -r That Elkxihhks Sample Rooms. go to To Get Your "Wagons l'akhed Rring Your Purses along with you, and don'tVu forget it SING Washingand I roning, HO Cents a Dozfn. May Street, HEPPNER, OREGON. lfomember the Old Stand -OF -- G. AV. Bwauuart. IIrppxlb, OliKOO. O .wheub Torwii.l FIXO i 039 i Old Judge and . United ve Stand, -.4 SPECIALTY.- 'pHK.SK bnitidsar" Favorably known by judge , 1 of doodl iimor. InMf. " ling's Live Serd. The cheapest, the freshest, the purest. They never fail to grow and give a lib eral crop. SM flower seeds, 300 vege table seeds. t5 fields seeds, '20,000 cata logues to give away, send foj one. Local agetiU wanted everywhere. Eked aq, I3araboo, Wis. Heppnkk, O THIEF OK TIME. We'll read that book, we'll sing that Butwhu? Oh, when the days are Ions; I When thoughts are free audvoioes clear; song, Home happy time within tlje year: .. - The days troop by with noiseless tread, The song unsung; the book unread. We'll see that friend, and make him feel The weight of friendship, true as steel; Some flower of sympathy bestow: But time Bweeps on with stetidy flow, Until with quick, reproachful tear, We lay our flowers upon his bier. And still we walk the desert sands, And still with trifles fill our hands, While ever, just beyond our reach, A fairer purpose shows to each. The deeds we have not done, but willed, Remain to haunt us unfulfilled. ' ' ON A SLEEPER. "Never was so amused in my life," said calmly the old traveler, "as one time when I was traveling in the western part of " the state. There wgrtwo awfully stunning young lailies in the sleeper who oc cupied the seat next to mine. They were traveling with the father of the older ong, and he and his daughter had the whole section on the opposite side of the car, and the other had the lower berth op posite that one, and coESetJiWiMjjQ next to mwe. I sat with my back f r to them and heard them decide to sleep together that nig!t in ' the berth next mine, and they said they were so gladthat top berth wasn't occupied, because they wouldn't be disturbed by having anybody climbing up there for any thing iu the world, and then it was such a lovely place to put their thiiJJor the night "Well, every thing seemed propitious for their plans until, just as they were pre paring to retire, a fellow got on at a s)!trn?HeMifaif&.t would-be mashers, vou know regular swell. He cot the top ffljerth of theirs, it beinc the onlvJ one m the car that was vacant, "uid the porter came and told them they'd have to taj:e thehwraps and their hats, and all their othor thingjteput of it "Inn't that just too horrid!" 'said .... " i one of the young ladies. "ihe masher was close behind the porter, and he got up a most delightful Bmile and said: " 'I really trust, ladies, that I shall not be very disagreeable.' "Well, they treated to the shadow of thcupamit's wing, and I heard one of them say: 'He shan't think he's made a conquest of us,' I don't believe he did think so the next morning. He went to bed in the top berth, but not to sleep. The two young ladies were uutler neath, and, the stern parent slept in the top" berth opposite. Suffer ing Mosesi how that stern parent did snore. "Why' I never heard anything like it Then the torture of that unfortunate masher began. 'Oh, do just hear that horrid man "up above us snore,' young lady No. 1 would say, in a perfectly auiMble tone, as her father cave vent to a wirticular violent burst oJLmusk Oprhen the masher would .cotih to show tlfct he was awake and guilt less, and the young lady, perfectly aware who was making the noise, would remark: 'Poor papa! He can't get to sleep uPeause of that awful snoring any inure than we can; oh dear!' The masher Would cough more violently, and then his fair tormentor would say: 'I de clare, if he. don't stop- snoring I shall rap on the bottom of the berth with my shoe.' And ure enough she did, and they lay and giggled half the night about;it And you should have seen liow lamb-like and inoffensive tfcat masher was m the mormnc. 1 wis really sorry for him." ' SETTLER'S RIGHTS. Some of the apologists and de fenders of the railroad land-grab- ueia tun itiiemptuig w oppopc rmssace or me onis in concretes 10 forfeit these lands back to the pub. lie, by setting up a cry about the rights of settlers under the license of the railroad. This is a false cry gotten up purposely to deceive. There is not a single bill now' be fore congress to forfeit any of these grants but what contains ample provisions " to protect the rights of all bona fide settlers un der the railroad contracts or deeds. Let no one be deceived by this lame attempt at deception. When wolves protect lambs then we will expect railroad companies to pro tect tlie rights of the settlers, Congress will give them the pro tection the land crabbers have re fused TEXAS CATTLE HEX. John N. Simpson owns the bet j xx A n 7 AT -n-uverall, ot Loleman, is an , ter p? fjpi 'xissounan, xie is repuiea to , TT ? Ill bo worth 2.000.000 in cattle and land. Lane & Millett own about 125, 000 acres of land and employ , (!0 cowboys, all tfee time. ; II.. H. Campbell, of Motley county, rep resents $2,000,000 in land and cat tle. C. C. Slaughter, of Dallas, is lvvortk $750,000. iWGeorgo V. "West, of Live Oak, owns one pasture containing Izo, 000 acres, has over 20,000 . head of cattle0and considers a check for $100,000 a rather small transac tion; Senator N..G. Collins, who hadn't ten cents to begin with, is worth $1,000,000, .made in cattle. L. 13. Harris . is much like him. The latter has one ranch in Tom Green county embracing 65,000 acres, which is a half day's ride in leith, and takes in 10 to 15 miles of the Colorado river. Dick King is ' literally king in the business. He has 650,000 acres of land in'olie body, 40,000 in another at St Gertrude's, anoth- extent, and many smaller tracts, ml his opinion hardly worth mention ing. , ' A. "W. Tierce, of Matagorda, was a cowboy, but now ovgiiiCCne jys tiye from the gulfJ the Colorado river, 6-4 miles tong, L&ssdes 10, 000 acres of caney land ' on Mata gorda bat. He is a great wag and story-teller. . E. C. Sugg, of Gainesville, Tex., has imiiensg herds in , Indian Ter ritory and Wyoming. He came to Texas at the close of the war, . a -pnnrybw. He is now worth about iLauOOin cattle.' ' ; '' PEOPLE'S LANDS. The people's lands must be fought for toothe bitter end. Let Semtor Slater remember, and let the House CtSilmittee on . Public Lands take, notice, that the Port land Board of Trade does not rep resent the people of Orecon, nor the sentiments or wishes of the peo ple. I3ut on the contrary, the peo ple of Oregon are bitterly opposed to the Portland Board of Trade on nearly all questions, and especially on this railroad question. And besides this, these Board of Trade resolutions not represent the disinterested judgment of a single man in Oregon. This Rtmrd ot Trade is composed of Portland Sjerchants, every single ma which has in his pockex a spi contract which euabhs him to ship his freight over the Northern Pa cific railroad for from thirty-three to fifty per cent, less charges than is charged to the lfierchants of Salem, Albany, The Dalles, Walla Walla, and other places mitside of Portland. Thigajy&aril of Trade isJ simply passing iaie resolutions which its patron and master de mands of it And the resolutions the Board passed to have the peo ple swindled out of their lands are entitled to no more respect'or afH ttQtion at the hands of Senator Slater and other members of Con gress than if they had been adopted by a meeting of the fire men, brakemen and section bosses in solemn convention assembled at the railroad shops in Albina. TOO OLD.. The Boise Statesman is eminent ly correct when it says: An ex change mentions the recent ap pearance of a poem on Arizona bv a bard who has probably iwver vis- ited our sister Territory. The poet cives a vivid picture of a herd of "long-horned cattle" stampeded by IndifSis, who shoot the herder with a "feathered arrow." This idea of Arizona is obsolete. It was good c,tor twenty years ago, before the Inditm agent had sold the gentle savage the latest improved breech loading riflesaUd S?e best ' ammu nition. Now an Indian in Arizona with low af?d arrows is as great a curiosity aa a man who refuses good liquor or the prospector who has not struck it rich and made and lost a half-dozen fortunes in five years. The "feathered arrow" must be laid away with the stories of the good Indianvho never got drunk, or the gentle savage who nobly refused to scalp the white man whj) had fed him. Christopher Columbus was the first ruanto "go west" About that time, Mr, Bighead Bishop was discovered, i It is difficult to lmacme thatJ wnai w now tue lair ana populous j fctate of Kentucky should have i been only fifty years ago the dark hunting-ground of the Red Indian. Indeed the sufferings and hard ships of Daniel Boone and his fol lowers have hardly been sufficient ly realized. Imagine what must have been the life of the handful of men, women, and children, who were right in the middle of a ter ritory where Indians came not to live, but to fight The Indians of the South came to fight with the Indians of the North. A touch ing story is told ( the storys touch ing because it is true ) of an Amer ican mother who w as surprised by Indians while doing the week's washing. She had one hand in her wash-tub, and she wa? ladling out some hot soft-soap with the other, when she espied the face of an Indian peering in at the window. Quick as thoulhf"slthrew the whole contents of the ladle full in to the red man's face. The brave howled with pain. He had never been so highly flattered be fore. The other Indians, however, ereatitetlriilobsSb their satisfaction in such expres sions as these.; "Good squaw! Ugh ! ugh! Plucky squaw!", They fur ther testified thjiiyippreciation by spaing her life, and by taking her and her child CiO captivity with ..them. Through the long winter nights the mother nursed her poor babe in the Indian wig wams. But the life was a distress ing one. The food was bad, and t3 smoje of the wigwam .rru ft tlft SOFT SOAP. child cry. The mother, fearful"?- colors the Cceur d'Alene mines lest the duels would wecome irn- patient and kill her child outrfgW :. it. j.. :i i ,i:.V4 woiuti" croon io ii in ti pietiumy v"oice: "Dou'fPljo cross, honey; don't be cross." Death soon came to the poor mother; the child, however, lived, grew up to be a fine girl, and was adopted by the tribe. With bungling pathos her Indian foster-father called f?eO"Cioss- Hovtey." .The devotion of the American mother had touched even the Indian heart CORRUPTION FUND. The San Francisco Chronicle publishgs a copy of a confidential circular issued by the Railroad Shareholders' Association, signed by John Livingstone, president, of 2ew York. The circular sets forth thafthe object in view is to raiss an immense fund to defeat legisla tion on railroad matters, to secure the repeal of existing laws, and the abolition of railroad commis sions in all States where such ex ist. All railroad shareholders are invited to contribute to the fund, and the amount of the subscrip tion expected is named in a confi dential letter accompanying, tbe circular. ' Two . California share holders, not 4ftffif? have been called on for $100 each It is understood the demand on in... : f"..:ii i, i, , wetuuiy uuc3 ui uc in mo buui proportion. It is well known that great eastern roads have allied themselves With the Central Pacific to raise this fund, and it is predict ed jji the circular that enough will be subscribed to defeat congres sional action on land grant bills. It is to, be hoped, that some of these men who are scheming to prey upon the people may be ar rested for bribery and conspiracy. "What kind of a horse should the all-purpose horse be?" was asked Coleman, of Illinois, and he replied, "It should be a horse 16 Wiands high, with good, serviceable bodv and limbs, and thensthe more style he has the better, dif he car ries a fine head with a well-arched neck, if he has a long, busy tail and an active way of going at the walk, or the trot, or the run even, all the better. Such a horse is larce enough, and not too large. He is just the size for the plow or the wagon, for the saddle, buggy or carriage. He is readyand suit able for 'any job of work on the farm or off of it. If lie is for sale his owner will find plenty of buvers. If he has the size am qualities spoken of, and is in addi tion trotting bred, so much the bet- , p 1 Ml , rtU ter, ior ne win comuitiuu bo muui the bter price. The shrinkage of Tulare lake; Cal., uncoed a prehistoric set tlement stone buildHigs, traces o canals, once bordered with treef& and other evidences of occupation by an unknown race, being cleerly defined as tho water guusiui.' LEGS OFF. At Lewiston a niNliLIe-nr'pii mim waiKetl into the olhce of an attor- ney amrtook a seat, w hen the fol- lowing conversation took plac? SAW MY "I called in to see about gittin' a divorce from my wife." . "Ah! what seems to be the dif ficulty?" "W elh me and Jinny are always quarrelin', and I think it would be better if she would go bat k to her folks and I stay where I am. Sheo ken take the three children with her." i . . "On what grounds do you want the divorce?" "Well, you see, it's just this way: Jinny's the most skeeriest woman of tramps ye ever seen, and soewa wh'en we go up stairs to bed she wants me to look under the bed for a man, when I know ther' an't no man there. So you see that I get mad, and then she gets mad, and then ther's a fuss, and I don't have no peace and can't get no sleep, and I'm a hard-working man." "You can't get a divorce on thoso grounds, sir." I can't?" "No. sir." o rfivlgtcjpli j. ii go jtomo huh sfiw ui legs uu the beirclose up so a man can t get under. If I had thought of that sooner I might have saved all this time coram' in rfieiip fiftm Camas Prairie." A MALICIOUS t CIRCULAR. A cimfidar has been issued from the Northern Pacific railroad office at St Paul, which pictures in glow- The circular is evidently designed to increase the passenger traffic of the road, and as its ultimate effect will be to caust an influx of ad venturers which in time will be come a burden on charitable peo ple, we feel it a duty to condemn the same as retarding rather than advancing the interests of the Nortbt As the mines are but little prospected, it would Vie noth ing less than a wild-cat scheme to leave employment even in unre- mote quarters to attempt to earn a livelihood, and even should the New Eldorado, so-called, prove as rich as its most ardent proprietors o claim, there are plenty of broke men there to work them. Boj, some of you may get rich by going there, but inethe long run you will find nrore real richness in the dirt of the Heppner Hills. '" Up to Kirk &, Houston's Willow CreelSawmill is the place where they will soon jdank in big wet logs and turn them into cash as quick as a railroad man can draw his sal ary out of the pay car. The log is held on a carriage by means of iron dogs while it is being worked into lumber. These iron dogs are aryramibn(jf0lifo those we see, on the front lltiluolibil,! , . lvrmvnKffrie frnnt iw. casionally. I hey are another breed of docs, ihe managing ed itor of the mill lays out the log in his mind and works it jnto dimen sion stuff, shingle bolts, slabs, edgings, two by fours, two by o O eights, two by sixes, etc., so as to use the goods to the best advan tage, justRis?! woman takes a dress pattewi-jand awitsit so she won't have to piece the front breadths, and will-still have enough left to make a polonaise for.last summer's gown. 'Gentlemen," said the professor to his medical class, "I have often pointed out to you the remarkable tendency to consumption of those who 'play upon wind instruments. In this case now before us we have a well-marked development of lung disease, and I was not surprised to find that he ia a member of a brass band. Now, sir," continued the professor, addressing the consump tive, "will you please tell the gen tlemen what instrument you play on?" "I blays der drum," said the sick man. A Pizen Gulch correspondent sends in the following interesting items: "I have no material change to note in the stateof the weather, except that Miss Mary Smith is engaged to be married t" John Jingledoodle. Ulysses S. Jo8es is building a chicken coop, which will be the finest affair ever seen this side of the French (.ount.s. ranch. Our pastor was obligedsto throw away the remnants of his last donation party, and we are sorry to sa&the boynleft very few remnants to throw-a way." a 0 e o o O ooo Q