THE GAZETTE. HEPFNEtt. THUiiSUAY, DEC. 3, '65. THIS PATHS r&!S?SSS JMvu-rtF.tnjiHnrf'aurMjBpriio" &t. w'ti'rf- (ulvon mlng SWIIUWU life UJ UUuid Xuf it ilfcfcV VOlijik IX CALIFORNIA. Perils of i'armius itntl tStock-Kainliig in the (joiSV-a State. The Newspapers ofSau Francisco at tbis time of ye.'ir aru Ht t'i contain Ji patolies from vsnuim Ciiiiforuia coast towus regarJiu the amount of raiu which hB falleu during the pluvious week. They read sumetuinir like this: "H-.in Jvme, Nov. J5ih A liyht rain bogn fiilliuK here liwt evtuiu ai-.il continued vitli intervals ttirouhout the ni'lit. The wind is uow blowing from tiie south with strong indiontiotin of more rain, ltyjtifall so fur 10-lUOtLm of an inch. FfMiera are jubilant." To most people living in Oregon the idea ot filling a whole pays of a news paper with dispatches about h shower of ram would suggest a scarcity of news items, but to one who lias passed a cou siderable portion of his liio within the boundaries of the gulden stale these rain telegrams possess unusual siguiH cauoe. When the Americans tirni came into possession of California, fully nil the land capable of raising a crop w ith out irrigation year after year, had been taken up under the laud grant system of tlie Mexican government. In size these grnirf ranged from a single league of . three miles square to tracts embracing what woiiUJ into Lit- considered good-sizi-J JntmneS. i'liuSe "ranchoa" were nearly alJ located between the ocean and the coast rang$, a strip of country M) or 6(10 miles long, with an average width of 40 miles, with the Bay of San Francisco about the centre of the bolt. The Mex ican grant-holders were Btockraisers al together. Their home buildings were located on some select spot near the centre of their range, and here they fathered their "vaqueros" and hangers on about them. A few acres would be fenced in for corn and watermelons and the balance left free to their flocks and herds. Our government respected these grants and so all that was left of Cali fornia for the Amorionus to take tip was the large, though comparatively aridj area lying east of the coast range. ' When the outside world begau to pour into California in search of the ,whicu her mountains contained, these Mexican rancheros commence! to soil their lauds; some in small parcels, oth ers parting with their entire tracts at once. Fanning on the American system was instituted and these favored btrips of rich soil, manured as they had been by the cattle of a century, produced crops far beyond the expectations of the most sanguine. Good prices for pro duce prevailed; then the rush from min ing to farming. In a few years the hordes of wide-horned mustang cattle mid swarms of coarse-wooled, bare bellied sheep disappeared from the face of this paradise and their places' were occupied by waving fields of grain, prosperous towns and elegant villa-like country seats. Iu somo instances the Mexican grants are preserved intact to day, and have come to be looked upon by well-wishers of the country as a curse to California, a system which enables one man to monopolize an immense tract of fertile laud to the detriment of the commonwealth. Whilst farming was confined to this narrow belt, there was n anxiety about the weatb.ee Abundant rains during the winter and ocean fogs iu the spring always matured the crops. liutnow, in a few yearn the incoiniiiiz home-hutvt- ora kind he-uua to nettle to the eiud of Die Ctowt Itaugp, mid in an extremely wet season a large crop or wfieat was raised by all who had ventured tliere. The stampede for farms on Uncle Ham's land then begau, and not three years more had passed by before nearly all the level land in the state was taken up for wheat-raising-. JS'oy California began to show its in equalities of climate. A wet season would be suocoeded by a comparatively dry one, when most of the farmers would bo compelled to cut their wheat for hay and buy their seed for next soason from tho favored localities of the coast. Next winter would be drier still. A shower of rtuu in .November would start the sown grain boautifiilly; then a period of bright warm days, lovely weather for health or pleasure, but death on starting crops. lhy by day almost the whole state was watching the clear, blim skies, noting every shift of tho light wind which persisted in ooming- from the north or west. A little cloud "no bigger than a man's himd" off to the southeast would orowd the street coruers in every country town with anxious men, whose money was lmriuin the loose, alluvial soil, "doing to rain sure," would be tho prophesy of the hopeful ones. La boring men, shopkeepers, merchants and lwnkers would he all equally uneasy about the ruin. December, January aud February would pass. No variation iu the weatheV New moons would appear and change, full and grow dark again, but oil the first of April the plains and lulls would look brow ner and barer than in Novemlier. Stock would suffer and linger; no feed, but the weather so bright and balmy that although starving they could not die. The February lamb ing passed without any increase. In many oases it was necessary to kill the lambs as fast as they camo iu order to give the ewes tho only chance they had to live themselves, iu '77 the writer as sisted in killing the offspring of iitOO full-blood Merino ewes in the San Joa quiu valley. Their owner bad lived on in hope tiutil the last, expectiug the wel come uowei-"whioli 'would oover the ground with green grass in four days, but it never came. At the oleventh hour he had rented an island op the river at an enormous oost, aud attempted to drive there. Lambing caught ua on the wav, trav-ding over broad acres of rich soil which had been black and dusty for uearly two years. Summer eiuue aud went, long, hot and dry, and again the farmers, already head and heels iu debt, managed to obtain seed to take one more chance in Nature's lottery. Agaiu the anxious w atching for clouds which never came. The immedi ate surroundings of San Francisco directly on the coast always had damp ness enough to produce vegetables and fruit, and so the bulk of the citizens of the city would not realize tho failure the state was making nutil its effect begau to tell on the pockets of business men. It was in times hke Siese that Kearney lecaui6 notorious! Idle mou (locked to the metropolis k) join those newly arrived thero from the east, and the thousands of Chinese working in the factories were blamed as tho cimse of the hard times. Then sand-li t agitation, the establishment of free soup-houses, and the exodus to Oregon and Washing ton would beooiuo the order of the day uuttl the depression iu the golden state was iu one way or another pulled through. Oneould suppose that an experience like this would serve to entirely depop ulate the great interior of California, and IJiat a howl would go up from the gtarTiuii people that would startle the world, but during these three dry years the coast eotiutry had produced enough for hom consumption, which would be sold at fair prices; the mines would still engage numbers of peopi$i and thus a lit tie money would always be in circula tion. Besides the knowledge that if the Ulterior did rais a crop, the producers would obtain good prices for it, situated as they were within easy reach of the markets of the world, served to stimu late the farmers who remained to further ellurts. Again sotd was obtained from some source, but this time abundant showers came in the early fall. Imme diately the fact was telegraphed to the metropolitan papers from all quarters: "A spieiidid rain. Farmers are jubilant." Now was everything transformed again. Credit was good; the hiiis assumed their grassy look. Plenty of work; in fact a bcarcity of hands. Agitation in the city ceased; Kearney's saud-lotters were dis persed to farms throughout the interior, and himself obliged to follow some less- noisy calling. The following harvest splendid crops everywhere within Cali fornia's broad boundaries, except imme diately along the coast where the rains had fallen somewhat too plenteously. Aud so the state was soon prosperous and shouting loudly for more help to till the farms, and new immigrants would be enticed hither, having yet to learn that the golden state was like a spoilt girl; she could smile sweetly or she could boowl like the devil. And uow California is again undergo ing one of the dry periods. It began last year. It may continue two or three, and in the meantime every shower which falls along the coast will be telegraphed tn the Han Francisco papers with the ad ditional information that "farmers are jubilant." v Eafiern OrecoVi farmers vwill never have to run such gauntlets as tlieseieJ moisture enough iu the shape of rain or snow falls to produce a crop, but our honest bnncligrass hills will always per form what they promise: a satisfactory yield when the soil is properly tilled and a good living for the stockman who un derstands and utteuds to his stock busi ness. J. N. Kail road liUiuts. The chances are very good for the nn- earneiailroafl lands in Eastern Oregon to revert to me government mis wiuter. Both of Oregon's United States senators claim to be iu favor of it. Mr. Dolph has been in Washington some time pre paring a bill to that eftcct, which he will no doubt introduce early iu the session, gjid Mr. Mitchell promised the legisla ting after he was elected that he would do all iu his power toward that end. If the people of Bunchgrnss would petition congress to have these lauds declared forfeited, and thus show the powers that be" how their sentiments are on this question, they would perhaps haslSTi forfeiture. Eastern Oregon is settling up with a desirable class of hard-work ing farmers. Most of them are limited iu means, and the policy whioh compels them to pny the maximum price for their homes works many hardships upon them, the more unjust because the railroad grant they are paying for has long since lapsed, and only hangs on through the dire negleot of their representatives. Many settlers have already paid the 2.50 per acre on their pre-emptions. Half of this should be returned to them when the government severs the hair which attaches the uuearned lands to the unbuilt railroad. A long-suffering people are now again straining their eyes toward Washington, endeavormg to descry some minute object on the hori- zou which will give them hope that Uncle Ham will take his heel off their necks and let them have a good fighting chance to work for their living. The thousands of nors of reserved lands should be either restored to the public domain aud opened for settlement, or should he fully ceded to the luuioau company at once, so that settlers could get titie without further delav. If the railroad company had the land, it is be lieved that settlers could procure traots of it at reasonable rates, according to its quality and location, and if it revert ed to the government the settler conM go ahead with his improvements in the full knowledge of what he was doing. Iu its present reserved conditio", the land is no good to either t1$i government or the railroad company, and it is high time something detinue was done about it. .TenVrsoii's Oversight. The death of Vico-Presidout -Hen dricks culls to mind the fact that the constitution makes no provision in re gard to his successor. If the president were to die also, w hi 1st cougress was as sembled, that body is empowered to ap point a successor until suoh time as uu election could bo held by the people; tint it congress was not assembled there would be no one empowered to call a session for that purpose. A cabinet meetiug might be held and the ,c.retary of state issue a proclamaticnbut he would have very little authority in the matter. That gap in the constitution should be tilled up before the occasion occurs which might plunge the nation into confusion and anarchy. AV--a--a--y t'rnin Texn. A aper called the Suuny Clims, over flowing with wit, humor and pathos, occasionally drifts into the Heppner Gazette shop, coining all the way from Italian, Texas. It is published aud print ed by ladies, aud shows much hard work ou their part. TLe Clime recently is sued a birthday edition containing much interesting matter, but the portrait of Barker Bradford looked as though the poor mau was having a very doleful time squeezing blackheads out of bis chin, orsomething. In low. Mr. R. Bcichmunui who for the past two yen has been living near the North Fork of the John Day, is now back on a visit to his old home ut Toledo, Iowa. He found his folks ail well, and is enjoy ing himself as well as a mau can who ohanges from the rough and romantic grandeur of the Blue mountains to the tame prairies of the eastern country. Advances on Wool. Reliable information has reached Heppner that the large wool firm of Oberne, Hosick & Co., of Chicago, 111., will be again represented here from Deo. 5th to ltc. 10th by E. W. Peet, who will make all needed advances on wool for nextseasou. Assurances are given that the freight rates and market will be suoh as to favor tho shipping of wool east B ar Hunt. Sam Clark and Dan Hall started out on a bear hunt last Wednesday and pot two big follows. The critters were found scratching around after ants and other grub, and the dog surrounded them in a patch of brush. The bears fought pret'y considerably, but the bullets were plugged in too thick for them, and they vielded np their fat carcases as winter beef to the neighbors of Sam and Dan in and around the Camas prairie and Cable creek country. Mr. Ashp, of Billing, Montana, bos bought lrtW sheep of Robinson, Lone liock, at $1.50 a head, one to three-year-old wethers. He will winter them here and either drive or ship to Montana in the spring. Ho wishes to make up a bnnd of 4500 but? Rlieep-rnisera are not very auxions to sell just uow. Death of Vice-President Hendricks. Thomas A. Hendricks, vice-president of the United States, died at bis home in Indianapolis at 5 o'clock Wednesday afternoon. The cause of his sudden death was paralysis of the brain. Mr. Hendricks has been in bad health for many mouths past, but his death was not expected. He was born in Ohio in lSl'J; in h'iS he was elected to the Indiana state legislature; iu ISoO, dele gate to Indiana constitutional conven tion; in 1851, member of cougress; in l-STri, re-elected member of congress; in lHTiS, commissioner of laud office; iu 1.H03, United States senator; in 1872, governor of Indiana; in 187G; vice-president of the United States first time; in IbivA, vice-president of the United States second time. Mr. Hendricks was never backward in expressing his sentiments. tie was honest in his convictions, and m private life his character was spotless. During his long political oareer he has by no not of misfeasance scandalized his party, and he goes down to the grave bearing the reputation of an honest, up right man. Expensive Kill. Over near tho North Forlr nt Mi Tnlm Pay last week Charlie Howard and Wal ter Kirk were riding along toward the former's ranch, on their return tmm Canyon City. The shades of evening were lowering, and in the coming gloam ing they descried what they considered a oig nil eiK. air. ivirk Held the hones while Mr. Howard dismounted and took a pot shot at the elk. The animal was killed in its tracks, bat Instead of hoing an eiK it iiuuuu uui vj ue a nue iiut hrnwn mail that Mr. Howard had re cently bought for $100. I. o. o. y. The following are the officers elected for the ensuing term: Noble Grand, E. G. Sperry; Vice Grand, Thos. Morgan; Treasurer, Geo. Noble. OEEGON WOOL EXCHANGE Geo. Pope & Co., WOOL! Commis'ion Merchants PORTLAND, OREGON. We hereby beg to notify the wool growers of Eastern Oregon aud Wash ington that we are prepared to make liberal cash advanoes on the clip of 188(5. Our agent, Mr. Mclntyre, will shortly visit the various localities for tho pur pose of making advances. San Francisco Casli Store. The Old Maddock Corner, Main St., - It hi Mate Me u o How Prices Have Come Down ! Siuco the new store started in No need of going to Al kali or any store in Eastern Oregon. We sell LOOK AT THE PEICE LIST I Cucon per pound r ww.afTrT?".?????. , ... 10 cents Shoulders per pound 10 cents Coal Oil per case 4 75 Sulphur indirect from Mt Vesuvius, per pound 4 cents Green Apples, per box $1 50 Flour, per sack, A No. 1 II 00 A No. 1 Coffee, guaranteed good, per pound 13 cents (Cheaper grades at less price.) California C Sugar, per barrel at 9 cents Canned Peaches, Lusk's brands, 2Mb cans 25 cents Heavy Eed Flannel, per yard 50 conts 8-ounce lied Flannel, heaviest in the 80 cents, now 'aterproof, formerly 1 25, now No. 1 Suits of Cloth, formerly $25 Cheaper grades at very low prices. Gents' Underwear from 50 cents upwards. We keep a full line of Groceries, Crockery, Boots and Shoes, etc. etc., aud will take Butter, Eggs and Wheat in payment at Cash Eates. AVe will duplicate any bill bought at Alkali, except salt, sulfur or sugar. " " Remember the San Francisco Cash Store, Maddock's Old Couxek, Mais St., Heppner Citv r Meat m- Market! JOHN B. HEITEL, : PEOFEIETOR, Main Street, ... Heppner, Oregon, ...DE.VLER IN.... Beef, Pork, Mutton, Corned Beef, Dried Beef! Salt Pork, Sausages, 'fripe, Etc. Pressed Can ned Beef and all kinds of Fresh Sausages constantly on hand. Home-made Uml For Sale. Highest Cash Price paid for , SUnighLrvd Hogs, Huka and bheep-Fclft. ' scorrs precixct. Nov. 18. The weathers fine, grass is getting green, and settlers here are all iu ood courage. Som, writer from Pine City who wastes his good time scribbling for the hogthiefs haudorgan tells about a schoolhonse built bv J. J. Galloway ex oept a small frle. "The writer must be a strauger, so 1 feel it my duty to ex p.ain the matier to him. He went so far as to sny th house would oost 700 or S8(X). I wiff not expose judgmeut about small matters, but when he goes so far ae to accuse his neighbors of re fusing to helpuild schoolhouses or pay taxes, it is time to kick. The schoolhoo.se will cost about 8350 or Si00, as it is a plain box house about 20x30. J. J. Galloway finds use for the old schoolhouss in this district, so he agrees to give J000 feet of lumber, equal o 40, said lumber to go in a school house at Pine City. Mr. J. J. Galloway thought of the old sayiug to rob Peter to pay Paul, so after he got all the money donated for schoolhonse, he well could then. ye agrees to turn the house into a church, and is to deed it to the United Brethren as soon as they pay him all the money back that he was out except 100. So the 2000 feet of lumber he gives for the old schoolhonse will easy pay $) of-his 8100. So the people lost oouBdence in J. J. Galloway last winter in a subscription school. One man sent two children, paid ?10, another sent one, and jid $10; he was no church member; so J.C J. Galloway sends five scholars, Bgr.v4 to pay 820, aud then - j- - -'T'"i , - " This is your cj -ho builds 8800 school houses. SUBSCIilBEB. If tho Lead. Alkali still takes the lead in low prices. It will pay anyotie to go to Arlington for a load of goods, nd Coffin, McFarland & Co. carry the lariest Btock aud sell goods lower than any ullier house in the oity el Arlington. Coffin, Mcl ahland & Co. ApjHeted Agent. G. F. Ashtou, representing the old and reliable Connecticut Fire Insurance Co., of Hartford, Corin., was in town this week aud has appointed me agent for said company at Heppner and vicinity. I represented this reliable fire iusuranoe company back nt Muntsville, Mo., my old home prior to locating here, and know whereof I speak Aeu I say that it is safe, fair and reliable. Those desirous of reliable insurance would do well to consult with me. Very Resp. Yours, Nov. 18, "8a Giio. W. Weight. Real estate morflriges, chattel mort gages, warranty deeds, quit-claim deeds, promissory notes, etc., are kept on sale at the Gazkttb office, and are also filled out, with notary acknowledgements, at snort notice. - Hevfner, Ogn. SAN - FKANCISCO CASH STOEE, STEEEl. HEFPNEE e kiWo lliinl of It. the old Maddock Corner Building. other place. It is the cheapest goods at Reasonable Prices. o market, formerly sold at Jv 05 cents Ra nontu 00, now , $18 00 Come to eTO BUY YOUR WINTER SUPPLIES." :o: REMEMBER THAT THE LEXINGTON STORE CO! SELLS EVERYTHING AT BOTTOM PRICES. o .OIJR STOCK OF. GENERAL MERCHANDISE! I: il IS FULL AND COMPLETE IN EVEKT PAIiTICULAK. H- ...v.. WE ARE BELLING. ...... ' Dry Goods,e Clothing, Boots and Shoes! HATS AND CAPS, Groceries, Tobacco and Cigars, (IwcRcry and Glass&are, Hardware, Tinware, Barbed Wire, ) AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS ! Qrain Bags, Needles, Sewing Twine, Doors and Windows, Wall Paper, Patent Medicine, Paints, Oils and Glass, Seth Thonuus Cloeks, ; LIME, " SULPHUR AND SALT! ' f ANDAKES AND SHINGLES At such Low Prices that it u-UUPay You to Trade With Us. :o: AVe Will Not Be Undersold ! m" WE HAVE COME TO STAY ! ' -8 Courteous treatment will be extended to all. Call and see ub Very Respectfully, HMER McFARLAND, Manager. .THE. f9 LEXINGTON CITY DRUG STORE, T T C T 7 w n ARRIS oc ioung, . HAS A LAltQE AND Pure Druexs and Medicines Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Glass, Putty, Paints, Oils, Varnishes, Perfumery, Toilet Articles, and in fact Pure "Wines .FOIt MEDICAL Prescriptiorfs Carefully Compounded. Ho ! For Arlington -:o:- . If You Want Merchandise of any Description, or Agricultural Implements at Factory Prices and .freight direct, come to Headquarters! J- W. Smith, Arlington. -:o:- I WILL NOT BE UNDEESOLD IN ANYTHING. Don't Le deceived. I have the Stock and I hava the inclination to give you ' THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES -HH- I pay 10 per cent More Taxes than All the other General Merchandise Stores here Cotnbinetl I HAVE A FRESH CAELOAD OF Plows and Harrows at Surprising Prices ! KM ALSO A CAR JUST RECEIVED OF "Mitchell" Wagons at a Further Reduction ! o Gale Spring-Tooth Seeders! Antl Buckeye Seeders and Drills 10 Lower Than Last Year! J. W. SMITH, .nx-TGTOsr. MARLIN Dost fur larra or mad. Perfect accuracy rwraotced JTV- - ZT.nX gHSfiHg?l p. i lumatci cu:ofw. Pnc reduce d. r. Pnortfnc mnd boouag, buLilus, Lexington! - T- : : i roprietors, FRESH STOTKOF and Liquors PURPOSES.. and Lowest Prices ! In TJao World cnwll rame mri in S e&Ubra. 40 mlDlDowderiSScal. A5mlns;40cal.60Kraliu:4Ac&L70ai)(l BSirrrin, Th utroiwett hootlnrrlti ted the only absolutely tare rlfl made. All ityLea, Tirtft Rlflra. Wtrrld reBowrd. The itaixlard fnra and thootin rallerlea. all caiibrps from 3 to 4b. from MITIFTRP IPMQ m TW UIVkM f SI Tlios. W. A.vora, Tberon E. Fell, Ciistle Rock. Heppner. CASTLE ROCK VVAKKIIOUSi:? A,YEES & FELL,0 . GrxebaL Com'ission Merchants. Advances made upon Wool for Enstorn Shipment at the lowest rutes of interest. Forwarding and Commission ! CASTLE ROCK, OREGON. W. J. HAYS - Hns taken charge of tho - FEED-:- STABLE! DOCK SHOBE'S OLD STAND, Opposite the Brewery f Heppner, Ogn. Horses Fed Stabled 0f W AT IjIvijnu rttiuun. A hirqe Corral and Wagon-Slied&n connection. ANNOUNCEMENTS. THE GAZETTE LANDWFFICE AnnrmnnM tlmt it IH nrfimm) to mftkft hnmU Btrnd, pre-HmitKn anil timhor-oulture tiliiiK" r final proofn, to conduct oonUwta. make out mort ffaieefl, deed, letiftwa, notea, aroerantR, etc. and attend to any kind of land or notary buainew. Upper aimn elreet, Heppner. Charles Cunningham, VINSON, : OEEGON, Successor to Jacob Fmzor, Brooder of und Doaler in Thoroughbred Spanish Merino Sheep Btatk of OiiitooN, ) County ok Umatiixa, j' I, Jacob Fi-hzw, btuiw duly fiwnm, wiy that 1 hnvo carefully exiuniiicu Mr. OunmntrlminV I mm! of Bpaninli Merino grade lmckn, above men tioned, and tluit they are n tine m any. if not thn fiiinnt, in thtH country, and are free from wmband all diwease whatever. j Jacob Fhazeu. Buhner ibM I and wornto bfioro mf thin jilut day of September, lbHfl. J. P. WAORll, Notary Public for Oreon. TENTH YEAR OF PUBLICATION IT 1 ID 3i! If the mibHcription price ($2 per year) ia sent in mm yonr name will be entered for lHHrt and tho remainder of 1MH5 will be sent as a prtunium. L. HAMUEIj, Puffcinher, 122 Front Street, Portland, Or. 8. P. FLORENCE. I FLORENUE. FLORENCE BROTHERS, 3 iLk.'i-ril.w-i.-t..j-'-r.-iJi i.fiitfRW. STOCKRAISERS ! HEPPNER, - - . OIIKGON. Cattle branded and oar-marked as shown above. Horoeg V on ritfht Hhetilder. Our cnttle ri'.utfe in Morrow, Gilliam, Umatilla and Waeeo counties. We will pay HOO.OO re ward for the arrest and conviction of any person stealing our stock. NOTICE OF INTENTION. Land Offioe at La Orande, Or., Nov.24, 'S5. Notice ia hereby Kiven that the followinff oained settlor has tiled notiee of his intention to make riual proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be saade before J. W. rtHdiriKton, Notary at Heppner, Or., ou January 9, 1886, viz: Joseph Crank, Tn commute homeateud No. 2MH, for the HE NWi8H NK ii and NE k Nli Hec. 23, Tp II H, H 27 1WM. He names the following wit- noHfmM to prove his oontiliuus residence upon, and uiiltivntion of. sniri land, vis: A. 8. Ilnrcli. J. C. Uall, 1. It. Jjuua. V. 11. Tayleur, all of Usppner, Oregon. Hl-4t) 8. O. SwurnHAMV.B. hVxiKtor. NOTICE OF INTENTION. Land Office at The Dalles, Off Nov. 2J, '85. Notice iB herehy given that tlie following-named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof iu support of his claim, and that said proof will bftmade before J. W. Kedington, No tary at lleppuer. Or., on Jan. 9, lbb4, vizi Win. Nelson, T. 8. No. van. for the BE ! HW M Bee. 10, E Si NW ii 8W H N W ii Heo. Si. T 1 N. K 01 E, W. M. tie names the follcing witneesos U prove his eontinnous residence upon, and cultivation of, said land, vis: Mm. More, J. I. Henvfiel, of Ha lineville: W. W. Utockdale, of Ella; A. J. Bor den, of Heppner, Or. llO-i m L. Bxith, Register. NOTICE. HOMESTEAD CONTEST. TJ. B. Land Office, Le. Grande, Or.. I , . , . Nov. , 18H6. f romplaint having been entored at tlus office br William Huling against William F. Hhiss. for aliar doning his homestead entry No. 2MJ, dated Bept. 21, ll, upon tbe K W UK (4 HE hi NE W and HW ! BE Hec. 6, Tp 2 B, ft 2 E, W. M.. ii Morrow cimnty. Or., with a view to the cancella tion of said entry: the said parties, are hereby summoned to appear at this oilice 00 the 21st day of ecemlmr, lWvl, at 1 o'clock V. M.. to resiioml and furnish testimony oucermng said alleged alwtidonmnnt. Tlie parties ere further notitied that Itco. W. Wright, a Notary Public at Hepp ner. Morrow county. Or., has been designated to take and reiort to this office for use at the hmr ing of Ihis cause the testimony of such witnesses as either party may present to him at Ida office in Heppner, Morrow county Dr., commencing Dec. 14. 15. at 10 o'clock A. M. and continuing thi-afu-r from day Ut day until all testimony offered be taken. And it is further ordered that service ut this notico be made on d-fnlant by puhlixh ing the same in the Heppner Oni-tte. a we kly newtia-r. once a wk for four ooniKs-utivn we-k prior to l-c. It. lie-1, and by mailing and posting as rejuirixl by Kule H of the "Mules of Practice." n--ti b"0 3wrgmMri("Regitj,r, mmm. Pi :