SIXTH YEAR. HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 16, 1888. NO. 282. THE GAZETTE ISSIJBD KVMtY THURSDAY AFfEItNOOK, BY OTIS PATTERSON, At $J.0O per year, tl.25 (or eix months, J0.78 for turps months; in advance. If yuid (or at tee expiration of time. 42.50 u year will be charged. OREGON OFFICIALS. a S. Psnnoyer. . of Hti"'. W. Bellmte. Tnuomrer WeBb. Judite Seventh. District -J. H. Bird. District Attorney 11. lUiis. MOBBOW COTJMTT. Joint Senator J- Wnwr . .r?? vvv;v::wm:Mitcheli: wuphmhW'': T .. .... T " Commissioners t . -biyi.J Thompson. , ' Clerk ft, Ad""- - TreeHirer if.",J"'?. - ' Asssssor ..-J- '-.!!. Surveyor Julius Kmthley. " School Suo't J. H. Stanley. Cornier a.j.buodo, . . . .Menrv Rlsekmnn, C.rSim'e'n" '.'.''..'..'.'.'.. .E. K. Swinburne, Kllie Minor, 8. P. Garriaiee, George noble J. " - F J Hallook. Tr,r(r H. C. McDonral. KSSX'.'..'.'.. J. D. Locknane. SOCIETY DIRECTORY. Doric Lodne No. iO K. of P. moots evaryTtieBClay oyeninnai in 1. O. O. F. Hall sojourninn broth er, ere cordially invited o attend. K. B. BWINBUUKE, K. of H. o. J. W. Mohbow, C. C. .usSS&L, WUlow Lodae. No. M I. O. O. F. ffiS&g& meets every Wednesday ovellins at &j&3gr 8 o'clock. Visit Ins- brothers oordi ally welcomed. tilto. Noulk, m. u. C. TV. TouKeaiiEM. Keo. Soo'y. SansSonci Uebekah Duff. No. M I. O. (). F. moots second and foartU Saturdays of each month. Members of the Ufgree oordiaUy wel oomod. Mas. H. B. Hihtoji, N. G. Heppnor Lodire, No. 09.A. F. & A. M. mtmki every first and third Saturdays of cash month. ... Will. A. Kibe, Secretary. p. DA1RYVIIXE. tnilre Balm Id No. 82, 1. O. O. F. resets ev to do dey evening ail o'clock at the usual "YVh " tn-- Visiting broUier. welcomed. VVDO Btru J. J. MsOee, N. (i. Intion to th'Soo. point of - " horses jo Bebeknh Degree Lodge No. 3S, meote "-d third VTcdJUesday of each month. Carrie Stanley, N. (J. Hardinan. See. PROFESSIONAL. GK W. ItEA. Attorney-at-Law.nzzz: :0 Q- nlafj Public and Justice of the Peace. HEPPNER, OQN. OFFICE OPEN AT ALL HOUUS riTrn WM 'VTJTaTTT. ATTORNEY AT LAW AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Opposite: Gazette Office, Beppner. -r AN I'FILINBS. Contested Entries, Reliable JJ li.Biiraiioe. laus mude and collections pronipwy attended to. A. L. FOX, Pb. 0. AND M. D. Srafeite of the University of Michigan. CLASS OF '69-70 Sceouil ntiention given to diseaies of wmen ud children. OfSce in P. O. Borg s building. W. R. ELLI3, Attorney -at-Law AND Notary - - - Public, HEPPNER, OREGON. Prosecuting Attorney for Seventh Ju- ,, dieial District. Will give.prompt attention to any and all business entrusted to him. OFFICE on Main Street, over Liberty Mar ket, CHAS. M. JONES' Heppner Barber Shop ! In the Matlock Building. Main St., Beppner. Js now turning ont Shaves, Shampoos and Hair truta In the highest style of the art. City Meat Market, flOnTH SIDE MAIS STKEET, HEl'PNFB, Keeps on hand a full supply of Frt sh mnd Cornsd Beef and Pork, Fresh Mut ton, Sausage, Tripe, Etc. C. E. BINTON, PROPRIETOR H. B. LE FEVRE, Professional Herder of Bucks and Billiegoahi Lone Eeok, : : : Oregon. Trades, sales and purchases negotiated at low Aommisaion, and a general line of ram brokerage transacted. Gathers from the ranges at shot ring time, takes no iancks that have been exposed to eab. dips, feeds salt and sulphur, pays for bucks not accounted for, and makes general deliveries at oonveuient places between the middle and last cf October. All for a Dollar and Ten Cents a Bead. LIBERTY MEAT MARKET, Me ATE B A SPRAY, Proprietor. 1RE8H BEEF, MUTTON AND POKK CON stantly on hand at reasonable prices; also boloexia and park sausage, head cheese, etc. New Tied Front, Main street, Heppner. 17a Notice. Notioe is hereby given that sealed proposals will be received by the oonnty clerk nt the court house in Mor row oonnty Oregon, for a contract by rind between the lowest bidder or bid ders and the oonnty court of said oonnty, to bnild a fire-proof brick vault for the safe keeping of the records of the oonnty, according to the dimensions given in the specifications and drawings. For further particulars see plans and specifications at the county clerk's office, where bids will be received until 2 o'clock P. M., Wednesday. Sept. 5, 1SS8, By order of court A. H. Tison. First National Bank OF HErPNER, C. A. RHEA. HUOH FIELDS, President. Vice-President. J. O. Haddock, Cashier. Transnots a General Booking Business EXOHxlNGE On nil parts of the world Bought and Sold, Collections made at all points on Rea " tunable Terms. This ad. calls attention to the fact that A. A. ROBERTS I now engaged in the Real Estate, Insurance and Collection BninMs. OFFICE WITH W. K. ELMS, OVKtt LIB erty Heat Mnrkot, Heppner, Onwrn. H. V. JOHNSON. W. M. HARRISON. JOHNSON AS HAHWISOX, Contractors and J3uilder. Call on tham at tho Morrow Building, Corner Main and May itreeta, and net their fiffur' on buildinfl before contracting elsewhere. MONEY SAVED ! By Getting yonr Fainting and Pupuring Done by R. A. FORD. SIGN JEJ Eg- PAINTING A Specialty Shop, First Door South of Browery E. NORDYKE, THE WAGON AETIST, Announces thnt lie is fully prppared to do Wau on Work and all kinds of Wood Untcheririff In a tintt-class manner at short notice. Oflico on Main Street. Heppner, opposite Leozer & Thomp on's hardware store. PETER O. BORG, Heppkbh, Obbson, DEALER IN Watches and Clocks, Jewelry, Etc. GOLD PENS, Amethyst, Cameo and Diamond Geld Rings, Gold and Sdver Watches. AND All ether articles usually kept in a Jew elry Store. REPAIRING A SPECIALTY, AND ALL WORK WAR RANTED. ST011K opposito Minor, Dorlson & Go's Slay St, Ed L. Mukkb. Wm. G. Soott. Ww Creel Sawrai Meeks. & Scott, rropriators, Sixteen miles from Heppner. Good Roads and Plenty of Lumber. DON'T DRINK Anything but the Purest and Best, which can always be found at the The. Lexington SALO ONI First Class Cigars. A Billiard and Pool Table for the Amusement of Uuosta. COOPER'S Sheep Dipping Powder IS USED ON 50 MILLION SHEEP ANNUALLY. AND IS THE Cheapest, Safest and Best CURE FOR SCAB. It has been in use half a century and applied to more sheep than are now existing on the earth, Snell, Heitshu fe Woodard, Wholesale Agents, Portland, Or. Koshland Bros., Portland. Sold wholesale by Wasco Ware house Co., The Dalles, Or., and retailed by all merchants. IT IS A COLD Wi DIP PICKINGS FROM ALL OVER. W niter Wells and Turner GrRves had some difficulty yesterday, (7th inst.) which ended by the latter drawing a knife on Wells, who afterward swore out a warrant for his arrest. In the meantime, how- ever, Graves had "skipped." JS. O. Blondin, the famous rope-walker, is willing to repeat his old-time feat of walking across the gorge below Niagara Falls on a rope for the sum of 810,000. It is said that Imre Kiralfy, the theatrical manager, will pay the price and arrange for the exhibition in three weeks. There is a rumor nt Seattle to the effejt that the treasurer of a prominent secret order is short in his accounts about $100, and he is liable to be arrested soon. Mem bers of the lodge acknowledge that there is a shortage, but there is evidently an effort making to cover the matter up. Hugh Medlock, convicted of horse stealing and sentenced to two years imprisonment from Walla Walla, at the December term, 188G, was released from the penitentiary on Monday, sentence having expired by commutation for good behavior. W. W. Union. A W. T. editor wrote to a Da kota postmaster inquiring about a delinquent subscriber. The letter came back endorsed, "The man is dead." Some time afterward, in overhauling a list of delinquents, an inquiry was inadvertently sent to the same postmaster about the same man. The reply came back, "Still dead." W. W. Eoss, an old resident of Sparta, and well-known in Eastern Oregon, met his death Aug. 2, near Island City, by being thrown from his buggy while on a canvassing tour. Mr. Eoss was aged about 65 years and quite de crepid. Helmet with an accident some three years since by a run away team at his home on 'Lower Powder, since which time he had never fully recovered. H. C. Gay, formerly a represen tative from Morrow county, and a good one, too, was a passenger on Saturday afternoon's east-bound freight, en route with a car-load of horses, shipped from Arlington. Mr. Gay is quite enthusiastic over the prospects of Heppner, and be lieves that it will knock out Pen dleton on the Long Creek trade question. He says that at last re ports two miles of track had been laid on the branch railroad to Heppner. He thinks that the now road will be a big thing for the town. E. O. Bob Burdette says: "My daugh ter, when you note that the man who wants to marry is too awfully anxious to learn whether you can bake a loaf of bread, or wash a shirt with Chinese dexterity, be fore you close negotiations do you just fly around and ascertain it he is either willing or able to earn enough to make a biscuit, and if lie has paid for the shirt he wants you to wash. Nine times out of ten, daughter, the man who only wants to marry a housekeeper can be kept more economically in the work house than he can in your father's house." A few days ago James A. Cooke caused the arrest of Detective Mears, at Seattle, because the latter was injuring him by shadow ing his every move. It now trans pires that there was a reason for the shadowing. Cook has left town for some unknown point in California, and it is said that wine, women and diamonds were the cause of his sudden departure. Young Cooke arrived here two years ago and worked at the news paper business for -a time, when he associated himself with W. H. Moore in the real estate business. Cook & Moore became very suc cessful operators and did a large business. Mr. Moore refuses to say anything about the amount Cooke took with him, saying he would try and prevent the matter from being made public. The colored troops at Fort Shaw, near Helena, Mont., it is reported, are engaged with govern ment mules and mowing machines in cutting hay on the government resorve to fill a contract entered into between a civilian and the government It is said that any one who wants a load can drive his wagon to the hay field in the reserve, and the colored troops fill it witli hay, charging therefor a price lower than the farmers or other persons in the business can possibly afford to sell it for. It is also alleged that an officer of the post has charge of the colored troops while they are engaged in this business. . The lines written on a postal oard by Robert J. Burdett to J. W. Eedington, and published in yesterday's Statesman, were the means of causing a good many people to cudgel their brains in an attempt to translate them, H. E. Holmes and B. C. Hopkins are tha only ones who did this success fully, as far as heard from. It turnSjOut'that the lines were not written in a foreign language at all, but in distorted English, from a well-known song, just as might be expected of Burdette. The lines: Ho Muggin, Ho Muggin! Fromma for renxhor; Rando! ItfiUsmyhartwitchoy,eto. Beingtranslated, reads: Home again, Home again) From a foreign shore; And oh! It fills my heart with joy. W. W.-j Statesman. TlinmnH Pfiterson. a Dane, was arrested at Posadena, near Los Angeles, Aug. 0, on a charge of committing an outrage on two little girls named Ho Hon, ;n that city. The victims artMsistirs and aged respectfully fiv'"Jf tltrse ysars. This afternoonyfitjsVy'nldren were enticed by Peterson to the top floor of a restaurant buildinar. where, it is alleged, he outraged both in a frightful manner. The children have been examined by physicians, who claim that the nlivninn.1 nnnrlitinn of the cirls shows repeated acts of violence and the poor cnildren are in a pitible state. Peterson has virtu ollv prlmitt.ftfi his ouilt to the offi cers, although he claimed being drunk at the time or. tne occur rence. An old gentleman came into an Augusta marble-shop last aut umn with the marks of affliction on his countenance, and after ex plaining that one of his sons had died, sorrowfully inquired the price of a tombstone. After look ing over the various Btyles and endeavoring to beat down the dealer, he remarked confidentially, with a glance at his consumptive looking wife who sat on the buck board outside, that he "didn't think Marthy would winter, and he guessed he'd wait and buy two stones at once," to get a reduction. Marthy "wintered," but she didn't "spring," and a few days ago the old man appeared again, snipped a couple of tombstones home, and went on his way. Augusta (Me.) Journal. At Los Angeles, on Aug. 7, the constable of Los Metos brought to the county jail Dick Perry, who was committed by Justice Yan slyck, of Downey, for trial on a charge of assault to murder Jas. Pbolun. The affair grew out of a dispute betweevrTren " who were cultivating some land together. The history of the prisoner is a remarkable one. He is 73 years old, has resided in this section many years, and is said to have acknowledged the killing of nine persons, eight men and one woman. The story is probably an exager ation, but he has figured in a num ber of bloody affairs. One that created the greatest sensation was the killing of John See n dozen years ago at Dswney. Shortly after this the sister of See at tempted to kill the old man, but failed. The man who was killed was the father of Dick See, who murdered William Duncan at old Gallaton several years previously, and is now at Ellens burg, W. T., awaiting extradition. S. S. McDonnell, of Idaho, re cently went to Medical Lake, W. T., and rented a cottage for him self and wife. He was largely in terested in sheep raising in the Big Bend country, and business frequently called him away from home. This was the case last week. He returned home Aug. 3, and found his house locked, and that no one Would open the door in response to knocks. He olimbed through a window, and met his wife at the door of her room. She endeavored to dissuade him from entering the room, but he persist ed and found Thomas Karker, who is said to be well-known in Spo kane and Wardner, in bed, appar ently asleep. Not wishing to kill the man in cold blood, he went to the door andrnded an expla nation of his wire. They got into an altercation and he struck her with his pistol, Wounding her. She fell on the floor in a faint, and the revolver was accidentally discharg ed, the ball entering the wall. In the meantime Karker made his escape by a window and came to Spokane on horseback. McDon nell immediately collected his ef fects and will return to his sheep ranch. He does not propose to prosecute the woman, but will simply leave her. A dispatch from Pittsburg, dated Aucr. 2. says: Miss May Patton, of Johnstown, Pa., shot and killed Charles DeKnight, a well-known vouna man of Lawrenceville, this " . I,, ,, i i morning apa wen oiew ner Drains ont The tragedy took place at the Metropolitan hotel, this city. The couple called at the hotel at o o clock this morning and regis tered as C. Lewis and wife. They were givn a room and nothing more was neard from them until 9 o'clock, when the guests were startled by the report of two pistol shots in nuick succession. The hotel clerk ran o tho room, but the door was locked and it was necessary to break it down to ef feet an entrancs. A terrible sight met the clerk and guests who came t a 4i, n 41. ! iiuixyiug vkj tiio etcuc. ju tiio floor was DeKnight, dead, with a bullet hole in his temple, and ly ing on the side of the bed was the woman, also dead, with blood trick ling down from a wound in her head, and the revolver still tightly clasped in her hand. DeKnight was in street attire, but the girl was in dishabille. It is supposed that they quarreled and that De Knight was about to leave the room when he was shot. Both moved in good society. The girl was the daughter of a furniture dealer at Johnstown, and has al ways borne a good reputation. She was quite handsome, and about 20 years old. DeKnight was a Pullman car conductor and lived with his parents in Lawrenceville. He was about 24 years old. In searching the room, a letter was found from tha girl, addressed to Jess E. Thurlow, Huntingdon, Pa., and stating that she was going to commit suicide. POLICEMEN AS STREET LIGHTS. General Stevenson, a Southern inventor of note, has at last, after many trials, perfected a machine which bids fair to entirely revo lutionize the police and street lighting departments in those cities which are progressive enough to give the invention a fair trial. Each policeman is to be provided with a patent helmet with a beacon electric light attachment. An ap paratus, similar in construction to a pedometer, is attached to a cer tain part of tha policeman's body and by an ingenious system of wires and olectricity generated by the movements of the legs is trans mitted to the top of the helmet, thus giving a brilliant and continu ous light. The well-known rapidity with which every policeman tra verses his beat will insure a per fect blaze of light on the streets of the city from sunset until dawn. If the policeman stops he must at least keep his legs in motion or the light will fall and signify that he is loafing. Besides this the Gen eral has a contrivance which will act as a spur whenever the police man stops to interview a servant girl or take a drink. The battery when not supplying a light must act upon a certain portion of his anatomy ana tnus Keop nim on the go. The Memphis Avalanche has come out strongly in favor of the invention and is urging its use in every Southern city. As a peace- preserver it would be of great value, and the affection which tipsy citizens entertain for lamp-posts, for instance, would carry them di rectly into the arms of the police and thus save these officers much unnecessary trouble. HIDDEN DANGER. A fourth and happily a suc cessful search by her Majesty's ship has just been made for a re ported rock toward the southern end of the lied bea, on which two steamships the Avocet and Ted- dineton are supposed to have struck during the year 1887, both ships afterward foundering. The fourth ship, her Majesty's survey ing ship Stork, guided by some slight indication afforded by an insignificant rise in the sea bottom, has found the rock. It is a small coral patch only 15 feet under the surface of the sea, and stands in twenty-eight fathoms of Water in latitude 14 degrees, 22 minutes and 8 seconds north, longitude 42 de grees, 41 minutes and 32 seconds east. It lies midway between the bset two positions that critical cross-examination had finally settled as most probable for the respective vessels that were lost Though it is between five and six miles from the direct straight line of the track, the existence at times of strong currents transverse to the axis of the lied Sea causes the danger presented by it to be by no means insignificant, and it is a matter for marvel that it has never been before struck. The difficulty of finding such a small rock may be appreciated from the fact that one of the searching ships was at anchor within 400 yards or it, with her boats sounding round her, without its being perceived, and she was driven from her anchor age by a gale before tbe spot was passed over by the boats, -uonaon Times. Helping the Right Side. Tn Violn flip ritfhfc aide in not onlv com mendable in a general point of view, but is judicious and pruueut wnen mat. neip o Anliutad in Laliulf nf the.ritfht side of the body, jnst over the lower ribs in the rear of tbe liver. Tne most einoieni nmp is afforded by Hostetter's Stomach Bit ters, an anti-billions medioine of incom parable eilicacy. Inaction of the liver is accompanied bv constipation, sick headache, furred tongue, nausea, occa sional vertigo, an unpleasant breath, yellowness of the skin and bull of the eya The author of these symptoms, liv er complaint, rooted by the Bitters is aooompanied by them in its flight. Fe ver and ague, which always involves the liver, dyspepsia, rhenmatism, debility and kidney tronbles are all maladies to the early relief and final cure of which this standard medicine is adapted. Don't use it by fits and starts, bnt sys tematically, that its effects may result in a perfect enre. It will pay you to call upon J. M. HAGER, HEPPNER OREGON, Who Keeps Constantly on hand a Large and Complete Stock of STAVER & WALKER'S Very Best and Latest-Improved FARM, DAIRY AND MILL MACHINERY. WAGONS, BUGGIES, CAE EIAGES, CAETS And Machine Supplies and Specialties of' all Kinds ( Ffa fc tai ! Quality Considered. And Price List. SUPPLIED FREE ON APPLICATION. TAKE GOOD CARE OF YOUR TEAM When You Come to Town by Putting Them In SIIOI3E IvIVJRY fc1Wl?rIi, -Which is B. A. Hunsaker. Opposite Natter's Browery, Heppner, Oregon. Saddle Horses or Hacks to Hire at Reasonable Bates. Stoclt: liourclecl I r tlie Titxy, Week, o I' Montli. All Stook Left in His Care Will Receive the Beet of Attention. For Pure Drugs and Medioinos call on GEO. W. HARRIS, AT THE CITY DRUG STORE, Lexington, Where you will find the finest stock of Drugs in Morrow county, consisting of a Fresh Stook of Drugs, Patent Medicines, Toilet Articles, Choice Perfumery, No tiona, School Books, Stationery, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty and A fine line ot Tobacco and Cigars. The Finest Brands of Wines and Liquors for Medical Purposes, Al ways in Stock. Physicians Prescriptions Compounded Day or Night. Sperry's New Roller Mills! HEPPNER, - - OliEGOJSr, Capacity 70 Barrels J, B. SPERRY, Proprietor, -: o Flour from best Grades of Wheat, flour and Mill Feed. Is now for sale in quantities to suit purchasers. CAS. E. WOLTEBTOK, President. J. W. Ctsick, Treasurer. J. O. The Farmers and Merchants Insurance Co., OF A-ISTY, OTfcEGOJST. Capital Stock, $300,000. A Square Company Managed by Square Men. XDWICHT'S TBS COW BBAHD. V IU DELICIOUS BISCUITS or WHOLESOME BREAD USE Dwight's Cow-Brahd Soda-Salepji-js, ABSOLUTELY PURE. , ALWAYS UNIFORM AND FULL WEIGHT. - . B son that thus U picture of Cow on your pscksgs and yon will hsvc the best Soda mexle, THJ cow r,nAND, Vfj jfUa 'WdiSnsM' Call and see this Fine Line of Goods, or send for Handsomely Illustrated CATALOGUE, Now Enn by- Oregon. :- Wmtsmax, J, K. Elehsiin, Vlo.-Proldont, Bocrctsrr nai Mu W. 11. Kaikosd, Assistant Secretary. Paid up in Cash, $60,000. MAHL RbWICHT'l