WEEKLY BUDGET. THCRSDAY ...JULY 17, 1890 Entered at -4h. PosUifflcc at Lcxinoton, Or., as Second-class Matter. At the. subscription price of the LEXINGTON WBMC'LY llVDllliT is only it per year, ve shall insist upmt payment of cash in advance. There u7H positively be no deviation from this ruie. Any one receiving lliit paper anil knowiug that he has not paid for it, will understand that it is either complimentary, a sample eapy. or that tome friend hat paid for it. PUBLIC OPINION. What Some of the Boys are Saying on Topic9 of the Day. . Speaking on the shipping bill the other diiy, Senator Frye Hai J : Now, this is a lireut nation. We boast of it immensely, We are complimenlinir ourselves hugely over the census returns, over our wealth, over our manufacturing industries; and yet to-day we are fulling into the con tempt of the whole world because we, a maritime nation, have no ships on the ocean; uijfa we are- entitled to that con tempt, too. We are a giant, but we are bound. We are a Sampson, but our locks are Bhorn. Why should we pay $150,000,000 a year to foreign ships for carrying our cargoes? Why should we carry our mails under a foreign flag? Why should every paHsenj?er who de sires to sail from America ubroad be compelled to sail under a foreign flag? Why should we, witli our immense wealth and our great power, our ship yards and mechanics, our enormous count-line, depend upon foreign nations to do all of our foreign carrying business for us? Why should we permit them to pay subsidies, as England lias for fifty years, and quietly surrender the posses sion of all this business? Why yield to Spain and Germany and Italy and Hol land and the Argentine Republic? Ihifiiness pluck is necessary for the development of tho resources ot any community. It makes little difference how advantageously any point is situ nted, if those interested in its growth do not exercise enterprise and energy the town w ill die and allow other cities to reap the advantages which it natnrallv possesses. If we had the business grit of Spokane rails, Ilakur t it v or even l'endleton, steamers would now bo mak mg daily trips to and fiom tho upper Cascades, and tho railroad company would be tho suppliant instead of the business men of Tho Dalles cringing at every movement and craving the least favor from 'the heartless and greedy monopoly. If Tho Italics will rid itself ' onhoHSbac'Uisin it may yet siirvivo and be a leading city of Oiegon; if not, it will die of inertia. The Dallei Timet- Mountaineer. A petition comes from Colorado pray ing Congress to buy the historic field of Valley Forge ami make it a public park There is nothing in all the daily records of events more encouraging than these occasional ami unquestionable evidences of patriotic spirit. There is not a more thoroughly material state in nil the Union than Colorado; its history is only tho story of yesterday ; it was settled by adventure and bus been built by a thoroughly speculative and practical class of people, yet it is from Colorado end not from Massachusetts or Virginia that this appeal comes. As the years go by the impression grows that truo Americanism lias followed the star of empire to tho west. Detroit Free Press. Tertland wants the Press association there this year. The association meets in August, and ubout fifty editors expect to bo present. The best thing 1'ortland business men can do is to give tho boys a big string of good-paying "ads." for six months or a year. That would hit the boyi better than for the business men to spend $1500 or 2000 in stuffing them at the Portland hotel. Oregon editors are not after the grand ; they are chasing tho substantial only. Issue "ads." to the boys and let them provide their owu frugal rations. ailvtrtan Appeal, Senator roster, ot Louisiana, in a ringing opeecU against the lottery, said "I say, sir, that if Louisiana cannot per form the duties of a state, if she cannot educate her children and support her charitable institutions, then let us tear from her her sovereign rights as a state and place her under tho control and pro tection of the Federal government or Dome other government savo the govern ment of the lottery company." According to vital atiitintici moro men tlmn women dio annually. Other ntu tintics nssuro us tluit inure females than linden me burn. That ought to cu counigo the woman's rights advocate. In Ilia natural course of events men iniiHt wholly disappear, leaving thn fe male nex in exclusive possession of tho earth. If the women will only patiently bido thoir time they will bo able to have everything tlmlr own way w ithout trouble. Spokane Fulls Ulobe. It won't be very long at the present rate of progress until this government lias navy worthy being spelled with a large S. Pollard and sense are doing the work bountifully. I'hilaJtlphia Press. The human race is divided into two classes those who go ahead and do something, and those who sit still and iniiuire, "Whv wasn't it done the other ivav. "'"IT.,'? f ''--V. CENERAL NEWS NOTES. Hawaii is talking about annexation to to the United States. They all do it. A Kansas farmer sold a meteor which fell on his farm for $1,000 and raised the mortgage on the place. The real sum which Mr. Stanley re ceived in cash for his latest hook is said to be in the neighborhood of $70,000. Tripoli is being devastated by locusts. The decomposed bodies of the insects fill the wells, rendering tho water unfit for use. The steamship companies are talking about reducing tho time of crossing the ocean from this country to Europe to five days. The marriage of Henry M. Stanley and Miss Dorothy Tenmint took place in London last Saturday. It was a grand atlair. The San Francisco chief of police has lectured that thore shall bo no more glove contests between professional pugilists in ttiat city. Silva Porto, who committed suicide in Africa, wrapped himself in a Portuguese flag ami blew himself up with fourteen barrels of gunpowder. A hotel costing $3,000,000 is to be built in Philadelphia by the Astors. It will be alter the fat isian plun and conducted on the European plan, One hundred boys and girls at Wood land, Cal., whose ages rango from 12 to 19 vears, have, formed a co-operative canning and drying union. Mad dogs are numerous in western Connecticut villages and many persons have been bitten. A vigorous war is being waged on all dogs found. Shipvards on the Maine coast that have been idle since the days of our grandfathers, will resound with the echoes of the carpenter's mullet this rear. The navy department has issued cir mlars asking fur bids for building three 8300-ton coast line-of-battlo ships, to cost not moro than $4,000,000, exclusive of armament. The miners in Butte, Montana, own a big hall, have M.O01 members in the union and $2.i,O00. Hie twelfth anni versary was celebrated by a parade and mass meeting. Twenty-one horses tied to a w ire fence at a funeral in Missouri the other day were knocked down by a streak of light ning which wuh traveling over the wire, Four of them weie killed. The prince of Wales continues to grow stout and gray. It is said of him that ho is disinclined to make anv exertion, ami the only place to which he does not drive is to meals and to bed. A man ut Dubucpip, Iowa, is making much money by dealing in cats. He sends the tabbies to North Dakota farm ers, who lire troubled with field mice. Ho recently shipped 1,17(1 felines at one carload. 1'iishop Wiggen, of New York, has sent out a circular letter to the different parishes in his diocese forbidding eulo gies at funerals, on the ground that some lives are undeserving of - such commendation. Colonel ( 'logue, vice-president of the Great Sot thorn railway company, an nounces that his company has marketed $10,000,01)0 wotth of bonds in London and that the money will be used to ex tend their road to Pugot sound. The thousands of soft maple trees growing in the streets of Chicago, and especially in the suburbs, are ulllictcd with a parasite known as the maple bark louse which threatens to destroy thi- year a largo number of these fine shade trees. At Chicago, last Fiiilay, a terrific ex plosion of gas occurred in tho hold of the steamer Tioga, loaded with kero sene, gasoline and cotton. Nineteen bodies have been found, and the number of deaths is placed at about thirty. The steamer was wrecked. On the Chicago & Northwestern rail road, last Saturday, the fireman on a passenger train suddenly became insane and attempted to kill the engineer with a heavy wrench. A fearful struggle en sued on the flying engine, hut passen gers finally found that something was w rong, I'liuio forward and overpowered the maniac. Ten trie cyclones raged in various places on tho European continent for two days last week. Largo tracts of country have been devastated, and thousands of horses, cattle and other animals have been killed. Crops are ruined, buildings wrecked, and other damage has been inflicted which will take months to repair. According to figures given out by Su perintendent of Census Jenkins, the pop illation of thirteen western Washington towns is as follows: Olvmpia, 4,ti0.' Poi t Tow intend, 4,5"i5 ; Vancouver, 3,4Sti; Snohomish. l.OHa ; I entralia, I , 7- : I tiv allnp, l.TM; Chehalis, 1.471; Ballard, 1,157; Anacortes, l.i:W; h.ent,8l; liu coda, 7'Jo; Orting, lij"; Tenino, 302. Thero is nothing small about Califor nia when it comes tondvertising herself. On learning that tho ten acres of space asked for nt the world's fair could not he obtained, she now asks the privilege of decorating at her own expense the diiveways of the ground to be occupied by the fair with California palms, flow ers and shrubs. In this way she will occupy more space than nny other state. A pilgrim appeared at Allahabad, India, called a crowd about him, and asked if the time had not come when tho hated English should go. Ho was in jail in less than twenty minutes, was arraigned in court within an hour, and in less than two had been sentenced to five years' imprisonment. Tho English don't intend to let India get tho start of her again, and the pilgrim w ho has any questions to ask had better talk to him self. East Sunday was nn unusually hot day east of the Kooky mountains, ex cept in the New England lake region and from Maryland northward to New York. Of 14; stations no less than 10 report a maximum temperature of 8.1 degrees or more. At Ihiity-six stations the maximum was 00 degree or over, while twelve report a maximum of 100 degrees or higher. At Omaha the tem perature reached 105 degrees. The pros trating effect of these temperatures are much greater than a greatly increased degree of heat in eastern Oregon and NORTHWEST NEWS NOTES. OHEOON. Oregon cherries retail in Omaha at forty and fifty cents per pound. The Union facitic is putting in a Bpur-t near Kaniela tor the accommodation ot shippers. .Three carloads of California fruit and one car of watermelons arrived in Port land last Monday. Five hundred posts for the telephone line from Salem to Portland arrived at Aurora last Thursday. The school directors of Independence have accepted plans for a $10,000 school house, to be built at once. None of the salmon canneries on Yaquina or Alsea bays will be run this season, owing to the low price of salmon. Clackamas county has put a fine bridge, 800 feet long and ten feet high, from Pudding river to the bluff on their side. It is high-water proof. Tho other day in Polk county John Robbins killed a big wildcat that was trying to kill his pigs, and llenty Mc Carter and Jim and George Mayors cap tured seven coyotes that were making their home in a hr log. Work will begin this month nefr railrostd grade through Cow crtyZmVT! canvon. It is said 2,000 men will be employed during the summer in grading and building seventeen miles of track and constructing a 350-foot tunnel. The upper bridge on the Calipooia, near Krownsville, gave way last Friday as Mrs. Nannie Templeton and daughter Iva were driving across, and dropped them over twenty-five feet into the stream below. Mrs. Temp'eton was al most fatally injured, and Miss Iva had an arm and leg broken badly. The re covery of each is doubtful. The grade between La Grande and Elgin on the branch line of the Union Pacific is practically finished, there being now left only a few short gaps to close and a number of sidings to grade in order to complete the work entire for the rails. The bridge across the Grande Hondo river at Island City is also fin ished and tho work will be prosecuted, with all speed. WASHINGTON. Ellensburgh will build a new school house to cost fM.tioO. A species of cutworm is creating havoc iu the vicinity of Cheney. Work on tho 1'ort Townsend Southern railroad is being pushed forward. The city election at l'ort Townsend, last Monday, conducted on the Austra lian system, was pronounced a decided success. The building has boon completed and machinery received ut C hehalis for a pump factory, which will commence op erations in a few davs. Early last Sunday morning burglars entered private upa' tments-at a hotel in attle and seemed between .filJU and $K()U in cash and jewelry. The city of Walla Walla boasts of hay nig three "heat mm mmiese-- wut im vote at the forthcoming election, thuy having been born in this country. In a cargo of 1100,000 feet shipped to Wales by the l'ort lllakely sawmill com pany, there were u icet oi umDer llixiiJ and 24x24 from 00 to 90 feet in length. Win. Kerr, manager of the famous Moxee experimental farm, near Yakima, has sent to Japan for a quantity of tea cuttings, for the purpose of testing tea growing in the Yakima vulley. The Northern Pacific has completed its (iray's Harbor line across the Skook umehuck and a considerable distance across Eord's prairie. The river was crossed on false work, and a bridge will be built in the fall. Tracklaymg is going on rapidly. Complete returns give the Belhngham bav cities 10,815, as follow s : Whatcom, 4,0'(il; New Whatcom, 2,710 ; Eairhaven and liellmgham, 4, two. All but two dis tricts of Whatcom county havo been heard from. The population will be about 18,400. Some hay was cut at Medical Lake last week that was sowed June 1, 1880, thirteen months ago. The lack of rain last summer caused it to lie intact until the fall rains called it into life. It stood fivo feet high whon cut and yielded over two tons to the acre. Tho Odd Fellows propose to erect a model hospital at Ccntralia at a cost of f-'5,000. Tho institution is to be a joint stock affair. Two hundred and tifty shares at $100 will put up the building. It is the intention to sell stock to every lodge ol Odd Fellows In the state. At Seattle last Monday the city elec tion passed off satisfactorily under the Australian system. There was no trouble whatever at the noils, all falling into the new order with alacrity, and the people are enthusiastic over the merits of the new method. The enure repuoirrun ticket was elected. Tobacco and hops are going to greatly add to Washington's riches, as well as lumber, fish and coal. The Moxee farm in the Yakima valley is raising an av erage of 1,000 pounds of tobacco to the acre, netting fliOl). Hops are increasing in acreage, both east and nest of tue mountains every year. The Cascade and Lake Chelan trail is now finished to the summit of the Cas cade mountains. It is in first-class con dition and furnishes a means of easy transportation into the mining district by pack train. Hundreds of men are passing over this trail to prospect and develop the rich mines of Skagit couuty. A young ladv named Miss Mcl.ain, who lives about three miles west uf this city, says the Olvmpia Tribune, has the reputation ot being a great hunter, Imr ing tho last few years bIio has killed no less than titteen cougars, twenty hears, ten dingwalls and fifteen wildcats. She is a dead shot and can hit a small glass ball w ith a 22-caliher bullet at lOOyaids. It is stated that Georgo Sims, formerly private secretary of Henry Villard.isen route to Tacoma from London as the agent of an English syndicate to pur chase the l'oit Ulukely lumber mill. The consideration of the transfer is not ac curately known, but is said to be in the neighborhood of $2,400,000. The Fort Blakely mill is the largest in the world, its per diem capacity being estimated at twice as great as that of any three mills in thr country. I) O N ' T E E C II U M P ! DO YOU WANT TO CATCH OX ? lln vou want to eaten me eye oi the 'people ? Do you want to cateli the popular favor? Do you rant to eaten part oi me suvery stream that la constantly flowing Ironi the country to tho town, with a freshet after harvest? DON'T BE A CLUMP! Do vou want to catch a part ot the trade that a rustling neigh bor merchant Is enjoying, anil which bv the exercise of a little enterprise and judgment you could capture as well a not? You are human and answer Yon. 1) () N T HE A B U M T ! A little reflection and investiga tion will convince you that the way to accomplish these things is to acquaint the people whose trade vou wish with the fact that you have something to sell, and also witu oiner suggestive iov. I 'BE A LUMP! It is also casllv to be seen that in order lo spread the informa tion which you wish to Impart it Is necessary to employ some medium that will reach the eyes of those whom vou would ad dress, to-wlt, the farmers. The Bciiqet is read by them. DO YOU CATCH OX? DON'T BE BUMP? V Oil I. A I I K S OM, Y. If you haven't business, advertise. If you have business, advertise anil get more, i'eople go T II I S to those places that are advertised, and go by those that are not. A house that advertises Is I S F O K known to everybody; one lhat does not is known only to the few. Some say it is of no L A I) I E S O N L Y. use for them to advertise, as they have been In business u loin; time and everybody knows M O I) E S T them. Such persons deceive themselves, for people conic and people go, and the merchant GENTLEMEN mav not be so well known as he thinks lie Is. besides, if ho doesn't advertise, people with W ILL S A V E modern Ideas are liable lo think he Is a moss back ulld that his oods are of a similar class. THEIR In this age of the world, unless the name of a business lirm is kept constantly beforo Hie B I, C S II E s public its trade censes to increase ns it should giauualiy owinoies. 11 you wain me wuue 1 BY HEADING of the farmers, keep your leime before Ihem iu their paper, the IU iiciet. Meu of business do A H O V T not lose money by judicious advertising. The farmers are nobody's fools, and when they see S O M E T H I N G E L S E. a merchant advertising well they know ho is wide awake, so they try hhn, and it depends on hlin whether or uot he keeps their trade. t Ull L A I) I I. S ONLY. ADMINISTRATOR'S SALE. XOTK'E IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT I'N X der and by virtue of an order of the Countv Court, oi the State of Oregon for Mor row Comity made at the July term. 1S!H ot said court, tho undersigned, administrator tie bonis won ot the estate of Klina Ann I'lunkett. deceased, will, on Saturday, the Hth day of August, lsflo, at 11 o clock a. ., at the door oi the court house of said county and Stute, sell at nublic sale to the highest bidder, either In one pared or iu subdivisions, all the right, tit 10, estate anil interest in anu to tne iowow ing described premises, tn-wtt: The north east quarter ami the southeast quarter and the northwest quarter and the north half of the southwest quarter and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section Pi, and the south half of lite southeast quarter and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 17, anil ine nonneasi quarter oi iou northeast quarter of section 20, all In township 4 south, range 2.", east, Willamette meridian, containing "tie. acres. Tho terms of sale w ill bo as follows: One halt cash on davofsale. the balance In one and two venrs In equal payments, with in terest at s per cent, secured by mortsago on the premises. Heppner, Or., July 12. I."! FRANK KKI.LQKO. (12-46) Administrator de bonis non GEO. P. MORGAN, LAND LAW SPECIALIST THE DALLES, OR. l-EOff.ARLY ADMITTED TO PRACTICE IV before lxcal Land otncci and Depart ment at Washington. I charge nothing for Correspondence, aud may be bl to Help you. gtV If I take your case I am willing to wall until the work 1 successfully dune before my fee m due. TO BRIDGE CONTRACTORS XOTICE 19 HEREBY GIVEN Tit AT SEALED ii proposals will oe received iy ine county clerk ol Morrow counlv for building a county bridge t or near Dout'lai station, on Willow rreek. l'lau and snecillcations may be seen at the Clerk's office. Main ipan of bridge to be fifty feel long bv eighteen feet In width, with twenty-foot approaches on each bank. Hid will be opened at t o'clock p. M.. on Monday, August 4. 1SK0. The eonlraet will be let to the lowest responsible bidder, aud boud wilt be required as Ihe law directs 1 vvf uiTciirt t July 14, llWo. Couuty Judge. CHOPMILL. IIOR THE CONVENIENCE OF THOSE WHO wish to have grain chopped, 1 will here alter be prepared to run the chop mill at any time aud on but moment's notice. (4i) B. HOPE. NOTICE. THE ACCOfNTS OK THE GOOSEPERRY store of J. D. Kirk A Co have been placed In the hands of N. R. McVay, at Oouseberry. who has authority to make settlement! and givo receipts. All persons indebted to said rm are reuuesiea 10 can upon Mr. jictay and Adjust their account. WM. Fr NI.AND. PERSONAL TO REACH THE Bm lo cality tor business or farming, take the w lllo'V Creek branch at Arlintn aud buy DAVIS & BURGOYNE, PROPRIETORS OF THE exingtonI Plour Mill! KEEP CONSTANTLY ON IlANn THE VERY BEST QUALITY WHITE And GRAHAM FLOUR, UEItlU AXD CORN MEAL, Bran, Middlings, Shorts & Chop In quantities to suit. Flour in Exchange for Wheat at Reasonable Hale. Grain Chopped to all Times. Order at rniiE kloi;r turned ot'T at orit mux J will bear comparison with tho best made, and our prices aru put at the lowest figures consistent with a legitimate business. fsyAgeucy of the Company. Northwest Insurance ARE YOU A MUD-TURTLE? The way to keep yourself and your business constantly Iu the minds of the people Is to persistently ami ultineiiveiy auvemse in local papers. You may get out all the circulars you please, and distribute them as you will, but they are short-lived. If you ad vertise iu a newspaper your name and announcements are al ways w here they will be seen ; news 'paper advertisements work auk lor a mo.Ttimii? Yat you iu places you least thought of. The paper may be at tirst glanced over and thrown aside, but some one else picks it up, ami there your ad looks the reader straight iu Ihe face. It is constantly bobbin U, serenely in the queerest places Imagin able. Newspapers arc used for a great variety of purposes. The housew ll'e puis up lief husband's lunch iu one, ami he reads ARE YOU A MUD-TURTLE? While he eats, ami perhaps your ail will interest him for some particular rcusou. Packages are wrapped iu them and they travel trom one house to another, each lime being critically scanned. Tney are utlli.ed on tho pantry shelves, and even tho walls of ihe house are papered with them. They are used iu a hundred and one dillerent ways, and forever staring at you is the AKK VOI A M I O.T lltTI.E? Persistent advertisement: you must read it; it commands your attention: you see the formiition of the w ords, the letters, the ilit fcreul kiinU of type, the spelling, the arrangement, etc.. until you have it pal. lil.e a schuot lesson. Anil when an thing Is need ed In ihe line advertised, your stray ing thoughts tmmcdinlcly revert to the well-know n ad and you go and see the lnau whose ARE YOU A MUD-TURTLE? Xame is mentioned therein. Koine. was not built iu a day: nor do business men get rich from tho protlts of one week's or, e mouth's advertising, it is tt ton- slant dropping of watcrti. wears away the hardest stone; aud it is tho persistent advertiser that reaps the golden harvest. The lti'POKT is read by the farm ers. l.io you see the latiut of the foregoing remarks? Are you allowing your opportunity to slide? AKK I'OC A Ml B.TIHTI.E? THE LEXINGTON PLANING MILL IK HKItllllY Idr'KKKU For Sale at a Sacrifice. rpHK W.AS1SO Mll.I, AND l'l.ANT COX L sistsof a complete otil tit, including Planer, four-sided sticker, Klpsaw, Jigsaw, Hhapcr. Mortiscr. Timiine l.athe, chop Mill, I.crlel Cl inch Turldne Wheel, twelve-horse power Kn Kine, Hcltlni? and ShaflitiK complete; also Dry Kiln and Milt llulldliiKs, a quantity of Mold Inns and -I'lOOO feel of rough and dressed Lum ber. Flume and machinery In gmid running order. Also, the tmnroveinents on lo acres ol land, all fenced, plenty of waler, dwelling house, four head of cattle, and a Minnesota Chief Separator. This entire property will he sold at very low rlgurea. with or without the ni ill machinery. This Is an opportunity that Hhould Itu investigated bv anv nruetical mill man w ho desires a positive harcaln Apply to n,.J.I,u.. . It- llftl- Citij Lexington, Or. NOTICE OF INTl'.NTIOX. (Commuted Homestead.) l.ASn Orrici at Th Dai.i.k. Or.. Julvs. im. VOTICK IS HEREBY til VEN THAT THE a1 following-nauicd settler has tiled notice of his intention to commute and make final nroot In suooort of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the Couuty Clerk of Morrow county , at Heppner, Or., on August ; taut), vU: Abnrr i 4. Iirlumtin, lid Ap. of SR.'. of Sec. . Tl. 2 S..K. J4 K..W. M. He .-so. -ji;i, tor ine s, oi w . ana n names the lollnwlug witnesses to prove his continuous resilience upon and cultivation ot said land, vis: Harvey M. Vaughn, W. Kiley Muukers. Thomas !,. I'orman and Samuel 2t. W artlcld, all of Kight Mile. Oregon. H:I7) JullS W. i.LVt IK. Register. PKI ItSONAL-TIlE CAI'II M.IST WHO H AS routnd of one dollar can hear of a prolil- Mf Investment by calling at the BctKiKT office. WANTED-MORE LIVE Bt'SlNESS MEN M to locate In Leximrton, the finest place In Eastern Oregon for a thriving town. V-0 BETTER LOCALITY THAN Tni3 CAS -4 be found for the farmer to acquire home of his own aud "grow up with the coun try.'' THE Vst'AL PRICE Of Cot'NTRY WEEK Ho is from i: to 13. The lit poet is only II per year, iu advance. The best is the cheap est and the cheapest is the best. COME TO LEXINGTON: LOOK AT THE Lo cation; look at the surrounding country; look at vour purse and decide that this it the p'.a'.t. ci in elt Hj c-'Utiutt DON'T BE A CLAM. The MAN WHO CONDUCTS his business on the theory that it doesn't pay and he can't afford to ad vertise, sets up his judgment iu opposi tion to that of all the beet business men of the world, says an experienced ad vertising authority. With a few years' experience in conducting a small busi ness on a few thousand dollars of capital, the man who thinks that ADVERTISING DOESN'T PAY assumes to know more than thousands of men whoso hourly transactions aggre gate more than do his in a year, and who have made their mil lions by pursuing a course that he says is unprofitable. DON'T II F: A Ml'D.TlltrLE, If advertising doesn't pay, why is it that the most successful merchunts of every town, large or small, are the heaviest advertisers? If it doesn't pay to advertise, why do the heaviest business firms in the world annually spend millions that way ? Is if because they wartt to donate those millions of dollars to the newspaper and magazine publishers, or because they don't know as much as The short-sighted merchant who says money spent in adver tising is thrown away, or is donated to the men to whom it is paid? They advertise for the same reason that they buy at wholesale and sell at retail because there is money in it. Advertising may not pay to day or to-morrow, but sooner or later it is sure to bring a stream of the "dollars of our dad dies" to the merchant who uses printer's INK. These are facts that cannot be denied, and you are perhaps one of those who are reaping the profits of advertising, but here's a word In your ear: Thore are a whole lot of butichgrnss farmers who must trade somewhere; perhaps they trade with your neiglibor. They read the lliDOKT, and if you had nn ad but you see the point, don't you? DON'T BE A CLAM. NOTICK OK INTKNTION. Land Office at The I)aij.k. Ox, June 13. iww. VOTICK IH HKHKHY iIVES THAT TIIK N MlowtiiK-intiiuMl M'ttler linn tl lei. litrtU'0 of It l.i ittUMitiuti to muke tlimt irof iu ij-vrri uf lits cluim, iinri Hint mU pmaf willl' innde before the County Jude of Morrow vmmty, ml Jk'I.pner, nr., on Annual J. lwo, viz: JoM'pli TIafton, IM. An. No. 17.(7, for the SK. 4' of NK. . and !,nts 1. ! hihI II, Her. T.2 H., It. 24 K., V. M. He iiiuiu'M the following vitnesne8 to prove hi eoiitlniKMiH reitiiterx'ti upon and ciiltiviitioii of snid In ad, viz: Columbus A. Khea him) 1'renUm Looney, of Heppner, Or., find Albert H. Wind sor and John J tenner, of I.exlntrton, Or. (:StM:0 JOHN W. LKW1S, KeaUter. NOTICK OF INTENTION. Land Okfick at The Pau,f.s. Or.. June lti, 1KM. VFOTU,K IH HKHKHY GIVES THAT THE i.i following mimed nettler has tiled notice of hi intention to make nmtl proof in support of his eliiim, and tlmt said proof will be madu before the Countv Clerk of Morrow couuty, at Heppner, Or., on July IWO, viz: Inauc It. Howard, D. 8. No. 3tW. for the HV. H of Sec. 26, Tp. 1 X., K. 25 E W. M. Ho ti time s the following wit nexKen to prove his contiiiuoim residence upon and cultivation of said land, vix: Jam en 1, Ben etiel, Wm. H, Benefiel, Charlei A. Hod son ant) John C, Thomson, nil of Lexington, Or. (;w-4:t) JOHN W. LEW18, Register. NOTICE OF INTENTION. I.anp Office at The Dali.ks, Or.. June . Irtal. VOTTrK IS HEREBY fllVE.N" THAT THE 1 following-named settler ha filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be madr oerore ine county juuge ot .Morrow couuty, ai Heppner, Oregon, ou July at, mm, tie: Jame H. Ilrerdinfr, ltd. Ap. No. 1222, for the NV. U of So. 18, Tp. i S3., R. JO K., . M. He names the following wit nesses to prove Ills eontiuuoua residence upon aud cultivation of said land, vix: J, T. Yoonl, Cyrus X. Shinn aud Wm. Kstes. of Lexingtoo. ur.. ana soiomou .nayncio, or iieppncr, or. (;l7-4 JOH.N w. LEWIS, Register. NOTICE OF INTENTION. Land Office at The Dalle Or., June 4, lw.m. OTICE IS HEREBY filVEN THAT THE following-named settler has filed notice of his Intention to make final proof tn support of hi claim, and that said proof will be made before the County Judge of Morrow county, at Heppner, Or., on July 21. lttlH), vU: lirorr W. Junklns, ltd. Ap. No. 1WW. for the NE. i of 8e. 10, Tp. S., K. 'J4 K., W. M. He name the following wit nesses to prove his contlnuou residence upon and colli vat iou of said land, Til: Thorn J. Merrill, Riley M tinkers and A. 8. Harries, ol Eight Mile, Or., aud Peter Brenner, of Goose berry. Or. JOHN W. LEWIS, (:I7-12 Register. NOTICE OF INTENTION. Lasd Office at The Dalles, Or. June 10. 180O. N'OTICK IS IIKRKRY GIVEN THAT THE following-named settler baa Hfed notice of his intention to make tinal proof Iu support of his claim, and that said proof will be mado before the County Judge of Morrow county, at Heppner, Or., on July at. IJ0. vl: Harnrt it. I.lpacomb, IM. Ap. No. 137S. for the NW. of Sec. 24. Tp. 1 N.. R. 21 K... V. M. He name the following wit nesses to prove his conlinuon residence upon and cultivation of said laud, viz: J. F. Deo, I. M. Piper, and Levi Hill, ot Ella, Or., and C. E. Holland, of Lexington. Or. (37-4J) JOHN W. LEWIS, Register. IOfND-A PAPER THAT HONESTLY BE lleve in the luiure of Morrow county a au agricultural district and alway stands by that belief. The Bi doet is only II per jear, tn advance. rANTEI MEN OP CAPITAL AND EN v T ergy to take a look at Lexington and sur rounding country with A view to establishing a bank here. . "1 TANTED PR ACTICAL MEN TO ISVE8 t V ttgate the advantages of Lexington as s. location tor a sorghum mill. Tj OST-SPI.ENDID OPPORTUNITY TO 8E- cure giK.l homes by those who wait too long before coming lo Morrow county. TlANTED MEN OK LIFE. VIM AND FN y trvv to If nte in Lexington nd prcvcDt (rum Ukiuff root 0