LEXINGTON WHEATFIELD Published Every Thursday at LEXINGTON, OREGON S. A. THOMAS, Editor and Proprietor. OFFICIAL PAPER TOWN OF LEXINGTON Subscription, per year, - $1-00 Advertising rates on Application Copy for change of advertising must reach this office by Wednesday noon. Entered as second-class matter October 6, 1905, at the post office at Lexington, Or egon, under the Act cf Congress of March 3, 1879. THURSDAY JULY 25, 1907. notice: The. best way to build up your own tcwn is to do your trading at home. Patronize your home merchants. If they succeed the chances are you Vill succeed. When you send a dollar to ia mail order house vou have the goods and they have the money. Trade at home and we keep both the goods and the money. LOCAL NEWS i Read The Wheatfield and be happy I Nothing can exceed the intense, af- fection which a girl deals cut to her father for a day or two before the time when she asks him for a new dress, For sale at all times the finest Berk shire pigs and shotes, males or females allso half breeds Poland china and Berkshire, B. F. Swaggart. The Wind River Lumber Co's yard at this place is being stocked as fast as possible. They intend to have one of the largest stocks of lumber and fuel in the county. Mrs. E. A. Beymer and Miss Grace Cypert returned yesterday from the McDuffey Hot Springs where they have been for several week. They report everything all right. A number of the state papers have been asking one another if Orchard, of Idaho, is a peach or a lemon ? He looks to us like a prune orchard suffer ing from a bad case of San Jose scale. Mrs. B. F. Estes and children re turned Tuesday to their home at Moro after a weeks visit with relatives here. Mrs. Frank White and children accompanied her home for a few days visit. P. M. Christenson left some fine samples of grain at this office last Synday, among which Is wheat, barley and oats. These samples are good .... B' v. fiUlPR enough to be saved and taken to the Pendleton fair. The work of the combined harvester Is being watched with a great deal of interest by our farmers. Present In dications are that a number of these machines will be brought into this county another season. An Indiana man has gone to steal ing so as to be Ditt in prison, which will keep him. from drinking. After he has had a good taste of prison life he will probably go to drinking again to stop himself from stealing. - C. 0. Burrows, local manager of the lumber yard, departed last Sat urday for Dayton, Wash., where he was called by the illness of his father, Mr. Waite, traveling auditor, being In charge of the yards during his absence. It is said by some that profess to know that Morrow county will produce enough potatoes this season to supply the local market. This will mean a saving of several thousand dollars to the people of the county by keeping the money at home. Our greatest need today is harvest hands. Any boy large enough to carry water is getting from 2 to $2.50 per day. We understand that some o) the women have consented to go in the field and help as best they can until the situation eases up a little. Luther J. Green, of Zebulon, Geor gia, arrived in Lexington Sunday eve ning to visit Rev. T. P. Graham and family. Mr. Green is a brother cf Mrs. Graham. , He expresses' himself as wel1 pleased with this country and will probably remain in Oregon perma nently. Our readers will notice by last weeks issue the Editor was still celebrating the Fourth, however this week he has settled down to work and gone to the harvest field, actually working in "The Wheatfield" with P M. Christenson. If this weeks issue is better give the' "devil" credit for It, if not so good blame ihe Editor for not staying at home and attending to business. SWINE NOTES Keep the sleeping quarters clean and dry. Keep clear water before them all the time. . Do not-feed an extreme green corn diet. Have good shade during the warm weather. Keep the hogs and their yard in a sanitary condition and watch the herd carefully in order that no disease may get a start. All these points should be kept In mind for they are the only effective lnsurancer against cholera and kindred diseases. Give the hogs salt and ashes, es pecially hard coal ashes, and an oc - ' x 01 S HARVEST SUPPLIES We have a large stock of everything needed for the harvest and can supply your wants promptly. No order too large for us to fill, and none too' small to receive prompt attention. A child can buy as cheap as its parents. LEXINGTON, casional dose of copperas and sulphur in the slop. Be particularly careful about this with the hogs that are in the feeding pens. About cement floors a swine breed er says: '"I see a good deal of talk a bout cement floors for hoghouses. I have never seen one that was a suc cess, the best floor, in my opinion, is dirt, with a good woven wire netting stretched over it to keep the hogs from rooting it up." Most of the profit in hogs, except ing from breeding sows is made by fattening them when they are 6 to 7 months old. If kept growing without check until this time they ought to weigh 225 pounds or more. It pays better than to feed an extra year, even though the weight is doubled In that i ! time. The pork pig sells quickest and highest. Breeding sows may be kept so long as they produce two good litters a year, one dropped early in the spring and the second In August or Septem ber. NOTICE FOP PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon June 20, 1907 ' Notice is hereby given that SAMUEL T. HUMPHREYS, of Strawberry, Oregon, has filed notice of his intention to make final five-year proof jn support of his claim, viz: Home stead entry No. 9858 made Oct. 22, 1901, for the NEtf of Section 25, town ship 1 North, Range 25 E., W. M., and that said proof will be made before J. P. Williams, U. S. Comm'r, at his office In Heppner, Oregon, on August 17, 1907. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultivation of, the land, viz: Carl Musgrove, Henry Musgrove, of Strawberry, Oregon, George Weities, E'- mer Lindsay, of Heppner, Oregon. i C. W. Moore, 7-11-8-15 Register. NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION Department of the Interior Land Office at The Dalles, Oregon, June 20, 1907. Notice is hereby given that HENRY F. DEVOE, of Strawberry, Oregon, has filed notice of his intention to make final five-year proof in support of his claim, viz: Homestead Entry No. 1 1236 made July 11, 1902, for the SE;' NEI, E'A SEtf and Lot 1 Sec tion 2, Township 1 North, Range 25 E., W. M., and that said proof will be made be fore the Register and Receiver, at' The Dalles, Oregon, on August 6, 1907, Ha names the following witnesses to prove his cotlnuous residence upon, and cultivation of, the land, viz: W. T. Scott, of Strawberry, Oregon, R, D. Everett, Ross Everett, M. J. McMurry, of lone, Oregon. C. W. Moore, 1 7-4-8-1 ' Register. to Stationery Qonfectlons . i Sciool Supplies Toilet Articles &tc. &tc. LEXINGTON, THE OFFICE A. D. INSKEEP, Proprietor WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS. FRESH BEER ALWAYS ON DRAUGHT r GOOD ,'OOL TABLE IN CONNECTION LEXINGTON, OREGON I n i 1 i"Fb- 1 mi minium fl V fiaiMi mini 1 V V . -iKffi LEXINGTON BANK Branch of BANK OF HEPPNER E. D. BROWN, Manager, CAPITAL STOCK S50.000.00, FOLLY PAID Loans made at Eight per terest paid on Chamberlain's COLIC, CHOLERA AND Diarrhoea Remedy It 1 relWMe, ptcuant tod tei tmmiy tm bvwal mmImIi I bmt, I wmf mrf Ek o o O OREGON J .,T,'.'U!H'''lr1lKJIi II'. it cent. Four per cent, in Time Deposits. o J'ROCURED AND DEFENDED. Send model, iHwiMtt or photo, tor expuit search and free report, free advice, how to obtain patents, trade mark, wpyr1gun.jjto, IN ALU COUNTRIES. Busints direct with Washington tavit time, money and often the patent. PttMt Md Infringimint Practice Exeluefvely. Write or comedo uj at lit Itatt I, ValM MM fmm M, tMHietTOH, B. . 1 0 n r THE LEXINGTON CREAMERY