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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1904)
How About Printing? The Gazette office was never better equipped for Artistic Job Printing than it is to day, having just received a large supply of NEW AND UP-TO-DATE TYPE which added to our already complete office, makes it one of the best shops in Eastern Oregon. Do you need LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS or ENVELOPES. If you do now is the time and the Gazette is the place to have 11 uone. an supply you with anything in the CATALOGUE OR POSTER LINE In fact we are prepared to turn out any job from a small card to a full sheet poster, and you can have col ored work if you prefer it. If you do not believe it, try us. iUake a specialty or PRINTING BRIEFS Perhaps you are in need of some legal or land blanks, which we always carry in stock. Send for catalogue. We have a complete line of both LEGAL AND LAND BLANKS Come in and examine our line of cards and wedding o stationery. THE GAZETTE HEPPNER, OREGON Administratrix's Notice. In the County Court of the State of Oregon, lor Morrow County. In the matter of "the estate of Emily Gaunt, ieoeasexi. Notice is hereby eiven that the undermined hae been duly appointed admlniRtjatrix of the estate of Fmily Gaunt, deceased, by the County Court of Morrow County, Oregon. All persons having claims against the said estate will present them to the undersigned at the law oil'iceof Redh'old ta Van Vactor in Hoppner, Morrow County, Oreeon with prorer vo'H hers attached within six months from the date of tho first publication of this notice. First publication May 1'.), '!. EMMA HALE, Administratrix of the estate of Emily Gaunt, Jeceasi'il. Kedlield it Van Vactor attorneys for admin istratrix. 91-fr. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. "PEPARTMEXT OF THE INTERIOR, LAND ' "uira i i up naiies lire., April i, l'.tOl. Notice is hereby eiven that the followintr namcd settler has filed notice of his intention to make commutation proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before Vawter Crawford. County Clerk, at Heppuer. Oregon, on June 2", 1!1. viz: CHARLES K. TOOLEY. of Lexington. Ore. H. E. No. lift, for the !ot 3, SEU Nyi ' and E'J HV"i 8ec 2. Tp 1 S, K Lti E. W M. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence UDon and cultivaHnn of 'said land, viz: Georce McKee, R. 8 Taylor. Olen R. Hodsdon and.yThoinas !cott.all of Lexington, Oregon. n 6 r MICHAEL T.NOLAN. Register. WEAPON FOB WOMEN. Thi Upto-Datt Hatpin Is Extreme ly Dangerous. Bter Than m Heroine In th Band of a Woman Attacked by a Riga. warman-How It Im Ud. LOCAL JTIAKKLTS. WW '"rpner Uuof ationa on Staples uougnt and Sold Here. RETAIL G ROC lilt Y TRICES, COFFEE Mocha anil Java, beat 40c per pound ; next grade, .c per pound : package coffee, Lion and Arbuckle, G packages for $1. RICE Hest head riee 10c per pound; next grade 8 cents per pound. SUGAR Cane granulated, best $G GO "What Bhall we do in case we are at tacked by tome ruffian?" is the question wiimen hn vp hrUpiI in every part of the country since the recurrence of the bru- f'er fiack (1 13 pounds $1 tal "hold-ups" by tramps. The man to SALT Coarse 7ocper 100; 40c 50 whom the question is put, sajb ine im- pounds cinnati Enquirer, will immediately an- An independent telephone com pany is making a fight for a fran chise in Eugene. Roy Taylor, a Seattle waiter, has fallen heir to tho income from an estate of 81,000,000, left him by his father in England. Taylor ran away from home when a small boy. The mining trust planned by John D. Rockefeller, is to be capi talized at 2,500,000,000. Bwer: "Carry a revolver." Uut worn en dread revolvers almost as much as they do the possibility of attack when out at nif?ht. Few women possess the nerve necessary to use a pistol with ef- lect when set upon by a burly stranger Ions; 50 per case FLOUK ft 25f) 00 per barrel. BACON 1.)1S ; per pound. HAMS V(r17c- per pound. COAL Oil, SI ;3(Tcn 75 for 5 gal ill n t ir u W PsJT TP P 4 UH. TTCi 1) in a lonely road. Then' there is the ob jection to a revolver in the possession of a woman that she would be averse to suspecting the motive of every man she 'met, and would probably fail to draw the revolver until too late for fear of maU ing a foolish mistake. What, then, can bo provided for her that will be as dead ly in her hands as a revolver, and yet absolutely safe so far as she is concerned and ever ready at hand whether wanted for use or not? The answer to the puzzle has been pro vided by those who make women's hat pins. A hatpin has been designed and will soon be ready for sale that is in tended primarily for us-e as a weapon of defense. It is in reality a ftiletto, masquerading as an innocent little hat pin. It is made of fine steel, that will bend but will not rveak, as sharp as a needle and hardened at the end so that It can be used with deadly effect as a dagger, and wtth a handle that enables a woman to grasp It for use as a weapon and hold it so that it cannot easily be pulled from the hand. There are two ways of holding the new hatpin. It can be held with the thumb pressed aginst the top, or with the but Offered by Whiteis & Patterson Real Estate Dealers. VEGIJTA BLICS. POTATOES ?4'c p r pound. CABBAGE 4 c per pound. ONONS-2c per pound. FIUITS. BANANAS 10c per dozen. LEMONS 30c per dozen. ORANGES 40c.r!)c per dozen. MVKSTOCK AND POULTRY. Prices paid bv dealer to the producer. CHICKENS $3 50 per dozen. BUTTE It ranch, 40 and 50c per roll. I! KEF CATTLE, ETC. COWS $2 50$: per hundred. S1EERS 33 50 per hundred. HOGS Live, ocjdressed, Gl4c pound. VEAL Dressed, lie per pound. SHEEP 11 502 50. HAY AND FEED. MANY RARE OFFERS MADE Wiitcli This Space L'acli AVeck, as Many Krtiicliew Will be I jiMcd Here. 1120 acres, part good farm land, rest hne grazing land. One fine seven room house, three houses for tenants, good nam and out buildings, fine orchard, 700 acres government land fenced, nine miles from Hamilton. About 40 acres of good timber on land. $7.00 per acre. Easy payment. 040 acres, good houses and barns, finely watered, 200 acres meadow land, timber on the land will more than half pav for it, adjacent to outside range, fine ranch for some ons at a reasonable price. Five miles from Lone Rock. 200 acres "miles from Lexington.' A snap for a short time. 1120 acres 3' mlfls frnm ITi'numn CHOPPED BARLEY $27 50 per ton fine wheat ranch, nearly all under cultivation, some improvements. Will be sold on reasonable terms. r . . ill r hi " luiico iiuiu neppner, one ton grasped In the palm of the hand, aiilorma, and delegate from that wheat ranch, plenty of good spring In either way It is quite as terrible a state, will make the speech putting water al1 under good 3 wire fence and weapon as a razor, and one moreover Tiont ; - t- lo.lt ibuobu. vv ui r. e soiu at a bargain. that cannot easily be wrested from the He&r8t 10 nmation at St. Loui8. mQ m g hand that holds It Sarrmol FT TTmrMrtli fnr T7QDa nQ dwelling houses, larare barn hist mm. -.f l l -j . Pleteu, all of 300 acres can be irria-atRd. to the best advantage when attacked Is ' T ueiecuveb in all under good 3 wire fence, adjacent to to aim at the face of the highwayman. the emP J of Denver, has been gwernment range, fine stock ranch. w j ..w ntAM9 aura uuijcl cultivation, all under good two wire tence. Price $2000. This is a bargain. W e have a number of good houses and lots in Heppner for sale very cheap. It is not likely that he will wait for the blow. A woman armed with one of these stilettos, even if she has not the slightest idea of the rules of the dagger duello Is likely to do more damage in a few sec onds than a hungry tiger. The wicked little blade is so small that it is impossi ble to grasp it to wrench it away from its owner, and yet so keen is it and so light that, used by a woman frenzied by fear, it is likely to be more dangerous to a highwayman than a Gatling gun. In considering the advantages of this weapon in the hands of women, those who advocate its use point out that every woman is familiar with its use. While the average woman would find a revolver cumbersome and difficult to draw from pocket or bag, the hatpin can be whisked out in a second by a prac ticed hand. No woman would care to be forever plucking a revolver from her pocket when out in a lonely district. And yet there are times when a suspicious looking character comes into the offing and prudence whispers: "Beware of him." While most women would shrink under those circumstances from pulling out a revolver, it is an innocent act to put th hand to the hat and draw out one of the stiletto hatpins. With this in her hand the nervous woman is ready for the stranger, whatever his intentions If he is an innocent man he will prob ably take no notice of the woman's ac tion. If he iR a rascal it is more than probable that he will mark the motive for the act and let the woman pass unmo lested. It is an axiom with the members of the police force that the woman with the hatpin is more to bo feared than an armed and desperate burglar. The rea son is that the burglar's hand could not travel hipward without a bullet or a club disabling his arm. The woman with the hatpin, however, has to be watched with lynx eyes, and even then la likely to have the weapon concealed up her sleeve for use when opportunity comes. The inventors of the stiMfo hat pin had this in mind whn they decided to design a weapon that would be do culiarly a woman's weapon, and yet bt sufficiently deadly to do as much damage aa the mopt ardent opponent of the gen Uem&n of the road could wish. re of the Trlt'Dhnn. To the making of Irish bulls there is no end. according to Marshall P. Wild er. Here ia one of the latest breaks of the Celtic species, If the humorist is to be believed: An Irishman Just over sees a telephone on the wall, and never having seen one before, asks what It is. "It's a telephone," he is told. "Phat's a tillyphone used for?" Queries Pat "Why, to talk through, of course." "Can I talk to Mike upstairs through thot thing?" "Why, of course." Pat goes to the telephone and calls up Alike. "Is that you. Mike?" "Yes." comes the answer. "Well," says Pat, "stick yer head out the window. I want to talk to ye." Rochester Post-Express. m THE ROUTE MUM JUST STARTED . . . Tli o s . B re mi an, Practical Horscshoer Entire Attention devoted to Horse shoeing.' No other work. Through personally conducted Tourist sleeping cars between Portland and Chi cago once a week, and between Ogden and Chicago three times a week, via t he Scenic Line. Through standard Kleeplnirrarsdaily between up'ien and Chicago via the scenic Line. Through standard sleeping cars daily between Colorado Springs and St. LouiB. Through standard and tourist sleeping cars j aauy between wan t rancisco and Chicago via J.os Angeles and Kl Paso. Through standard sleeping cars and chair cars daily between .St. haul and Chicago. Be sure to see that your ticket reads via the Lower Main street next to Mead ows' Livery Barn. Before You Order Tombstones, Marble or Granite Work You will do well to see Monterastelli Brothers and get prices. They have a fine stock on hand. main stki:i:t, iii:iim.k, ouk. Great Rock Island Route ItnmUrtPRIO GRANDE Sir u li v f fa rH e . . 1 06 RAN Dt WESTEgN j The beet and most reasonable dining car ser vice. Midday lunch fill cents. For rates, folders and descriptive literature write to L. B.GORHAM GEO. W. BAI NTER rp Ut.NK.nAI. AOL PIT. THAV 250 Alder St.Portlaiu uF"" TnE SCENIC LINE TO THE EAST AND SOUTH US & 1UHG Have just opened a new saloon at the corner of Eain and May street?. Finest Liquors and Cigars Pendleton Beer on Draught Hot and Cold Lunches Heppner, Or. Through Salt Lake City, Lead ville, Pueblo, Colorado Springs and Denver Oilers the choice of three routes through the famous Kooky Mountain eeenry, and five Distinct Routes East and South of Denver. . . . vr x it .i i s i n i 1,1... Between Ogden and Denver, carrying all classes of modern equipment. Perfect Dining Cur Service and Personally Conducted Tourist Excursions to all Points. r Overs Allowel ON ALU CLASSES OF TICKETS For all information anJ illustrated literature call on or Hddresa Ginebal Agent U2 ThirdlSt. PORTLAND ORE