...... , ., . , . . ... .,.. Crook County otirea vol vi r. PEINEVIME, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, JUNE 18, 1903. NO. 27 New Spring Every Department New Spring Bagrains. are too numorous to mention but if you want anything go to the Big Stora They'll have it. WURZWEI1ER 8 THOMSON Princvlle's Leading Merchants Hamilton Feed Stable AXI) Redby Feed Barn . . . noo'jii a coHxicrr, i i'V Fine Saddle Horses and Livery Turn Outs Stock boarded by day, week or month. Rutin reasonable, (bind ni-i't'U) ii mibt li H ih. Remember us when in Prineville, mill wo guarantee that your patronage will lm appreciated mul deserved by iik. C. J- STUBLING , Vho Dalles, Oregon A FEW FACTS foiirerning 0 R E E N R 1 V E R Whiskey 1 1. (iltHKN KIVKU in pure. 2. (iRKKN IUVKK is perfectly matured. ;l. (i KICKS UlVKIt has an exquisite flavor. 4. (iRKKN IUVKK in fit' whiskey without u headache 5. (iRKKN IUVKK if lln' U.S. Naval Hospital Whiskey. (I. (IKKKN KIVICK is sold by C. K. McDowell, I'riu i villi C. J. Stubllng, Distillery Distributor Distillery SMITH'S RECEPTION. "Wines, Liquors, Domestic and ImportedCigars. Proprietors of the Twn I)mrn South ol First Niitiounl Hank. CHAMP SMITH. VA444U444444444W GU YOUR I The manufacturers of (he McCormicK guard the interests of agriculturists by building a machine that works success fully in the field, and the farmer should guard his Interests by pur chasing the McCormicK a machine that rrtl ..A o a Elkinsn&Kin t in our Big Store is full to The Ladios will find many Distributor The Celebrated A. B. G. Beer Always on Hand. Prinetillc Stria Works. PlilSKVIlLE, 0I1E. 1SOM CLKliK. ERE5TS has a record of seventy -two years of continuous suc cess in the harvest fields of the world. Write for a "Model Machine," which tells how to guard afp q0 your In terests in buying harvest ing machines. Goods Overflowing with Brand New Things, They POCKET KNIVES AT 1). 1. A DAMSON'S (Tin- Brick Drug Store) St a ioncr' ...at... D. P. A DAMSON'S (Tlio Brick Drug Store) Woodbury's FACIAL PREPARATION Kur nil m k i 1 1 troubles it is TII1C REST. D. P. A DAMSON'S (The Brick Drug Store) 5 Days' Treatment of Our Sure (!ure for LOST MANHOOD, Ncr vousncss, Failing Memory, Varicocele, Atrophy, Palpita tion of Heart. Send name and addrcsB to I'KOP. A. AU It U It K, 25J N. First St., Portland, Oregon.' and receive by return mail this grand remedy absolutely free of cost. Send no money This is a bona fide offer. Write today, as it costs you nothing to try it. WASHINGTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF NEW YORK. CLAY A. SIMPSON. M'i'r Interior ttept Has the largest percentage ot cash assets to eaoh dollar or nu bility ; earns the highest average interest, ana Issues the most up to-date progressive policies for In vestment or proteotion. i - v;rs4 j, .' '!.' J ',,;;5.f:'.-tl ,,,i;si (' n Great Loss of Life at Heppner. The Worst Disaster Ever Chronicled on The Pacific Coast. A cloud which burst on the hills a mile smith of Heppner at about 5:30 o'cock Sunday afternoon let loose a hungry flood of wa!r, which swept down the hillside in a wall ,10 feet high and 20(1 yards wide. Reaching the bottom'of the canyon, the liquid avalanche rear ed its mighty front over the doom ed town, and carried to destruction iciirly every building and human licing that lay in its path, leaving a waste of desolution to mark its trail. The, destroying torrent raced down the narrow gorgo of Willow Creek, inundating as it reached them, the tcttlwncnU of Ij'xington, lone and Douglas, but lessening in fury and in volume as tho thirsty alkali soil of the valley drank up the water like a ponge. Unbind it lay rtearly 800 lend, drowned like ruts. in a trap. The suddeness oft he catastrophe gave the victims no warning, over whelming them for the main trap ns they sat within their homes.' Immediately after the fatnl flood had wiped the major portion of Heppner out of existence, swift couriers on horseback sped to warn the residents of the valley toward the Columbia of the coming peril. Lessio Matlock, son of an ex-Sheriff of Morrow County, rode a wild ride for 18 miles ahead of the raging waters. His horse dropped dead, but ho secured another, and again another, covering the 65 miles to Arlington iu soven hours. To this Paul llcvere of Oregon is undoubt edly duo the fact that the ranchers of the Willow Creek country below Heppner lost so little stock and property. The Palace Hotel was the first building to stem the tide, and all the guests were saved; but houses below "tho Palace Hotel wore thrown out into tho street, over turned and wrecked. The resi dence of C. A. Rhea was carried away, and the entire family, con sisting of bis wife and three daughters, and Miss Adkins, a cousin, were lost. Mr. Rhea hinv self was absent in Portland, at tending the Masonic convention. C. K. Red dole, "whoso residence was completely destroyed, was al so absent with Mr. Rhea in Port land, and his wife and baby were drowned. Tho body f Mrs. Red- lield is among the recovered. A. C. Geigor's house was carried away and Mr. (lieger drowned. IHb family is in tho East. iteorge uonsor B house was next, but the family succeeded in saving their lives by rushing to the upper story, the house being carried down tho creek three-quarters of a mile. When reached by the rescuers they found that the house had been cut in two, and Mr, Censor was standing in water up to his lift k, holding his wife upon tho roof, and keeping her from slipping with his outstretch ed arms." Dr. MeSword and J. Avers, who were living in the same residence, were drowned, Oscar Miner's house was next demolished, and Mrs. Miner drowned. The rest of the family succeeded in saving their lives by climbing to the roof. All of the Wells family but two were lost and tho house carried away. Willi the Wells residence went the houso of tieorge Swaggert. Mr. Swnggert's two married daughters wero Jrowned, with their five chil dren. L. 1). Colby, a rancher,. whose house is almost on the banks of Willow Creek, near Cecil, 31 miles from Heppner. said the flood went past his lesidence at 5 o'clock this morning. "We had no notice of its com ing," said Mr. Colby, "except a low roaring sound. We looked out at the creek, and the water was rising in it rapidly. In a lew minuti-s the little creek swelled in to a torrent, and great quantities of hay and driftwood came rushing past on its surface. At this par ticular point the banks of the creek are quite high, and while the flood did not overflow them, it ate great holes in tho soft loam, and the channel appears to have been slightly altered. The crest of the flood soon passed, but the cieek is still very much swollen." A mile or so above the Colby ranch is the farm of C. C. Curtis. Here the waters burst from the river banks and rushed over sur rounding meadows, sweeping a good hundred tons of newly-cut bay from the fields where it lay stacked, and ssattering it broad cast over the valley. At Douglas, six miles further up the valley, the cloudburst did little damage. The residents had been warned of tho coming peril by Leslie Mat lock, of Heppner, who made a wild ride from the stricken town to Arlington. At Douglas Matlock gave his hurried warning about midnight, and within 30 minutes the creek liegan to rise. The ex treme height was not reached un til 4 o'clock in the morning. The The torrent overflowed its banks at several pianos in this vicinity, but beyonp drowning few hogs and spoiling some hay, did little damage. In one field all the pil- cd-up hay was floated by the water and carried to the fence. Here kindly barb-wires detained it and the subsiding flood left it hung on the fence to dry. At lone immediately after the alarm all the townpeople fled to the bills on the same side of the creek upon which the town iB built, with the exception of seven people, who live close to the bridge aoross the creek, and who rushed across the bridge to tho hill on that side. Two old ladies, Mrs. Aero and Mrs. Sheldo, and Tom Colvia, his wife and two children were those who sent the entire night on that side of the river. Nearly all the other townspeople returned to their homes by 3 or 4 o'clock in the morning. ( When Mrs. W. J. Blake returned she was obliged to wade knee-deep in mud and water through her yard. Mrs. Blake is prostrated from the excitement, About 100 persons have been buried in Heppner's graveyard to day. Owing to tho entire absence of proper facilities for caring for the dead, the victims of the flood were, for the most part interred in common crates. The ghouls, who are usually found, like human vul tures, rifling the pockets of the dead in such great dissaster as the one which has stricken Heppner, are in this cose fortunately absent, and the vigilance committees and patroila which wero bo neccessaay at Johnstown and Galveston floods, seem to be unncccessary in Oregon. A phone received by Postmaster Summers slates that up to last evening 2(15 bodies, hail boon re covered and that the first estimat ed of the loss of life were nearly correct. Mr. Cleveland has gone fishing and M r. Gorman has gone to Eu rope. Only the silver tones of the peerless leader calling his thousand dollar heifer is left to cheer the hearts of the downcast Democrats. The estate of the late Thomas B. Reed foots up to nearly half a mil lion dollars. He retired from (he 8Hukersbsp a poor man and made all this money in New York. A part of it was made in his law practice, but the bulk of it came from stock speculation on suggestions given by H. II. Rogers, the Standard oil man. In other words, his savings rep resented fees and tips. NEWS BRIEFLY TOLD Items of Interest Gath ered Here and There Some Stolen, Others Not Oulllngs From Our Exchanges News Not of the Week- Timely Topics. According to the Klamath Falls papers that city (till has a case or two of smallpox. Rev. J. II. Howard and family, of Silver Lake, passed through the city Thursday homeward bound. It is freely intimated that there are some things about President Roosevelt's Cabinet which give him Payne. A coaling station in Alaska would prove so valuable to our revenue cutters that its establishment is warranted, regardless of the re moteness of war with Canada. Denmark is not the only place containing something decayed. There has been apparently a good deal of rottenness of late connected with postmarks. Miss Stone is goning back to missionary work in Turkey. She had better be careful. They still need the money over there, and next time are apt to raise ransom rates. Ex-Minister Wu Tin Fang has been given a subordinate position in Peking. He must feel this keenly, and the commencement season in full blast in the United States, too. At a meeting of the County High School Board held lost Satur day, the Fair Grounds were select ed as the location upon which will be built the High School building. Prof Ullery is the probable princi pal. Postmaster Summers' salary has been raised from $1200 to IHOO per year. This equals the increase given Salem, Astoria and other much larger cities, and is only ex ceeded by Sumpter, which office was raised $300. It is announced that active work will soon be commenced on the state portage railway to be built around the Celilo rapids. Chief engineer A. t. Hammond is en gaged at present in malting a sur vey of the route and estimates of its cost. An Episcopal clergyman not long ago was being shaved by a colored barber whowas addicted to occasional sprees. The razor ma nipulator cut the parson's face quite considerably. "You see, that comes from taking too much drink," said the minister, hoping that this might prove to be an in valuable lesson to him. "Yes, sah," replied Jackson; "it makes de skin very tendah, sah; it do for a fact." The good people of Burns were recently treated to display of me chanical skill iu the form of a $3000 automobile, and they immeiiatly concluded that it must be the fore runner of a railroad. Should they see a toy balloon floating over their city on the coming Fourth, they would doubtless exercise the same imaginative faculty and herald it as a forerunner of an airship line. There would lie about as much reason to it. A Kansas paper gets off the fol owing: In reply to the question, "who pays the expenses of the president's junketing trip?" Wil liam Allen White says: "It is a stocky built man with a ratty mustache, a font of double pica teeth, and a jaw set with a Yale time lock; a man rather below me dium height, inclined to be pussy, with a voice that needs a composi tor a man named Roosevelt T. Roosevelt, to be accurate. He is the first president of the United States, in recent years, who has re fused all courtesies from the rail roads and pays his way, and by the same token he is the first presi dent in recent years whom the railroodsare going to fight." Tha Htffnmr lUmmHt Tun. As we go to press the committee consisting of Messrs T. M, Baldwin, C. I. Winnek, Mayor M. K. Brink, and Geo. Summers made g partial canvas of the business houses and raised $300 for the Heppner suffer ers. This amount will be added toto day and shows the publio spirit of our citizens. Show us another town the size Prineville that would do better. Later. The committee had raised up to this morning $351.75 and expect to have about $100 to send on today's mail to thote en gaged In the work of relief at Heppner. Ulemaiaf wnm Hwr. Hawkins Bros, have resumed work at their saw mill. 1 Grandma Hawkins and ber daughter Lizzie were visitors at John Demaris' last Sunday. Alfred Hoee has been haulinir lumber for Clyde Hon for the past two weeks. Clyde is preparing to build a bam; also a creamery. The first singing of the season. was held on Sunday last, at,the Howard school bouse. Singing every Sunday at 2 oclock, p.m. nvery noay invitea. A. C. Knighten and wife, made a flying trip to Mill Creek saw mill last Monday for the purpose of bringing home a little deer, that had been left at Mr.Birdsong's for Zella Dyer. Some half dnxen Fnatam hntrm who homesteaded in this part of ine country last tail, are now build ing cabins on the snme. Th..v contemplate a pleasant summer hunting and fishing, with perhaps aii occasional uear thrown in. Miss. Josie Andrews, nf Rwwt Home, closed a verv snccMftfnl tarm of school, in this district on last rnaay. Her sister Miss Ora who is teaching at Combs flat spent oamruay ana uunuay witn Miss Josie, at the home of J. W. Wright. Henrv Cram, wife unit Miu Vul. lie Mc Daniel were on a pleasure trin lnat ftimlav at M. fi. i - u.iuu, ... ... vmuj mine which is located on a spur oi LooKout mountain. On the re turn trip Mr. Cram was rlrivincr at about the same speed as an automo bile. Still I think the storm caught them. Owinsr to the repent ruins pmna are looking their very best, Al though We Would not cunt In ha favored with many such storms as occured last Sunday evening. It Commenced with a terrific hail storm, in some places, bail fell as large as small hen eggs, ending with a regular down pour. narr Ffstes. C. Henry and W. A. Carson start to town today. Walter Morrin trip to Prineville last week. H. H. HawlftVWAHllrtino hnainrao in Prinevilie tho first of the week. Aleck Mackintosh nnsaeil th here Tuesday on his way to Port land, where his wife is quite low. Our school, which heiran Mnv 1H is progressing nicely under the able management of Mrs. H' H. Hawley. Mr. J. W. Rennett h.a Iran nn the sick list for several days, suffer ing with the erysipelas on his foot. Henry Cox is suffering from a lame foot, having been kicked by one of his horses a few days since. Several of our girls are planning a picnic on Moury mountain, at the old mill, for the Fourth of July. The first wool of the season pas sed through here on the way to The Dalles, last Sunday. This district has been treated to a series of thunder ulinwnn. n,i,;ni. have gladdened the heart of our iurmers, Mrs. S. Glenn and daughter, Miss Mary, of Prineville, are spend ing a few days on Mrs. Glen's farm, attending to business matters. C. A. Luclling and fumilv n, anticipating a trip to the Valley in a week or bo. They will visit friends and relatives nt P,,riln.l and Oregon City. Mike Brown met with rat!.. serious accident lastTnnulav tu. ing caught out in ashowcrhestart- eu to me uouse lor his coat; wish ing to take the nearest way, he was in the act of getting under a barbed wire fence, when the fence was struck by lig'itning, the shock ren dering him unconscious for several minutes, and the wire burning his suouiuer. Vivian.