Portland Library WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 OFFICIAL PAPER WEEKLYAZETTE Subscription Price, $1.50 Leads In Prestige.... Leads In Circulation. Leads In Mews The Paper Is Published Strictly In the Interests of Morrow County and its Taxpayers. Is the Official and Recognized Represent ative Journal of the County. EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORROW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY. APRIL 26, 1900, NO. 779 1 The Heppner Gazette Is published every Thursday by J. W. RE DING-TON. Entered at the Fostoffice at Heppner, Oregon, ai second-class matter. PROPESSIOlTAIi CJLXlXMa. C E. Redfield ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office In First National Bank building. Heppner, Oregon. Ellis & Phelps ATTORNEYS AT LAW. All business attended to in a prompt and satisfactory manner. Notaries Pub lic and Collectors. Office in Natter's Building. Heppner, Oregon J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and U. S. COMMISSIONER. Office in Palace hotel building, Heppner, Or. A. Mallory, U, S. COMMISSIONER NOTARY PUBLIC Is authorized to take all kinds of LAND rnuuro ana hnu filinos. Collections made on reasonable terms. Office at residence on Chase street. Government land script for sale. D E. Gilman GENERAL COLLECTOR. Put your old books and notes in his hands and get your money out of them Makes a specialty of hard collections. Office in . N. Brown's building, Heppner, Or Dr. M. B. Metzler DENTIST Teeth Extracted and Filled. Bridging a specialty Painless Extraction. ... Heppner - - Oregon. J. R. Simons Si Son General Blacksmiths Horseshoeing a Specialty Wagon Making and Repairing. All work done with neatness and dispatch. . . . Satisfaction Guaranteed. Upper Main Street, Heppner, Ore. All Heppner people who have stopped there speak well of the HOTEL ST. GEORGE Pendleton, Oregon. GEORGE DARVEAU. Proprietor. European plan, erected in 1869, elegantly furnished and heated by hot water. Corner Main and Webb streets, 1 blocks from depot. NOTICE OF INTENTION. DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR, LAND Office at The Dalles, Ore., March 19 1900. Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to commute and make final proof in support of his claim and that said proof will be made be fore J. W. Morrow, United States Commissioner, at Heppnei, Oregon, on Friday, April 27, 1900, vii: DANIEL C. GRIFFIN, of Heppner, Ore,, Homestead entry No. 6752 for the northeast H section '21, township 1 south, range 28 east W M. He names the following witnesses to prove bis continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: Frank E. Bell, Even G wor sen, Ben. F. Swaggart and Elmer Scott, all of Heppner, Oregon. 74-9 Jat P. Ldcas, Register. NOTICE OF INTENTION. DEPARTMENT OF TBI INTERIOR, LAND Office at The Dalles, Or., March 19. 1900. Notice is herebv given that the following named settler has filed notice of his Intention to make final proof in support of bis claim, and that said proof will be made before A. Mallory, United States Commissioner, at Hepp ner, Oregon, on Friday. April 27, 1900., vis: JAMES W. BEYMER, of Hardman, Ore., Homestead entry No. 7249 for the southwest H northeast , west southeast and northeast '. southeast section 15, township 4 south, ranxe X east W M. He names the following witnesses to prove bis continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: W. F. Cowdrey, J. C. Owen, Onmer Shaner and A. E. Wright, all of Hard man, Oregon. 74 9 Jay P. Lucas, Register. SEEDS Thousand of g&n3en cndepeDd on Ferry'afteeds every year and never suffer disappointment. Cheap sutasll- tatt bring loss, not paying crops. It dsvs to pay a little more for FtRBT'aESKEi. Five cents vrr paper everywhere, and always worth It. Always t h Best. WJOtwed Annual m. I. . flT CJ., flTHSIT, MICH. FEBRTS r jj BHfflB AVegetable Preparationfor As similating tteTood and Regula ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotest)cstion,Cheerful ticss andRest.Gontains neither CtomnT.Morphhie nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. fyape afOdOSAMVILPtlVBEa Punalcm Sml Alx.Srnnm , Sesd tiiCarbanakStim ftfmSeed -(Itmfwd Suqttr . A perfect Remedy for Constipa tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms convulsions .Fevensh ncss andLoss OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACT COPY OF WBAPPEB. fiRST Rational J ank OF HEPPNER. O. A. RHEA , . . . ; President I T. A. RHEA VioPresident Transact a General Banking Business. EXCHANGE ON ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD BOUGHT AND SOLD.. Collections made'on all polntsbn reasonable terms! Surplus and undivided profits 135,000. " Palace ' JwSft ' Hotel. mwmm A Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel Every Modern Drummers' Resort. Stockmen's Headquarters. One of the finest equipped Bars and Clubrooms in the state in connection. ... First-Ciass Sample Rooms. For Business Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West. FLOUR The Heppner Flouring Mill Company Have peifeoted arrangements to run the mill permanently. They have secured tbe services of a first-olass miller, and wheat snfficieot lo make and keep on band a permanent ' supply of Flour, Graham, Germ Meal, Whole Wheat, Bran and Shorts Of tbe tery best quality and guaranteed to give satisfaction. We are here to bay wheat and exobange with tbe farmers, and aolioit their patronage. AT T. R. HOWARD'S STORE, Main street, you can find Groceries, Provisions, Glassware, ,1 Tinware and Furnishing Goods, All well adapted to either City or Country Trade. Staple and Fancy Groceries Fine Teas and Coffees. X. R. HOWARD, Heppner. Pi. n hi For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears Signat The Kind You Have Always Bought. THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEWVOHK fllTV. ti. W. CON8ER Cashier E. L. FREELAND. .Assistant Oashier J. W. MORROW, Proprietor. Strictly First-Class Convenience. FLOUR - - Good Goods.... Fair Prices.L uhoiu w em LATEST WAR NEWS. Battle Pending-. London, April 23. It is quite prob able that by this time Gen. Handle has fought a decisive battle with the Boers. He entrenched himself Saturday to await the arrival of Gen. Campbell with the Sixteenth brigade. That commander arrived Saturday evening,, and news may therefore be expected 'at any mo ment. During the last few days there has been a renewal of Boer .activity in all parts of tbe theatre of war. The tenacity of the enemy around Colonel Dalgety proves that considerable forces are still there. Koar of Artillery.'' Maseru v Basutoland, April 21. Four Boer guns have been hard .at work all day on Col. Dalgety's position. The British guns have replied at intervals. The Boers are divided into three divis ions, two being in position to repel the relief columns, the distant roar of whose artillery is audible. General Brabant's relief force is reported to be today in tbe neighborhood of Bushman's Kop, 20 miles from Wepener. A dispatch from Jamraersburg says: The Boers are desplaying renewed ac tivity. Five guns were used freely to day from four different positions against ours. A rifle firing south and west was heavy and continuous. Officers and men are on duty day and night in the trenches, and the heavy rains of late have made their task a great feat of endurance and pluck. Dutch Kcrtes. , Information shows that at one time the two republics had 105,000 men in the field, including the Colonials. Tliev can still muster 80,000, of which 50,000 areintne free State, 10,000 are to the Biagarsberg district and 15,000 in the district of the Fourteen Stresms. It is now believed that before the war the burgher lists were deliberate falsified in order to deceive the British intelli gence department. Fighting all Day. -Maseru, April 23. Fighting began early this morning at Bushman's Kop. The Colonial division advanced cau tiously. It was found that the Hoers had evacuated their positions on Bush man's Kop during the night. A run ning fight has been proceeding through out the day, the British gradually ad vancing and the lioers losing ground. General Brabant is moving in a north easterly direction, keeping Basutoland close on his right flank. Thousands of Basutos are watching the operations, Our casualties so far are 25 wounded. The , Bri ish Are bivouacking tonight eight miles from Wepener, and the Boers, who are besieging Col. Dalnety, appear to be preparing to retire. A stubborn fight is belif-ved to have occurred in the direction of le Wet's Dorp, where the Boers are in strong force with a lot of guns and where also there is a relief column, apparently General Uundle's. Wepener, however, is already practically relieved by the withdrawal of a large portion of the besiegers. PHILIPPINE WAR. Manila, April 22. Last week was one of the bloodiest of the war. Official re ports show a total of 378 Filipinos killed, 12 officers and 244 men captured, and many more wounded. The number wounded is hardly guesnable. Consi dering that the Filipinos entirely lack hospital facilities, a great majority of the wounded will die. Probablv the week'i work finished 1000 insurgents. The American lows was nine killed and 10 wounded. Two Sergeants and oie pri vate were killed in ambushes, while es corting provision trains. The insurgents have been aggressive in almost every province of Luzon, General 1'ilar's band, numbering' 300, which whs out of sight for three months, the leader being reported killed, has re appeared in its old field about San Mi quel. Pilar is supposed to he again in command. He gave the American gar rison at Han Miquel, consisting of three companies of the Thirty fifth Infantry, with a Oatling, three hours' fighting, during a night attack. HARD ON HORSES. The Chilcoot Pmbs was hard on horses, and no',v the Boer war is bard on horses, and the coble ani mals pet killed and used up alarm, ingly fast. The horse had become too numerous for BDy earthly use, but under the present administra tion he has had a great increase in value, and shows symptoms of be coming more so. The British gov ernment lias agents in America with 30,000 horses for shipment to tbe front in Africa, arjd as most of tbe horses fitted for such service have to be secured in the Pacific Northwest, it will probably in crease values here very materially. Wireleiw Telegraphy. It is said that aoocesafol pxperimeoti have tt last been aocomplmhed in wire lets telegraphy, and Ibis would undoubt edly be a good tbing, and revolutionize many ways of doing bntiness. One writer has gone so fur as to my Ibat wireless telegraphy Is the greatest dis covery of the aire. We beg to differ. Don't overlook Hostetter'i Ktnmaoh Bit ters when yon talk about tbe area! things nf the world. This peerless mad ioine bus done more to promote health and settle stomach tronhlt-s tkno any other medicine in nxixtHiine. It oorei dyspepsia, indigestion, msUris and oon tipation. It neer fail. Try t, and be sure nd jf thu genuine, with Pri vate Iievnn fttsrop over tlm nek nf bottle. Don't let tbe druggist pnlm off 'nbetitnle " Twl City Kxi-e East bound, on the Northern Pacific, passes through the red-colored Had Lands and the North Dakota wheat fields in the dav time. This train lfavfa Portland at 11 MO o'clock at night, I'll (Hit Hound points early the following morning, and arrives at HKkaneat lO .40 p. m., and at ht. Paul at 7:45 a. m., con oectiog with all out-going trains. EASTERN OREGON GROWTH. Li. 11. Wells, of Portland and, a native son ol La lirande, recently wrote some very interesting rem iniscences in The Oregonian, from which tbe following are extracts: A ' long period extends back through the vista of vears to the first schoolhouse at La Grande aud to the time the new building was finished, during which almost the entire Inland Empiro has passed through a wonderful trans formation. The old town, as it stood when Professor Morgan taught school in the little shack near the foothills has nearly disap peared. The railroad baa taken the place of the lumbering stage coach, as the new brick schoolhouse has taken the place of the other buildings. Many of the men who attended the meeting which was held at La Grande in the early '60s to take steps toward the erection of the schoolhouse have passed away. La Grande was then a mining supply town, and the valley was little occupied. The school was taught in any old room that hap pened to be handy. The new build ing was a fine structure for those days. From the windows a full view of the old immigrant road, winding its way through the val ley and up the mountain side in the heart of the Blue Bange was had. There were the long trains ot ox wagons, packed with families, who had trekked across the plains and were still trekking on to the "Wallamut" Valley the promised land and goal of the almost endless procession; pack trains of mule and horse, great prairie schooners dragged by the slow moving oxen, or the long eight-mule teams, mov ing in constant succession to tbe mines of the "Upper Country" from Umatilla, by the schoolhouse on the hill. That was before rail ways and before the Meacham road had been riven out of the iron mountains along the rushing Grand Rend River. The sons of Jack Morrow, the pioneer merchant of the old town, who afterwards moved to and founded Morrow County, attended achool here. The Bona and daugh ters of Senator Slater got their ed ucation in the old building. Car rie and Ella Rhodes, the latter Ella Higginson, were pupils in this old building. Some of the old pupils have attained considerable prominence, especially Ella Hig- ginson. SAM HOUSTON'S SECRET. "A mystery in which the Ameri can people were once deeply con cerned was that which shadowed the life of one of tbe most remark able characters of the country," writes William fernne of "Mys teries of the Century," in the April Ladies' Home Journal. "In 1829 Samuel Houston, or, aB he called and Bigned himself, 'Sam' Houston, was Governor of Tennessee. It was in the midst of a campaign for re-election to the Gubernatorial chair that Tennessee was startled by a report that be bad resigned bis office. He had been married to the daughter of an influential family; three months afterward sheieturned to her father's house, aud her husband resolved to pass the rest of bis life in tbe wilder- DSHH. "Houston betook himself to the tribe of Cherokees in the Indian Territory; he adopted their costume, appearing in all the trappings of an Indian brave, letting his hair giow down bis back, and visiting Washington with a buckskin bunting-shirt, yellow leggins, a huge blanket, and turkey feathers around his bead. No one could induce bim to reveal the secret of his metamorphosis and his abandon ment of tbe ways and habits of civilization. He married again after he emerged from bis Indian life, aud he lived to be an old man, dying in the midst of tbe Civil War, but no one was ever able to persuade him to unlock (he mys tery of his life. Nor would bis first wife, who also married again, throw any light on tbo mystery." A T SOLDIERS' HOME. m J, G. Hart, of Heppner, the vet eran soldier who is now at the Sol diers' Home at Roseburg, wrote to Gov. G. W. Rea April 18, as fol lows: Comrade Rea This home ia all right, and is kept in good shaoe. The commander is a vr-ry fine fel low, and is very kind to the old soldiers. He does not take any of their pension money from them. He puts it in the bank, and when they want it he gives them a check. Everything is neat and clean, and the food is good enough for anyone. The home has 40 acres of eround, a cood orchard and strawberry patch, and a nice grove of hr trees and seats. There are three D-rades of n I diers here veterans of the Mex- lean, Indian and Civil wars. BO amng Powder Economy The manufacturers of Royal Baking Powder have always declined to produce a cheap baking powder at the sacrifice of quality. The Royal is made from the most highly refined and wholesome ingredients, and is the embodiment of all the excellence possible to be attained in the highest class baking powder. Royal Baking Powder costs only a fair price, and is cheaper at its price than any similar article. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., TOO BAD! TOO BAD1 The Dewey cat is out of the bag and in full sight of everybody. The Admiral has simply allowed himself to be used by those demo crats who still have hopes of keep ing Mr. Bryan out of the demo cratic nomination. It is the demo cratic nomination that the Admir al exprots to get. He baa declared himself to be a democrat, although he has never cast a vote, and says the only time he ever desired to vote was when Mr. Cleveland was a candidate for President The only effect of his candidacy will be humiliation for himself. It is now known that his announcement has fallen as flat everywhere else as it did in Washington, and the demo crats in Congress, who ought to know the sentiment of their con stituents, say that Dewey has no more chance of being nominated by the Kansas City convention than Grover Cleveland has. A mong Admiral Dewey's real friends much regret is expressed that he should have listened to advice that must end in bringing him great humil iation. The liryanites are already adding gall to that humiliation by suggesting that Dewey may pos sibly be given tbe nomination for Vice President on tbe Bryan tick et. Just think of it! Tbe hero of Manila Day, the man who did more tnan any other one man to give the U. 8. the Philippines, and who has been referred to aB the father of expansion, used as the tail of the Bryan ticket, on a platform opposing expansion and everything else George Dewey was supposed to stand for. Surely that would be enough to make Dewey wish he had never been born, or at least that he had al lowed himself to fall into tbe hands of his friends and married rela lives. , Wide VentlbnlM On the North Coast Limited and Twin City Express, the Northern Pacific's two daily trains, east bound, after April 29. lhey will leave count cities about twelve hours apart. Ask for a 'orth Coast Limited leaflet. Independent and reliable The Oregon-lun. Samples of mixtures made in imitation of baking powders, but containing alum, are frequently dis tributed from door to door, or given away in , grocery . stores. . , Such, mixtures to use in food, and in many cities their sale is prohibited by law. Alum is a corrosive poison, and all physicians condemn baking powders containing it. 100 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. WAUNEU MAIL. Over in Haystack valley, 40 miles southwest from Heppner, is a thriving settlement' which sends its products to Ifopimer for shipment to the mar kets of the world. There was a direct mail route between its town of Wauner and Heppner, connecting at Hardman with the daily Canyon City stage. IkicniiHe of the starvation price paid the sub-contractor, lie dropped the route, and now Wagner has to get its mail via Arlington, which means 4 days to get a letter there from Heppner, where it used to go in one. This h not fair to tbe people. The government is not too poor to pay decent wages for such work, and it should re-establish the daily service to Wagner and supply the people with the mail they are juy entitled to. HHKGP HALEd. Buyers and growers seem to be still apart, the former claiming that there is no margin for them in buying sheep at present aHking prices. There are many buyers in Heppner, and they all want sheep, but say they will not buy at present prices. Growers sav that they are only ask ing what their sheep are worth, and that if they cannot get that they can hold them over, for they have more and better graHS than ever before, and the number of sheep on band is less than for years. The only sale reported is that Isaac Howard, of Butter creek, sold his band of ewes and lambs, count noses after shearing, at $2.11) a head all around. At this rate he will receive for a ewe with twins say 11.50 for the wool and $ii.3) for the three bead, total $7.80. RESOLUTIONS. At a regular meeting of Rawlins Re lief Corps No. 23, held April 21, l'JOO, the following resolutions were adopted: Whereas our friend and sister Mrs. Belle Lalande has been called upon to bear sore affliction in liie death of her beloved hiiHband Stephen Lalande, we the ladies of Rawlins Relief Corps No. 2:1 desire to express our heartfelt sympathy for her and her family in their sad berevement. Resolved, That a copy ot this expres sion of our sympathy be given to the bereaved family and that a copy be sent to the Hoppner papers. Per order of the corp. Mary Bartholomew May 8. Thompson Mattik T. Smkao ' .Committee. Editor's Awful Plight. F. M. Iiifwini, editor Heneoa, (Ills.) News, was alllioted for years with piles Ibat no dootor or remedy helped until be tried Backlen' Arnioa Salve. He writes two boxs wholly cured bim. It's the surest pile cure on esrtb and tbe best jftlveiu the world. Cure ftuarsoteed. Bold by Conner A Warren Drug Co.