Portland Library WEEKLY GAZETTE Subscription price. $1.50 OFFICIAL PAPER WEEKLY-eAZETTE Subscription Price, $1.50 Leads la prestige Leads In ClrcuUtloa.... Leads la New The Paper la Pa naked Strictly In tke Interests of Morrow County and its Taxpayers. IS tha Official aad Racoflnlzad Represent ative journal 01 e county. EIGHTEENTH YEAR HEPPNER, MORHOW COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY. JANUARY 3, 1901, NO. 815 The Heppner Gazette Is published every Thursday by J. W. REDINGrTON. Entered at the Postofflce at Heppner,' Oregon, aa second-class matter. tor-FICIJj SIBBCTOIiT, Baited Btates Officials. Prjitnt i WiUiam MoKinte? Vtc President , T. Boosevelt Secretary of State W. K. Dsy ' Secretary of Treasaij.. .......... Lymen J. Oage Ssorntnry of Interior .Cemelios N. Blies 1 Hortary of War E. B. Boot Secretary of Nary John D. Long PoatinaBter-Qeneral Charles Kinery Smith Attorney-General John W. Origs 'wratAry of Avrinnltnre Jamea Wilson Com. General Land Office...... Muger Hermann State Federal Uffiotali. - 'Coalmen fe fe -Internal Revenue Collector D. M. Donne District Judge C. B. Bellinger Cirouit Judge W. B. Gilbert District Attorney J. H. Hail I) 8. Marshal ,...Eoe;h Hooter Uuitxtd statu Land Officers. THB DALUS, 01. ty P Lnoas Register Otis Pattorsun Receiver LA QBAHDI, OB. K. W. Bartlett Register i. O. Hwaokhamer Receiver Oregoa State Officials, d-MTernor T.T. Qer ecmtryof State F. 1. Don bar treasurer F H. Moore rinpt. Publio Instruction ...J. H. Ackernmn Attorney General .....D. R. N. Ulsokburn Printer W. H. Leeds SR. fc). Bean, F. A. Moore, C. E. WolvBrton CI'Tk Board School Land Commission , .......Wert Chamberlain Game Warden Alpha Qoimby Fish Com F. C Reid. Attoria Veterinary Snrgeou Win, McLean, Portland .Sixth Judicial District. Circuit Judge W. R. Ellis Proseonting Attorney T. G. Hailey Morrow County Officials. Jo ni Snnator J, W. Morrow Representative. A. B. Thomson Co i ity Judge A. G. Bartholomew " 'mnmissinners J.L.Howard Ed. C. Ashbaugb. " ,irk Vawter Crawford Sheriff J. W. Matlock ' treasurer M. Liohtenthal Meeesor 8. E. Willis ' Surveyor... J. J- McOee " .onool Uup't Jay W. Bhipley " C nur Dr. E. R. Hunlock Stock Inspector Henry Scherzlnger Deputies J. P. Rhea, lone Ike Vinson, Gartoway UBPPNEB TOWS OmOUI. Hayoi Frank Gilliam Oounollmen B- P- Garrigui-s, J. R. Simons. J. J. Roberts, K. W Rhea, Geo. NoMe and Thoe. Quaid. Recorder J. P. Williams r -iwiurer L. W. Briggs Uwshal George Thornton HB&rNIR tCHOOL DISTRICT. Directors Frank GUUrm, 0. E. Farnsworth, J. M. Htger; Clerk J. J. Roberts. Precinct Officer. Ja tioeof the Feeoe.. J. P. Williams C nxrahle G. B Hatt , " : C E. Rcdf leld ' ' ' " ATTORNEY AT LAW. s Office In First National Bank building. Heppner, Oregon. . i 0. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office on May street, Heppner, Oregon. J. W. Morrow ATTORNEY AT LAW and . V. 8. 'COMMISSIONER. ' Office in Palace hotel building, Heppnet, Or.' A. fflallory, - ; U. 8. COMMISSIONER : r 7 NOTARY PUBLIC J ' ' Is authorized to- take- alb kinds of '-AND PROOFS and LAN- ViUNiM Collections made on reasonable terms. Office atresidance on Chase street. Government land script for sale. D. E. Gil man 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 J. N. Brown't birildin;, ! Heppoer, Or Dr. M. B. JV.et2.er DENTIST Teeth Extracted and Filled. ...... .Bridging AfipeciaJty Painless Extraction. . . . Heppner - - Oregon. .Gentry & Sharp - Tonsorial Artists Your patronage solicited, esftlilactioa gaarnmeed..'. LI Hot and Cold Baths Main Street,' near Palace Hotel. " ' Heppner. Nothing so 6ood aa a pure malt beverage to refresh one after a hard day's work has ever been discovered. And there Is one malt beverage that Is better than others that if J. B. Natter's beer It goes right tn the spot, and Is served up at Natter's Brewery, on upper Main Heppner. woere an toe-oold cellar in the solid rock keeps t always cool. wanted active mam of wood cbar- cter to deliver and collect Id Oregon for old established manufacturing wholesale house. iMOayer.sarepe. Honeatv more thn e pertenee required. Oar reference, any bsnk la (-addressed stamped envelope Manufacturers, Third Floor, 434. Deerrjornawi Lrg in I I (CI IT r i lmi I . II i -VlfUaj U i - . i - mm fTTTI fTITVITHHTTMl i. h.iUlt; i m t tUl i tu i. 1 1 b i ot. i iti tt tt.i it Lnitit ti m ii L iATTiTTTlT iiDiiMiiiiiniiiiiiiiifuiiiiitiuiimi iiiiHitiinriiiiiiliuiilliiiii AVgetable Preparationfor As similating tlicroodandRegula ling thcStoirjachs and Bowels of Promotes Digestion,CheerfuI ness and Rest. Con tains neither Opiumforphine norMinerat imp afoua-siMuiiPtKim Jbc Smn Bit mmSmd.- Apetfecl Remedy for Constipa flon, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions Jeverish ness and Loss of Sleep. Fac Simile Signature of NEW YORK. EXACf COPY OF WRAPPER, mamma - A, Leading Eastern Oregon Hotel Every Modern Coavenience. Drummers' Resort. Stockmen's Headquarters. One of the. finest equipped Bars and Clubrooms in the state in connection. ... Iirst-Oltass Sample Rooms. For Business" Heppner is one of the Leading Towns of the West.-! For Fall and Winter Wear ill. LiCHTENTHAL, - - -.-av -7. y .n iii ) ) ! The Pioneer Boot and Shoe Dealer of Heppner, hai The Latest Styles of Footwear for ; Men, Women and Children. 'V- i :, , . . . , SATISFACTION GUARANTEED IN EVERY PARTICULAR. ' Old Stand, Maln Street. i , , T-Rprrtn a Ssieclalty. HOME INDUSTRY. FLOUR Heppner Flouring Mill Co. s ; ' v ' ' Has secured the Bervices of a first cUbb miller, t and keep od band a full Bupply of FLOUR, : GRAHAM, : GERM : MEAL, WHOLEWHEAT, BRAN and SHORTS Of the very beet quality and The mill- exchargps with their patronage. W L. Come to Morrow 1 1- T71 ." ianus. vaiues are sure er again will land sell For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature Use lor Over Thirty Years B ' TMt eamaun eoM-Mv.Rn vea errv. rv ,m- In i ii. nil w ii in in niiM If ?u uy u v.. Palace Hotel. J. W. MORROW,' Proprietor. strntu, r n FLOUR guaranteed to give satisfaction. the farmers,- and eolieiiB HOUSTON, Manager. County, for low-priced i 1 .1 "i xt 10 uoiiDie up. iNev- so low as it does now. WHEAT., . . . Recent sales in Morrow county include1 5000 bushels' sold by County1 Commissioner Ed C. Ash baugb to Alvah Lr?ach at Lexing ton and 1200 bushels sold to has. Johnson at Pettys, all at 43 cents a bushel. Mr. Ashbangh -says there is no profit in raising wbe.t at 43 cents. He raised 15,000 ' bushels the past season. In 1891 Mr.' Ashbaugb received 5 rcents for his -wheat and had a yield of 40 bushels to acre. In addition to his own land he rented GO acres, paid $2 an acre casbreut, and cleared $1300 on it. Mr. Ashbaugb would like to see a big fall of enow, ' and 'feels sure it would be followed by big crops. In 1891 the fall Was 27 inches, land the yield was great. , The Oregonian of Dec. 30 said: The wheat market took a violent turn upward yesterday, 'aad the East was booming. The Portland market has been so far in front of the procession throughout the sea son that the full extent of the ad vance in other taarketa 'was not reflected locally. Walla' Walla wheat sold around 54i and 55 "cts., and a fraction above these figures was paid for ' some fancy stock. Bluest em is in nominal demand at the -usual differential -of 2 to 3 cents per bushel. Shipments are holding up very well, another car go cle&ring yesterday, and bring ing the total - shipmentr for the month, e j elusive of flour, up to over 1,900,000 bushels. Valley millers continue to buy consider able wheat in this market, and bo long as this condition of affairs ex ists there can be no export quota tion of value- on Valley! wheat in this market Freights are ruling steady, "with a fair amount of business doing. As high as 37s 6d has been paid for next season ships, but large Carriers are obtainable at less. Nothing is obtainable, however,' this eide of April at less that 40 shillings. LONG HAUL FOR FUEL. H. V. Gates is shippfng cordwood from Fairviewy Multnomah county, to Heppner, for the use of his light and water plant there. This is hauling wood 160 miles, though there is plenty of wood in the Blue mountains, 20 miles from Heppner. The heavy body fir of Western Orefron, Mr. Gates thinks, is the best wooden fuel in the world, and so he considers it economy to ship it trom Falrview. It costs him, laid down in Heppner, $3.40 per cord, while the soft pine of the Blue mountains can be bought in Heppner for if J. The above Is from "yesterday's Ore gonian, which is mistaken about the price of wood in Heppner. Pine and fir, 4-foot, retail here now at $6, and the summer price is $5. There are vast bodies of good fuel timber within 18 miles of Heppner, that can be bought where chopped at $1.50 a cord, and it would be a paying investment for Bothe capitalist to build a narrow-gouge, jerk water railroad along I he water-grade of Willow creek and haul fuel to Heppner; is destruction of lung 'by a growing germ, precisely as mouldy cheese is destruction of cheese by a growing germ. If you kill the germ, you stop the consumption. You can or can't,' according to when you begin. Take Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil : take a little at first. . It acts as. a food; it is the easi est food. Seems not to be food ; makes you hungry ; "eating is comfortable. Yottcrowstron?:- Oris Tfctiire en it, CT. ........... h. ?Take more; fHKT so oincr. not too much ; enough is as much as you like and agrees with you. Satisfy hunger with usual food: whatever you like and agrees with you. When you arc strong again,' have recovered your strength the germs are dead ; von have killed them. If vou havo not tried It. 'send for free sample, its agreeable taste will surprise you. SCOTT & BOW NE, Chemists. 409 Pearl St., New York. 60c. and $1.00; all druggists. Bp 1 2 3 4-1 5 ' 6 7 8 9 10 II 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 GAY AND WITTY. The Irish peasant is still what Sir Walter Soott called him after the visit of the great novelist to Ireland in the early thirties he is still : "the gayest fellow in the world under difficulties and afflic tion." He has a cheerful way of regarding circumstances Which to others would be most unpleasant and disheartening. A peasant met with an accident which resulted in a broken leg. The neighbors,1 of course, commiserated him. "Ar rah," ha remarked, with a gleam of satisfaction in his eye as he re garded the bandaged limb, "what a blessing it is that it wasn't me neck." Yes, the irrepressible Irishman has a joke for 'every oc casion. Two countrymen who had not seen each other for a long time met at a fair. "Shure it's married I am," Baid O'Brien. "You don't tell me so!" said Blake. "Faith, yes," said O'Brien, "and I've got a fine healthy boy which the neigh bors say is the very picter of me." Blake looked for a moment at O'Brien, who was not, to say the least, remarkable for his good looks, and then said: , "Oh, well, what's the harrum so long as the child's healthy?" AT SOLDIERS' HOME. Philip Fair, writing from the Soldiers' Home at Roseburg, says: The old soldiers very much appreciate the copy of the Heppner Gazette you send here. We have about 100 members in the home. In summer time we generally have from 10 to 15 out on furlough, visiting relatives and friends. We have 75 members In the home building and about 25 patients in the hospital. Many worthy -veterans are refused admission because there is no room to accommodate them. The home building and hospital arc inadequate for the demand, and oar last legislature reduced the "appropriations several thousand dollars. This was done through some misrepresentations of some parties '. who were prejudiced ior perhaps did not understand the needs of this institution, and we hope and look'fdr our1 next legislature to make sufficient appropriations so as to enable the managers of the home to enlarge the hospital so as to acc6mmodate those now awaiting admission. The sanitary condition is all it could be; the clothing is good and sufficient; the food is well cooked and served, and It Is putting it mild when I state the variety of food is not excelled by afty second-class hotel io Oregon, and I may add the average farmer and me chanic lives no 'better than we do 'in this home. Wt raiee on our home farm the finest variety of vegetables in Oregon, and have ' froit and berries. The farm work is mostly done by mem. bers, who receive not to exceed 8 a month. ' Our Comrrmmler W. J. Shipley and , Adjutant D. G. Palm are men of the highest type always on the alert and looking to the best interest of the home and the members. Bobt. Hart, formerly a resident ot Heppner, Is a member of the home. His weight has increased 17 pounds. He is fireman in the hospital, running the heating apparatus and be never felt better inliis lite. This home life agrees with him na fa is here to stay, STEALING. Chicken-stealing is often practiced and becomes generally justifiable In time of war, when hungry soldier-stomachs feave their consciences blunted. Bat in time of peace it is not to be tolerated, and is not done on account of lack of food. Fifteen years ago many Heppner boys formed a syndicate and sold to Chinamen at a bit a head chk-kens they bad stolen all over town. To get a little money to go to a roller skating rink these boys disgraced them selves and their parents, and several of them received proper punishment. It looks as though a similar syndicate bad recently been formed. There is a bounty on coyote scalps not only because the coyote steals sheep, but also because 'he robs hen roosts. Let boys beware lest in raiding roosts they may be mistaken for coyotes while lowering themselves into the same line ot business. A Great There are many brands of baking ' powders, but " Royal Baking: Powder is recognized at once as the brand of great name, the powder of highest favor and reputation. Everyone has absolute confi dence in the food where Royal ' is used. Pure and healthful food is a matter of vital importance to every individual. Royal Baking Powder -assures the finest and ' most wholesome food. There arc many imitation baking powders, made from alum, mostly sold cheap. Avoid them, as they make the food unwholesome. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO. NEW YORK. GOOD CLIMATE HERE. Col, H. E. Dosch, the pioneer horticulturalist, who has traveled xtensively and knows a good cli mate when he sees it, has gone to the Buffalo Xpobition and writes from there to The Oregonian Dec. 26 as follows: , If any Oregonian is dissatisfied with our climatic conditions, just let him take a pleasure (?) trip across the continent to the Atlan tic seaboard at this season of the year. We had scarcely got out of God's own country when our troubles began -Bnow, ice and blizzards galore all along the line, and they are with us still. Snow drifts all along Bear val ley, and when we were called at Laramie for brenkfast at 6 o'clock a. in., found the thermometer had gene down to 20 degrees below zero, with a gentle 60-mile zephyr breathing across the prairie, and as the "Finch" gas had given out, we -were groping about in the gloaming for our unmentionables, our happiness was complete, and we have been happy ever since. The Missouri and Mississippi rivers are frozen over solid; the horses, cattle and hogs are stand, ing ib the fence corners in fact, behind every available little shelt er, shivering, while their human brothers go about wrapped in com fortable for coats and Arctic over, shoes. The thousands of lighten ing rods on every dwelling, barn, chicken-coop and even ' telegraph poles, tell what kind of summers they have, and the people tell you they enjoy it, but I presume that for people who like that kind of thing, they certainly have the kind of thing they like. Oregon, glori ous Oregon! The beautiful timber belts so familiar to us are oonspicuoaB by their absence, but Mr. Johnson, the forestry expert, pointed out a mill where we actually did see a lot of ""saw-logs ' 10 inches in diameter. The Twentieth Century. We now stand at the threshold of tbe twentieth eentory, and the nineteenth is a thing of Ibe past. It will, however, always be known as the century of inven tion and disoovery, and among some of tbe greatest ot these we' ean tratbfully mention Hostetter's Hlomsoh Bitters, the celebrated remedy for all ailments aria- log from a disordered stomaoh, snob as kyspspsia, Indigestion, Uatnlency, eon. stipation. nervousness and bilionsuess It bas been odb of the greatest blessings to mankind during tbe past fifty ysars as health builder. Many prominent phy sicians nrssoribe and reoomment it Take tbeir advice, try a bottle and be ooovinoed, bnt be sure to get tbe gen a Ids, with our private revenue stamp over tha Deck ot tee Dottle. Editor' Awful Plight. F. M. Higgles, editor Heneoa, (Ills.) News, was altlioted for years with pile that do dootor or remedy helped until he tried Booklen' Arnica Halve. He writes two boxes wholly cured bim. It's the surest pile oure on earth and the best sHlve in tbe world. - Cure guaranteed. Only 25 eents. Bold by Conser & Warren Drug Co. is a guarantee of superior worth TWAIN'S TALK. Ortlv rtriAA Vina XfarV nPurain .Art. peorea in purine as a political speaker, and that was in the pres idential campaign of 1880. While visiting at Elmira, N. I., in the fall of that year, hea made a short speech, introducing to the Repub lican meeting General Hawley, of Connecticut. In the course of his . remarks, Twain said: "General Hawley is a member of my churoh in Hartford, and the author of 'Beautiful Snow.' Maybe he will deny that, but I am only here to give him a character from his last place. As a pure citizen, I respect him; as a personal friend of years, I have the warmest re gard for him; as a neighbor whose vegetable garden joins mine, why why, I watch him. As the author of 'Beautiful Snow' be has added a new pang to winter. So broad, so bountiful is his character, that be never turned a-tramp empty-handed from the door, but always gave him a letter of intro duction to me. Pure, honest, in corruptible, that is Joe Hawley. naven t said any more of him than I would say of myself. Ladies and gentlemen, thia is General llawley. IN CHINA. Being oo the 'eastern Side 'of great 'iontinent, China has the same extremes of climate as are to be found in ' the United States. Fruits, flowers, and crops vary io like manner. Tbe population of China is over 885,000,000. 'That of the British Isles in 1891 was hot quite 38,000,000. That of Franca in ikoa ma w nnn nm The Russian nation,' alreatt ex tended over one-sixth of the globe, while China only extends over a little more than One-twelfth, mus ters little over 120,000,000, tod thus has about one-third of the Chinese population, with about twice its territory to stretch itself in. i is ' sSssi i ' ii free fob All. When Morrow county becomes better known, many sturdy stock raisers and industrious farmers Will come here and buy lands and doable their value and double the population. If you know of any man wtra weald be a desirable addittion to Morrow county, write his address below, cut it out ana mail it to the Heppner Ga zette, and a description of Morrow county will be sent to him free of charge. His name. P. O. State. That Throbbing Headaohe Would quiokly leave you If you used Dr. King's New Life Pills. Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchless merit for siok and nsrvons bsadaches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and bnild up yonr health. Easy to lake. Try them. Only '25o. Money back if not oared. Hold at Couser & Warrea Drug Co,