Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1902)
TWENTIETH YEAR HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCT. 30, 1902, NO. 910 United States Officials. President Theodore Roosevelt decretaryoi state .... u t.n nf War Hi. M. xvoot georeurof Navy Postmaster-General Henry L,. rayne Attorney-General r u-TO..no SewetHryot Agriculture James Wilson Oo m General Land Office Binaer Hermann State Federal Officials ( John H. Mitchell Senators ( Joseph Simon i'fhos. H.Tongue Congressmen fll. A. Moouy United States Land Officers. mnvniT.I.KIl.Olli T . Register Jay P. Lucas. Keoeiyer rtuno rtioiow" " a sit) a iinv ns. W. Bartlett w n u ...!, V,or..ar receiver Oregon State officials. t t q Ooyernor. Vr iulinbar Secretary of State C B. Moore Treasurer .. T Ar-lformnn ,Pt' GV.V.dVh. 9: Blackburn Attorney General " w H LeedB crinier ( R. 8. Bean, ...j IF. A. Moore, Bupr.ui- c E WolTerton Sixth Judicial District. Oircait Judge w(: ".f'; o .,tin Attorney u. naiiey -t luorjvuiuo " Morrow County Officials. H-tor J, W.Morrow motility !)u.... -it n,..,rH Pnmm u nnsn J. L. Howara Kd. C. Ashbaugh. ,, fli'v 'Vawter Crawford .. c! ..J. W. Matlock TrLnrer .'.'.'.V M. Uchtenthal ISSST:::::::: :::: w. l. :: &te:::;::::::::jayS A .. IJr. Kisuier Deputies . . Ik- vingon. Galloway Hrp.B tow oinor.k Qmm Mayor...... o K Karnsworth 'TrJru; K.W-Rh.a, Phil Conn, Thos uaid. j p Williams S'00 .V.V.....L. W. BrittKS M;rhT.v.v:.v:::.v.v:.v:.:...oeorge xhomton HKRPNKB SCHOOL DISTRICT, Directors-Frank Gillipm, E. M. Shutt.J. M. Hager; Clerk J.J. Kooeris. Preftinct Officers. - ..... .v. .'.J. P. Wflliams 7. .w. G. B. Halt "UdUBUIUlOtM - - - - - - FEOTESBIOITAIj C-A-XJS. G. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW . yitiee in Odd Fellows Bids Heppner, Oregon, .Redfield & Welch, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office on west end of May Street. Heppner, Oregon. G. W. REA ATTORNEY-AT-LAW V. S. COMMISSIONER Homestead Filings and Proofs ma,1e; ffice one door east of P. O. Borg s Jewelry Store. Heppner. - Oregon A. K. HIGGS, PHYSICIAN cf- SURGEON. Okfice new I. 0. 0. F. bmldine. Rooms : and 4. Residence at J. V. Morrow's Hkppskr, Okkgox. DR. METZLER, DBNTI8T located in Odd Fellows building. Koouis 5 and G. McSwords & Kistner, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Office hours when not professionally absent. Office: Opposite First National Rank. Heppner Feed Store II AY, GRAIN, and FKKD in quanities to suit. Being located on Main street this is a handy place for teamsters driving in, and for city trade. Complete Stock Always on Hand Robert Morgan, Prop, Next Door to Palace Hotel. SI WILL make a brilliant com- r WILL remove pimples, boils and blotches. WILL cure sick headache and billiousness. WILL make rich, red blood. A $1 Bottle of Slocum's Sarsaparllla does It. . . . We will refund your money If It DON'T benefit you... ..SioGum Drug Go.. The Belvedere FINEST WINES, . LIQUORb & CIGARS One hundred empty barrels for sale. Five hundred barrels of ex tra fine cider vinegar on tap. . . . FRANK ROBERTS. Prop Red Front Livery & feed StaDles Stewart A. Kirk, Props FIRST-CLASS "LIVERY RIGS Kept constantly on hand and can be furnishes on short notice to parties wishing to drive into the interior. First class : : Hacks and Bugyjes CALL AROUND AND SKE US. WE CATER TO THE : : : : : COMMERClAL TRAVELERS AND CAN FURNISH RICJS AND DRIVER ON SHORT NOTICE : : : .LIBERTY MARKET. 4. H. BLAKE, PROP. Beef, Pork, Mutton.Veal and Sausage POULTRYand FISH MAIN STREET. : Heppner, Oregon DESPERATE Till ROBBER Holds up Northern Pacific Pas- ; sender Train Alone. THE ENGINEER WAS KILLED Jubilant Polk County Hop .Man Throws Away 9 10 0 in Nickel Butte, Moot., Oct. 24. One of the most daring train robberies in the his tory of the Northern Pacific Railroad occurred early this morning; three and a half miles west of Drummond, Mon tana. As far as is known, fcut one man was engaged in the robbery. Engineer Dan O'Neill was shot and killed, when he grappled with the des perado, who had covered him with two revolvers. The robber secured but very little for his trouble. The train had left Bearmouth, and, as the fireman turned to gather a scoopful of coal he was startled to see a man standing on the coal pointing two re volvers at his head. "Throw up your hands," shouted the man, elevating his voice to overcome the noise of the train. "Throw up your hands and obey my orders and you won't get hurt." Then the robber commanded: "Go and put out that headlight and mind that you come back here." The fireman lost no time in obeying the order an was returning into the cab when he heard a shot and peered in just in time to see the engineer fall backwards out ot the gangway to the ground. Just then the steam was shut off and the brakes applied and the train came to a atop in Mulkey Canyon. Clerk C. W. Otis refused to open the j mail car door until threatened twith dy namite. Once in tlie mail car the rob ber went to work on the registered mail pouches, which he forced the express and mail men to open. Packages were handed to him, and with the utmost coolness the fellow took a seat'and opened tirst one package and then another, using nis gun to break them. casts .iim:v l. A IK. Jubilant llopmuii jjlvf Away SUM) in Mckcl. Dallas. Or., Oct. 25 About 2(00 people witnessed 400 children Bcranible for $100 worth of nickels, on the Court-house Square, this afternoon. Two weeks ago Hon. W. C. Brown announced that should the price of hops ever reach 20 cents a pound he would throw away $100. Mr. Brown had grown hops for a num ber of years, and sold them for 8 or 10 or 12 cents. In conversation with some friends one day he asserted that he did not believe that the price would ever reach 20 cents again, and offered, should it do so, to throw away $10t) in coin. Lest week he sold his hop crop for 2" cents, and immediately announced that he was prepared to fuJfill'his promise. The nickel-throwing affair came off today, with great crowds of children in attendance. The sowing was on the Court-house Square. The children were arranged in groups according to size and areas follows: Large hoys, small boys, large girls and small girls. The formation was on the sidewalks, and the nickels were sown on the sward and the different settions were seper ated by ropes. At a signal from Mr. Brown, men en- THE OLD Absolutely Pure THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE ployed for the purp se threw $100 in n:ckele at once, this being the signal for the scramble, which was immense. Several hundred children plunged into the square, c'ad for the occasion. For a moment the scene was novel and intensely exciting. There seemed to be an indiscriminate mixture of bonnets, hats, boots, shoes and other childish apparel. The affair passed without serious accident, every precaution hav ing been taken beforehand, and was a great nortrp of satisfaction to Mr. Brown. Republican majority. Washington, Oct. 26. Chairman Bab cock has the following to say of the outlook : "The Republicans will elect a ma jority of the next House of Representa tives. The majority will not be that of the last Presidential election, but will be somewhat reduced. I think it will be greater than the majority in 1893, which was l.'j. "In most of the states there will be a light vote, and all our speakers have re ported considerab'e apathy. However, there has been an awakening of interest and I look for a heavy vote in some states. "1 attribute much of the present fa vorable outlook to the splendid attitude of President Roosevelt on the question Shylock was the man who wanted a pound of human flesh. There are many Shylocks now, the convales cent, the consumptive, the sickly child, the pale young woman, all want human flesh and they can get it take Scott's Emulsion. Scott's Emulsion is flesh and blood, bone and muscle. It feeds the nerves, strengthens the digestive organs and they feed the whole body. For nearly thirty years Scott's Emulsion has been the great giver of human flesh. We will send you a couple of ounces free. SCOTT St BOWNE. Chemists. 4O0-4I5 Pearl Street. New York. i yx. aoJ f i.eo ; all druggist. STOCKS REUSABLE of the trusts, the tariff and the coat strike. If the party had ignored the tariff question it would have met with defeat. It has taken the ground that the tariff should be modified and placed on a protective basis. It has also ad vocated Cuban reciprocity in the West and East." The Worst Form. Multitudes are singing the praises of Kodol. the Dew dlsooverv wbioh is mak ing so many siok people well and weak people strong by dygaetiDg what they eat, by cleansing and sweetening the Btomaob and by transforming their food into their kiod of pure, rich, red blood that makes you feel good all over. Mrs. Cranflill, of Troy, I. T., writes: For a number of years I was troubled with in digestion and dyspepsia wbioh grew in to the worst form, fiually I was in duced to nse Kodol and after nsiDg four bottles I am entirely cured. I heartily recommend Kodol to all solferers from, indigestion and dyspepsia. Take a dose after meals. It digests what yort eat. Blooum Drug Co. Come to Wewtou. Weston, Oregon, is an ideal horn town. Beautifully situated in the rich est part of the rich empire where wheat is king, with pleasant surroundings and superb climate, its attractions to the home-seekers are manifold. It has a splendid gravity system, amply sup plied by mountain springs, and offers free water for ten years to house-builders. The only state school in Eastern Oregon an excellent institution under progressive management is here Weston gave to the state its first Nor mal building and afterward donated a ten-acre site, the best property in the city, for the new Normal grounds. At t lis date, October 23, J'.02, it has granted a valuable acre strip adjoining to complete the grounds, l ine build ing sites on Normal heights may ba cheaply had, with shade trees, grading, sidewalks and city water free. Weston is the the place to locate and "school your children." Desirable land may be had for a reasonable figure, consider ing its productive val ic. For informa tion in detail address Weston Improve ment Association Weston, Oregon. A Kriuarkable Offer. The (Jazetie has maile special ar rangements with the Young People Weekly, published in Chicago, to fur nish this interesting an J valuable paper with the Gazktte, both papers for fl.'. The Young Peop!t Weekly is one of the leading ptory papers of America with l'J pages, nicely illustrate ! every week. It is always interesting to tht young people.