y 5'-' t ; TWENTIETH YEAR HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY, NOV. 20, 1902, NO. 9J3 y - or V. qICI-Xj DIEEOTOET. United States Ofliclals. President Theodore Roosevelt Secretary of tate nay ojot-HLtiry or Treasury Leslie M. bhaw j...rar f Interior Ji. A. Hitchcock V .T . . Hanrmary of War i.. M. xvoot Sooretary of Navy William Heury Moody Poituiaster-General Henry C. Payne At wrney-Ueneral P. K-nox Secretary of Agriculture James Wilson Com. General Land Office Binger Hermann State Federal Officials. ( John H. Mitchell Senators Joseph Simon iThos. H. Tongue Congressmen (M. A. Moody United States Land Officers. TEE DALLK8, OB. . Jay P. Lucas Register Ous lJutterson Receiver LAOBANDK, OB. . li. W. Bartlott Register J. O. Swackharner Receiver Ui-egou State Officials. liaT-Tilir JL. X. vjcoi Secretary of State Treasurer bapt. t'ublic Instruction Attorney General I. - . F. 1. Dunbar .0. a. Moore ....J. H. Ackormaa .D.'K.N. Blackburn .W. a. Leeds rnuwr - - &aY.4rU Sixth Judicial District. Circuit Judge. W. R. Ellis Prosecuting Attorney i. u. uauey Morrow County Officials. Joint Senator J,WJIorrow Representative .. .. A. B. Thomson Coanty Judge A. G. Bartholomew rVimraiesionere J.L. Howara Ed. C. Ashbaugh. 1 1 rirW tVawter Crawford saeriif::: " Treasurer M,wCl BaliM ::v:::.::::::::::. j: i rrSSSS Stock T nspector. He5ryo8S,1le"i?K-I Deputies o r- iv" lKe Vinson, urtuiuwaj Mavor Frank Gilliam fi , O E Karnsworth J. J. Roberts" K. W Rhea, Phil Cohn, Ihos J.P.Williams reV:::::: r-hK Marshal George Ihornton HKBPNBR SCHOOL DISTRICT. Directors-Frank Gillirm, E. M. Shutt.J. M Hager; Clerk J. J. Roberts. Precinct OfncerP. tv,o par. J. P. Williams ;n T.V.Vi- " G. B. Hatt wsu Dia v - - - - - - - - - peofessiowaij c.iaxs. G. W. Phelps A TTORNET 'A T LA W Office in Odd Fellows Bldg Heppner, Oregon, Redfield & Welch, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office on west end of May Street. Heppner, Oregon. G. W. REA ATTORN EY-AT-LAW V. S. COMMISSIONER " Homestead Filings and Proofs made. Office one door east of P. O. Borg's Jewelry Store. Heppner, Oregon A. K. HIGGS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. OrricE new I. O. O. F. buildine. Koome 3 and 4. Residence at J. W. Morrow's Hkppnkr, Oregon. DR. METZLER, DENTIST Located in Odd Fellows building. Rooms 5 and 6. McSwords & Kistner, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Office houra when not professionally absent. Oilice: Opposite First National Bank. Heppner Feed Store HAY, GRAIN, and FEED in quanities to suit. Rein 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. WILL make a brilliant com plexion. 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... ..Siocum Drue Co.. Thje Belvedere FINEST WINES, LIQUORb & CIGARS One hundred empty barrels for sale. Five bundled barrels of ex tra fine cider vinegar on tap. . . . FRANK ROBERTS. Prop Red Front Livery & Feed Stables Stewart A. Kirk, Props FIRST-CLASS UVERY RIGS Kept constantly on hand and can be furnishes on short notice to parties wishing to drive into the interior. First class : : Hacks and Bugyies CALL AROUND AND BEE US. WE CATER TO THE : : : : : COMMERClAL TRAVELERS AND CAN FURNISH RIGS AND DRIVER ON SHORT NOTICE : : : LIBERTY MARKET. J. H. BLAKE, PROP. Beef, Pork, Mutton.Veal and Sausage POULTRY and FISH MAIN STREET, Heppner, - - Oregon BL1IE J0UOT HEME Creation Finally Determined by Secretary Hitchcock. PRESENT LIMITS MODIFIED ITIany Objectionable Features Will be i:iimiiiatc4 by most Care ful Inspection. WASHINGTON, Nov. 15. Secretary Hitchcock has finally determined that r forest reserve shall be created in the Blue and Strawberry Mountains of East ern Oregon, but the lands included by the Presidential proclamation will be only Government timber lands or worth less mountain summits. The proclama tion will not issue until tho Interior De- pariuieni snau nave inspected every A i l II 1 1 acre to be included in the reserve, and to eliminate such lands now inolyded in the withdrawal as have been denuded of timber or are owned or occupied by large holders. Ail towns or settlements and all school lands and all private ranges will also be excluded. But, above all else, the Secretary will exclude, those lands which were entered for speculat ive purpose just prior to the depart' . l : 1 1 i i i .. . uieuiu wuuurawai Dy parties wno are believed to have received tips as to the intention of creating a Blue Mountain forest reserve. This information the Secretary today gave to Colonel Emmett Callahan, of Baker City, who has been urging me estaousnmenc oi a reserve Al. J 1 1 1 . t from which all private holdings shall have been eliminated. Secretary Hitchcock says it is his pur pose to create no lieu base in making the Blue Mountain reserve or to permit chances for frauds of any kind. The re serve he favors will be irregular in shape, a checker-board in some sections but will be all government land. He finds that much opposition that as been manifested by Oregon people was based on misconception of the pur pose of forest reservations. He gives assurance that the timber reservation will not in any way interfere with tbe ocation of mining claims ; neither will t prevent cutting of mature timber. It will, however, prevent corporations and speculators from acquiring title to large areas of valuable land in this region, to the detriment of the interests of settlers. Protection of water supply is of equal importance to timber preser vation, he holds, and to this end the forests of the Blue Mountains will ba perpetuated. It may be six months or a year, says the Secretary, before the reserve shall finally be established, but when it is created its lines will be per manent. There will be no just ground for continued haggling for the exclusion of some areas or the addition of others, as has been the case with almost every reserve heretofore created. Tan Ilury Wife Alive. Emporia Kan., Nov. 15 Judge Mad den, in the District Court last night, de cided that a man had the right to bury his wife alive. The case was the City of Emporia vs. Professer Vanora et al., an injunction being asked to prohibit the professor giving an exhibition of hypnotism by burying his wife under ground and leaving her buried six days. The city claimed the exhibition en dangered life. The hypnotists claimed the city had no right to draw a distinc tion against this kind of exhibition. Thanks To Americans. London, Nov. 14. In acknowledging the final Installment of $75,000 contrib- I v uted by Americans toward the Queen ictoria memorial fund, Lord Mayor Samuel today wrote Chairman Van Dn ser, of the American committee, as fol lows: "The liberality shown by your country men is a practical demoiitttration ot the regard and esteem entertained for Her Majesty in the United States. This generous tribute will touch the hparts of the English people." Kitgiiieer fc'olls Hold-up. Fi-ankfort, Ind., Nov. 14. Four men attempted to hold up tbo south-boond Monon Express at Cyclone today. The Uain slackened speed on striking tor pedoes on the trail, but when the engin eer faced four revolvere he threw open the throttle. The four men fired rapidly and often, but all the trainmen and pas senders escaped injury. Sheriff Corns and deputies afterward caught the men who gave tbe names of CharleB Johnson, James Mock, Frank Smith and Harry Grav. All claim to live in Cincinnati. Hotel Porter's II Iff Steals. New York, Nov. 13. -Patrick Bolan, for seven years a trusted porter at the Holland House, has been arrested in a Bowery pawn shop, where he was en deavoring to pledge for $35 a necklace of pearls valued at $2,500. The prisoner was taken to police headquarters, where be is said to have given information which will lead to the recovery of jewels valued at $12,000 stolen some time ago from the apartments of Mrs. YV. J. Matheson, wife of a wealthy manutac tu'er. , The police have beea moch worked np over the robbery, as there wea ab solutely no clew, and had almost given INTO WIS "When the butter won't come put a penny in the churn," is an old time dairy proverb. It often seems to work though no one has ever told why. When mothers are worried because the children do not gain strength and flesh we say give them Scott's Emul sion. It is like the penny in the milk because it works and because there is something astonishing about it. Scott's Emulsion is simply a milk of pure cod liver oil with some hypophosphites especially prepared for delicate stomachs. Children take to it naturally because they like the taste and the remedy takes just as naturally to the children be cause it is so perfectly adapted to their wants. For all weak and pale and thin children Scott's Emulsion is the most satisfactory treat ment. We will send you the penny, . c, a sample free. Be snre that this picture in the form of a label is on the wraprer of every bottle ot tmuLioa jou bur. SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, 409 Pearl St., N. Y. 5ocaodi.oo; all druggist. THE OLD RELIABLE 0m I novAVeaJ SKI IS pU! Absolutely Purer THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE up the hope of success, when two de tectives observed Bolan entering the pawnshop. The robbery is supposed to have been effected by gaining entrance to the apartments through a window. To Help Panama Caual. New York, Nov. 14. General Fernan dez, Minister of War, who has resumed hie duties after a period of illness, says he is favorably disposed toward entering into a canal treaty with the United States, cables the Bogota, Columbia, correspondent of the Herald. If neces sary, he added, Congress will be con voked for that purpose as soon as cir cumstances will permit. Dr. Carlos Martinez Silva, ex Colom bian Minister to the United States, and other influential men are still in prison. There have been no changes in the Co lombian Ministry, and there will prob ably be none soon. IMed TryliiK to Save a Flag. San Francisco, Nov. 15. John Ny strom, a Swedish sailor on the United States array transport Summer, sacri ficed his life while attempting to save an American flag which had been torn by a gust of wind from the stern of the vessel's Bteam launch. He plunged into the water and secured the banner, but was caught bv the strong ebb tide and drowned before be could be reached. "Last winter an infant child of mine bad cronp in a violent form," says Elder John W. Hogere.a Christian Evaneli8t, of Filley, Mo. "I gave her a few doses of Chamberlain's Congo Remedy and in a short time all danger was past and the ohild recovered." This remedy nol only cares croup, bat when given as soon as the first symptoDS appear, will prevent the attack. It contains do opium or other harmful substance and may be given as oorjfidently to a baby 1 . 1 1 OI.... as to an aanit. ror snie vj oiuuuuj Drug Co. I'll pet Sound Fiwh of BOO Pound. Seattle, Nov. 14. The biggest fish ever taken irom rugei counu was brought here today by a crew of Greek fisherman. It weighs 600 pounds and ia nine feet long. Whether it is a shark or a blackfish will be determined tomorrow. The fish was netted in a seine which was badly torn by the monster's struggles, the catch of salmon escaping. A Startling Surpriss. Very few could believe in look at A. T. Hoadly, a healthy, robust blaoksmitb of Tilden, Ind., that for ten years he suffered such tortures from Rheumatism as few coold eDdure and live. Bat a wonderfnl change followed his takmg Electric Bitters. "Two bottlee wholly cared rre," he writes, "and I have not fell a twinge m over a year." Tbey regulate the kidneys, purify the blood anl cures Hheamntiem, Neuralgia, Nervoumess, improve digestion and give perfect health. Try them. Only 50 cents at Slocara Drug Co's.