Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912, January 22, 1903, Image 1

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    Hcciety
HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY. JAN, 22, 1903.
NO. 922
TWENTIETH YEAR
PBOPESSIOXT.Z C-AJR33S.
G. W. Phelps
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
Office in Odd Fellows Bid Heppner, Oregon.
Redfield & Welch,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Office on west end of May Street.
Heppner, Oregon.
6. W. REA
U. S. COMMISSIONER
HomeBtead Filings and Proofs made. Office
one door east of V. O. Borg's Jewelry Store
Heppner, - - Oregon
A. K. HIGGS,
PHYSICIAN & SURGEON.
Office new I. O. 0. F. building. Rooms
3 and 4. Residence at J. W. Morrow's
Hefi'Neb, - Oregon.
DR. METZLER,
Located in Odd Fellows building,
Rooms 5 and 6.
McSwords & Kistner,
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
Office hours when not professionally
nViHPnt.
Office: Opposite First National Bank.
Belvedere
FINEST WINES,
LIQUORS & CIGARS
One hundred empty barrels for
pale. Five hundred barrels of ex
tra fine cider vinegar on tap. . . .
HEPPNER,
ORE.
Weak Men!
SJ J.
ssexo tablets:
WIlA. A1AKE YOU STRONG
They are an Absolute Cure
lor Loss of
SFXUL I'OWEK, SPERM 4T0KU1I0EA,
KESULTS OK EXCESSES, ETC.
Aivl we Kuarmitee them. On
rt-Cfijit f One Dollar we will
mail a lox (10 days treat
ment) securely sealed, to any
uddrofH, with no marks to
UUelooO contents.
Six Boxes
Full
Treatment
$5.00
Your money will lie promptly
returned to' yon if you are not
satisfied with the treatment.
Green & Jackson Drug Co.
L.
WALLA WALLA, WASH.
.LIBERTY MARKET.
J. H. BLAKE, PROP.
Beef, Pork, Mutton,Veal
and Sausage
POULTRYand FISH
MAIN STREET,
Heppner,
Oregon
The regular juice for the San Fran
cisco Weekly Examiner is $1.50. You
can get it and the Gazette for $2.23.
These
Cold Winds
cause chafing and rough
hands and your face
gets rough. Ab a pre
ventative, use
Witch Hazel
Cream
ThlB id also good for
blemishes, and has no
v equal for any skin dis
ease. After
Shaving
apply this cream and it
will remove all irrita
tion from the most ten
der skin.
SlOGum Dma Go
Red From Livery &
Feed stables N
Stewart &. Kirk, Props
FIRST-CLASS:
LIVERY RIGS
Kept constantly on hand
and can be furnishes on
Bhort notice to parties
wishing to drive into the
interior. First class : :
Hacks and Buoyles
CALL AROUND AND
SEE US. WE CATER
TO THE : : : : :
COMMERClAL
TRAVELERS
AND CAN FURNISH
RIGS AND DRIVER ON
SHORT NOTICE : : :
Heppner. Oregon
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ton 1 ,1 U XT
1. .4 .1
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1
11
11
I. .New Management..
NEW RIGS
Special Attention Given to
the Traveling Public
General Livery
and Feed Stable
Lower Alain St., Heppner, Or
inn m
mum
IM.fi I1U
K I 1 IIVIJUK.
WILL PET 1)1 PUD
The 1904 Convention of Nation
al Wool growers.
THE INDUSTRY PROSPEROUS
The Wool Outlook Is Encouraging
..At Present There la no
Surplua.
Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 17. The next
annual convention of the National Wool
growers' Association will be held in
Portland, Or., the second Monday in
January, 1904, one day prior to the con
vention of the National Livestock As
sociation. Senator F. . Warren, of
Wyoming, was re-elected president, and
Frank F. Bennett, of Boston, will serve
another year as vice-president. The
president will appoint a secretary and
treasurer. Resolutions relating to the
forest reserves and the disease known
N . ...
as scab among sheep provoked the
principal discussion of the ee-sion t )day.
A resolution extending; the thanks of
the convention to the Bureau of Animal
Industry for its activity in combatting
the "scab" disease, and asking that
Government inspectors be appointed to
investigate and fight the disease, caused
a lively debate between Utah and Idaho
delegates. J. H. Moyle and Jesse
Smith, of Utah, indorsed the resolution,
and Darlow Ferguson, of Idaho, said it
t
was not necessary to uak Government
assistance, aa the few states affected are
amply able to fight the dieease. The
resolution was finally tallied.
Speechmaking, reports of officers and
consideration of resolutions took up the
time. Senator Francis E. Warren, of
Wyoming, president of the association,
delivered his annual address, which
was followed by the reports of the- ex
ecutive committee and the treasurer.
The programme included addresses as
follows: "How Knowledge l'ertaining
to the Sheep and Woolen Industry, 15 th
National and International, Can Be
Brought to the Attention of Those In
terested," by Hon. Frank 1 Dennett,
Boston ; "State and Federal Inspectio j,m
Dr. D E. Salmon, Washington, Chief of
the Bureau of Animal Industry; "The
Cost wold Sheep," Frmk W. IDirding,
Wisconsin ; "Mutual Interests of Wool-
growers and Wool Manuiacturers," S.
D. North, Boston; "Benefits to Be De
rived From Organization and Co-operation,"
Hon. Jesse M. Smith, Utah ; "The
Sheep That Produces 100 Per Cent Fine
Delaine Wool," L. L. Harsh, Michigan;
"Transportation of Livestock to Market."
R. F. Buller, Idaho, and "Co-operative
Wool-Selling," Joseph E. Wing, Ohio.
In his address, President Warren said
the woolgrowers of the country were in
better condition now thanjthey hud been
for years past. The country, he said, is
practically free from old wojI stored in
former years by speculators and with
the market in genera! clip Jthis year he
believed better priceswvuM prevail,
Take it all the way from the sheep's
back to the clothinz cf the consumer,
I
there is no surplus in this country at
this time, l'teident Warren '.'said the i
Knit-,! St iff- neomed tct h:ive become a
mutton-eatim? country.
foal ly flie Miiploud.
Boston, Jan. 15. A wholesale co l
firm in this city announced that, as a
result of the removal of duty on coal, it
has closed charters on 41 or 50 steamers !
to brim: coil to this port, about 300,000
tons in all.
State Prison Report.
Salem, Or., Jan. 15. The quarterly
report of Superintendent Lee, ot the
State Penitentiary, filed in the office of
the Secretary of State today, shows an
increase in the population of that in
stitution of 16 during the three months
ending on December 31, last. There
were received during the quarter, 58
men ; discharged, 35 ; transferred to the
asylum, 4; died, 3; daily average,
310 7. The earnings of the institution
r 1 the same period amounted to
$3377.16, as follows : Board of United
States prisoners, $368; convict labor in
the Northwest stove foundry, $3009 16.
The expenses of the institution for the
three monthsAggregated $11 238.77, as
follows: Salaries of the officers and
employes, $5328.50; supplies, etc.,
$5366 95; improvements and repairs,
$543.31.
Tbe orowned heads of every nation,
The rich men, poor men and misers
All join in paying tribute to
DeWitt's Little Early Risers.
H. Williams, Ssn Antonio, Tex writes:
Little Early Riser Pills are tbe best I
ever used in my family. I unhesitat
ingly reoommend them to everybody.
They cure Constipation, Billiousness,
Sick Headache, Torpid Liver, Jaundice,
malaria and all other liver troubles.
Slooum Drug Co. lone Drug Co., lone.
Coal Lies in Kailroad Yards.
New York, Jan. 15. The statement
that thousands of tons of anthratic coal
were awaiting delivery to retail dealers
at t!.e docks of the New, Jersey t Central
Railroad at Elizabethport, N. J., has
been verified in detail by a photograph
of the yards, practically blocaded by
loaded cars. There were easily 400 cars
The walking sick, what
a crowd of them there are :
Persons who are thin and
weak but not sick enough
to go to bed.
"Chronic cases" that's
what the doctors call them,
which in common English
means long sickness.
To stop the continued
loss of flesh they need
Scott's Emulsion. Eor the
feeling of weakness they
need Scott's Emulsion.
It makes new flesh and
cives new life to the weak
system.
Scott's Emulsion gets
thin and weak persons out
of the rut. It makes new,
rich blood, strengthens the
nerves and gives appetite
for ordinary food.
Scott's Hi vision can be
j taken '1S long
as sickness
w ;ir.; ( n
and do ood all the
o
lime.
There's ikw strength
i aiK I (lCSll ill CYLTV clo.S
I
We will Ira .id
to .'eiJ you a iiw
doses free.
t fi'; t'--t t'
WT'i: !Kr it t " '
-. tv t :rc ri
I i, 1 t!.c
Lu'.tic of
f.r.
h , i - T til 'Vn'i
l.ii'.i.i-i.-n "U Luv.
&COTT .fi 1JOWNE.
Che mints-,
409 Pearl St., N. V.
50c. and $1 all tlrussistj.
fXiS1
THE OLD RELIABLE
81
Absolutely Puro
THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE
in the yards and more than 100 ad
ditional on main tracks leading into the
yards wailing to be taken in by drill
engines. Averaging the 500 cars' ca
pacity at 60,000 pounds each, would
make the total coal in Elizabethport at
the hour of the court 15,000 tons.
At other points there is also a conges
tion of coal-laden cars, which the ofheera
of some of the coal-carrying roads say is
mainly due to the confusion caused by
the separating of cars containing in
dependent coal from those bearing the
company coal.
FULTON LEADS.
The first ballot for United States sen
ator at Salem, resulted as follows :
Fulion 23
Geer 20
Wood 18
Scattering 21
Absent 3
Total 00
Alaska t anneries IHcrjje.
Seattle, Jan. 15. The 14 independent
canneries of Southeastern Alaska were
merged at a meeting here today, and
the entire pack amonntinc at the present
time to between (500,000 and 800,000
cases per annum, passed to the control
of Grillith, Durney k Co., San Francisco,
who will establish headquarters here.
The new firm will invest about $1,000,-
000 in warthouse8 in Seattle and in
rendering as-istance to tbe Northern
points, in order to increase their out
put. The priceHst for Alaska pinks will be
advanced 15 cents a dozen on the
average and new lists will be issued at
once. The cause of the merger is al
leged to be from hostile rulings on the
part of the Treasury Department, which
threatened to drive many of the can
neries out of the business with a total
Iohs of their investments. While the
plants will continue to be operated by
theindividu.il owners the product, as
put up, will be shipped her to Griffith,
Durney it Co., and will be dispo.-ed of
at a uniform price. All competition in
the salmon pack of the North is re
moved and a unity of action will be
maintained in the operation of the
plants and a compliance with the de
partu.e'.t ruling. It i estimated that
the advance in the list will nee the
1 anneries about 5"0 000 a year on th"
pick ct the present time. This it is the
i itention to increase as soon as possible.
A symlicit cf Vauoouver din
ners is emUviwiring to arrange for
the establishment of a chain of
cannery plants on the Eastern
coast of Siberia. John Houston,
manager of th' syndicate, h;i3 start
ed for St. lYtersbr.r- to complete
arranemerit with the Kusiau
fisheries department.