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About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (July 14, 1904)
Oregon llidtorlcal 80 ciei City Hall TWENTIETH YEAR HEPPNER, OREGON, THURSDAY JULY. 14. 1904. NO. 999 DR. METZLER, DENTIST Located in Odd Fellows building. ItoomslS and 6. G. W. Phelps ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office In Odd Fellows Bid? Heppner, Oregon. G. W. REA ATTORNEY-AT-LAW U. S. COMMISSIONER Homestead Filings and Proofs made. Office one door east of F. O. Borg's Jewelry Store Heppner, - - Oregon A. K. HIGGS, PHYSICIAN & SURGEON. Office new I. 0. 0. F. building. Rooms 3 and 4. Residence at Palace Hotel. IlErPNER, Oregon. Redfield & VanVactor, ATTORNEYS 'AT LAW. Office on west end of May Street. Heppner, Oregon. Frank C. Kistner, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in Patterson & Son's drugstore C. E. W00DSEN, ATTORN E Y-A T-LA W Office in Palace Hotel Heppner, Oregon DR. M. A. LEACH Permanently located in Hfnpner. Will open oilhe in the new Fair building about July loth. Red Front Livery & Stewart &. 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 : : flacks and Buouies i? CALL AROUND AND SF.E US. VK CATFU TO THE : : : : : COMMKRClAL TRAVELERS AND CAN FURNISH KKiSAXD DBIYEK ON SHORT NOTICE : : : Heppner. - Oreaon p I 1 JJL 1 Li This ia what one of the prominent men of Heppner has to say of Slocum's Scal pine: "I was troubled with dan druff and an itching scalp and was entirely cured by using one bottle of Slocum's Scalpiue. Teos. Morgan." WE GUARANTEE every bottle and will refund money i n every case where it does not give satis faction. l SloGiiin Drug Go f Belvedere I FINEST WINES, LIQUORS & CIGARS' One hundred empty barrels for sale. Five hundred barrels of ex Ira line cider vineuar on tap. . . . HEPPNER, ORE. O 9 a, t Pastime Js the proper place to get that nice cool drink you have been looking ? for. W We serve the celebrated t Hazelwood Ice Cream 3 in any quantity. Private ) rooms for ladies. En- trauce through postoflice v ? ft Gilbert's Chocolates cannot be equalpd. This is the kind we carry. Cigars and Tobacco 9 All the leading brands 2 carried in stock at all v times. c Ashbaugh & Aycrs 9 Proprietors j - o - j - r o r o A PflLflCE HOTEL HEPPNER, OREGON Leading Eastern Oregon Motel MODERN CONVENIENCES E-ECTRIC LIGHTED . . . Ocder New ManBgement. Thoroughly RenovateJ and Refiitted. Beet Slei Is id the City. TillL METSCHAV, Jr., Prop. PHRKEB FOR PBESIDEHT Choice of the Democratic Na tional Convention. DAVIS FOR VICE-PRESIDENT .ifter an All flight Session There Was Much Jtiuf hiiKfasm and. Confusion. St. Louis, July 9. -Amid scenes un paralled by anv national convention of the Democratic party, the convention at 5:40 o'clock this morning nominated Jndge Alton B. Parker, ot New York, for President. Parker lacked just nine votes when the first call was ended, but before the vote was announced Idaho changed her six votes to Parker and Nevada followed with two. Parker now laoked but one vote, and West Virginia gave him 13 and Washington 10, making him a total of 6S9. Before this could be announced, Gov. Dockery, of Missouri, withdrew Cockrell's name and moved that Par ker's nomination be made unanimous. This was done with a yell and a demon stration was started. Everybody was too tired, however, to offer verv much, and a motion to adjourn was greeted with a howl of af.irmation as 11,000 spectators and 1000 delegates made haste for the exits. Davis for Vi President. St. Louis, July 10 Ex'Henator Hen ry (L Davis, of 'Vt).Mt'Vircinia, was this morning nominated for Vice President by the Democratic national convention, which adjourned sine die t 1: Ml. Others in the raoe were ex-Senator Turner of Washington, Congressman Williams of Illinois, and ex Senator Harris of Kansas. Mr. Davis won easily on the first ballot. Ex-Senator Turner, the choice of the West, v as (inly third in the race. Suiiiiip Lands of lilansatli. Salem, Or., July 0. The state of Ore gon has not given up its contest for ti'le to the swamp lands in Klamath county, but has filed a motion for a re view before the secretary of the in terior. Attorney General Crawford has received a copy of the brief in sup port of this motion, prepared by Wm. .M. Matthews, the attorney employed by the state at the national capital. When this contest was tried before the secretary of the interior it was de cided against, the state, and this de cision will be final unless the state's at torney can make it appear that the sec- Your Hair 'Two years ago my hair was falling out badly. I purchased a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor, and soon my hair stopped coming out." Miss Minnie Hoover, Paris, 111. Perhaps your mother had thin hair, but that is no reason why you must go through life with half- starved hair. If you want long, thick hair, feed it with Ayer's Hair Vigor, and make it rich, dark, and heavy. $1.00 a bottle. All druggists. If ymr drnirfrNf cannnt pii'ily you. nd us one d"ll;ir and e will ex)rrs vnii a IxUtle. Uf sure and cive tli name of jour uearest exj're oftx-e. Address, retary was in error and thus secure a rehearing. About 70,000 acres of swamp land are in question. The state claimed the land under the swamp land grant of I860, which granted to the state b!1 swamp lands on the public domain not otherwise disposed of. In his decision the secretary of the interior holds I, that all the lands in that region belonged originally to the Indians, and that by the treaty of 1848 the Indians gave up their claim to all except what is now the Klamath reservation, which reser vation includes the swamp lands. Ac cording to the secretary's view, the government had no title which it could convey to the state by the act of 1S60, for the land belonged to the Indians. Mr. Matthews contends that the In dians had only such rights as the gov ernmant gave them, and that the swamp land grant of 18i;0 conveyed the land to the state, subject to the possession of the Indians during the continuance of the reserve. The government haying en tered into a treaty by which the Indians talie lands in severalty and give up their claim to other lands in the reser vation, Mr. Matthews contends that the title of the state is now complete. He v ? r!'jt dS? d5 t"h o in the family is not to be ex pected where a poor cook stove is used. That is only natural. Secure DOMESTIC HARMONY by furnishing your home with one of those magnificent 41 41 iperior or Majestic STOVES OR RANGES Economical in Fuel, Satis factory in Results, and as cheap and ood as a orod orade f Stoves can be sold. FOR SALE ONLY BY Gilliam & Bisbce, Heppner, Ore. LEADING DEALERS IN Stoves and Kitchen Outfits PLUMBING A SPECIALTY GILLIAM & BIsBEE asserts that the government had at all times power to grant the swamp lands to the state, and did so grant them ia lS(i0. Numerous authorities are cited by him in support of his view of the questions involved. Sheep Hcing- Soid. During the past two months a large number of sheep in the Columbia river counties have been sold and shipped out of the state, and within the past two weeks several Bheepownera of Grant county found a fair 'market .for their yearlings and over 8000 head have been driven to Heppner for shipment. Burns & Stout drove from th e Monu ment locality last week 4200 head of mixed yearlings which they purchased in that locality, securing 2000 head from . Emil Scharff. 1700 head of Tunis and Wm. Swick and 50i) head of F. M Bound. ( Chas. E. Trask came in from South Dakota last week and secured 4100 head of mixed yearlings for which the Blue Mountain Eagle is informed he paid $1.50 per head. His band was made up of 1200 head from Leet Paine, of Cot tonwood, and 2000 head of Wm. Ster ritt, C. F. Maoltae and Giles T. Kirk, of Dayville, and W. S. Fields, of Mt. Ver non. Blue Mountain Eagle . v3-- sa - kz-' - v- it 3 MKSmNIIIMUUUKl