Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Heppner gazette. (Heppner, Morrow County, Or.) 1892-1912 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1908)
'l' : ''' i i i ' I'- 1 " " ' Local Notes. Bert Ward came down from Hard man, Mou day. E. L, Freelaud returned from Portland, Tuesday. Clothes cleaned and pressed, called for and deliver d. Guy McKniqiit Frank Engleman came up from lone Tuesday evening returning ' Wednesday. Wright Baling, ofllardmaD, was transacting business in the' city the first of the week. Fred Behrena went to Portland, Mondav, to visit with his mothtr and sister for a few days. J. S. Bickson, road master on this division of the O. R. & N was in the city Wednesday. R. W. Hickok, the Ioue grain buyer, will be at Heppner Thurs day of each week. Qet offers on .your grain. Phill Cohn, at the Heppner warehouse, will pay the highest price for hides, peits, and furs. 4Seed wheat, oats, rye, and barley on hand. Conductor Fred (Mary) Wall returned Saturday , evening from Portland where he had been for nearly two weeks. While below T'red made a trip or two to Pendle ton as conductor on the passenger run. On Tuesday evening, February "25, Doric Lodge No. 20 will cple- brate the 44th Pythian birthday. Knights and their wives, or sweet heart -as the case may be, will be entertained in a royal good man ner. The nflair is to be strictly social, consisting of games, music and light refreshments. J a s. Dohrrtv, who hns been been working for I?. F. Wigglesworth on Bnlter (rrek, received a very , severe iracture of t hi I e., Tuesday. IVIr. D herty was hauling hay when the hay rack give way with him causing; the bird wheels to pass over his Ipps. Hp was brought to the Sanitarium in this city whera the fracture vhs reduced. Rev. Charles II. Porter lias some of tbe finest White WvandoUe chickens in the Noithwest. They are beauties and the ureateat 08 all egg layers. Three pens, each headed by prize winning tnales. Pen No. 1 bv cockerel winning in six shows. No. 2 by cockerel winning in three shows this year. N.i. 3 by 3rd prize cockeM at Halem three years ago See these "Royal Whites and get some setting of eggs. iTlurdered! The dirt at the Heppner Steam Laun dry. Everything back but the dirt. Phone 171 and we will do the rest. Heppner Steam Laundry. OASTOHXA. 3wri tli ?Th8 Kini1 Ym Have Always Boutfit The Kind You Have Always Signatory of SAVE COUPONS REMEMBER We give cou pons with every cash purchase.. These Coupons are as good as money. You can buy Phono graphs and Records, or any kind of Footwear, with them. Old Coupons are good here. And all the time we give you the best values in Shoes, Hose, Rub ber Goods and Furnishings. Ladies' Overshoes . . r $1.C0 Men's Overshoes . $1.35 SIGN OF THE BOOT Beaman & Gay nor Successors to C. O. Huelat T. V. Grant, of Portland, is here visiting relatives. Ben 8tanton and wife were in from Eight Mile, Monday. Lather Huston and wife were Heppner visitors the first of the week, from Eight Mile. Ed McDaid and wife, of Straw berry, were transacting business in Heppner the first of the week. W. F. Cowdiey came down from Hardman, Monday, and transacted business with the local merchants Mhb Lillian Cochran left last Saturday for her home at Monu ment, after visiting with friends in this city for a coup'e of week9. I. A. Grant and wife, of La Grande, are here visiting Mr. Grant's sister, Mrs. Charles E. Smith. Mr. Grant is an engineer on the La Grande division of the O. R. & N. Mr. Walpole went over toHepn. ner last Friday to attend the an nua tax sales, says the Irrigator, and came home Sunday. Mr. Roadruck drove over Saturday and brought him back Sunday. The school at Castle Rock got down to two scholars and quit Miss Gardner, the teacher, had a contract for the full terra, but as the only family in "town'' left there was no place for her to board. So she is now in Irrigon, with her sis ter, Mrs. Slater. She will probab ly bring suit for the balance of her ealarj', as she had a contract for the fuil term. Irrigon Irrigator. An Irishman wishing to possess a homestead, and not knowing how to go about it, sought information from a friend. "Tim," he said, "you've taken a homVstead, an' I thought, maj be, ye could tell me the law consarnin' how to ,o about it." "Well, Patrick," says Tim, "I just don't just remember the exact wordin' uv the law, but I kin give ye the ineatin' uv it. The meauin' of it is thi: 1 he Govern ment is willin' to bet ye 1G0 acres uv land against 11 that ye can't live on it for five years without starvin' to death. Invitation are out for the Elks annual ball to be given the even ing of the 21st iust. Several of the "Old Pucks" are petting up early theso mornings and me to to be found in their woodsheds practicing the Minuet. Georte Washington and his Martha never were capable of doing this famous old dance in a more graceful and chivalrio manner than these boys of 358. The affair will be hel in the Commercial Club and the entire building will be at the dis pdsal of the Elks. An orchestra to furnish music for the occasion has been secured from The Dalles and good music as one of the main attractions is now an assured fact YOUR Skating ia flue now on the Kla math lakes. Who would ask for better Win- ter weather. . Dillard French was in from Gur daue, Monday. Henry Blackman came up from Portland Monday. C. A. Rhf a came in fiom Port- land on Monday's train. A Eugene box factory has been enlarged and will manufacture egg cases. J. I. Cox and wife of Vollmer, Idaho, are here looking over Mor row county real estate. Koine fine black walnuts, ' like our daddies used to'heve back east, are raised near Moro. Judd Rogers, a cattleman from Cecils, was a business visitor in Heppner the first of the week. Mrs. Turk came in from Portland Monday evening and left for heri home at Hamilton on Tuesday morning's stage. Heppner Blackman is holding doWn a good position down iu Fort Worth, Texas. Oregon boys are the right kind of stuff. It is said that there are only 27,- 000 women in Hew York who snp- port their husbands. What is the country coming to? A. E Bates is in the city from Hardman. He reports fine sleigh ing in that locality, the enow be ing eight inches deep. ' Richard McElligott, one of Mor row county's prosperous farmers, came up from lone Moudiy after noon, returning Tuesday. As the primary election ap proaches, polities continues to grow warmer. It is a sort of free for all race and should be settled with good feeling. P. S. Barlow, one of the big wheat farmers of Eight Mile, was in the city Saturday. Mr. Barlow sfate that grain is looking well .in his district. H. D. Parkins, the Eiler's piano man, was in the city the first of the week. He sold a fi ne piano to Mr. and Mrs. Luther Huston, of Eight Mile, which was here. delivered W. P. Myers, an attorney for nifjnv 01 lone, s a candidate on the republican ticket in the seventh judicial district for prosecuting at torney. Fred Wilson, of The Dalles, is also a candidate for that nomination. A new national bank with a cap ita stock of $25,000. will soon be established in Miltoo. Applica tion for a charter has - been made to the comptroller of the currency at Washington. The new institu tion will be known as the First National Bank of Milton. Columbia College at Milton is to be enlarged. At a recent meeting of the Board of Trust it was decid ed to erect a brick building to cost not less thau $25,000, exclusive of furnishings and equipment. The plans for the building include a dormitory, study halJ and recita tion rooms. Correspondence of the Burns Times-Herald: We Windy Point ers don't want to brag or boast of our chickens, but we have one hen in this vfcinity that really has a record. In, fact, it's a cold day when she doesn't lay two eggs. She is a full blood Leghorn, owned by Mr. Skinner. This hen is more or less bothered, as she hasn't time to set, so it is necessary to get an incubator of 200 egg capacity, -and by the time one hatching is ready to come off another lot of eggs is on hnnd ready for the incubator. - Shoes 1 73 Cases have just been x opened up and your inspection. Now is the time MIN 353q3K VIC GROSHENS Proprietor Union Saloon WINES, LIQUORS THE CELEBRATED Indervveis BEER High Grade lsrars C7 HEPPNER, OREGON Ths Kcppner Gasetto the newt of Mor row County; The Weekly Oregonian tn news and thought of the world. Both at a special price. Inquire cr address The Qasette. Heppner. Or. Belvedere FINEST WINES LIQUORS &C1GARS. One hundred empty barrels for Bale. Five hundred barrels of ex tra tine cider vinegar on tap. . . . HEPPNER, ORE. PflLflCE MOTEl HEPPNER, OREGON Leading Eastern Oregon Hoivi V0DERN CONVENANCES E-ECTRiC LIGHTED . . . OuJor; N ' MAtiHKpaieijt. ThcnuiLlj Kenovatedj'aDd Remitted. Leet f U;rl9 ia the City. MAD L CO. Fri's. Shoes You Need a New Pair Without fear of contradiction we make the sweeping assertion that our shoe stock is the largest, most complete, and of best qual ity in Morrow county. Our long experience in handling shoes has taught us to judge quality and secure the best values, and our business standing gives us the pick of the manufacturers of the country. These facts, combined with the fact that nothing short of the best makes will answer, places our stock far itvthe lead as regards quality, style and quantty. of New Spring Shoes Ours are the best Yours for Redfield & VanVacior, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. - n Office on west end of May Street Heppner Oregon. C. E. WOODSON. A TTORNE Y-AT-LA W Office In Palace Hotel Heppner. Oregon HIGGS & WINNARD PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS. Special attention given to dieeasea of the eye, ear, ooee and throat. Ofjicb: The Fair Building. Heppner, Oregon. Phelps & Notson ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Office In Odd Fellows Bldg Heppner, Oregon. Frank B. Kistner, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office in Patterson & Son's drugstore Resideuce in Morrow building over Patterson & Son's Drugstore. VV. L. SMITH. ABSTRACTER. Only oomplete set of abstract books in Morrow county. Heppnkr, Oregon. DR. METZLER. ' r KNTIHT Located in Odd Fellows building. Rooms " and 6. DR. . A. LEACH i i c ;v i i v Permanently located in Heppner. Office iu the new FBir building. Gas ad ministered. THE GAZETTE AND WEEKLY OREGONIAN $12.00 A YEAR O R Shoes are ready for This is the Place kind Good Shoes, C Red Front Liven & Feed Satbles Willis Stewart, Prop FIRST-CLASS LIVERY RIGS Kept constantly on t an.l and can be furnishes cn short notice t paitles wishing to drive into he interior. Fin claso : : flacks and Bugyies CALL x. RCUND AND SK U. WE CATER TO VUE : : : : OOIV!MERCIAL TRAVELERS ..ND CAN FURNISH RIGS AND DRIVER ON SHORT NOTICE : : : Heppner, Oregon The Brick Saloon We carry in slook only a very high grade of Barrel and Bottled Goods We carry the lead ing brands of FINE CIGARS Draft and Bottle. Pear nEFlXEB, Okeuos. Call at the Gazette oRc. ar.J learn i our clubbliig offer wiUi tiie Wtekly 0;e- . ... .