Image provided by: Morrow County Museum; Heppner, OR
About Heppner times. (Heppner, Or.) 1???-1912 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 25, 1904)
TT A 11 1 N iU VOL. VII. IIEiTNEIl, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1904. NO. 42. OIDMIP .i 11 iC X. a There in nothing equal to Paruffin Wax for Healing jelllen, jnniH, etc. Slocum Drug Co Grocery Store DECORATKD SEMI-PORCELAIN WARE FREE By purchasing $2",00 worth of goods at this utore you re ceive free of chargj a Bet of this beautiful ware - PREFERED STOCK GOODS Remember EVERYTHING NEW AND FRESH No Stale Goods . . CALL . And Bee ub and we will treat you right. BINNS BROS. Cor. Main and Willow Sta. HEPPNER, ORE. CR0SHE1IS AND ZOLLINGER Have jnnt opened a new saloon at the corner of Main and May itreeti FineBt Liquors and Cigars Pendleton Beer On Draught Hot and Cold Lunches Heppner, Or. fi'inwmi initiiiiiutniiiHifiHiiitiiiiuwHiHHH(MiHHitifMiiiHiittHni CARR&COX Contractors and Builders I PORTAOf ROAD "nothing grows. There is no wheat near It to be benefited by iti conserva tion of moisture, if there ii such a thing. Its straight Up root, reaching down into the soil, takes strength awav from Co-operative Association the cropi iu prenc reduces I we amount 01 gram materially as noth- Work for Construction. ' the circle occupied by it, from twenty inches to three feet in diameter. "We fought it in Dakota and Minne sota aad I am fighting it in Oregon and there is but one way to kill it oat, and Professor Chubbock of the that u to Pul1 u uPr cnt u off whiIe u Department Of Agriculture, !". before the id ripena. In Regard to the Weed. "If u "P6"8 and blows wav u ,cl- rAa r;l1;nR. A I- la. at. I Beyond an agreement to co-operate as . ions one 01 me weeas tumming across a field can seed acres and acres of once clean land. The 0. R. & N. company is doing what it can to prevent the spread of the pest and will co-operate with, the farm ers in any campaign against it. It is almost as bad as the Canadian thistle and multiples just as rapidly." THE RUSSIAN THISTLE Colonel Judson Disagrees with ESTIMATE AND PLANS FURNISHED ON ALL WORK A share of the patronage Bolicited. HOUSES MOVED and REPAIRED Office one door north of Scrivner's blacksmith shop, Main street far as possible with the open river com mission of Eastern Oregon, the meeting yesterday afternoon of the open river committee of the Chamber of Commerce was not productive of definite results There wss much discussion, however oi me plan 01 Duilding the road upon the land which to be conveyed to the government for the Celilo canal, and much valuable information was brought forth. The argument in favor of this 'plan was summarized by one of those present at the meeting, as follows : Anyone thinking of ecurlnf a monument lor a departed re lative or (rlnd Will do well to Heppner Marble and Granite Works j Wa arc prepared to do all Cemetery and building work at reduced prlrei. t MONTERASTELLI BROS. DR. SENNETT GRADUATE OPTICIAN Now a resident of Mor row County. : : : : Office at Slocum'a Drug Store Regular trips to Heppner the first and third weeks of each month ooooeooooo6ciitceciiciioeecci6oecoieoo6o THE PASTIME Brands of All The Leadinc CIkoth in Stock. : : : : : : : aaHHHNtaHaMHSaMHMSMaMMHHMMiMMaSHHMMMHHHHMVJWMM Agents Hazelwood Ice Cream Celebrated Coft'nian Chocolates, Used at all leading Theatres. : : : : : Ashbaugh & Ayers. 0900000000000000000000000090000000000000a BICYCLES.- The Knmbler Lends BUY AN UP-TO-DATE WHEEL 2 All kinds of repair work promptly at tended to. Bicycle Sundries. Opposite Palaco Hotel Lee Cantwell Heppner Transfer Company Do a general Dray and Transfer business. All kinds of heavy hauling. Household goods moved and handled with care. 1 Prompt attention given to all work Cantwell & Mitchell State Fair. The 44th Annual Bute Fair will be given by the Board of Agriculture at Salem, beging on Monday the 12th of For much the greater part of the line 8eptember and continuing throueh the mere is ground lor the portage road and week B"""" chum, oniy iwo Several ccuntiea are Kettioz ud reore- .1 1 J at - U !LI. I F. wuum uicro w . possiom con- ,entative exhibits of their producU flict, and these are for very short dis- Bnowing np their reBonrces and it will tances-viz.,atCelilo, where property thuB an opportanit v or them t0 ad was recently condemned by the canal verti8e for a ,arge emigrat,on is looked board, the noTtatrn muA fnr Hiatanpp nf I ... ... . - r - " i j0r ana tne country is already tiling np not over 600 feet would be directly along with , dBirab,e clue of emirant8, and J. al I 1 a. a. 1 t.l I a.uc luo caiia., oui not newssamy wun- ,he . t to We an(, ... in the limits of its construction, and make good citizens, and even if only wouia properly te a light trestle con- two or thr tti i thm h.. struction, easily removed at very small nuM of the ahowi the connt exhibu expense; at the other point, near ft ha8 made, the a9 a whole , lower oi Big eddy end of the line, at the ahead u ca8e9 of thifj Mture ft ig not MHnh ntmwv II ik. ,: JU .J J I uDuc.y, vu wiu.ii u, Kuu Bruuu lor the cofit of the exLibU mugt a short distance is limited and the twoK i.bon .; j..; I aw xwa.vu AMWV VVUBtUOISlViVU WUV, mo m""u wuu,u "8B,n m rec7 "8 value of the exhibit has as standing side one another, but in this case also advertiBement , to Bpeak of what that the construction of the portage road particalar ia good or 1 J a M. - - t f... 1 I woutu no oe oi magnuuae, ana lis re- xhe live itock how wiU u lMy op moval, if called for, would be a matter to the standard of excellence that has rf a 1 1 ir Vi f ATnottca. T n r Visa nnnatmAtinn .... . ... v.w-.ow.wt.aw a Yf.n nivpn in th nnfit and anAoial in- of the government canal the first step to ducementi have bee,, made by the be taken by any contractor would neces- p Eailway in - :i it. i ;i i: i .i I amy , lu0 uuuuing o. a construction tran8porting exhibits, including live railway" alongside the canal for the handling of material and to insure the rapid advancement of the work. If the portage road is built at this time it would serve the purpose of such a "con struction railway" and thereby save both time and expense when the canal is actually under construction, and I ..GORDON'S.. LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE w Wm. GORDON, Prop, a number of First Clsns horses and New Rigs, both will : t Has added Boggles ami Hacks, and otters yon first class service, and you receive courteous treatment. A share of yonr patronage I Z SOLICITED MAIN STREET, - - - - Heppner, Oregon, i IF YOU BUY IT OF B0RQ IT'S ALL RIGHT. TO WATCH BUYERS We hava tho bout anwortment of wnli'tip In thin aevtton of the Htate. We will duplli'Hte any relUble watrta at the prli'e, ve you exri charge!, ami ny rlHkol future aiinoyHnce. We wll reliable watchtia from fJ.W np. We i'U the 7, 11, 15, 17, nd 'il-eweled watchea In the different rrRdea In Nirlcol. Hterlltig Mlver, Uuld Filled and 14 K. Nottd (iold enws. We Uuarmilee all watrhei, and If they prnve IkuIit from workmanship, we will fully return your money. stock free, and too much credit cannot be given the company for their liber ality in that particular. Stock breeding is only in its infancy in Oregon and shoal J be encouraged, for it is the coming industry in this state, and it requires no more labor or feed to raise a thoroughbred than would furthermore give immediate re- gcrub j, ail to make lief to the country above The Dalles, for which it is earnestly desired. A meeting of the Open River Com mission of Eastern Oregon will be ar ranged as early as possible, probably within two or three weeks. Portland Journal. arrange' ments to spend a part of the week least in Salem, or if you can do so and camp, they have a fane camping ground full of oak grabs and plenty of good water piped right into the grounds, P. 0. BORQ JEWELER AND OPTICIAH Real Estate. Lexington town property $550 will buy a six-room house, four los, small barn, young fruit trees. Can be irriga ted. Enquire of S. E. Notbon, Lexington. The Russian Thistle. Colonel R. C. JudBon, industrial agent of the 0. R. & N., does not agree with Professor Chubbock, of the department of agriculture, in regard to the Russian thistle. Colonel Judson, in an inter view with the ,ast Uregonian, gives some reasons why the weed is a pest Professor Chubbock argues that the wide spreading plant, is a benefit to the land, conserves moisture, prevents washing by heavy rainfall, and helps dry land by shading it. Colonel Judson, who has been aggres sively fighting the thistle for the past 20 years in the Dakotas, Minnesota, Ore gon and Washington, disagrees with this view, and says this weed is one of the most harmful peBts ever toler ated in a farming community, and that the law against it should be rigidly enforced. One of the fixed rules with the O. R. & N. track department is that the sec tion men cut down this weed wherever it starts to grow within the railroad right of way. This rale is rigidly ob served and in this way the company is assisting in exterminating the thistle, as it flourishes best on idle ground. "In the circle occupied by this infer nal pest," said Colonel Judson today, Cattle Turned Down J. N. Burgess returned last Friday evening fiom Southern Oregon, where he went to receive a number of cattle recently contracted for B. F. Saunders, of Salt Lake. Out of 600 head of cattle contracted, only about 160 head were accepted by the government inspector, the balance being turned down because one or two cows in the band showed symptoms of scab. Mr. Burgess reached Shaniko on Thursday evening, and on' Friday morning the inspector turned down 160 head of cattle that had been brought in for delivery at that point These cattle belonged to Clay Grater and the McGreers, and only one or two in the entire band showed any eymtoms of disease. They had a few spots on them which Air. urater claimed were made by the flies, but the inspector re fused them a herlth bill and the entire lot was rejected. The cattle were contracted for B. F, Saunders, who has a large contract for supplying cattle to the government, The fact that cattle in a number of places in the west are breaking out with scab has made them extraordinarily careful in the selection of cattle for this government contract. Antelope Herald Yield Largest in History o! Morrow County. CAUSE, ACREAGE INCREASE E. W. WrlKht. Staff Corres pondent of Oregonlan, Esti mates Wheat Yield and Gives Reason for Increase. An Oregonian staff correspondent, in an article on tha crop situation in Sher man, Wasco, Gilliam and Morrow coun ties, has the following in regard to the Morrow crop : ' "Morrow county, like its near neigh bor, Gilliam, is to the front this year with a wheat crop that is easily the largest ever produced in the county. Early estimates of 1,000.000 bushels are now believed to be much too low, and from the retains now coming in, there will be fully 1,000,000 for shipment. There are some phenomenally large yields on the new lands in the county, and as some of this land was sold as low as $10 per acre, the returns for the money invested are larger proportion ately than in the higher priced lands in the other counties. Dozens of new land farmers in Morrow county have this - season sold their first crop for a sum in the aggregate much greater than the coat of the land. The heavy increase in Morrow county's crop is not due so much to phenomenal yields as to a heavy inciraee in the acreage. "Thousands of acres which has for years been used only for sheep range, are this year yielding their first crop of wheat, and the twenty to thirty bushels , which are being twnelB3ja a high tes- timonial to the judgment of the men who have made the change. 'Another contributory factor to the big crop is the improved methods of farming. It has at last dawned on even the lazy farmers that one acre properly cultivated will yield twice as much aa one that is scratched over. Even in the dryeet years Morrow county has ever experienced, the farmers who plowed deep and worked the ground with care, reaped fairly good crops. They have since had imitators, and Morrow county, by such methods, is steadily drifting away from the danger of crop failures. "On account of its scant population, a very large proportion of the crop of Morrow county is available for ship ment, and lone, the wheat metropolis of the Heppner branch, will ' handle fully 600,000 bushels, with possibly 200, 000 bushels at Jordan's Siding, a short distance above town. The success ot the farmers in producing good cropa on land which for so long has been prac tically wasted for sheep range, will re sult in a general rush for these long neglected lands, and in anything like a favorable season the wheat yield of Morrow Coanty will be susceptible of enormous increase. "Wool has longeen one of the great staples of Morrow county, but the value of the wheat crop this year puts that of the wool clip far in the shade. The lone buyers alone will pay out about (500,000 for that portion of the crop that is marketed at this point and adjacent stat ons, and under the influence of this golden stream that is flowing in,, the town shows a decided air of prosperity." Jas. Kirk visited in The Dalles Toes- day. Notice to Taxpayers. Notice is hereby given that on the last Monday In August 1904. The Board of equalization of Morrow coanty State oi Oregon will meet at the office -of the county clerk and continue in session one week for the purpose of publicly examining the assessment roll of said county for the rear 1904. All taxpayers wishing to make any change in their assessments for the year 1904 should appear before tha laid board at the above named date. Howabd Gove, Assessor of Morrow Co., State of Oregon 'V 1