IMESo .1 Ii Ji j 11 ii X NjJv 4 ii VOL. VI 1. IIEITNEil, OltEGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1904. NO. 50. v.- f x p p f p ft ? it I I n 1 w Attention FARMERS We are prepared to furnihh to the farmers FORMALDE HYDE, for the prevention of Hmut in wheat. It in cheap er, tuore t ffwctivo, and much earner unud than liluo Vitrol. Call at our store and get literature, and directions how- to Uco it. Price, 50 cents a pint. - Slocum Drug- Co. ROGERY Store DECORATED SEMI-PORCELAIN WARE FREE I5y purchasing f 25.00 worth of goods at thiB tstore you re ceive free of chargo a Bet of this beautiful ware - - - PREFERED STOCK GOODS Remember No Staid Goods EVERYTHING NEW AND FRESH . . CALL And see us and we will treat you right. BINNS BROS. Cor. Main and Willow Bts. HEPPNER, ORE CROSHEtIS ZOLLINGER Have just opened new saloon at the corner of -Main and May streets f Finewt Liquors and CijjarB , I Pendleton Beer On Draught Hot and Cold Lunches Heppner, Or. I NURSERY ! STOCK Rllfll rjEB KEF I bave everything grown in the' nur- cry line, and can give you better i satisfaction in selection, quality ' and prices than anyone. All atock guaranteed as represented ! ! : j mmmm mmm mmmm mmmm mmmmm m HARRY CUMMINGS HARDMANC ORE. ' . Heppner Marble and Granite Works :;r,i;rr,,,0,orepurct,",ng Anrona thinking of K-curlng a monument (or a departed re lative or frteml Will do well to W ara prepared to do nil Cemetery and bulldlnx work at reduced prion. MONTERASXELU BROS. j If your prewnt 1uki Son't full joa you nee 1 s new pair )OU uvey trouble CALL ANl KEE ME In Heppner the first week in each month at Heppner Drug Co. DR. SENNBTT GRADUATE OPTICIAN .. LOOK HERE.. HE PASTIME OO6OOOOt666oO6e6666CC66666OOO4COC6CC6C6666d0 0 IS THK ONLY PLACE IN TOWN WHRKE YOU CAN GET A Cup of Hot Href Tea, Chicken Souo, ilouillon Soup, Oyster Bouil lon, Oynter Cocktails, and other hot drinks. We also keep the best line of Candies in the market. And i( you want a smoke, you can fret any kind you want, for we keep all the leading brands of DOMESTIC and I M POUTED CIGARS ASHBAUGH & AYKRS Heppner Transfer Company BICYCLES. The Rambler Lenda BUY AN UITODATE WHEEL All kinds of repair work promptly at tended to. Bicycle Sundries. Opposite Palaco Hotel Lee Cantwell 1 ..GORDON'S.. . n LIVERY, FEED AND SALE STABLE Wm. CORDON, Prop. Has added a numbnr of First Class horses and New Rigs, both Buggies and Hacks, and offers you first class service, and you will receive courteous treatment. A share of your patronage list . SOLICITED t MAIN STREET, - Heppner, Oregon. $ Do a general Dray and Transfer business. All kinds of heavy hauling. Household goods moved and handled with care. j Prompt attention given to all worK 1 Agents for Hop Gold Beer Cantwell & Mitchell IHIIIHIIII IMUH Over 3000 Head Will be Fed on the Creek. OUTLOOK IS ENCOURAGING - . Price of $3 60 per Hundred Pounds Has Already Been Offered, and Price Is Expect ed to go Higher for Best Beef. Geo. VV ..Vincent retuaned last Friday from a week's visit to bis Butter Creek ranch, where be had been receiving cat tle which be la feeding for the spring market. He sajs there will be a much larger number of cattle fed on the creek this year than last, and tbat the indica tions are for a much better price nest spring than last.1 Beside those being fed on Butter Creek, there will be more than a thousand head fed on the Uma tills civer in the vicinity of Echo. There will be something over 3000 led on But ter Creek, as follows : Waldon Rhea 75 Ralph Stanfield 150 Harry Rogers 200 Jesse Moore.... 150 Asa B. Thompson.... 300 J. 15. Saylor 400 Stanfield Bros 600 O. F. Thompson 300 Dave McCarty 100 M. S. Corrigall 75 Florence & Genty 175 Frank Sloan 100 W. J. Wattenburger 106 G. W. Vincent 250 J. II. Barker JJ Total ( A large number of these cattle bought in Morrow county, and nearly all were received here, but the greater 'portion came from Grant, Crook, Gil liam, and Wheeler counties. ' Stanfield Bros, and J. B. Saylor of Echo, received 600 head here Tuesday from Crook and Grant counties. While the price paid for tbeee cattle was low, $1.50 per hundred pounds, the sales bave distributed a large sum of money in the counties, besides it bas thinned down the herds of the stockmen to a perceptible degree, leaving them better prepared for the winter. Though there is plenty of feed in all sections of Eastern Oregon, and no fears were en tertained of a shortage, even though no stock bad been sold, there is a feeling of relief among stockmen because there will be more feed for their remaining stock which are better provided (or In case of a very severe winter. Mr. Vincent tells us that he has al raady been offered $3 50 per hundred pounds for his beef when it is ready for the market, and that feeders are very much encouraged over the prospects for a better price for their beef stock the earning spring. 1 3006 were IF YOU BUY IT OF BORG IT'S ALL RIGHT. TO WATCH BUYERS Wo hav. tho bout nx.ortmcnt of wati-hra In thin ( lun nl th Hlnl.v We will (luplli ny r Imhle watch lit lit irln. vrt you txprt'M rhurgfi, .ii't Htty rlkof ftiiurf unnuyitni'. We roll ri'llRlilc WHtrhi'. Irmn il.H) lip. W e .HI the 7, II, I V 17, .tut 'Jt--wh-tl WRtrtu- In tlin 'llnVrent irniU'i In Nlrkcl. HtiMlllt. Hllv.T, OolJ Killed .nil 14 K. HoMil dull (',. V (iiinmiilt .11 w.lc'lipa, .nil l( thojr ftrnvn faulty from workumiiMlilp, w. will fully return jrour mout'jr. F.lBOIU JKWKLKH Al OITUIAK TRIP TO SCOTLAND. (Continued Iroia lut week) Real Estate. Lexington town property Isso will buy a sia-room huune, (our lots, small hnrn, young fruit trees. Can lie Irrlgn ted. Enquire ol 8. E. Notson, Lexington. Sunday night no one needa any sup per; each one makes (or hia bed. Here is where I say the emigrant gets touch of what the different lines adver tine as the latest and best accommoda tions for steorage passengers. We are huddled together like pigs, although each one has his own bed with a little iron rail around it. We sleep in long rows across the ship, hardly . enough room to crawl in for the next row above you. Here is where we have to eat and sleep, and if the weather is stormy stay there like herring packed in a bar rel. Belora midnight we are all sic and vomiting, although I escaped that part until morning. Sleep? there is no use trying to sleep: the smell gets un bearable. I thought I would escape being sick if I could get on deck and get a breath of fresh air. I got to the deck but before I could get to (resh air the gates were drawn across the deck and locked. I don't know how I got this far. In try lug to move one ft' It like be was being tossed in the air and the last breath be ing taken out of him. The Locania by this time is shipping sees that give a re port like some of Dewey's guns when they hit the deck. I stand here only a few minutes whou I take a chill and the next mjnuU I am burning up, and then here's to my first experience in sea sickness a sensation long to b remem bered. I stand there because I am so weak I cannot move. I get wet from the spray, and am sometimes over the shoe tops in water ; but here I staved for three long hours the starboard bow long to be remembered by an "Emigrant." The sea by Monday noon had calmed down considerable and the gates are opened so tbat those who could navigate at all are feeding the fish over the rail. Monday when the pig pen needed in spection there was none. Tuesday we were lined up, or those that were able to be on deck, inspection card in band, and run through a chute one by one. Here a big fat Officer almost squeezes the eyes out of a person, and another stamps the card if you prove sound. This per formance generally takes place in the morning, and by the time one thousand of ua get through wfe hear the bell for dinner. If a person gets oyer his sick ness he generally is hungry, especially if he hasn't eaten a bite from Sunday noon to Tuesday noon. A tip to thn! steward generally counts for a little ex tra, so I hand him two bits. Dinner comes on, and just as sure as we have to sleep in a pig pen, - 3 just as sure have to feed in a piR trough. To live in a sheep camp may )e bad, and lots of people even in the West would turn up their nose if they had to eat this grub ; but give me a frying pan and enough to cook in the Blue mountains. I for my part would prefer it to life on the ocean wave. But as my ticket reads emigrant, what does the steward care your tips are all for nothing, you just have to grin and bear dirt. I have seen lots of it, but this is disgusting ; people in bed tick and sitting down to try and eat such a dirty mess is out of the question. Never having the experience of my ticket reading "emigrant" before, I was a little afraid of it. But thanks to kind friends. Before I started I was well provided for the occasion. The only thing that I could eat was a good old Irish Murphy cooked with the jacket on. At times we got an apple, but be ing used to the apples of Eastern Ore gon, it would take better digestive organs loan 1 bave today to get away with such apples as were set before as. From what I could learn the third- class fare is much better going east. As rule most of the people were nice, res pectable and clean looking, altogether a ifferent class from what used to be the emigrant, but I fail to see where the better accommodation comes in. After all if it hadn't been so stormy we could ave had a good time. Thece. were sev eral different kinda of musical instru ments on board and dancing and sing ing was kept op until 9 p. m., when the women were all ordered below. Weather permitting we had to go through some form of inspection every day. For instance one day's inspection was to take your bat on and walk past an officer. I was taught to raise my hat to a lady it she recognized me first; but for a Western sheep herder to raise his bat to an officer of tie Lucania was something new. If you don't take it off some officer will do it for you ' all be cause your ticket reads emigrant. An other day the men are all lined up for vaccination and those that can't show the brand are ed right there. So thank: to an old tear left on my arm from dresHing a mutton in the Blue mountains. Although I bave been vac cinated, but hard to see, I fell in line showing a distinct scar made by my own. knife. I pass through almost on the ran, my ticket is stamped and once more I am clear. . The next performance was to hold up our hands and pass through and the laBt inipection by an English officer, the day bolore we land, li atick ing his fingers in your eyes again Now to one. that has lived in the States, and we know that in the morn ing we will see the Statue of Liberty looming up at the entrance to New York, the emigrant thinks he will soon be in a free and independent country the United States of America. But his surprise the quarantine officers Uncle Sam board the vessel alter pass inn the Statue of Liberty, and here we line up again to go through a careful in epeclion. I say careful because I thin they would need to be if all emigrant were treated like us. I wasn't so much afraid of graybacks, as the ctas of peo ple were clean and well dressed, but the smell most of time was almost unbear able. However, we are toon taken tow and landed bag and baggage at the Cunard docks. First and second class ara landed first, but the poor emigrant is locked up in a large warehouse to have his baggage examined by the U. S. customs ouse officers. Having no trouble here we are again loaded on a boat with our baggage, and hurried off to Ellis Iilsnd to go through another I ItPJIIli Large Shipments and Good Prices This Year. CONDITIONS FAY OR ABLE Pasturage Being Good and an Abundance of Good, Cheap Hay, an Incentive for Sheep men to Hold Their Flocks. Sheepmen of Morrow county are very much pleased with the sheep outlook. Sales have been very lively the past few weeks, and prices are tending upwards right along. Good lambs are now sell ing for $1.65, and even as high as $1.75. Ewes are bringing $2.25 to $2.50, and few are to be hal now at these prices. The fact is, there are few sheep of any class for sale in this county. Buyers are still coming in and a few shipments are being made, but few Mor row county sheep are now going out; nearly all those being shipped coming from Grant county. A train of 15 cars went out Tuesday and another shipment of about the same number is due here from Grant the latter part of the week. This, it is believed, will practically end the shipments for the season. While there are a great many sheep yet in the county, probably as many as at ' this time last year, few of the sheepmen are willing to let go at these prices, as they have plenty of feed to carry their flock through the winter, beside they look forward to better prices next spring. The prospects next year for both wool and mutton is considered extra good, as fall pasture is splendid and there is van abundance of good, cheap hay. Sheep will start into the winter in fine flesh and perfect health, and every indica tion points to a splendid clip next spring, both in quantity and quality. In spite of the big sales that have been made, it is the general belief that there will be as many sheep fed in the county this winter as last. to of Entertain Official Visitor. A special meeting held by Ruth Chap ter No. 32, Eastern Star Monday -even-ing, October 17, was largely attended. It was for the purpose of receiving an official visit from Mrs. Ella Houston, of Portland, Worthy Grand Matron ot the Grand Chapter. At the conclusion of ceremonies an elegant supper was served, which was enjoyed by all the members. Mrs. Houston left Tuesday morning for way points in the interior to visit all the chapters. She made many friends here by her quiet and charming manners. Her husbard, Col. David Houston, was a resident of the Heppner hills a quarter of a century ago, and well known to many old pioneers of Morrow county. Installing New Machinery. The Heppner flouring mill has been closed down the past week while some new machinery is being installed. Man ager Stevenson tells the Times that he is putting in one of the most up-to-date sifters to be had1 on the market. It makes 72 different separations. When it is placed and repairs and renovations now under way are completed, the mill will be strictly modern in every respect, with a capacity of 150 barrels daily. The mill is grinding nothing but high grade blueetem wheat, and is turning out a first-class flour, every sack of which is guaranteed. (Coutlned on fourth ptgo) Soma Seasonable Advlca It may be a piece of superfluous advice to urge people at this season of the year to lay in a supply of Chamberlain's cough remedy. It is almost sure to be needed before winter is over, and much more prompt and satisfactory results are obtained when taken as soon as a cold is contracted and before it has become set tled in the system, which can only be done by keeping the remedy at hand. This remedy is so widely known and so altogether good thtt no one should beii tats about buying it in preference to any other. It is for sals by Slocum Drug Co,