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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1912)
L4. GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER. TUESDAY, JANUARY 30, 1912. view ISA X BP II ! Ill li II LI IIUiIM'll flln THIS WINTER FAMOUS THE WORLD OVER For its splendid hostelries, its varied at tractions, its fine beaches, , hot springs and : pleasure resorts all these can be. reached with ease by the Oregon-Washington Railroad & Navigation Co . and Southern Pacific Company "Railroad of a Thousand Wonders" $55.00 ... : .f Portland to Los Angles and Return WW :. With correspondingly low fares from all O-W. R: & N. points, good six months with stopovers going and returning with-; in limit. Handsomely illustrated- litera ture will be supplied upon application to any ot ojr agents, or aaaress nruu.utinnv ' ' A 11 ili . ... V .11 t . " . . Gen. Pas8..Agt Portland, Ore Bottled inBond 6 VII A RS Smooth Mellow Rich Absolutely SKSfiSte,: . : Grant A Lincoln -v LA GRANDE, OREGON. ' ffl" $ 4 $ $ $ S S $ 8 J Feed and Grain. MARKET BEPORTS ' " $.Jj)S$Iv''J'SS?,J be cut off about 20 or 24 Inches above ground, . . ( Square or Qulueuuc Dflt Systems. There aro Various systems of plant ing trees but the square or rectangu lar system Is probably usod most and all things considered, It Is probably the best system; for a permauent or chard. One of Us chief advantages ov er some of the others Is the fact that allows for Its easiest cultivation. The Dninmini svatem allows for a more even distribution of the trees and It is used mostly where .fillers are to e grown a number of yearB and then ta ken out. By this system the Hilars are nut Into the center of each Bquare and when taken out the sqaure sys tern results The hexagonal or equllaterlal trlan ele system allows of the mose even distribution of any system known, but Is not used more because of the dim cultv in cultivation. A few of the main points in starting an orchard are: To order stock ear- lv: to order and plant only one-year7 sized trees: to thnrnnnhlv iirenare the soil: to exer - & nntr.lA nrOVATlK v I else every enurt iiuacuj w p - the Important factors . . , 'i uarnra twine b"- - 7 . trees rrom oryius - ti. inncttfloporl aftnr Ihfi lnontlnn lins I . -... j - v. tho AvnflrU . " piamoa, anu iu uj - ucu viiuavu,, up w win .un.n".o - i ences oi your neiguuuio, planting ot the trees. : Order Stock Early- It Is very doubtful if It is posible to set any nursery stock if ordered now and certainly not very advisable to try unless one knows' whom he is dealing with. Every ... nurseryman knows that the' best stock is-always sent out with , the first orders and those, who order after , the first, class stock is Bold, receive an Inferior grade ot plants. The reason why this is es pecially Important now and probably will be for some years is because so, many large orchards are being set out nil thn nurseries cannot supply the demand. . Stock to be used In the spring should be ordered during the .previous summer or early fall. Ono-Yoar-Old Trees Best, The one-year-old tree, meaning by this a one year old top on a two or GEORGE REIBEN DEALS WITH T11E , SUBJECT. ' :V-. S - . Learuedly Recites Advuutnges of Sel- eutltio Orchard l'lauting. (By Geo. Reiben, Horticulturist.) Oregon Experiment Station, Union, Jan." 29.-( Special) The number ot trult growers who own mature or chards and who, if they had the chance would plant them over again exactly as they are now ar few and far be tween. In planting an orchard we cannot over-estimate the Importance nt careful ulannlui: and our aim should be to establish an orchard which has all of the good points and none of the poor ones of those we Bee about us. It Is the aim of this article m L'HIXCII'AL TASK HAS BEEN MAS ;.. TERED. Feat of Enfrijieering Equal to Panama Canal Is Opinion. New York, Jan. 30. Mayor Gaynor accompanied by the members ot the board of water supply and a number nf invited euests, went up to Storm ,j lx .,(... Kine todav to take part in the celebra tnree year o.u ruul laM . thB tllnnei . : t i 1 - lUn l.lnrl ntMnn 11(111 111 LllO UUUiVvni wi. -- out nrm ana siocay ib mo -- - ,.,.. ohnu h n,ifirHrt The huda should worn lor we vw !' ' ----- Tempting Fresh Country eggs and pure meadow butter are what you crave for OUt OlieU lilll W i-l iS J not uo ioj iv mJ fi cer to givc you them as to supply the other kind it The grocer who values the good will and future trade of his customer, AS' WE VALUE YOURS, selects is all a question of care in buying. i his butter and eggs with care, We GUARANTEE every egg sold at this store and we use the pure fresh butter on ovr own table every day, ' Nothing can make you surer than that about our best ' in eggs and butter. . r Tliese are this week's prices: , - '. ....40c j. A ou xu.i-.va. -C3? , be evenly distributed along the stem which should be straight and have no branches. An older tree Is much hard er to handle and not nearly as' satis factory. Some growers prefer non- Urrlgated stock and in some cases they nave very good reasons for such pref Eggs Ranch eggs, 45c; storage, 35c, Vegetables and Miscellaneous. Potatoes Per cwt, $1.50 Cabbage Per cwt, $2.00. Onions ?2.25 per cwt. Cabbage Per pound, 1 and 2c Celery Per bunch 16c, two tor 25c. Sugar cane, cash, price $6.80; 30 days' time, $7.20 per cwt., beet sugar, cash price $6.60; 30 days' time, $7.00. BeanB White, 8 l-3c: lima, 10 cents Fruits. ' Home grown apples $3.00 to $1.50 per box. Grade establishes price. Cranberries 20 cents per quart. Bananas 40c per doz. Oranges 40c to 50c. Alfalfa Hay $13.00 (retail). Timothy $15.00. Grain Hay $13.00. Snowdrift Flour, sack $1.40 . Bran and Shorts $1.30 and $1.40. OatB $1.50 per cwt.. ' Rolled Barley $1.70 per cwt. Cattle, Hogfl and FowL Cows 3 to 4c. Steers ic to 5c. Sheep 3c and 4c, ; Light hogs $5.75. . Heavy hogs $5.00. Chickens Hens, 10c;' old roosters 8c and spring fries 10c to. 12c. Turkeys, live weight, t7 to 18c Ducks, live weight, 12c. Geese, live weight 10c. Fresh smelt are In the markets to day. ' the Hudson river between Storm King and Break Neck. ' The opening of the tunnel marks a most Important step !n the advance ment of the great Catsklll aqueduct towards completion. The carrying oi the aqueduct, which will have the ca I n:v' ;-v:,-:' nave very euuu ioaouim iu duu t . , crence because some nurseries give paclty of a small river, beneath he ..... -u..-: . ,fQ- Hudson .river and the irregular coun- tne trees an over-auumm.. r ....... h.hian,m. in order to get extra large trees and try aajaceni wu - ""-" -. uo,noo f mesented an extremely difficult proh- hTp " Sua oc7c;7 ;n;7al.y lem. The tunnel ,s 500 feet below ;j ly told by Its abnormal size and soft TtZ watery growth and should not be used tne i.uuuB Ucu... ----- t,oi'm mnph more ant to aie khuu u DRINK M-O when set out than are the properly grown stock. This, however, is not the fault of irrigation but of the lrrl gator. ... ' Extreme Care Nccessnry. , The date from the time when the trees are taken up in the nursery un til they are planted In the orchard is one of the most critical times in the life history of the fruit trees. As a rule the grower has little or no means of changing their state of affairs until the consignment arrives at his railway station but then the stock Is In his hands and much depends upon the way in which he takes care of them. As soon, as they arrive they should be ta ken away from the railway station and "heeled in," unless they can he nlnnterl Immediately. To do this the the opposite shore called Break Neck The building ot the , Catskiu aque duct, wihlch Is to afford the great city of New York, an adequate supply, or nure water for ages to come, has been nntinnnnaii Viv pncrlneers to . be a lUIIVUUbVU tJJ O greater undertaking than the building of the Panama canal. The aqueduct wll cost about $102,000,000, which Is In excess of the estimated cost of the isthmus canal. The aqueduct will be 60 miles in length. It will carry thirty times as much water as the famous aqueducts of Rome combined. It will afford an outlet to twelve reservoirs constructed to hold the enormous flow of water from the various watersheds of the Catskllls and adjacent hills. The Ashokan reservoir alone will have a capacity of 710,000,000,000 gallons, or University Opong Farmers' Course Madison, Wis., Jan, 30,-r-The annual practical courses in agriculture and husbandry for farmers, their wives and their children, were opened here today by the University ot WiBconBln orevlous year. . Farmers and their with a lareer attendance than In any families from all parts of the state are taking advantage '6f 'the ten . days' practical instruction and training un der the supervision of experts which the university offers and which Is sup plemented by a great amount of valu able Information which they may gath er at the various meetings of agricul ural bodies to be held here during the ten days ot the course, . -- NOTICE OF SALE. In the matter, of James B. Bass, bankrupt. ' . ; , Notice is hereby given that under signed trustee In bankruptcy, In per suance of an order made on the 25th day of Oct., 1911, by John S. Hodgln, referee in - bankruptcy, will sell at public auction at 10 o'clock a. m. In Imbler, Union county, Oregon, on the 27th day of January, 1912, to the high est bidder for cash In hand the follow lug described real property, tow It: That parcel and . tract of land, the ' boundary Hue ot which begins at a point 32 feet north ot the south east corner of block 7, Townslte pt Imbler, as recorded in the office of the county recorder in Union county, Ore- gon and runs thence north 70 feet; thence west 100 feet; thence, south 7Q feet; thence east 100 feet to the plac of beginning, all In Union county, Ore gon, and subject to a mortgage ot Robert Newlin, on which there Is duo about $320.00; together with the per sonal and mixed property contained in the buildings on said premises, such as counters, .shelving and other fix tures, . ' ''' ;"!l,'''n''irW,Bix GEO. Jj.-CLEAVER.; - Trustee In above entitled bankrupt cy. First publication dated January 5, 1912. : ' - Frl. Dly 4 7 America's Best Mineral Water It's Good for What Ails You planted immediately, to ao whs ,akeg Qf K1Uarney bundles are opened and trees placed mare tnan tu singly in a furrow which should prer- erably run east and west. The trees. may be placed as near eacn uuic OBITUARY, in. .m,,,f Tiorifllncr thfi roots. I POSB1U1B WlWiuui. ww-..,0 . . Ti. and the tops should he Inclined to- Summerville, Oregon. Jan. 29.-John ward the south so that they will not Murchison was born in Kirkton, Loch . . t.. iv ro nlnnted. r.nrnn. Scotland. Jan. 12th, 1821 and Degin gruwui r It the trees arrive in a dry shriveled died at the home of his brother Ken- v Complete Equipment tor Resetting ann Repairing Rubber Buggy Tires LA GRANDE IRON WORKS ' D. FITZGERALD, Proprietor COMPLETE MACHINE SHOPS ARD FOUNDRY I HACK AND AMBULANCE TTntown office Main 720 Residence phone Main 25 E.LBUSSEY WENAHA Main 732 Can't We Help You Build a new home? No use to pay rent when we are selling lumber and building material at1 such low prices. Drop : in and get estimates from us. You will thank us for the hint. LUMBER CO. La Grande, Ore. condition they may be buried for 24 in nrrter to revive them ana should then be heeled-in. slinnld CnltlTate Deep. The soil should bo plowed quite deep, long enough before the trees are set so that It will have plenty of time . n,,ia TiafnrA thflv are set it neth, on Friday the 26th Instnt, aged 91 years and 14 days. Mr. Murchison came from Scotianu to Illinois in the year 1856, remaining there until 1863 when he crossed the plains and came to Summerville, where he settled ona homestead one mile north of town. When 73 years to HBinc. u- i i : - hi i wnrked tin in good shape of age he took up his residence in tne with a disc or springtooth harrow and home of his brother. For two yearn the surface smoothed with a drag. If and nine months he has been confined a hard-pan exists near the surface It to the house. Three brothers and three should be broken up by subsolllng or B8ter have gone before htm to the blasting, especially where the trees other world, five of whom, himself the are to be planted.; The holes for the gIxth, now lie at rest in the beautiful trees much be large enough to admit summerville cemetery, all of the roots without bending but He was a communicant of the Pres- not necessarily any larger where the byterlan church, soil is of a sandy type as Is the case Thus one by one those hardy plo- wlth most of the fruit lands in this neers who wrought so well to build up part of the state. All Injured roots lMs growing commonwealth ot the and any which are unnecessarily long pnclflc coast, pass on and are succeed- should be cut oft before planting. The ed by others, who knowing Tjt the trees should be placed an inch or two hardships, will Instead realize . the deeper than they were in the nursery benefits that have come to us from and the soil should be well compacted their labors. around the roots. Any vacant av around the roots cause the mto dry out which increases the danger of ttiom dying from drouth and there will be enough trees dies even it the planter exerts every care possible to overcome this drying out. The tree should then Simple As 2x2 Charles Fiohman will shortly make productions of a woman suffrage play by Alfred Sutro and a new piny of New York life by Porter Emerson Brown, j An ordinary lamp glvesa bout as much light as a 5 watt electric globe. . ' It would require five ordinary kerosene lamps to furnish the same light as a 25 watt electric globe eight for a 40 watt, etc. ,; It costs .00375 cents an hour to burn a 25 watt electric light the equivalent ot five kerosene lamps. Kerosene sells at 25 cents a gallon. Figure it out yoursolf Just how much more it will cost you to produce a given volume of light with kerosene than with electricity. You will then be convinced that electricity Is cheaper than any other form of lllamlnant. That it really does more for less cost. , .....-', , We are convincing people of the advantages of electrlo Hghtlng every day. Not one user In a hundred would ever be willing to go back to kerosene lamps. . - . - . There is only one conclusion to draw trom this; that our ser vice is reliable and our rates reasonable Phone Main 34 for rates.- Eastern Oregon Light & Power Co. "Always at Your Service." . V,