a m m a H M City and County Brief Xercs Items AL'aira seed for sale at R. S. Z- Misa E. Strale? of Elgin visited VI rs. E. A. Renfrew Friday. Japalac, Tarnish stains, linseed oli at Bumaugh Mayfields. Vrs. William Fleenor of l:ine Tis::e4 her son. Harly Fridaj. Gel y T in:r caifca?e an 3 saueT kritt A. il. Wipe:, Etsrprise. Icocard Johnssn who bad been in frca s'-arted for home Satur- Vrs. Dr. Moore amied Friday from Kbiji City where she has been for the past six weeks. Elgin Flour at W. J. Fuk Co"s. Parent 11.50 a sack, straight grade. tl.0 a sack. Mrs. George Law has returned from a riait of seven weeks with her par ents at Lincoln. Neb. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Keavis of "Walla Walla were here to attend the funeral of their uncle. George Emmons who recently bought the Pace farm on Trout Creek moved there last week. S. F. Pace mo.ei la we:-k intolAmev of Joseph, were in town Frida- his River street residence recently rchased of George Emmous. Elfcies and tablets- pencils and pens In tact everything reeded by a school pupil at Jackson & Weaver's. Superintendent J. C. Conley return ed from Promise Friday, where he had been visiting schools. The Ragsdae Viilear-e on Resi dence street is being improved by the addition of wash room and cellar W. L Dishman, Portland buyer ship ed three car loads of cattle and one ef hogs from this point Saturday morning. J. A. Rumble of Joseph and George Hendrlcson of Promise were iu En terprise Friday ti attend the funera' of J. C. Reavis. Miss Ella Sparks of Sunnyside, Wa who had been visiting her aunt, Mrs F. Hamliin, and family, left for hei horn Saturday. If you want good winter apples, absolutely free from worms, call up O. J. Roe, Mountain View Fruit Farm, Home phone. Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Erady have re turned from a two weeks visit in the Imnaha. visiting relatives, hunt ing and fruit getting. J. W. Rodgers, Levi Miller and B. T. Long and BOn Ed returned Mon day from a week's hunting trip at Table Mountain. They got six . Mrs. Sarah Henderson returned to her home in Elgin Saturday morn ing after several days visit with friends in and around Enterprise. Hotchkias & Combes shipped four cars of fat hogs to Portland Thurs day. They were brought in from the North Country and were sold at 7 cents. Claude Lockwood and Charles G. Bllyeu bought through the Enter prise Real Estate companv the Char les Kin worthy place on Alder Slope this week. The place consists of 160 acres of fine orchard land. ira iratt left Fndav morning for Bellingham, Wash., where he has ac cepted a position as instructor of the T. M. C. A. band. Mr. Pratt has beei at the head of the Enterprise band the past two years and will be misse not only by that organization but by the town. H13 rich baritone voice in vocal solos, or in choir, gave pleasure at many public gathering. Mrs. Pratt has been at Bellingham with her parents for some time. Enterprise Poultry Produce Farm F.hode Is!ar,d P.ed Egs; ail kir.ds of Vegetables i " &&?$k A. M. WAGNER, Prep. mm. s- r wr i i i i i I w - tiiuuizzsuai The Ciy Planing' Mill f W. F. RANKIN, Proprietor 5 ENTERPRISE, OREGON. Carries a complete stock of rough and dressed S lumber. J A line of standard mouldings alwavs in stock. S Satisfactory Mill WorK a Specialty S Five per cent discount for cash. All account balanced g at expiration of 30 day and settled by cash or note. S Judge Pavid B. Reavis returned Thursday from Hood River where he, had gone to spend the winter, ca'led iome by his brother's sudden death. Dr. J. R. Gillilan of La Grande was in town Friday night. The M. E. quarterly conference was held at the home of J. A. Uurleigh at :30 Fri day evecing. lr. C. T. Ho-keU. F. 1. Vergere. CJe;r?e Yi.cbtll and L. Burnaugh re turned home Friday from a three weeks hunting trip at Deer Creek. They killed four deer. G. V. Hyatt. C. H. Zurcher, Sol D. Keltner. Geo. L Ratcliff and Fred S. Ashley were in Joseph Wednesday to attend a meeting of the county merchants association. L. Loyd and G. W. Neil of lm naha. and Harry Yaughan and Churcl Dorrance of the Buries were deliver ing cattle in town Friday, their stock being shipped by Dishman Satur- (JaT Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Carpenter, of Seattle. Wash, arrived here this weel iad Mr. Carpenter will engage in the jewelry business in this city. Mr. Carpenter is a cousin of T. P. Cole man. Mrs. Agnes S. Amey, daughter. Mrs Hugh Wiison, and niece. Miss Gussie to attend the funeral of J. C. Reavis. Miss Maude Amey, who teaches ai the Reavis school, returned home with them to spend Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fav of Chico left Fridav for the Yaqui vallev, Old Mexico, where Mr. Fay has purchas- fd land and where they will make heir home. Mr. Fays1 place as orest ranger has been taken by Joseph A Harris, of Wallowa, who will soon move to Chieo. Elgin Recorder The foot-ball team -eturned from Enterprise Sunday ind report a god game there Sat- jrday. Tho Frank Hallgarth was hurt he game was played well and ended A-ith a score 0 to 0. The boys ap- irtciate the kindness of the Enter prise citizens and school shown them A'hile there. She Liked Silk Hosiery. Susan B. Anthony was a woman of simple tasie in dress, but her close friends knew of oue pretty feminine vanity that she always held to. She had a weakness for silk stocklugs. Be ing pressed on utie occasion for an ex planation of what most women at one time regarded as an unnecessary ex travagance, she laughingly exclaimed: "Oh. 1 just love "eml They are au In spiration. If I have my Silk stockings on when I rise to make an address 1 fee! just as if 1 nm walking among the clouds. They help me to soar away on flights of eloquence. 1 wouldn't be without them." Just the Thing. The poet took his silver mounted pistol from the bureau drawer. "What are you going to do with thatr asked his timid wife. "I'm going to use it to drive the wolf from the door." he answered. Teu minutes later the pawnbroker had advauced $2 on it. Chicago News. Headed Him Off. He Tun know. Clara, about the dia mond eniiucemeut ring I waut to give you. diamonds have gone up so She -Oh. you denr boy! How sweet of you to want to make sacriflces to prove your love. Baltimore American. Lost Opportunity. Wifey I remember the night you proposed to me 1 bent my heud and said nothing. Hub (comfortingly)! know it worries you, dear; but never mind you've made up for it since. Exchange. A man should stand erect, not be kept erect by others. Marcus Aurellus. and Chic kens? 1 533XE3XEEU1 Jury List November Term. The Jury drawn for the regular November term. 1909, Circuit Court af Wallowa county, is as follows: Tom Marks. Frulta. farmer G. A. Miller. Wallowa, farmer' John W. Baker. Trout Creek. stockman E. W. Sandy. Flora, farmer H. E. Dawson. Joseph, millman D. S. BurdeU. Joseph, farmer W. B. Fordyce, Lost Prairie, farmer Dm Rails, Paradise, fanner Fred) Shafer, Enterprise, farmer D. H. Hearing, Enterprise, farmer L. Loyd, Imnaha, farmer Floyd Hammack, Lostine, farmer J. W. Bright. Lostine, farmer A. Austin, Flora, farmer Geo. C.Russell, Trout Creek, farmer J. B. Kooch, Enterprise, farmer L H. Robinson, Joseph, contractor Geo. Hendrickson, Paradise, fanner Nathan Craven. Prairie Creek, farmer W. E. Fields. Wa'lowa, farmer Peter GoebeL Wallowa, farmer M. O. Courtney, Lostine, farmer E. B. Knapp, Enterprise, sheepman G. B. Cook. Lostine, farmer J. M. Silver, Grouse, farmer Geo. L. Cole, Joseph, farmer N. M. Devln, Flora, farmer J. C. Dodson, Joseph, merchant W. C. Straley, Paradise, merchant Nelson Dexter. Wallowa, carpentet N. C. Longfellow, Buttes, sheepman New Suits Filed. Oct. 19. The E. M. k M. Co. vs James M. Stubblefield. Oct. 20. A Levy vs. Calvin Smith And Jessie Smith. Marriage License. Oct. 21 Thomas P. Adams and Miss Goldie E. Biggs, both of Joseph ENTERPRISE JEWELRY CO. Martin Larson has sold a half in terest in his Jewelry store to J. C Carpenter, recently of Seattle, and the new firm will continue the bus iness with an enlarged stock under the name of the Enterprise Jewelry company. The store room occupied by Mr. Larsen" Is being re-painted, papered and improved for the new firm. DEATH RECORD. Joseph C. Reavis wag born a' Pisgah, Cooper county, Missouri June 1, 1833. Was married to Miss Emily McKinney, Dec. 17, 1856 He removed from his native state to Texas in the year 1870, residing there until the year 1888, when he came to Wallowa county, which was then a part of Union county. Here he resided until his death which oc curred Wednesday, October 20. He is survived by his widow and three sons: Frank of Enterprise, David of Crowell, Texas, and Fred who is in the Philippine Islands Two daughters preceeded him, Liz zie who died before reaching woman hood, and Mrs. Minnie Hendrickson Mr. Reavis had been a member of the Presbyterian church for 30 years for many years serving as an elder The funeral was held Friday forfr noon at 10 o'clock from the Presby terian church and was very largely attended. The altar and organ were beautifully decorated in autumn flow era and foliage, and the casket was laden with floral tributes. Rev Samuel Harris, pastor of the Presby terian church, delivered the sermon and Rev. W. P. Samms spoke on the life of Mr. Reavis and Rev. C. E Trueblood offered prayer. A choir composed of singers from the various church choirs sang several appropiate songs. The pall bearers, all old friends, were John Rumble, John Calvin. Ben Boswell, Jacob Wagner, W. W. White and Joe Melotte. The business houses were closed and the public school was dismissed during the funeral. Mrs. Theresa Mimnaugh, mother of the Mimnaugh brothers who are a part of the big NIbley-Mimnaugb Lumber company, died at her home in Wallowa Tuesday. Oct. 19. Mrs. Mimnaugh had live J in Wallowa about a year. Her husband died In Perry, Oregon, January 1908. She leaves two sons, J. H. and C. H. Mimnaugh, of Wallowa. Funeral was held from the Cath lie church at La Grande Thursday. PUBLIC SALE OF HORSES. I will sell at public auction, Sat urday, Not, 6, 1909, at Joseph, Or egon, 75 bead of young horses, well bred, heavy stock, 7 mule colts, 1 Spanish Jack, 7 years old; all mares have been bred to black Percheron stallion or Jack. Terms of sale: 12 months time, 10 per cent bankable note; & per cent discount for cash. W. A. WRENX. THE FRIENDSHIP OF NATIONS. Tet It 1 true, as ilolinari says, that the saving in treasure and life is but a mere incident of the benefits which will come when there Is friendship among the nations and a universal peace. Think of the bodies and brain that will be let lose from the wel fare of mankind when foar of war shall have ceased; of the freedom of Intercourse and commerce when every flag of every land ska'.l l' welcome in everry port! Think the advance In government whrn that which is now the principal ajse ar government shall have passe 1 away, leaving man free to s!ve other problems. The friendship of the nations rot-an she uplift of the masses; it means -hat burdens and shackle will f'! from those who are weary and op pressed. It means that the human hive, undisturbed, will hum with in dustry, investigatiin. and the wholly new impetus wl I arise wiihin him. There will be other and greater poets. Other and greater heroes and a higher aplift toward the true god-hoad in man. Nation wi.l join hand with aation until the world will be circled by the nations, each finding what is uch an acceleration of human prog ress that no imagination can picture Je outcome. Charles Erskine Scott Wood in the November Pacific Monthly. SONG ADOPTED BY NATIONAL W. C. T. U. The verses given below were adopted by the National W. C. T. C. as their national song and at the j recent Oregon state convention which Mrs. T. M. Dill attended it was re luested that each delegate request hat they be published la her hanie paper, and that each member of the V. C. T. I", cut o:it a:id preserve -his song. It wiil he sung in the unions all over the land a:id in the Sunday schools everywhere. MAKE THE MAP ALL WHITE. 3y Leona Mabel Dufford, Evanston, III. "Tune, The wearing of the Green." 0 my comrades, have you heard the glorious word thats going round? There'll very bcoj be no saloon on all Columbia's ground. There's a wave of Prohibition rolling up from every strand. And all the states it inundates, straightway become dry land! By city, state, or cjunty, or by town ship, or by town. lust let the peaple have a chance we'll vote the dram shop down. Refrain: Till we make the map all white, Till we make the map all white; We'll work for Prohibition, till we make the map ail white. Maine Is at the head, for she has led for half a hundred years, nd Kansas great and North Dak ota stand among their peers; Georgia next, and Oklahoma, won their place among the free; Alabama, Mississippi, North Carolina. Tennessee; Vnd Texas, too. and Arkansas, have voted for the right, Vnd all the rest will follow, till we make the map all white. The distillery and the brewery and the winery all must go; The saloons can stay no longer, when the people have said "No" So we'll sing them out, and pray them out. and educate them out, We'll talk them out, and vote them out, and legislate them oat ; We'll agitate and organize, and surely win the fight. We'll work for Prohibition, tin -e make the map all white. Osteopathy in Women's Diseases. Congestions, strains and displace uents are the basis of most of the nckness that af.'licts womankind, the real first causes of disease. Every function of the human machine is de pendent upon its appropriate struct ure or organs. So disturbanr-e 'f function (disease) are due to abnor malities in structure, to mehani.l faults in the anatomy. This is the osteopathic view of disease dvpl by long study and the examination or countless cases, and it i nn- fully established that congestions. trains and disDUcementa r nr.i ftllATll. - - ""V-L"C Ul Kreaijr I than en.- ather set of causes. rutr.r.o.i.i I 'VWllllUJl 1 Health. The Bakery Fresh Bread and Fine Pastry WE ARE HERE TO PLEASE We Solicit Your Patronage H. V. MOORE, Manager P4ver St, 2 doors south of Funk's. INVESTORS and LAND All over the Northwest are talking of Wal lowa County and the wonderfully fertile lands here that can be bought cheaper than similar land anywhere in the Inland Empire. There is no fairer land in all the Inter-Mountain region and no section with richer and more varied resources. Everything is here. Fertile land for grain, hay, sugar beets, vegetables, fruit; abundance of water, splendid climate, greatest body of timber in Eastern Oregon, un rivaled winter and summer range, great stock countn,' and the mountains full of minerals. Wallowa County has Just Begun to Grow Enterprise is the county seat, largest town and commercial capital of all these resources. As grows the county, so will Enterprise grow. It is growing now, rapidly and substantially. Hundred Thousand Dollars Worth of Improvements under way this season. Fine public and high schools, churches, electric lights, fine moun tain spring water distributed by high pressure gravity system owned by city, best equipped flouring mill in Northeast Oregon, and many other advantages and industries. You Make the Best Move of Your Life When You Locate in Enterprise HOW A HORSE GALLOPS. The Natural Way and the Conventional Pose In Art. How does a horse gallop? Owing to the rapidity of action it cannot be seen by the uuiimu eye. However, just as the individual spokes of a rapidly re volving wheel cnu be made visible by a flash of lightning, go the actiou of a galloping horse can be and has been analyzed by instautaueous photogra phy. The statuette of Sysonby. the thor oughbred, has beeu uiude from photo graphs taken at the instant wbeu all four l.-gs are off the ground. The back is areued, the bind feet are directed forward, the fore feet backward, so that all are tucked under the animal's uuuy. When the limbs S tvu. u lUv ground the first to ww, VS. IUC bind feet, which is thrust far forward so as to form uu acute angle with the line of the body und thus serve the i;u.Iose oi o spring in breaking the force of the Impact of the hoof when the horse is going at top speed. In the conventional mode of repre senting a galloping horse all four legs are off the grouud at once, but the front pair are extended backward in such a way that the undersurfaces of their hoofs ore directed skyward, the b3y being nt the same time, brought near the ground. This conventional Pose appears to have been derived from a dog running, when the front and bind pairs of legs are respectively ex tended forward and backward, with the soles of the hind feet turned up ward. This pose. It Is thought, was adopt ed to represent the gallop of the horse hy the goldsmiths of Mycenae between im juw b. C whence It waB transmitted by way of Persia and Si beria to China and Japan, to return in be eighteenth century as the re sult of commercial relations to west ern Europe.-Cuicago Tribune. The Earwig. U here Is no insect which has pualed Hon more than the earwig. Some have sorted lhat u M f the beetle? ers that It Is connected with the grass- beTnha.Er about "8 EE Rr. , lTn endlPM discussion. f Lnve houKht the name earwig h r,ult of ,he crea.ore's suppo habit of getting ,, (Ue ' others are eoually certain that U te tint ti. , - ,rora ne fact tit i It, " wUeo aa resembles tlilng fa certaln-tbe earwig as we 7;;hh' arrival ofVn'ea K laM wery other meqf. BUYERS CHURCH SERVICES. There will be preaching serrlcej in the Catholic church Sunday at It o'clock. GOOD ROADS WORK IN WASHINGTON (Continued from third page.) of the agitation is to get enough American ships in the foreign carry ing trade so that the greater part of 1200,000,000 which we are now jay ing to foreign ship owners to trans port our going and coming canjos, will be kept in the pockets of boat- folks. "Votes for Women" is the nam of a monthly periodical, launched b.r the Washington State Equal Suffrage Association. Mrs. M. T. B. Hannt of Edmonds, is the editor and her as sistants are Adella H. Parker, 1!T Q. O'Meara and Rose Glass. The primary purpose of the publication b to draw support to the constitution! amendment (or equal suffrage that b to be voted on ia this state No"0" ber, 1910. Ultimately, the intm is to be. made national in its scope. Governor Hay favors keeping tact the exhibit of Washington fit" at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposit ion, so as to provide a nuclus for dis play at future world's fairs. Toere are three in sight now, at which It I recognized the Evergreen State Bios' be suitably represented. They rt scheduled for Winnipeg in 1912; e Panama Canal Exposition ' 848 Diego, Cal in 1915; the Tokyo Ex position in 1917. Gov. Hay says the is enough of the original appropriation of 1400,000 made by the state for tni A-Y-P! Wri to uka to keen up the exhibit. He wants it preserved at w University grounds In Mn"' permanent buildings, w here U tors to KonttlA r-nn view it. a, UJ San Franclso where the California rnr motion Committee keep a permansB' exhibit. Mis. T.!7,.l Arnold of Belllngns"' ie voai-a S.M . tho women's chat"' plonshlp for baseball throwing in Post Intelligencer contest, rece She made a record of 209 feet, 6 w inches. This makes a new world rec ord. Thirteen-year old Mayme r. . . t,.eM on a uonaia covered tne tour - ball diamond in 18 V4 seconds, tbereW winning the Dugdale medal. TM athletic achievements show that . wo"" fell IB Ul LUB lVlUHVi " beaters..