Wallowa County chieftain. (Enterprise, Or.) 1909-1911, June 09, 1910, Image 6

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"It cured me." or "I: saved th
life ol ay child," are the expres
b.oba vol hear every da.v about
ChamrerULn a Coll-. Cho.era csl Di
arrhoea Remedy. This Is true the
world over where this valuable rem
e.lv ha Ihk a intioduced. No o:her
medicine jr. use for diarrhoea or
owel complaints has received such
...c. t. approval. The secret of the
o at ess cf Chamberlain's Colic, Chol
era and Diarrhoea Remedy is that
i: cures. Sold by all druggists.
Trie Costly Part.
Tolly rii.Li:tu. Somebody has stol
en the leading lady's jewel cane, with
all her jewelry In It.
Fauuy Foot lights Is she up In the
air about It?
Polly Pluktiirhts Sure. She says the
case cost $2.0. Philadelphia Record.
If you are not satisfied after us
ing according to directions two
thirds of a bottle of Chamberlain's
Sumach and Liver Tablets, you can
hzve your money back. The tablets
citanse and Invigorate the stom
ach, Improve the digestion, regulate
t' bowels. Give Uiem a trial and
go well. So'.d bv all dealers.
Make People Happy.
I find the gayest castles In the ;
air that were ever piled far bet- .
ter for comfort and for use than '
the dungeons In the air that are
dally dug and caverned out by
grumbling, discontented people.
A man should make life and na- j
rure happier -to us or he had j
better never been born. Ralph j
Waldo Emerson. '
Lame shoulder is almost invari
allj caused by rheumatism of the
nil teles and yields quickly to the
.'rte application of Chamberlain's
liniment. This lininient is no; only
prompt and effectual but Is no way
Jsagreeable to use. Sold by all
druggists.
Energy.
The longer I live the more
deeply am I convinced that that
which makes the difference be
tween one man and another, be
tween the weak and powerful,
the great and insignificant, is
energy. Invincible determina
tion, a purpose once formed, and
then death or victory. This qual
ity will do anything that is to
be done In the world, and no two
legged creature can become a
man without it. Buxton.
Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver
Tablets will brace up the nerves,
banish sick headache, prevent des
pondency and Invigorate the whole
system. Sold by all druggists.
We do tirst-claae job work.
To the Citizens of Wallowa County
It is our purpose to handle any business
entrusted to us in such a fair and liberal
manner as to matte the customer's rela
tion with this bantt satisfactory and
proGtable. Aside from our excellent
facilities, this bank has the advantage of
a large capital and substantial list of
stockholders. It is also a State Deposi
tory. If you are not a customer we
invite you to become one.
Mpweis and Farmers National Bank
Wallowa, Oregon
What Can You Expect?
What can you expect your business to
amount to without a Telephone? (Do you
suppose a customer will lose time running
after you when you can call your compet
itor by 'phone?
Home Independent Telephone Co.
iiininiiiiiniimiiiiiuniunniimiiiiinni
S The City Planing' Mill
W. F. RANKIN, Proprietor
ENTERPRISE, OREGON.
Carries a complete stock of rough and dressed
lumber.
A line of standard mouldings always in stock.
Satisfactory Mill WorK a Specialty
Five, par cent discount for cash. All accounts balance
at axplration of 30 days and settled by cash or not. g
Pleasure as an End.
The man who choose pleasure
as the object of bis life has no
real baveti. but Is like a boat
that bents up and down and
drifts and drifts to and fro.
merely to feel the motion of the
waves and the Impulse of the
wind. When the voyage of life
Is doue he has reached no port;
to Las accomplished nothing.
Ilenry van Dyke.
Scared Into Sound Health.
Mr. 15. F. Kelley, Springfield. HI.,
ivrites: "A year ago I began to be
troubled who my kidneys and blad
. der, which gTew worse until I be
' came alarmed at my condition. I suf
fered also .with dull heavy head
aches and the action of my bladder
1 was annoying and painful. I read
uf Foloys Kidney pills and. after
taking them a few weeks the head
j aches left me, the action of my
, bladder was again normal, and I
1 vas free of all distress." At Bur
1 laugh at Mayfiold's.
Physically Not Mentally.
Dick You were born u be u writer.
Charlie.
Charlie (blushlngly Ah. you've seen
some of the things I've turned off.
Dick No; 1 was thinking what a
splendid ear you have for carrying a
pen. Stray Stories.
What a Summer Cold May Do.
A summer cold If neglected Is just
js apt to develop Into bronchitis or
pneumonia as at any other season.
Don't neglect it. Take Foley's Hon
ey and Tar promptly. It loosens
ihe cough, soothes and heals the in
flammed air passages, and expels the
col from the system' Eurnaugh
it, Mayfield's.
8m?
I The comedian boarder cracked an
egg with his lork and said solemnly:
j "Ladies and geutlemeu, did you ever
hear the story of Ypsilanti, Mich.?"
I "Can't say that we did," they echoed
' in uuisou. "Is it a good story 7"
"Er It's hard to say."
And ten minutes later when they
j tumbled they voted that the comedian
boarder should join a minstrel show
and make his fortune. Chicago News.
The Conservation of Nature's Re
sources. Applies as well to our physical
state ad to material things. C. J.
Budlong, Washington, R. I., realiz
ed his condition and took warning
before it was too late. He says:
'I suffered severely from kidney
'rouble, the disease being heredi
tary in our family. I have taken
four bottles of Foley's Kidney, Rem
edy, and now consider myself thor
oughly cured. This should be a
warning to all not to neglect taking"
Foley's Kidney Remedy until It is
too late." Eurnaugh & Mayfleld.
imminnmiEgimiiMl1jttl
NEWS PARAGRAPHS FROM
OTHER CITIES IN OREGON
Fifty cars of strawberries have been
shipped from Hood River, a record for
early shipments.
Public exercises In honor of Flag
Day will be held in Salem this year
under the auspices of the Salem
Lodge of Elks on June 14.
The Slate Railroad Commission will
hold a hearing on June 14, at Monroe,
Or., to investigate the service fur-
nished by the Corvallls ft Alsea River
Railroad Company.
Pumping water from Crooked River
to the tablelands 600 feet above the
river is an experiment being tried at
Redmond.
The third annual meeting of the Ore
gon Society of Mutual Insurance Com
panies was held in McMinnvllle June
7 and 8.
The Forest Grove Council has re
pealed the ordinance recently passed
prohibiting the selling, keeping for
sale or having in possession of any
combustible fireworks.
Eugene will hold its first aviation
exhibition June 11 and 12 at the Lane
County fair grounds. Whipple S. Hall
will be there at that time with a Cur
tiss biplane.
Percival H. Dennison, a prominent
sheepman of Spray, Wheeler County,
committed suicide by snooting him
self Urough the heart with a revol
ver. In the final high school debate for
the championship of the State, held
under the auspices of the University
of Oregon, Pendleton won by unani
mous decision over Eugene.
The Booth-Kelly Company has
started the largest log drive down the
McKenzle River that ever floated
down the stream. There are 10,000,
000 feet In the drive. It will take
almost a month to bring It to Co
burg. The Oregon Valley Land Company
has awarded the contract for the con
struction of the Drews Valley dam in
Lake County to E. S. Burney, Involv
ing $125,000. - The work la to be fin
ished by May, 1911.
The dairy Industry of Coos County
last year yielded the farmers $385,000,
and 405 tons of butter was shipped
out of the county. The Norway
creamery led in point of production
of butter, turning out over 100 tons.
In the same district 356 tons of cheese
was produced.
Hermiston will have a banner al
falfa crop this year. From the esti
mates of those who are now cutting
hay it Is safe to state that fully 6,000
tons of bay will be cut this year. The
first crop will go to 2,000 tons. The
acreage Is being Increased each year
and without a doubt the tonnage will
be doubled another season.
Vice-president L. B. Wickersham, of
the United Railways Company, has
submitted a proposition to the County
Court of Tillamook County to expend
$30,000 to improve the Wilson River
road, making it suitable for -automobiles,
provided Tillamook and Wash
ington counties would contribute each
$15,000.
Declaring the proposed assembly
scheme to be a crime against popular
government and an insult to the intel
ligence of the voting public, George C.
Brownell, for sixteen years a member
of the State Senate from Clackamas
County and at one time president of
that body, addressed a meeting in the
Mllwaukie town hall.
The conference on the bill renam
lng the Oregon revenue collection dis
tricts came to an agreement by which
the salary of the collector at Astoria
will be $3,000 with not over $300 for
shortage, and the Willamette District
will be renamed the Portland District,
with a salary of $6,000 in lieu of all
fees and other allowances.
The largest graduating class that
has ever left the University of Ore
gon will receive Its diplomas here .at
the annual commencement day exer
cises,' June 23. The class comprises
eighty-eight members, not including
the departments of medicine and law,
in Portland, whose graduating exer
cises already have been held.
Horticulturists are interested in a
new species of strawberry which has
been developed by C. A. Benson of
SUverton. Mr. Benson, who is a large
berry grower, has succeeded In pro
ducing a fruit that has all the flavor
jf the wild strawberry and the size
of the domestic berry. He obtained
the new fruit production by crossing
pollen of the wild berry blossoms and
those of the cultivated berry. The
new addition to the berry crop will
be known as "Benson's Oregonian."
To discuss a constitutional amend
ment which shall give authority to the
counties of the State to issue bonds
for the Improvement of State high
ways, a meeting in Portland of the
county judges of Oregon will be
called within the next week. This is
part of the programme of the Good
Roads Association. Immediately after
the meeting the proposed provision
will be circulated for algners to an
Initiative petition, and It will be sub
mitted to the voters in the fall elections.
City and County
Brief News Items
Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Miller and two
children of Leap, were trading in
town Monday.
Mrs. Inez Cropland, living near
i:n:n,,-, is visiting- friends and
relative-i In Troy.
Mrs. J. Cunningham of Chlco is
I spending several weeks at the home
i t William DUhow
E. A. Hach returned to Troy last
week, having purchased a 30-acre
rauch in Eagie Valley.
Miss Tressle Cramer left for Par
ma, Idaho, last Thursday. She goes
to visit her sister there.
Miss Eva B. Haas accompanied by
her cousin, Mrs. Chambers, left for
Pennsylvania last week.
James and Cejrge Funk came In
to Enterprise from the Lltch shear
ing plant, last Friday night.
lr:. p. M Wi'liams of Troy ar
rived hnnif lasi week from an ex
tended v;pH wl h triends in Idah: .
Mrs. Reid Davis and little daugh
ter ter of Troy visited several days
last week with friends at Hansen's
Ferry.
E. L. Wiley, a well known stock
man of Wallowa, arrived here last
Friday to spend a few days on bus
iness. The North End Telephone com
pany held a niee:ing in Troy Sat
day last for the purpose of reorgan
ising the company.
(.rorge Uosiou and McNeil broth
ers left Troy for Lewis ton, Idaho,
taking a load of fat hogs. They
win return with freight for T. H.
Valen.
.Miss Flossie Williams, teacher in
the Eden school, spent Saturday and
Sunday with Miss Florence Bart
lett of Troy. Miss Eartlett is a
Troy teacher.
Miss" Esther Trueblood left for
Nampa, Idaho, Tuesday morn lug,
where she will visit for some time
with her uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. II. L. West.
Mrs. F. J. Hambelton and daugh
ter Hellice and little son I.eland
arrived here from their home in
Joseph Saturday to spend Sunday.
Mr. Hambelton Is at work here.
Dr. J. V. Mllligan, who had been
in attendance at the Christian Nur
ture conference here, left Saturday
morning for La Grande. Dr. Ket
chum left on the same train with
him.
Attorney T. M. Dill has just re
ceived the first shipment of 129 vol
umes of state reports and 20 vol
umes of 160 books of American de
cisions, that are added to his Isgal
library. This is the only library of
Us kind in Wallowa county.
Miss Inez Makin, who taught in
the Hawthonie school during the
past year, is ill at the home of Mrs.
Henry Laatz ,wllh a very severe
cold. Because of her illness she Is
delayed in returning to her home in
Enterprise. Pendleton East Orego
nian.
Mrs. John Shoemaker, daughter
J Miss Erma, and sons. Fay and
Rex, came in from La Grande last
week, accompanied by Mrs. Clara
Hensiey of Spokane, to visit Mrs.
R. M. Fay. The boys have gone
to work at the Mountain View fruit
farm on Alder Slope.
W. E. Keltner arrived in Enter
prise from an extended trip over
Oregon. He returned last Friday
evening. As was previously stated,
Mr. Keltner will engage in the hard
ware business ,wi:h his brother, S.
I. Keltner, and make Enterprise his
home from this time on
S. K: Clark left Thursday of last
veek for the J. H. Dobbin ranch,
some five miles east of Enterprise,
where he Is patting In plumbing.
Mr.- Dobbin is placing a stable sew
er and the improvement will add ma- ,
terially to the a.ready good sani- j
tary conditions about his ranch.
W. A. Williams, special agent for
the Continental Insurance company,
left Tuesday morning for Walla Wal
la and Portland, after transacting
business in and around -this city.
Mr. Williams is, a large land holder
m Wallowa county, and has nothing
but the most e.lthus:".tic belief in
... . i.i .. ........
tries here.
v. S. t,rocKe-t bunda.V, .May M,
Completed a tvo years' pastorate In
.v . ... . ... ......
vue i-uuuijr, serving I IK!- V.nrisuan
Churches of Entemrise. L03tine and
Wallowa. While Rev. Crockett closes
his work with the Enterprise church
he has accepied the pastoral of
the churches at Wallowa and Los-
tine. A During the psfst year the
membership of these three churches
has more , than doubled.
.i.
A- B8- of known
ranchers in the county, living near
Paradise, brought a .oad of fine hogs
coiijyeiiea to nas;en uacK nome
owing Xo the Illness
daughter Lois who, howe
proving. Mr. Burns was formerly a
school teacher, having taught irv this
ver, Is lnvier
.College hap CLOTHES"
Bfftraotott jSmraioii'Lj).
..-V.. sv -f biitM
VT HEREYER you happen to see a group of young
fellows you are most certain to find them wearing
clothes of rare style and individuality. We don't claim
that these clothes are always of an exceptional quality,
but we do claim that young men affect certain features
which older people don't. In "College Chap Clothes"
we have been fortunate enough to find a quality which
is not by any means expensive, and features which are
strikingly 3'oung though net too young, fur nun who
wish to reiain their youthful appearance.
The Normandie, The Norfolk, the College Chap and
the College Chap, Jr. are four styles of young men's
garments. They ars classed under the name of "Col
lege Chap Clothes." They are a branch of "Modern
Clothes," made by Brandegee, Kincaid & Co., tailor
shops at Utica.
If you are particular! y' sensitive to style you had better B
make it your business to call at our shop and inspect
these garments. You ma' rest assured of good treat
ment at the hands of skilled salesmen.
Enterprise
Mercantile & Milling
Company
county and in other localities for
a period of twenty years. He is the
type of Oregon ranchmen that are
making Wallowa county noted for
her Intelligence as well as for her
production
The first ripe strawberries of
the season raised in this viclulty
were picked by Mrs. w. I. Calvin,
June 1, on the Roe & Calvin ranch
jU3t west of town. Messrs Roe &
Calvin have worked a transforma
tion in their farm during the past
tix months. The hill top has all
been broken up and sowed in wheat
and barley over 100 acres. Their
pumping plant for irrigation purpose
is expected to arrive in a day or
two, and some time this summer the
:a;id will be placed on the market
in small tree's. They ,wiu make
:no3L desirable homes.
owlKN WAYS'
pui u u iny ie you Wi&h.
Jteeptlie bicycie duo it bark
. , W juiivu:iieAI.Eu8, yo
,v ... . . - '
'-' i ... . v i Y-r-3.
my uavc a nurauer on nana
plly at prices mnir.ir iro-i K.
K:il2XlpH.KrrU9ll-X --" ""wl.t
-""-" equipment ot all kinds at
ill
ritSTQdT PRICES ..tl'SflS" i7"" "
to $n middlemen'! pro"u l?V'uJ:1jaor' ,?'
auiee beiiind your bicvde. liO iliiT iiT?v .1 anf luv "'''.uficiurcr, t-i -at
nr trie, uruilyiu recede oJi r,VY '"Wle or a P--r ol liru frj-n a :-..
trice, fd m-jrUSW "riuTr" rtlf" &ur "Btaml ot
YOU WILL BE ASTOKSDIID T,h you rive ' chw. r
m,r.-wecaiinukeroat).M,eJr. VV'Wk. wT?., n",t1?- " ,,he, tMKM y
than r. oih.r ir .. .- ' f c '.' -n 1 . :'":itri -cc bicvcle3(or leu Mumr
rri StLr-IicfiLliiG TllsES ISSS
'relar retail try tot these tires i.
..t jzr.zr,j?ZA'."i"vxp". ."
IJ3 MORE THC33LE FuCM
air out. Sixty thounand piir sola iT3t vpr
t,ver'w tundred tJjoumi pairs now in use.
! DESCRIPTIONS MadetanlU-zM.TtuiNr.t,.
andevridmg.veiyduiableaiidliacUi liOewihV
? fal quality of ruobcr, which ncr becomes
pS.o'e
SoS
?,2 ' 7dvta,!,
att
QV,mPunMweremakiii!;mipcaliaci0rrir.7A
ifT-.TO,,.
!' lor-cr and look fieV thS 3nrTLX7M
Zl .. '.T V'dSoSS
" V.iT E."Tequo,??,?v,;: '
postal to
of his little nn n1iw;(Tw,l
A. L HEAD CYCLE C8M?AHY, CHICAGO, ILL
w
j SUMMER NORMAL.
-
j The annual Summer School for
, Teachers will be held In the High
i School building at Enterprise, com-
i niencmg July 6, 1910, and couUnu
lng five weeks.
All teachers who arc planning to
' take the August examination should
i attend, as special review work will
' be given in all subjects required for
county certificates. Methods of
teaching in each subject a apec
' laity. Tuition for term $10.
j Please notify the instructors at
oace of your intention to attend.
AUBREY G. SMITH,
Principal Lostine Schools.
J. C. CONLEY, County. Supt,
97bl3 Instructors.
1
Ice Cream Freezers a
stock at Keltner'3
brand new
vi;iATdiSSSS' L '
advanr- -xav: , .
If .1
time you m.iyriueOie 0.
to - Z 17. ,ri"u' ?.nilll or co ih - :
" - an
- .can acll our l ,. v "
lorv
own Hams pli ftt
ka. f Ik, ...V
30
Notice the thiol rubber tremd
"A" and iimu-ttire atrip !"
and "li.-oUo rim atrlo "If
to prevent rim cuttlii. Tli!
tire will outliMt nv otliir
uu're-OFT. LOSlIO ILud
"t for our bii Tire ;rd K ,,.
learn evervthiu WrT,. ;7 X'Z?.?1
: pi.is vi, .... .
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