Professional Directory
AND
Business Cards
Physicians and Surgeons
Physician and Surgeon
C. T. HOCKETT, M. D.
Independent Phone.
Office up Htairs in Bank BIdg.
F.G. HEWETT, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon,
LOSTINE, OREGON.
Attorneys-at-Uaw.
J. A, Burleigh
Daniel Boyd
Burleiqh & Boyd
Attorney s-ai-Law
Will practloe in all the Courts of
this State and before the Interior
and its offices.
The most careful attention
given to all business entrusted
to our care.
Enterprise, Oregon.
THOS.M. DILL,
Attorney - at - Law
Office First Door South New
Fraternal Building
ENTERPRISE, ORE.
Hotels.
When Passing On The Lewis
toii Road, Stop At The
Sled Springs Hotel.
Plenty of Stable Root..
8. B. CONNER, Proprietor.
Miscellaneous.
WESLEY DUNCAN,
Stock Inspector for Wallowa
County.
JOSEPH, OREQON
Fruit Trees From
Spraying
Myers1 Spray Pumps
Pruning Hooks and Saws
FORD C. POTTER
WALLOWA, 0R1CG0N
Before buying nursery toek or
nursery supplies of any kind
write tue for prices.
Information Concerning Eighth Grade
Final Examinations.
1. Dates: 'a) January 23, 24. 190S:
(b) May H, 15, 1008; (c) June 11, 1J,
1U08.
2. Program:
a Tbursdaya Arithmetic, Writing,
History and Civil Government,
b Friday -Grammar, Physiology,
Geography and Hpellliig.
9. Sources of Questions:
a Geography State Course of
Study, itedway and Hitman's
Natural School Geography,
b Spelling Eighty per cent, from
iteed's Word Lessons, and
twenty per cent from mnnu
script In Language,
a : Wrltint Specimens of penman
ship as Indicated In copied mat-
, ter ana iroin nmnusera la
Language.
d LansmuM Ruehler'i Mod0,,n
KngliaU Grammar, no dlagra
nilng.
Civil Government United States
Constitution,
f History List of topics from His
torv Outline In bUte Course of
Btudv and Current Event
Notice: Teacnem preparing classes
for exnin nations will Please notify
voonnty superintendent 30 days before
fxnniliiktliiu accorottig lo law.
J. W. Kr.HNS,
Colmey Superintendent of Hchoula,
AN INDEPENDENT VKWHPAPEB
Formerly the Wallowa hewn, EntabllxliMl Marrh 3, 1S9U. New aeries began April 80, 1907
Published every Thursday
EAST SIDE PUBLIC SQUARE
GALLOWAY & H EATON
Knterett at Hie l'.iit?rpritt poMutlice hs tu-cmitl-diiM matter.
Ml BSC-KIP I'lUN KATBSt
One ye:ir f l.-Vl; three m jnths 50 cent cash in advance.
Note: Under 1m- new, n wtal rod iletioua, subscriptions to a v eekly newspaper
must lie dii ontinui d id end nl :i year or pay one cent ro.-taye on em u
papeK Tlii m-aii in irin:tl-.il working, a caidi basis. Every HiiliM-ribcr
of tin Xew lie-nnl will lie nolili -d the first of the month in which bin
niliMTipiinn expired, iind il mi renewnl is received by the last tiny uf. Unit
iiionth 1 1 it; nuine in taken fmni our lii-ts.
Coi'STV AnvKurisiNii ItATi;: 1 i;jz'i lif subscribers may have a second .copy sent
outside WalUnv.i futility (or if I a yean '
MT.r'AJ, AIIVKBTIHINO NcVJCE.
Resolutions, cnnU of tlisrks, o itiiary poetry, and notices of entertainments the
idiject of v. Iiieii i-i pi I'uni.iry j iin '(ont.-idtt pine news mention) are charged
5 cents a line
Want Coli'MX: Noli-en mi 11 nut column on fir! pane are charR-d 1 cent a word
one insertion, or 3 cents a word 4 insertions. Minimum charge 15 cents.
Cash, w it li order.
Tlll.'ltSPAY,
The Determining Factor.
The Jiifpph Herald practically concedes that people want the
county cent to remain where it is, and is especially disgruntled over the
attitude nf the north end of the county. It slurs the voters there by
insinuating they favor Enterprise becausa of railway propers and be
cause of the personal friendship existing between the peopleof that sec
tion mid (hose of I his oi'y.
he Herald is mistaken in its idea of the m livs that, will deter
mine the minds of the voters in June. The people of the North Coun
try and other sections outside this valley are not concerned in the town
fights, jealousies and enmities of Joseph. Enterprise, Lostine and Wal
lowa. They are concerned in having the county seat located in the
place most convenient to them, and
ihem will vote in Juiih. ' '
Knterptise wants and itf going to do everything in its power, to
have this city connecttd by rnilroad with the t orth end for the benefit of tins
city. That it will also be of great benefit to the North Country is all the lietter,
hut as the people there know the primary motive that will cause the citizens
here to subscribe liberally is a business one. That's the reason the road will be
iniilt.
After Oiling his sheet with personal attacks against the editor of the News
Record, Jonas all at once guts good, says he won't do it any more, cries and, like
Wegg, drops into poetry because he has been answered in kind. The News Rec
ord simply turned his own words against him. This paper did not start person
alities on the county seat question, but if any little two by four thinks he can
play smart and get away with it, he has another think coming. Tne trouble
with Jonas is ho is sore because the people of the entire county won't recognize
him as lord of their opinions and boss of their votes. He has struck the wrong
country to expect everybody to dance because he is playing, though sqme may
have done so for a while, as a joke, probably saying with Goldsmith:
"Heralds proclaim aloud all Baying,
See Esop dancing and his monkey playing."
Seeding is well along and a big acreage cf grain has been sown. Stock is in
splendid condition for the time of year and the range grass is even more abund
ant than usual. Good weather has been the ruin during the greater part of the
1 mbing season and fie increases avera e about 90 per cent. The timber ir
dustry will boom if the big mill is started at Wallowa and everyone is hoping It
will. The mining outlook is also better than for several years, and tlere are
rumors of a smelter being erected. All in all, the year piomlses well (or Wal
lowa county in all things that make for her material prosperity, except in the
price of wool. , .
While there has been a lot of Johnson noise the last few weeks it will sub
Bide long before the Denver convention and W. J. Bryan will be nominated on
the first ballot. The Republican convention will be just as tame with Taft a
winner. At least that's the way it looks now. It will be another campaign
between Williams as it was hi '(!.
It will be just as well to turn out and vote at the city election next Tuesday
even if there is only one ticket in the field.
Oke or Chamberlain. Which C do
All railroads were "hot air" at one
Co-operation of Teacher ani Parent.
Editor News Record: Co-operation
implies the working togethei
of two or more forces toward a
common end. In this work of
education are two great force, the
home and the school, each with its
prime controller, the parent and
the teacher. How, then, shall
these two forces work together
toward a commor end, the develop
ment of childhood into true man
hood and womanhood?
Tli's question involves the con
sideration of . three things the
duty of the parent to the school,
tho duty of the teacher to the
home, and the du'y of both to the
child.
Parents cannot afford to he
ignorant or indifferent in the mat'
ter of the child's school environ
ment. They should familial iz
theraselves as far as possible with
the motives and character of" the
teachers who have 60 large a part
in the training of their children.
They may not stand rtt the head of
education in a professional way,
but in breadth of view and earnest
ness of purpose they mav stand
shoulder to shoulder with those
who have chosen this as their life
work.
We recognire in a general way.
that the child has a three fold
nature, and that we desire for the
child a vigorous body,- a well de
velop" d mind, and an ennobled
and responsive spirit. Rut we
fail to retiignize, at least practi
cally, that these nature cannot be
separated, that they, must be
at Enterprise, Oregon
TELEPHONE HOME INDEPENDENT MO. M
Publishers
APRIL 30
that is the way the majority : of
vou see?
stnge of their inception..
treated as a unit, and any system
of education which does not co
relate physical, mental and spirit
ual training must he a false
system.
Froebcl has most successfully
set forth this theory of education.
He Bays: "I would educate
human beings who stand with
their feet riveted to God's earth,
their heads reaching into heaven
and their hearts uniting both
earth and heaven.' He regards
unity as the most important law
of education.
These three natures must be
trained in harmony or we "thwart
the divine process of natural de
velopment "
So long as w e accept, at least
practically, if not theoretically,
the system which the home for the
physical, the school for the mental,
and the church for the spiritual
training nf a child, can we expect
or hope for more complete co-operation?
Parents must care for the
body of their child, but they must
do more. They must remcmlier
that "man dues not live by bread
alone," and that physical need
must be supplied in such a way
that mind and soul are nourished
at the same time, Teachers must
teach a child to read and spell,
but they need to remember that
how a child thinks is of vastly
more importance.
Primarily, the child's well being
must he looked after at home.
It is the parent's duty to supply
proper food and clothing, watch a
child's habitual positions, to see
that a child keep early hours, to
give greatest care to defective
senses and correct any tendency
to careless morals.
The- school necessarily must
assume in a large meaeure the
burden of the child's mental de
velopment but the responsibility
of the school does not end with
teaching the child to read and
write however well this may be
done technically. His home read
ing eho-.ld be governed, to some
extent, by his contemporary work
at school. That education is in
deed inadequate which, fails to
pUce betiire i iie child right ideal
of culture, which does imt install
in hi h mind a love of literature
and a conception of true beauty
that will enable him to choose be
tween he true and t he false, and
through his intellectual iztowth
elevate the home and purify its
atmosphere. Parents should in
terest themselves in their child's
school life. They should encour
age him to talk of his school work,
and impel him to his best efforts,
marking their appreciation of his
efforts by honest praise, and by
cheerfully supplying him with all
needful niatetial The parent who
is too buav or indifferent to take
an interest in his child's progress
in schiM-l fails nf a very important
duty and counteracts his own use
fulness as regards his child.
Right here let me instill in the
mii d of the parent the great im
portance of seeing that his child is
in school every day and that he is
on time, too. He can not hope
that hio child can make much
progress if the child is out of
school one or more days in a week.
The parent does a great wrong ti
other children and the teacher, by
allowing this, for when his child
dues return to school again- all the
rest of his class must be he'd back
more or less while the teacher tries
to teach his child what the child
has missed and what the ethers
have already had. The new Ore
eon school law has done much to
correct this evil but there is too
much' latitude still allowed.
By far the greater duty of both
home and school is the training of
the child's moral nature. The
instillment of the cardinal virtu8
of truth, purity and loudness
should have its niuin in the 1iome;
the influences wiii'-h have' sur
rounded the child for the first six
years of his life are easily discern
ible upon his first entrance into
school, and it is for we teachers to
continue to encourage the good or
thwart the evil as the case may he.
It is the duty of the parent to up
hold the teacher in all reasonable
demands of discipline, and to re
member that Jo destroy the child's
confidence in his teacher is but to
lay the foundation for that most
unhappy quality of character, dis
trustfulness of motives of his fellow
men. It is the duty of the teacher
o place before the child roper
ideals of life and conduct and to
hold immediate conferences with
the parent whenever he notices
evil tendencies on the part of the
child unless the parent has proven
himself careless in this, mattei.
In that case the teacher must do
what little can be done.
Successful co-operation of home
and school can be brought about
only by the heartfelt and sympa
thetic acquaintance of parent and
teacher This dops not imply to
my mind a monthly visit to the
home of every pupil by the teac er,
but a feeling of perfect freedom to
consult each other at any time re
garding the welfare of the child.
When the patent realizes that
the teacher, by earnest, honest en
deavor, is striving to lead his child
to a true conception of life, when
tho teacher real zes that bis en
deavor is appreciated and sus
tained at home we need have no
fear that the great end will he
reached. W Eugenic Smith. . "
Hearticulture.
Oliver Herford and John Cecil Clay
in the May Woran'i Home Companion
assert that Hearticulture is an exact
science, and they give cultural direc
tions for the use of lovers, young and
old. Everyone can imagine how de
lightfully Oliver Herford could describe
such strange flowers as Aprilfoolis, tbe
Valentine Plant, the Hope Vine, and
Gossip Weed. The illustrations of
these unique plants are iu c dor.
Summons.
In
tho Ci enit Court of the State of
Oregon for Wnllowa County.
Emma J. CliuichPl, Plaintiff,
vs ,
Nsncv J. T.nollilin. Grace P. Chnirhitt.
Roy L, Churchill, Nora M. Churchill,!
mill K. I . Liiptiani, 'Guardian, De
fendants. To Roy L. Churchill, the abeve named
defendant: -
In the name of the state of Oregon:
You ao hereby required to appear and
answer tlui complaint filed against yon
in the above entitled suit and court, on
or before six weeks after the first pul
lication of this sunm ons, and if you
fail to to appear I'nd answer, the plain
tiff for want thereof, will take a decree
aitainst yon for the relief demanded in
the complaint, tow it: for a sal in
partition of the following real estate:
The 8 SEW.Sij' SEW, Sec. Win
Twp.6N. of Rng. 43 E, W. M., in
aid county, and that tbe proceeds be
divided amongthe parties to this suit
according to their respective shares
and interests, for the appointment of a
referee to make the sale, and for such
further relltf as the court may deem
just.
This summons is published In The
News Record, a w eekly newspaper of
general circulation, published weekly
at Enterprise, Wallowa County, Ore
gon, for a period of six consecutive
weeks, the first publication thereof Is
the 2nd day of April, 1908, by order of
the Hon. T. H. Crawford, Jn'dte of the
above e titled Court,, made and dated
the 1st day if April, 11)08.
O. M. Cobkins, Attorney for Plaintiff.
4!)t"
Summons.
In the Circuit Court of the State of
Oregon, for Wallowa County.
Grace Blackinton, Plaintiff,
vs
Albert T. Blackinton, Defendant.
To Albert T. Klaukiutou, the above
named Defendant:
In the name of th state of Or ston;
you are hereby req'fred to. appear nnd
answer the complaint tiled ngniusl
Our (Complete Line Of
Gents' Furnishing Goods
Is now. in. ' Shirts, fancy and plain in
both negligee and banded, Under
clothing, Neckties,- Scarfs, Collars,
Cuffs, Sox.
Spring and Summer Suits for
Men,' Youths' and-' Boys;
1908 patterns and styles. Ready-to
wear. Our Prices are Height. Our
SHOE DEPARTMENT
Is filled as never before with the best
footwear for men and women, toys
and girls. We especially 'call your
attention to ladies' Oxfords in button,
buckle and lace.
WE SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE ' -
TUB ENTERPRISE M.G0.
New and Second -Hand
Furniture, Stoves, Dishes, Kitchen Uten
sils. Miners' supplies picks, shovels,
drills. Highest Market Price for Furs. Hides and Pelts.
HUNSAKER & TAYLOR
HOME INDEPENDENT PHONE JOSEPH, ORE.
Harness and
L. BERLAND,
Will supply your needs in the Leather Goods line more cheaply and
give better satisfaction than any other dealer in Wallowa county.
Let btm tit you out for the season's work. Repair work a specialty.
MAIN STREET,
ENTERPRISE
BEST OF MEATS
Highest Market
Price for
Hides and Pelts
'PROPRIETORS
FIRST-CLASS RIGS
CAREFUL DRIVERS
ARE SPECIALTIES OF THE
Horses Boarded by Day, Week or Month
Good Care of all Stock.
BEST EQUIPPED STABLE LY. THE COUNTY
One Block North of Court House.
J. C. SHACKLEFORD, Proprietor.
MAIL AND PASSENGER
STAGE LINE
Wallowa. Appleton. Flora lo Paradise.
MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS; ami
Frcn Paradise, Flora aad Appleton to Wallowa.'
- TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS, ami SATURDAYS.
E. W. SOUTH WICK, Proprietor.
you in the above-entitled court and
cause, by the above-named plaintiff,
on or before tbe expiratiou of six
weeks from and after tbe date of the
first publication of this summons,
which date of first publication is April -tli,l!!0H,
and if you fail to ho appear
and answer within' said time, for want
thereof, the plaintiff will apply to the
said court fur the relief prayed for in
her said complaint, to-wit: For a dis
solution of the marriage contract uow
and heretofore existing lietwceu I tie
plaintiff and the defendant.
You will ake notice that this sum
innn is served iipuii you by publica
tion llieret f tp the News Iteenrd for
llicfnll period of mx coimec.utl ve Wi-eks,
ooiiiiiieiiciug wiili llie ishuh of April 9,
1U8, pursuant to the order of ' Hon
o aide O. M. Col kins, enmity judge of
Wallown count v, Oregon, which order
wis made, dated anil entered on the
Sih day of April, 11KW.
BCKI.KIOH '& l?ovo,
"0t7 AttoiM for l'.uiulirf.
P-irc'ihind lots r" the lieer buy i i
city property in Wltt wa county. See
tr.e l). R. &, I. Co. for prices and easy
terms.
Saddles
THE HARNESS ANO
SAijuLfcMAM -
ENTERPRISE, ORfcGON
MEAT MARKET
ALWAYS OX HANI).
INDEPENDENT
PHONE 20