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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 20, 1909)
THE NEWS RECORD (Twice-a-Week.) AX 1 SDEPEM EM NEWIPifE a 1 )wa Newa. estab lished March 2. 1H'J3. Published Wednesdays and Satur- . days at Enterprise, Oregon, by ! THE ENTERPRISE PRESS Office East side Court House Square ; Entered in the Enterprise paJtoffice m 3e .-oid-eUsi matter. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1909. OREGON BRIEFLETS The United States Na.lonel Bank If Portland has been approved as reserve agent for the First National Eank of Nor:h Bend. At a meeting of the Va?co County Horticultural Society, hell at The Lalles last week. The Dalits Fruit growers' L'nlan was formed The senate has passed Senator Fulton's bill appropriating $175,000 for a site and public building at As toria. The controller of the currency has approved the conversion of the Douglas County Bank, of Rosebur?, Into the Douglas National Ban!:, with $50,000 capital. The oldest horse In Oregon died near Burns at the age of 4 3 years. The animal was an Indian pony and was owned by the late Captain Jack Kelley, the Iudlan fighter of Lava Beds fame. The Baker City Light and Power Company has been i b ,rbed by -he Elkhorn Light & Power Co::ip.my, which has plants In l'on. Cove and La Grande. The new company may also manufacture and sell gas. Threshing men of Clackamas county met in Oregon City and or ganized the Clackamas County Threshers' Assoclction. The consti tution and by-laws of the state as- oclation were adop .ed. Representative Hawley secured ; passage through the house of his bill j to pay S. It. Green $206, being the amount of postal money stolen from j the postofllce safe at Oregon CI;y j when he was - stmas er, which amount he had u. pay the govern ment. Walter Johnson, convicted of the murder of Elmer Perdue, of Spo kane, was hanged In the penitentiary at Salem last week. The crime oc curred In the mountains near Hllls boro, while ths men were on a tim ber cruising trip. Robbery was the motive. Lebanon has taken the lead of all cities In the state this year in pre paring to celebrate the Fourth ot July. At recent meeting of the BuBinesB Men's League It was decid ed to celebrate and preliminary plans for a big celebration were Inaugu rated. Not a single person has been sent to the Penitentiary from Linn coun ty for the past two years. This county has always been remarkably free from crime, but this is the longest period In the memory of court officers without at least one commitment to the state prison. Three counties In this state, Ben ton, Lincoln and Yamhill, have not a single prisoner In the state peni tentiary. This Is shown by the bi ennial report of the superintendent, C. W. James, who has classified the prisoners as to their crimes, length of sentence and county from which committed. Unkempt, dirty and with his ankle so badly sprained that he cannot stand without assistance, Robert Gerrlsh, who escaped from the Ore gon Insane asylum last November, was found In a barn at Oakland Fri day night and taken back to the asylum. He can give no account of his wanderings or the cause of his Injury. Before the noxt regular river and harbor bill Is framed by congress, a report will have been submitted by the army engineers, passing upon the necessity tor a SO-foot channel from Portland to the sea, and that report will be accompanied by the outline of a project and estimate of cost. If the report Is favorable, it will be binding upon congress, and It Is reasonable to presume that the new work will be started under au 'Cartful Banking Insurts tht Saftty of Deposits," Depositors Have That (iuarantee at WALLOWA NATIONAL BANK OF ENTEIM'RISrJ, OREGON CAPITAL I.W00 SURPLUS $30,000 Wc Do a General Banking Business. Exchange Bought and Sold on All Principal Cities. Cleo V. Hyatt, 1'rvt.Ulent Uet. 8. Craig. Vice l'rrwlileut 1)1 K KtTOHS Gko.S. Ckaiu Hko. V. Hyatt Mattik A. Holmes J. II. Dohbin - W. K. Holm ics ENTERPRISE HKS1 OF MKA1S Highest Market I'rlce for Hides and Felts 1 PROPRIETORS thority contained In the bill. Four tramps were discovered In an alley at the rear of a Salim brewery Saturday morning by the police. Two of the men were nearly dead and several hours were re quired to resuscitate them. The other two were unconscious and all were taken to jail in an express wagon. They had been drinking wood alcohol and had fallen asleep In the middle of a mudhole and were nearly drowned as well as frozen. It is possible two of them will not survive. R. S..Pmlth, of Klamath Falls, representing the Water Users' Asso ciation on the Klamath irrigating project. Is In Washington In confer ence with the reclamation service and the secretary of the Interior, in the hope of securing a modification of the order Imposing a charge for water right. Water rights at Klam ath have been fixed at $30 per acre, divided into 10 equal payments. He wants the department to make the first payment $1 or $1.25 per acre and gradually Increase the amount so that the last payment will bring the toial to $30. Smith says settlers will have difficulty In paying $3 per acre the first year. After consultation with officials of the reclamation service. Representa tive EUls has written to settlers un der the proposed Malta ?ur irrigator project, informing them thrt the government will gladly take up and build that proect if they themselves will promptly get together and In duce all landowners, including the Wagon Road Company, to Join the Water Users' Association in agree ing to sell their surplus lands when the water Is ready for delivery and Me application for water rlgh's for all Irrigable lands. The project 1? attrac'ive to the government engin eer.", more so than many others un der consideration, but It is up to the peonle themselvps to say whether or not It shall be built now or later. Increase in Tlllamooi Dairying. Tillamook Tillamook county's principal industry, dairying, shows a gratifying increase over the yaar 1907, as is evidenced by the reports ot three cheesi factories Just made public. . The three manufactured 532,553 pounds of cheese, wb'.cb brought in ' a revenue of $65,720. During 1908 the averaga price for butter fat was several cents lower than In previous years The average yield of cheese to the 100 pounds o' milk was 10.9 pounds for these three factories. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. , U F. land O.llJe at La Grande, Ore- I Kon. Palmary 15, 1909. ! Notice is hereby given that Charles B. Hiri.er, ot Ll;htn.nK, Oregon, who, on Jily 21, 1 01. male Homestead Entry No. 13723-Serl.il, No. 01200, for Lots 1 a d :, SWfc NE14, NW14 SEfc, Sec ; dun :, Towimhlp 3 Nor'h, Range 49 : East Wil a-nette Meridian, has fl'.ei nutl e of Intention to make Final five year I roof, to establish claim to the land abo.e dejcrl'.el, before D. W, !-halun, U. P. Commissioner, at En- tT iilse, Cre on, cn the 6th day of Aprl', 19)9. C aimant names as witnesses: Charles I C. Hclmes, Colonel F. Graves, Guy C, . Horner, Wl.llam P. Rankin, all of Light' : nlng, Ore.-ron. F. C. Bramwell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. .. Land Office at La Grande, Ore gon, tei.rcary IB, 1909. Notice Is lieieby given that Ezeklel F. Fargeant, of .Enterprise, Oregon, who on Oi tolier 2 th, 1903, made Homestead Entry No. 13322 Serial, No. . 03269, for the North-east quarter of Section 34, Township 1 N.. Range 46, East, Wll. Me ridian has fi e I notice of Intention to make ilnal five year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before U. W. Sheahan, U. 8. Commissioner, at his o. flee In Enterprise, Oregon, on the Cth da of April, 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: Harry N. Vaughan. Elmer J. Jewell, Delmar Pargeant and Lora E. Allen, all of Enterpr.se, Oregon. F. C Bramwell, Register. For that Terrible Itching. Eczema, tetter and salt rheum keep their victims In perpetual torment. The application ot Chamberlain's Salve will Instantly allay this Itching and many cases have been cured by Its use. For sale by Burnaugh & i Mayfleld. V. R. Holmes, Cashier Frank A. lUavls. Aont. Cashier MEAT MARKET ALWAYS ON HANI). INDEPENDENT PHONE 20 Home Course In Modern Agriculture II. How Plants Eat and Grow By C. V. GREGORY. Agricultural Tix)Ufon. Iotoa St ait Collect Copyright. 1903, by American Press Association EVERT grorlng plant Is a little factory. The green coloring ' matter of the leaves, or chlo rophyll. Is the engine. Tbe tnnlight is tbe power that makes the 'ngroe go, and tl,e air, water and some of the substances in the soil are the raw materials. Under the stimulating influence of sunlight tbe chlorophyll takes the car bon dioxide gas of the nlr and the wa ter, nitrogen and minerals which the roots send up In the form of crude sap and tears th?m to pieces. Then it puts them together again In hundreds of dlffurcut ways. It makes them iuto starch of the potato or the sugar of the sugar beet. It puts tbea together In another way and makes tbe bard, horny gluten of a kernel of popcorn or the tough fiber of a cornstalk. By MO. Ill TBI OBOWTH OF COBS BOOTS. building them up In still different ways It makes the bard wocd of the oak or the delicate petals of a rose. Man. with all his skill and machinery, has never been able to make any products half so wonderful as are being made every day in every field on your farm. If plants are to grow rapidly and produce large yields, they must be well fed. About half tbe dry weight of a mature plant is made up of carbon. Practically all of this comes from the carbon dioxide of the air. Every acre of wheat will use a ton of this gas or all that is in a layer of air three miles deep over the acre. Tbe constant mix ing of the air by the wind Is always bringing fresh supplies within reach of the plant. Tbe farmer does not need to concern himself with the supply of carbon di oxide, for every time be builds a fire or even breathes he Is adding to the store of this material in the air. Tbe smooth upper surface of a leaf Is both air and water tight On the underside, however, are many small openings, which ore really the mouths of the plant. It is through these tiny hnlpfl thflt rnrhon HIatIHa la 4 iItpti Into the leaf to be used by the chlorophyll. In making starch and other products out of carbon dioxide and water some oxygen Is given off. This passes out through the openings In the leaves. Thus you see that plants breathe In much the same way as animals do, only they give off oxygen, the product whltb Is used by animals, and take up carbon dioxide, tbe gas which Is breathed out by animals. In this way plants make animal life possible. Ani mals give off carbon dioxide and manure as waste products. Plants tear these waste products to pieces und by rebuilding them make them once more into food for tbe animals. Next to carboa hydrogen and oxy gen are tbe foods that the plant uses In largest quantities. Since water Is composed of tbese elements, the sup ply will be plentiful as long as there Is plenty of water In the soil. There Is one element, nitrogen, which forms a considerable part of tbe plant, that Is harder to get V'hllo three-fourths of the air Is rUn-sen. the plant does not seem to be able to use It in this form. Tbe only kind of plants that can use the nitrogen to the air" at "aTlafeThe "legumes, such as clover and alfalfa. Certain bacteria that Mve on the roots of tbese legumes have tbe power of changing tbe at mospheric nitrogen Into forms In which the plant can use It We shall study more about this process later. Nitrogen Is one of tbe most impor tant plant' foods, and it la one that is very often lacking. If the plant can not get a sufficient supply of nitrogen It will be stunted, will stop growing early, and the yield will be very mucb reduced. Since all tbe crops, with tbe exception of the legumes, must get their nitrogen from tbe soli, the farm er must see to It that there Is a plen tiful supply ttaerelf Tie wishes to ob tain a large yield. If you will drop a little rich black soil on a hot shovel some of It will go up In smoke. Tbe part that burns Is humus and is made up of vegetable and animal . matter which Is partly de cayed. ' This humus contains large amounts of nitrogen, and from this source the greater share of this ele ment used by the plant must come. If your soil Is black, spongy and well supplied with humus there Is little danger that the plant will go hungry for nitrogen. One of the best ways to keep a field In this condition Is to ap ply liberal quantities of barnyard ma nure. Another way Is to plow under green crops, specially clover. Some times It Is necessary to buy nitrogen for the plant In the form of commer ' tal fertilisers, but this Is a very ex narva way of obtaining It 4ven when the plant Is given ell tbe iltrogen it can use it torn i times falls .o do well. Th Is because It cannot ret as much of the mineral elements as" It needs. Too much nitrogen in proportion to tbe amount of mineral elements causes the plant to "go all to vines." There will be an excessive growth of leaves, but the yield of grain will be small. Take an car of corn or a bunch of hay and burn it The ashes that are left are tbe mineral parts of tbe plant These cannot be obtained from air or water, but must come from the soli Some of the most important of these are Iron, which is tbe substance that helps to build up chlorophyll, and sul phur, which is found in tbe nitroge nous parts of tbe plant There are a number of others also, nil of which are present In tbe soil In such large amounts that there will probably al ways be all that the crops can use. Two of these minerals, however, po tassium and phosphorus, are not so plentiful. When tie plant cannot get enough potassium the grain will not be filled out well. If there is too little phosphorus, especially In the case of fruit trees, the development of fruit is checked. Adding barnyard manure to tbe soil helps to keep up the supply of these two materials. On farms where little stock is kept or where grain has been raised continually for years and little attention paid to the soil It Is sometimes necessary to apply phosphorus and potassium in the form of commercial fertilizers. In the eastern part of this country there are many farms that have" be come so badly -run down that crops will not grow at all unless they are fed with commercial fertilizers. Tbese are very expensive, and It often takes nearly all a farmer makes to pay his fertilizer bills. Tbese farms would never have become so worn out If they find "been lroperly"careaT"7br. Leaving plowed ground, especially on hillsides, exposed for several months during the fall and winter allows much plant food to wash away. Growing the same crop year after year wears out tbe land rapidly. Different crops require different kinds of food. By changing crops from year to year no one food material Is used to excess and the others wasted. By keeping as mucb stock on tbe farm as possible, saving the manure carefully and spreading it on tbe fields before it rots or leaches away and by using leguminous plants to gather nitrogen the soli can be kept well supplied with plant food. It Is mucb more profitable to feed tbe crops In this way than to buy plant food on the market at excessive ! Pr,ceB- "ually. however, the plant Is ! fr tne mlne1 events not j because e nre .not ,n the toll, but because they are in a form in which It cannot get at them. Tbe roots of the plant spread all through the soil in search of food. If you will look at a little root through a magnifying glass you will see that it Is covered with root balrs. It Is through these root hairs tbat the plant takes up food from tbe soil. There are no openings directly Into them, but tbe walls are so thin tbat the water can soak through to the Inside. Solid sub stances, of course, cannot get In, so that the plant food must be dissolved In wdter before It can get Into tbe roots and so up to the chlorophyll which Is waiting to build it Into seeds or leaves, If the soli has been worked until it Is fine and loose each little particle -4 VIO. IV St AONIF1KO SECTION OF TJNDJtB 8IDM OF LUf SHOWEia BBSATiLWU POBJBS A, A, A. will become surrounded by water, which will readily dissolve tbe plant food from it It on the other hand, the soli Is in tbe form of chunks and clods very little of the plant food can be dissolved. The plant food that Is on the Inside of a clod might as well be out In tbe road or over on one of tbe neighbors' farms. Some of the potassium and phos phorus will not dissolve even when brought In contact with water. It takes a long contact with the air to sause chemical actions which will change It Into a soluble form. Con tinual stirring of tbe soil hastens this change. Thorough stirring also loos ens up the ground so that air can get down to the roots. Without aid they will stop growing and the entire work of the plant will stop. The yellow ap pearance of a patch of corn In a low place where the ground Is water soar ed Is due to lack of air about the roots. NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY. In the County Court of the State of Oregon, for Wallowa County. Notice la hereby given that by vir tue of an order of the above-entitled Court, made and entered on the 8th lay of January. 1909, licensing, au thorizing and empowering the under-. signed guardian of the estate of Beu ah Bunnell and Irene Bunnell, min jrs, to sell all or the Interest of the jaid minors in and to the E of :he NW Vi and the W V4 of the NE 4 ot Section 35 In Township 1 North oi Range 44 E. W. XI. in Wallowa County, Oregon, the same being an undivided one-third Interest, I will from and after the 12th diy of Feb ruary, 1909, proceed to sell at private sale all of the interest of said min ors in and to the said described real property. The terms of said sale are as follows: the eatire purchase price is to be pali in cash. Dated this 13th day of January, 1909. MINNIE AKINS, Guardian. First Insertion Jan. 14, 1909; last Feb. 11. 1909. BURLEIGH & BOYD, Attorneys for Guardian. 21t5 Lame Shoulder. TMi Is a common form of muscu lar rheumatism. No internal treat ment is needed. Apply cnanwer aln's Liniment freely three times a day and a quick cure is certain rbis liniment has proven especially valuable for muscular and chronic rheumatism. Sold by Burnaugh & Mayfleld. SECOND-HAND STORE iODGERS Bicycles and Bicycle Supplies Bicycle and Gun Repair Shop. Furniture made or Repaired, Screen Doors and Window made to order, (iive ua a trial Onr price are rich! and all work pnaranteed. We Have and only complete line Call and inspect oar goods and compare oar prices with others. S.D. KELTNER, THE HARDWARE DEALER. j MILLIONS OF 1 AT LOWEST RATES. ON EASIEST TERMS. Wm. Miller & Brother, SUITE 204, Wallowa National BanK Building, Enterprise, Oregon. General BlacKsmithing JtorsesAoeny a Specialty It V H li&ndle t u chi inn Vl-'l i i Clllt)lt.' f nif. v i Hack, Mock in thi S. E Combes, Enterprise, Oregon, 1 Did It Ever Occur To You That A Telephone in Your Home Provides safety, convenience, economy and pleasure, and makes your home life com plete? Its cost is little, its benefits are manifold. Home Independent Telephone Co Covering Union and Wallowa Counties MAIL AND PASSENGER STAGE LINE Wallowa. Appleton. Flora lo Paradise, MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS: and Frci Paradise, Flora ud Appleton U Wallowa, TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS and SATURDAYS. Good acninio1atlnn, murtioua Leave Wallo-vit at a. in E. W. SOUTHWICK. Proprietor ADMINI8TRAT0R-8 NOTICE. In the County Court of the State Oregon, for Wallowa County. In the Matter of the Estate of Martha J. Brown, Deceased. Notice Is hereby given, that the un dersigned, the administrator of the estate of Martha J. Brown, deceased. has filed his final account of his administration of the said estate with the Clerk of the County Court In and for said County of Wallowa, and that the County Court of said Wallowa County, by order duly made ind entered, has fixed Friday, March 12th. 1909, at the hour of ten .o'clock in the forenoon of said day, as the time, and the County Court room in the County Court House In the City of Enterprise, in said coun ty, as the place, to hear objections to said final account and settle the same. All parties Interested in said estate having objections thereto, if any there be, are notified to pre sent the same, in writing, at said time and place. Dated this 9th day of March, 1909. J. A. BURLEIGH, Administrator of the Estate of Martha J. Brown, Deceased. 25t5 GAME LAWS. Any person knowing of anv viol i tion of the game or fish laws of tb state, or of persons not proper' keeping screens over lrrlgatlo ditches, are requested to notify JOE CLEMON3, Deputy State Game and Fortn Warden, Zumwalt, Oregon. 4ltf Read the advertisements. BROS., mum i.-.i The Best of Hardware in the County K iukv, Plow or Ha i row ifintml-e line and you will nave or nt-y by treatment and reasonable nit. I Y