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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (March 13, 1909)
THE NEWS RECORD (Twice-a-Wesk.) An iVDErENbiNT newspaper 'i abwa News, estab lished March 3. 1899. Published Wednesday and Satur days at Enterprise, Oregon, by THE ENTERPRISE PRESS Office East side Court House Square Entered in the Entjrprise po3toffice as seoud-clas3 matter. SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1930. THE BRANCH ASYLUM. That the town of Union has a chance to be selected as tha sits of the Eastern Oregon Insane asy lum, it can thank Repressntative J. P. Rusk of this county. The origi nal bill, gotten up and engineered by Baker and Umatilla counties, ri quired the asylum to be loca'e-J within five miles of either Baker City or Pendlet;n. The committea refused to amend and Mr. Rusk toak up the fight on the floor of the house, and sucded in having aa amendment adopteJ Including Uni m as a posilble site. The fight didn't end there for the engrossing committee left out t is amendment and the senate refuse:) the plea or Senator Oliver to wait even 10 minutes that the error might be corrected, but passed the bill without amendment. Thi nullified the bill unless the house would concur in the senate's action Here was where Mr. Rusk got busy and proved to the senate leaders he house never woald consent. So at the. evening session, the senat; reconsidered 1 s vote, put on th: amendment and passed the bill as It now stands. It will be voted ov by the people in Noember, 1910, be fore it become j a law. Union has a irood chance for tha asylum. The state already owns 64 acres of ground there very suit able for the lo a'.Ion. Thsn, too Union is mora can rally located, and the climate Is far superior to that of Baker City or Pendleton, in addl ' tlon to being n?ar the curing waters of Hot Lake. The location of the asylum. If It. la authorized by a majority of th: electors, will be made by the board of control, consisting of the governor, secretary of state and one or two others. Taft hai bejun his administration by refusing to take side batwesn Cannon and the iniurge.nt3 In the House. ThU Is not a good start for a stiff-backbone policy, and It Is to be hoped the report is a mlitake. Properly conserved there has been lenough moisture) ln the hills al ready to insure a bo.mtlful crop. The outlook for the en' ire county wuj never better. AL ROBERTS HAS RESIGNED., The fact th .t A. A. Roborts has resigned the off be of receiver of Lh. Grande has now become public property, says the La Orando Star of Thursday, the Information comini? from Washington that such resigna tion has bean preiented to the sec retary of the interior by Mr. Rob erts half-brother. Representative Ellis, As might be expected, there are a number of candidates for the place, and It U expected that the lucky one will be named shortly af- ' "Cartful Banking Insures the Safety of Deposits." Depositors Have Tlmt Uuuruntoo at WALLOWA NATIONAL BANK OF ENTERPRISE, OREGON CAPITAL .V).r00 SUKPLL'S foO.lMH) Wc Do a General Banking Business. Exchange Bought and Sold on All Principal Cities. O. o. W. Hyalt, President W. H. Holmes, Canliler Oeo. 8. Craig, Vice President Frank A. Ilea via, Axxt. Cashier ' 1M 1 KCTOK8 Gko.H. Ckaiu Oko. W. Hyatt Mattik A. IIoi.mks J. It. Dnniux V. It. Hoi.mks ENTERPRISE HKSl OF MEATS Highest Market Price for Hides and Pelts T PROPRIETORS ter congreis r2-convenei. In resard to the condition of Mr. Roberts' books, there is nothing which indica e3 any intention ll wrong and all apparent discrepan cies have been fully covered. Mr. Roberts, it ia seiJ, will go Into the real estate business, probably 1:1 Portland. A Pleasant Physic. When you want a pleasant physic give Chamberlain s Stomach and Liver Tablets a trial. They are mild and gentle in their action and al ways produce a pleasant cathartic effect. Call at Burnaugh & May field's drug store for a free sample. Smoke the Advertiser, best five cent cigar. Horn 3 made. SUPPORT OF HOME PAPER. Merchants Urged to Back Local Ad vertising Medium to the Limit An appre:ia'ive view of the honn newspaper is given In the Office Outfitter of Chicago, from which wo ina';e the folowlng extracts: Many a goo3 town Isn't worth a cent because the local newspaper I neglected. Many a good merchanc'li ing center is dead beca.t.ij tu man ,n basine treat the editor of thj lewaparer ai an object of charity. Th's Is wrong. The local paper Is he greateit thing in the community. ;t should be supported. It should imart when they slip one over the e ral and patronized. The mer chant! who think they are clever and ocal pajer make a big mistake. Ev jry dollar you ta'te away from the ocal newspaper In schemes and mocks hurts the town. It hurts bus neis, and, most of all. It hurts the nerchants who Indulge In It. Whatever else you merchants do, patronize your home paper. Don't tell me that It has a small clrcula .Ion. Don't tell me that you reach .en times as many people with less )xpense using circulars. Don't spring iny of those time worn gags on me it all. Stop standing in your own ight. Get behind the local paper ind push it for all you are worth. I don't mean push It to the wall .'ush it up grade to a position whera t ought to be, and as sure as you are alive you will push your oyn business' up with It to a point you never dreamed of before. When a man tells me that ha reaches more j eople, and gets better results from hU circulars I know that he Is deceiving himself and tjll- ng me what I can prove to be un rue. A newspaper In the commu nity 13 read by the people. Thay .earn to watch for It, and when the get it every member of the family .van ts his turn to see what It says. ds, and all ara read. If the mer chants of a community will educate ue people to look In the newspaper .'or their announcements the people will road the paper more and great er will be the returns. There is no tlley so long but that has Us ash barrels, and there Is 16 knock so powerful or subtle but that it reacts. Do yourself a favor and keep up yoar end by supporting :he local newspaper, and support It .'or all you are worth. It can be added that whatever the local papers do to help their city or town is of benefit to every bus iness man therein Chelsea (Mass.) Record. For Diseases of the Skin. Nearly all diseases of the skin such as eczema, tetter, salt rheum and bar bers' Itch, are characterized by an in tense itching and smarting, which often makes 11 'e a burden and dis turbs seep and rjst. Quick relief mav be had by applying Chamber lain's Salve. It allays the Itching and smarting almost Instantly. Many cases. have beon cured by Its use. For sale by Uurnamh & Mayfield. MEAT MARKFT ALWAYS ON HAND. J 1 l)MAl INDEPENDENT PHONE 20 ome course an Modern Agriculture V. Leguminous Crops and Rotations By C. V. GREGORY, Agricultural Hi)Uion. lobaa State Collect Copyright, 1000. by American Press Association MONO the important classes c? crops grown on tha farm are the legumes. The soil Is to th farmer what a stock of goods Is to a merchant, lie eating keep drawing on it forever without putting something back. OrSinary crops takf plnnt food from the store In the soil ThlH must be replaced In some way. Legumes, on the other hand, leave the soil richer rather than poorer. If you will examine the roots of a clover plant careful-.- you will notice numerous little spellings about the size of p! he.-.ds or a little larger. These lire called nodules and are tin homo of certain bacterin. These hn itria are minute one celled plants, s small thnt thousands of them -n haiu on the point of a pin. We stall stulj some of the' different classes of bac teria l:i detail luter. The ones thai live on the roots of legumes have thi power of changing the ni ropen of th( air into a form In which it can be used by the plants. When clover stubble Is plowed under the nitrogen which Is contained in the stems and roots Is added to the soil and can be used by the following crop. Whure the soil is badly lacking in nitrogen nnd humus it sometimes pays to plow under the entire crop of clover. The nitrogen which leguminous plants ndd to the soil Is by no means the only benefit which comes from their use. Nearly all of them have a long taproot, which forces Its wny down Into the soil far below the depth reached by the roots of ordinary crops. Alfalfa roots sometimes go down as deep as thirty feet or more. Much of the plant food used by the crop Is brought up from this lower layer of soil, and some of It Is left In the upper soil when the roots and stubble decay. The passage of the long roots through the soli also loosens It, and when they decay add to the humus supply. Thus the physical condition of the soil Is so Improved that the more tender roots of such crops as corn can penetrate It readily. Because of these facta corn, potatoes and almost any other crop will grow faster and give a con siderably larger yield on a field which has grown a legume the year previous. The principal legumes are alfalfa, clover, cow-peas and soy beans. Al falfa Is grown most successfully west of the Missouri river, although by no means confined entirely to that local ity. It requires some care to get a good stand of alfalfa. It does best on a soil that Is somewhat sandy and should never be sown on a soil where the water table Is liable to stand for any length of time within three feet from the surface. "Wet feet" will kill alfalfa quicker than anything else. As a general rule the best time to sow alfalfa is early in the fall. The ground should be put In the best pos sible tilth, and If manured before sow ing the seed the chances of success are considerably Increased. The seed should be sown at the rate of about fifteen pounds per acre. A light har rowing will cover It sufficiently. If the young plants weather the first winter successfully, the critical time is past. The ndvantages of alfalfa over clover are Its higher feeding value and greater yields. It can often be cut three or four times In a season, with a yield of from one to two tons per cutting. Alfalfa must always be cut as soon as about one-tenth of the plnnts are-In bloom; otherwise the vitality Is weakened and the yield of the succeeding crops reduced. There are several varieties of clover, of which medium red Is the most wide- no. - WOHT-MONTHS-OLD ALFALFA PLAMTS, Note the lone taproots and tha nodules. ly known. Clover seed are usually sown with small grain In the spring. A surer way of obtaining a stand Is to ow after the oats have been disked in and cover with a harrow; otherwise the seed are put in so deeply that many of the little plants never reach the sur face. One of the principal reasons for fail ure with clover la poor seed. A sam ple should always be tested before sowing. ThU can be easily done by putting a hundred Beeds between a couple of moist blotters and keeping la SI 1 number that germinate can be used a a guide to tae amount of good to as a guiue to the amount of seed to use per acre. . . One reason why clover and alfalfa are not more popular with farmers Is the difficulty of curing the hay. If it Is left In the swath until dry enough to put In the mow, the leaves, which are the most valuable part, will become so brittle that many of them will . be lost. A better way Is to go over the field with a side delivery rake as soon as the leaves have wilted a little and throw the hay together in loose wind rows. Handled in this way. It dries evenly, and tti leaves will not fall off so easily. Hay cured In this way Is also less liable to be dusty than when cured by direct exposure to the sun. Once in awhile, even with the best of care, some of the hay will be caught in a rain. A hard rain on clover or al falfa hay wnshes out much of the nu triment which It contains. Such hay Is hardly worth putting in the barn, but may be made good use of for bed ding. In this wny it is mixed with the manure, and the plant food which It contains Is returned to the soil. Cowpeas and soy beans are to the southern part of the United States what clover and alfalfa are to the northern sections. They are grown more as hay and forage than fyr the grain. These legumes are also used In some sections of the corn belt ns catch crops. If sown on early fall plowing, they prevent the soil from washing and thus losing much of Its available plant food. They may be pastured off rra. xi cutting a heavy, growth op ALFALFA. later or dbked up In the spring. They are oftou sown lu coruiields during the last cultivation to keep the weedu down and to add nitrogen to the soil. Bocause of the fact that other crops make so much better growth after the field has grown a legume for a year or so It Is Important that a crop of clover or some other legume be growu occa sionally.. If a plan of rotation Is ar ranged so that the fields are regularly changed from one crop to another, so much the better. It "has been found that when any crop is grown year aft er year on the same land the yields will grow less. The particular kinds of food that a certain crop requires grows scarcer, and weeds and insects become more numerous. If another kind of plant is substituted, other elements of plant food will be drawn upon, the In sect will be starved out and the chang ed methods of soil treatment will dis courage the weeds. Plants vary greatly In their ability to get food from the soil. Such crops as rye and buckwheat are strong feeders and are able to obtain food from a soil on which more tender plants would starve. Some plants use much more humus than others. Crops like corn that are cultivated frequently deplefe the humus supply rapidly, since the constant stirring of the soil hastens de cay. Oats, on the other hand, take comparatively little humus from the 'Mil. . . These differences may be largely equalized by a consistent system of ro tation. In planning rotations the aim should be to so distribute the crops that they will be best adapted to the condition In which the soil was left by the preceding crop. The starting point of every rotation should be clover or some other legume. The length of time that a field should be left In to such a crop depends largely on local condi tions. In the east, where alfalfa seed Is high and the difficulties of obtaining a stand great, it ts usually wise not to plow up the crop for three or four years. Ked clover lives only two years: hence If not plowed up the second year the land must be reseeded. In most cases two years Is as long as the land should be left to any one crop. Since clover Is grown with small grain the first year, this means only one year In which It will be the sole crop. If the second crop of clover Is to be plowed under, as Is the case when the soil Is considerably lucking In humus, this work had better be done In the fall, so that the mass of green clover may have time to decay before the following crop ts planted. If the soil has been properly cared fur. however, this green manuring will be unnecessary. As a general rule It Is more profitable to feed the h.iy or grass to stock and return the manure to the land. In this way from 80 to 00 per cent as much plant food Is added as would have been If the crop bad been plowed under, and at the . same time the stock has had the bene fit of the extra feed. When only the stubble Is to be turned under, the plowing may be done either In late fall cr early tprln. For dyspepsia, Indigestion and loss of appetite take Levy's Oregon Grape Compound. Sold and guaranteed by Burnaugh & Mayfield, Enterprise, Oregon. Stiff Neck. Stiff neck is caused by rheima tlsm of the muscles of the neck. It is usually confine! to the back of the neck and one side. While it Is often quite painful, quick relief may be had by applying Chamberlain's Liniment. Not one case of rheuma tism in ten requires Internal treat ment. When there is no fever and no swelling as in muscular and chron ic rhaumatism, Chamberlain's Lin iment will accomplish more than any internal treatment. For sale by Bur naugh & Mayfield. . NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. S. Land O.tie at La Grande, Ore eon, Feonary 15, 1909. Notice is heieby given that Charles B. Homer, of Lijhtnlng, Oregon, who, on July 21, 1.01, male Homestead Entry Xo. 13723-ferlal, No. 01200, for Lots 1 ard 2, SV NE14, NW SE14, Sec tion :, Township 3 North, Range 49 East Wll'amette Meridian, has filed noti:e of intention to make Final five year Proof, to establish claim to the land above describes, before D. 'W. !-h.ahan, U. F. Commissioner, at En- terpilse. Ore --on, on the 6th day of April, 1909. C.almant names as witnesses: Charles G. Holmes, Colonel F. Graves, Guy C. Horner, William P. Rankin, all of Light ning, Oregon. F. C. Bramwell, Register. MILLIONS OF AT LOWEST RATES. ON EASIEST TERMS. Wm. Miller & Brother, SUITE 204, Wallowa National BanK Building, Enterprise, Oregon, ITTTTTTTtTTtTTTTTtTTtTVtITTT uiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiuiiii m v m l131 Dealer in Harness, Saddles, Chapps, Spurs, and Leather Goods of all descriptions. I will fit you out with the best goods for the least money. When in need of anything in my line, call and inspet my'stock before purchasing. ENTERPRISE, - - - - OREGON XCEBKha,tkSSlSSHBSSBiiH Red Front Livery and Feed Stable First Class Accommodations Best of Hay and Grain ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF HOTEL ENTERPRISE 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 General Blacksmithing Jftorseshoeing a Specialty It you wish to buy a Hack, Buggy, Plow or Harrow remeiube handle a compleU stock in thii line and you will gave or Dey by purchasing of me. ' S. E. Combes, Enterprise, Oregon. MAIL AND PASSENGER STAGE LINE Wallowa. Appleton, Flora lo Paradise, MONDAYS, WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS; and From Paradise, Flora ud Appleton to Wallowa, TUESDAYS. THURSDAYS and SATURDAYS. Good accommodations' courteous treatment and reasonable rates Leaves Wallowa at 6 a. m. E. W. SOUTHWICK, Proprietor. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at La Grande Ore gon, February 15, 1909. Notice Is hereby given that Ezeklel F. Sargeant, of Enterprise, Oregon, who on October i th 1903, made Homestead Entry No. 13322 Serial, No. 03269, for the North-east quarter of Section 34, Township 1 N., Ranvte 46, East, Wll. Me ridian has fi'el no 1 e of intention to make final five ye.ir proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before D. W. Sheahan, U. S. Commissioner, at his office In Enterprise, Oregon, on the 6th day of April, 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: Harry N. Vauglian, Elmer J. Jewell, Delmar Sargeant and Lora E. Allen, all of Enterpr.se, Oregon. F. C. Bramwell, Register. Good Cough Medicine for Children. The season for coughs and colds Is now at hand and too much care can not be used to protect the children. A child is much more likely to con tract diphtheria or scarlet fever when he has a cold. The quicker you cure his cold the less the risk. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is the sole reliance of many mothers, and few of those who have tried it are willing to UBe any other. Mrs. P. P. Starcher, of Ripley, W. Va., says: "I have never used anything other than Chamberlain's Cough Remedy for my children, and It has always given good satis "action." This rem edy contains no opium or other nar cotic and may be given as confident ly to a child as to an adult. For sale by Burnaugh & Mayfield. EXiiiiiiiasaiszss'j! : s H VI w 8 u M U M M M r H m m VJ. , fckft&KEti . BOSWELL & SON PROPRIETORS. E Y