Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (March 27, 1909)
I 77 : '77 v EV$ftfiCORDfS 1 A 77 fTakTeB4-2fek.i A'la Wa'liwa News, estab lished March 3. 1899. Published Wetfnesfiay. and Satur-! days at Enterprise. Oregon, by THE ENTERPRISE PRESS Office East side Court House Square Entered In tho Entsrprlse po3toffico as seoad-clasi matter. 8ATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1339. The passing within the span of one day of two "fathers In Israel" like Wm. K. Stubblefleld and Thomas Terry give us pause to stop and consider the'.r long and useful lives. Both had passed by several years the four-score milestone. Mr. Terry was not so well known here, coming in his extreme old age, but he had epent his long life la noble work, and wai a men of prominence In an Eastern state. "Uncl3 Billy" Stub Me'ie'.d, as he was familiarly called, was a pi'moer of this county, yet was what Is usually considered an old man when he came here a quar r f a century ago. But possessed of a magnificent physique, he did more of the hard, pioneering work than mo it of t'ae young men, and at 80 years was driving the stage through storm and cold to Chlco, never rolling a trip and never re ported late. And before he came here he had done more work than the. ordinary man does in a life time. The following tribute was paid Mr. Stubbleflald In the La Grande Observer by one who knew him: "His moral and physical de velopment was all that nature, and the hl.?he3t sense of personal honor could make It. He belonged to that old school of manhood, when every promise was kept and every duty performed He was tender as he was strong, and simple as he was true li e al'y without deceit and without pretense. As a pioneer and frontiersman, he was thoughtful, ten dor and bravo a manly and courage ous mai." A Pleasant Physio. When you want a pleasant physlr give Chamberlains Stomach and Liver Tablet a trial. They are mild and gentle In their action and al ways produce a pleisant cathartic effect. Call at Hurnaugh & May field's drug store for a frea Barnple. Highest market price paid In cash for live chickens at Enterprise Meat Market. Prke & Homan. PUBLIC AUCTION I will offer at public auction on my farm 3V4 miles west of Enter prise, on Tuesday, March 30, begin ning at 10 a. m. Bharp, the follow ing described property: 22 horses, consisting of 4 1400Jb. Bay mares, all hi foal; 1 3-year-old Bay filly. In foal; matih span mares, 1300-lb., both in foil; 2 12001b. mares in foal; 1 mare, in foal, with colt by Bide; 6 yearlings, one a Coach; 5 2-year-olds, one a Coach; 1 3-year-old. Two milch cows with calves. One high grade Jersey, 1 half-blood Jer sey, l full blood Jersey bull. Nine head of hogs, consisting of eight thoroughbred Poland China sows, and 1 full-blood Duroc Jersey boar. Farm Implements and houeshold goods, 3 sets of team harness, 1 2 horse power chopper, 1 hay stacker, 1 cook stove, 2 heaters, 2 farm wagons and other articles too num erous to mention. Terms: Sums "Cartful Banking Insures th Safety of Dtposits" Depositors Have That tiuurunteu at WALLOWA NATIONAL BANK OF KNTERPR1SH, OKROON CAPITAL .V.r00 SURPLUS ioO.000 Wc Do a General Banking Business. Exchange Bought and Sold on All Principal Cities. Geo. W. Hyalt, President V. U. Holmes, Cashier Geo. 8. Cra'tf. Vice President Frank A. 1 tea vis, Awt. Cashier " ,- MKKITOKS Gko .8. Ckaim Uko. W. Uvait Mattik A. Hqj.mks J. II. Dobbin V. R. Hoi.mks ENTERPRISE BES1 OF MEATS Highest Market 1'rlee for . Hides and Tells U PKOPRIETOUS under 10 rash; over $10 six months me on approved note. Free hot lunch. W.- C. EADS. Owner. H. 13. DavlJhl:er, Auctlonear. I will sell at public sale at my farm. 4 mile3 southwest of Enter- 3-4 mile southwest of Alder, Friday, April 2, beginning at 9:30 a m., the following described property: H head of horses, consisting of 1 large brown mare, 8 years old; one hunky bay mara, 8 years old; black mare. 10 years old; grey mare, 4 years old; bay mara, coming 2; geld ing, 10 years oia; Day geiaing, com ing 4, and his full brother coming I; bay ge'.dlng, coming 2, and his full brother, coming 1; sorrel saddle ind driver, 8 years old. Three good nllch cows, all giving milk; 3 steer calves, 1 part Jersey heifer calf, 2 yearling hellers; 40 head of hogs, ;.e;al have fine pigs, about 35 i pigs already. Three sets of louble work harness, Bain wagon, l'i, double tire oa hind wheels, near y new De Laval cream separator, i few tojls, boy's saddle, tables, chairs, 2 rockers, stands, good heat ing stove, dishes, almost new cider nill and other artlclss too numer ous to mention: Terms: 6 months ime on a'l sjm3 over $11 wl'h A )er cent Interest, good approved se :urlty; 2 per cent discount for cash. HO and under cash. Come early and inspect stock. If you want bargains, jome. MARION L. HARRIS. Three miles southwest of Enter prise, Wednesday, March 31, begin .ing at 10 a. nr., sharp. The follow ng articles will be offered: Invlnci Me Universal ste3l range, 2 heat lg s'-oves, kltrh3n safe, dish cup oard, extension table, fall-leaf table, .Itchen treasure, stand tables, 12 hairs, several rockers, variety of ilshe3 and kitchen utensils, tin and .ranlte ware, canned fruit and emp y Jars, keg vinesar, tubs and wring r, several Iron bedsteads, springs jo n:ateh, wardroba, de3k and book :ase, commode with glass, brand iew sewing machine, emery sickle Tinder, small tools, chains, Cham ion mower and hay rake, 16-hich Oliver chilled plow with jointer and .' extra points, 2 section steel har tw, Iron Age cultivator, Cohoun ,rass se-jder, 3-lnch heavy wlde-tlre lalf-truck Studebaker wagon, Mit chell hack, 100 fence posts, saddle and bridles, 2 good sets double har ness, hay rack, 1 heifer, soon fresh; yearling Jersey heifer, 2-year-old mare, six dozen chickens. Terms: All sums under $10 cash; on all bove a credit of 12 months will be jlven on approved bankable note3 drawing 10 per cent; 5 per cent dis count for cash. . " R. D. SANFORD. A Religious Author's Statsment. ' Rev. Joie;-h II. Fesperman, Salis bury, N. C, who Is the author of several br.oHs, wrlt9S; "For several years I was afflicted with kidney trouble and last winter I was sud denly"8trlcken with a severe pain in my kllnes and was confined to bea eight days unabla to get up without assistance. My uilne contained a thick, white Bedlment and I passed same frequently day and night. I commenced " taking Foley's Kidney Itemely and the pain gradually abated and finally ceased and my urine became normal. I cheerfully recommend Foley's Kidney Remedy.". For dyspepsia, Indigestion and loss of appetite take Levy's Oregon Grape Compound. Sold and guaranteed by Bumaugh & Mayfleld, Enterprise, Oregon. W. B. APPLEGATE. Notary Publii . Co'lectlons made. Real Estate bought and sold and all business matters attended to. Call on or write me. PARADISE, OREGON. MEAT MARKFT ALWAYS ON HAND. 1 11 I IV INDEPENDENT PHONE 20 Home Course In M odern Agriculture The Selection of Seed By C. V. GREGORY, Agricultural Ti)Uion. Jobua State College CopyrlKht. 1909, by American Press Association NE of the most Important fee tors in crop production is the selection of seed. This is Im portant not only In producing a largo yield, but also In obtaining a product of the highest quality. The use of the fanning mill as a means of sorting out the heaviest, plumpest grains was spoken of in the previous article. The Importance of this means of seed selection cannot be too greatly emphasized. One of the principal reasons for se lecting the liirwst grains for seed is that they contain so much more food for.thp young plant. This enables It to 'make a strong, vigorous start ..ticii plants have more vitality, grow faster and produce larger yields tlinD plants from shriveled seeds, which have a struggle for existence from the time they germinate. Another reason for selecting plump seed Is that the resulting crop Is likely to be of better quality and will thus bring a higher price when sold. The old law of "like produces like" applies to plants as well as to animals. One of the surest ways of bringing about Im provement Is by using parents of the desired type year after yenr. Selecting seed according to size by screening out the small grains Is not Fid XIII GOOD AND BAD TYPES OF 8 ESS WHEAT. Nota the shriveled, shrunken condition of the kernels to the right. enough. Borne of the largest grains' are shriveled and light in weight The only way to separate these Is to use plenty of wind in the fanning mill so as to blow them over. SucU grains are all right for feed, but ai entirely out of place In the seed bin. This method of selection is especially important In the case of wheat, as it separates the bard from the soft grains to some extent, since the soft ones are lighter. Hardness is an Im portant factor to look after, since a hard wheat is much more valuable for milling purposes, making a larger amount of high grade flour. If the most value is to be obtained from the selection of seed some defi nite plan of improvement must be fol lowed. By a little care a variety of wheat or oats may be so bred up as to increase the yield from ten to twenty bushels per acre. The work Is a small Item as compared with the benefits. In starting the work of breeding the variety which does best In your par ticular locality should be selected. Go Into the field Just before harvest time and select forty or fifty of the best heads. In doing this the size and plumpness of the grain and the length of the head should be considered. This latter point has a great deal to do with the yield, since a long head often contains twice as much grain as a shorter one. The character - of the straw Is also Important It should be straight and strong, with no tendency to rust, as a weak straw or one that Is badly rusted cannot hold up a heavy head of grain. Another point to-notice is the stooliug that Is, the number of stalks that grow up from one seed. When the required number of such heads have beeu found they should be put away lu a dry place until spring, when they should be thrashed out sep arately and planted In a little plot in the garden. The seed from each hend should be sown In ,a row by ittrlf. The rows should be about four Inc'ies apart and the plants the same dis tance apart In the row. As harvest time comes on a great difference in these rows will be no ticed. Some will be badly affected with rust. Some will have weak straw and will go down badly. Some will have short beads containing but a few grains each. A few of the rows will contain plants and heads of the type you are looking for. Select the best heads from these rows to plant in next year's plot. The second year. If the first year's selection was proierly carried ou, con siderable improvement will be observ ed. This year the seed from each of the strongest rows should be saved In bulk after sorting out any heads that are not of the required type. The seed from each of these rows Is to be plant ed in a little plot by Itself the follow ing spring. Notes on these plots regarding the strength of straw, amount of Btoollng and resistance to rust Bhould be care fully kept. The main point to be con sidered, however, is the yield. The grain from each of the plots should be weighed and the preference given to the heaviest ylelders. Seed from Qve or six of the best producing plots may then be saved for larger plots the fourth year. The yield of these, to gether with the quality of grain and strength of" straw, will determine which strain la to be selected for field UBe. A factor which often cuts off as much as 10 per cent from the yield of small grain is smut Unlike rust, the treatment of this disease comes more under the head of preparation of the teed than that of selection. It may be well, however, to give a brief outline of the methods of prevention here. Smut is a fungous growth that is, a low form of plant which lives ou other plants. It usually attacks the heads of small grain, tilling the place where the kernels should be with a black, worthless mass. The black dust of which this mas3 Is made up la com prised largely of spores, which corre spond to seeds of higher plants. These spores become scattered over the seed in thrashing and storing. In the spring, when the grain sprouts, the smut spore germinates also and sends a tiny thread up through the stem to the head, where It develops Into the familiar smut ball. Often these smut balls ure inside of a hull that appears perfectly sound from the outside, so that the damage from smut Is much greater than would appear from sim ply glancing over the Held. Any method of treatment which will destroy the smut upores on the grain will prove -effective, although the smut which Is scattered In the field some times Infects the plnnts the next year. When rotation Is practiced, however, this Is seldom the case, as the oat smut will' not attack corn, nor will corn smut grow on oats. The selection of seed corn is even more important than the selection o? small grain, since so much less corn Is required to plant on acre, thus per mitting of much more careful choice. The most important point to be consid ered in the selection of seed ears Is ma turity. An ear that is not entirely ma ture will be light, the kernels will be loose on the cob and have a dull, chaffy appearance, and the germs will be shrunken and the back of the ker nels wrinkled. Such corn should not be selected for seed because the amount of food ma terlnl stored In tho kernel is too small to give the young sprout much of a start. The germ is also likely to be weak from being frozen while still in the Immature, watery condition. The fact that an ear is not entirely , ripe indicates, too, that It belongs to a variety Just a little late for the local ity. Ears that are not entirely ripe are not nearly so valuable for seed as riper, sounder ones, even If the latter are not so large. By selecting only ears of this early maturing type a strain of corn can soon be developed which can be depended upon to ripen In tho particular locality In which it Is grown. Since the size of the crop depends to a considerable extent on the size of the ear the seed ears selected should be as large as is consistent with early maturity. Mere size of ear is not enough, however. The ears should be well proportioned and not too big around for their length, since ears of this sort are late in maturing and slow to dry out. The size of an ear should be made up of corn instead of cob. This means deep kernels and a relatively small cob. There must also be the largest pos sible amount of corn In proportion to FIO. XIV A SPLENDID TYPE OF SEED EAR. the cob. To secure this the ear should be well filled out at butt and tip and fairly uniform In size from end to end. The kernels should be so firm on the ear that it cannot be twisted In the hands. There should be no spaces between the kernels next to the cob, nor Bhould the spaces between the tops of the kernels be too great. Tbey should not be packed together too tightly at this latter point, however, as this hinders rapid drying out. The rows should.be straight and the ker nels of uniform size. Iu starting out to select ears of the desired type the work can be done much more quickly If the corn Is laid out on a table or bench. Then by taking an ear for a sample which most nearly represents your Ideal you can go over the entire lot and quick ly pick out the ears that are most lite It The point of selecting ears of a uniform type Is au important one. as only In this way can the corn grower hope to make Improvement from year to year The methods of btocding corn to serure Increased yield will be taken up In detail in the next article. Stiff Neck. Stiff neck is caused by rheima- tlsm of the muscles of the neck. It Is usually conlinei 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 i3 no fever and no -swelling as in muscular and chron ic rhsumatism, Chamberlain's Lin iment will accomplish more than any internal treatment. For sale by Bur naugh & Mayfleld. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Da mrtma-it of the Interior. TJ. S. land O.!l?o at La Grande, Ore gon, Febnary 15, 19U9. Kntlra in hihv L'lven that Charles B. Horner, of Ujhtning, Oregon, who, on July 21, 104, male Homestead Entry Mo. 13723-Serial. No. 01200. for LOIS 1 ai,d 2, SWV4 NE, NVV14 SE, Sec tion ;, Township 3 North, Kange n East WilatieUe Meridian, has filed notice of intention to make Final five year Proof, to establish claim to the land a!;o.e de3erl.el, before D. w. Sluahen, U. 8. Commissioner, at En terpilse, Oregon, on the 6th day of April, 1909. C.aimant names as witnesses: Charles G. Holmes, Colonel F. Graves, Guy C. Horner, William P. Rankin, all of Light ning, Oreson. F. C. Bramwell, Register. Nature's Remedy. Levy '8 Oregon Grape Compound. Enrlche3 your blood. Regulates kid ney and liver. Sold and guaranteed by Burnaugh & Mayfleld, Enterprise, Oregon. ! MILLIONS OF I AT LOWEST RATES. ON EASIEST TERMS. I Wm. Miller & Brother, SUITE 204. Wallowa National Bank Building, Enterprise, Oregon. t L, BerSaimdl, 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 myrstock before purchasing. ENTERPRISE, - - - - OREGON is: IT V Red Front Livery and Feed Stable First Class Accommodations Best of Hay and Grain & ONE BLOCK SOUTH OF HOTEL ENTERPRISE General BlacKsmithing . JorsosAoffny a Specialty you wish to buy a Hack, Buggy, Plow or Hat row rememle handle a' complete Block in thU line and you will" gave m ney by pu.channp of me. , S. E. Combes, - Enterprise, Oregon. Did It Ever Occur To You 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 From Paradise, Flora and Appleton to Wallowa, TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS and SATURDAYS. Good accommodation, courttous treatment and reasonable rates, leaves Wallowa at 6 a. ni. E. W. SOUTHWICK, Proprietor. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Darartment of the Interior. U.' S. Land O.'flee at La Grande Ore gon. February 15, 1S09. Notice Is he:eby given that Ezeklel P. a.rKeant. of Enterprise. Oregon, who on October 2 th 1903, made Homestead Entry No. 13322 Serial, Ko. 03269, for the North-east quarttr of Section 34, Tnwnshln 1 N.. Range 46. East. WIU Me ridian has ft el notice of Intention to make linal five year proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before D. W. Sheahan, U. a Commissioner, at his o'fice in Enterprise, Oregon, on the 6th day of April, 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: Harry N. Vaughan, Elmer J. Jewell, Delmar Pargeant and Lora E. Allen, all of Enterpr.se, Oreson F. C Bramwell, Register. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior. U. S. Land Office at La Grande, Or egon, March 16, 1909. Notice is hereby given that Henry u. Downs, of Lostlne, Oregon, who on July 28, 1903, made Homestead Entry No. 13161-Serial, No. 03999, for W SW, NE SWH, NW'4 sa t, Section 10, Town3hip 2 South, Range 43 East, Willamette .Meridian, has fi'.ed notice of Intention to make i'inal Five Year Proof, to establish' c aim to the land above described, before D. W. Sheihan, U. S. Com missioner, at Enterprise, Oregon, on '.he 26 h day of April, 1909. Claimant names as witnesses: I o is 0.3en, Charles E. Van Pelt, Paul A. Harris, Floyd W. Ham mack, of Lostlne, Oregon. 68t6 4 F. C. Bramwell, Register. f BOSWELL & SON PROPRIETORS. That A I Y