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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 28, 1909)
i i ALL THE DAILY PAPERS, MAGAZINES AND THE, National Weeklies at Coleman Brothers The Best Cigars, Confec tionery and Fruit. Stationer- Supplies of al! kinds. First door east of rostoffiec. THE NEWS RECORD (Twics-aWeek.) AN I N DEPENDENT NKWKl'ArKR Formerly the Wallowa News, estab lisiie.l .iarch 3. 1S'J9. " Published WeJne6Cays and Satur days at Enterprise,' Oregon, by THE ENTERPRISE PRESS Office East .side Court House Square Knt ere 1 as shoo -id-class matter .htiiuaiy 2, 19 ''., a' tha po-itnffiee at Kiittrjirl.se. Oregon, under the Act of March 3, 1ST'.). LODGE DIRECTORY mr ENTEIIPJtlSE LOtiOK, No . I. 153. KAlEllALU KliHEKAlI l-OWiH, No. 1!!) Kn KNTEIU'liJSE LODGE, No . ofr. 4. J U A NIT A TEMPLE, No. 7, I'y'hiar Slaters. MASONIC So. "0. Ilo.itl Ar.'li Mason meets first and t h In TuimiIii.'H of cB' -I month In Masonic Hall. All visitlnf Koyal Arch Masons welcomed. J. It. OLMSTEH, I Hull Priest. D. W. Si LEA 1 1 A N, Secretary. WALLOWA I.OrxiE, No. M, A. 1 A. M., meetB s wond aii.l fourth Sntur days of each month in Masonic Uall Vlslthiif Masons wi li nui' d J. A. Unil.HKiir, W. M. W C. HOATA1AN. Koi rouii y. WALLOWA VALI.KY CI I A PTKIt, Nf BO, O. E. S. meets first und third Sat urdaya of each month, In MusiiMe Hull Vlultlnt; Hturs are always wekomed. MKS. ELVA L. FUENCH, W M. MRS. MAKY ! STKKU See. M U A KACil'l': ''AMP, No. 10197, M III. If. A, W. A Meets first mid thin Thursdays in null month. In nuw Era ternal hull. Yl.ilting Neighbors alway. welcome. J. W. IIO IX! El IS Consul. T. M. KILL, Clerk. ANEHOID CAMI', No. Itr.l, It N. of A. Uf n ll KNTElil lUrtU CAMI II. Ui II. oar., w. of vv. ALMOTA CIRCLE. No. 278. W. of W. No Subsorij:tbni I'.a'es: One year 52. six months $1, three months i0c, Jiie mon Hi (lo. On ye.lrly ca3h-ia-.tdvante subscript ais a dUcount of 2jc is given. SATURDAY. AUGUST 23, 1909. Till Ins been a long, warm stun ner, b'lt never a night but -what a Munket or two were nesded. Hot' iot too hot, but jmt hot ena;ig:i; hat's the Waliwa county way. Think of a climate well nigh summer .lerfooiion, you poor, luckless denizen' if the Mississippi Val e.y, who ha e oo:i sweltering in the li j'.'ee. Aj? isi ever known eve i back therj. Think of a place where the days, are .lust warm enough to make everything h:it. grows, ripen to perfection, while he nights ara of tho 10 hour solid deep variety. Mail two days old smacks of starve coach days, yet t iat Is what the upper alley lias under Ihe new train soiled lie by which ihe mail doe3 not arrive ..I. Kn'erjnise un:l! (!,7 and even 8 Tclock at. night, and at Joseph until ui ho ir later. S.iroiy, when no one's interests are serve 1 by such a change nd everybody ii discomoded, the comiiany would to.isider a prole H. aiade in the rlgh'. way. To it ed shows in Wallowa county are becoming mo:e numerous than Instructive. Still, come to think of we don't go to shows to be ia iU'Uct 3d. '::: : : : ; ; ; ; : Enterprise Opera House SATURDAY NIGHT AUGUST 28 RlHel Tucker 'toclt Co, t t FOR OME NIGHT ONLY The Seroamiiiglv Ftiiinv Coined v A Runaway Match THE CIIAKACTKKS IN TIIK 1'I.A Y Richard Claxton, the father, Leonard Claxton . -Solomon Short -Jule. the landlord MRS. IRENE MATCH - Millie Match, the daughter, Jim, the brakeman ) lirijrgs, the countable, "quiet and peaceful, dat's me motto" ) Tin: PLAYKKS Lynton A they Louis Koch Morney Athey ETHEL TUCKER Marjorie Mandeville Frank Browne V f T ! f V f SVNOl'SLS. ACT I -The Runaway Couples. "Oh, Mamma, you've married our little boy." ACT II The elopment planned. The Menagerie. ACT III "No harm done-even with a runaway match." REMEMBER THE DATE-ONE NIGHT ONLY Saturday Night, Aug. 28 Some of the Funny Speeches of the Play Millie "You married my mother, I am" Leonard -"My daughter -you married my father, I am-" Millie-"My son. My mother is your father's daughter and your father is my mother's son; that makes your father my, brother." Leonard "Then I am my own grandfather." Millie "And your father i3 his own great grand father." Other amusing complications arc: A charming young widow in order to conceal her age from her young lover represents her daughter as having had only four birth days, which is true, as she was born on the 29th of February: consequently her birthday is only once in four years. t t z t i PROGRESS IN THE WOULD OF ART K s- " X I Ft:"- Jl av: Q fa' 1 . '. f J.' '' '' "Si. M Grand Staircase of Yerkcs GaHcry?1 THE c l!y ;f New York sustained tiite n loss when the bequest of the bite Charles T. Yerkes was forfeited by the inuuie ipallty nnd the art gallery which the (lend traction magnate Intended should become a public Institution was al lowed to po Into private bauds. It Is said the building which Mr. Yerkes erected for his art treasures will prob ably be torn down to make way for some other rl- h man's private resl lenee. An l'"-nrance company held a mortgage against the Yerkes estate, mid sirt gallery which Mr. Yerkes r l ied to the city of New York, with its contents, was put up at auction r.ernes rnar is, or nit? mnsnarea nw. nil wife by r.onjamin Conrtaut. :-&;,- ; ;-i;t':' A II' i V s;j;:&&Z The discovery has brcn r.irv.'.e In thH fountry tdnce Ihe holding of the l.hr in lernnlloiinl oxjitislilmts nhouialiivj in uljtural dectd-atlous that the oii'ect af such ndorniueins I t mtirli helhten ?d by giving them proper out. of dm.! surroundings. Carrying out this Idea'. Chicago, the first American clly to hold I a world's fair emlieliishid to any t-x- tent with the sculptor's art, has been ! making the experiment of tin mudoor ! exhibition. The display was held in 'Humboldt park and is said to have j ')een the first outdoor sculpture e.shlbi- 1 linn ever plven in this country. Yari . Ions societies co-operated, the ITeld Co lumbian museum lent a number of jeronjis from the lale but net lamented ColiiinM.'ti exjiosition, and the sculp tors of Chicago and tho west contrib uted generously of their works, l'ass Ing tilong throuvrli 1 lie shrubbery one ?ame, for Instance, upon "The Miner," 1 big muscled man, earn lug his dinner pall and stoojilng to l;Hs his lltll'J daughter, a group by Charier! .1. Mulli gan, who has done many tucli works und has fitly been called the sculptor if labor. On the lawn at the side of Ihe jinth was Leonard Crunelle's "l!oy and Hen" struggling as though In the midst of an nflernoon frolic. On the bank of a stream which wends its way Ihrough the park was the same sculp tor's "Y'outhful Bather." In New York a somewhat similar experiment was tried In connection with the recent annual exhibition of the National Academy of Design. The sculptural exhibits, instead of being nrranged as usual with the jiaintings In the Vanderbilt gallery, were placed hy themselves In the Gould riding cir cle, next the Vanderbilt gallery. In this apartment, with its tanbark Door mid lofty roof, the out of doors Im pression was Intensified by placing at Ihe end ojijiosite the entrance some columns from the Massachusetts stu dio of Daniel C. French so to form au exedra and arranging heuiloek trees in :S2SBS2EE3aBaXBKSZXSaZ2S2I ES332SSIBB5SZBE223ESSHHB Hack Calls to any part of the city answered day or night. Both Phones Home Independent 40 Pacific States 45. ENTERPRISE LIVERY AND HACK BARN J. C. SHACKELFORD, Proprietor. First Class Rigs and careful drivers. u H M H H H II n n a M H Our bus meets all S trains. within city limits Faie 10c: S THS ItKNlAMIN CONSTANT PORTRAIT OF HltS. YK1IKES AND THE $40,0(10 11 UD. under foreclosure proceedings nnd sold for $277,."i(j(), a price barely exceeding i he ninount of the mortgage. Thus the rare tapestries, statuary. and painting housed In the gallery were left home less and the opjiortuulty of tho munic ipality to convert the bulldiiig with Us collections Into a public institution was lost. All the art objects In the famous collection, the result of years of effort by the late multimillionaire, must bo removed from the gallery by Fob. 5. They will be placed In the Yerkes residence, adjoining, In East Sixty-elplit street, nnd, though there Is a possibility that this residence may yet be utilized by the city as a perma nent home for the collection, It Is said to be n remote one. The siile did not include the contents of the gallery The grand stairway forming the principal entrance to the gallery Is a most Imposing and artistic architec tural creation, and In front of it was placed a tftiO.000 rug. On cither side were rare pieces of sculpture. One of the notable pieces in the col lection was the famous $40,0H) bed. Among the paintings are works by members of the early English, K'.mu Ish uud Dutch schools as well as ian VST i V fvt'ir , v ...... . . - :u v'. k ..... , v. r'."-, - . v"i3& V; - lltSlllfii H ZrZEZB?iXSSSSBE2SE2eSSEBKSZSCSSrnieS!iESB3SXSSBBaiM J. D.WALCK Real Estate Dealer NOTARY PUBLIC Mitchell Hotel Block - JOSEPH, OEEGON MAMMOTH JACK "Will make the season at the ranch of Thomas Morgan. TERMS: $5.00 cash; $10.00 for season and $15.00 insurance. Either of the above prices be comes due upon the trading, selling or re moving the mare from the county. MORGAN & DOBBIN, Owners. C. M. WILLIAMS, Manager. TAKE NOTICE. All persons are recommended to take Foley's Kidney Remedy for back ache, rheumatism, and kidney and bladder trouble. It will quickly cor rect urinary irregularities, which, if neglected, may develop into a serious illness. It will restore health and strength. Do not neglect signs of kidney or bladder trouble and risk right's disease or diabetes. Bur laugh & Mayfield. 18I1HMIK KOKTIAXD HIS FOUNTAIN GBOtll'. vases by many noted modern French aitlsts. Among the pnlutlngs which Mr. Yerkes cherished himself with sjie clul fondness were his Itembranilis. lie wua nlso a great Admirer of J. M. W. Turner and once paid ubout $S0, Ooo for a painting by thl artist. The Collection Included a painting of Mr. Dl ST OF POI? 1)V ESMOND T. QC1NN. the background. Iu the center of the rear wnll was placed Mr. French's latest Important work, the Melviu me morl.tl, entitled, "Mourning Victory," an achievement that has beeu com pared favorably with his now famous Death aud the Sculjitor." In the cen ter of this unusual' gallery was .a I'ountain with a fountain group by IjJi'.ore Kontl, and lu front of it was ho rather remarkable figure by Fer nando Miranda", entitled, "Primitive Marksmau." This certainly had not only the open air. but the primitive, even primeval spirit, the man here represented, on his back with upraised feet. supiMrt!ng bis bow and aiming .in arrow nt the sun, being a creature who might well have lived In the gla cial epoch so fnr ns thoughts of elvili .'.ntlon were concerned. The fountain group by Mr. Kontl, showing a mother hoWlnjr her child nnd bending over us If to dip It in the flowing water. Is a very chaste and beautiful creation, worthy of an artist whose work at several expositions has contributed so much to popular educntluu aloni; the lines of art The centenary of the birth of Edgar Allan Toe on Jan. It) gives special In terest to the lironcc laist of Poe by Ed moudT. Quinu shown In the sculptural division of the academy exhibition. It has been spoken of ns One of the most effective sculptural likenesses of tho (loot yet produced und Interprets his nrtlsttc temperament as only a true artist appreciating the achievements of it member of another creative !ro fesslon could do. An lnteresling con trast might be Instituted between It ttiul the Foe bust by Zolnay Iu the pos tesslon of the I'nlverslty of Virginia Mr. Qulnn's Poe Is one which exerts a fascination much like that which the poet himself must have exercised over those who were able to appreciate hU genius. The bust was purchased by the Kronx Society of Arts ami Sciences for the monument dedicated by It Iu ' Ioe park. Ford ha in. on the day of th teutenary., EDWARD IIAl.E F.Jtt'SII. The courts h ive given Hill the start it Harrhnan for the railroad right f way up beschrites canyon. Washington's Plague Spots 'ia in the, low, marshy bottoms of Uio Potomac, the breeding ground of ma arla germs. The3e germs cause rhills, fever and .ague. biliousness, aundice, . lassitude, weakness and ;eneral debility and bring suffering ir death to thousands yearly. But Electric Bitters never fall to destroy them and cure malaria troubles. "They are the best all-round tonic and cure for malaria I ever used," writes R. M. James, of Louellen, S. G They cure Stomach, Liver, Kidney and Blood Troubles and will prevent Typhoid. Try them, 50c. Guaranteed Iby Burnaugh & Mayfield. ' W. B. APPLEGATE. Notary Public . Collections made. Real Estate bought and - sold and all business matters attended to. Call on or write me. PARADISE, OREGON. WESLEY DUNCAN, Stock Inspector for Wallowa County. JOSEPH, OREGON 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 maKe the customer's rela tion with this banK satisfactory and profitable. U 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 3'ou to become one. Mpras and Farmers National Baok Wallowa, Oregon ENTERPRISE MEAT MARKET BEST OF MEATS ALWAYS OX HAND. Il,st Market S. & COMBES INDEPENDENT Pells and Hides proprietor PKONE 20 MAIL AND PASSENGER STAGE LINE Wallowa. Appleton. Flora io Paradise, MONDAYS WEDNESDAYS and FRIDAYS; and From Paradise, Flora and Appleton to Wallowa, TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS and SATURDAYS Good accommodations courteous treatment and reasonable rates. Leaves Wallowa al 6 a. ni. E. W. SOUTHWICK, Proprietor. v.... .; . .....