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About The news=record. (Enterprise, Wallowa County, Or.) 1907-1910 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1909)
Men of Character Will Find It Profitable to represent The Only energetic men of strict reliability can retain a contract in this Company for any length of time. This i3 for the protection of the public and for the protection of our representatives. The contracts of many of our agents date from the organization of the Company. HOME OFFICE C0R2ETT BUILDING, PORTLAND OREGON. A. I MILLS. Pre. I,. SAMI'KI., On. Jlitr. CLAIIEXC1S 8. SAMUEL, Ailt. Mgr. City and County Brief News Items Alfalfa seed for sale at R. S. & Z. School supplies of all kluda at Jack son & Weaver s. The Pakory will reopen Monday with a full Hue of bread and cakes. See the new Art Squares lit Ashley's. 47U2 Paul B. Knap? Is a Seattle fair visitor. O. J. Wagner 1 hare from Tort land to remain for some time. Another car of Western goads re ceivel this week by Ashley. Mr, and Mrs. h. Cojch and chil dren of Wallowa were Enterprise visitors over Fri lay night. Slates and table's, pencils an" pens In fact everything needed by i school pupil at Jackson & Weaver's J. W. lOinmons went out to Hot Lake Friday to talte treatment for rheumatism. Mr. and Mrs. n. F. Stubblefleld and daughter Vary, and Mr. and Mis Omer BUbblo'lold left Saturday for the Seattle fair. Anyone wis! lng apples, pears, plums, crabapples or prunes call up Mountain View Fruit farm. Home phone. O. J. Roe, proprietor. Do not fo get the premium will be given away at Grace Wood's millin ery store next Friday afternoon, Oc tober 11, at G oVlJck. Come and get your chance. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Iloyd and children returned Wednesday from an extended trip to the Bait, dur ing which they vlsltsd with Mrs. Boyd's people near Pittsburgh, Pa., at Mr. Iloyd's old home In Indiana and with his brother at Twin Falls. Idaho. County Cominls doner Locke stnrt ed Thursday, and Judge Olmsted and Commissioner l.lt.ch Friday Tor Troy, where a meeting wl'l bo held to con sider the project of a bridge across the Grande Roude at or near Troy, Mr. Hberhart, representative of n bridge company, accompanied them. An advertisement it .to a merchant very much what sowing seod Is to a farmer. It niny .take a little time for the resu't to become apparent, but they are auro to come. The wise farmer Is nit niggardly with hla soed, nor the v.lfo merchant with his advertisement. The Pakery vi 1 re open Monday with a full line of bread and cakes. Enterprise Poultry Produce Farm Rhode Islni d Red Errs; all kinds ot A. M. WAGNER, UIIIUII1I1KBIKUSII11IIZBH2I1IHUIIUIIUUIII The City Planing' Mill W. F. RANKIN, Proprietor ENTERPRISE, OREGON. J Carries a complete stock of rouh and dressed g ft lumber. 9 A line of standard mouldings always in stock. jjj Satisfactory Mill WcrK a Specialty jj Five per cent discount for cash. ' All account balanced 8 at expiration of 30 days and settled by cash or note, 5 Oregonffife Policyholder Company The Bakery wl 1 re op in Mouday with a full line of bread and cakes. Picture moulding of all kinds Just received at Ashley's. b2 Headquarteis for school supplies. Jackson & Weaver's drug store. Mrs. C. T. Ilo kett and children spent tha day. Saturday, In Lostine. fiet yo r v.int r cabbage and sauer Unit. A. M. Wajner, E.itjrprise. Mrs. J. S. Putner and baby went to Cashmere, Wash., Wednesday, for a week's vliit wlih her sister. Tha Iiakery will reopen for busi es! Monday. Mr. and Mr?. Henry Ro3s of Osh so ill, Wis., after a fortnight's visit wlili lieu- si iter, Mrs. Earl Coffman, ind h.isband, of Elk IMountaln,. left .'or their home' Saturday, Th i kickers, and croakers have no !ace in a cMy with the push and pro jresdvenoss of oar town. The man vho opposes needel public Improve ments and stands In the way of prog ress Itf not a good citizen. The Noai-nivaltaUa Old Hickory Chairs, atj Ashley's. b2 Learned nien te 1 us that In Lat n the word "elltor" means some :.hilng ".to eat." In the Unite States !ts mean'.ng Is altogether different. It means to scratch around like V.n'.m to gat something to eat. .loo Allen and J. C. Surber got in !o an akercnUou In front of the uos.!.offlc over an account, and each had the other arrested. City Re corder Tasgait did the Impartial by fin Ina each $25 and costs. The Ikikery will re-open for busl leu Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence D. Vest and his bi other, Orover Vest, all of Sim Lance, Wyo., have come to En terprl ie to locate. The - men are nephews of O. H, Vest, and visited here about two years ago. Mr. mid Mrs. Thomas Morgan of Prairie Cre.'k left Wednesday for Pittsburgh, Pa., to' attend the con-, lounry celebration of the Christian f.li.l.,l. 1I... ...Ill lllllll, j UUJ Vl' VIIL HI WLUCI I polats in the East and will be gone for Bcvcrul we 'ks, Tlio Pakery will reopen for bus In uu Monday. La Grande Star: J. W. McAl'ls tor Is here from his home In Cali fornia and will remain for the week I of the fair and the l go to Enter prise where ho lias, some farming In teroiu .to look arter. He expects to remain In eastern Oregon about ' a month before returning to his home In California. and Chicken ; Voetubtes Prop. 4 M Citizens Allowed To Extend Mains Money So Advanced To 8tand To Their Credit For Water. At the regular meeting of the city council, Monday night October 4, a motion was a Jolted allowing any citizen who desired to advance money to extend the water system, tot do so and the amount so advanced to stand to his credit against water rent. This, action was tak en as it is understood a few prop erty owners where the mains do not reach, desire to take this method of securing water without delay. The recorder was instructed to order three pieces of 2-foot hose to connect the new hose recently re ceived with the lire plugs. He Is also directed to oblal.i prices on 3 and 4 Inch wo Hi pipe. An offer of $10 for the old pest house down along the electric p. mi tlume was accepted from Char les Horner. The railroad company is offered water at $30 a moith. Following is the Mot of Claims Allowed. W. J. Funk & Co. (Gutter & EoiJivin, work on streets).. $19 01 J. P. Sanders, freight, drr.yage, etc 1 20 1. W. Atle.i, putting In water pipe 7 8E E. J. Forsythe. lights 59 70 Win. McConmack, hay 8 75 W, E. Tacgart, Sept. pay, rent, recording deeds ." 20 00 T. M. Dill, Se.Jt. pay Atty 5 00 C. M. Lockwood, Sept. pay Treasurer 5 0C Chas. Hug, Sept. pay- marshal 75 00 Ohas. Givonoml, Sept. pay, A&it. marshal 52 50 City Planing mill, lumber.... 10 71 Washington Prtg. & Bind. Co., water and bond books 22 5C U. Sorenuon, wo.k on streets with team 14 00 EVANGELISTIC CAMPAIGN. The time for the opening of the Meetings is d.awlng near. Ootobet 24 is not far distant. The execu tive committee Is doing business n a manner that shows they mean mslness. That is what is needed all along he line. Much Is yet to be done ind every christian should line up 'or work. We need everybody who Jan fill a niche of usefulness. This is your meeting and everyone should work just as though its success de pended upon you personally. From North Dakota. -Fargo, N. D, August 10, 1907. For abojt threa years I have known Rev. J. R. Pratt of Albany, N. Y., and have been in close per sonal touch with much of his evan g'.is.Uc work. He knows his Eng Ush bible as well as any man of my icq. lalntance. He Is a devout, earn est, tactful, eplrlt-fl led man of God. He has a winsome personality, and is a mo.4t acceptable preacher. He s eminently a teacher of the Word, with a love of souls and a strong ivangellstlcj earnestness. No man ms. come into our State who has teemed to command the attention and respet of all classes of peo ple as he ha). He has had a prom inent place o:i the program of the North Dakota tlbie Conference foi jhree successive years, and the min ter8 of all denominations seem to ippreciate him ibet er the more they sit under hU teaching. A. Christ) Urown, Synodlcali Missionary. PRESS C0.M.MITTE3. Air. and Mrs. John Baxter of Grande Ronde are visiting her par ants, Mr. and iMrs. W. H. Gibson. Miss Lida Flowers was brought 'aoiue from La Grande Friday even .ng still suffering with jtppendlci--ls hut so much improved it was .nought an operation was unneces sary, but during the night she took worse and today is very low. There was no school Thursday and Friday, either In the public or high ichool. that the teachers could have he opportunity of attending the ounty institute at Lostine. Nearly .11 the local teachers attended one Jr more days," Tha 1909 pennant In the North western Baseball league has been won by the Seatt'e team with Spo kane a close second. This Is the first time In ten years that Seattle has been at the top of the heap. Iast year Vancouver, B. O, won the championship and the year before that it went to Aberdeen. The other teams iu the race this year were Aberdeen, Portland, Vancouver and Tacoma, coming after Spokane in the order named. President Taft, one of the most ardent baseball fans in the country, as soon as he struck) the Northwest wanted to know ir he would have a chance to see SoattU and Spokane play, while here, show- ing that he waa parted even on base ball matters of the Northwest. A Word About Osteopathy. Dr. StlU called his new system os teopathy, Osteor-ahs, then being essentially anatomists Jocate a les slon caused by a bone or ligament or a contracted muscle compressing a nerve, a blood vessel or some organ and cure the trouble by re moving the lesion. Why there ehoald be any opposi tion to the free practice of osteo pathy Is not clear except that some people are always too busy to stop the progress of the world. Harvey, the discoverer of the circulation of the blood, suffered ignominy and con tempt at the. hands of his medical brethren, and his practice dwindled to very smalt proportions. Galileo was put in prison for saying the earth moves around the sun. But those who trust themselves in the hands of an osteopathic physician can rest aisured that ha thoroughly undertsands. the anatomy of the- hu man body, and wl I soon be able to locate in the particular spot the esion causing tli mischief or dis 3ase, and that" only such manipula tions are exerted which will set iie bone3 in thslr place or remove any obstacle or constrict on and lius aKow a fcea flow of blood and Jf nervous energy. In these days ol Hia-gery, when it U sjuglit to bring jvery possible dHsase in 'the domain t the surgeon the people should be Jlad to see simple manipulations Hum; h over cl ficult cases which iven the surgeon's knife could no! .emove. These remarks are offered in a .'riendly spirit, and not to antagonize my school or medicine; they are .jrompled by a love of fair play in he land of the free. After manj ears of medical studies from all osslbla standpoint, the writer, as t lisinteres'ed party not tied to an) .articular school, neither riding a fa ored hobby, is forced to recognize he positive fact that osteopathy is , nerely appliel anatomy a-id physl logy; and those who fight it do o either from Ignorance or malice. A. A. RA.MSEYER. Deneret Ne .va, Salt Lake City. 3AKER COUNTY FARMERS PASS UP GOOD THING From Baker City; Democrat. For 49 hogs' yesterday, weighing lot over 200 poinds each, the' Bak ir Tacking company paid an Eagle alley farmer 755. There is nothing so remarkable bout the fact Itself, but it does in dicate the high prices obtaining, and he scarcity of Baker county porkers. Work it out mathematically and it s almost impossible to find a reas m for such scarcity, for the Baker valley should be one of the best hog ilatrlctsi In Oregon. Yet on the other hand the pack .ig company has purchased every ival'able porker in the county for he next month and still has a great icarclty. Where a year ago the company lad 18,000 pounds of lard, y ester lay there was only GOO pounds in he; shops. They cannot supply Bak ir county's needs with Baker's pork irs npt nearly. Yet conditions here are almost deal for hog raising! By running the Bhoat3 on alfalfa Mtil t'aey reach 150 pounds in weight ind then turning them Into the fat ening pens on. a ration ot wheat, ac ording to the Oregon Agricultural Experiment Statl-.n, the farmers can ..irt on the fir.it K0 .pounds of weight at 3'4, cents per pound, and -an add the next 100 so that the tfhe&t fed will pay them in pork eight at the rate of $1.50 per bushel. Under euch co.idUIons there are oorea of ranchers In Baker county uost adml:ably fitted to raise the .nebeian hog with great profit far greater than they are getting from -heir alfalfa and grain under their present system of marketing their crops as crops yet for some reason there are very few who will pay any attention to that phase of their business, Oct. 6 Gordon Martin, 24, la borer. Enterprise; Mary Wagner, 20, Enterprise, Elgin Flour at W. J. Fuk & Co s. Patent I1.B0 a sack, straight grade, 11.40 a sack. The Bakery Fresh Bread and Fine Paslry WE ARE HERE TO PLEASE We Solicit Your Patronage II. V. MOORE, Manager River St, 2 doors south of Funk's. Football Game Won By La Grande Wallowa County High Tackles Team of Men And Are Defeated. The county high school football ;eain "was defeated at La Grande, Thursday, by a score of 16 to 0. fhe team went out expecting to play the La Grande high school team, out was pitted against a team com posed . principally of men ranging from 18 to 27 years in age. The local boys put up a nervy, gritty game nevertheless and never jlopped-iighting until the game was oVer. They lost because they were ;reatly overmatched in weight. The a Grande Star said of the Wallowa .'ounty boys: Enterprise gained their yardage hut twice In the game once on a ecovered punt and once o.i a for ward pass usually being thrown for ossaa bohind their own scrimmage ine, 'being' outweighted and outplayed jy the local teim all the way, uough the visitors, are worthy of a ;reat deal of praise for the game ight they made against odds, and ney fought jast as hard when the :core had run up to 16 to 0 as they jid -when the 11. st few plays were nade, and showel notable school ind fighting spirit. This is their 'irst year in high school football md . another year should see them veil up in front in the eatsern Ore son lists. They are a very gentle nan ly crowd of boys also. Whirlwind Tablets cure rheumatism in this climate. They have relieved mndreds and cured scores of cases a Union and Wallowa counties, .ositive proof, names, etc., furnished in application. For sale by Jackson i Weaver, Enterprise. 20btf Marble Mountain Highest. A. W. Sampson of the Forest ser Ice, who has made careful aneroid leamrements, says Marble Mountain l Hurricane canyon is higher than :agle Cap. The former Is 9,665 feet nd Eagle Cap Is 9.415. Whirlwind Tablets are. a guaran eed remedy for rheumatism and cldney troubles. For sale at Jack ion & Weaver's. 35btf Coos Bay is to be advertised in the east with moving picture ma .hlnas. Good Id 3a. Many woman after remedying a moky stove or a smoking lamp, have o put up with a smoking husband. Look at hte date on the label on 'our paper. It gives the month and ear to which your subscription is aid. ILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN AT SEATTLE OCTOBER 12 Seattle, Oct. 7. With President Taft here and gone, the populace is law Succeed when everything else fails. In nervous prostration and female weaknesses they are the supreme remedy, as thousands have testified. FOR KIDNEY (LIVER AND STOMACH TROUBLE I it is the best medicine ever told over a druggist's counter. Fall and Winter Wear for Men Including all the latest ideas in Shoes, Hats and Caps, Underwear, Sheep Skin Lined Coats, Mackinaws, Coat Sweaters, German Socks, and All kinds of Rubber Shoes sr .. Brand New $tock of CLOTHIMG Just Arrived Quality and Satisfaction in All Lines Guaranteed C. H. ZURHCER ENTERPRISE OPERA HOUSE Watch for Next Announce-, ment waiting for the coming of one whom many prefer to call "The Second Man of the Natijn," William Jen nings Bryan, who will speak at the A-Y-P exposition October 12. The Democratic Central commit tee has the arrangements In hand and are planning to equal if not rlv- n! tlio rfpTtl'in nonrkrAa: .Mio ljaflrir of the Grand Old Party's forces. Mr. Bryan was. obtained with no lit tle difficulty, and will not speak at any o'jher placa in the Northwest out side of British Columbia. He will spjak at the Natural Am phitheatre at 2:30 i.i the afternoon, after being introduced by Governor Hay and Mayor Miller. In the even ing there will be an old-time demo cratic rally, rei-le'-e with red fire, drum corps, flambeau olubs, and brass bands. The marchers will wear the long linen dustersi and high white hats first brovght out1 In the Hayes Tllden campaign. After the demonstration on the grounds, a public reception will be held In the Washington State build ing, at whlih time Mr. Bryan will meet his northwest friends. Presl tentnd Mrs. Ohllberg will be in the receiving Jine. N j v Irri a I n Bojk Fr e. "Wei. Irri. a ion fo Sjna 1 Farms." la a iubli-ation just issued by the Ge:eril Pa3en,er Department of tie O. P. &N. company and Southern Paclil; :in;s in Oregon. This booklet sets forth In a practical, concise wa tia possibilities f r pro:'t of lne:ensle irrLaim and s'loald be ii tin handsof every farmer in Oregon. Co lei n&r te 'b .a In ad f-ree on a plica Ion to W. M. Mc Murray, General I a Sanger A ent, O. R. & N. and S. P. lines jn Oregon, Portland Or2goi J. S. BUTNIR, A?t. O R. & N. TCHING Dandruff and RLUMHiAIR are but outward signs of the evil done In secret by myriads of dan Jruff germs sapping the life blood of the hair. Micro kills the para site, soothes the itching scalp, gives lustre to-the hair and stops it falling out A single application gives relief aod proves its worth. Save your hair before too late, Micro prevents baldness. It is a delightful dressing for the hair, free from grease and sticky oils. Ask your droggistfor free booklet HOYT CHEMICAL CO. PORTLAND, MCQONj . Q wviuor