The Times-herald. (Burns, Harney County, Or.) 1896-1929, December 27, 1913, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ?5rl -4 ?5f -i?
r
i
CITY OF BURNS
COUNTY OF HARNEY
The Biggest City In The Biggest
The Biggett County In The State
County In The State Of Oregon I
r
Of Oregon, Be In The West
BURNS, HARNEY COUNTY, OREGON, DECEMBER 27, 1913
)L XXVII
NO. 7
Tl J -4 2w I
i. ,i k. y, i Mi
' VJI
' ',"!T"T " ""' . . .... i
HJC UBRARY BEN
EFIT ENTERTAINMENT
il Program Greeted by Capacity
louse and Every Number Heartily
applauded. Success of Production
le to Untiring Efforts of Ladies in
Charge and Loyal People of Burns
GLACIER PARK INDIANS GIVE NOTED ACTRESS
PAIR OE EXQUISITELY BEADED MOCCASINS
participated in the choruses are
entitled to praise for their gmc -ful
dance steps, drills and charm
ing singing. The cost u mi ni?,
stage settings, the living pictures
in connection with the "Song of
the Cities." in fact everything
in connection with the entertain
ment, were in keeping with t
and very p'easing.
It is gratifying to note in con-
ince the production of nection with this entertainment
ado" several years ago. I that the people of Burns an- gen
erous patrons of home produc
tions and show such marked ap
preciation. .It is always a Brent
sacrifice to those who take part,
not only in time neglect of busi
ness and personal convenience,
but also in expense toward cos
tumes, etc., and they appreciate
th hardly an exception the generous expressions from
did well. Mrs
steal entertainment giv
iwama on last Tuesday
a benefit for the pub
under the direction
jement of Mrs. G. A.
president of the Ladies
lub, was one of the
essfuland pleasing ever
in oy tne i mo. ine
filled to capacity and
receipts largr than
the numbers were t:k-
IThe Prince of Pilsen"
lich were heartily ap-
rith frequent t scores,
sent showing marked
n of the efforts of the
Several of thenurr-
re special mention, al
fwidow" made a most
1 impression, people who
Bssed "The Prince of
its entirety stating she
weal "widow" in grace,
make-up. Piatt Ran
"scream" in the char-
rArtie" and his mono-
imadeahit. The ladies
imposed of Miss Louel
James Farre, McHose
jld, with Mrs. Murray
ping the music with a
and graceful Spanish
i a very enjoyable num-
i warmly praised. The
liss Louel Smith. Mrs.
je, Mrs. Archie Mc-
M. Johnson, Delbert
D. M. McDade were
ling and they received
its from their many
ad admirers. The big
under the direction of
re added much to the
It of the program. The
lies and gentlemen who
Farre, ' friends
t
Much credit is due Mrs. Rem
bold and the committee who as
sisted in staging the entertainment.
How to Bankrupt tha Doctors.
A prominent New York physi
cian says, "If it were not for
the thin stockings and thin soled
shoes worn by women the doc
tors would probably be bank
rupt." When you contract a
cold do not wait for it to develop
into pneumonia but treat it at
once. Chamberlain's C o u g h
Remedy is intended especially
for coughs and colds, and has
won a wiue reputation oy lis
cures of these diseases. It is
most effective and is pleasant
and safe to take. For sale by
all Dealers.
- W- r"l v -1aKf?Sie& ;,ifeiS? ''WM
' ' M Vtt uw3,' war Swani VvrWSwt aw .A4M
1 ibi. v L ElLMF m Lr j V m - ML A
SfW rBaCaHr JD V L ' JEtWffia: ataal Paw, ii?'jB&
$3t w - 'i& I EyHHaimH8pyiB8 mBsi M"B8BSjBrTOEH
c
Finest alfalfa, timothy and red
top hay baled may be had at the
Goodman feed barn is south Burns
- -
.-
THE BURNS HOTEL
DELL DIBBLE, Prop.
nt rally Located, Good Clean
leals, Comfortable Kooms,
Clean and Sanitary beds
it Class Bar In Connection.
Uve Me A Call
THE WHITE FRONT
ERY, FEED AND SALE
STABLE
We have oonfined our business entirely to the
White Front where we are prepared to care
for our customera better than ever before
JES FED FOR 20c. PER HEAD AINU if
laled Hay and Grain for Sale at Market
rices. Good Hay in Stack $4.50 Per ton.
Delivered in Burnt); $6.50 Per Ton
e Burns-Yale Stage Line
36-Hour Schedule from Railroad
Close Connections Made With Trains East.
Cofortable Conveyances for prasepgers.
Fare, f 10. Careful Atteplpp apd Prompt
Delivery of Kx press and Frejgha Entrust
d to Our Care. Freight 2 M& Per Pound.
R. J. McKinnon & Son
BURNS, - OREGON
HOWARD H. CUSTIS
Veterinarian
Graduate of UsUrorslly of PuujrlinUi
JOHN DAY, ORBAOM
CatUa
I ilH'Atiii. A Imiiil ..( (ilui-U'i Natlomil l'ui'k luillaim vcut o I'IiU'iiko by IiuU W. Hill, (.Unlruiau of tUuuunn
f director "t tliu i iiiMii Nortlicru Kallway to nttvDd the iiind iliuw, tpruiiK a Hiirrrls,. on Mnry Ounlcti
iln- iiniixi iiitrcHH. hy wrrunillUK BSf with tbolr wvlrd muilo hiuI nonga iih h ulepixnl from hor private nt
Tlu'Ni. Moiitnnu Inillnna from tin- Itoof of the Itoi'klM fire itrvut iiiIiiiIi'itn of tin- illnlliiKiiUhtMl atnae tlar.
who uipeura In tho role of Natomah. an Imllau innlil, In the opera of that uiime. Tin- real obJiM-t of the Imllana'
riH'eptlon to .Mnry (lanlen wiim (he iri)utatlon ly thain of a pair of exqulaliely !. i.l.-.l miH-raalna which the beat
beiiil workero of the Olmlcr I'nrk NMTVsBaa nniile for her. More than 200.INIII lieailn of twrnty five ahadea of
color were imixl III iln'onillni; thin Inn knkln footwear. It took ten aqmiWH hIi monlha to complete their work
When the aqSlwl hnil tlnlaheil their labor th" ineilhlne men of the trlh went throiiKii the myatlcal rltea of
uiakliiK "koinI iiu-illi'lne," ao If the wearer of tin irtlatlcally beaded inoccnNtna iIik-m not flinl herself becoming mora
nimble aa Natomah It la no fault of Chi. 'fa I I Hoy, Meillclno Owl. Illnl Itnttle. Wolf riiinie.' Flab Wolf'Boba
and DiiKle Calf.
The actroaa una dellKhliil with the ulft aa well na the unique reception tcmlcnil her by her red frUada
whom lb promlHiil to Hit in (ilarler National l'ark next autnmur
Progress of County De-
menstration Policy
OreKon Agricultural ('ollesre,
Corvallia, Ore. The jmlicy of
securitiK county iicld and farm
demonstration agents is making
rapid progress among the coun
ties of Oregon. Already five
counties in various parts of the
state have complied with all re
quirements and made the neces
sary appropriations for maintain
ing the county agents in cooper
ation with the Oregon Agricul
tural College. Those five coun
ties, together with the sum ap
propriated by each, are as fol
lews: iane, ?zuw; trooK, iow gnosis was
Coose, $2000; Tillamook, $2000; veterinarian
and Harney, $2000.
Two counties, Hakcr and Grant
county in Colorado.
Aside from their work in farm
demonstration, the county agents
have become active agents of co
operation. The county Bgmtal ot
two Ohio nullities wriv able to
effect tin- Cooperative marketing
of a large lot of surplus potatoes
that were grown in one county,
to the farmers of another county
in which there was a great scar
city. A county agent of South
ern Colorado was the first to re
cognize a disease that was killing
large numbers of hogs, as cholera.
He found it very difficult to con
state in this work or who wish
to place song birds in their com
munities from purchasing the
same.
Max Muller. for many years
with the state poultry depart
ment and who recently was sent
on a mission to Kurope to pur
chase ;t00 pairs of Hungarian
partridges, is to be sent on an
other trip for )00 pair next
month
Mr. Muller will sail for Ger
many early in January and has
In en empowered by Game Ward-
n Finley to assist bird lovers
vince the farmers of the fact and others desiring to aid in the
that the disease was cholera, and placing of song birds in this
succeeded only when his dia- state by acting as a purchasing
confirmed by the agent while abroad. Muller will
of the Agricultural go to the Tyrol and the Black
College. He then explained the Forest where song birds abound,
impossibility of eradicating the and will bring home as many
have taken steps to establish a disease single handed, and tin.' skylarks, canaries und woodlarks
district for demonstration work,
expenses and benefits to be shar
ed according to agreement. As
mining and lumbering are im
portant industries in these coun
ties, it is felt that one farm agent
can serve both counties for a
imperative need of a cooperative
Campaign. By his skill and de
termination, he saved an industry
that is worth $r000 annually.
The amount and character of
the work of the field ajjenl is
shown by the following report
time, at least. Legislative pro- on the work of the Kent county,
visians have been made to cover
such cases.
It is expected that Wallowa
and Marion counties will be
among the next to make provi
sion for securing county agents.
Michigan, CgricuHurel agent;
"During the year the agent has
reached about eleven thousand
farmers through the alfalfa cam
paign, the granges and other gone two months
means. He has encouraged seed
and other sweet voiced denizens
of the woods as he is commission
ed to purchase.
The birds will be brought back
under his personal care and will
be brought al absolute cost, plus
transportation charges. Warden
Finley hopes that the bird loveia
of the state will assist in bring
Ing song birds to Oregon, as the
state has made no appropriation
for that purpose. Muller will be
Journal.
Malheur, Union and Klamath are testing and soil preservation, and
seriously considering the ques
tion. Douglas county officers
are being importuned by influ
ential farmers to establish the
system, and Jackson county has
taken up the matter with Pro
fessor French, State Leader of
Agriculture, who expects to see
the system adopted there at an
early date.
has done much work among the
school children."
Song Birds to Be Im
ported From Germany
Venater Water Suit
The land office has hunded
down a decision in the case of
the United States vs Venator
and also ugainst Lamest Bolcof,
in which the government con
tested the desert claims of Vena
tor and Bolcof in the Barren val
ley country.
The government claimed that
LATEST DEVELOPMENT LEAGUE NOTES DDADAcr nili mnrn imi
PUBLIC LAND LAWS
Hawley Would Make Grazing a Part of
Cultivation. Department Expected
To Oppose on Ground it is Too
Liberal. Improvement Clause Also
Objected to, The Dispatch Claims
It is expected that the Ini'-rior
Department will attack (he Haw
ley bill, on the ground that it
makes it too easy for a home
steader to get title to 160 acres
of public land. Assistant Sec
retary Jones, of the Interior De
partment, has already made an
adverse report on the Borah bill,
w hich provides for improvements
in lieu of cultivation, contending
that is too liberal, and if the
III!
J'
The absence of song birds in
Oregon causes much regret among
bird love s who come from sec-
. , i 111 111' K"'t lllllll III VlClllIllll nun
The policy of maintaining " "' country ana auroaa tne ,Rnd ,md not beenrecWmed
county agents of field und farm wnt- inp Bweet voiced mrus
demonstration work is heartily fill I he air with music. Many u
approved where-ever it has been Present-day Oregonian is said to
tried. A convention of 176 farm- De homesick for the song of the
ers and business men of Spring- akylark and the canary und
field, (MasB. ), passed resolutions cuckoo.
approving the work and provid- j State Game Warden Finley is
ing means of raising funds for , greatly interested in tranship-
its support. The State Hunkers' ping some of these song birds tlt. charges be dismissed and
Association or Colorado com- Irom other climes to this stute, that the entry proceed to patent
mended the plan, and pledged Its but is unable to do so because
moral support of an effort to the state game protection fund
finance a county agency in co- carries no provision for this
operation with the Agricultural purpose. There is nothing, how
College and the Federal Depart- ever, to prevent individual bird
ment of Agriculture, in every lovers who desire to assist the
i'i in Mm fort I nnd Ourraauondnn )
February 1214 is the date set;
for tho l'JH meeting of the
Oregon Irrigation Congress,
which will be held in Portland
at the Imperial Hotel. The ex
ecutive committee is busy pre
paring a tentative program that
will he announced shortly.
It la planned to give a banquet
n the night of February 12 for
the delegates to the Congress in
celebration of the effective work
done at the last Congress. Thi
banquet will he given under the
auspices of the Central Oregon
Delegation. A re(.cnt newa flatten from
About 40 organizations of Washington published in the Oi-
watfr-users, ditch owners and itronian, Bays: Shortly after the
commercial bodies are associated holidays, when Congress rets
with the congress and each will down to iegfatatinn, an effort will
send five delegates. It is ex- be made to bring about needed
pected that M0 delegates will be changes in Hie land laws. Sev ..I
present b.lls are pending proposing
That the Pacific Coast has changes in the homestead law.
ample time to prepare for an "siKned entirely to male the
ultimate influx of European bn law m"rt' '"''p1"1 ,( lti" borne-
migrants, is aonarent from re- seeker and to remove. s. me of I ie
ports received hy the Oregon burdens that now attach under department frowns on the im
State Immigration Commission. ht' three-year I ivv as it was provement provision, which re-
This conclusion has been reach, d "mended at the suggestion of - - quireB the annual expenditure of
by that office after making un Secretary of Interior Fisher. $240 on each homestead, it cer-
extensive investigation in co- Senator Borah has a bill which tainly will object to the Hawley
operation with the Oregon De- na8 already pass d the Senate, bill, which stipulates that the
velopment League, of reported '"""V'd'otf thai in Hen of cultiva- raking of grasses shall be ample
sales of thousands of steamship t'on now 'equred, the hone- to meet the cultivation reijuire
tickets on the installment plan o f tea'cr muy make a showing of ments, but gives the entrvman
prospective immikrat t) via the improvement en his land to the the option between improve-
Panama Canal is without found;.- ('xtent of $1.60 an acre a year up ment and the growing of grasses.
tion.
Humors that a great flood of
European Unmigmnta was to
pour upon the Pacific Coast as
soon as tne Panama Canul was
open, bus cieated great anxiety
amongst civic organizations. The
Oregon State Immigration Com
mission felt that if such a throng
was actually in prospect, it was
incumbent upon the Commission
to ascertain what nroviaiona
could be made for distribution of
arriving aliens away from the
congested centers.
So far as a thorough investi
gation could disclose, no steam
ship company has yet quoted
passenger rates for immigrants
via the canal, and no such tickets
are oeing boio eitner lor cash or
on the installment plan. Per
sistence of the old rumors caused
this office to make such investiga
tions and the reports now in
hand from the American Con
suls stationed at the important
ports of Europe, utterly dis
credit the rumors of a direct
Pacific Coast immigration.
The state of Oregon is es
pecially well equipped through I thereafter
its commercial organizations
banded together to handle any
possible inflow of agricultural
immigration. The Atlantic Coast
states have not and never had
such an organizations exists in
this state for the distribution of
agriculturists upon the soils of
Oregon.
Ultimately positive that the
favorable climate and inviting
opportunities of the Pacific Coast
will attract a large immigration
from Europe through the canal,
still the Immigration Commission
feels no alarm over any im
mediate overwhelming influx.
to the time of submittintf final
proof, such improvements to in
clude houses, barnes, fences,
orchards, etc. Representative
Hawley, of Oregon, has intro
duced a bill which incoroorates
all that is in the Borah bill, but
adds a new proviso to the fft ct
that the nrouing of native or
cultivated grasM s for hay or for
grazing shall be construct! aa
'cultivation" within the mean
ing of the law.
The Interior Department, in
interpreting the present law, has
held that ihe growing of grasses
shall not be Considered as cultiva
tion, but has required the plant
ing of vegetables or fruits in
order to comply with this clause.
The law requires cultivation of
one-sixteenth the area of the
entry the second year and one
eighth the third and following
year, in order to show good faith.
If the Hawley proposal is adopt
ed by Congress, a homesteader
taking 160 acres of land could
Notice to Stockholders.
To whom it may cencern:
All parties who bought Gold
berg Butte Stock from M. L.
Lewis and Tom Anderson ue re
qut sted to send their names and
number of their certificate to J.
A Morris of Adel, Orejron, for
the purpose of entering your
names on the book, as Lewis and
Anderson fa'led to furnish us
with your names and number of
certificates.
E. H. LOFFTUS.
Fit Hit CMS Exactly.
"When father was sick a6out
six years ago he read an adver
tisement of Chamberlain's Tab
lets in the papers that fit his case
exactly," writes Miss Margaret
Campbell of Ft. Smith, Ark.
"He purchased a box of them
and be has not been sick since.
My sister had stomach trouble
and was also benefited by them."
meet the requirements of the
cultivation clause by raising grass ' For sale by all Dealers.
or hay on 10 acres of his land the , - '
second year und on 20 acres Sauer kraut at Lunaburr.
. Dalton & Co.
THE FRENCH HOTEL
DAVID NEWMAN, Prop.
Strictly First Class. Splendid
Service, Fine Accomodations,
C mmercLI Headquarters
Sample Room In Connection, Reasonable Rates
by irrigation. That one eighth
of the land hud not been cultivat
ed. That the claimant had not
procured a permanent water
i lght and did not have a system
i hat would irrigate all of the ir
rigable portion of the land.
The local officers decided that
The decision is signed by Bruce
K. Kester, Register, and Harry
G. Guild, Receiver. - Vale Enterprise.
Totiuwumu tonight.
Market Report.
Receipts for the week have
been Cattle-685; Calves-15; Hogs-
3765; Sheep-5138.
A natural apathy was apparent
in the cattle market this week,
follow the big Stock Show, when
exceptionally heavy shipments
were made. Cattle pnets suf
fered a severe slump, top quality
going at 25 cents lower und
other grades at even more of a
decline. Killers had suonlied
their needs temporarily und will
have to work off the surplus, but
as liquidation will be light for
jthe next few months the situa
tion is expected to impiove this
next week.
The hog market d topped off
1 10 cents during the week, with
j extreme top at $7.5 for
i the week'B dose for choice
j stuff, with heavy stock 10 to 16
I cents down. Liberal liquidation
increases the seasonable weak
ness.
The sheep house business held
up well for the week. Some
choice mutton and lambs were
marketed. Lambs moved easily
at $6.26 and prime wethers held
their own at $6.00, while ewes
closed around $4.00, when choice
stuff was offered.
JBLU
Daily I.
BLUE MT. STAGE CO.
Daily Line, Burns and Prairie City
SCHEDULE:
l.KAVK
llni ii-
Canyon fit
I'ralrie City
Canyon City
ii u in
7 a in
SJ p in
7pm
A It It I VI
Canyon City
I'raitir Clly
tiurna
lM p m
III ; in
1 II no II
$ 6.00
11.00
Fare, Hunts-Prairie City,
Round hip,
Expremt Rates 2 1-2 Cents, Prairie to Burns
PLEASANT. SCENIC ROUTE ALL THE WAY
L. WOt DENBERG. Prop.
BaMawmmsmmm
Gifts
The Welcome I tarinacy
Hat some of the finest holi
day goods to select from..,.
Hand Painted China
Cut Glass, Toilet Sets
Kodaks, Pictures, Toys
Appropriate Gifts for old
and young and at prices to
suit your purse. You are in
vited to come in and see our
display. No trouble to show
You are Welcome