Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About Independence monitor. (Independence, Or.) 1912-19?? | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1915)
MMIIMMIIIMMHW MUSICAL GOODS! Violins, Guitars, Banjoo and Mandolins For list than he regular Mutlo flora can afford to Mil them for. Alao : : STRINGS IF ALL KINDS, VIOLIN OASES AND BOWS, AT ('REAMER'S. 4 I SALE 1 "Buy It Now" MAY 15 till 29 This Is a Get-The-Money Sale! We have the Goods We need the money and are making Inducements that will bring it Let's get togetherIt will pay you. Gome and Look! i Profit? Not Ours--But Yours (We have croaied that word from our dic tionary )-You can't make money faster than to annex tome of these beautiful articles at the prices we are making. COME AND LOOK! ROWE'S JEWELRY STORE "Whars dollar does its duty" "ttmiittttMimtiti ntttt titniim huh mi free Suit of Clothes Fret to anyone sending or bringing a buy er or exchange for this or any other farm on my lists, a 925.00 suit of clothes made to your measure and your own choice. A M sere stock ran h for'sxcBange, valued at ISO par acr. About 4 aero., cleared n, I baUm-e In A-l timber, fir sultabla for pillni. Kallliif. reddish aolL suitable fur fruit. Kino large 1 room house, and large barn 60e aidad with Ruitia. Running water from areas and sprints. Want ie Siskanfa small ranch up to $5000 and fTOOO In eaah. Balaae eaa ramaia In Drat mortgage on placo at 6 percant. A chance of a Mia time. Writ for partlaulara. No troubla to abow rdaes. East aecoaa to large kipping aontar. For limitod tlma only. j. g. Mcintosh MIM MlimMMMMHIIMItlMMMMt A STUPENDOUS SALE Clearance & Removal Owing to circumstances oer which we had no con trol, the Monitor hu nearly 100 yellow back novels in cold storage. As w wars vacinatad againat reading thttn yean ao, to remove and clear them out, we will sacrifice thetn at a jitney each catch-as-cateh-can, six rides into another world for a quarter. Come in and become Infected. SALE STARTS AS SOON AS YOU ARRIVE LOCAL NEWS Dr. Lowe May I'd. Phone in the news. at , . a w a U. Cuegley .Dunes tins moved to Dallas. Willis Carter was here from Wells this week. Dr. R. E. Duganne, den tint, National Bauk Building. Mrs. W. Black of Dallas was visiting in Independent this week. "Buy it Now" at Howe's Jewelry Store for cash and save money. Mrs. E. E. Paddock and Dorothy went to Corvallis today for a short visit. MiHH Maud Patterson re turned to her home at Van couver, Wash., this week. State Superintendent Chur chill and Col E. liefer were in Independence Saturday. Dr. H. C. Dunsmore ar rived in Independence yes terday from San Francisco. Mrs. W. VY. Ireland and children are at the home of her mother, Mrs. K. J. Tay lor. J. 0. Molntoih wants to give you a suit of clothes ah solutely free. Read his ad on this page. For the M arj Pick ford cap and white and eolored out ing hats for ladies, you will go to Conkey fc Walkers. Kllery Fluke suffered a re lapse of the mumps and has been spending his time in bed for the pant ten days. Mrs. Robert Sinclair, whose home is in British Columbia, is at the home of her sister, Mrs. B. E. Owen. K. E. Tripp reports the snle of the Willis Carter house and lot near the Chris tian church to Chus. E. Fra- aier. Dallas Observer: Ed Dunn has traded his ranch near Ellendale for the Qeorge Hawkins apple orchard near Riekreall. Dr. and Mrs. O. D. Butler are in Portland this wtek. Their son Maurice graduates this week from the Portland Dental College. Harry Mix resigned his position aa bookkeeper in the Independence National Bauk this week and moved to a faun ntar Corvallis. Shaler Eldridge takes the placs at th bank, The entertainment to be given at the Methodist church next Thursday even ing by Katharine Neal Situ mons, soprano soloist, assist ed by Mrs. Gilhoueen, vio linut, and Miss Florence Jackson, pianist, will be a treat musically. The ad mission price will be 35 and 20. W. P. Connaway, of Van couver, Wash , was hero Sun day to see his sunt and uncle, Mis. and Mr. K. A. Patterson, who have been quit ill. The Connaway family left here about tiftetn years ago for Vanrouvei where Mr. Conuaway has been one of the prominent citizens, at the prevent time being President of the Com nu'iciai clab. He wa strong- ly iinprtitsed with the many improvements to be noted in independence. j A good pair of reading glasses for SI -00 at 0. A. Kreamer's. Wilson will be fair with Germany. Tripp still sells realestate. Miss Panline Looney of Jefferson is a gsest of Mrs. R. L Gaines. E. F. Emmons is building a house on his farm aouth of Independence. Luther Ground, living near Monmouth, is in a crit ical condition due to paraly sis. Buena Vista and - Airlie played bill at Airlie Sunday. The pcore was 7 to 3 in Air- ie's favor. The usual large crowd at tended th circus in Salem yesterday from Independ ence and vicinity. Warner's Corsets are supe rior to others in wear. Eve ry pair guaranteed. For sale by Conkey A Walker. Three youngsters broke a plate glass at the Red Cross Pharmacy Wednesday which will oost over $40 to replace. Ladies, don't forget . the cooked food sale by the la dies of th Christian church t Reeves' grocery store th first Saturday in June. Percy Haley, who lives at Airlie, recently sheared his sheep, the yearlings averag- ng 19 pounds of wool which he sold at 25c per pound. The 0. A. R. will erect headstones to the graves of their departed comrades at the I. O. 0. F. cemetery on Saturday, May 22. All in terested are invited to assist. The Conqueror Hat is the lient $.'.00 hat made for men. Do you need one? They come in the latent shapes and styles for men and young men at Conkey & Walker's, the store tv.at gives you value received for your dollar. Why be bothered with two pairs of glasses? Call at Hotel Beaver Saturday, May 29, to 4 o clock only and have Dr. Lowe show you the new glasses with which you can see all distsnces. He guarantees all his glasses to satisfy, whether they cost $2 or more. Scores of Inde pendence references. Eugene Register: Jaok Cannon, formerly connected with the Frank E. Dunn store in Eugene, plans t( leave Wednesday for Inde pend uce where he expect to take a similar position with the Wetherbee & Jones xtoro of t:at city. Mrs. S. A. Caldwell and laughter, Miss I). Caldwell, left for Independence where they intend to reside ptrnia- nrntly. GREAT SALE Throughout The Land OF THE NEW SAXON 4 Who la Your Tailor? Let as take your measure for your suit, ior men of all class. A complete line of all woolen asm pies to select from. We will give you free for the next 30 days one ex tra pavr of trousers with eve ry suit or coat and pants which ever you prefer Let us take your measure now. Price f 18 and up at t 'on key A Walkers. t : : - y-JK l f -HM B " . - : ' 'X I WSfX"" 5 -I This Car $785. F. 0 B. Detroit G. A. RICH, Resident Dealer WHY MEN LOVE BASEBALL And Why, Too, In Mora Than Ona Way, It la a Vary Dangaroua Cama. Baseball is the most dangerous game known to history. When it comes to mortality lists baseball leaves football a kp behind in a six furlong race on a mile track. Statis ticians have figured it out that it is 430 times a a destructive to human life ss a Mexican revolution, and al most as deadly as Mexican chile. Annually it kills off so many aunts, uncles and grandparents that think ing people wonder how the under takers can mand the steady work. For example, in the course of one thrilling pennant race our office boy lost seven grandmothers. For all that, we love baseball. Even in spite of the grand stand humorists, we love it. It is our national game. We feel that, since this country was to give us base ball, our revolutionary sires did not bleed and die in vain. Men have much reason to love baseball. It gives them the chance to admire t-kul, speed, strength, nerve, courage and determination, and to learn the latest slang and most pepful repartee. It gives them the chance t boldly abuse and in sult other m n without fear of con sequences and to exhibit their wit before large crowds. It gives them the chance to set up real heroes and bow down to them. Statesmen are corrupt, generals fight from their tents, literarv lions are pale, weas bodies. But I aseball heroes are real heroes. An 1 it baseball also gives men tl opportunity to be as loud and sil.y and joyously unre pressed as tl ty want to be without being laughed at. Young wo uen like baseball, too, and some of them understand it re markably well. Some of them are said to know the difference between the pitcher and the umpire. There is s legend that once there was a young woman who could watch a whole game without asking, "Whst are they doin now V and tell which Hide won at t ie end. But that is be lieved to hive been written by Grimm. It is not idwaTS wise to take a young woman to the ball game, no matter how -she dotes on it Miej may not noti -e the difference when they stop bat ting up flies and begin the game. SI a tnsv think the pitch er and catcher ars plaving against each other and complain because one of them, does not quit and give that eute fellow with such a jaunty air a turn. She may mistake the catcher's breast protector for a por ous plaster. But she will notice, with an ever growing admiration, me grace, eurene and swiftness of the well conditioned men on the field. After which she is likelr to size you up and devido vou won't do. A lot of tine poiuts about health, gained from baseball if most of us weren't so good at muffing them. Lee Shippey in Judge. CHEW YOUR FOOD WElL Thia Will Aid Digaation and Halp to Banish Dyapapsia. "Chew your food well," is a mot to winch should be w ritten large on the walls of dining rooms, restau rants and every other place where human beings eat. the reason is that in order to digest food in the shortest possible time and with the least possible effort it must first be dissolved, and thia can be accom plished only by adequate chewing. Just how much thorough chewing lessens the strain on the digestive apparatus can be seen by a very simple experiment. Take s one inch cube of hard, solid, nonporous sugar candy and drop it into a pint of water. It will take at least half an hour and per haps much longer to dissolve be cause a cube of this size has only six square inches of surface exposed to the solvent action of the water. If, however, a similar cube of candy is broken into 100 smaller pieces before being placed in the water it will dissolve 10,000 times ss quickly because there is now 10,000 times as much surface area exposed. In digestion we have to deal not merely with simple solution, but with the chemical conversion ol in soluble into soluble substances a much more difficult process. For this reason a one inch cube of solid food would take much more than 10,000 times as long to digest ss the same quantity which had first been reduced to fine bits by the ac tion of the teeth and the saliva glands. Science now believes that much modern dyspepsia arises from our having lost the habit of living on hard, dry foods. When all our food was so hard and dry that it had to be well chewed before ws could swallow it our salivary glands were kept more active and our teeth cleaner. New York American. Etiquatta of tha tafo. "The etiquette of the sofa" in Germany i indeed a profound mya tery to English people. We offer the easiest chair near the fireplace to the guest of honor, but in Ger man? the sofa is invested with a sanctity as of a thronse. The visitor must not sit upon it unless especial ly invited to do so by the hostess, to take a seat there unasked is an outrageous presumption. Strictly according to the rank, wealth and status of her guests does the haus frsu oiler them seats of honor, the Hon" before the untitled, and so on to the married lady before the spinster. It is delicate a matter as the Englishwoman's pairing of Ser guests for the dinner table, 'HANTS For Sale 4 bowk and pigu. 39 C. P. Welle. The front room of the loni or building is now for rent to a suitable tenant. Wood, Uravel and Sedi ment, delivered. Utf F. E. Rider. Wedding Stationery at the Monitor office. All kin' at all prices. Wanted to Rent A good typewriter at once. A W., Monitor. 40 For Rent Three nicely furn abed rooms for light housekeeping, with toilet and bath. Mrs. W. H. Park. Cor. Log Cabin and liutler St. riOM THX MONMOUTH HKXALD John Riddell is still ioiDrovmir in health and was able to go home to visit his father and fam ily last Saturday for a few days stay. The Monmouth Oeamerv Co. shipped the third !shipment of cheese this week. The output is between 400 and 500 Dounda of cheese per day.; J. L. Murdock sent the her,t of cattle he brought down from his Yamhill farm, some wck ago, back to the farm last Tues. day. Earl White taking them. Mr. M. intended to di'sr of the heH at the Independence sale, but stock sold so cheap that he did net offer them. Dr. Laura Price. Mrs J H Remington and alias Allie Butler delegates to the Rebek ah Grand Lodge, went to Newport Hon day. Miss laa Fiahbaek returned heme Thursday after spending two weeks in and around Carl. ton visiting relatives and f rierda. Thia weak Wills Rickman sold his partly burned residence to John South who at once moved it to leta north. Mr. South will rebuild the structure and maka a home oat ef it