(Twf nim nut ihi acoo jvtn am tfonwm m r mim') (nt Km lip 1 wrtTrsoav am lyuw nr.t Txt v ) -j " vtky avricM i-walitth ( oriHl lui.Toucwrw f 1 HiuinMW-mMgM r i f & L "J TITIEN a fellow wants to ' bacco satisfaction and finds liovv he can get it, it's natural for him to put the other fellows next to the Real Tobacco Chew, because a little chew satisfies. Tobacco satisfaction is what he is looking for the smaller the chew it takes, the better it suits him. A little chew of pure, rich, mellow tohacco seasoned nil sweetened just enough cuts out so rnucn of the grinding and spitting. ASK Y0UP DEALEP FOpW-B CUT CHEWING TOBACCO.IT IS THE NEW REAL TOBACCO CHEW-CUT LONG SHI7EO. Take IcM than one-quarter the old elite chew. It will be mora utifyinj( than mouthful of ordinary tobacco. Just tuka a nihbla of it until you find the tranjtlh chew that iuiti you, then hi bow easily and avenly Ilia real tobacoo taste comet, how it satisfies, how much lese you heva to spit, how lew chewe you tak to ha tobacco satisfied. 1 tint's why it la 'I hi Htal Tvincc Lkrw. That's why it costs less in tba end. 'Ilia luata of pure, rich tohacco dona not need) to be covered up. As ltwts of licorice and awaateniu makes yuu apit too much. One small chew takes the place of two big chews of the old kind. Not Ire bow the salt brfnfls) out llie rich tobacco laie.tt WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, SO Union Square, New York City i THE INDEPENDENCE NATIONAL BANK Established 1689 A Successful business Carter ot Twenty five tsars INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS OFFICERS AND Dl RUC'I ORS H. Hlrichberg, Pres. D. W. Sears, V. P. R. It. DcArmond, Cashftr W. H. Walker, I. A. Allen, 0. D.Butler oca liuujlaj. Oiiij.vwwboaA j Enamel your walla and woodwork and iccuro finish that is hard and smooth, non-aUorbent and tanitary. Enameled surfaces do not require scrub bing. An occasional wiping; with a damp cloth will keep thcin looking clean and fresh. ACHE QUALITY ENAMELS (MEALY) are easily applied. They cost no more than ordinary paint and save you time, trouble and worry. Our "Home Decorating;" booklet tells you how you can "do it yourself" at uifliug cotL At-W for a free copy. GHAS. K, SPAULD1NG LOGGING COMPANY Independence, Oregon THE INDEPENDENCE MONITOR AN INDLMjJN'OCVr NHWSPAPLK Published Weekly at Independence, Polk County 'Oregon, on Friday. Snteied as Second Class Matter August 1,191? at the Post Office at Inde pendence, Polk County, Oregon, Under the Act of March 3, 1879. CLYDE T. ECKER, Editor NINA B. ECKER, Associate Suoscrlption Rates: One Year $1.50 StrictJj In Advance ADVERTISING RATES: 15c. per inch for one Insertion. 12 l-2c. for two or more Insertions, 10c. on monthly contracts. Readers, 8 and 10c. per line Independence, Oregon, Friday, October-15, 1915 Our old friend, Col. Hoft must want a Democratic goven or to succeed Withy com be not, why should he wish for Lh Republican nomination. if Yeterday'n Benton County Courier was printed two daya ahead of time. Birth in the fam ily or KoinK fishing? Over in the Portland distric with rat McArthur carrying the Republican banner, Oswald VVel ruling the Democratic don key and Luiferty always running, anml excitement and an uncer tain result can be looked for i the concessional race. Too bad there cun't be a like condition ii this district. It seems to be pre scribed that we must swallow the dose, but perhaps somebody someday will introduce a stomach pump" that will work. The Portland News has sprung a corker which it want tho American people to think about. 'Suppose", says the News, "that an army of 250,000 Mexicans should decide to march to Wash ington.'' This is such an appall intf supposition that one shudders in its contemplation. Just im agine five million American men, living along the thousand mile route of the march, taking to the hills and allowing the pesky invadera the right of way, just because they, the Americans, were not in a state of "prepared ness" and as youths they had not been taught how to ptvperly shoot to kill a fellow being. "COOLNESS AND COURAGE" The Oregoniun recently stated that in the police department Patrolman Long "has a reputa tion for coolness and courage," To which a Portland writer com ments that it is hardly a demon stration of coolness and courage to shoot a man in a hole thru the body and then handculT and drag himout.-Bentoa County Courier. Echoes of the War. I'ram talk ih sulci to le Id the air Ttmt U where (lie pern emakerr, are, 'no. nliia!r-Clilcno News. Somehow the torpedo boat destroyer Id not seem to niHke un liiipreaislve fit; tire In the prvwut war. Chnttunoog:i 1'i men. We continue to look forward bojieful ly to the dny when Europe will Invite every one to the grain! burned wire ruinniiiKe ule --Washington I'oxt. "Thrift, thrift!" 1b now the cry In Biilnln, Triune. Uertmuiy, Hungary Every one must save Venule " ttint million run be uliot off in powler, Detroit Journal. IK'onlatloiiH aa to what the relations of government w become after the end of tlie war will liuve Importance in time, but at present they are preina tuie.- Wnxliingtou Suir. The Royal Box. Queen Alexandra refuses to wear osprey oil m-ruuiit of the cruelty to lilnla which the eollei tliiir of the feuth er Involve. Therand iMike Nicholas Is furnoua a a KportHimiii. Counting wolves wltb borzoi may he regarded aa a national Bport In ltiitislii, and it 1 one wblcb the grand duke Ima made big own. The queen of the Relglun recently celebrated her thlrty-nintb birthday A member of the royal bouse of Bava ria, the I'l'linex Kllznbeth was born on July 25, 1S7U. at 1'ossenhofen. In October. l!K)o, she married at Munich i'rlnce Allien of Itelglum, who sue- cteded to the throne of that country on the deatb of his uncle. King Leopold II., In Decynber. 10O0. Short Stories. The United Slatea baa 1.903.000.000 acres of land. Tapioca 1 poisonous In its raw state. but I purltied by masting. The I'nited Slate income tax In the last fiscal year yielded $70.8ZS,075. It 1 said I bat Nero once paid a sum eiual to about S'JoO.lTOO for two cu of transparent glaa. lu Home ports of China it la cotisld red a hljib virtue for a wife to com mit suicide after the deatb of ber bus-band. Never liefore In blatory baa the price of horses been so bigb lu Holland. The vldcnt cause la the great demand for rsea resulting from the war. Monitor Ada Get 1Tie Bunc4. "CO TO IT" It makes little difference whether the juice comes from Loganberry or Phenomenal, "drink her down." Oregonian. TBI REAL THKIU One ean now ride in a hydro aeroplane for $10. Ilavinur the ten spot is thrilt enough for u. Dethan, Ala., News. A SOLDIER'S TESTIMONY "Though I have been trained a soldier sad participated in many battles, there never was a time when, in my opinion, some way eould not found of prevent ing the drawing of the sword." Cent ral U. S. Grant " SHORT AND SHARP. Live wires should not waste time ou dead issue. Take your pick of Mexican "sltua tlons." That eouutry baa tbem to buru Somebody says Hint you can't play golf unless you have the nerve. Muut men display a lot of nerve in think lug they eau play It It woniit -Mm i ho hbrh time for the gooselKine man to speak, or 1 the ma chlnery of hi inairlc ossihYatlou dlsar nihsed by the ernh of wart RAY GROUND'S PRIZE WINNING ESSAY ON PROHIBITION Published by Independence W. C. T. U. THY IT ON YOUR CROCER Try to work the Allies loan' method on your grocer. If youj owe him 100 go to him and a.- Is to borrow $2H to pay him off and a tree to trade the extra huadred out with him. When he asks for security tell hltn you have none, but you pay him essh with his wa money. Peters burg, Neur., Index. Following Is the essay by Ray Grounds of Dallas, which won the Ore gan state prize in the high aehool eon teat, end which ia fall of strong- argu ments against the liquor traffic. There Is a probability that this assay will win in the national eenteat, a decision in which will be rendered in the aot eery diatant future. The essayist, who is a wall known hif h school .boy, having graduatad last spring-, haa written sev eral temperance artielee that have at tracted wide-spread attention among cold wstar advocates of the country, but the eta ay In question ts especially meritorious, and worthy ef wide pub licity t "Traffic In aleohollc liquors in IU re lation to government presents a prob lem of world-wide importance. Con sidored in its social, ocoaoaaic and po liiical aicta, this criminal trade ia America's must bitter enemy. The sa loon ia the root of the social evil - Ma ry K. Regan, chief matron of the Chi ago police department, says: "Of ail the tea or twelve thouaand unfortunate girls and recked women arreatvd ev ery year ia Chicago, ameng these whe tell their wo- s to me, ninety-nine out of one hundred attribute their woes to the first glass ef wine or shampalgne." The accuracy of this statement haa been corroborated time and again by such authorities as the oir.cial vice in vestigating committees of Chicago, Philadelphia and Pittsburg. "The saloon is the church's most ag gressive foe. Dr. J. C. Jackson made a very convincing comparison between two Ohio citiea. The first had long been wet. Ten years after it had gone dry the church membership' had dou bled in proportion to the population. The second hsd been dry for years. After it became wet the church mem bership decreased one-half during the first ten yesrs. Mr. Jackadn found that in aeven wet Ohio towns, of which the aggregate population was 15,557, there were only S915 church members, as compared with a church member ship of 10,000 in aevea dry towns, of which the total population was only 12,800. "In this country rum is at present the chief promoter of criminality. By starching the jail records of Massachu setts it haa been disclosed that in 1911, out of 31 cities, used ss examples, in the license citiee there were 78,771 crimes committed becnuse. of drink, while 34,061 offen-es wetelaid to other caoses. In the sam yetr there were 9826 orirnes committed in the no-license plaees of tha list because of drinking, while 9191 offenses were attributed to other causes. The city jail records of Lansing, Miotiigan, show that in 1910, when the place was dry there were on ly 206 arrests, in comparison to 10.15 in 1912, when the town was wet. Accord ing to the court records there were 9950 criminal cases filed in the munici pal court of Chicago in 1910; in 1913 there were 20,291. Judge Gemmill i considers this remarkable increase in crime to be due principally to the sa loons. Looked at from a physiological stand point, alcohol has wrought havoc throughout our nation, Insurance ta blea of the United States give 92,794 ss the total number of deaths resulting from smallpox, scarlet fever, diphthe- erate drinker at 20 years of sge and after, loses 13 years of life and that the average hard drinker at the age of 20 years and after, loses 29 years. Al cohol makes the human body more sus ceptible to disease. Sir Andrew Clark, physician to Queen Victoria, found that seven out of ten in the English hospital warda owed their afflictions to Intoxi cants. Drink ia largely responsible for the rapid increase in insanity. Within a period of 50 years the population of the United States hss increased 880 per cent. During the same period the number of inssas has become 950 per cent lsrger, the latter increase being due almost entirely to the excessive use of alcohol and other narcotics, in one form or another (committee report, American Medical Association, New York). Ln 1910 there warm on an av erage, 118 8 insane to each 103,000 pop ulation in the dry s'ates. In the wet states the number of insane averaged 276.6 to each 100,000 population (U. S. censua 1910.) "Liquor traffic haa every where proved a decided hindrance to education. In Mnine, where prohibition prevails, 83 7 par cent ot the children are enrolled in the schools. In tha wet state ef Rhode Island only 66.4 per cent of the child, rcn of school age attend. In Oklaho ma, a dry state, 81.6 par cent of the j youth are being educated. In Nevada, I quors. The rise in taxea which the tariff brings about heavily counterbal ences the amount of revenue it brings into the treasury. Employing a basis established from the report of the Mas sachusetts state board of statistics of labor and the state auditor'a report, it was discovered tnat $2 012,419 of the cost of paopers, criminals and insane wis due to license for the sale of intox icants. One-fourth of the appropria tions of the Oregon 'egislature in 1913 was for those institutions made neces sary largely by the open saloon. "Labor and the manufacturing indus try sre decidedly worsted by booze. The Oiegon Anti-Saloon League's in vestigation in 1914 of the 18 breweries of the itate shows that $2,462,927 was invested in these plants and that 204 wage earner were employed. By carelul comparison with the other in dustries it was shown that if the same amount were inveated in any other line it would employ 818 wage earners. The families of drunkards are forced to compete in the labor market. This, of course, greatly lowrrs wages. In Mas sachusetts the average yearly earnings of each man and woman living in no li cense cities amounts to $42.39 more than the average yearly earnings of each man and woman living in the wetcities, an aggregate difference of $4,085,081.- 91 (Third Annual Report on Statistics a state in moat respects similsr to Ok-1 and Manufactures for Massachusetts.) ria, croup, typhoid and cancer. Yet this is insignificant when we are aware that intoxication brought about 1G2,- 781 or 69.987 more deatha than did all six of those diseases combined. Drink destroys three times as much life every yesrin America as did the civil war. 'The indirect results of the liquor evil on mortslity are even more far- reaching. Dr. J. H. Kellogg, of Bat tle Creek, calls attention to the fact that in Bulgaria, where intoxicants are uaed but very little, ene person out of every thousand attains the age of 100 years, while in Germany, a nation giv en to bee drinking, only one oat of 700,000 reachea that age. Insurance tables indicate that the average mod- lahoma, but wet, only 68 per cent ara in school. "The economic loss occasioned by the liquor trade is titanic. The last census report represents ths distillers and brewers of the nation as having uaed materials amounting to a little more than 1 per cent of the value of the raw products made use of in all manufac turing. A few simple comparisons will suffice to illustrate how rum has worked to the detriment ef the producer. Whan breweries were in operation in the state of Oregon they returned enly two-fifths of the value of their product to labor and materials, while ether in dustries returned four-fifths (1914 Campaign Manual, Oregon Anti-Saloon League.) In every ease where states have gone dry the farming communities have been benefited by the change. Twenty years sco mortgages were held by eastern ers on Kansas lands Now, in spite of repeated droutha, the people of the state own $67,000,000 worth of such credits. In Ksnsaa every fifth farmer owns an automobile; in wet Missouri, where conditions of climate and soil are much more favorable to the agricultur ist, only on farmer in every 100 afford an automobile. "The one thing that has given King Alcohol the grip he now holds on your gevernaaant is the revenue. let in 1912 we received $31,365,484.81 interna! revenue from sources other than li- "The preparation of liquors does not deserve mention among manufacturing industries, The vulueof products from lumbering alone ia more than three times the value of malt and distilled liquors, while the vslue of products from our foundries and machine shops is nearer four times as much (Abstract of Census, p. 442.) v "Liquor traffic adds very little to in. land commerce and atili less to' oeean trade. On the other hand it injures trade the world over by decreasing pro dactibility. Furthermore, it menaces the carriers of commerce by inducing an Irresponsible rondi ion upon the part of train and ship crews. Business con ditions will be better in the United States without booze. So little raw material ia used, so little labor needed, to carry on its production, that the prsfits are enormous. Nothing keeps , more money out of circulation than does the liquor trade. By a conserve -tivc estimate, our drink bill in 1910 was $2,430,551,073 58. Other causes not taken into consideration, this great economic waste ia sufficient to bring about stringent financial conditions and it is well to notice that our financial panics have always followed a series of years when fermented liquors boomed. "As long as the liquor traffic ex'sts our liberties and institutions are en dangered. It ia therefore urgently necessary that this "enemy at home" be prohibited to continue." Independence Business PirmeS Well worthy of your patronage Dr. J. Callaway Osteopathic Physician Graduste of the American School of osteopathy, Klrksvllle, Missouri, under founder of the science, Dr. A. T. Still. : ; : : Offieec: First floor of the F. A. Patteraon prop erty, half block west of railroad, on C street The City Bakery MAKES THE Best Bread and Pastries FATRON1ZI HOME INDUSTRY DENNY BROTHERS DEALERS IN New and Second Hand Hardware and Furniture WE BUY, SELL AND EXCHANCE. Store en C Street. American Restaurant We serve the best meals ln towa. All Bona Cooking. : : ; Chlckta Dinner Kvery Sunday. Ideals at AU Hours, MEALS 25 SHORT OKDEIS IDA ZERR, Proprietor C Street HALIADAY'S MACHINE SHOP In Fitchard's Garage. General Machine Work Repairing; of nil kinds Vulcanizing. Automobiles a specialty Let us grind your plow shares. IN. L,. BUTLER Attorney-at-Law Practice la all Courts. Q. A. RICH TBI RELIABLE Contractor and Builder His ork speaks for itself. Sea him if you wish to build. Non Resldentt who desire to ellorbuy property In the In dependence district, may notify the Monitor and some reliable real estate man will be engaged for yon.