Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About Independence monitor. (Independence, Or.) 1912-19?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 21, 1917)
JSPQNDDNCE, BUENA VISTA Miss Etta Well is eonfined to her home on account of being sick. Mrs. Plant is here from the Wigrich ranch visiting her daughter, Miss Plant, and Miss Rose, her grand -daughter. Mr. Hanson left Saturday for Forest Grove where he will com bine business with pleasure. S. W. Leonard has a sale on December 27. Please don't for get the date. Prof. Reynolds of Salem was a week end visitor in this vicin ity. Orville Wells was a week end visitor from 0. A. C. with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Wells. Mrs. Hale and her daughter. Miss May, and son, Arthur, were Surday guests at the E. M. Lichty home. Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Chown moved to the Wigrich ranch the last of the week. Major and Mrs. Rose spent several days in Portland where they combined business and pleasure. HOW LEWISVILLE GOT ITS NAME A week or two ago I drove thru Polk and Benton counties. I stopped at a prosperous looking farm house and asked the pro prietor how far it was to Lewis ville. "It's just over the hill, what there is left of it." he answered. We fell into talk and he told me his name was Francis Marion Lewis, and that he was born on that farm on February 5, 1847. "My father, D. R. Lewis, came here in '45," he said. "He was in the same train with Captain English and Sol Tetherow. Our place is on the old emigrant road to Roseburg. Father gave Mose Apple' and Abe Wing five acres from his donation land claim to start a town here. They called it after father's native city, Louisville, Ky., only they spelled it as we spell our name, Lewis, so that it was named Lewisville. "Gaston, a lawyer from Jack sonville, started the first rail road in the Willamette valley and interested a lot of the set tlers in it. They wanted to come to Lewisville but some of the old settlers around here tried to hold them up for right of way, so the road passed Lewisville by and that settled its fate. It is a good site for a eity but the short sightedness of some of the well-to-do people around here killed the town." Fred Lockley in Portland Journal. mere Is more rntarrri In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and fur years It vaa sup posed to be Incurable. Doctors pre scribed local remedies, and by constant ly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, preatly influenced by con stitutional comlitlons and therefore re quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is a consti tutional remedy, is taken Internally and acts thru the rtlood on the Mucous Surfaces of the Sys'em. On Hundred Dollars reward Is offered for any case that Hall's Catarrh Cure fails to cura. Send fur circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY A CO.. Toledo, Ohio. wold bv PrueirlKts. Tr. Bull's Family Tills lot constipation. A good pair of reading glasses Tor $1.00 at O. A. Kreamer's. MISS LIZABETH M. .COSPER HONORED The announcement of the ap pointment of Miss L. M. Cosper as chairman of the art committee of the Oregon Federation of Women's Clubs was a matter of congratulation at the Women's Civic Club Monday afternoon. Miss Cos per is a recent addition to dub membership and her ap pointment by Mrs. Chas. M. Castner, president of tha Feder ated Clubs, gives Lebanon a place in the Federated year book on an important committee. Un til recently the chairmanship has been filled by Mrs. Alice Weister of Portland, an acknowledged authority on the subject. Miss Cosper has as her assistants, Mrs. Alice Dodd of Salem and Mrs. Calista Dowling of Portland. Mis Cosper's appointment came unsolicited, but she brings to the task an enthusiasm for work and a love for art , in which she re ceived valuable training in her former home, Tacoma, under Mrs. Alice D. Engley Beek. Mrs. Beek spent 14 years in Paris studying art and is recognized as a teacher of great ability. Miss Cosper specialized in China painting and water colors and was awarded two medals for her work at the Alaska-Yukon Ex position. Lebanon Express. Sick Wifa's Story Surprises Independence The following has surprised Inde pendence: A business man's wife Buf fered from dyspepsia and constipation for years. Although sh dieted she was so bloated her clothes would not tit. ONE SPOONFUL buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adler-i-ka relieved her INSTANTLY. Because Adler-i-ka empties BOTH large an ! small intestine it relieves ANY CASE constipatioo, sour stomach or gas and prevents appendicitis. It has QUICK EST action of anything we ever sold. Williams Dkug Company. 3 i -1 4 3 -3 Dr. R. E. Duganne, dentist. National Bank Building. -I v Enhance the Joy of Giving 2 Add Usefulness, Art and Originality to the i Tender! Sentiment Which Invokes the Gilt. j ) Ivory Pyralin Narcissus Toilet The Choicest of All Gifts Water Resembles real Ivory in its beauty and at a fraction An exquisite odor. the cost. Large Bottle $1.00 Tryg .... 25c to $4.00 Bonnet Mirriors - - - 52.50 to $7.00 Hair Brushes - - - $1.50 to $6.00 S.',.tB;. ' - " Ansco Cameras Nail Buffers - - - tl. 23 to $1.50 Make appropriate gifts Nail Files - - - - 75c $2.00 tO $20.00 Also Perfume Bottles, Cloth and Hat Brushes, Manicure Scissors, Etc. For the Boy in Do,Is lu D. Khaki A well selected assortment of unbreakable Dolls from 25c to $2.50 A Glllette Razor wjth Trench Mirror, or An Iiiiiersoll Radiolite Watch Framed Pictures 2-25t0 4-25 An assortment in Gilt, Ebony nd Walnut Frames that will please you w 10, 15 and 25c rOV UZXCL Who carries dinner bucket """" a Thermos Lunch Kit or a Thermos Bottle Stationery $2.00 to $4.00 Some pleading and splendid value, in Boxes, Cor- residence Cards, Xmas Cards. Folder, and Por Mother For the Soldier Boy I A Bud Vase - 85c to $1.25 A Writing Portfolio-50 sheets, 24 envelope. A galt and pep,r shake - $1.15 to $1.75 35C A Msrmalade Jar ... 85c I Williams Drug Co. i To Our Friends and Patrons We Wish You A Merry Christmas and a HAPPY, PROSPEROUS NEW YEAR. We Still Have in Stock a Large Number of Suit able Christmas Gifts and Last Day Shoppers Will Find It Worth While to Visit Our Store. Craven & Huff Hdw. Co. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon, for the County of Polk. H. D. Chamber., Plaintitr v.. II. A. Davis, and Jin. Doe 1 Davis, his wife, and Ta- 1 No. 608K cuma Association of Credit i Men. a Washington, cor- ' ation, Defendants. To H. A. Davis, and Jane Doe Davis, hi. wife, and Tacoma Association of Credit Men, a Washington corpora tion, Defendant, in the above en titled suit. In the name of the State of Oree-on, you .nd each of you are hereby re quired to appear, and answer the com plaint filed against you in the above entitled suit, on or before Saturday, the 2Gth day of January, 1V18. that be ing the day fixed by the order of Court fur you to appear and answer, and more than six week, from the date of the first publication of thia .ummons; and if you fail to so appear and answer, the Plaintiff will apply to the Court fur the relief demanded in his com plaint, to-wit: (1) For a judgment against you, the said Defendant, H. A. Davis, for the sum of $100.00, with interest there on at the rate of 10 per cent per an num, from the 23rd day of January, 1917; the .urn of $20.00 as an attorney fee, and the costs and disbursement, of this suit- (2) Tor decree foreclosing that certain mortgage given by you, the said Defendant, II. A. Davis, to the Plaintiff, on the 23rd day of April, l:tl6. upon all of Lot numlered Nine teen (19), in Block numbered Two (2), in Sheridan View Acres, in Polk Coun ty, State of Oregon, in the manner prescribed by law, which .aid mort gage was recorded in the Record of Mortgage, of Polk County, Oregon, in linok No. 34, o,i Page No. 4!i, thereof, on the 6th day of August, 1915; and that the .aid above described property, and in aid mortgage set forth, be sold I by the Sheriff of .aid Polk County, j .State of Oregon, and the proceeds thereof be applied to the payment of ' siiid sums of money hereinabove men ' tinned due to the Plaintiff. (3) That you, and each of you, be forever barred and foreclosed of all right, title, lien, elaim, or interest in, to, or upon the said real property, and every part thereof, save and except the statutory right of redemption. (4) That the Plaintiff have execution against you, the said Defendant, H. A. Davis, for any deficiency in his judg- i ri.ent against you, after the applies I tion of the proceeds of the said real property. (5) . For a Judgment and Decree that the before mentioned mortgage ex ecuted by you, the said Defendant, II, A. Davis, be reformed and corrected, according to the real intent of the parties, so the description therein shall read as follows: "All of Ixt num bered Nineteen (19), in Block numbered Two ('), in Sheridan View Acres, in Polk County, State of Oregon, as shown by the map and plat thereof, on file and of record in the Office of the County Clerk of Polk County, State of1 Oregon, containing ten (10) acres of land", and, ao reformed, said mortgage shall convey said last described pre mise, as fully as if the same had origiaally been described therein; that the title to said premises above de scribed pas. by the said Judgment and Decree from you, the said Defeadant, H. A. Davis, to, and vest in, the Plaintiff, In fee simple, by virtue of the aforesaid mortgage, held by him on the said premiums (subject only to the statutory right of redemption), as fully as if properly conveyed la said mortgage, and x (6) For such other aid different re lief .. to the Court may seem proper. This .amnion. I. published in the "Independence Monitor,', once each week, for six successive weeks, by order of the Hon. II. II. Kelt, Judge of the above entitled Court, made on tha lath day of December, 1917. John K. Rijuhks & Leslie S. Parker, Attoraey. for the Plaintiff, P. 0. Address: 410-411. Swetland Building, Portland, Oregon, residiog at Portland, Oregon. Date of first publication: December 14, 1917. Date of last publication: Jsnuary 25, 1918. BUTTER WRAPS At the MONITOR OFFICE War Can't Stop Us It makes no difference in our appetites for good eats. But the question of the hour is, "where to jjet good, satisfying eats at medium prices.'' WE HAVE THE ANSWER It is plainly in evidence in every part of our store. It consists of Fresh, Pure, Clean Groceries And the smiles of many satisfied customers is the best of proof that we make good on every claim. Calbreath Jones