ISIS
MATINEE
INDEPENDENCE
EVENING
JUL. 22
THt UUOTT AND SHERMAN fllM CORPORATION RRCCNT
DAVID W. GRIFFITH'S
Masterful American Play
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Accompanied by Special Mutical Score
3 Hours - Thrills - Laughter - Tears
Millions have tern it--only--to come again and again
'The Mastercraft of Film Perfection
COME EARLY and PICK YOUR SEATS
in the auto, when the party re-'
turn 1 Wednesday afternoon was
taken ! y Mrs. Klein of Portland,
who will he the guest of the
Smiths for a short time.
Wm. G. Campbell who came to
Oregon in 1853 and was a mem- i
ber of the Oreiron volunteers dur-
injr the Civil war, died at his
home in Dallas Tuesday. He died
on his seventy fifth birthday just
as his fellow G. A. R. brothers
were preparing to visit him by :
way of observing the anniversa-:
ry. He was born near Springfield
III., was a member of the Christ
ian church and is survived by
nine children.
0. A. Wolverton and W. J.
.Miller went to Amity Tuesday
and brought back 1100 po'unds'of
honey, the product of a colony of
bees which they are renting
there. These gentlemen have re
cently purchased 55 queens in
San Jose, Calif., and are renew
ing their local aviary and placing!
the bees in new and modern
hives. Foul brood had obtained a
hold in the old hives and it was
I necessary to give them new
fr3on300E
Local Brevities s
30in ' Campbell, Rosa B. Tarrott and j homes. The new queens are the
U . Mabel G. West. I Golden Italians and are docile
300C
' n
IOJ
gone
Lieutenant General J. B. V.
Butler is in command at the Nor-
to mal this week with a stall of
: rookies as aides. The major por-
Wm. Crabtree has
Waldport to work.
Mr. and Mrs. Ilerren motored t tion of the faculty is in Portland
to Newport for the week end ! attending the N. E. A.
with Harold Ilerren as driver, j J. K. Grimes, formerly of Mon-
Constable J. II. Moran is busy j mouth, who was brought to Dal
these davs accepting license mon- his from Portland, charged with
ey from dog owners.
Miss Libby Wade has succeed
ed her sister, Miss Gladys as
clerk in the post office.
jwife desertion was discharged
because the wife refused to pros
'ecute. I Carl Pollan, wife and mother
and good workers.
Houses to Rent
One six room house for rent.
One furnished four room houee
for rent. See W. J. Miller.
Evangelical Church
Sunday School 10 A. M.
Worship and sermon at 11 A.
K. J. Himes is surveying for and M, W. Jones, Elmer Rake
an extension of a logging road in , and Mr. Bowman are starting ov
the hills back of Falls City. jerlaml for Coquille where they
Winegar & Lorence delivered 1 Wt to get railroad work at $7
a Burnley tractor to Wm. Riddell ' Pl'r lla'. man and team,
yesterdi
,y. I Mr. and Mrs. L. I). Mulkey of
Mr. F. K. Hubbard of Falls j McMinnville made a brief visit
j with Mrs. Monroe Mulkey bun-
M.
Young People's Alliance, 7 P.
M.
Evening service, 8 P. M.
A cordial invitation is extend
ed to all.
ODD 'TRICK" OFT BADGER.
The Animal It Able to Turn Almoit
Around In Its Hid.
It appears tlmt the pelt of an
adult badger is extremely thick and
dilliiult for u biting adversary to
penetrate, and so loosely does the
fkin cover the body that the animal
is, fo to speak, able to turn around
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Toby of . in its hide.
, Eugene visited with Mrs. Stone! Should a dog acquire a hold on
(lay. They were traveling by
auto enroute to Corvallis and
Brownsville.
City was transacting business in
town Tuesday.
Mrs. Laura Harris of Eugene
is visiting this week with her
mother, Mrs. A. A. Cattron.
ii 1 1 1 1 i
Llarence walker nas ut , ,,: the throat the badger turns him-
helping this week to make hay i . ; ' . ,J' self so that the dog's grip is on the
while the sun shone for a farm-. ,. . , . ' .,"
uooo, aim eastern uregon points
er north of Independence.
II. K. Sickafoose has limbered
up his heavy artillery and is at
tacking the weeds on the farm of !
baek of the badger's neck, without
having loosened his first bold, then
returning to Eugene by way of j the .badger secures a viselike grip
upon some vulnerable portion of
Crater Lake.
Our old friend Sam Barrows of
Wm. Riddell, Jr. at present. I l5aiulon- 8t()PH for a short visit
, . . i u ,l Monday morning. He was trave -lhe
Sunday picnic which is the , . . , . ,
, , n ,, ling by Ford troin Carlton on the
annual event of the Dallas
,. , , ,, i , ,,; return trip to Bandon with two
Christian church will be held , , , , ,
July 22.
Clyde Ecker of the Independ
ence Monitor was a welcome vis
itor at the Herald office Monday
afternoon.
The Dallas' ltemizer now has
one publisher instead of two, J.
E. Bloom having retired M. L.
Boyd assumes the whole works.
Miss Catherine Gentle ap-
nepnews ana naa ueen away
from home just seven days.
A. C. Haley of Pocatello, Idaho
a brother of A. J. Haley of Mon
mouth, is here visiting with rela
tives and friends. Mr. Haley is
a buyer of potatoes which are
raised in large quantities in that
part of Idaho.
Miss Parrott who is attending
re-
his enemy, and while his long tusks
penetrate to the limit he digs and
scratches with his front feet, that
are furnished with claws almost as
formidable and deadly as might be
expected from an anteater of the
dark continent.
He who has removed the pelt of a
badger and is at all observing does
not wonder at this animal being
sharp bitten and that he is able to
hang with bulldog tenacity when
the formation and adjustment of its
claws are noted. Neither is it much
of a mystery how lie manages to
bore through the soil so rapidly
that half a dozen men with shovels
cannot overtake him, for he is a
mass of cords and muscles, particu
larly in the neck, chest and show
1.1 Ttl a
. i - - i i ip sins o is nr rnp n k a
peareuona progra g, e uy , - f, der, very similar in physical con
me music pupus 01 Mm neien , - - - - ; stmction to the ground mole.
Eaton in Independence last Fn-1 m" w,rt s "l w
day evening.
Mrs. W. W. Newman's mother
was brought home from the hos
pital in Salem the first of the
The badger toes inward sharnlv
mal but went back to the met-! when travelinsr and alwavs on the
ropolis Thursday to finish the alk. twisting here and there very
j week.
I Rev. W.
A. Elkins has been
1 11 l a
mucn line me movements of a
skunk, while if it be in winter ho
makes a business of hunting buried
week and seems to be much bet-, making preparations to leave , dormant woodehucks.
ter
the city with the cal
for the I
nv I, i mi i i Coast Artillery of which he is a
I lid Kulin-.m li iiek-a u'hii'h nrp J ,
. , ', , .. , ,,,, member, which had been
ui in- mm in inc tiiiiuiK ui uic 1
railroad crossing have
lie is a fur bearer of rather
coarse quality, and there is a groat
range of value in the pelts taken.
an all the wav from 1(1 rents tn $2 nr
nounced for Julv 15th. A biter
crossing nave arrived i t " t , , ,, i V"M "'"o "r",1 l",vy' ui
i i j . , f ,. , iinoimiii.fueiii pom poneu me ca ine coa;. , unucer is cnieiiv vaiu-
n nd are being put n place under . . ,,,, ; i,u i, , ;n, li ' .u 4
. ni to service to July 2;jth. Mr. Elk-! ' hen it has a long coat, so that
the direction ot r. K Itotison. , , , , A , - the minrd hairs rn hp nlnoloH Dud
ins had planned to leave Satur-1 r , c?" ,e rlucKia ana
Mrs. Celia Anderson and day, but now has ten days more. ! Times hlm"
daughter Mrs. Day Idleman and; The Misses Marie Smith, Mil-! ' " ' '
daughter of Pendleton are guests dwi Force am, Neta Waor C(m. ! good Friday.
at D. M. Hampton's and A. F. stituted an aut0 party with Jaeob ! RKwCl.SZt:r
Huber's. Smith as driver which went to "utt Prossei1 " him l,1' turJen when-
ooiiui is uuvtr MllLn went 10 fur all lhe sinful eons of men.
Among those registered at the Portland Monday to take in the Christ nt to calvary.
. 1 li II . I V T 1 1 i t T1 I
Hotel rortlanii irorn wonmouin a. i a. miss force went on to the moumtui journey that h mad,
Newp ort
Charming Resort
by the Sea
Those who seek rest and sea
shore recreation, will find abund
ant opportunity at Newport.
Ample hotel accommodations
cottages or camping arrangements.
Low Round Trip Fares
Daily Trains-Each Direction
Ask our nearest agent for folder, "Newport" or write
John M. Scott, General Passenger Agent
Southern Pacific Lines
IN aolemn shadow of the cross,
U bouI. dbide till he
Who tested death ere thou shouldst know
lis blUeniess of utmost woe
With strength ahull guerdon thee.
ITS Via Dolorosa still
Each life of earth must see,
And In some hour, or soon or late,
lusl I lend beneath (lie crushing weight
Of earth's Gethsemane
I "HIT, heart, In love and prayer look up
Iteyond the awesome tree;
The heaven of heavens Is reft today;
All nnxels march (he e(arry way
That leads from Calvary.
IJOR conquering the lord of Ufa
(His in ii;h I y legions free)
(Joes forwaid while the iiges roll;
The price of every ransomed soul
Full paid on Culvury.
-Margaret E. gangster.
obtained through th old established
"D. SWIFT A CO." are being quickly
bought by Manufacturers.
Send a model or sketches and descrlpt Ion
of your invention lor FREE SEARCH
and report on patentability. We get pat
ents or no fee. Wiite for our free book
of WD nwHh-d inventions.
D, SWIFT & CO,
Patent Lawyers, tstao.maa.
k 307 Seventh St.. Washimiton, D. C,
"OVER THERE"
The Thrill and Hell of the Trenches De
scribed by an American Boy
We have secured a series of six articles by
Sergeant Alexander MiClintock of Lexington,
Ky., and the Canadian army. H z has a gripping
tale that every American will read, for he tells
the facts, unadorned. Wounded, a Distinguished
Conduct medal man, he was invalided home, but
is going "0er There" again to fight for Uncle
Sam and his allies.
this week
Campbell,
are Mrs.
Misses
Mary S. South Bend, Washington to!
Each step was taken for thee.
Be hushed, my heart, let clamor cease;
Agnes I), spend the summer, and her place ' ''"p chamber white with peace.
I His resting place to be.
Feb. 14, 1917.
Sergeant Alexander McClintock lerverMn the Eighty-seventh
Battalion Canadian Grenadier guards from September, 1915, until
November, 1916, the last four months of that time at the front
in France, where he gained the Distinguished Conduct medal by
bis devotion to duty and bravery under fire.
As his former commanding officer I can testify as to his good
qualities, and I consider he would make a valuable officer.
(Signed) F. S. MZIOHEN,
Erigadier General, Commanding Canadian Training Division,
Bramshott.
NO. I. In Training. How the men are
finally brought to the firing line. A de
scription of conditions that our own boyi
and their parents will read eagerly.
NO. 2. The Bomb Raid. The great prep
arations and rehearsing for this attack
Volunteer! for the Job taken behind the
line where the German trenchea are exact
ly reproduced. The days of preparation.
Heretofore unwritten detail of modern
trench raids. This article conclude! with
the men going out to their Job.
NO. J. "Ovtr the Top and Give 'Em
Hell." The English Tommy'! battle cry
as he breaks from his trench. The bomb
raid and what happened. Of sixty that
started forty-sii failed to return because
the Germans had prersred and mined the
trench. Graphic description of Sergeant
McOllntoclt'! terrible experience.
NO. 4. Shifted to the Somme. Servant
McClintock takea part In the greatest of
all battles and tells of the hell of It "The
front In Belgium was really a rest lector
In comparison with It," he saye. The ex
tensive preparations of the allies for open
warfare afterward abandoned because of
the failure of expected development.
NO. S Wonoded la Action. This article
describes the terrible fight, the dead and
dying, the loss of a pal and the final fall
ing of McClintock In No Man'! Land. Sim
ply told. It Is one of the most remarkable
description! of a batUe by a participant
ever put together.
NO. 6. Decorated For Brtrery; Home
and L'ncle San. This concluding article of
the series relates In detail how England
cares for the wounded. How the king and
queen came to the bed of an American
boy and decorated him In a London hos
pital for gallantry. Intereitlng, Intimate
and amusing Incidents told by and of the
wounded Tommies. Trying to fight for
l'ncle Sam.
We will print one article each week for six weeks. Watch
for the first installment.
4
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