Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (May 12, 1911)
EICHT PACE! PACK TWO TNK INOIPCNOtNCK tNTCRTRISt, INDEPENDENCI, ORtGON. What A Varikt ky ?rf""l"if'A"' ii nil iu.u of phhI tilings to eat are to Ue luiJ from t It i bakery. BREAD OF THE BEST cake and pie that rival the bewt that anv mother ever made. II you tritsi thia bakery once we d not think you would bother will liome baking again. Why ahould von when vou cot at least as cood here without bother or as nnio expenso? The Independence Bakery . . . rro s WHILE WE ARE "AHEAD of the meat business," it has become a serious matter with the ordinary wage-earner to know how to supply the family table with WHOLESOME MEAT Although our margin is small, we buy only the best and give our customers the benefit of it, and every part of our market is kept clean and in a sanitary condition. GEO. F. HECK PROPRIETOR Independence, Oregon Cba$. D. Smiley CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Independence, Oregon Plane and Specifications Cheerful y Submitted. Bell Phone. - - - - Farmer 524 INDEPENDENCE SHOE SHOP O. FLOYD, Prop. . All kinds of repairing done with neatness and dispatch. Shop on Main Street, CHAS. INGRAM Painting, Paper Hanging and i DECORATING Free Hand Frescoing a ( Specialty. AIRLIE, OREGON "THE BEST EVER". ' Hum h M- , At- o-f 'tvn- X For Sale By THE WILLIAMS DRUG COMPANY, I INDEPENDENCE AND MONMOUTH RAILWAY From IndepvntUnc ta Dll Train N. 64 leave si'v at 6:00 a. m. and Independence Monmouth at : 1 r a. m. and arrtvi at Iiiaa at i 6:40 a. m. Train No. 6S leave Independence daily at IO;."0 a. m. and Monmouth at 11:05 a.m., and arrives at Pallas at 1 1 :30 a. m. Train No. 70 leave Independence daily at 6:15 p. m. and Monmouth at 6; 30 p. m., and arrives at Pallas at 6:55 p. m. From Independence to Airli. Train No. 61 leavea Independent daily at 7.00 a. m. and Monmouth at 7:15 a. m., and arrives at Airlie at 7:M a. m. Train No. 73 leavea Independence daily at 2 :20 p. m. and Monmouth 2:50 p. m., and arrives at Airlie at 3:25 p. m. From Dallas to Independence. Train No. 65 leaves Dallas daily at 8:30 a. m. and Monmouth at 8 :55 a. m., ana arrives at independence ai 9:15 a, m. Train No. 69 leaves Pallas daily at 1 :00 p. m. and Monmouth at 1 :35 p. m. and arrives at Independence at 1 :40 i. m. (This train connects at Monmouth for Airlie.) Train No. 71 leaves Pallas daily at 8 :00 p. m. ami Monmouth at 8 :-j p m., and arrive at Independence 8:40 p. m. From Airlie to Independence Train No. t2 leaves Airlie daily a S:15a. m. and Monmouth at s:5u a. m., ana arrives at independence bi 10. a. m. Train No. 72 leaves Airlie daily at 4 :05 p. m. and Monmouth at 4 :40 p. m.. ami arrives at inueitenuence ai 50 p. m. TWO TROMIXENT TIOURES IN WORLD S PEACE MOVEMENT. AUTOMOBILE TIME CARD Leavincr IndeDendence at 7:30 a . arrives at the McNarV crossing in time to catch the east bound train. Leavintr IndeoenuenCe m the even ne at 3:30 d. m. and arriving. at the crossing in time to make connection with trains going both ways, and re turn at 4 :49. Fare 50 cents for each trip. INTERNATIONAL CORRE SPONDENCE SCHOOL Scranton, Pa ll. V. REED, - Representative 233 Alder Street. Portland, Oregon, Will be in Independence every month, C W. H INKLE Funeral Director and Licenced Embalm r. Lady assistant if desired. Calls attended day or night. Independence, Oregon. L. L. HEWITT. M. D. Physician and Surgeon Office in Cooper Building, rooms 2 and 3. Office hours 9 a. m. to 12 m and 2 to 6 p. m. Calls answered night and day. W. R. ALLIN, D. D. S. Dentist Both phones. Cooper Bldg. Independence, Oregon B. F. SWOPE Attorney at Law and Notary Public Will practice in all courts of the State. Probate matters and collec tions given prompt attention. Office, Cooper Bldg. Independence, Oregon. THE ELDRIDCE C. E. Van Allen, Proprietor Large sunny rooms en suite or sin gle. Electric lights, bath and piano European Plan. 248 N. Commercial St., Salem, Ore. THE DEAL POULTRY PARK INDEPENDENCE, OREGON S. C. W. Leghorns a Specialty. Eggs for hatching, per setting (13) $1.00, 50 $3.50, and 100 $6.00. SANFORD SNYDER, Prop. Box 181, Home Phone 7521. CASH PAID FOR Farm Produce BY THE BUTLER PRODUCE CO. i ... : e. de oo.laat. I. , If A -eT.ve 1 V Ilarna I)'l-lurarllea UNITED STATES IS NOT GREEDY Taft Denies Ambition tend Domain. to Ex Allusion Is to Mexico Says Ve Know What War Means-Want ' None of It. Baltimore, May 4. President Taft in his speech ' at the opening of the Third National Peace conference here today, said the United States would keep hands oft' and not seek to extent! its domain or to acquire foreign terri tory. He made no mention of Mex ico, but to those who heard him it was evident that he referred to the south ern republic. "One of the difficulties the United States finds is the natural suspicions that the countries engaged have of the motives the United Statea has in ten dering its good offices," continued the president. "Asseveration of good faith helps but little where suspicion is the rule, and yet I like to avail my self of an opportunity in such pres ence as this to assert that there is not n the whole length and breadth of the United States among its people any desire for territorial aggrandizement and that its people as a whole will not permit its government, if it would, to take any steps in respect to foreign peoples, looking to a forcible exten sion of our political power.' "We have had wars and we know what they are. We know what re sponsibilities they entail, the burdens and losses and horrors, and we would have none of them. We have a mag nificent domain of our own in which we are attempting to work out and show to the world success in popular government, and we need no more territory in which to show this. But we have attained great prosperity and great power. We have become a powerful member of the community of nations in which we live and there s, therefore, thrust upon us necessar ly a care and responsibility for the peace of the world in our neighbor hood, and a burden of helping those nations that cannot help themselves, if we may do that peacefully and effectively." The president spoke to several thousand persons in the Lyric theater. Cardinal Gibbons, Secretary of War Dickinson, Senator Gore, of Okla homa, Count Leo Tolstoi, Andrew Car Y " "IT"' Ceeal Lr I'elatol. negie and more than a dozen leaders in the movement for world peace sat on the platform with the president. LABOR WAR RAGES. for Chicago Workers Forced to Flea Lives Strike Spreads. Chicago, May 4. Professional slug gers and hired "gun men ran riot in the city today, while government and state officials, architects, building contractors and international labor un ion officials worked in an effort to re store harmony in the industrial field. Late tonight all negotiations be tween the freight handlers and the railroads were declared off and a strike will probably be called tomor row. This will involve the territory in an area from the Canadian border to New Orleans and the ' Pennsylvani line to Western Iowa. It will also bring in the teamsters in all affected cities. A new element of discord was in jected into the troubled building trades situation when the Otis Eleva tor company hired elevator construc tors to take the place of the ma chinists who have been doing the work for two years. Sluggers work ing for the machinists who were ous ted by the company raided a number of buildings and attacked the elevator constructors, with the result that one man is in the Alexander Brothers' hospital and a number of others are seriously injured. In the plumbers and steamfitters' war, international association steam fitters were driven at the points of re volvers from two school buildings where they .were employed. w re Bound to Please anyone familiar with the quality and value of GROCERIES They can see plainly that our line is selected from the best that money can buy, and they can judge at once how favorably our prices compare with others. R. H. KNOX Independence, Oregon C Street K LJ fm nil 1,-4 Li ttr an J i TO DE HELD IN Portland, Oregon, Juno 5 to 10, 1911 WILL BE A MOST Brilliant Floral Fiesta and Civic Jubilee Portland, "The Hose City," will be a scene of splendor and the center of world-wide interest for one week. REDUCED FARES TO PORTLAND FROM ALL POINTS ON THE Southern Pacific (Lines in Oregon) To keep perfectly posted on all important matters relating to this great event, call on local agents for circulars and printed matter, or write to WM. McMURRAY General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon Letter Brings Fortune. Leipsic, Saxony At an autograph sale here a letter written by Martin Luther to Emperor Charles V was bought by a Florence dealer for $25, 500. The purchase is said to have been made for J. P. Morgan. The letter, which is in Latin, was written in 1521 during the reformer's return journey from Worms, describing the proceedings and defending his attitude before the diet. The epistle was en trusted to an imperial herald, who gave Luther safe conduct through the Thuringian forest. Indianapolis Waxes Indignant. Indianapolis The Merchants' asso ciation of Indianapolis passed resolu tions "unequivocally demanding that a most thorough investigation be made into the recent charges which connect Indianapolis with the many dynamit ing outrages which have taken place throughout the country in the last two years. The association also offers its support to city and state officials in all legitimate efforts to discover and punish the guilty parties. Woman Mayor "Meets" Alone. yunnewell, Kan. Hunnewell's new mayor, Mrs. Ella Wilson, has clashed with the city council. On Mrs. Wil son's motion the council voted last week to meet in a local hotel. The five councilmen went to the hotel to hold their meeting, but Mrs. Wilson "met" in a feed store. She had the clerk's journal and other papers, but as she alone was not a quorum, neither session transacted any business Meanwhile two women who were to have been appointed city clerk and marshal, still lack their commissions, Rainfall Insures Crop, Spokane Another rainfall wet down the Palouse and North Idaho re gions and it was sufficient to satisfy everyone. In the Big Bend and Cen tral Washington regions, however, the rainfall has not been heavy. Water ville reports enough moisture in the eround from winter snows to insure a bumper crop for Douglas county Grant, Adams, Lincoln and Chelan county wheat fields need rain, which is promised by heavy clouds. E3CCURSI0M FARES EA; ST 1911 During the months of May, June, July, August and September, on dates shown below, the SOUTHERN PACIFIC will sell round -trip tickets from Independence, via Portland, as follows: . Far!H Chicago $74.45 Council Bluffs Omaha Kansas City . . . 01.95 St. Joseph St. Paul St. Faul.viaCounci Minneapolis, direct . . Minneapolis, via C. Uluffs Duluth, direct .... Duluth, via Council Bluffs St. Louis Van Bluffs $05. 85 . . 01.95 05.85 G8.85 09.45 71.95 SALE DATES 30. Frenchwoman is Spy? Cologne, Germany Mme. Thirion, an attractive Parisian resident here, was arrested charged with being a spy and obtaining the secret mobilization plans of the German army from an army officer. The prisoner offers the romantic defense that she had asked for the plans in order to test the honor of the officer, who was a suitor for her . band. May 16, 17. 18. 19. 22, 23, 21. 25, 27, 28 and 29. June 5, 7, 9, 10, 12, 16, 17, 21, 22, 28, 29 and 30. July 1. 2, 3. 4. 5, 0, 19, 20. 20, 27 and 28. August 3, 4, 5, 14, 15, 16, 17, 21, 22, 23, 28, 29 and September 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7. Stop-overs within limits in either direction. Final return limit Octo ber 31st. Inquire of any S. P. Agent for fares one way through California, or apply to WM, McMURRAY y General Passenger Agent Portland, Oregon Patronize Home Industry The Independence Steam Laundry does good work. BOTH PHONES. Neat Rig Good Horiei Careful Driver Dickinsons Livery and Feed Stable 1 I. W. DICKINSON, Proprietor. Home Thone 5810 Bell Phone 203 Independence, Ore.