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About Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 6, 1912)
EIGHT PAGC8 THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. PAGE THREE I. A M. RAILWAY TIME CARD Prom Independence to Dallas. Trulii No. ISO Ku vol Indopoiuloncfl dully t 2:30 p. in, and Moiiumuth at 2:40 p, in. und arrives ut Dunns ut 3:05 p. m. Train No. 61 leaves Independent dully ut 0:15 a. m. nd Munuioulh at dully ut 0:00 a. in. and Maniuoutli at 0:31 a. lu., and arrives at Dufllas at 7:00 a. m. Train No. C8 loaves Iudepoiidencs at 10:50 a. in., Monmouth at 11:05 m., and arrlvoi at Dallas at 11:30 a. in. Truin No. 70 leaves Independence at 6:15 p. m. and Monmouth at 6:30 p. ni and arrives at Dallas ut 6:55 P. m. From Independence to AlrUe. Train No. '61 loaves Independence at 6:30 a. in. and Monmouth at 6:45 a, m., and arrives at -Mnlo at 7:20 m. Train No, 73 loaves Ind'Pndeiice at 3:35 p. m. and Monmouth at 4:0 p. in., and arrives at Airil m 4:45 P. m. :' , Prom Dallas to Independence. Train No. 73 leaves DiKlas dally at 3:30 p. m. and Monmouth at 3:55. Train No. 65 loaves Dallas dully at 8:30 a. m. mid Monmouth at 8:55 a m. and arrives at Indepondnce ut 9:15 a. in. Trala No. 69 leaves pwllas dally at 1:00 p. m. and Monmouth at 1:25 m. and arrives at Independence at 1:40 p. in. Train No. 71 loaves Dallas dally at 7:20 p. in. arid Monmouth at 7:45 p m., and arrives at Independence at 8:05 p. ni. From Alrlle to Independence. Train No. C2 leaves Alrllo dally 1 7:30 a. ni. and Monmouth at 8:05 a, m., and nrrivCHat Imlcpeudoce at 8: 15 at in. Train No. 72 loaves Alrlle dally at 6:00 p. m. and Monmouth at 5:35 ju., od arrives at Independence at 6:45 p. in. From Independence to West 8alem Train No. 124 leaves Independence d:iy at 8:20 a. m. and arrives at Went Solera at 9:00 a- m. Train No. 126 leaves Independents at 4:05 p. m. and arrives ut West Sa- I 'm nt 4:45 p. rn. From West Salem to Independence Train No. 123 leaves West Salera daily at 9:50 a. m. ond arrives at In dependence at 10:25 a. m. Train No. 125 leaves West Salem dully at 5:00 p. in. and arrives at Independence ut 5:40 p. m. Chas. D. Smiley, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER Plans And Estimates Furnished On Short Notice. DWELLING HOUSES A SPECIALTY Roll Phono 521. C. W. H1NKLE Funeral Director and Licencd Embalm r. Lady ashistant if desired. Calls attended day or night. Independence, Oregon. W. R. ALLIN, D. D. S. Dentitt 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. SNYDER'S POULTRY PARKS Independence Oregon 3. C. W. LEGHORNS and BARRED PLYMOTH ROCKS Pure Bred Eggs $1-00 per 13 or $6.00 Per 100 P. O. Box 181. Home Phone 7521 HOMER LODGE, No 46 meets every Monday I evening in their castle hall, Independence, Ore 'Visiting Knights wel come. 7:30 is the hour. M. MOR AN, C. C. J. W. RICHARDSON, JTt., K. R. S snrs HARRY NORTON'S TONSORIAL PARLORS Electrlo Shampooing, and everything In Our Line Carefully Attended to. Bath In Connection Main Street, Independence, Ore. Marble and Granite MONUMENTS, HEADSTONES, ETC. ALL CEMETERY WORK. Q. L. HAWKINS, Dallas, Oregon PO3T0FFICES CLOSE SUNDAYS New Regulations of Department Af fect Large Cities. Washington, V. C Plans were perfected by Postmaster General Hitchcock whereby the adiulnIiitrfcMon of the new law prohibiting the deliv ery of mail on Sundays will have no serious effect upon the handling of im portant mail matter. Holders of lock boxes on first and second class postofflces will have ac cess to them as usual, although no mail deliveries will be made by car riers on the street or at poatoffice win dows. Mail for hotel patrons and newspapers will be delivered to them through their lock boxes by the simple arrangoment of having that mail sorted on the railway cars before it reaches destination. Such mail will be regarded as "transit matter," and will be distributed immediately upon its arrival at the office of destination, thus practically insuring speedier de livery to the addressees than hereto fore bas been the case. NOVELTY FOR ROUND-UP. Pendleton Show Will Stage Genuine Rabbit Drive, x Pendleton, Ore. Seldom is it given to an audience of twenty thousand people to witness a coyote, wolf or rabbit chase but that is just what bas been provided as one of the features of the Round-Up which is to be held in Pendleton this year on beptember 26. 27 and 28. Real thoroughbred fox hounds trained to the hunt are to be seen and beard close in pursuit of slinking coyotes, stealthy timber wol ves or sprightly jackrubbita by reason of a contract which has just been en tered into by local the aimociation and Leon B. and J. Kenworthy of Dayton, Wash. The latter Kenworthy is s big stockman of Columbia county Wash ington and the owner of a stable of thoroughbred horses and a kennel of registered, hounds. The sage brush bout his ranch is alive with jack- rabbits and coyotes, while an occas ional wolf steals down from the tim ber, lie proposes to capture several of these animals, bring them to Pen dleton at the time of the Round-Up turn them loose in the park during the performances, put his hounds on the trail and let the spectators see a little excitement such as they read about. However, lest any humanitarian shud der at the thoughts of such cruelty, the Round-Up directors hsve announc ed that they have specified in their contract that both dogs and their quarry shall be muzzled in order that neither shall be damaged when the pursurers overtake the pursued. Riders will also follow close on the trail of the hounds in order to rescue rather than kill the victims of the chase. Round-Up park is a large en closure and tightly fenced so that the chane will not pass from view of the audience. The novelty of such a feat ure is expected to make it one of the moat popular of the three-day succes sion of thrills. CUBANS WOULD STIR UP STRIFE Attack On American Minister Part of Plot. Washington Backs Its Representative and Will Sift Matter Cuban Press Hostile. PLANE DEEMED UNSAFE. Aviator Refuses to Fly in $15,000 Racing Craft. Chicago There may be no Ameri can defender of the Gordon Bennett world's champion aeroplane trophy, in spite of the expenditure of $15,000 by a Chicago syndicate for a racing aero plane designed to travel 125 miles as hour. DeLloyd Thompson, who had been trained as pilot of the Aero club of America's monoplane, Nieuport, has refused to fly the racer on the ground that it was "obviously unsafe, ill- designed and unable to fly for a single mile as it stands. This situation arose after aeronaut ical engineers, at Thompson's sugges tion, reported unfavorably to him on the soundness of the craft. With Thompson's refusal it became known that Glenn II. Martin, the Pa cific Coast aviator, had volunteered to 'see what he could do" toward get ting the racer in shape for use. Suicides to Evade Summons, Andover, Mass. Ernest Pittman, head of the W. W. Pittman company, one of the largest textile mill con struction companies in New Enlgand, committed suicide here by shooting. He had been subpenaed by the Suffolk county grand jury to testify regarding alleged "planting" of dynamite to dis credit the Lawrence strikers. The summons followed the testimony be fore the grand jury against John Breen, who was convicted and fined for planting the dynamite. Rebels Fire on Troops, ' El Paso, Tex. Making way with 100 head of cattle obtained in a raid on the Culberson ranch, situated four miles from the border and 35 miles from Hachita, N. M., a band of 25 Mexican rebel raiders exchanged shots with a troop of the Third United States cavalry stationed below Hachi ta, according to reports received here by Colonel E. Z. Steever. Colonel Steever announced that additional troops would be rushed to the scene. Treats for Surrender of Captives. Tangier Negotiations were begun here by Colonel Mangin, commanding the French troops, with Elhiba, the south Moroccan pretender, for the sur render of Vice Consul James Maigret and eight French officers, who were captured when the pretender recently took the town of Marakesh It is feared that the followers of Elhiba will massacre the prisoners unless they are soon released. Washington, D. C That fEnrlque Maza. the reporter who attacked Hugh Gibson, American charge of the legation in Havana, last Monday night, was merely a tool in the hands of Cuban plotters who are antagonis tic to the United States and who would like to get the Cuban govern ment into trouble with this country, was the opinion expressed by Senor Antonio Martin-Rivero, the Cuban minister. He was of the opinion that Maza had been urged on by others who had made him think he had been insulted and that he should seek revenge. Under no circumstances, no matter what his provocation may have been, said the minister, was Maza justified in the action he took. That justice would be done in the case was the dec laration of Senor Martin Rivero. The minister has notified his gov ernment of the demands of the United StateB that the assailant be punished. As soon as he learned of the attack the minister "spontaneously sent word to Cuba," he said, "that the United States had laws rendering virtually immune from attack the person of foreign representatives here and that, on account of this reciprocity, tbe full rigor of the Cuban laws could be ap plied. In case of a country which does not protect Cuban representa tives," said the minister, "no further rights are extended to its diplomats than to any other foreigner." SLAYER GETS REPRIEVE. Acting Governor of California Says Law Works Unevenly. Sacramento, Cal. Acting Governor Welloce, who is representing Gover nor Johnson while the latter is in tbe East, has issued a 14 days' reprieve to George Figueroa. who was to have been executed at ban Uuentm prison Friday, September 6, for the murder of his wife in Los Angeles. The re' prieve was extended on the request of Figueroa s counsel. Asked concerning what action be intends to take in the six other cases of men condemned to be executed, the acting governor said: "I have not made up my mind that the abolition of capital punishment would be an unmixed good. One of the strong points in' the removal of the death penalty is the fact that under existing conditions the law works un evenly. A poor man suffers the ex treme penalty of the law and the rich man, by long-drawn-out legal process es, usually escapes." BOY DROPS 2000 FEET. Lad Tangled in Balloon Guy Rope Hurled From Great Height. Flint, Mich. In the presence of hundreds of persons, 15-year-old Ches ter Betts, son of Bert O. Betts, of this city, was accidentally caught by the guy rope of a balloon and earned about 2000 feet in the air before the rope untangled and dropped him to death. He crashed against the roof of a barn and was still alive when spectators reached him, but he soon died. The tragedy occurred at a county fair, and when the balloon and aero naut shot upwards many, persons thought the youth dangling at the end of the rope was a dummy. The heroic efforts of the balloonist to rescue the boy soon disclosed the truth to the crowd below. As the big bag crept higher and higher, the aero naut, in peril of his own life, could be seen working desperately to pull the dangling form to the trapeze. Final ly the rope swirled away from the lad and the form dropped. Humanity Growing Bald. Los Angeles "Within 500 years there will scarcely be a hair on any woman's head, and men will lose their hair 200 years before that time," de clared Professor Carlton B. Wells, an eminent brain specialist of Paris, who is here on his first visit to the United States in 20 years. "Baldness will be the fashion for both men and women," he continued. "The development of brain power of the human race will precede the loss of its hair and to have curly locks will be a reflection on the intellect of the wearer." War Exists, Says Aikens. London 1 "Germany and England are now in a state of war," said J. A. M. Aikens, Canadian member of Parliament from Brandon, Manitoba, who has just returned here from a con tinental trip, in an interview here. "The Wert blow has not yet been struck," he continued, "but when it is all may be over in three months or three days. When Canada under stands, I believe the Dominion's hear ty help will be forthcoming." Thibet Policy Attacked. London Thibet's future promises to become as great a bone of conten tion a that of Persia. The same sec tion of the Liberal party which ac cuses Foreign Minister Edward Grey of sacrificing Persia, and, incidental ly, W. Morgan Shuster, to Russian in terests, declares that Great Britain's Thibetan policy is on parallel lines. THE BALDWIN PIANO Is Our Specialty THE8E PIANOS WON THE GRAND PRIZE AT THE PARIS EX POSITION IN 1900; AGAIN WON THE HIGHEST AWARDS AT THE ST. LOUIS EXPOSITION IN 1904, AND ARE TODAY BEING USED IN THE BEST HOMES AND COLLEGE OF MUSIC IN THE WHOLE WORLD. OUR PLAYER PIANOS ARE A WORK OF ART, AND PER FECTION SIMPLE AND EASY TOOPERATE. Come and hear the Baldwin at our sales Rooms THE SAVAGE MUSIC HO0SE 135 N. Liberty 8treet. SALEM, OREGON. OREGON ELECTRIC RAILWAY Five ?rLdrFi.noSm Da"5' Salem and Portland For Independence TPeople No. 8 . h No. 12 No. 16 No. 20 No. 22 NORTHBOUND LIMITED LOCAL LIMITED LOCAL LOCAL Lv E. Independence 8.12 A.M. 10.58 A.M. 3.17 P.M. 5.44 PM. 8.41 P.M. Arrive Salem 8.35 A.M. 11.20 A.M. 3.40 P.M. 6.05 PM. 9.05 P.M. Arrive Portland 10.10 A.M. 1.20 P.M. 5.10 P.M. 8.05 P.M. 11-00 P.M. No. 1 No. 5 No. 9 No. 13 No. 19 SOUTHBOUND ' LOCAL LIMITED LOCAL LIMITED LOCAL Leave Portland 6.30 A.M. 9.00 A.M. 2.15 P.M. 5.00 P.M. 9.30 P.M. Leave Salem 8.35 A.M. 10.35 A.M. 4.20 P.M. 6.35 P.M. 11.30 P.M. Ar. E. Independence 10.50 A.M. 4.35 P.M. 6.50 P.M. 11.45 P.M. G. C. Skinner's launch "Independence" connects with these trains(ex cept No. 19) leaving Independence for Northbound Limited trains at 7.50 A. M. and 2.50 P.M. For Northboun Local trains at 10.30 A. M., 5.25 P. M., 8.20 P. M. For Southbound Limited trains at 10.30 A. M. and 5.25 P. M. For Southbound Local trains at 7.50 A. M. and 4.15 P. M. One-way -and round trip tickets are on sale on trains. Boat fare, 25c. The Oregon Electric Ry. reaches Woodburn, Forest Grove, Hillsboro and other Willamette Valley points. Folder" may be had from G. C Skin ner on application, or requset to . W. E. COMAN, GENERAL FREIGHT & PASSENGER AGENT, OREGON ELECTRIC RY., PORTLAND, OREGON. II WV 'ItiaVWIl " IB ' TrTTTWrTfTT f TtTtrfTr"Hr ST m TMWf kTi . luAilUttaVMSMMSMaMBaaMHUHMBi irmniini mtmsmbi ut raw r -i Qias Spaulding Logging Company. will furnish you with at reasonable prices Independence, Oregon THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE $1.50 PER YEAR SEND IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW MSB MliiSUlUB EH