THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON. PAGE 8 EVEN POULTIiY AND GAME Can t you funny irlce fi r Wild Durlm ml otlwr irnmti In wmmti. Writ us for sh oITit m nil kind of poultry, pork, tto. PourKon-Paffo Co., Portland IHPPraill .(tii 4 ..HllHI" T77TW sJffl .iift villii, (iitoriidn, Nnliutl plil Oolii, niTnr, i, tnun, niivnr, IIMIJ .Mini. FJni nr !t)tHtr, If. Mull lug wnvKlufiiHi Hi full firlnjL on nt'plli'nMoit. iVntfol Mutt I'mplrs wurkau EIGHT PAGES THE- . .l K.r v ax'i 1 1 If I TI 1 y WW Mf, II W ; mm 'ut'irxit V ac ami ii iir.v i.iw in I iuiw-m iJSF .j -a I I I II i I 1 i I I I I I ti I II I lit tl V tVTV fT" 4i ! IMI IFllllllMWIf I I I I II f II III Machinery I Maohl and nn. rwlkr. sawmill. t. 1 ti J. K. Martin Co., HV lt bu, f ortlanU. Hxntl for Stock l.lt mm prim. 1" Wh.TTrToHTI.ANh .lun at NKVV SCOTT HOTEL Huht room: steam boat; big lntiby; rlfitn nml oidrrly: rlim Ut buHlrii- wetlnn; bust plm fur fHitilly in oily. KOOMH 60c Ul. Bovvnth and Ankcny Street Convenient from All Depot by Hlrtcar. AGENTS WANTED. W wind m, nt'iy rirftnrlntlve In you l"nl nlttior mnn or woitinn, to liitifHlut' iUn fmtioui I'H(tti,iro" ii i miiii hiii iiiiiM in mnrv liouitt. 'Htm I) rut itiir cin itnitillylnii Tor tht iHwOtmn will hmvtt tmriiw of nil uttmiu ut iliMtrii-t, uwMtiiiuii luru nnd in umiiL liiiimn. Mm um tiliu-lnu tttn r 1 1 r -i on lli ainrkot, ima ut H I (nut, Jf i mi want Oil (millcm, frrll ut ci itif lu ttif H.tiuirti MMitif'trtiirliig CfuU4pft Vui., (J Aimivwn liitltf., J ttoui, num.. LIME FERTILIZER Also Land Plt.r, Mm. Cmont. Wall Plas lr and tilling-!. Writ for prli'e. NOTTINGHAM & CO. 102 Front Btrt. PORTLAND, OR. SAVE MIDDLEMAN'S PROFIT of $100 or more by buying: your Piano or Player Piano direct from factory store. HUSH & LANE PIANO COMPANY 355 Washington St., Portland, Or. VEAL, HOGS, POULTRY ThI, fimi-r, W in lun II. 1.1 tn in ISo. lb. fork, fnmr, l(Xi lo 176 , 1(1 1 Hi' Ih. 'lil,'lnii., linuit nimI .i,riii, Uv, I'i M to IS lb, J. ., j'okln, 11 to uk, lb. llf. 11 l J'.i,' III. 1 mky. lit, 11 to IH." Ih.t Hrooi1. to He lb. W stmrnnt,- lo ,-t )oii 1li hImii ,rlr on nit' M,ifinl I lit rrli nil or l,!nrn ll,'liilMr 6,11(12. hhlp m wMin m rou oau. i'bvt-k ,nt bjf rturn niil. F. II. M'HMAI .7. CO. I'.ld up C'.plul flD.OOO. 141-m Front rllrrat, 1'ortlind, Urrson "EAT HEARTY" - irj . r ,v t r : iUJii BELIEVE DISTRESS AFTER EATING DEEP 8EA MONSTERS. Th prlnco of Monaco preaontod re cently to the Acailomy of Sclencoa In Parla aome notes about cephalopoda captured by him at an average depth of about 13,000 foot. Cephalopoda are octopuaei, cuttlufluh and oquldn. Theie anep aea creature, lie ald, have auch tranaparont bodina that all tholr Inter nal arranBuniHnU can be aeen dlatlnct ly, and even the courao.of the nerves through tlio bond and tentacles may be traced. Several years ago the prlnco described come cephalopoda which had searchlights fixed upon their heads. He now doscrlbos a species with eye. of which the lower half Is lumlnoua, so that the eye serves both for seeing and for llehtlna-. Any ani mal that Inhabits such dc-Dths as these do must have artificial light, for the SUQS ray cannot nnnnlrntn anri all is absolute darkness. So the eyes of mew cephalopoda are perfectly adapt- eg 10 tneir environment ' : : : . - 1.-.,, . n.'VKlr ?iii- .( f 'W u -t r . . j'. ."j W J Hill '"tf- Zt- ' t fn '' THE BLANKET TREE. Blankets grow on trees In Ecuador. and while the Idea of an all-wool, frefth from the forest, bed-covering might glvt Insomnia and a backache to the child of civilization who likes to snuggle comfortably under several layers of down and wool, the natives find It all right, as In fact, it is. When an Ecuador Indian wants a blanket he bunts up a demajagua tree and cuts from It a five or six foot section of tho peculiarly soft, thick bark. This Is dampened and beaten until the flexibility of the sheet Is much Increased. Tho rough, gray ex terior la next perled off, and the sheet dried In the aun. The reult is a blanket, soft, light, and fairly warm. of an attractive cream color. It may be rolled Into a compact bundle with out hurt and with ordinary usage will last for several years. Harper's Weekly. T PART f YARDS Demon of the Niger. The natives Inhabiting the country Dear the source of the Niger believe that a devil lives In the rock whence the river springs. They are very super stitlous and greatly fear this devil who is supposed to kill any person who dares to look at the source, Whenever the natives are showing a stranger the spot, they cover up tholr faces and walk backward in the dlroc tion of the spring, pointing toward it with outstretched hand behind the back. Mothors will find Mr. WlmW, Bootnlns Jyrui tl e beat rnrnndy t UBO'onUelrolilWruj i ui jug , io weiiiiug erioa. Truth Eternal. AH errors have only a time; after a hundred millions of objections, sub tleties, sophisms, the smallest truth remains precisely what it was before, Ancient Maxim. Formation of Friendship. We cannot tell the precise moment when frlendtthip la formed. As in BUiug a vesBel,.drop by drop, thers la at least a drop which makes It run over; so in a series of kindnesses there Is at last one which makes the heart run over. From Boswuil'it Lit 9f Johnson. Don't Envy anyone a good appetite a perfect digestion a robust constitution. HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS will help you to obtain these very quickly. It tones strengthens in vigoratesthe entire di gestive system and always stands for better health. Try it today. All Druggists. FARM HAS TRAGIC HISTORY. A tragic history accompanies Welsh farm near Swansea. The farm la known as "Taiywanda." A man named David Davlea, a farmer, thirty years old, committed suicide there, a few days ago, by cutting bis throat. When found In a field, the body was almost beyond recognition, having been attacked by rats. No fewer than five Inquests have been held by the coroner at the farm on bodies of members uf the family during the past few years, and all met singular deaths. The father was killed by being run over by a cart which he was driving; the mother died sudden ly; an elder brother was thrown oft his horse and killed, and another brother hanged himself. A previous occupant of the farm, prior to the tenancy of the Davleses, also hanged himself. SMOKE COSTS MILLIONS. More than $500,000,000 a year Is done in damage to merchandise, de facement of buildings, tarnishing of metals, Injury to human and plant life, Increased cost of housekeeping and losses to manufacturers due to Imper fect combustion of coal. In other words, In abating the smoke nuisance In the large cities this amount of money will be saved, as well as In creasing the comfort and convenience of the residents.. An important step In this direction has been taken in Pittsburg, where the University of Pittsburg has undertaken to call the matter to the attention of those inter ested In a series of papers published In the form of bulletins. ta: 3 Bflit Ccngh Syrup. Taitei Good. In tlm.. Sold by DruirirlBti. FIRST SON NOT ALWAYS BEST. The first born eon is not necessarily the smarteit, according to history, Among famous men of genius who came along late In their families are Joseph David, Napoleon, Dickens, Lin coin, Washington, Cromwell, Tolstoi, Daniel Webster, Franklin, Balzac, Ten nyson, Chopin, van Dyck and Rem brandt. The oldest son in the family Is not necessarily the best. Being the oldest, of course, he will put on the most airs and be a family leader be cause of mere flrstness, but the young est boy may be the one whose name will become distinguished, or the one who will be the greatest comfort to hla parents. Gallipolis Tribune. UNIT OF MAGNETISM. The electron, or unit of electricity, is now supposed to form a material part of the atoms of the various ele ments, and Prof. Pierre Weiss has at tempted to prove that a similar par ticle, which he calls the "magneton." Is the unit of magnetism. In testing his theory he has made numerous ex periments on magnetization at very low temperatures. He has found con firmation of his view, and believes he as shown the presence of magneton in the atoms of Iron, nickel, cobalt, copper, manganese and the metals of the rare earths. HE part played by the rails In feeding a hungry world is per haps shown nowhere more pic turesquely than in the Union stockyards at Chicago. Impos sible aa It may seem, there are at these yards 250 miles of tracks within an area of one square mile. It con nects through a b-elt line system with more than 25 trunk lines. The cattle country tributary to the Chicago Union stockyards embraces about 1,000,000 square miles, says the Railroad Man's Magazine. The range cattle fatten In the Dakota-Iowa-Kan sas-Nebraska-Mlnnesota corn belt In addition to cattle are boga, sheep, mules and horses. The system of handling this enor mous traffic is In two distinct parts the traffic over the granger lines prop er and the handling of trains after they leave the freight terminals and enter the belt line tracks. Any one of the big trunk lines may be taken as an example of the rest. The live stock traffic of one of these averages a 400 mile haul, the trains having right of way over everything except passenger service. The average stock train is of 35 loaded cars, and Its speed, all stops included, is 35 miles an hour. If the haul is from Omaha, the train will be handled over three, divisions, meaning three crews, each consisting of an engineer, fireman, conductor and two brakemen, 15 men in all, and these only to the terminal point December, January, February and March are the banner months, and Monday Is the day of largest receipts at the Chicago yards. Wednesday comes next. The average number of stock cars entering Chicago over one of the great railroads on Sunday night and Monday morning Is 700. Occa sionally the number of cars arriving during the Sunday-Monday 24 hours Is more than a thousand. Thousands of People Employed. The great yards themselves are di vided into two great sections the western portion with Its packing houses and subsidiary industries, and the eastern- part with its pens and chutes. Here every weekday of the year more than 60,000 persons labor or transact business. Between eight o'clock each Sunday evening and nine o'clock Monday morning during the four busy months Inclusive from 22,000 to 23,000 cars of stock, comprising approximately a hundred trains, are unloaded In the yards. The process of unloading con sumes around 12 hours. Tha average must be one car unloaded every 20 seconds. To the casual observer the trains ap pear to be massed In a hopeless Jam and one might walk block after block on the tops of cars. But despite this seeming Impenetrable Jungle of roll ing Btock, the trains are moved with a precision that would shame most clocks or watches. . This stock Is shipped principally to commission brokers and seldom to packing houses or other eventual buy ers. Each train may contain every class of stock that goes into the yards horses, mules, sheep, hogs and cat tle. Walk down Exchange avenue In the yards on Sunday afternoon or evening and watch the groups of Idle employes whittling sticks and swapping yarns, with nothing to do but wait Now and then a passenger goes by, but for the most part it is expectant waiting. And then, Just before dawn the stock trains come hurtling out of the darkness, bringing their thousands of live animals. By daybreak the tracks are Jammed for miles with the moving trains while the uproar Is increased by stock men shouting, whining, swearing, threatening because they fear they will not have their stock un loaded when the market opens. It Is bedlam. As soon as a train arrives at the pens. Its movements having been governed by the train director in the tower, the locomotive Is at tached to the opposite end. The length of time consumed in unloading each car is one and one-half minutes, but many other cars are being emn- tied In that same Interval. There are ten chute platforms lead ing to all parts of the yard, and each holds from 18 to 62 cars, making a, to tal of 812 cars that can be unloaded at one time. The average Is 32 cars to the chute. This roaring, protesting, squealing norde of live stock la urged ud the chutes, with the sheep waiting reluct antly for a leader. Railroad employes and yard opera tives detest sheep. Sheep won't crosa a puddle of water until a bellwether has been yanked over it and then they won't stop till their leader baa bumped into a fence and can go no farther. The animals In general are excited, the nerves of the workmen are tense and the controlling element, time, seems to spin by with tragic fleet ness. As each train Is unloaded it be comes a dead thing, so far as the yards are concerned. It is hurried out of the way, making Its exit over one of the three outgoing tracks and Speeding back again to the meadows and the prairie reaches. A thrilling scene Is being enacted along the endless rows of pens. Punch ers on horseback (regular western cayuses, at that!) are clattering over the brick pavement or splashing through the mire. Buyers represent ing all the packing houses, eastern concerns and even individuals are rac ing to and fro. discussing fine points in the stock, bidding for their favor ite herds. Start for the East From the northeast and southeast corners of the yards other trains are moving. These are bound for the east with stock on hoof traveling toward New York, New England, and other points that attend to their own kill ing. While 2,600 or 3,000 cars are moving into the yards1 with their lading of farm animals, about 800 cars are trav eling eastward with live stock that has been purchased that day for those distant market places. And during this same period 60 crews of the stock yards railroad are handling their dead freight, shunt ing 8,000 cars Into position, bringing in and taking out the thousand and one things that go to make up Indus try In the stockyards. For those few hours the train di rector Is the busiest man In that whirlpool of Industry. He must ac count for every stop, every start of each train received and returned. He must determine by the bills Just where the consignees can be favored the most, and he must place his trains so that every chute is operating to its fullest capacity every moment of these teeming hours. To convey some adequate notion of what this amounts to during the week Jammed into a few busy hours of each day let us look at the averages for the weekdays of the four most Industrious months. Monday and Wednesday being the two most prolific shlplpng days, bring about 4,800 loaded cars into the yards. On Tuesday and Thursday there are added 3,200 more cars, and on Friday and Saturday 1,600 addi tional cars go toward making the grand total of 9,600 cars for the week, constituting 270 trains. Each train moves over approximately four divisions. Besides this, about 1,000 cars of live stock are shipped cast each '' week, averaging 30 trains, travers ing more than 600 miles end .enter- ng a territory where divisions are more frequent .A V'lU. , 1 r. m 5 i s I "Thank Duke's fe Mixture for Them" Every member of your family will appre ciate the many handsome, useful presents you can get free with the coupons now packed in nil i 1 Duke's Mixture Is one of the big favorite brands for both pipe and cigarettes. Men everywhere prefer it be cause of its true natural tobacco taste. Duke's Mixture la simply th choice leaves of fine Virginia and North Carolina bright leaf thoroughly aged, stemmed and crumbled. It'i Impossible to get a purer smoke or a more likeable one than this mild, rich, fragrant Liggett 4" Myers Duke's Mixture. One and a half ounces of this choice granulated tobacco cost only 5c and with each sack you get a book of cigarette papers FREE. The Presents are FREE They do not cost you one penny. In each 5c sack of liggell Sf Myert Duke's Mixture we now pack a free present coupon. With these coupons you can get any article described in our new , illustrated catalogue of pres ents. Asasoecialorfer. good during December and January only, we will give you this cata log absolutely FREE. Simply send us your name and address. Coupon, from DUKE'S MIXTURE mar be assorted with Tazs from HORSE SHOE, J. T.. TINSLEY'S NATURAL LEAF, GRANGER TWIST and coupon from FOUR ROSES ( m-lm double cent ton), PICK PLUG CUT. PIEDMONT CIGARETTES. CUX CIGARETTES. other tugs and coupons tssuta ay us. life Premium Dept. ST. Louis, mo. ,rm Ideals the Guiding Star. Ideals ara like stars; you will not He Knew Teacher. "A small boy dropped into a stora succeed in touching them with your : on tb9 North Side on Ms way to hands. But. like the seafaring: man I chool to get some candy. says th on deserts of water, you choose them Holton Signal. "While he was loofe as your 'guides, and following them reach your destiny. Carl Schurz. To Brcal: in New Shoes. Always .hake in Allen'e Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures hot, sweating, aching, swollen feet. Lures COms. inpmwllll? nails and hnninmr Al all druggists and shoo steres, 2.ic. Dont accept aiiyiHiusiiiuie. E-HmmeisaiiRamLtw Aaures a.iiea. uimstea, ije itoy.iN. y. Gift That Is Divine. ii msteaa oi a gem, or even a flower, we could cast the gift of a lovely thought Into the heart of a friend, that would be giving as the smgels must give. George MacDon-aid. RELIEVES SORE EYES Birds Worthy of Gratitude. It has been estimated that the birds In the United States save $200,000,000 worth of crops each year. The tree sparrows in Iowa eat 4,666 pounds of weed seed daily. One full-fledged robin will eat 16 feet of caterpillar daily, or about 4,569 individuals a month. Red Cross Ball Blue irivea double valua fm wini- money, iio twic a iu a any oilier. Ask your grocer. And So Many Do It. A campaign year Is a time of hap piness for the man who likes to get at the extreme outer edge of the crowd and yell "Louder!" Denver Republican. lug over the assortment displayed tm the case the salesman called his at tention to some fresh lemon drops. 'Naw,' the boy said, 'Gimme some jelly beanB. I want something the teacher can't hear me eat. Teacher can heat a feller eat lemon drops clear aeroM the room." Kansas City Star. Be thrifty on little thin its like bluing-. Bon'tMk eept water for bluinsr. Ask fur Rod Crsaa Bajfe Blue, the extra good value blue. Calming Her. "" Mrs. Fidget "What's that noise I hear down in the library?" Mr. Fidget "Must be the history repeating lteeU. Go to sleep." Puck. Get Well and you can very easUy High Society. A new-rich dowager, only recently removed from the environs of a west ern packing house, has afforded much amusement while clambering up the slippery rounds of the social ladder. One day. after she had returned from circumnavigating the globe, she essay- prl to ont.firt.nin ft druwin-rnnm with boastful account of her travels. She had been everywhere, and her How of English was augmented by frequent' wavings of her bediamonded hands' and forceful noddings of her tlaraed head. "Did you see the Dardanelles?" ask ed a sprightly debutante. "And the Himalayas?' 'Inquired an other fair young bud. "I dined with them In Paris," replied the dowager, triumphantly. And sbe wondered why everybody mileaV jo Years withCoughs We have had jeventy years of experience with Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. This makes us have great confi dence in it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, weak throats, and weak lungs. We want yo.u to have confidence in It, as well. Ask your own doctor what experience he has had with it. He knows. Keep in close touch with him. One of Ayer's Pills at bedtime will cause n increased flow of bile and produce a gentle laxative effect the day following. Formula on each box. Show it to your doctor. He will understand at glance. Dose, one pill t bedtime, just one. afada y the J. 0. ATUR CO., IwU. Has. Gee h $ Geo Wo : Wo THE CHINESE DOCTOR Both the American and the Chinese physicians use medicines made from plants and herbs. But the Chinese nave extended their researches and nse Roots, Herbs and Barks that have never been heard of in this country. And with these harmless and non-injurious remedies Dr. C. Gee Wo has cured hundreds of patients of all sorts of dis eases and who had previously been tak ing the medicines urescribed bv wall known American physicians. He has testimonials from patients all over the northwest as to the fine results he ob tained with the use of these nature remedies. Should you live out of town and wish to begin treatment, Bend 4 cents in stamps for a consultation blank and circulars. - Office open evenings and Sundays. CONSULTATION FREE The C. Gee Wo . Chinese Medicine Co. 162J First St., Cor. Morrisofa. PORTLAND, OR. P. N. U. No. 49-,12 WHEN writing- to advertise 1, pleas tian this paper. 1