Independence enterprise. (Independence, Or.) 1908-1969, February 20, 1920, Page PAGE TWO, Image 2

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    THE INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE, INDEPENDENCE, OREGON.
PICTURESQUE FISHERWOMEN OF BELGIUM
PROFESSIONAL COLUMN.
SWOPE & SWOPE
Lawyers
I. 0. O. F. Building
Independence. . . Ore.
The G-E Range
QmriG Irnnrl if
The comparison shown
here is not mere theory
it is based on uctuul tests.
Figure this wiving out in
money at present prices ot
tnt'itt. See what it means
to your pocket-book.
THE PALACE
Main Street
Open day and night we serve
meals and lunches at all hours
Try the famous Mt. Hood Ice
Cream. Also
connection.
barber shop in
..... -V. k
PAGE TWO
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FLETCHER & BARRICK,
ATTORNEY'S
Cooper Building
INDEPENDENCE, .. OREGON
TIME CARD ON VALLEY &
SELITZ RAILWAY.
Effective Sunday June 23th
The Valley & Siletz Railroad will
run a train leaving Independence at
t.s a. m. going through to Camn One
arriving there 10 a. m. Leaving at
.o p. m. arriving Independence at
p. m. leaving at 7.25 p. m. for Ho
kins. Sportsmen will have an op
portunity to whip the Luckimute
.-....v.. , f.'v-y
vn unusuni pnoiogrnpn snowing isoigian usnenvomen casting ttu-ir nets, w lion the itionrolk went to war, the
women courngeously stepped into their places, niul nre etlll plying tlieir trades an pnrt if the treat reconstruction of
this little nation.
ON
OLD ACCOUNTS
WE GET RESULTS
WE REPORT RESULTS
WE REMIT RESULTS
WE PAY THE EXPENSE
WE TAKE THE BLAME.
KNIGHT ADJUSTMENT CO
McMinnville, Ore
Successor to
YAMOREG COLLECTION
AGENCY.
HERO OF ARMY
WAS "LET DOWN"
Capt. De Vere Harden, Wounded
in War, Is Now Sergeant.
WAS FIRST OFFICER 10 BE HIT
Long Service In Army Leaves Him
With No Other Career, So When
Discharge Comes He
Re-enlists.
artillery support was directed during
the nine counter attacks the Germans
made In throe days.
Fought Five Dayt and Nights.
Harden was nttached to the Six
teenth Infantry when the First divi
sion, forinins with the Second Ameri
can and the famous French Moroccan
division f)l cnnnrliitn,) nf tl, .,(..,.,)-
tirove forward on July is south of
WILLARD
STORAGE BATTERY STATION
We selL Rent and Repair Bat-
terie8. OUR REPAIR WORY
GUARANTEED.
418 Court Street. Salem.
Phone 203
and Our Good
PRINTING
Will SaveTbu
Money
JLi?P n Every Cake
Get the Genuine
and Avoid
Waste
SKINNER & WHITE
DO YOU LABOR AGENCY
WANT
HELP?
35 N. 2nd St., Portland
IrLra"' Fnp Help.
and Kitchen Help ' nm- Lam"
Phone Broadway 3205
'
MURCH RUSSELL, M. D.
Physician and Surgeon..
Office and residence over Inde
dependence National Bank
Try the Salem Studio for
PHOTOGRAPHS
384 State Street
New York. The first Aninrlrnn nffl.
eer who was wounded in the wnr Is
an officer no lonjrer, thousrh ho Is still
in the nrmy. When wounded he was
a first lieutenant and lator he became
a captain. Now he Is a sergeant, and
salutes second lieutenants. Those nre
the ups and downs that have befallen
De Vere II. Harden of Burlington. Vt..
who Is now nt the new army signal
corps school at Little Silver, near Long
.Branch, X. J.
Ilarden received the Croix de Guerre,
lie served nearly a year in France
with the famous First division. He
was in the first
Cnntlgny and In the bloody and deci
sive cattle of Solssons. Now he is back
practically where he started sixteen
years ago when he first enlisted In the
army.
Sign Marks Place He Fell.
Unless a shell has Mown it or souve
nir hunters have torn It to pieces a
small sign still stands near flip nM
front-line trenches at Les Jumelles,
near Nancy, In Lorraine. It commem
orates the facb that there fell the
"Premier Officier Amerlcai n RIpssp" fir-.
tober 23, 1917. The sign stands or
stood lust outside the
Lieut. Co!. then Malor
Roosevelt occupied when he w.ns flrt-
In the trenches. Ilarden linri tn iaf
Roosevelt when a shell exploded and n
fragment struck him in Imp Itm t,,
French commandant erected the sign
to commemorate the event. Tim
about the last that was then heard of
Harden ;
TT 1
riuruen went to I-rancp ti ifh
First division, the fi
there June 20, 1017. He was then a
first lieutenant with the Srwm,t a,.i,i
signal battalion. Soon after i.rrivin.
In France he was commissioner a first
lieutenantthe reward of hi, in
service and good record in the romiUir
otrv lrl...i:.
iiiciuuiug service in I'anamn,
Alaska and on the Mexican border
The First division had been In the
trenches only a few days when Har
den was wounded. In his eagerness to
get back to his outfit he left fho i,o
pltal too soon, and ns n ronit Mc
wound did not quite heal nronertv na
cannot hike as he used to. Four or
five miles tire him out.
nfien the First division took over
the Toul sector the first trench sector
ever controlled by American troops
Harden was there, caint n C Vlilnn 1 lT
perience as one of the first American
"niseis io nanuie independently the
signal system or a trench sector on
the western front.
When the Twenty-eighth artillery of
the First division made the tw a,'
ican attack and captured the village of
iitiKijy uuruen-s post was the ob
Solssons In the first allied attack of
the decisive campaign. For Ave days
and nights tho Sixteenth Infantry
went through as close an amu-oiieh to
hell as Its men nnd othVers wanted to
see, then was relieved, covered with
glory and its mission accomplished.
Shortly afterward Ilarden was re
turned to the United States ns an In
structor. On reaching Camp Lewis In
Washington state he was pronmted
captain and took command of (' oom
pnny of the Two Hundred and Thir. i
teenth field signal bnttiillon .if tt.
Thirteenth division. He was the only
officer In the battalion who had serve.')
overseas, so he took a large pnrt in
Instructing the battalion.
Harden wns then transferred to
Honolulu, where he commanded K com
pany of the Fifty-third telegraph bat
talion. He put It through stiff training
for the October maneuvers. In wtil.-h
according to citations. It "show e.l re.
mnrkable proficiency."
Col. George E. Kumpe telegraphed
Washington asking that Ilardi n fie Tier.
manently assigned to the western de
partment, nut .November IS orders
reached San Francisco for his din-
charge from the service.
Ilarden had served so long with the
army that he had no other career, nis
profession was that of the soldier. For
tnree weeks fie cast about for some
opening In civilian life. He could find
none. 'Hack to the armv ninin
sppmofi rno nn iv rnvtci. rt i.i.. . .t.
- j '- io nii proo-
n-iii. u liit it-uiumug omce lliey told
him they would be glad to have him
back as first sergeant
"Dammit. He's Dend."
Says Headstone for Dog Jj
Abilene, Tex. Six liundi
students nnd the MitIre faculty
of Simmons college hero attend
ed the funeral of "I n tn ui 1 1." n
white bulldojj which for four
years had been the college mas
cot. "Dammit" was burled In a
casket on the rollegu campus.
A band played and a Htudent
delivered the funeral oration on
"Kvery Fog Una His Iay." Over
the grave wan placed a marble
headstone bearing the Inscrip
tion, "lammlt, he's dead,"
iWrt of Daw Uf
SAYS
WOMAN IS A CHATTEL
British Husband B.iae Divorce Dam
age on Claim Woman Hat No
Legal Statue.
servatlon and telephone station whence
JERUSALEM CITY TO BE SAVED
Historic and Romantic Aspects Will
Be Preserved in Improvement
by Zionists.
London. Prof. Patrick Oeddes, town
planner, who has in hand projects for
the Improving of Jerusalem for tho
Zionist organization, aims fit mnUnn
the changes without destroying the his
toric and romantic aspects of the an
cient city, according to a statement
which he has given to the Zionist bul
letin. Prof. Goddes Mates that one of I.i,
nrst tasks will be in conneetinn .ih
the Hebrew university, nn.I ho hopes
to begin on that next year, utilizing
ouuuings already erected. Research
laboratories for chemistry w!L be a
feature of the school. Dr. Weizniann
the Zionist leader, who has been reader
In biochemistry at Owen's college
Manchester, will be in charco t
researcn work.
Prof. Geddes says he hopes also to
start a Palestine museum and suggests
that nothing more of historical and
archaeloglcnl interest should go out of
the country.
London.-It Is ii basis of n bus-
band's claim for divorce damages that
Ills wife Is still In fart If not In la
a chattel if his. Tills was the them.
of an Interesting nrgumeiit before Jus
tic,.. M.Cordle In the divorce court
arising ut (,f u,lch dam
ages wore sought against t.ie c.
respondent by the husbiind. Counsel
for the petitioner said that up to the
matrimonial causes rot of lS.'S a
woman was regarded us a chattel nnd
trie liirv hint to nuur.i ,..,,..... ....
..i., .muiim'n in-
coming to her value to "ier husband.
His lordship then nske.l when had n
wife ceased to be regarded lis a chat
tel. Counsel fi,r the petitioner safd
he had not suggested that this Idea
had gone.
Judge You say she Is still to be
regarded as a chattel?
Counsel Yes. with slight modifica
tions. The question assessing dam
ages is whnt she Is worth.
Judge Then von mil i.-.r i
. 'iiii"i
chattel?
After some furl her dlsensi.m i,.u.
lice Mef'ardle aske.l If ,,s the result
of counsel's researches he could show
that u wlfo could brimr fid Ion i. .... ifn:f
me seducer of her husband.
Counsel said there was no sn.-h ,u..
nnd that there could not be such an
action because a woman bad not the
wuno legal stains or the same legal
rights as a man.
v Lloctneitu
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Cxd'.
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MOUNTAIN STATES
POWKR COMPANY
'J' nU-'.,...'.
THE REASON V
Money it More S
NATIONAL BAJ
fWCD oi nun
RESOURCES" I
(Each Under Sujy
sion of U. S Gov't
Of all tin) placet lh-r i
Deposit, Hide, nnd Jnm'
Money hero U the r
"Why" we iihould prtf
Nntional Iinny.
THE INDEPENDENDENCE NATIONAL BANK
This Bank is Under Supervision of United Sb
Government.
MUST MELT BELL IN TOWER
Only Way It Can Be Remnrf rr,
it. Louis City Hall Is In
Bucketfuls.
GIVE 9 1.1
.warn -wi w mm mmr mM XBiC
If I FAIL to CURF tm PiMP FfJ iTii!nD i
- ----------- - "MI lUIIIUil I
w- ? Itp?'S0NS ip Hands or attars ts BOKE
niuiuuinuiieui rdHIVBw, S.
3
&ffl!I!!!Ilffl'lllilll!iniIB
- .....,.nmiii;iiui,,;j-i l,l lljj
Rattlesnakes Prove
Menace to Stock
Wo PAY Until CUREnrTW
mm
WDITTrU ril40uTrc
Wo X Kay or other
Kwniiuo. Aiiisiana
plant makesthecure
yVnvTuunD inua r.
ivniun, ..Vllir
SORE on tho lip, face
J i UKKAy IKIUK IB
CANCER; it never
pains until last stap:e
120-PAGE BOOK sent
HiEE. 10.00U tfistl.
mouiala. W.-lti ta soma
We refuse mnny who wait too long & mustVlia
Poor cnredfchalf price if cancer J?yct email
? p SPCdsnHey Co. for m Back
3 Great Cancer Specia.'.sts 43 Years STR,CT
WIAIL THIS To Sr.mo O.ie with CAr.CE
iPhWOaMfSililSI
Tortsmouth, Tex. Rattle- I
snakes in large numbers recent- 1
ly have been seen swimming n 1
the Oulf of Mexico near the. Half
Moon lighthouse, seven miles 1
from the mainland n.,,i t,','
RUM LIES IN CORNERSTONE
ru 1 r- .. .
congregation Entombed L Inunr
f : j , .. 1
wunsiuerca i nen "as Respect
I able as Water."
Cincinnati, Jan. J5.-Lng after tho
last cellar lias gone dry and the last
drop of whisky consumed there will
remain a bottle of liquor that, accord
ing to tradition, is entombed In the
corner stone of the Universal church
1 milof! from the peninsula to the a at Monlgomery, Ohio. None other than
I south, according tn ih . fa ' William Sivnim . l,mn
south, accordlnc fo iho t '
..... i,, ,
who keep the light. It is Paif
throe rattlers were klllecl on n,e
llghihouse platform by the keep
ers. Tenants
g f'Jnnerly constituted the Itanrho
g Grande hero renort n n-in
m of rattlesnakes, which, ti.ev c
m - u uiunuce to live foei- ti m
S vlf lt ls reported by n number 1
?f faers that fat cattle, bitten H
ny rattlers, do not u.. k .., H
P i uom me bite of one snake H
being insufficient to kill them, M
nullum Swaim. aired h.v,,.,i,. ,.
m'n V u,""'nery. is aulhorlty for
; lie tradition that n Quart of ,,qi Z
m , - .-,..,.J. lu lIie roundatlon of the
m '" "iiicn was built In g'!7
' "In those days liquor was s re
H I spectable as water" t ,
U1UI, " Jst like other
oiks did. It was customary to r, hZ
"Quor in a cornerstone for the
renHon that folks drink each otner's
liealth in Hquor." "mors
Svvaim recalled that in lhe
a0l,drS" Whl8 -Id for threee cCs
""is. j no two-ton I, ..II ,. i.i,.v.
Jiangs in the tower of the city hall has
.i'ie uie tower unsafe, but the bell
Is so large It would be dangerous to
try to take It down, so It Is to be melt
i.gnt wnere It Is with acetylene
o.ow lorones, such as are commonly
st en in use by workmen, repairing car
iracKs.
iuiiu;ng Commissioner MeKelvey
luuiiouiiceu ttie tower i, i.
as the bell remains, h.-r-miH,. the steel
supports have become coi-i-o,i.i nr,...
over, he said, an attempt to lower the
oe W0Uiu be very chingi-rous, there
fore the decision to take It down a
bucketful nt a time.
The only time In
l ii a . -"l. jiuirj IJIIH
7( )U" ,)ns "eon rung was the day
or the armistice celeb
uK wnen tlio building was construct
eu in J JU4. T ip lmll ut t
""j, iiiu eoense or r.w.,.i.,.. ......
!, ,v. . o. V, """""'Ii 1 L Will
LT,. .f . 1(1 "lx f't high
.vu ieL-t in diameter at the base,
PLAN STATE OF MANHATTAN
Din i- hi
m ,,ew York Assembly Would
aa Mnotner star to the
Flag.
A Grocery That Never
Disappoints Customer
Cheap
Not Best Bceause Bfefiis:
Albany, N. v. Tho Ktr.
hattan, composed of tho counties of
Suffolk, Nassau. Oneen vi,.. .',
mond. New York k.' . . ""
,,, , "".iA niul west
r .New York "". would be
"U"UI! y wo legislature If a bill
(Dem.) of New York became a law
J ho net would mjulro rnf Ideation
by a referendum next November
Assemblyman I.e!,,i, ,..
Queens introduced , ',
c- a state of (,,,,,,-Ne, .'"
JDIS Is n more , .ii :
than that of Mr. r , "?'''
only Incledes all !. !'.'"
Proposed state of , ..,n
WOUld contain tn ,, :."""
.iji in,. COIUll ,,v
m a -A . . if ' , s
Large OuanOIIcs
But Biggest Because Bes
iNo Order Too Large To 11
No Order Too Small To fit
This Store Aims to fin
Goods We Soil r- t7 V i'lcnsantly flnl Wull-Thi
We NEVER DuTlrf8 m arc Give.
Never Send the "Just as Good" Kind JU8t Whflt YU
Cal breath & Jones
Envelopes to Match
Z.Zy l the C0'0r 0f
envelopes to maS!JI - nd,an,(l turn sh
colors o, " JL?atch m a"y of the twelve
tat.V
!We letterhead SDecialkf. Vn
I S?Jf ?r printing and the
very
paper we cive vn, v'. '"S1 and .
y low. o1 na our prices
Let
i!ShpwJruvvhaf We Can
Do