a ay, Movempcr zo, lwzi I CUT ENDORSED ft BRITISH LABOR ,ri. ..f iniiiilfi'Hto Imunid by tlio ny 1,11 In half of the. wholo tii' i .. '!. mI ttrltutil tirnm. ' ort of mty wK-im Unit nmy bo sry to " ho the American pro- r t ...i ,. i-iini in i' ill reililrt Iiiiih mi I 1m for I h 'Xi i. iihtuii . O HM ' " " id - ,,M to nil f ritm of u r iiiit- , yf (do manifesto declared tf .... I ftiuli heurtouiy iMiinrmn '.uiiiIhI f""1 progressive rodue Lose.! ty tl l"' Hliil ,,ik of lti present Confer- wi support any imiHtturi'H '4rjon tli" "''lo of "rnut Hrltuln linK ff,, t i""1"' I'nijiuHiHH. , pjiilfimto also called for mm 0(t!n wIIIbiu'o between Great SH HALT ACTIVITIES , pour Battle Craft of Hood Type Tied Up. .,oa Tt' HrltUh admlrulty un- 4 tbiil It bad ordered the . .(ill work on four battleships !,up?rlor Hood typo. Tho ship t firms with notified not to In '. further Itabilltlea on new nu itruilloii until further nolle ,(, idmlrnlty. These contract ,rQod only two weeka ago. uplsined that the practical , othe admiralty's order would a ibului cessation of all wur- fork pndint the outcome of tin ..ton conference. The admlr- ntiouDtiement evoked a chorun jrotiit by prominent KUlhorltlci oul Kngland. Lumbtr Rate To Eaat Cut. eio, 111 The tranacontlnentsl I buru announced rate reduc- oe lumber, shingles and lumber irti from ramie i.oasi poinn i ntt and New England. The i-iuu commerce commission ha :uked to aulhoriie publication of ,t tariff. The reductions ranis . 15 to 16H cents under present to trunk line association and England point. INSIST ON "LIFE FOR LIFE" Natlv., 0f Naw Qu(nM Reasoned Out of Cu.tom Ea tabli8lie(j Long Ago. VF"1' '", ,h" " "'"Ill fllHt llOHHCS ()f H. u ; VV,H "r '"r" "l-m , 1 " b.,lH that n,,m U.'v. Uuul l-lnlri Jw,,.r. y,r. tnm;l,t h nu0ll, wo '"U m.tll li.y l,,,,,,,!!,,,,.,. Im) "Iviim-u win, ,. r 11(. ,M,,i,(ll.M r"",ly ,"" "'''IK IhliiB Imi,,,,..,,,!. 1-n.iii il... In.(lr,.Ht. I,,,). t),m. nuiivTH 'iuhchI, iti.ivIIi, on tn.'lr l.m,,! m,d I ""'PI'Iiik ..very f,.w f).,.( t Ui.-Mk th.lr ln.lH ,,,, . h"011 llh.-(H.V. II.., 1VHW.1I. I WHS tl' IIihI whit,. ,., , I'"r ilnyH tiny would not pi-nnlt um to l.nvi.. At hm!, when W() ulHt. "l on imrl'iitf, nix o th.-m Jolnt-d our piirty to HiMdinimny UM t th (-oiiHt. Kvi'O'lliliiK wnit MucM.thly until 01111 of thcui f,.i ((, u Hln,llln ll(1 WUH lniwiii'd. IHh trlboMiiicii iioiirouchcd UH tlllTiit,.,lhk'y; lM.y 1.(1 H n.HIwn. wlbli) fr th ihiiii'h dcittli, TI117 wmIUmI ami (loumiKlfd ,ujuii'iit. We ofTi ri'il thi'in uriutftK, colored dlslu-H und clotliM, but they would nt bo iM'l,,'',d. They wuntcd u llfu for a fife. Ah (iilkly im we could we nmdo th licurext couHt K(!tt!einciit, em luirkfil upon 11 "irnu" uml went buck to civilization. Limit I Jeurnnd tlmt, after tin InvHrliihlti cuMoin of their rme, tin) (lend niun'u brother Iuiuk about the count until lit hud killed a white mini. 1I!h briilher'n ileuth wim nvcnjjed it inulcr lmd puld the price. INTUITION MORE THAN HUNCH Loane Total 130,572.327 uhlniton. I). C.Total a;rlcub I lot ni by the war finance cor- .oaund'-r the amendment of Aux I Uil amounted to 130,672.327 on sbcr 16, the Joint commliialon of jltural Inquiry waa Informed, tu on loan on which the mon- -u been paid over. IP. Pay Conference Called. b FrnclMco.-The Soutliern Pa- tomiwiiy has called conference ulU railway employe to "ncKO- M revlnii.11 of mien of pay." It unoiimi-.l officially at compuny jiarti-rn here. iternlty Lill Pasted by House. jMiiKtmi. The hounu piiHHed the ;irdTowiier maternity bill, un- hich .,000.000 will be spent In -iity nld In the various states. "1 Men Buy Portland Ball Club. "land, Or. After seventeen year 'nershlp. Judge V. W. McCredle Wter 11. McCredle have sold the ;nd baseball club to W. H. Klup- formerly of Portland, now of tie, ami James R, Brewster of 31 JACIAL PERIOD IN DISPUTE p Evidence That It Exlsteo, oui J the Question la, When Did It tnd? n did the glacial perltfl end? It, un Amerlcun scientist pern or Vln, when the Ice beKau to dl or hod half dlmippeared, or fntlri'lv lUanmuiiirwIf I the hint mentioned, then we nre 11 la tlio lee age, for Kurope lias Jlaclcrn, and Ko have J.ubrailor, the Aliisku uml IhIuihIs In tno !c rceloiiH. nrul. hh verv schoolboy 'ware, Oreenlund Is neurly coveted an Ice cup. m the rm.'st ton tm settled by & !r,'nce to climate? If ho, then the '! period Mided for. say, tlio un- P) rci'l.m l...,l..iliHf llf I, like r."u .,1, mn uviiiniii -iUolH, for its trees !elonK'(l to n ' temperate climate, ''mlmbiy tlio point is best m'ttM nikln tli Klaclnl period a pro wive event, retcnrdlriK It us "ullnB "ne tt'Klon pcrhapM thousand f befoii. It ends In another. fltllnnl ,1.... i... f.. ... IT el.OI'h Of 'k-rlbl,,.,! Ice constitutes 0110 of the ,lt 'nj'Nlei-los of he world'tt Iiistoiy. 11 absolutely liedwd In with uncer- "'""Kh It Is generally believed thnt ,re wriH more than 0110 Ice 110 ' ton u.,.. ,in, .i.wri-nn of Cor . nuv Vl,l H1IV il'h' - wiioiiiM tlire were three. n slx- or a dozen, for the matter of till) Aimr.rxui- n 11 mvsterles l with one or any of these iuus H what was xiw m. it,i(i iioia siiwi HStnmo hivc, so far, failed to solve tlmt Consequently, t Lady Writer Say, It Must Never Miscarry, but There Have Been Instances. "I have dlftcuHsed the mutter with celebrated doctor of medicine (who believes that tceulDH Is cauHed by mi crobe), and he aiM-rlhes Intuition to an stavlstlc endowment. He some what Inconsistently mentions Eve and Ann Whitfield In the nrae sentence by way of epigram. After going to all this trouble he was quite Insulted when I hinted he wss trying to ex plain the existence of something that did not exist, let I will bet all I have In my pockets that the dear doctor has never once In his life al lowed a female nurse's Intuition to tell him where to dig for an appendix. "Hell hath no fury like a woman whose Intuition hath slipped a cog. A (Hipular Journal recently had the temerity to challenge the Idol In a Joke column: Two women are talk ing. One sny: I heur that Mrs. TUherlngton-Hlobtm has eloped with Major 8now.' The other replies : 'How disgusting. I thought It would be Col onel Swish.' What. pray, disgusted the Indy but the miscarriage of her Intuition? "Intuition, If It existed, would nev er miscarry; otherwise it would be a mere hunch, such as a man may re ceive. If woman's hunches were In fallible the gift would have been cap italized long ugo. Throcmorton street murks the wrecks of men who have tried to capitalize their wives' In tuitions." llostou Herald. "Mothercraft." "Mothercraft. u movement for bet tcr preparation of girls for niother I.oikI. has within the last five years made remarkable progress In this and other countries," writes Marlon U linker. In the Survey. "Starting In . ou n iieftulte standard- MiissiiiiiiiKi-no no - ------ lred course of study for girls and I ' 1 in mm form or voung women, n " '. Another born adopted In most of the tales in the dominion of Canada un de, th auHploesof the Victorian Or of Nurses, and to some exten In .eveml other foreign countries. Ma and national branches of the Feder a Jed Women's clubs have taken the U dilative in promoting mothercraft. also had support from paren -t"n e- associations. Bed Cross we k Im Girl Soouts, Camp Fire Girls. Am'eianlzatlon centers and play ground associations Why Men Hate Shops. ..0f course," said the floorwalker In the I ll department store .mew It .at n(.Vcr thinKS "i des red HklnrTen lrroni Tl around urflf1?- InS, sale ilrlB who aren't ,he store, asks sniesg fipPosec tc , jnm J th y ral,,ents m Jt . Lecnuse he il 1 f the rea80ns , hurry . H'.i t B o e Why men hnte fjv YorIf se their heads nt nu. Sun. There are no swo is 0 m)t on ninny a "c,d ,g now doing Ben- "",y L New York Sun states, marauders, ti e j'-w urt flg Tl-et'n liHtte Pln cultur0 as 1Uult,y ln Ul. u - a wood. t"t of W' I, M " old coat has l",le U,T . : .. .i,. to create a rarnw dniliea, h "-" ,vurrior and in . . . ... .i,nrr OI a w1" . . .. nuiiianio , cout is u fi instances, f,,,sf, figure army tnnlc. t"e " (W or fast Beenfr0,"aUkeB8lt from the torcflr se''"is like 8 pi in en lieen for ome old w mot hei INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE Page Three SAYS WAR HELPED RELIGION , IS OLD LONDON PLAYGROUND Bl0 Fight Made 8oldiers Better Men, Is Assertion Made by Man Who Knows Them. y Tlio American soldier came out of the war rt'lih more religion than he wen) In, according t Jtev. Henry llus Hell Tulhot, canon of the National nilhedrai at WashlnKton, who arises to delVini id,, doughboy from the libel Hun Ibt; "war ruined lilm." "He Is n better limn for having been In the unny," assertH the cunon, refer ring to tlio veteran, the Slurs und Stripes Hi II ten. Cunon Tulhot was senior chaplain of tlio FiiNt division of the American ex peditionary forces, Iu a communica tion to national headquarters of the American Legion at Indianapolis he admits the American, as he saw him In France, wus "uncommonly timid in the exercise of his religion. Ho was frightened at his own religious shadow or he might have been grossly Ignor ant of tho content and practice of his religion." Hut as the First division's senior chaplain, the canon was In charge of all the private belongings of the 1,800 Americans killed In the ten days' fight ing In the Argonne, und In nine out of every ten of the men's kits found a crucifix, scapular, pruyerhook or testa ment. "And In those days," Canon Talbot writes, "the First division waa not carrying anything It did not deem essential.' "There was a kind of collectivism which outruns the ordinary standards of honesty," declares the canon, "but underneath there was implicit, If not explicit, reverence for the Son of Man." BENEFIT OF "LIGHT BATHS" Rheumatism and' Neuritis Yield to Treatment In Which Purple , , , Rays Play Big Part. The usefulness of "sun baths" for health has long been recognized. Un limited sunshine hag much to do with the beneficial effect of a vacation at the seashore. - i Nowadays this matter Is better un derstood than It used to be, and It Is known that the heat rays of the sun have nothing to do with the physical benefit obtained from such exposure. It Is the chemical rays In the sun beamparticularly the ultra-violet rays that do the good work. Electric light Is rich In these rays, and many cures of rheumatism and neuritis have been accomplished by exposlnff the affected part of the body to a powerful incandescent lamp, Its rays concentrated by a hemispherical reflector. For curative purposes phy sicians have turned to useful account a srt of cabinet lined with such lamps, Into which the pstient. lying on a padded bonrd, could be slid. The newest method employs a quartz lamp containing mercury va por, through which the electric cur rent Is passed. Quartz has the advan tage of being extraordinarily trans parent to ultra-violet rays. Such n lamp, made In the shape of a tube of small diameter, can be In troduced into the nasal passages for the treatment of catarrh or Into thf throat for the cure of Infected tonsils thus saving the patient an operation Philadelphia Ledger. Hyde Park Has for Centuries Been the Scene of Amusements Dear to Englishmen. Tn llydo park, London, nearly every Ciiiiui iMid sport known to the English bus been practiced ut one time or all ot her. In liiJiO the B'reiicli ambassa dor hunted there with the king. In 1578 1h4 Duke Caslmlr "killed a bar ren doe with bis piece In Hyde park from among J?00 other deer." In the rt-lgn of Charles I the park became celebrated for Its foot and horse races round the ring, the "dusty mill-horse drive," as Lady Malapert calls It. "Shall we make a fling to London," wrote Klehnrd lirome, "und see how the spring appears there In the spring gardens ; and in Hyde park, to see the races, liorse and foot; to hear the Jockles crack?" Kaclng In the ring was one of the greatest attractions In the park, and some of the meetings were thought to he of great Importance, as even among the state papers there Is pre served the agreement for a race that took place there. Charles I mixed freely with hla subjects on these occa sions, but, looking on the royal park as his own possession, he once ordered the ejection of a Berkshire squire, whom he referred to as an "ugly ras cul." The "ugly rascal" overheard the phrase. He went away quietly, but vowed vengeance, and gradually embittered the whole of hla country against tho king. He had, indeed, his revenge, for writ large on Charles I's death warrant was the name of the "ugly rascal." THE LIFE OF GAS MANTLES Illuminating Device Should Last 1,000 Burning Hours May Be Destroyed In Few Moments. , ; " "' The following facts about gas man tles are taken from Gas Logic, the house organ of the biggest gas company In New York. "A good gas mantle should last; from 500 to 800 or even 1,000 burning hours. "Breakage, however, Is not always due to poor mantle quality. Turning the gas off and on and the slight ex plosion that sometimes occurs when It Is lighted Is highly destructive of mantles. A mantle which, burning steadily, might last for several thou sand hours, may be destroyed In a few minutes by rough handling or in a few hours by unusual but unavoidable wear and tear. "Initial candle power Is that meas ured when the mantle Is first lighted. It Is extremely high In cheap and In ferior mantles. But soon, often with in a few minutes, the brilliancy of the light fades, never to be regained. The Intensity of this Initial light Is a snare Into which the unwary and unwise fre quently fall In purchasing cheap man tles. "Sustained candle power Is the meas ure of light given out by a mantle over a long period, and Is, of course, the real test of a good mantle. The high class mantle may not have an initial candle power equal to that of a cheap er substitute, but In the long test Its superiority Is demonstrated. "Some of the gas companies are now selling mantles with a guarantee of at least 00 days' service." 1E rrr -"iriTfTnr"""tf1l WEfAkMtflS STATE PA MR 1 J .1 il pfmi i u. i mm mm wm Thanksgiving We recall with satisfaction and thankfulness the many blessings afforded our people in our great U. , S. A.the land of liberty and opportunity. Let us all steadfastly hold tc the true course of our Republic, and every Thanksgiving Day 'will record greater progress. Farmers State Bank INDEPENDENCE , OREGON POLK COUNTY NOTES Sarah unraress rone napier, ( TnivV4-A-Ms si Vioi A w ori nan 'Povnlll. I tion, is planning to collect the family records of ajl Polk county pioneers, their children and grand chUdreni. The chapter requests any one having Bible records giving births, deaths and marriages to isend a copy to the Chapter historian Mrs. Joseph E. Sibley, 410 Hayter street, Dallas. Itemizer. resolution that was adopted by the convention demanding that a law be enacted requiring a physical exami nation of most parties applying for marriage licenses. Itemizer. Mr. and Mrs. Vera) Compton this week purchased the house at 125 Ash street, formerly occupied by Lester Guy and family. The deal was made through a firm of Corvallis real estate dealers, who recently came into possession of the property. Item Dr. W. S. Carey, a former well known physician of this city, is a candidate for postmaster of Rogue River, where he has been located for several years in the practice of his profession. Itemizer. $7,500 FUND IS CREATED .... FOR SHADE TREES IN 2011 The , statement has been made in bank advertisements that if $1 had been placed at compound interest in the year 1 it would have grown by now to a sum larger than all the money in the world. Such a statement must have caught the eye ; of Alfred V. Lincoln, of Charlestown, Mass. His will provides that $7,500 of his estate must be set aside at compound interest for 90 years, or until the year 2011. Then the total will be drawn, out to plant many trees in Lincoln's home town. "At 4 percent compound interest money doubles in 17 years and 246 days. In 90 years, Mr. Lincoln's orig inal $7,500 will amount to about $250,000. Shrewdly invested by trus tees, it may turn into millions. County Clerk Floyd D. Moore, ac companied by Mrs. Moore, was in Portland several days last week. t.llA vvnite in ere ir, mww , , , annual convention of county clerks of Sloper Bros & CocWe s store, Oregon, He was the author of a Wednesday, December 14th. Christian Church Bazaar . The ladies of the Christian church will hold their annual bazaar at on mmm ' We are doing a whirlwind of business. There's a reason. Suits BBid Oveo'CQBts TO Se Tko m Mow Wf;j'r- "7 Salem MMiBis tor . ,C. P. BISHOP, Prop. The Store That Specializes Upon Oregon Made Goods 9 9BIR&3!1sii ' aim iiJI "L,n- It Is not yet even to whnt extent the lco enp covered n. ids of i' rm,LC' S'ohc.