YAfav. June 30, 1922 INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE Page Thre & ? . .... - f .. . . ... l" ' "'" " 1 ' .mi- ! i i i mi- ... m i ,.,, , ,, , m i , ., i, i i, i -.,.,.,. . i will celebrate Suiv 3 and 4 2 DAYS OF HIGHCLASS HORSE RACING Featuring Some of the Best Trotting and Pacing SfrifW tin ihn Pn-iuf BIG STREET PARADE 10 A. M.f JULY 4th PATRIOTIC PROGRAMSTREET RACES BASEBALL MOVING PICTURES 2 BIG DANCES EACH NIGHT-FUN ENTERTAINMENT COME! CELEBRATE IN ALBANY LOW FARES ON.ItAJLUQADS went he ushered In a bhr revival. He pMt an fdta Acrcit. began work In Oregon In 18C3 and Whether It wae mental telepathy or cotlnued until loving hands laid a mere coincidence, I cannot nay, but him away to slumber in the cemetery, this Is what happened: by the church he had organized and ! 0n railway atatlon platform at Home alliance rrwn me nooo an un caused to prosper. Clarence Clement Fishback of West Salem and Miss Allison French of Monmouth were married in Drain, Oregon, last Saturday. Miss French bus been teaching at Ash, a rural center somo distance out in the coun try, She la from Alanson, Michigan, bat has been living In Monmouth while attending school. The groom, farniliurly known as "Clem" is the fourth of tho Fishhacks and Is en Kagcd in tho carpenter and contrac tor business in West Salem, Mon niouth Herald. MM TRIBUTE IS PAID TOTHE PIONEERS NATURE DENIED Only SNAIL BRAIN migrant family. The father carried no bundles, but the mother was loaded like a pack mule. In one hund she held a bundle resembling a large week's wash tied up In a sheet. The other arm bore a weighty looking basket and a husky baby. For about 20 minutes I looked on as that woman In sort of dumb pa tience stood there motionless under that awful loud. It was positively nerve-writcklnfc to watch her, and finully I yelled to her, mentally: "For heaven's sake drop those bundles!" Instantly the woman let go of the bundle, bunded the bftby to her hus band, placed the banket on top of the big bundle, folded her hands over her stomach and heaved a sigh of relief. Kansas City Htar. flrownisvillf- Something like 1000 rmM motored to Frovidcnce church i,unv to do honor to the memory of inn county's great pioneer preacher, L.v. Joiil. Powell. On the program ,pcoa'.I Ir. Ituniel ISryunt. of the .,t Portland Unptixl church; Dr. O. Wright, Portland, F.nptist stale i rctarv: Pr. S. O. Kcid, state evun- V i: , 1 I. Put tcriton. Salem. i t . v , - ' .-presenting 'be Paughters of the meriiim Kevdtttion; Dr. John llor. er of the Oregon Agricultural col- .... ci..i.. . ..r cue; Wiry rsneium i oiiu, f.mtii iKarle Stanard, Ilrownsvillc; Miss L5- lore Powell, Albany, and Hev. 11. l!ber.i, Albany. J Itcv Mr. Albers presided over the emnrial service. Dr. Heid gave a j Mr, port of the Haptist convention, hith he attended in Indianapolis. :iley Fheiton called the roll of the lurch membership. Dr. Horner ave a brief but forceful tribute to ie memory of Hev. Powell, and Dr. rj'-tnt in his memorial address said , Filns Powell, who was one of Rev. Mr. Pow.-il'a 11 children. A feature of the program was a quartet sung by fur members of the Powell family. liev. Mr. Powell was a Missouri cii:;;t ri!er who cume vest in 1 852 t and proceeded to carry tho gospel to every r.uok and cranny of tho Wi!!am- el' valley, and he also m.'tde long nnd j -itteiw; mlHxionnry tours into other ; I'nrU of the west He was one of lh- founders of Providence church In' IS 3. The church was organized at ' the homo of John Powell, Joab's oldest1 son, and this house was about one I mile north of the present church! bU'ldin. j 'Die doors of the church are never j clow! and no one thinks of mutilat- j ing projH-rty in or around this build-j ing for it 1h holy ground and sacred ! to the rm-iDory of the man who bap-' thod lumM, if not fully 3000 souls' to repentance. Tho church stands' on a corner of the donation land claim of Ann Carmichal, a daughter of Rev. I Powell, now ncaring Thinking Apparatus Creatur Can Do. lot of Consists of a Few Nerve Cells. JiiNt M.iiil Khdls will buy a wife in Africa if u man I in u hurry and not partic ular, l.it to get u really good one requires ubout IHMX) ;-.lielU, aceonllng lo Harold I.. MaI!soii, curator of the Cl'-volund Mi;;ei:i:i of Natural History. The African iim'S the of the t-iiiill for foot), but suvoh the fchoilx with whJHi to buy UU wife. .Money cowrien, a name given to cer tain klnd.4 of wliells, were unwl us a medium of I'schan'? In India and oth- er Per Kai countries us early as T(M) A. 1. ' Whlie coral and other tmiuisjls j aft"'r belli;; subjected to cliormou preMMire anil tense Peat, when burled j in the earth, ultimately ure turned Into j toarlile wlilch Is UKed to build the finest ' palacct of mail. Snails ai'iear to widk on their stotn uchs, but they have a soft foot by which they move. In some types It Is shaped like a hatchet. One group of shell aniiiiul walks on Us head. The chambered nautilus Is the mot beautiful of this type. Its eyes are under Its urm, and Its mouth Is on too of Km ht-ad. ! A snail has a heart all right, und eyes, but he will never die from con- Go Back to Fifteenth Century. If anything should astonish us about trees It Is their longevity. The life of animals Is ephermerul compared to that of our trees. The pine and great chestnut can assuredly extend their existence to u term of 4fX) or TM) years. In the Island of TeoerlfTe are found many venerable pines and enor mous chestnut trees which in all prob ability were planted there by the con (liilstadores at the commencement of the Fifteenth century, the epoch of the Invasion of the Island. The former are distinguished from the others, owing to the connnerors having In their piety decorated them nearly nil with little madonnas, which are still seen suspended to their houghs. 1 cushion of tin brain, for his oolv think- her 90th! ini ai.tiuratus Is u few nerve cells. anniversary of birth. The cemetery j n lives to be about eight years old. in the lot adjoining the church on tho but he has the ability to live four wiuth was ifiven bv John TWW vears without eatlne anything. This Man's Marvelous Memory. A man who has developed his mem ory until he has un amazing store of information on a wide variety of sub jects has been discovered at Birchen cllffe, Iluddirslield. He Is John Holroyd, a builder's la borer, und he Is self-taught. Holroyd has 31,000 facts stored away In his brain. He can name ev ery man who has played football for Ibis country, and the winners - of all 'classic races since 18C0. Another of his specialties is cricket scores and results. He can tell you the birthdays of national and local pi m a wi nf ? I II ' '' I ' tlotiJ..i44lI I 1 ., I"' 'ti i THE INDEPENDENCE OF CHECK PAYMENT Be independent n a v b check, the safe medium of settle ment, and save the cost of money order, car-fare or registered letter. The Farmers State Bank is a good bank with which to have your Checking Account. Farmers State Bank INDEPENDENCE , OREGON v k J 4a 4vAiAv J h OREGON COUNTRY PRESS OFFERED SERVICE PRIZES ie present generation must g-et hack his old hymn book. He said his; after be placed It In warm water the the faith of its fathers. A biography of Kev. Powell, which as written by Everett Earle Stanard I as read by Miss Ignore Powell of 'batty. Mr. Stanard is a grandson of hn-ther of Rev. Mr. Powell's wife. AJrm Powell of Scio, the only living ami of the pioneer minister, exhibited his father's saddle bags and has liM'ii proved several times. In a professor In a Hrltlsh museum wns examining some snails which had been stuck on cardboard for four years, lie noticed that one looked to be alive, and fnther knew the Diblo by heart and the old hymn hook from cover to cover. liev. Mr. Powell had a wond erful voice and he sang and preached the old-time religion. Wherever he animal was soon feeding on cabbage leaves and In a short time became ac tive as a normal snail. The Enterprise is still $1.50 a year All weekly and semi-weekly Oregon newspapers have been invited to enter the second rural news service contest with valuable prizes offered by the department of industrial journalism at 0. A. C. The papers will be judged by a committee of three at the annual meeting of the state editorial association at Corvallis, July 21-23. "The first contest was a big thing i..t.i.... I... !...... ha ceieoriues. , . brf . tfc advertising value of never forgets it, und he lias more than 1 . . once set parents right as to the birth- rural news service to the at days of their children. London Tit-1 tention of Oregon editors said C. E. Hits. . i Ingalls of the Corvallis Gazette- Times, ex-president and present pro- i gram committee chairman of the have association. "As a member of the may .former judging committee I had oc- Mrs. j casjon to study the close relation oe- i tween the amount and quality ru was . , . . . , , . rai news ana tne amount ci paia aa- I Suspicion Confirmed. "It suys here that surgeons discovered that orange blossoms be used as an anesthetic," suld Henpeck. "I always did believe that I unconscious when we were married. remarked Mr. Henpeclc jvertising. You shoiI hav this con test at the annual meeting of the as sociation by all means." To enable every newspaper in Ore gon to enter the contest with a chance to win on merit the country papers have been grouped into three classes with a loving rap as first prize, fountain pen second, and hon orable mention third. The classes are: First, grand champion, free for all, except dailies; second, best paper published in town of not more than 1500 population; third, paper of fewer than 28 columns all home print. The "best" must be left to the judges to decide, but they will con sider the amount of news from any community away from the publication point or news and editorials primarity for rural readers and the quality of this news and its ration to the total news and editorial space. To elmi nate special "cramming" it is speci fied the editors may select any edi tion of their papers published in June, 1922. aw r e try.! ii amm .mm ii li i "5 mtt -fin -.-i..1' j j i 1 f: - I' J-.l i.i r, H 1 ' 'i n Y) ETpii ;i I.H.IM,., tm,X,:s.j.fr.l . i Never in the history of this store has there been such a wealth of clothing for you to make selections from. Never before have we made such price concessions as we are now mak ing for this two day event. Come Early Two Days Only-Saturday, July 1, and Monday, July 3 Hundreds ien's and young fai's Suits The Selling Starts at 8 a. m. THE VALUE EVENT OF THE YEAR Mb We have divided our stock of Men's and Young Men's broksn lot Suits into four groups and marked them at greatly reduced prices. Lot t mm mmm Values from $17.50 to $25.00 in cassimere materials, Men's Models Lot 2 r Value $25.00 Cassimero and Worsted ma terials in Men's and Young Men's models. Cm Values from $30, $35, $40 Worsteds, cassimeres cheviots and tweeds in Men's and Young Men's models. Lot 4 Values $40, $45, $50, $55 Worsteds, cassimeres and tweeds for Men and Young Men. E,. We're determined to get our stock in shape, so we've made these extreme cuts. If price is an object to you, here is the -best .thing .going- SALEM, ORE. Open until 9 P. M. 'on Saturdays SALEM, ORE. . . .. .-amM, MilC-ir- : I WI.MBItrn i i MHimt tW,M unp- '" 1