Independence enterprise. (Independence, Polk County, Or.) 189?-190?, September 05, 1895, Image 4

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    I
I
ffiii: roue county muss.
Jtrwi 1Iiiik and I'dWoilol Kx
p renal on h,
rs
From ihn JMMn OIerver.
Supt. IIutclmiHon is attending
the Teachers' iiiKtituto at Il-
Mr. Wm. Lvle. of Cross Keys,
r ' - l
uregou, ,s v.su.ng ... um u.c-
in Dallas this week.
wr. j
noticed in this vicinity during the :
week looking for locations,
. W 1 , ? t H
A. (-rant Ml ednosday to attend ,
llev. Futrell and wife and Mrs
(ho conference at Oakland.
jura. Joey lieiicn siarieu iur-
. . i v.
dav for San truneiseo where shei
intends to continue her musical
studies,
Tl'e outlook for a fair yield lrom
the young prune orchards adjoin
ing Pallas is flattering. Prepara
tions aro being tuado to care for
the crop.
Sir. P. Duvis lays claim to
piaking the boss record this season
8 a threshing man iu the north
part of the county, Out of a fif
teen days' ruu he threshed 35,844
bushels.
Elder B. F. Bmnell and wife ar
rived in Dallas Wednesday. Elder
JJonnell has been engaged as pa tor
of the Christiau church at this
place, and will occupy the pulpit
there next Sunday.
Constable Curt Hubbard arrested
Frank Ivy near Jacksonville.
Southern Oregon, on last Thurs
day and lodged him in Polk
county's jail on Saturday. Ivy is
arresUd in connection with the
Conleo bacon stealing case.
j
from tlie Dallas Iiemlier.
Prof. R. F. Robinson is up from
Portland, renewing the associations
of his boyLood days.
The Irish-American threshers
were out eighteen days and a half
and averaged about 1S00 bushels
per day.
Near Perrydale A. Cj Taylor
tr-reslied 2GC0 bushels of wheat and
J100 .f oats and Frank Strong had
j5300 bushels of wheat. .
The railroad track-layers are ex-
mr,i.,A V.-.f.L- Virfl next week to re
, . 1 . .V I
jtume work. The heavy rail is laid
out to the Bridewell place and the
eufacing is finished to just beyond
town.
T?-v Fads, who was once a
Jilill Creek boy, is now preaching j
in Tdaho. and Rev Walton Skip
worth, who was once an Independ
ence boy, is preaching at Union in
Eastern Oregon.
Numerous fish wagons are run
ning in all directions from the
palnion cannery over on the Nes
tueca, the fishermen there not be
ing able to supply the demand. A
man came to Dallas Tuesday with
twenty salmon, aggregating about
400 pounds, and had no trouble in
fielling out at G cents a pound,
Corneil Hughes has rented his
place south of town to John Me
Bee. It is thirty-one yars since
Mr. Hughes opened a shoemaker's
phop here and in the meantime he
has seen many a footwear artist
come and go. He says that A. S.
Crider, now a retired capitalist,
Stuck at the business longer , tnan
pny oiie else.
Tlie Dangers of Cycling.
" Of course the warning against
the dangers of the bicycle has come.
It was due pome time ago. With
SOC,000 bicycles sold during the
pas-t year it was inevitable that the
physicians should begin to trace
ailments to their use. Every
modem invention has had to bear
ft, similiar responsibility. We have
the railroad spine, the telephone
ear, and the electric light eye.
And now a young man has died
from cerebrospinal meningitis, at
tributed to excessive use of the
bicycle.
liJiovs enme of the
11 1 c v w - 1 1 1 1 , n wu.j
medical authorities this unfortunate j rjjjt8 are quickly conceded to
pvent portends a welter of calami-; them. Spain, it is said, has 100,
ties to come, We are to have qqq idiers, regulars and militia,
cyphosis bicycliasis, gastritis, spinal , ;n the jand, and these have made
meningitis and a variety of entirely j no headway against the insurgents
1 n;i.r.ila n liif!i have OOt ti. on find , ACl nm more, whip.h
prigllini an j i 1- a' ' , 1 .j , "
ret been named, because some ofiprobayy represents all she can
tliem have imtbeeudiscovereJ, andt.pare from home and from the
il., rt are waiting for the gradual
, ., llf .u 1
development of the resources of the .
firwl dictions rv.
It is not likely that the output of
bicveles w ill be materially reduced
. - ' . . i r, T
py these "
th-days of the old ordinary,
whicl-. is now the extraordinary,
li.uh wnei-l, people who i-x -""
... - . 1 1 . . 1 . .tit ,
tKpv tnit thrir cba'.cf'S of
n.hivigthejr fcea-Js or- the first
pieco of hard pavement on which
it might omir to the it machine to
dump thorn, hut they rodo just the
eiune. Kven now there are more
fatalities from headers, collisions
and runaways, than from cyphosm
hicydiat-U, gastritis and cerehro
spinal meningitis, but in Ppite of
there notorious dangers the cycleriet
noiinsn. ,
If the death rate irom wcycnng :
n.p.J ilh the Jtl ' '
from silting in otuny " uum.
rooms and reading "Degeneration,"
i.T..'n,.. 1 mTIi Mutman " it
w dd pi blv b7 nTrta t the
ouui jro
saving device. It takes people out
I . . . ...
.. , ...
of divrs when nothing else will
, , , i .v
Of course when a hundred thous
and people do anything whatever,
some of them are going to nine
from it. If they walk in the streets
a certain percentage will be run
over by trolley cars. If they play
football some will have their neck
broken. If they 20 swimming
given proportion will be drowned
If ih.v a-alt nnst.'iirs some will
it vmj .... wf. .
succumb to heart failure. Bicycl-
... f f l!P I
ing is not me enxiroi me, aim .-u-not
be expected to insure im
mortality to its devotees.
Of course the wheel should not
be used to excess. One physician
remarks of women that "if you tell
them to take a fifteen minutes'
spin they ride to San Jose." When
anybody goes at the sport like that
there are likely to be unpleasant
consequences. Lemonade is a re
freshing and usually harmless
drink, but a gallon at a time might
produce painful consequences. The
wheelman should alw'ays stop while
he feels fresh and vigorous, and
should be canful to avoid undue
strains and jolts. With these pre
cautions he will probably he as
good an insurance risk as the man
who sits in an office and moralizes
about him. San Francisco Ex
aminer. CAMPOS AXI PYKKHUS.
The Cubans Giving Evidence of
Similarity to the Romans.
St. Loois 01ub-Iemoert.
Afcnrrline to a Havana litter.
(;enerai Campo6 "recognizes An
. . ,
toni. Maceo's exceptional ability
to take advantage of his political
opponents' weakness and careless
ness." This tribute from the
Spanish commander to a leader of
men whom the average Spaniard
classes with barbarians is strangely
like that which another warrior, an
interloper, too, like Campos, paid
a eoofl many centuries ago to a
race of men whose intelligence
and bravery the world was destined circulated in McMinnvilIe on Fri
to know more of later. Said dav last for the purpose of render-
Pyrrhus enthusiastically, just be-
...... i 11.. :.. .... I
fore the battle of Heraclea, admir
ing tne sum wnn wnicn me
Romans whom he was about to
.... 1.1 t m it
fight arranged themselves for the
conflict. "In war, at least, these
men are not savages."
The similitude extends farther,
In the reports printed 111 the
Havana papers, the war news
columns of which Campos and his
staff edit, though the Spaniards
are said to win all the victories,
yet the Cubans, it is related, do a'l
the attacking. Pyrrhus, going
over the field after the battle the
battle of Heraclea and noticing
that the dead Romans' wounds
were all in front, the significance
of which circumstances he quickly
grasped, exclaimed, "If I had such
soldiers as those I would soon be
master of the world." The Span
ish commander, when representing
the Cubans as always fighting on
the offensive, gives, consciously or
unconsciously, these formerly de
spised enemies very high praise.
It ought to be plain by this
time to the Spanish government
that a people whose soldiers show
such courage as this, who are led
with such skill and who manage
to maintain themselves under such
disadvantages, will sooner or later
conquer for themselves all the
rights they seek unless some of the
other colonies, will find the job of
conquering the insurgents no easy
1 of fi whkh
t.l.t-v will be comnellcd to do is the
I sort which the average European
jpoldier dislikes. And, to return
a.-ftin to the kinsr of Eoirus
.ogv, there is a possibility that
eabied wjth even the
!j gt arm? which Spain can
command lur sucn service may oe
- 1 V
ag barren to the victor as those
which Pyrrhus fon,
STATU SKWS.
More than Illi.tXK) for taxes has
been collected by Sheriff Coombs,
of ti rant county, since July 1.
Hnmhrey it Segor. of Eugene,
shipped two carloads of prunes,
weighing 55,000 pounds, to the
Kaxt last week.
L. Warren showed the Mo
ij.rter man a wc
ll
n ..irii of
,LiSJhrf 10
.ounce
Mr. Anderson, of Forest drove,
has Wen offered f-'OOO for his crop
urunesand plums, to be delivered
at the depot, the buyer to pick out
1 1 .1 . I io ttutllllllltlll
and dry the crop. It is estimated
his grapes will bring him lUWt
A. MeMurdo, an employe of the
r I North Pole Mining company, at
Bourne, died Monday last from the
effects of cyanide poisoning. The
tkm was deeply cyanosed, as if the
blood had been deprived ot oxgy
Martin Yenke, a fisherman of
Woods, was found drowned nea
..... 1 u-... L- Jn )m T!ir Ns
JE( m-, ino, ... - -o
,uoca river, about a mile and a half
... 1 . 1 1 ..
above town. His ears were badly
bitten hy crabs, which showed that
he had been in the water for some
hours.
News has been brought in from
Olive lake by people who have
been there for their summer outing
that many prospectors and miners
in the Greenhorn district have
lost their cabins hy the recent
forest tires. Greenhorn City, they
say, is a thing of the past.
The Yamhill Conuty Reporter
says Wright's machine threshed
3370 bushels of oats Monday and
an even 3000 each of the following
two days. He will be through
Saturday nitiht. Mr. Wright es
timates the average wheat yield of
the county at between 25 .and 40
bushels.
Mr. A. S. Hart has raised at his
home in this city, says the Albany
Herald, some fine samples of Yel
low Crawford peaches, which equal
any of the Southern Oregon or
California products. The Willam
ette Valley may yet become a great
peach growing country.
It is reported that there has
been outlined an agreement be
tween the board of city trustees
and the Roseburg Water Company
to the effect that the company is
to furnish the city good and
efficient service for ten consecutive
vears, and that the city is to pay
the company flOGo per year for
the service.
The Nestucca mills will be re-
built
A subscription paper was
. . .1 f . tWa 1: .
ing assistance therefor. The list
Was headed by Jacob Wortman
and Judge cowls wun a conirmu
tion of $150 each, and the r
. it. t, i ,r
otal
subscription reached $1005 for the
day. Almost every carpenter in
the town promised to donate work
to rebuild the mill
There is prospect for a pretty
large shipment of prunes from Mc
MinnvilIe in a few days. Enough
for a trainload of six or neveu cars
are in sight, if all parties who have
been figuring together ship at the
same time. Calbreath & Goucher
and G. S. Wright think they can
load two cars from their orchard.
D. I?. Kincery will have a carload
and Mr, Eberall will have some
hundreds of bushels.
Judge Blanchard, of Columbia
county, while at work with his pile-
driver at Kalama last Saturday,
fell through a hole in the wharf to
the rocks below, dielocating his left
shoulder, breaking two ribs and
seriourdy bruising his side and fact-, i
About two years ago, Judge Blan
chard, while engaged similiar
work, fractured his leg and dis-'
located his shoulder, in addition to
other injuries, from which he has
not entirely recovered.
Those who have recently re
cently returned from the Santiam
mines state that a new 30-inch
ledge of very rich ore was recently
struck in the Red Bull miue
which makes a satisfactory assay.
The machinery for the 40-stamp
mill is expected to arrive in Al
bany in a few days, and will be
hauled to the mines. Sixty men
are now at work and on September ;
2 the crew will be increased to j
seyeuty-five men.
J. II. Stewart, of Eden precinct,
whose extensive orchard is one of
the cleanest and best ones on the J
coast in which the owner takes j
commendable pride, says the Ash-!
land Tidings, expects to have
I twenty carloads of pears to mar
'ket before the geason is over, which ;
iiimht to biinii him nearly sMO.OOO,
His other 'orchard products are
estimated at .p,000 making 15.WX)
returns for ono orchard in Jackson
county, which is worth the con
sideration of people who maintain
that fruit raising does not pay.
Mr. Stewart has been giving em
ployment to OS people picking and
packing fruit the past week.
A sail case of destitution came to
the knowledge f the generous at
Hillsboro last week. A Mrs. oss,
Hying with her husband and five
children, at Gray Oaks, was taken
down a few days ago hy overwork,
and on Tuesday last was hurried
to her grave by blood poison. The
neighbors found the children the
..i.i..u i- mill tin voumiest teas than
VHivrn - - - - - r -
a vear old destitute of clothes and
sadly neglected. I hey were taken
by the ne.ghbors and temporarily
made comtortame.
Tim (t'rv.'ilIU Times savs: (hie
bund rid and forty-five summer
outers came- out trom Newport,
Wednesday, ninety Thursday and
1 to r..Kti-iluv. HU'houni for home
on the return from their animal
vacation. Conductor Hartges re
ports about twenty-five to thirty
bound for Newport by evert train.
All agree that the crowd at the sea
iiu tu.ii hiri'i-r this vear than
ever h4bre. and cofipiaints have
been general of the unusual severity
of the co!d, a fault not confined
alone to Newport, but true ot ail
coast resorts.
1 -riu bvit take hlliOiONS
Liver Kugulatoii, the "Ki.va op
LivE'.t Mudicixi?" Everybody neds
tike a l.vcr remedy. It is a slurgfah or
diseased liver that impairs digestion
and c::U3es constiixttion, when the waste
that should be carried off remains in
tite body and poisons the whole system.
That dull, heavy teelim? is due to a
tomid liver. Biliousness, Headache,
Malaria and Indigestion are all liver
disejir.rn. Keep the liver active bv an
occasional dose of Simmons Liver Reg
ulator and you'll get rid of these trou
bles, and give tone to the v.'hole sys
tem. For a laxative Simmons liver
Kegulator is bettkh than Pills. It
docs not sripe, nor weaken, but greatly
reftvsb.es and strengthens.
Kvery package has the Itcd 2,
stamp on tli' vriitjer. J. 11
Zcilin & Vt, I'hlhulcljitaia.
W. H. Wheeler,
PIANOS, ORGANS, &
Dealer in
SEWING MACHINES
Sewing Machine Needles and Oils.
SEWING MACHINES NEATLY REPAIRED.
Oni with City t!oo!i .Store
Near the fioat olllie.
Main St.,
I.N DEPEND EN' CE
TAILORING.
Aliae line of samples t.'TZ
alwaya on hand
from.
Safcisfaelion Guaranteed
T. LAYTOII JEMS,
Independence, Or
Webster's
International
Dictionary
PXniraJnable la Ottee, School, and Homes
New from Cover to Cover
Successor of the
"Vnahridged."
Standard of th6 .
TJ. 8. Oor't rriiit. ;
ine Office, the U. 8.
Hiipreme Court, and ,
of nearly all the J
BcnooiDooiu.
Warmly com
mended 67 BUM 1
Superintendent!
of SrnonlH, and (
other E'iunatort a I-
most without Bum- (
ber.
THE BEST FOR EVERYBODY
accAusc
H May to And tin word wanted.
tn the Torarmlarr, earh one U'Kinnuig a invar
Wwriiu riven oieir eorrert aiDnahetleal butm
srapn 10 M lo u nmmj muisui uj uie eye.
1 It la eaar to aacertaln tb pronunciation.
The pronnnetatton k Infllnatefl by tne omineir .
diacrltlc&llr marked letters ued In ttie echool.
tooM. wtuH touuto are langht la Uie nubue
acbsoia,
' tt to aaay to traoa the rrvwth of a word.
The etrmoloflee are complete ann cKiiinrami
tne (iinTem minei.,mi um, .w,".
invea la U ordKi OJ Uili KrowUi Irouj Uf root
tm - tmmrm mihmt m ward IMM
Thedeflamonareaer.eri!ieTt.aiKiTiiu; tnm. ,
retoimprerierimee. tact cfe(inlll'illoMH'Wd ,
m m leperiie pmrmmiMitu.
O.JtC. IfERRTAMCO-, Publisher;
SprloiBeld. Xm V.8.A.
Siwetniea nuna. etc.. ernt on apptlaatloB.
le not buy caee repnuli of aooeat edittnni ,
tfr nV5.; V':
mLE SUjLAT0RAi
for Infants and cnnarcn.
von k..qW u,.t u. J .n.'-i '",Um"
OVO,KW .h.l I. -I COU..UU. .U -
wlthotiuiin"u'Mi'f ...,,,11.1
U rm or yv,r ,...y'.'ivt. kuuw T w.u. H I. r-.t t
vo k.,qW ih.i c...o.i. t-. i--y pm-h. ""t ,w rf
II. ril(!reUic.H. U jul.luhf.l with evtry Ivllltr
rSHLZ, f n.y thirty .4 .h.. U
of U other rtmcllrt f.r children comhlneil r
VO.. K..o,v that .... I'..,.,, one. ,r.,e,,t ot the V.Ued
IZ1ZZ -,u.iv. H IK. mr .d hi. N - -
v- K-owth.. oneuf .he ft " '
w,u-bcvuWc.u,.,.i;:d he.. Pri o U u.liely l.-r...lr-1
i,.v.,K., that aeru "
ceulM, or one cent or
vo unoMr Omt .hen p-r.l. PM prep.Uu.rrhiMr,r
b U,.t well, d tlwt U "y h hrke le.t r
xvll. Hie-wc ttit"K ' oi'h kowtu. Thry 'C ftfc
Tti
Children Cry for
dWVnim tt carry n liiT't-clasM uttwkUf
IW ol'IIartlwai-f, ItnpltMUfUts, Stoves W
iTinvaiv,fU'.,itstoi'k that will meet tlu
vatitr- of our t ratio
SUPERIOR
S VE M1VE RECEIVED
B .. - t.. ..f il,..w. wt-rw. iorltotll
It lit ' V X' l ' Itv iv .......
cookiny: and heating piii'posi'ri.
C1LL 5EE THEN,
tlu? best kockIs for the least inoitoy
FRAZER
:Monmouth,
All
kinds of
Legal Blanks .;u."
wiBwaealHi '
NEAT
CLEAN
ATTRACTIVE
M
That is the Kind you Want
That is the Kind we Do
That is the Kind That Pays
Whilo we do not claim to excel in all
kinds of first clanH printing (though
we flatter ourselves that we can hold
our own).
"VvJU that we havo niiHuriiastied
IDO fuciliticB for getting up
f!T 1 A T"M" attractive
goents'I General Job
Pam Wand I Printing.
WE
business. Tell tin
what you want wo
w ill do the rest, and
(I nobody can do it
better.
r
Good Ada
May Bo Spoiled In Tho
If you want your ads,
circulars, stationery,
etc., set and printed
in a style to command
attention and respect, just send copy to the
EPTE1FE15E OFFICE
a a .
rl"if.
Pitcher's Castorla.
STOVES - - -
& CATTRON
-
Oregon. y
1 mviTrHcnrTPTnmJ'
1
J
3
attend to tlie wliolo
1
I DRESS MAKING
'''-
GoffandGoff. ;
5 V r n''rtd lo do ilri'.
J imtfclnii In ,tt,,1 "'y1"'
,iiiitrrtiit'0 il!iiiM'tloii. 'roin)l
t rvlm '! ri'rtnotiHlilu elmrifii, I
. . . . 1 .. .. .. ...I l.li.l T
('or. Hullroud nml ) Hia,
? iM)r,ri':Nui.M"-,"u'.noN) i
CITY LIVERY
HAl.Knnd KICK I) HTAULK8.
KKM-KY & HOY, l'mjii,
nu.H.uMra lo A. W. IkH-aalea.U r.
Styl
inh Turn
out siiNsi -la ...
(l.Mid tnrnouUfor t'oinuiorulttl men
llunMnUmfiLul ) ill" W ' "u.nili,
JNliKI'ICM'lvNfK, OK.
Estos & Elkins,
City Draymen
mi kind-of ijalliing
in or out of the city
rromptly attomloil to.
Ch n rjvs rv(tsonnble.
HORSE
MEN
liet your Mill
pi in ted at tlit
ollit-c, and gt
tlit. bent work. You will thuH 1
enulil"il to Mt uro tho In I retnilt
fron, your invt'Htinfiit. V tv
Homo tine
STOCK CUTS.
fCT'CKir price art tins lowrtef
ypRTHERN
ll PACIFIC R. R.
R
u
o
N
Pullman
Sleeping Cars
Elegant
Dining Cars
Sleeping Cars
ST. I'll'L
Tourist
"jn i.crii
lli'.t.YiT FUNK'S
Ch-OOKSTO.Y
WhWlVEO
UI'J.K.y.l find
'HVTTK ' ,
TO i
THROUGH TICKETS
TO
CHIC AUG
lXIIIXt)TOX
I'll n,,4i)Ki,vns.i
XEW'YOIIK "
FOSTOX uud nil
I'OIXTS E.1S T a ml SOUTH
Kur liif,,riniill,.ii, llmii iiinlx, mt nd
tii'ki iH, i-iill on or wrtiu
XV. II. HAWM'V, Affpnt, (
tiuli'wiipurt, Or.,
OH
A. TXrilAlil.TOV. AH.Cien. Pn.At,
No. ISVi, Morrlw.ii Mlri'.'l, 1'oriinr Third Ht.,
I'niiri.ASi), Ok,
i:. McMCII.K, Koelver.
TO THE
tllVKM TDK CHOK K Or
Two
Transcontinental
ROUTES
UNION
PACIFIC RT.
VIA.
OMAHA
Kansas City
VIA
SI'OKAXE
MINNEAPOLIS
AM.
ST. PAUL
I.OW KATKH TO AM.
EAHTKKN CITIKS.
OCEAN STEAMERS
every 6 1hvb lor
SAN FRANCISCO,
For mil detail mil on O. H. O. Ant
M.o. IlilTKIl, Inili'eiiderJce,or.
r adilrcnx:
w. h. Hvm.iurrtT.