Image provided by: Independence Public Library; Independence, OR
About Independence enterprise. (Independence, Polk County, Or.) 189?-190? | View Entire Issue (April 16, 1903)
S. M. Daniel Monmouth, Oregon The Larger Part of S. M. Danie 0 mm mm nil riii I t il j ii Mill i i n v i m m mm I I 111 I I II II I f U UUU UH v , v . . ;.i .nr on mir slidvcs, uur stot -. . .1 : ..i I hn ll'tlir I II Ull . Andtlie rcimuimur is "v, I, Iwlorc and our prices is now larjrer and better assorted in an um . yu - such that it is a real pleasure to imy goou t Our stock i unnur- Dress Trimmings Galore, VndniiU. Moduli...., Fancy H.u Ali.U-n vti. f unnur- - r . ii.! hrimi nml Jin n uikh i. Wham showing a lareo and we assorieu hub oi "", i i;, fit tv e ' ,,r ,mm,,,"K " . . , We are snowing a iarfe0. ,mtv for nuantily ami quality, in, ij . w York. All t , .i . :;., Jif all t h new latinos such iuiiir - j - . mem i . gocnis this spring, consisting bt a.l tne new .a. . - - , - - - .,iace f, buy your .I.e. colored, embroidried striped and dotted Swisses, mercerued j and price. Our .tore .a 11.. I ginghams, silk tissue., organdies, lawns and many otntr GnOCLS x. fabric unliable for waists and suite. Uiy KJUUl . UrBUliiU " . and beautiful dr.iKi.H. Com to u for jour I trimming and you will pt t th ri.t tiling. "Z'mm, Turnlsblna Goods atffc enavo -- ... , .:. ... , , Ung. print, percales, raUHlu... Kt.rn.np. pm.. y0 can rlmw you a p'i niroup ime uj Ladies' Shirt Waists. cteL,nn,tc;m aot curu..-.. antl i,0y .-uinr ov.nd.irt, nwUwm, j -''' i ...... ...... i.tj unci,.. in i-r. utlnlkeri-IiieH, liitr- We will have the prettiest line of. hirt waists we have fro Kv,ry ; i 't .VVthinK -ry for a !.,n .Mi-. . Alaoaeood lineofwh.tei e still sell tl.e cueunue i uf Ilnvvmir e ..t hlllL' H-ie. ever snown, ctirticnj ... c. ? niuu v. , pie,, goods in dimities, lawns, organdies and Indm linen.. pa.r warrant, X XIX J. vj J-rwj . . tt t 91 ign3 fnr the next thirty days we will give a discount of ten per cent on Beginning Saturday, March 2 ,1903, tor the next ty J b a cash purchases amounting to one aoiiar or muic, .-M.r-,- spool cotton. . X4. inwl nml limil.rv. We always irivetk Brine: us your eggs, uuuui, uaw, r -. , highest market priced produce in exchange lor goods. o, r v. Mnnm mi tK Oregon S. M. Danii O. -UtXlllCl. t-v. 7 - Independence Enterprise. AND WEST SIDE. PUBUHHEO EVERY THURSDAY. Entered at Independence, Ore., postofflce 8econd-cla matter. Subscription Price, $1.50 pcrVr. TKLEPHONK 54. tl 50 75 05 SUBSCRIPTION RATES, . (Htrlctly In adrance) ,per year Six month! dHncrla (VIHV Local notice are 5 cenU per 11 n straight absolutely no reduction for any reason whatsoeTer. Rates on display adTertisIng made known on application. The Enterprise, in supporting Mr. Hermann for congress, does not have to get in the band wagor., for this paper was the first to ad vocate his return to congress. It is contended that Mr. Hermann had served sufficient time and gbould be relegated to oblivion. The name argument was advanced to defeat the late Senator Dolph, and again with Senator Mitchell. . Their successors accomplished little if anything. In the second district the best man they ever had in congress, Mr. Moouy, nas Wn turned down. It took Mr. Tongue some time to attain a Btanding. We believe Mr. ner mann has this prestige already. and will make Oregon a good con gressman. McMinnville college is making a . 1 worse botch of it by passing resoiu confidence in Smith, the college orator convicted f nlairiarism. It is a lame excuse to snv the likeness of the two addresses "resulted from uninten tional and unconscious repetition from memory." A man with tn intellect .to read a lengthy address of another's over a few times anu learn it by heart would surely have the intellect to know it De- longed to another and knows where he saw it. A man who had the intellect to perform the former taalt would hardly be such a fool tn rln the latter trick. ' Leave a rotten mesa alone. Whitewash is poor treatment for euch a case. School Exercises. Following is the program of the Sunny Slope school rendered on Arbor day: Reading A. .1. Shipley Half- Sick " l first used Ayer's Sarsaparilla in the fall of 1848. Since then I have taken it every spring as a blood purifying and nerve strengthening medicine." S. T. Jones, Wichita, Kans. If you feel run down, are easily tired, if your nerves are weak, and your blood is thin, then begin to take the good old stand ard family medicine, Ayer's Sarsaparilla. It's a regular nerve lifter, a perfect blood builder. SI N a Mils. AlHrwIrts. Aik yoor doctir wht h thinks of Ajtr" Sariamrtlls. Ho knows sll about tbli grand old f.mllT mliein follow bu aduceaud w will b saUsfled i. C ATI Co, Lowall. Mats. Forest Song by the school Roll call with quotations "Our Klag". ...... .by the school Recitation Orjiba Shipley Recitation Roy lark "Sing of Spring Time" school Exercise .....by five girls Recitation Lenna Fisliback Recitation Hattie IWren Forest hymn by the school Recitation.- Jay Clark Recitation Pearl Fishback lixerciseT7777777TTby-fWir4fr Select reading lna Fishback Recitation Nellie Shipley Recitation Bessie Clark Select reading Ruth Haynes Song of the Trees school "Flowers and Showers" Letta Fishback Select reading Retta Clark .Notice. All parties indebted to me will please call at once and settle, as I urgently need my money, J. M. Staiik. - J. A. Mills, of Salem, was in the city Friday. He is now interested in the Barnes racket fitore there and is well pleased with Salem. Thursday Melville Courier, of Falls City, was fined $10 at Dallas for assaulting Fred Raymond, of the same place, on election day. Farewell Keception French. to Mr Pedee Lumber Companj PEDEE, ORE. A ful stork of roti'' Ii ami drcxM'tl lumlx-r U" stork at the mill. I'rire very reasoiiauK. Bill of h cut to order. Mill f'.vr milrt north of Prdoo, Oregon, excellent musical selection were survive her. viz., A, J. Tupi"! rendered and some interesting: Mrf. Tl.otf. TitA. of InuYn,i' A speeches were made by l'rcsiili:t i and Mrs. Susan I.nngbtry, of (1 Hessler, Mr. French, R v Wig-j fornia. more. The training school, soine; Funeral services were Mi J 225 cliild.en were out in full force the residence. Rev. W. It, Bwl and in many ways expreswd their 'oflirinting. Interment in the M appreciation of Mr. French, who 'cemetery, near Rick nail. has won a warn, place in the affec tions of this community. Tho Entkki'IUmk wnnls iii:i. tz to be b regular reauVr. .THE. NICKLESON At her home in! North independence, Friday, April 20, lOO.'J, at 0:00 P. M., Mrs. j " Mahula Nicklesim, of lagrippuand j heart trouble, ngil 82 year-, 2, . I -.I I1 .1 1 4 iiiunviin ami uuj p. ' i ounn u.-ti j n ii t i 1 4 Should have vour Work ' i I r? h-ouii t Mil 1 1 ' ' 1 1 1 "V -- - - pioneer woman of tho year ',"!, crossing the plains with ox teams in tho same immigrant train as Henry Hill. For forty year she was a resident of Independence. Mrs. Nickleson was married three times and was the mother of eleven children, three ef whom Itlontttoutb Eaurt H.I. WHITMAN, I'mP " Wishing called for l " llvcred. 4 Wiif-hing called for on Tf A ilnv diwl li,llvrfil (ID f,tUt 1 ly lUcrk Guarantee.. Monmouth, Oregon LastTuesday evening the parents, citizens and the Normal school students gave R. C. French a fare well reception. Mr. French has a new field of work at Weston, in the presidency of the Normal located there. During the evening a r umber of Wl rH, H. Jasperson, Undertaker, Enbali er, Funeral Direct f-e