INDEPENDENCE ENTERPRISE AND WEST SIDE. STH VKAK. J NDKI'IINDKNCK, I'OI.K COUNTY, OltlXJON, AlKJU.ST 20, 19U3. NUMHEIt 33 M i'I i:mi;h Will Itr-iC 1 th" "' Molt ilny f Nel Month. a un imtf tf tin director , gxinii', U ' trn'l t mfiiK' thin 'li'"l year ll' . Moii l.iy iii September, it Thi will l wftT IWI'l in '.'Mil i.Liiu' H over I " , ,! Mlir"r.v 'I"'' ..... .mm m KlUMt ON0.llATi:i J, Hlte and l ! Hate rnfiiir.1 a l'rliierW. ',v furniture flulilitliliuiit A. 1.. life ini'l I" J"" lVf ! fdllihllU'd, Olid IM JJtM-K IrfShr lirill llrtlllO Of Jttl'O 'JI. j.-aiiM'tliip wu .Jf, Tu l'iy. "JJi ill give ,(n.ii!i'nK one of tin liiri ht U f furniture in the valley, n iln tn men nro lotli :!r aft.-r trade, much .tii i hcf. I ff'n j,viu& fl 'ytl town UV tt liUHH". t.nnj; ut I'lrm uS Thumday I.. Joe purvha--.f furniture tore of CampUM .Uinit iuiii.f-.li.".!" f-f t nu r. Mr, Jwtt' i a ciii'! iiitr'r a new fi-lii'iit, And s'.cf)fiii:j pirit i in keeping ; (!, i-i interest of th town. .f;t!iU !i boy are noil com i! i future intension, but b'l tltry mnr remain In In- A Itecrut Oilfnt ;! Inin lUmim VM. jlaldwin, of Albion, Vh , Thunxluv fur hi home after a iWimtto r'Utirtit aimJ other Baldwin ii a native of Polk ml eerved an jHwlmai'ter iifiiggiUn IliH-nit Vista for a p!r of yenr. removing to Al- Wi August, lie i 1 proprietor of the only drug "in thfi bustling town of Al- ml in highly pleased with J'o( Ima'idii, although a ontifold Polk, hi heart U M In lh oM VVilUinflt fJ. From a luinf vlsiul I Mr. !!!,! in Mat UutWIill. 'Co.. Wttsli., U Ir nhfiiil of thin oftliMj.),,!,,,, t,rtt it in a prBO iiw country niul yield 'M ri'turim to iha f Armor; hut 3priMi. for reply to tho tit f hich in ih. mor di'dirahli) 'fur knHi, Mr. IUhlwin ail lothcro in Ins travJ him h '!tono half no fair a his : lami, old polk, in unny N Th hunt of fricniU ot Mr. in I.:.. . ..!... n r M.. - -mi inn (iiinaui lamuy r"iinhin thf'iu continued nl lroieritv in thoir new - ---J A iin-rrjr mrty hft AMami th I'Stb, fur a trip to (Vltiii Spriiij( It iiK Imli'.l Mm Juk-i TlijriitKii Mr. T. A. Hayi'ft. I.uciln llavti ICiilli lUy mi Ona i'atrii-k, of Aihiand; Mm, It. J I Kikk, Prari ami Frt".i Kim, of Ih'1.mii done, Mii Kltiii, Mm, Jy (iuli ami Mr. (in.ro (Jurl", of Taroma, Cidralin i a tlclijf htful nnut in thn Hikiyiiuii j Uaf Im'lh ol tlml ali fornia liiin. 'l'lin altilU'in in aliul lhirlTKr'ri hutdn-J ft. TU f I over th hlkiyini in ninl witndrfful jiic :i( t-ityt ii--r iiiji, ami lh vi frun th" ''ir windowii ar grand lvnd d'rinti-jn. I n I lie I'oIiIip. llaiit( t)urt li" I, in cinni'ctio'i witti L Jim.hi', thn furniium htm linn lonin rly om J hv ("anilll Hr.. , I wi!i to thank lh (uihiic for thrir lilwrnl at ronax of the mt, and rxt-nd an iiiviUtimi to lh ti! of polk iMiiiity in (? rral to rU and eiamine our etJt'k of furiitur. hardware, ftc. We have already plcH an order with J'aMt-rn tuaitufacturem f or a large liipnxMil of iiiw and up-to-date furniture. It i our intention to havi 'ona of th lel and Urgeot !tIm t.K-k in lite valley. In connection aiih'-ur furniture utore a proM to add uiolrrn undt-r. taking parlor, which will he Cited up with CuhttiH of the lateV. de aina Again wmhing to thank you, I remain 1 ouri truly. W. i Hi. K. Jaun ,'!rovn and M.iud 1'iutli-r, lot 2, I-i-vena ad I to Dalian, 11100. Town -, Kail City to Win Cilmn, that portion of , second tre-t lying hetw-rxn Mill ami Main ctrf'tn. 1. li and M I! Kawk (o P It H Mill r ft ux, rM 0-Uc-rea. t 7 , r w.tl. W C Urown to Matthew Dighy, lot 1, :i, and 8. block (ifrumrc town. lli!U. A J Haley, adin'r, to Sarah U Kihr, Iota in Momnoulh. ll.'JOO. A J Johnaon el ux to Willamette Valley Sto:K and Land Co., 2'J-ifJ acre, t ID a. r o w, II. ("ira l and Jui'4 Clark to F ( Mel-emh, 4 acre, Hi , 1 1 w, flOS. I) O .SH-riiian, truniee, et ux to Amandit C Mcl.onch, lot, 2 block It, Wsl J?leui, llUO. M ) Plank to Auut Bittner, lulu in lleriuanlown, IIDOO. 1$ K (iwiu et a! to Mary K (Jwin, tracl in t S a, r o w. 5. Sonitt l'-w Stori-a. ci.aim aujiweh. It ISiunk, road acct I 4.CH Irfin-IIodnon Co., auppliea.. 7.50 lri Plaudliuefcr, pauper acct 15.00 C Iv S-fk'v. road acct t.00 J K Hiblev. salary tiC.u" Ind LuuiWrCa, roaiacct.. C.2 K Haytvr, salary .. G-i.OO S-th ItiKg". wlary 21 00 J It Teal, salary 8.S0 Salfin, Wclneiliiy, Aiijf. Crop Near loiiinouth. Crop in thi vitiui'y ire turn ing out good. The out are, in Miie ple(. pretty ehort. Win-al Several bi excursionn will go from this vicinity ami local people will bu well represented at tho big Uhow. Thoeo who go Ironi Here should tiiiike every effort to arrive in time to ee I he magnificent new etreH uarade, which is given in the morning preceding theppon ng porfonuance. Three miles of li irloriuft are diviued into in large and well filled 4d - iny tion. and each ecli .. in 5h, 2.V at the Bankrupt Store. Ni nice ami reah, at Wag- f, Carrie Labreu returned irom W Saturday. J- Fihnr in on a bueiness trip Mh'i'gton state. y Craven and family ara at '"or a ten days outiug. t, Im. a pfiK-rallv lmk1 croi Th weather ban be-n moat favorable for hrveliug. and garden look freh and are in uplendid growth. While runny ot our Kan'ern friendn are nufiVring from drouth, and in nome place dioenne and famine ni-fni iminune, we Oregonian nit calmly down and enjoy the many good thing Providence ha given un, taking everything an a matter of cour nd hardly renliting our good fortune, Willi plenty of rain nl the prope n.-anon, Htilendid nun nhiny weather fr the liarvent and !uti-i Knl n'iLhtii. cardenn where an vegetable one can wish for will grow and a promine of l,..,,i;r,.l cron. we are indeeo: n favored nooi.la, and while Adam and Kve lot Kden, we surely have found it. Ro while we continually wish for many thing unattainable, let un remember that our Willamette val ley is truly a hind of plenty. Court Home Note. Observer. IKOI1ATK, Guardianship ofOo. L Gain, an insane person-report of sale of real property filed. Katate of Janiw I-l-win, deceas-ei,-f,nal account set for lieanng September 12, 1903. at 10 o'c iT.'.... t viwrt V. Thompson, de- ceased-final account set for hear ing Mondav. September U, I.M, at 1 o'clock p. m. REAL 5lTATK TBASSFEKS- Eleanor and Lewis Zumwalt to show in iuelf i pira lo such tho world ha never seen before In thin wonderful dinplay are shown 10H beautiful dens, luira and cages of rare wild animals, a herd of forty big and little elephants, fifty horses, and over one thousand people, One section of this procession is de voted to magnificent and costly lloats representing dermany.Uussia Entrlaiid, France, India, Persia, Scotland, the United Statts, and other countries. I he performance that follows, and which includes the superb spectacular production of Jerusalem and tho Crusades, is tne most magnificent display of arenic wonders ever presented by any amusement enterprise in America. The menagerie is filled to overflow- ine with rare beasts and birds, in eluding the only baby elephant bred and successfully raised in tne United States, the only rhinocerous in captivity and the last living pair of giraffes. ! :. SEARS. At her home in McCo Ore., on Saturday, August 15, 1003, Mrs. M. K. Sears, of apo plexy, aged 40 years. The deceased's illness extended jf I...! .f l..,i(ii rt w) inn over a lew oriei iiomo, vmuiuh so sudden was a great shock to her friends over the county. She was the wife of J. K. Sears, a promi nent Polk county character. Sur viving her ia a husband and sev eral children. Funeral services were conducted Sunday, THE HoNKHT I.AWYKII. There ia an old story of a lawyer named Strang and hi wife hav ing a conference a to the thing he wished ''one after he had oV parted thii life. 'I want a headstone put over m. my dear," said th lawyer, "with the simple insciiplion "Here lies an honest lawyer." The wife exprefH"!! surprise that he did not wish hi name put on the headstone. "It will not be needful," he re sponded, "for those who pass by and re.cl that inscription will in variably remark, "That's Strange." TIIK T'TAI. AH8TAINEH. A temperance lecturer waa caught by a disciple after he retired taking a hot whiskey punch. Said his shocked follower: ' I thought you were a total ab stuiner?" ' So I am," said the lecturery'but not a bigoted one." tub iiist mortem. There is a friend of mine living in Peekskill who had all the ills iWh was heir t , and he took pills and powders and pills without result. So he called in my old family doctor, Dr. Bassett. The doctor looked at his tongue, lifted up Ills eyelids and looked at his eyes and shook his head. "How do you diagnose my case doctor?" anxiously inquired the patient "Well." said the doctor slowly "I cant tell exactly what's the mat ter with you. but the post mortem will show." TIIK 15H1PK AND THK Bl'TTEB A friend of mine stopping re centlv at a Washington hotel sat by a bride who had been a widow and on her first wedding journey had stayed at the same inn. She said: "John, pass me the butter." The bridegroom indignantly re plied: "My name is not John,, it is Charles." She said: "Excuse my mistake, Charles," and then, tasting the butter, she said reflectively, "but the same butter." DEMAND AND SUPPLY Demand and supply don't always govern prices. business tact s imetimes govern them. The other lay I stepped up to a German butcher out of curiosity asked, "What's the price of sausages?" "Dwenty ceuts a pount," he said. "You asked twenty-five this morning," I reminded him. "Ya, dot was ven I had some. Now I ain't got some I sell him for dwenty cents. Dot makes me rep utation for selling cheap and I don't lose noddings." You see, I didn't want any sau sages, and the man didn't have any no demand, no supply yet the prices of sausages went down. THE VETERAN OF BULL RUN. One day not long ago I met a soldier who had been wounded in the face. He was a Union man, and I asked him in which battle he had bee ii injured. "In the last battle of Bull Run, if," he replied. "But how couldl you get hit in the face at Bull Run?" I asked. "Well, sir," said the man half apolegclically, "after I had run a mile or two I got careless and look ed back." THE WIDOW. While in Peekskill I went to call on two old friends, a widow and a maiden lady. Said the widow: "Well, I married when I was quite young. My husband died and I had him cremated. In about two years I married again; he died and I bad him cremated. I mar ried a third time and lived to cre mate him." "Ah," answered the maiden lady, "wonderful are the ways of Provi dence. Here I've lived all these rears and haye never been able to get married to one man, and you've had husbands to burn." TllJi REMINDER. They tell the story of a senator being shaved by an aged colored barber at the Arlington hotel in Washington and remarking to him, "Uncle, you must have bad ainoDg your customers many of my dis tinguished predecessors in the sen ate many of the men now dead who have occupied the place I now fill."' ''Yes, sah," said the barber; "Use known most al of them. By the way, Senator, you remind me of Daniel Webster." The gratified statesman raised himself in his chair and placed his hand opon his forhead. "Is it my brow?" "N'o, boss," said the barber; ''it is your breath.' TH1& AUTOGRAPH. ,1 went to a hotel in Georgia and said to the clerk: "Where shall f autograph?" 'Autograph?" said the clerk. "Yes; sign my name, you know.'' . "Oh, right here." I signed my name in the register. In a little while in came some Georgia crack- era. Une ot them advanced to tne desk. "Will you autograph?" asked the clerk, with a smile. Crtainly," said the Georgia cracker beaming. "Mine's rye. What's yours, fellows?" THE BOY AND THE WOODCHUCK. The teacher of the district school up at Peekskill calbxl up the two biggest boys in his clar-s one day and said: "Tom, you are a Rej ublican?" "Yes, si ." And, Sam, you are a Democrat?" "Yes, sir." "Well, now, the one of you who can give me the best reason why re belongs to his party can have this woodchuck I caught on my way to school this morning. Now, Tom, why are you a Republican?" "I am a Republican," said the boy, "because the Republican party saved the country in this war, abolished slavery and brought about the resumption of specie pay ments, and has done everything for the good of the country." "That is a good reason," said the teacher "Now, what is Jhe reason you are a Democrat, Sam?" "Well, sir." was the reply, "I am a Democrat because T want the woodchuck." That ice cream soda is ready for you at Wagoner's.