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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 13, 1920)
Sir? (Entlaß Cèrna? gettito! J VOM IM K XXX AND w Mra. Htelln France* Luliluo died Monday ut Itow Kiver of infliionr.H. Tho funorul wan held Wodncadny ut Kugeno and interment wan in the Mol key cemetery. A child wit* born to Mr* 1 .11 1 tine lu*t Friday, the day of tho funeral of her husband, who alno died of iiifliienxn, It lived but u few hour* but there nro five »mull children left without pufrnt*. Mr*. IjiHlue wn.< born ut Oaceolu, Iowa, February 27, IHH2. lie maiden name wa* Ream Thu I'tiunery clwwil nut it» blurkl>erry | mm »I ln»t wim 'I i nt U cent* tin’ pound, which was I ■■••nt iibove tin* nmli prii*i<, although nut im high n price a* Imil been nxpeated. No mroM profits tin M ill, howwver, I mi (mill mi tin' money received fur thi» pool. Last Jeer tin* iiiiinery niuili< u lifierul contribution to the upkeep of the government, na it will again thin yi'ur. I .nut year it amounted to ui’urly #20011 whlrh '■■i '■ ■ ■■ 1 • money would have r 0111111 nod horo had nil tho product» boon piMilod. Othara Tranent Bay Account of Accl SPEEDSTERS HAVEN’T TIME TO THINK OF LIFE AO ENT REPORTED 8ELLINO $160 SHEEP DIP AT $4 THE OALLOM deut I.unt Week Erred to Tree. Ing Driver o f Blame. It i* only a few year* *lnce autumn- bile* came into geimrul u»e but now tho»o who n few yenr* ugo did list uae even a hor»c nnd buggy to n*»i»t tin in in getting about find time *0 preciou* thut the euduugCriiig of life umouiit* to nothing if a few »ociunl* of time can be *u>ed. Home day thi* tnnniu ia going to reault in a aerinu* accident 011 the Mam avenue bridge. There probulily 1 » not a day thut aome driver, not to be deluyo.l by aorne »lower mov ing vehirlo, dnrta over onto the wrong aide of the bridge to get ncroaa. Home day aomcotie juat a* enixy to aavn It hua boon found that tho aaaocin time will be coming from the other lion tho man roproaont* la a amull pri way and then both of them can uae vote concern. It ia aald that the name the time they auved talking it over in luun hna recently viaitod thia eoai hoapitnl cot». munity ami atilt may Im operating The Hentmel hua been eritieixed for her«. the atntement ill i t « . laat iaaue, <|untcd from one who *uw the accident, to the MILL8 ARB TURNINO effect that Frank June» wna blnnielcaa DOWN LUMBER ORDERS in the accident ut the corner of Main and Huth when hia car grnxcd the aide Portland, Ore., Fob. 7.— Lumber man of a Ford. Thoae who firat reported ufneturern in weatern Oregon and went Thoae who firat reported the accideut era * Wnahingtoa are running their the accident to The Mcntinrl amd tlmi plant* to near rapacity and producing the Ford eauie out from thia blind cor approximately M7 per cant o f their nor ner at a »peed o f 20 tuilca an hour innl rapacity, according to the weekly without giving any »ignnl. Other* hnv. re|Mirt of the Weal Count Lumbermen ’* ainee reported that the Ford wna trav ana. iciutinn. eling nt a moderate »peed while the The output at 130 mill* rej>orttiig to June* ear wa* traveling fuller than the anaoeiation the laat week in Jnnu wa* uafe. No representative o f The ary win HO,732,222 fret, un eomjairr.l Hentmel having aeon the accident, The with a normal priMlartiua of 01,0o0,OO<l Heiitinol give» only the Information u* foot. it come* to it and hu* not attempted The name group o f mill» laat week to fix the blame. Mr. June», when in accepted order», 111 tho rail trade, fur terviewed, anid that he bad »lowed an aggregate of 2432 rara, which wan down at curb corner a* be cum» down 300 earn more than they »hipped They the street and thut had he not been now have a total of 13,ttl2 car* of un traveling ut a moderate apred when he filled rail order« on their book* reached thia corner he could not have The ear ahortago, aaya the report, stopped without mrnming the Ford. He evidently will continue for neveral »aid thnt he would not have hit the mouth*, and the mill* therefore are other ear at all except thnt after «kid ■ml accepting haaiaeaa that they cannot ding hia wheels hia brake* seemed to deliver. bale their grip. The Hcntincl hu* been The total of »3,000,000 foot in order* unable to leurn who wne driving the taken laat week, it ia eatimated, ia not Kurd, except thnt it wa* a young boy, 30 |>er coat o f the total huninoaa of and U, therefore, unable to give hi* feriwl. vereion of the accident. I’miltry minor* in other part» of tho »tat» are complaining of tho nppour nnro there of u mini representing him •elf a* field representative of tho Htnto Poultry unnoeiation who hnn boon noli ing * germicide fluid for #4 n gallon. It 1 » nnid that tho mini trio* to give tho Impronaion that ho in nu 0111 ployo of tho atato or of aomo b-giti- innl« poultry association and thnt tho fluid hnn boon found to bo nhoop 1 lip which run !>« bought anywhere for #1.50 the gallon, which leaven a uont profit for thia agent. ' ^ t 1 * 4 OHOVE L R A DEB COTTA! IK OHOVK. LANK COUNTY, OREGON, FUI DA Y, FEBRUARY 13 , 1920 LA BLUE DIES LESS BLACKBERRY POOL CLOSED MRS. THAN WEEK AFTER HUSBAND OUT AT 9 CENTS Osnnsry Fays O u r $0000 m Excess Profits T u on Prod pro It Bought for OMb. OOTTAOE Footprints of Old Pioneer Days The Hentinel is indebted to Mrs C. F. Counts for a clipping from the Ore goninn which gives un nccouuf o f the death of Nuthiininl Mu Min, who was the first postmuster in whut i* now the eity of Cottage Grove, It will be re in ein be rial thut the mime was given t< 11 postoffice first located by G. C. Pearce near what Is now Creswell Later it was moved to 11 point a short distance south of Creswell, where a Mr Mulholland wa* postmaster. Htill later it was moved to a point some little distune« north of Huginaw, where Anderson llnmilton was postmaster. Htill Inter it was moved to a point »till nearer the present postoffice of Hnginuw, where Mr. Martin hccume postmuster, snd he moved the |ai«tof fine to Cottage Grove, 11 » stated in the clipping from the Oregon inn, which was in the year IHIW5. The Hentinel probifbly was in error in stating that Htepben Murtin, who bought part of the old Pearce claim, succeeded Mr. Pearce ns postmaster. The Hentinel does not know where the informntion came from, but the fart thnt it was also stated that Htephen Martin was the father of N. If. Murtin, former city councilman, plainly indicates thut Nathaniel 11. Martin was the man the person giving the informntion had in mind, us this clipping give* Nathaniel 11. Martin us a surviving son. The clipping is dated January 0 and there is nothing to indicate the year, but the year probably was about 1002. Hcv eral o f the pioneers have spoken o f the subject uf thi* sketch 11 » u fluent and fiery orator und a mun of influence in uny public gathering. The clipping is a* folio wa: Cottage Grove, Jan. Hpeeial.)-— Hon. Nathaniel Murtin died at hi* home here thia afternoon. He wa* born in Indiana in IH 20 . In 1H54, with bi* family arid un emigrant train of 12 learn* and 30 persona, he started for California, where he arrived safely a f ter a journey of six month* On the plain* the p'<rtw wa* hampered by Indian* and barely «neaped the Moun tain Meadow inaMMiere. Mr. Martin ciune to Oregon in 1858 und settled in Lane county in 1830. In 1835 he secured the appointment a* postmaster 011 a homestead five miles west o f here, the office being named Cottagi Grove, The office wus soon ordered moved here, to oe in closer touch with the Oregon ft California Ntnge Hoe. Mr. Martin packed up the office nnd moved here, opening in a blacksmith shop. This was the origin o f Cottage Grove. Mr. Martin wa* the first justice of the peace in tbi* section and gained much popularity. In 1872 he wa* elect ed to the stutc legislature. Mr. Martin leave* a wife, almost 80 year* old, and seven children, Willnrd I L Jesse, Mr*. K. C. Harlow, John 8 ., Joel, Clysse*, nnd Nathaniel II. • • • R W. Watch, who is here on n visit, say* that all the talk about this winter being the coldest on record here is without foundation. On February 10, 33 yearn ago, he say* he remember* distinctly going to Eugene with bis father. Ve* Watch, on the ‘ ‘ Hlim-Jim’ ’ McFarland luwsuit, and that on that day the thermometer showed 10 below and that there wa* plenty of snow. The next dny the thermometer showed 12 below. Parr and Sm olt 8TATE 8ENAT0R JOHN QILL EXPLAINS HOW TO DISTINGUISH BETWEEN TROUT AND SALMON FRY The following letter from John Gill all the salmon there are never less than fourteen rays in the anal fin, and tag« Grove because of the controversy usunlly there are sixteen. All natural us to whether or not w « have been re ists depend upon this identification of reiving trout fry. Mr. Gill is a state trout and salmon, and pay no attention senator, n member o f the game com to the " lo o k s ." mission and a student of wild life. With a small magnifying glass fry Portland, Or«., Fab. 0.— (To the Ed an inch long can lie tested. Every itor.)— In a copy o f The Hentinel angler ought to know and uae this sim dnted January 23, which you kindly plo test. It is "u nlaw fu l to take or sent me, 1 found more interesting mat hnve in [sissession any salmon less than ter than thu marked column containing twelve inches in len gth ." 80 reads your indulgent comment upon the do si-uSum 30, Inws for protection of food mgs o f senate and house. This was » fi» F Section 20 fixe* the aixo limit at reference to the planting o f fish in the twenty inches, and contains thia re Const fork o f the Willamette river, nnd markable provision: "T h is shall not an apparently irreconcilable difference prevent the taking o f mature salmon o f opinion between Wnrdcn Hboemuker less than twenty inches in length." and fishermen of your vicinity as to Hut many of us catch salmon six inches long in April, and add them to our what the said fry may hnve been. We ought to take it for granted that basket*. These are no longer parr. The Hprny, Long ft Crumn may have to I1E0IN1YIE0 OF LIFE purr Htngc is the childhood of the sal- 8H0WE SCHOOL PUPILS erect a breantwork around their *how the warden knows what fish were sent mouidae. In youth they become window*. A car entered one of them you, by the hatchery records; and hi* " smolt»." I like to believe thi» name opportunities for more exact knowledge 11 few week* ugo und one day thi* The pupil* uf the public »ehnol* had was given these little fish because they an unusually fine treat Wodnenday week another cur barely mimed going of the fish raised in state hatcheries look like »molten silver, but the die when Mr, Huundera, o f the Orcgou through the corner window*. The enr •luring his four years’ service have gi\ tionury gives no such authority. H..r ia I Hygiene mwiety exhibited to wn* coming north on Sixth »tree! anil en him advantages which would enable In April I hnve fished two denr riv them arveral reala o f film on " I l o w in making the turn onto Main the him promptly to identify trout or sal ers o f Clatsop for many years. I often L ife K egina" mid gnvo an eiplnnutory driver seemed to lone control o f the nion without reference to their hatch get » brace or two of big Clark l.ct ore on the aubjcct. Two ahowa tnnrhine for a few momeat* and wn* cry records. trout (which we call by the blood were given, one for grada pupHa at hendmg straight for plate glua*. Hi Hut if the warden nnd one o f your thirsty name of "c u t-th ro a t") in the 10:43 a. m. and one in the afternoon recovered control just before hitting fishermen chanced to be at Bonneville lower roaches where the tide nt high for high arhiMil atudenta nnd parent*. the curb und made the turn. hatchery, and a doxen of the salmon runs up a mile or more. Casting my Thene film* were purchased from the fry two or three months old nnd a dox flies for trout on these lower waters University of California and am being en trout of the same sixe were turned ill April, often a doxen o f these sil Presbyterian Bally »hown in the achoola o f Oregon fr w of Bov. lioudinut Heeley, o f 1‘ ortlnnd, loose in n pint cup, probably neither very »molts will rush at the fly in the rhnrge. The demon*trntiona of plant will preech in the Tre*byterinn church imin could tell " b y the looks o f th em " same instuut. One can hardly snatch nnd unimnl life loginning* and de next Hundny ut II n. m. nnd 7:30 p. which were trout nnd which »nlmon. his lure away quickly enough to avoid velupment are vividly depicted. There i* a simple and certain menns catching them. Usually they are about m. Every person interested in the wel Through the conrteny of Mr. nnd fare o f this church ia uaked to be of separating the trout from the sal five inches long. In the strenms I Mr*. W7 J. White thr»e *huw* were present. An effort will be mude dur mon. Men of long experience in hatch »peak o f— Nekanwkum and Wahana— given at the Arcade theater. ing the duy to put the church on u ery work, nnd likewise blest with the they are not Chinook but silver sal sound working bn»i*. A cordini invitti gift of cureful observation, might roc mon, and on their way to the sea, turn is extended to the public to at ognixe either species at a glance. It whose roaring comes pleusnntly to my POISONOUS WEED IS would not be possible to identify by ears while I fish these tidal estuaries. tend thcae services. BLAMED FOR SICKNESS inruns of the "d a rk vertical mark These "silverside salmon" sraolts are in g s ," for all salman and all trout, then fifteen months old. No Chinook Oodnrd (lets Eugene Contract. II. F. Ilrogdou, who recently bought in their first year, benr these murks H. L. Godard, who will complete In ever enters those rivers. the Harm* place east o f the city, .be lieve* hi* livestock ha* been eating about 30 day» the new Woodson alike. These are the ‘ ‘ purr m urks"— For three or four weeks these smolts, usually about ten dark spot* of 11 »nme poisonous weed. He lost one cow Druthers garage here, hits received the spotless, their parr marks invisible loagish-ovnl shape, vurying from dull Tuiiailuy nnd two other rows nnd a bull rnntrnct for n new building for tho (but you will find them tin the skin green to purple, the first crossing the were seriously ill but have recovered. Tncifle garage ut Eugene. lie will be beneath the silver scales), play about in point of the operele or gill cover, and He hn* sent a sample of the *u»pected gin work n* »0011 u* the material can the brackish water, nccustoming them similar marks, ten to twelve in num lie placed on the ground. weed to ('orvalli* for anelyii*. selves to the salt of the sea. I f we ber, extending backward to the base of took them from the stream o f their the tail. The two nearest the tail are One Delight Valley Family Escapes Flu. nearly round; the others, varying in birth nnd placed them in the undiluted Candidate for District Attorney. E. J. Hears, whpn in the city 11 few sue with the sixe of the fish and more water of the sen they would be dead in Fred K. Hmith, for the past nine yenra u practicing attorney In Eugene, day* ugo, reported thnt his family wna distinct in the »mail fish, are set rog half an hour. And when they return, has annnunned hia enndiducy for the about the only one in Delight Valley ulttrly ulong the side; vertical burs, after three yenrs, grown to twenty republican nomination for district nt not down with the flu. Wholo families about thrice ns long ns they are wide, pounds in weight, they loaf for a few torney for luino county. One other re there hnve hud it but only u few case* leaving lighter splices nbout the same weeks about the mouths of the rivers, tempering themselves to the fresh publican, Clyde N. JohnHton, o f Junc have been *erioua. The Kchools tire yet width, between tne purr marks. water, before ascending to the river tion City, hn* announced hia candidacy, closed. I have at hnnd u bulletin o f the IT. sources, to spawn and die. but ao far no democrats have an H. fish commission, containing a care I have possibly taken too much of nounced themselves, the present inruni Orange Haa Birthday. ful study of I’ ucific salmoaidac. A parr bent, L. L. Huy, who I* a democrat, Oottnge drove grunge will celehrnte of the Chinook salmon and one of the your space and wearied your readers, but the study o f fish life is more in having decided not to run for the o f it* eleventh anniversary with nn nil rainbow trout, both drawn from life fice again. dny meeting Hiiturdny, February 21, 11 from specimens four inches long, lire teresting to me than most " n e w s " I which time Htnte Muster Hpenee will shown in pictures. The resemblance is rend. A wider knowledge of the sub be present. A full sited grunge dinner »0 close that no difference nppenra. joct, and the discovery o f much that More Are Fined In Eugene. is yet unknown, is highly important to Eugene Register: A. W. Htcin nnd will be served nt noon. One could be sulisitiuted for the other anglers and commercial fishermen If Otto Koppe each paid a fine of #2 in and an expert could not detect the in we are to bequeath to the next genera police court Monday for allowing their Card of Thanks torehnnge by rnsiiiil observation. But tion our rich heritage of the trout and enr* to stand on the streets without I wish to express to my many friends tho expert could toll which was trout salmon. JOHN G ILL. light*. * * * I.. L. QunrkenbuNh paid 11 in Cottage Grove my sincere npprecin uvoti float the picture. There are other 1’ortland, February 3, 1020 . fine o f #2 in police court Hatnrdny for .tion o f tno many kindnesses shown in means o f knowing, but this certnin hnving hi* car headed wrong on the my recent bereavement in the death test is rarely known by men engaged street nnd with no light*. * * * Harvey of my son Dale nnd hi* mother. in rearing trout and salmon. In the THERMOMETER CUTS DIDOS A. Hnbel, n traveling man, was fined fl3 p W. P. LOCKWOOD. pnst ten years some of my friends who #15 In police court Tuesday for speed AND GETS DOWN TO are dealers in fish have asked me fre ing hi» enr. He acknowledged hnving Bine Bells Found Month Ago. 22 ABOVE quently: " H o w do you tell a trout attained n speed o f 23 miles an hour. The H. L. Godard girls report thnt trorn 11 salm on f"— and I have shown blue bells are no novelty now, ns they them. I think not one of these dealers Cottage Grove experienced nnother Botul Money Apportioned. hnve found many of them, the first a* knows this simple test today. cold spell during the past week, but Tho county court has apportioned much as a month ago. On all trout and salmon the " fin - the thermometer did not anywhere near the road money from the general fund, p la n " 1 » exactly the same. Of course reach the low point of tlie previous district* in thi* end o f the county re Many people «scape being criminal* we all know thnt on the back, just fo r cold spell. The lowest was Thursday ceiving tho following snms: by never being tempted. As nn ex ward o f the tail, there is a little thick morning, when it dropped to 22 above. Nu. 13 (Hnginnw W *Tker).„....#1,320.00 nmple, you never heard of a news teat which we call the adipose fin. On The temperature for the four dnys pre No. 14 (west Row riv e r)......... 1,040.on paper man getting pinched for " sweat the belly, first fin above or forward of vious w »* as follows: Sunday maxi No. 15.(Const fork)................. 881.00 in g ’ ’ #40 gold pieces. the tail, is another fin called the anal. mum 45; minimum 23; Monday, maxi » » » No. 17 (east Row riv er)....................... 050.00 This is a membranous fin with small mum 47, minimum 23; Tuesday, maxi No. OS (Latham )................. 300.00 A glacier hn* been discovered in ray-like hones. Two o f these bones, mum 52, minimum 24; Wednesday, No. 00 (Hilk Creek)... ............ 403.33 Alaska thnt moves only twelve feet a the forwnrd one», next tho vent, are maximum 52, minimum 23. No. 70 (Mosby creek)............. 1,840.00 dny. We have congres*mnn who hnve rudimentary, nnd do not extend to the not chnnged thoir position that much edge of the fin. Then follow ten or The Hentinel handles job printing of W ATCH YOUB LA B E L. in 23 years. eleven— never more— in tho trout. In every description. ••• 1 » of |M>culiur interest to people of Cot DALE LOCKWOOD IS BURIED HERE ONLY TEN DAY8 AFTER MOTHER NUMBER 21 CiiTTkCV TDiWC VCT CDCC w I I A u t UAUT l I l I ri\LL OF INFLUENZA The funeral o f Dale M Lockwood, of ------- Tacoma, wa. held here Wednemlay, only ^ R 10 days a fte r the 'late hi* wsa her» with the body o f hia mother, Mr».; ***• A r » Not Affected; Hurah France* Lockwood, who almidied All Oa* « t Are Mild. at Tacoma. Mr. I*oekwood was taken 1 ______ ill immediately upon returning home and gradually grew worm-. He wa* No aeriou* case* of influenxa hnve born in Cottnge Grove and wn» 23 yet been reported within the city, nnd year» of ago on August 22 laat. Thu only a few mild eases. The attendance only »urviving near relative ia W. P. at »ehool ha» hardly been interfered Lockwood, of Heattle, the father Mrs. with and there ia no preaent dnnger Darwin Briatow, Mr*. Martha Little- of need o f closing the schools. In the field and J. H. Medley, all of Eugene, few mild canes the physicians are ro und E. C. l-ockwood and Win. Medley, operating in what amounts to a volun- of this eity are uncle» and aunt». Jury quarantine. ---------------------- I Bow River has been the most »e- I W I I A M I T C T A C C I l f T A I t r r r a ver,,|Jr h,t o f “ X pl»M 10 thr county, I/I It A ( i l l I t VlUxsJ ill I U 1/11 t i l two deaths having occurred there. The schools in Huginaw and Delight Valley remain eloaed because o f the epidemic I in that section, the Dorena school ha* ' been elosed because o f the condition Wheel Goes to Pieces and Four Oars at itow River, from which place many Jump Track Out of Middle of l ot tbe come, and the school at - . . . _ . [Hebron hat been cloned because of Freight Train. (several case* there. -------- | The cities of the entire county seem „ ,, , . _ „ _ to be more free of the disease than Resident* o f Cottage Grove who the rnra, djitrieU . The eaawl „ Eu peacefully .lent Thursday night o f last ara mild ^ thefe have ^ week probably never will know by death, hM ^ one d„ ath at what a mere fraction they escaped be j unetitm City. ing rudely awakened or never waken- • _______________ ing at all, when several cars on a .............. .......... ............. southbound Houtbern Pacific special HARRY CULVER ADDS NEW freight, one of them a powder ear, WRINKLE TO OLD WILD were wrecked a mile and a half north WEST STUFF of here just before midnight. Ahead of the powder car a flat car A new frill was put on the wild west loaded with lumber went into the ditch | <tu ff'a "few nijht* ago,Tn‘ which'Heir"y and scattered lumber along the right Culver and a eow intended for th„ of way Apparently the powder car, block took the lettding part> The eow it» truck, torn from unoer it had skid W8i ^ taken to thp ,iaug ht„ pe,, ded along on the lumber and wn. thus b Mr (fulver who waa ug„ f h,g prevented from striking a rocky wall j lix. ln plac4i of the rt.gu|atloI1 bucking that might have set o ff the powtUr. ! broneho. A . the night was a little The flat ear wa. completely buried by ; dttrk and the hghta not an. tow good the powder ear and another following he ran e,ogi,r to the tha" he which was thrown crosswise of the intended t« to. The bovine kicked out at track. A corner wa» torn out o f the the lix. with one hind leg. demolishing powder car and the corner of one box one o f the headlights, and then started of powder. Why it did not explode | belter shelter dow n the road. His own is inexplamable, but the train crew car bei ont of eommiieioll Culver and Cottage Grove citizens are not in hopped mto another that eanM! a,on„ sistmg on explanations. A second pow Burrounded the and drove h(.r .Ur car stuck to the rails. back to the pen. The accident w as unavoidable due to | __________________ a defective wheel which went to . ______________ piece«. Four cars in all left the rails. | F A T H E R A N D D A U G H T E R The roadbed was not seriously dam DIE WITHIN FEW DAYS aged and none of the train crew were lojured. Hr morning wreckers had Hpringfield, Ore., Feb. 7.— The death cleared away the debris so as to per o f M. B. Kirkend&ll, of 8 aginaw, aged mit traffic to resume. 40 years, occurred at the Hpringfield A Kouthcrn 1’ acific board of inquiry, hospital at 5:30 o ’clock Friday after of which C. A. Bartell and Elbert Bede noon. Death resulted from tuberculosis. were members, investigated the acci Deceased 1 » survived by his w ife and dent Saturday forenoon and found the four children. I~ast Monday his year- facts as already stated. old daughter died at the hospital of pneumonia. Both were buried in Laurel H ill cemetery. WHILE C G. SLEEPS Huginaw, Ore., Feb. 11.— Michael Bolden Kirkeadall was born September 1, 1872, at Camas Valley, Douglas coun ty, Ore. He wa» married to Lottie Hmith August 29, 1905, to which unión aix children were born. One lived but a few minutes and Goldie, aged one, died at the Springfield hospital Feb ruary 3. The surviving children are Vergil, Gladys. Claude and Gertrude. The w ife also survives. The family moved from Douglas county to Sag inaw in 1918, where they have since reeided. Other surviving relatives are the mother, Mrs. James A. Kirkendall, of Saginaw, and sisters and brothers as follows: Mrs. Vonie Burch. Mrs. E ffie Wilson, Nathan and Jesse Kirkendall, all of Camas Valley, Ore.; Mrs. Mary Cooper, of McMinnville, Ore.; Mrs. Pearl W ild«y, o f Ephrnta, Wash.; Mrs. Lillie Cribbins, of Powers, Ore.; Mrs. Jane Cappioua and Allen Kirkendall, both of Haginaw. Mr. Kirkendall had been ill for several months before his death. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Miller were in Eugene Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Godard, teachers at Mabel, spent the week end with rel atives here. George M. Hall and Walter Woodard were in Eugene Monday on business. Joseph Daniels, of Hutherlin, and Miss Fannie Estes, of this city, were married at Eugene Monday, Judge J. O. Wells officiating. D. Y. Allison, of Boseburg, brother o f 8 . V. and F. H. Allison, has just recovered from a month's siege with the flu. Another brother, Frank, of McMinnville, has recovered from a brief illness. , E. E. Korapaugh and W. H. Ney, of Eugune, were in the city Tuesday on business. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Eddy arrived Sunday from Waterloo. Iowa, to make this their home. Mr. Eddy will assist THIRD LYCEUM NUMBER his futher in the express office. IS SURE NOUQH TREAT H. J. Hhinn was in Hulem Monday on The Ward Waters company, the third legal business. O. L. Nichols went to Leona Monday number of the lyceum course given to do some surveying work for the under the auspices of the high school student body, which appeared here Leona Mills company. Tuesday night, was another real treat Mrs. Ellis Bobinson returned Monday and was well patronized by an appre to her home at Huuiner Luke, her ciative audience. The company is a father, Mr. Lajoie, being well on the rare combination of artists— vocal, iu road to recovery from his recent ill strumental and elocutionary. Mr. Wat ness. ers several times "brought down thu Mrs. A. 8 . Phelps left Monday for house ’ ’ with his perfect character de Monmouth, being called there by the lineations. One more number will con illness o f her daughter Buth with the clude the course. flu. G. G. Warner left Monday for his HOUSEHOLD BBS CAN H E LP claims in the Bohemia district. M A N WHO D K LIV E B 8 OOODb Mr. aud Mrs. Albert Anderson, of Vancouver, visited this week at the An advertiser in Tho Sentinel sug home of Mr. Anderson's sister, Mrs. gests that those having groceries deli, Hugh Trunuell. ered could do much toward assisting Grant Atleu, who had been visiting the delivery man in making proper at the home of his sister, Mrs. C. M. and satisfactory deliveries by having Jackson, left Monday for his home at a box or bench for the receiving 01 l ’ rineville. goods delivered, and at the same time Misses Louise and Alice Garetson make it more convenient for them and Mis* Florence Hemeuway motored selves, for they would then know juat to Corvallis Hunday, being joined at where to look for their goods. The idea seems to be that service can be Eugene by Harvey Madden. Mrs. W. E. Rhodes underwent an op made more efficient by cooperation on eration for appendicitis iu Eugene Sat the part of the householder. urday. Orovs Lumber Company Auctioned. A brother of N. E. Glass, o f this Eugene Register: The assets of the city, died Saturday in Beattie. The brother from here and gone there sev Grove Lumber qpmpany, of Cottage Grove, now bankrupt, were auctioned eral days before. o ff in the office o f the Lane County •’ Aunt’ ’ Ana Sears, of Creswell, vis Credit association Monday morning ited last week with " A u n t ” Harriet and brought a purchase price o f #3800, Wallace. the buyer assuming a fttioO mortgage. Mrs. J. M. Boyd, who had visited at The Bank of Cottage Grove was the the home of her brother-in-law, 8 . W. successful bidder against a small field. Boyd, since tho death o f her husband This makes a total of #7400, for which while they were on their way herefrom the hank will beeome the owner o f fiv e California, left Haturday for Denver to portable sawmill* i f the deal i* con visit a niece. firmed by A. M. Cannon, o f Portland, Mrs. Emily Birnstiel returned Satur referee in bankruptcy. According to day from an extended visit at Dons Lee M. Travis, secretary of the asso ciation, this will mean that the cred muir, Calif. Mrs. W. B. Cooper and daughter Dor itors will receive about 35 or 40 per cent on their claims. othy visited in Eugene Haturday. Cottnge Grove won the basketball I f you can't afford to subscribe for gnmo from Dorena Friday night by » The Sentinel you can’t afford not to score of 27 to 20. read someone else 'a. ***