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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 20, 1920)
tailed for the other side Just to meas ure the danger and take pri uutlon against such su Invasion. "1 Ills Is on© menace at our threshold The oilier, more threatening, more ter rtble, Is The menace of the world’s 111 will. We run afford to dUs but to tie despised forever as a greedy and phari aahal nation Is a fate that we must uot Incur. "Th e French government has many serious problems t solve, hut the French peasantry Is working and the French artisan, while still iiadly In Tacoma Rigid Inquli-y Into the need of raw materials, has not lost his cause of the explosion of a six Inch habit of liiiluiitry and thrift field guo ut the Camp Lewla artillery *"lt ily, despite her grout sllortuge range, which killed three men and of ruw material, Is looking forward pulnfully wounded five other members and not lot. kwurd Italy cun he relied of the Oregon coast artillery, national upon to do her part "England Is meeting the problems guard, will be matte. The Investiga of reconstruction Just as those who tion thus far shows that only a poor lies Moines, la Hpenklng before the guiidrul ci nferenen of the Medio knew her past should have expo»-ted fuse, a possible flaw In the gun Itself, j or a flaw In the Mheli could have dlst Kposcopal Church, ileury I*. Ihtvl- her to meet them. I caused the fatal accident. ■on. chulrmnn of thu Hoard of Gov- Plan to Aid Central Europe. eruora of llie l.iugue of llo l Cross So Governor Hen W. Olcott, of Oregon, "It Is n* t for me pei’hap* to give eludes, said "A s chairman of dm In detail u formula for solution of the narrowly missed being Injured In the convention of Red Cross societies com world's Ills, but as I have been asked 1 tragedy. Accompanied by Mrs. Olcott posed of representatives of twenty- m my times, 'W hat would you do?' I and several Camp Lewis officers, the seven nations Hist met reri ndy In am gluil to give iny own answer. governor had left the gun but a few Geneva, I am custodian uf authorita "Accordingly, I would ask minutes before the explosion. tive reports recording uppull'ug con "First. That congress Immediately The dead were: ditions among millions of people liv pass a hill appropriating a suru not Corporal Kdwurd O. Scott, 2d com- ing In eastern Europe. to exceed $500,000,000 for toe use of j pany. Oregon coast artillery, Marsh- "One of the unfit terrible tragedies central and eastern Kurope. of the hlsti ry of the human race Is be ' field. Or.; Corporal Clyde R. Du ml In "Second. That congress call upon lug enacted within the hr* ml hell of the president to uppodnt a nonpolitical ger. 2d company, Oregon coast artil territory lying In-tween the llulllc and commission of three Americans, ill»- lery, Marshfield, Or.; Private Ralph Ihe lllack and Adriatic feus. Fraley, 1st company, Oregon coast ar linguistic.) for their character und ex "This un<u In c lV d c N the new llaltlc «cuHvc ability and commanding the tillery, Ashland. Or. Scott and Fraley slates Poland, Czechoslovakia. The respect of the American people. Much were killed Instantly. Oundlnger lived Ckrallie, Austria Hungary. Iteuinaula. a commission should Include men of : an hour. Montenegro, Albania and Set Ida the type of General Perilling. Mr The Injured were: "Th e reports which come to tia Hoover, or ex Secretary Lane. I Private (first class) Herbert E. Pe make It clear that In these war ravaged would invest that commission with lauds civilization has broken down. complete power. tersen. 2d company, Oregon coast ar Idscase, bereavement and suffering "Third. 1 would have the commis tillery. Marshfield, Or., cut on bead are present In practically every house sion Instructed to proceed at once, ac and face by steel fragments; Private hold, while fin d and clothing are In companied by proper personnel, to , William J Blake, 2d company. Oregon sufficient to make life tolerable. survey conditions In central and east- coast artillery, Marshfield, Or., cut "Men. women and children are dy ern Kurope und then net for the restor ' on arm and shoulder; Mechanic Peter ing hy thousands, sud over vast nnen- ation of those countries under such i Marrascul, 2d company. Oregon coast ! civilized areas the e are to he found conditions and u; on such terms as | artillery, Marshfield, Or., badly stun- I neither medicinal uppHunces nor medi the commission lizelf may deride to cal skill sufficient to cope with the be practicable and effective. Am en: * ned by concussion; Private Homer El- devastating plagues the conditions should be provided that j hart, 1st company, Oregon coast artll- "W holesale starvation Is threatened there should be no heal Interference I lery, Ashland, Or., ahoulder broken; In Poluud this summer unless she can with the free and untrammeled exercise Wagoner Fred Scott. 65th company, procure food supplies In large ijuautl- by the rommlsslon of Its own preroga coast artillery corps. United State« ties There are ni w approximately tive of allocating materials Govern army, foot badly torn; Corporal Roy *&il,000 esses of typhus In Poland and mental politics should he eliminated; Camplgetto, 55th company, coast ar In the urea occupied hy polish troops. unreasonable und prejudicial barrh-ra tillery corps, United States army, stun- Worst Typhus Epidemic In History. betw.-en the various countries should : ned. "This Is already one of the worat be removed, and such substantial guar Th<* rifle was of the 155 millimeter typhus epidemics In thu world's his antees as may tie available should be lory. In OalU-la whole towns are exacted In order thut the conditions long range field type used by the French, but was manufactured In the crippled und huslm ss suspended. In Imposed should be fulfilled. some districts there Is but one doctor "Fourth. As to financial terms, I United States. It had been fired only to each lMl,000 people. should make them liberal. I would 14 times. Thirteen shots were fired "In the Pkralnu. we were told, ty- eburge no Interest for the first three last week in trying It out. The 14th phua und tuflucuza have alfecleil most years; for the next three years six shot was fired Immediately before the of the population. per cent, with provision that such In tragedy in the presence of the gover “ A report from Vienna, dated Febru terest might be funded if the economic nor, adjutant general and party. ary 12. Bold: 'There are rations for conditions of the country were not ap- three weeks. I tenth stulks through priarhlng normal, or If Its exchange the streets of Vienna and takea un conditions were so udverse as to make hindered lull.' payment unduly burdensome. I should "Hudapest. according to our Inform» make the maturity of the obligation th n. Is one vast city of misery and 15 years from Its date, and I should suffering. The number of deutha la have no doubt as to Its final payment. double that of birtha. "Fifth. Immediately the plan was "Typhus and smallpox have Invaded a*npt.*d I would have our government Washington.— James M. Cox an the four countries composing Czecho Invite other governments In a posi slovakia. and there la lack of medi tion to assist, to participate In the nounced that If elected president he "would endeavor with all my strength cines, snap and phyaldans. undertaking. "In Serbia typhus has broken out "Sixth. To set forth crmplotely my to give what President Wilson prom again nnd there are hut 200 physicians opinion, I should add that in the final ised to those who sacrificed In the to minister to the needs of that eutlre Instructions the American people great war." His statement followed country. through their government, should say an heur's conference with the presi "Returning to the United States a to the commission: dent at the White House at which few weeks ago with all theae horrors “ 'W e want you to go and do this Franklin D. Roosevelt, the democratic ringing In my earn, I found myself Job In such a manner as. after study, vice-presidential nominee, was present. once more In a laud whoso granaries you think it should be done. This The president In a formal statement, were overflowing, where health anil is no ordinary undertaking. The after the conference, de< lared that he plenty abounded und where life and American people trust you to see that activity and eager enterprlae were In an.l the governor "were absolutely at It Is done right.' the full flood. " I would also say to the commis one with regard to the great issue of " I asked myself: ‘ What If this plague the leugue of nations" and that the sion: . . and famine were her« In the great “ 'Use as much of this money as Is governor was ready to be the “ cham territory between th*« Atlantic sea needed.' Personally I* am c nfident pion In every respect of the honor of hoard and the Mississippi valley, which that with the aaslatance und co-opera- the nation and the secure peace of the roughly parallels the extent of these tton which would come from other world.” ravaged countries and that 65,000,000 parts of the world the sum of $500.- Asked as to the president’s health. of our own people condemned to Idle 000,000 from the l States would ness hy lack of raw material and be more than enough to start these Governor Cox replied: "In splendid whose fields hud been devastated by countries cn their way to self support condition; In most agreeable shape." Invasion and rapine were racked by and the restoration of aoriual condi starvation nnd pestilence and If we tions. For Repairing Punctured Hulls. had lifted up our vet cos and Invoked "The whole plan, of course, involves The cement for r. pulring apertures the attention of our brothers in happier many practical considerations, the In submerged ships o f a Cardiff pat Kurope to our own deep miseries and most serious of which is that of obtain entee consists of five parts hy weight our cries had fallen on deAf ears, ing the money, whether by issuing ad of crude rubber dissolved In naphtha, would we not In our despair exclaim ditional Liberty Honda, an Increase In three o f rosin, two of white lead, nine against their heartlessness.' the floating debt or by luxation. Hut of coal pitch, and one-fourth part of Only Three Ways to Help Europe. I think we cculd properly say to ths shellac. The heated mixture Is list'd "There are only three ways by which treasury department: for cemrntii T metal surfaces asttl may these stricken lunils can a«scure sup " 'W e know hew serious your finan he applied to cloth to form an adhe plies from Ihe outside world. One Is cial problems are; we know the dif sive patch. The material mny he by payment, one by credit and the ficulties which are immediately con thinned with naphtha, when It Is sult- third Is by exchange of commodities. fronting you; we know the importance ■ able for paint If these peoples tried to liny materials of deflation, and we knew that ths and supplies In America at the present government must economite and that Spanish W ar Vets to Got Pensions. market value of ihelr currencies individuals must economise, but we Washington. — The house bill to Austria wi old have to pay forty times also know that the American govern grant pensiors of from $12 to $30 a the orlgitiul coat, Germany thirteen ment advanced $10,000.000,000 to Its times. Greece Just double, Czech.► allies to attain victory and poace. Cer month to Spanish war veterans, inca Slovakia fourteen and Poland fifty tainly It Is worth making the addtthn- pacitated from causes other than those times. These figures are official nnd al advance In order to realise the peace Incident to active service, was passed uro a .rue Index of the economic plight for which we have already struggled, i hy the senate and sent to conference. for nothing Is more certain than that The final vote on the measure was 65 of these countries. “ It Is clear, therefore that they can until normal conditions are restored to 3. not give us gold for the things they In Europe, there can be no peace.’ ------------------------- ■* •! "A bove all things. 1 would say that must have, nor have they either pro The Crow's Voice. . ducts or securities tc offer In return- whatever action Is taken should be for credit. If only they could obtain taken Immediately. The crisis is so The crow Is one o f the most widely raw material which these Idle millions acute that the situation does not admit disliked o f hirtls. His reputation Is of theirs could convert Into manufact of delay, except with the possibility of | bad, and Is probably deserved. ured products they would have some consequences one hardly dares con No matter how long you study the thing to tender the world In return for template. I crow, you will always have something "Th e situation that I have spread j to learn, nnd at the end of all your its raw material, food and medicine. Hut If they have neither money nor out here is far beyond the scope of ' study he will know more about you credit how are thi y to tnke this first Individual charity. Only by the action ! than you will about hltn. At times It great step towards redemption. One of government, our own and the others seems as If he knew what you were half the world may not eat while the whose resources enable them to co thinking about. other half starves. How long do you operate, can aid be given In sufficient The crow has a large variety of believe the plague of typhus that Is volume. I am also confident that our notes or calls, and e*ch one seems to taking a hideous death toll In Ksthonln action would be followed by the gov he the harshest in all bird vocalism and Poland and Ihe Ukraine anil oat ernment of Oroat Itrttain, of Holland, until the next one Is sound<»d, which lug along the fringes of Germany and of the Scandinavian countries, of Is s little harsher. He Is an »conn Csocho-Hlovaktn will confine Itself to Spain and Japan, and that France and pllshed bird, and intelligent. If tamed, these remote lands? Helgtum and Italy, notwithstanding all he can be tuugh: many things, hut "Only last Saturday our health com- of their losses, would help to the b9tt j never to be good. He Is a natural I tit lei. and cannot be reformed. misslouer of New York, Ur. Copeland, of their ability." HOW EUROPE CAN (é § T n t r jK iT c n E N ESCAPE COLLAPSE H c a b in e t l . OREGON MEN KILLED IN GAMP LEWIS EXPLOSION Wo Must Aid By Extending Credits. Says Cavison. Victims Members of Gun Crew Training at Target Range. Work la i i I vim i m uli, uot o n ly, im r io nitii'li. iMMliupa, buiuuau Ih » w u rlìi iiw il i II M .in culi W ork, b u i w ork inokvn muli. An u iflro la no i nivru ly u l*l*i* e fu i m s k ln g lll.*n a y, II la n piai a f|*r iiin k liia uii'K A w u ik a liu p la nut u l'i'iiu fu r m ukIme m in b in a i y o n ly . Il la u |ilnri» fu r iiiu k lo g amila, fu r flllln v In Ib a w o rkin g v lrtu a a **f una'a III**, fu r t u r | liig uni liu iival, lim ili al unii guuil n u lu ra il man lla tir y Ifru m m o n il. HELPFUL H IN T 8 . S<> i i | i n m k liiK la m i n r t. T o ri m a n y U fiiM iin liiifa iliia lr o y lin i r lm r m u n ii lu i a llu n ili p re ilo in ln iit« . Veg ••fiiliIi-M t im i con- tu lli II vo lli f II«* o li, I I k e o n I o n a a llu n ili noi II« iiv c rc o o k iM l na tliu iiiiii lille fin v o r la ilr lv - •■li o ff hy Ilio lic u t. N i i i | | i . llk u il11 H itle r fu m i liu t i la a e rv e il Im i, a llu n ili lie a e r im i In ho t p la te a , lu m ia o r ru n a . A a in i|i |iu t m n y tu lle II a n u u lifu l o f |*e:ia u lu t lf i‘it |if ill o f liiin n t u , n a fu lk u f r e l e r ) . itti u lilu li o r II Irli o f lie e f If r u t y . tt t li lei 1 lo tlu * s to c k , llin k llii! li taialy il I a li o r l u t i o f h o ii | i n in i a .ld ln g u le u l \ i i I ile lo th è n ie lli. S o m e o o o k a u ilil Iw n o r f li r e e p r im i* * o r u iliix e lt ro ta tila lo ( Ile a u i||i |a it un Im u r Ir e fo r e a e rv lliif. T h e llu v n r la ea p o l l i l i ) ’ lile u a llllf. A lliln c re n III ai>ti|i o f n n v k I lui n m y In- fu r llie r e n r li herf li) th è u i h llllu n u f cg g yulk n in i e r e u iii. (le ni Ihe eifif. mhl Ihe cren III n in i (u n ir n l i d i e uf die huf aoup llltu Ihe lillxturo hefure Itllx- Ine ih. 'u o. A N o r* V Fried Cal««.— Bellt two eggs lint h Uk'fif. inId a fittili•NplM>nful of sugar nml three laid I'MJMM lllfltl s of frenili Adii one litui Ihn*c foil ribs cupfuls 1 >f pll «try Hour to limit t< n dotigli to roll. Unit out w r y thin und cut In illuni)nnd still | m •N Hitti two In D m * celili•r of Fry In deep fut. ilntln nini aprlnkle with |*iw. ilerml sugar. Flah Pudding, —( ‘ook one cupful of riet» in holline aa llfm ^ ^ liter er midi ten lier Cinik II lin i poll In I pickerel, hnaa or other freah wider Mah lindi teiuler In Imlllne aullml wafer. Ilemove flu* akin uiul turnea from die cookml Mali lllul linke It. ( ’onihlne the rlee nml ciMiked llafi. nihl tuo ent« » e l l tienten one riipfiil uf milk nini one cupful of the Mah afock. Sciiaon nml arrange In Inyera In n buttered illali with hila of hotter In between die Inyera. linke one half hour mu! nerve hot with drawn huder nntiee. yittU-i weiß 'T h e K Y fC rm lim i«' i n «all «Ir Id ttd rM i III u lt • t n t l u t l l , $»t»d im i i j | r a t lo t i« , I .«ait« tv g n a t afi<l Ifiilvra ■nml). I I iti it»« f » r m « r llie tn « II; Kur th« fariiidr li'ada th« Kurtl»«rtiior« lit> tlia len U ra —T CI. Mot.'unnaL MORE GOOD THINGS. Stewed Mga, If ul lower! Io aonk *er- eral honra then rooked alow ly In.n d o u b lé holler, make n moat de. Ilcloun fruit to aerie III vurtoua wuyn. Aliti it hit of lemon Juice nml augur; hull down Ihe Juice mid pour over llie Ilk’a. Chicken Loaf.—Tuke one chicken, one alule louf of hrend, two Inhle- apminfula uf chup|a*il piirale.v, anlt, pepper nml chicken hrodi. Iloll chick eu In wider lu rover until tender. Ite- inove from llie hruth und lilao reinuve flu* meut from the hone*. In n hol lered linking diali pul il layer of hut- tereil crutnha, die cruiltbu aliuuld be very coa rae, the hrend pillimi In pierei» with the Ungern. I bit the rruinha with Idtn of hotter mul ndtl n layer of chlekeli whlrli aliuuld he III alteen, nut e Implied. A*IJ hrend rruinha mill rhlrken until nil nre uaed. Four over the whole two eiipfulu of broth, add anlt and pnraley. Hake lindi the rruinha nre brown. Corn Souffle — Melt two fnldeapoon- fula of butter, mid two tiihloapooufillu o f Mmir, one tenapoonliil of anlt. one- elgtilti of n lenapoiinfoi of pepper. Add one muí one half eupfiila o f aenldml milk mid ono-thlrd of n cupful o f noft hrend cAfrmha. Cook mull amoolh add two cupfuls of corn nml die yolks o f two eggs heilten Well. Kohl III Ihe whiten o f the eggs beaten stiff and turn Into h hull ermi linking dish nml linke thirty minutes. An the summer time und Jelly sen- son approach It In well to prepare for the delkdnun Jellies which may be mude o f fruits which lack pectin. Thin mny he supplied hy Ihe follow ing: Peel nil of the yellow rind from thick-skinned oranges or lemons. Re move the ' white peel and pul It through a meat grinder. To each cup ful of the chopped, pressed down peel add the lutee o f one lemon nnd let stand one hour. Add two cupfuls of water, and let boll live minutes. I.et stand over night, add four cupfuls of water, heat to the hulling point nnd holl ten minutes. Strain through a Jelly hag. Pour this extraction Into ■iterile hollies and keep until needed } t u ju < 7v w " t i t GRAVE MENACE TO U. S. A. European Ruin Would Involve America---Starvation and Oisease Rampant. GOV. COX CONFERS WITH PRESIDENT ♦ - --------------------------------- ♦ STAR. August Ik.-—Mrs. Ida Wicks nnd son Alv is visited nt the John Wicks home Wednesday evening of last week. Lincoln au.l Jay Cole, Miles Wick-, L Y N X HOLLOW. August Ik. - Harold Wolford returned and Maurice Estubrook were in Bo Huturdsy from u two weeks’ stay on rena Thursday evening o f last week. Mr, and Mrs. Ezra Messenger, o f tbe coast. Mrs. John Samson arid little .laugh Row River, and Mr. and Mrs. O. Sallee sprat Sunday picnicking on ter returned to Mal.-ia Monday. Mrs. K. T. Hurtley and son Harold Sharp's creek. James Hpuhr was in Borena Sunday. arrived last week from Bend for a Alvis Wicks, Arthur Haller and Miiu visit at the I. N. Bresser borne. James Huntsman came home to as rice Estubrook were ni the Grove Sat sist his father through the threshing urday afternoon. Juinea McGee visited relatives in the season. The Lynx Holiow men aw trying out Grove Saturday evening. Mrs. J. Sams, of the Grove, is visit n threshing outfit and if it proves sat isfactory will do their own threshing in ing her daughter, Mrs. K. J. Wicks. Earl Neal visited at the Hpnlir home the future. The Huntsman family entertained a Hunday. Jay Cole left Sunday for his home number o f friends Hunday. Mr. Woodson, o f the Grove, was in ut Point Terrace. Mary and Ruth Owen visited Turn the Hollow Tuesday. day evening with tbe Carpenter girls. Maude and Grayee Smith, of Row- ROW RIVER. River visited Monday with Virgo- and August Ik.— Mrs. Ezra Messenger Gladys Carpenter. visited Monday ut the Mrnith home. Miss Faye Whiteley in visiting rei Gladys and Evelyn Carpenter, of atives at Saginaw. Htar, visited Haturday night and Hun- Ezra Messenger, o f Row River, Mr. day at the G. H. Hloau home. and Mrs. O. C. Bailee, Mrs. J. T. Hal A five pound duugbter was born Hat lee and daughter Velma were iu the urday to Mr. and Mrs. Casey Jones. Grove Haturday evening. Mrs. A. Herini visited several days Lincoln Cole left Friday to visit rei o f last week at Divide. atives at Lorane for a few days, an.l Mr. and Mrs. Art Cbilders nnd Mr. will go from there to bis h»nie at and Mrs. Clarence Coulter, of the Point Terrace. Grove, visited Hunday at the Casey Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wicks motored Jones home. to Eugene Saturday evening and re- Mr. and Mrs. Alphonse LuBlue and : turned Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Tanner visited Haturday Mr. and Mrs. Elzie ilolderntan and night and Hunday in Eugene. | daughter Boris and Mrs. Ella Pitcher I rank LaHiue and Andrew Crowe , visited at the Hpahr home Sunday ev e- visited Haturday night and Hunday at 1 ning. the Jim I .owe home at 1-caburg. Visitors at the Ida Wicks home Wm. McCaleb, Corbett Hm.lh and i Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Carrol Bar A lf Williams were in the Grove Hun I low, Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Wicks and day. ion and daughter, Walter anil Ida, o f Frank I-aHlue an.l Grayee and Maud Wendling; Mrs. Eb Spray and Mrs. J. Hmjth were in the Grove Hunday eve h. Woodson an.l children, o f Cottage ning. ! Grove, and Maurice Estubrook. of Row Nellie I'ieuard was a Cottage Grove | River. visitor Haturday night and Hunday. j Mrs. ftillie Owen and son Itule mo * tored to Borena Monday evening. M OUNT VIE W . [ \ elma Sallee visited Sunday with August la.— Hazel Carpenter, o f j Jen nett Hpahr. Marshfield, and lialiie Netini were out Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Wicks motored from the Grpve, where they are visit I to th.* Grove Friday. ing, and visited Thursday und Friday I , Alvis Wicks ami Bonahl Owen were with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Sears. i in tbe Grove Monday. Mrs. Ernest Johnson visited over Mr. and Mrs. I .*■ -* t e r Mooney, Mr. Hunday at her home in Eugene. and Mrs. C. E. Whitlock and Mr. ami Mr. and Mrs. Ferrell an.1 family 1 Mrs. Martin were in the Grove Satur were in Eugene one day last week eon- day evening. suiting a physician in regard to Mr. ( . fc. Whiteley nn.l daughter B e r th a Ferrell’s arm which was fractured two ami Mr. and Mrs. Cooper an.l daughter weeks ago. Ruth motored to Eugene Saturday eve- Vernon Fields, o f Roseburg, was out ning. to the W. J. Chapman and W. 1). Heath homes Friday. SAG INAW . Mrs. I'reaton, who is staying at the August Ik.— Mrs. Kirkendall was in J. Kile borne, visited Tuesday morning Eugene Friday on busi with Mrs. C. W. Hears. Mrs. t^ucen and Mrs. Fisher visited James Fisher spent Hunday at bis j Sunday at the Moody home. home in Eugene. Miss Ethel Moody was in Eugene Mrs. Kate Hears was at the C. W. 1 Monday. Hears home Friday night. Mr. and Mrs. Bushneil visited at tbe W. J. Chapman and Otto Chapman * Taplin home Monday evening. were in the Grove Haturday. Mrs. L. R. Long came out- from the I Harry Jarret and family, o f Spring field visited Sunday with H. H. Jarret. Grove Haturday and Mrs. W. I). Heath Mrs. B. Miller anil children were in aerompanted her home, returning in the Grove Wednesday. the evening with Mr. and Mrs. Fred T. Benston ami family* were in Frost and son Harry, who spent Sun the F. Grove Hunday. day at the Heath home. Carl Allen was in the Grove Hatur Charles Conner, o f Delight Valley, day evening. has rented the place adjoining Charles Mr. an.l Mrs. \V. I.. Leonard attend Hales’ place for the coming year. church in the Grove Hunday uiorn- Mrs. Waldo Miller was in the Grove ed ing. Wednesday. J. Fogle and family were in the Mr. und Mrs. O. L. Englisi.l and fam Grove Saturday. ily and Arthur Hales, of Borena, were P. Dick and family have gone to Hunday guests o f Mr. and Mrs. Charles the W. coast. Bales. A donkey engine is being unloaded W. D. Heath, W% J. Chapman and for the Moyer Brothers mill. Otto Chapman have been helping J. R. Mr. Gibler, o f Portland, formerly a Cooley and L. L. Leedom stack grain resident of Bclight \ alley, is v isitjng the past week. with friends here. Mrs. Wm. Haupt has a daughter F. T. Benston was in Eugene Mon from Portland and another daughter day. from Los Angeles visiting her this Kathleen Allen returned Monday week. from Eugene, where she had been Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hears, Mrs. Kate employed. .'. ¡trs, J. R. Cooley, 1-ewis Mendnl and The Bert Myers family spent Sunday Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Heath were among at the W. F. Briggs homo. those in the Grove from this neighbor Hazel Minion and sister visited at hood Haturday. the J. F. Adney home last week. The C. J. (¿ueener family and Jess DORENA. and Inez Tucker returned from an out ing Saturday evening. (Special to The Sentinel.) Mrs. Burton and son have moved to August IS.— Mr. and Mrs. A. S. the J. E. Fogle place which they re Ward motored to Springfield Thursday. cently purchased. Perry Ruscoc returned to Portland Mrs. Houston (¿uooner and son left Saturday. Tuesday for their home in Washington. Belle Elliott spent the week end at Upton with her sister, Miss Sarah. Mr. and Mrs. Hal Jennings and chil * --- --- dren spent several days of last week at the C. II. Jennings home. ♦------------------ ------- -------------------^ Mrs. H. U. Crites returned Saturday froin a business trip to Cresvvell. Members o f the primary department Mrs. Chas. Wagner itn.l two children of the Presbyterian Sunday school an.l arrived Thursday from Portland for a their mothers made up a party o f visit ut the Lot Wagner home. about »40 w hich spent Wednesday at Miss Minnie Goulet, o f Eugene, spent ternoon at the Elks picnic grounds. the week end with her parents, Mr. Games took up the greater [»art o f the time. A bounteous luncheon was served. and Mrs. James Goulet. Robert Ward and family motored Mrs. Charles Adams, superintendent of up front Springfield Sunday anti spent the Sunday school, was in charge. the day at the A. S. Ward home. William Rhodes and Mrs. Fannie L. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Holstrom and Rhodes, of this city, were married yes sons, of Marróla, were Sunday visitors terday in Eugene by Justice Jesse G. Wells. at the J. li. Kirk home. « Mr. anti Mrs. II. A. Newbury, o f Ta Clyde Moore went to Eugene Friday for a brief stav. coma. Wash.. Mr. and Mrs. John Blake The D. L. England family visited ly, o f Monroe, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Sunday with Mr. and Mrs! Charles Goodman, of Stayton. Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Blakely, o f Eugene, and Mrs. E. T. Hales at Mount View. Mr. anti Mrs. S; O. VanSchoiack mo Blakely, of this city, who is visiting tored up from I-eonn Sunday. at points down the valley, motored up front Eugene last evening and visited briefly with E. T. Blakely. Mrs. W. L. Darby’s class of the Methodist Sunday school picnicked Wednesday nt the Elks picnic ground« A delightful luncheon was served an.l games and amusements were enjoyed. At the ohl Orrin Robinson place 10 Mrs. Darby, Mrs. W. F. Johnson and miles southeast o f Cottage Grove, on Mrs. Uussie Hurd were in the party Mosby crook, commencing promptly at and assisted the little girls with their 10 o'clock, 1 will sell at public auction good time. The C. E. Untphroy and S, L. Mack my 120-acre stock nud dairy ranch, with good 6-room house and* 50x60 in families nnd their guests, Mr. and Laphant, o f Buckley. barn; 40 acres can be irrigated, 35 Mrs. Ralph ncres under cultivation. 15 acres bot Wash., and Miss I-cona Harwell, of tom land, 5 acres o f beaver dam land. Tneoma, Wash., and the A. A. Rich 25 aeres piling timber, and thousands monil, 8. L. Godard and Elbert Smith o f acres of outrange easily aecesstble, families enjoyed a picnic and bonfire fine gnrtlen, large family orchard, nil party at the Elks picnic grounds Wed kinds of fruit and berries. Also 40 nes.lay evening. Mrs. C. E. Umphrey entertained in tons of hny, two 3-yenr oltl colts, throe good work horses, two Jersey cows, formally at her home Tuesday after wagons, nil kinds of farm machinery, noon in honor fo Mrs. Ralph i.npbnm. garden implements, tools, furniture, o f Buckley, Wash., and Miss Leona stpvos, rooking utensils nnd other 'ar Burwell, o f Tacoma, Wash., who have been guests for several days at the ticles too numerous to mention. Umphrey and Markin homes. j Neighborhood News Tales of the Town PUBLIC SALE! Thurs., Aug. 26 R. W. Ward, Owner, For Sale— Combination drag and Col. J. ,1. Hnrhatigh, Auctioneer. | buzz saw. Oliver Veatch, Clerk. 8 20c naw, Ore. C\ A. Moore, Sagi 8-20, 9-3pd