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About Illinois Valley news. (Cave City, Oregon) 1937-current | View Entire Issue (April 19, 2017)
Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, Ore. Wednesday, April 19, 2017 Page A-3 Oregon dog gets temporary stay of execution after outcry GRANTS PASS, Ore. (AP) — A public campaign to save the life of a pit bull on death row has led to a temporary stay of execution. The dog, Kron, attacked a horse three weeks ago near Merlin, a rural community in southwest Oregon. The Josephine County Board of Commissioners ruled that Kron must be euthanized but reversed course last week after an outcry that included a protest in downtown Grants Pass. The three commissioners voted unanimously to send the case to a hearings officer, the Daily Courier reported (https:// is.gd/1h8wLF). County records show the dog is owned by Brye Rogers but was staying with Leah Harp, whose property is a few hundred feet from where the horse lives. The dog left Harp’s yard through a broken gate, said David Pitts, an animal protection officer who investigated the incident. Horse owner John Bartlett told commissioners that he fired at the dog when it was in a pasture and again when it charged his wife. Kron was shot twice, once in the head, but survived and is now at the county animal shelter. Bartlett’s grandson, 15-year-old Drew Hogan, told authorities in a written statement that the dog at one point had latched onto the nose of the horse, a 30-year-old mare named Hummer. “The dog was dangling off the horse’s nose,” he wrote. “The horse (was) trying to get the dog off by flailing her head.” Veterinarian Todd Bershad said the horse suffered an 8-inch cut over its nasal bone and a cut to the interior of its left nostril. An online petition started on the dog’s behalf describes the injury as a small laceration that didn’t require medical attention. The petition had more than 18,250 supporters as of Friday morning. “This is heinous disregard for a well-loved member of a family that quite literally didn’t hurt anyone or any animal,” states the petition, written before the stay of execution. “If you have your four-legged friend sitting next to you while you read this, think of how lucky they and you are to be comfortable and not in pain... and not facing death over a trivial matter.” The Daily Courier reports the hearings officer will be Robert Bain, a local attorney. A hearing date has not been set. County attorney Wally Hicks said hearings officers used to consider most cases involving dogs, but the practice was discontinued because “everybody was appealing” the decisions to commissioners. Historic Wolf Creek Inn expected to reopen in May WOLF CREEK, Ore. (AP) — Shuttered to visitors since 2014, the historic Wolf Creek Inn is expected to reopen for overnight guests and daytime visitors on May 1. Details are still being worked out, but plans call for state parks employees and volunteers to run operations, with the inn’s restaurant remaining closed. Attempts to find a private manager have been unsuccessful. “We had difficulty finding a concessionaire that was a good fit for that park,” said Nathan Seable, Oregon State Parks manager for the site. “We’ve decided we needed to do something to get that opened.” The expected opening is welcome news for this unincorporated rural community 25 miles north of Grants Pass, which benefited from the many visitors who pulled off of nearby Interstate 5 to take in a bit of yesteryear. “I really missed having it open,” town postmaster Debbie Roberts said. “From what I can tell, everybody misses having it open.” The inn, also known as the Wolf Creek Tavern, dates back more than 130 years, to the early 1880s, about the time of the coming of the railroad to Josephine County. It’s been closed since the fall of 2014 for overhauls of heating, Art’s Red ALE Garter H D OPPER Homestyle DINNER SPECIALS Mon - Sat 5-9 PM in Lounge KARAOKE Wednesdays @ 9 p.m. F r i d a y, A p r i l 2 1 @ 5:30 air conditioning and fire suppression systems. Former concessionaire Margaret Quist of Sunny Valley said she and her husband, Mark, stepped away after six years as the concessionaire when construction took too long. She remembers weddings, celebrations and other events there, including quilt shows. Family members helped in the restaurant. “We loved it,” Quist said. “Wonderful memories. It was hard to walk away.” But it was hard to make a living at a venture so dependent on seasonal traffic. During the winter, Quist sometimes had but one room rented, and would serve only one meal in an entire day. “The restaurant never really paid for itself,” she said. “Summers were always good, but usually the summer profit wasn’t enough to get us through the rest of the year.” Quist said she would have been happy with it opening as a museum, if nothing else. She still maintains a social media site about the inn. “I’ll see cars there all the time, with people peeking in the window,” she said. “It’s hard on the community. That’s such a tiny community, when something that draws people is gone, it’s something that’s felt by the community.” KARAOKE w/ Steve - OH Tim Mitchell Friday, April 21 @ 9 p.m Saturday the 22nd @ 6 Saturday Pool Tourney @ 7 Every Wednesday from Open MIC Night 6 - 8 p.m. Taylor’s Country Store Fridays @ 6 p.m. J Barley Free pool on Sundays Sportsman Tavern Seable expects the building to be open as a museum and for overnight room rentals, with a park ranger on duty weekdays and a volunteer park host on site for overnights. Reservations for room rentals might begin in mid-April. A formal announcement about the park’s reopening is in the works. Park Ranger Ed Johnson was at the inn Friday taking care of landscape maintenance and getting things ready. There’s dusting to do and linens to refresh, along with contracts to sign for housekeeping and linen service. A park host will have to be found to live in an RV trailer out back. Johnson, who has worked The G SPOT Hump day Karaoke w/ Jammer Dave 8-midnight Open Mic w/ B Thursdays @ 7 p.m. at the site for seven years, said room prices have yet to be determined and he wanted it made clear that the restaurant would not be open. “I don’t want folks to be disappointed,” he said. The inn, restored by the state in the 1970s, features two parlors, a small room where author Jack London and his wife stayed while he wrote, and a small room of historic photos and pieces. Each of the nine guest rooms has a private bath. The inn’s landscaped grounds stretch to nearby Wolf Creek, with picnic tables available for public use. 4/20 PARTY Thursday, April 20 @ 9 $10 The Herbal Crew Dead Kids Proper Nonsense Plus Special Guests! @ McGrew’s!