DHL ^rntt Hmtlit .--.......... —............................... - ■- CHURCHtS INI It IN MENIAL (ULIlJKf CLUB MtMOKIAl SfRVICfS MEI WIIM MRS. GtSfLI Sunday L verting Close of Held and Last Program Mwtlnq Is of Unusual Interest. Troy tvangelistlc Meetings. Th« Mt. ‘Scott Mental Culture Club Th* Union Evangelistic meeting« are ' met last Thursday at the home of Mrs. now on tlieir laal lap, but people are J«n«t Ge««ll, 6119 Eighty-ninth street. more nugsr an I enthu«l*«Uc than in the This was the la«i program meeting of first week. The week ju«t pant, though the i«a»i>n ami waa of unu«u«l interest, cold atxl wet, «»» the larg««t crowd of Mr«. Harold Wagstaff gave a com­ Hie eerie« Every night crowd* have prehensive review of “Sweet Lavender” Katlier<erly lirard corner to by Pinero; ¡Mr«. R< ger« read Interest­ hear the singing and «|>«»king Dr, ing biographical sketches of Filch and Kehl haa spoken with ureal power ami Moody, American dramatists; Mr«. F. tandem««« and Mr. Troy haa aung the R. I«-Roy reviewed "Truth," by Fitch, Goepel iuto the heart« ol the |>eople and Mra. F. N. Debt« reviewed Moody'■ The afternoon meeting« have tieen well "Great Divide ”, attended. Report* for the year were given by Sunday night aaw the Evangelical the president and chairmen of the com- Church taieil to It* ulinoet capacity. A ' initleea. large number of aokliere were prea. iiI in a Ixxly aud they were onderfully at­ tentive and eeeined to enjoy the «erv- Ice« Dr. Held «poke of Juda« and Id« price for the Savior, «bowing that when Mr and Mr*. Thomas F'lllnghain and Juda« received hi* thirty piece* of diver he «old himaelf and not Id« lx>rd. Bo in Mr« Emma Godfrey of Portland were life, each man ha« Id« price, «ome men gueflta at the liourol Mr«. G N Hager are cheap like Juda«, other« you cannot Bunday of last week. put the dollar mark on. Mr. and Mrs. If. E. Poppleton enter- Nest Sunday liemg Memorial Holiday I tamed erieoda from tbe city Sunday. the church«« will unit« at the morning service« aa well ai in the evening. The Mr. and Mr*. Charles Ix-iner and old «oldier« will be preaent in a body Dr. Reid will preach the Memoilal e«r- daughter, M im Grace were recent guest* mon. The evening «ervice will conclude at the home of Mr. and Mra. W. N. Moore. the evangelistic meeting«. PLEASANI VAELLY After a busy day'« work, which in­ cluded caaling her ballot in the primary election Friday, “Mother” Hepperly retired in apparently uaual health at her borne, Wlllft (Fifty-seventh Avenue 8. K. About otMluigbl Mr. Hepperly w»a «routed and arose and made a Are, but before any aeu«e of alarm was felt in regard to per condition, Mr«. Hep­ perly passed quietly Into eteeuxy. ' Her «on, Wade Hepperly, and daugh­ ter, Mr«. Thoma« Brown, of Vancouver, Wash., with their famihe«, came Satur­ day morning, arranged for their mother’« funeral and looked alter their aged father, who will rewid« with them in the future. The funeral service« ware conducted I from the Kenworthy parlor« at 4 p. in. Monday, May 20, interment lining at Multnomah cemetery. KeV. E. A. Smith conducted the «ervice*. Mr and Mr». Thus. C. Hepperly had reaided in Mnta for ten year«, having moved here from Springbrook, Ore., where they located whin they came weal in lik'd They were married in Heptemlier, 1863 at Peoria, III. Mr«. Hepperly »»« Selma A. King, her birth- place lieing Washington County, Ohio, Bhe is survived by five children, Frank and Curt Hepperly of Nebraska, John Hepperly of Clearfield, Iowa, and Wade Hepperly and Mra. Thomas Brown of Vancouver, Waah. Mrs. Hepperly waa a member of the Methodiat church and in earlier life was a prominent worker in the W. C. T. U. She waa held in high eeteem in the community. _.....■ Mr. and Mrs. Mike Henries are re­ ceiving congratulation« on the arrival of a «on May 8. THE RED CROSS SPIRIT SPEAKS By I0HN H. FINLEY. .... I go wherever men may dare, I go wherever woman’s care And love can live. Wherever strength and skill can bring Surcease to human suffering Or solace give. I am your pennies and your pounds; 1 am your bodies on their rounds Of pain afar; I am you, doing what you would If you were only where you could— Your avatar. The cross which on my arm 1 wear, The flag which o’er my breast I bear, Is but the sign Of what you’d sacrifice for him Who suffers on the hellish rim Of war’s red line. gi 5 1 ' '1 ■ út.* fia "S/ p The G. H. Richey family have moved into the P. P. Jenne house. Vol. 16. L! Memorial Bunday services will be held at the Evangelical Church at 11 a. m on Sunday, May 26. Bhilo Circle and Reul*n Wilson Post will meet at C. C. Wiley’s office on Main street and car lineal 10:45 a. tn. and will march ti­ the church in a t-ody. The regular Memorial services will be held at Mount Scott Cemetery May 30 at 2 p. m. We will meet at C. C. Wiley’s office'.on Main and car line at 1:30 p. in., where the Cemetery Association will furnish conveyance« to and from the Cemetery. We invite Bhilo Circle, Spanish War Veterans and tbe Sons of Veterans and Boy Scouts, Lents and Woodmere schools and citizens in general to join with us. Tbe boys of 61 to 66 are passing away. Boon the last Grand Army man will have passed the great divide. Can you do anything that would teach tbe rising generation a greater patriotic lesson than to come with your auto to take those in who have no machine and join with us in our services. Remember tbe boys who wore the blue and made this nation what it is, abolished slavery, solidified the states so there is but one country and one flag, and made it possible for President Wil­ son to raise millions of men and bil­ lions of dollars to build tbe beet navy in tbe world. Will you come? J ohn W alrod , Commander. Goldie Ellanora, the infant daughter of Mr. and Mr*. A- Johnson of ¿910 Eighty-fourth Street 8» E.. passed away May 16 at 6:4ft a. m. A complication of bronchial pneumonia anc meaaiee was the cause. The funeral services were at the Ken­ worthy undertaking parlors and tbe little body was taken to Newberg for interment in the family lot. Mi«a l.ydia Maunder« of Corvalll« was a Hunday gueel at the W. N. Moore | borne. Leland Moore, who has just graduated from O. A. C., haa enlisted in the U. 8 ' A. and leit May 14 for Camp Lewis. Azcz/i'o Aktw — CHtRRYVILLE 0 No. 21 6. A R. CALLED LOR MEMORIAL SERVICES JOHNSON BABY PASSES AWAY W. Q. Cameron was a recent Valley visitor, Oscar Byer« of Portland, formerly of | this place, who recently graduated from the Forestry Department at O. A. C.. lias gone to Washington, I). C., where bn will enter the service on a Govern­ ment cruiser am. will probably be «ent | to France at an early date. 1 ■==^- Will Attend Church In Body Sunday Service Flag to be Dedicated—All Old and Cemetery Thursday Soldiers and D. A. R. Invited I kneel behind the noldiers’ trench I walk with «hamble»’ smear and stench The dead I mourn. 1 bear the stretcher and I bend O’er Sammy, Pierre and Jack and mend What ahella have torn. ACKIE8 In the Ameri­ can navy are classed a* the best fed hotly of men In the world. In the ship’s galleys every effort I* made to eliminate waste. In the upper photo President T R. Berry called a meet j one of the cooks on the ing of the Red Cross committee on the North Dakota I* oper­ 13th. at which plan» were perfected fori ating a meat slicer that cuts bacon with the tbe second Red Cros« Drive. least |>o**ible wastage, F’at is fuel for fighter*. llacon Is badly needed In the allied armies and navies The allied need* In pork prod­ uct* are l.ftO.OOO.OOO pound* monthly, The sawmill above u* turned out 13&i three time* n* much as before the war. Another wasteeliminator on the North ties at a$l each one day last week. Thin ia gixxl work and a benefit to the com­ Dakota Is the |M peeler, shown In the lower photo. Nothing is lost ex­ munity. cept the actunl potato skin. There Is a sufficient quantity of po- AtHiut 3tX) autos came up last Hunday, 1 or more than twice as many as those going the other side of the river. The big Portland dailies tell every now and then about the good road« on the Mar­ mot route being paid for by a certain 1 Dutch booze-tlghter, and yet they can’t Wednesday, June ft, haa lieen ntlicially get anyone to believe them, as there is designated a» Registration Day through­ too strong evident-" to the contrary. out the Unite State«, for all young men who have attained the age of 21 year* One aoldier boy with an aero squad in j since draft Regiatration day one year ago England «ay« the city of Lincoln, near On WedneHcay, June ft, every 21-year- old man in the United State« must appear where they are located, is a city of at the registration place designated by 7fi,(XX) inhabitants yet has but one uuild- ing of any pretensions and tnat is a hi« local draft board, and register. cathedral. The only eseeption am men already in military or naval service. Special W. J. Wirts of Handy spoke in the arraiigiiient* have tieen made whereby church here Sunday, the 12th. Mr. almentee* and thoae too ill to ap|>ear at Wirtz is a member of the Uuity organi­ the n*gi«tralion place« may register by zation, which t>ody has no creed, but mail. advocates an uplift for all humanity But they iniiHt all register. Failure to do along utilitarian lines, and says thar it *o make« the guilty voting man liable to is not what a man believes, but what imprisonment for one year. Ignorance he does, that counts. of the fact that June ft i* Registration day will not tai accepte.1 a» an excuse. Every prospect for a good crop of all The burden of informing themiMvea a« to the place and date of registration kind* here. Even the cherries have not fallen badly, as they have farther down i* placed on the men themselve*. the valley and around the Dalle*. Registration will lie in charge of the ocal iHiardH in their re«pective district*. Fred Beechel, who has the contract They are require.! to post, immediately for driving tie* down tbe Sandy river a list of the registration places. from the mills above ti* at ft cent* each, These registration place* will tie open drove over 40,000 the month of April. from 7 o’clock the morning of June ft He has two helpers at |5 a day each. until I* o’clock that night They will lie in charge of official« of the local draft Willie, the 13-year-old son of Mr. and boards. June ft haa tieen selected a* the date Mr*. W. R. Allen, died Saturday in a for registration day because it is the Portland hospital. He had been sick anniversary of the first draft registra- for some days and was too weak to rally ation day, when approximately 10,000,00 from the operation. He was buried in men between the age* of 21 and JO years, the cemetery here Tuesday, W. J. Wirt« of Bandy conducting the services. iido in , n gin. n d for the draft. All Must Register June 5 .. Lent«, Multnomah County, Oregon, May 23. 1918 Subscription, $1.50 a Year MRS. T. C. Hl PPLKLY KASSLS ON ... Next Tuesday afternoon at 2 o’clock • patriotic program will be given in the assembly hail of ths Lent« school, to which all old soldier« and members of the Circle of tbe G. A. R. andJDaugh ters of the American Revolution are specially invited. Tbe Lenta school Service Flag will be dedicated, there will be addresses and the school children will give drills and sing songs. No admission will be charged. Lents lias War Baby A ten-pound baby boy was born to tbe wife of Sergeant Elmu« C. Beck on May 10. Mrs. Beck is a war bride, be­ fore her marriage being »Miss Adelaide Rowley. Bhe is making her home with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. 8. Rowley, 6718 Eighty-ninth street. Sergeant Beck is a member of Com­ pany F, Fourth Engineers, now serving in France. GRAY’S CROSSING George Friday of 6321 Eighty-second street is home from the hospital, where he was for three weeks recovering from injuries received in an automobile and street car collision. Mrs. A. Wright, of 6442 Eighty-second street, reports having received a letter recently from her son Frank saying be is well and busy in France. Mrs. A. H. Nelson and .Mrs. R. E. Thomas attended a wedding anniversary at the home of Mrs. C. McGill on Greg­ ory Heights May 9th. This date waa also the birthday of Mrs. McGill. A number of friends were present and all enjoyed themselves to the fullest extent and wished the hostess many happy anniversaries. R. E. Thomas, 8113 Sixty-sixth ave­ nue, has recovered from tbe injury sus­ tained in falling from a defective lad­ der while painting in the 8. P. shops at Chas. R. Drake died Saturday, May Brooklyn recently, and is at work 18, aged 90 years and 10 days, at the again. home of his son. Clayton B. Drake, 1148 Forty-seventh Avenue 8. E The funeral C. R. Nicholson of 8108 Sixty-fifth was held from the Friends Church May avenue bas the sympathy of the com­ 20 at 2 o’clock, Rev. Jasper of the Meth­ munity in the loss of hi« father, Lewis odist church officiating, assisted by G. Nicholson. He was 85 years old, a mem­ A. R. and Bhilo Circle. Interment was ber of the G. A. R., having served with in Multnomah Cemetery, by tbe side of Company D, 106th Illinois Infantry. his wife, who passed away Nov. 19, 1917. Hie long life was full of usefulness. Mr, Drake was born in Tompkins County. N<-m York. May 8, 1828 H Mrs. C. R. Nicholson ’s captain for «aa married twice, first to Miss Euphia the Red Cross Drive in this section this P. Lemin, in August, 1848. To this week. We look for her success, as she union was born five children, Jas. N., tatoes in America for greater use in is a worker for this war and liberty. Cornelius 8. Gideon G. Miles N. and every home and for all needs of army and navy. Eat more potatoes, eat Lydia B. Drake, of whom only two sur­ A. H. Nelson of Eighty-fir«t>treet and vive, Cornelius 8. of Lents and Miles N. less wheat Sixty-sixth avenue has been at home Drake of Louisville, Neb. i sick for several ds ye. A Modest Request CIVIL WAR VETERAN CALLED Mr. and Mrs. William James have returned from The Dalles with their family and are occupying the house at Eighty-seventh avenue. Their many friends welcome them back to tbe com­ munity. Mr. Hickev, of Eighty-second street near Johnson creek, has gone into the insurance business. Christian Endeavor Entertains The tegular monthly bnsineee meeting and social of tbe Millard Avenue Chris­ tian Endeavor wa* held at the borne of Mr*. W. J. Hollingworth, 5627 Seventy- second Street 8. E., Friday evening. The busineee session wa* followed by games and an informal program. In keeping with the times, some of tbe popular liberty songs were sung by Major Repp and Messrs. Ruth Putnam, tne former accompanied by Mrs. Grif­ fith and tbe latter by Mrs. Putnam. Mr*.(Griffith also '.favored the gneste with piano numbers. Mi»s Nell Hornor of Woodmere gave some of her delightful readings and wa* compelled.to respond to two encores, tbe house all but rock­ ing with laughter. The committee and hostess wish to express their apprecia­ tion of these entertainers. Dainty refreshments concluded a de­ lightful social evening. RED ( ROSS DANCE AT SUNNYSIDE A dance will be given by tbe Loyalty League in Frank Ott Hall at Bunnyaide Saturday evening. May 26, at 8.30 o’clock, for the benefit of tbe Red Cross. Refreshments will be served and a good attendance is expected. Tickets 2ft cento.