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About Coquille City herald. (Coquille City, Or.) 188?-1904 | View Entire Issue (June 26, 1913)
Column Neighborhood News Creswell Notes. What ia the use o f using so much elbow grease when gasoline is so cheap? Coroe and see our little en gine. Just the thing to run your sepa rator, washing machine churn or pump. This boy doesn't wear out any clothes, uses about as much gasoline as the average boy would ‘ lases. Car o f No. 1 shingle« at Spray’ s. Car o f tile at Spray’ s. Car o f salt at Spray’s. For sale, Jersey bull calf, 7 months old, elig ib le for registration. W . F. Hartsell, London Route. How about harvest? Have you everything ready? Look your machines over. L e t Spray know what you need in the repair lir.e. I f you need a new machine, remember I have as good ma chines as there are made. Tom G ill has for sale well drill and pressure tank cheap. Jim Bedford has for sale 22 ewes and 20 lambs. June 21.- Mrs. Elisabeth A lvira Blodgett died at the home o f A. H. Blogett, her son. shortly after noon to day. She was past 82 years o f age, and had been in poor health tor some time. The funeral w ill be held to morrow afternoon at 2:30 o ’ clock at her son’s home. The services w ill be conducted by Rev. F. L. Fraser of the Presbyterian church. Mrs. Blodgett was born in the state o f New York in 1831 and was married to L. F. Blodgett at Hartford. Wiacon sin, whom she survives. She leaves two sons, W. F. Blodgett, residing in Redfield, South Dakota, and A. II. Blodgett o f this city. She came here with her son about three years ago from Hastings, Minnesota. The general committee on arrange ments for Fourth o f Jul\ celebration met last evening to complete arrange ments and appoint committees on floats. Mrs. R. D. Hawley is suffering with a serious swelling on her finger eauaed by a thorn, which got into her finger as she was handling fruit. Walden. June 2.— (Special to The Sentinel.)— For sale, two-seated spring wagon — Mr. Timms o f California visited at almost new. Inquire o f J. W. Gowdy. Landwehr a last week. Miss Clara Lebow spent Saturday For sale, eucalyptus buds for fancy and Sunday with Winnie Prophet. work or seeds. Mrs. E. Tumkpins. Miss Ina W alker o f Waldport is visit For sale, 5 horse power steam wood ing her aunt, Mrs. Marion I,ebow. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jones and baby saw, good repair, $125. Wm. Kuscher, returned to the reserve Monday morn or call at Spray’s. ing. The Taylor girls o f Coast Fork have Marion I.ebow is visiting at W ald far sale several barrels o f cider vin e port. gar. Mr. and Mrs. John Allen w ere in the Grove Monday. VW . A. Hem eway has for sale or trade Erwin Whipps spent Sunday at home, one mare and cult. Would like to trade returning to Divide Sunday evening. for cows or young cattle. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Chamberlain Look your harvesting machine over were in town Saturday. Waldo M iller has purchased a cream and see Spray about it. Don’ t wait separator. until young grain is ready to cut. Mrs. Reese returned home Monday Machine oil o f all kinds at Spray's. after visiting her daughter. Mrs. Geo. For sale or trade, two and one-half Nnlta. Mrs. George Downs returned from h. p. Webber gas engine. Good condi Salem a fter attending the funeral o f tion. Curtis Veatch. her sister. Mrs. McSarley. When you come to town come in anti S. B. Mores has bought A lbert Ris- sue's interest in the Crowe anti Gauley see our baby thresher mill and has move«] his fam ily there. C. E. Ashby has for sale 130 head o f George Shields and two aons, Robert goats. and James, visited at Linebaugh’s last See Spray and help to build a can Friday. nery. Help to manufacture your owr Mrs. Frank Hubert is visiting her sister, Mrs. George Lang. produce. Come in and see me. School closed last Wednesday. Groceries and dry goods at the bole in the wall. Saginaw and Delight Valley. See me before you sell your mohair June 2. — (Special to The Sentinel.!— or wool, as I w ill pay the highest price C. A. Smith is making a new addition Spray. to his barn this week. 1 pay cash for chickens, eggs, h des, Miss Alpha Morgan visited with I.yndall G ibler Wednesday. grain, mohair and wool. Fred Whitcomb o f Disston visited I f you need an engine see our engine his parents last week. and g e t our price before you buy. Mr. Benstnn’s cousin from Seattle Wagons, buggies, plows, harrows, visited relatives here the latter part o f cultivators, discs, binders, mowers and the week. Mr and Mrs. Hill went to Eugene rakes at the big hole in the wall Saturday to visit friends. Curtis Veatch ha9 Duroc Jersey sows Mr. W lac arson o f Irvin g spent Sun for sale. day at the N eat home. Mr. H aight made a business trip to Lim e and sulphur spray at the big Eugene Saturday. bole In the wall. Mrs. Earl Hopper and Miss Eva were Fage field fence is a spring steel. in Cottage Grove Friday. beat by every test. Phone 162. Hal G ibler made a business trip to John Deere and O liver plows at Cottage G rove Saturday. S. A. Monteith returned Tuesday to Spray’s. Anlauf, where he w ill take up work Do you need a cream separator? with Anlauf Bros, again a fter hio in jury o f a few weeks ago. Come and see our Blue Bell. It is M its Becker o f Woodburn is visiting good one and the price is right. her sister, Mrs. Keene. Warren McFarland has some nice Mrs Vaughn and children o f Seattle are visiting Mrs. Vaughn’s mother, young S'*ws fo r sale. Mrs. McKinney, and other relatives Buy your feed and flour o f Spray. here. Phone 162. Born to Mr. ami Mrs. W. E. Stevcna on Monday a daughter. See our new 2-way gang plow .' It Mrs. Geo. Nichols ami children re turns it down hill going and coming. turned Monday from a w eek’a visit at Rogue River. For sale W hite Rock and Buff Or A number o f young people o f the pington all full blood. J. T. Short. vicinity attended a dance at Jackson’s, Ask your grocer fo r W hite R iver near W alker, Saturday evening. Mrs. Pelland o f Douglas County is Flour. It beats them all. You w ill visiting her daughter, Mrs. Paraxoo. have to pay 15 cents more for it than Mrs. Hauna and Mrs. Hamden fo r some other hard wheat flour, but drove to Cottage G rove Tuesday. we guarantee every sack. Disston Doings. a 3 a i n o( y o u r G r o c e r s ™mm B E T T E R THAN E V E R M a k €! s Wh ite r. Lighter Bread I deliver free to all parts o f town. Spray, phone 162. Warren McFarland has good second hand hack for sale. I w ill trade you one sack W hite R iver flour for one tier 16 inch old growth fir wood. Come and see me in the hole in the wall. Forty lbs. o f W hite R iver flour for a bushel o f wheat at the hole in the wall. Our new platform scales are now ready for use. Come and weigh your horses and hay. T ry a sack o f W hite R iver Flour. Aak yoar groeer fo r it. I f he hasn’ t t, call Spray, phone 162. C. F. Handy has Buff Leghorn eggs fo r sale, fifty cents fo r fifteen. $3.25 per hundred, also Indian Runner duck egga from select stock, fawn and white e g g strain, 60c fo r thirteen. Orders taken for day old^chicks and ducks. Fanners, come in and see our manure spreader. Something new. June 25.— (Special to The Sentinel.) — Harry Shearer and w ife have moved to Diaston. Bobie Jones went to Cottage Grove Monday on account o f sickness. Supt. H ogg o f the Champion mine arrived Friday from Washington. J. D. Maconleu and w ife spent the latter part o f last week at Row R iver. Claudie Kim e o f C ottage Grove is at Rujada this week. Mr. W illiam s o f Rujada mashed his foot very badly one day last week. The little M eir babe was very sick Saturday and Sunday. Fred Woodhurst spent last week visitin g Jessie and Frank W ileoxen o f Currin Station. John W ileoxen went to his home at Currin Station Saturday. Miss Veta Holderman spent a few days at the Trask home. John Carr has been laid up for sev eral days with a carbuncle on his neck. H erbert Neal o f Ruiada visited with Fred Woodhurst over Sumlay. Rev. Barnhart spent Momiay night at the R. C. Woodhurst home. Stuart and O lie Comber o f C ottage Grove came up Momiay to work at the J. I. mill. Chas. Plank was a passenger on No. Tuesday, Rev. Barnhart preached two sermons Sunday at the school house. Frank Jonea spent from Saturday to Monday at his home in the Grove. J. I. Jones shipped several cars o f fine lumber out this week. Overseer Young haa been working the road above Disaton thia week. Mrs. 0. H. Lindsey is quite sick at the home o f her father at Dorena. Mrs. Grace Rainie ia on the sick list. Divide. June 26.—(Special to The Ssnlinel.) B. H. 1 .00 was In Eugene one day last week on business. # ■ Pete Tonole was a Cottage Grove visitor Friday. Miss Olga Söderström left Wednes day for the Grove to spend some time with her trother. Carl E. Burkett and w ife arrived Friday from Portland for an extended visit with their parents. Frances Dugan attended the teacher’s examinations in Eugene last week. Jesse Turner returned to Dothan Wednesday, after spending a week with his parents. Mrs. B. H. Lee sod family. F. J Taylor and w ife and Carl Larsen left Wednesday for Portia ml to attend the Adventist campmeeting. Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Russell ami fam ily o f Conist«x-k visited over Sun «lay at the home o f W. E. Burkett. Mi hire« I and I.ala W alker o f the Grove vieiteil a few days o f last week j at the J. A. Maekey home. W. E. Burkett is busy making hay. j T a k e the flint to be ma«lc in this vicinity. Pete Marketta o f Comalock visited Sumlay at Divide. Master Arden Eby o f the Grove visited over Sumlay with Harold Dugan. Archie Larsen visited in the Grovel Sunday. Mr. ami Mrs. H. tl. Harris of Cot tage Grove v ie it « l over Sunday with their daughter, Mrs. Fred Schribner. Carl Burkett went t«> Cottage Grove j Saturday. Wliat «1*» y«»ti want, anyway? A Sentinel want j<L A dance was given at Angelo Perm i’s tag«’ Grove visited relatives here S at unlay ami Sumlay. Saturday evening. l«>r you. IV te Tomde o f Divide waa buying cattle here thia w««ek. Doreng. Mra. Roy Griggs went to Drain Mon June 24. iStieeial to The Sentinel, i Mrs. Naomi Hales is on the sick list day to visit relatives. this week. Miss Fhiy Johnson o f Drain has hern James Radford made a lioaiuasa trip elected to Teaeh the Caau ls i * aehaul to C olla ge Grove Monday. thia fall. Miss Gertrude Hisscll o f Dunainuir. Roy Grigga ami Pete M arkrlta are Calif., is visiting at the home o f her getting out piling for l ' K. W alker «>f aunt, Mrs. Currin Cooley. Cottage Grove. Mrs. Deane and fam ily returne«! Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Hr ml lay and chll- I We«lnes«lay from an extended visit dren were Collage Gr»»ve vlalturs Sat north. urday. Mrs. Johnnie Kirk ami daughter Bertha returned Wednesday from M »r cola, where they hail lieen visiting Mrs. K irk 's daughter. Mrs. Holstmm. C. H. Jennings receive«! a kick from a horse Satunlay which laid him up for a few days. Mr. Slaone o f Disston v is it « ! Sunday (Continued from first page.) at the home o f his cousin, Mrs. Charley Teeters. Mrs. Amanda Mnrtin ami daughter, year shove that he had at the beginning. Mrs. Frank Dobkins o f Lake County, Mr. Scharcn ia a native o f Missouri ami visited at the home o f Currin Cooley d<>«-»n't have to bo shown that Lane last week. Arthur Vanachoiack, Johnnie Kirk, county ia a goml place to live. Albert Zim krr liv«*a a quarter o f a B. F. N egley ami the Land brothers were among Cottage Grove business mile east o f Crcawell and ia a native visitors Saturday. o f Switserland. He hit Creawell 28 years ago with 10 cents in his fiockala Comstock. «In ch he spent for «»rang«?*. Now he 1 June 24.— (Special to The Sentinel.) — Mr. ami Mrs. David G riggs o f Cot- has 118 acres o f land o f which 60 acres are in a high atate o f cultivation. He ia out o f debt, hts laml ia well storked i ami he has mi.ncy in the hank, a nice P O N T MISS THIS ONE home ami other buildings. lie milks nine cows Holstein ami Jersey mixed which average him Table Delicacies over $75 to the cow per year. He sella about £100 per year o f hogs; 150 White leghorn hena average over $1 BY per day in eggs. From the 50 acres he Too Good to Keep. sells over $1500 per year. An exchange which l r i « l to put one | Borrowed $IHI to Start W ith. over on The Sentinel a «tu p le week* j Eil Ziniker, also a native o f Switxer- ago |>rrpetrate<l such a joke on Itself who wUI at our land, lives five miles west o f Creswell that The Sentinel can no longer keep and ia known as “ The Onion K ing.*' il quirt. The "w is e on« ' - laid From three and a half aerea o f onions “ Everything you ran mention ia in he clears an average o f $1200.a year The Sentinel--ami a g*««! many things two acres o f bearing prunes clear him which hail jual aa well not tie men- AT WAUE« STATION. ONE. $300 an acre a year. He haa 120 acres lio n «!, for inatance : Mr*. I). G. AIM- eon o f Rneehurg ia visiting her parents, o f land o f which 20 are in cultivation. Mr. ami Mra. W. C. Johnson. Thia He has been on the place SO years ». d w ill indeed be news to Mr. ami Mrs. has a fine family o f 10 children, an W. C. Johnson, but Mr. ami Mra. elegant home, some city property, a Hope Firater w ill won<ler when Mr. ami Mra. Johnson adiqdrd their daugh substantial bank account and mi ilebts. Basket Dinner t e r ." For hia atari it might not tie amiaa to The fact o f the m ailer ia that Mrs. I). say he b o rrow «! $!«) o f his brother G. Allison ia the «laughter o f none o f A lfred. these parenU. She ia a daughter o f In the vicinity o f Creawell is a splen Mark Jonea. Mra. I I • rebel A. Allison did place to live. The soil ia fine, ia the daughter o f Mr. ami Mra. F lee schools nod church faculties are first ter. The "w is e one” w ill kindly tie class, markets are good and arc getting more careful about IniliaU in the fu better as ia ahown by the cannery, ture. the building o f which ia complete«! and machinery fo r thia year'« run being Get your "House fo r Kent” and installed. As fine people live in the ’ House fo r Sale” signs at The Sen town ami country as one could wish to tinel office. Sixth Sired near AW« W hen you purchase a sack of find. $9.75 SUIT 60 Men’s and Young M en’s Suits in Grays, F Blues, Tans and Browns. Not a suit in the lot that formerly sold for less than Most of them are regular $15 values, some are wonj A complete range of sizes from 32 to 44. your pick from the lot at .... OREGON WOOLEN MILLS ST By Their Fruit Ye Know Them ARRIVES FEW YEARS AGO FROM SWITZERLAND; MAKES ■ ..... FORTUNE - j W ide Mouth M a son ) I t onomy Jars and C Golden State Jars :: We also have the filling for the and silbar to put the fruit up I The M etsan SI “SOCIALISM WILL BE PROPERLY EXPOSED” W . r. R IE S Spriggs ft BlcU-ksmil Third Annual Sunday, June 29,1913 FREE TRANSPORTATION Horse A F lour You Can B a n k On Creswell ia c a ll« ! the Orchard City fr«im the many hundrmls o f acres of fine orchards surrounding it, hut o f the orchards ami berriea I hope to write later. 1 fouml farm laml priced very reasonable In that vicinity. To give an idea as to what can he produced in that viciuity 1 will say that at the state fa ir last year John Lindsay, who lives «>ne mile east o f Crcawell, took the first premium or the largest squash ami on the six largest From your grocer you can rest as beets and secoml premium on |>otatoc* sured that you have as good a ami oniona. He ra is «l over .'Hi tone flour as it is possible to mill. A o f kale to the acre. Shoeing ami Repairing Work SUMMER SPEC} Ladies’ W h it e C an vas Shoes, valu e $3.00, B utte at flour that is as clean as modern In conclusion I wish to say that I am scouring machines can make— and not In the real estate business, ami as wholesome and pure as the am em p loy «! by no one save The Reg. finest wheat will produce. iatcr. These articles coat no one a cent Drifted Snow Flour is sold with I but The Register. The sole object ia a guarantee. If you are not satis Ui show what ia being done by farmers fied with the baking results you in different parta o f Lane county ao obtain from this flour, your grocer that othera may perhaps read ami profit will pay you back the full price from the experience o f men who have for the whole sack and the flour made good. you have used will cost you nothing. It takes good flour to Sentinel Helps Bring Him. live up to such a guarantee— and Rev. R. M. Broadtmoks paid Tha Drifted Suow has always made Sentinel a pretty compliment at the good. picnic Tuesday when he said the pr«>- There sack. is satisfaction m every gressiveness o f the city aa re flect«! in The Sentinel hed a great deal to do in i ¡"»pressing him ao favorably with Cot- Sp erry F l o u r Co. * lm *mr,rovelh,the» "*•<>«»«> r J resident without the preliminary o f visiting the city first. Ladies’ Patent L eath er Oxfords value $2.75, at $ 1 .5 9 , L U R C H ’S , » » » » » » » » » fr »»»* * * * * '