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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (July 18, 1912)
DATE OF LOCAL FAIR BINGHAM FIGURES IN OTHER SCRAPES APPROACHES ,W h y P u t O ff S eein g T h e s e N e w S u m m er G ood s U n til T o m o r r o w W h e n Y o u C an Just a s W e l l S ee T h e m T o d a y Presbyterian Church. Rav. Francis L. Co IT o f Hoseburg w ill occupy the pulpit on Sunday, July 21st, morning ami evening. Special niuaic baa been ai ranged. t'hurch o f Christ. Regular services next Lord's Day. Sermon subjects aa follows : “ Doctrines o f the New Testa ment ¿.'liurch. and “ la Church Mem bership Essential to Salvation?" at 11 m. and S :00 p. m. respectively, erybody welcome. ______ ~j____v . Y o u ’ ll be just as ^ bri ' T ' H 4 E Y , ............r are simply fine— _________ fabrics of quality. «£ them as we are. vc see them. T here’s ^ ":v v ♦ enthusiastic About about them are, when you X no time like now to see them. x C om e! Every session o f the l.emi-a-Haml class is helpful and inspiring. Next Sabbsth at 10 a. m. the topic for study is “ Tenement and Apartment Chil dren." General discussion on "W hich is More Potent in Character Forming, Heredity or Environment?" A ll men are cordially invited. T -------- i X L a w n s , D im ities, G in g h a m s for T h is S u m m e r’s X X V t T ♦ ? T ? ± % per yd . Dress, 5 c to ----------- 1 W e are all ready to show you the best values in town Merchandise o f quality at fair prices Hampton 0 Cn The Store That Satisfies LO. C o tta g e kX % G ro v e \ ❖ affair took place Saturday or Sunday. The couple escaped their friends and are otf to San Diego on a honeymoon trip. Both are well known reaidenta j of the city. Mrs. Hunt was proprietor o f the Hat Shop. Her assistant m ill iner got married a short time ago and when the proprietor followed suit it was necessary to close out the busi- taken for the best one. Mrs. Vecske ness. pie I off and didn't tell any, but won The Emanon Club will meet this the prize after cutting with Mrs. Job afternoon with Mrs. G. M. Scott. and Miss Baker. The prize was a beautiful vase. Phillips Place Sold. A fte r a social hour Mrs. Kinter in The F. B. Phillips home on West vited her guests Into the house, where Main Street was sold this week to John tables w ere daintily laid with goodies. Bader, a recent arrival from Pitts Ice cream, cake, cookies and salted al burg, Pa. The consideration was monds were served. The day was Mrs. 94,250. This is a choice piece o f Kinter's birthday anniversary, but she property with beautiful lawn, shrub kept it a secret until her guests were bery, etc., and is considered a bargan about ready to depart. She received at the price paid. Mr Bader came several beautiful gifts. The guests here to look over the 1-orane Valley, were Mesdames Cruson, Veatch, Na a -d has also purchased a tract there. son. Price. Keeney, Foster. Venske. For the time being the Phillips fam Adams, Job, Baker, Smith, Mackin, ily will move to some college eity to H. H. Veatch, Bolden, Robbins, Hill, give the children school advantages Hall, Miller, A. King, Roy Smith, Mr. Phillips says, however, that they Brainard, Ingram, Paul Jones, Kem, will be back as soon as possible, as he Bede, and Miss Shepherd. knows o f no better place in the world to live and would not leave Cottage A surprise wss sprung on Cottage Grove even temporarily i f not com Grove society this week in the mar pel led to do so. * riage o f Dave Hendricks and Mrs. S. M. Hunt. It is understood that the Legal Blanks.—The Sentinel. u rirtif ► +C Miss Mary J. Whitaett and Geo. E. Robinson o f Ibis city were quietly mar ried at Eugene Wednesday o f last week at the Central Presbyterian Church, Rev. W illiam Parsons officiating. Miss Alice O. Jones and Ralph Le- gat o f this city were quietly married at the Christian parsonage at Eugene last Thursday, Rev. J. S. McCallum officiating. Mr. Legat is manager of L e g a t’s Harness Shop and Miss Jones is a well known young lady. Mrs. J. S. Medley entertained the Social T w elve Friday afternoon. The usual work was taken up, after which ice cream and cake were served. The follow ing guests from outside the club were presant: Mesdam^ Geo. Hawley, Harrv Mercer, Jesse Darling, C. H. Burkholder, Geo. Kerr, Shea. Mrs. Cidye Kjnter entertained about 30 of her friends on her lawn Wednes day afternoon. Each guest was re quested to tell a story, then a vote was T T T ♦ ? ? T ± T t f T T f Com e in and gaze around our new merchandise room across the street from our old stand. T here’ s room enough for every one and Methodist Church. Last Sabbsth wss very hot but the congregations were large and the interest was splen did. At the morning service one young Isdy wss received into the society in full connection and one man confessed Christ Mnd was taken into the church on probation. Special topics for the coming Lord's Day. Public worship at 11 with sermon by |wator. Subject, “ A Bugle Blast o f C h eer." A t the People's Popular Service at 8 o'clock Robert Sutcliffe answers the question "W h y I am a Methodist?" This w ill be well worth hearing. Bible school at 9:45and Epworth League devotional meeting at 7. A hearty welcome for all strangers. Delight Valley. we ll be pleased to meet you and show you around. i I Mr. and Mr*. Felix ^urrin visited with J. I.. Beatty and family Monday. The hay balers are working at Ernest Sears' place this week. George Andrews is building a new barn on hia place. - Takes Samples From Here. Roland McKee, o f the Bureau o f Plant Industry, with the Chico, C alif., Experimental Station, visited yester day with Felix Currin at his Walnut Aveune farm. He looked over the forage plants which had been left with Mr. Currin fur experimental purposes and took samplea away with him for use in hia work. He also took a number o f pictures o f the grow ing crops to use in showing others how Mr. Currin does things in the famous, fertile, fruitfu l W illam ette. Mr. McKee is on a trip throughout the coast states distributing seeds and gathering daft for a report to the government. \ x White Slave Traffic Described. The terrors o f the w hiteslave traffic, the awful sufferings o f the girls who are inveigled into the service, and the almost unaurmountable difficulties to , overcome in returning to an upright life, were depicted in a pathetic and human interest manner by Miss Ia*ah Barrel! in her lectures at the Christian Church Monday and Tueaday evenings. Mias Harrell speaks with force and uses convincing arguments derived from personal experience. She goes ' into all the awful details and gives the cold blooded facta straight from tha shoulder. H er audiences were large and appreciative. Electric at Eugene Sept. 1st. Rees-W allace “W H E R E YOU DO B E T T E R l l Poultry Department and Products of Theft of Four-Horse Team Laid at Hia Door; But Story U School Children Promise To Later Found To Be Be Features of the Untrue. Exhibition. • (Continued from Aral |>age.) by school children and many uf Ore gon's future citizens are planning to capture prizes. In fact, it waa the in dustrial contest arranged for the school children that started the agitation for the fair. In additinn to the local prizes, the best exhibits hy school chil dren w ill com|iete for awards at the Sa'em state fair, and it would not be surprising i f some o f them were cap tured by local boys and girls. Every effort has been made to make the fair this year a humdinger in every respect. Something unusual is prom ised in the stock department and women's exhibit building. Fruits, grains and grasses are rt|iening rapidly ami will, no doubt, be ready for the oc casion. Yoncalla. A number o f Yonralla streets are br ing improved with crushed roek. Miss Emma Applegate, who has tiecn teaching schotd at The Dalles^the past year, is home to spend the summer va cation with her mother, Mrs. Laura V. Applegate. The three oldest reaidenta o f Doug las cou'ity attended the celebration in Yonfalls. They were Mrs. Simpson, aged 81 years, John I.etsom, aged 84, and Mr. Kelly, past 80. K. Helliw ell is looking after business matters at different pointa in the W il lamette valley this week. L ittle Calvert Applegate was kicked Miss Vera Cochran is visiting with in the face hy a vicious horse last Mrs. Cunningham for a few weeks. week, the calk o f o ik * shoe rutting his J. E. Ingraham and fam ily have aold nose quite severely. I'hysiriana were their property in Saginaw and moved called at once and the wound dressed. to Eugene. The nasal bone waa but slightly hurl A crowd o f young people went to and there will not lie any aerious dta- Walker Saturday night to a bonfire ligurement. party and had a jolly time. The S. I’ , ia hauling and unloading a The Ladies Needleeraft G. T. X. lot o f Ane granite along the Yonralla spent a very pleasant afternoon with section. Mrs. Harry Neat last Wednesday. The Saginaw church visited the Walker church services Sunday *eve- l ning. G. A. Harenden spent Sunday in i Eugene. G. C. Birtchet returned Saturday from Albany, where he had been at tending Chautauqua. Now We Know W here! and We Hope You We’ re At Do Also I X x t ? The Thursday evening prayer meet ing at the Methodist Church is balked forwsrd to all the week. Attendance larger than ever before for mid sum mer. Each attendant at the next a«*t- vice is e x a c te d to bring a warning from God’s book. Young and old will meet for prayer and praise. LESS THAN THREE WEEKS FUR TAKES CHARGE OF BAKERY AND LEAVES NO DOUGH PREPARATION OF EXHIBITS | " W e w ill have our electric trains running Into Eugene by September 1, ea sy ," declared Carl Gray, J r „ o f the Oregon Electric, who waa in Eugene a few days ago to meet with the Council to settle the matter o f excluding from 1 the Are limits the ground where work has been commenced on the company's freigh t depot. Mr. Gray said that the work o f laying rails on the Albany-Ku- gene extension will begin in a very few weeka, but that a crew to lay tracks inside the city limits will be at Eugene in a few days so that there may be no delay in the work o f pav ing the streets over which the com pany’s tracks a r? to extend. The effete East ia looking for a pro ductive ccuntry. Send your friends out there copies o f The Sentinel and , let them know how things grow in this salubrious clime. Canning Many Berries. (t5ontinu«<d from lire! page.) needed that tile warrant for embezzle me lit waa served on him. An aectiunl o f hia escape from the officer has al ready been published, Just at tills lime the following item apiiesriHl in a Knseburg pn|«T : "L o c a l officers are on the lookout for a tour-horse team which startr«! for this city from Lane county s few days ago anil which is re|airle«l to in rlu«!«i a stolen horse named ‘ Two Hits,' which «nice ran in races at the fair grounds east o f Koaehurg. W. C. Bingham, the driver o f the outfit, was arrested at Drain two days ago a f ter the theft, but gave his captor the ruse. He askt*«l the officer for |M-rmis- sion to go in to a hotel to get an oerr coal. His r«n|Urat being grantml be slip|ied out of s rear d«*>r o f Uie hos telry unobserved, regained his team ami drove away. The stolen homes lie long to Edward Spaight, a former husineas man o f Hutherltn, ami Agured In a replevin ease in ju stice Court sev eral months ugo " It has since l>een lcsrn«-«l that this team has been fouml aud Bingham was not the driver. Why llingham waa so slow to get out of the country after his ditferent esca padea is somewhat hard to understand, but he was an ex|*ert in Impressing people with a sincere desire to make g«jod for hia |M>culali«ma and hia seem ing lack o f desire to get out of the country allayatl suspicion. It ia also probable, in the ligh t o f Billowing evet^s, that he ligurtnl it pretty easy to get away from an officer after cap ture and there waa no need uf lieing in a hurry. In addition, he had a w ife ami two children with him, which made it inconvenient to leave suddenly. The family is now with Mrs. Bing ham's parents near Woodburn. Bingham is thorougnly familiar with every road in the state, which probab ly accounts for the fart that mi trace haa lieen gotten o f him » I nee he made his getaway and look to the lulls ami brush. __ Manager J. O. Holt, o f the Eugene Fruit Growers' Association, saya the pack o f all kinds o f berries ia three times as great as ever before, espe Arrested for Killing Venison. cially o f loganberries. There ia a On complaint of a party living In hia great falling otf thia year on cherries, neighborhood, Joseph Stevens o f the but the Agures on berries beat all Noti valley, was arrest«1«! by Deputy records. _ Sheriff* Tom Bailey ami Bud Kompp thia week ami taken to Eugene on the Thermometer in the Air. The thermometer has l>ecn acting charge o f having a deer in his | km » cs - a little light in the upper story the aion, in violation o f the game law. Mr. past week ami has been considerably Stevens ap|>care<l la-fore Justice Bry up in the air, hovering around the 90 son, where he pleaded not guilty. Hia mark for a couple o f days. Consider trial was a«'t for August 7, and he was ing the terrible heat conditions in the allowed to go home on his own rreng East, 90 seemed quite comfortable. r.ixanee. The atmosphere has moderated consid erably today. For Fxchange. Hardware and furniture stock of about 918,000 in the beat fruit belt o f Idaho, to trade for Lane county land. Address P. O. Box 323, Cottage Grove Ore. Gooseberry Raising Is Industry. Profitable L. D. Gibson, one o f the well-known farmers o f Polk county, living on the Oak Grove road, Ave miles west o f Sa lem, han an acre ami a half o f goose berries and has just receive«! from the Salem cannery a check for 91517.00 for hia crop, being two cents per pound for 30,856 pounds. Besides the goose berries aold to the cannery the family and the pickera and othera used at least 200 pounds. Mr. Gibson thinks he netted about 9500 for his crop o f an acre and a half o f gooseberries. The "O regon Cham pion" la the variety, and the bushes are aix years old. The land where they are planted ia red land; about the same aa thousanda o f acrea in Polk and Marion counties. Mr. Gishon plowed the land between the rows last fall. He ran the cultivator over the land three times thia spring ami the clod- masher once. That ia the extent of the cultivation the past year. Mr. Gibson haa put out two acrea ami a half more o f gooseberries and haa con- trade«! the product to the cannery. Big Harvest Festival for Creawell. In connection with the induatiral and agricultural contest and school fair to be held at Creawell this fall, there will be a harvest festival and picnic. They will take place about September 1, the date to be anrmunccd later. A ll |>eo- ple o f Creawell ami vicinity End sur rounding towns are invited. This pro ject w ill have the support o f all busi ness men o f Creawell, aa well as o f the farmers o f the surrounding country. In connection with the picnic dinner there will lie addresses by prominent men o f the state on subjects o f value ami interest. There w ill tie speakers from the (College o f Agriculture. Unl- veraity o f Oregon ami the State De partment o f Public Instruction. A GOOD PIANO FOR $150.00 Ten Dollars Down and Five Dollars a Month Gets It at EILERS MUSIC HOUSE Thia ia Only One of the Many Bar gains We Are Offering for the Next Week or Two. Better Get Busy or You Will Be too Late. Selling pianos. Iota o f them at great ly reduced pricea. Piarna o f higheat quality at prices that are not high, ia the slogan o f Eilera Muaie House. Right now here in Cottago Grove you have a real demonstration o f thia low priced plan o f selling. Some have already taken advantage and are se curing instruments at a great saving In price. We have juat an even dozen on hand at thia w riting which we In tend to sell within the next two weeks, or by August 1st, In order to do thia in the dull season we know that ex tra ordinary inducements must be olfereil In the way o f pricea and terms. W e buy thousands o f pianos to supply our forty stores located in the weatern cities where we operate, hence we are able to sell dependable pianos ranging from 9150 up on easy payments. Why not aecure your piano now, for at least 9100 umler the prices usually asked by small dealers ami agents. Investigate thia home piano prop«>ai- tion. We w ill not be here long, for at the cut prices we are making, it would not pay to operate a atom ami plug along in the ordinary way an«i only sell an occasional instrument. We will keep the storo open evenings i f you can’ t come in during the day. Come after supper. EILERS MUSIC HOUSE K. P. Building. Main St. Viaiting cards The Sentinel.