The summer sun It has no fear, For those who keep Nyal Face Cream near It soothes the shin, And keeps it white &(sats' Face Cream Is a true delight 25c and 50c jars You'll like II bclltr IJCc for a hair cut at Blah- j op b Bhop. I , ..,. i fr lJillirr "rC vlstlng In Grants Pass. Art Sneed left Friday for Blue i Itlver for a vacation trip. Born Sunday, August IB, 11J1B, to Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Van Vllet of Crow, a son ; , , , , ' " 11 ev to various points north. .iiuib r.xtr Ctinnnnril la In PnllrTii-nln Mrs. R. L. Kirk and son Char les, who have been confined to their, beds, are able to be up. l'nv MiiMl'MIi. who in mnnlnv- ed by tho S. P. at Oregon Clty. - !...! 1...,, MM. ..,, .. r .. I JIM I veil iuhl i ii ii i miuy iui a vian with his parents hero. Mrs. Harry Hill of Seattle, was hero Thursday afternoon look ing after property Interests. She left the same evening for home. no Good reliable fire Insurance. No aoHcssments: no membership! fee. Pay onco and you are done. H. E. Walker at tho City Hall. tor Attention, Fanners. The Springfield Flour mill has twine and sacks. Bring In your wheat. Wo will store free of charge. Mr. and Mrs. George Lamar came, down from Wendling on SiTliirtlhv ovuiilnif to Hiiend Sun day with friends here and In Eugene. J. C. Winters of Montesona, Washington, Frank Wilder, Rube Mace and Jack Durdle of Portland composed an automo bile party that stopped at the Elite hotel Friday night. Miss Fern Thrlllkill of Chari ton, Iowa, visited Friday and Saturdav with Mrs. A. HIl'Iow and fanilly. She has been away from homo slnco June, visiting , the Exnosltion at San Francisco and other points of Interest. Miss Thrlllkill Is now visiting friends In Marcola. The Smiles of the Satisfied Are the Smiles that Count Every dy, in thousands and thousands of homes thcrc.ll be happy smiles over the New Post Toasties They're different from the ordinary corn flakes! both in flavour and form. Post Toasties don't mush down in cream as ordinary flakes do they have a body and form that keeps them crisp and firm. And the flavour! The hearts of selected white corn are skillfully cooked, daintily seasoned, rolled and toasted by 'new process that brings out all the delightful zest of the true corn flavour. New Post Toasties t the Superior Corn Flakes. Fine with cream, milk oi fruit. Try Them and Smile Hall for choapor boIoh and ' licolB. ,' i Tho llttlo son of Mr. and Mrs. V. A. Worloy In quite sick to day. Korn Sldwcll and EmcBt Skin ner spent Sunday with friends in Marcola. A phono Ib being ltiHtallud to day lit .lames Laxton'B wood of ficii at tho Uoofh-Kclly mill. 1'lanJcH have been delivered for tho rcplanklng of the went 'approach of tho wagon bridge. i JohiiBon'o TJohI Flour $1.4 B nor Hack or $B.flO per bbl. at tho Feed Store. Can You Heat It? Fred ThonuiH and William 1111 ler went to Salem and Indepen dence ycBterday on their motor cycles. , . I Carl Krocgcr of Goshen wnsi In Springfield laHt night waiting (for repairs to bo made to IiIh motorcycle. imIbb Thelma Crouch Is con- fined to her bed with a boll on foot. It had to be lanced ,,,, mnrnlnt. this morning. Mr. and Mrs. T. J. McCracken ! jnnd Miss Lcota. left Friday for Newport to spend two or tlirco weeks at the beach. Mrs. W. 0. W. Sheppard and!80n Gaylord of Eugene, spent children are visiting at the home 'Sunday with Mrs. Jessie New !of her daughter, Mrs. E. P. Bean engaged In the bee industry. w a Mrs. J. B. Hansard left for her now homo in Lebanon Friday , morning after spending three , wcoks with her mother, Mrs. B. E. Darling, who has been 111. WW Mrs. D. Crouch and daughter ' 'V"linT n.. in .here to Thelma returned Friday from a! Hb.ert IJurns ,0(lge hcre l two wcekB trin to points lnin,111, . Washington, Pendleton and Portland. She spent buyers' week in the Rose City buying. goods. ... , , ,? 1 tn,l0,r' 1108 11,11,1 l" "K",u H-b " ortng nusiness pn opnngueiu. M(I has moved his outfit from J'JllKUItU IVill J Vtl I C. 13. Whoaton's barber shop fori u i,i, nnn Ttrmk ft11 itcir vnnt r T samples In the front. I ped now to do any kind of Feed Grinding, Rolling and Cleaning, www i or nnvini: cumuiuivu mu numu- i , r,avr HY.."1.?. R. "Tr had gone Friday bv automobile ' of BnTcd. hit some looserCTavel is uie r ecu store, uur sioeit is mm.. .with Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Clark, i ,nd was overturned, large .and complete and .our building has six rooms ai d, a . .na was uienunieu. nrlPOM Jim lOWOr . WO nre enilll)- IIIH UilHUUlUHl, Uim wuv iiiiuio. Air mwl Mrs T? W Wnllirnnlr We can nialte your cmciten ieeu a spring on uiu iu uuuvu i,virrie Holbrook of BellinRham and cow feed to order. A trial house. ! Washington, arrived today for will prove our work superior. T a visit at. the home of J. C. Hol- . - I M. M. Perry, 'Jesse Senyey, , hroof of walker & Holbrook. Arthur llatn lost a flnjrer nail Wolby Stevens and Dr. . ReliUnn Mrs. Folsom and the Misses Hol nnd was consldorably bruised left Friday for the Middle Creek brook are nieCes of J. C. Hol up Friday evening when his mo- country in Southern Oregon ior,1)rook torcyrle and a buggv collided on a deer hunt. Harold Pcery rc-j . . East Main street. He had just ceived a card this morning from . Mr an(1 Mrs neoree Catch nasHed an automobile with very his father, stating that they se-;inrr ami Mr an(1 Mrs clark hricht liuths. and bciore he could get tho glare out of his eyes, strueK ine ouggy. uemoi- ilsbimr a front, wheel. Mr. Ham was thrown some distance, and the rorks or ins motorcycle wore bent. 2Cc at BIs- jhop'H Darbor Shop. Mrs. Frank Coglll and aon left InBt wcok for an extended visit with rolatlvcB In Michigan. Largo number of heal sports are now In tho mom 'alna door hunting, tho buboii having open ed yesterday. , B Dan Core, Chief of Police J. B. Stanlirer, and Tom Carney, ro turned Thursday evening from an automobile trip to ItOBoburg. WW When in Eugene don't fall to hco tho Moving Picture 13aby contest at tho Oregon. Several Springfield bableB are hown In it. W. P. RodenbauKh left at 4 o'clock Thursday morning fori . . . . . 1 4 a trln by blcvclo to Newport. At 9 o'clock that day he had reach ed Corvallls. Mrs. Ennls Walte of Salem Is vlsllng her sister, airs. John Renne of Waltervllle. She was tho guest Sunday of Dr. and Mrs. R. P. Mortensen. Twenty empty cars were brought In this morning from the main line to bo loaucu in Springfield and at points on the wummui, uuu uumms Hair cut only Mr. and Mrs. I. Pelchlor andjBruce Lansberry. Paul Scott, man. Mrs. Newman and the Pclchlora, are former residents ol Aitkin, Minnesota. J. S. Johnson of the Robert nP1,P of Portland while on hl8 wav honlc from Roseburg where he has large orchard in terests, stopped off at Spring field today and will attenu tne Lvn A. Brown, editor of the Brownsville Times and son of F. - state game warden, and Miss Ttr. n urmnlnr businesswoman of Brownsville, :,., .nnrrlofl nt that iilnce on ..,, n rtv r. r l'lZ I?"' , , IL M. Emerson came down f rom I Wand t his morning a - . ... . , ... ' i toaay iroill naiem. WlllUier Site , Thi enr rnnnimr nr n hi fli rat A if as modern as in any n y n-;nf idence. Water is snoplled from cured a line oucit cany yesier- day morning. The party had to ciumge uieu- miwmw i "yesterdav three other lnmting parties were already there. Mr. Pecry states ' uiai uiu wuuua uiu tun Ul . hunters. ! Social A very pleaBant farewell sur prise party was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. D. Moe on ?:orti Mill street, Saturday evening In honor of F. W. Hollls who leaves for San Diego, Cali fornia, today. Members of the Epworth League and Sunday school and close friends of Mr. HolT met at the Moe home where he has been residing for the past bIx months, and there 'luncheon with them. Among indulged In many enjoyable j those present were Mr. and Mrs. games on the lawn, and later M. L. France, J. II. Bower, J. P. participated In light refresh-j Vaughn, Mr. McBee, P. A. ments Including watermelon and: Woolley, Mrs. Lambert and the cantaloupe. Mr. IJollIs during Misses Lambert. h! short Htnv In Snrincflekl 'made for himself a great many" friends and the news of his ex-! J.I -V 1 i 111. ncctcd departure was met with , by roKret on the part of those ; with whom he had become in - - tmiaieiy acquamtcu. Mr. i-ioins E very pleasant evening In social was an active member of the (conversation. Among those League, faithful to the work of i present, aside from the immed thc choir and manifested a great ;jate family, were Mr. and Mrs. Interest in tho young people here : John Lamberty and Mrs. Vin Those in attendance were: Mrs. J. T. Moore, Edna Swarts. Kate Lansberry, Lucile Copenhaver, Mabel Duryee, Lacy Copen haver, Ruth Scott, Helen Bark- man, Olive Smith, Francis Bart- lett, Myrtle Copenhaver, Flor-t once Coffin. Rev. J. T. Moore, Herbert Hansen, Ed Olson, -Win ifred May, Randall Scott. Her bert Moore and Bryon Smith. Tho Gleaners will meet with Mrs. Wayne Calkins on Thurs- day afternoon at her home on G street between 7th and 8th streets. .. . P. w. Green was pleasantly .Friday afternoon. Those who .brother in Michigan, reminded of his 74th birthday enjoyed the jolly afternoon were! 8011 and climate of Oregon are annlveraary Sunday by a visit ' Ellen Lambert, Ewdina Parsons, well adapted to mint, wherever the from C. IT. Green, wife apd .perne Travis, Vivian Senseney, native mint grows the domesticated daughter of Eugene. ; Dorothy Holbrook. Emma Tra- m,nt win &ro'w'' and Vlbtte the naiire ;vis, Eva Manwarring, Marjorie mint will produce some' oil the domcstt- The King's Heralds society of Gibson. Emo Gibson. Vernita cated mint will produce from three to the Methodist Church held a Morrison. Intra Soleim. Marceda ur tlmes as much. jollv picnic on the banks of the WHIninnttf in tlin TrtinnvilJn neighborhood Saturday after- noon. A basket sunner was RPrvwl. Tho npvf moptinn- win " " Hall for cheaper soles and heels. " " Miss Estella Martin returned Albany and Mr. and Mrs. Carl p0isom hisses Mildred and wiinnion drovn to Alhnnv. Por- vallis nml other valley pojnts Near Monroe they lwitnGssefl n nntomobilfi acci FUTURE OF THE MINT By J. W Nlhoty-flvo per cent of all tho pep permint used in the world is produced in four counties in Indiana and Michi gan. A. M, Todd of Kalamazoo, Mich- i Ignn, n brother of O. H. Todd of Eu gene has 4000 acres of mint under cultivation, is a millionaire many times over, and has mado his fortune out of tho mint industry. Mr. Todd was a visitor in Eugene a couple of weeks ago and said: "There is no discount on your mint or on its quality; all you need is irrigation." Two miles north of Springfield on tho Dugald Campbell farm is to bo found a nine-acre field of peppermint. O. H. Todd ami Mr. Campbell are try ing it out and nro now cutting the mtnt nrenaratory to distilling. The peppermint stalks nro cut with a . , ...in. i i mower, raked with a nay rao anu allowed to cure until nearly dry, or until the leaves will hang on tho stalk. Tho distilling Is a very simple opera tion. Two stono tanks, each seven feet high and five feet In diameter, somo tin water pipe and a galvanized Iron boiler nro tho equipments, Tho cost of a still to handle 60 acres of mint is betwoon $300 and $400, Tho mint Is loaded on a rack, the same ns hay and Is hauled to the still j and pitched Into ono of tho tanks and packed down tight, after which the wooden covor Is put on and fastened. . The stoam is then turned in and kept on until all mint smoll Is gone, which takes from 15 minutes to half an hour. Whon steaming tho steam Js carried from tho tank through a five-inch tin pipe over which cold water runs con- stantly. Frpm this pipe" is goes thru , several other pipes each smaller than : ' , tho proceeding ono. This conaensoaj Motes be held next Saturday at the home of Miss Lacey Copenlmv er. . A number of members of the Woodmen of the World and the Royal Neighbors went to the P. R. Russell home last Monday eveninc to celebrate the thirty- eighth birthday anniversary of Mr. Russell. The guests brought 'a number of relatives and friends called at the Ed. Tib- .... . - bettts home Friday evening to heln him celebrate his fif tv-thlrd birthday anniversary, spending! Williams. The Epworth League has completed plans for an Ice cream social to be held in the city park Saturday evening. Ice cream, cake and candy will be Uold afternoon and evening, and !at 7:30 a program will be given, including chorus, dialogue and solo numbers. After the pro gram the League will hold its monthly social.. . f MIkr Ttnhv Spnsflnfiv. assisted j by Miss Marjorie Knott and Miss , Beatrice Holbrook, entertained the Juniors of the Christian I church at the Senseney home Soleim. Ruth Sales. Marv E. WhJtnnv norIn Rnloim WilHnn Knott. Txirne M.inwarr?nr. W5"'- fred Al en. Arlene Alien, and vi. Rnnconpv . 11 dent in vhich a car a Ford .turned completely over, wreck- linir itself, and onlv slitrhtlv in - Murine one of the five oecunants. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lenhart aro enthusiastic over the mint pros were summoned to Monmouth pect, but both agree that the great Sunday when Mrs. Lenhart's drawback is the lack of irrigation, father, D. E. Stitt. editor of the They say the yield could easily be Monmouth Herald, suffered a doubled with irrigation. Mr. Campbell Ptroke of paralysis. Mrs. Len- made the statement that on the nine hart left at once by train and acres, if he had irrigation, he could Mr. Lenhart waited until his sis- make a good living for himself and ter-in-law, Mrs. Blanche Stitt. family. who had left Monmouth that I The oil is now worth $1.25 a pound morning for Sprincfield, by auto, 1 -which is extremely low on account of could arrive. Oliver Johnson 'the European war. The average price left at 3 O'clock with Mrs. Stitt for the past ten years has been $3,75 and Mr. Lenhart, and returned a pound. The cost, taking a ten-year at midnight, having covered 130 miles. INDUSTRY IN OREGON PIXLEY the steam and It comes out a liquid composed of oil and water. The oil comes to the top and is skimmed off. This is all there is to it. Mr. Camp bell says the process is so simple that any child could operate tho still. The second tank is filled while the first Is being steamed. The best peppermint oil In the world comes from a small section in Eng land near Mlchem. The quality of the Oregon oil compared with the Michem oil may be seen by the analysis which shows the Michem oil to contain 55 per cent of menthol, tho Oregon oil 62 ter cent and the Michigan oil 35 to 37 per cent. The Michem oil sells for double the price of the American oil in tho mar kets of tho world and it is the hopo of I t'ne Oregon raisers soon to receive a ... better price for their oil Mr. Todd Is Interested with Mr. Campbell and is also interested at Leb anon, West Stayton, Albany, and 25 miles down tho Columbia from Port lond In nil CO acres. Mr, Todd Bays the crop on the Camp boll farm ho estimates at 35 pounds There Is more Catarrh In this (section pf the country than nil other diseases put toeother, and until tho lust few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a grout many years dpctors pronounced It a local disease and pi escribed local reme dies, and by constantly falling to cure with local treatment, pronounced It Incur able. Science lias proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore re quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured, by K. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, Is the only Constitutional cure on the market. It Is taken luternally..It acts directly on the blood and muqous surfaces of tho system. They ortcr ono hundred dollars for any case It falls to cure. -Send tor clroulars ttnJ?aSgl'?-,gf'S,IBNnT a co., Toledo, o; boh y dmihs. igc TaUe Hall's Family rills for constipation. Hop Tickets Printed at the News Office of oil to the acre. Mr. Todd sayajhe is cutting the mint before it blossoms when it should be cut after it blossoms, but he says if he had Irrigation ho could double his yield and get a second crop, while without irrigation he jvill get only one crop. As it is now he has. to cut early tosave what he has. All' the oil produced by Mr. Todd on .the coast is sold to one man. That matt in the past two years has purchased: '$60,000 worth of oil from Mr. Todd's. Tne greatest expense in mint rais- Iuk IS in ine nrst year. Alter inai ail there Js to d0 18 t0 cut and dlsUI- o-ampnen says mere is no more ivorK nor expense 111 uihiuuub uau there is in baling hay. ' I Oregon mint will stand indefinitely Mr- Told 25 years 'at least, in : Michigan the average life is three years on account of the mint freezing out. Anoiner peauiy auoui ue crop Uiat so far neither here nor in Mich igan or England has there been dis covered a pest that works on the crop. Both Mr. Campbell and Mr. Todd , period, is not to exceed 60 cents a pound, so a splendid profit Is seen even at $1.25 a pound, the presentVul- Ing price. j After oil Is distilled it is put either ,ln cans or bottles and does not deter iorate, but on tho other hand gets bet ter the longer It is so kept, so if the price Is not satisfactory, it can be held indefinitely, Oregon Granre, Side-tin. " Butter Wrappers-Call Spring- Mrs. Lucina Richardson un derwent an operation on her throat this mornning. She was reported as petting along nicely. NOTICE TO'CREDITORS Notice Js hereby given that the un dersigned has been appointed admin istratrix of the estate Of Stahislau IC Noel deceased. All persons having: claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, duly ver ified and with the proper voucners, to the administratrix at the oHlce of" Woodcock, Smith & Bryson. 210 Batv nard Building, Eugene, Oregon, within, six months from tho date of the first, publication of this notice. Date of the first publication of this, notice August 5, 1916. ' ' BERENICE NOEL, Administratrix of the estate of Stan-. Jslau K. Noel, deceased. ' .i NOTICE ? Notice Js hereby given that the County Surveyor of Lane ' County, Oregon has filod in the' Offico of the County Clerk for said County, his "Certificate of domplotlon''of.!.w'jrk on County Road No. f(5C; in jfe'edrdanca with Contract with Itoylanco,a"ud:.,Mes slnge'r, who have completed, said, work and any person, firm, or corporation having objections fo file, to tho 'com pletion of said work aro hereby, noti fied to do 60 wltljln tvyo weeltB tfrom tho date of, this Jjfotlce, in the oiltca of, the Coupty Clork. ' . .. H Dated Aug. 7, 191B, ' ATjTc&W, JIUSSELL. 155-7-9 ; County' Qlorlc