The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, January 20, 1922, Image 6

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    Clearance Sale of
Clearance Sale of
Gingham Dresess
W in ter Coats
ALL
One lot of misses’ dresses, $2.25 to $2 7f>
WOOL VKLOl R COATS NOW
ON
SALK AT
values, sizes 12 to 17 years, choice....
$1.39
Half Price
Choice of women’s short sleeve aprons, reg­
ular $1.25 to $1.75 values, now each .
95c
One lot of women’s lout: sleeve aprons, rejr-
One lot of silk plush coats, regular value
ular values from $2.25 up, choice
$20 to $42.50, now
$1.29
HERE ARE WORTH W H IL E SA VIN G S IN OUR GROCERY
DEPARTM ENT
No. 2U_. onn Royal Club fancy peaches, 3 cans for
95c
No. 2 's can fancy pineapple, 3 cans for........
95e
Die cakes assorted toilet soap, 4 for................
27c
Seedless Sultana raisins, lb..............................
21c
15c cans tomato soup, 3 for........................
35c
•'! lb., 7 oz. package Holden Rod rolled oats.
39c
l-ll> jrlass jar Monopolc brand coffee...............
39c
No. 2 can Royal Club sweet corn, ,’t cans for...
65r
No. 2 can standard pack pea«, 3 cans for........
39c
\\ lute Wonder laundry soap, 8 bars for.........
35c
$21.50
CONDENSED SA LE RARGAINS
89«:
72xK(l size cotton sheets, eaeh
Regular $4.50 value bedspreads, now
$3.37
Regular $2.25 value bedspreads, now
$1.69
14c
36-inch bleaebed muslin, a yard
40-ineh
One lot
One lot
One lot
$1.69
till wool poplin dress goods, $2.25 value, now yd
t/j
PRICE
remnants of silk, wool, cotton minds
$2 69
$3.5(1 lo $4.50 value petticoats
98 o
$1.75, $1.85 petticoats, choice
Save M oney on Cold W eather Merchandise N o w
W AR M BLANKETS FOR C H ILLY NIGHTS AT SPECIAL
LO W S A L L PRICES
11-
4 jrray or
special each now
12-
4 irrav or
value, special i ach
• 2\'U heavy white
11-4 heavy weight
sp< cial • ach now
Men’s
Men’s
tan cotton blankets, medium weight, $2.25 value,
Mens
.. .
SI.69
Men’s
Men’
tan cotton blankets, heavy weight, regular $2.65
Men’s
Men’s
now
..........................................
$1.95
speeial
rotten blankets, each now ........
$2.25
Men’s
entton napped blankets, regular $2.75 value,
. . .
......................................... $2.95
M EN S W A R M
wool shirts, till reduced in price.
% Off Reg. Price
leather vests, reduced in price
25 *,
9
$7.50 wool mackinaws now ....
$8.50 wool mackinaws now.......
$ 6.38
$7.50
$10.00 wool mackinaws now
$15.00 wool mackinaws now....................
$11.25
heavy weight kltaki work shirts, regular $1.75 grade,
eaeh now.................................................................. $1.19
heavy weight fleeced cotton work gloves
o prs. 50c
'aa
All genuine Nashua wnolnap blankets, pretty plaid patterns,
-i" ■ •..i ■ ach now
..........
$3.69
tint lot "IH I and vs .50 wool blankets, speeial eaeh now
$6.25
THE
Q U A L IT Y S T O R E - c o o p s e r v a i
II* uniat 'll.on fine wool blankets, special eacli now......... $8.25
OREGON NEWS NOTES
OF GENERAUNTEPiEST
W A R M U N D E R W EA R
CLOTHING FOR COLD D AYS
uuring me year 1921 tne city record­
nouse in 1921 than In me precenius
er of Pendleton Issued building per­ IliU t i l l i u u u m r u ,__ __- «ax. m u o o « m i « i y
12 months and the Increase in tonnage
mits of n total valuation of $406,000. point eight additional traffic officers,
was 2.212,174 tons net.
under
a
new
law
enacted
at
the
recent
In 1920 the value of new buildings
Charges of bribery, dlrecteil at E. F.
special session of the legislature. This
erected was $118,000.
B Ridgeway, state prohibition agent,
will
give
the
department
15
field
men.
More than 1000 members of the
Principal Events of the Week Christian Endeavor society are expect­ It has been announced that the lute whitewashing of the oficer by the
grand Jury and charges of conduct
ed to attend t$ie state convention Colonel H. H. Sargent, wlilely known
Briefly Sketched for Infor­
unbecoming an official, on the part of
army
officer
and
prominent
Medford
of the organization, which will be
W. I. Keator, district attorney of
and
Jacksonville
citizen,
In
tils
will
held
in
Salem,
February
16
to
19
mation of Our Readers.
Umatilla county, will he subjects of
bequeathed
167
volumes
of
essays,
let­
Heart disease, developing from a
a special grand Jury investigation to
moderate cold of two weeks’ duration, ters. books o f biography, travel and
Holler inspertors of Oregon will hold caused the sudden and uncxp«‘cted high-class fiction to the public library be launein'd nt Pendleton with A. J
Llljeqviat. assistant attorney-general,
a conference in Portland Saturday, death at Portland of Miss Frances Hol­ of Me«Iford.
acting In the capacity of legal adviser
January 28.
There
wore
two
fatalities
In
Oregon
man, 79, pioneer resident of Oregon.
to the inquisitorial body.
A total of 7201 lineal feet of cement
A complete Investigation of charges due to industrial accidents during the
Increase of more than 200 per cont
sidewalk was laid in Cottage Grove and counter-charges concerning the week ending January 12, according to
the
last year In the total nmonnt of
during 1921
management of th<- Oregon institution a report prepared by the stale Indus­
Fire losses in Oregon, exclusive of for the blind will be made by a com­ trial accident commission. The vic­ United States treasury checks brought
Portland, during the month of Decern mittee of prominent Portland people tims were William Peters, planerman. Into Oregon for ilrill pay among units
Portland, and Edward Erickson, dock of the Oregon national guard Is
ber. aggregated $128.000.
appointed by «»overnor Olcott.
shown in nn annual financial state­
employe,
Astoria.
Senator Stanfield has Introduced a
Receipts of the Albany postoffice for
As a result of the opinion of the ment completed hy George A. White,
the last month were 11 per cent greater bill appropriating $10,000 for improv­
ing the entrance to Oregon caves in Oregon supreme court upholding the | adjutant-general, for the information
than during December, 1920.
of the Oregon general staff. Govern­
Fines collected In the nine Justice Josephine county and providing proper constitutionality of the state dog tux I
ment money put Into circulation In the
law.
canine
owners
in
counties
not
ex-
[
lighting
facilities
to
mal«'
this
scenic
courts in Clackamas county during
erupted under the act will he com- | state during 1921 amounted to $199.-
spot more Inviting to tourists.
1921 nearly trebled those for 1920.
On January 16 the Union county polled to pay their licenses within 311 052,56, us compared with $81,471.15
Announcement was made by the war
in 1920.
finance corimratlon of a loan of $1.15.- court will open bids for $400,000 road days under the penalty of having the
Rale of $450,00«» bonds hy th«' Talent
000 for agricultural and livestock pur­ bonds. The bonds represent the maxi­ animals destroyed.
Irrigation
district to a l,os Angeles
mum amount of road bonds Issuable
poses in Oregon.
A decision to purchase a farm of
bank has been approved hy the state
Records at the Gaston postoffice annually by the county court under 245 acres to Is' used as a Women’s !
Irrigation securities commission. One
show an increase of 25 per cent In the road bond election held last year Christian Temperance Union home for
Teachers In the Salem schools, un­ dependent children was reached at a unit of the Tulent district has been
the Christmas mail handled In 1921
der a decision announced by the board meeting of the child farm board of previously completed, nnd the lands
over that of 1920.
of the district nre said to be in a high
The
Four hacksaws were found hidden in of illreetors. will Is- allow'd eight-day the organization In Corvallis.
state of cultivation. The district plans
the Dane county Jail recently by absences on pay when the absence is tract is thns' miles east of Corvallis
now to develop th«1 rest of the lands
Sheriff Stickels nnd his deputies, who caus'd by Illness, or attendance at oil the highway leading to Albany.
with the proceeds o f the sale Just
funerals In event of death of an im
were overhauling the place.
Irrigation of 3105 acres of land, con­
made. Contract for the work, which
mediate
relative.
Sin-rlff W. J. Wilson of Clackamas
struction of 00 miles of canal lines
The special election set for January and the development of 715(i horse­ will include the construction of a (lam,
county was cleared of the Indictment
has not yet been made.
of larceny by bailee, returned against 11 by the Klamath county court to vote power are contemplated In «1 permits
Improper handling of trains No. 12
him by the grand jury on December on a road bond issue of $800,000 has to appropriate water and eight per­
been call'd o ff tccause Clark. Kendall mits to store water issued by Percy and No. 17 of the Oregon-Washington
22 .
Railroad
ft
Navigation
company,
Interest displayed by ex-service men A Co., Portland bond house, discovered Cupper, state engineer, during th»:
which collided head-on recently nt a
at a meeting of the American Region a legal error in the petition which months of October, November and
point about one-half mile east of
w ir e d the organization of a company rendered It Invalid.
December.
Ceillo, was charged by the Oregon pub­
A total of $51,155.51 has been ex­
of infantry of national guards at Hood
Citizen Indians will meet at Beatty
pended for land, buildings, equipment, January 20 ami at. Chlloquln January lic service commission in an order
River.
covering the commission’s Investiga­
It-cause heavily loaded trucks are operation and administrative costs by 23 to determine whether a request j
tion o f the wreck.
Records In the
the
Oregon
land
settlement
commis­
cutting up certain county roads badly,
shall be made or a suit instituted In |
offices of the public service commis­
the Lane county court has issued an sion since Its creation through an act the United States court of claims for
sion show that seven persons were In-
order limiting the weight of loads they of the 1919 legislature, according to a partition of the Klamath Indian res­
a report flle«| with Governor Olcott ervation, or for an apportionment of Juretl fatally In the collision Twenty
carry.
Representative Hawley and J. II. the shares of the Individual Indians I others suffered Injuries which neces­
Organization of l.inn county’s first
sitated their removal to hospitals. In
drainage district will be completed Nalper of Keefisport, counsel for the who have become citizens of the Unit- )
all, more than 70 persons were in­
soon. This project is to drain a sec­ port of Ump«|ua, appeared before the ed States.
jured us a result of the crash.
house
riven«
and
harbors
committee
tion of land a short distance east of
The Willamette Valley Flax ft Hemp
In Washington. D. C., and ask'd the company, which was organized at Sa­
Albany.
‘•Polite" Motor Horn.
A move Is on foot to establish the I committee to approve the project for lem recently under the direction of
The magazine .Motor announces the
biggest brickyard In the state, one I the north Jetty at the mouth of the Robert Crawford, ex-superintendent of iirrlvnl of the courteous motor horn.
mile west of Jacksonville, which will \ Umpqua river as recommemled by the the stat*' penitentiary flax plant, has
Up to now tlie motor horn lius Iteen
provide employment for a large num­ hoard of army engineers. The engi­ signed up approximately 150 acres of decidedly cacophonous. It sipuiwks un­
neers' estimate of the cost was $267,- flax lands In the Rickreall vicinity.
pleasantly; it liellnwH alarmingly; it
ber of men
utters noises dlsiigrvahly suggestive of
Portland's postal receipts were $t0,- 000.
The association now has more than
The BanMam Reclamation company 1000 acres pledged for planting (lur­ mi it s'-a
200 larger in December, 1921, than In
But th«- new horn, which Is appear-
December of the preceding year Port­ has filed an application with the state ing the year 1922 .
ing on tiic innrk«'t, has a lone that Is nt
land was the 29th city in December engineer for the appropriation of 1500 J The rapidity with which the ship­
once polite and powerful. It warns, yet
acre-feet of water from the North Han ping of the Columbia river Is growing
postal receipts.
ilia's not olfeinl the sensitive ear. The
George C. Monger, 76, pioneer real tlam river for power purposes. It Is \ In volume Is Indicated by a report Just
ton«' adjusting mechanism is so con­
dent of Oregon, is «lead at The Dalles proposed to develop the power near i completed by Deputy Collector Karln- trived ami arrnng«'«l that the horn ia
after a short illness from pneumonia. Stayton, according to the application, j en of the Astoria customs-house. This easily regulated for aoy degree o f vo-
T. A. Raffety. chief Inspector for report shows that 361 more vessels clferousnesa, but It yet carries a mint
Monger was chief of The Dalles fir«
tug to the pedestrian.
the state motor vehicle department, I enteraft i»r
» f th e customs-
department in 18»t
_____
FOR MEN AN D W OM EN
For Women
$1.25,
$1.75,
$2.25
$2.00
$1.50 values fleeced cotton union suits
$1.95 values fleeced cotton union suits
values fleeced cotton union suits
in $2.75 values wool union suits ....................
Kite
$1.29
$1 49
$2.39
For Men
Cotton ribbed fleece shirts and drawers
Heavy flat fleece shirts and drawers
III suits .......
III stills .........
and drawers
and drawers
suits.............................
$5.50 value's wi
suits.............................
HORSE HAS PLACE OF HONOR
Body of Only Survivor of Custer
Massacre is Preserved in Mu­
seum of Kansas University.
Tlie place of honor in the natiinil
history museum of the University of
Kansas Is iielil hy Did Comanche, an
Imlian |Miny. In n glass «use In the
«•enter of the museum stands all that
Is mortal nr Immortal of a Imrse that
has a unique place in th,. Iiistorv of
tit«' country.
Old ('iiniiiiiehe never
won n nice, belonged to no certain
breed, was of no celebrated anc, s'r.v.
Old ( ‘immnche wits the «inly living
thing that survived the Custer mas­
sacre of the Little Big Horn light of
Juno 25, IS7I1. After tin* Imttl«'. after
the terrible massacre of Custer's troop
of soldiers, the relh'f expedition which
a trivial tlie morning following the
massacre, found a saddled and bridled
pony, wounded lint nitle to wnlk,
grazing an the latfralo grass near
tli«' scene. A tradition says that
the pony wandered across th«’ pruirh's
nnd found his wny Into n camp of
Unltisl States cavalry. But tla> war
record of Old Comanche states that
tie was found nt the scene of tlie mas
sacr«' eating grass anil keeping faith­
ful vigil over the bodies of til«' sol-
illi'rs mill tlie horses that lay plli'il
about him, tlie victims of iln> bloody
light that has liei'n Immortalized hy
Anierleiin historians.
Did Comanche never bail a rider
after the massacre. In the fight his
rider was Cnpt. Miles W. Keogh,
Tnsip 1, Seventh cavalry. After the
rei'overy of Old Comanche an order
wits Issued thut lie should never have
another rliler, hut that In every parade
or public npiicnriincc of th«' Seventh
iuvnlry. Old Cimmnche should In' led,
riderless, properly druped in moiirnlng,
and with the colors. This order wtut
carried out to old Comanche's death,
which occurred In 18112. In 1K8K he
wns brought from Fort Menile to Fort
Riley. At the death of Old Comnnehe
tlie late Dr. L. L. Dyche, for years at
th«1 h«n«l of th«' K. U. museum, wns
risk«*«! to mount the horse and pr«*-
s*Tve It for the regiment. But the
ri'glment find no money nml the War
department, unmoved hy sentiment
pertaining to n mere llen-hltten pony,
would not mnke the appropriation. The
agreement between the regiment and
fleeter Dyche was thnt the state uni­
versity should niei't the expenses of
•he mounting, nnd that, the War de­
partment falling to mnke the ap­
propriation, Old Comnnehe was to | k >-
com«' the property of the university
museum
The sndille nnd bridle w'hlch form
"Ohl Comanche's'’ trappings are those
thnt he wore when he was ridden Into
the Custer nmssnere hy Captain Keogh.
bOc-
Cile
one
$1.39
$1.69
$1.89
$3.39
$4.69
-n
planning nr«' the results of horn«
«'(Tort!
«¡cranium perfume Is so easy to
mnke. Take the leaves of your sweet
smelling geranium quantities of them
and |tuck them quit" closely into a
glass fruit Jar.
Then (ill It with
alcnhol and put It away to draw new
striuigtli for several wi'i'ks, after wlilcl
yotl will squeeze out the leaves, strait
tin' liquid nml put It In small bottler
tightly corked.
Volt can make various kinds of fine
turi'S In Oils way—tuberose. Jasmine
heliotrope.
With these, however, us«
the fresh I i I ossoiiin Instead of th«
leaves.
If the odor Isn't nnfllrlently strong
after the separation o f the blossom.'
nml liquid put more blossoms In and
let tlie mixture remain several day«
or a week longer Then squeeze tin
flowers out nnd strain again
Round-Headed People.
Itouud-lii'iiiled mid Europeans have
very different traits from the Brills!
and Scotch ancestors of so iiiiiity
Americans.
Their descendants an
long beaded as they were ami so ills
tlnigilslicil hy initiative, capacity to
govern anil colonizing ability. The
Doles, Germans and Russians who
come tier«' in eimutless numbers hrlnr
other traits which anthropologists sa.‘
must have certain effects. It may Im
prove and It may harm Americans.
Tlie roiiuil-lieiiiled peoples have i
great rapacity for patient labor, ha
nre lacking in Initiative. It is salil
the Immigration of these ..... pie to
Great 1 trltulii in the last 2011 years teg-
changed the cephalic Index of the o f*
«Unary Britisher 2 tier «'«;iit. The «*
Phalli' Index Is the ratio of the breadth
of the Skull to Its length Briton 1
thus nre said to be 2 per cent more
round headed than their forefather t
of 2(8» years back. New York I lentil’..
A rH p tin y to Clrcumstances.
He wiis a moat useftll man to hsv
nt n party, wns lliigh Denlcroft, fu
he always hall some little game il
bis sleeve when thè party Itegnn t
twlddle tlicir thuinhs In tla* aiisene
of iinything lietter to do.
“ Nmv, herp’s a alce game," la- sii «
gì'steil, at Gnldhng's party, when th
fitti showe«l some slgns of nhating. ",
glrls poi'ls un appiè, tnrning ottt on
long pocllug. o r nn ornngc wlll ilo.
“ I sis' !" miiriniircd thè giicstn, on
Miai msirly all.
"Ubo tlirows thè iieellng over he
shoiililer," con liti ned Denlcroft, "un
Il furata thè mitili! of thè ime she I
to Wl'll."
•T’eellngs, oh7" «merlisi old t;«H<!
Inigs. "W o are Ili! vory rleh, bore, yo
know I"
“ Well, wliut of ItT" nskeil Denlcroft
"W lll diamomi neoklnix*s ttnswer Ju»
•s well 7“ pat In Mie profltcer's daugt
ter.— London Answnr*.
Home-Made Perfumes.
Perhaps you, happy possessor of a
A man will start ont to ilo in ori
yard with many little |aitlis, flower- yonr what coutil liardly he nrromplisl
decked Oil either side, would like to O l i ia ten yisirs and in tua yenrs h
make your own iicrfume, yonr own will nccomplinh wiint shoulil hnvo he«
UluAUDiM? L jf vjrjr gtflipie I ¿ud unite dono in ono.