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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (April 14, 1922)
Neighborhood News ! ------------------------------------ « BLUE MOUNTAIN. (Special to Tlu* Sentinel.) April l l lira. \N :«•!«• \\ t> ili.l ! • lie sou started with Mr». Albert Hissue i. few days last week. an* baching n mile or so from the mill. AH the high jwnks around Black Butt«* are white with snow and an inch fell Friday night in the valley. ROW RIVER ART IN CUTTING DIAMONDS Peculiar Propartlaa of tha Praciou* Gam Muat Ba Thoroughly Under, atood by the Lapidary. A diamond cutter, writing for the (Sp«*cial to The Sentinel.) London Mall, relate« some Interesting April 11.—J. S. Magladrv motored Mr*. Edd J ob ** and aoa Archie via facta aa to forma Into which dluinomis ited at the Thena Miller home Sunday. up from Eugene Monday and at ten dad ure cut to enhance their luater. A to business matters. There will be a basket dinner at the Mrs. Win. Eustcd amt «laughter Em diamond la the hardest substance in Blue Mountain church Easter Sunday. ma, of the Groxe, are visiting at the nature and cannot even he scratched All are welcome. except with another diamond, while Mr. and Mrs. Robert l«amaster and Henry Sanders home. The Elmer* Wicks family has moxed aome atones can be cut ouly with their « tntdrcu visited at the Bert l<aucaster to the Grove. Mr. Wicks will lenve own powder. home Sunday. Sadie Allen visited Su inlay with soon for Montana. Yet the hurdest o f all can l>e cleft Mrs. Allan Koeppe, o f Hilts, Cnlif., Oladya Whipjw. by a heavy blow delivered In the right is a guest at the Frank Tanner home. John Palmer was a Grove visitor Alice Thru a, Nellie Plena rd, Mrs. direction; that Is, parallel to the faces Friday. He *p«*iit the night at the o f the eight sides which It* crystal Bert l^ancaster home, reiurumg to h*s Mabel K«>eppe and Alfred Williams at tended a dance in the Grove Saturday sho .-«, It Is this property that permits ram h Saturday looming. the very large stones, auch as the "Cul- Mr. and Mrs. Joe Perkius Jr. and night. Mr- Wm. Satterfield, o f Junction llnan" diamond, to be worked. daughter Sarah spent one uight last In spite of this, a diamond Ima the week at the home o f Mr. Perkins * City, is visiting her mother, Mrs. Eva Williams, mid other relatives. simplest composition of all precious father near Cottage Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Plena nl ami A number o f young folks from her«- stones, for It Is only crystallzed car- *ittended a surprise party at the l^iyng children spent the week end in t h«» I bon, and a near relation to ordinary Grove. home Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Williams, o f the graphite, usually called “ blncklend " Miss Dora Bruer went to Eugene But It has been formed by enormous Monday to attend the wedding o f her Grove, wore week end visitors o f Mrs. Eva Williams. paessure In the remotest depths of the jA i«r. Elmer McCollum is in Eugene re earth's crust, and probably forced to ceiving medical treatment and xxill ward the surface by steam. WALDEN hxve nis tonsils removed. His father The principal forms Into which a B. F McCollum, is with him. (Special to The Sentinel.) Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Perini and chil diamond Is cut are: Brilliants, with an octagonal face April 11.—John Martin spent sex dren were week end visitors at the A. surrounded by many smaller facets. ral days at the K T. Martin home Toaole home in the Grove. Rose diamonds, with a flat base, lelpiug care for Mr. and Mrs. Martin, x ho both had the flu but who have The only eonqm»sts that bring real above which are two rows o f triangu •ecovered. satisfaction are those that are made lar fucets, the uppermost terminating Mr. a ud Mrs. Preston Smith and over temptation and hatred. In a point. Mrs. G. Johnson were in the Grove Table diamonds, which are thin O f ronrae kissing is sinful, but there Saturday. stones cut with triangular facets. Mr. aud Mr*. Kay Gourley and chil are times when a man doesn't want to What makes the diamond so pre Iren, of Albany, *q**ut the week end go to heaven. cious Is the presence o f Inward "lire"— vith Mrs. Gourley *s parents, Mr. and the mysterious gleams of blue and red Mrs. James l^ bow. t r«* that change with every movement, and M r *. J. C. Port«1■r, who has ■ unit'll from San Diego, w h«-re s h f which mnkes such an appeal to our * peilt the w inter. vinited We«ln« •Sill« V sense o f beauty. iitfht S t th a* h o III«* o f h«*r aial«-r. M im . The charm o f precious stones lies 1) H Brumbaugh. In their brilliancy nnd luster, the In Ja niies I a -1> ow , Harry Ca.«*tl« Fr«-«! Science of Canning Food of Im tensity of the latter depending upon Front au«l Horatio ami George MOsili the polish of the surface; for If the mense Practical Value. Mere in the Qrove Moiula y. stone Is dull or uneven the light Is D. H. Brumbaugh has purchased a scattered nnd not reflected. Ford *ar. George Hastiugs spent the week end F.w D iscover!., or Invention«, It 1« The only stones at all approaching with home folks. It are zircon and the green garnet Point«! Out, Have Been of Great Mr aud Mrs. Hurry Castle ami chil called “ olivine.” The luster o f all er Benefit to Humanity. iren visited in the Grove Tuesday. other stones Is vitreous, such as seen Miss Dorn IIousted ¿pent Thursday Though less spectacular, the science on the surface o f broken glass. And light at t h r Hastings horn*-. The Walden sehool and the ‘sixth o f canning « a s a discovery only the third type Is thnt shown by resins. In order to bring out the full beauty ^radt» from the Grove played ball Fri equaled In Importance by such Inven lav. the scon* beiug 2*'» to 5 in favor tions as the telephone, the wireless of a stone It must he cue In such s of Walden and the airplane. When we stop to way thnt the facets reveal Its splen Peters A Mosby loaded another car renllze that food, shelter and clothing dor. and the nrt o f the lapidary rests • •f lumber Saturday. are man's most vital needs, and what upon his knowledge o f what becomes Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Perkins Sr. a 1 a rge proportion o f our food is pre o f the light when It falls upon the were in the Grove Thursday. served for us today In canned form, stone; so he must understand the laws we better understand the full signifi of reflection nnd refraction. MOUNT VIEW’ . When a white light Is refracted Into cance of this Important discovery. a colorless stone It changes and Is split IMckltng or drying; were the only (S}» m ial to The Sentinel.) up Into a spectrum. Since the refrnc- April 11.—C. W. Hears went to Eu methods o f preserving finals that were gene Tuesday o f last week to consul, i known up until about a century ago. tlve Index Increases progressively as an eye specialist. In 1796 the ne*-e**ltles o f wur prompt the wavelength of the light decreases, Mrs. Joe Schneider spent Friday , ed the French government to offer a a normal spectrum Is violet at one end in Cottage Groxe \ isiting friends. reward o f 12,0110 francs for a better nnd passes through green and yellow Mrs. W. D. Heath visited Sunday at method of food preservation. The to red nt the other end; for Instance, fh*- horn«- o f her sou, Fred Frost, at prize was awarded to Nicholas Ap|a-rt, In the familiar rainbow. The width of Blue Mountain. the spectrum also varies, and It Is Mr Louis St-ars returned Thursday and his method stands today as the this “ dispersion” thnt determines the to her home at Hood River. Mr. Near* real basis o f our present process o f | will leave for there this week, hating canning—namely, hermetic sealing and “fire.” It would be difficult to nHtne any quite rapidly recovered from his recent sterilization by heat. serious illness. Tlila discovery has added Immeas substance around which hns been Mr- Kate Hannigan, of Portland, ar urably to the wealth o f the world, be- 1 woven such a weh o f romance. rived Suuday for a visit with Mr. and cause it has meunt that at times o f j • Mrs. Joe Schneider. The Schneiders j harvest the surplus crops, which It Is j Safety Deposit Free. and Mrs. Hannigan are former neigh : The story comes from Scottshurg Impossible to get to market before they | bor» at Loraue. and It shows all the shrewd persons William and Addison Heath went to spoil, have not had to go to waste, but are not In the large centers o f popu have been preserved for use at other £ugene on business Saturday. A strenger o f ordinary ap Mi-- Exalina Hoffman, o f Eugene,' periods of the year when Nature Is , lation. arrived Saturday from an extended producing less and when, but for the pearance and apparently of moderate isit at the home of her aunt, Mrs. science o f canning, we would have to means walked Into the hnnk nnd C. W. Sears. subsist on much less attractive fare. asked to borrow $5. He was told the Mr. ami Mrs. Floyd Jones and chil This Is conservation In the broadest hank did not loan such small sums, •Inn visited Sunday with Mr-. Jones’ and most economic sense of the word. but when he Insisted thnt the business parents, Mr. and Mrs. i>an Brumbaugh, But the process of canning not only o f a hank was to loan money, that he at Blue Mountain. needed the sum mentioned, nnd that Mr. and Mrs. J. U Cooley and benefit» the world at large; It has very Blixabeth Cooley, George l*uyng anfl definite advantages for each of us as he had good collateral, the note was %V. 1 ) . Heath and sous were among Individuals. For that much-talked-of mnde out, the banker regarding It as Then the stranger Mr. Average Man-ln-fhe-Sfreet and his a good Joke. hose from here iu the Grove Hatur Fousewlfe-ln-the-KItchen, "canning" pulled out $10,000 worth o f Lllierty to - 1-estou Dowens, of Blue Mouutain, eliminates the seasons. In effect. It bomls as collateral and left them, re - icited over the w«s*k end with his “ makes summer last all the year marking that at another hank they »rother Walter Dowens. 'round.” and In midwinter brings us had wished to charge him $f> for a Mr. and Mrs. Joe Seluieider enter j safety deposit box to keep them In, the crops o f midsummer. 'ained Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Heath and hut now the hnnk would keep them for And canning also eliminates space | family Saturday evening. Mr and Mrs. Frank Treason, o f Cot or sectionalism, for those of us who him fr*-e, and he would have the hank's tage Grove, Mrs. Otko VanSchoiask live In the Interior may still enjoy oys- $5 to amuse himself with.— Indianap ;tn*l Sarah Riley, o f Fairview, and Mr. lers, crabs, lobsters and other sea olis News. and Mrs. J. K. Cooley and Elizal>*‘th foods whenever we w ish ; and those I Cfroley were Sunday guests o f Mr. and o f us who live In the eastern states Thinking and Doing. Mr-. C. W. Sears. may nevertheless have access to the “ It Is perfectly ensy to write '1022* Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hogate were« dellcloua fruit crops of California and If you only think what you are doing,” Sunday dinner guests of Mr. aud Mrs. I Hawaii. And so on the world over. remarks the Boston Globe. That Is one o f the great Ifs that Mr. and Mrs. Otto Vaughn spent Tlie pioneer In Alaska, and miner In Saturday evening with Mr. and Mrs. the mountains of South Amerlcn, the continually Interpose hazards and ob explorer In the Antarctic, men and stacles In the path^of the weary mun Waldo Miller. Mrs. Joe Schneider motored to Drain women everywhere on the fringes o f dane pilgrim. Feasibly It Is the most Sunday, accompanied by Mrs. Katie civilization, all have at hand— thanks Important one o f all. The majority Hannigan. to the ran—the same wholesome ap o f our errors and sins of omis*lon, es Mrs. Kate Hears, o f Cottage Grove, petizing food» that are served to the pecially those o f a minor character, s visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bales most exacting guest In an exclusive are due to our failure to think what Mr. aud Mrs. K. J. Hears, o f Delight | New York hotel. we are doing. But the mere recogni Valley, visited Sunday at the W. A. Because the science of canning has tion o f this failure und the earnest Hogate home. Waldo Miller has been ill during the 1 so done away with time and space— desire to correct It will not prove suf with respect to food—the can has come ficient In most cuses as un effectual past week but is now' somewhat im to be known as a modem genie o f the remedy. The great trouble Is thnt It proved. Tiie housewife whose pantry Is practically Impossible to think what M rs Waldo Miller was in the Groxe! home. Monday. shelves are well stocked with canned one Is doing in very many particu food* Is able to choose her meal from lars. whatever com er o f the world her whim BLACK BUTTE suggests. Valuable Phosphate Furnas. (Hpecial to The Sentinel.) Millions of tons of phosphates pre April II Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Funk Sacrifice Worthy of the Name. vlously wasted will he saved potential *n*J family were in town Hun-lay eve The word “ sacrifice” gain* new ly as a result o f the perfection o f a niag. meaning when we think of the story new reclamation s-. stem devised by Mia* Mildr- ) Hopper *pent Friday that Is told about the three hundred the I'nlted States Department o f Agri •ifternoon in the Grove. culture. The Bis* k Butte arhool lions*- ha* » children of an Armenian orphanage. 8o small amount o f food had reached Heretofore heavy annual wastes ol new door. The Blaek Butte »ehool will hold a the American relief workers In charge valuable phosphoric material have oc fia-ket social Haturday night, April o f the orphanage that they ronld give curred during the mining and maim IS. The proceed* will go for improve almost nothing even to the three hun faeturlng processes. The new methof merit-* of the aehool. dred. Each child got only a small o f controlling these losses consists 1** Mr* le vi Geer and Mr*. Anna l.ive piece o f bread and a few walnuts mixing the 'run-of-mltie" phosphate Iv visited Sunday afternoon with Mr*. twice a day. O f coorae the food did with sand and coke and «melting th> Susan Walker. not nearly aatlsfy thetr hunger, but It mass In an electric or fuel-fed furnace Mr*. Mary Groat visited Friday with was enough to keep them alive. In this process the phosphoric acid I* her mother, Mr*. Husan Walker. When tha children learned that driven off as a fume and may be read Harry Garuian ha* been laid op for there were hundred* more In the near Uy collected In cnni-entrated form a few dav* with the grip. Dun l-abseh, who had been employed by vlllagea who Could receive nothing for W White, hsa moved hack on Mi*. at all they voluntarily gave up the Chilean Oil Field. Knmia Jones' place for the summer. walnuts. Before each meal they The most promising petroleum field Mr. and Mr*. I*evi Geer spent Hat dropped their note Into a sack In one so far dl*co\ereil In Ilio Province ol urday aight at W m. L iv ely ’a. corner o f tha room, and when It was Antofigu-ta, Lidie, Is that In the paw Several in this vicinity have auf fared severe attack* o f the grip this full aorna ona of them would carry It of Sigila, near the Argentine frontier, to the frantic crowd In tha street. but It remains to la- scon If the |w*tr*e week. Tho* Funk and three men from the Omild there he a more generous sac- leum will tw found In pa > log quanti- Bull who wara exposed to amall pox rlflce than (h a il— Youth* Companion. UM. BOON TO MANKIND DISASTER OF 1917 Inside Secret of the Great World War Now Revealed. C ru sh in g D efeat of the F re n ch A rv n lss U n d e r Q e n sra l N ival!« D u a t s T h a t L e a d e r's Ovarconfldanoav Thu Hevue da Paris la priutlng, mouth by mouth, the fullest account yat glvau of the greatest disaster sus tained by the allies on the waateru front during the war. This wus the defeat of the Freuch armies under Generul Nlvelle between Reims aud Solasons on April 16, 191T. The ac count Is given by M. Palnleve, who was tho French war minister at that time, though he ouly camu Into office when the plans for the battle ware , complete aud their execution alrooet Inevitable. M. Palnleve often has been attacked for hla own action be fore and after the smush, so he spooks as o party to a case. Still, more of what he says Is only new In the sense that It has not been fully published before, though It was substantially known to the French and British gen erul staffs within a few weeks o f the j calamity. The French attack, com monly known at the time as the Chem- In des Dames attack, was to be the main blow o f the Franco-Brltlsh of fensive for the year. Sir Douglas Haig, placed provisionally and with some qualification under the supreme command o f Nlvelle, was to attack on April 9 from near Arras In the north to our right Hank near St. Quentin In the south. Our part o f the work was to draw off the German strength from the crit ical point, to kill and J>e killed and keep Ludendorff bu^y rather than to , penetrate far. The whole scheme was j Nlvelle’s. Nlvelle had been made com- ' mand.-r In chief In succession to Joffre the Christmas before, to the exclusion o f Foch and Petnln. Nlvelle was at the moment the latest fashion In gen erals. French political feeling that winter was In a state of reaction ' against the “ Somme school”— the school of Foch and Flalg tho "limited objective”- school, the school which re stricted the depth o f Infantry advances to ground on which artillery had quite ruined the- enemy’s defense. Nlvelle represented a new “ Verdun school" of swifter, deeper advance. He had suc ceeded at Vaux and Dounumont n few months before, by making his man advance In a why that the “ Somme school" would have thought reckless— because they or their predecessors had tried It In 1015 and found It disas trous, hut this was forgotten; fashion had changed; It hnd gone bnck to the more slushing fashions of 1914 and 1915; Foch and Haig were back num bers, Nlvelle was the man, and wis dom would die with him. So he was given the whole Franco-Brltlsh offen sive In 1917 to mold at his will. Ills mind was completely made up ■ by New Year’s day, 1917. He had not a shadow o f doubt, from then on, that he would be able to drive straight north ward from Reims towards Brussels, behind the German front, cutting off the German northern armies. T o any one, soldier or statesman, who sug gested a doubt or an extra precau tion he said. In effect, “ Leave It to me. I pledge you my word we shall win.” To Infect the troops with his own op timism he circulated freely among regimental officers full written details of the plan of attnek, the dnte, the at tacking strength, everything. This was done In January. Within a fortnight the etiPiny knew It all. Ludendorff In his book of memoirs tells us how a German raiding party captured, In the pocket o f a dead French captain of the second division, the French plan of battle. The Germans had now two months In which to fit up ns an abat toir the ground which Nlvelle meant to capture flr*t. They drew hack their whole line between Arras and the Brit ish right, futlllxlng the great part of the Intended British division. Tb#n they sent down to the Reims-Hot »sons front the troops thus economized. Then they rigged up on the high fiats of Vauclerc and Craonne, whete the chief hopes of Nlvelle’s coming attack centered, such an aggression of ma chine guns and quick-firing guns, hood ed with concrete and metal, as no troops ever had to face, before or af ter.— Manchester (Eng.) Guardian. A Welsh Poat Miner. Huw Menat Williams Is Wales poet- miner, who bids fair to bring Welsh literature to the attention of the Anglo-Saxon world. Born In Carnar vonshire, Williams has been a coal miner at Glamorgan since he was six teen. Hla work hne therefore heon en tirely Inspired among the sordid sur roundings o f a mining town. Intel lectually, he Is a self-made man. The remarkable thing about William's terse Is that It Is written In Kuglfah —an acquired language for him and one that he has no extraordinary com mand of. Ills book, "Through the Dp- cast Shaft," la calming a furore In England.—From Argonaut. BULL POUT QUITE AT HOME OH! Haro«« of This Ramarkabla FI eh Yarn Fumieh Something New In Plecatorlal Bterlea. The One faela almost like apologising for telling a fish story that Isn't a bit like any other fish story ever told since the days o f Jonah, but there Is one good excuse for the uniqueness of this fish story. It la gospel truth, says George L. Brown, according to the New York Sun. The scene o f It ts Elisabethtown, a village completely surrounded by Adirondack«. The stream* and ponds around Elizabethtown have been famous In their day for speckled trout and more recently for pickerel, perch, black baas and bull pout. Lat the humbla bull pout be the ke ro o f thla yarn, the “ Sacramento cat," aa he has been named In California, the alugglah browser of weedy ponds, that will live wherever a frog can and blta anything from an angleworm to a piece o f a tin dinner pall. And the bull pout's tenacity o f Ufa may be credited with a good share of the uniqueness of this unprecedented fish story. In the days when the thing hap pened the young fellows of Elisabeth town used to go fishing for bull pout Saturday nights In Lincoln pond or In the “ marsh” not far away. And on Saturday night Carl E. Daniel and hla cousin, the late Arthur H. Norton, went out and brought home a fine mess after midnight. Carl was tired and he Just dumped his bull pouts with the grass In which he had carried there home, into a dlslipan. Then It occurred to him to put the dlshpnn In the kitchen sink and turn on the faucet a little, and he did so before going to bed. That's where the story begins. The reet of it happened while Carl was asleep. You see, the grass overflowed with the water from trie dlshpen and clogged the drain of the sink. And then the sink filled up and overflowed. And then the whole o f the ground floor o f Carl’s home, "Colonial Cottage," be came a pond. And when Carl got up on Sunday morning and went Into the kitchen he found all his mess o f bull pouts swimming around over the floor ns happy ns if they were heck In Lin coln pond. That's the story, and If you doubt that It happened In Just that way you can ask Carl, who Is now head o f the Elizabethtown Hardware company, Inc. MY BACK! Expression o f Many a Klduey Sufferer In Cottage Grove. A stubborn hueknnhc is cause to su* pect kidney trouble. When the kidneys are inflamed and swollen, stooping brings a sharp twinge in the small o f the back, thnt almost takes I he brealit away. Doan's Kiiluoy Pill* revivo "lul?8>*h kidneys— relieve aching hacks H ere’s Cottage Qrove proof; Mr*. Amanda Spriggs, 500 H. lat Ht., says: “ D oan’s Kiduey Pills are uot a new remedy to me. I had terrible backaches and could hardly get about and dizzy spell* came over me, espe cially when I stooped. My limbs ached, my feet swelled and my kidney* acted too frequently but D oan’* Kid ney Pills soon had mo feeling like a different person. The ache* and pain* left and my kidneys did not annoy me.’ ’ Price 60c, at all dealers. D on ’t «im ply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’« Kidney Pill*— the same that Mrs, Spriggs hnd. Fostcr-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. »21-28 Cottage Grove Iron and Brass Foundry Opposite O. P. & E. Ry. Station Iron, Bronze and Brass Castings of All Descriptions Highest market prices paid for scrap cast iron and brass Frank J. Carrigan, Proprietor City T r a n s f e r Hauling and Draying PIANO MOVING A SPECIALTY WOOD SOLD AND DELIVERED O ffice In Spray Brick Near S. P. Depot PHONE 99 A Secret 8oclety. “ It would shock, or bore, or disgust the world tn general, I suppose, If all the school teachers and office workers who want to marry should suddenly tell the truth. The public prefers to believe that women cherish their eco nomic independence more tenderly than they ever could cherish husbands and babies. And our pride helps to keep up the grent delusion. P. W. JACOBS, PROPRIETOR “Many o f us, especially the older Res. Phone 21-F3 O ffice Phon« 4 ones, would never admit our loneliness and disappointment, perhaps, even to ourselves; but tho majority, I believe, have 'had to tell' someone— some I P R O F E S S I O N A L ___ O A R D S~| equally lonely woman friend— wheth er or not we told It In words, the story DR. C. E. FROST of frustrated hopes, of baffled In O ffice in I-awsoii builring Phone 47 stincts, of Imprisoned powers. Cottage Grove Oregon “W e form a kind of great secret society. The Initiation Is, mercifully, GAVEN C. DYOTT, M. D. gradual; the dues are endless; the Physician and Surgeon badge may be anything from a com X-ray work in ail its branches. Eve mutation ticket to a Phi Beta Kappa nings by appointmeut. key: the password, seldom uttered. Is 634 Main Cottage Grove, Oregon nlways the snme— loneliness."— From “ No Courtship at All,” by Another J. E. YOUNG Spinster, In the Atlantic Monthly. Attorney at Law Grove Transfer Furniture Moving and General Jobbing Clavar Smuggler Caught. What Is said to he one o f the clev erest devices ever developed for smug gling 'was uncovered on Puget aopnd recently by federal officers, when a speedy power boat, believed for sev eral months to he a successful smug gler of Illicit goods from Canada Into tjie United States, was captured at Seattle. It had been known for some time, federal officers state, that a dumping device was In use on some of the smuggling boats, says Popular Mechanics Magazine, but a complete outfit o f this type had never before been captured. Along with the setznre, more than $2,000 worth of contraband was tnken, which made It possible for the government to confiscate the boat. Climbs Fujiyama Top. MaJ. Ords Lees, British balloonist and Arctic explorer, hns Just com pleted a trip to the summit of Fuji yama, the celebrated mountain tn southeastern Japan. It Is said he Is the first European to have reached the top of ths mountain In winter, which Is 12,865 fest above sea level. Major I-ees was accompanied by H. 0. Irish o f London, and accomplished hla feat In 48 hours. The last 4,000 feet of the climb were made over slippery Ice. Major Lees was a mem ber of the Hhackleton Antarctic expe dition in 1914, and he and Mr. Irish are members o f the British air mission to Japan. Klectrlo Sealing Machine. A sealing machine, In which the wax Is electrically melted and which Iceland Ponies. It Intended to meet the requirements Iceland ponies run well In company o f hankers, brokers. Jewelers and Out o f fifteen or twenty, one or two large commercial luatltutlons In the will a*.on be recognized aa the lenders, sealing of valuables, hat made Its ap and the rest will follow these; hut un pearance. The machine can be at amount o f whipping will persuade tached by a cord to any light socket them to go even a short distance aep and operated at a coat o f cr.e-helf cent arutely— a fact Which the traveler an hour.— Popular Mechanics Maga soon find» to be very Inconvenient 11 zine. Ids pony does not happen to be a lead er, nnd he la yet anxious to deviate Spanish Shawl la Thaatar Curtain. occasionally to examine objects o f 1» A new drop curtain tn one o f ths terest off the track. This Inability to New York theaters la really a gigantic run except In company hns gained tha Rpantah shawl of silk and lace, S6 by Icelandic ponies a character for etn 40 feet In dimensions. Tn embroider pldlty In thla country, where they ara the huge fabric took TS of tha moot •eldom used except 1 b the coal ininoa skillful Spanish uovdlawuuiuu 84 da/a, O ffice rear o f First National bank Cottage Grove, Oregon H. J. SHINN Attorney at Law aud Notary Public Practices in all courts. Twenty five : years of experience Bader Bldg. Cottage Grove, Ole, ( A LTA KING Attorney at laiw Collection*, Probate, Notary Public j 774 Willamette Ht E u g e n e , Ore. ! H. W. TITUS, D. M. D. Expert Dentistry Modern equipment. First National Batik building. Hours, 9 to 12 and 1 to 6. Evomugs aud Sundays by appointment. J. S. MEDLEY Attorney at Law Eugene Loan & Having* Bank Bldg. Eugene, Oregon DR. W. M. HAM ILTON Chiropractic Chronic cases a specialty. O ffice over Darby hardware. Resideuce at 212 South Pacific Highway. DR. A. W. KIM E Specialist iu Obstetrics Will care for confinements at bis home if desire*). Special nurse if re quired. Phones; office, 34; re*. 126J MRS. F. J. AL8TOTT Suggestive Therapeutics Why keep your painaf Both chronic and acute ailments treated Phone 180 L Cottage Grove, Ore. DR. W. E. LEBOW Dentist O ffice Fifth and Main. Hours, 8:30 to 12 aud 1 to 5:30. Evening* and Sundays by appointment, i*houes: o ffice 35, residence 133-L. J. F. SPRAY Real Estate, Insurance and Collections O ffice in First National hank build ing; Sixth street entrance HERBERT W. LOMBARD Attorney at I tw First National Bank Building Cottage Grove, Ore. Phone 94 DR. ROY SMITH Veterinarian Phones 1114 nnd 915 HA Park Street, Eugene, Oregon