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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1922)
NOTICE OF SH E RIFF’ S SALE. Nillicit in hereby given thut by vir tue uf nu elocution ami order o f Hale issued out of the Circuit Court of tli:* Stlali' o f Oregon fur l.aue County Oe tuber 16, 1922, upon and pursuant to a decree given mid made by euid Court on the Ctth day of October, 1922, in r. suit therein pending ill which the Nlate Bunk o f Coburg, n corporation, w u h plaintiff and Hubert H. Wynd and Kliinbelh Wynd, bin wife, Harold Wynd, Mrs. Marie Onnberg Oltten and Vincent A. Manning were defendant», which execution and order o f sale waa to me directed and commanded me to aell the real property hereinafter de DOUBLE THE BEAUTYand LUSTRE OF YOUR HAIR You can d o It «H nilyl U *e SEPOLr -th* innrvttUHiM S)u-u|> D ip T onic SiuuninHt -It •ocourturuH Um- g ro w th of h*tavj, luxuriant» Iflonay h a ir frw * U m iicalp fr o m dandru/f 1 H'likfhtful to um * Utavea a d ain ty fr* C - ratio* Kor «•xoeMdv« o il. Ilftd«** hair, d a n d ru ff, f a llin g hair and Itchi ng a e a lp It him no «Mjual! At all R«*od d r u g s to r e * - TAKE IT IN Adw. TIME Tust as Scores o f Cottage Grove Peo pie Have. Wuiting doesn’t pny. If you neglect kidney bucknche, Urinary troubles ofteu follow. Doan 'a Kidney Pills are for kidney bnrkache, und for other kidney ills. Cottage Grove citizens endorse them Mrs. Narcissi L. Hmith, 118 N. 1 St., snys: “ My kidneys were out of order mid I suffered so with my buck I could luirdly keep going. Frequent dizzy heudnehes made me miserable. My work was burdensome and I often neglected it, and my kidneys acted ricgulnrly, 1 rend o f Doan’s Kidney fills and they cured me o f the buck ache und nil other signs o f kidney compluint. ’ ’ Price 6bc, nt nil dealers. D on’t sim ply ask for u kidney remedy— get Doans’ Kidney .4*111*— the same that Mrs. Smith had. Foster Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo N. Y, o27n3 What Are You Going to Do About It? Without a buaineas education you are greatly handicapped. If you are employed by others you have to have it; if you work for yourself you need it. Monday is enrollment day and there will never he a I tetter time than right now. Our teachers have all had practical business experience in uddition to their teacher train ing. Our school is well equipped with modern office devices, such as bookkeeping machines, udding machines, calculators, mimeograph typewriters, etc. FREE CATALOG AND FULL INFORMATION UPON RE 7 1 BBT. Eugene Business College A. E. Roberts, President Eugene Oregon IIT N E Y g Ralph Chestnut Woodson Garage, Phone 27. After garage closes, phone res idence, 118-L. W. T. POOLEl ho ri bed to satisfy certain lien* and chargea in anid decree specified, 1 will on ¡Saturday, the 18th day of Novum ber, 1922, at the hour o f one o ’clock p. m. at tile Houthweat door o f *h‘ County court house in Eugene, Can County, Oregon, offer for sale and sei ut public auction for cash subject to redemption ns provided by law nil n r the right, title and interest o f the de fendants in stiid suit and of nil persons claiming by, through or under them o." any o f them since the ISib day of ¡September, 192U, in or to the following described real property, towit: l.ot numbered five in section twenty six, lots two and three and the west half of the southeast quarter of section ! t wenty seven nail the John B. Gilham donation land claim number forty, N > til'icution number 7261, all in township eighteen south o f range one west of the Willamette Meridian in i.nue Conn ty, Oregon, excepting I In-r-'f loin li.fM acres heretofore deeded to W. J. He lira is and Ella Helirum, said land contninin| 313.25 acres. Also, the west half o f lot six in section twenty SIX and the west h a l f of the northeast quarter o f the northwest quarter o f section thirty five, nil in township eighteen south o f range one west o f the Willamette Meridian hi Ijtne County, Oregon, containing .’13,90 acres. FEED 0. STICK ELS, o20nl7 Hheriff of Imuo County, Oregon NOTICE OF SALE. Notice ¡ b hereby given by the under signed administrator of the estate of Ira O. Hauchett, deceased, that, pur* suunt to the order o f the county court ■nude und filed in said estate upon December 28th, 1918, directing me to sell the real estate o f said estate at privnte sale for cash, I will, at the o ffice o f Fred K. Hmith, Attorney at Law, llovey Block, Eugene, Oregon, sell at private sale, on and after No vember 6th, 1922, to the highest and best bidder for cash therefor, the fol lowing real property of which said decedent died seised, to wit: I » t Four in section 33 in township 18 south of range 1 West o f Willamette Meridian, in Lane County, Oregon, together with tho appurtenances and hereditaments thereunto belonging or appertaining. The right to reject any and all bids is reserved. Date o f first publication, October 6. 1922. V. C. HANCHETT, Administrator o f the estate o f Ira 0 . Hanchett, deceased. D on’t have any slackers; keep track o f wbat each hen does by using egg record cards; for sale by The Sentinel at |1.7S the hundred. tf The Exposition Means Immediate State Development Y OU ARE ASKED to vote November 7 on a constitutional amendment authorizing the city of Portland to levy within the city a tax of one million dollars a year for three years to finance the proposed 1927 Exposition. There is evidence that plans and purposes of the 1927 Exposition are not fully under stood and this message is being published to give a more complete understanding and to gain state wide approval of the Exposition plans. It should first of all be made plain that the proposed three million dollar tax to he levied in Port land is contingent upon the raising of a fund of one million dollars by private subscription — the men who are pioneering the building of the Exposition showing tlieir own faith in a material way. •J The one purpose o f the Exposition is the development of Oregon and Oregon resources. •J Oregon, twice the size o f the state of New York and one of the richest sections of the world in natural resources, has less than a million population instead of the four or five millions which the state can easily support and which in turn would contribute to the support of the state. Oregon has fewer people than the city of Los Angeles. €J Oregon has only eight people to the square mile. California has 22 and Washington 20. •J Oregon is burdened with taxes and the one sure relief to tlie individual taxpayer is more people to develop more wealth to share the tax burden. 4J Vast areas of Oregon soil, as fertile as the world contains, are untouched by the plow because the people of the world do not know of their fertility and opportunity. 4J But these are facts we all know. €J We are all agreed as to the need of development in Oregon; now let us see what the 1927 Exposi tion can mean in bringing about that development: €J It is proposed that the 1927 Exposition shall be the central feature of a ten-year development plan for the state. €J The first essential o f this plan is that the people of the East who can better their own conditions by coming to Oregon be made to know what Oregon can offer. 4J It is planned, if the Exposition measure is approved at the polls, to begin, not later than 1924, a campaign of advertising which shall cover all the rich states to the east of us. This advertising 19 to appeal to farmers, stockmen, orchardists, manufacturers and tourists, telling each of these classes o f the opportunities which Oregon offers them and inviting them to come and see for themselves. All this advertising will lead up to the 1927 Exposition, but it will be intended to attract not alone sight seers but settlers and investors even before the Exposition. <1 It is planned also to continue this development programme after the Exposition is ended and until 1934. 4J It is proposed that the Exposition shall strongly feature the products and resources of Oregon, so that visitors will become interested in the state as a place for them to live and prosper. CJ Each section of the state will be given an opportunity to benefit both by the preliminary adver tising and by the Exposition itself. t| Railways will he asked to sell excursion tickets to the Exposition, which shall give the holders without extra cost a trip to other sections of the state which they may desire to visit. 4J Each county in the state will be invited to participate in a carefully worked-out plan to direct atten tion to and create interest in all sections of the state. 4J Those who sponsor the Exposition believe that these plans will insure a speedy and definite devel opment of Oregon's vast resources by bringing together the entire energies of the state and by focusing attention upon the state. 4| The welfare of every man, woman and child in Oregon is directly connected with state develop ment. Adequate state development means increased prosperity, a better social condition, better markets, more comforts and conveniences, with reduced taxation. €J In the present condition of the United States and of the world at large, Oregon’s state development will not come speedily unless well thought-out and aggressive plans are put into execution. 4J The 1927 Exposition — as the concentration point of a ten-year development plan — is a definite, tangible movement for state-wide progress, and on this basis you can confidently give your approval to the Exposition measures to be voted on at the polls November 7. t Why the Exposition Has Been Set Forward From 1925 to 1927 The change o f date from J925 to 1927 has been made because it has been found im possible to build an adequate Exposition and to co-ordinate atl its features in a general plan for Oregon development in the little m ore than two years between now and 1925. C a rp e n te r W o r k By the day, tho job or the contract, in town or in the enuutry. Address P. O. Box 280, Cottage Grove, Ore. City Transfer Hauling and Draying PIANO MOVING A SPECIALTY O ffice tn Spray Brick PHONE N Near S. P. Depot It must be some consolation to con 'ssinrn to know that if they ere de itrd the successful candidate will be ted two years from now to do the ne explaimug that present congress ■use are doing new. Exposition Committee George L. Baker, Vice-Chairm an Managing Committee MANAGING COMMITTEE A. H . Lea F. T. Griffith, Chairman W W. Harrah George L. Haker, Vice-Chairman F. C. Deckabach s fohn F. Duty William Hanley G sy W. Talbot Emery Olmstead Ira F . Powers FINANCE COMMITTEE Emery Olmstead, Chairman David M. Dunnu Guy W. Tat hot * A . Cranston Ira F. Powers R. E. Smith John F. Daly Nathan Strauss THIS ADVERTISEMENT IS PAID FOR BY FIVE HUNDRED OREGON CITIZENS