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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 3, 1922)
SOCIETY ---------------------------------------- ♦ Mr». D. H. llumunwiiy wiih a charm i ig hostess Monday afternoon when Hie opened her attractive home for one of the first social event» o f the »carton. Autumn leave» and yellow »haded lights combined to carry out tne spirit of Hallowe’en in the recep tion room» where more than 30 women enjoyed an afternoon of Five Hundred. Mr». C. 11. VauDcnburg won hign I onor» and Mr». (J. (). Knowles second high honor», the prize» being an Oriental jar filled with candy and a picture of one of the old misHion» near Manta Monica, Calif. The hortte»» wa» assisted in receiving by Mrs. J. WillitH and Mrs. Clara Burkholder. At the close of the afternoon a de bghtful two-course luncheon was served, the guests being seuted at »mull table» made charming with Hal lowe’eu decorations. Mi»» liallie Wil Ids and Mi»» Kathryn Mendenhall assisted in serving. Those invited to enjoy Mrs. liemenway’s hospitality were: Mrs. H. M. l.ns»well, Mr». K. K. Mills, Mr». C. C. Cruson, Mrs. George O. Knowles, Mr». W. K. Lebow, Mr», .‘u me» Johnson, Mr». E. E. Arthur, Mrs. C. A. Kurre, Mrs. Hoy Short, Mrs. l). A. Bart ell, Mrs. J. I*. Graham Mr». 8. V. Allison, Mrs. Schofield Stewart, Mr». Raymond Grube, Mr». 'V. Frasier Johnson, Mr». H. A. Miller, I«lrs. H. W. Titus, Mrs. Hood, Mrs. C K. Stevens, Mrs. Elbert Bede, Mrs. Clara Burkholder, Mrs. J. Willits, Mrs. Carrie Hemenway, Mrs. Charles VunDeuburg,, Mrs. H. Griggs, Mrs. N. 11. Glass, Mr.-«. A. S. Howell, Miss Kathryn V\ illits. Mendenhall and Mis* Hnllie pnrty in the church p a rlo rs F r id a y night. Mod of the children were in <§* costumes expressing the Hallowe’en Cider and doughnuts were Mr. and Mrs. William Frasier John sprt-it. son, who are moving this week to served. # ® # Hugene, and Mr. and Mrs. Schofield Mr». Ferguson entertained nt dinner Stewart, who leave soon to spend the winter in 1*0» Angeles, were honor Sunday in honor of fhe birthday an guests Friday night at a dinner and aiversary of her daughter, Mrs. Fred Guests besides members of bridge party sponsored by the Tues Bennett. day Afternoon Bridge club. The honor the family were Mr. and Mrs. Victor guests and other members of the club Kem and Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Sanders. 4> # <$> and their husbauds were invited to I hi* home of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Lass The Eastern Star held n social well for dinner, after which they en session Friday night following the joyed an evening at cards at the home exemplification of the initiatory w o t ' k of l)r. and Mrs. Gaven C. Dyott. upon Mr. and Mrs. Victor Chambers. Those who enjoyed the evening were Miss Helen Rodolf, guest of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. S. V. Allison gave two very much Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Moore, enjoyed esthetic dance numbers. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Arthur, Mr. and ♦ < S> Mrs. T. G. Hud tell, Mr. and Mr». Miss Elsie M. McOulhim, daughter Harry Grube, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. of B. J. MoCullum, of Row River, and Nelson Jr., Mr. and Mrs. H. S. I ¿ass William B. Patton, motorcycle police well, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Roberts, officer, were married Tuesday in Eu- Mr. and Mr». Irving Schmidt and Dr. gene at the office o f Judge Jesse G. and Mr». On von C. Dyott. Mrs. Rob Wells. erls and N. J. Nelson won high honors. ^ ^ «$> <$> A Hallowe’en party was enjoyed Miss Helen Foster and Ohauncoy L. Monday evening at the Presbyterian Rlossor, of Lorane, were married church when members o f the choir en Thursday in Eugene at the study of tertained the newly reorganized Chris Dr. E. V. Stivers, pastor of the tian Endeavor. About 70 were present Christian church. The bride is a and enjoyed the evening. Mrs. George daughter o f Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Foster Matthews was iho general chairman and a niece of Mr». Hiram Griggs, of and was assisted by Mrs. Charles this city. They will make their home Adams, entertainment commitee and in Lorane. Mrs. Roy Short, chairman of the re <£* <fc> freshment committee. <$> <$> Forty children of the Junior Chris tian Endeavor of the Presbyterian The birthday anniversary of Mrs. church and their superintendent, Mis* Fred Bennett was celebrated Sunday i!ii-h.)yi‘il •* Hallowe’en hen Mrs. Carrie Ferguson invited in a few friend* for a surprise dinner In honor of the event. Those present, besides the family, were Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Sanders and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Kcm. <t> V ❖ Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Trunnell in vited in some of their old schoolmates October 2.T to help them celebrate their fifth wedding anniversary. Those pres ent were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Currio, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hull. * ♦ * For Mrs. W. P. Perry’s birthday anniversary Mrs. O. W. Perrv enter tained a group of friends o f the honor guest Monday afternoon. The house was decorated with white chrvsanth emnms and autumn leaves for the oe- easion which was a surprise. ♦ ♦ # The sixteenth wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. H. T R o g e r s was celebrated Tuesday night with a din ner nt the Rogers home, Mr. and Mr*. 8. Ti. Godard and Mr. and Mrs. F. B VanNortwick being invited in to enjoy the event with the Rogers. ♦ ❖ ♦ The Hallowe’en spirit was cleverly carried out Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. C. A. Bnrtell when she entertained members of the T-n Comas club at Bnrtell hotel. Autumn decorations were used in the dining room and the girls who assisted in serving were masked and dressed in Hallowe’en costumes. Cider was served from an old-fashioned demijohn. To lend effect a ghost mingled with the crowd during the afternoon. The invited guests who 't'inifimied on eighth page) 1 Here’s the Truth, the W hole Truth About Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Th f Ku Klux Klan has many enemies. So has the church. The enemies o f hoth are men who cannot join either whisky-peddlers, crooked poll tic i at is, and law violators o f all kinds. A ll that is necessary to say regarding the enemies o f the Klau is— line them up and look them over. I f you like them, don’t join the Ku Klux Klan. Enemies of the Klan said few men would join it. The movements ami membership o f the Klan are secret, hut the evidence shows it is the strongest seeivt society in America. They said the Klan would not last long. It will last as long as crime and injustice and oppression live. They said a low elass o f men were joining who would not stay long in any society. A man must bo honest und pay his debts; he must be u good citi zen: he must live straight with all the world to be u member o f the Ku Klux Klan. A man cannot wrong his w ife and children, nor his neighbors and stay in the Klan. lie cannot de laine the United States and live in a community where the Klan is organized. It is the greatest organization in the world. The members o f other secret societies are sjvorn to pro tect their fellow members from injustice. A Klans- man is sworn to protect the weak o f the w orld ’s people from oppression by the strong. The members of other secret societies are sworn to assist their fellow members to achieve noble things. A Klaiisman is sworn to uplift the human race. There are in other secret societies a sick benefit and cheap and good insurance. A consciousness of duty done is a Klaiisman's only reward. The Klaiismen are peuee-tMiie patriots with war time patriotism, unafraid fighters, whose desire to serve, still lives after the hurrah dies. Silently they go about their business. Unless it becomes nts-essnry in performing their duty they never reveal themselves. One may live for years and never meet one o f them, if he lives straight ; if he is crooked he cannot get away from them. The Ku Klux Klan is not anti-negro, anti-Jew, auti-Japanese or anti-Uatholic. it believes in jus tice to all, including the white man. The Klan is non-sectiouai. It is strong in all sections. It is the greatest force yet conceived for- drawing the aeetions closer together in national harmony ami brotherhood. Many persons believe the Klan is doing all it can to injure the negro. Officers huve been dismissed from the Klan and, by request o f the Klan, dis charged from office for dealing unjustly with the uegro. No one claims perfection for the Ku Klux Klan. Kike all other secret societies it lias its faults and failings, but to the worried and harrassed people of Oregon, it looks like the dawning o f tlie morning of a better day, a day when, if the United States goes to war with a nation three thousand miles away, it will not be necessary to keep its soldiers at home to guard its factories and railroads. To help America and through America to help the world is the purpose o f the KI hii . The most sublime sentence in human language is written in the Constitution and the Ritual; it is the motto and slogan o f the Klan. The Klansmen hear it when they come into the hall. They pledge themselves to follow its teachings when they go out. It -s written ill the heart o f every Klaiisman and in his soul is a desire to live by it. It is the grandest sentence ever held by a human soul; ¡1 is the most beautiful sentence ever written: ' Not for aelf, but fo r others.” The Klansmen are for everything that lifts the human race up, against everything that pulls it down. They are for prohibition and peace, and against whisky and war. They are for public schools and churches, and against the improper dance and the vulgar show. They are for education and virtue, and against ignorance and vice. They are for government by the people and against government by the few. They are soldiers in a new army that fights for better things in a better world for better people. They believe in America for Americans, and be cause they doubt the patriotism of many o f our foreign-born citizens they believe in government by Americans. They believe in the Ku Klux Klan and its pur poses, and they believe in the Ku Klux Klansmen. They believe this world can be made a better place for all mankind and they believe it is the duty o f every man to help do it. They will teach patriotism and love o f country to millions o f young men. In our schools and libraries are books that libel American citizens, books that create hatred and dislike among the people o f different sections o f America. The Klan is pledged to true history. So great is the power o f these books for evil that i f the Klan takes one o f them from our schools it has earned the friendship o f every patriotic Am er ican. They will make treason and anarchy unpopular. They w ill take g ra ft from politics and give us clean men in office. They will make the world better and happier, and take away much o f its sorrow. To a man who loves America, the promises o f these patriotic men have a pleasant sound. I f one-tenth o f the w orld’s people would live ‘ ‘ not for self, but for others,” it would lose nine- tenths o f its misery. ‘ ‘ N ot fo r self, but, for others,” a Klaiisman gives his time and money to make more love and laughter and less sorrow and suffer ing. 11 is desire to serve humanity is like a mother’s love for her children— ‘ ‘ not for self, but fo r a bet ter world, for better people.” He works to make this weary world more like heaven and less like hell. ‘ ‘ Not for self, but for friends,” many good men never know the value o f real friendship until they become Klansmen. Ilis friendship is as strong as iron chains. ‘ ‘ Not for self, but for country,” he knows no North, no South, no East, and no West. Ilis pa triotism is as broad as America. “ Not fo r self, but for truth and honor.” He is sworn not to deceive a Klaiisman. He is taught to tell the truth to all men. Ills honesty is above suspicion. Ilis word is as good as gold. To honor and virtue his heart is as soft as the heart o f a good woman. T o crime and shame it is as hard as steel. A soldier marehed through I’aris with the first American regiment that went to France. He walked through miles o f streets crowded with de feated and discouraged people, war-worn and weary, beaten and broken by years o f battle, lie saw tears o f jo y in the eyes of strong men as the flag passed. He saw the hopeless and downcast people o f France lift up their heads as they watched the faces o f the unafraid soldiers o f Uncle Sam as they marched toward the firing line to taee trained men victorious in a hundred battles. He saw these people, defeated and driven baek, look into the eyes o f American men and heard them shout “ V ic tory.” He saw the brave boys o f England, wounded and dying, look at our fla g and go “ w est” with smiles on their faces and cheers on their tips for America. He saw black men from the French colonies, discourager and disheartened by defeat, sullen ami silent, look at our men, still unafraid in front of the German guns, and smile. lie heard the • Mohammedans from India thank Allah for the flag o f many stars. He heard the German prisoners praise the American soldier. He came home, and on the streets o f New York he heard dirty, foul-mouthed foreign-born anar chists call American soldiers cowards. He saw men and women kneel in the streets o f I’aris and kiss the American flag. Oil the streets o f New York he heard men curat- and revile the flag and everything it stood for. lie heard men curse America ami American people ami their gov ernment. 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