Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Nov. 17, 1922)
OREGON NEWS NOTES OF GENERAL INTEREST OLL P rin c ip a l E v e n t s Save a Dollar DOLLAR DAY SPECIAL—WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 22 A dollar saved is u dollar gained. Sec how we can save you dollars on automobile tires and tubes. Our ‘*re|>eat,‘ orders show that the <|uulity of our tires is strictly up to standard. Our prices are LOWEST because all unnecessary selling ex pense has been eliminated. Note below the still greater saving you can make by buying your tires and tubes here on Dollar Day, when we will give from our already LOWEST prices, $1-00 otf on each ol the following either fabric or cord: On two 30x3 Empire Tires. On one 30x3!» Empire Tire and Tube, fin one 32x3'¡> Empire Tire. On one 31x4 Empire Tire. On one 32x4 Empire Tire. On two 32x4L. Red Tubes. On one 33x4 Empire Tire and Tube—$1 <H> off on each. On one 34x4 Empire Tire and Tub«“— $1.00 off on each On one 32x41L. Empire Tire and Tube $1.00 off on each Sterling Feed Company 826 West Main Street, Cottage Grove The Place to Buy Tires, Feed, Flour, Apples, Potatoes, Etc Cozy and Comfortable Via the Shasta Route Sunny C A L IFO R N IA to ^ our comfort is the first consideration of Southern Pacific employees who have built up an enviable reputation for courteous and efficient service. Ltjuipnient ot Southern Pacific trains is modern in appoint ments and contains all the features conducive to comfort and luxury. Observation ears and sleeping cars with sections, drawing rooms and compartments facilitate the enjoyment of scenery. They afturd privacy, rest, sleep, relaxation and pleasure. Excellent meals tastily prepared and served m attractive dining cars appeal to the most fastidious. For LOW ROUND TFJP FARES. 1 rain Schedules, Sleeping Car Reservations and beautiful fold ers, ask railroad ticket agents ur write John M. Scott, n l i -24 G. P. A., iNirtlaiui. Ore. .L se 3 per cent, of your gross receipts for ad vertising and increase your business 10 per cent Beidler Cash Feed and Grocery Store 5 cakes of pure honey....... $ 1.0 0 5-lb. pad of pure ia rtj...... $ 1.00 7 lbs. of new crop raisins. $1.00 1 W kite Emerald broom... $ 1.00 b cans of oysters. ........ .......... ..........$ 1.00 1 H.- earn saga* $ 1.00 7.) Ins al I m v pota oi - -- — 2 Du*hH* of .NVwtown appl«*s $1.00 18 large rolls of toilet paper $1.00 5-lb. can Laiuniet baking powder $1.00 9 large can« of Carnation milk $1.00 13 lb« head rice $1 00 bO lbs of oyster shell 13 bar« of Palmolive soap . $1.00 $1.00 h ton off on all kind« of fee«l COME AND SEE OCR COLLECTION BARGAIN L( »INTER PRICES RIGHT ON EVERYTHING « E C O N O M Y F E E D ST O R E Corner Sixth and Washington | Phone 57 6* th*> W r* B r ie fly Ske tch e d for I n fo r m atio n of O u r Readers' Snowfall, though light, prurttcatly has elim inated the danger of forest fires In the Um atilla national forest, according to officials Tliw forest has not had uny big (Ires this year. Sherman county this year Inst the distinction of being the first county In Oregun to send its election re turns to the secretary of state for official count. This year the honor went to flood Ktver county. The third annuul district conven (Ion of the Itoyul Neighbors of Amer ica was held In lluker with 50 dele gates, representing camps from Pen dletun. I.u Grande, Outurlo, Elgin. Halfwuy. Cove ami (aland City. The state emergency board met In Salem Friday to consider an additional appropriation for the erection of a new dormitory ut the state Industrial school for girls to ropluce the one which was burned a few months ago With 70.164 votes cast for governor In Multnomah county dually tuliulat ed, the result gives this Important eouu ty to W uller M Pierce, democrat, by a lead of 8171!. Complete unofficial returns from the 435 precincts In the county give Olcott 35.406. Pierce 43. County assessors from 35 counties In Oreiton held their annual confer ence at Salem last week. The recall movement against liar vey E. Cross, county Judge of Clack •m as county, was lost. Complete returns from the Salem preolnets In the election show thut John (lelvs was elected mayor. Medford high school boy students have put the taboo on any of their members wearing the famed peon pants. At the Eugene city election last week, the entire "yellow’' ticket, lu dorsed by the patriotic societies, was elected. Judge Charles Carey of Portland has prt'sented to the state library at 668 Bused on complete or Incomplete Salem. 65 copies of his work on On returns from every county, the dem gon history. H erbert R. Satchwell, new post norms In last wt*ek's election nppar m aster nt Shedd since October 1. age i ently made a gain of eight members about 50 years, dropped dead from of the house in the stute legislature heart disease. which couvenes next January. The C. N. McArthur, for years the re ! minority party u I ho gained two seats presentatlve In congress for the third ln the senate. Fire losses In Oregon, exclusive or district, was defeated for re-election Portland, during the month of Oc by Elton W atkins, democrat In the thretM’ornered contest for tober, aggregated *376.150, according mayor of Astoria. O. H S etters de to a r»*port prepared by the stute fire feated M Gorman and B F. Stone by marshal. The most disastrous fire was at Medford, where u warehouse a plurality of approximately 400. The first boys and girls’ industrial “nd contents were destroyed with a club to organize In Linn county for of *190.000. the coming year is at Franklin Butte A large burn, 200 tons of haled timo thy hay, two valuable horses, a huge school In the Sclo neighborhood. The port of Astoria budget com straw stack and u few small build m ittee has fixed the port tax on the ings situated on the ranch owned by 1932 roll at *233.937 70 or *32.123 30 N. K. West of La Grande, situated less than the amount in last year’s about 11 miles east of La Grande, were completely destroyed by fire with • roll. Jam es S. VanWInkle. Linn county loss estim ated at *15,000. The Hood River valley Is being ad j assessor and brother of Attorney-0<»n era! Van Winkle, died at his home ln vertlsed by a new contour map of | Albany following several w«*eks' 1H- the orchard section and Mount Hood region The map. executed by Fred neaa. Twenty-one road districts of Marlon Routledge of Portland. Is being ft county have voted special road levies nanced jointly by the Hood River corn- aggregating *34.474 86. according to merctal club, citizens of the city and reports received at the county clerk s valley uud Amos S. Henson, office. Through fu tu re of the candidates The first of the 25 special road dls for city office to qualify, and the sub trlcts ln Linn county to report the sequent failure of the city recorder to voting of a special tax for road im publish notice of election, the people provement next year is Rock Creek, of Gold Hill were unable to elect city officers As a result, the present near Gates. Scott & Eager of Dayton. Wash., mayor and city council will hold over have purchased approxim ately 4.40«).- until next e la tio n unless they are 000 board feet of yellow' pine. Douglas recalled. Commercial organizations of towns fir and white fir ln the Umatilla na in various sections of Idaho, Oregon ' tlonai forest. The political race between George and W ashington have accepted an in L. Quine and W L. Cobb for county vitation sent out by the Open River judge of Douglas county will prob association for a conference at Pendle- ably not lie decided until the final ] ton November 17. Delegates will be ln attendance from Lewiston. Walla count is made The compulsory education bill which Walla. Spokane, Seattle, Hoardman. Oregun adopted at last week's election Baker. Kennewick and Umatilla by a majority vote of more than 13.000 | An unusually fine (all fur farm work Is to be tested in the courts for its ln western Oregon, but too dry for best results in the eusteru part of the state. constitutional right to live. The pear shipping season from the Is the substance of reports reaching F Rogue river valley is about over, there L. Kent, agricultural statistician. Uni being only about 20 cars yet to go. So ted States departm ent of agriculture far 1309 cars of pears have been Reports indicate tlait fall seeding oper | atioua arc farth«>r advanced than usual shipped to the eastern market. According to figures compiled by In the western part of the state, many tha Port of Portland, of 1.123 vessels farm ers having already completed clearing from the Columbia river dur their fall planting. ing the first ten months of the present Charged with attem pting to control year, 913 carried the American flag. the export lumber business of the Pa During the month of October the elite coast by illegal methods, the Oregon Growers' association paid out Douglas Fir Exploitation and Export of the Salem office to growers from company was made defendant at a various pools and fur the packing and hearing held In Portland before W. W handling of prunes, a total of *722.- Sheppard, exam iner of the federal trade commission. The hearing, which 901.67. W heat shipments from the Colum was preceded by a sim ilar one at San bia river district between July 1 and Francisco will be followed by a simi November 1 reach«»d 8,379,285 bush lar investigation at Seattle. With her rudder partlully disabled el*. while for the same time in the 1921-22 season they were 1(7,776.340 j and about four feet of w ater In her storeroom as the result of a hole la bushels. The boar«! of directors of the lower ( her bottom, the governm ent dredge P ! Columbia Dairy association has fixed 8 Michie was brought Into the Aatoria 61 cents a pound as the price to be 1 harbor last week. The dredge was en- pald for hutterfat delivered to Its As rout« from Orays Harbor for Port torla creamery during the month of land and when crossing into the Co- j lumbla river a strong ebb-tide forced October. The voters of Medford at last week’s the vessel on to the edge of Clatsop election adopted a charter amendment spit, where her at««rn struck. providing for a water commission to That the Pacific northw est Is help- | he appointed hy the mayor and to leas In the grip of the worst car have full control of the w ater depart shortage It has ever known and that immediate relief Is imperative was the ment of the city. Charles A Bigelow, commissioner gist of an urgent statem ent framed and of public affairs, was re-elected and forwarded to the Interstate commerce Stanhope 8 Pier was elected, accord commission hy officials of the public ing to complete unofficial returns from service commission of Oregon, the all city precincts, for city commis public utilities commission of Idaho and the departm ent of public works of sioners In Portland C W. Drake. 55. and William Me W ashington after a conference In Port Teague 46. are dead as the result of land being struck by rocks flying from a Construction of an *8.000.000 (lower blast at the William Von der Mellon plant at the Metollus power site on road camp on the Crater lake high the Deschutes river. Is the project on which Is based the Bend W ater, way near Prospect The assessm ent on all property In Light tk Power company’s request for Oregon, exclusive of public utilities, a hearing before the federal power upon which the levy for 1923 will be commission Development of 120. ii /H) made, will he slightly lower than the horsepower, sufficb-nt to pump water , present year, accorillng to a report from the Deschutes for the Irrigation | issued by Frank Lovell, state tax com of 86,000 acre* of land In J eft.- moo miaa.oner The 1923 levy will b.- based county and In addition to affonl suf on the tax rolls for 1922 and probably flclont power for large Industrial use, I will be announced late in L eceuber gr» Included la the project. We have a big line of useful niul attractive little trills for Christinas that yon eau irei Dollar Day. .lust think, you ran huy hauti painted salt ami popper shakers in china that day for only one dollar. Jewelry and novelties ol all kinds that cost up to $3.00 at only one dollar. Other gills wiil-vhcH, wrist watches, diamond«, soliti gold or plat ilium jewelry t hut we cannot sell al one dollar we will give you $100U ff on each $10.00 worth of nierehumlise purchased lor cash. JUST A FEW OF OUR MANY DOLLAR DAY ITEMS Waldcmar chains, silk rilihou, n guiar $2 2.i $1.00 Tie clasps, B B. filled, regular $1.50 $1.00 Stickpini) regular $1J0 t* $3.80 Cuff buttons, regular $2.00 to $3.50 Breast pins, regula* $1.00 One half carat diamond, regular $220 Three-quarter carat diamond, regular $350 $1.00 $1.00 $100 $200 00 $31500 Madsen's Jewelry VAN W YCK M OTOR BUS CO. SOUTH BOUND Leave Cottage tìrove for Roseburg at 10:35 a. in. and 4:25 ]». in. NORTH BOUND Leave Cottage drove for Eugene at 12:50 I». m. and 5:30 p. in. Hound trip tickets can l*e bought for any point between Kugene and Roseburg, good for 60 days. Cottage drove to Roseburg and return $3.60 Cottage drove to Kugene and return $1.30 TICKETS ON SALK AT HOWE’S CANDY FACTORY, 7TH AND MAIN, PHONE 97 Claude V a n Wy c k , Ma n a g e r 21» bars of White Wonder snap ........ 10 cans of Armour milk.......................... 12 lhs. of heat California white beans 11 cans of Cam$tl>cll tomato soup 3L. lhs. best IVaherry coffee................. 2 lbs. best bulk tea 8 cans of Prince Albert..................... $ 1.00 $ 1.00 $ 1.00 $ 1 . 00 * $ 1.00 $ 1.00 $ 1.00 E A D S G RO CE RY $ 120 for $1.00 Lome to our market on Dollar Day, pick out $1.21» worth , any of our good« at our regular price«, the «ame price I hi yon may have paul the «lay before, and pay only $M mj for tl assortment There in no restriction whatever a« to the gout you may select. You get the 20 cents oif for every dollar vc pay, whether one dollar or a larger number. P e o p l e ’s M a r k e t