COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19. 1923 1 NOTICE OF GUARDIAN'S SALE OF BEAL PROPERTY. NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Iu the Couaty Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Marion. : Iu the matter of the Guardianship i of Marjorie I.ucillo Knox, a minor. I Notice is hereby given, to whom ; it may concern, that iu pursuance of an order of sale, made and eu Wc do not have to pay long-haul transports, tered of record in the County Court tion and high merchandising costs to make of Marion County, Oregon, on the 6th day of July, 1923, in the matter Zerolene available. All that you spend for of the guardianship of Marjorie Zerolene goes to buy high quality only. Lucille Knox, a minor, the under signed guardian of said minor will Zerolene forms less carbon than any other motor proceed to sell at private sale on aud after the 15th day of Nuvem- ail known to us. As a result, the Zerolene-lubri ber, 1923, at the First National cated car may be driven from 15Z to 50% far» Bank, of Cottage Grove, Oregon, _ and the office of McNary, McNary ther without having the valves ground or the & Keyes, in Salem, Oregon, for cash, cylinders rebored. or at least 10 per cent cash, and the balance secured by a mortgage, Because Zerolene gives better lubrication contin payable within five years, an undi uously, it reduces wear to a minimum and per» vided one-fifth interest, subject to a life estate in an undivided mits the delivery of more engine power to the half thereof) the following wheels on the ground,giving you more mileage .scribed premises, to-wit: Lots numbered Three (3) from your gasoline. Four (4) in Block Number Six in the James H. McFarland’s Insist on Zerolene—even if it does cost less. dition to Cottago Grove, Lane STANDARD OIL COMPANY County, Oregon, except the East 9 (California) feet of said Lot Number Three (3). Beginning at a point 109 feet West of the Northeast corner of lot Number One (1) in Block Number Six (6) of James H. McFarland's Addition to Cottage Grove, Lane County, Orogon, running thence West 91 feet, more or less to the Northwest corner of Lot Number Four (4) in said Block Six (0), then'j South 100 feet to the South west corner of said Lot Four (4) thence West 50 feet and thence North 101 foet, more or less, to the Northeast corner of a tract of land conveyed to F. D. Wheeler by deed recorded in Vol. 56, at page 209 of the Lane County deed records and running thence West to the center of the channel of the Coast Fork river, thence Northeasterly down said river to the Northwest corner of a tract of land conveyed to the First Christian Church of Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon, by deed recorded Dec. 11, 1891, in Vol. 31, at page 375 of said Deed Rec ords, thence South along tho West line of said tract 70 feet; thence West 10 feet, thence South 55 feet to the Southwest corner of a tract of land deeded to F. E. Billington by deed recorded June 24, 1904, in Vol. 61, at page 370 of said Deed Records; thence East 1 foot and thence South 37 feet, more or less to the North line of Lot Number to Portland 3, in Block 6, of James H. McFar and return land’s Addition or place of begin ning. All being a part of James H. On sale Friday, Saturday and Sun McFarland D. L. C. No. 58, in Twp. day, with final return limit of Tues 20 South Range 3 West in Lane County,, Oregon. day following date of sale. Beginning at the Northwest cor ner of the John Partin D. L. C. No. 64, Notif. No. 841 in Township 20 to Portland South of Range 3 West of the Wil and return lamette Meridian, running thence East 18.17 ehqinB, thence South On sale daily carrying a return lim 19.14 chains, thence South 38° East 4.50 chains; thence South 26° East it of 15 days from date of sale. 8 chains, thence South 21° West 13.58 chains, thence South 38%° West 15.42 chains; thence South Reduced Round Trip Fares 49° East 2.97 chains; thence South to other points 78%° West 6.81 chains, thence North 6.80 chains, thence North 57° • West 2 chains; thence North 62° ' Use the Train West 2.66 chains to tho West line of said claim, thence North along Safe—Comfortable—Convenient Visit the said West lino 48.49 chains to the Dependable and Economical place of beginning, containing Pacific International 103.24 acres, all in Lane County, Livestock Exposition Oregon. IPHA KNOX, For further particulars ask Guardian of Marjorie Lucille Portland, Ore. agent. s28o26^_^__^___Knox^a^iinor. Don’t Let a Low Price Keep You From Using The Best P opular E conomics S eries By B™* of the hfanhaoan Cowpans, New York Off "The Greatest Family in the World” 5% mon ¿¡asoline mileapc Use 3% of your gross receipts for advertising and increase the volume of your business, 10% a Round Trip Ticket and SAVE MONEY $5.30 $7.20 Nov. 3-10, 1923 JOHN M. SCOTT Asst. Passenger Traffic Manager Portland, Oregon 05-12-19-26 Southern Pacific Lines Every patron of The Sentinel is helping to give Cottage Grove a newspaper which emi nent authority has stated to be one of the best country newspapers published anywhere A Good Thing - DON'T MiSS I T. Send your name and address plainh written together with 5 cents (and th* slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Co., Dei Moines, Iowa, and receive in return • trial package containing Chamberlain’i Cough Remedy for coughs, colds, croup bronchial, “flu” and whooping coughs | and tickling throat; Chamberlain’s Hlom- : ach and Liver Tablets for stomach trou bles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd the heart, biliousness and constipation Chamberlain’s Salve, needed in avery family for bums, scalds, wounds, piles and skin affections; these valued family medicine* for only 5 cents. Don’t miss it Estate of George Doweus, de ceased. Notice in hereby given that Lu- theria Catherine Dowens was by the County Judge of tho County Court of the State of Oregon in aud for Lane County appointed execu trix of the estate of George Dowens, j deceased, and that all persous hav ing claims against the estate of the said deceased are hereby required, or notified, to present the same, duly verifiod, to said executrix at the law office of H. J. Shinn, in Cottage Grove, Ijine County, Ore gon, within six months from tho 5th day of October, A. D. 1923. Eutheria Catherine Dowens, Executrix of the estate of George Dowens, deceased. H. J. Shinn, Attorney for executrix. o5n2 GUARDIAN'S SALE OF PROPERTY. 30%/ra CARBON ASK FOR PAGE FIVE jilrn frit thr lurr of ntuf opportunities The history of mankind is a rec ■ ord of the growing participation of more and more people in more and I more of the good things of life. This is progress. And since this is the goal towards 1 which civilized society steadily ad vances, we must believe that human 1 history, taken as a whole, is a rec ord of progress. In spite of follies and failures, we ! are slowly but surely getting ahead. Our problems are problems of life : and growth, not of death and decay. Now and then, as in the World I War, through some madness, moral I or economic, civilization may slip > back a hundred years over night. But these tragic lapses into the : swamp holes of despair really repre- sent an investment in experience. Ignorance is free. Knowledge has 1 to be bought and paid for and the price is always high. But usually it is worth all it costs, for by defeat, real men learn the secret of victory, and failure often is but the first step 1 on the road to success. When, after the gloom of the Middle Ages, new worlds were • dis- covered overseas, life became once 1 more a great adventure and ’he idea of progress received a new impulse. It was the age of another chance. Men felt the lure of new opportuni ties, and the new societies organ ized, the new homes and institutions builded under new skies and upon new soil were glorified by the thought and hope that they might be better than those of the past. Today it is reasonable and nor mal to think of human history as in essence a forward movement from darkness to light, from slavery to freedom, from poverty to comfort, from aloofness among men and na tions to friendly contact and coopera tion. Political progress, spiritual prog ress, intellectual progress, material progress : these are the goals of earthly well-being towards which the face of the world is turning in deathless hope and desire. the production and distribution of wealth wc have made greater prog ress than has any other people. » Egypt, for example, of whose an cient civilization we have heard much, has a population of 15,000,- 000. It is prosi>eraus, but its wealth is in the hands of a few landowners and princes, as it has been for over 4,(XX) years, while the people are so poor that they have none of the household utensils and conveniences that are common to the humblest American homes. Agricultural im plements are the same today as those of centuries ago, and ninety-eight per cent, of the people cannot read or write. Compare this with America: In the last twenty years household wealth, that is, the value of things used every day in the home, has in creased about threefold. The aver age family income iu 1910 r mured in money was $1,470. I11 1919 it was $2,600. In fifteen years the Ameri can people have spent upon automo biles. accessories and improved auto- mobile roads, upwards of twenty-five billion dollars. In 191S. the people of the United States had nine and a half billion dollars tucked away in twenty-six and a half million savings account* (including certificates of deposit) distributed in twenty-eight thousand banks and institutions. At the close of the great Litierty Loan campaigns, twenty million in vestors had bought nearly eighteen billion dollars of government bonds and war savings stamps. Wealth of All Increasing This growing participation by all the people in the wealth of the na tion is not confined to investments in bonds. We have millions of farm owners and home owners. Other millions own stock in our public util ities, railroads, banks and industries, and the spread of this form of public ownership through private invest ment is widening every day. These conditions, so rich in their contribution to national happiness .and security, have been achieved by Americans under American institu- and through the application Progress Defined of American principles. Progress, then, is the growing par We govern ourselves. As a people, ticipation of more and more people wc make, unmake or remake our in more and more of the good things laws as public opinion decides. We of life- Judged by this standard, educate ourselves for any kind of America is, perhaps, the most pro work or any place in society we gressive nation in the world. choose. Izt us examine this statement. Most of the big men in industry, Politically, we have progressed to in politics, in finance, in every form the point of representative govern of intellectual and moral leadership ment and universal franchise, includ liegan at the bottom. ing men and women on an equal . Free and unhampered individual basis. initiative and effort, coupled with * Intellectually, wc have become a growing economic cooperation under nation of free schools, of countless government sanction and control, newspapers and magazines, of thou have given us the widest participa sands of public libraries, of mu tion in the common wealth ever seums, galleries and public lectures— achieved l>y any nation in the world. all of them offering their privileges Having reached this point by to every one alike. American individual initiative and Spiritually, we have unquestioned private cooperation, shall we go on religion* freedom for all. This is until the job is completed and every an ideal for which men have fought producer has acquired an estate? more de perately, perhaps, than for The triumphs of the present are any other cause, yet such freedom built upon the experiences of the is a part of the ¡at ire air of the pas*’ .cver changing yet ever con United States. stant in their adherence to the virile Thus far, in our country, three American principle that a man must °f the goals of progress have been seek advancement through his own reached. The privilege of partici- i’erFrX"7^,i l*hor, his sacrifice and ’ T>n by all the people in all the his initiative, coupled with a quick treat, intellectual and spiritual sympathy with hit fellow* and a g««"! things of life is virtually com readiness to cooperate with them plet*- But what about the fourth for the common good, if we but jroaf, the economic ideal, the partici remain loyal to these fundamental pation by all the people in the ma American characteristics, we are on terial good things of life upon a 1 75 I1 arcornPi’*hfneftt so bans of equal opportunity? splendid that, compared with it, even Here in America we have come our present superiority will be but nearest to solving this problem. In as the dawn of a gioriou* A»y (Nesrt Article of Series is "The America* IPoO Subscribe if you can, borrow it if you need to, steal it if you must, but—read The Sentinel It is not yet too late to join our claaseB in Book Keeping, Shorthand, Typewriting, Business English, Spelling, Penmanship, Arithmetic, Commercial Law REAL Notice is hereby given that by virtue of an order of the County Court of the State of Oregon, in and for Lane County, made on the 26th day of September, 1923, licensing me hr guardian of the estates of Thelma Sly and Britta Sly, minors, to sell the real property herein de scribed, I will, on and after Mon day, tho 19th day of November, 1923, on said premises aid at the law office of A. E. Wheeler in Eu gene, Oregon, offer for sale and sell at private sale to the party offering the most therefor, cash in hand, any or all of tho following de scribed real property in I*ane Coun ty, Oregon, to-wit: Lot 4 in B!o“k 8 ami North Half of Lots 1, 2, 3 and 4 in Block 21 of Long & Landess ’ Addition to Cot tago Grove; The undivided 5-16 interest in I*ot 1, Block 1, Shields’ Addition to Cot tage Grove; Lot 5 in Block 3 of Florence; The 8E% of the 8E>4 of Sec. 26, Township 22 South, Rango 4 West of Willamette Meridian, 40 acres, all subject to tho approval of and confirmation by said Court. FRANK J. SLY, ol9n!6 Guardian. Merchants! Your salesbooks. Place your order with The Sen tinel 60 days before you must have them. • A rticle O ne THE GOOD THINGS OF LIFE Enroll Monday —or other subjects necessary for a business training. Write and we will tell you about it Eugene Business College A. E. Roberts President Eugene Oregon Grove Transfer Furniture Moving Piano Moving a Specialty F. W. Jacobs, Proprietor Office telephone_________ 4 Residence telephone..... 21-F3 City Transfer A. u. Anderson, Proprietor Hauling & Draying 1’ianu moving n specialty. Daily freight to and from Eugene. Wo *ro equipped to haul, pole*, tim bers, etc. Office in Spray brick near 8. P. Station. Offico phone, 99; res idence phone, 124-J. PROFESSIONAL CARDS DR. A. W. KIME Specialist in Obatotrio* Will cure for confinement* at his home if desired. Special nurse if re quired. Phonos: office, 34; res. I20J H. W. TITU8, D. M. D. Dentistry Modern equipment. First National Bank building. Hours, 9 to 12 aud 1 to 6. Eveuuig* aud Bundays by appointment. Office phone, 10: res idence phono, 184-J. HERBERT W. LOMBARD Attorney nt Lew First National Bank Building Cottage Grove, Ore. Phone 94 YbuVeamotor that starts RIGHT AWAY if RED CROWNS in the tank/ Vaporizes rapidly* one ©ark is ENOUGH* for 1OO% power. USE RED CROWN for comfortable winter driving- rTANDARD^ OIL COMPANY DB. O. E. FR08T Offico in Lawson building Phouo 47 Cottago Grove Orogon DB W. M. HAMILTON Chiropractic, Mechano Therapy, Gynecology, Hydro-Therapy, Electro Therupy. Office over Darby Hard ware. Phone Ilfl J. Office hours: 9 to 12; 1 to 5; Buuday* by appoint ment. GA VEN O. DYOTT, M. D. Physician and Burgoon X ray work iu all it* branches. Eve nings by appointment. 034 Maiu Cottage Grove, Oregon DR. W. E. LEBOW Dentist Office Fifth aud Main. Hour*, 8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5:30. Evenings and Bunday* by appointment. 1‘noues: office 35, residence 134-Y. DR. Licenaed Phono 30. 630% Main H. A HAGEN Drugloaa Physician Ostrander Building, Street, Cottago Grove J. r. SPRAY Real Estate, Inaurane« and Collection* 405 Main Street Cottage Grove BETTY B BEAUTY PARLOB Particular Work for Particular People. 300 Main Street Phone 110-1« H. J SHINN Attorney at law and Notary Public Practice* in all courts. Thirty years of experience. Bader building, Cot tage Grove, Oregon. HEMSTiTcnrwo and SEWING MBH. J. Q. WILLITS MBH. r. W. HAWKINS 36 north Fifth street, Cottago Grove TT“ ONSTIPATION C A cause <>f many Illa. Harm ful to el<9 rlr p~»*le. Xbwiys nlief w tnhn* STARTING CHAMBERLAIN'S TABLETS with no sacrifia Easy -pleasant - elieethve—-only 25c °f Power Hold a regular position by having an ad every week.