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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 20, 1923)
PAGE FIVE COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1923 SUMMONS. SUMMONS. In the Circuit Court of the State In the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Lane County. of Oregon for Lane County. Ida Bitchie, Plaintiff, vs. William Mary J. Cooper, plaintiff, vs Her- F. Bitchie, Defendant. . bert E. Cooper, defendant. To William F. Bitchie, Defendant: To Herbert E. Cooper, defendant: In the name of the State of Ore In the name of the State of Ore gon: You are hereby required to gon, you are hereby required to ap appear and anawer the complaint pear and answer the complaint filed filed againat you in the above en against you in the above entitled titled suit within six weeks from suit within six weeks from the date the date of the first publication of of the first publication of this sum this summons, and if you fail to ap mons, and if you fail to appear pear and answer the said cause of and answer as herein required, for suit and complaint on or before the want thereof the plaintiff will ap 27th day of December, 1923, the ply to said Court for the relief plaintiff will apply to the above demanded in her complaint which named court for the relief demand is for a decree of the Court for ed in her complaint, to-wit: for a ever dissolving the marriage con decree dissolving the bonds of mat tract existing between plaintiff and rimony now existing between the defendant above named and for plaintiff and the defendant and costs and disbursements of this suit. holding said marriage contract for This summons is published once a naught, upon the ground of cruel week for six successive weeks in and inhuman treatment, and for The Cottage Grove Sentinel, a week such other and further relief as to ly newspaper published at Cottage the Court may seem meet, just and Grove, Oregon, and of general cir proper in said suit. culation in said State and County, This summons is published pursu by order of Hon. C. P. Barnard, ant to an order of Hon. G. F. Skip County Judge of said County and worth, Judge of the Circuit Court State, made on the 11th day of of the State of Oregon for Lane December, 1923. The first publica County, made on the 13th day of tion of this summons is on the 13th November, 1923, directing said sum day of December, 1923, and the last mons to be published once a week publication on the 24th day of Jan for six consecutive weeks in The uary, 1924. Cottage Grove Sentinel, a newspa H. J. SHINN, per published at Cottage Grove, Attorney for plaintiff. Lane County, Oregon. My postoffice address is Cottage Date of first publication, Novem Grove, Oregon. dl3j24 ber 15, 1923. Date of last publication, Decem SUMMONS. ber 27, 1923. J. M. Devers, Salem, Oregon, In the Circuit Court of the State 8. M. Calkins, Eugene, Oregon, n!5d27______ Attorneys for plaintiff. of Oregon for Lane County. Samuel K. Busick, plaintiff, vs. Mary Busick, defendant. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT To Mary Busick, defendant: In the name of the State of Ore In tho matter of tho estate of C. gon, you are hereby required to ap C. Lyon, deceased. pear and answer the complaint filed Notice is hereby given that the against you in the above entitled undersigned administratrix of the suit within six weeks from the date estate of C. C. Lyon, deceased, has of the first publication of this sum filed in the County Court of Lane mons, and if you fail to appear and County, Oregon, her final account answer as herein required, for want as administratrix of said estate and thereof the plaintiff will apply to that Saturday, the 29th day of Do said Court for the relief demanded oember, 1923, at the hour of 10 in his complaint which is for a de o ’clock a. m. of said day has been cree of the Court forever dissolving fixed by said Court as the time for the marriage contract existing be the hearing and passing upon said tween plaintiff and defendant above final account, and objections there named and for costs and disburse to, if any, and for the final settle ments of this suit. This summons is ment of the said estate. published once a week for six suc The first publication of this no cessive weeks in The Cottage Grove tice shall be on the 29th day of No Sentinel, a weekly newspaper pub- vember, 1923, and the last publica lishd at Cottage Grove, Oregon, and tion on the 27tli day of December, of general circulation in said State 1923. and County, by order of Hon. C. P. ANNIE LYON, Barnard, County Judge of said Administratrix. county and state, made on the 11th H. J. SHINN, day of December, 1923. Attorney. n29d27 Tho first publication of this sum mons is on the 13th day of Decem NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ber, 1923, and the last publication on the 24th day of January, 1924. Notiec is hereby given that the H. J. SHINN, undersigned has been duly appointed Attorney for plaintiff. by the County Court of Lane Coun My postoffice address is Cottage ty, Oregon, as administrator of the Grove, Oregon d!3j24 estate of Fred D. Peters, deceased. All persons having claims against NOTICE TO CREDITORS. said estate are hereby notified to present the same to the undersigned In the Circuit Court of the State administrator at the Bank of Cot- tngo Grove, in Cottage Grove, Ore of Oregon for Lane County. Western Logging Company, a cor gon, within six months from the poration, plaintiff, vs. Western Lum date of this notice. ber & Export Company, a corpora Dated December 1, 1923. tion, defendant. N. E. GLASS. To Whom It May Concern: Notice FBED E. SMITH, Attorney for Administrator. d6j3 is hereby given that by considera tion of the abovo entitled court in the above entitled suit, the under NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT signed, d. H. Chambers and Walter Myers, have been duly appointed receivers of the Western Lumber & Notice is hereby given that the Export Company, a corporation, and undersigned has filed his final ac that an order has been duly made count as administrator of »he estate herein for the purpose of asserting of Edno Oliver Elliott, deceased, and adjudicating the claims of cred with the County Clerk of I-ane itors against tho said Western Lum County, Oregon, and an order has ber & Export Company, said re been made and entered of record ceivers shall give and publish notice directing this notice and setting the for four successive weeks by pub 15th day of January, 1924, at the lication of such notice in the Cot hour of 10 o’clock in tho forenoon, tage Grove Sentinel, a newspaper for the hearing of objections, if published at Cottage Grove, in Lane any, to said final account and for County, Oregon, directing all cred the final settlement of said estate. itors of said corporation to present Dated and first published this their claims to such receivers, duly 13th day of December, 1923. verified, and pursuant thereto, KARL K. MILLS, Notice is hereby given to all Administrator of the estate of creditors of said corporation to pre Edno Oliver Elliott, deceased. sent their claims to the said J. H. HERBERT W. LOMBARD, Chambers and Walter Myers, the Attorney for estate.d!3jl0 undersigned receivers, duly verified, within thirty days from the date ADMINISTRATOR’S NOTICE OF of thi% notice. Further notice is hereby given FINAL SETTLEMENT. that objections to the allowance of Notice is hereby given that the any claim may be filed by any per undersigned has filed in the County son or "persons interest within twen Court of the State of Oregon for ty days after the expiration of said Lane County his final account in time for filing such claim. Verified claims may be presented the matter of the estate of Martha to said receivers by delivering of E. Churchill, deceased. Saturday, tho 22nd day of Decem the same to said receivers at the ber, 1923, at the hour of 11 o’clock office of Western Lumber A Export a. m. of said day at the offico of Company at Cottage Grove, Oregon Date of first publication, Novem the County Judge in Eugene, Oro gon, has been set as the time and ber 22, 1923. J. H. CHAMBERS, place of hearing objections to said WALTER MYERS, final account. Receivers. Date of order, November 21, 1923. n22d20 Date of first publication of order, November 29, 1923. SUMMONS. WM. KIRTLEY, Administrator of the estate In the Circuit Court of the State of Martha E. Churchill, deeeased. of Oregon for Lane County. J. E. YOUNG, Mabel C Alstott, plaintiff, vs Attorney for estate. n29d27 Frank J. Alstott, defendant. To Frank J. Alstott, defendant: NOTICE TO CREDITORS. In the name of the State of Ore gon, you are hereby required to ap Notice is hereby given that the pear and answer the complaint filed undersigned has been appointed by against you in the above entitled the County Court of Lane County, suit within six weeks from the date State of Oregon, administrator of of the first publication of this sum the estate of Henry J. Dreese, which mons, and if you fail to appear and order bears date of the 22nd day answer as herein required, for want November, 1923. thereof the plaintiff will apply to All persona having claims against said Court for the relief demanded in the estate of said Henry J. Dreese, her complaint, which is for a decree deceased, are hereby notified and of the Court forever dissolving the required to present the same duly marriage contract existing between verified, to the undersigned at the plaintiff and defendant above law office of He’bert W. Lombard. named, for a distribution of the real First National Bank building. Cot estate mentioned in said complaint, tage Grove, Lane County, Oregon, for the rare, custody and control of on or before six months from the the minor children named therein, day of the first publication of this for alimony and support and for notice. costs and disbursements of thia suit. Dated and first published this This summons is published once 29th day of November, 1923. a week for six successive weeks in The Cottage Grove Sentinel, a WILLIAM M. DREESE. Administrator of the weekly newspaper published at Cot «state of Henry J. Dreese. tage G rove, Oregon, aad of general HERBERT W. LOMBARD, circulation in said Mate aad Coun Attorney for estate. n29d27 ty* * by order of Hon. C. P. Barnard, Fire Victims to Slide Through Silk Tubes For saving the lives of persons speed of the falling body by holding trapped in burning buildii a long, taut or loosening the liag at the bottom silk tube, inclosed in strong nt tting, has of the net. In a recent test, firemen leaped from a third- story window, and At Left: Start of Plunge Through Silk Tube from a young woman Window; Center: Men at plunged head-first Bottom Controlling Speed through a forty-foot by Grip on the Net Cover; tube. Invented by Right: A Slide to Safety. a middle-western man, it is made in Million Wasps Are Freed To Women Inventors Are Busy on Industrial Problems War On Crop Pests One million wasps, the size of pin- âhave been imported by the gov- nt and are now distributed in the East to destroy the corn borer. The wasps will save millions cf dollars in crops for the farmer, if they serve as well as they have in Europe. Whether they can flourish in this climate has not been determined. The borer, resem bling a caterpillar, attacks corn, beets, celery, beans, rhubarb, potatoes, buck wheat, clover, and many other prod ucts. By laying eggs on it, the female wasp kills the borer. • • « <1 Registration of trucks and auto mobiles as reported recently indicates that there are now more than 13,048,128 motor vehicles in the United States, an average of one machine for every 8.5 persona. Between July 1, 1922, and July 1, 1923, there was a gain of 2,440,000, almost 23 per cent. To leant just what part women were taking in inventions, government officials recently undertook a survey that showed over 5,000 patents had lieen granted to them in 10 years, more than the total for 105 years previous. The first patent granttai an American woman Was given by the British gov ernment to the wife of a Pennsylvania planter, for a device to clean and cure corn. Labor-saving machines are said to mako up the majority of women’s inventions, ono making an apparatus for scattering fertilizer, another an ar ticle to strip sugar cane, while an ad justable horse collar was made by a Montana woman. For the kitchen, a pie pan was brought out that prevented juices from overflowing the rim, and a wooden mixing bowl was invented that would not split. Almost every line of business was inclnded, but 1,385 pat ents were for articles «f housekeeping. The salt trust is getting fresh again and has raised the price an other notch. a • • Many a person has been saved by hesitating. • • • NOTHING NEW UNDER SUN. A nursing bottle has been found that was used 5000 years before Christ. Heretofore we had presumed that the children of that day board ed at home. Turkeys Chickens Ducks Geese Veal Hogs Portland is a good mar ket. We are a reliable firm. Ship to us. PAGE & SON Portland, Oregon Forty Years in Business been designed. Attached to a window, various lengths to be fastened to any the victims may dive through it to window equipped with frame hooks, safety. Firemen in the street control in a building several stories high Hottest Flame Known to Aid in Study of Planets Grafting Cotton to Ti ce Makes Crops Richer What *s declared to bo the hottest flame known to man has been produced by artificial means in experinu ata held to study the form of atoms. An elec tric blast, lasting for only a small part of a second, occurring on a charger! wire, seemed to explode, creating heat so intense that it could not bo meas ured, although estimates put it at 30.(XX) to 80,000 degrees. Pictures taken as tho explosions occur are ex pected to aid astronomers in solving the cause's for different kinds of light thrown off by many of tho planets. Grafting a single cotton plant to the root of a mulberry tree has pn duced '.XX) bolls, or pods, where formerly 40 was a good crop. '('he process, an in vention cf a southern plant breeder, is lx'ing widely watched because of the possibilities it offers in reducing the cost of cotton. Rime of these g afitd plants are nearly 8 feet tall and liuvc well-developed fliers, called staples. The production rate is greatly in- crcasid, three mother plants giving about 60 pounds of seed Cotton, or four bales per acre. Small Dwellings Set at Angle to the Street to Give More Light and Air and Greater Security against Intrusion: Heat and Electricity are Supplied from a Central Plant More Light and Air for Small Homes Some of the disadvantages of small dwellings built in groups for the sake of economy have been overcome in Ger many by placing the houses at an angle to the street to provide more light and air for each dwelling. Such groups are easily supplied with heat, electricity, and water from a single center. U nder County Judge of said County and State, made on the 11th day of De cember, 1923. The first publication of this sum mons is on the 13th day of Decom ber, 1923, and the last publication on the 24th day of January, 1924. H. J. 8H1NN, Attorney for plaintiff. My postoffice address is Cottage Grove, Oregon dl3j24 NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the matter of the estate of Fingal 8. Hinds, deceased. Notice is hereby given that tho undersigned administrator with will annexed of the estate of Fingal 8. Hinds, deeeased, has filed in the County Court of Lane County, Ore gon, his final account as adminis trator with will annexed of said estate and that Saturday, the 29th day of December, 1923, at the hour of 10 o’clock a. in. of said day, has been fixed by said Court as the time for hearing and passing upon said final account, and objections thereto, if any, and for the final settlement of tho said estate. The first publication of this no tice shall be on the 29th day of No vember, 1923, and the last publica tion on the 27th day of December, 1923. GEORGE O. KNOWLES, Administrator with will annexed. H J. SHINN, Attorney. n29d27 NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Estato of Mabel Bpray, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Elvin C. Spray has been by the County Court of the State of Oregon in and for Lane County, appointed admin istrator of the estate of Mabel Spray, deceased, and that all per sons having claims against the said estate are hereby notified to present the same duly verified to the said administrator in Cottage Grove, Ore gon, within six months from the 13th day of December, 1923. ELVIN C. SPRAY, H J. SHINN Administrator. Attorney. dl3j!0 NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT In the matter of the estate fo William H. Rawlings, deceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned administratrix with will annexed of the estate of William H. Rawlings, deceased, has filed in the County Court of Lmae County, Oregon, her final account as ad w.inistratrix of said estate and that Saturday, the 29th day of Decem ber, 1923, at the hour of 10 o’clock a. m. of said day has been fixed by said Court as the time for the hear ing and passing upon said final ac the German plan each of the houses hm a little garden, secure against t he pry ing curiosity of neighbors and equally protected against intruders in th« front and rear. count, and objections thereto, if any, and for the final settlement of the said estate. The first publication of thia no tice shall be on the 29th day of No vimber, 1923, and the last publica tion on the 27th day of December, 1923. ANNIE LYON, Administratrix with will annexed. H. J. SHINN, Attorney. n29d27 NOTICE OF SCHOOL MEETING. Notice is hereby given to the legal voters of School District No. 45 of I-ane County, State of Oregon, that a school meeting of said dis trict will be held at auditorium of high school building on the 24th day of December, 1923, at 7:30 o’clock in the aft'-rnoon to vote on the proposition ot voting a special district tax of 423,308.00 for the purpose of maintaining schools of said district during fiscal year be ginning on June 18, 1923, and end ing June 30, 1924; said levy to be made to create a general levy of $18,808 und a debt levy of $4500. Dated this 10th day of December, 1923. H. J. SHINN, Attest: Chairman. WORTH HARVEY, Clerk. d!3 20 It always seems so funny to a person that his friends can bear to associate with his enemies. • • • The average fish is said to grow four to six inches a year. The fish you almost catch are always of a venerable age. • • • The hypocrite is Satan’s right bower. • • • A Now Hampshire man imagines he is a monkey. There are a lot of others who think they are better than they really are. • • • WE NEVER, NEVER DO. A noted lecturer has stated that flirting weakens the physical strength of the person doing the flirting. That may account for man belonging to the »stronger sex. If you always wait for the eleva tor you will never get any farther up in the world than hosts of ot hers. • • • Every girl thinks it in nice to be engaged until she contemplates the marriage that follows. • • • An English novelist says womsn is * baffling conundrum—but the men will heep on guessing. • • • A eonneisnee is a troublesome thing sometimes. A rticle S even kind of a policy to the conditions of the individual who buys it, the agent AN UNRECOGNIZED PUBLIC makes possible a home for the fam SERVANT ily, education for the children, a The value of any political, social carefree old age, protection for bus or economic organization is deter iness, strength in credit and the croy mined by the service it renders to ation of an emergency fund. the individual and to society as a It is sometimes said that if in a whole. If it helps forward the given community the work of the growing participation by more and life insurance agent were completely more people in more and more of successful in the logical development the good things of life, it is rated as of the principles he advocates, every an agent of progress. If it retards family would own its own homo, this participation in the good things every child would be properly edu of life, public opinion will destroy it. cated, every old person would be in This is an infallible test. It is comfortable circumstances, every applied by public opinion working business would be safe, every credit over a period of time and from it would be good and everyone would there is no appeal. If the institution have a savings fund. While this is is judged to be of value to society, a consummation, perhaps, too ideal it becomes permanent, a recognized for human nature as it is at present social fact. constituted, certainly the life insur Let us apply this test to the insti ance agent has no need to apologize tution of Life Insurance. for the thing he is trying to do. Ha We have here the most inclusive, represents an ideal and a method of the largest, and, judged by economic social service which have made the results, the most successful private institution of Life Insurance a great cooperative effort in the history of and growing factor in lightening the the world. The organization in common burdens of the people. cludes forty million people who built The first social service of the in up, out of their savings, a fund of stitution of Life Insurance is what ft over eight billion dollars, and insur does for the home Since the home ance protection for their depen is the unit of civilization, and since dents to the extent of fifty billion the American home is the rock dollars. foundation upon which our nation Apart from the money interest in is builded, it would be hard to ex volved, what does this gigantic in aggerate the social value of such a stitution do for the social and spirit service. ual well-being of the community? The strength of a nation depends What is its personal influence and upon tlie quality of its citizenship. what are its effects upon social rela Intelligence and character among the tions. people constitute the only guarantee Suppose we begin with the func of national progress, prosperity and tion of the agent. permanence. Army Is Necessary Need for Education There are around 168,000 life in Since the chief problems of the surance agent * at work in the United present time are economic, our great States. This army of representa need is for education in the laws of tives is made necessary by the iner economics and in the practice of tia and indifference which lie dor sound economic principles and poli mant in human nature and which cies. It is fair to say that the insti make it necessary for men to be tution of Life Insurance is giving prodded not only into doing their valuable service to the country by duty, but also into taking advantage educating more than a third of our of real opportunities for profit and population in sound economic prin progress. ciples and laws. Life Insurance en To overcome this resistance in hu courages thrift as the basis for an man nature requires men of charac economic surplus. It provides a safe ter, intelligence and human sympa- and profitable form of investment ^Vhen the agent has secured an and this very investment becomes a school in economics. It stabilizes application, for a life insurance pol the financial institution * of the icy, his work is not ended. Fre country by sending a stream of cap quently he becomes the friend and ital wherever it is needed for con financial adviser of the policy-holder. structive purposes, and it helps to In this capacity, he gives advice as establish credit which is Itself to methods of saving, as to care of founded upon the knowledge of a the funds thus saved, and as to ways man’s character, not less than upon and means of meeting the premium his economic resources. The man payments. who has insured his life in order to From the point of view of those make his family and his business who are more eager to dodge their permanent is likely to lie a good rightful burdens than to bear them, moral risk in any business. The idea that there is any neces the life insurance agent often looks a good deal like an evil to be sary connection between the life in avoided if possible. But seen in his surance which a man carries and his true light, in relation to the great ability to borrow money Is compar cooperative enterprise he repre atively new, but the credit men ot sents. and to the well-being of the the country think h of Importance. individual and the family, he takes They argue that a man who has on another character. In a very true enough foresight and sense of re sense he is a maker of men, an edu sponsibility to provide for the fu cator in thrift and duty, a social sta ture of his family by insuring his bilizer. a friend o< the home, an en life, is a good moral risk, not to emy of poverty and want, a vigilant mention the fact that his insurance watchman against the silent enemy. policy creates an estate out of which He sells personal service plus com nis debts can be paid in the event pany service By Atting the right of his unexpected death. (Neil Article cf Strie» it "Working Agoitcti OneeelvcCl And the warmth of Pearl Oil is good to come back to! Turn it lip to full flatne—heat? A roomful in no time! No oily smell with Pearl Oil—but a clear, steady flame that warms you through and through. Soon as tho room’s warm enough — turn the wick down as low as you like. Pearl Oil will burn brightly on all day long with no fuss, muss or one drop wasted. To insure best re sults, use only Pearl Oil — the clean-burning, A uniform kerosene—re fined and re-refined by the Standard Oil Com pany’s special process. “Coal oil” or “kero sene” may mean any kind of kerosene—say “PEARL OIL”—copy righted for your pro- te&ion. STANDARD OIL COMPANY ( California ) PEARL OIL (KEROSENE) UGHI