Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 7, 1924)
PAGE THREE COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 7, 1921 held Friday, August 15th, 1924, as the same appears in the original pe Notice is hereby given that a spe 'tition calling for said election. HOMER GALLOWAY, cial election will be held in the City of Cottage Grove, Lane Coun ¡13la 14_______________City Recorder. i ty, Oregon, on Friday, the 15th day of August, 1924, for the purpose of NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT voting on a proposed amendment to iho Charter of said City of Cottage Notice is hereby given that the Grove, a copy of which is hereto undersigned administrator of the . attached. The polls will be open estate of August Rudolph Gerisch. for the purpose of said election be deceased, has filed his final ac- tween the hours of 9 o’clock a. in count in the County Court of the and 12 o’clock m., and between the State of Oregon, in Lane County. ’ hours of 1 o ’clock and 5 o ’dock and an order has been made by said p m. of said day. Court fixing Tuesday, the 2nd day The armory is hereby designated of September, 1924, at the hour of us the voting place in the First 10 o’clock a. m., at the County Ward; the City Hall in the Second Court room, in Eugene, Oregon, ns Ward; and McKibben residence, tho time and place of hearing of Jefferson and Tenth, in the Third objections, if any, to said account Ward. Mrs. O. L. Nichols is here- and for the final settlement and 1 by designated as judge, and Mrs. distribution of the residue of the Anna Swanson and Elnor Witte ns] said estate. Take notice accord judges and clerks of said election ingly. i in the First Ward; R. E. Walker a- MICHAEL kEBELBECK, .judge and Mrs. Nellie Pitcher ano Administrator of the estate of (). O. Veatch, judges and clerks, in August Rudolph Gerisch, deceased. the Second Ward; and Mrs. Delhi I H. J. Shinn. , Richmond, judge, and Mrs. Mabel Attorney for estate. j!3la£8 j Chambers and Mrs. Leita Stewart, 1 judges and clerks in the Third SUMMONS. Ward. Done by order of the Common In the Circuit Court of the State Council the 28th day of July, 1924. of Ore gon for Lane County. HOMER GALLOWAY, Mary L. Hand, plaintiff, vs. Hen City Recorder. ry Hand, defendant. To Henry Hand, the above named Charier Amendment. defendant: I AN ACT to amend the Charter of In the name of the State of Ore the City of Cottage Grove, Ore gon, you are hereby required to gon, by adding a new Chapter thereto authorizing and empower appear and answer the complaint ing the Common Council of the filed against you in the above en titled suit within six weeks from City to issue and sell negotiable the date of the first publication bonds of the City to the amount of this summons, and if you fail so of twenty-five thousand ($25,- to answer, for want thereof the 000.00) dollars or so much there plaintiff will apply to the Court of ns may be necessary for the for the relief prayed for in plaint- purpose of building and con i iff’s complaint, to-wit: for a decree structing trunk sewer lines J? i of the Court dissolving the mar- said city trunk - . ns . follows: One * m * riare contract and bonds of matri- sewer to be known as the host | nionj existing between you and the nut Avenue Trunk Sewer, one to | ....♦ on thg grountia of willful be known as the Sfecond Street desertion for more than one year Madison Avenue-Third Street- immediately prior to the commence- Adams Avenue Trunk Sewer, and meit of this suit and for costs and one to be known as the Sixth disbursements of this suit. Street - Quincy Avenue - Tenth This summons is served by publi Street Trunk 8ewer. _ _ by order of the Hon. G. F. cation ' , judge of tho above THE CITY OF COTTAGE GROVE Skipworth, _ . DOES ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS: named Court, dated the 1st day of Be It Enacted by the Electors of the July, 1924, and the date of the first City of Cottage Grove, Oregon: publication of this summons will be Section 1. That the Common on the third day of July, 1924, and Council of the City of Cottage the date of the last publication will Grove is herey authorized and em be on the 14th day of August, 1924. H. J. SHINN, powered to issue and sell negotiable Attorney for plaintiff. | bonds of the City to the amount of Residence and postoffice address, I twenty-five thousand ($25,000.00) Cottage Grove, Oregon. dollars or so much thereof as may jl3al4 be necessary for the purpose of con- i I structing trunk sewers in said City NOTICE TO CREDITORS. as follows: One trunk sewer to be I known as the Chestnut Avenue In tho matter of the estate of Triv’k Sewer, one to be known as William Lane, deceased. I the Second Street Madison Avenue- Notice is hereby given that Emily Third Street-Adams Avenue Trunk Jane Lane has been appointed Ex Sewer, and one to bo known as th? ecutrix of the estate of William Sixth Street-Quincy A venue-Tenlh 1-ane, deceased, by tho County Street Trunk Sewer. Court of the State of Oregon, ia Section 2. The bonds hereby and for Lane County and that authorized shall be denominated all persons having claims against “Trunk Sewer Bonds’’; they shall the said estate are hereby notified be a general obligation of the City I to present the same to the said of Cottage Grove, Oregon, in de- | [ Emily Jane Lane, at Cottage Grove, I nominations of five hundred Oregon, duly verified as required I ($500.00) dollars each and to ma by law, within six months from ture serially in numerical order at tho first publication of this notice the rate of five hundred ($500.00) which will be on the 24th day of I dollars beginning with and includ July, 1924. EMILY JANE LANE, ing the year 1925 up to and includ- Executrix of the estate of | ing the year 1929, and thereafter William Lane, deceased. I beginning with and including th'' H. J. SHINN, year 1930 up to and including the Attorney for estate. jly‘24 nug21p year 1944 at the rate of fifteen hundred ($1500.00) dollars per year, said bonds to bear interest at not to NOTICE TO CREDITORS. ¡exceed five per cent (5%) per an num from date thereof, payable In the matter of tho estate of Hemi-annually at the City Tretsur Thomas Richardson, deceased. er’s office in Cottage Grove, Ore Notice is hereby given that gon, and the city reserves the right Christena Richardson has been by to retire any or all of said bonds the County Court of the State of after ten (10) years from date Oregon, in and for Lane County, thereof. appointed administratrix of tho Section 3. The Common Council estate of Thomas Richardson, de of the City of Cottage Grove is ceased. All persons having claims against hereby authorized and directed and shall include in its general munici tho estate of said deceased are here pal tax levy each year sufficient by notified to present tho same, special levy to pay the interest on duly verified, to the said Christena the bonds and to provide for the Richardson, administratrix, at Cot payment of the principal thereof tage Grove, Oregon, within six months from the 24th day of July, when due. Section 4. The Common Council 1924. CHRISTENA RICHARDSON, of the City is hereby authorized to Administratrix of tho estate of issue and sell said bonds from time Thomas Richardson, deceased. to time as they may bo needed for . J. SHINN, the purpose herein specified, but II. Attorney for estate. jly24aug21 before any of them shall be sold they shall be advertised for sale by the publication of a notice asking NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE for bids therefor to be published MENT. at Cottage Grove, Oregon, once a week for three (3) successive and Notice is hereby given that consecutive weeks prior to the time ■ IFayette R. Long, administrator of the sale, and they may also give | 1 ”i ine nair, hiiu tney mini » givn i of the estate of Geo. W. Long, do- has filed i- . notice of Male of said bonds in such . ceased ___ in the — County -------- other papers as they may deem to Court of tho State of OreRoa, in be beat for the interest« of the j and for Lano County, his final re City in effecting a sale, but if no port as such administrator, and that ■ satisfactory bids for the purchase ten o’clock in the forenoon of Mon i of the bonds be received they may day, the 1st day of September, 1924, i«ell them at. private sale, but no I at the Court room thereof, have sale either at public or private sale been by said Court fixed and ap- ¡shall be made for less than the face j pointed as the time and place for value of said bonds and accrued hearing objections to said report interest. J and for the final settlement of the Section 5. Raid bonds shall not | estate of said deceased. LAFAYETTE K. LONG, | be taken or considered as a part of Administrator, ; the bonded indebtedness limitation A, E. WHEELER, Attorney. jly24-aug21c | provided in Beet ion 1 of Chapter XI i , or other section or chapter of the Charter of the City of Cottagfl NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT Grove, but are hereby specially au I thorized by a vote of the people I Notice is hereby given that the of the City of Cottage Grove, Ore . undersigned administrator of tno . gon. estate of R. A. McKinley, deceased, Section d. The funds arising, has filed in the County Court of | from the sale or disposal of ail , I»ano County, Oregon, her final ac bonds provided for in this Art shall count as administrator of said es be known as 11 Trunk Sewer Fund” tate and that Saturday, the lflih and shall be kept separate and day of August, 1924, at the hour of 1 apart from al) other funds of th-’ 11 o’clock a. m. of said day has i City of Cottage Grove and shall been set by the County Court of I only be used to pay the costs and ■aid County as time for hearing ob expenses that may be incurred bv jeetions to «aid final account and the City of Cottage Grove in the ( the allowance of the same. construction and building of such jll7a!4 A M McKINLEY. trunk sewers. Administrator of the estate of R. A. McKinley, deceased. State of Oregon) County of Lane) *■ I, Homer Galloway, Recorder of | A negro minister discovered two the City of Cottage Grove, Oregon.. men playing cards on Sunday—and hereby certify that the foregoing, for money. “ Bantus, ” said the minister. is a true and correct ropy of the proposed amendment to the Charter I “ don ’ you know it’s wrong to play of the City of Cottage Grove, by cards on de Hnbbnthf’’ adding a new Chapter thereto, to be, “ Yes,” pnsson,” answered Rastus submitted to a vote of the legal i ruefolly. “But, believe me, all’s voters of the said City of Cottage paying fob mnh sins.”—The Hod Grove, at a special election to be • sonian. SPECIAL ELECTION NOTICE. 571 DEPARTMENT STORES 'our Dollar Has a Permanent urchasing Value here! These purchases are generally made (Erect from the mills. We have the advantage of the best discounts. The vahie of our chandise does not fluctuate with the changes of the wind. Sound Investing Is Not Spending Sit Down Right Now and Mail the Coupon The people who invested their money in Mountain States Power Company 7# Gold Notes are glad they did so. Does not this fact tell you better than a book of statistics that an investment in this company is one of the very best you can make? You can We shall be glad to have you as a profit-sharing investor, You will join our large number of investors if you decide to do so. receive substantial interest payments every six months. We want you tq return the coupon so that we can get in touch Inevitably you you and show how easy it is to become an, investor, thank us if you accept our invitation. INVESTMENT DEPARTMENT Mountain States Power Company INQUIRY WITHOUT OBLIGATION Investment Department, Mountain States Power Co., % Pleaxe «end me your investment information. Name Street _ City ___ ___________ SOUND INVESTMENT IS NOT SPENDING COOLIDGE AND DAWES ONCE RAN A GROCERY Ancestor« of Candidate« Were Partner«. Chicago.—The Coolidge and Dawe« families are not so unacquainted as the distance between Massachusetts and Illinois might make It appear. Their ancestors knew each other and worked together, writes Oscar Hewitt In the Chicago Tribune. Now it Is "Coolidge and Dawes,” candidates for the two highest offices In the land. Many years ago— about 147—It was "Dawes A Coolidge,” grocers, of Wor cester. Mass. The Dawes of the flrm was the great-great-great (perhaps another one or two) grandfather of Gen. Charles Gates Dawes, Republican nominee for vice president. The Coolidge of the flrm was an ancestor of the President of the United States. In the brief day of a newspaper reporter the recon struction of the Coolidge family tree la too tedious a task to say with cer tainty that the grocer Coolidge was the grandfather of several generations back of the present head of the na tion. But one genealogy so Indicates, while another places Grocer Coolidge on a different branch of the tree from that on which the President originated. Companion of Revere. The grocer Dawes was William, re- ferreil to usually as “the patriot," who was the companion of Paul Revere, made famous by Longfellow. Concerning his poem It has been printed that “Mr. Longfellow wrote to an acquaintance who sent him a little antiquarian volume, correcting some of the Imaginative statements in ‘Paul Revere’s Ride’: “ ‘Please accept my thanks for your beautiful book, William Dawes and his ride with Paul Revere. I have read It with great Interest and pleasure. I am afraid that you huve convicted me of grave historic crimes and misde meanors, but I shall not appeal.’" This little volume referred to Is an essay by Henry W. Holland, read be fore the New Eugland Historic Genea logical society on June 7, 1876, tn which is attached a genealogy of the Dawes family. It was In that genealogy that the fact was disclosed that Dawes and Coolidge were In the grocery business. The particular Dawe« of Interest to day was named William, and was born October 2, 1719. The Daweses for five generations up to that time were builders and masons, but thls'WIlltam had a clubfoot and could not follow the trade. He became a goldsmith. In 1742 he married Lydia, daughter of Nicholas Boone, a bookseller of Bos ton, who, one authority asserts, pub lished the first newspaper In America. Nine children were born of this mar riage, of whom William “the patriot" was the second, born September fl, 1745. The third child was a girl, who was named Lydia, horn February 10, 1747. She married John Coolidge, Jan uary 5, 1772. Iwo Families Associated. It was with his brother-fn-law, John Coolidge, that William Dawes, “the patriot," went into the grocery bn«!- ness. John Coolidge seemed to go right along with the Daweses at that time. After William Dawes, father of “the patriot.” married a second time, a number of pieces of real estate In Boston wc»e sold by the heirs of the first wife. Regarding one of them the Holland essay sn.vs: "On January 2 following (1779) oth er heirs sold a piece of garden land on Green lane, on the northwest corner of the road to Rsrion’s point, for 800 pounds to Daniel Jnckson, Mr«. Dawes’ brother, and Anally they «old the Jack- son mansion, on Sudbury street, to John Coolidge for 1,200 pounds. It was next to the Benjamin Eustis es tate, and Samuel Pitts, and thns very near the Dawes mansion. The elder William Dawes sympa thized strongly with the colonies and one writer says that “his apprentices were among the party who threw the tea overboard In the Boston harbor. The elder William Dawes was a strictly religious man, according to the light of hl« day. and Is said not to have allowed his children to laugh or look out of th« window on the Sab bath. Also one history says: “Not only was the food for Sunday prepared on Saturday, that the day might be one of rest for all members of the household, but the shoes and garment« were brush 'd and prepared before hand.” Man Vote« for 70 Year«j Finds Himaelf an Alien Weather Permitting. Golf novice (after her first stroke)—“When do I use the put ter»“ Instructor—“Some time before dark, I hope.' ’—Life. Better After Than Before. “But, darling, don’t you want to marry a man who is economical* ” “I suppose so, but it’s awful be ing engaged to one.’’—Flamingo. Costa Rica is reported to have recently experienced 400 successive earthquakes. The man who stopped to couut them is the man we are going to tie to when a real emer gency arises.—Portland Oregonian. Leaders of the farm bloc talk as if the government could guarantee the weather for the farmer.—Cleve land Times-Commercial. Permanent waves arc Desired by the fair— Men are contented With permanent hair. —M. B. in Boston Transcript. It has been officially declared that any waiter in tho senate res- t aura nt who accepts a tip shall bo fired, but maybe they will follow the example of Secretary Fall and resign first.—Detroit Free Press. New York is the city of opportu nity. A man who went there broke owes $203,005.85 now.—Miami News Record. Campaign song writers will kind ly avoid the tune, “Should Oiled Acquaintance lie Forgot I’’-—Boston Herald. CALL FOR REDEMPTION OF B0ND8. Notice is hereby given that on September 3, 1924, Bancroft Im provement Bonds, Nos. 3, 4 and 5, issue “11,“ City of Cottage Grove, Oregon, are due and payable at tho office of the City Treasurer, First National Bank, Cottage Grove, Ore gon. All of said bonds will be taken up and cancelled on said dato at par value and interest thereon shall cease on said third day of September, 1924. Dated and first published this seventh day of August, 1924, HERBERT EAKIN, City Treasurer, Cottage Grove, a7-21c Lane County, Oregon. City Transfer Co. C. Mulvihill, Prop. FURNITURE MOVING AND STORAGE Piano Moving a Specialty. Phone 99; Res., 168-1. J Spores Fuel Co Now Handling Old Growth Fir and Hardwood Order early for your next winter’s supply. Reduced rates on all orders of ten tiers or over. Office: 9th and Main; phone 99; rei. phone 178-R. tic (r= Lancaster Transfer R. W. Lancaster, Proprietoi Furniture moving, l’iano moving a specialty. We ar also equipped to haul poles, timbers, etc. Office in E. C. Lockwood’» real estate office. Office phone, 8; res. phone, 156-R PROFESSIONAL CARDS H. W TITU8, D. M. D. Dentistry Modern equipment. First National Hank building. Hours. V to 12 and 1 to 6. Evening« and Bundays by appointment. Office phone, 10: res iaence phone, 184-J._______________ HERBERT W. LOMBARD Attorney at I. rw First National Hank Building Cottage Grove, Oro. Phone 84 New York — Samuel Peterson of Lo DB. O. E. FROST gansport, Ind., who has voted In the Office in Ijtwson building nation's *le< tlona for the last TO years, Phone 47 discovered upon his return to this ( fregón country from a visit to his native Den Cottage Grove mark that he was an alien. He was GAVEN O. DYOTT, M. D. permitted to land on the promise that Physician and Surgeon he would go Immediately to hie home. Evenings by appointment Mr. Peterson told the Immigration au Huite 3, Kein Bldg., Cottage drove. thorities thn t he had come to the Unit Entrance on north Sixth street, just ed States with his parents when he off Main. was twenty, and never bad thought ft DR W E LEBOW necesaary to become naturalised. Dentist Hatch-« Family In Tree Office Fifth and Main. Hour*, 8:M to 12 and I to 6:30. Evenings and Pnonee: Sundays by appointment. , office 35, residence 134 Y. Columbia. Pa.—There la one hen tn Lancaster < -unty with high Ideal«, «• DB. H. A HAGEN «he selected a tree In which to lay her Licensed DmglA«. Physician egg« and hatch a family. She belong« to Ephraim Newcomer of Glen Manor, Phone 30. Ostrander Building, and ahe ch< ee an apple tree In the or A30H Maia Street, Cottago Grove chard of her owner'a neighbor, Jacob H. J. SHINN 0. Shellent»'rger Hhell.-nberger found Attorney at law and the hen ha ’ made tier neat In a de Notary Publie cayed crot' h, eight feet from the Practices in all court*. Thirty years ground There were ten oUcka «boat of experience. Bader building, Cot four day« old la the neat. tage Orove, Oregon. r1 ___ .