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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1924)
COTTAGE PROVE SKNTINEL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1924 TH’ OLE GROUCH WHAT MY '-------- ROMAN CAMPAGNA IS NEIGHBOR SAYS -------------------- B a AUWtSIS IM FAVOR Is of Interest to Cottage Grove Folks. When one has had the misfortune to suffer from backache, headaches, dizziness, urinary disorders and oth er kidney ills—and has found relief from all this sickness and suffering that person’s advice is of untold value to friends and neighbors. The following ease is only one of many thousands, but it is that of a Cot tage Grovo resident. Who could ask for a better example? A. Bogers, retired farmer, 706 Chestnut Ave., says: “I have taken Doan’s Pills off and on for several years and they havo always done good work. I was subject to kidney troubles and at times I had diffi culty retaining the kidney secre tions. Doan’s Pills have always regulated my kidneys.” EXACTLY FOUR YEARS T.ATER Mr. Rogers said: ‘‘Dean’s have always helped ine when I needed them.” Price 60e, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy— get Doan’s Pills—the same that Mr. Rogers had. Festcr-Milburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y, WRIGLEYS Chew it after every meal It stimulates appetite and aids digestion. It makes your food do you more good. Note bow It relieves that stulfy feeling after hearty eating. Whitens teeth, •weetens breath and It’s the goody that L-a-s-t-s. . r City Transfer Co C. Mulvihill, Prop. FURNITURE MOVING AND STORAGE Piano Moving a Specialty. Phone 99; Res., 168-L fr Chestnut Transfer Ralph & Clarence Chestnut, Props. (Successor to R. W. Lancaster.) Furpituro moving. Piano moving a specialty. We arc also equipped to haul poles, timbers, etc. Office in E. C. Lockwood's real estate office. Office phone, 8; residence phone, 155-L. Visit the I nternational S tock I Ex position , P ortland , 2s[ov. i to 8 J [ to Portland and return Benefit by low week-end fares now in effect, on sale Friday, Saturday and Sunday—return limit following Tuesday. Or 15-day fares, on sale any day—return limit 15 days, with stop-over at any point enroute. Make all your going away plans to take ad vantage of these low round trip fares. For full information about these and ocher round trip fare» coutmunicau with Southern Pacific H. A. MORSE, Agent OF UV1MG AS LOUG AS POSSIBLE AND CM POSITIVELY AGILI THIS HERE PASTlhAEOF TRMIM* YD KNOCK LOCOMOTIVES OFPU RAILROAD TRACKS VJITVA automobiles , ABODE OF POVERTY People Work Hard but Can't Combat Malaria. amm time i Rome.—Life In the Campagna for the ordinary peasant woman is very GST IU SECH A MURKY I TRM much the same as It was In the days Y BEAT A TRAIN Y* A CROSSIM’, of Servius Tullius. Take half an I HOPE MN FRIEMDS' l L hour’s railway Journey out of Rome TAKE AWAY MN CAR OUTIL I and walk back In the direction of that city, and today you still will encoun ter wild-looking men clad mainly in goatskins, driving before them scraggy looking herds of goatB and sheep and savage sheep dogs In attendance—far more awe-lnsprlng than the captive wolf on the Capltollne hill. To the observer the poverty-stricken holdings and pitiful attempts at farms all seem alike subtuerged In ruin and misery, though the Inhabitants recognize dif ferent degrees of squalor and pros perity. Love plays a targe part In the lives of these peasants, and after the pre liminaries have been settled the next recognized stage In the proceedings is for the bridegroom-elect to provide a capanna—the poor little hut. In com parison with which a thatched cot tage Is an establishment de luxe. The householder will personally lay the ring of foundation stones for the hut, then fell the young trees from the MICKIE SAYS— nearest wood, a friend helping with THEM AIKT NO SECH THINS \ the framework of tree trunks. Onto AS "GOOD ENOUGH" ABOUND THIS I this frame he places layer upon layer PRINT SHOP ! WE DO OUR. VERY < of straw, and, fastening all down, completes his building by leaving a DURNEDESV OH ALL JOBS' MEB8E THATfe WHY WE G<T SO MUCH > tiny chimney-hole at the top. Running Brook a Luxury. COMMERCIAL PRINTING TO DO J Happy Is she whose man has had the good sense to build a capanna with a brook running In front, so she may be spared the toll of a couple of miles’ tramp under a broiling sun with a heavy basket of clothes on her head to accomplish the family wash. An orange tree on one side of the hut and a prickly pear tree covering the wall on the other side Is the sole conces sion to elegance. Should the bride wish to attempt any cooking, she will have to make friends with a neighbor, for the average newly married couple’s capanna has no furnace. In time, If things prosper, both working together, they may accom plish a furnace of stones, and leading on from this the next ambitious achievement will be a little thatched PHONE US pen, like a miniature Indian wigwam, A no for the pig. The donkey, hens and WE WILL ducks will continue living with the CALL) family until such a time as the two are In a position to provide a rough, oblong shelter. Indeed, by dint of CM4AW-Q sheer perpetual hard work, grit and oft) Rot continual self-denial, they might man age well enough were It not for the BILL BOOSTER SAYS curse of the Campagna—malaria. Country of Yellow Face«. Even yet. In spite of continued ef PERSON NEVER.VALUES forts on flip part of the government, THEIR. HEALTH FULLY the Campagna remains the “country UNTIL. THE-» AR.S SICK’. ÍIA A of the yellow faces,” where malaria GREAT BOOSTER FOR GOOD has so changed the blood of sturdy HEALTH’. fM FOR FRESH AIR, farmers, vigorous fishermen, strong, CORRECT EATING, LOTS OF healthy shepherds and charcoal burn ers that they crawl about like so many EXERCISE AND A CHEERFUL VIEW corpses until death seizes them. CF UFE VJVTH HEALTH,YOU The poor wretch In the throes of CAN DO ANYTHING z VJfTHOUT tertian fever, finding no comfort on rr » NOTHING \ If his wretched pile of straw that serves for bed, asks bls wife to light a fire, and iiuixiedlately the room is ulioked with wood smoke, for which there Is Insufficient escape. In the throes of a deadly chill, he drags himself outside to borrow ■ little warmth from the sun, and he and his wife wait with dumb fatality for the fever to abate and bring a more or less prolonged respite, or for the heavier fever that brings release. More often than not both suffer together. For the majority the doctor is more or less a chimera, an un-get-at-able person who lives In the fortress strongholds of the mountains. More over, how can people whose sole idea of luxury Is an occasional treat of black dough flavored with bacon and lamb find the money to pay his fee, let alone the horse to act as convey ance? So one accepts the Inevitable and either dies or recovers; and, of course, there is quinine, which the government now supplies gratis tn THE MARBLE HALLS OF OREGON. many districts. Beneath old Grayback’s mighty dome Dear Mother Nature formed a home By magic power at her command. Nho delved and wrought and uobly planned. Nor gave a thought to man, but caro In shaping wondrous beauties there. The lime-white waters fought their way Thru sand and quartz and marl and clay Tc make a rugged broadening path. Or hurl the boulders in their wrath. Or shap’d with all a nurthcr’s care Tho beautiful stalaetito there. The massive chambers and great hall From marble hewn and quartz, and all The forms that shame the sculp tor’s art Were not perfected each apart, But crysuilized iu one great mold— The work of ages, years untold. The labrvnthine, rock way Concewled so far from warmth of day. In Stygian darknew. all enclosed. In mlenee crave and deep, eofnpaaed The mountain’ h mou L and taught num thrrp To biaea the light and God’s pure air. C. H. FAUNCE. - Correct style» always ia wedding 'and social stationery nt the lira win print »hop. ns Berlin's Zoo Gets Abyssinian Animals Hamburg. — The strangest cargo unloaded here In year» was taken off the Norwegian freighter Randsfjord recently. If was a consignment of animal- from Abyssinia for th« Berlin zoo. The cargo Included drome dariea, jackals, panthers, leop ards, 80 large apes, 24 porcu pines, giant turtles with a com blued weight of 2.500 pounds, and 80 smaller animals of prey of various descriptions. The unloading proved no easy matter. The camels, for in stance, simply lay down on the upper dock and refused to walk down the gangway. They finally had to be lifted off bodily with the aid of pulleys and cranes A leopard managed to alm a vicious blow with his paw al one of the expsrt tamers of th< zoo who had been hired to assist A long scar on his forehead (tears evidence that the leopard aimed straight Every nninm! had to bo inspected by, an otti Hat veterinary before It was al lowed tn land - ♦ i nij»HHtwmu M11 PAGE THREE BEST SABLE FIELD GERMAN SCHEME IS " IMPERILED BY OIL FOILED BY A DRUG Relentlcee Prosecution and Stotre Punishment Will Check Crime Increate, Says E. 4. St. John Sleeping Sickness Cure Bars Russia to Decide Between the Two Industries. Dicker for Colonies. •‘FINANCIAL crimes havo J/ Increased alarmingly since 1913,” says E. A. St. John, president of the National Surety Company of New York. “losses paid by a group of surety and burglary insurance companies In 1918 totaled $3,328,789. These same companies in 1928 paid losses of $20,912,706, and will pay as much or more, In 1924. Our own share In 1928 was $7,917,051 the largest of any single company. In 35 years we have paid In losses $40,000,000. If the crime wave Is to be checked employers, public prosecutors and magistrates must join In a cam paign for relentless prosecution of the criminal and severer prison sen tence«. “Financial and commercial insti tutions must increase protection of messengers and funds t must be more careful in selecting new employes; must watch even old and trusted employes and install better systems O 1924, National Surety Co., of accounts and checking. “Citizens and public officials must Insist upon honesty courses in the The alarming increase in financial crime from 1913 to 1923. public schools. “Magistrates must Increase respect - the law by Imposing more punishment fit the crime. “While tlu-se measures will not end . .<ntences. burglary and embezzlement they cpmles must seek to will prevent their Increase, and ■■ a more severely the unfaithful should greatly lessen the yearly bonded man—they should do, as th’s company has done—make the loss.“ Toronto, Ont—Germany has lost what little chance she had of recov ering her African colonies by trading off for them the formula for curing the sleeping sickness, for France has now the same remedy, or, as the drug gists say, "something just as good.” Bayer 206 has a rival In Pasteur 309. Such Is the announcement of Dr. H. H. Dale, head of the pharmacology de partment of the national research council, London, physiology section, here at the meeting of the British As sociation for tlie Advancement of Science. When Africa had been partitioned by the allied powers they found much of their territory becoming un inhabitable by the spread of the sleep ing sickness, which devastated a belt 2,000 miles long and In places 100 or 200 miles wide, stretching up the Con go from the Atlantic almost to the opposite ocean. The disease was dis covered to be caused by the trypano some, an Infinitesimal wriggler car ried by the tsetse fly and Infecting the blood of man and beast German chemists set about to find a drug that would kill the creature without harming Its host and after fif teen years of effort succeeded. But meantime Germany had lost her Af rican possessions. The formula for Bayer 205, or, ei it Is now called, “Germanln,” was kept secret, but It was Intimated that It would be disclosed If the allies would return the German colonies, amount ing to 1,000,000 square miles. The allies showed no eagerness to buy the recipe at this price, but set their own chemists at work on the problem, fol lowing such clues as could be obtained from the prewar Bayer patents. Now Fourneau, working In the Pasteur Institute at Paris, has found that his 309 preparation has “similar and probably as valuable properties” as Bayer’s 205. Injected Into the blood It will not only free the animal from the trypano somes tn a few days but render It Im mune to further Infection for months afterward. All Brands of Flour Tested by This Woman Moscow.—Sables or oil? That Is tlie question which the Soviet govern ment's planning commission mast de cide. Far off In the northern Pacific the peninsula of Kamchatka protrudes from the mainland like a dagger blade separating the Bering and Hunter seas. For decades Kamchatka hs» been Russia's best happy hunting ground for sables. Every year 5,090 of the little blue-black animals, whose skins are valued at approximately $500.000, were hunted dowu on the peninsula. Now an expedition led by P. L I’olevuv, a geologist of the Soviet geo logical survey, has discovered oil on Kamchatka. The oil Is of an extru fine quality and yields 75 to 78 per Cent of kerosene, whereas the best crude product of the Baku field yields only 40 per cent. The find Is of paramount Impor tance to the economic development of Siberia. Russia’s unfathomable petro leum resources In the Caucasus are too far from this vast domain, while the oil fields In northern Sakhallen, which have been granted as a conces sion to the Sinclair company, are still occupied by Japanese troops. Consid erable pressure Is therefore being put on the Moscow authorities to npproprl ate a sum of money for the opening ---------------------------- OF —-------------------------- of the Kamchatka field. But here the sables interfere. The oil deposits which Professor Polevov has discovered are situated just below the trapping grounds for sables. The sables from the entire peninsula rush Into this trapping Bed furnishings, all descriptions, for space during a certain season of the year when the three rivers of the dis the home, or for the logging camp. trict overflow their banks. The small fur-bearing animals seek refuge in the high open preserve especially set aside for this purpose by the govern ment A decree prohibits any man on blankets, sheets, spreads, comforters, pillows, ner of Industrial or mining activities In the area. And the soft sables army blankets and many other articles. seeking refuge, find death. Expert enced hunters have no difficulty In trapping the creatures wholesale. Kamchatka supplies one-fourth ot Russia’s sables. Will madatne be able to step Into Complete House Furnishers one of those brilliant shops on Fifth avenue next summer and buy hersell a cape made of Kamchatka sable? It REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK depends on the decision of the bol AT COTTAGE GROVE IN THE STATE OF OREGON, AT THE shevlks In Moscow. Will they annul CLOSE OF BUSINESS ON OCTOBER 10, 1924. the decree and permit the sinking ol RESOURCES wells, thus to drive the sables away $383,822.15 or will they be kind to the sables and Loans and discounts....................... 2,504.09 help them rench Paris and New York) Overdrafts, secured, 987.69; unsecured, $1,516.40 ....... U. 8. Government Securities Owned: Denonitud to secure circulation (U. 8. bonds pat value) ................. _.................... $ 12,500.00 Youthful Genius Gets All other United Status Government securities (in Job With Chicago Opera cluding premiums, if any)..... . ........ _........_____ 124,221.94 130,724.94 Closing Out Sale Bed Furnishings Bargain Prices BRESSLER SON Other bonds, stocks, securities, otc__ —____ ______ ___ ______ ”31,143.07 Banking house... $16,500.00; furnituro und fixtures, 5,706..17 22,206.37 Real estnto owned othe.r than banking house....... ..................... 3,699.42 Lawful reserve with Federal Reserve Bunk...................................... 52,807.63 Cush in vault and amount due from national bunks ..................... 11.8,9311.92 Checks on other bunks in tho same city or town as report ing bunk.................................................................... _......... ................ ... 277.05 'total of two preceding items.......................................119,213.97 Redemption fund with U. H. Treasurer un4 duo from U. H. Treasurer ...................................................................................... ...... 625.00 Other assets......................................... ............ _......... „.............. ............... 2,777.09 Total............ ...... LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in ............. ............................................................. $ 2.5,000,00 Surplus fund_____ ___________ ______ ___________ _______ ____ 25,000.00 Undivided profits__ —____ ________ .___________ 12,561.42 Loss currant expensos, interwt, ami taxes paid.. 187.17 12,374.25 Circulating note*, outstanding........................................ -..................... $ 12,500.00 Amount due to national banks........ ............ 3,069.56 Cashier's checks outstanding.... .................. 4,255.35 Total of two preceding items.................................... 7,324.91 Demand depo.s.la (other than bunk deposits) subject to re- servo (deposits payable within 30 days: Individual deposits subject to check..... ......... 596,291.11 Certificates of deposit due in less thun 30 days (other than for money borrowed)........................................................................ „ 730.25 State, county, or other municipal deposits secured by pledge of assots of this bank or surety bond.......................... .............. 36,911.70 Other deunand deposits........................ 28,497.70 Total of demand deposits (other than bank de posits) subject to reserve, four preceding items....602^430.76 Time deposits subject to reserve (payable after 30 days, or subiect to 30 days or more notice, und postal saviugs: Certificates of deposit (other than for momiy lx»rrow<d)___ 1,400.00 Other time deposits............................. -.................. 207,132.42 Postal savings deposits.................... ........................ 2,061.39 Total of time deposits subject to reserve, three preceding items...»...... —............. ................ ............ 211,193.81 Uncle Sam, in this case being Miss It. Leone Rutledge, baker chemist of the Department of Agriculture, tests various brands of flour under the same conditions by baking loaves of bread •nd then testing them for cubic vol ume. She is shown here about to test a loaf. Thrifty Bulldog Has His Own Savings Bank Account Chicago.—Blm Elgert, a bulldog, sarns his own cash and deposits It in a bank. So far as known, he is the only dog who has his own bank ac count Blm Is owned by Mrs. Orel Elbert of Sheridan road, and he earns bls money by going stout the premises and putting things In their proper places. He gets a dime for going to bed promptly, and If he whines or barks his pay Is cut off. He carries baskets to and from the market and gets an extra quarter for watching the automobile. Once a week he takes his collection of quarters and dimes to tbe bank, stands in front of the receiving tell er’s window on his hind legs, gets his book back and trots home. His bal ance was $68 with no withdrawals. Firstborn Said to Lead in Mental Deficiency London.—Defenders of primogeni ture, backbone of ths English beredl tnry principle, received a formidable blow when Dr. Robert Hutchinson stated before the British Medical 1» »odatlon that two-thlrds of tho men tally deficient children he had had to deal with In hla practice had been firstborn children. Defenders of primogeniture point o the efficiency of Innumerable Euro- .«sen monarchs which history reveals, while the backers of Doctor Hutch- Inson’s contention mention Benjamin Franklin, who was the fifteenth child 'if his parents, history being mute re i 'a rdlng the adxlevementa of ths first fourteen children of Josiah Frank- Ila. - t - 055,833.73 Henry G. Weber, a twenty-three year-old Chicago boy, who has been acclaimed abroad as a musical genius, will make hls debut with the Chicago Civic opera at the Auditorium this season. Herbert M. Johnson, business manager of the opera, learned of Mr. Weber's musical prowess while search Total__ ________________ 955,823.73 ing for new talent abroad, und cabled to President Samuel Insult Mr. Web State of Oregon, County of Lane, ss: I, T. C. Wheeler, cashier of the above-named bank, Jo solemnly swear er, who was visiting hls mother In that the above statement is true to tho best, of my knowledge and belief. Chicago at tbe time, was signed at once T. C. WHEELER. Cashier. as an assistant director. Subscribed and sworn to before Correct—Attezt: nu* this 15th day of Octob’T 1924. O. O. VE\'K H. HERBERT EAKIN, Homer Galloway, Notary Public. School Trains Dogs (My commizzion expire. 3 14-1928.) N. W. WHITE, Director». to Lead Blind Men Berlin.—In the historic city of I’ota- dam, there haz been e.tubll.hed a na tlonal training school for a type of dog conspicuous for the Red tiros. In .Ignlu carried on Ids harnass—the guide dog for blinded soldiers. The dog must learn to walk slowly, to obey the master's word to fetch things for him when desired, not only to avoid the holes and projections and ditches dungerou. to Itself, but also to pull the master over far enough for him also to avoid danger. Supposing, for Instance, there Is a projecting mall box. It la no hindrance to the dog, but the animal must be taught that its master should be so led as to avoid running into It. These dog» must also learn to guuga ths speed of traffic so as to Indtcats to their mas ter whether It Is safe to cross th. street. When the time has come for the dog to pass Its final examination the trainer hamc es th'' dog and hid. It lead Its teacher, whose eyes are tied for ths purpose, through Potsdam. 159-J that is the number to call when you have a news item. If you know an item and it doesn’t get printed, the fault is yours for not taking a moment to phone it in. In emergency bases, call the satne number to give in your wantads. Forms close al 12 o’clock I Wednesdays. ¡1 Our phone is for your convenience; don’t hes- L itate to use it. THE SENTINEL