The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, January 01, 1925, Page 4, Image 4

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    COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, 1925
PAGE FOUR
The Sentinel will assist you in
i the preparation of any special ruled
or printed form. Give your home
live wire print shop an opportunity
to meet ecmpctitiou iu any thing a
NOTICE TO CREDITORS.
7b—
Invest the dollars you earn here
in supplying all your needs,
whenever possible, from Cot­
tage Grove Grove merchants,
Cottage Grove industries and
Cottage Grove producers. For,
only through such cooperation
can our city enjoy Progress and
Prosperity.
7 b—
Advise your neighbor to do the
same and convince him that his
cooperation with us in building
up a greater Cottage Grove is
as essential as is yours. With­
out your aid, we cannot prevail.
In turn, Cottage Grove merch­
ants, industries and producers
should resolve
7 b—
Continue to give you their un­
divided attention, prompt serv­
ice and courteous treatment at
all times.
It is to the advantage of all con­
cerned to go out of our way to
purchase the wares and pro­
ducts of home merchants, in­
dustries and producers.
PASTEURIZED
or RAW
M ilk
Delivered any place
in city.
1 qt........................12c
2 qts.................. 24c
3 qts........ ........... 33c
4 qts,
40c
We get our milk
from three dairies.
From cows tested
for tuberculosis by
both county and
federal authorities
Our milk is handled almost
entirely by machinery under
the most sanitary conditions
possible.
Powell Dairy
Phone 186-R
Notice is hereby given that
James C. Huff and Gracie A. Con­
ner have been by the County Court
of the State of Oregon in and
for Lane County, appointed ad­
ministrator and administratrix of
the estate of Louisa A. Huff, de­
ceased.
All persons having claims against
said estate are required to present
the same with the proper vouchers
to the undersigned at the law of­
fice of Herbert W. Lombard, First
National Bank Building, Cottage
Grove, Oregon, within six (6)
months from the date of the first
publication of this notice.
Dated and first published this
4th day of December, 1924.
JAMES C. HUFF AND
GRACIE A. CONNER,
Administrator and administratrix
of the estate of Louisa A Huff, i
deceased.
Herbert W. Lombard,
Attorney,
d4-jl(T) I
HANGS DOG DAILY
TO OUST SPIRITS
Canadian Police Discover
Savage Practices of
Indians.
Wrangell, Alaska.—Killing and tor­
turing members of the tribe having
failed to drive away evil spirits that
were causing hunger and disease, an
Indltyi in the Liard district of Can­
ada, 500 miles east of here, hanged a
dog dally until he had put to death his
whole sled team.
This was one of the tales that tric­
kled through to Wrangell by means of
gold prospectors after a party of Cana­
dian royal mounted police passed
through here recently bound for Van­
couver, British Columbia, with five In­
dians accused of torturing to death
Mocassin, a lad of seventeen. The
boy was said to have been burled while
he still breathed.
Legends that the Indians of the
wilds of northern British Columbia
and southern Yukon commonly tor­
tured und slew fellow tribesmen for
being friends and companions of in­
jurious spirits have long been com­
mon among prospectors.
Killed for Witchcraft.
Five months ago Frank Bass, factor
I
WANTADS
■
------------------- . for the Hudson’s Bay company at Fort
Liard, Yukon territory, reported to
WE SELL LATE MODEL, HIGH Canadian authorities that Big Aleck,
est grade typewriters at low a Cree Indian living on the Mackenzie
prices and on easy terms. We also i
handle all makes of adding ma ' river, had told him that nomad In­
chines.
Every machine is tlior dians from the Nelson river, in British
oughly rebuilt and guaranteed. Boy j Columbia, had murdered a boy ac­
a machino and pay like rent. I cused of witchcraft. The crime was
Royal Sales Co.. Inc., 500 Oregon ) placed at 40 miles south of Fort Liard.
Bldg., Portland, Ore.
tf-sn(2) I
Superintendent Knight of the royal
FOR SALE—FIFTEEN ACRES police, stationed at Vancouver, sent a
river bottom land, $1500—$500 patrol to Investigate. The Liard dis­
cash. Four-roomed cottage, orch­ trict was reached after traveling hun­
dreds of miles on foot with pack dogs
ard. Ono mile from Dorena high
and navigating the swift lower Liard
school—Seven miles from city, on ' river by canoe.
Big Aleck, when 1
Row river road.
C. L. Camp­ found, repudiated the story. The
bell.
n24-jlp(2) j
party of three policemen, commanded
REWARD FOR RETURN OF by Inspector T. V. Sandys-Wunsch, I
brown leather suit case with a camped near the suspected Indiana
Patiently studying the territory, the
man’s belt around it. Was lost
Saturday, December 20, near the j Investigators came on a hole In which ;
south entrance of the city. Leave ' they found the body of a boy with his ,
it at the Union Oil station for j handB tied behind him.
Girl Pleads for Llfa
reward.
d22-jlp(2?
After that confessions from the In- J
OLD RAGS WANTED—NOTHING dlans came easily. These were to the
less than 2 feet square. Must be I effect that Edy, a squaw, had sus­
clean and of material that will ab pended Mocassin head downward from
sorb gasoline; old underclothing, a sapling to drive away evil spirit*
* I
flannels and the like preferred. Can after Big Aleck had dreamed that the
not use old socks, mercerized or J lad was a sorcerer. A girl, Lucy,
hard surface goods or Bmall pieces
of any kind. We want the best rags found Mocassin hanging there and
and pay the best price, 5 cents the begged that he be cut down. Lucy
pound. The Sentinel.
tf said that the lad was alive when pot
Into the hole, but other Indians as­
GUARANTEED HOSIERY, HAM- serted that he was killed flrat by hit­
ples your size free to agents. ting him on the head with a rock.
Write for proposition paying $75
weekly full time, $1.50 an hour! The police arrested Edy, her three '
sparo time, selling guaranteed ho- , brothers, Dan, Jimmy and Clem, and
siery to wearer; muBt wear or ■ Big Aleck, and took them to Fort
replaced free. Quick sales, repeat Liard. At a hearing there the in­
orders.
International
Stocking spector, a magistrate, decided that the
mills, 6234, Norriston, Pa.
nl0jllc2 j prisoners should go to Vancouver for
FOR SALE—FORD TRUCK IN trial.
The tliree policemen brought the :
A No. 1 condition, 1923 model, |
four speed transmission, only $200. ! prisoners out to Wrangell, traveling
1,000 miles on foot and by canoe.
C. W. Watkins, north Eighth
No police had been In the Liard dis­
•street.
(129-jlp
trict since 1892.
I
WOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM
someone who will cut and sew Many Rare Treasure»
carpet rags, phone 134-L. d29jle(2) I
CARPENTERING AND HOUSE
repairing. Small jobs a specialty. 1
Have a Stevons six touring car i
which I will trade for a vacant
lot. W. C. Monroe, 145 north I j
street.
d29j8p(2) I
LISTEN
Jersey
People's
a quart.
cows.
FOLKS! PURE WHOLE I
milk can be bought at j
Moat Market for only 10c I
Milk is from T. B. tested
d29j8p(2) j
FOR SALE—HIGH GRADE .TER
sey heifer in milk. Mra. M.
Nordstrom, two miles oust of city
on
Row river road.
Phone
29-F-4.
jl-5p I
Zfy
Economizing
Do this by taking
advantage of our
closing out sale.
All stock goes at
cost and less.
Wynne & Kime
Inspector Says One “Ghost”
Happy New Year
Was Probably a Man.
London.—George E. Mlles, Inspector
of Windsor castle In the lord cham­
berlain’s department, who has just re­
tired after more than 51 years’ serv­
ice, has turned to reminiscences.
Speaking of the “ghosts” that are
said to have been seen at the castle
from time to time, Mr. Mlles smilingly
denied that he had ever seen any,
though he added:
“I have beard a number of noises
which I cannot account for. and I have
considerable faith in psychic phe­
nomena."
There was reason to believe, he
said, that the supposed “ghost” that a
guard’s sentry shot at an the east
terrace some years ago was really a
man.
Mr. Mlles served under three sover­
eigns and said that of all the historic
ceremonies he bad seen the most not­
able was that In June, 1911, when the
Prince of Wales was Invested and In­
stalled a Knight of the Garter at
Windsor.
The king has granted Mr. Mlles the
use of the Saxon tower for a few
months until his house In Windsor Is
ready.
We greet you on this happy New Year’s day
with the wish that all happiness and good
things may be yours during the twelve-month.
If our Pay Cash and Pay Less plan has helped
make the past year more profitable for you,
we trust you may repeat the performance
during the year that starts today.
GRAYS
EASHUCARRY
Cottage Grove, Oregon
Ivan E. Warner, Manager
Adventurers to Seek
South Seas Continent
San Francisco.—Bound for the leg­
endary "lost continent" of the Pacific,
the adventure-scarred old schooner Lu­
zon, veteran of tropic trade paths. Is
heading toward the sunset on Its three-
year scientific cruise.
M. R. Kellum, retired Florida mil­
lionaire, Is financing the expedition,
which will dig back of the strange
tales handed down from generation
to generation of the “Noah-Noah
land," where great cities rose long be­
fore the western world began to record
its history With him are h’s family
and a group of scientists from Bishop
Museum foundation, authorities on
South Sea life, the fauna and flora,
the geological formations, oceanog­
raphy, zoology and biology.
The trip was conceived several years
ago by Kellum. OriglnaHy It was to
have been a pleasure cruise. Then th»
Bishop museum asked permission to
send one man along, and the idea grew
until now six experts will be picked up
at Honolulu. Two tutors will care for
the education of Kellum's sons and
daughters, all of whom accompany
him. Mrs. Kellum Is a niece of the
late Andrew Carnegie.
Like true adventurers, the party
does not know where It Is going. Pro­
visions for one year have been taken
along, and It is expected the expedi­
tion will last three years. The ar­
senal Is calculated to take care of any
emergency.
Let your children have all the bread they want and
eat more yourself. Bread and wheat products are na­
ture’s greatest gift to humanity.
You’ll really enjoy bread if its baked at home so whole­
some and nutritious with a flavor you can’t bnv. Bake
your bread or rolls with—
Evidence Convince
*
Court
Dog Bit Girl
*
on Leg
*
New York.—A pedigreed English
bulldog, worth $200, refused to indi­
cate, by growl or wink, in the Coney
Island court whether he had bitten
two girls on the leg while they were
renting on the sands of Manhattan
on July 21. The complainants
Found in Mesopotamia beach
Insisted William Patton, owner of th»
Chicago.—The Sumerian founder! of dog, be punished for harboring a
ancient Kish, tn Mesopotamia, were vicious animal.
artisans possessing “skill and knowl­
Mr. Patton protested his dog was
edge unprecedented among other an­ vivacious snd sporttve, but never bel­
cients," In the opinion of members of ligerent Magistrate Folwsll ruled It
the Field Mmeum-Oxford university would be necessary for him, the court,
expedition to that seat of the world's to see the scars. If any.
earliest civilization.
The magistrate directed the exami­
D. O. Davies, director of the mu­ nation take place In bls chambers.
seum. announced
had received There he retired with the blushing
late reports from Prof. 8. Langdon, court stenographer, ths blushing at­
heading the expedition, that "the torney and the equally blushing com­
value and •variety of treasures and plainants—Mrs. Ethel Bleleeeld, twen­
art works excavated have exceeded ty years old, and Miss Frances Cut-
all expectations."
rooa, eighteen, both of Brooklyn.
“Jewels of exquisite workmanship,
According to the court records. Mag­
finely engraved cylinder seals of in­ istrate Folwell observed that the
estimable historic value, glased pot- i young women bad been bitten, and, re­
tery of unique and rare design and , turning to the courtroom, fined Mr.
artistic Inlay of silver and lapis lazuli I Patton $10.
are Included In these discoveries," said
Mr. Davies.
FOR SALE—THIS YEAR ’S CLEAN
oat baled hay. Stored in town, j
Every patron of The Sentinel is helping to give Cottage Grove Sold only in % ton lots or more, j
a newspaper which eminent authority has stated to be one of $20 per ton at barn. Clean cheat
t'le best country newspapers published by anyone anywhere. hay $15 per ton. Phono 37F-4 or!
see Williams Bros.
jl-8p i
Munich Telephone Chief
*
TAKING ~ORDERS FOR
1925
Introduce
Novel
System
baby chicks and hatching eggs.
! Purebred Barred Rocks, O. A. C.
Munich.—"Put a nickel In the slot
mid Kleinsmith strain, two and and hear tonight’s opera performance
three vear-old hens except a few In the State opera houses" Is the lat­
early hatched pullets mated with est Munich slogan.
The telephone
cockerels with records of 219-273. administration has just opened four
j Place your order early and got opera-hearing halls tn MXinlcb suburb
*,
I your choice. 100 chicks, $15; 500 where long rows of pay telephones
chicks. $72; 1000 chicks, $140; 15 wait for customers, eager to bear
eggs, $1.50; 100 eggs, $6; 500 eggs, grand opera for 50 pfennigs.
$27.50; 1000 eggs. $50. Also pure-
Telephone subscribers may use
! bred White Leghorns, O. A. C. their phones at boms against a
! and Hollywood strain, 2 and 3- monthly fee for the opera serric
*
; old hens except a few early-hatched When the subscriber who listens to
pullets, all mated to cockerels with grand opera Is wanted by another
: records of 240-280.
100 chicks. subscriber. the exchange Interrupts
$14.50; 500 chieks, $70; 1000 the entertainment flor the duration of
The transmission
*rhicks, $130; 15 eggs, $1; 100 eggs. the conversation.
$5.50; 500 eggs. $25; 1000 eggs. is entirely over wires and has noth­
$48. Guaranteed *0% fertile eggs ing to do with radio. Subscribers who
10-day teat. Guaranteed 100
*1.
live listen to grand opera need no amplifier
delivery on baby chicks. Terms: ■ units and loud talkers as used in the
20% with order, balance due 10 radio field.
days before shipment.
W. N.
Elliott, 5 tniles east of Cottage British Scientist to Explore
Grove on Row river road. Phone
Ancient Honduran City
25 F 5. Cottage Grove, Ore., Disston
Route.
n20dl8jlj8p
London. -Dr. Gann, archeologist and
W \\ : I 1> GIRI TO HEI.I' Wl I’ll expert on the Mayan civilisation of
housework. Mra. Ida Miller nt Honduras and Yucatan, is on his way
boarding house, 204 south Seventh to Jamaica, whence he will go to Brit
afreet and Adams nvenue, phone tab Honduras to explore the ruins of
132 J.
jle 1 the ancient Mayan city which he and
a number of companions discovered
Will, ' do HEWING, MENDING early thia year. Dr. Gann hopes to
or darning at my home. Mra. i find inscribed on jade or painted pot­
Nettie Jones, 128 aouth Fifth tery a date prior to 68 B. O. tbe »aril
•treet
g
jl 12p(S) • esc Mayan data at proeant knewn.
Start the New
Year Right—
“NOISES” AT WINDSOR
CAS fLE ARE MYSTERY
Trade Bonaparte’*
House for Hi
*
‘‘iliakcs thread Light as a Feather:
Don’t let a dealer try to persuade you that another flour
is just as good as FEATHERFLAKE. Although dif­
ferent, Featherflake costs no more than ordinary flour.
You’ll be surprised how good it is.
THERE’S A DEALER IN EVERY COMMUNITY
■''YOU’LL
BE SURPRISED^
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.
Sword
Parle—Prince Victor Napoleon has
given to the French government tba
house at Ajaccio. Corsica, in which
Napoleon Bonaparte was born and In
return has received the Boman sword
of honor presented to Napoleon when
he was first consul, and a clock by
Clodion.
These objects formed part of the
personal estate ef Napoleon HI. Liti­
gation over them was earned on for
years between the late Empress Bn-
genle and the French government.
Prince Victor inherited this Utlgatloa
with the rest of Eugenie’s property,
but by the present arrangement It 1*
definitely settled.
The sword and clock now are I*
the Decorative Arts museum.
3,000 Crow
*
Chase
Eagle to It
* Valhalla
Nevers. France.—The strange
sight of a huge eagle being pur
sued by a flock of crews eett-
mated at some 3,000 caused the
townfolk to «retch their necks
The eagle eventually sought
refuge at the Chateau de Oussy.
where keepers tuuaedlataly shot
It. whereupon the flock of crown
disbanded and disappeared The
measured more than eight
foot screes the wing
*
E have much for which to thank our
good patrons, whom we wish happi-
ncss and prosperity. Our resolution
shall be to given an even better service during
the year that is starting. This we hope to be
able to do just as soon as we are in our new
location, which will be just west of our pres­
ent location. We extend an early invitation
to one and all to plan to visit us then and
see the splendid buys we shall have, to offer.
We trust that we may also see you often
between now and then.
THE WHITE
PHARMACY