The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, March 16, 1925, Page 3, Image 3

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    COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1925
Max Schwartz the tailor says,
¡“When you have tailoring to be
done, take it to a tailor.’* ml6-26p
The 8. 8. I .asswell family and
! Miss Helen Breedlove motored to
Portland and spent the week end
with Mrs. Lasswell’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. M. C. Banfield.
Mrs.
Banfield is in a Portland hospital
recovering from a serious operation.
Miss Dorothy Jackson sustained
an injury to her right eye Ctetur-
day afternoon when she was struck
by a rock thrown in play. She is j
I getting along satisfactorily.
A FIRST NATIONAL PICTURE
Al and Roy Rockett
Present
'
THE ADVENTURES OF
ABRAHAM
LINCOLN
A most astonishing picture
play of romance, drama,
humor and thrills.
Arcade Theatre
19-20
Admission, 50c and 25c
Matinee for school children Friday after-
noon, admission 20 cents
□□nnnnn□□□□□□□□□□□
William E. Grimes has bought
□ the Norman H. Cochran property
□ j on south Eighth street through
n
_
□ | Hall & Lang. Mr. Grimes will take
a
□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□
possession of the property March
The Free Methodist district 21. Mr. Cochran plans to leave
quarterly meeting will be held soon for Califqrnia.
here March 19 to 22,- with Rev.
A 10-pound son was born
W. E. Goode, of Macdoel, Calif., I day to Mr. and Mrs. George
I ford.
in charge.
Mrs. Herman F. Edwards re­
Two houses, also choice lots and
turned this morning from Spokane, building sites, for sale by owner—
where she spent three weeks with easy terms to responsible people—
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. ! buy ahead of Cottage Grove’s big
Chingren. ” Mr. Edwards motored boom. Watch this eity grow while
to Portland Saturday and brought the mills build up. A. L. Woodard,
Mrs. Edwards home from there. iphone 183-Y.
f2<>m26p(2)
It pays to list your property
Miss Gwendolyn Mooney returned
with Hall & Lang.
I to her work today at the Southern
The Rinkeydinks, a boys’ club Pacific station after being absent
under the supervision of A. Ralph for a few days on account of ill­
Spearow, have changed their name ness. Miss Bernice Brainard filled
to the Lions Cubs. Mr. Spearow’s Miss Mooney’s position during her
Japanese film, which recently wa.“ absence.
Mrs. Dessie Grigsby, of Waits­
shown in the Arcade theater, will
be shown at the church tomorrow J burg, Wash., spent the week end at
evening for the benefit of this i the home of her brother, Arthur
club.
A ten-cent admission will I Ishmael.
be charged.
Our new office and ware­
Mrs. L. C. Michener arrived ’ house is just north of the depot.
Saturday from Washougal, Wash., j Visit us. Godard & Randall.
for a visit with Mr. Michener.
Charles Lewis, of Woodburn,
Compare our prices with those | spent Friday and Saturday at the
of others on shingles.
Leave home of his daughter, Mrs. W. 8.
orders for Heath & Milligan McCaleb. Mr. Lewis was a resi­
paint,
Short’a
Second
Hand dent of Cottage Grove about 20
store.
ml2-23p(2) years ago.
Mrs. Jess Griffin, of Eugene,
Miss Leoane Hohl, who is em­ spent the week end at the home
ployed in the Eugene telephone ex- of Mr. Griffin’s sister, Mrs. G. W.
change, spent the week end with McQueen.
her mother, Mrs. Maude Hohl.
City Briefs
8. M. Anderson, H. N. Anderson,
G. E. Anderson and A. W. Middle­
ton, of Aberdeen, Wash., and W. H.
Abel, of Montesano, Wash., ar­
rived yesterday on business in-con­
nection with tho Anderson & Mid­
dleton mill.
Mr. Abel returned
last evening.
Ray Nelson for Radiolas.
Miss Maude Blackmore, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Blackmore,
sprained her right ankle Tuesday
when she slipped on the sidewalk
near the west side school. She is
again able to get around.
Mrs. E. 8. Holderman returned
last evening to her home at Ru-
Studebaker announces a new jada, . after spending some time
model Standard six coach for here caring for Mr. and Mrs. O. O.
only $1545. Service Garage.
Veatch, who both recently under­
Joe Kaspyr has ben discharged went operations. Mrs. James Short
from a Eugene hospital.
will care for them now.
IF
Seeds and Plants
We have a good supply of fresh *
garden seeds in package
and bulk
PLANTS—This year we are stocking the Ever­
green Hot House plants.
■
i
!
Ì
SPUDS—Early seed potatoes and Netted Gem.
CANDY SPECIALS
THIS WEEK
See Our West Window
20c Lb
Marvin Smith was a business
Tho
local
Methodist
church
visitor Thursday in Albany.
raised $1400 for the retired min-
The E. J. Kent family are plan-1 inters’ fund in the recent circuit
ning to leave the fore part of ridere campaign.
April by motor for Agenda, Kan­
Mrs. . C. A. Moore and daughter
sas, their former home. They will j have returned from their former
take three months for tho trip.
home, Agenda, Kansas, where they
Mrs. Edwin Bushnell and son spent six weeks visiting relatives.
Donald, of Dexter, are visiting at
Mr. and Mrs. John Culver, of
the home of Mrs. Bushnell’s grand- Portland, spent the week end at
mAher, Mrs. 8. E. McKinney.
the home of their son, Harry Cul­
Ray Nelson, auto electrician. ver.
Weise Brothers have received a
Earl Fullmer was in Corvallis
over the week end and attended Clyde donkey engine to be used
the O. A. C.-California basket ball at their sawmill on Cedar creek.
The machine was taken to the mill
Our new office and wäre­ game.
house is just
st north of the depot.
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Grannis spent . Saturday.
Visit us. Godard
C_i—2 —
__
& Randall.
the week end in Salem and attend-| The Dayton Days family, of
Umphrey & Mackin have in­ ed the state terminal basketball Portland, returned home Friday, af-
stalled an electric sign.
games. While there they visited ter spending last week at the E.
J. H. Heard underwent a medi­ with friends. Their son and daugh­ J. Kent, W. E. Nixon and Lee
Nixon --------
homes. The families were
cal examination in a Eug ne hos­ ter, Robert ......
„„rvi 1 --------
and Carolyn, were
pital Saturday. He will unuergo week end guests at the J. W. Sears on«e neighbors in Kansas.
a more thorough examination some home.
M re. Lloyd Smith returned Sat
day this week.
Now is the «-time to have your urday to her home in Portland,
pressed, after spending last week with her
cleaned
Galloway, insurance, 511 Main. M garments
and
ml Bpd parents, «Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Ash­
Mr. and Mrs. John Bell, of Hoffman Cleaners.
Her little daughter, Marie,
Assiniboia, Sask., who were re-
Mrs. Flora McGee left yesterday by.
turning home from Ashland, where for Portland to visit with her who had spent three weeks with
they had spent the winter, spent daughter, Mrs. Laura Dunmire. She her grandparents, returned with her
the week end here with their old I is planning to cook for the Mene- mother.
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Richardson,
j Canadian friends, Mr. and Mrs. fee Lumber company near Portland,
J. W. Craig.
1 which will start operations the of Dallas, where they are in the
newspaper business, were guests
Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Hawkins | fi™‘ of next month.
and their son and his wife, Mr. j J Mr. and Mrs. Harrv Wheeler, of Hatur,,a-V afternoon at the Elbert
J and Mrs. Leslie Hawkins, motored | Roseburg, motored up Wednesday 1 Bede home.
Miss Beth Bede spent yesterday
io Roseburg yesterday and spent and visited at the homes of Mrs.
| the day at the home of Mrs. C. A. Wheeler’s brother, H. C. Hart,,a* the D- W. McKinney home at
| Smith, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. and Mr. Wheeler's parents, Mr. ®MPnaw*
and A! rs. M. M. Wheeler. ♦ Mr. | Earl Ishmael, who is in a Salem
, F. W. Hawkins.
Studebaker announces a new i Wheeler returned home Friday but hospital recovering from the loss
model Standard six coach for Mrs. Wheeler remained at tho of his left leg, which was mangled
Hart home until yesterday, when in a recent train accident, is re­
only $1545. Service Garage.
O. C. Davis returned Thursday Mr. and Mrs. Hart and Mr. and ported as in a satisfactory condi­
I to his position in the postoffiee, Mrs. A. E. Laffoon and baby took tion. He was rather low tho lat
i after being off several days on her home by motor and spent the ter part of the week but has ral-
day in Roseburg at the Wheeler lied and his recovery seems cor-
I account of illness.
home.
tain.
Mrs. Arthur Ishmael nnd
Mrs. Aida Smith was ill soveral
children were in Salem over the
Expert
altering
and
repair
ser
­
days last week,
Her place as
ml6pd week end with Earl and Arthur
grade teacher was taken tempo- vice at Hoffman Cleaners.
Mrs.
George
M.
Scott
and
chil­ Ishmael, who have been there since
rarily by Mrs. Georg? Matthews.
the accident.
dren
spent
the
week
end
in
Eugene
Rawleigh’s Good Health Products
with
Mrs.
Scott
’
s
father,
F.
j for sale by W. E. Mayes, rural
Wooley.
Mrs.
Scott
also
salesman, phone 2F3, and W. A. L.
Hemenway, city salesman, phone called on her sister, Mrs. C. J. Par si Put T heir Dead
2F22.
m9-30p(2) ChandlefJ of Wendling, who was in
on Towers of Silence
a Eugene hospital, where she re­
Elbert Bede attended the ses­ cently underwent a minor opera­
It was a terrifying sight und I
sion of the Oregon Newspaper tion. Mrs. Chandler expects
to re­ was the flrst European to see it. I
bad to camouflage myself und to
conference held Friday and Satur­ turn home soon*.
dress and act like a native of India
day in Eugene.
Elbert Smith
Miss Myrtle Kern and Miss In order to visit the sucred burial
attended Saturday.
Esther Silsby were in Eugene Sat­ places of the l’ursl, says g writer
Mrs. J. H. Chambers and Mrs. urday on business.
in "Deutsche Medlzlnsche Woclien-
Clara Burkholder were Eugene
schrlft"
For
rent.
—
Office
space.
Apply
The burial places, or rather the
visitors Friday.
Hoffman Cleaners.
ml6p storing places, of the dead are the
I
For Radiolas and parts see
O. O. Veatch was in Eugene Towers of Silence. Foreigners cun
Ray Nelson.
Thursday to have the stitches re­ never get there, dead or alive. All
are prohibited. Only
moved from the wound which was photographs
by special Influence was It possible
recently made when he underwent for me to get near these strunge
an operation for varicose veins. towers. A P hts I to whom I had
He is ¿etting Along satisfactorily, been recommended by a friend
J. T. Smith, son-in-law of Mr. agreed to guide me.
On Malabar hill there Is a grove.
Veatch, took him to Eugene by
surrounded by u high wall. A road
motor.
takes one up to the house of the
Mr*, Frances Gray and her guards. We happened to Bee the
grandson, , Merrick Metcalf, who burial of a rich Pursl. The body
makes his home with Mrs. Gray, was dressed In white linen and lay
left Thursday for Salem to make on a network of strong linen straps
their home.
Mrs. Gray has sold held up by 12 carriers. The entire
mourning crowd, dressed In white
her property on west Main street Instead of black, followed the
to W. E. Lebow.
Tho Lebows corpse two and two. Each couple
are moving into the house today. was tied together by a white linen
J. Hardy Crow underwent an ribbon. Eagles und hawks circled
In the air.
operation Wednesday in a Eugene about
I was unable to get to the Tow­
hospital. He is getting along satis- ers of Silence proper, but my com­
factorily.
panion described the burial pro­
Miss Elizabeth Allen, of port­ cedure. The corpse is laid on the
YOU’LL ENJOY
land, returned home Friday, ai ter platform of one of the towers by
men who are employed for their
FAULTLESS BREAD
a visit with her sister, M rs. Ed whole lifetime In this work. As the
Whether for sandwiches, Saltzman, anil at the homes of body begins to decay the eagle*
with your meal, for toast, Mr*. Edgar King and Mrs. Anna come down. The skeleton remains
for dressing, or for any _ of Petrie. She was also here on for about three months, and then Is
buried in a valley.
the many ways in which business.
bread is used, no bread is
Percy Rogers recently received
superior to Faultless Bread. word of the illness of his father, Possibility Venus of
A. Rodgers, who makes his home
Milo Never Had Arms
in Sheridan with his daughter, Mrs.
It
may be some consolation to art
Bessie Lady.
—
He is improving
lovers throughout the world, who
satisfactorily.
have wondered in what position
Mrs. H. H. Veatch «pent the were the inlsBlng arms of the fa­
G. A. Sanden, Prop.
week end in Corvallis with her mous Venus de Milo statue In the
sister, Mrs. Jennie Currin, and in Louvre, to learn that even the an­
cients themselves were perplexed
Mrs. Marvin Smith and Mrs. Portland with Mr. Veatch.
on this point, according to a letter
Peter Nelson left Saturday for
John R. Smith and Jack Klop­ to the Springfield (Mass.) Repub­
Melrose for a week ’s visit at the fenstein was down from the Boho- lican.
Doctor Edde, a French physician,
home of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Smith, mia district during the week. They
parents of Mrs. Nelson an<l Mr. brought down the hides of two bob­ has Just made known that during
a recent visit to Egypt he came Into
Smith.
cats which Mr. Mpiith had caught possession of a small bronze statu­
A. W. Helliwell was in Roseburg near their mine and collected the ette of the same period as the
Friday on business.
Venus de Milo. This statuette Is
bounty.
Dr. Hagen can eur^ neuralgia.
Arthur Woodring, who has been an exact copy of the famous Venus,
and like the original. It has no arms.
Charles Gettys was a Eugene working at Sutherlin, was called Doctor Edde, therefore, concludes
to
Pendleton
Friday
on
account
that the Venus de Milo never at
visitor Friday.
Mrs. W. E. Dodge was in Eugene of the illness of his aunt, Mrs. any time bad arms, and he believes
that the sculptor, when he had
Fannie Mitchell.
Friday.
carved out of stone such a divine
Mr*.
L.
G.
Moxley
returned
Mrs. Anna Seybolt, of
form, gave up all Idea of adding
returned home Friday, after visit­ Thursday to her home at Wilbur, arms.
When the Venus de Milo was dis­
ing at the homes of her daughters, after a month’s visit at the home
Mrs. Frank White and Mrs. Lee of her brother, Joe Geer, of Lon­ covered on the Island of Milo a
large reward was offered to anyone
don.
Williams.
who could find the arms, but, In
The property of the estate of spite of extensive search, nothing
Our new office and ware­ Susan Shaffer, deecased, is valned
house is just north of the depot. • t $2217.80, ««-cording to the in­ was discovered.
Visit us. Godard & Randall.
ventory of the appraisers, Worth
Way to Judge Age
Mr. and Mr*. Frank Morgan, of Harvey, George H. Brainard and
moving
A
__
____ . picture man delights
Buckley, Wash., who were enroute Charlo 8. Hall.
to Sell of a proposal that happened
to California by motor, visited
Earl Van Valin has been admit­ while be was directing one of hl*
briefly Thursday with 0.
E.
latest pictures.
It seems that a
ted to a Eugene hospital.
Umphrey.
young writer nad ¡aid his heart al
Sv. A. Garoutte and son Colin,
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bartell and the feet of the leading woman, and
been coldly turned down.
N. J. Nelson Jr., Mrs. A. W. Kime Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Helliwell and had
“Perhaps It’* best, after all," he
and Mr*. W. W. McFarland mo­ ■oi William motored to Roseburg remarked, acidly. "After all. * man
tored to Portland Friday and spent yesterday.
of twenty-five would soon tire of
the week end. Mrs. Garoutte. who
George M. Marksbury and Mrs. a woman who hover* around thirty-
had spent the week there at the O. M. Miller were Koaebarg visi­ two."
“But Fm not that old," gasped
home of her sister, Mrs. Jack tor« yesterday.
the woman. "Whatever led you to
Chllahan, returned with them last
District Huperiateadent 8. A. Da a believe that I’m thlrty-twoF
evening.
“Well, perhaps you're not," ad­
-
r
r ford conducted the nervicea pre­ mitted the young man, “but It cer­
Having heard a raraor to the ceding the «-oamangin service yea-
tainly
struck me that you must bo
effeet that I am moving away j terday forenoon at the Methodist
somewhere near the freezing polnt."
from Cottage Grove, I, I with to, ekoreh.
.»
>*
—I»* Angele* Times.
correct it. I am here to remain. !
Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Grube i
D. A. Forbes, M. D
fl9ml9p(T) returned Saturday from Portland,
Your home print shop—The Sen­
Mr. ...f Mrs J. M VaaBiader where Mr*. Grube recently under tinel—should be always considered
■ nd son. of Aberdeen, Wash., ar­ I went an operation.
She is im­ first. Usoally it can handle any
rived Friday,
proving slowly.
¡job of printing you may have.
x
The Cottage Grove
Electric Bakery
PAGE THRBB
For Today and Every Day
Every day you’ll find the best Grocery values in the
city here. Choice lots of the finest food products
obtainable—yet priced reasonably low.
McQueen’s Grocery
PHONE 65
,L
Anyway, there is some consola­
tion in knowing that it is almost
impossible to transmit a cross-word
The restored ruins of 1’ompell puzzle by radio.—Hudson Dispatch.
still show wall inscriptions und reg­
Polygamy has its advantages,
ular election campaign posters
which often ure signed by women Think of having an entire harem
The same ruins tell us also about to look for your collar button.—
business advertising in ancient Cleveland Times.
Rome. The show windows of Rome
■— ■■■ . —
during the oldest time cannot be
compared with their parallel In our
modern trade world. For a long
time It was Impossible to buy the
necessary glass, which was tremen­
dously expensive. Besides, the win­
Get you winter coal from
dow glass was milky and dim. and
Chestnut Transfer.
often iridescent, at any rate not
sufficiently clear and transparent,
Rock Spring’s Utah coal by
writes II. Doelllng In Frankfurter
Zeltung, as translated for the Mil­ sack or ton.
waukee Journal.
The Roman retailers, therefore,
were content to exhibit their goods
In an opeu stall in front of their
homes; the shop Itself was built
Into the home and served merely as
a storeroom.
The only means of
advertising was the voice; he who
barked loudest got the most cu»-
toiners!
Only after trade received a new
stimulus by the conquest's in the
Orient and Occident did the Ro-
Barber Shop
mans begin to adopt the business
tricks of their tributaries, the
Ponters and Asiatic Greeks. They
Installed regular show windows In
IKE BOB, CURL AND
their shops. Their goods were safe
DYE HAIR
from theft behind bronze grates,
and were provided with price tags
and annotations.
The merchants
Barber work in general ;
Indicated on their shop doors the
special attention to children.
goods they furnished und their own
names.
630 Main P. 8. Bukowski, Prop.
.
................ —>l
Early Advertising as
Practiced in Old Rome
Coal! Coal!
CHESTNUT
TRANSFER
MPERIAT
1
Basis
of Diamond Formation
The Store That Appreciates Your Trade
T ——
1
Sees Renin as
Similarity between the X-ray pic­
tures of the lattice structure of di­
amond crystals and of decater-
I«‘ne, a resinous substance, is the
basis for the claim advanced by
Herr Decker, a Jena chemist, that
diamonds originated from this ma­
terial under enormous pressure and
possibly beat, during long periods
of time, according to the Berlin
correspondent of Industrial and En
glneerlng Chemistry.
Diamonds have long been known
to be pure carbon In crystalline
form, but what the original carbo­
naceous material was out of which
they developed bus been a subject r?
of dispute. Resins contain hydro­
gen us well as carbon, and the
theory of the Geruiun scientist as­
sumes that, under the conditions of
diamond formation, the hydrogen
was literally slowly squeezed out of
the raw material until at last noth­
ing but pure crystalline carbon was
left.
For Umbrella Protection
A well-known business man had a
bud habit of losing umbrellas, und
us they were usually expensive
ones, he hit upon the happy Idea
of having bls telephone number en­
graved on the bundle. Since then
he lost his umbrella half a dozen
times, but owing to the telephone
number he has always recovered it.
The Under does not have to send
it back; he rings up the number,
and the owner glndly calls for it.
If the Under Is dishonest he will
not feel comfortable with that tell­
tale number, and If he himself loses
It, as ten fo one he will, a more
honest person will eventually In­
form the original owner. The lat­
ter, of course, will know nothing of
the umbrella's adventures. If only
the umbrella could talk I
Drilling Hole* in Gia»»
Drilling holes In glass Is not so
very difficult. The old method
utilized a discarded triangular file,
ground to n sharp point and used In
a brace with a slight pressure. The
point of contact was moistened with
turpentine. The more recent way,
and one that Is quicker, Is to use
a brass or copper tube with thin
walls Instead of a file, says Popular
Science Monthly. The tube Is placed
In a brace and drilling Is accom­
plished with powdered carborundum
as a cutting agent. A guide of wood
keeps the lube properly centered.
Cjty Transfer Co.
J. A. RHOADS
Proprietor
ft
FURNITURE MOVING
AND STORAGE
Piano Moving a Specialty.
Phone 99 ; Res., 189-J
JJ
Jitney Service
JOE T. SHORT
Day and Night Calls
1‘rompt,
Efficient
«nd
Courteous
Service
Headquarters at
Beaulieu Ä Harrel
Garage
Phono 18
Res. Phone 145-1$.
mfe(M)
‘I
WOOD
Any Kind
Any Time
PRICES RIGHT
Term«: Cash
Quimby Bros.
Phono 124 L
f23m2«p(2)
When you visit the
country, why not
patronize the coun
try?
Buy Your Gaa and Oil
at the
PASS CREEK SERVICE
STATION
OPEN ALL NIGHT
Carl Burkett, Prop.
f2Gm26p2
BEEF
Beef is the standard meat of
the world. It contains vital
elements, food essentials that
are necessary to keep the
body functioning properly.
Our Beef is properly aged and
in prime condition when we
sell it to you.
4
Smith - Short Grocery j
j
Quality Market
PHONE 4«
Culver & Anderson
1
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