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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (April 30, 1925)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. THURSDAY. APRIL 30. 1925 PAGE TWO □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a socierr | I □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a Mrs. A. L. Wynne wns hostess Tuesday afternoon to the M. P. G. club. Tht: rooms wen» attractively decorated with spring flowers. Fancy work and social conversation, the usual diversions, were enjoyed and a delightful two-course lunch eon was served, The table was centered with a large basket of sweetpeas, baby breath and other spring flowers in pretty arrange- ment. Nearly all the members were present. ♦ Mr. ami Mrs. C. A. Stevens en- Chambers, was an additional guest , tert.iincd the Tillicum club last I for the afternoon. evening at an apron and overalls ♦ ♦ ♦ party. The front room was attrac- □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□a I tively decorated with lavender □ APPROACHING anemones ami lilacs. A large pink □ EVENTS i and white May pole was in the a center of the dining room. Dog- □□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□□ wood and other spring flowers The officers of the Tuesday Eve were also abfiut this room. A ning Study club will entertain the mock wedding caused much amuse- club at a 6:30 banquet Tuesday ment. Five hundred, the usual di evening at Hotel Bartell. Follow- version, was also enjoyed. Mrs. ing the dinner the annual business W. W. McFarland was the winner meeting will be held at the home in the hunt for cornucopias filled of the club’s president, Mrs. George with eandy and received u large Matthews. The club will then dis stick of candy as a prize, A most band for the summer. t delicious two-course luncheon was « ♦ ❖ served, Invited guests of the club C. A. Bartell will be host- Mrs. were Mr. ami Mrs. S. V. Allison, Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Miller and ess to the LaComus club at its Mr. and Mrs. W. W. McFarland, regular meeting Wednesday after Mrs. W. J. White has invited the noon. club to meet next Wednesday at her home. ART EXHIBIT GIVEN HERE Members of tho Utopia club, with their husbands, surprised their president, Mrs. C. E. Frost, Tues- day evening, When Mrs. Frost roturned from a brief visit at n neighbor's she found tho guests in ♦ ♦ ♦ possession of tho house. Card A number of relatives anil a few games were the diversion and dain ty refreshments of ice cream, cake friends held n picnic dinner Sun nnd coffee, which the guests had day at the Isaac Land home at brought with them were served. Dorena, tho occasion being the The club presented Mr«. Frost a I seventy-seventh birthday anniver gorgeous davenport pillow of old sary of Mr. Land. The table was rose taffeta trimmed with gold lace.l set in the yard. Thos Those to enjoy the affair were i wore Mr. and Mrs. Land Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Umphrey, Mr. Mrs. Frank Kelly and and Mrs. 8. L. Mackin, Mr. and I and son, Miss Rita ami Mrs. O. W. Hays, Mr. and Mrs. j Mr. and Mrs. Warren !• F. L. Grannis, Mr. and Mrs. Omer and Mrs. Verne Garoutte Moore, Mr. and Mrs. N. G. Buell, Walter and Leonard, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Richmond nnd M. P. Garoutte, Mr. ami Mrs. Riy Garoutte and son Ccforil, Mr. and Mr. nnd Mrs. Nelson Durham. Mrs. Perry VanSchoiack. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Garoutte and son Colin, Mr. nnd Mrs. Earl Garoutte •nd se n Alden, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Dame wood, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Patton, The Complete Alex Garoutte, Bob Stacey, Frank Beauty Treatment SnodgrasH, Buryi Arthers, Andrew Lnnd, Mrs. Della Abbott, Misses Sarah and Laura Riley, nil of this city or vicinity; Mrs. Eva Wells and granddaughter, of Portland, and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Roye and son Lynn, of Seattle. CARA NOME ♦ ♦ ♦ Proceeds Go to Buy Pictures for Local Schools. •_ Tho grades of the public schools lire sponsoring an art exhibit being held in the high school gymnasium. The pictures are reproductions of famous pictures and are especially adapted to school rooms and were sent here by a picture publishing house. The proceeds of the exhibit go for the purchase of pictures. The west side school furnished an entertaining program last eve ning. Musical numbers, a minuet and another dunce number, vocal numbers and playlets were included in the program. A clover imper sonation of “Alburtue the Great,” was put on by Glonn Swanson. A memory drill staged by thirteen junior high students showed re- markable ability and intensive training. This evening, which concludes the exhibit, the east side school will give a program of musical numbers, vocal numbers, dances and other drills. Mrs. S. S. Lasswell was hostess to tho Tuesday Bridge club this DORENA. week at its regular 1 o’clock lunch eon. The centerpiece of tho table [ (Special to The Sentinel.) was an artistic bouquet of wil.l [ April 29.—Mr. and Mrs. 8. O. orchids nnd the place cards har- j Van Schoiack came home Friday monizod with the centerpiece, Rod from Alpine. carnations were the attractive ileco- Mrs. F. J. Hills nnd daughter rations of the living room, whero Lois, of Roseburg, visited over the the afternoon hours were pleasant week end at the home of Mrs. iy Hpont nt bridge, Mrs. C. S. Rob- ' Hill’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. arts securing high honors. Mrs. Van Schoiack. Raymond Grube was an invited 1 Walter and Roy England motored guest of tho club. to Rujada Sunday on business. * Everett Holstrom, of Marcola, i" Mrs. Victor Chambers was a host- visiting nt the home of his gram! ohs Tuesday to tho El marten club parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Kirk nt its regular social afternoon. of Dorena. They completed their plans for Bet A number of relatives and friends ter Homes week, which this club of “ Uncle” Isaac Land surprised is sponsoring. A tempting luncheon him on his seventy-seventh birth was served, tho table being cent day Sunday. About L’!> spent the The Store ered with an nrtistic bouquet of ilnV with him. orchids fixed in moss. Mrs. A. L. L. G. Van Schoiack motored to C. J. Kk.M, Prop Thomas, who is a house guest at Roseburg Saturday for a visit witn Cottage Grove, : Oregon the homo of her sister in-law, Mrs. relatives. Many National Parks ' in the United States There are 19 ustionai parka. They are: Hot 8prlngs. located In middle Arkanaas and containing 46 springs; Yellowstone, in northwest ern Wyoming; Sequoia, middle Cali fornia ; General Grant, central Cali fornia. created to preserve the Gen eral Grant tree, 85 feet In diameter; I Mount Ralnler.'Washlngton, with 28 glaciers, Crater Lake, southwestern Oregon, extinct volcano. Wind Cave, 8outh Dakota, with miles of galleries; Platt, southern Oklahoma, containing sulphur springs ; Sully Hill, North Dakota, a game preserve; Mesa Verde, south western Colorado, with prehistoric cliff dwellings; Glacier, northwest ern Montana, with 60 small glaciers; Rocky Mountain, middle Colorado, with peaks 11,000 to 14,255 feet high ; Hawaii, including the volcano Mauna Loa ; Lassen Volcano, north ern California. Mount McKinley, Alaska, highest mountain In North America ; Grand Canyon, northern Arizona ; Lafay ette, Desert Island. Maine, with a group of granite mountains; Zion, southwestern Utah, with canyon 2,000 feet deep. In addition to these there are several dozen smaller reservations, with caves, natural bridges, battle fields and similar places of natural or historic Interest. These are known as national monuments. Scientific Basis for Chances of Great nets The older the parents when the child Is bora, says an autho'rlty on '^gedlty, the surer Its chances for y.^atnesa. The first and last bora are more ely to attain eminence. The more children a mother has e longer she Ilves—and the longer ie lives, the longer the children i/e. Children of professional people— lawyers, physicians and the like— have a Better chance for fame than those born to wealth or those whose parents lacked educational advan tages. The offspring of fathers under thirty-one are more likely to become soldiers; artists come from fathers between thirty-one and forty; be tween forty-one and fifty there Is more of a tendency toward states men ; over fifty-one come the philos ophers like Confucius, Bacon and Franklin. Ninety per cent of the Investi gated criminal cases show them to be the offspring of younger parents. If your father Is more than sixty, and you are the youngest child In a large family—you should become famous. SMART SUMMER STYLES Our Displays Set the Keynote of Fashion in Summer Apparel The crossing of Fashion seasons finds Umphrey & Mackin ready with many charming new styles for the Summer of 1925. Here are assortments that reflect every true mode of the warm weather season. Color rules supreme. The lines are straight, and each mode shows details that are entirely new and in good taste. So one choosing her Summer apparel has the advantage from newest frocks and enjoying a full season of smart year. “Palmer” tailored silk and cotton dresses priced each................................ *..........$12.50 “Palmer” all silk dresses, light wool chailie, all-silk crepe, and wool crepe dresses, priced from.. .......... :.................. $12.50 to $25.00 “Palmer” ensemble suit (coat and dress) priced from $32.50 to $45.00 A Doctor’s Life The doctor sent n bill for $10 to the terrible-tempered Mr. Bnngs. The bill read : “Two visits—$10." “You’re a robber." said Mr. Bangs- “Flve dollars a visit! It isn't worth It.” "I’ll rewrite the bill," said the doctor and Bangs smiled. ’ They couldn’t put anything like that over on him. Then the doctor wrote: “To get ting out of bed at 2 a. m.. answering telephone, disturbing wife, dressing going to garage, cranking ’tin Liz zle,’ two-mlle drive In the cold, sav ing baby's life, return to garage, waking wife, undressing, getting back Into bed $10.” He said to Bangs: “I won’t make NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. any charge for the second visit, and you need not pay for the first un Department of the Interior, U. 8. less you feel I have earned the money.” Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, Mr. Bangs paid the bill.—Boston March 28, 1925. Globe. Notice is hereby given that John H. Volgamoro, of Comstock, Oregon, Uncle Sam Gives Bargain 'who, on January 3, 1922, made Nobody likes to get a letter on Homestead Entry, No. 014259, for which there Is postage due. One of NE% NEK, Section 17, Township the R. F. D. carriers tells a funny 21 8., Range 4 West, Willamette ] yarn about a woman, a foreigner, Meridian, has filed notice of in who received a letter from the old tention to make three year Proof, otintry marked 20 cents due. He offered It to her. asking for the 20 to establish chiin to the land above <-enta. She refused It. shaking her described, before the Register and head. He stayed a moment, not Receiver of the U. 8. Land Office, knowing exactly what to do. Final at Roseburg, Oregon, on the 9th ly, he noticed that he had made a day of May, 1925. mistake and that the postage Claimant names as witnesses: charge should have been 15 cents. So he called to the woman. Crying Christopher C. Watkins, Peter Mor- ketta, William L. Curtis, all of to explain. As soon as she heard 15 cents Curtin, Oregon and Robert Anlauf, she smiled, showing all her teeth. of Anlauf, Oregon, She cheerfully gave him the money non coal HAMILL A. CANADAY, She thought she had got the best a2-30c(2) Register. of a bargain.—G. Edward Snyder In the American Magazine. KEM’S FOR DRUGS NOTICE FOB PUBLICATION. Department of the Interior, U. S. Land Office at Roseburg, Oregon, April 24, 1925 Notice ia hereby given that Elizabeth A. Allen, of Cottage Grove, Oregon, who, on February 3, 1921, made Homestead Entry, No. 013417, for EH SWU, Section 17, Township 20 8., Range 3 West, < i initor t, economy and aafety awry day Willamette Meridian, has filed ut the war, rear io and year out. fta notice of jntention to make three Million Dollar Motor ■ only oat ex year Proof, to establish claim to the land above described, before ample oi the progrew and value tnAt E. O. Immel, U. 8. Commissioner, into the 1925 tar. at Eugene, Oregon, on the Sth day w w of June, 1925. Check these bleb ¡«ewer features that Claimant names as witnesses: Frank McFarland, Wilbur Me guarantee long Dfe and perfect motor Making Him Useful Farland, John Veatch, Frank Van utisfecrion over and above any car in its The plumber worked and the Northwick, all of Cottage Grove, price class. “Tomurrvw’rCar helper stood looking on. He trai __ Oregon, learning the buslneea. Thia *u his non coal HAMILL A. CANADAY, first day. a27 m25c(2) Register. "I say.” he Inquired, “do you 1 . . . charge flor my time? ” Eugene “Certainly," came the reply. NOTICE TO CREDITORS “But I haven’t done anything." The plumber, to fill In the hour, Notice is hereby given that the had been looking long at the fin ished job with a lighted candle. undersigned has been appointed Handing the two Inches of It that by the County Court of Lane were still unburned to the helper, County. State of Oregon, admiais he said, wltherlngly: "Here. If trntrix of the estate of Fred Ernst, you must be so cousciebitoua. blow deceased, which order bears date that out!” the Uth day of April, IMS. All person* having claims against G routing the said estate are hereby notified <\»nvlct (lust released)—Lamme, and required to present tho same, ain't It cold? Fancy turning ■ chap outer doors In thia weather' Roa- duly verified, to the undersigned at the law office of Herbert W. ton Transcript. The ALL YEAR CAR For Many Years Competitors may satofx chase Mr* ilass fbazwrrs in ih. /utw — «ha IMS Star Cor has iham now- that's •Av wa say— "Tomorrow»’« Car Loday." Th, W Mite Dtiltr hotor s a Feat W'hert Beehrt When you put your money into a Star Car, you buy the beat «adue your dollars can by. a 'S The staunchly biak 1925 Star Or is the final Kiv in the low -cost field. No other car offers so many ¡woven features as the 1925 tar Car. The Scar is built to last, to give service, to deliver the maximum of motoring LANE AUTO CO. ('■ottave Grove Fell Ftret Fre4 Ltbriettioe a a Teh »1er Beerbtet Dite Cleteh ÜMc MHlIONj «JI •Sw Poor Advertisement Good advertising should look not merely to the present but to the future. It must have been a short sighted house painter that Inserted the following announcement In his home newspaper: "To the public; The reason why I have hitherto been able to do painting so much cheaper then anybody else Is be- cause I nm a bachelor and do not need to make profit for the main- tenance of a wife and children, TIs now my duty _ to „_____ Inform the public that thia advantage will shortly be withdrawn, as I am about to be married. You will __ therefore do well to send In your orders st once for the old rate."— Youth’s Companion. LAR MOTOR h r Lombard, First National Bank Building Cottage Grove, Oregon, on or before six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. Dated and first published this 16th <lay of April, 1925. AUGUSTA ERNST, Administratrix of the estate of Fred Ernst, deceased. Herbert W. Lombard, Attorney for estate. al6ml4c(T) First with Cottage Grove newr The Sentinel. NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLE MENT. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned has filed herein her final account as executrfx of the last will and tvetament of D. J. Gover, deceased', with the County Clerk of Lane County,. Oregon; and an order has been made and entered of record directing this notice and sotting the 12th day ef May, 1925, at the hour of 10 o’clock a. in. as the time, and the county court room in the county court house at Eu gene, Lane county, Oregon, as the place for tho hearing of objections, if any, to said account and the final settlement of said estate. Dated and first published this 9th day of April, 1925. JULIA GOVEB, Executrix of the Last Will and Tes tament of D. J. Gover, Deceased. Herbert-W. Lombard, Attorney for estate. a9m7c(T) NOTICE TO CBEDIT0B8. In the County Court of the State of Oregon for Lane County. In the matter of the estate of Elnorah Guering, deceased. Notice is hereby given that Bob- ert Leslie Learning has been by the County Court of the State of Oregon, in and for Lane County, appointed Administrator with will annexed of the estate of Elnorah Guering, deceased, and that all persons having claims against the said estate are hereby required to present the same, duly verified, to said Administrator with will an nexed, at the Law Office of H. J. Shinn, Bader Building, Cottage Grove, Oregon, within six months from the 29th day of April, 1925. ROBERT LESLIE LEAMING, Administrator with will an nexed, of the estate of El norah Guering, doceased. H. J. Shinn, ttornoy for estate. a30m28c(T) Our Building Material Line Includes— CEMENT. LIME, PLASTER, BRICK. FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY. METAL LATH, CORNER BEADS, shin . GLES, DRAIN TILE, SEWER TILE CONCRETE SAND AND GRAVEL. PLASTERING SAND, ZOURI STORE FRONT FITTINGS, AND OTHER THINGS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. No Charge on City Deliveries Godard & Randall Just North of S. P Station—Phone 100 4