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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1925)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1925 PAGE THREE Mrs. E. B. Harriman and daugh Mis« Ruth Griswold, of Eugene, Able to Hear Noises ter, of Kansas City, Mo., returned is spending the week at the home home yesterday, after a ten-day of her aunt, Mrs. E. W. Armes. Made by Electrons visit at the W. M. Hall home. By means of the radio vacuum The R. C. Arne family have re A nine-pound son was born Tues- turned from a two weeks ’ motor tube amplifier, scientists have been able to hear the notees made by day to Mr. and Mrs. R. !.. Jenkins. trip to eastern Oregon. electrons, the infinitely small units Mrs. Phoebe Berrey and daughter Verne and Carrol Christensen re of electricity as they are "bombard May, of Creswell, and Miss Cora turned yesterday to their home in ed” against the plate in the tube 1 Douglas, of Canby, were guests Portland, after spending the sum front the hot filament, says Popular Tuesday night of Mr. and Airs. mor with their grandparents, Mr. Mechanics Magazine. These elec trons. It is held, carry the current D. A. Forbes. Mrs. Forbes ac and Mrs. E. Hiner. make possible the operation of companied them home and will re Frank Sears has purchased the and the tube, which Is capable of tre turn this fvening. Worth Harvey property at the eor- mendous amplification. Through Mrs. C. E. Umphrey is improving ner of north . Sixth street and this, a new way of measuring the steadily and satisfactorily from a Whiteaker avenue. The deal WHS value of the electron charge has ? operation and is able to be made by Hall & Lang. been developed and a method of re I 5 recent search opened which may lead to around the house. Keep it in the house where it may be burned, lost valuable knowledge concerning the Mrs. J. Kuni and daughter Mar- or stolen, but if you want to keep it safely where electron and its properties. Previ jorie, of Creswell, were guests it will always be ready for you when needed, ously, it has been studied by means Thursday at the home of Mrs. of tiny drops of oil, observing their deposit it with us. A bank account will give you t Kuni’s aunt, Mrs. M. P. Garoutte. movements between two electrically a better business standing in the community and ? charged plates. Droplets are made Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bassett were a.prestige that you may never have enjoyed before. Í to fall slowly or rapidly, or are held 3 . called to Sand Point, Ida., the fore If your name is not on our books, we will be stationary between the plateR, ac 3 part of the week on account of the cording to the presence of charged pleased to see it there before the close of the ? I : sudden death of a son by drow ning. electrons In them and the voltage year 1925. E. V. Ostrander, of Eugene, will applied to the plates. With proper = . conduct preaching services Sunday amplification, the roar of the elec Safety deposit boxes in a safe place for rent. trons In the tube can be magnified forenoon at the ~ Presbyterian • to produce a volume like that of Newspaper Advertising ; i i church. Niagara, It Is said, and this action s Turner Wallace anil daughter, Ì Makes Big Stores Out Is to be studied In the hope that Mrs. Laura Pope, of Stockton, facts not presented In the gravity of Little Ones. Calif., arrived yesterday to visit tests will be learned. ■ relatives. C. S. Roberts has paid a fine of O Explaining Origin of j $3 for irrigating out of hours. Four the “Vegetable Dinner” ! other complaints are on file in the Mrs. Ira Fleak, who had been The death of Patterson M. Vege j recorder’s of fee. visiting at the home of her niece, table, one of the most cordially Lester Mooney, logger at Rujada Mrs. H. C. Rose, left today for hated men In North America, brings ; for the Anderson & Middleton her home in Seattle. Evelyn Rose to light for the first time the story I Jerome Scott, who had spent ' Lumber company, was taken to a accompanied Mrs. Fleak to Port of the Invention which earned him two weeks here with his grand- Eugene hospital last evening suffer land to visit her grandmother, the position he occupies, "C. F.” writes In the KansaB City Star. | parents, Mr. anil Mrs. W. L. Darby, ing with a fractured left leg, sus Mrs. Sadie Fleak. It was the old. old story, yet ever tained when a snag was pulled Virgil Guggisberg, 9-year-old son new, of two men and a girl; In the n----------------------------------------------- n loft Monday for Eugene to visit against the leg. his mother before going to Olym of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Guggisberg, ensuing triangle poor Patterson The William Oglesby family, of pia, Wash., to spend the remainder Miss Gurnetta Dudford, of Port- sustained a painful fracture of the found himself hopelessly In the hy Salem, were guests Monday, while of the summer vacation . with ■ land, returned home yesterday, af- right arm yesterday afternoon when potenuse. Soured and embittered on their way home from Crater friends. [ ter spending several months at he fell from a horse. The horse In love, he turned to the soil; and lake, of Mr. Oglesby’s aunt, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Berna Heiser re the W. A. Jones home in Gowdy- went under a tree and Virgil was In his little truck garden on Long Nancy Oglesby. Island he devoted long hours to rals brushed off. turned Monday to their home in ! ville. I Ing obnoxious Bpecles of plants and J. P. Graham has returned from North Dakota, after a visit here Mrs. H. H. Harms, of Portland, A. W. Coons, an employe at the herbs. This morbid tendency led Yakima, Wash., where he was em at the William Kirtley home. and her niece, Clara Beagle, of loading docks at Curtin, sustained eventually to his famous Invention ployed for some time taking wire Be sure to see my ad on this Ridgefield, Wash., who had been a - badly mashed right foot this of a platter with various compart reports for the Associated Press. page. Prices reduced on Overland visiting relatives here, returned forenoon when a tie fell upon it. ments, Into which he fitted one spe He is temporarily employed in the anil Willvs-Knight motor cars. N. J. to Portland today. They came R. C. McNew, employe at the cies of each unpleasant plant he book keeping ilepa rt men t at Knowles Nelson, Jr., Dealer. Tuesday, bringing home Mrs. Sarah Anderson & Middleton company’s had produced, calling the whole af & Graber’s. Miss Hazel Loucks, in company Harins, who had been visiting in sawmill at Latham, sustained a fair, In his dryly humorous way, a dinner.” Constipation cured by Dr. Hagen. with girl friends from Eugene, Portland. laidly mashed middle finger of The comparative economy of this Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Beatty re left yesterday on a three weeks’ Mr. and Mrs. Frank Patterson, of the right hand Tuesday. Idea appealed to the restaurants; turned Monday from spending two motor .trip to California. California, visited here last week and the embittered old man found weeks at Bandon. the last years of his life consider Miss Laura Adamson, of Garden and went into the Bohemia district, ably brightened by the sight of thou Valley, is visiting at the home of where they have been joined by sands of restaurant patrons seated the Roy Smith family from Port her aunt, Mrs. F. W. Hawkins. before these plates endeavoring to land, who arrived Monday. Mr. Jesse Denny left Monday for eat one of Vegetable's "dinners," or San Francisco, where he will under Patterson and Mrs. Smith are "Vegetable dinners,” as they came brother and sister. This is Mr. go an optical operation in the in time to be called. Patterson ’ s first visit in 25 years. Southern Pacific hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wittie re Bugle Calls Ancient Galloway writes insurance. turned Tuesday from Portland, Of very ancient origin are the va Mr. and Mrs. Bert Gore, of where they had been called by the rious bugle calls still used by mod Clovis, N. M., left yesterday for serious illness with ptomaine pois ern armies, The “tatoo” dates buck home, after a vsit at the home of oning of Mr. Witte’s mother, Mrs. to the Thlrty-Years’ war, from Mr. Gore’s brother, Alva Gore. 1815 to 1B43, and was originally Fannie Witte. Fred Cole, of San Pedro, Calif., the “tap to” call, a signal for the Mrs. Charies Gettys left Tuesday men to cease their drinking by visited during the week in Cottage for Portland for a few days’ visit closing the bung or “tap" of the Grove, his childhood home. with relatives. barrel. "Retreat” cnll was used I Prices slashed on Overland and The C. E. Stewart family, Miss by the Crusaders, The cow’s horn Willys-Knight ears. See my ad on Flossie Mathes and Cecil Caldwell was the first bugle and It la ineri We Have a Complete Line this page. N. J. Nelson Jr., Dealer. have returned from an outing at tloned In the Bible, The rà m’s horn of Parts and Accessories. was a later variation, Many stil Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vaughn, Siltcoos. dents of musical apparatus say the All are QUALITY Goods. with Mrs. Vaughn’s father, F. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mason und bugle Is the oldest of musical In Maulding, left the fore part of daughter Ila, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. struments. ! the week for Portland. Hogate and son Claire and Mr. ana I Mrs. J. R. Ernest and children, Mrs. C. W. Caldwell returned Mo»- I Pertaining to Ages of Sacramento, Calf., arrived Tues day from Triangle lake, where ‘hey A century begins with the begin I day to visit Mrs. Ernest’s grand- had been for a week. ning of the first day In Its first 1 parents, Mr. and Mrs. I. B. Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wallace and | The O. G. Biggs family left yes year, and does not end until the close of the last day In Its hun Mrs. Grace Neet, of Eugene, vis baby daughter, of Portland, who ' terday on an outing to Bandon. dredth year. The mode of reckon ited friends here Tuesday. had spent 10 days here with Mr. The Arman Guggisberg family, ing I« often confused with the com Miss Bonita Beager spent lari Wnllace’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. of Pasadena, Calif., visited during mon mode of stating the age of a w. . k in Monmouth with her moth John Wallace, left for home Tues- I last week at the home of Mr. Gug person. A person horn at the be i er, Mrs. William Thum, who was day. gisberg's cousin, Frank Guggisberg. ginning of the Christian era would PH0NE-201 9ih&MAIN attending the summer session there. Fred Guggisberg haw returned to Mrs. Louis J. Scholtz and I son be called one year old during his second year, that Is during the They returned home Monday eve his work as logger for Ellis Robin - j Raymond left yesterday for ' New- course of the year two; he would be ning. son at London, after being off a port on an outing. called two years during the year Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bennett and Mr. nn-I Mrs. Charles McKernan few days suffering with a scalp Karl K. Mills motored to New three; and forty during the year son Glenn returned Sunday from have returned to Seattle, after a cut which he sustained when he port yesterday to join Mrs. Mills forty-one, etc. a three months’ motor trip to Mis visit with relatives here. Mr. Mc fell against an ax. and son Robert, who are there on souri and Kansas, where they vis Kernan is a brother of Mrs. Hiram The Henry Rohde family left Scotch Ttrrttri ited relatives. Griggs and Mrs. Martin Foster and Tuesday for Cloverdale springs on an outing. The first pair of Scotch terriers Mr. and Mrs. John Barker spent Mrs. W. L. Darby has returned Mrs. McKernan a sister of Mr«. a two weeks’ outing. Tuesday and yesterday in Lorane ever exhibited at a bench «how In Kathleen Kap- from Eugene, where she had been | George Kappauf. this country were shown to the pub Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Kersey, of for some time receiving treatments pauf accompanied them for a brief Bremerton, Wash., spent Sunday as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph lic In 1888, at which time there was Lynch. for rheumatism, She is still unnble [ visit. a decided dislike for the doga, and night at .the home of Mrs. Kersey’s Mr. and Mr». J. R. Penn, of the show was criticized for admlt- to walk. Mrs. J. H. Heard is Miss Irene Griggs will return sister, Mrs. Anna Dodd. They with her. Monrovia, Calif., visited during the ting the palr, bnt after Doctor this evening from a visit in Eugene were enroute to Crater lake. week with Mrs. 8. E. Markley. Ewing of St, Louis and other men Spirella corsets, rubber reducing with the John B. Patterson family, K. L. Stewart left Tuesday on Mrs. Penn was formerly Miss Mel- began developing the dogs and were girdles, belts and brassieres—Spi The Pattersons will come with an outing to Yachats. able to show their finer qualities, va Markley and was a resident of public sentiment developed In their rella quality hosiery. »Mhaughnessey Irene and be dinner guests at the Mr. and Mrs. Ogle Young and son Cottage Grove a number of years Mrs. E. C. Griggs home. olivit net lingerie. favor and Scotty 1« a welcome dog and Mrs. Young’s parents, Mr. and at all the bench shows and ha« won Shay, 305 south Sixth St., phone Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hart, "L. F. Mrs. Wood, of Wenatchee, Wash., «go- alO-17-24p(M) Orpurd, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Laf- The D. H. Remple family moved hl« way to national popularity. 137-R. visited briefly Tuesday at the home Mrs. A. C. Loucks and daugh- foon and Herbert Cochran returned of Mr. Young's father, George | to Newberg today. Qualities of Sugar Mrs. W. E. Mayen was called ter Hazel have returned from a Monday evening from a 10-day Young. The sweetness of sugar Is tested to Baker today by the sudden ill two weeks’ outing at Bandon. motor trip to California. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Ellsworth j ness of Mr. Mayes, who in em- by diluting each kind of sugar with — - , and Imby daughter left yesterday | an equal amount of water until only ployed there. one tastes sweet. It Is easy to con I for northern California on a few ; tr the Wiese Brothers have started fuse the sense of sweetness with days’ business trip. construction of a house on old other qualities of the sugar, one be Gordon White and Clarence Ap- ! north Pacific highway. ing the melting quality—that la. piewhite returned Monday evening Mrs. James Groom left today If the sugar melts easily in one’s from a motorcycle trip to North mouth, the sense of sweetness for Iowa for a three months’ visit cornea more rapidly than If the Bend and Marshfield. with relatives sugar dissolves slowly All In ell. Mr. and Mrs. C. Elmer Neet Mr. aid Mrs Charles H. Burk It la believed that white sugar la have returned from a trip to Crater holder and daughters Dana and sweeter than brown. lake and Klamath Falls. ...70c 2 packages quick Naptha soap chips, value Charlotte left yesterday for Yachats Mrs. J. E. Withrow, of Yakima, 41c Atmosphere Above Earth on a two weeks’ outing. 10 bars Swift’s white laundry soap, value Wash., visited here during the 22c The exact height of the earth’s 3 cans Sunbright cleanser, value........................ Mr. and Mm. W. R. Whitten, of week with Mr. Withrow. Oakland, Calif., visited yesterday atmosphere la not known. Horae 3 bars Maxine Elliott complexion soap, value 30c Mrs. A. Sternberg, of Albany, in estimates, based on tbe calculated with Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Hagen. $1.00 1 set mixing bowls, value heights of shooting stars when they ’ company with several relatives, N. J. Nelson Jr. has sold the flrat become luminous, place the ( visited yesterday at the S. V. $2 63 Total value followng used <ars: Ford coupes limit at which atmosphere has a Allison home. density sufficient to produce any Miss Crystal Robinson arrived to P. E. Nelson, Ivan Lawrence observable effects at about 200 last evening from Portland and will and Harry L. Allen; Ford sedan to miles. Very little oxygen Is pres again make her home with her Dale Horton; Ford touring to Glen ent In the air at a height of 110 Haney; Ford roadster to E. N. kilometers (fW.31 miles). There Is mother, Mrs. M. V. Phillips. Eehler, of Curtin; Overland tour none at a height of 120 kilometers Mrs. Sarah Howe spent yesterday ing to E. E. Chertnut, and Stude (74.52 miles). j in Salem with her son, E. J. Howe. baker touring to I seston E. Dowens. Charles Cochran and daughters Are now coming from Southern Oregon and are of Mr. and Mm. L. Stevens, daugh Effective Duster Gertrude and Melba and his moth ter and non, have returned to Van fine quality. You can make a duster that Is In | er, Mrs. 8. E. Cochran, left this couver, B. C. after * visit at the valuable for fine furniture by Mt- Peaches and tomatoes for canning—we will have quality afternoon on a two weeks’ motor home of Mm. Stevens’ sister, uratlng s piece of cheesecloth lo at reasonable prices. trip to Washington. kerosene oil and hanging It out In K. L. Cooper. the sunlight to dry. Mrs. Nola Ambrose, who had been visiting her sister, Mrs. M. M. Turn About Repression j Thornion, loft today for Eagrne to Wife—“I think you might talk I make he rhome. "Repression I« Quite the thing ____ la to me while I sew. ” srttag now How can I Mody rs- Forrest McGee left Saturday for Husband—‘‘ Why don ’t you prêtai oat’ The Store That Appreciates Your Trade Winlock, Wash., to join his father, to me while I read»”—(L. A N. “Well, yon might <<>nai«ter the ]C. W. McGee. Employers’ Magasine.) wooden Indian." If you have money to burn ♦--------------------- ♦ Judicious ^Advertising ä First National Bank ♦ of Cottage Grove City Briefs What Men Live For Everyone lives to accomplish ambitions. his desires and The Bank of Cottage Grove aims to help each customer get what he wants out of life by suiting its banking service to his personal needs and by cheerful cooperation and friendly counsel. Bank of Cottage Grove Service Is Successful Because It Helps People Succeed. Bank of Cottage Grove COTTAGE GROVE, OREGON “THE BANK WITH the CHIME CLOCK" IBI Every patron of The Sentinel is helping to give Cottage Grove a newspaper which emi nent authority has stated to he one of the best country newspapers published anywhere. Overland and Willys Knight REDUCED PRICES on entire line of fine motor cars fro tn $35 to $200 PER CAR these show and RADIO RAY Says: Genuine Radiotron Tubes.......... $2.50 N. J. Nelson Jr Use 3% of your gross receipts for advertising N elson E uctmc S hop SATURDAY SOAP SALE This assortment for Saturday only $1.88 FRUITS AND MELONS Smith-Short Grocery i 1 ............ -.. I ..... “It Always Pays to Trade at Gray’s ft GRAYS EASHOCARRY Quick Service—Highest Quality—Lowest Prices There is no doubt about our Quality— we handle the very Best our prices speak for themselves ask your neighbor! Junction City “Best” Creamery Butter— Guaranteed, pound 55c Look! Look! Watermelons Turlock CnnteloupeH All You want Standard 45 Size We Bought O uch Out of a Fresh < 'ar Turlock’s Best Each 5c Per pound 21/2c When Down Town Stop at Gray’s — You Always Save Peaches Citrus When You Oct Ready to "an I’eachcH I 'all Us—Our Price Considering Quality I h the Lowest. Buy a Package of Granu lated Soap Powder... 50c Receive One Package of Citrus Powder Free. 10 barn Crystal white 41c 3 ounce bottle vanilla 19c All kirxlN of milk, can 10c Corn flakes. package 10c 3-pound <1 package Kerr's 31c wheat f flakes....... 3-pound package Kerr's rolled oats 2 We Sell nt Lowest Prices GI hhs Top Jan» for Less I’itils ............. 65c Quart« ......................... 75c JAR RUBBERS Heavy gray, 6 dozen 25c Heavy red, 3 dozen 25c Jars Phone 53 Gray’s Cash & Carry Phone 53