Cntîaiu' (5riwr
^5
-dakes
^O’ ,s Out of
.tie Ones
N'
At>
>___ _______________ ____________________
_____
TWICE-A-WEEK
COTTALE (¡ROVE, LANE COUNTY. OREGON, MONDAY. AUGUST 17, 1925.
VOLUME XXXV
PRESIDENT CAMPBELL
IS TAKEN BY DEATH
Newspaper
Advertising Makes
Big Stores Out of
Little Ones
Cow Is $1 other to
Orphaned Fawn
NUMBER 90
Story of Early Grove
Farm and Business
Comes From Cell
Row River Country in Pi ¿lu res
X
Years ago there lived in Cottage
Grove a young man of some talent,
an observing eye and a retentive
memory. He was an eye witness
of some of the stirring events in |
the early history of the city. To- .
day he is in prison.
For what 1
crime we know not. He has sub- |
mil ted his story to The Sentinel
under tho pen name of Jay Bee ,
and it will be commenced in an j
early ¡«¿mo as uu addition to the ■
“ Pioneer
Footprints”
material j
which The Sentinel publishes.
Many of the characters in the |
story will be recognized. Others
probably will not, except possibly ■
by old timers. Some are yet living 1
and are known to many. The story
probably would not be of great ;
interest to others, but it should be |
to readers of The Sentinel. The |
first installment probably will ap
pear next Monday. Five or more j
issues will bo required to complete
tho story.
cow owned hv Newt Cruson.
of the Lorane road, has adopted a
Noted Educator Succumbs To fawn and fights for it as quickly
as she did for her own calf which
Illness That Started In
i was weaned a few mouths ago. The
fawn wtu* fou ml in the woods,
Winter of ’23.
! almost dead from hunger, by Joe
■ Davis. He took it to the home of
His Life History Is Record Of l Mr. Cruson, who is a game warden.
| and a permit to raise the fawn
Education in Oregon For
was secured.
A friendship de-
About 35 Years.
I volnped lhetwecn the enw pad the
ifuvvn and the latter now takes its
I meals direct. The foster mother
Following iin illness that started ' will not permit anv interruption
in the winter of 1923 with intes ' at dinner time and the regular
tinal ififluqpza and had since puz i milking has to wait until her foster
zled physicians of the const, Dr. I child has had its fill. The fawn
Prince 1.. Caiupliell, for 23 years ■ plays near the Cruson home while
president of the University of Ore i the cow is out to pasture and
gon, died at 9:45 Friday forenoon, ' makes- no attempt to adopt the
'¡’he president had been slowly fail wild life of its forebears.
ing for a week following a rally
in which he had so .improved as to
be able to get around Eugene in RACING PROGRAM HELD
the university’s invalid ear. He
Cottage Grove Plays Baseball At
was 63 years of age.
Calapooya Hext Sunday.
The funeral will be held Tuesday
afternoon at Eugene.
Several hundred attended the
Lad Arranges Own
Birthday Party
Lions Go to Coquille.
Lions and their tamers (wives)
to the number of 20 left their
lairs here Saturday and attended
a meeting of the Coquille club,
which was presented its charter.
The visitors were efctertaine 1 with
a trip to the coast and with an
evening banquet.
THE
FEATHER HEADS
MADE
A
little K illing
IN FLORIDA
REAL ESTATE,
FANNY'S
first thot
WAS TO SHOW
SOME OF
HER aD FRCND3
THE INTERIOR -
OF A FE W OF
THE TOWS
SMARTEST
RESTAURANTS
HO, NO, FANNY-
HERE LET ME
HAVE THE CHECK
<_______________
■—---------- -------------------------------- i
Street J Fork Disturbs
Old Time Marker
THE FEATHERHEADS
¿?iNCE
Agricultural Ills Are Murth the
Same as Those tn Other Lines
of Industrial Endeavor Today.
By P. F. Babson.
Babson Park, Mass.—A great
many people—by no means all of
them farmers—have gotten hold of
a strange idea. They have heard
so much talk about sick conditions
on the farms that they have come
to Itelieve the farmer convalescing
from strang«» ills.
Maladies of
which th«» ordinary business world
knows nothing! For the most part,
such an idea is absurd. Let us
boil down a potful of advice ami
opinions on th«» subjects and see
whether ordinary industry is really
any stranger to the greater part
of those ills which have been milk
ing th«» average fnrmer a sick man.
Overproduction: Th«» habit «if fit
ting production to the needs of the
market is still a very .serious prob
lem in most: lines of industry. No
EPWORTH LEAGUE MEET one can deny that. The war left
us with a much greater productive
ENDS YESTERDAY
than consumptive power.
Delegatos Praise Cottage Giove As
Efficient Marketing: What con
cern is there today that is not
Hospitable City.
studying salesmanship as never be
What industry but needs
The annual Epworth League in fore!
stitute for the southern Oregon dis sec that its products are distributed
trict closed here yesterday with as efficiently and economically ns
5(H) or (100 delegates in attendance possible in view of terrific compe
The 10-duy session was pronounced tition!
Wasteful Methods: Can wo im
the most successful and most large
ly attended over held
The dele agine any ordinary business house
gates were loud in their praise for today that does not have to watch
Cottage Grove as a delightful and this sort of commercial leak! Th«»
hospitable city.
The delegates farmer certainly has no monopoly
made th«»ir Ionic on the Methodist here.
Inadequate Legislation: This can
((inference "amp grounds during
the entire session.
They broke mean too much ns well ns too little
law. There are business men cry
camp this forenoon.
Dr. I. M. Hargett, Kansas City ing for mor«» tn riff—there are those
evangelist, preached at all the main who want less. Railroads—public
services and delivered a number utilities—and so on down the line,
of inspiring messages for the young even to thos«» who claim that the
folk.
Preachers in attendance 18th amendment is* ruining their
spoke at the forenoon and midday business. Oh no! Tho farmer is
not alone in this legislative prob
services.
Hiking trips and athletic con bun.
Shipping Costs: The increased
tests took much of th«» time be
employment of traffic exports in so
tween services.
Tho institute will be held her«» many houses speaks in itself for
tho troubles of the manufacturer
again next year.
in this respect.. It is not unusual
to find plants moving to where
Commissioner Landes Leaves.
Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Landes, of they think they can obtain bettor
Washington, D. C., who had be«»u facilities and costs.
Low Prices for Products: Shoes—
at the home of Mr. Landes’ cousin,
goods—automobile»—most
Mrs. Clara Burkholder, left Sunday woolen
for Han Francisco.
Mr. Landes, lines today are facing the oblige
who is acting commissioner of the tion of receiving less for their pro
federal farm land board, will visit ducts.
federal farm land banks and joint I Partial Failure of Products: It is
stock land banks in California and by no means unusual for a manu
will attend a convention of officers facturer to find that one of his
of such banks, to be held Septem products turns out disappointing
ber 1 in Colorado Springs.
He and he has had to learn the advis
will be gone from Washington ability of not putting all his eggs
in one basket—just as well as th«»
until October 15.
farmer!
No single solution for these prob
If your business isn’t better this
year, tho reason probably is that lems confronts tho farmer any more
you haven't dono a sufficient thnn it iloea tho business man. Tt
amount of judicious advertising in a sort of a case of “united we
stand divided wo fall,” and neither
Tho Sentinel.
xxx
of them are going to tumble. Both
of them aro going to bo far more
firmly got on their feot by tho
end of thia year. Abd they aro
going to do their own “sotting”—
for tho simple reason that there is
no one else better fitted for tho
Probably few know that a monu- job.
horse racing program held yester
University of Oregon., Eugene,
day at Calapooya springs. In the
Aug. 15.—The story of the life of
saddle race, first money wont to
Dr. Prince Lucian Campbell is al Irving Hopkins, of Independence,
most a history of higher education
on Casey Jones and second to Guy
in Oregon for the past thirty-five
Ray on Jackson’s horse f roin
years. Ho was president of the Walker. In the pony race, first
state normal school at Monmouth
money went to Powell, of Dillard,
from »'MOO to 1902, the institution on Shamrock, and second to Irving
from which he took his degree be
Hopkins on Roxy. In the stake
fore entering Harvard, and for the race, first money went to Ted
past twenty-three years he was Kirkpatrick, of Creswell. In the
chief executive of the University of free-for-all, first money went to
Oregon.
Powell on Shamrock and second to
President Campbell eame of a Clfivton, of Dillard, on Oregon Dan.
lohg line of fejichers and ministers.
For next Sunday a game of base
He was born at Newmarket, Mo., ball has been arranged between
Oct. 6, 1861, the son of the Rev. I Cottage Grove ami Springfield.
Thomas Franklin and Jani' Eliza
Campbell. His parents took him to
Hamant Loses Chickens.
Montana when he was four years
Anyone who has received an un
old. In the fall of 1869, he came
to Oregon, his father having ac expected invitation to a chicken
cepted the presidency .of Christian dinner from someone who doesn’t
college, Monmouth, later the state raise chickens, or who knows of
normal school. For fifty-six years half a dozen chickens being added
President Campbell lived in Oregon, to someone’s flock, will do Dan
with the exception of the time Hamant a favor by informing him
His flock of six
spent in Cambridge while a student of the fact.
at Harvard, and a year as a re was removed from his chicken
coop several nights ago. Evidently
porter on the Kansas City Star.
The son of an Oregon pioneer, the biddies put up a fight, for they
President Campbell’s life spanned left many of their feathers. The
two epochs. He grew to manhood chicken house is a distance from
while the state was evolving from the Hamant house, so that the
pioneer conditions into a modern commotion was not heard..
and progressive commonwealth and
Highway Picnic Planned.
he contributed over a long period
To familiarize all of this section
to the development of education.
In point of years of continuous with the beauties of the Umpqua
service he was among the senior scenic highway and to coordinate
college presidents in this couytry. the efforts of residents of Cot tag«»
His marriage to Miss Eugenia J. Grove, Drain and Reedsport in
Zieber, the daughter of A. Zieber boosting for the - improvement of
and Mrs. Charlotte Zieber of For such a highway, a basket picnic
est Grove, took place in September. will be held Sunday one mile east
1887. The daughter of this mar of Scottsburg on the. proposed high
riage, Mrs. Lucia Henderson, is a way. The affair is lndng sp<»nhore<l
resident of Baxter Springs, Kansas. by the chambers of commerce of ,
Mrs. Eugenia Campbell died four these three places, but all inter
TOF—Wide, shallow pools where the children may wade in safety.
years after her marriage. Presi ested have been invited to attend. |
Center—A bit of the Row river road just above Sharps creek bridge.
dent Campbell married Susan A.
Bottom—Foot bridge over Row river; visitors at.Eugene Girl Scouts camp watching the dai.y dip.
Church, of dan Francisco, August
20, 1908. She survives.
'Courtesy Eugene Register.)
Since the year Dr. Campbell be
A very pretty extension of the Is is as clear as crystal, like all
came president of the University
A trip up Row river is an exceed
of Oregon it has made steady
ingly pleasant way to spend a drive is provided by the Sharps Oregon streams, and runs over a
gains in student enrollment, in
Sunday—particularly in a midsum creek road, reached by crossing the bed that is largely solid rock.
It all little lads had the initia- ; mer, when swimming is a popular Sharps creek bridge. This road Here it tumbles in a rapid, and
equipment and in character of teach
ing personnel.
Notable achieve tive of Marden Shaw, whose diversion. Row river is shallow, leads to Bohemia, which is 16 miles there it loiters in a quiet pool. In
spots the rocks confine it to a
ments scholastically were made by eighth birthday anniversary oc and runs for the most part over
distant from the bridge.
It is few narrow channels that can al | rnent placed by government sur
the university during his regime curred Thursday, mothers wouldn’t smooth rocks. Therefore the water
not recommended for nervous driv most bo leaped, and again it will veyors while Indians yet roamed
until it is recognizel as among be much troubled about parties for is comfortably warm. Every pos
Master Marden sible depth can be found, from ers, for it is narrow, but it is spread out into wide shallows. The at will over tho prairio where
the leading state institutions in their offspring.
forgot about his anniversary until safe shallows where the kiddies very attractive. It follows along road as far as Sharps creek follows Cottage Grove now stands is to
the country.
There were fewer than 250 stud 11 o’clock. When the fact dawned can wade to deep, green holes by the creek through heavy timber. through a pleasant farming country. bo found set in the paving in cast
Row river is one of the prettiest Above the valley narrows and be • Main street between tho tracks
ents enrolled when President Camp upon him, he bounded into the where the diver has no fear of the
1 of the two railways. Tho location
bell took up his executive duties house and succeeded in getting bottom.
small streams of western Oregon. comes wilder.—Eugene Register.
of tho monument has boon pro
at Eugene. Today there are ap I reluctant consent from his mother
i served by placing nn iron contain
proximately 3,000 regular students. that ho give a party. That was
invited
to
be
present.
According
j the only one at the well for several
Robberies at Oil Well.
■ or around it.
With tho placing
Extension, correspondence-study and about all the mother had to do
It may be necessary to call out days, was absent fof a short time. to word from Mrs. Joseph Best, of black top on thia street it will
with
it.
The
lad
made
hs
own
,
summer session students bring the
Tho value of the articles stolen president, those attending will wear bo necessary to superimpose another
three-layer cake, only bothering the state militia to keep someono | was $200.
total well above 6,000.
as badges headings cut from tho
, ring of iron on tho iron container.
from
carrying
off
our
oil
well.
his mother as to the coloring, and
front page of The Cottage Grove
This monument in tho key marker
Two
robberies
have
occurred
there
■
prepared the lemonade. He found
County Road Work Progresses.
Sentinel. Mrs. Best expressed tho
; for many of the property descrip- I
C. G. Association to Meet..
wish that a largo delegation might
County road work in this section | time, however, to issue invitations during the past week and every-
( tions of this section and in the
for the year is nearing completion. | to all the children of the vicinity thing of value removed from the j The annual meeting of the Cot bo present from here.
j olden days four donation claims '
tage
Grove
association,
of
Portland,
residence
buildings.
Upon
the
first
regardless
of
age.
Those
to
enjoy
Work on the London road has been
were laid out with this marker I
completed and the equipment has the affair were Chester and Betty visit, tools and several small ar , will be held in Peninsula park
Th' live wire print shop is al as the starting point.
Few of i
been taken away. Work on the , Belle Scott, Dale and Velma Ben tides were taken. Upon the second j there Sunday, August 30. A bas ways ready to help in the prep
those now living had been born I
Disston road will be completed j nett, Bobbie Beagle, Cecil Safley, visit bedding, clothing and personal ket picnic dinner will be held at aration of advertising and printing when this monument was placed.
(
within a few weeks. Several new ! Kathleen Daugherty, Marilyn Shaw, effects were removed. The rob 1 o’clock and a program will fol
copy.
Our experience may be
A similar marker is to be found i
low.
All
former
and
present
resi
beries
were
oommitted
while
O.
H.
Maxine
Leonard
and
Eddie
and
pieces of this roed are yet to be.
xxx 1 on tho high school grounds.
Gjorset, assistant driller, who was dents of Cottage Grove have been worth something to you.
Eldora Eakright.
rocked.
Commissioners Crowe and Hurd
By L. F. Mr»»|slpK
Van Zeh»
l.ole«
and County Judge Barnard were
here Thursday on road business.
Street Work Nears Completion.
The year’s street paving program
is nearing completion. South Sixth
street was completed Friday and
the black top is now going down
oa Monroe avenue. This will be
completed within a day or two.
East Main street and one Mock
of east Adams avenue remain. Both
of these are ready for the Nack
top. Chestnut avenue is yet to
be macadamized.
In Same Boat
TtiU KNOW, FANNY, IF 1 WHY HOW
why
do you
RIDICULOUS /
hafta
pick out he most
f-TNStvE »4IN6S ON
Tue menu ? do txt
I THOT TOy WERE / I WANTED XXJ TO HAVE
GOING TO PAY
( EVERYTHING TOU LIKED—-
THAT CHECK I
\ YOU KNOW SINCE WE MADE
WOULDN’T
HAVE
\ a 8OUT
EATEN ANY DE55ERTJ
REAL
200,000 IN FLORIDA
ESTATE ,WHY-----------
First with Cottage Grove news—
The Sentinel.
IChat Happened
To Pear line
A generation ago Poarlino was
ono of tho most widely advertised
products in America. As far back as
1924, it had a $560,000 advertising
fund and was ono of tho best
known products in tho entire world.
Tho ad fund was “lopped off”;
the business wont dead.* It tried
unsuccessfully to make a come-back
in 1914, and sold its plant for
junk to a large soap manufacturer.
Killing off the ad approportion
wreckod tho business.
Judicious advertising pnys.
It IS Unusual