COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL, THl RSDAY, AUGUST 20. 1925
PAGE FOUR
LONDON.
(Special to The Sentinel.)
Aug. 18.—Mr. and Mrs. W
Townsend and son Clifford
Mrs. O. W. White attended the
funeral of Mrs. Emily Lake at
Eugene Wednesday of last week.
Mrs. Edwin Tullar and son Earl,
of Eugene, arc visiting at the home
of Mr. Tullar’s daughter, Mrs.
Joe Geer.
Ernest Geer, of Los Angeles, and
his mother, Mrs. Belle Geer, of
Hebron, visited the Frank Geer
family last week,
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Newton and
family arrived Friday from The
Dalles.
The
Corvallis, the Ralph Bunton family,
of Albany, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Banton and daughter Mildred, and
Mr. an .1 Mr». Archie Perrin of
Monroe, spent Sunday with the
J. E. Ban ton family.
Miss Hazel Powell, who had
spent several week» with her
Mrs. Ci': Powell and children
went to Harrisburg last week to
pick hops.
Mrs. Axol Fischer and son Don
aid, of Eugene, arrived Friday to
visit the family of Mrs. Fischer’s
unde, W. L. Townsend. She re
turned home with Mr. Fischer and
William Wilson, who came up
Monday.
Mrs. (). W. White went to Grants
Pass Tuesday to visit friends the
remainder of the
Mrs.
Grove
for mmlical treat
inent.
Mrs. W. A. Even and children,
who had been visiting ut Ashland
for several «lays, returned honi(‘
Monday.
Eighty were present.
The mill
folks gave Mrs. Finley several
pieces of fine glassware.
Leia Kelly visited her uunt,
Jessie Post, up the Mckenzie, from
Wednesday to Sunday.
The John Murry family have
been sick with the flu the past
week but are better now.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Overton,
Mr. and Mrs. Abner Gilcrist and
Ray and John Robinson, all of
Dunsmiur, who had been visiting
relatives for a week, left for home
Monday, going by the way of the
Oregon caves.
The Welsh family, of Looking
Glass, and Mr. and Mrs. Gage and
granddaughter, of Kansas, visited
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. H. D.
Aldridge.
Mrs. Welsh and Mrs.
Aldridge arc sisters.
George Aldridge and Mr.- and
Mrs. Henry Aldridge and little son
spent the week end at Looking
Glass visiting relatives.
Stacking grain and picking black
berries are the occupations of the
most of the folks in Hebron.
The mill at camp B was shut
down two days this week.
Miss Della Murry spent Thursday
with the Gilcrist girls.
The girls’ cooking club will fur
nish the “eats” at the Farmers’
union next Thursday evening, The
proceeds will go to help them get
started with their work.
A surprise party was given Sat-
unlay evening nt Walter Garoutte’s.
The Christian
Endeavor nre
working on a play to be given
soon.
Harvey Shipp has resigned as
pastor of the Hebron church
will leave September 1.
DOREN A.
HEBRON.
BILL BOOSTER SAYS
W A NT ED — It E LI A BLE RENT E It
for good stock ranch of 300 aeren
muir Doremi. For particular», see
Won Chrisman.
n0-8lp(2)
P NOU UVE OM A STREET
TO TRADE -ONE TON TRUCK,
for live stock, or Foni touring
car. II. F. Smith, Osburn farm,
Lorano road.
»gl3 17-£0p
O
TUAT VS RDM-DOVJM, FVK
UP NOUR OWM PlAet MtQ6 EMO
MEAT AMO WATCH MOW NOUR
NEIGHBORS POUVOW NOUR
RACE!
IA AMM A CARE VESS
STREET MAS «6FORIASD BE
CAUSE of A
G ood EKA m P uh ' .
HOP PICKERS WANTED AT HOP
Island ranch.
Picking begins
August 18. Will pay loading price.
Ir| Stewart, Springfield, telephone
11F3.
al7*80p
FOR SALE- GOOD LIVE GENTLE
bfiUKy pony with buggy
harness for $39. Mrs. Foss,
miles west on Lorane road. al7-80p
FOR BALE BLACKBERRIES ON
vine, lc per pound. Victoria,
lliimihiya and Evergreen varieties.
Ready to pick now. Henry Rissue,
six miles from city on Mosby creek
road.
»17-20p
ACRES FARM
iile cast on Ron
ldtngs, stock, ma
P- go with place
rvsidoace property
payment. Term*. ,
telrpheno 29FI3.
nl01Tp(M)
Bookkeeping
Systems
Complete
Loose leaf systems and
.special loose leaf forms
of every kind made to
order to suit customer.
We welcome the oppor
tunity to help you work
out a system.
Cottage Grove
Sentinel
Among the working class of
China, as well as many other coun
tries of the Far and Near East,
eating is an outdoor sport. Sum
mer and winter they take their food
from little open-air side restaurants,
itnd chopstick it Into their mouths,
sometimes standing, sometimes sit
ting, either In the street or In
it doorless, windowless shelter be
side the street.
The eating goes on continuously.
Tills does not mean, of course, that
every workman eats all day long—
as it might seem—but each work
man eats when he can, and the res
taurants are busy every hour of
the day, knowing no separate time
for lunch, breakfast, dinner or sup
per. On the main street there are
restaurants every few steps, a
dozen or so to the block.
Then there are the walking kitch
ens. One man carries on a pole
slung over his shoulders a cook
stove suspended from one end, and
a pantry with a counter on top of
It on the other end. He moves his
stand from time to time, going
where business is best for the mo
ment, now In front of a factory,
now in front of a school, now on a
busy corner, almost anywhere.
The keepers of the large restau
rants, by way of advertising, estab
lish their bakeries right beside the
street In full view of the perhaps
hungry passer-by. The baker, a
mighty man Is he, standing beside
his two-by-two monument of dirt,
kneading u mountain of dust-grayed
dough, then beating It out flat with
a stick, like a lusty drummer-lad
beating a charge to battle.
Queer Contributions
to Medical Science
The Warwickshire county coun
clllor who bequeathed Ills body to
the General hospital, Birmingham.
In the hope that light would be
left thrown on the origin of headache,
v ini t “the unmerciful scourge that has
wrecked my happiness from my
and earliest recollections," followed a
long line of posthumous benefactors
to medical science.
Perhaps the most remarkable of
all wus Jeremy Bnnthani, the phil
osopher, who directed that bls
skeleton should be clothed, provided
with a specially molded wax head,
and presented to the medical sec
tion of University college, London,
where It muy still be seen.
Hospitals often receive queer be
quests. Charing ('rose hosptlal not
long ago received u bag containing
forty-eight farthings, a bust of
Queen Victoria, mid the return half
of u railway ticket. Another fa
mous hospital received the deeds of
a freehold house, a pawnticket for
a valuable sporting trophy, a dia
mond ring, several prize rabbit
skins, and twenty aspidistras In
pots.—London Times.
WANTADS
□--------------------------------------------- -□
WAGON,
R. L.
a G 10p
Chinaman Takes Meals
Geologist Explains
at His Convenience
Causes of Landslides
In describing some troublesome
landslides that have taken pluce in
England, owing to wet weather,
Mr. William Platt, author of “A
Popular Geology,” says :
The causes are simple enough.
Wherever the geological formation
is that of alternate hard and soft
rocks, and when this occurs in any
sufficiently steep bank, hill or
mountain, there will always be the
risk of a landslide, especially
after heavy rains, which soak Into
the softer layers and make them
loose and slippery.
Landslides may be divided Into
two classes—natural and artificial.
The former octur In the wear and
tear of nature.
That picturesque mountain In the
Derbyshire Pennlnes called Mam
Tor Is so liable to landslides that It
bus been nicknamed locally "The
Shivering Mountain.” Another cel-
ebrated Instance Is the landslip
near Shanklin, Isle of Wight.
At Merok, In Norway (Norangs-
dal) a huge landslide dammed up
a river valley, causing the water
to pile up and form a lake. The
people who lived In the village In
the valley managed to escape, but
their red-roofed cottages can be
seen today under the clear waters of
the huge tarn thus formed.
Exactitude of Little
Consequence in Map
SUMMONS.
Explaining Law of Motion
The first law of motion, one of
the cardinal discoveries, which con
tributed to the fame of Sir Isaac
Newton, Is that a body continues
to move ut the same speed so long
us no force is applied to retard or
accelerate it.
It was a surprise
to his contemporaries and contln
ues to be to any one who hears It
for the first time. Experience leads
us to suppose that the natural con
dition of a body is stationary; but
Newton asserted that neither rest
nor motion is more natural tliun
the other. Bodies set In motion by
human agency always come to rest
before long, because friction and
resistance of the air are always op
City of Quaint Dress
erating to retard them; but the
The city of Seoul, now called earth Is surrounded by empty
Keljo, the seat of the Korean gov space, so that there is no friction.
ernment, Is a place of quaint dress.
White Is the universal color of outer
Chairs and Their Makers
clothing, whether for men or for
women. The women, who nre short
It Is probable that very early in
and fat, wear fantastic balloon cot American cabinet making rocking
ton skirts. The men wear a “Moth chairs were Introduced. It Is not
er HufWiard” robe, baggy trousers unreasonable to attribute l their
tied at the ankles, and a transpar origin to a date previous to the
ent “plug" hat, many sizes toe Revolution, but after 1750.
Not
small, tied under the chin. Long until the Nineteenth century was
thin whiskers, great hornrimmed well under way, however, did that
goggles, hair put up In a queer top type become common as an article
not to signify manhood, and pipes of furniture.
It Is probable also
with stems t'.vti or three feet long that Windsor chairs were the first
complete the picture. When In to be fitted with rockers. The
mourning fur n male relative a man Windsor chair Itself was Invented
wears an immense straw hat shaped In England, and its comfort quick
ly made Its appeal. The old chair
like a toadstool.
makers knew how to adapt their
furniture to the human anatomy,
A Child, of Boston
and the American Inventor of the
The little boy sat disconsolately rocker added still more comfort.
<>n the curb and sobbed ns though
bls heart xvas breaking. The kind
Chinese Religion
old lady stopped and asked sweetly:
"Is a Uta boy cryIn'? Turn, tella
Chinese religion, like Chinese art
and literature, Is quite indigenous,
nice wady wasaa matter.”
"If. you are Inquiring as to the a natural expression of the Chi
cause of m.v lachrymose condition,” nese philosophy of life Indeed, the
he answered, looking up at her pity Chinese notion of religion is very
ingly. “it Is because I have been slight. The thought of the entire
unable to find any suitably Intelli population Is permeated by a defi
gent playmates whose eugenic con nite ethical code, but it is not fierce
stitutions are In harmony with my or persecutory. "Religions are many,
pathological tendencies ipul whose but reason is one.”
Chinese re
hereditary affiliations meet with the ligion is more tolerant, more reason
approval of my parental relations able and less dogmatic than the re
since we moved to this d—n place ligions of any other people. It is
from Boston."—Carnegie Puppet.
hardly more than an ethical code.
In China there have never been re
ligious wars.—Chi-Fung Liu, in
Love Song of Old Race
Scribner’s.
The making of love songs Is an
ancient art. Before Van blew' upon
Ancient Golf Club
Ids reedy pipes there were love
songs, They were sung In the Gar-
The Royal Blackheath Golf club
den of Eden before and after the of London la said to be the oldest.
serpent wiggled his way Into that Records date back to 1787, and tra
earthly paradise. Men wove their dition carries the club ba< k to the
magic Into the first crude language reign of James I, 1008-1025. The
of the human race, when caves old Royal Blackheath course has
were used for dwelling places and been closed since It was no longer
the hunter went forth to the hills possible to keep it In playable con
to strangle Ids prey with bare dition. It was crossed and re
hand*
Helen heard them sung to crossed by roads »nd railways and
her within the walls of Troy. All surrounded by buildings. The course
through the countless ages of the consisted of seven holes, a match
world since time began there have consisting of three rounds of 81
been love songs.
holes.
The Coffee Cura
Insect Civilisation
Coffee was once regarded na _ a
cureall. The first advertisement of
the beverage was published In the
1‘Ubllck Adviser of May 19, 1057.
and announced that the proprietor
of a shop in Bartholomew Lane,
London, was stocking “a very
wholesome and physical drink”
called coffee, the virtue of whtch tn
eluded helping the digestion, quick
ening the spirits, lightening the
heart »nd proving ■'excellent good
against eyesore», cough», colila,
headaches, gout, dropsy. »curvy,
king's evil." and a long string t of
other ailment».
That Insects do almost everything
known to mankind, whom they ex
cel in skill. Is the belief of a well-
known nature student, who s;xlhe
before a meeting of the American
Institute of Phenology. While the
less developed species live under
rocks or tn the earth, and exist by
hunting, trapping and fishing for
prey, others colonise In large com
munities and keep herds, raise crops
and use leaves for clothing and
shelter. Many insects even build
tiny streets and highways.
Only One Way
We all have to grow old, so do
your best not to worry about It. For
over three thousand rears people
have been trying to discover the
secret of periwtual youth, but they
have never discovered It. and they
never will. (Rd age la a gracious
and a happy state when we accept
It naturally. It la only when we
struggle that It become« a traced?
Man glories In his physical
strength, and well he may But the
grimiest strength that a man may
pos.seaa comes from Iwing clean
and straight, and right.
Strong
moral fiber Is made by right living.
There Is no other way to gain thia
—Grit.
,
NOTICE FOB BIDS.
Notice is hereby given that on
Monday, the 31st day of August,
1925, at the-hour of 8 o’clock
p. in., in the council chamber of
the City Hall, sealed bids will be
opened for the improvement of
south Sixth street, from the north
line of the Southern Pacific right-
of-way south to the south line of
the O. P. & E. right of way, where
said rights of way intersect said
south Sixth street, according to the
provision of Ordinance No. 598,
passed and approved August 3, 1925,
with five-inch hard surface pave-
ment known as bitulithic or bitu-
minous concrete or with cement
concrete.
Plans and specifications on file
in office of City Recorder, who will
receive bids for said improvement
until 7:30 p. m. of said day, Aug-
ust 31, 1925. Work shall be com-
pleted within 30 days from the
signing of the contract and certi
fied check for 10% of the amount
or approved bid bond shall aecoin
pany each bid.
The Common
Council reserves the right to reject
any and all bids,
Dated this 20th day of August,
1925.
HOMER GALLOWAY,
City Recorder.
ag20-24c
An amusing story is told In
Berlin by the publisher of geo
graphical maps.
A Mongolian
prince recently visited Berlin to
place an order for maps of his
country. The publisher was glad
to get the order, but told the prince
that the latest maps he had were
published before the war.
“I must confess," said the pub
lisher, “that I don’t know the ex
act boundaries of your country at
present. Haven’t you some mate
rial that will tell me how to draw
the boundary lines?"
“No, I haven’t,” was the reply.
“But It doesn’t matter. Just you
draw the boundaries as wide as
possible, so that my people may see
how large their country Is.”
On Growing Old
■
In the Circuit Court of the State
of Oregon for I^ane County.
Stella V. Fouts, Plaintiff, vs.
Charles C. Fonts, Defendant.
To Charles C. Fouts, Defemin nt:
You are hereby required to ap
pear ami answer the complaint
filed against you in the above en
titled suit within six weeks from
the date of the first publication of
this summons in The Cottage Grove
Sentinel, which date is July 30,
1925, and you are hereby notified
that unless von appear within said
time your default will be entered
for want of an answer and the
plaintiff will make application to
the Court for the relief praved for
in the complaint, to-wit: That the
marriage contract now existing he
tween you and the plaintiff be
forever dissolved.
The Hon. G. F. Skipworth. Cir
cuit Judge of Lane County, State
of Oregon, made and dated an or
der July 28, 1925, directing this
Summons to be published in the
Cottage Grove Sentinel once each
week for six successive weeks; and
that you appear and answer the
said complaint within six weeks
from the date this Summons is first
published.
HERBERT W. LOMBARD,
Attorney for Plaintiff.
First National Bank Building.
j!30-s10c(T) Cottage Grove, Oregon
Pay Cash and Pay Less.
“It Always Pays to Trade at Gray’s
Gray’s Cash & Carry
Guaranteed Creamery Butter, pound 55c
Peaches
We have just bought our third car of
Elberta Peaches, another car next week.
These are large, ripe, fancy
Priced to Sell.
95c
$2.10
8-Pound Pail Pure Lard
100-Pound Sack Mill Run
Watermelons
Every one guaranteed to be good—we
replace all bad ones.
2c Lb.
25c
6 Dozen Good Jar Rubbers
Highest market price paid for your hens
and chickens.
PHONE 53
PHONE 53
GRAYS
EAS HL CARRY
A Sentinel Wantad Will Sell It for You
159-J
NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION
United States Land Office, Rose
buri;, Oregon, .Tilly 29. 1925.
Notice is herebv given that Jesse
L. Crawford of Cottage Grove, who.
on Scpttember 27. 1920, made
Homestead Entry, No. 913341, for
S.
R.E.
%. Section
11.
Township 21 S.. Range 3 West,
Willamette Meridian, has filed no
tice of intention to make throe
vear Proof, to establish claim to
the land abovo described, before
the United Stats Land Office, at
Roseburg, Oregon, on the 10th day
of September. 1925.
Claimant names as witnesses:
John S. Allen, Arnold Ducrst. A.
S. Lancaster, Daniel H. Bnimlmugli,
all of Cottage Grove, Oregon.
HAMILL A. CANADAY,
non-coal. a3‘31(2)
Register.
Is Our Number
Call that number whenever
you have an item for publi
cation. The Sentinel wants all
the news while it is news.
If you know an item and don’t
tell it, it’s you fault if it is
not printed. ’
SENTINEL
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Grove Sentinel
The Only Advertising Medium
Covering South Lane County