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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 3, 1925)
COTTAGE PROVE SENTINEL. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1925 PAGE THREE I J. W. Kirk sustained a fractured i Busy Tim cn Farm— pelvis yesterday when he was but Not for Farmer tallying ties. The r.reident oc- curred at Sutherlin. Mr. Kirk was i One day a farmer went to the brought here to the home of his i county fair and his hard-working daughter. Mrs. George Currin, and I wife remulned at home to see that later sent to a Eugene hospital. the farm suffered uo loss during his This is not a receipt to reduce a compound fracture, absence. He returned about dark, nor is it a testimonial for a never failing cough Mr. and Mrs. F. L, Grannis left and coming out on the porch, he in- today for Bandon for a week’s 1 qulred: dope, but a word about banking. outing. “I'm tired out, Mary. Is the cowa The close affiliation of “The Old Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lents, of 1| In the barn?” 5 “Yes, long since," replied the Reliable” with the leading banks in the : Lenta, Ore., stopped here Monday wife. State has proved a source of distinct advantage t ' to visit 8. L. Mackin. "Is the hoeses unharnessed an’ to its customers, while the unusual make up of its William Brown, of Heppner, ar fed!" directorate is assurance that care, as well as prudence, ■ rived Tuesday for a visit with ili:- "Yea” "Fowls locked up!" ' sister, Mrs. Malissa Chrisman. will be exercised in the transaction “Yes.” The Misses Sylvia and Sybil of all business intrusted. s Veateh have returned from a va- “Wood chopped for mornin’T” “Yes.” 3 j cation trip to Bandon. “Be them ducks plucked an’ We are the largest, 3 Homer Galloway and W. M. dressed fer market!" s the strongest and the best. "Yes.” Morelock left Tuesday for Port 5 land on business. “Wagon wheel mended an’ ready ■ Yes, we are the papa of them all 3 Elliott Vinson, Lee Nichols and to start In hauling wood tomorrow I Armand Riggs left today for Port- morning!” “Yes.” : land to attend a convention of "Well, then," he concluded with ; amateur radio operators. a sigh of relief, “let me have my supper, Mary, and I’ll turn in. I Lewis Van Blaricoiu left Wed- Farmin’ Is beginning to tell on me." On this Labor Day, we suggest that you - nesday to visit in Minnesota. —Country Gentleman. Miss Vera Scott is visiting at give thought to the results of labor— ! the borne of her aunt, Mrs. Chas. and to the proper safeguarding of a Simple “ Cradle ” Used | Chandler, at Wendling. part of what you earn. The complete in Placer Mining Mrs. Roxie Durham returned to Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Lincoln left her home in Eugene today after a banking service we offer is already In mining "placer" is a place yesterday for their home in Taft, I short visit at the home of her where deposits of precious metal, helping many workers to realize their Calif., after a brief visit here I sister, Mrs. Ray Baker. usually gold, are found near the ambitions. with friends. Mr. Lincoln is a Mrs. . L. B. Pearl and daughter surface, often In the gravel of river former resident of Cottage Grove. | Helen of Ranta Aon. Calif., ar- or creek beds. The mineral Is ob Herman F. Edwards, forfaerly Miss Helen Rodolf, Medford tained by washing the gravel or with Portland papers, but recently rived today to visit Mrs. Pearl’s pay dirt; that Is, separating the in the picture shop business here, dancing teacher and former resi | sister, Mrs. Andrew Brund. gold dust from the gravel and earth has accepted a position with The dent of this city, visited yesterday The H. H. Scott property on with which It Is mixed. This kind with Mrs. 8. V. Allison. She is Sentinel as news editor. mining called placer mining, on her way to Sheridan to visit I East 1 Main street was sold this of F, W. Bressler has recovered her parents. week to Mrs. Mabel M. Huff, The and it is in this kind of mining thut The from an illness which kept him deal was handled by E. C. Lock- the miner’s cradle Is used. cradle Is a’ simple appliance for Mail orders promptly attend wood. at home several days this week. treating “ pay dirt, ” earth and COTTAGE GROVE, OREGON We have a good assortment of ed to. Nelson’s Electric Shop. A state wild bird and game ref- gravel containing gold dust. It con- Olivia and Julia Ann Smith, uge has been created on the place slsts essentially of a box mounted used cars, and are sure to please Farmers’ Accounts Invited on rockers and provided with a per you. Pirces from $25 up. N. J. children of Mr. and Mrs. Roy known ns the D. G. McFarland 1 Nelson Jr., dealer in automobiles Smith of Portland, accompanied farm and on the Laura McFarland forated bottom of sheet Iron tn S-3-C. their father here Tuesday and will farm, E. N. Cruson, deputy game which the “pay dirt" is placed. Wa of quality. ter is poured on the dirt and the Mr. and Mrs. Bert Trask lclt visit with relatives over the week warden announced today. rocking motion Imparted to the Do You Remember When today for a visit to Crater Like. end. Mr. Smith, who is a former Lawrence K. Phelps, formerly of cradle causes the finer particles to □ --------------------------------------------- II resident of this city, returned to A shave cost KI cental this city and recently of Klamath pass through the perforated bottom Portland Tuesday evening. We had 5 cent movies! Falls, was a visitor today while on on a canvas screen, and thence to A haircut cost 25 cents! Miss Viola Welty, who has been his way to Tillamook to visit his the base of the cradle, where the □ --------------------------------------------- □ gold dust accumulates on trans Wages were $2 a day! visiting her Bister, Mrs. C. H. brother, Lester. Presbyterian Church-—No regular verse bars of wood called “riffles.” Shoes were $3 a pair! Woods of London, returned to her church services until after Septem- George Atkinson, of North Bend, Filing cards The Sentinel. There were 3-cent restaurants! home in Centralia, Wash., Tuesday. is a visitor here today. Ix-r 1. Rev. Duncan, of Detroit, Burroughs bookkeeping form of Mich., pastor after thnt time. Sun Ice cream sodas were 5 cents! Imaginary Land many kinds. Your home print Did you know that Dr. Hagen An eight-pound son was born The doctor charged $1 a call! The name "Hyperboreans” was day school at 10 * a. * * in. can cure all diseases of the eyes Tuesday to Mr. and Mrs. Julius Rubber stamps. The Sentinel. Cigarettes were 5 cents a pack given by the ancients to an lnmgl- Christian Church, the ‘ ‘ home-liko' ’ without the aid of glasses or oper- , Pierpont. nary people, favorites of Apollo, who church—A. J. Adams, minister. age! at ion! eow(T) lived beyond Boreas, or the North Sunday school at 9:45, sermon at Overalls cost 50 cents a pair! Mrs. W. B. Cooper left Tuesday Wind. Virgil placed them under 11, Christian Endeavor at 6:30, eve You could get a square meul for Cedars of Lebanon ning service at 7:30. the North pole. This favored race morning for Portland where she 25 cents! « « • Of every kind printed at dwelt In a terrestrial paradise un will visit her parents. Her daugh Famed for Centuries der a cloudless sky. and enjoyed a Methodist Church—J. II. Ebert, You could buy a good nickel home by the Home Print ters, Dorothy and Charlotte will re Sunday school at 9:45, cigar! The cedar of Lebanon Is native in fruitful land, unending peace, and pastor. main with their father in Eugene Syria, Asia, Palestine and the Is Shop. worship at 11, Epworth You could buy a suit of clothes perpetual youth and health. The morning League at 7, evening service at for $15! during her absence. land of Cyprus. It usually grows Hyperboreans were said to live In 7:30. Charles Hhanda sustained n I In the mountains at elevations of an atmosphere composed entirely You could get board and Always give your Home crushed toe Thursday when he I 4,000 and 8,400 feet above sea of feathers. Herodotus and Pliny Christian Science Society—corner for $4 a week! Print Shop first chance dropped a tie on his foot while 1 level. These trees, famous from both refer to this Action, hut say It of Jefferson avenue nnd Second You could buy ginghnm for 5 loading timbers at the Wiese mill. early times In sacred and profane was suggested by the amount of street. Sunday services at 11 n. in. at all your printing. writings, are large, ornamental snow thnt fell In those northern re- Wednesday services nt 7:30 p. m. cents a yard! Nelson has 24 usod cars. If in evergreens with wide spreading gfqps. The word "Hyperboreans" Everybody welcome. Radio Ray has this to say: « • • You paid $1 for the best H(‘il ts the market for such, come look branches. They are noted for the has been used by anthropologists to Free Methodist church—Corner of for the best shows! over our line. s-3-c. size of their trunks rather than for designate certain people thnt dwell Monroe Our new stock will be in avenue and south Fifth height, as many people sup in the northeast of Asia and street—Chester Hotels charged $3 n day, Ameri very soon. Get a 1926 Walter Beaver, foreman at the their Smith, pastor, Sun- pose. can plan! the northwest of America, and that day school at 10, forenoon services model Anderson & Middleton mill had Until the outhreak of the World cannot be classified either as Mon nt 11, evening service nt 7:30. The butcher UH(‘d to give you his right eyelid and the fingers war one of the original grove« men golians or as North American In- Prayer meeting nt 7:30 Thursday liver for your dogi on his right hand cut by flying Honed In the Bible was still stand dlans.—Exchange. evenings. • • « Your mother sent you to the gro- G. M. Bradner, of California, who emery Tuesday. Ing at the head of Kedlsha valley Seventh Day Adventist Church— eery store to buy 2(1 pounds of NELSON ELECTRIC SHOP has spent the summer at the B. M. Sol Davidson of Reedsport and near the ancient Lebanon. ThlsInBI Otherwite Engaged West Main street. Services overy sugar for $1! Hawley ranch on Sharps creek, left his son, Clovis, of ~ Palo Alto, Caif., remnant of the cedar forests s<> !■■■■■ ............................ Rossetti, who painted the now fa- Saturday. Sabbath school nt 1A, yesterday for home. visited Wednesday at the home of often referred to In the Old Testa moils reredos at Llandnff cathedral, church service at 11; prayer meet ment was visited by the English brother-in-law, botanist Hooker In 1880. Mr. Davidson’s took so long over them that the ing Wednesday evenings nt 7:30. Galloway writes insurance. He found about 375 trees grow denn and chapter became weary of Mrs. F. E. Dickson is visiting George McQueen. First church of Nnznrcno—Elev Mrs. Lila Wilson of Canyonville, Ing in nine group«. Five of the waiting, especially as replies to let enth in Portland for 10 days. Ailnrns, Harold E. Botte olde«t trees measured thirty feet or ters sent Rossetti concerning them miller, nn<l after a short visit at the home pastor. Sunday school nt 9:45, Mrs. Cleo Moreloc.k, Miss Hazel were not forthcoming. So one day over around the girth. Hooker e£" service nt 11, ovening Swanson and M:sn Evelyn Veateh of her niece, Mrs. Nelson Durham, tlmated them to be about 2.500 the bishop of Llnndaff. being In Lon 'forenoon I service nt 8. Prayer meeting nt will leave Sunday on a two weeks’ returned home Tuesday. years old. 8ome of the younger don, called at Rossetti’s rooms, and I 7:30 Wednesday * • evenings. • Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Maltby re tree« were estimated at 100 years. Blackfrlnrs to ask to see them, and motor trip to Seattle, Mount Rai thus discover the reason of their Glad Tidings Mission—Tenth nnd Many of these survival« of an- _ nier and Spokane. They will drive turned to their home in Oregon non-arrlvnl snd of the painter's si ! Adams streets, G. F. Shackelford, to Pendleton to attend the round City Wednesday ( after a short visit tlqulty were deatroyed during the lence. But the maid who opened ¡pastor. Sunday school at 9:4.5; World war. In ancient days the at the home of Mrs. Maltby ’ s sis up and will then return here by the door there nt once Informed him forenoon worship nt 11; young white gum which oozes from the ter, Mrs. C. H. Burkholder. ! people ’ s meeting at 7; evening scr way of the Columbia highway. that Rossetti was absent, and on CEMENT, LIME, PLASTER, BRICK, trunks and branches ________ of these ce vice at 8; week-dav services, Wed Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Hemenway derà ______________ hearing what the bishop had come was used for embalming.— nesday, Friday and Saturday eve- FIRE BRICK, FIRE CLAY, METAL lr nbout, she exclaimed: "Oh, lor* sir, nings nt 8. returned last night from a trip to Pathfinder Magazine. LATH, CORNER READS, SHIN Mr. Rossetti don’t paint now—he's Portland and Columbia river points. married I" GLES, DRAIN TILE, SEWER TILE, Baptist church — W. O. W. hnIL Mrs. Roy Meeks and Mrs. Car Animals Have Various J. C. Orr, pastor. Bunday school CONCRETE SAND AND GRAVEL, Rose- rie Hemenway are visiting in ~ at 10 o’clock, services at. 11 o’clock Earliett Typewriter» PLASTERING SAND, ZOURI STORE Methods of Signaling burg today. and 7:45. B. Y. P. U. services nt The flrat typewriter of which FRONT FITTINGS, AND OTHER Bird« all have good voices, bar there Is any record was patented In 7. Prayer meeting nt 7:30 Thurs Members of the Roy Short evening at the Roy C. Howard THINGS TOO NUMEROUS TO family, with Andrew Brund, have ring a few like the pelicans and cor England In 1714. In 1820 the first 1 i day homo, 110 old north Pacific high MENTION. gone to Bohemia to pick huckle- morants that are virtually silent, American typewriter, called a typog way. and so we find that they communi rapher, was patented by W A. berries. cate their messages mainly by No Charge on City Deliveries Miss Sylvia Taylor of Beaverton mean« of the voice. Mammals, on Burt. In 1844 and 1848 typewrit “What do you make a week!’’ machines were Invented In Eng C. B. Taylor. is visiting with Mrs. the other hand, are not possessed ing asked the judge of an Italian or Use a Sentinel land, which, like mnny of the early Mrs. Beatrice Casey and daugh of such ready voices, and so are machines, were designed primarily gan grinder. ITan tad I ter Kitty returned to their home given much more to the use of ges for the use of the blind and so pro “Twenty dollar, sare.’’ tures, says Hamilton M. Laing, U duced embossed characters. About in Linntou this week, after a visit the Winnipeg Free Pre««. “What! Twenty dollars for Just North of S. P. Station—Phone 100 1867 Charles Latham Sholes began grinding an organ?’’ b- ~............... n here. The common Richardson ground to experiment on the construction 3ulrrel and striped spermophUa “ No, sare; not for da grind — of Portland, Miss Agnes Carter of a typ^' tlter. and from this the our prairies, the prairie dog and Remington Do you know where Goff’s Shoe who had been visiting at the home had Its origin. The first but for da shut up and go away.” Shop is! Just at rear of First of her sister, Mrs. William Bartels, some others of these rodents, ap crude model was completed In 1888. parently use their tails In signaling. National bank. a27s3p returned home Tuesday. Mrs. It can be noted, too, that each ani Airs. A. Doolittle has returned to Bartels and son Billie accompanied mal is prone to repeat the signal Zoo Hat Big Food Bill Cottage Grove from Centralia, her. The trait Is so pronounced that Choice Items on the bill of fare Wash., and will make her home we hear them called “flicker of the animals In the London Zoo M. G. Frye sustained minor in often tails," These fellows all have a here. juries yesterday at the Roy Beebe shrill whistle that Is much mor« logical gardens during the past year of Herman Cathcart, Mont- mill, when a hook with which he useful as a danger signal, and this Included: 440 horse«, weighing 220 peiier. Cal., arrived here last wee k was working slipped and he fell 1« true of the marmots (wood tone, fed to the carnivore«; 4 tons. 15 cwt. codfish, fed to the walrus; to visit his aunt, Mrs. Floyd backward, striking his neck. chucks) also. 35 tons of herrings and whiting. Counts. Mr. Cathcart is a frrmer The red squirrel of the woods ex- 1,500 pints of shrimps, 34.3 gallons Mis« Sue Badollet of Eugene has press«« « great many things by resident of this city and his visit of fresh milk, 14,000 tins of con last week was the first he has been a visitor the past week at means of hla great feathery tall, but densed milk. 128 pounds of honey, the home of Mrs. Daniel Hamant. he seems to use ft not so much as 258 pounds of ants’ “eggs," 77 made in 13 years. to his kind as to express pounds of meal worms, 150 bunches Mrs. Catherine Bader left Wed a his signal Monroe will open his photo studio own feelings He has a good of onions. 108 heads of lettuce and Next Door to Quality Market—Aerosa Street From nesday for Salem to visit her niece, October 1 at the old stand in Cot _ ___ I voice and his messages to his klad 218,085 bananas. The food con Mountain States Power Company. tage Grove. a27s3p 'I™- William Scott. are sent by means of It sumed In a year coat $50,000 A Word About Banking In Honor of the Workers Labor Day each year brings anew to the Nation the great part that the mechanics, the farmers, the craftsmen, the tradesmen and the millions of other workers play in keeping America in the position of leader ship in the world. Labor Day is a day of tribute to the men and women who do things right and on time! It is not a day for those who dilly dally, or put off, or give less than their best to the work at hand. The First National Bank This Institution will not be open LABOR DAY Monday, Sept. 7 of Cottage Grove Bank of Cottage Grove It Church News Burroughs Bookkeeping Forms The Sentinel —RADIOLA Our Building Material Line Includes— You Want Godard & Randall We’re Now in the Old Show House (Former Arcade Theater) Longevity From Sap? Store Closed All Day Monday, Sept. 7, LABOR DAY But you will find everything you will need here Saturday to run you over the holidays. Smith-Short Grocery The Store That Appreciates Year Trade Longevity through the utilization of nap from tree« as a food for hu man beings is the theory of an Ore gon scientist, who 1« investigating whether there Is any foundation for a myth that the ancients who lived to • great age drank the sap at tree«. Man must he Mtlsfled with a life of seventy or eirhty years, while a redwood tree In California, which was a seedling 525 years be fore Christ, goes on living st 2.508 years of age. he reasoned. If this scientist ran find snd isolate the long-life auhstunre In the California redwoods, he believes he will have something better than a gland cure for restoring youth and prolonging life, says Capper’« Weekly. Keep Sweet "Buppose you look at the world through a yellow pane of gins«.' said the late beloved Doctor Jowett. “Why. then yon have a yellow world. Suppose you look through a dirty pane of glass. Why, then ev erything Is defiled. Suppose you look nt everything through a yellow pane of Jealousy, or the red pane of envy—why. then you disfigure ev erything. And If you look at things through a soured disposition you will not see anything that la lovely or sweet. The cynical heart has a channleas world.” On the Job Bu«1ne«s Men—Get out or I'll throw you out I W<H>k Agent--Caul I offer yon First «rith Cottage Grove news— The Hentiael. xx thia pamphlet on “How to Control four Temper T' And Ready to Show Y oh how conveniently we arc arranging our complete line of Hardware, Sporting Goods, Paints, Wall Paper “In Their New Home" DARBY & LISTON “Quality ' ’ and ‘ ‘Service =¿7