Image provided by: Cottage Grove Museum; Cottage Grove, OR
About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 15, 1925)
Big Business Uses Newspar £ Advert’ 7 o — . * XXVI VOLU> ------------ (to (Enitcuu* (5rnnr â’rntüirl COTTAGE GLOVE HIGH READY FOR EliGEfiE ELEVEN — • TWICE-A-WEEK Close Stores for Game. Clir,g One To Other Frosh Girls Are Advised That They A record for tho most affection- ate family has bqpn mode at Thomas J. Bradford place on i Sixth street road. He recently 36 good sized potatoes from hill and all were joined Siamese fashion. A number of smaller ones were clinging to the bunch. Hills of 36 potatoes are not uncommon in this favored section of the famous, fertile, fruitful Willamette, hut never before has such devotion on the part of every member of a vegqfnble family been found. This unusual product of the soil has been placod with the agricul tural exhibit in the Homer Gallo way real estate office. Seedless raisins, raised by Mrs. Applewhite, have also been added. Cottage Grovo high eleven is ready for the big game of the reason when it meets Eugene on the local field Friday afternoon, The team has developed rapidly since its early season appearance, as evidenceci by its overwhelming defeat of Oakland Saturday and, while the players are not over confident, fans believe Eugene will get a surprise. The game will start at 3 o’clock. Dedication of the new field, which has been named Delbert Kelly field in honor of a Cottage Grovo boy who fell in the Argonne forest, will be held at 2.30. Local merchants will close their places of business from 2 to 5 LLOYD SIXTH MURDERER IN POLK COUNTY o’clock and a record attendance is expected. Hat and arm bands carrying the optimistic slogan, "We Other Executions Were Conducted At Dallas by Sheriffs. Must Beat Eugene," made their appearance on the streets early in Dallas, Ore., Oct. 14.—If the the week. Positions on the team are di death penalty-decreed by the jury vided almost equally between new last Wednesday on W. R. Lloyd is and experienced men. Hoskins, carried out he will be the sixth who has played mostly in the back- person to have paid the extreme field, has been shifted to center. penalty for murder committed in He is improving rapidly, is a Polk county and the first from this steady man on offensive and a county since the law was changed I fixing the place of execution at strong defensive player. the penitentiary in Salem. Chestnut, a new man at The first man to be legally came out for the first time last season and showed promise. He hanged in Polk county was William is light, fast and a fighter. Wanker, j Everman in 1852. A few years out for the first season, is heavy, | later a man named Wimple was Both these executions husky and a willing worker. Heard i hangod. and Shipp, guards for last year, i were held in North Dallas, not seem slow in starting. Neither far from where the present paved has been able to get out much, highway turns east. The next legal due to injuries and employment. | hanging here was that of a man Longfellow, old standby guard of named Moss, which was held in last season, has been kept out of public on the hill in the southwest scrimmage by an injured shoulder. part of town. There elapsed ¡r period of 27 Miller, backfield man last season, has been shifted to tackle, where years before the next execution^ he presents a stone wall defense' In July, 1888, Sheriff Ira Smith hanged William Landreth, and on and is aggressive on offensive. Swanson, another backfield man, | February 2, 1900, Sheriff J. O. is playing tackle and because of Van Oradel- officiated at tho exe his fight and strength is a good cution of W. G. Magers. The last two were put to death in the yurd running mate for Miller. White ' of the present county jail, Short- is out with injuries. End positions are held by Glass, ly after Magers ’ execution the substitute of last year, and Ballew, place for carrying out the death who learned the game last season. penalty in this state was changed Glass' is a fighter and can be to Salem, He was the last man counted on in a pinch, while Ballew hanged by a county sheriff in is developing into a sure tackle and Oregon. defensive man. MeCargar, at quarter, is oldest Has Novel Football Window. in experience and is running the The Mountain States Power com team in excellent shape. He is a pany has a novel football window good passer and can carry the ball advertising the game for tomorrow. well. Alstott and Gordon, at halves, | The Cottage Grove and Eugene combine, weight and speed with teams are shown in position on the their year of experience. Huff, at gridiron. On Cottagd Grove’s iull, is the youngest player in the side appears the slogan, "We Must backfield, but makes up in fight' Beat Eugene. ’ ’ On the Eugene and weight what he lacks in years. ; side appears the slogan, "We Capable substitutes are being de Can’t Beat Cottage Grove. ’ ’ The veloped in Scheufele, center, Um- colors of both schools are used in phrey at guard, Murry at tackle, j the decorations. George Wilson at end, Goff at half, Vinson at quarter and Hauser First Frosts Arrive. at full.. The team will average Frosts Monday and Tuesday close to 150 pounds. Probable lineup for Friday: Hos nights killed tender plants oi this section but the hardy ones were kins, e; Chestnut, rg; Heard, lg; ; There wore few Swanson, rt; Miller, It; Glass, re; ! not affected. Ballew, le; MeCargar, q; Alstott, garden vegetables to be injured, however, and no damage of any rh; Gordon, lh; Huff, f. The Eugene team will be sup consequence has been reported. Heavy night fogs saved grape ported by a large delegation of crops, The frosts were general rooters. It is reported a special train will bring several hundred over the state, in most places being heavier than here. here. Radio Gives Baseball Score«. Always give your home print shop first chance at all your print Cottage Grove baseball fans ing. Usually your home printer crowded the "auditoriums" at the ean meet competition in quality several radio stations of the city as well as price. xx during the national championship contest. The receiver at the New Era drug store did triple duty. MICKIE SAYS— Wires were extended to the Im r---------------------------- — perial barber shop and to the Eagle CXI» 'THlMGr IB' PUAUC cigar store, where loud speakers fMOQM eouOOERfi it -m' were installed. •HRAT POWBW TH' 6OHDR, NEWSPAPER advertising makes HM», AMD HO*J 6A&6FUUN AM eOM»lCWRAT6L'f ME USES big stores out of little ones and keeps them from going back to If »HOU RARMLM FW AM little ones. -xx KDfttM. VUHO ABUSSS THt» PQMMR, OR- 7V»MS IT 'tt> Hit OMJU BCVFtBH CMOS, OK MACS <T Tb SETTIX GRtfX» I Eugene Miller, of Canada, who was called hero recently by tho death of a son and who is vis iting her sister, Mrs. Christina Richardson, says that during tho 10 years of her absence from the city it grew and improved so that she almost feels that she has awak ened from a Rip Van Winkle sleep. She can hardly believe that the city with so many fine buildings and so many paved streets is the same place she left a decade ago. Mrs. Miller may spend tho winter with her sister. She would like to enjoy the mild climate of the Cot tage Grovo country once more, It would be a welcome relief, Hhe believes, from the extreme cold of the Canadian country. COTTAGE GROVE FOO TBALL SQUAD WHICH MEETS LOCAL MERCHANTS ARE BEST BUILDERS FOR FUTURE Support of Home Business H. S. Cline Is Put Out Of Commission By Iron Marker Men Makes It Possible to Boost and Work for Community Spirit. The necessity of working for tho upbuilding of the home community should be apparent to everyone. Tho growth and development of each community adds to the pros perity of all. By helping your neighbor you help yourself and nothing contributes more to human happiness than a growing, prosper ous and harmonious community where all are willing to do their part. You are a partner in your com- munity. If it grows and thrivos, you profit in hard dollars and cents. If its growth is retarded and it goes backwards you lose. You and your neighbors have tho making or breaking in your hands. Do your share and there will be no question as to the outcome. It means money for you and for your family; it means the same thing for your neighbors. Frequently a community will fall into a rut of indifference and the prosperity that might have been theirs is lost for want of a little push and enterprise. Noting these things many of the citizens realize the need of a little work to bring home the value of the home community work to the peo ple. They have selected The Senti nel as their organ of publicity in a campaign for a better home com munity, and the building of home trade. Elsewhere appear the names of your partners. They are our own business men who have confidence in a great future here, They must have, or they would not back their faith in this place with the invest- ments they have made and pay heavy taxes on theso investments besides spending large sums each year to maintain the establishments that stand before you as monu ments of their implicit confidence that the community ean and will makq good. Onr community richly deserves the confidence of our trade terri tory. This belief on the part of Cottage Grove business men is the motive for one of the biggest booster campaigns this city has ever known. The home merchants know that nobody is going to push this eity except the citizens them selves. To expect thia help from outside is futile. The lines of merchandise carried by our merchants are complete— they are bought from the best wholesale markets and sold at prices that entitle Cottage Grove merchants to the trade of this community. Cash is the motor that will make Cottage Grove forge to the front. THE FEATHERHEADS wit NUMBER 3 Miller Hardly ecognizes C. C. She Knew o„e Local Grid Team Expected to Make Good Showing; Merchants To ________ •________________________________ ______ COTTAGE-GROVE, LANE COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1925 36 Potato, in Big Business Uses Newspaper Advertising H. 8. Cline is hobbling around with an injured foot and he be- lieves that the city should at least pay his doctor bill. One of the intersection markers placed by the city fell on the foot. The heavy chunk of iron did not jump up and attaek Mr. Cline, but he was assisting in replacing the marker after it had been shoved out of place by a car that camo tn core tact with it. Henry Beaulieu, whom he was assisting, had raised the marker with a crowbar ”d the heavy chunk of iron slipp'd off the crowbar at a moment when Clino had his foot where the chunk had to fall. He did not think the injury serious and spent Tues day night at his home east of the city, Yesterday mornnig the in- jury and swelling were bothering him so much that he came to the city for medical attention and it was found that at hone had been fractured. Royal Masons Give Banquet. Cottage Grove chapter, Royal Arch Masons, entertained the blue lodge Masons of the city Wednes day evening at a venison feed. Music was furnished during the banquet by the Troubadours. This "’■ganization also gave a number at the program following the ban qnet and a vocal number wns giv en by a male quartet consisting of Cecil Caldwell, H. A. Hngen, L. P. Sasford and F. D. Wyatt. Ad dresses were made by E. O. Potter, F. G. Jennings, R. T. Burnett and F. C. Heffron, all members of the Eugene chapter, who were special guests for the occasion. The affair was pronounced the biggest event in years in local Masonic circle». Telephone Poles to Go. The Pacific Telephone k Telc- graph company is making up its esitmate of the cost of removing its poles from Main street and plac ing them in the alleys north and south cf the street. It is planned to start this work during the early part of next year, When this is done, Main street will be cleared of poles, the Mountain States Power company having re- moved its poles during the past year. First with Cottage Grove news— XX The Sentinel. But not in the way you think. You will not be asked to part with your money. Not the cash that eomes out of your pocket, but the cash that stays here is what will build up thia community. How is thatf That will be partly answered next week. I Should Weir Th ir Garters Above the Knees. The first issue for the year of Cee Gee Mirror, Cottage Grovo high school paper, appeared Tues day in mimeograph form. Mimeo graphing a new paper presents many difficulties most of which the members of the Mirror staff have overcome in whole or in part and the publication is a highly credit able one. It is devoted to news of the classes, editorial, jokes, ole. A departure this year is the add: tion of display ads to partially defray the expense of publication. Tho Mirror’s editorial policy is in harmony with that of The Sen tinel. The following "Advico from a Senior" indicates the truth of TRAVEL WILL INCREASE the immediately preceding stat"- ment: ASSERTS EDITOR "The majority of the new fresh EUGENE TOMORROW. Captain H. L. Wells Says Publicity man girls think that when they Will Bring Tourists Here. have reached the lofty station of freshmen they must wear their "A great increase in travel on garters below the knee. We all the Pacific highway is the purpose i realize the necessity of garters, but of the Pacific Highway associa owing to the shortness of skirts tho tion," said Captain H. L. Wells, j garters would appear to better ad field secretary of that association, I vantage if worn above the knees. Petition for New Road District To Wednesday bb he was passing We have heard people say that through Cottage Grove on his way a freshman girl can always b< Be Heard by Commission At to speak at the luncheon of the recognized from a distance by tho Elkton October 29. Lions club at Eugene. predominating bright colors. Girls, "I am on my way now with j do you like to have people make Residents of tho Reedsport-Scotts- Mrs. Wells over the entire line I such remarks 1 If you don’t, then burg-Elkton country are going from Mexico to Canada gathering remove tho cause. Don’t be afraid ahead with their plans for the for- data for a fully illustrated book you stockings will slide. Garters mation of a super road district let of the entire highway, 1800 abovo the knees should always ac in which it is proposed to levy a miles long. It is the longest, fin company short skirts, so if your special tax for the improvement 6Bt and most beautiful of all tho skirt is short, pull up the garter. of the proposed Umpqua scenic world’s touring routes and by prop You know modesty never hurt any highway from Drain to Reedsport er publicity the travel over it can one." and for tho complotion of Rooso- be doubled.” Tho members of the staff are: velt highwav through the west Captain Wells is also editor of Thelma Kom, editor; Hazel Bock end of Douglas county. Pacific Coast Travol, a now mngn moyer, assistant editor; Billy Me- A petition for tho formation of zine devoted to picturing and do- Cargar, athlotic editor; Helen such a road district has been filed scribing the attractions of the Ostrandor, society; Gordon White, with the state highway commission Pacific highway for tourists, Tn advertising and art; Maurice Coch and a hearing upon the petition former years he was editor of ran, frosh reporter; Harold Hauser, will be hold at Elkton October 29, a magazine in Portland called "Tho sophomore reporter; Irene Griggs, at 2 o ’clock, Cottage Grove has West Shore" and also an editorial junior reporter; Muriel Young, taken considerable interest in tho writer on the Portland Oregonian. senior reporter; Genevieve Lansing, formation of such a proposed scenic Many will romember him as captain operator; Margaret Carter, faculty highway and the chamber of com- of Co. S. of the second Oregon advisor. Contributors are Lola merce probably will send a large regiment which wont to the Vhil- Godard, Rachel Galloway, Rachel delegation to attend tho hearing ippineB in 1898. Short, Verna Leep, Alico Maxwell, at Elkton. Joseph Bricher, Orvil Hazen, Roy Schaufele, Donald Metcalf, Hnrrv Timber Sales Heavy. Metcalf. na Receipts from the sale of BANK HOLDUP IS FOILED tional timber for the first quarter I BY ALF JURY of this fiscal year totalled $1,055.- Reservoir Concrete Almost In. Members of the chamber of com Former Cottage Grove Man Turns 165, sales from forests of Oregon and Washington totalling $278,596, merce wore members of a junket In Alarm After Struggle. tho largest ever received for nny party yesterday afternoon to tho Alfred Jury, former cashier of one quarter. The national figure site of the city’s new million gal They found the tho Bank of Cottage Grove, R8- also is a record. Tho total annual lon reservoir. sumed the role of hero in a holdup cut of timber from government I work of running tho concrete al of the Queen City bank, Seattle, lands is only about thrno per cent most completed. Godard & Randall, September 29. The North End of that cut from private lands, contractors, will have all but two slabs in by tonight. Within three Colleague, a Seattle community pa fedoral officials state. weeks water enn Im turned in and per, credits Mr. Jury with frus tho big hole put into service. A trating tho attempt of tho robbers County to Build Road. by turning in an alarm after a Completion of four miles of the curbing around the reservoir and struggle with one of the bandits. Eugene-Lorane highway will be a fence to protect the water from The bandits entered the bank undertaken by tho county, it was intruders are yet to be built. during the noon hour while Mr. announced this week by P. M. Jury and the cashier were alone. Morse, county engineer. Failure Your homo newspaper is always After covering Jury with their of the contractor to make ns rapid glad to g've assistance in tho prep guns the holdups turned their at progress as agreed led to an ar aration of advertising copy. xx tention to the cashier, allowing rangement whereby tho county ns Jury to walk to his ofice. Ono sumed the job. Work will be of the men caught him here but rushed but completion will depend he was able to lock the door and on woather conditions, it was said. turn in an alarm. The police, with the prompt aid of two other citi Springfield Accepts Land. zens, captured the bandits. The Springfield city council on Monday night formally accepted Women May Have Classes. 265 acres of land east of that city Classes in dressmaking and mil on a lease from tho city of Eugene linery will be conducted in Cottage for 49 years at a rental of $10 Grove by an intructor from the tho year. Tho land was formerly Of every kind printed at Oregon Agricultural college if suf owned by the Southern Pacific home by the Home Print ficient local women are interested and was transferred to Eugene in Shop. in the work. Miss Bess Chappell, tho deal by which the railroad state supervisor of home economics, acquired its present car shop site in a letter to O. W. Hays, superin Springfield will offer the land RH Always give your Home tendent of schools, announced she sites for industrial concerns. Print Shop first chance would bo here Friday to ascertain at all your printing. whether the classes were desired. The chamber of commerce at its A meeting will be held Friday noon luncheon Tuesday voted to afternoon at 2:30 in'room 6 of pnt on a membership drive during high school building. the remaining three months of the year, during which time the fee will be $5, covering dues for three If you know what you want, months. a wanted to get it for you. 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