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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Dec. 7, 1925)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. MONDAY. DECEMBER 7. 1925 4 zC Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hart and Mr. and Mrs. HH. B. Breedlove drove to Roseburg Sunday. On their return they were accompanied by Mrs. Tom Laffoon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hart. Lloyd Griggs sustained a frac tured bone in his wrist Thursday ■ afternoon when he fell while play- i ing in the high school gymnasium. Mrs. Laura McKernan. Mrs. Geo. Kappauf and Mr. and Mis. C. M. Foster composed a party visiting Eugene 'Thursday. A seven-pound daughter was born Saturday night to Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hunter at their hornte in this city. The ladies’ aid of the Pres- byterian church wil 1 meet at 2:30 i Friday at the chuirch. Mrs. Job, Mrs. Eakin, Mrs. Gowdy and Mrs. J. E. Blackmore will be the hos- teases. What You Don’t Expect Sometimes Many people think of a market as merely a place at which to buy meat, while it is really far from that. The “' ~ Quality market asked the ad soliciter to write an ad. They didn’t know what to write it about. Here are a few of the items outside of meat that the solicitor noted on display : Pork and Beans . Corned Beef Creamery Butter Cottage Cheese Nut Margarine Devilled Ham Dainty Spread Pimento Cheese Kraft Cheese Limburger Cheese Phenix Cheese Dill Pickles Mustard Pickles Olives Mince Meat Sauer Kraut Pickled Onions Ketchup Mayonnaise Mustard Peanut Butter Drum Corps Elects. Tvan Warner was elected drum ! major of the American Legion drum corps at a meeting of the corps Wednesday night. Albert I Griffin was elected captain, War- ner and Griffin, with George , Matthews, K. M. Bird and Fred i Bennett compose the executive committee. Regular weekly prac tice will be held by the drum corps under the direction of Mr. | Griffin instructor from Eugene. Quality Market Culver fif Anderson PHONE 46 City Briefs Today is last day on $2.25 Subscription Special. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Frnns ex ■-------------------------------------- pect to move today into their new George L. Gillespie filed suit home on north Ninth street. Mrs. Kenneth Mills of Eugene is Thursday in circuit court against Margaret Gillespie for divorce.' He visiting at the home of her sister- asks custody of their four minor in-law, Mrs. George Boyd. children. Christmas photographs at Toll n9dl4c(M) Mrs. Olive Berrey went to Port man Studio, Eugone. land Saturday for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Richmond and Mr. and Mrs. George Richmond of Galloway writes insurance. Elmer Willard left Saturday for Gardiner were guests the latter part CAKES OF EVERY KIND Ogden, Utah, after a short visit of tho week of Mrs. Ida Veatch and a score of other equally at the home of his parents, Mr. anil Mr. ard Mrs. Victor Kern. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Hart renew delicious bakery goods come and Mrs. O. H. Willard. from-our ovens—fresh daily. their subscription from Portland I and send holiday greetings to Try them and be convinced of their wholesomeness. thoir Cottage Grove friends. pays to shop at Tollman It 1 Studio, Eugene. n9dl4c(M) Bail of $5 deposited with Chief of Police Pitcher by J. O. Burcham for speeding within the city limits G. A. Sanders, Prop. was forfeited in police court this forenoon. Burcham, who is a J Springfield school teacher, told Pitcher he would not be able to Henry Taylor Dies at Spokane. appear unless the officer insisted Henry Taylor, former resident of that he do so. the Coast Fork country, died Thurs Galloway, insurance, 511 Main. M day at Spokane, Wash. Interment Mr. and Mrs. Bert Trask and was at Republic, Wash. small son spent the week end in Mr. Taylor was born in the the Albany at the home of Mrs. Coast fork valley and spent the Trask’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. earlier years of his life there, He W. V. McGee. had been a resident of eastern Robert Galloway, accompanied by Washington for the past 25 years, Daniel Cheney of Enterprise, was living recently in Okanogan county, here from the U. of O. for the He was about 60 years old. Mr. Taylor’s widow and six chil week end. survive. Two brothers, John and Today is last day on $2.25 dren George Taylor of Coast fork sur Subscription Special. vive, as well as two sisters, Mrs. Joe Taylor, who was seriously J. E. Lestoe of Adams, Ore., and injured recently in a motorcycle Mrs. A. 8.. Powell of Los Molino», i accident, is able to be out. Calif. In the list of surviving relatives Tested tubes, tested sets, of the late Dr. T. W. Harris of tested service I Eugene, the name of Mrs. Martha 1 Baughman of this city was omitted. She is a surviving sister. Spirelia supporting and figure train “We are having lovely weather ing garments for every type. Spirelia but we can’t get along without quality hosiery, silk lingerie. All The Sentinel," writes Mrs. G. M. make nice Christmas gifts. Mrs. E. C. Hall from Pasadena. Shay, 305 Sixth street. <17-21p(M) East side residents can save A. W. Turpen writes from Mo time and money buying at their desto, Calif., to make arrangements east side store. Park Grocery. Cor for another year’s twice-a week in ner Main and Eleventh. n30tf(M) stallments of the old home paper. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Linn of Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Compton, Kennewick, Wash., are here to daughter Lois and Brighton Leon spend the holiday season at the ard drove to Eugene Sunday and home of their son, Pastor John visited at the home of Mr. and Linn. Mrs. William Ashworth. Claude Bearisto, of the Lane Mrs. Deselle Stevenson of Port- Auto company, left Saturday for land visited last week at the home Oakland, Calif., to attend a meet of her mother, Mrs. Addie Jacobs, ing of Star car dealers. in Gowdy ville. Radio Ray A Christmas Gift for the Whole Family - J 11 DON’T FORGET There is nothing the youngsters will like better than a BICYCLE, WAGON, SCOOTER OR A KIDDIE KART FOR CHRISTMAS I have a full line at reasonable prices. Make a small deposit and I will set article away for you until Christ mas without extra charge. I also carry the parts and do the repair work. HARRY RENTLE THE BICYCLE 8H0P 400 Main Street I T Teachers Join Association. Lane county, for the first finie in five years, is credited with a 100 per cent enrollment in the Ore gon State Teachers association, ac cording to word received last week at the office of E. J. Moore, county The convenience of ordering Groceries from us by phone superintendent of schools. The en is an economy every housewife should learn the use. tire teacher personnel of the county will be listed in the new member ship lists being prepared by the association. TRY ORDERING GROCERIES FROM US BY PHONE Nearly thirty persons, seme of them college graduates, applied for a certain position in the Cincinnati public library, but ouly eight scored a passing mark in examination. The Pathfinder's poetry machine and Its relation to poetic license must have been uppermost In the mind for the candidates who said that one of the grants of high office Among the several physical bene bestowed on a poet laureate was PHONE 65 “certain privileges called poetic li fits arising from the granulation of cense.” Oregon soils by lime are the follow Another candidate defined Sleepy ing as noted by experiment station: Hollow as a "hollow In Kentucky renders soil permeable, aids recep ATHLETIC CLUB MEETINGS. —” that has become the setting of sev tion, storage and distribution uf eral books.’1 The Cottage Grove Athletic club Marco Polo, according to one, moisture, and fortifies against is holding regular meetings every "was the first man to try and reach ‘‘heaving” and winter killing. I Thursday evening in the high the "North pole.” Barber Shop B. I school gymnasium. Business men, "Before the break with England, Not Fit. Henry Clay uttered those immortal ! Alice for the first time saw a | employes of business houses and 630 Main, P. S. Bukowski, Prop. i words, ‘Give me liberty or give me ‘cat carrying her kitten by the na po any others wishing to join are in- vited to do so. All that is neces death,’ ’’ wrote another. | of its neck. ' sary to join is to appear any Madame Curie was credited with “You ain’t fit to be a mother, ! Thursday night and pay member* being founder of the Christian Sci | she cried scathingly. “ You ain ’ t ence church. “Robinson Crusoe" ' ship fee. was said to have been the work of ¡hardly fit to be a father!" BRIGHTON LEONA RD, Robert Louis Stevenson. d7c Secretary. The handwriting on the wall, to Ought to Have. Barber Work in General ; one young woman, referred to the Tess: Hazel married a man with I special attention to children last supper. ail kinds of money. SPANISH WAR VETS! A young man said Christ was Jess: Who is he? tried before Ananias.—Pathfinder Meeting at 7:30 Friday evening Tess: A coin collector. Salesbooks. The Sentinel. Magazine. in former commercial club rooms over Burkholder & Compton store. Lotteries Have Firm d7c ELBERT SMITH, Adjutant. McQueen’s Grocery MPERIAT 1 BOBBING Hold on All Italians The national sport of Italy is the lottery. It Is the popular sport of all classes. There are many kinds of lotteries, but the one which seems to hold the popular favor Is the weekly one. The charm of this weekly lottery lies in the fact that the buyer of a ticket can play a hunch. Since all Italians are super stitious, it Is only natural that each has a particular "hunch" on the winning numbers in the lottery. The eight largest cities In the kingdom are listed and after each city five numbers appear. Should anyone have an Idea that Naples would draw 4, 18, 87, 34, 52, It Is simplicity itself to back your hunch. You simply walk Into ail agency and write your own ticket. The numbers do not huve to be ar ranged In the same sequence as drawn. For example, In the case above cited if tlie purchaser has se lected the numbers In inverse or der, or in any other order he would still win the maximum purse.—De troit News. KITCHEN CUPBOARD A. F. & A. M Special bookkeeping systems of many kinds. The Sentinel. By NELLIE MAXWELL Judicious E Newspaper Advertising Makes Big Stores Out of Little Ones I Things to Eat TAEI.ICIOUS stews may be made of smnll pieces of meat If the family Is small. Tnke one pound or less of round steak, cut into small pieces and add with cold wa- ter to cover a small onion or two, cook for .two or three hours at a simmering temperature; the last hour add a few potatoes sliced thin and cook until they are soft. There should be some suet added with the meat to give richness to the stew. Season with salt and pepper, adding water if needed, and serve very hot. Lamb Stew.—Cut three pounds of the neck of lamb Into convenient sized pieces for serving, brown in three tnblespoonfuls of drippings, add two onions cut Into dice, one carrot diced, one sprig of parsley, one small piece of bay leaf, two Tested Patrons’ Hospitality cloves, eight peppercorns and salt Stepping Into a taxicab the other to taste. Pour over one cupful of day, says the Paris Intransigeant, boiling water, one cupfui of toma a fare discovered a package of toes; add six diced potatoes nnd chocolate lying on the seat. With two cupfuls of pens. 31mmer on out hesitation he put_it into his the back part of the stove for three pocket, paid ................ “ the chauffeur, adding hours or cook five minutes at the a good pourboire, and was about to boiling temperature, then place In a depart when the driver called out: fireless cooker for five hours. Pork Chops and Parsrlp Stew.— I “What about my chocolate?" “Your chocMate?" queried the Put six or eight pork chops Into a client, greatly taken aback, Then kettle, add five good-sized parsnips the chauffeur explained that he was ; which have been washed and testing the honesty of his fares, and scraped and cut Into one-inch pieces, of eleven whom be had carried that add five diced potatoes, one chopped morning only two had Informed him onion, salt and pepper to season. that a package of chocolate was ly Cook slowly for twenty minutes, ing on the seat. The two honest { thicken with flour blended with xlin- folk were n sergeant leaving for cold water, cover closely and back mer for three hours on the Morocco and a milliner’s messenger of the stove. girl. “Honest people are scarce," Hungarian Stew. — Take two said the philosophic chauffeur. pounds of lean shoulder steak, cut Into small pieces and marinate with Can’t All Be Vegetarians two tablespoonfuls of strong vine There is one very good reason gar, two tablespoonfuls of grated why we cannot all be vegetarians, onion, one teaspoonful of salt, one- even If we would. In the first fourth teaspoonfpl of caraway seed, place there are not enough vegeta- | the same of sweet mnrjorain. leav ides In the world to feed everybody, | ing It two hours Add the meat and and in the second place there is seasonings, two tahlespoonfuls of not enough land on which to grow 1 butter, cook until brown, add one vegetables. Meat Is concentrated tableapponful of flour, simmer for vegetable food. Again, we must four hours. Add one-half cupful of a dash of paprika and serve. have leather, wool, feathers, horn, i cream, ISIS. Western Newepeper Union.) Ivory, fur, kid, hides, hair, etc., and to get these usually means the | death of the animals. So. we put PROFESSIONAL CARDS ouy coverings outside, and their I flesh Inside. Vegetarianism Is good DENTISTS enough for poets, artists and preachers, but the strenuous, virile, IJ W. TITUS, D. M. D.—-Dentistry. fighting, aggressive man requires Modern equipuiont. First Na meat.—Beauty. tional Bank Building. Hours. 9 to 12 and 1 to 6. Evenings and Sun days by appointment. Office phone Unexpected Pleasure 10, residence phone 212-R. One side of the famous Devil’s glen was open to the public; the 11H. W E. LEBOW.—Dentist. Office other side was kept strictly private Fifth and .Main streets. Hours, 8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5:30. Evenings by the landlord. An American visitor, ignoring the and Sunday» by appointment. Phones: notice boards, was walking up the office 35. residence 161-J. private side of the glen when he ATTORNEYS was met by a choleric old gentle- man, who shouted : ‘‘What do you IIERBEBT W LOMBARD—Attor Fruit Sent to Hospital. mean, sir, by trespassing on my ney a* Law. First National Crippled children in the Shrine property?” Bank Building. Plyiue 94, Cottage “Great Scott!” replied the Amerl- Grove, Oregon. i hospital in Portland will enjoy I home canned fruit from Cottage can. "I knew this was the DevlFg II J. SHINN.--Attorney at Law but I never expected to meet Grove homes for their Christmas glen, and Notary Public. Practice« the proprietor!”—London Mall. in all courts, under building, Cot* I dinners as the result of efforts I tage Grove, Oregon. ! of local Shriners, who have col Point Moral Lesson lected 12 to 15 gallons of cherries, PHYSICIANS “Little Apes of Nikko,” some ! peaches pears, strawberries and times known ss the “Three Wise |)R. C. E. FROST.—- Physician other fruit for shipment to the Monkeys." is the name of monkeys and Surgeon. Offico in Lawson home. C. A. Bartell and Earl which lippear In a mural decoration Building. Pnone 47, Cottage Grove, Hill are in charge of the work. among ancient tombs of Nikko. Oregon. Japan. The three monkeys are aa follows: MIrani, who sees no evil; /.LAVEN C. DYOTT, M. D—Phy County Jail Buatneea Drops Business is falling off rapidly at Mlkazura. who hears no evU. and ” sician and Surgeon. Evenings by appointment. Suite 3, Kein the Lane county jail and Ffiday Mazaru, who speaks no evil. The Bldg., Collage Grove. Entrance on legend connected with these mon there were only 15 inmates on the keys nortn Sixth street, just off Main. la (imply a moral Idea to point 1 register. Only twice during the out the wisdom of minding one's [ j A. FORBES, M. D.—Physician past 19 months has the jail popula own affairs. *-'• and Surgeon. Calls answered tion dropped as low as it is at day or night. Maternity work a present and sometimes it has been specialty. Over C. J. Breier Co. Lightning in Forests Phones: Office 34, residence 199 J as high as 50. When lightning strikes a tree the ordinary result Is to splinter the I 1R. A. W. KIME.—Physician and NEW OFFICERS WANTED. Surgeon. Obstetrics and disease» wood or strip off bark through the __ The Sentinel will appreciate hav sudden generation at steam, says of women and children a specialty. Will care for confinement» at his ing secretaries of lodges and so- Nature Magazine. In the great ma home if desired. Office over C. J. cietic« furnish lists of new officers ’ Jorlty of cases the tree Is not set Breier Co, Phone»: Of flee, 234; elected or installed. <!7tf on fire. Nevertheless the aggregate residence, 128-J. Residence address, I «umber of forest fires started by 1149 west ,Main._________________ ■ lightning Is, in many parts of the ; country, greater than the number DRUGLB88 PIIY8ICIAN8 i due to all other causes combined. [xR. H. a . nAGEN—Licensed ” Drugle.ss Physician. Phone 30. Altruism Ostrander Building, 830 14 Mein street, Cottage Grove, Oregon. Here’s one yon msy hare beard. Special eommanication Tuesday, BUI gets s cablegram from his NOTARY PUBLIC AND Dercmtier 8. Two M. M. degrees friend Jack In Mont« Carlo, read- COLLECTIONS and refreshments. Visitors and S.W on the red for you last H arry w . neet . -Collections " I Sight and mem lier» cordially welcomed. lost. Send ____ check st Bailer and Notary Public, By order W. M. I once."—New York Herald Tribune. building. Cottage Grove. The Cottage Grove Electric Bakery ZENITH FADA RADIOLA Would-Be Librarians Not “Up" on History rAGE THREE g s I s : i ■I =! : 1 Big cities are built by merchants whose advertising draws business from surrounding communities. NEWSPAPER advertising- is the least expensive method of* building a big city here, and of keeping others from building big cities with money that should be spent here. I M ’in»/ m » \?i/ \itu mi »/ i?iff nm nu/ 11» \m mil j| r ira nv. inx rrn rrn hit tth jth mx irn irnTra zrn mx zrn trn mi th nn irix nn ww Winn fncm t irn L • j I Enroll Today—It’s n Good School Secretarial, Stenographic, or Bookkeeping Course EUGENE BUSINESS COLLEGE A. E. ROBERTS. President c 992 Willamette St. Phone 666 Eugene, Oregon, j Cl BJi ILL Mi» H» 11» MJZ 111» MJ/ M» H» 11» 11» M» H» M» 1!» 11» 11» H» H» 11» MJ/ M» WILD The quickest-start ing, full-powered gas oline that ever pro pelled a car. On sale at the “Red Crown” sign. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (Osliloriiia) NEW WINTER RED CROWNÌ Our Building Material Line Includes— Cement, Lime, Plaster, Brick, Fire Brick, Fire Clay, Metal Lath, Oor- ner Beads, Shingles, Drain Tile, Sewer Tile, Concrete, Sand and Gravel, Plastering Sand, Zouri Store Front Fittings, and other things too numerous to mention. No Charge on City Deliveries Godard & Randall Just North of 8. P. Station—Phone 100