The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, January 21, 1926, Page 3, Image 3

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    COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. THURSDAY, JANUARY 21, 1926
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Church News
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Methodist Church.—John A. Linn,
Pastor.—Sunday school at 9:45;
preaching service at 11; Epworth
league at 6:30; prenching service at
7:30. Midweek prayer hour, 7.30
Thursday.
A weleoine nt every
service.
e
%
Presbyterian Church.—Bunco n P
Cameron, minister—Sunday school
at 10 a. m.; public worship at 11
a. m.; Endeavor at 3:30; evening
Sunday, January 24.—2:30 p. m.
Junior Endeavor.
7:30 evening
service. Address, “Robert Burns
the Poet of Democracy.”
• • •
Baptist church—Chapel car, one
block north of 8. P. depot—
J. C. Orr, pastor. Sunday school
at 10 o’clock,
. , services
—
s at 11 o’clock
and 7:45. -
B. “
Y. -
P. -
U. services at
7:00 P. M.
• • •
Christian Church, the ‘ * home-like ’ ’
church—A. J. _____
, _______
Adams,
minister. _
Sunday school at 9:45, sermon at
11, Christian Endeavor at 6:30, eve­
ning service at 7:30.
♦ • ♦
Christian Science Society—corner
of Jefferson avenue and Second
street. Sunday services at 11 a. m.
Wednesday services at 7:30 p. m.
Everybody welcome.
• • •
Free Methodist church—Corner of
Monroe avenue and south Fifth
street—Chester Smith, pastor. Sun­
day school at 10, forenoon services
at 11, evening service at 7:30.
Prayer meeting at 7:30 Thursday
evenings.
• • •
First church of Nazarcne—Elev­
enth and Adams, Harold E. Botte
miller, pastor. Sunday school at 9:45,
forenoon service at 11, evening
®eJYIC®
* 7 8- Prayer meeting at
7:30 Wednesday evenings.
Glad Tidings Mission—Tenth and
Adams streets, G. F. Shackelford,
pastor.
Sunday school at 9:45;
forenoon worship at 11; young
people’s meeting at 7; evening ser-
vice at 8; week-day services, Wed­
nesday, Friday anu Saturday eve­
nings at 8.
Loose leaf binders of all sizes.
The Sentinel.
NOTICE OF SALE OF BEAL
PROPERTY.
Tn the county court of the state
of Oregon, for Lane county, in the
matter of the estate of R. Pope,
deceased.
Notice is hereby given, that pur­
suant to an order of sale made and
entered by the county court of the
county of Lane, state of Oregon,
on the 22nd day of December,
A. D., 1925. in the matter of the
estate of R. Pope, deceased, the
administrator of estate will sell at
private sale the following described
real estate, to-wit:
Beginning at a point 96 rods
and 3 links south and 203 rods
and 18 links west of the north­
east corner of the M. P. Mar­
tin and wife donation land
claim No. 41 Notif. No. 862,
thence east 19 rods and 12%
links, thence north 50 rods, to
the center of Martin creek,
thence in a westerly direction
np said creek to a point direct­
ly north of the place of be­
ginning, thence south 49 rods
to the plaee of beginning, con­
taining six acres, more or less,
in section 8, township 21, south
range 3 west of the Willamette
meridian, Lane county, Oregon.
The sale will be made from and
after Tuesdav, the 26th day of
January, 1926.
The bids will be received at the
office of Herbert W. Lombard,
First National Bank building. Cot­
tage Grove, Oregon. Terms of sale,
cash. The said property is sub­
iect to a mortgnge of six hundred
dollars ($600.00) dated March 10.
1917.
Dated and first published De­
cember 24, 1925.
W. G. PALMATER,
<124j21e(T)
Administrator.
Frenchman First to
Use Gasoline Engine
The first attempt to employ gaso­
line as a motive power was made
by a Frenchman. Pierre ltavel, who
patented "a steaiu generator heat
ed by mineral oils, to be applied
to steam locomotion on ordinary
roads." Ravel’s engine was fitted
to a small carriage, and developed
three horsepower.
The Franco-German war put an
end to Ravel’s experiments for a
tone, but years later he built a mo­
tor car In which petroleum was
used for the direct generation of
motive power. In 1876 Lentz In-
v voted a burner by which a mix­
ture of gasoline and other naph­
thas, called massout, was used as
fuil on steamships.
About tlie same time gasoline
was used as an lllumlnant In street
lamps and later a new use was
found for It In the manufacture of
varnish and oilcloth.
Gasoline,
amounting to 8 per cent of the dis­
tilled product of the crude petro­
leum, continued to be a drug on
the market until the Invention of
the gasoline motor, and its appli­
cation to automobiles, boats, air­
planes, and hundreds of Industrial
uses.
Several Inventors helped to In­
augurate the “Age of Gasoline,” but
the chief of them was George L.
Selden of Rochester (N. Y.), tbe
father of the automobile.—Chicago
Journal.
Equinox Affected by
Heating Power of Sun
The autumnal equinox is warmer,
not colder, than the vernal in prac­
tically all of the continental United
States and other places of middle
to high latitudes. The reason for
this is that the temperature condi­
tions at any locality always lag be­
hind the changing amounts of heat
received by the locality from the
sun In the course of Its annual
journey from winter solstice and
return, In New Jersey, for ex-
ample, the heating effect of the
sunshine Is at a minimum on De-
cember 22 of each year, but the
lowest temperature of the winter
occurs fully a month later, on Jan­
uary 25. The greatest solar heat­
ing occurs at the summer solstice,
June 22, but the highest average
temperatures fall about the end of
July. The autumnal equinox. Sep­
tember 21, occurs, therefore, only
about five days after the highest
temperatures of the year, whereas
the vernal equinox, March 21. Is
separated from the time of high­
est by fully 130 days, and 18 sep­
arated only about 50 days from the
coldest period of the year.
.1
Nur ter y for Children
Some young mothers are bo exer­
cised over the thought of germs
that they won’t let their babies or
children play on the floor. They
let them tumble or Bit up to a ta­
ble to play. Now really, thia seems
a shame when children of all ages
enjoy ‘‘scooting around" so much.
No cutting table or dining table can
compare with a floor for a place
on which to build blocks or set up
railroad tracks. Why don’t these
people have a nursery with a floor
kept dean enough and dustless
enough to be played upon? Have
this room kept for the children to
play In and see that they wear lit­
tle bouse slippers or sandals when
playing there and that no grown­
up enters who wears shoes that
have trod the streets.
Not Qualified
Willie, who was nearly five, and
bls mother were sitting at home
one night. At the table bls sister, i
aged seven, was doing her home
work. Suddenly mother looked up
and saw Willie watching his sister
"Well, WUlle," she said. “It will I
not be long before you will have to
go to school."
“Oh," said WUlle, “It’s no use
NOTICE OF SHERIFF’8 SALE sending me to school I”
“How la that?” asked bis mother.
ON EXECUTION.
"What’s the use of sending me
.
----------------
“i|
Notice is hereby given that by to school?"
exclaimed
Willie,
virtue of an execution issued out don’t know anything and I can’t
of the circuit court, of the state of reed or write.'
Oregon, for the county of Lane on
the 29th day of December, 1925,
upon judgment rendered therein on
Life of a Sponge
the 22nd day of August, 1925, in
The separate existence of a
favor Charles White and againBt
Walter J. Macomber and Florence sponge begins with the breaking
L. Macomber, his wife, for the sum away from the parent of a tiny par-
The latter, after being
of $178.95, with interest thereon at tide.
the rate of 6 per cent per annum whipped about for a time by tides
from the 22nd day of August, 1925, and currents, eventually attaches
and the further sum of $12.30 costs I Itself to a piece of rock, and from
and disbursements, which said judg­ that home It seeks its own liveli­
ment was enrolled and docketed in hood, says Natural Science. The
the office of the clerk of said court food of Infant sponges consists of
in said county on the 25th day of yolk cells, which contain a form of
August, 1925, and said execution to
me directed commanding me in the nourishment. Later, as the sponge
name of the state of Oregon, to grows. It requires something more
satisfy said judgment, interest, solid, and this Is brought by the
costs and disbursements, and the currents, which sweep Into a bag—
costs and expenses of and upon this half mouth, half stomach—minute
writ out of the personal property particles of the new food.
of said defendants, Walter J. Ma­
comber and Florence L. Macomber,
First Iron Vettels
his wife, or if sufficient could not
bo found, then out of the real prop­
It U not recorded who first dls-
erty belonging to said defendants, fovered that an Iron vessel would
ia Lane county, Oregon, and being float as easily as a wooden one. It
unable to find any personal property la recorded that an Iron boat was
belonging to said defendants or
either of them, upon which to levy, built and launched on tbe River
Foes, In Torkehtre. England, as
I have levied upon the following early
as 1777. but the date of the
described real property, in Lane
Invention of iron as a recognised
county. Oregon, to-wit:
Lots 1 and 2 B 8 and lots 1, 2, material for ship construction Is
7 and 8 B 9 Cooper and Randall often given as 1818. when the light­
addition to Cottage Grove, Lane er Vulcan was built on tbe Monk­
county, Oregon.
land canal, near Glasgow, Scotland.
Now, therefore, in the name of
the state of Oregon, in compliance
Ca/t/ornia’s Capital
with said execution, and in order
to satisfy said judgment, interest,
Before being admitted as a state,
costs and disbursements, and tbe the capital of California was Mon­
costs and disbursements of end up terey. alternately with Ixm Angeles
on thia writ. I will on Saturday the Monterey was the capital from
6th day of February, 1926, at the
hour of one o’clock in the after­ 1M0 to IMS. Loe Angeles from
noon of said day. at the southwest 1M5 to 1M7 Monterey was again
front door of the county court the capital from 1M7 until Cali­
house in Eugene. Lane county, Ore­ fornia was admitted as a new state.
gon, offer for sale and sell for cash, In 1M0 Sacramento offered $1.000,-
at public auction, subject to re 000 for the honor of becoming the
demption as provided by law, all state capital, and became officially
of the right, title and interest of recognised as such In 1854.
said defendants. Walter ,T. Macom­
ber and Florence L. Macomber, his
Help Wanted
wife, or either of them, or any
other person claiming by, through
"My danghter telle me that
or under them, or either of them in are a ch arch member What
and to the above deaeribed property. nomination do you belong to?"
j?f4(hwli FRANK E. TAYLOR,
"Why—er—er—name a few
Sheriff of Lane county, Oregon I-1 HI be able to tell yon."
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PAGE THREE