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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1926)
PAGE FOUR COTTAG^lRO^SENTINEUjrHURSIMY^CTOBERaLiW^ (fottaqc <6rorr Sentinel Mondays and Thursdays said about Bob had he been th- only candidate against Haney. Not only is it not at all certaiu that Stanfield will retain any of his committee positions should he be returned to Washington, but should his candidacy result in the election of a democrat and give control of the senate to the demo crats, all western republican sena tors, including our own Senator McNarv, would lose their important committee positions and these would go to the democratic south. Those who wish their own »tate veil ami who believe in th«* prin {dples of ♦ he republican partv, wil’ vote for Frederick Steiwer, the re I ubliran nominee. Samoan Native Still Believes in Old Oath SUMMONS In the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Lane county. .. Publisher» Bede 4 Smith. (.'arson Atkinson, plaintiff, vs. While iiivu sUiu ihiivductd liiSj Josephine K. Atkinson, .... Editor Elbert Bode....... defendant. system of plotting inud aud iht In the name of the state of Ore bUl'VtjUiu Ilh-Ulbùj UÌ dViiUillg gon: you are hereby required to A first class publication entered at bo uu uh lies, bivugui with Uicm tu appear and answer the complaint Cottage Grove as second class matter S uujuh life white uiuu a» uieihud ol filed against you in the above en titled suit within six weeks from Business Office. 25 North Sixth udmiuibivring uuihs. So, ulhciuuy, the u*t li ve buiuoau the date of the first publication of this summons, and if vou fail SUBSCRIPTION RATES places his huoU upon the Holy Bi so to answer for want thereof the By mail (cash in advance) ble lu bw ear that title to a cerlalD plaintiff will apply to the court Oue year $3.00¡Three months .80 piece of laud belongs to him. for the release praved for in plain Six months.. 1.30 | One mouth...... 40 But thuae who have lived there tiff’s complaint to wit: for a de long kuuw lìmi , at heart, the na <ree dissolving the marriage con Member of • tive doeb not nave tbe degree ol tract existing between vou and the National Editorial Aaaoeiation fear when un oath is taken U|M>n a plaintiff on the ground of desertion for more than one vear immediate Oregon State Editorial Associative Bible that he had fur tbe old Sa ly last past. Oregon Newspaper Conference moan oath. Where grave issue* This summons ia served bv pub are at stake be Is apt to discard lieation, bv order of the Honorable the modern form for the old one. U. F. HkipworNs judge of the above MAVERICK BOB While the old manner varied I d named court dated the 5th dav of PATTERSON NOT TO DEBATE. the different village« the common October. 1926, and the date of th the rite was to take a bunch of grass first publication of this summons is ♦he ' “ * 7th dav of, October. 1926. hi» Governor Pierce has isued an and lay It on a stone or other ob H J. SHINN. Hi» ' other challenge to I. L. Patterson, Ject that represumed the family or Attorney for plaintiff. th ‘ the republican nominee for gov- village god. My postofflee address and resi The contesting parties would saj dence is Cottage Grove. Lane ernor. to debate the issues of the countv, Oregon o7n!8c(T) to being au » campaign. It may be good busines« with band resting on the grass, “In in is likely i for Walter to issue such challenges, the presence of tills whole assem bly, I lay my hand on the grass. 11 NOTICE OF FINAL SETLE- to avail ih ou Id he be end it certainly is political sn 1 have declared falsely may 1 sud MENT. returned gton, which giioitv on the part of Nominee denly die.” does not likely. We ’ Patterson not to be drawn into a In the county court of the state It often happened that one mak believe it will be either Steiwer f trensie encounter in which he ing a false oath would be seized of Oregon for the county of Lane. In the matter of the estate of or Hane.v. Should it be Haney, ' could not hope tn appear to nd with superstitious fear that would K. Busick. deceased. Stanfield alone will be to blame, vantage. Anyway Oregon has nr- overcome him or cause him to con Samuel Notice is hereby given that Agnes should his votes combined with rived nt the point where it hn*’. fess. V. Smith executrix of the estate The meaning of the grass was (4 Samuel K. Busick, deceased, Steiwer’» be greater than those giv ih’cided that it does not want a en Haney, which is certain to be drbaler for governor. Tt wants h that, should the outh be false? he has filed her final account in the and his entire family would be ex matter of said estate in the countv the case. i governor with sufficient confidence terminated from tbe face of the court of Lane county, Oregon, and The excuse for his candidacy , in his own judgment to act, and earth and their habitation covered that Tuesday the ninth dav of No vember, 1926 at ten o’clock in the given by Stanfield that Steiwoi that* promptly, without waiting tr th grass. forenoon of said day at the countv • couldn’t be elected, is a fat una» discuss problems before the singing court room in the court house in Eugene, Lane countv. Oregon, has eno. Steiwer is a strong candidate, societies and ladles’ aid societies Sudden Jungle Quiet been fixed as the time and place i nd if Bob is third in the race, as nt the stnto. Wo have had plenty bv the said court for the hearing as Night Approaches of soerns likely, there is the strong of the latter kind of government to objections to said account. Anv; There Is »oiue noise lu the Jungle anil all objections must be filed probability that Steiwer not only satisfy us for a long, long time. all day long, according to African with the clerk of said court oh or I could have been elected but that h • travelers, but Just at nightfall It before the day of said hearing. will be elected. State Treasurer Kay is borrowing becomes oppressively quiet. Not a Date of first publication, October Stanfield*s claim that ho did not money to pay state warrant». Par sound la to be heurd for a while, 1926. AGNES V. SMITH. receive fair treatment Tn the pri ing interest on state indebtedness but this does not last lung, for all Executrix of the estate of i maries is not based upon any more b. a poor way of reducing taxes. of a sudden there are many noises Samuel K. Busick. deceased. solid grounds than Steiwer could to be beard that were not experi H. . J. Shinn, Attorney for estate. oln4c(T) 1 have had for an independent candi Possibly we old grouches should enced during the day. _ 2BL1«,LJJ!. JSg J, . ' JJLgJi , Jackals begin to yelp and hyenas dacy had he been defeated and encourage the women in the us» to howl, Immediately followed by Bob’s excuse is not nearly as good of paint, to keep some of them NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION. hundreds of other lesser denisens a one as many defeated candidates from going half naked. of the Jungle. These uolsen keep Department of the Interior, U. 8.1 l ive had in fhe past. up all night, approaching at times I and Office at Roseburg, Oregon , An<l supposing that all Stanfiel*. It would be well if the law» on and then receding, so that the September 16, 1926. las claimed is true, which it is the statute book» were a» fully camper is kept at qul vlve all the Notice is hereby given that\ time, not knowing when some ani Charles H. Sharon of Saginaw, Ore- ' not-, when in the history of the understood as the unwritten one». mal will poke its nose Into his gon, who, on June 17, 1921, made world have two wrongs ever made Adjoining Fann Homestead Entrv presence. a right? Every other noise sinks into tn* No. 013959 for SW’4 8W%, section Stanfield is being flattered by significance at the roar of the lion, 9. township 20 8., range 3 west, I meridian, has filed the democratic Oregon Journal, which seems to shatter the atmos- Willamette notice of intention to make thre j pl.jre.—Chicago Journal. hich not only discovered Steiwer vear proof to establish claim to the ! ahead of the Oregonian, but also land above described, before the United States land office at Rose Old City of London e^ged Stanfield into the fight. burg. Oregon, on the 27th dav of Sometime when we feel that we In the early days of London, the October. 1926. houses of noble» and peasants were can stand the odor we may print Claimant names as witnesses: built side by side, but in later cen William M. Myers, Oswald Knight, a few of th<‘ things that the pur< turies a species of segregation Frank T. Benston, all of Saginaw, ! nd upright and holier than-nll the went on that led to the main divi Ore., and C. C. Moody of Cottage [ rest democratic daily would have ! sions of West end, City and East Grove. Ore. end. Yet even now, tucked away non coal ROBERT E. CRAWFORD 1 Acting Register i In the most fashionable parts, are «20-0186(2) to be found clusters of the poor est. The liability to fogs Is be NOTICE OF SHERIFF'S SALE ON lieved to have led to the earliest EXECUTION IN FORECLOSURE. enactment In the matter of smoke Notice is hereby given that by abatement and In 1803. on tbe pe tition of the citizens, the burning virtue of an execution and order of What's a Name For. of sea coal was made a capital of sule in foreclosure issued out of the A man rushed into an old fumi fense, says the .Vancouver Prov Circuit Court of Lane County, Ore gon. on the 14th day of (jetober. tvre store. ince. Not long afterward the first 1923, in a suit wherein on the 11th serious labor trouble came to a day of October. 1926, in said court, *4 What do you head In the revolt of Wat David Ransom Robbins, Sarah proprietor. Emilv McCall. Eliza Ann McCall. I n this a second hand store?” Loudon was occupied by Mary Augusta Fix. Charles N. Rob workers aud the court took to the asked the man. Tower. In those days agriculture bins, Maria Jane Coughlan, Flor ‘‘Can’t vou see it’s a second was the chief Industry, so the re- ence Alma Whipps, George Wash Robbins and Rebecca Edith I and store ! ’ ’ suit might well be termed a gtss- ington Leiseher. plaintiffs, recovered judg “Well, I want a second hand for era! strike. ment against the defendant Lucy my watch.” Robbins for the sum of $809.17 with interest thereon, and the fur Niagara Falla Receding ther sum of $100 attorney’s fees Besides being the source of tre ami the costs and disbursements mendous amounts of power, Niaga herein, which judgment '■ ” ra falls Is a sort of gigantic dock rolled and docketed in the Clerk's Hurry, Worry and Orvrworlt firing by which scientists estimate time office of said court in said county Heavy Strain. From repeated annual measure on the 11th day of October, 1926, menta It has been found that tbs and said execution to me directed ODERN life throws a cataract is cutting hack at the rate commanding me in the name of the i heavy t urden on our bod of two feet a year, says Popular state of Oregon, in order to satisfy ily machinery. The eliminative Mechanics Magazine. At this rate said judgment, interest, attorney’s fees, costs of suit and accruing organs, especially the kidneys, it has taken It at least 80,000 years costs to sell the following de are apt to become sluggish. Re to recede from Its original site al scribed real propertv, to-wit: tention of excess uric acid and Queenstown, 60,000 feet from th« The southwest quarter of the other poisonous waste often present location. Another cheek southwest quarter of section gives rise to a dull, languid feel eighteen in township twvntv- on time le afforded at the Missis ing and, sometimes, toxic back one south of range two west of | slppl delta. By measuring the sedi Willamette Meridian. Also the aches and headaches. That the ment In s quart of water at differ southeast quarter of southeast kidneys are not functioning ent seasons of tbe year and figur quarter of section thirteen in perfectly is often shown by ing the total volume, an eetimats township twentv-one south of burning or scanty passage of Is made possible as to how fast ths range three west of Willamette secretions. More and more land Is wearing away. meridian. Also beginning nt l>eople are learning to assist the southeast corner of the their kidneys by the occa northwest quarter of southwest Electricity for Belt» sional use of Doan’s Pi7/a—a quarter of section eighteen, township twentvoiie south of stimulant diuretic. Ask your Electricity has now been called range two wesW running thence neighbor! into use In experiments to give south 25 rods, thence north 8*4 loose belts a firm grip on the pul degna's east to the south Mne leys. Metal pulleys are coated with of the northeast quarter of the C. J. KEM, Prop any smooth, hard and durable In southwest quarter of section sulating substance, and tbe Me eighteen township twentv-one I 5r<muZaar Dnmtie to tko Kidnoy south range two west, thence tlon of the belt causes tt to be Ch—,>i«W»,M.V. west to the place of beginTin^ charged with electricity on Its tn ner surface. Aa the belt passes in section eighteen township over the Insulating coating, th« twentv-one south range two I metal of the pulley becomes west in Lane county, Oregon. kA "" ' m charged by Induction with elec Now. therefore in the name of L 11. 4 A tricity of the opposite pole, and the state of Oregon, in compliance strong attraction between belt and with said execution and order of sale and in order to satisfy said ( pulley Is developed. Wo Operate Over judgment, interest, attorney’s fees, 7000 Miles of cost of suit and accruing costs. ( will <>n Saturday the 20th dav o^i Hair Growth After Death Highways. November, 19’26. at the hour of one ¡| Roirntlats differ aouirwhat oa o’clock in the afternoon of said this suhjoct, but the weight of au dav. at the southwest front t door of thorlty favor« the view that th« the countv court house in Eugene, hair. Including the beard, ceaaea to T^ane countv. Oregon, offer for .-ml” grow at death. Apparent growth and «‘Il for cash, at public auction, i __ led I of the hair and heurd after death subject to redemption as t provi la' explained by the ahrtnkage ot bv law. all of the ri'iht. title and Stages leave Cottage Grove daily the soft tissues around each Indi interest of said defendant. Lncy vidual hair, a natural result of th« bobbins, and all persons claiming for all California pointa Office Supplies of All Kinds evaporation of the liquids of th« by. through or under her in and tn muscles. Those scientist! who be said premises. SCHEDULE: FRANK E. TAYLOR. lieve that there are authentic cases a. 1:15 m Sheriff of Lane Countv. Oregon. of the hair actually growing aftei <>21nlHc(T)his i death say that such growth con 4:20 and 10:50 tn ttnuee but a brief period. Fare, from Cottnge (Irovr to — Timely Wanted Merchandise First in Quality at Reasonable Prices Always the Rule at Umphrey 6? Mackin’s All-Wool Periot Twill $1.95 Yd. PRETTY NEW CRE TONNE PILLOWS 98c EACH .Tin s ■ pillows are covered two .-titles with soft, pret tv pattern crelonnc ano trimmd around sides with contrasting colored ruffles of soft sateen — the shapes include square, clilouround, triangle, heart and half-eirele—you will like these on sight. Each ............................ 98c Periot twill is most suit able for present demam' for one-piece dress styles —this twill is 42 inches wide and is made with a beautiful high lustre'—col ors are eopen blue, reseda green, gray, black, red. lii'Vy. $1.95 WOMEN’S ZIPPERS FOE WINTER FOOT PROTECTION Shown here in all rubber wool top and rubber and in styles to fit the present low shoe styles—try on a pair and enjoy the warmth and comfort of these for winter wear with low shoes—no buckles, laces or buttons, just pull on the pat inted tab and—zip! they are fastened snug. Women’s styles... $3.95 to $4.50 Children’s styles $2.95 to $3.50 NEW RAIN OR SHINE UMBRELLAS —JUST ARRIVED Here they are in cotton, •in if and cotton, linen and silk and all silk tops and a color range of black, navy, green, red tan, wine and brown—all with most attractive new short handles and 10 to 12 rib frames. Cotton umbrellas ..... 98c to $2.95 Linen and cotton, linen and silk...... $3.25 to $4.95 All silk umbrellas................ $3.95 to $11.50 ----------------------------,----- r*-- ----- ---------------------- MEN’S AND BOYS’ WOOL CAPS 98c EACH INGERSOLL FOUNTAIN PENS $1.00 EACH The new Ingersoll fountain pen is made with a eraek proof metal barrel, the point is 14 karat gold and the tip is made of genuine iridium which is the hardest metal known, giving long life to the point. The patent twist self ink filler holds the maximum of 50 drifps against 15 drops of the ordinary pen. Remarkable value are these caps at this price for the tops are good quality wool materials, one piece style, flexible visor—colors grey, tan, brown, etc.—leather sweats and sateen lining. TRY OUR GROCERY DEPARTMENT Large, Fresh, Quality Stocks—Reasonable Prices—City Delivery—Phone 33 Safety tip matches. 6 boxes 25c Large fancy bunch celery.......................... 10c Large fancy Tokay grapes, a pound....... 10c Good quality local potatoes, 10 pounds... 25c No. 2l'y can fancy sliced pineapple....... 29c CARA NOME TALC U M 10c Jet Oil liquid shoe polish........... Large bottle boiled sweet eider. 29c 3 pound can I'risen and 4-quart aluriiinuni deep frying pan with wire drip strainer, all for .................................................... $1.49 THE QUALITYSTüRÉ- good service Overdoing? M KEM’S FOR DRUGS DOAN’S Carbon Paper . A World’s Longest Stage Line Box of 100 Fhe Sentinel NEW 5:15 ni., Yreka Redding San Francisco Los Anirrlcs p. p. Typewriter $9 00 $12.50 $15.50 $27.35 information, tickets, folder* from IL iwc ' i Confectionery. Agent. Phone 97. Stage Terminal Maia Street, Cottage Grove, Ote I I I I ♦ Coffee, Gray’s Red Bag, pound Flour, a Good Hardwheat Grape Fruit, 3 for 10 pounds Sweet, Dry Onions 7 pounds Sweet Potatoes............ • i i ♦ The editor had already that aft ernoon rejected the maouacriptt brought by six poeta, and conae quently waa not tn a pleasant mood when the seventh of the breed ol barda entered his office. “Here/ said the versifier, handing a bulky manuscript to the editor, “to a poem that you cannot afford to Ig nor*.'' The editor looked the veras over hurriedly. “Cant use It,“ h« satd abruptly. “Why not F d* manded the poet. “It's too long." the editor replied. “And beaidoà I it's too wide and too thick.“ MR. F. E DICKSON, who has served you so faithfully in our m'eat department for some time past is leaving to enter into business for himself We wish him the best of success Kindly allow us to introduce an enthusiastic young man who will make his home with you in this city. MR. GEORGE R DUNPHY at the block. fresh, sweet, clean and healthy. It will pay you to buy our meats. They ara IT ALWAYS PAYS TO TRADE AT GRAY’S GRAYS RUBBER STAMPS The Sentinel 47c $2.05 25c 25c 25c Our Meat Department Many Adverse Reaeone The Sentinel Öfter Supplies and Conweiemrs OUR REGULAR PRICES WILL STAND THE TEST OF SPECIALS EASHCCARRY FREE CITY DELIVI RY PHONE 53 711 MAIN