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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1926)
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL. THURSDAY. OCTOBER 21, )926 r Galloway Gets Editorial All Nature Keenly Plants, Like Mankind Job on U. of 0. Paper Responsive to Trutl RetpvnJ to A;. ection A BARGAIN IN A Check Writer A late model, just as good as new, at a substantial saving. THE SENTINEL University of Oregon, Eugen“, | Gru, Oct. 20.—(Special.)—Robert Galloway of Cottage Grove, sopho more in th«* school of journalism, ‘ Las been appointed one of the day «uitors of the Oregon Dailv En - I er? Id. Complete staff appointments havv ¡been made after a three weeks’ i j vriod of try-outs. Selections were II iuade by Ray Nash, managing e«l: j tor, with cooperation of Sol Abram .»on, editor, and members of the school of journalism faculty. The list includes four members of the upper staff, six feature writ ets, seven day editors, five night editors and 25 members of the gen era I staff. The sports staff con sists of six mein hers. Office Equipment 80 Families Arrive During Year ■ l j City Briefs At least 80 families have move 1 Mr. and Mrs. George Sather and ■to Cottage Grove from outside the f; mily returned Tuesday night from state during the past year, in the E. Mendenhall, secre- Medford, where they spent two opinion of F. ~ I arv of the chamber of commerce, months. a list of 39 such families Windshield plates and sedan who has believes there niu^t be twic * ioor lights for less. C. G. end number. Those knowing of itffg. Co.. alto that families that have arrived here An 8-pound «laughter was born from other states will assist the Sunday, October 17, to Pastor and secretary hv reporting the fact to Mrs. A. C. Archer. him. No record is kept of families Mrs. Augusta McCormick of Ash moving here from other points in land arrived Tuesday morning to Oregon, of which there has been a spend a week here on business. number. Twenty-five per e»nt of I Gibson Art Decorations, plac«* the arrivals from other states are (ar«h, tallies, table sets, etc., in from California. large assortment at KEM’S FOR DRUGS. Twanging the Lyre. Autoist: 441 haven’t paid a cent New members of the chamber or i commerce are Henry Quimby of the for repairs on my machine rll the Farmers’ union store, F. L. Hamp ten months I have had it.” Friend: 44So the man who di«l ton’s service station, H. L. Weber j of Gray’s Cash and Carry, F. L. the repairs told me.” I Grannis, principal of the high Yniir.Homo Print Shop First. ! chool, ami Marshall G. Barber of ; the Twentieth Century store. Tom Awbrev’s specialty, tui to I mobile insurance. Seo him. It is not too early to ffs arrange a sitting for your The Elmer W. Caldwell fnmilv I spent the week end » iih Mr. Cai.1- well’s parents. Mr. and Mrs. ('. W. I Caldwell. Galloway, insurance, 511 Main. M now. Mrs. John Barker, who has been Solve your gift problem ill for some time, is reported to with portraits. be somewhat improved. Miss Molly Mack has accepted a position as nurse for her. I I 4 Red Rose Butter is the best end made at home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bottemillei arrived Tuesday from Yakima, Wash., and spent the night with Mr. and Mrs. Albert. Stocks. Mr. Bottemiller formerly was pastor of the Nazarene church here. He has row removed from Yakima and will accept a call to either a church in Portland or one in California. Buy Hallowe’en decorations, plac' cards, tallies, etc., for your H»1 lowe’en party or dance at KEM’S JOB DRUGS. Presbyterian Church SUNDAY, OCTOBER 24 Evening service at 7:30 Address: 4‘Shakespeare and the Bible.” It has often beei? remarked upon Shakespeare’/ familiarity with the scriptures We shall quote from many plays to show where he got his knowl edge and 65 beautiful pictures will be shown of Shakespeare’s country. Several questions have been handed in, the following will be answered at this service: (1) Do you think the churches of the world will survive the present unrest t (2) If the bible is tu be rend to school children and interpret- eted, will it take on :i sectarian point of view! («3) Is there bootlegging in Cot tage Grove! (4) Will you give a review «>f the life of Aimee McPherson! (5) Is it right to have a pol:- tician in a church pulpit! Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Hays and Elbert Bede were those from here who attended the inaugural banquet in Eugene Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Hays also attended the inaug ural ceremonies during the forenoon of the same day. Windshield plates and sedan door lights for less. C G Mfg. Co.. alt? A 14-acre tract on Row river. belonging to R. A. Snauer, was sold Wednesday to M. E. Simonds, Charles S. Hall handled the deal. Red Rose Ice Cream is a pure home made product. Mrs. C. A. Dodge received word Monday of the death of her father. M. F. Seal, who died Sunday night a* Denver, Colo. Eat White ’g toasted sandwiches. C loth cwr ri There are no “aver age” men, the Cloth craft tailors say, and so they make suits for tall men, stout chaps, stocky fellows, the slim individual, the one with short legs and long body, long legs and short body— and for you, good sir, whatever your build. “Can’t tit you?” Ol course we can, per fectly, in Clothcraft “51.30” Serge Suita $29.50 We ar« looking for yoo H you ar« hard la K.* Christmas Portraits Shields Studio Call us up if you have car I trouble. Phone 14. SIDE GARAGE. Í i The marriage of John Ja mes Kennedy an« I Magdelane Helen Willis, step brother ami step-sister of this city, took place Tuesday afternoon in Eugene, Father Curley officiating. Stewart for trood plumbing. Phone 217-J. South Seventh. Henry Landess, who was for a time in a veterans’ hospital at Walla Walla suffering with tulM*rcu- losis, has been remove«I to »Sawtclle, Calif., according to wor«l received here by his parents, Mr. and Mrs William Landess. A physician from the Walla Walla institution accom panied Mr. Landess to the Califor- nia institution. The Coast Fork local of th.' Farmers’ union will conduct a festi- val at their hall near Hebron school house at 8 p. m. Friday, October 22. A play, 44An Old Maids’ Conven tion,” will bo put on. Also two reels of moving pictures will be shown and other entertainments Price of admission 25 cents, chil d>en 10 cents. ol8 21c The football squad of the Grantr Pass high school, which is to plav hi re «Saturday, will arrive Friday forenoon an«l will be oversight guests at th«* homes of students of the local high school. Masks—you ’ll want one or more of these for your masquerade «lance or Hallowe’en party. A splendid rrsortment at KEM’S FOR DRUGS Miss Belle Burkholder left Mon day for Salem, where she has ae- cepted a poKition in the state house. Fuller For Brush company, brushes or service phone G. B. \rnest, 124-J. o21nl1p(T i Mr. and Mrs. Max- Becker arc the parents of a son born Tuesday, October 19. Dr. Hagen cures spleen trouble. The women’s relief corps will hold its regular meeting Saturday afternoon in Legion hall. 22 north Sixth street Cottage Grove. Join the Church Next Sunday Pontier This Question! Are You a Member of the Church? No? Do you feel just right about the fact? Does it in any way affect the happiness and conduct of the family! Does that ever keep your children from Sunday school, or your wife away from church’ Does that make any differ- cnee in the attitude of your children, or of your neigh bor’s children toward tin questions of right and wrong! Next Sunday Is Join the Church Day at the Chapel Car. Sermon therm* for the morn ing, ‘‘The Church and Moral Conduct”: for the evening. “The Man Without An Altar.” Baptismal Services in the River at the Steel Bridge at 2 p. m. The Ladies’ Aid of the Bap- tist Church will hold a rum- mage sale at Bressler’s nexi Fridav and Saturday, Octo ber 22 and 23. A Quiet Dreiser Mr*. Suburb: “Your hu*hnn<l Rf vn Vf« JreRRPR wo quieti*. ” Mm. Travelingman : 44 Oh doe* he! Yon ought to hear him when h‘ lonew hi* rollar button.” Machine bookkeeping equip ment and supplies The Senti nel I Laws execute ibeuiselves. Thej are out ui time, out of space, am' □ot subject to circumstance. Thus In the suul of uiuu there Is u jus tic» whose retributions are Instant auc entire. He who does a good deet Is instantly ennobled. He who doei a mean deed is by tint action ltsel; contracted. He who puts off Im purity thereby puts on purity. Il a man dissemble, deceive, he de celves hltuself, and goes out of uc quaintance with his own being Character is always known. Theft»' never enrich; alius never itupover lab; murder will speak out of ston« walls. The least admixture of I lie—for example, the taint ot van ity, any attempt to make a goo< Impression, a favorable appear ance—will instautly vitiate the ef feet. But speuk the truth, und all things alive or brute are vouchers aud the very roots of the gruss un derground there do seem to stli and move to bear you witness, hot all things proceed out of the same spirit, which Is differently named love, justice, temperance, in Its dif ferent applications, just as th« ocean receives different names on the several shores which it washes —Ralph Waldo Emerson. British Public Balked at Sqnitary Met hod t The meeting of the congress ol the Royal Sanitary institute recall« the strong opposltiun which sanl tary reformers once encountered. The Times in 1854 rejoiced that Chadwick had received a pension which would enable him to leav« dirt and disease alone t “Aesculap lus and Chiron, In the form of Mr. Chadwick and Doctor Southworth Smith, have been deposed, and w« prefer to take our chance of chol era and the rest than to be bullied into health.” Another complaint was that theii activities had established “a per petual Saturday night, and Mastei John Bull was scrubbed and rubbed and sinall-tooth-combed till th« tears ran Into his eyes, and hit teeth chattered, and his fists clenched themselves with worrj and pain.” What would the writer of this {iroteei any If he could Bee the pub ic health service today? Accord Ing to his standard by this tlm« Master John Bull ought to have been washed altogether out of ex lstence and poured away with th« soapsuds. — Manchester GuardlaD Weekly. Province» “of Age'’ The two Canadian provinces o! Alberta and Saskatchewan attained their majority September 1. Each of these provinces Is twenty-one years old. Prior to 1905 the ares embraced by Alberta and Saskatch ewan had the status of terrltoriee administered largely by the Cana dian federal government. At that earlier date the combined popula tion of Alberta and Saskatchewan was approximately 400,000. Now, according to a census taken by in vestigators employed by the Cana dian Pacific railway, the combined population of these two provinces Is 1,500,000. Since their birth at provinces the annual agricultural production for Alberta and Sas katchewan has Increased from »40.- 000,000 to »785,000,000. Brief Rett Wat Fatal When Gen. John Morgan, with; bls raiders, stopped to rest for an hour and a half at Chester, Ohio, during the Civil war foray, be com mitted an error that brought dis aster. After resting, the raiders proceeded to Portland, reaching there just after dark. It was un usually foggy and this prevented the raider»: from finding the ford j leading to Bluffington Island. Hadi they reached Portland an hour ear j Iler, they could have crossed the [ Ohio river to safety that night, says a writer In the Columbus Dispatch. I Morning brought Genere' Judah's troops up the river and General Hobson from the rear and Mor gan’s defeat Life of Human Hair The length of life of the hair va ries with the age, sex. character of hair and Individual peculiarity. Each hair has Its determined length of life, and this la not the same for every hair of the same sort. The rate of growth, espe cially in young women, la from 2 to 8 millimeters, or about H to U Inch during each 10 d ya after first piercing the skin, or about % to % Inch a month. When It reaches a length of 10 to 14 Inches its rate of growth la reduced or.e-half, and later toward the end of Its normal life Its Increase la hardly per ceptible. Steel and Wood Filing Cabinets and Transfer Cases The famous Macey line The Sentinel A pretty sloi.v is told ui a man who, in a train e, found himself lr another sphere, sluuuiiig b> a bauk covered with exquisite Golela, the scent of which filled the air. Stop ping to admire the ¡lowers, he saw each dainty bloom lift its tiny iieud In acknowledgment of his delight in their beuuty. Sir Jagudls Bose, the Indian sei entlst, calls plants anchored ani mals, und has proved beyond doubt that some plants are actually more sensitive than human beings. He has shown that they are actually affected by the approach of certain people. This Is a fact of Intense interest to many Mower lovers who have long suspected that something of the sort was the case. They have noticed that Mowers In adjoining gardens or allotments, on similar soil and apparently similarly treat ed, do not grow alike, but that in one garden they bloom more lux uriantly than in the other. They have noticed also that certain peo ple are far more successful than others In growing what may be called shy Mowers. It would appear that the person ality of the gardener has much to do with the success of the Mower garden—that. In fact, there are people whom Howers love, Just as there are those who have a natural power with animals. Often a com paratively frail woman can manage a horse which strong men have at tempted to hold In vain, and we all know eases of apparently In significant people who are adored by alt dogs. It is our sincere belief that there is not a farmor in this com munity who can afford to mist, or who will fail to profit by this opport unity. BANK of COTTAGE GROVE Cottage Grove, Oregon o-y DANCE Early Peruvian Pottery s' SATURDAY NIG H l at the Armorj Prehistoric pottery provides vir- , tually all the known history of the | Chlmus, a race occupying the northern part of Peru before It was conquered hy the Incas. These peo ple made their pottery by the coll ing process. Long strips of clay were colled around, one upon an other, and the mass thus formed molded to the desired shape by means of shells or smooth pebbles. When finished, nearly all evidence of the coils was obliterated. It Is by means of this pottery that mod ern scholars are made familiar with { the dally life of these early Peru vians. Vessels often are found tn the shape of the vegetables used. Some clearly indicate the squash, ears of corn, beans, potatoes and other vegetables familiar today. There are many so-called portrait Jars, giving a clear idea of the fa cial appearance of the race.—San Francisco Bulletin. The decoration of Riddle Fitments it guaranteed permanent ? J 1 'I J Í! Dispute Over Book of Job The authorship and date of the Book of Job are controversial mat ters, a great many students of Scripture being of the opinion that the book dates back to the patrl- archial age, malting Job contempo rary with Abraham, possibly being Jonah the Edomite, alluded to in Genests, tenth chapter, twenty ninth verse. Others ascribe the book to Moses, and still others to Holomon. It Is said that the ani mals mentioned In the book would be better known In the Assyrian mountains than In the plains of Palestine, while the leviathan or crocodile was a native of Egypt. The spirit of the book, however, undoubtedly is that of the Hebrew race, combining faith, endurance and tenacity of purpose, which are characteristics of the race today.— Washington Star. Your home deserves Riddle Fitments Early Autop»y Salted“ Violin» Famoui Mountain Sytttm give such • remarkable tone. Yon may never see Sarah Ann. though perhaps you might. Sarah Ann was pronounced the world’s greatest Holstein last year—the All-American Aged Cow. And where did she appear? Why, at the Pacific International Livestock Exposition in Portland—where many, many world’s champions appear! Sarah may be there again this year from October 30 to November 6. But. if not. you will see thousands of the finest bred, best producing dairy stock in America—for they come from the four corners of the continent to be at this—the greatest combined livestock exposition now known in the world. Also eonte the finest Beef Cattle, H,ti'ses, Hogs, Sheep, Goats and Foxes. Then there’s the famous Horse Show and Land, Industrial and Dairy Pro ducts Exposition—all housed in the tremendous 10-acre exposition building. A little girl uml her mother were visiting In the country, on a farm. Having alwuys lived In the city the cow was a great curiosity to the child and she was very much interested tn watching Its move ments. One day she saw the farmer milking. She watched him as he carried the milk into the house and unusual. strained it and it was put on the table for the evening meal. She liseovery of a Lancashire was much surprised, us In the city tenor who can sing throe notes at the milk always was delivered In I once is the more remarkable in view bottles. of the number of tenors who can’t A glass of milk was set at each even sing one note at once. place. She refused to drink her por tion and was asked by her mother why she did not drink the milk. [ ROYAL NEIGHBORS ATTENTION Putting her arm around her A special meeting of the Royal mother's neck and drawing her Neighbors will lie held at 1:155 bead down she whispered: "Mamma, where do you think he Friday for the purpose of balloting on names. All iiiemhers requested got that milk?" “I don't know,” replied the moth to be present. er. “Where did he get It?" “Why,” exclaimed the little girl, “he squeezed .1 out of an old cow. I saw him.” The Legion d'Honneur In France is an order of merit, both military and civil. As at present organized It consists of five classes—cheva liers. officers, commanders, grand officers and grand crosses. The President of tlie republic Is grand master. In ordinary circumstances twenty years of military, naval or civil service Is necessary for eltgl bllfty to the rank of chevalier and promotions can be made only after definite service In a lower rank. Extraordinary service admits to any rank The word “chevalier" means knight. Absurd ss It msy sound, German manufacturers who are experts In judging the worth of violins have come to look for lime salts In de termining the value of an Instru ment. The exceptional resonance of some of the famous A mat I vio lins. it is stated. Is due to the lime salts with which the Instruments are stained The material Is 1m- tiedded In the pores of the wood, and Is believed to he at least partly responsible for the hitherto un solved secret of why old violins Meet SaPah Ann Duplicate Wouldn’t Drink Milk “Squeezed” From Cow New fork's social register for 1857, In reality the town enrollment for New Amsterdam, ax New York then was known, contained the names of 21» "great citizens" and 204 “small citizens'' and It was among the latter that the physi cians were mentioned. In that same year doctors were called upon to do detective work. »Ince ft wns re quested that they should ask wounded patients how they had re ceived their Injuries and by whom. In 1891 Dr. Johannes Kerfbyle, a Hollander, performed an autopsy upon the body of Governor Slaugh ter. believed to have been poisoned, and this la thought to be the first autopsy performed In this country — New York Evening Post French Legion of Honor What is the trouble with your generator on your car* Our complete test stand will t<ll vou. WEST SIDE <1 A R AG E. “Do angels have my!” • ‘ Yew, darling. ’ ’ “Can thev flv! 4 4 Yew, dear.” 4’Then, when is nuraie going fly. ’eaiiae daddy railed her r.ngel last night!” “Tomorrow, darling.” PAGE FIVE The Alpine system covers nearly the whole of Switzerland, a great part of northern Italy, several de partments of France, and a large part of Austria The historical passages of the Alps have been those by Alexander the Great; Ju- Mux Caesar to attack the Helve tians; Hannibal; Napoleon, who crossed the Alps Into Russia only to find that the retreating Russians bad left Moscow In ruins. Tbs greater part of rhe French army died In reerosalng th« Alps Into Franc*. You want your home to have the best of everything, particularly wh< n tU best is avail- able at moderate cost, Above ail, you should have beautiful lighting, Riddle Fitments, the standard of residential lighting, are truly decorative. 1 hey will add »o much to the appearance of your home—and they are so reasonably priced that an entire Riddle in stallation may be secured at a very small out lay. If you are building—or if you want to modernize your present lighting equipment— come in and see the beautiful Riddle Fitments we have on display. I Feci free to consult us about your light ing problems —without any obligation. Our experience in malting attractive installations in many homea in tn is com munity is gladly placed at your disposal, whether you want a single fitment e pment for an entire home. N elson E lectmc S hop PHONE-201 !9N.6thSi. /tuthorized Kiddle Dealer I