PAGE FOUR
Fottdra fa America
Got Napolton'i Goat
Napoleon bad an unusually deep
Interest tn world politics, extending
•van to tba Internal politics of ji
remote section of the United States.
It was revealed when < Y»1 Duncan
K. MacRae of North Carolina weut
to Parle as consul general more
than yi century ago. Napoleon was
puttied as to why the people In one
part of a «»unity embraced one
party, while their uelghbor* held
oppoalug views. In some manner
he had learned that Edgecombe
< ounty, in North Carolina was
Democratic, while Pitt county em-
braced the Whig faith. !nft»ru>ed
that tYilouel MacRae was from that
state, he said to his courtiers:
“Now, I will find out the riddle
of North Carolina polltlca." So he
gave Colonel MacRae an extraordi
nary welcome nnd said to him:
“I understand that the same river
flows through the «»unties of Edge-
■•otnbe and Pitt in North t,'arol!t> •
that the i>eople of both «»unties till
the noil and own slaves. I am told
that practically all the people In
Edgecombe count) belong to the
Democratic party while u>o«t of the
people of Pitt are Whig*. Why la
itr
Any other person than Colonel
MacRae would have been flabber
gasted. remarks the llaletgti News
and Observer, but not so the elo
quent colonel, known as North Car
olina’s first orator. Nobody knows
the answer he made, but he was
quick to give a reasou that satisfied
the monarch.
Atbeeto» Long Known
but Little Employed
People of modem time are en
gaged in a ceaseless search for
«ays to Improve living conditions.
Safety, comfort and reduction of
expense rank among the principal
things to be «»nsldered. Asbestos,
a material known for centuries, but
put to use only a comparatively
short time ago, has done as much
or more toward the realization of
these three fundamentals than any
other one thing In Its class. Traces
of Its use have been found in an
cient China. In Persia, by the early
<1 reeks ami Romans, and later. In
about the Sixteenth century, in the
island of Guam, now a possession
of the United States
The sudden
emergence of asbestos, front the
long period In which It was almost
entirely the subject of myths and
legends, or treated merely as a
costly curio, into one of the world's
most Important mineral« and Indus
try’s most • important ntdn. Is re
markable. Even -lectrlclty did not
have quite so sudden a transforma
tion.
i
British Army Club
The Union Jack club is a
tional institution of Croat Britain
where soldiers, sailors nnd airmen
can go when on leave or passing
through London, a place where they
may deposit their kits and valu
ables, where they may obtain at
moderate charges good meals and
comfortable bedrooms to themselves
and where they find the usual
amenities of a club. Including li
brary and writing room, billiard
room, baths, barber shop and also
a club shop In which articles of ev
eryday use and almost everything
that service men require may be
purchased. The Union Jack club
was erected by public subscription
as a national memorial to those
who had fallen In the South African
war and other campaigns, and
opened on July 1. 1907. by his
majesty. King Edward VII.
*
Trutt to Picture»
In these days of hustle and
tie, hyper-activity and constant
•■go,’’ there Is one thing that every
one can d<> to neutralise to some
extent the restle««ness that has In
vaded our life. That one thing Is
to surround oneself with beantifnl
and restful pictures.
Pictures take the mind off the
worrisome, petty details that are so
lrltatlng to the nervous system. A
good-natured Jolly Cavalier to look
down on us understandlngly from
the wall, or a lovely Madonna to
fill us with peace and contentment
are like real
companions and
friends, and have an advantage
that even the best friends do not
have: they make no demands and
expect no favors; they are always
equally dependable and ever ready
to serve.
Letf
to Indian “Mutiny”
Sepoy* are the native British In
dian soldier». In religion they are
Lost No Time.
CAMERON WILL PREACH
the most part Mohammedan and
i born in early life in
Brahman. One considers the cow
SERIES
ON AFTER LIFE
sacred, the other is not permitted Franklin county.—Columbia (8. C.)
to eat pork. The Enfield rifles paper.
A series of .Sunday night ser-
which were put in the hands of the
i
mona by Pastor Dum an I’. Camer-
Sepoys Just before the 'mutiny'
on will start Munday night nt the
had cartridges greased with tallow
Presbyterian church.
The general
and lard.
It was necessary for
v ‘XwCeivni^
the soldiers to bite these cartridges
of
theme will be “ The House
with their teeth. <>n May 10, 1857,
Ma ny Mansions. ’ ’ Twelve sermons
4?
the Sepoys mutinied in Meerin
will be given and the following
when native troops rose and litter
texts will ’>e covered
‘ is There
ated some of their comrades who
Life!’’
What
is
a
Future
had been Imprisoned for refusing
Death!’ ' “Where Are the Dead!”
to handle the English cartridges.
Personal
' ‘ Does
Identity
Con
ÿniôofa-Sr; 7bt ■? '
Contino !”, “Do the Dead Bur-
Child’» Cott to Parent»
vivef ”, “Will Christ Return J ’
One of the life insurance cotnpa
Body
tiles estimates that a child costs
“With What
do
’ They
“Oil on troubled waters has
98,150. This includes birth and ex
Come!’’, “What and Where !
i»
pense until he is eighteen years old cairned many a storm of fact Heaven .’ ’’ and “Why Meek : Ye
Tills total is reached by adding t»
the Living Among the Dead!’’
the Initial “«»st "f being bora,” esti and fiction.”—I’. Troleum.
Th«- minister will endeavor in
mated at $250. the sums of $2,50*
this series to bring the mighty
for food. $1JI2O for rent, reckoning
sanction of the unseen world to
the share of the child as one-sixth
of the total so expended ; $300 for
bear upon the minds and hearts
fuel anil light. $351 for furniture
of the people and to confirm their
and household maintenance, $144
faith in immortality.
for first cost of Installation of th«
home, and for clothing $912 for a
t»oy, and $1,002 for a girl.
Doing a Houdini.
Funeral
services
were
Cold Feet
Tbursdny afternoon at 2 p. m.
"Do you suffer from cold feet?'
th«- Harlan chnpel with Bev
the doctor asked the young wife.
G. I*. Hedley conducting the I
"Yes,” she replied.
al services.
Following whic
lie promised to send her sonu
SERVICE STATION
was burieil nt l.nfiivett«- vein
medicine.
TEL 9i
COTTAGE GROVE, ORE
t'iilifornia paper.
"Ob. she replied nervoualy
"Lbus’re not not uUo«,'*
Battery and Tire
Work Our Specialty
MOTÓRHNN
r
The vanished Hcrw-tail.
Load Patrolmen May Meet
Anyway the
modern
husband
Tentative plans for a general
meeting of al] county road patrol- never -.era any »witches parked on
men for a discussion of the work th«- hur<nu. Cincinnati Enquirer.
to I»«. «¡on<- during the coming year
are being considered bv O. E.
If
Crowe, county commissioner,
Thfc
plan» nr« co plcfcd it is probable
Modern
Way
that th
ii « «-ting will be held ut
’ to Write is on a 1
th«- court h< »ise some time
this
month.
A ♦ (•ntntis <•
talks by nmir
court '• B I R. 8. Bryson,
county
clerk and P. M. Morse, county
engineer,
53 road patrolmen
were appointed by
for the
th" court
week.
X
X
Remington
Portable
C-ell and let us show
you this wonderful
little typewriter
Hud- en
Inspiration.
Cottage Grove
Sentinel
J
“And what di«l your wife have
tho
to any ivh • you stood
at
pyramids!’’
hii'l
“Wanted to know if
I
lock«-«l the kitchen door.’’--I Louis-
■ ill«- Courier Journal.
very patron of The Sentinel is helping to give Cottage Grove
a newspaper which eminent authority has stated to be one of
t ic b'tat country newspapers published by anyone anywhere.
AMERICAN LINE WOOD
Office Desks
MACEY LINE
Steel Desks
That
won*
IV teeth
“ Pu nth
Price/^S
ua't/i ca»f(
M60
THE SENTINEL