The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current, August 11, 1927, Page 4, Image 4

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    COTTAGE G^OVE SENTINEL. THURSDAY, AUGI ST II, 1987.
PAGE FOUR
£f)ttac,r (Grove Sentinel
Monda/a and Thursdays
Pub li «hera
Hade A Smith
..... Editor
Kihon Bade...
A first „’U m publication anterod at Cot
tar« Grose as aecoad-claaa matter
aft North Sixth
Buxine«* Office
ttVBIK’KIPTION RATKH
By mall tcaah In advsnea)
Ona yaar.... .....|3.00.Tkres month*— no
Hti months..... l.OOfOaa month...---- .40
Member ot
National Editorial Aaaociation
Or<xon State Editorial Association
Oriqron Newspaper tVonforence
WHAT ARE YOU DOING? WHAT
ARE YOU GOING TO DO?
The ci-liools of the country soon
will be in session again. Thi- lends
us tu ask of school pupils: "What
are you doing and what arc you
going to dot’’
The answer to the first question
probably will to:
"Pn-paring and educating our
selves for our life work.’’
Very laudable endoavor. certain
ly, but are pupils really doing what
their answer indicates that they
are and when they leave school
will they to able to earu a living!
A Chicago manufacturer, a 11 an
exparirneed in receiving from the
school« as workers in hi« shops,
pupils who have presumably pre­
pared themselves for their
life
work, a fevv years ago said that he
found them entirely utipfepansi for
the work. It was mostly hi* sug
gestiop that resulted in tlie estab
lishnient of industrial trade schools
in Chicago.
What the schools an- doing in
preparing vouug men and
young
women of the country for their
future work should not be under
estimated. It is a great work that
they are doing, but boys and girls
will find that the education which
they get from text tooks alone, iiu-
jiortant as it is. is aot sufficient,
nor efficient—that it by no means
completely prepares them for their
work. They will find, if they let
their education stop there.
that
jobs will not come to them ns
readily as to their le«« edueated
brother who has prepared himself
in a different way—the wav of
rxperience.
Too inauy have the mistaken idea
that text book islucation is all the
advance preparation that need be
made for a life work.
• • ♦
Young men anil young nomen do
not prepare far enough ahead, do
not plan enough on the time when
their school work will be
com­
pleted and they nre thrown abrupt
ly on the world. They will find
this happen» almost before they
know it. and they will be looking
for jobs.
All cannot be bookkeepers, nor
professional pi-ople, nor politicians,
all can not
follow
occupations
where a text book education is
presumed to to sufficient.
Moot
of these fields of endeavor art-
overcrowded
already.
Someone
must work at other line.«, ^rv pu­
pils prepared for this tui e of their
life?
Are they preparing them­
selves for such a time?
a
The uneducated man
with
trade is doing better than the edu­
cated man without a trade. Edu­
cators the world over are begin
ning to recognize this fact And are
education
declaring
text
book
great
merely elementary to the
work of life.
What is the sense of filling live-
girls and boys with
dead
lan-
gunge* and higher geometry with­
out giving them a jiractieal educa­
tion to go with the other?
The
employer doesn’t ask a fellow to
demonstrate a little calculus or rip
off a yard of Virgil.
What he
wants is practical burines« methods.
This is not an excoriation of
school work. It is merely an ap-
Come to your slate University for cultural
education and proleseional tramins
Opportunity u offvrvd in
22 departments of the College of
Literature. Science and the Arts
And m the School» of
Architecture and Allied Arts—
Business Administration—Educa­
tion—Journalism—Graduate Study
—Lav«—Medicine—Music—Physi­
cal Education—Sociology—Social
Work—Extension Division
College ïeir Opens September 26. 1927
por information or catalogue umritt-
The /ùjietrar, UniVerntÿ of
Orejón, Eu je ne. Ore
citJk youth !
I
¿lAaJwemar aa a.
tel
O.K.ÒT
O ra
rtf«
I
I
I
I
«
I
•
I
I
I
for mor»‘ practical »chooKng
to K’u with th«» thtH»rv(i«‘al. Youn^
|M<»ph», team a tm«lv.
If you an*
not taught hi your >«’h«»ol. take it
upon yourself to h»nrii one, and
i
hntrn one you like and hxtrn 1 it
? ’ ’ tf Fc.ced
.Child Tiaining That
ty Suc. '.mb to ÄiUo
Hcs Ha.m.'ul Effcets
jhjh !
It is almost ¡Hithetie to se# a
young intra or woman finish odh»g«»
at 25 or »•» and find kn»i>«'lt‘ or
I herself unable to
rn a living. It
i is galliug to him or her to have to
start learning a tm«!e at an ap
| K PC» wage at a time of life
othvr> of like age an» up
; pa11ing tnniilios. The writer ia not
I writing of what he ha.* beard. Hr
i* writing of what he knows, He
has seep college graduates wor king
ou section erows at a dollar a day.
an-i any pupil is likely to go up
against the same kind of a propo
sitio® if uut prepared ngainst it. 1
Young men and voung women
should begin pri'|«nriug for their
life work «while they an1 young.
.----- „ ;
I'hings nre more easily learned then. ;
.Then. toe. at that age, it is not
i «criou* matter if a young man .
«ir ivoriuiii niii«! »hut h<» **r í'Bt'
*tartwi to learn a trade to which
he or she is not adapted and wants
to make a change,
After
one
rwtehes Í5 or 30 it is n serious
thing to waste a year or so trying
to learn some trade at which he or
«he can uot succeeii.
It may take sonic ambition nnd
perseverance to do these things and
it may require the giving up of
pleasures once in a while, but it is
not such an irksome thing to do.
An hour or so a day is sufficient,
and the young man and young wont
an with a desire to be eotneone and
to amount to something will find
his or her fight for a position in
the world greatly advanced by pro-
paratiuix now. during time thev
arc allowing to go to wr^te.
Don't say that this is too much
You will not have to
of a taak.
one thin! as much
do one-ha|f nor
i
as ma tiy of the great men of the
country have • done before you.
While Koosevelt was president he
«aid: " My ideal, of a l*oy is one
who will grow up and to able to
support himself *n 1 wife and chil­
dren. Bring them up to work.” he
sai-l. “so that they »hall recogniti»
be
an obstacle as - something to
overcome, not to be shirked."
cru pii.v ivliin rvtuiiiiug
a pmfcMli al roll ucros« the
ty i .Irri'sl I up a Jack niliblt,
Hie Exansville Journal
The
4 II i ,-d trolled uioiig In front of
pl \ . imfs < ar undlsturbed u|s
utl v while h was trii'ellng 2.T
More »vi» a Sport-
n hour.
cl uno? io try out Ilie ramner
IIIIKIU« • b) Mark Twain. The
I hl» mir fgoiu
lull S|
I
to "<> mile and tlien to 3X i'lie
• Idei lield its place In thè road ai*-
p.i.enlly in.loylng thè race ut tliat
the doetor lurned on
lutee,
speed <>f -ht miles an
thè gas
iul i « Iteld the road
hour.
d llie « ar w .is gitlnitig
ululi II
Up.'tl It
tl.en I o | h d Into the
br.lsh ut thè siile of Ilio road. Thu»
it iippetus flint thè uukliown speed
of ilio fi:inou« animai Ila« bm-n
e't.ihlished.
Many a good hound
dog ha« run itsilf nlmoHt to deulli
n put«alt ot a Jack rnldilt In-t.ife
It would givo up ilio eluise
F.ven
(he g.v hound has never I hs ii uble
to curry on with a Jack rabb.t.
te
Ims tiikeu un automobile to drive
Jui k from thè tield In u race
No doubt thè Jack I*
(or spt-cd.
vv otidering wlmt sort of a dog bus
come into tls fichi to definii it iu
i trial of speed.
A
Mec.l Time in Chir.a
The Chine a consider the «tom-
lcli the source Of intellectual Ilf V
«nd therefore the fattest man goes
for tlie wisest one.
They affict
t<> believe that foreigners route to
China to eat because they have net
enough to eat nt home.
It Is con­
sidered a mark of refined (lollti*-
tiess to treat a guest or a visitor
to a meal nt any time of the day. i
For the most part, only those who
have families take their meals at
home; the rest eat nt hotels. They
usually have two substnntlal meals
k day—one an hour after getting
up in the morning, the other to-
•ween three and four o'clock In the
afternoon.
The well-to-do cla«s
hike three or four meals a day.
’tften the father alone eats meat,
sidle the rest of the family huva
to I»- MiitI«tied with rice.
prehend wh • human being« nre.
and wnat I y are doing, well
enough to g.-i -ve nb«wt It.
The
of the crocodile Is yllfferent. It
might very rensonatdy break »!••’ wn
and cry every time It realized it i is
a cro-Sdile.
I have a cottage In Colebrook
row. Islington.
A cottage. for It
Is detach'd; a white house, with
six good room«; the New river
(mther elderly by this time) run»
(If a moderate walking (nice can
b*- so termed) close to the foot of
the house; and behind Is u apt*-
clous garden, with vines (I a.««ure
you), pears, strawberries.
par­
snips. leeks, carrots, cubba.
to
delight the heart of old Alueiiioui
You enter without passage Into e
cheerful dining room, ull studded
over and rough with old books, and
above Is n lightsome draw Ing room,
three windows, full of choice
prints,
I feel like a great Ioni
never having n house before.—
From ''Letter« to Barton, 1823,' ” by
Charles Ltirnb.
Typewriter
Ribbons.
Sentinel.
Desks. Office f'bairs
Sentinel
The
The
The Sentinel
Office ( lilt fit tern
The
Your limin' Print Shop I-'irst
<’nrl»on I’tiprr. Tin* St ntiiuU
■—1
-
1 ■-
AUGUST
CLEARANCE
SALE
OF SUMMER
VOILES
Colora black
tan ami broivn.
All tleW good
stylis anti just
tv hat you want
vacatimi
f o r-
tripa.
Valuva $l..’il)
and $5.50.
Auguat sale
a pair $3 98
PRICE
29c
ALL REMAINING WOMEN'S
SUMMER COATS
•Just a dozen left but theac coh I n arc tn on I
di.sirabli- in style mid paltrie come today.*
--------------------- -—
AUGUST SALE
WOMENS, GIRLS SUMMER STYLE
SIFFPERS AND OXFORDS
All new Miltninet* stvl s litui good size
r.tiige. l our lots to eliooNe frutti añil a
big saving in each
$1.98, $2 98, $3.95, $4 95
FREE DEMONSTRA
HON TODAY AND
TOMORROW
TH( ÇUAinr $TOnr • coot, -. ik ■ r
Royal baking powth-.r ami
j< III poll <|vl ( 'nine
X
Home Print Shop
First Chance
gd
Your Home Print Shop is equipped to pro
Golfer’» Alibi
Wren’s Sweet Song
I
All Sizes
Singles or in Culliti' I n
Always Give Y our
links an <11
On the St, A
a most Irti«-
tliuslust'
i-lb! • temper i.ua faced with a
critical short putt.
lie addressed
Iris bull, studied the line, nteadled I
Idlil-elf
carefully,
putted—and
missed.
Instinctively he glared round, bnt
the entire party might have been
-o ninny statue« not a caddy had
moved, not u player had budged.
Ills eyi-fl rovml the horixon In
vain.
No one outside the mutch
was In eight. Then he gazed aloft
while brentbless silence Invested
e
one.
At last the explosion
< me:
"D n that lark!”
While Jenny Wren I k Incubating,
her mate perches nearby, untiring-
v warbling ids sweet song, suys
the Nature Magazine.
After the
voting are hatched there I k little
rest for either of them.
Cater­
pillars, beetles, bugs und gplderg
must be supplied In astonishing
number« nil the time, until tho
youthful wren« are reudy to help
in the hunt.
I )<* Luxe
Steel and Wood
Card Cabinets
MEN S
SUMMER
OXFORDS
ALL REMAINING
MEN S STRAW HATS
*/? PRICE
Wonderful Alpha Ray»
Herculean Viewpoint
A colored mail >• * - o.\ m*d fl
' ir"e wagon and a »• Xi'l horse was
hired to haul awuy some trash
. un n homo. (The t-.r-'i contained
mi.nv brickbats ami made an awk­
As l.<- wn* ready lo
ward load.
drive uv.ay the ‘ der of Hie house
■aid tn him: "If you Intend to
haul such Jartre c U .vu need n
'I
colored mnrf
rge r horse."
(i-olii-d: “If you !• i to tilt l.im up
\ nioruliig .
I
■ i would
. • nit him heavy ei **t»g1i."
Tyimivrih r l‘ap< r Th< Sell
t itili
l.t'tiiiks. bags, suit cases, hat lx>x<*s. aitio
trunks.
Let us shun you tmr luggage
line today.
Tlie Alpha rays from radlonctlvg
matter. It appears, consist of ver­
itable atoms of matter projected
at a speed averaging 6.000 miles a
second
It Is the great energy of
motion of these swiftly expelli-el
masses that gives rise to the heat­
ing effect of radium.
Yet they IJo
not go far.
The swiftest alpha
particle travels »even centimeters
in the air. under ordinary condl
Hon«. before It Is stop[>ed. But on
its way it plunges straight through
every molerule In Its puth, produc­
ing
positively
and
negatively
chiirgi d Ions in the process.
On
an average, an alpha particle, la-
fore Its career of violence Is
«topped, breaks up about 100,000
molecular.— Washington Star.
I
Pyrotol Pool Closes Monday.
Nuim-rmiv orders two living
reived nt the office of the county
agent for the |>.v rotol po<d w liieli w ill
lie i lourd Monday, but sufficient
ordyr» will not bo reveivod to make
it possible to «hip n car direct to
Cottage tiravo.
Order« muy
be
placed with the county agent or
with either of the I'ottuge (Irovc
Imiiks. It may not Im possible to
get further shipments of this ox
Illusive as the government
Ims
nearly i-lenm-d up its surplus wur
materini.
BUY TRAVEL LUGGAGE K0W
AND SAVE MONEY
15% Special Reduction balance of month
Feeling Like a Lord
Ering On Your Victim»
"Moliti Uh, ululili" «nid Vilille
''Mimi i
Willief" asked hi-
nmt her.
"(lod w
pickle. ” From
E viti bodv '
Nin cm
^VacalionDaijs
>
Two rcasoua are given fur th.
n.uulng of tlie <ii|dian brigade if
die Contcderiili* army
Keniueky
tried to be ueutrul when the Civil
war broke out. but neutrality w:.«
violated and many Kentuckian« de­
cided to tight for the South. The
famous Camp Boone was twrmisl
near tlie Kentucky line, a few
miles north of Clarksville. T> nu.
Fifty companies from M counties
in Kentucky eulisted. These eons
posed the largest part of tlie First
Kentucky, heller known ns the Or­
phan brigade.
One of tlie reasons why tills com- I
nuind was called the Orphan
brigade was becuuse so malty
commanders were lost, either by
reason of promotion or by death on
the battlefield, says a contriMitor
to the I'nthtinder Magazine. An
other Is that the members were
away from Kentucky during nearly
all the time of their service, ami
«o cut o.T from communication with
friends and family.
“Well.” «: Id the bearded |»lii si­
1 elun. ‘T And that you nre suffer­
ing from an nasortvd crop of su|>-
pn
d d sires.
Yarn are also the
fortuiiute jHisNi-s.sor of three type»
<f <-o iqdexi-s; -ujierior. inferior
„ml ull i ior.
Your thyroid glund
is sllgl’tly out of focus, while neu­
ro'i<i!ly your r< u-tions are very
[io r. I find definite truces of dual
personality and chronic mvlam
You Ilve In n dre in world
We imagiu-’ tjii' often a giri re­ i i ' ii -
and are mixed u|i In five or als In-
fuses to show her love for ír man
.i-rlocking personal It lea.
I think
because she knows how independent you : e perfectly safe. (So ahead.
he would act if he felt sure he had No Jury will eouvict >OU."
her solid. She wants to keep him
"Thanks. Doc." gratefully an­
swered Hamlet.
"Do you know
ourting her.
wlr re I can have a dagger sharp­
ened?’
A well-known woman author is
reported to have said that women
/ -’vance Information
love more deeply than men. Nec­
E. .y trade Im« its stock of well-
essarily. for the man in love is ktio n yarn«, hut occasionally a
about the shallowest thing imagin­ new one do'-s occur. «Ins. in time
able.
to la-come a ciassic.
A certain
well-known new- paper man was
There is more real pleasure in holding forth lo a group of
among vvlmtn was u rather
getting two dollars that you do nut writers,
famous novelist.
The Journalist
expect“than in getting many time«
ring Hint he had recently
that amount that you have labored to-en engaged In revising the obitu
faithfully for.
itriiti held
idiness by hi« pa­
per.
Tur
to the novelist, he
"I've Jn«t been
Then- are no diwortcri! big enough added >• «•ly:
to worry th<-
person
who
has writing you up."
But the nov* «t. apparently, had
plenty to cat three times a day and not : -1 n following very
c> «fly.
n good appetite to go with it.
Wakfi.s Up with a start, lie asked
“When Is it g i': g to be
pul *t-|i< 1?"
Waxing Candalou».
of
r Drummond,
author
the
Greatest
Thing
in
Coffi.ted in Coconut I
' in his lighter moments
In Honolulu may be seen two
many) was full of
-<• ontll Uro caskets, woven to
ent In efligy King I.lion. w ho
-fitly displaying
a'
a d over Hawaii 1n 1."iOO a . D.,
r-ntih form of wit.
I Ills great grandson, Lenoi-kupia
1' a group assembled
koldki. Inside the basket nre llo-
the home of Drum
bones of the kings.
Such coco
-r. Dr. .«Inri-us Dod.s.
n t liber c.-i;:|;ets, shaped somewhat
Du ri ng
supper, which had like tin I yptlan
.
mu ..ay case, nre
to he tn
i-nndle light, one of e* comely rare. Ilu-se wer** found
the can
•gan to droop. One In one of the ancient burli I caves
The Hawaiian» often
of the
men set it upright, of Hawaii.
ii to the other Side, secreted the bones of dead kings
then it
Finallv
ime -i subject of re­ in ii -lei-i-sslble cavos to prevent de­
filement by an enemy.
mark.'
Homer r>nn
it a moht i
it wl
i-d r-nnti :il(»; a not h<i
lu »"nt to Greece, and *u
other joke* were leveled at
Fi
unfortunate light giver.
Drummond said, very ekrnesth
thought the eunv-i-rsntion was
ginning to wax eamlalous.
Tl*O liliali or l‘1i lililí* I. e< lloll
of pm.-ut« I« iqi:-lh Imrtii'.il mid
borii -foil elint:.ctor
The trilli
mg that i*, «'lici « iloi do obi dicht «
«poils the eii.Id « native a ;n «Ivi*
n -s m d h ivi s lain lo In ea«lly
beaten in Imor c .-nipct. I Ions of life
by minds «al» rlor only In llielr Iti
ner prv| >iat on.
Iho alliini liv of
a luirent i n re«|ion«ibllilly rullici
than a privilege.
Anni her risk Mssiiiiied hv pur
eut«, winch I« not »o ... .m.oui)
tliiderstooih I« that of hurling llielr
children by affection Willi liuiumi
Iteli.gs the love utili nd-* lull) |*< r
slut In such a vv..y ihm He eliil«l
never actually matures mid come«
to have u fully developed self-life,
or Indulgence lion|>ed up**ti the
child In itu* imrent iii.-iv «pi.lt the
-est of life mid keep the child emo-
tloliully Ir ■'lutiti*.
lie may bi*
come fixed upon Hie pin ent so
that he is e* sen tin I ly pnriialHe In
hla Inner emotional cravili « und
cannot mniiitulu nomini relation-
»hips In bus'ness. «octal cuittict«
or Inter family life If lie ever ut-
templa to establish a home of hle
own. I t otu "Sis-ini l*roli'e:ns ut
the Fallili)'." by I’rof Erm *< H.
tira vea.
Fa.nc :s Brigade Ti at
Served “Lost Cause”
Gospel in Fo-m That
Appeals to Tibetans
Tibetan printed books are print­
ed from vwoilen blin ks on very tine
„tiff i-olorvd imper manufactured
n the country from the bark of a
The pages are long
cei tain shrub,
They are not bound
ami harrow,
into u volume, but lie lisisely one
above unother.
When not In UH
the leave.« arf Inclo-ed In two
wooden slab«, which are often fine-
ly carved, and tied with silk rile
bon
The. whole is wrappi d In a
beautifully embroidered silk cover.
The sacrist books of Tibet, pro­
duced in this way. are reganled
with the greatest reverence
A
lady missionary working on the
b.uxlc « of Tibet suggvsti-d to the
British and Foreign Bible sm-iety
that a part of the New Testament
s' Mi ld be produced in Tllwtan
style.
‘ "This,"
•This." reports
re|iorts the so-
i- y, “
"ha«
mu» hem
been done,
done.
St.
has now
5. a t k hrs assumed a dress which
We cannot increase the strength
will make a stroll appeal to the
of our muscles by sitting in
a
They will be led from
Tibetans.
gymna-ium and letting others exer
the attractive appearance to the
vise for us
Neither can we learn
contents, which are still more at-
a trade by watching others work
tractive, and we hope that many
at it.
of the i will be led to the luird
Young men and young women,
Himself.
this
you will «oon be running
í'repa^
great country of ours.
“
The Willow Hoes
younu-lve» for the task.
The man who tries to do some-
A Vancouver writer uttempts to
thing and fails is b-tter prepared answer tl— question. 'Thj animals
than the one who tries to do noth weep?" Certain iss't« describe a
*f g a« doing so. but when pinned
ing and succeeds.
Keep before you this inspiring down they admit they have never
en. a stag, eitlier weeping or
motto: ‘-Snd will I»- the day for
Virgil describes a horse
me when I become content with laughing.
that wept behind its master's bier,
the thoughts I am thinking and the
deeds I am doing—when there is but at a time long antedating that
at which the writer lived. In short,
not forever beating nt the doors of
there Is no trustworthy evidence
my »oui
soul some gri-at
gr-*at desire to do
of the phenomenon.
Tin- weeping
know
'ething larger, which I
of nnlnmls would he Improbable,
I
was
meant
to
do.
”
that
if only I hh - uusi * they do not com­
,It takes a special election
io
1
to
fill
the
Multnomah county
vacancy left by the • suieide
of
Representative Mauriti­ Crampa k-
er. Some of the toothers of the
pros, i lumrnt this mid have come
forth with the suggestion that the
stat** law to -changed so that nn-
expited terms -ould to filled by
the governor.
This sounded all
right, but. it so hn[>p--ns that the
the
follerai constitution provides
method of filling
vacancies
in
congress. Rome eighth grade pupil
that.—
might have told them
Springfield News.
A Natural Deduction
There wan great exrltenietit in
th«» Jon«»« home out «m Lung in
hind.
\ red lord na#* paying them
a viait. lie wan now Nittlng nt th«»
dinner table nnd Mr*, .lune*« t’lut
t«»red a* ah*» urged Mx Lord to ent
ihi* nnd that.
Mi. .lone*, ’»wolleii Milli n »enae
of great honor l»e*towed upon hia
hou*«'h<dd, began eaeh
Mentonee
with Lord, nnd A'iid«»d it the Manic
wny with a woi^hiptul. not to *ny
revt»renlial, air.
\ m a Npwinl privilegi» thinking
that he might talk about K im him
turer vvhi * little Willi«*
«liiiiuH,
five, huti I m ’ ui » permitte«! ti»
UttCllll flic l unet hui «m vomlitioti
that ho rofriiin from talking unless
s|>iikcti to
Mindful of his pledge,
the little fellow sat m silence, his
large round tvos fixed in a stare
upon the face and form of the
*t in nger.
But, when he saw the visitor's
«.»<■ louioiug hiiher and von aeruss
thi* laden table a« though seeking
something, an innate sense of hos
pitulilv moled him to speuk.
duce practically any printing liiat can be
produced in any shop
If asks first chance
and usually can meet competition in both
quality and prico.
It asks for 1 he business
of its home town peojde on this basis
Cottage Grove Sentinet
Printers—Publishers-—Office Outfitters
i
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