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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (March 4, 1932)
4 m i l V i K G R O V E , L A N K (X ) U N T V O M K G O N . F H I II A V VO LU M E XL. Lawson Would Head Eugene Police Liberal Credit by U nde Sam la Aimed to Bring Money Out of Hiding. « k « » « ( h u k Jeaklas la M.dlvrd Mail Trtkua. ) You have bean reading in the newspapers that the emergency fi nance legislation recommended by th e president and approved by con gress win help tremendously to re- store confidence and bring business conditions hack to norm al- so that, for example, those who have lost their Jobs can get their Jobs back. Perhaps you are wondering Just how this w ill be brought about. Here, In short, plain words. Is the purpose of this new legislation: To provide new money to replace the money that has been taken out of the banks by tim id people and hidden away. I f that la done, the necessary credit will be provided to carry on business and provide employment. I f you are intelligently curious, your next question w ill be: "Just how is this thing to be dons*** This Is the answer: “By widening the rediscount powers of the fed eral reserve banks." Whereupon you w ill «rant to know: "Just what does that mean*" By »ray of answer to this ques tion. let us examine the process of rediscounting W hen your bank "rediscounts" a note, it takes It to the federal re serve bank, which for this district Is located In San Francisco, and M ils It. In payment for this note the federal reserve bank Issues cur rency which Is printed by the U nit ed States government. The banker who sella the not« takes this money and lends It to somebody else or *—t * It to pay to depositors who w ant tbslr money. Then, when the note Is paid. It Is returned to the bank, the bank re turns the currency which has been Issued against the note, the cur rency is destroyed and so retired from circulation or used to pur chase other notes, and the transac tion Is closed. Thus the need for money with which to provide credit and carry on business has been supplied. O nly certain kinds of notes, how ever. are eligible to rediscount— that Is say. the federal reserve bank w ill advance cash only on not«« made for short periods of time by those who are able to pay promptly when the notss come due. T h a t Is where the trouble comes In now. Comparatively few notss held by the banka can be paid promptly without distress and great disturbance to business. So what Is proposed by congress is to perm it the federal reserve bank to "rediscount," or buy. notes that are perfectly good but require somewhat longer time for payment w ithout distress and business dis- turb&ncea. W hy is It necessary to provide more money now? Here is the answer to that ques tio n : Because tim id and foolish peo ple have been drawing their money out of the banks and hiding It out. As explained in this column yester day. every time a dollar Is w ith draw n from the banks and hidden out somewhere, about ten dollars In bank credit, w ith which modern business Is largely transacted. Is destroyed. Bo. as explained earlier la this column, It Is necessary to provide new money w ith which to replace the money that has been withdrawn fro m the banks and hidden away. T h a t Is w hat the government, through this new legislation, which has received the approval of the best minds In the country, la under tak in g to do. Now here la a curious thing: Just as soon as tim id people find th at they can get their money Im mediately, any time they w ant It. they no longer w ant IL They would rather leave It In the banks, where It Is safe and draws Interest. So when the governmenL as It to now undertaking to do, steps In and provides the means whereby peo ple can get their money any time, they will cease to w ant It and the money that to now hidden out will flock back Into the banks and peo ple who are perfectly solvent will again be able to get the necessary credit with which to carry on their business. When people with brains and courage are again enabled to carry on their business In a normal way, free from the menace of fear, It w ill be possible to provide Jobs for those who need them. Modern business and finance are complicated and hard to under stand. So let's try a simple Illustra tion: Suppose you owe your neighbor on one side a thousand dollars and your neighbor on the other side owes you a thousand dollars. Now suppose your neighbor who holds your note gets scared of your abil ity to pay and demands his money. T he only way you can get It Is by collecting from the neighbor who owes you. In order to get It, he has to sell w hat he has, a t any price he can get W hen that sort of thing to going on everywhere, as always happens when there to lack of confidence, more people w ant to sell than want to buy. When mors people w ant to M il than w ant to buy, prices go to smash. When prlcM go to smash, business suffers and people lose their Jobs. This to a great country. I t to full of people who want things. I t Is full of people who have things to M il. But confidence Is frozen, and everybody Is afraid to move. Thia new legislation, of which so much Is hoped, to an effort to re store confidence by removing the fear that people can’t get their money when they want It. Italy's great difficu lty la lack of coal. Hydroelectric power in the Al- plnas Is carrying manufacturing back to rural districts. In India a man must follow oc cupation of the caste In which he was born. 11 K Lawson of Portland, former Cottage Grove resident, announced Saturday that he had applied for the position of chief of police of Eugene, an office recently vacated by the resignation of Chief II. W. Hall. Lawson, a colonsi In the reM rve corps, eras superintendent of the state prison under Governor Oswald W est Until June, 1490. he was su perintendent of aeronautics at H ill m ilitary acadsmy la Portland, a post he held th rM years. Prior to that time he was associated with the Macleay Interests at Oold Beach. Colonel Lawson spent most of his youth in la n e county, hav ing lived In Cottage Qrove and Eu gene. He left Eugene to Join the army at the outM t of the Spanish- American war. Eugene has an ordinance which provides that a man must have lived In the city one year before he may become chief. I t la expected that this «rill disqualify Laereon. 00396735 J.H. OF SCOTTISH MW Cottage Grove Scottish Rite M a sons were hosts at a Sunday noon luncheon at the Colonial for John H Cowles. Washington. D. C . sov ereign grand commander of the su preme council for the southern Jurisdiction of the United StatM . mother supreme council of the world. Mr. Cowles to recognised as the highest ranking Mason of the world. He was accompanied by Louts O. Clarke. Portland, sovereign grand Inspector general In Oregon: Ralph E. Pinnsy. Portland, deputy to the sovereign inspector general, and E. T. Jorgensen. I*ortlaad. pre ceptor of Portland consistory The party had visited Scottish Rite bodies at RoMburg. Medford and Marshfield. On Thursday the Eu gene bodies had been visits«! and preceding that the I*ortland bodies. The thirty-third degrM was con ferred at Portland on Washington's birthday on designates elected at the recent session of the supreme council. Mr. C ow I m has been the head of the mother council since 1*31; he to past grand master of the grand lodge of Kentucky, past comman der of Knights Tem plar of Ken tucky. has officially visited every supreme council of the world, over SO in all. and has more Masonic orders, medals aad other orders and decorations than he can recollect. He has been decorated S tar of Roumanla; commander. Crown of Roumanla. and has the order of Nlchan Ip tlk a r of Tunisia. During the Spanish American war be eerv ed as captain of the let Kentucky voluntM r Infantry in Porto Rico and now holds a commission as colonel In the officers' reMrve corps. Cottage Grove was the only city not having a Scottish R ite body that was visited by the grand com mander during his trip through the west. The honor came to the city bee a uas of the aetlve part taken by Scottish Rite Masons here in the work of the Eugene bodies. LECTURE SERIES OPENS SINO-JAPJOUBIE UP "The Trouble Between Japan aad China" w ill be the subject of a lecture to be given Monday night In the high school auditorium by Professor Harold J. Noble of the University of Oregon department of history. This w ill be the first of a lecture course being sponsored by the Cottage Orove M inisterial asso ciation In cooperation with the uni versity extension division. The leo- ture la free. Professor Noble was born aad reared In Korea and speaks as one who knows first hand both the Chinese and the Japanese. The schedule of other lecture* w ill be announced later, but the series w ill deal w ith live present day problems. I t to the hope of the ministerial association, according to Henry W. Davis, president, that Cottage Grove w ill show a real In terest In this course and derive the profit that to to be gained from IL DORENA. March 1.—Mrs. A. L. Lawrence and children visited Bunday a t the Joe Howell home e.t Banta C la ra The following attended a card party Saturday evening a t the C. A. Peterson home: M r. and Mrs. Edward K iefer and daughter Paul ine, M r. and Mrs. O ran t Bales aad children Sidney, Evelyn and Juani ta, M r. and Mrs. Orlen Land. M r. and Mrs. Melvin McKlbben and daughter Norma, Mrs. Ruth Eng land aad Orville Isham. M r. and Mrs. John Whetssl vis ited Wednesday in W olf Creek. Mrs. Ruth England and Mrs. Ada Jennings motored to Eugene Saturday. K. K Robinson of Blue Moun tain was here Saturday on busl- Mrs. G. B. Pitcher, Ray K e rr aad Mrs. Sarah K a rr of Cottage Grove and Mrs. Edna Blackburn of Eu gene visited Sunday w ith Mrs. Clara K irk . A number of the Happy Circle club members met w ith Mrs. Glenn Gllltsple Wednesday of last week and pieced a comfort top for the Mothers' club of Cottage Orove. The Mothers' club furnished the pieces. A delicious luncheon was served. Those present were Mee- dames Thomason, Vaughn, Thelm a Wicks, Doolittle, Dodge, M ary Land, Kiefer, Teeters, Ellen Land, Peterson, flpahr, McKlbben, Avan- elle Wicks, Jeanette Kelly, Barbara England, Bales and Ollllsple. Lowry England and Roy England war« dinner guests. A number from here attended the Jasper Patton funerr 1 In Cottage Orove Monday. Services are being held here this week by Rev. Kenneth Tobias and M r. T aylo r of Springfield. 600 4-H CLUBBERS ARE COnAGEGJOVEGUESTS What Alms of Organisation Ars Xa Explained and Potluck Lunch la Served. The Interest In and enthusiasm of south Lane county for 4-H club work was manifested Friday night when over 400 attended a 4-H Jubi lee sponsored by the chamber of commerce under the direction of R. C. Kuehner. county elub leader. An attendance of 300 or 900 had been expected Parents and others joined with children from practical ly every community of south l e n t and IS elub leaders were present from the Eugene district. The meeting was held la the high school gymnasium, which was filled to capacity. The program opened with several numbers by the Cottage Qrove band An address of welcome was given by Elbert Beds, president of the chamber of commerce, and this was followed by several more numbers by the band N. J Nelson sang a solo, being accompanied by Miss Frances Maehln This wae followed by a talk by Mre. Alice Woodruff, president of the rounty organise tlon of local leaders. Motion pic tures Illustrated a talk by Miss Helen J. Cowgill, assistant state club leader, on the aims and objec tives of 4-H club work. A t the conclusion of the program a potluck luncheon was served toe cream and coffee were supplied by the chamber of commerce A com mittee of domestic science girls un der Miss Sara-Loulss Shields had charge of this feature. The chamber of commerce com mittee In charge of the a ffa ir was D r H. A. Hagen. O. V Breese and C. A. Be Idler February Temperature Varies. February showed a variance In temperature, according to t h e weather report Just Issued by C. K Stewart, cooperative weather ob server, the first of the month regis tering extreme cold and the last a springlike temperature. A minimum temperature of I t was recorded on February 1 and a maximum tem perature of 74 on February 34 The mean maximum was 44.1. ihs mean minimum >3 2 and the mean 40.5 degrees. A trace of snow was recorded and precipitation totaled 3.93 Inches. Eight days «rare dear. 13 were part ly cloudy and nine wars cloudy. Oregon State College, Corvallis. Feb. 3 4 —Harold Allen of Cottage Orove. sophomore In vocational edu cation. was a member of the Oregon stats varsity debate team that met Stanford university In a no-dectolon contest over radio station KO AC recently. Allen upheld the affirm ative on the question. "Resolved, that this house disapproves of the practice of wage cutting during the present economic depression “ Larkspur Moehy Creek. March >.—(Special I —A cow and calf belonging to Lew McCoy were poisoned one day Iasi week from eating larkspur. A cow owned by Bert Meyers was poisoned the same day from the same cause. All are now reported out of danger. LONDON. March 1.—W . T. Jones aad Georgs Sutherland attended a meeting of the Farmers' creamsry Wednesday in Eugene. Miss Uuiega Means, who to at tending university In Eugene, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and lir a La. A. Mean*. Baptismal services were held here a t > o'clock Sunday In the waters of the Coast fork. Miss Lillian H u ll of Latham spent the week end as the guest of Mice W ilm a Sutherland. J. L. Lemmon preached Sunday morning a t the Central V i e w Church of C h ris t He was accom panied to that place by hie daugh ter Esther, Mlee W ilm a Sutherland. Miss Lillian H u ll and Miss Reta Bailee. O. E a rl McCay of Lorane preach ed a t the church here Sunday morn ing. M r. and Mrs. Mack Smith of E lk ton visited Sunday at the horns of Mrs. Smith’s sister, Mrs. Fred Doney. M r. aad Mrs. J. E. Banton mo tored to Eugene Friday. M ra Lyman Adams and Mrs. W illiam Broom of Cottage Orove visited Thursday afternoon with their sister, Mrs. Oeorge Suther- lAAd. Mrs. J. L. Sm ith and daughter Grace of Row river were guests Wednesday a t the J. D. Clark home on Cedar creek. Miss Hasel H u ff of Eugene to the house guest this week of an aunt, Mrs. W alter Murry. Guests at the M urry horns Sunday were Mrs. Ada Mounts of Salem and Mre. Lajole aad daughter Sarah of Cottage Grove. M r. asd Mrs. Clyde W illy and son of Smith river were over night guests Wednesday a t the horns of Mrs. W illy's parents, M r. and Mrs. Fran k Geer. M r. aad Mre. Lee Berry of Smith river spent the week end at the J. D. Clark home. M r. and Mrs. Clyde Clark were guests at the Clark home Sunday. . Mrs. Ida Hardlety and son of Cliffs, Ida., are visiting Mrs. Har- dlsty’s slater, Mrs. Stlmmel of Black Butts. Mrs. Hardisty expects to be here several weeks. Mrs. Fred Doney and children Olive, A rthu r and Jimmie, Chris tine Hooker, Audrey, Mildred and Forest Cox, W ilm a Sutherland, Esther Lemmon and Reta Bailee celebrated Washington's birthday anniversary with a picnic dinner In the park, followed by a hike Into the hills. M r. and Mrs. Robert Phillips celebrated their wedding anniver sary Sunday. T heir guests were M r. and Mra. Van Allison of Cottage Orove and Mr. and Mrs. M urray Newton and daughter. Melvin Adams of Cottage Grove to visiting a t the home of an aunt, Mrs. J. W. Thorn. M A IU II Disston District Asks Three Republicans File Setting Aside Merger For Jobs With County Three republicans filed their for mal declaration of candidacy for county office« Monday and Tues day. County Judge C. P Barnard and County Commissioner Clinton Hurd both filed to euoceed themselves In offlee. Late Monday afternoon Dennis Lovelace, Eugene, filed his declaration to seek the republican nomination for county commission er. Barnard and Hurd are both standing on their records in office. Commissioner Hurd, as usual, re iterated hie famous campaign slo gan, " I f you elect me, you'll still have to pay taxes." F. F. Cooper, principal of Santa Clara high school, who some time ago declared he was not In the running for the post of county school superintendent, has changed his mind and Is elroulatlng peti tions seeking the republican nomi nation for this offles. A petition asking the oounty court not to consolidate the Disston precinct with the Dorena precinct was presented Tuesday I t was signed by 40 petitioners from the Disston area. Thto consolidation wae effected reoently when the oounty prooinols were out from 190 to 43. or 34 per oent. Thia was done, aeeordlng to members of the oounty oourt, to ef fect a aavlng of approalmalely 94.000. I t to Impossible for the county oourt to eat aside consolidations until nest June, O. E Crowe, coun ty ootnmtoslonor. sold He said the court would not be Inclined to do so anyway, because of tbe esvlng In taa monlee which has resulted The petition aaka that the polling place for Dlaaton he set at W ild wood school rather than a l Dorena. eaylng that many of the voters would have In eaceae of 14 miles to go without adequate transportation ^ LANE_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ LOCAL GOLfEBSTAKE WILL MEET IN TOURNEY OAKWAY FDR CLEANING District Basketball H onon to Be Settled Today, Sat urday; Locals Play. Cottage Orove high school basket ball team will meet Eugene high school al l >0 this afternoon In Me- A rthur court in Eugene In the sec ond game of the Lane-Dougtaa bas ketball tournament to determine tbe team to represent this dtotrlot in the state tournament to be beld la Salem later la the month. The locate are given only a bare out side chance of defeating the Eu gene quintet, according to the dops- etere. Coach Bagley has been both ered ell season by scanty material. The full schedule for the dtotrlet tournament follows: Friday. J SO. University high, winner Lane "A" league, va Drain, winner of Doug las "B" league: I 10. Cottage Orove va Eugene. 7 90. Springfield va. Lowell. 4 90. Roseburg ve. St. Mery's, winner Lane "B" league. Saturday: 4 >0. winner of 3.90 F r i day game ve. winner 4 >0 Friday game: 1010, winner J 30 Friday game va winner 7:90 Friday game, 7 90, final game for district cham pionship. The tournament this week end to regarded ae one of the outstanding basketball events of the year for this district since the winner w ill be entered In the state meet. Even the most enthusiastic followers of the gems hesitate to pick the win ner from the eight schools entered Lowell, runner up In the Lane 8 " league, defeated Oakland, run ner up In the Douglas "B" league. >3 to 37 on the high school gym floor here Tuesday night, winning the right to enter the Lane-Doug- lae meet. BATTBBY TO UNDEBOO INSPECTION TUESDAY Battery "K," 344th coast artillery, local national guard unit, w ill un dergo public annual Inspection Tuesday night. Captain L. D. Farns worth of Salem, regular army In structor for the 344th C. A., will be Inspection officer. The Inspection w ill take Into con sideration m ilitary ability, drill, clothing, equipment and armory facilities. The battery he« been drilling herd In preparation for the event end every effort has been made to put the armory In first class shape. The battery Includes 50 enlisted men end three officers. Captain La- Sells 8tewart, First Lieutenant H e r bert W Lombard and Second Lieu tenant O rville Haxen WOBK P B 0 0 B E S 8 IN 0 ON NEW PULP OBEEK MILL W ork to progressing steadily on the Bohemia Lumber company’s new 40,000-foot capacity mill now under construction at Culp Creek. The mill foundation has been com pleted end the uprights for the first floor are In place. The mill pond will be completed this week. Fourteen men, under the direction of LaSells Stewart and W. A. Oa- routte, mill owners, ere employed on the work. I t to expected that the plant w ill be ready for operation the middle of May. W ork was stopped Monday by a light enow storm that h it the Culp Creek district. License Penalty Is Reduced. An order reducing the >3 penalty for those who fall to obtain dog li censes by March I wee Issued Mon day by the county court. The rea son for the action wae the d iffi culty many person« are having In meeting their obligations. The penalty for not having dog licenses afte r March 1 w ill be 35 cents during March, 50 cents dur ing April, 75 cents during May and 91 from June to December, Inclu sive. M any persona were buying li censee Monday and at noon there had been slightly over 1935 sold. Last year over 9000 were sold. Deputy Aaeeeeora S tart W ork. Nineteen deputy aaseesors started work on new valuation« Tuesday, according to Assessor Ben F. Kee ney. Supplies and Instructions for assessment work In the county were given out last week. Deputy assessors end the dis tricts In which they w ill work In thia section of the county follow: I. B. Morris, city of Cottage Grove; L. R. Burna, Dorena and Row river; Roy Foster, Lorane; Lester O. Porter, Saginaw and west Cres well; Thomas Sikes, south of Cot tage Grove and Coast Fork die trlot. Oermany, heavy Importers of pep permint, plana on raising Its own. Species of acacia tresa are almost fire proof. Northern Chile is known as tha rainless coast. Mosquitoes are found on bleak tundras of tha Arctic. Eugene Pill PunUrs O«t Little End of 39 12 Score la Sunday Match. The Cottage Grove Golf club team defeated a 17-maa team from tbe Oakway course Io Eugene I t to 13 Sunday on the local course, even ing tbe count with the visitors, who had woa a match 26 H to 33H Janu ary 34 In Eugene. W ilbur Spray made a belo-ln-one on No. 4 green on the second round W illiam Mayor of the local olub took low modal honors with an 43 for the 19 holes. Young, who was Moyer's opponent, soorod low medal for the visitors with aa 44 Those playing and their scores follow: Cottage Grove Oak way Zlmmerly, 44. 1 Crtop. 99 ------ 1 Moyer, 4 3 ---- 9 Young. 44 — 0 Moretock, 44 I H Kingman. 40.. it Leonard. 43 .4 Achlu. 4 9 ___0 Wells. 4 4 ------ l i t H u ffak er. 44 1 * Smith. 44 ___ 9 Scott. 104 — 0 Nelson. 49 — 9 Walls, O.. 100 0 Spray, 103 —1 Lawaadder 47 3 Daugh'ty. 44 9 M artin. 109 _0 Trask, 4 7 __ l i t Roberts. M ..lit Wiseman. 47 l i t Palmer. 100 _ it Hwaru. 44 -.4 Sellom. 1 08 —0 Stoereil, 111 . t i t C n ih 'a k . l i t it Pyne, 104 __1 Mills. 103 __ 9 Thorat'n, 100 0 Bartels, 43 —9 DeYoung. >39 it Newton. 107 l i t Coiner, l i t — 9 Stockstill. 134 0 BtitlEl COTTAGE GROVE WINS AND LOSES IN OEBATE Negative Team Travels and Is Victor at Both Eugene and Boaeburg (Wrtttee ky Jeereelle* Sl«4«el I Cottage Grove has won In two debate contest* and loet In two dur ing the past week. la the debate with Eugene held Tuesday of last week In the high school, the affirm ative team of Cottage Grove tied Eugene In argu ment end effectlveneee, but loet In rebuttal Members of the teams are Cottage Grove, affirm ative, Verele McCoy and Vincent Brlcher; Eu gene, negative, Iva Jacobsen and Edeeea Davenhlll. Mr. Hempstead of the public speaking department, University of Oregon, wae the critic Judge. In tha debate with Boaeburg held Wednesday morning In the high school the negative Roeeburg team woa by the decision of Herbert l-ombard. the critic Judge. Members of the teams are: Roeeburg. nega tive. Elisabeth W illiam s end T lllle F ran k, Cottage Grove, affirm ative, Verele McCoy and Vincent Brlcher. The question for both debates waa: Resolved, That the several • tales should enact legislation pro viding for compulsory unemploy ment Insurance The Cottage Grove negative team, accompanied by D. A Emerson, de bated with Eugene In Eugene end with Roeeburg In Roeeburg at the same time the affirm ative team waa debating here. The Cottage Grove team won at both place«. Members Melvin Breese end Orvel E tter The local team will debate Spring- field Thursday of thto week. Stulea Car la Dewertod When Curtto Vaatch sees a couple step from a ear. leave It beside the road and signal for a ride he feels certain that something to wrong and that the car probably has been stolen. He eaw that happen Tuesday a short «ray north of Cottage Grove while he waa on hie way here from Halsey. He took the license num ber and notified Chief of Police Pitcher of what be had seen, and the next day the police officer re ceived a police bulletin that the car had been stolen. He and Mr. Veatch then went out and brought the car into the city. The chief was of the opinion that the owner probably wouldn't feel that the car. an old Bulck roadster, was worth enough to w arrant the expense of coming after It. The bulletin did not give the name of the owner and the registration card had been removed from the oar. In the car were a Jug and a milk T o t a l« ____ 94 19 bottle that had been used in con veying gasoline It wae believed W AEBMBE QUINTET WINS that the couple, who had made PBOM LOEANN P I V ■ 37-17 their getaway, had been stealing gasoline on their way here from The Cottage Orove W arrior« de Portland, thought they had come rested the Lorane basketball team about ae far as they could without 37 to 17 Monday night at Lorane. detection and left the ear when the Schaalder. Lorane forward, wae gasoline tank wae emptied. high point man with eeven and Glaee aad Scott of the W arriors were tied for second with six each. The lineups follow: Warrlose tJ7> Lorane 117) Pteuard. 4 ____ F _ — Schneider. 7 Conner. 9 ------- F ----------------- King Helen Hansen and Betty Jacob Seotl, 9 --------- O ----------------- King. * sen attended the second annual Glaee. 4 ______ O ._ _ _ Anderson. 4 Skelton meeting o? the high school home Chestnut. 4 Hayes. 4 economics clubs, held at M cM inn Scheufeto. 4 ville February 34-27 under the di The W arrior« played l-owell last rection of Mlee Frances M-. W right, night on the local floor In a Lane supervisor of home economics with county league game. Only two the state board for vocational edu league games remain on the W a r cation, assisted by Mrs. Thelma rior's schedule. Thurston Tuesday G lide* and Miss Edna Fitts, home night at Thurston sad Blachly economics teachers at McMinnville. Thursday night here. The W a r In addition to tha high school riors have won six games and loet delegatee the group Included seniors seven In league play from Oregon state college who ex pect to teach home economics next Land la Restored to Entry. year, officers of the Oregon section The United Statas land offlca of of American home economics aaao- Roseburg has Issued notice that the clatlon, C. A. Howard, state super N E U and E U N W U Sec >4. T. 31 intendent of public Instruction and S., R 4 W , containing 140 scree In O. D. Adams, state director for vo Lane county and 40 acres la Doug cational education. las oounty, and the whole of section Friday afternoon was spent ob 99, T. 37 8.. R. 13 W . W M.. la Cooe serving exhibits made by girls of county, has been restored to entry, McMinnville, Friday evening the subject to the preference rights of g irl* attended a banquet a t which ex-service men. The land w ill be several girls spoke on home eco open to ex-eervlce men April 7 and nomics problems. to the general public July 7. Saturday the glrle attended ses Only regular fees and commie- sions of the convention at which alone will be charged ae the land to Miss M ildred Chamberlain, who de listed ae cut-over. signed the American home econom ics association pin, and who to now Telephone Line Change Propoeed. associate professor of related arts A epeclal meeting or etockholdera at Oregon state college, gave an Il of the Coeat Fork Telephone com lustrated talk In which she showed pany has been called for 9 o'clock how high school girls could pro Tuesday evening at Hebron hell to vide beauty in their homes and vote on proposed line changes. school rooms at small cost Dissatisfaction w ith line No. 7. Cottage Orove school to one of a extending from London to the W il group of school« which have clubs liam Lively place, has been voiced affiliated w ith such school* a * Sa and It to proposed to hook line No. lem, 8t. Helena, LaOrande. K lam 7 onto line No. >4, m aking a full ath Falla, Roseburg, McMinnville, metallic circle of line No. 7 and do Pendleton, Silverton, Astoria, Leb ing away w ith phantom colls. I t anon, Medford, Corvallis, Newport to then propoeed to put a naw >4 and Albany. e e e line on the poise from Cottage Orove to tha George Taylor place. August* Heck. Edith W illis and Paul Sanders, Juniors, and Alpha Marek Cornea I* Like a (Jon. Pitcher, sophomore, are absent March came In like a lion, bring from school because of mumps. ing snow, rain and oold «rinds. I f Kathleen Beldler, i.enlor, return the adage holds true, good «reather ed to school Monday morning, a f to In prospect for the last of tha ter an absence due to mumps. month. A light «now storm waa re The basketball game between ported at Culp Creek and work on Cottage Orove high and Roseburg the new Bohemia Lumber company high, which waa to have been play mill at that place wae stopped Mon ed Saturday at Roseburg, was call day to aw ait better weather. Cold ed off because several members of winds and rain vtolted Cottage the Roeeburg team were III with Grove. E. J. Kent, mall carrier on the measles. Disston route, reported enow low In Cottage Orove plays Eugene high the hills. Friday afternoon on M cA rthur court In the district "A” league 4-11 Radio Program Announced. tournament. The regular 4-H radio program Luclle Burge, asalated by L ud le broadcast over KOAC for March 7 Favor, entertained Melba and Ger has been received and provides trude Cochran Wednesday evening much of interest. The program at the practice house. will consist of club news from over Mlee Theresa Young attended the the state; story by Edna Geer, Linn Oregon state - Oregon basketball county superintendent, of 4-H club game Friday evening In Eugene. day at the Linn County Progress T e a ch er» ' Institute Planned. exposition; music; 4-H Club W ork Yesterday and Today," by Burton An Inatltuta for teachers of south Hutton of Douglas county and "My Lane county w ill be held here April T rip to the National 4-H Club Con 2. The hours will be 4:80 to 13. gress In Chicago,” by Beth Joy of Three speakers will be provided for the main program, afte r which the Jackeon county. teachers will divide Into three Most Parisian garments are hand groups, high school, upper grades made by women In their own homes. and primary, and conduct programs King Zog, Albania, to the young of Interest to each group. est ruler in Europe and the only Income T ax Records. Sentinel. unmarried one. N O M M ER «I. Holc-in-Onc is Made By Spray TAXES DOWN $238,417 1831ASSESSMENTR0LL The second hole-ln-one within >0 days wae made on number four of the Cottage Grove Golf club's course Levy OottaFe Orove $30,509, Sunday during competition with the Eugene Ii High With Oakway team of Eugene The Levy of $266.146 single shot waa made by W ilbur Mpray, who became a father for the first time about a week before, and Tax assessments for Lane county he to quite confident that thto feet are 1294,417 34 less than last year, had something to do with the reo- according to tha 1491 tax roll turn ord he made Sunday ed over to the sheriff Monday by Thto to the third hole-ln-one on the assessor number four, the others having The total to S3.130,933 9M. of which been made by Earl K ill and Rev. 94,451.70 has already been collected. I t W. Davie. I For 1490 the figure* were 92.2M.7M> - 42. Taxable property In the county ' was valued at I4M.XA4.201 The money to be collected to dl- , vlded Into the following amounts: | State and county. 91.OSO.4M.S5; spe cial eohool taxes. 9507,500.48; union high school taxes, 949.744.43; special road taxes. 957,547.36. epeclal city taxes. 9949.808 84; epeclal Port of The annual campaign against Slue law taxes. 95947 67; special for gray digger ground squirrels to ex est patrol tax 911.502 06; special pected to get well under way dur rodent tax. 914075. special thistle ing March, according to County cutting tax. 920; special horticul Agent O H. Fletcher, who directs tural tax, 934 50. Only the rodent the fight against these peats. tax to greater than the sim ilar item The Lane County Agricultural Hated last year. There was no council has adopted grey digger th u tle tax last year ground squirrel control work a* one ; Special city taxes follow Eugene, of the county wide project* to be |2M . 145 47, Cottage Grove 930- cooperated In by alt farm organ- so4 U ; Springfield. 924.784 58; Junc- ixatlons of the county during 1432 Uon Clty |9.M 9J0; Coburg 92 774 - I t ---------------- to ex peeled .U that subordinate -. ...w— . - . . . oe. 92,554 04, and Cree- granges. Farmers' union locals and well. 92940 18. community clubs will Join In the Among the larger taxpayers of campaign. the public utilities are the Southern Farm organisations In communl-1 Pa<.|nc company | i 49. tie« where ground equlrrel control 450 7J. th, c . , , trB, PBCinc R a Uw« ; to a problem are expected to noml- • company. 9100.707.57; the Oregon nate one rodent control eupervleor Electric railway, 94.655 38 the Pa- for each school district covered b, clflc Telephone and Telegraph com- these organisations In com m unl-] p , ny 974.497 42; Mountain State, ties where there are no farm or- Pow. r company, M2.185.81; North- ganlutlons, the county agent will Cltle, Oae company, 910 744- ealect rodent control supervisor. |f l#7. w „ U rB Unlon Telegraph com- there la sufficient local Interest p , ny gg99LM; California-Oregon These eupervlaora will be appointed ; Pow. r company, $2948.02; Pullman by the county court and w ill be glv- J company, $2,740 45; Pacific F ru it en authority to poison squirrels on Express company. $1.887 78 neglected land at the expense of the | . owner. O fficial notice to all persons hav ing charge of land In Lane county to take steps to exterminate gray | digger ground squirrels on their property w ithin 10 days from March 4 to published elsewhere In thto ■ Issue. ' ,i..—. The county agent ha. prepared a j Edwln Schoen. 31. son of M r. and supply of poison barley for sale to Mr> Jul(|M Sch(H,n of th„ rtty farmers at cost. This may be ob- dted Shanghai. China. Tuesday at lamed at the office of tha county hemophilia, a disease In which agent and from dealers In all parts bleedlng not h . , topped of the county. The charge '• 4 j Private Schoen enlisted In the cents for a five-pound bag -United 8tates arm y seven months Dealers who w ill handle _ ago with his brother, K arl Schoen, poison In south Lane county 77. Both were sent to M anila and Cottage Grove. Farmers' l nlon th< p , rent , Of ,he boys received a store and C. A ____ m letter _______ Monday, the day of Edwin's rane. Addison's store; Dorena. K irk death, that the boys had arrived In store; Creawell. B. A Land store china. and Gray's feed «tore. Schoen's body w ill be sent here “ ~ ~ ~ ~ for burlat. H«mophuia. rare dt«««e which 1 rv s i n U 1 . affects only men. to Incurable so Grade School B u i l d i n g f * r * • known. The disease, accord ing to physicians, to transmitted to male children by their mothers, al Erection of a new grade school building at Culp Creek will be con though they themselves do not suf fer from It. sidered at a special district meet- The parents of the boy« say that X tO,rw C^ u n ^ « r w ^ t h ^ h ^ Z 'e n n o ^ p 'r e ^ e c ^ o J ofTic! òr the cotn^T echoo*i h*«noPhl1'“ “> •»>« fam ily and that at the office_ of the county school , Edw)n h>d nevef W hen # superintendent. tittle boy he sustained a severe in The proposed building would con jury to a foot and one toe was sist of three rooms, one to be used nearly torn off, but the wound as a community room, and would healed completely. coat not to exceed 93000. R. C. Glee- He la survived by hie parents, the eon to chairman of the school hoard. one brother and one sister, Bonita, Consolidation of a number of of Cottage Grove. Edwin was for nearby district* to sought by Culp merly a student at Drain high Creek to Ju.tlfy b u i l d i n g l a r g e r Th<> gerv school.. At present there are 24 th - l w ln, . n Irv fr« „ ^ the Slat Infantry, recently trans children under one teacher at Culp ferred from M anila to Shanghai. Creek and the addition of a num ber more students to anticipated next year. The present building is old and crowded. School district No. 177 at Disston , has not definitely decided whether i to build a new school or to cooper- ' ate with the Culp Creek district, , according to County Superintendent E. J. Moore. A t present children from this dletrict are attending | J. L. Culver of the Hebron dis tric t to a firm believer in the future school at Star, but thto arrange of the strawberry growing industry ment to said to be unsatisfactory. and to backing his faith with deeds Mrs. J. S. C arr to clerk of thto dis by planting six acres of his 50-acre trict and has notified M r. Moore farm to the berries. He declared than the district will come to that growth of the froxen fru it In decision In the near future. dustry means much to strawberry ANNUAL DRIVE AGAINST RODENTS IS UNDER WAY EDWIN SCHOEN DIES IN U.S. ARMY IN CHINA Culp Creek Proposes i ARESETOUTAIUEBRON Quarantine Placed On Various Berry Plants Those getting raspberry, black berry. dewberry, youngberry or any horticultural variety of berry plants from any state except California, Artxona or New Mexico w ill have to get their shipment here before March 15, according to an order of the state agriculture department, which has placed a quarantine on these plante from any state except those named, effective M arch 15. County F ru it Inspector Stew art has received notice of the order. growers. He Is setting out 90,000 plants of the Marshall variety which have been proved to be the best for freesing. Mr. Culver expressed the belief that development of the strawberry Industry in thto district would be a benefit to the commun ity by providing seasonal Jobs in the time of cultivation and harvest ing. Famous Local House To Have Rival Cottage Grove's famous circular house is to have a rival In a house that to to be designed like a tree and can be revolved so that any desired room will be fronting the sun. The Idea sounds fantastic, but the well known Starrett-Eken Con struction company and the General Motors corporation are said to be London, March 1. — (Special.) — financially Interested In plans to Electa Thordenburg wae painfully put such a house on the market. Injured Sunday when «he waa bit ten on a hand by a house cat. The O fficer Morgan Moved to Eugene. animal almost bit entirely through Paul Morgan, state police officer the thick part of one of Mr«. Thor- stationed here, who had been In denburg'e thumbs and also tore a structed to make his headquarters half-inch strip of fleeh loose from In Eugene, moved his fam ily to that one finger. city Monday. Mr». Thordenburg wae trying to The change waa made In order to put the cat into a sack In order to centralise state police officers of give it to a neighbor. thto district. Jaaper N. Patton Dice. N O T IC E . Funeral services were held Mon Notice to hereby given that a spe day forenoon for Jasper Newton Patton, resident here for 44 years, cial meeting of the stockholders of who died Friday following a para the Coast Fork Telephone Co. Is lytic stroke a few weeks ago. Rev. called to meet at the Hebron hall on D. P. Cameron of the Presbyterian the 8th day of March at 8 p. m. to church was In charge of the ser vote on the following proposition: vices and Interment was In the A. F. As line No. 7. extending from Lon don to the W illiam Lively place, Is A A. M .-I. O. O. F. cemetery. Mr. Patton was born June 14, very unsatisfactory, It to proposed 1856, in Boufbon, III. H e to sur to hock line 7 onto the 39 line, m ak vived by the widow and three chil ing a full metallic circuit of the 7 dren, Mrs. Bessie Thompson, Van line, and doing away with the phan couver, Wash., and Fred and ■Wil tom colls; and then putting a new liam Patton of thto community. 99 line on the pole» from Cottage Mrs. Ellxa McKlbben, thto city; Grove to the Oeorge Taylor place. By order of the Board of Direc Mrs. Harah Sloan and Mr». Nellie Sloan, Kansas, and Bona Patton, tor». MRS. F. C. F Ü H R E R , of thto city, are surviving etaters f34-m4c Secretary, Cat Resents Indignity Bites Owner