Till KS|> n , JAM ARV 26, 1989 THE SENTINEL, COTTAGE GROVE. OREGON Seventh Anniversary Irish Swartz to Be Observed This Week Floyd Thies Makes An Interesting Find This week Irish - Swartz lnc„ are holding their seventh anniver­ sary celebration with a special anniversary sale. In January of 1932, or seven years ago, Harold Swartz and M. R. Irish started operating under the name of Irish-Swartz Inc., and have con­ tinued business at the same loca­ tion, 7th and Main. Special values in both the gro­ cery and meat market of Irish- McBroom are being offered to the many customers of the store dur­ ing the anniversary week and H.-D. canned goods are being fea­ tured. One of the largest ship­ ments of canned good ever dis­ played here will go at special prices to patrons of the establish­ ment. See the announcement of this concern to be found elsewhere in this issue. County Court Names Boards Commissions Cottage Grove, Oregon. CITY BRIEFS I Ray Randall, Miss Marian Jeli- nik, Miss Clara Dotson, Miss Marie Frasier and Sydney Wynne spent Sunday skiing up the Mc­ Kenzie. 11*11 and Johnston, Real Estate. Mrs. Ignora I’yburn and Miss Dmi.se Hallyburton of Eugene spent ’he week end at the home Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Wilkie of of Mrs. Pybum's mother, Mrs. Seattle arrived Thursda; y of last Welcome Hubbell. week to spend the weel k end at Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Sherry and the Loren Hunt home. The couple Mr. Wilkie, who son, who spent the week end with n. wwlywtd recently was signed as a pitcher Mrs. Sherry's parents, Mr. and for the San Francisco Seals basc­ Mrs. Newton I.and, returned Sun­ ball club. is a nephew of Mr. day to their home In Portland. Hunt. Miss Alsea Hawley left Wed­ Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Gerimonte nesday for Portland, where she of Westfir spent the week end at will leave for New York. She the home of Mrs. Welcome Hub­ plans to visit there for a time be­ fore sailing on a tour of South bell. America. She expects to be gone Horace M. Robbins, principal of about three months. the Central school, and Mrs. Wil­ liam Thum, principal of the W«*st Mr. and Mrs. Al Wallace of Side school. attendai a meeting Denio left last Friday after vis- of elementary school principals iting a week at the homes of Mrs. Saturday in Eugene. Mrs Thum Wallace's uncle and aunt, Mr. went on from there to Junction and Mrs. J. R. Hendricks, an City to visit her daughter, Mrs. uncle, J. S. Markham. Mr. and Bonita Skilling, and granddaugh- Mrs. Wallace have an extensive t< r Bonny Jean, who are ill with hay ranch in the southeastern severe colds. section of Oregon. They took back with them two purebred Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Cochran Jersey heifers which they pur­ are the parents of a daughter chased from the Duerst ranch on born Saturday morning at the Disston route. McFarland maternity home. A son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Burge are the parents of a daughter born Jerry Rice on January 24th. January 20 at the McFarland ma* Mr. and Mrs. H. E. D. Brown ternity home. of Rujada station returned recent- .. Mm. ....................... William Earl left last 'y from a fortnight's vacation week for Colorado tn visit a sis- •sP*nt at Seattle and Bremerton, ter. She went by way of Califor- Washington. IXMUU, Sure Insurance. Phone 5b. Mrs. J. P. Hoyle of Joplin, Mis- Mrs. William Thum returned *°uri ls a at the home of Wednesday of last week from son> Clyde Butler. Santa Ana, California, where she „„.i Mr_ v—e».—i. Mm. James Herman. over-night guests at the home of William Morelock underwent and Mrs James A. a major operation at a Eugene ^mith Friday. Mr. Shank is as- of hospltal Thursday and according sistant administrator *—•—* * the Sisk- to an early report is recuperating iyou national forest service. satisfactorily. Mrs. Alice McC. Miller of the Mr, and Mrs. William Baker local postoffice is recovering sat­ and infant son of Coos Bay were isfactorily from a badly scalded here the latter part of the week ankle. visiting Mrs. Baker's parents, Mr. One of our subscribers, Franc and Mrs. E. R. Crabbe. Mr. Bak- er who is with the Coos Bay Lucile Hard of San Jose, Califor­ Times, attended the Oregon Press nia, in a note to the Sentinel association session at Eugene says: "The new Sentinel is a great , improvement. I wish you would Friday and Saturday. ; print news from the Bohemia Leslie Hamant of Boston, Mas- n»*n»ug district, We a|ways a boost sachusetts, arrived last week ‘ to - appreciate - visit at the home of an uncle,1 and welcome any suggestion. "Dan Hamant. Red Rose Rutter and loe Cream. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Compton for them. C. G. Creamery, tf left Monday afternoon for Earl- ham. Iowa, where they were call- Stewart for plumbing, phone ed by the sudden death of Mr. 12-tfc ÌÒTKV o ST ó ÄÄ John Veatch of Cottage Giove was again named on the dog con­ trol board at a meeting of the county court in Eugene Friday, at which time county boards and commissions were appointed. Re­ appointed with Mr. Veatch were Claude R. Downing and Fred Stickey. On the museum commis­ sion, Anne Whitaker, Floyd West­ erfield, F. L. Chambers, Elisha Large, C. M. Young. All will serve for three-year term*. ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION AT CHAMBER MEETING. In the absence of H. E. Eakin, president, L. C. Schroeder pre­ sided at the regular luncheon pro­ gram of the Chamber of Com- mercé Tuesday noon and after hearing a report from the Boost Cottage Grove Committee, the matting raooived itself into a round table discussion. An article read by C. J. Kem on the attitude of the public with reference to government spending provoked quite a bit of comment. LATHAM P. T. A. MEETS. The Latham P.T.A. Study club met Monday evening at the home of Mrs. A. E. W’alker with a good attendance. “The Young Citizens in School” was reported on by Mrs. Roscoe Yearous. This is the fourth in a series of articles published by the Parent - Teacher’s magazine for use in study clubs. A round table discussion followed. The next meeting will be Feb- ruary 27 at the home of Mrs. Hugh Trunnell. All parents are invited to meet with the club at that time. HOME INTERESTS CONFERENCE. Home economics teachers from this section of the state are mak­ ing plans to attend the ninth an­ nual conference for the study of home interests to be given at the State College at Corvallis Febru­ ary 7 to 10. Home economics stu­ dents and mothers of home eco­ nomics students are invited to at­ tend. PENSION FOR FIREMEN SOUGHT. SALEM, OREGON. City fire- ben throughout Oregon will be assured of pensions if a bill drop- ped into the house hopper Satur­ day becomes law. A 3 per cent levy on fire insur­ ance premiums in cities where fire protection is available was designed to raise a fund of about $175,000 annually. Firemen 50 years of age with 25 years' serv­ ice and firemen 55 years old with 20 years service will be eligible to retire with pensions under terms of the bill. Disability provisions for volun­ teer firemen also w’as included in the measure. Two slightly tued mg, at a bar- month« whll Mr Ä mb s “SU Rebuilt Underwood typewriter tends to business affairs in con- —nt »messier*.____ 17-tfc for sale. The Sentinel office. 4-tfc nectlon with a family estate. They have rented their house to Mr. and Mrs. Billy Beach. Malcolm Sprague, connection with the Coos Bay Times at North Bend, wns a dinner guest Sunday at the E. R. Crabbe home. He returned horar Sunday eve­ ning with Mr. and Mrs. William Baker, who had npent the week- end at the Crabbe home. Mrs. Dan Hamant attended the annual P. E. O. Founders lunch-1 eon held Saturday at the Osburn hotel In Eugene. Miss Lula Cur­ rin was in charge of the library Saturday afternoon in Mrs. Ham­ ant's absence. Ä * EXTRA SPECIAL! HURRY! This ad and $1.00 will give your car a com­ plete lubrication and a genuine electrolux cleansing if presented to Tommy’s Service Station Plumbing - Heating • Equipment at Martin Motors, 125 North 9th Street, Cottage Grove. Get our prices on any job you plan. This offer expires February 4th, 1939 Short’s Plumbing Shop Add life, add beauty to your car the grange. Uis talk for the most part was on the grange wholesale in Portland. First and second de­ gree obligations were given Aura and Adele Bostick and Don Read. The following press dispatch from Fort Stevens may be of gen­ eral interest. It concerns the find­ ing of a bottle by Floyd E. Thies of Battery E, 3rd C.A.C., on Janu­ ary 14th. Mt. Thies is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arni! Thies of this city. “One of the most interesting finds made in recent years on the Hammond ocean beach was a bot­ tle from the hydrographic office of Washington, D. C., containing the following information. The bottle was thrown overboard by Captain A. J. Hoskins from the vessel, Empress of Russia, on April 11, 1922. The latitude was 51 degrees 25 minutes north and the longitude 141 degrees and 46 minutes west. The bottle was found by Private 1-cl. Floyd L. Thies of Battery E, 3rd C.AX?., Fort Stevens, on Jan­ uary 14, 1939, on Clatsop Spit near the mouth of the Columbia river. Sergeant Kenneth Edeburn of the post also found one of these bottles since the big storm but water had leaked into it and it was not legible. It would be in­ teresting to know where the first bottle had been for 17 years when it is only a little over a thousand miles from here to where it was thrown overboard. The storm may have destroyed it. Degree work in the 3rd and 4th degree will be presented by the degree team at the next regular meeting, February 2nd. Frances Gaw ley, news reporter. Get Your Drugs — Prescriptions School Supplies Musical Instruments Candy — Cosmetics at Brown’s Original Cut Rate Drug Store The store that started cut-rate prices in Cottage Grove. We meet or beat any prices in Cottage Grove Brown’s Drug Store Mrs. Susan E. Warner Dies Sunday Morning Mrs. Susan E. Warner, aged 85, and pioneer of the Fall Creek dis­ trict, passed away Sunday at the home of Mrs. R. F. Duncan near here. A native of Indiana, Mrs. Warner was married to Frank Warner at Fall Creek in 1881. Mr. Warner died a year ago. Survivors are three daughters, Mrs. Lewis Flock, Fall Creek; Mrs. C. Abrahams, Wendling; Mrs. Frank Donpier, Oakridge, and four brothers: Chas. Neet, Fall Creek; Wesley Neet, Trent; Jacob Neet, Halfway, and Ole Neet, Fall Creek. Funeral ser­ vices were held at the Poole chapel in Eugene yesterday af­ ternoon with the Rev. S. E. Chil­ ders officiating. ^^S^Annim Rites for Mrs. Land Held Here Friday Rites for Mrs. Zillah May Land, aged 67. were held at the Mills Chapel Friday morning at 10:00 a. m. with the Rev. H. W. Davis officiating and burial was made in the Sears cemetery. Mrs. Land, a former resident of Dorena, died at the home of a son Leslie at Yakima, Washing­ ton, on January 16th. A native of Missouri. Mrs. Land came to Ore­ gon in 1886 and was married to Jim P. Land of Dorena in 1890 In 1920 Mr. and Mrs. Land mov­ ed to Alexanderia, British Colum­ bia, where they lived until Mr. Land's death in 1935. Surviving are two daughters Myrtle and Naomi; six sons, Al­ bert, Ralph, Leslie, Chester, Hom­ er and Raymond, and three sis­ ters, Mrs. Anna Doolittle and Mrs. Minnie Wagner of Dorena and Mrs. Rebecca Chapman of Eugene and three brothers. Grant, Arthur and Chas. Bales of Do­ rena. ORIGINAL AIR-WOVEN DORENA GRANGE HAS IN­ TERESTING MEETING. A good attendance was regis­ tered at the Dorena grange ses­ sion last Thursday. The FFA boys of the Cottage Grove high school, under the direction of Henry Wil­ liamson. presented a program pre­ ceding the grange meeting. Arthur Browm. state grange deputy, was present and addressed TUFTLESS MATTRESS A gisnt pillow for your body! By ths sxdusivs Sealy "Alr-Wesv/* Formerly $42.50 luq« enough to fill • «mall room, aad Now W* year« of Mnnc«> BRESSLER’S “Your Home Should Come First” Kelly’s cut Rate Drugs 1-lb. Velvet or P. A.... .... 15-oz. tins Velvet or P. A Camels, Luckys, Chesterfields $1.15 Carton $1.20 Sal Hepática.......... ... 98c $1.35 Lydia Pinkham $1.00 1 Pint Nor. Cod Liver Oil... 89c 75c Listerine............ .... ....... 59c $1.00 Hines Cream___ 35c Pond’s Cold Cream 75c Fitch Shampoo___ 50c Ungentine ---____ 89c 40c Dr. West Tooth Paste... 33c 50c Milk Mag. Tooth Paste 39c 59c Penatro Rub 35c and 60c 42c 50c Purola Nose Drops..... 39c Tampax ... ......... ... M.D, Sanitary Napkins 500 Cleaning Tissues... 50c Red-E-Aid Cough Rem 23c 25c Red-E-Aid Anti acid Po 13c 25c Red-E-Aid Cold Cap Trade at a Drug Store for Safety and Satisfaction