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About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (June 8, 1939)
THURSDAY, JUNE H, 193» THE SENTINEL. COTTAGE GROVE. OREGON LEGAL NOTICE TO CREDITORS Notice is hereby given that the County Court of Lane County, Oregon, on the 9th day of May, 1939, appointed H. O. Jackson. Administrator of the estate of Della Garoutte, Deceased, in Lane County, Oregon. All persons hav ing claims against said estate are required to present them, duly verified, with the proper vouch ers, as by law required, to said administrator, at the law office of Alta King, 613 Main Street. Cot tage Grove, Oregon, within six months from the date of the first publication of this notice. The date of first publication being May 11th, 1939 H. O. JACKSON. ALTA KING, Administrator Attorney 39-5t-43 NOTICE OF ANNUAL SCHOOL MEETING NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the legal voters of School Dis trict No. 45, of Lane County, State of Oregon, that the ANNU AL SCHOOL MEETING of said district will be held at auditorium of High School Building; to be gin at the hour of two o'clock p. m. on the third Monday of June, being the 19th day of June, A. D. 1939. This meeting is called for the purpose of electing one director to serve three years and the transaction of business usual at such meeting. Election shall be by ballot, the polls closing at 7:00 p. m. Dated this 25th day of May, 1939. ATTEST: WORTH HARVEY. District Clerk. VINAL T. RANDALL, Chairman Board of Directors. NOTICE TO CREDITORS NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN That the undersigned has been appointed by the County Court of Lane County, State of Oregon, Executor of the Last Will and Testament of MARTHA A. SHORTRIDGE, deceased, by an order bearing date the 7th day of June, 1939. All persons having claims against the estate of^said MAR THA A. SHORTRIDGE, deceas ed, are hereby notified and re quired to present the same duly verified to the undersigned at the law office of HERBERT W. LOM BARD, First National Bank Building, Cottage Grove. Lane County, State of Oregon, on or before six months from the date of the first publication of this no tice. Date of first publication June 8, 1939. Date of last publication July 6. 1939. E. VERN SHORTRIDGE, Executor Last Will and Testament of MARTHA A SHORTRIDGE, De ceased. HERBERT W. LOMBARD. Attorney for Executor 43-5t-47 school gymnasium. Cottage Grove, Oregon, in said Union High School District No. 14 on the 26th day of June, 1939, between the hours of 2:00 o’clock P. M. and 7:00 o’clock P. M for the purpose of electing five directors to con- stitute the union high school Fascinating * [ i board, in accordance with the pro Tales of tMaiwum ! visions of Section 35-3726, Oregon MU. H Code 1935 Supplement, and for ; Lost Mines the further purpose of voting on UsxzxxxxzxxxxxxxzxxxncoM the question of adding School District No. 48 to Union High; INTO THIN AIR School District No. 14, Lane County, Oregon, for high school purposes only, the same to take v U H AT became of U m buckskin * ’ bags of gold that George A. effect immediately. Dated this 8th day of June, uicksou buried in th« corner of hie abint 1939. CHARLES BEIDLER, Chair Jackson has been dead for many man. Board of Directors. rears, and if anyone elee who Union High School District knows the secret Is alive, he has No. 14, Lane Cbunty, Ore kept bls knowledge carefully bld- , gon. Jen. Attest: Jackson himself was a man of WORTH HARVEY. Clerk. prominence. It was he who, on De Union High School District, cember 31, ISM, went up Clear No. 14. Lane County. Ore Creek alone (his two companions gon. 43-3t-45 GOLDEN PHANTOMS Ram Want Ma arm M accaptad at U m rata of 1 ewit par word for flret toaartloa alt* aUnlmum of S& canta for each M or three Umea at tunas rate of Hret ta- terUoa. If paid tn advanoa. Casto should accompany your order to Insure taaerttoa. M osots extra MU bo ohargod for Keyed ada. Card of thanks. M oaota for 10 ttnee Obituaries (not death aoUceel will be pub lished at legal rate of » cents per line ForSale _ _ FOR SALE OR TRADE —Bone dry block wood. Cash, any kind of stock or what have you. Angelo Perini, B. B. Route. 41-3tp-43 MILL WOOD: Good heavy, old growth slab and edgings, the fin est wood there is. Also heavy 16 inch block. 2-ft. block, nubbs and planer ends mostly 2 in. Row River Fuel Co., Owen & Kelly. Phone 18F6 or 10F2 or leave or ders at Wanker's Service Sta tion. 42-2tp-43 FOR SALE—1924 Ford model T touring car, run 23,000 miles. Parts of car almost good as new. Good rubber. F. L. Hockett, Knox Hill.42-3tp-44 SHAKES—No. 1 24-in. old growth $5.00 M, count. Albert Teague, Drain, Oregon, Smith River Road. 43-lp FOR SALE—O. I. C. weaner pigs, 6 weeks old. Bert C. Myers, Disston route, phone 16F24. ____________________ 43-ltp WHITE CHERRIES, l^c per pound, you pick. Bring contain ers. Also have some fine weaner pigs for sale. M. P. Olsen. Sagi naw._______________________43-ltp For Re^ FOR RENT — Small, furnished house. $12.00 per month. 707 North 10th. Phone 184R. 43-ltp j FOR RENT—Furnished house in excellent condition. Call 86L or 133R. Frances Nichols.43-ltc FOR RENT — Furnished house. 1329 West Main Street. 43-ltp — NOTICE OF ANNUAL SCHOOL FOR RENT — Strictly modern MEETING house. Apply to 1133 Adams street. 43-ltp NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN To the legal voters of Union High FURNISHED ROOMS FOR rent by the day, week or the School District No. 14, Lane County, State of Oregon that an month. Mrs. A. W. Kime, 1149 43-ltp annual school meeting and elec- West Main St. tion will be held at the high Wanted____________ Professional Cards ___ DENTISTS DR. W. E. LEBO W—Dentistry -Na 1 Omer Apartments Cottage Grove, Ore. Phone 35 DR. C. H. KIME, Dentist—Of fice in First National Bank Building. Phone 10. Cottage Grove, Oregon.___________ PHYSICIANS H. AXLEY, Physician and Sur geon— Evenings by appoint ment Over Kern’s for Drugs. Cottage Grove, Oregon. DR. G. L. EARL, Physician and Surgeon — General Practice. First National Bank building. Cottage Grove, Oregon.___ h T e . SHUEY — Physician A Surgeon. Over Kern’s Drug Store, Cottage Grove, Oregon. DR. J. W. TARR, Naturopatic Physician. General practice. Office at 117 South 3rd St, phone 129-R. ATTORNEYS HERBERT W. LOMBARD, At torney at Law. First Nation al Bank building, Cottage Grove, Oregon. Phone 94. ALTA KING — Lawyer, 613 Main street. Office phone 254J; Res. phone, 28F31, Cottage Grove, Ore. J. E. YOUNG, Attorney at Law —J • n e s Building, Cottage Grove, Oregon. TITLE ABSTRACT COM PANY OF EUGENE, Fred G. Stickles, Pres. "Real Title Service.” 881 Oak Street, Eugene, Oregon. LADY WANTS CLERKING or restaurant work. Good references. Please call Mr. Hugh McBride, phone 19. 43-ltp WANTED — One or two little calves, any kind. State price. Mrs. Florence Quaglia, Cottage Grove, Ore., Disston Rte. 43-ltp Miscellaneous_______ NOW IS THE TIME to order Corvallis strawberries, the best for canning, and to buy red clover seed. Phone 17F11. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Trunnell.^_______ 41-3tp-43 BOARD, ROOM AND LAUNDRY $25.00 per month. Mrs. Dan Clasby, 1142 Birch avenue, Cot tage Grove, Oregon. 43-ltp LOST — Bronze American Legion Auxiliary school award pin Fri day night at the Armory or on Main St. Phone 245R. 43-ltc SEE H. N. TRAXLER for real estate, farms and exchanges. Creswell, Oregon. 43-4tp-46 LOST: Black and white Springer Spaniel pup, 4 months old. Re-1 ward. Phone 241. 43-ltc "My Skin W m Full of Pimple« and Blemishes from Constipation” nays Verna Schlepp: "Sine« using Ad- lerlka the pimples are gone. My akin la amooth and Kiowa with health." Adlerlka washes BOTH bowels, and relieves con stipation that so often aggravates a bad complexion. Cottage Grove Pharmacy. had gone after a band of elk), found hot springs, camped at the place and a few days later panned gold in a tin cup and made the first gold discovery of Importance in Colorado. The place was the pres- sent town of Idaho Springs, where mines still operate and gold Is still to be taken from the ground. It was this man who went to Middle park In 1867 to prospect for more of the precious metal. He and his comi>anlon on the trip found gold In Buffalo park, but they also found unfriendly Indians and little or no water, so they drifted north along the top of the range. Four or five miles from Rabbit Ear peak they found gold again In a little creek, and by traveling upstream they came to a bar that held con siderable value. This was what they wanted. After doing some work at the loca tion they went to Georgetown and organized a party of ten men, re turning to the bar in the spring of 1868. Now they built a cabin and a cor ral, for ten men needed something in» the way of comfort, and conven ience if they were to devote their time to taking out gold. They worked pretty steadily, but Jack- son took a little time out for whimsy, and carved his name on a tree at the corner of the cabin. After a while $10,000 In gold dust, packed in buckskin bags, lay hidden below the earth In a corner of the cabin. That meant a thousand dol lars apiece—not very much as for tunes went, but still a neat start. And the CoIorow and a hundred lively Ctes decided to discourage the white men. They dropped In on an unfriendly call, and when they departed three men lay dead and the rest did not drag their feet as they headed for Georgetown. In fact, the seven who survived, with the exception of Jackson, seemed to fee) that the peaceful East held a lure that surpassed that of the golden phantom and shortly left Colorado. Jackson, being somewhat accus tomed to such turns of luck, bad no idea of leaving the gold In that deserted cabin. He told a friend about the cache, and the two start ed out to get It, but heavy snow turned them back and they were forced to delay the trip. The next spring, they planned, would see them at the cabin, digging up the gold. But that winter Jackson pulled his gun barrel-first out of a wagon, and the accidental dis charge of the weapon caused bls death. Fortunately, his friend knew the location of the cabin. He shared the knowledge with another man, and spring saw them up in the wild country where Jackson had found the gold. On Walton creek, near where the old Steamboat road crossed, they found the cabin and the corral. They also found the 1 tree with Jackson’s name carved on it. This was the place, without a doubt. And so they dug in the corner of the cabin, among the rubbish which remained as souvenirs of the ten energetic miners. They dug In the other corners, too, and in the cor ral, and outside, and by the tree. Gold does not vanish Into thin air—unless some one aids It in its disappearing act. But who had been there since Colorow and his band? Just another mystery to add to the many strange happenings which make dramatic the history of the West! Designation of Prince of Church Cardinal is the designation of a prince of the church. The word comes from the color of the hat be stowed by the pope when the digni tary is created a cardinal The col lege of cardinals elects the pope. । It is limited to seventy—six cardinal bishops, fifty cardinal priests, and fourteen cardinal deacons. Europeans Easily Taken In Much of Europe was so credulous, j during the Middle ages, says Col lier’s Weekly, that tricksters, spe cializing in the sale of fake relics, Will be paid by the manufactureri were known to have sold thousands little empty boxes supposed to for any Com GREAT CHRISTO of contain such things as a finger of | PHER POSITIVE Coro Cure can not remove. Also removes Warts the Holy Ghost, rays from the Star and Callouses. 35c at Kern’s for of Bethlehem and peals from the bells of Solomon’s Temple. Drugs. $25.00 Reward ODDITIES AT THE FAIR NEW YORK - Her, art a few oj th« strikinyly unusual things visitors will find at ths New York World's Fair 1939: A parachute tower from which visitors may "bail out" at an elevation of 250 feet and be sure of a “happy landing." Revolving “magic carpets" from which you may look down as from a height of two miles upon "The City of Tomorrow" inside the 200-foot Pensphere A “Tree of Life" carved from the trunk and branches of an elm planted in Connecticut 'n 1781 by Revolutionary War prisoners “Steve Brodie” jumping six times a day from a reproduc tion of the Brooklyn Bridge. • • • The most valuable wheat field for its size in the world in full growth Five million dollars worth of diamonds, rubies, emeralds and other gems in one glittering display. Thesteel-walled bathysphere in which descent has been made miles down in the black depths of the ocean "Rocket gun” by which pas sengers will be shot to the moon, or Mars some day—perhaps. The model of a human eye so large visitors may enter it and look out upon the Fair’s busy scene just as if the eye were do ing the looking. • • • Two hundred blooded cows being milked daily on a re volving platform. An orange grove transplanted intact all the way from Florida Automobiles with living driv ers in hair-raising collisions and flying somersaults. The largest opal in the world. An oil well in operation with real drillers in the “cast." The largest mode) railroad ever constructed. Puppets 14 feet tall drama tizing the contents of the fa miliar bathroom medicine cabi net Displays of rare orchids, re newed every three days by plants flown to the Fair from Venezuela. The tremendous discharge of 10,000,000 volts of man-made lightning. A Brazilian exhibit building erected on stilts. A floor made of cotton. Kings of the Forest Mahogany trees are giants of the forest; they grow to 150 feet In height and range from three to sev en feet In diameter. The first limb may be 60 to 80 feet above the ground. Hannibal Hamlin. Vice President Hannibal Hamlin of Maine was elected Vice President of the Unit ed States in Abraham Lincoln’s ad- mlnistrntMn and served from March 4. 1861. to March 3, 1865. Ricksha runners from South Africa six and a half feet tall and clad mostly In feathers, horns and beads. A waterfall cascading from the high roof of a building. Mural paintings that change their colors while you’re look ing at them. Fireworks set to music in re lated patterns of color and light A city entirely populated by midgets. An automobile speedway half a mile long on ‘.op of an exhibit building. Mighty snowstoi ms sweeping down out of a clear Spring sky bUO ROOMS • SINSIBIE RATES A building turned Inside out with its roofbeams on the out side. Moving c h a i r s traveling around in a building so visitors won't have U walk. A flight to Venui so real you'll swear you've been there and met the folks. The tallest mural paintings in the world A model of New . ork City so large that the Empire State Building is reproduced 23 feet tall. A sphere 200 feet in diameter seeming to revolve on jets of water, like the little silver ball in the shooting-gallery. A fountain that sings. Paintings that have to be de stroyed every night and done all over again next morning A "Fountain of the Atom." with electrons and protons dancing around a pulsating shaft of light SEE BOTH FAIRS 5J U TRir FOR $ fl ft ROUND ONLY in chair car» and coach«* Here's the chance of a lifetime to see the U.S. at low cost. *135.00 ROUNDTRIP Monkeys First Smokers Monkeys often imitate men. but when it comes to smoking it seems that Englishmen took after mon keys. At Cawdor castle, the Scot tish stronghold supposed to be the scene of Shakespeare's Macbeth, there Is an old carving dating from before the introduction of tobacco to England, depicting monkeys smoking pipes. Weal Indian Mahogany West Indian mahogany was the first discovered and the first used in England and in the American col onies. Today Cuba supplies com mercial quantities while lesser amounts are produced In Santo Do mingo. The West Indian mahogany is generally held to be the finest of the mahoganies, being heavier, fine textured and of beautiful color and | figure. It is used principally in making reproductions of Eighteenth Chautauqua Salute The Chautauqua salute was at century chairs. one time widely used as a substitute Man Can Stand Temperatures for applause in greeting speakers. Humans can endure and live on In giving the salute the audience stood, waving handkerchiefs held either end of a 220-degree spread of temperature. high In the air. ta Standard PidMiana. êtes barth Southern Pacific See local IP aisat ar «nila J. A. OKMANDY. Paha Âf«. Pic IRe Ballding. Portland. Oragoa THE NEW 'PEEDi/NS CORONAS V m 5 Three models: Silent Corona stands out in design...construction performance. The all com plete portable tor as little as Sl OOaweek.Come inandtryit ... Sterling... Stand ard. Free touch-typ- with all CorotiMk The Cottage Grove Sentinel Distinctive Printing and Quality Office Supplies Cost No More at The Sentinel Office Call 159 and a representative will gladly call at your place of business to discuss what you may need.