Image provided by: Cottage Grove Museum; Cottage Grove, OR
About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (Sept. 21, 1939)
THE SENTINEL. COTTAGE GROVE. OREGON Established 1889. Published Every Thursday at 25 North Sixth Street. W. c. MARTIN .................................Editor-Publisher SUBSCRIPTION RATES (Cash in Advance) Ilas New Hobby In Lane-Douglas Counties Outside Lane-Douglas Counties Steve Gasper of the Red Boot One Year $1.50 One Year $2 00 Shoe shop has a hobby with little Six Months ......... ............ ................. 80 Six Months ... 1.25 hornet Three Months ................................. 50 Throe Months ..................................65 'competition. He gathers Foreign rate 50 cents year additional. No subscription accepted for nests and so far has had little trouble in locating plenty of less than three months. nests. He takes hornet nests much in the same manner that beemen rob bees and so far has been stung only once and that's when a hornet crawled under his polo shirt and was mashed. Oregon hornets are more like bees he says. If you want to see real hor nets go back to Pennsylvania where they grow to lx* an inch FEWER SCHOOL CHILDREN and a half long. There the hornet hits you like a bullet ami really Reports from schools in larger centers as well as in many hurts. (Warr errore dentine! Here and There THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 21. 1939 Preview 1940 Pontiac At Martin Motors Local motorists interested in viewing new model cars can have an opportunity in seeing what the 1940 Pontiac looks like in a s | h >- vial preview of the new models by the Martin Motor.Co. at 125 north 9th street. Mr. Martin has on dis- play a Pontiac Deluxe six sedan. The preview is by special ar- rangement and is a few weeks in advance of the regular showing of the new models usually held about the middle of next month. Che public is cordially invlttsl to view the 1940 model. See the an- nouncement of the Martin Motor IV in this issue. correspondent for the London Daily Express, "I Lost My Eng Getting Ready for Birthday- lish Accent." He tells of his visit to Munich at the time of the Anniversary 1938 pact. No butter was served in the hotel dining room. The' Bill Haldeman has turned car bread was synthetic. (“After eating a sandwich I felt as penter the last few days getting though I had been through a sandstorm.”) He managed to get ready for the anniversary of Bill's an orange, but it was served in a velvet-lined box and cost Super Market to be the latter $1.50. Only shirts he could buy were rough, gritty, as synthetic part of next week. It promises to be a big event. as the sawdust bread. On the other hand, for those who want to know how things N. J. Nelson Jr. generously do may he for us if this country becomes involved in the war, an nated the Sentinel publisher the of a new cob pipe, and took other book just published (“What Will Happen and What to price 1 the old pipe, which was old Do When War Comes”) is a very informative document. Five , enough to walk into custody. He experienced American newspapermen have set down their con- I has promised to remove the rust the post office sign, if we ception of what will happen to your property, your job, your from 1 remove the plaster from business and, 1 inally. your life. It is a grim picture they por- would ' tray, but nevertheless a capable analysis of probabilities. J the Sentinel sign. Who said Cot tage Grove pride ? had no World Supply of Radium Up to 1929 the world had produced 300 grams of radium. Since that time new supplies of ore have been discovered making the world total in 1936 over 600 grams. Of this amount 180 grams came from Utah. No Taxes Here Helgoland *Holy Land), Germany's rock tourist island in the North sea, is not only exempt from German taxes, but tourists there can buy American cigarettes. Havana ci gars, French wines and English goods free of customs duty charges. largest Military School 1 as A. and M. college is called - gest military school in the . Stop-Wear Lubrication Triton Motor Oil Union 76 Gasoline Tires and Batteries HERB ADAMS SERVICE STATION 522 Fifth St., on Highway WINTER COMING Let us reline your heaters, circulators and cook stoves and make them like new. We make sawdust burners to order. COTTAGE GROVE FOUNDRY Phone 181J Harry Rentle Bicycle, Key and Gun Work Lawn Mowers Sharpened Nichols Insurance Service Representing State Farm Insurance Companies 16 South Sixth Street SAN FRANCISCO'S BEST CLIMATE IS RIGHT NOW! Warm sunny days and clear nights are an autumn tradition by the Golden Gate. Better plan to make your World’s Fair trip now, during the balmy Indian Summer season. GO BY TRAIN Hop aboard a Southern Pacific train, and relax while the engineer drives you safe ly and swiftly to San Fran cisco. Ask your S. P. Agent about the low fares now in effect. Southern Pacific S«e local S.P. agent or write J. A. ORMANDY, Gtn. Pat*. Agtnt, 622 Pacific Building, Portland, Oregon Rear Kent's Drug Store io 1MB wm FOUR BIG DAYS September 21, 22, 23, 24 both ('ducal ional and interest in Lions will often lie in the middle of one of the park's roads, apparent- ly oblivious of an automobile's preach Wh feet away, the anima) will rise calm ly. stretch Itself and saunter off the r >ad. to lie drwn once more. ami other entertain- t u rp on Ke turned A Form ' ,i fisherman who lost hi. harpoon recently when it broke ofl in a 300-pound swordfish, was sur prised to learn that George Engel found it while dressing the rtsh in his market at New Britain. Conn. Tin- harpoon had sunk deeply into the flesh and was covered over when 'he wound healer! Lane ( ’omit \ Eair Hoard Allan Wheeler, Manager. Now s the Time to Stock Up municipal Hunter Sneed of the Electrical World presents an interest Governor Chas. Sprague will ing synopsis of what people will and won’t do: address the October 27th meeting What People Will Do of the Willamette Valley Lum 1. Follow a habit until it hurts. bermen's association at Eugene, 2. Accept beliefs ready-made and stick to them until the it was learned yesterday. cows come home. Egg Shortage 3. Follow leaders blindly, eyes shut and mouths wide open. Because most of the local egg 4. Yield to suggestion when flattered. production is shipped out and be 5. \\ ork hard to establish their superiority. cause the hens are probably rest 6. Find their greatest interest in their own emotional ing from a hard summer’s work, grocerymen were having some “kicks.” trouble in securing eggs for the 7. Love low prices and at the same time dislike economy. retail trade here yesterday. 8. Glorify the past and discount the future. What People Won’t Do ■Noblesse Oblige* 1. Look far beyond their own sett-interest. The phrase ‘‘noblesse oblige” is often used to denote the obligation 2. Accept changes without some resentment. of honorable and generous behavior 3. Remember the past. ^Pight for thing, when they ran find something to fight against. obliges.” 5. Dare to be different from the crowd, unless those dif ferences are recognized as being superior virtues. 6. Exert themselves beyond the line of least resistance, ex cept under high emotion. 7. Act. even in important matters, unless promptly follow ed up. We Guarantee Each Job Square Deal Barber Shop Bookkeeping Outfits. Sentinel. THINGS TO WATCH FOK smaller centers show there are few»^* pupils attending school Archery Real Sport. Nation-wide contest by a large this year than last which brings up Hie subject as to whether Archery is really coming into ty|x‘w liter manufacturer to find the American nation has reached tiie peak in its population and its own or maybe it's just a fad a word to replace the word "port whether we shall witness a gradual declini* in population num Anyway then* are lots of people able” in denoting a home type bers. If the peak ot population has been reached, it has come practicing archery around hero writer. . . Softer frankfurter cas and l<x*al stores are offering nreh- ings as result of new tenderizing sooner than most statisticians figured. cry equipment, whereby a pineapple * Perhaps good process Much ot the wealth of the nation is based on the gradual marksmen will soon develop solution is sprayed on the meat. . increase in population, increasing population meant more de enough so ------ _ skill — that ---- they , will Intended for home kitchen use. a mand for property, more homes anil a greater domestic market leave their guns lx*hind when they new pressure cooker which can tor the articles sold. Rising demand for city property and farm go deer hunting and take the bow stew chickens in 40 minutes. I mh I beef in a half hour and vegetables property created a rising value and greater potential wealth, and arrow. in one-fifth ordinary time it created not because of the ability of the individual, but because cooks at 15 |M)tmds steam pres Fall Coloring of a condition over which he had no control. Fall coloring has begun to ap sure on very little heat and with Greatest decline in birth rate has occurred among the mod pear in the woods and within an little water. . . Vitamin lolly-po|M erate to well to do people. Or to put it another way the great other two weeks should be show for parents whose children object taking <*od liver oil one jx»p est decline of births has occurred among those with the greatest ing up well in the hills. Vine to maple and like materials are is said to be equivalent to the ability and most able to afford a family. The matter of "keeping showing up well. A drive up tbe vitamins A and I) contained in a up the birth rate has been left to the |x»orer classes and to per Bohemia way shortly after the half-teasp<x>n of cod liver oil. petuate the future of the nation. The question naturally arises first of October should be worth Lions Arc RoM Prat as to what kind of a country we shall have fifty to sixty years your time. ’• ’• <*ut f r I "in Africa's from now. Turkey Growing Kruger National park is the equivz Another angle is that we must look for other fields to pio Local turkey growers should be ! '«..ich out for cattle" in neer which might mean a change in methods of living since we ready for the Thanksgiving sea the United States. While lions are can no longer hope to reap great wealth from real estate and son this year. In Benton Schrenk’s no danger to travelers, the auto expanding market demands, if and when an actual decline oc- flock there are gobblers now that mobiles of tourists can be a real will weigh in excess of eighteen danger to the animal.*: curs. pounds. Other growers probably have as heavy birds. Raisers ex FACTS AND FORECAST pect to add about a pound per week to each bird be tween now market time. In the mean Revealing glimpse of the way things really are with the and time they'll be scooping the feed people of Germany, uncensored, is found in the just-published to the flocks at in average of book by C. V. R. Thompson, noted English writer who is I’. S. about a pound per day. Bravera liicrrailii« Beavers were once plentiful from the Rio Grande north to the sub arctic timber-line In 1926 it was estimated that the entire beaver population of the United States had shrunk to about 200.(MM) reports the National Wildlife federation There has been a remarkable increase in the past 20 years, und heaver trap ping is now permitted In h number "f states, to keep the population within the limits of the natural food Crackers Délites Salted Wafers 2 pound box 15c Peanut Butter Real Roast pound jar 23c Toilet Tissue Real Silk 3 roiis 1 Oc Del Monte Orange Juice Tuna Finer Flavor No. y2 Tin . .. 19c Large Tin Crescent Coffee Has the Flavor Pound Tin....... Jello Pudding Broom Daisy Kitchen 29c Each Chocolate, Butterscotch, Vanilla Cleanser Package Lighthouse 3 ‘¡ns.............. IOC Picnic Hams Mild Sugar Cured Pound 16c 25c Quaker Oats Quick Cooking Large pkg 19c Oranges Sweet Juicy '><■«■" 15c Crisp White Stnlk Celery S w eet Spuds i«* 3 |b«-10c BILL'S 5UPER MARKET THE GROVES THRIFTY SHOPPING CENTER " PHONE 40 INDEPENDENTLY OWNED FREE DELIVERY