Image provided by: Cottage Grove Museum; Cottage Grove, OR
About The Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Oregon) 1922-current | View Entire Issue (May 9, 1940)
T l l l ’H SDA Y, MAY », liMO TH E S E N T IN E L . CO TTAG E G RO VE, OREGON MIMN TRUNNELL FIJCDGED FIELD AUDITOR IN EUGENE UTieaf Crop Loss OREGON STATE COLLEGE. J. II. Mace, field auditor for the Unemployment Compenaa« COLOR PORTRAITS OF STARS BEING GIVEN AWAY Procedure Given of Corvallis. May 8. Ilene Trunnell State tian Commission, will be In Cottage Grave, sophomore In week to mnsult with home cranonilcs, was one of the gene this of or work« four women pledged to Mu Beta era with regard four to the new nqsirt- Beta, local professional society In Ing To Insured Grower 4-H * and imyrall records. club work which carries grade While In this vicinity Mr. Mace Eu employers ir o n forms 5 / Full color 8 x 1 0 portraits of Hollywood's outstanding celebrities with their life stories on the back are being given away through Richfield stations in connection with major motion picture studios. Purported to be the finest collection of its kind ever made available to the public, these color portraits are being issued in Prosperity Quiz Closes May 15th rapid succession, starting with Tyrone Power, Cary Grant. Alice Faye and following with a sequence of the motion picture industry's most famous stars. Ac cording to Richfield executives, the supply of each portrait is necessarily limited. Saginaw Graduation exercises were held for the 8th grade class at the Sagi- new grade school on May 2nd at 8.00 p. m. The stage was decorat with class colors of blue and Appointment and acceptance of ed gold. class motto. “Not Eve the roles of Grand Prize Judges ning, The But Dawn,” was of gold let for the final competition of the ters background and bor Columbia Empire Industries 1940 dered on by blue red The graduates Prosperity Quiz was announced were: Vivian roses. Pollock. Velma Pol today by Geo. L. Baker, manager lock, Francis Queener Jimmy of the organization. In order of Stewart. The program and was as fol acceptance, the area-wide judges lows: Class history, class are Rex Putnam, superintendent class will, class poem and song, class of public instruction for the state prophecy. T h e teacher. Frank of Oregon; the Honorable Joseph Clark, gave a short speech and the K. Carson Jr., mayor of the city were presented by Mrs. of Portland, and Mrs. C. S. Jack- diplomas Dora Stewart. There were two son of the Oregon Journal, and a plays. “Who's Who in the Home.” noted civic and social leader. and “He Cbuldn’t Say No.” Vivian “The unqualified and enthusias and Velma sang a song. “Mexicala tic acceptance of these judges, Rose.” A large crowd attended. knowing that the judging will take The Friendly Neighbors club hours of their valuable time, is sponsored a picnic for the grade certainly indicative of the value school children parents. May and interest such civic leaders 3rd. A May Day and program place upon the efforts of the Co The 1st and 2nd grades followed. gave a lumbia Empire Industries." said folk dance. Next followed the Mr. Baker. “Likewise, the mem crowning of the queen. The girls bers of the organization are deep dressed in red and white aprons ly grateful to the district judges and the boys with either for Cottage Grove for the inter a and red caps or white streamer marched est and effort they will have to from the front of the school house expend in judging the district en to the throne. The six-year-old tries." queen, Carol Rand, had on a white Thg contest closes in this dis dress with a red train. The train- trict May 15th, and all entries bearer was Jimmy Krebser. Fran must be turned into this news cis Queener the queen paper before midnight of that with a wreath crowned of red roses. Next date. District judges will announce was a folk dance, drill and May the district winners in this news pole dance. paper on May 22nd. and all dis Lynette Forcier of Eugene spent trict prize-winning entries will be the week end with her grandpar forwarded to the grand prize con Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Benston. test at once. Grand prize winners ents. Mrs. Ralph Hill left for Port will be announced June 5th. land Friday to spend a couple of Grand prizes to be awarded are weeks $200.00 in cash; a glamorous tives. visiting friends and rela-i Fashion-Flow bedroom suite: an son was born last week to exterior house paint job up to a Mr. A and Jay Burleson. cost of $125.00, with materials for Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Brown and a new roof; an automatic electric son of Walton Clyde spent Sunday at hot-water tank; a 1940 Princess Ed Brown home. kitchen range; and a week’s va the Mrs. Ed Haney of Wendling cation for the family at The spent several days last week with Tides, Seaside, Oregon. her mother, Mrs. Ray Stewart. Mrs. Myrtle Pollock spent Sat UNU SU AL DISEASE FO UND urday and Sunday with a sister, Mrs. Woods, at Sutherlin. A broth IN FO XES er, who was visiting there from Pass, brought Mrs. Pollock Dr. W. H. Lytle, chief veterinar Grants home Sunday and remain ian of the state department of ed for a short evening visit. agriculture, last week reported Fern Fry of Veneta spent the finding canine leptospirosis in week with Iris Montieth. foxes at a Willamette valley fur Mrs. end Stigers Curtin spent farm. This is the first time the several days this of week disease has been found in Oregon daughter, Mrs. Ed Brown. with a and one of the few times it has Raymond Stewart, who had been found in the United States. been the hospital in Eugene the It is prevalent in some European past in two months, came home countries. The leptospirosis is transmit- Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. L. Clark and son able to humans, and for this rea Frank this week to Milton son Dr. Lytle urges that veterin where moved they will spend the sum arians and others handling dogs or mer. Frank Clark has been re foxes be on the lookout for it. elected to teach school here again Both animals and humans a t this fall. tacked by the disease often show and Mrs. Edward Krebser pronounced jaundice -like symp of Mr. Cottage Grove were supper toms, and in some instances there guests Friday evening at the Low have been influenza-like symptoms ell Benston home. in humans. It is known as Weil’s disease in humans. In some types,, For Ladle* Only human mortality has been report A trout stream for women anglers ed from 10 to 25 per cent. only has been set aside in western North Carolina. S o m e P e o p le D o u b t T h is In the year 1000, when most Euro peans expected the end of the world, the Norsemen discovered a new world—America FO R ST A T E «pM SH E R M A N ’S HEAVEN" P is the title of a current man* zine article by Rex Beach and, for once, a title tells the story. Mr. Beach writes of the fishing and hunting camps in Western Ontario and tells in particular, in May Cosmopolitan, of a spectacu lar stunt of transplanting as per formed by one Mike Anent in the country. SUBTERRANEAN CLOVER TO BE TRIED MYRTLE CREEK — Testa of various strains of subterranean clover and two of the new lotus a * legumes will he made this sum mer on the J. J. Eppinger farm near here, as the result of plant ings made by Eppinger in cooper ation with County Agent J. R. Parker. Subterranean clover will be tried out both on irrigated and non-irrigated land. The lotus plantings were made on plots that will be irrigated. Subterranean clover is an annual clover but It has the peculiar faculty of renew ing itself by putting Its own seed in the ground for germination the next year. Stems of the clover Rex Beach bearing the seed work themselves A few years ago Mike Anent procured a shipment of full-grown into the ground before the seed black bass and placed them in a [ hx I s mature. lake near Sioux Lookout, just to see what would happen. Nothing but muskellunge and gray trout had ever lived in those waters, but fishermen are ever hopeful. Of the shipment, Mr. Anent man aged to salvage one hundred and thirty-seven fish by heroic methods in a •Teverse-english” fish’ life saving and prayerful thinking. He drew them back and forth in the water, forcing oxygen in their gills. He held smelling salts under their T h is noses. At any rate, the one hund red and thirty-seven went to live B e a u tifu l E d itio n in the lake. Allowing for a reason able lapse of time and other con siderations, Mr. Anent returned to the lake and found, to his delight, that the obliging one hundred and thirty-seven had repaid his loving care with thousands of little exiles. At the time of writing the story, Mr. Beach announces there were millions of black bass in the lake and that the largest taken had run eight pounds. Fisherman’s heaven? z Y our i Congressman James W . TREASURER M OTT H e is one o f the recognized leaden o f the National House o f Representatives. H e is at his post in Washing ton N O W protecting Y O U R interests. H e has placed the First Con gressional District o f Oregon in the most commanding posi tion it has ever occupied, and has obtained fo r it more ben eficial legislation than it has ever received before. Republican Candidate for D istrict A ttorney Prim aries M ay 17, 1940 LESLIE M. SCOTT Able Trial Lowyer “An All Oregon M an” Republican Primaries May 17, 1940 A d paid lo r by Soon fo r T reee urer C o m m itte e . and high school Interests in club work Into college. Membership Is restricted to upperclassmen and gradual(• students selected on the I mis I s of activity In college 4-11, leadership, scholastic rating and the campus 4-11 roll call covering at least a year nnd a half, Katherine Wright of Creswell, senior in secretarial science, was one of 25 women pledged to Kappa Delta 1*1. national honor society for graduate students and upper classmen In education, Inst week. Members of this organization are chosen on a basis of scholarship and attributes that make a suc cessful teacher. will make headquarters nt the local employment office on West Sixth street across from the old |M*st<iffli*e. TRAFFIC FINES IN EUGENE Chester Renrlck, Disston route, was fined $25.00 by u Eugene jus tice of the pence for failure to bring his ear to a full stop before entering a main traveled nlghwav Saturday. The fine was sus|M*niled. Diner; “I say, waiter, the flow- era on this table are artificial, aren't they?” • Walter: "Yes, sir. That's the worst of running a vegcterlnn Typewriter nnd adding machine restaurant. If we use real flow ribbons, all makes of machines at ers, the customers cut them.”— Sentinel office. 21-tfx l'yjwi Graphic. Woman Always Remembers the Man Who Never Forgets Sunday, May 12 Is Mother’s Day Remember Mother, Wife, Grandmother or Some One’s Mother With * Whitman’s, Brown & Haley or Canter bury Chocolates. * Yardley’s Old Spice, Evening in Paris Toilet Sets. * Leather Hand Bags, Fitted Cases, Sta tionery, Fountain Pens, Radios, Porch Chairs, Etc. Mother’s Day Greeting Cards 5c to 25c C o tta g e G r o v e P h arm acy B R O W N ’S •’C U T -R A T E " D R U G STORE TO PAU) UP OR NEW SUBSCRIBERS OE THE SENTINEL O f The (« fi Í Í M ’ l a only HOLY BIBLE fTith F am ily R e g iste r, M aps, Illustrations, Aids . •. FOR $ Í JW ONLY $2.50 With Sentinel 1 Yeal* SCOTT R eese W in g a r d Paid Adv, 137 Bass 'Survivors* Multiply Into Millions Oregon farmers who have taken out federal crop Insurance on their wheat crop were reminded this week by the state AAA office in Corvallis to notify their county conservation offices immediately if their fields become damaged. The county office will then send a crop insurance adjustor to Inspect the damaged wheat. If the adjustor reports a small or |>artial loss, due to drought, storm, insects, or other insurable causes, adjustment will be made after harvest. If be reports total or sulistnnttally total loss, how ever, immediate appraisal and payment can be made. Payments will lie made on the basis of “unavoidable” loss, it was pointed out. This means that where insect infestations appear, such its grasshoppers or crickets, tin effort must be made to control them. Farmers will have three options in receiving crop insurance inednt- nity payments: (1) Immediate cash payment, equal to market value of insured wheat loss involved; (2) Warehouse receipt f o r wheat due. If suitable stored wheat is available nearby. (3) Deferred cash payment, with farmer specifying time with in 90 days when he wishes crop insurance corporation to sell the wheat for him. Oregon farmers have taken out 2011 crop insurance applications this year, giving "all-risk” protec tion on 298.731 acres of wheat. This guarantees an insured pro duction of 3,712.272 bushels. H is R e -N o m in a tio n and Election Assures Continued Active and Experienced Rep resentation in Congress. Read Record— Voters* Pamphlet Paid Ad M o l t fo r C o n g rra e C o m m ill® « H e r e —at last—is your opportunity to o w n a i n l y fine B ible, m agnificently bound, beauti- Aally printed . . . con tain in g many o f the extra features usually found o n ly in the very expen sive B ibles. 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