The object of punishment la
Sin with the multitude, and your
childtvn of Cottage Grove
tage Grove has moved into ’the
lerholser; Mrs.' Iva dinner guests of Arlo and
ihrvelold for just retribution; for
W ilbur R iha > home, vacant since
re,q>onMl>ility
anti
guilt
are
as
. and Mrs. Frank B.
They addl'd that the first group
r. and Mrs. Moxley ;
imily moved to Cot-
great and as truly personal as if the protection of society; lor the
Thomas families Tuesday,
Cracken and cl ■hildren.
and
called
year-old:
Poynter and daugh-
short time ago.
you alone had done the wrong.
reformation of the offender.
Danny'
of
Cotta:
(.•rovv
■luded many reject«! in wartime
Cochran incurred a
Tryon Edwards
Tryon Edwards
Rilea said 297 men would lx itots Sunday att rnoon
of Mr and Mrs.
on her return trip
ailed up for examination Oct. 25 E. Poynter home.
•. slipped and fell
from Cot irad .'. but is now recovci
Major and Mrs
the men
Eighty per cent
Thursday, sustain-
ing nicely.
daughter Alana, of Eugene.
called up in Oregon for the first CHEAP BOX SILO
ing severe cut on his fingers and
is.
George
L.
Moxley,
Mr.
and
Mi
Mr. and Mi's. Gale Lebow, of
p<Kee*timc draft have been reject WORKS WELL
hand, requirin six stitches by a
who recently sold their home here,
tage Grove, were Wednesday
Alsea -- A practical above
ed in physical examinations, selec
ian in Cottage Grove, who
ning guests at the home of
where they have liied the past
tive service officials said at Port ground silo for grass silage
d the wounds.
and Mrs. Alvin Allen.
.
twelve yens, were honored with
land Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Vogler, of
built here by Cri Ba une for
Mrs
and a leave-t ikin, patty at the R. E. Cottage Grove were dinner guests
(%1aj Gen. Thomas E. Rea. state 75 dollars. The s
Thursday, when Lues iay evening at the home ol
Mrs. Steve
!
Aaugard, of Cottagi Poynter
director said that of 147 called up
ids and acqunin- Mr. a n d Mrs. Robert Thomas.
Grove, . were Eugene visitors Sa*t fifty-one
only J2 passed, leaving the state just
tances V
eseut to pay their Mis. Vogler uud Mrs. Thomas are
sl*>rt of the November draft high, made of planks and heavy urday.
;o,xi wishes to the
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Overholser respects
quota. A second group will be timbers spiked and wired together.
cidled up Oct. 25 to make up the The silo was filled with grass, i and family have moved to their estimatif i nd elderly
deficiency and to fill the December' clover vetch and oats last spring. place recently vacated by Charles will lie ; atly misser
When opened recently it showed Eilenburg family, having lived in munity. Mr m l Mvs
quota of 124.
dinner I
its at the F y nter home friends Mr.
¿Officials explained the high num- very little spoilage, reports County ' the Burcham place near the saw- and the
T h e couples
a surprise. 1 ledden at
i mill for several years.
Agent Stonewall Jackson.
coast Sunday
licr of rejections by saying physi-
f the occa* motored to
Gordon Mooney is now able to
I huckleberry
Moxleys where they
cm standards for the peace-time
Wedding Announcements and sit up in a wheel chair and is con
picking.
Refreshments
wet
e
served.
Those
valescing
nicely,
in
the
hospital
at
tinny are higher than in the war.1 Invitations.
The Sentinel.
Arlo Ì lunnas
Eugene, where he has been con present were: Mr and Mrs. Alie
A i I o
Hanks,
daughter
Alice and sons
fined since his injury sustained in
the woods the latter part of Bill and Junior: Mr. and Mrs cuts and bodily bruises and pos
Leonard 1 fudgins of Gowdy ville; sible loss of a toe ' on his left foot
August.
wiule ’
with a
Miss Shirley Bradford, of Cot Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Palleskc and
tage Grove was a Sunday evening daughter Jo Ann. Ed Kirchoff, of caterpillar tractor on I iis (arm.
dinner guest at the home of Mr. Eugcnc; Mr. and Mrs James W. The tractor slipjaxl into gear and
Webb and children Carolyn and started forward while Mr . Thomas
and Mrs. George McMurrick.
‘ machine. 11
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Allen. Mrs Jimmy: Mr. and M s. Guy $mith
and under tin
Clarence Duncan and son Lester, and son Wayne; Mr and Mrs. Er- was Kii
were Eugene visitors last Tuesday. nest Darneli: Mrs. M. C. Foulks tractor,
suved from more
Mrs. Ernest Darnell transacted and daughter Elisc: Mrs. Charles body. I
business in Eugene and visited Nabakowski and son; Bruce Han- serious injury by falling into a
ditch under the tracks which
Gordon Mooney in the hospital kins;
BARRELS
TANKS
cott: Oren Sk iggs; Mr. and Mrs. passed over him. A physician was
there Monday.
Mr. and Mrs
Robinson H. E Maddy* : nd children Dwain. calieri from Cottage Grove, who
moved into their home recently Grant. Rol < t LaVcrn and Billie; rendered treatment and dressed
purchased from Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Mr. and Mr- Alvin Allen and the injuries. Mr. Thomas is in lied
803 So. Pacific Highway
Phone 548
Moxley, taking possession of the Ralph. Joyce nnd Judy: A. • O. at his home.,
Downie; Mrs, Ernest Hathaway
property Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Ray SuitiT and
I Robinson came to the northwest
[ from Ft. Worth. Texas, and after
extensive search for a satisfactory |
I location, acquired the Moxley
property. They have a son attend- |
ing Oregon State college.
।
Ed and Frank Kirchoff, of Eu-1
gene, and Bill Hanks, of Cottage
Grove, helped Mr .and Mrs. Geo.
i L. Moxley move Saturday to Eu
gene, where they will make their
home.
Mrs. Alvin Allen and daughters.
Joyce and Mrs. Gale Lebow and ,
Susan, spent Saturday and Sunday
with Mrs. Allen’s mother, Mrs.
Clara Tandy, at Independence.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ricks, of
Phoenix. Ariz., were guests sev-1
eral days last week at the Halle
Cochran home. They were seeking
a place to buy or rent, but were
not successful in their quest.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McCoy and
I son Wayne, of Glendale. Oregon,
were here over the week ent! visit-.
ing his mother. Mrs. Kitty McCoy.
O1 T OF WORK — A toppled victim of technological unemployment ■ and her sister. Mrs. George Gow- j
is he former refuse burner at Weyerhaeuser Timber Company’s mill I I ing and family.
nu nber one at Longview. Washington. Conveyors now carry to impor | Mrs. Hilma Williams, teacher,
ta. t processing plants the sawmill leftovers once feeding the burner’s t' closed school Friday because of
fia mes, which have been dead for many years. The finishing blow to , illness and went to Portland fori
th dbsidcte structure was given recently when the last of Its bricks I treatment, returning to her duties :
wn « haule<l away by salvage crews, to serve a more useful purpose I Monday.
George Kentner, who is in a |
eli -where.
hospital at Eugene, had as visitors I
, Sunday his niece, Mrs. William I
, Engel, of Springfield, Mrs. George
I Taylor, his sister, of Cottage I
Grove, Mrs. George Kentner and
daughters. Mrs. Jacob Carlson and
Mrs. Orval Whaley.
Mrs. Halle Cochran returned
GAS — OILS — LUBRICATION
Friday from Lamar. Colo., where
she attended a family reunion at
GENERAL REPAIRS
which her entire family were pres-j
ent: seven children and her par- ,
ents, the latter being over eighty ,
OPEN DAILY
years of age and her father cele-;
j brated his eighty-eighth birthday
Phone 430
! anniversary. One brother, whose 1
। home is in San Antonio, Texas, she
¡had not seen in twenty-six years.
Mrs. Ernest Hathaway' and chil-
| dren, David and Helen, leave Fri-
| day of this week, for Ridgefield. ;
Wash., to visit her mother, Mrs.
George Simmons, and be present
at her birthday anniversary cele
A NEW timber crop is growing on our lands
bration.
where mature trees have been harvested. These
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Newman, of i
Cutler City, Oregon were visitors |
new
trees will be ready for harvesting in about
Thursday and Friday at the home j
80 years. Some will be cut as thinnings in 40 or
of his mother, Mrs. Nettie Estes. I
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Morgan
50 years for poles, piling and pulpwood. The
have moved into the Burcham
place, vacated by Ross Overholser .
thinning process allows more space and sunshine
family.
so that remaining trees grow faster.
Mr. and Mrs. George Coons of
Coos Bay, were week end visitors
Weyerhaeuser grows trees as a crop on a long
at the home of her mother, Mrs. j
Nettie Estes.
range program. We have stands of timber at
Mr. and Mrs.
B. Cook and
children Mickie and Jimmie of
every stage of growth on our tree farms. Care
Bend. Oregon returped home Sun
ful studies indicate that timber is growing at a
day. Mrs. Cook has been keeping
house for her father, Halle Cbch-
rate that will insure permanent, sustained pro
ran, during her mother's absence.
duction.
The Hutchinson family of Cot-
SILK CREEK
Eighty Percent
Rejected in First
Peacetime Draft
V. C. LOMAX, Distributor
GROWING TREES
FOR TOMORROW
HANCOCK STATION
In the Douglas fir region blocks of seed trees
are left to reforest harvested areas. Seedlings are
planted by hand to fill in the gaps—caused by
fires or lack of seed sources. Fire detection sys
tems, fire-fighting equipment and trained crews
are always on the job during the dry months
to prevent and put/out fire.
70 HELP INSURE A
PERMANENT INVUSTRY'WE
'M. Operate Tree Farm* — to provide a
* A ne.ver endin« timber supply for our
f ■! H J
mill». The forest crop is harvested,
W
reseeds, harvested, reseed»—in about
^|^_~3BL80-year cycles.
4 4
''¡ a T
We are making every effort to insure that our
plants will operate continuously. We are plan
ning for and believe that we will ^ave as much
timber to harvest a hundred years from now as
we have today.
Diversify Our Manufacturing —in or-
der to use all of the tree. The aim
is to build manufacturing centers in
each of our operating areas so that
on one millsite we can make useful
products from low value as well as
high value material.
GET MORE POWER
FOR OREGON
MURDEROUS
FISH TRAPS
VOTE
Develop New Product»— to increase
the “take” from each acre of forest
land harvested. A staff of engineers
#
I'
"FISH BILL*'
A TAX-FREE MEASURE
THAT Wilt BENEFIT*
EVERY OREGON CITIZEN
*n this work. More products mean
more steady jobs.
Develop Permanent Markets— to be
reasonably certain that Weyer-
hacuser products are in steady de-
mand year in and year out, in good
times and bad. We work toward con-
Sistent high quality, and apply mod-
ern selling methods to create cus-
tomer demand.
—
T imid
h *
cioè
'
PRO^'
Working in tfve Padfìe Northw,tyo croato prodU^tft payroll, and profit,