Too Late to classify
FOR RENT: Three room apart
ment on ground fluor. Will tie
vacant by Dec 12th ln«|Ulre at
425 South 3rd St reel
20 lip
DELICIOUS COMICE («ais Just
right for Ubriatmaa holidaxN ut
$1 99 li Ixix or 6 centx a 111
llnmlow’x Mkt
Highway 99
south. Open ditily until mid
night
30 Hi-
F<»R SALE Mun's Hawthorn«' bi
cycle, like new. Cheap Phone
368-L.
20-He
Foil SALE Household goods mid
tools II milcM west on Duane
highway. 1,.
Miller. I'hoiie
353M
2« I Ite
FOR SALE: Sheep, I to H m - iii
old ewea. Harold Turpin, Viin
culla
2<i lip
>1.00 WILL HOLD anything In
store until Christmas, some toys
nlsiut half price Short's Furni
ture, 4oo Main street.
20-lip
FOR NAI E Giri's bicycle. 26 in
wheel, good condition. $20 Sc«
lit 1031 .lelfeisotl
20-ItC
i The »
g Season's
Ü Greetings
And All
Tragedies
Mar Many Yule
Celebrations
Fito turns Christmas into tmg
<x!y for hundreds of families every
year. Hie National Board of Fire
Underwriters warns in a state
ment urging caution with the
I laminable Yule tree.
A spark and a Clirixtmax tree
roduivd most <>f the Pennsylvania
tow n of Hyndman to ashes la a
year when fir«' spread from one
I mhiso through several Imsmiss
and residential block» The spright
ly holiday wreaths on town lamp
jxixtM Ixcame a grisly reminder
of the UhristmaH night blaze to
xeiirox of families lolt homeless
tine of the most liagie (’lilísi
mas flri'S struck at a Babbs
Switch, Oklahoma, schtxil parly
some years ago. Thirty-six (H ixons
Were killed and 100 Injured when
candles Ignited a huge Clnisimn
finad
that i
a
lishing executive lost his life last '
year ns a result of a lighted cig- ■
urette »tub dropped among Christ- I
man wrappings in his Scarsdale,
AND EVERY ONE IN WOOL—
These 11 girls won a total of more
than $2.000 in awards at the
‘’Make It Yourself With Wool"
National Fashion Show in Casper,
Wyoming, December 6. They ware
chosen from a gloup of 30 young
women from the ages of 14
through 22, i< pn <ntmg 13 West
ern states. Champion sewers, and
awards they won, follow: Seated
(left to right): Gloria Dawn
Watson, 20, of Sioux Falls, S. D,
winner of a $500 specia! award, a
scholarship to Colorado Women's
College, Denver, fur her 100%
virgin wool dress: Camille Thomp
son, 19, of Salt Lak'- City, Utah,
Grand Pi ize winner in the Senior
Class; Carol Menlove, 19, of Salt
Lake City, Utah. Grand Prize
winner in the Original Design
Class; Joan Hopper,
16. of
Caldwell, Idaho, Grand Prize
winner in the Junior Class;
Pat Kay. 17, of Big Horn.
Wyoming, Junior winner for best
dr< I, Standing (left to ri|
Barbara Hendricks, 16, of Ro»coe,
Texas, Junior winner for best
suit;
Dolores
Bombach,
17, of
L as Cruces, N. M., Junior winner
f : b< st coat; Ixiis Andren, 20. of
।
, N. D, Second Prize win-
m i in the Original Design Class;
Janet Kiefer, 20, of Moorhead.
Minn., Senior winner for best
dr ; Yuki Fiances Arase, 21,
University of Washington. Seattle,
Senior winner for best coat; and
Bjiba a Wharton Brill, 18, of
Denver. Colo., Senior winner for
-
reated fashion she mod-
eEi at National Fashion Show.
Obcuient Pets Need Well-Trained Owners
injured when she jumfxtd out of a
bedroom window.
A m recently ax half a Century
ago, paint was mixed by druggists
to customers' specificationn.
Good Wishes
From
ART NOLT
Chevron Station
«10 Madison
I want to are the Genera) about
I position as a »tart atenogra-
pher."
CHECK!
• 1MCOMA
'OIYMPM
LONovtew
1^^... fOR FAST, DEPENDABLE /
G ereicht
The contributor) of agricultural
Highly flammable Christ ma
started in th«' kitchen of a St.
Johns, N. F.. hull a few years ago
The lire und xul>H<x|ucnt |>unic
CHUsed the deaths of 99 (HTsons,
mjuied semes of
A short circuit in electric light
on a Christmas
fire that killed 17 persons, and
injured 30 others in a Hartford. I
Conn , <x>nvale*cent home in 1946.
One of th«' most common rejxirl
of Chriitnuis tree fires every year, I
the fire authorities point«'«! out, I m I
the fire started by a# carelessly I
service between
WASHINGTON, OREGON, CALIFORNIA
/^g^FREIGHT LINES, INC.
•
tostiamo
'UUM
MSKNY
I
ÍUOfMt
-
|
I
A MAN SPOKE TO
HIS WIFE
Only Once a Month
She Wouldn’t Recognize His Voice
Yet Some Men Advertise
Only Two or Three
Times a Year
and then
wonder why they
Lions Lose to
Lebanon; Beat
Junction City
1
by science in furthering agricul
tural progress are outlined in the
1950 annual report of the Oregon
State college agricultural experi
ment station which has just been
released.
Titled “< »regon's Agricultural
Progres- Through Research," th»'
165-pag« report summarizes the
and achievements of the
central and branched experiment
station» and experimental areas
located throughout the state. The
publication stresses research pro-
gross during the 1949-50 fiscal
year and contains the latest in-
formation available for publication
on most of the agricultural re
search being carried on in Oregon.
“The diverse nature of Oregon's
agricultural extends the work of
the experiment station into a wide
variety of fields, each of which
has p oblems whose solutions are
important to continued agriculture
pr spenty in the state,” William
A .Schoenfeld, dean and director
points out
in the foreward.
Written in readable form, the
report contains more than 60
photographs illustratin
agricul-
tural f search projects.
For convenient ■ in reading, the
report is organized on a comm d-
ity basis. Major sections deal with
field, forage and seed crops; horti
cultural crops; soil and water con
servation; livestock; dairy pro
duction and processing; poultry;
wildlife and marine; and home
economics.
SALLY'S SALLIES
I took the job just to be near a
doctor. I’m loveaick."
SUPER SERVICE
- - is what our «'xperh'DCi'd
personnel offer you!
Prompt, reliable, careful
and courteous SERVICE.
Cottage Grove-
Eugene Freight
and Transfer
32 S. 10th
Phon«' 99
3-tfcx
Friends cannot be acquired by
developed solely tbroiiuh sharing
with another that confidence and
understanding which prompts
If your shower has no built-in soap
cish. M-w one or more plastic envelopes
on he •„.„■of 0.. shower CUrtam to
bv.d soap and UKbvidual washcloth*.
BRISBANE ELECTRIC, INC.
Your GE Ik'aler
Phone 7R
702 Main
'Owning a puppy is one of childhood’s treats, but good owners
are trained as well as their pets. Like a human baby, the animal
variety needs special care. Punishment should be gentle—mere taps
With n folded newspaper—never a stick or hard objt'ct. Their baths
should be done in three quick steps: A thorough wetting with warm
water, a good soaping, and finally a rinsing. Never let your pup stand
in chill,’ dirty water. Then—a quick and gentle rub dry with a clean,
warm towel, followed by a combing ar I brushing, will produce a
pet that looks shiny as silk, ready to frisk with his young owner
without being afraid. This is the expert advice of a pet shop owner
whose views appear in a current issue of American Home Magazine.
MO IC^KIDS
/
Knickerbocker's
Con's
548 HI6MWAY99S0.
You’ll luid it In the eliuudfled.
The Sentinel
American children may
s[>end this Christmas in hospitals,
suffering from painful and dis
figuring burns.
That is the warning of the Na-
which jHiints out that the Christ
mas
is one of the most
dangerous in the year from th«1
standpoint of fires.
Use of flammable decorations,
careless smoking by adults near
Christmas tiees, and selection of
toys which can cause injury are
among the special hazards in the
home at Christmas time, the
tional Board states
The organization offered this
check list for parents, to reduce
the hazard to children during the
Christmas holidays:
1 Do not dress children in flim
sy, flammable costumes.
2. Do not us«' lighted candles at
Christmas. Use electric lights in
stead.
3. When choosing new Christ
mas lights, look for marking which
indicates listing by Underwriters’
Laboratories. Inc.
1. Do not use cotton or paper
decorations on your tree unless
they are flame-proofed.
5 Look for the marking which
indicates listing by Underwriters’
Laboratories, Inc., on electrical
toys, and supervise the children
when they play with such toys.
6. Dr not buy toys using gaso
line. kerosene, or other flammable
fluid-. Be very careful in ^electing
toy chemical sets.
7. Remove all wrappings from
the house soon after presents are
The report was prepared by Sam opened.
H. Bailey, experiment station ed
itor; and Norville R. Gish, as Everybody reads the Classified
sistant experiment station editor.
The Sentinel
Copies are available on request.
Webb's Hardware
Women of the Moose
The l«x*nl lumber yiarket gained
some strength during the past ■
week despite the international |
situation as one of the holiday ,
season surprises.
Dimension material. 25 per cent ।
No. 2. balance No. 1 and better. ;
advanced about $2 per thousand i
and is bringing from $57 to $60 on
the present market. Wholesalers :
say there are plenty of cars avail
able for shipment of lumber to all |
points.
Most operators had anticipated;
that the present Korean crisis
would probably create a period of i
inactivity from the time borne I
building wa» stopped until defense;
orders begin to arrive, but the |
market did not work that way. ।
One explanation is that many lum- |
her yards throughout the nation [
arc building up stocks of lumber i
against the day when homo build- [
ing materials may be scarce and i
require a priority.
M«Mt lumber operation» in
this area will close down Fri-
day night for a ten-day vaca
tion and plan to resume oper-
at ions by Jan. ' A few how-
ever, will cut the holiday
period short and will resume
work on Dec. 27. Ordinarily
the holiday period is a time
for overhauling machinery and
making re (»airs.
Th«' 1951 Ducks appear to be
one of the “shoot ingest” teams in
Oregon history. In the first five
10 games th«' Ducks have fired the
ball at the hoop 115 times, an
average of 83 times a game. The
high for the season was 100 shots
against UCLA in the opener.
Two of Coach John Warren’s
ace basketballers will lx* pitching
for Oregon's baseball team this
spring. Mel Krause, the veteran
guard, is also a two-year letter-
man on the mound, and Curt Bar
clay, the sophomore forward, is
regarded as one of the better hut 1-
ing prospects the Ducks have had
since Hal Saltzman, now with
Diego.
Prior to 1925 women were not
required to have a license to hunt
or fish in Oregon.
The University of Oregon has
three men averaging more than 11
|K>ints a game at the conclusion
of the first five games. Will Ur
ban is tops with 13.2 per game, Jim
Loscutoff is second with 12 and
Jack Keller completes the trio
with 11 counters per outing.
Three youths from Eugene wore
indicted for the robbery of the
M. & K. Furniture store in Eu
gene on Dec. 8. The youths are
William Grant Hardisty, David G.
Zivlinsky, and Richard C. Ordway.
SWING «mi
ROPERLY
Womens League Lumber Market
Takes Upswing
All Tied Up,
Playoff Due
Phone
Christmas Season
Fires In jure
Many Children
li
D'banon hit a strong .140 showing
that they really had their eyes on
the bucket.
Setting th«' pace for his team,
six and a half foot center Holzfuss
■ror«*d 28 (Hiints. Baker, playing
forward run second with >2 |>oints.
Cottage Grove center Ben Hil-
liker supplied 16 (xiints for his
team, and guard Ixywry Hoyer,
with 11 fxdnts to his credit, was
next high.
Coach Maurie Kreutz said he
The Women's Bowling leaague
1 thought his hoys played a g<xxl
game. He said that they got their faced with a playoff to straighten
I share of rebounds, but their shoot- out thi' <■ -ets of ties that • stilted
। ing just wasn't quite as accural«'
as the lalsmon squad.
c game last Saturdax 'Daugherty Lumber Co. are tied
night, the Lions came from be- for first place. Short’s Grocery
hind in the fourth quarter and de and Knickerbocker's are tied for
fea ted the Junction City Tigers, s«.*cond place.
The
49-40. This was the first win in
of
for tlie Lions in Dis- games, all 2-1 victories, that were
supposed to I m > the end of the
trict 6 competition.
Friday, Dec. 22 Cottage Grove first round robin are as follows:
Ix'at
Daugherty Lumber
will play Elmira here. The Elmira
team has a median standing in
Willamette league standings with erty’s Tana Rippy had a high
score of 180 and a high series of
two loses in two starts.
520.
In another 2-1 win, Webb's
Columnar 3ads The Sentinel,
Hardware o u t r o 1 I e d Cottage
Grove Recreation, who seemed to
have the first place spot on ice
after the previous week's play.
Orlena Martin scored high with a
157 tor Webb’s, and Maude Funk
IT WONT GO IM YOUR STOCKING1
of the Recreation squad had the
AS THAT WOULD DRAW A BLANK,
Ix’st series score of 112.
BUT FOR A COZY J
Short's GnKVry beat Con's 2-1.
Anderson of the winning
^nCHRISTMA^,J7 Arline
team took Kith high single and
J^PUT OIL JJK
high series with 176 and 502.
Mary Arne, with high scores of
ifS IN YOUR
150 and 391. led Knickerbocker's
tank
to a 2-1 victory over the Women
of tli«' Moose.
Team standings:
C. G. Recreation
16
5
Daughertj Lumber Co.
16
5 ,
Have us fill your fuel tank
regularly. It's the plan to
give you a permanent holi
day from any chance of
running out of heat com
fort.
The Sentinel, Cottage Grove, Oregon
t 4L
an unbeaten Ix'banon team in i
close 60-51 game here Tuesda)
night.
This win for the Warriors give:
them leadership in the Willamette
leugne. The Lions
u ins in five games.
The t e a m s we
times in the first
and the
at 30-20
Mine at hall-tune
with tlx- Iz'bunon boys inching
ahead The Uons cam«'
the third imtkm I and
the
to 42-38, but they <x>uld
not hold the Warriors out of the
w inner s circle. Final score was
60-51.
The percentage of
made (XT try prett; well tells
th«- story of the Ddianon win
COTTAGE GROVE SENTINEL
Phones 555 - 556
Thurs., Dec. 21. 1950
Progress in Ag
Research Shown
In OSC Report
EVERY ONE A CHAMPION HOME SEWER
AT LOW COST!
• Smith-Corona CASHIER
★ Here's the control you need to protect your cash
When you want broken glass
replaced come to the place that
specializes in this work. If you
. . . to give you a complete, up-to-the-minute review
of your business every night or week-end . . . Smith-
Corona Cashier is a complete, low-cost cash register '
can put it in while you wait.,
or at the most in a couple of
hours. There are no squeaks ..
no rattles.. and you'll probably
that tells you what you are selling and for how much.
Available with various keyboards to suit
your specia1 needs. Remember, it's a quality
machine in every particular, made by fa
mous L C Smith & Corona Typewriters Inc. ,
Glass Shop
Woody’s
Main at River Roan
•••••••••••
Cottage Grove Sentinel
116 North Sixth
Ph. 818
Phones 555 - 556
Any Way You Say It
We Wish You
MERRY CHRISTMAS
Clark’s
21 South 6th
Phone 343-J