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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 13, 1918)
OUII SAVED FOOD MURDER OF NATION FED THE ALLIES BY RUTHLESS HUNS Providing Banking Protection Tlia v u t raauuii'a* ut that Failoral Uf.ti vo Hy<*t«m. over a thou numi ml 11 loii dollars, am couirlti Hind by the dcpoMltora III bauk» wlilrli. Ilk« ouroalvaa, at« moni ham of tbla groat ayxtsiii. The largoal and the imiulleat or our dapoMltor» cui U contribute* lu III« nani« proportion to tills fund, wlilrli gives protection to all. If vou haven't tills protection aJreiuly you aught not to ilelay. You sneure It tbn iiiiNuent you heroine one of our depositors. Food Administrator Writes Presi dent America Conserved 141,- 000,000 Bushels Wheat. i k j w CREDIT First National Bank Cottage Grove, Oregon J) On a ccou n t ot’ atioth«*r ntlvanct' in tin' |dirr o f Initti'r parch m en t, w« l illti I tic fo llo w in g sill’ ll! atlvmict- in |>ricch ncccsHiiry : 100 wrap»............................ $1.26 Each additional 100 ordered at aume time as first 100 .. .35c SATURDAY SPECIAL A red u ction o f 30 ccii I h will be in tic It* on f i rut h u n dred on all o r der* p rinted on F rid a y * or Satin ilny*. O rder* m ay he placed on any d a v o f the w eek fo r p rin tin g on F r o ls v or S a tu rd a y at the re d u ced price. COTTAOE OROVE SENTINEL O h your |fir1 and thi-n got y*»ur ttmittre•monta firum TU.• Hontinel. If ymi run ’t sell ít, try th« want wuy. Hol dom falla. an- • • e ad. e • • W . W . M ’F a rla n d The Otty Transfer All Kinde of Hauling & Draying Done on Short Notice riauo Moving a Hperlalty WOOD AND COAL I’bon« AS Of fire at the Bou Ton Confectionery BUTTER WRAPPER PRICES Th« following priera aro now in ef- fret on butter wrappera: too wrappers, on uny day except Fri- -luv-« no-1 H alirdtyi |1,2S loo wrappers, ou Fridays and Hatur- dajn only SI.on The,« tire rush priées. Additional wrappers printed at the snme time with either of ihe above, 35 cents the 100. COTTAGE GROVE HKNTINEL, The Live Wiro Newspaper TO WOMEN. Mesi and Fat Shipments Increased by 044,600,000 Pounds. MP.MBKK FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM NEW BUTTER WRAP PRICES DUE Conservation measure« applied by tile American people etiubled the Unit ed Sillies lu ship Io th« Allied peoples and lo our own forces o v e rs e lls Ml,- ISSI, is s i bushel« of wheat mid 844,Out). - iSS) pounds of meat during the past year, valued In ull at $1,400,000,000. This wax iiccompllshcd In the face of a serious food shoring« In this coutilry. h cn p ciik liig the w h olelieiirled iH -ss nnd patriotism with which the American people have met the food crisis abroad. Food Administrator Hoover, In a let ter io President Wilson, explulns how lln- situation wns met. The voluntary enunci witlon program fostered by the Food Administration enabled the piling up of the millions of bushels of wheat during IIII7-1H and the shipment of nient during 1917TB. The total value of nil food ship ments to Allied destinations amounted lo 11.400.000400. nil tills food lining bought through or In rollaboratlon with lln- Field Administration. T h e s e figures lire ull based on official reporta and represent food exports for the hurveat year that closed June 3U, 1918. The shipments of meats aud futa (Including meat producta, dulry prod ucts, vcgduble oils, etc.,) to Allied des tinations were as follows: Fiscal year 1910-17... .2.1 ilfl.ri00.000 lbs. Fiscal year 1917-18. . . .3,011.1UO.UUU lbs. Increase ................... 844.000.000 I be. Our slaughterable animals at the be ginning o f Ihe last fiscal year were not appreciably larger than the year be fore and particularly In bugs; they were probably less. The Increase In shipments Is due to conservation and the extra weight of aulmuls added by our fanners. The full effect of these efforts began to bear their b<*st results In the last half o f the Osenl year, when the ex- ports to Ihe Alllea were 2,133.100.000 pounds, ns against 1.2t91.fi00.000 pounds In the same Period o f the year before. This compares with an average of 8iM.tsi0.000 pounds of total ex|«>ria for the aume half years In the three--yeur pre-war period. In cereals and cereal products re duced to terms o f cereal bushels our shipments to Allied destinations have been : Fiscal year 1916-17..250.000.000 huahels Flseul year 1917-18..340,800,000 bushels Increase 80,900,000bushels Of these cereals our shipments of the prime hrendsluffs In the fiscal year 1917-18 to Allied destinations' were: Wlient ni.tXSMSSi bushels and of rye 18.1« 81.000 bushels, a total of 144,900,- 0 0 0 b u s h e ls tr P rofessiona l Cards MAX LUEBKE THE RAWLEIOH MAN 77b Slsth Ave. W., Euxene. Ore. Local agnnry at J. B. Frotzman'a R McCAROAR. D. D. S. DENTIST Neuralgin relieved instantly by local applicatloa. Beeideaoe and office at Fifth nnd Main. Phone I.'IIJ Cottage Grove, Ore. DR S M. WENDT Physician and Burgeon Special attention given to surgery and eye, enr and -throat. Country rails ns well ns city calls answered dny or night.- O ffico: Cottage Orovo Hospital J. E. YOUNO ATTORNEY AT LAW Office on Main avenue Cottage Grove ‘ Oregon A. W. KIME. M. D. PHYSICIAN AND 8UROEON Office in Phillips building over the Henson drug store. Office pilone 34 Residence phone 126J. Cottage Grove Oregon DR. W. M. HAMILTON Ites. Phone I4F3 LICENSED CHIROPRACTIC PHYSICIAN Consultation and examination free. Office hours 9 to 5. Hnn- daya and ovenings by appnintm’t. Office in old Cottage Grove bank building at 101M, Main evenue. H. J. SHINN ATTORNEY AT LAW and notary nnblic. Practices in all courts. Twenty fivo years ex perience. Under Bldg. Cottago Grove, Ore. ALTA KINO V ATTORNEY AT LAW O ffice located in the rear of the First National bank. Oregon Cottage Grove The exporta to Allied destinations during (he fiscal year 191817 were: Wheat 188,100.000 bushels and rye RSOO.OOO bushels, a fatal of 137,400.000 bushels. In addition some 10.000,000 bushels of 1917 wheat are now lu port for Allied destinations or en route thereto. The total shipments to Allied cnuntrles from our last harvest of wheat will be therefore, about 141,000.- 000 bushels, or a total of 154,900,000 bushels of prime hreadattiffs. In ad dition to this we have shl|>|>ed aotne 10.000. 000 bushels to neutrals depend ent uiMin ua, and we have received some Imporls from other quarters. “This accomplishment of our people In this matter stands out even mor* clearly If we hear In mind that we had available In the tlscnl year 1916-17 from net carry-over and ns surplus over our normal consumption about 200.000. 000 bushels of wheat which we were able to export that year without trenching on our home lonf,” Mr. Hoover said. “ This last year, however, owing to the large failure of the 1917 wlient crop, we had avullahle from net cnrry-over and production nnd Imports only Just about our normal consump tion. Therefore our wheat shipments to Allied destinations represent ap proximately savings from our own wheat brend. “ These figures, however, do not fully convey the volume of the effort and sacrifice niada during the past year by the whole Amerlcnn people. De spite the magnificent effort of our agri cultural population In planting a much Increased acreage In 1917, not only waa there a very Inrge failure In wheat, but also the corn failed to mature prop erly, and our corn Is our dominant crop. “ I am sure," Mr. Hoover wrote In concluding his report, “ that all tha millions of our people, agricultural aa well aa urban, who have contributed to these results should feel a very definite satisfaction that In a year of 1 universal food shortages In the north* ern hemisphere all of those people joined together against Germany have coine through Into sight of the coming harvest not only with wealth and strength fully maintained, but with only temporary periods o f hardship. “ It Is difficult to distinguish between various sections of our people— tha homes, public eating places, food trades, urban or agricultural popula tions— In assessing credit for these r*. suits, hut no one will deny the domi nant part of the American women.“ A hoarder Is a man who Is more ttw terested In getting his bite than In gliw ing bU bit. •‘ BAVE THE HERDS ' CAMPAIQN LAUNCHED Bacai - tlinre in lit thin time a far n .H lull, need nf a greater appreciation of (lie value of dairies an an eennoinli feature in the program* and growth of tins ntute, n roiuinittee headed by nome of the leading scientific nnd huniuenn How the Poles Were Slam and men of Oregon nan arranged tor u «tate wide ediientmnnl campaign. Starved and Frozen During Foreign dairy eonditionn are indi the German Drive. «atei! by nome of thu experiences re ported by Couatean Madeline de Bryan, who recently vinited Oregon arid who F. C. Walcott Talla of tha Scenes of wan neat out by til«- committee on public Horror He Witnessed Along tha inform itimi. Counteaa de Bryan told of h«r work an a Red t.'ronn nume in France Road From Warsaw to Plnek and of conditions she saw there. Hbe — Million Persons Homeless. *nyn tin- Geminai* killed all cattle before abandoning captured French territory, ; ;+ +++++4-++»+-M ^ 4^++++4-»-M - knowing that in no doing they prac This I have seen. I could not tically killed the child rea. All wb» have believe It unlesa I had seen It returned from the countries of Europe through and through. For eev- tell of the great lack of dairy products oral weeks I lived with It; I in thotn- countries and how people across went all about It and back of It; the si ih are looking to the United Inside and out of It was shown Hi a ten for foods, particularly dairy to m«—until finally I cams to food», us well ua for men and munitions. reallia that tha Incredible was Hearcit v of feed for stock and the great true. It la monstrous. It Is un demand for meat Imvc resulted in the thinkable, but it exists. It Is butchering of dairy catti« throughout tha Prussian system__ F. C. Europe, and it will he many years after Walcott. the war is over before the herds can lie replenished and brought hack to ■ -» m w i w H i f i f $++++♦++■ their normal standard. For this reason The following la a statement by F. it’ is up to America, experts agree, to C. Walcott, who served us an assist not only maintain the present herds hut ant to Mr. Hoover during the time to increase them in order that, butter, America was doing all that was pos cheese, evaporated milk and other ex sible to feed the starving millions of portable dairy xupplies can be sent Belgium and Poland and northern abroad f« / our allies. Evaporated (or France. In this work he was brought condensed) milk is today depended upon In direct contact with German military by the children of Europe to provide the offli-lals, antj *»w the conditions which the German Invasion had creuted proper dairy food element in their diet. In a nutshell the situation in this among the civilian population: country may he summed up as follows: I went to Poland to learn the facts The public must he encouraged to use concerning thé remnant o f a people more milk and dairy products of all that had been decimated by war. The kinds as a health and economic measure; country had been twice devastated. the dairies must he encouraged to keep First the Russian army swept through their her*is together, broking to the fu tt and then the Germans. Along the ture and relying on the fact that by so roadside from Warsaw to Ptnsk, the prestgit Bring line, 230 miles, nearly doing they will eventually come out bet half a million people had died of hun ter financially than if they now dispose ger and cold. The way was strewn of tlo-ir cattle. With their hones picked clean by the crows. With their usual thrift, the N O T I C E OF HEARING ON FINAL ACCOUNT. Germans were collecting the larger hone« to he rallied Into fertilizer, hut Notice is hereby given that the un finger and toe b o n e s lay on the ground with the mud-covered and ruin-soaked dersigned, George Taylor, has filed his fiuul account in the estate of Rachel E. clothing. Wicker baskets were scattered n'ong Taylor, deceased, and that Monday, the the way—the basket In which the baby 30th day of .September, 191*, at the swings from the rafter In every peas hour of 10 o'clock a. m., at the County ant home. Every mile there were Court Room in the Court House, Eugene. scores o f them, each one telling a Oregon, has been fixed as the time and death. I started to count, hut after a place for hearing any objections thereto little I had to give It up, there were and of settlement of said account. GEORGE T W I .o R , so many. Administrator. Thnt Is the desolation one saw along n30-*pt27 Ihe great road from Warsaw to Plnsk, ■ mile after mile, more than two hun NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL ACCOUNT. dred tulles. They told me n million people were made homeless In six weeks of the German drive In August Notice is hereby- given that the un and September, 1916. They told me dersigned, George Taylor, has filed his four hundred thousand died on the final account in the estate of Jeremiah way. The rest, scarcely half alive, Taylor, deceased, and that Monday, the got through with the Russian army. 30th day of September, 191*. at the Many o f these have been sent to Si hour of 10 o ’clock a. m., j»t the County- beria ; It Is these people whom the Court Room in the Court House, Eugene, Paderewski committee Is trying to re Oregon, has been fixed as the time and lieve. place for hearing any objections thereto In the refugee camps, 300,000 sur and of settlement of said account. vivors o f the flight were gathered by GEORGE TAYLOR. the Germans, members of broken fam n30-apt27 Administrator. ilies. They were lodged In Jerry-built barracks, scarcely water-proof, un- NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL llghted, unwarmed In the dead of win ACCOUNT. ter. Their clothes, where the buttons Notice is hereby given that the un were lost, were sewed on. There were dersigned, Emmett M. Sharp, has filed no conveniences, they had not even his final account in the estate of Joseph been able to wash for weeks. Filth H. Sharp, deceased, nnd that Saturday, end Infection from vermin were tile 14th day of September, 1918, at the spreading. They were famished, their hour o f 10 o ’clock a. m., at the County dally ration a cup of soup and a piece Court room in the Court house, Eugene, of bread as Mg as my fist. l.ane county, Oregotl. has been fixed as In Warsaw, which had not been de the time and place for hearing any ob stroyed, a city of one million Inhab jections that may he filed thereto. AH itants, one o f the most prosperous cit persons having any interest in said es ies o f Europe before the war, the tate are hereby notified to file their streets were lined with people In the objections on or before said date. pangs o f starvation. Famished and EMMETT M. SHARP. rain-soaked, they squatted there, with nl6-sl3-ieh Administrator. their elbows on their knees or lean ing against the buildings, too feeble REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF to lift a hand for a bit of money or a THE BANK OF COTTAOE OROVE morael of bread If one offered It. per ishing of hunger and cold. Charity at Cottage Grove in the State of Oregon did what It could. The rich gave all that they had, the poor shared their at the close of business August 31, 1918 Resources: last crust. Hundreds o f thousands Loans and discounts..............$ 85,433.86 were perishing. Dny and night the pictures is before my eyes— a people Overdrafts, secured and un secured ______ _________ ... 3,357.14 starving, a nation dying. llonds and warrants........... 19,069.47 3,000.00 The above statement by Mr. Wal Furniture and fixtures...... ... . 7,574.95 cott is a terrible nrrnlgnment o f the other real estate owned......... Hun, but no more terrible than he Hue from banks, not reserve deserves. What has happened In hanks............ 3,985.37 Poland, in Belgium, In northern Due from approved reserve bnnks.... .......... ................. jt 5,084.95 France and every other country that has been blighted by the Hun’s pres Checks and other cash items 6,863.20 ence would hnppen In America should Cash on hand.......................... 4,085.56 the allies, by any chance, fall to win Other resources (War Savings this war. It would mean the enslave Stamps) ____ 834.00 ment of American men, the starving nnd death of American women and chil Total................ $139,888.50 dren. Either the nun or humanity Liabilities: must perish. Capital stock paid in............ $ 25.000.00 Surplus fund............................ 3,500.00 K ILLED BY GERMAN HELM ET Undivided profits, less ex penses and taxes paid....... 1,041.66 American Soldier Hunting Sou Individual deposits subject to check.................... 81,195.12 venir Picked Up Charged Cashier checks outstanding. .. 1.95 Headpiece. Certified checks........... 15.07 Shamokln, Pa.—Writing from a dug- Time and savings deposits ... 28.534.70 out In No Man's Land. France, I.eo Comer, a corporal in the Twenty-third Total..................................... $139.288.50 United Stntos Infantry, forwarded to State of Oregon, County of Lane, ss. his sister here. Miss CecellH Comer, a I, Alf. Jury, cashier of the above named hunch o f strange flowers he had gath hank, do solemnly swear that the above ered while on patrol duty. statement is true to the best of my Coiner had promised a younger knowledge nnd belief. brother a German iteel helmet as n ALF. JURY, Cashier. war relic, but in writing Informed the Subscribed Rnd sworn to before me brother thnt he was doomed to dis this 6th day of September, 1918. appointment until the Americans reach George H. Brninnrd, Notary Public. Berlin. He had seen a fellow soldier pick up a steel helmet and then fall My commission expires Oct. 4, 1919. COR RECT— ATTEST: dead. GEOROF, LEA, The helmet had been electrically GEORGE M. HALL, Directors. charged by the Germans, You can still get Real Gravely Chewing Plug for 10c a pouch. It gives you more solid tobacco comfort than ordinary plug. Tastes better— lasts longer. I VM ? f t Peyton Brand 8 Real Gravely Chewing Plug ? 10 c a p o u c h — and worth it C r a v a l y la a t « bo m u c h l o n g e r it c o a t s n o m o r a t o c h a w t h a n o r d i n a r y p iu g P. B. Gravely Tobacco C om p a n y Danville, Virginia T h e B u g l e ( X l l - Summon* all the force* and resource* of the Republic to th* defense of Freedom THE OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE which the United State* authorities have ranked as one o f the fifteen di»tintrui*hed institutions of the country for excellence in military training, has responded to the call. The College i* distinguished not only for its military instruction, but D istinguishes also for — It* strong industrial course* for men and for women: l a Agriculture, C o r .er-e, F n*ioecrin ,. 4orc»try H w n eE tw /.ii* . M miaii.fluiiBscy, t&J Vocational t-la.ati.-o. It* wholesome, purposeful student life. Its democratic college spirit. Its successful graduates. Students enrolled last year, 3453; stars on its service flag», 1258, over forty percent representing officers. C olleg e o p e n s S e p te m b e r 23, 1918 For cataiof, new IUu»trated Booklet, and other information write to the Registrar, Corvailit, On UNIVERSITY of OREGON ia P « e » or i. War Fully equipped li lx-nil culture and scientific department*. Special training • ■ - in - - Commerce, ------» U U I | | U 1 I . .Ionmulinili. - * | | | , i i i v i i i i r t t Architecture. u r r , l a i t w , , v 1 4 * 4 Law. 1 1 ( 1 1 1 $* .Medicine I : k __ l A * ___ I. U ____a a i s s a ..a . — ___ T e a c h in g . L ib ra ry H 4»rk, M unir, H o u s e h o ld A rts, I'h yw ieal T r a in in g nnd F in « A ria . Military Sro-wr, i. rk.r*- of t.rrina «...1 lirili.h ..Hirer.. Drill, lerlurr. .nd I,rid work 1 ■II ,r*-d«r. kwrd oe nwrirarr ia ,rr*ral war. CMB.Ie), a , « , . „1 i^arkr,. kridtn, * e*e. ......„„.J ,* I „ r l « , . l. . 1„,„. Oil-,.I— H. O. T. C. t**l'** UtllK bkrar, .1 k*I.OO*I „ I , . , , . Datraailiarir, lor mrn .ad — p. 8 -L E i w a a t k w S . mmek o g a o r lw a it y l«*r w a r k i a * M e * « w a y . . W r » « r H r s u d r a r . K . « r » r , O r r S a a . l o r i l l o w r a l r d b o o k ie * . L t í* - f l ì » P 1 <H -------------------— -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTICE. estate of the said deceased are hereby notified to present the same, duly veri fied, to the above named administrator, at his office in Cottage Grove, Oregon, within six months from the first publi cation of this notice, towit: on the 29th day of August, 1918. a30-s27 H. J. SHINN, Administrator With Will Annexed. Estate of Nancy Elizabeth McKee, deceased. Estate of Elizabeth McKee, deceased. Notice is hereby given that H. J. Shinn has been by the County Court of the State of Oregon, in and for Lane County, appoinftil Administrator With Will Annexed of the estate of Nancy Elizabeth McKee, deceased. Get your girl—and then get your an All persons having claims against the nouncements from The Sentinel. ••• * H o m e : o A la d e : F l o u r f FOR HOME PEOPLE Pride of Oregon, Soft Wheat Flour H. & H. Hard Wheat Flour $ Made by Cottage Grove Milling Company \ Phone 80 "Zerolene is the Best” The Ford automo bile engine, illus trated here, like all i n t e r n a l c o m b u s t io n e n g in e a , requires an oil that holds its full l u b r i c a t i n g qualitiea at cylinder heat.burns clean in th e c o m b u s t i o n chambers and goes out with exhaust. 2KROLKNE LIGHT AH« the«« requirements perfectly, becau se It ia cor racily ra fined from »alerted California aa- phatt-baae crude. — Say leading m otor car distributors, because the records o f their service departments show that ZE R O LE N E , correctly refined from selected Cali fornia asphalt-base crude, gives per fect lubrication with less wear and less carbon deposit. Most cars« are now lubricated with Z E R O L E N E because their owners have learned through experience that there is no better oil. ZERO LENE it the correct oil for all type« of automobile engines. It is the correct oil for your automobile Get our lubrication chart •bowing the correct consistency for your car. A t dealer s e v e r y w h e r e and Standard Service Stations. Oil S T A N D A R D O IL C O M P A N Y (California) ZEROLENE Ik e Standard O il J o t M o to r C a rs W. J. Woods, Special Agent, Standard Oil Co., Cottage drove, Ore.