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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (June 11, 1920)
» The Sentinel were asked by an iuqiiiicr whose name added a bonus of $300 for one year, ia nnt given, together w ith the au afte r the cost of living had gradtiallv su e rs given by some one iu authority increased over 100 per cent. A yesr society: after, they m unificently raised the bo A W eekly K rw upipiir W ith P lenty in “ the As pertaining to character, is the mis to $.’<00, although they later of Backbone changed this to approxim ntely ftfiil in dance good or b a d ? ” “ Indirectly b a d ." order to save the service from ship E lbert Bode and E lbert Sm ith P ib lilS M E lbert Bode._______________ Editor “ Is the private, chaperoned parlor wreck Mr. Business M an: w here can you get a man of brains and skill to u lf A first clsa* publication entered a t Cot dance h iir iu f entirely Slav w ith you for th a t price? on the guests tage Gro»e, Ore., a* seeosd-c.Ja»» m atter “ “ Dcpciuls The remedy lies with you. The postal W hat are the evils of the d an ce?“ Boaiaeaa O ffice_____ ____ 413 E ast M ain “ The nervous system is stim ulated service belongs to you. The postal to its highest pitch and unless the par w orkers are m aking no threuta. They SU BSCRIPTION KATES ties are strong m entally, physically ask only to be allowed to rem ain al One year_____ $3.00 1 Three m onths— 60c and many dangers will con work for you under fair conditions, S ta month». . 1.001 tangle copy____6c fro nt m th orally, and those that resign do so only ns a em .” No subscription listed for less thau 60c “ Should dancing lie introduced into last resort. ---------a---------------- —s— Help us. and help your service. In the publie sch o o lsf" M ember of N ational E ditorial A ssociation “ Nu. 1 would advise folk dances in sist th a t congress pass a new ami just Oregon Slat« E ditorial Association schools, properly superv iscd and mod salarv scale before Ju n e JO. Oregon N ew spaper Conference ly conducted Lane County P u b lish ers’ A ssociation craw In view of the faet that the dance is not us severely condem ned as it j FRIDAY, JUNE 11, 1930. once was ami is rom ing to be looked ufHiii as a pleasant, harm less diversion Thing« Other« Ih sh and What Wc IT COSTS M ILLIO N S TO NOM INATE by inaiiy who are regarded as devout Bank at Ih* Th.ngt Other« think church members, some of these an PR ESID EN TS. swers may seem to be exaggerated or q u ite a fuss is being made over the overdraw n, or the rantir.gs of some Ih iu 't W orry club is short of re huge am ounts recently spoilt ou behalf s tiff backed sky pilot who w ouldn’t em The its. of the proiniueat candidates in the know a waltx from a fox trot, but • • • presidential contest. Some folks hitvi1 here are a question aud answ er th at are The wheels of progress move slowly beeu shocked by the trem eudous cause for pause: am ouuts which have been characterised “ W hat is the relation o f the dunce but surely. to girl delinquency f ’ ’ by the radical press as slush funds. A man r a n 't serv e tw o m usters, so Let us suppose for a moment that “ Sixty per cent o f the girls who w olmi ti is it. all of the candidates had expended come into rescue homes can attrib u te only small sums daring the cam paign directly or indirectly their dow nfall to O pportunity is fickle, ih m 't depend and th a t no one had expended anv the dance hall. 1 may state that their too much upon it. delinquency does not take piare in the g reat am ounts ou their behalf. The eaiu|>nigii hav mg beeu conducted dance hall, but iu the fellow ship after It in not how much you lav e su much in this m anner, ho» many voters could the dauce, and the acquaintances made us how you spemi it. go to the polls having any definite at a public dance h a ll.” • • • This question is uuquestiouably an idea as to n hich of the several caudi A gentlem an will alw ays stand up swered from inform ation given by the dates » a s be. 1 qualified for the posi car. girls them selves. Those conducting the for a lady— in a • street tion f • • H o» many will presum e to say that rescue homes would have no reason to Public sentim ent in b e c o m i n g u more thau !*«>• per cent of the voters spread false inform ation as to the cause of Oregon would have known of the of delinquency. They are engaged in a stronger influence • e • \e • ry tiny. record th at Lowdeu hes made as gover sincere effort to get at the cause of Some speakers hush up a talk that increasing delinquency. They would nor of Illinois f How muuy will presume to say th at have no reason for placing the blaiuc there is n ’t a bit of • • m • eat iu. m ore thau five per cent of the voters where it does uot belong, for they The ghost alw ays walks for those of Oregon would have known of the would thereby defeat their own pur who collect the wages of sui. » record made by General Wood outside pose. We will attem pt to draw no conclu of his activities as a soldier? A l«»ve letter is out* kilo! of fittm ii If no one had takeu an interest iu sious. We will point no moral. Wt the candidacies of these meu. the vot simply present the inform ation as it seldom returned to • • the • author. ers would have said. “ Well, 1 h av en 't comes to us and giv «.* it for the thought A sour face never brings you any beard much about these guys. If they ful consideration to which it is en d o n ’t think tgiough of the job to eorne titled on the part o f those charged thing but mure trouble. • • • Cheer up! around and let me know who they are, with the rearing o f the young. Home people get pug noses from b u t I guess I ’ll vote for someone else, al though as far as 1 know they may be I T ’S YOURS; W HAT W IL L YOU DO ting them into other • • • people's business. the best qualified for the jo b .’’ W ITH IT ? A person's faults arc exaggerated Of course, everyone knew about while living aud • his • • virtues afterw ard. Hoover and most people knew some sym pathies of The Heutinel huve thing about Johnson, yet Jo h n so n ’s Tin* ays been w ith the postal employe I t ’s am using to see tho w ay itu o|«li* com m ittee spent a lot of money lettin g alw while others threatened to tie up narily sune mau will act about his first the voters in Oregon know what Jo h n who, of the rountay if de boy. son had to say about the laboring m the auds industries • • • for wage increases w eren’t met man. p. d- q. or quicker, kept on the job in It is easy to m ake un explanation, I f it were not perm itted to spend the face of continued rebuffs from the but i t ’s not alw ays So easy to explain large sums of money to furth er the ad m inistration which bowed its knee your explanation. candidacies of presidential candidates, before • • • it may be taken for granted that The others. postal employes now appeal to T h e re ’s no use m aking excuses for Hoover would have carried the state, the public for a fair deal, and we can m istakes. No oue suppose*« they are because everyone knew him. Would it uo b etter than to reprint a portion made on purpose. be fair, we ask, th a t such a condition do • • • th at appeal, which shoots straight should prevail aud th a t one man should of from the shoulder: A man is proud of his w ife when benefit beeau.se of the millions of dol The mail service is the most u n ite r lars in advertising given him at the sal and probably the most indispensable s h e ’s dressed up. but he hutes to adm it expense of the national governm ent of all public utilities. The farm er »< it. • • during the war while others were not daily, and he w ants his daily Law yers could get pointers from the perm itted to let their virtues be served paper, his letters, and his parcels on wav a t> year-old boy cross exitiuiues know nf tim e. The mails furnish practically his his «lad. This is a big country w ith many mil only • • • connection w ith the outside world. lions of voters and to reach each voter The business and professional world de Nome folks who delight in laying w ith only a m eager am ount of infor pends upon the The mails are bare the sorrows of others claim to be m ation is an expensive perform ance. the life blood of mails. business. The genera) Christians. Huge saius must be expended in doing public looks to the • » • man in gray for so. V oters m ust get accustom ed to messages from the absent Th The acme of success is to do some seeing these huge sums expended. As m ail service is established ones. long as these huge sums are honestly you, and it belongs to you. to serve thing b etter thau it has ever been done before. contributed aud honestly used there • • • E fficiency in the postal service is can be no objection on the part of the not a m atter of m achinery or even of If there were no ad vertisin g in it, voter. In faet he would be the first to eom plain because the candidates did train service, but alm ost wholly a ques not nearly so much moiiey would be not m ake known the qualifications tion o f hum an brains, experience and given to charity. • • • which they claimed to possess th a t f it skill. The prom pt and accurate band A fter u girl reaches 36 she m ight ted them for the high office which ling and distribution of mail is due to years of ceaseless study aud practice just as well m arry. T h e re ’s no pleasure they sought to fill. on the p art uf the many thousands of left for her anyw • ay. ’• • postal employes. In contrast to the SHOULD M AKE PA REN TS TH IN K . average m anufacturer, who can hire Homo folks get more satisfaction out m achinists, carpenters, moulders, and of the wrong they find in others than In view of the fact that the influ men of various trades in the open mar in the good in them selves. • • • ence m orally of the unregulated public ket, the postal service must develop its dance is alw ays a live subject for dis w orkers, for the knowledge they must It is usually those w ith a small cussion, has been such a subject ns possess is tau g h t now here else. The am ount of cheap notoriety who seek long as we van remember, anil is likely tran sien t w orker is of no value to the to impose their im portance upon oth to be a live one long after we have postal service. A postal w orker must ers. • • • Ceased to be live enough to tak e i n rem ain for life, or the tim e and effort interest iu live subjects, data furniraed spent by the governm ent in developing The proposition of exam ining men by the Pacific Coast Rescue and P ro him have been wasted. and women before m arriage to see th at tective society is of vital interest to I'ostal employes are w orking on a they are m entally sound is too prohib every fam ily where those of the fern basis scale o f from $NU0 to $1300 per itory. • • • inia« sex are grow ing to womanhood. year, passed in 1907. On Ju ly I, 19IH, Following are several questions which 11 years later, congress generously A fter all is said and done, the only accom plishm ents th a t bring real plea sure are those which bring joy to others. • • • We bear a great ileal about following the beaten path, but all progress is made by those who have the nerve to m ake a new- path.• • • The man who reads his love letters 30 years a fte r he has m arried the girl, w onders why he was never taken be fore the probate judge. • • • A New Jersey man has declared th at person w ith a short nose has no brains. T here are a lot of people whose sm ellers need am putation. o $ HINGS WE THINK There m e three kinds of liars; those who lie for ainilseuieiit, those who lie maheioilalv and newspaper men who le fuse to iiinke sworn to thou • • stateiueiits • Tli«» gmormiH'nt in proitrcul iiig a patent break fast food eoneertt »»n the chitrgt* of )ia\uig inritere«! the market The government wall have a Imiti time showing that any hariai has been tioaie 1hereby. T hat win* a |»rett\ |iieee of devotion Oil the part of tla«* wit«« who gave a pi«*e«i «if hor jaw bone t«* r«*pair her hu«bati«l *n leg. Now if it will t»nIv be still long enough to knit with the iifltei bone, all will be well. • • • In her p«%ti1 1 «»ii for divoro«*, a Wimli ington, IV tV, woman demand*«, among other it«*itis of «*\|*«*nsc for her sti|i port, $30 a month for milk. The I iiin band might uupur«* tin to whom *he in going to let skim • tin* • • tienili. Phonographs have been invented whieh will sing out th«* tune of day at «neh intervals as tin* owner mat wish V kind that would till th«* propei time to stop playing would make a hit with the neighbors of • p«*rsoiiH • • owning them. V doetor has dineovered a hetiltnr. extract that in rt*p«irte«l to be able to grow tis*ue in lit hours and to heal wounds in an itteredtbly short time It would have had a great stilt* if | m * i fee fed at th«* tun«* of the r«*e«*ut calli paign. n o t i c i ;» “CLARENCE” Willi tho Sumo Exceptional Cunt, Including Gregory Kcllv U o I m t i Adams lb ron Beasley Guv B’Eiiiiery Joe Wallace Grace Filkins l*etty Murray l<Tui 1 1 Gordon Clara Clandiek .lames T. Ford ( Il i i ret inn ii! (¡lin g « (' I'y lr r ) “ l ’luri'Mcc” is iIn* lira! light c tiiiirilj cvi'i' w ritte n hy un A m i'i icuii \ i ■ w V hi 1% T t ilmni* Mi T u rk in g ltm nt Ins l ust * I'liic u g o I'riliiiiit* r i l f C M C THEATRE L. 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The Contest Costs Nothing and Is Open to Everyone—104 Prizes Ranging from $3000 to $10 Will Be Distributed Get all information and your Contest Blank now from the Rexall Man at The Modem Pharmacy Cottage Grove $ __ Oregon ~ 09 . • • * The man who gives his life to save a tot from a speeding train is not more of a hero than th e womi.n whose life is forfeited in giving another to the world. • • • A university professor has decreed th at a chaperone must be a woman, and a woman of m ature age. How does he ever el|s*ct to get his co-eds pnqierly chaperoned? • • • An electric current of 100 volts is said to have a food value equal to a porterhouse steak. And a porterhouse steak would give m any of us a shock equal to 100 volts of electricity. • • flt A W ashington man has engraved the alphabet on a pin head. He could probably put his brains on the point of the same pin and have sufficient room left to build a fence around them . • • • 'A country new spa|ier man would get k i lied for tak in g the same liberties with his p a tro n s’ fnrnily affa irs th at are ta lp n by the dailies with the a f fairs of people in th e public eye. • • • The only thing sw eeter than a sw eet heart is the little tot made in her im age th a t comes in a fte r years to coo and play, toddle and tnlk and cause you to muse upon the m ysteries of life. .! Cord Tire* with “Driving** and “Swa»tika** Skid-Not Treads Fabric Tires in “ Plain,” ‘‘Ribbed” and “ B B C ” Skid-Not Treads Smith Motor Car Co, ft