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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 19, 1921)
i*gou in thi* w « V o f rooponfil nid o »m i» und restored jaiyroll», OREGON WILL BE FIRST TO ! S Ä nr< i m t m trx ix a s ii Ther« in itili another condition that N llK lY l AI ItU IV lim L K r AI H («Oint» to »arly activity in th» Pacifi i-i.iu»t itnli'R, and particularly in Oro i_.'u and i;on anil \ Washington. \ asntngtou. Durimi During the tho year* Pacific Coast Staten Did Not IU tU te l“ * " !,r »"Tlntiou tlioro was a big boom II uiiddlo n o i.r u tiirm land*, and Values and W ill l Not Now «0 1 «OW | tl.is boom oiirriod valuoa to a point Have to Deflate. tar in exceaa of anything justified by llio conditions o f tho present or the immediate future fhe mas traa i Eugene K.yislor; Ihero n. plenty ol ' thinking of buymtr land wants to testimony to the effect that the in know that there is a reasonable ex dust rial depression has touched boliom, isolation that it m il increase iu value but them am lew nho ale willing to but on the ousting seule o f vali risk, their reputations or a prophecy as {them can In* uo suoli assurance iu the to when business conditions m il come fanning belt o f tho middle west, back to normal. Them am too many bm d prices there will probably not uncertain factors to be considered, l o r recede great l> from the present fin one thing, restoration ol normal bust urea, except in individual cases ol ness ru tho Lulled Stales dependa to u foreclosure. In • ause it is the history pretty large axteut upou the reliaba ot the world that n.uu pi* cos .nive itatiou of Europe, for turo pc is our never mine lank to any considerable best customer and no coûtent eau extent. Itut they will nit increase. At prosper unless its customers are sol the best, they will roni-tiii stat'ouary vent. The best thought along tho hue for a long t>eriod of years, and In nil o f business recovery is that it will be that does not increase in value is uot uext spring betöre a marked change a very attractive iuveslmeut. occurs. Imnd prices in the coast states Dut there rs one prediction that may showed no material increase dtiriu.. be made with reasonable assurance the inflation period, and iu addition that is that Oregon s return to nor hotter marketing facilities for uew mat prosperity wrli be ahead of thi . iro|», such as tin* fruit crop, a re ntak average. One reason lor this is that mg laud worth intriusii'allv more than Oregon did uot reach the heights ol lever before. It is a matter o f praeti inflation that were reached else when, ,ul certainly that our laud prices vv . i and therefore has less ground to cover continue to advance over a long period in gettiug back to uoriuai condition.- of years, which means thnt laud here Another reaaou is that Oregon’s groat 'w ill continue to be a good investment. lumber industry rs lacing a condition The naiural re mi It ot tliis cuiuluii't o f dammed up demand instead o f thi timi o f circumstance* is that the Pn coudiliou of saturated market that is «'ific coast states are due for another faced by many other industries. immigrât ion movement. According t> It is common knowledge that the the best information obtainable, there housing shortage in the Luitc.l States are many laud owners iu the wuldi is acute. 8ouic estimates place the in states who have sold out Imi number o f houses ueeded us low a are still waiting to get their paymeut 2,Ut)0,0o0, while other estimates run adjusted. It stands to reason tli as high as 6,000,UOt); it is manliest l* thev will not turn around aud buv impossible to arrive at au accurate more land that has very little prospect figure, because there are no statistic- o f appreciating iu value, and the ex bearing on the actual number o f fam pericuce o f the past leads to the eou tires needing houses. But it is cel taut elusion that they will route west. It that the uuruber is large, aud every this conclusion is borue out by facts, one knows that rentals are extreme!' it will mean a new immigration move high as com (Hired with pro war levels meut ou a very considerable scale. High reutals tend to stimulate bull Oregon's industries are fuiidamen ing, just as low reutals are sure to tally sound. The lumber market is limit newt construction. Building con temporarily dormant, but demand is struction will be one of the first hi certain to l>e uuusually strong when it dustrres to show activity for the sun ngaiu awakes. The farming industry ile reason that rentals are now at a o f western Oregon is iu far better evel that makes investments in in vv condition than it was a decade ago. buildiugs attractive. Revival o f build The fruit market is apparently weath ing activity will be felt immediati l.v eriag an epochal slump iu a very sat isfaetorv wav and wo are learning al ready that lower prices are going to f stim ulate CARE is WASH WÖRD o u r larger consum ption. Prepare Now for Early Fall Clothes Home Sewing Days Are Here L igh t tand Heavy W eigh t Pure W ool Dress Goods for Y ou r Selection Here W e p re fe r to sell y o u n il w ool Urea» g o o d s heeniiHo we k n o w fa b ric « g iv e lies! HaliNluetion. Inett reilueeil to the new level fo r full All wool tiroHN good» priced n yard MRS. r. J. ALSTOTT bookfld Ued Senl brnud. is pre shrunk. display. Chronic Ailments a Specialty Phone 180-L Cottage Orove DR. A. W. KIME S P E C IA L IS T IN OBSTETRICS W ill care for confinements at bis home i f desired. Special nurse i f required. Phones: office, 34; residence, 126 J. $160, $106, $196, $2 26, $2 60 to $4 60 The color» arc guaranteed fast und every pattern Henultful new plaids with solid colors to match are now on See them Unlay, you arc welcome. Pretty N ew Patterns In Cretonnes A Y ard 25c to 65c 32 inch Renfrew Romper Cloth 39c Every yard of Heiifrew romper cloth is fast color Each pattern itti-inches wide. Cretonne« are now widely used for smoeks, house drelates, dressing sacques nud many uses nhout the house. These patterns are all new and pretty, you arc wel come to sec them whether you buv or not. is strong und hard to wear out. Renfrew The fabric romper cloth is splendid for school dresses, hoys’ shirts, men’s skills and hniise dresses for fall wear A Complete Stock of Domestics] ¡Here When OVERPRODUCTION OF EGGS IS NOT LIKELY 36-inch bleached muslin a yd. West Is Hardly More Than Caring for Underproduction in the Par East. Five hundred men saw a woman down at Atlantic City. Probably any o ie of at half of th«*iu, fom fort ably eiiM'Onswl on a roin*h in tho young woman’a house, would have offered to lay down hi« life for her. # * # It has long been said that nothing 1* eer nm but death and taxes. To this should be added that the street ear will run slow when you are late. • • • I f some our vested rights are no» careful they will find themselves stripped down to just about that amount o f clothing. C o m e Im lny. These zephyr ginghams just received m cane lot from the mill, arc the fnimiun \ DV ■i 17c and 20c Long cloth und fine thread Nainsook in flesh and w hite, yard-wide, priced Middy clotji iu white only, yard P r e s s in g E v e r y D a y SUGGE8TIVE T H E R A P E U T IS T ptiu.tq p t ' S I 1 ’}! p|oj>piiMi Pretty N ew Plaid Zephyr Ginghams 25c a Y ard Thorough removal of dirt with out injury to the fabric that’s our aim iu life. ( thnt nil w ool T h e n , too, we tthow m osl o f o u r w ool «Irett» ii.i311 ttil if Jo A >i pint (sit j poopm .i viift o.tti N.iopu ,n| |_ the readjustment process is completed aud business again begins to move forward ut a normal rate, Oregon will Is* among the first of the states to re turn to full prosperity. The census bureau has just issued a bulletin on eggs aud chickens that briugs out some rather interesting (snnts. it shows, for example, that in the decade between 1910 and 192" egg production through the United I States increased 5.2 per cent, w hile the number of chickens raised increased | only 2.9 |>er cent. it is appureut, therefore, throughout the euuutry rhe COTTAGE GROVE LAUNDRY there lias that been considerable success ill King Us Up Phone 79 increasing the number of eggs |s*r hen. it is interesting to note that the cen ter of egg production is moving steud riy west ward. Every New England suite, for example, shows a sharp do ■T ease in e g g production, the average f decrease for all of New England being Professional Cards 131.2 per cent. Every middle Atlantic j-tate save I’euusyIvama shows a lua ....i decrease iu egg production aud | even Pennsylvania shows an increase DR. C. E. FROST of only 3.1 per cent. New York, which is the Icuding egg market of the couu O ffice in Lawson Building. tr>, shows a decrease in production of Phone 47 12.f per cent aud au almost equivalent Cottage Grove Oregon decrease— 11.4 per cent- in the number ol chicken* raised. The east north central states, iu ■ hiding Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Mich OAVEN C. DYOTT, M. D. igan and Wisconsin, have remaiued P H Y S IC IA N A N D SURGEON about stationary in the way of egg X-Ray work in all its branches. production, but have falieu o ff m the number o f chickeus raised. The plains states aud the southern states have Evenings by appointment show n small increases both in the uum 634 *Main, Corner Seventh Btreet ber o f eggs produced and iu the mini Cottage Grove, Oregon ber o f chickens raised, these increases being largest in the south, where there has been a determined effort to bnug about gicater diversification of agri J. E. YOUNG culture. ATTO RNEY A T LAW But it is in the mountain und Pacific O ffice on Main avenue. states that the greatest increase* are recorded. The mountain stutes us a Cottage Grove Oregon whole increased their egg production 47 per cent in the decade between 1910 and 1920 and the Pacific states showed H. J. SHINN :m increase of 45.2 per cent. Montana ATTO RNEY A T LAW leads every state in the Union in in crease in production of eggs, her per and notary public. Practices iu ou tage in the decade being 99.3. Iu all courts. Twenty fiv e years ex 1910 Montana produced 5,950,015 perienee. dozens o f eggs and increased this total in 1920 to 11,»5«,042 dozens. Every Bader Bldg., Cottage Grove, Ore. mountain state showed a material in crease in the number o f eggs pro d uced. ALTA KING California lends all tbe Pacific coast ATTO RNEY A T LAW states iu egg production, both in the total and in the percentage of increase Collections, Probate, Notary between 1910 and 1920. California Public produced 10,735,2.1» dozens of eggs iu 1910 and increased this total to 04,- 774 Willamette Ht., Eugene, Ore. 123,»»0 dozens in 1920-- an increase of 57.1 |s*r ccut. Washington is second H. W. TITUS. D. M. D. with a production of 10,373,710 dozens in 1910 aud 21,356,570 dozens iu 1920 E X PE R T D E N T IS T R Y an increase of 30.1 per cent. Oregon Modern equipment. First Nation produced 11 ,»36,462 dozens in 1910 and al Bank Bldg. O ffice hours 9 a. 1 1,025,720 dozens in 1920 nu increase of 23.0 per cent. m. to lk m., 1 to 6 p. in. Eve These figures nre unusually interest nrngs or Sundays by appointment. ing because they show that while egg production is increasing rapidly in the west it is falling o ff with almost eiiual J. S. MEDLEY rapidity iu the fa r cast. The poultry ATTO RNEY AT LAW industry has been growing so rapidly ill the west that predictions of im Eugene Loan and Savings Bank pending overproduction have not been lacking, but there is considerable re Building assurance in this direction in the fact Eugene _______________ Oregon that production is falling o ff in the heavy consumption districts of the cast DR. W. M. HAMILTON in practically tin* same ratio at which it is increasing in the west, dims fur CHIRO PRACTIC the far eastern market is expanding, because o f lack of home production, Chronic Cases a Specialty at a rate almost sufficient to care for our increasing production, without tak O ffice Over Darby Hardware ing into consideration increases in the population and possible increases in Res., 212 South Pacific Highway per capita egg production. 0 26c, 35c, 50c priced per 25c to 40c 32-inch fust color crepes, a yd 35c to 60c EUGENE ARTIST PICTURES SCENIC BEAUTIES lowed,” say* Mr. Uurghiluff. “ Thi» 'V ili not I mi |Hi**ilile, however, lililes» thè short senson is rontinued. “ The prette ut lavoratile condii i o n «va* bruught about by releusiug birds from thè game fanu last yeur after Colors o f Lane County Out-of Doors thè elused senson, so th»t n11 Inni a* to Be Reproduced lu Oil on Canvas Lane rouuty and the fumed grandeur of its secure attractions are to 1 m * brought to the attention of the world through the medium o f paint and ran vas if a contemplated campaign o f publicity by picture whieh hut aroused lie interest o f the Eugene chamber of commerce and railroad officials is put through. I'hiitographic representation* and printed descriptions of the beauty and olor o f tbe local country fail to do justice to the wonderland of forest and -1 I• Ii 111 in tins region, they declare, and fforts are to be made t<» trunsfer some of the fumed Oregon views to canvas and thus to preserve in its natural coloring many scenes o f interest to the tourist thut the camera fails to retaiu. < 3 . Fulton, Eugeni urii-t, M i in terested members o f the chamber of ominerce aud railroad officials in tbe possibilities o f the oil painting as a means of publicity und an exhibition of bis work at the Eugene chamber is planned for the near future aud his work will also be on display at the ‘ .'Hie county fair next mouth. Mr. Fulton, at his home in Eugene, has a gallery of laine county scenic iews that represent the work o f his brush during frequent trips to many of the beauty spots o f this region und it is these oil paintings that have at traded attention to the possibility of nrr -yiug a pictorial message to the nor Id of the scenery of Oregon. I'aintiugs o f other states hang in all the great art galleries of the country, according to the Eugene artist, but the beauty of Oregon has been neglected by artists. Only one picture in the Metropolitan art gullery of New York ity has an Oregon title, says Mr. Fill ton, who has visited all the art centers o f the east, and this entitled “ An Oregon Sunset“ fails in many ways to impress the beholder with the real color and artistic effect that is part Of III.- reality. “ Artists of the east and also o f Cal forma who have never painted in the Oregon forests, when first viewing an Oregon painting, are loth to believe that the colors are those of nature,” said Mr. Fulton. “ The Oregon blue es (HM'iaily mystifies them and they can not conceive of its nature, never hav ing seen the light blue haze that is s<» noticeable a part o f the Oregon forest and which is little known elsewhere.’ Mr. Fulton, from an experience as a (Miintrr o f natural views, declares that the upiier McKenzie, from an artistic standpoint, is the finest in this region anil that the blending o f the colors in the stream taxes artistic ability of the artist who attempts to transplant its changing color scheme to canvas. CHINA PHEASANTS ARE BECOMING PLENTIFUL China pheasants and bob white quail will be much more plentiful in the Willamette valley this season than for many years, according to A. E Burgh «iuff, state game warden. The open season for pheasants in the district west o f the Cnscaile mountains will be October 15 to 31, inclusive. “ We feel that the shortened season in effect this year will tend to keep ♦ he pheasants increasing until they eventually will reach the number here before promiscuous hunting was foi- ■ hunee tu propugni«* before thè open T b » Mentili«*! rccrivc* inquiri«** rvery huntlllg sesso II . Mirre thousniiil b in i» week fmui prospertivs lettiere vv In» »e r e re Ira seti ni Pebrunry »mi Munti „ , „ 1 , rupie» uf 111« paper. I f you wisb » f th is y c n r just befure thè iiestmg yolir |ullj y,„,ra d . »houlil be m senno* rii» Hetittliel, » t ie ni p r u s p r c t i v e s e t t b r» The Mentimi, $2 25 thè yiiif. lf «vili s e * it. Everything for Q U A LITY —n o t h in g fo r s h o w T H A T ’S OUR IDEA in m a k i n g C A M E L S — the Quality Cigarette. Why, just buy Camels and look at the package! I t ’ s the best packing science has devised to keep cigarettes fresh and full flavored for your taste. Heavy paper outside— secure foil wrapping inside and the revenue stamp over the end to seal the pack- age and keep it air-tight. And note this! There’ s nothing flashy about the Camel package. No extra wrappings that do not improve the smoke. Not a cent of needless expense that must come out of fhe quality of the tobacco. Camels wonderful and exclusive Quality wins on merit alone. Because, men smoke Camels who want the taste and fragrance of the finest tobaccos, expertly blended. Men smoke Camels for Camels smooth, refreshing mildness and their freedom from ciga- retty aftertaste. Camels are made for men who think for them selves. atnel R . J. REYNOLDS T O B A C C O C O M PAN Y. W m .ton -S .U m , N. C, u l 4 t f