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About Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 2, 1921)
The Sentinel ! doer which can bo killed are bucks! I with horns. ' i f those men who have brough sorrow into other homes hud waited J to shoot until atler they kuow that I A Weekly Ncw»i>ajx'r With Plenty Thing* OttMr, think (mi Whit Ws they were not going to break tbo law,! o f Backbone. I hulk •( the Thing* 0th« • Ihisk uulil they knew that they were shoot | lug at a deer with horn», two homes Elbert Bede and Elbert South 1‘ubliahem Good »troots *rt> all right but the* Elbert Bede___________________ ___Editor wuiild uot have boon bcrcll ot a uicui bor held dear and two meu uow are uex«rtheles* poor educa!tonal Iu guilty ol killing a tellow uiuu would ▲ firat ciana publication entered at Cot o f the city. not haxo before them a lifetime o f stitutions for the • youth as tage Grove, Ore., aa aecoud claaa mutter remorse. About 50 per cent o f the unhappy 1 bo tact that those responsible for .412 East Main tlio killing did Buainena Office.. uot deleruuuo that woiueu o f thi» world lay it to being they were keeping wilhiu the law. married the other 50 per cent to not S U B S C R IP T IO N H ATE S shows gross carelessness that should being. One year____ $2.25 | Three moutha..... tJ5c uot lie lightly glossed oxer. • ss Six montha__ 1.15 | Single copy------- 5« A wise housewife showed a tramp N o aubacription bated for lea» than tioe Bandit Villa has demauded o f the the woodpile and said, " T h o s e who ▲ reduction o f 25c for paying a full Mexican goxeruiucut the pay promised labor not, neither shall they e a t . " him lor himself and meu. Our wishes year in advance m this eouuectiou are that Villa and " T h a t ' a too old a saw for m e , " the his buuch get w hut they huxe coming tramp replied, us he started ou Ins Member o f w ay. to them. Natioual Editorial Aaaoeiatiou • • • Oregon State Editorial Aaaoeiatiou We bave heard o f rare instanees of G U E S S IN G VS. K N O W I N G . Oregon Newspaper Coufereuee weather predictions that eauic true. iBy Walt Mason.) Lane Couuty Publisher»’ Association 4» • • I f 1 were selling uaiks or glass, or When a father come* home lin'd F R I D A Y , S E P T E M B E R 2, 1221 pills or shoes or garden suss, or honey freiu work there is nothing so refresh Horn the b*»e— whatever hue of gooifs were mine. I ’d study up that special mg as to have a diminutive rvpruduc TOO M U C U N O R M A L C Y . tion o f its mother route raring to inert line and know its history. I f 1 a stock o f rags should keep, him with outstretched arms, glowing A New York dispatch states that United States steel ta p m ate eorjiora 1 'd read up sundry books on sheep face enshrined with curls and tiny bps Beneath puckered for a kiss. The welcome is tiou not in auy way connected with and xxool and how it grows. the government ) has lowered its wages my old bulit, freckled naif, I ’d store so sincere and effusive that daily c a r e s for unskilled labor to $14.40 a week ut some facts ou warp and w oof and are forgotten iu its enjoyment. other things like those. I ' d try to • • • 42 hours. from pateut Not having as yet felt able to lax know n spuming jack Wheu a girl tells a young man she huru or wagon rack, a loom from hog in our wiuter supply of steel pellets hate* him, it's a sign that she thinks and pigs we do not kuow whether or tight fence; and if a mail caiuo iu to not this reduction in wages has been buy, and asked some leading question, something o f huu • anyway, • • could answer with some sense. reflected iu the price o f these house I f 1 were selling books. I ' d kuow a A man o f 7 .4 has challenged nuv man hold necessities, but we do kuow that this lowenug of wages is getting back Shakespeare from au Kdgnr l*oe, a over 70 to a fistic encounter. Oh, Os Carlyle from a Pop«, and 1 would to uoruialcy with a vengeance. know Fitzgerald ’* rhymes from I .aura terisiu, thy name is mud. We do not kuow what class id lob b y's brands o f crimes, or lollinn eople tnose unskilled laborers may b< . Bussell’s dope. The fall is hardest for those who t may be that they arc the lower ot And i f 1 were n grocer man. I ’d have climbed highest. the foreign races an 1 that $14.40 for open now and thou a can to see what 4 » hours, or 30 cents ihe hour, may be stuff it held; 'twere better than to I t ’* funny how hard it is to make big wages compared to wliat they writhe iu woe and make reply, I d o n ’t might earn iu their uative hinds, but k n o w , " when some mad patron yelled. someone else see what is so very plain we do know that no family iu America I hate to hear a merchant say; " 1 to you. • • • can live decently on that wage in think that this is splendid h ay,’ ’ “ I these times and lay by anything for guess i t ’s first class ta r.” A preacher ami an editor will ex He ought the future. to know how good things any if he change places for a week. The editor Folks may live differently around would sell his silk or tar or other proliably would be pleased to reprut the steel mills o f the east than they goods to me. Oh, knowledge is thn next world. do in this section o f couutry. Thn stuff that wins, the man without it the performance • in • the • wage may provide all the workers re soon begins to get his trade iu kinks. The way women wear their clothing | seiving it desire, but we doubt it. No matter where a fellow goes, he's That wage is hardly more than many valued for things he knows, uot for nowadays, Cupid should experience lit o f the young people o f this section the things he thinks. tie trouble hitting the mark. demaud for luxuries and pleasures. . . . Thirty cents an hour is the wage de A man made o f common clay is not | manded by little lads for their labor always a brick. in piling wood and doing odd jobs. • • • PICRIC A C ID IS BEINO When wages for the worker, and SOLD BY G O V E R N M E N T A man is discontented until he real employment in a steel mill sounds lik real work, get down to $14.40, it is At an adjourned session o f eouneil ires his ambition; thru h e ’s more ills time to call a halt in getting back Monday mgkt J. F. Spray xxus granted contented because he d id n ’t aim Orders Should Be Placed With Oregou Agriculture College. to normalcy and make a start iu the I ermission to install platform scales ou higher. other direction. . . . the north side o f his building, between A wage o f 30 cents an hour is not the curb and tile sidewalk. Portland, Ore., Aug. Ufi. - (Special.) The marriage ceremony i* too serious a normal or decent wage. A communication from the city a thing to contain surh a joker as thar — A grout »innetu* will be given the eleturiug o f logged over hinds ol the council o f St. Helens was read that IN E X C U S A B L E CARELESSNESS called attention to the gross inequality " o b e y " clause repeated by the fem »tute through the use o f a large the ceremonies. amount ol piene acid which the gov ot taxation ol public si-rx ice property ¡nine |>artirip«iit • iu • • ernment has made uvinluble for the Two meu haxe been killed in nearby compared to private property, citing The father who refuses to look aftci landowner, according to a statement sections in nustuke for deer. among others the Pacific Telegraph In both cases there is no question and Telephone C’o. that insists ou n the kids once in a while has no bus! issued by Charles Hall, of Klamath hulls, president o f the Oregon state that the killiuo was entirely unpre valuation for its property in Oregon ness with any. ehuiuber o f commerce, following the meditated and that those responsible o f over $15,IHR».IM*( in fix in g its rates • • • reeent notification from Washington for the killing grand- regret the tinge for '• rx ice, but is let o f f on a $5,iHXl, There are suppised to be certain that Oregon lias been allotted Itlii.lNM) dies, bat had these men bad the turn basis for taxatiou. The council proper respect for law neither o f these instructed the city attorney to draft rules which when properly applied will IHiuuds o f this explosive. According to government bulletins, accidents would have happened. a resolution to the state tax liourd ou raise perfect children. One o f them Is picric ne id is o f greater strength than The law says that the only kind of the subject and submit same lit next made o f reinforced hirkory. • • • dyuumite and is safer to handle. It is meeting o f council. Survey o f saleable timlier on c i t y ’s Officeholder* are grant sticklers for au explosive which was used in the great war und, with a great surplus west side water shed was deferred keeping np;>oiutmcnt». ou hauti ut the conclusion o f the war, until next spring. Repair o f niacudnni • • • tin* government decided to turn it over iHixement on south P a cific highway There nre mothers who brag about to the different states on a bnsis of left with street committee with power to act. Water commissioner reported how much the children look like their th«* amount o f logged o f f lands iu each state. that the I ’ rnytlicr creek dnm would be dad. • • • Landowners o f the state must place re|«tircd before high water. City engineer reported improvement o f XI A man got txvo years added to his their orders for the piene acid with street and north La lie street com sentence for making a flippant remark the Oregon Agriculture college, accord mg to advices from Washington. When pleted. * to the sentencing official. Talk wasn’t the numk>er o f orders equals a carload, cheap that time. the agricultural college will forward Butterflies in Masses. • • • this order to the United States deport The followin g item appeared in the It takes a bunch o f monev to get ment o f agriculture and the explosive hotel news o f M onday’s Oregonian: Money always «{i«1 will l»e shi|»|M*d to the state from the Tin* highway al«»ut 17 miles south » fly. n<r machine*. nearest cartridging plant. Individual # o f Eugene from Walker to Divide is have wing*. orders Will be limited to |00U |X>Und* • • • Relieve it with glasses now completed and ready for use, »<• ami the total cost o f the explosive, cording to J. C. Compton, road eon Ito u ’t be afraid o f criticism. It Is a correctly fitted by th«* cost o f cartridging, tractor o f MeMinux ¡He, who was at sign that you nre making folks take including handling, distributing and freight, will the Imp-rial yesterday. The fact that notice o f what you are doing. our modern methods. be iu the neighborhood o f LI rents the there are now no detours on this ' • • • pouml. road will be welcomed by many tour “ The state chamber has been fol It is nmusiag to nee a 75 potino ists. Mr. Compton came to Portland to meet Mrs. Compton, who has been woman boss around a 200 pound bluY> lowing developments closely in regimi to the dist rioution o f picric acid.“ at Lake Quinault for three weeks. Mr. ber. ¿ L i L l l w l said Mr. Hal). “ We believe that the • • • Compton said he had driven over the cheapness and efficiency o f this ex eat Wll LAMETTE ST EUGENE 0 « . McKenzie |«a»s recently arid was stir A bill collector in an nutomobile ts prised at the number o f butterflies he about the hardest thing in the world plosive w di g i « e a fren i impi I u t •. land clearing operations in Oregon. •aw in huge mnss<-s on the mountain. to dodge. The total cost o f picric acid to the • • • consumer is much lower than corn Ring u* np and give your item*. A chaperon i* a person who goe» men ial explosives at the present mar along for the purpose o f being fooled ket price and h great demand for the government explosive should come • • • from sonn* o f our districts where the A man hold* hi* ago— a woman bulk o f the undeveloped lumi* nr«* keep* her*. logged o f f ami burned o v e r .“ s • • “ Taken in «J «« These Month American scrimmage* logged o f f land h seem to be getting along very nicely by the last legislature, I believe that without fracturing any o f the revised the use o f picric acid will m«*an much to the development o f th«î stufe.“ football rule*. • • • N C E you have bought " K i s s i n g is o v e r d o n e ," say* a Bos R U R A L E N T E R T A IN M E N T Eversharp you incur no ton woman. The fire* o f love mu*t Tie further pencil expense except the REQUIRES L IT T L E CASH scorchers in the Hub. insignificant cost of Eversharp • • • Rural eiitcrfaiumunt 1* an important Leads. A single supply of these In the game o f life all may be mean* o f ioHleriug community »p in t, trump* i f they deal the cards eor in the opinion o f M om Norma Olnuu, leads, made especially to fit rectly. instructor in expri'»»iou and dramatic Eversharp Pencils, lasts months • • • art at the Oregon Agricultural colh-gn. andmonths. Eversharpquickly " W h e u person» are brought Inject her Whether something said is rut* or pays for itself. And, remember, not depend* upon whether the baby is and each one given something to do eighteen months old or eighteen year* more community »pirit i» aroused, ’ ' it lasts a lifetime 1 Be sure you says M i» » OI hou . old. get the genuine Ever .harp. The " O n e |MT»on with u knowledge o f • • • dramatic can do much in a »mail towu name is on the pencil. Call Sometime* a b o y ’s deposition isn’t or furmiug community, liy mean» o f to d a y to see o u r s p le n d id spoiled b y being repeatedly told thar the drama the m-.hool can be made the he looks like hi* father. center o f int*re»t and |»-rsons who assortment. A style for every . . • have no time or money to go to the requirement. A Vancouver housewife finds thn? larger towns can haxe in a small way • she walks IS miles a day doing her the art and beauty they crave. "L ittle cash outlay i» nece»*ary. Dealer’s Name and Address housework. Then hubby walks IS feet Electric light* are not necessary. across the clean floor with his muddy .Someone in the community will know boots and spoils the whole business. enough uf i-le.tricity to work out u • • • system o f lighting with the nae o f Expensive scenery in not A b ig breakfast food concern has hatterie». been forced to the wall, but that ¡an t required because green denim can be Anyone who likes nearly as bad as i f it had been force« used effectively. to »ew would be glad to denign and I VJAHl 7 to live on its own breakfast food. / PRODUCTSj «jake costiiDic*. • • • " Whnt is more important, the people People do not want " a c h a n g e " so learn to appreciate good piny* and much as they want " t h e change.’ ’ those who take part lose their »e lf . . . conaeiousncn» and are able to apiM-ar When Running fo r o ffic e does much to tm before the public without fear. prove some m e n ’s disposition for a there i» community »pirit and enter taiument people become more »at is few months at least. find with their life in the »mall com • • • munity. Some self made men shouldn’t men tion the fact as a qualification when AUTO TRAFFIC ON LANE HIGHW AYS QUITE IIE A V ’ looking for a job. • • • The »tntfl highway eonimi»»lnri n I f some men spent as much trying to live as they do tryin g not to die number o f weeks ago took n census they might accomplish something o f tra ffic on nil the highway* in the state, counting the number or vehicles worth while. o f various kind» passing a given point • • • on each. A man was stationed for A hung jury never sent a man to three days at each point nod the the gallows. average daily tr a ffic was computed. • • • The count was conducted between f( The number o f There is no need to debate a* Ta a. m. and 10 p. m. whether a thing is right or wrong. I f vehicle* computed in a dny lit four Laae eonntv p oin t* follows: there is room for argument there ta I’ aciflc highway at Junction City: not much chance o f its being entirely Horne drawn vehicles, 14; motorcycle*, right. 15; passenger car*, Oregon license. Cold Facts The ¡inIrl>U‘<lMt*ss of (Village drove, rilv ami school, is $2bH,707.Hi. $ The minimi inleresl charged on lliis amount is $1 The deld on every family in ( ’ullage drove amounts to approx ¡match *700, and this amount does not include county, state and nu t ¡oliai debt ; neither docs it include an\ interest on the bonded indeht edness. t j The moni lily interest charge for every man, woman and child in ( ’ottage drove amounts to 71 cents. If municipal ownership in Cottage drove is n success, why the necessity of a *10,000 refunding bond issue to pay for water purchased I went v years ago ( If a sinking fund for payment of water bonds could not he created, could a fumi he created t « » pay for an elect lie light and power system, when that would he operated mechanically ami uot by gravity ! ? 'The persone 11 of the ( ’ottage Grove Kleetrie ( ’ompaiiy your support in the defeat of the * ’>0,000 charter amendment. solicits SKIIN’ l< ’K is our motto. COTTAGE GROVE ELECTRIC COMPANY C ity C o u n c il 5 * 1 2 ; d i r » from o t b e r »tali -». I b i ; light dui v tr uc k», 2 it; tr u c k » o f a tou inni n ha ll r a p i n i t i nini on -r, 1 1 ; to ta l * 1 2 . l ’a c i f i c I n e h u a v a l C te awell - Borse dm »11 ve h ic le », 3 1 1 ; inotori-ycte», tlil; passeiiger rur», O regon lireuse, 2 * 7 : cur» from other States, 1 4 * 1 ; b elì i diity tr uc k», 1 2 ; truck » o f u Ioli unii n linlf cu luti li y and o v e r H; total, ftii.Y M eKeuzie In e h w a y al Thursto n: Morse Urawn v e n irle*. 2 ; motori-vele», 7 ; pnssenger rnr», O regon l im in o , 4 IM ; rars from olh e r » t a te », 1 3 ; light d i l l i tr uc k», 2 4 ; truck » uf a lun limi a hall r nim eity, 1 . 1 ; to tal, 4 7 0 . w illa m oitc \ nlley and Florence O The Modern Pharmacy! C. J. KEM, PROP. COTTAGE GROVE j| WiU BM • t »1411 \ wrmtnd will r«*i»t your linmu». —- ■ ■ " 1 ■■ - A. R. Spearow, Pastor Seventh Street and Ad&nia Avenue S U N D A Y , SEPTEM BER 4. M 0 R N IN 0 Sunday School ......... ................. — ........... ........... 9:45 a. m. Morning Hour 11 00 a. m. “ At The Doorway of L ife ," Inspiring music hy tin- young Indies’ choir. E V E N IN G Song Service 7:46 p. m. Kverybods sings. Evening Hour 8:15 p. m. Subject: “ The Mo»t Difficult Thing in The W o rld ." Every man ami woman, hoy and girl iu Cottage drove should he iu at least one service on Sunday. Come and bring ot hers. conjunction with the [»ill which was passiti \ Th«» H«*iitui«'l r**rniv«*» inquirí«** rvrry w*'«*k from proNpeeUvc nettimi who wish ropii'X o f th«* pup«r I f you with t*> n* II your lami yonr ml. nhotild I»«« •»» Thu McnttncJ, wlnn* proup«*«*tivu Mtf tiara FIRST SkemanVi filcodu fERSHARP highxxny, between Juliet mu City and Hort «»u: H«»r*«« drawn \rln« l» *, lì; iti « » ti»r«*y«’ b'*, *»; |*«--»t,i»g»*r * ’ir**, (ir«*g»»i»f t»l ; «*ars from «»ih* r slut* *, I; light duty truck», lì; trink* «»f a t«»it and a hnlf ni|»jit Hy or aver, f»; total, »7. t h e o i Hi u r n t h a t s e r v e s I When a Winchester Speaks It Means Business There he come»—the big grizzly snarling, only a few feet away. It takes a sure-fire, sure-to-Work, accurate rifle and a powerful, hard hitting cartridge to bring him down. A Winchester rifle and one Winchester cartridge can atop the charge u f the world’s largest carnivorous animal. Winchester rifles and ammunition have been the choice of Roosevelt and many other famous hunters of log game for many years. Every passes Winchester exacting tests rifle for strength, smooth action and accuracy. Winchester cart ridges are tested for power, velocity and penetration. For your next hunting trip whether you go after big game or small take a Winchester rifle and Winchester cartridges world standard for over fifty years. W. L. Darby & Company The Winchester Store