Cottage Grove sentinel and Cottage Grove leader. (Cottage Grove, Oregon) 1915-1921, October 07, 1921, Image 2

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    à
ELECTRIC RATE HEARING IS
ON HERE TODAY
Inquiry to Bo Held B e lo » Mein tier
of Public Service Commission
Bcguuiiii* at 10 v m.
The electric rate proportion in Cot
luge Grove will be the »abject of n
t.onriug to begin thin morning at 10 a.
ui. in the old commercial chib rooms
i efore a member of the public eervico
omminsion. The city will bo reprv
••nted by its attorney, .1. K Young.
;i **iatetl by E. t>. Potter, of Huge no,
and 11. J. Shinn will cviuduct the eane
for the electric company.
lu view of the fact that at the re
cent election a large majority voted to
bond the city for a municipal light
and power plant, aud that the same
proposition has been the subject of a
previous hearing, interest is expected
to l>e intense and a large attendance
is anticipated.
C.
O.
H IG H
OPENS
F O O T B A LL
SEASO N A T ROSEBURG
TODAY
The Cottage Grove football team
goes to Rose burg today to play the
first game of the sea sou.
A large
delegation of studeuts will accompany
them, and high school work will begin
this morning at 8 mul close nt II:.'10
mi
order that students may atteud
the game.
•
The team has some excellent ma­
terial this season and though Coach
Hargreaves has had
little
time to
whip the squad into shape, it is ex
peeled that they will give a good ac­
count of themselves. Enthusiasm was
rampant at the rally on the campus
Friday night of last week and if
the boys show as much pep in their
game as they did at the rally they
will
walk away
with
the valley
champioiiship.
♦ --------------------------------------------------------- ♦
City Council
Ou motion, bills were allowed as
audited as follows:
City Traualcr ( Vug. and Sept.) 9121.17
Phil .lene-, lebor
7—54
I mphroy A hlaekm, supplies
7.40
Knowles A timber, supplies
... 41.79
Chas. A. Beidler, street work
. 119.50
Ralph Fullerton, street work
I9.SS
Robert Buckles, street work
32.00
Smith A Short, fuel for street
work
M JB
Innamora Bros., lumber.............
2.00
Burge A Hardin, cement walk
7.25
Shelby Churchill, building side
walk...... ...............................
A. C. Mat hew -, roi k
i
I.
. Potta, atroci work
•M
R. A l e. si mat w erk
MUM
11. hlyers, street work
28.00
A. C. Dickerson, street work
28.00
Fred Be idler, at reel work.
.'1.75
Geo. Boyd, street work, with
team......... .... „........
tiT.fitt
t). 1« Nichols, engineering
78.00
S. P. R. R , freight
SO S I
J. P. Godard, work at |virk
10.13
GOO. 11 Dalli, labor
2.55
C. O. Electric Co., monthly flat 253.85
C. (1. Sentinel, pub. and prtg. ... 23.03
J, hi. Verne;, a g r )
;.....
Edna Sullivan, typewriting
8.50
H R. Job. salary
1000
J. F. McFarland, salary and ox-
js-nse
10.70
Homer Galloway, salary and ex
I s ■ 11 se
27.35
0. B. Pitcher, salary aud ex­
pense
133.60
On motion council adjourned to Oet.
10. at 8 p. m.
HOMER G A I.U IW A Y , Recorder.
No Loans to Studeuts Who Smoke.
Studeut loans at tlie Pnivcrsity of
Oregon mav in thè futuri« he limited
to nou smokers, accordiug
to
Dean
John Stmub,
tnistee of thè fumi,
which was bnilt np by gifls.
“ The
amouiit of mouey spelli by au avcmge
smnker during a school vear is #7>o or
more.- ’ says Dean Stmub. “ and il is
felt that if a studeut ready needs help
Don’t have any slackers. Keep track he should eliminate this item of ex
of what each hen does by using egg penso. ’ ’
record cards. For sale by The Senti
It pays to rend the wantads.
nel ut $1.75 the hundred.
***
ARCADE THEATER
WEEKLY PROGRAM
Fri.— “ Daughter
of
Devil
Dan,”
Irma
Harrison
and
Ki mptou Green, is a tale of
Kentucky hills. From a wealthy
Kentucky home into a gang­
ster’s den, thence to a news­
b o y ’s life in Louisville, that’s
a chapter in the life of Irma
Harrison in “ The Daughter of
Devil Dan.”
“ Diamond queen,” chapter
eight.
Sat.— “ The Valley of Doubt”
by George Burton. “ The V al­
ley of Doubt” is a powerful
story of the great northwest.
Snub Pollard in “ The Dear
Departed.”
Sun.— •“ Be be Daniels in “ Sjie
Couldn’t Help It.”
Adapted
from “ In The Bishop's C ar­
riage,” novel by Miriam Miebel-
son.
Hoot Gibson in one of his
famous westerns.
Mou.-Tues.— “ Wolves of the
North,”
Eva
Novak.
The
strange adventures of a beauti­
ful girl and a dog with two
natures in the frozen silences
of the north, where tlie passion
of men know no laws.
See
the great avalanche, amid all
COLD WEATHER
Ninety per cent of Deschutea county
ex-aervice men who are applying for
bouunen under the 1921 la » are ask
In« for loan». aceordltiK to the legal
representative of the bonun eontiuln
nion In that county.
L A D IE S ’ U N D E R W E A R
Silk mill wool union suits, Marshall Kicltl iV: < 'o. quality, low nock,
no sleeves, ankle length, $3.
bleeeetl eoltoit, heavy winter weight union suits, high iieek, long
sleeves, ankle length. Vellastie, a suit for comfort ami long service,
price Iasi year, $3.25; priee now, #2.
No. ti8SI>, I'leeeetl cotton union suits, tlilteh Iieek, elbow sleeves,
ankle length, priee only $1.85.
Clyde Cl. Huntley of Oregon City,
having been confirmed by the annate
an
7,50 collector of internal revenue for
Oregon, will aanunto the dullen of the
ifftce an noon un the neceaaury fo r
mailt ten are completed.
Vnnounccnient w.m made at Medford
by Harry L. \\ alt her, dtvtali.il manager
of the California Oregon Power com­
pany, that the home offtee« of the
power company would be moved at an
early date from San Francisco to Misl-
ford.
Prunes in the hand» of grower» In
The Dalles district have been cleaned
up for the first time In 18 months.
All of the 1920 crop has been »old and
the entire 1921 product has either been
contracted for or delivered to pur*
chaser».
M E N ’S U N D E R W E A R
bine wool union suits, “ Athena,” Marshall Kielil A. Co. best braml,
priee each $2.60.
Extra heavy fleeced cotton union suits, taped, full sized and
knit to fit, sizes 3(> to Hi; price last year, $2.15; now, $1.25.
The above are only a few items in our underwear department., l it
ion suits ami separate piece underwear for women, men, children
and babies, heavy ami light weight, wool, wool mixed, fleered cotton
and cotton. A full stock. (Quality ami price right.
Registration figures reveal the fact
Glut In point of number» the women
at the Oregon normal school at Mon­
mouth leud the men with ratio of 19
to 1. There are Ju»t 19 men in school
of a total of 381 student» who have
registered to date.
A Special in M en’s W o rk Gloves Mineral tan, .....I weight, soft
and pliable horscliiilr front, mulcskin hack, either wrist length or
gauntlet. IViec ottlv (M)e.
Estimate» on the Douglaa. county
prune crop shew that the county will
produce half of the pruuea rained In
the Pacific northweat thin year
The
Douglaa county crop 1» exceeding
early estimate* and the predicted ton­
nage now aland» at approximately 10,-
0 0 0 ,0 0 0 pound»
P o w e ll & B u r k h o l d e r
Corner of Fifth and Main
Phone
70
1
The atate irrigation aecuritie* com­
mission. at a meeting held in Salem, » ---------— ■
«
voted to guarantee interest for the
next six months on 9500.000 for bonds i
W A N T A D S
issued by the Medford Irrigation dis­ i
----------
I
I R ate» One rent the word; mmi |
trict. also the Interest on 9275,000 of
iuiiiu 35 words; throe luscrtiuua for |
bouils issued by the Payette Slope Ir-
the price o f two when paid iu ad |
rigatlon district.
| van e»; half cent the word a fte r |
Lumber shipments by water from
| (ho third laser linn.
I
the Columbia river during September
Order your chick»
were the largest In several mouths. 1922 baby chick*
now if you w n nl
early hub her».
Statistics compiled by I*« put) ''Col­ Heavy layers of largo while eggs that
lector of Customs Kurineu at Astoria, top ihv luuiket.
Win. Hands 4. Boa.
showed that In the 30 days. 65 i«*s. la box til t, Cottage G row , Uro. jlyJDlfi-
I
its wonders of
this stirring
drama of
the
frozen north,
nothing stands out in the
memory more than the tremen­
dous snow slide whieh buries
deep the gold camp of t'loiidy
creek. .Men, women, animals,
houses, trees, all go down be­
fore
the
mighty
force
of
nature.
Wed. I Inhart Bosworth in
“ Behind The Door.”
Story
by (louverneur Morris,
.lane
Novak plays opposite Hobart
Bosworth. “ Behind The D o o r”
is a sea story ami Bosworth
is the captain of the ship.
Comedy, Harold
Be be Daniels.
Alex l.aFollelt, »cantor from Mnrlou
county »ml n prominent orvhiirdtst of
fhc Willamette valley, tins nturknletl
more than 4000 boxen of peaches thin
■canon
The return» for the poavhe»
averaged 91 n box
Lloyd
anti
Thurs.— ‘ ‘ Truant Husbands”
by
Albert
1‘ayson
Terhune
with an all star east, including
M ah Ion Hamilton, Betty Blythe
and Francis Billington.
If
you
want
to
forget
your
troubles, if you want to laugh
as you have not laughed for a
long time, see “ Truant Hus­
bands.”
“ International N ew s,”
the
latest "urrent events in pic­
tures.
Comedy, “ Zulu Love.”
HOME TOWN
PAPER WEEK
Rarely does the average newspaper
boost its own business, preferring to
give quantities of spaee in boosting
I be affairs of others.
Somebody suggested that it was
time for the newspapers of the coun­
try to adopt a week in whieh their
own business should he given prece­
dence, and The Sentinel thoroughly
endorses the idea.
The date set, is the second week in
November, from the 7th to the 12th,
including that great world event,
Armistice Dav.
The official title for the week will
he “Subscribe for Y o u r Home Town
Paper Week.”
Thousands of papers will join in
this event and our readers will hear
more about it as time goes on.
loaded at the mill» In the Columbia
river district, and their combined car­
goes ^mounted to 59,092,371 feet of
lumber.
Charles Park, president of the state
board of horticulture has announced
that it wilt he necessary to quarantine
Malheur county on account of Wrcvtl
found In alfalfa In that county, and
that action will be taken at once to
prevent the shipping of alfalfa Into
other counties. A proclamation in line
with Mr. Park’s suggestion probably
will be Issued by Governor Olcott.
The Bear Creek orchard, on the out­
skirts of Medford, last week received
the highest price ever paid in America
for a carload of pears, sold in New
| York and bringing a gross of 24219
This car contained 1000 half boxes of
D' Anjou pears which sold for an aver­
age of $4 25. This means that these
pears were sold at wholesale averag­
ing 10 cents apiece for the entire car­
load.
Constitutionality
of the Oregon
bonus law will be passed upon by the
supreme court of Oregon In a friendly
suit which is to he Instituted in the
lower courts Immediately.
This ac­
tion was decided upon by the state
bonus commission after it had been
found that sale of the Initial bonds
waited upon such action in view of
the recent New York decision against
the bond issue in that state.
There were five fatalities In Oregon
due to Industrial accidents during the
week ended September 28. according
to a report prepare»« by the state In­
dustrial accident commission.
The
victims were Arthur Anderson, car­
penter, Portland; James Fielder, log­
ger. Brooking»; C. Atterbury. airbrake
man. Gresham; Robert Watt, logger,
Tillamook, and John H. Palmehn, team
■ter, Portland.
A total of 376 acci­
dents were reported.
Jackson county, with a score of 96 4
out of a possible 100, walked off with
first prize In the county exhibits at
his year's state fair at Salem. Jack-
son county’s exhibits specialized In
fine pears, although there were In­
cluded in the exhibit some choice
apples, small fruita and grains and
grasses typical of that section of the
state.
Poos county, which featured
cheese and dairy products, obtained
second prize with a »core of 93.3, while
Douglaa county was awarded third
prize, with a score of 89 7.
That Industrial and business con­
ditions In Portland are on the march
to normal good times following the
deflation from war-time prosperity is
indicated In the hank clearing» for
September, which showed a greater to
tal than for any other month so far this
year.
Building permits also for the
month were nearly a million dollars
In excess of the same month last year.
September also was a record month In
Portland's shipping and wheat export»,
for the export» were 150 per cent
greater than for the same month last
year.
,v aalod aiou or w iuuu to lake oidar»
among Idi-uils and uciglibui» lor lie
gcuutuu guuraulevel hosiery; lu ll line
tor uii a, woineu aud tliiliiivu . Kliut
m a l e s tiuruiug.
Wo |aiy <o* » a hour
•«part: lime, or gaO a week lor lull
lime. C.k peileuco u iiu tiw -u t). W rite
Intel ualiouui Slock.ug M ill», N orris
iu w u . Pa.
oelipd
For BHe 2 cuiio pulley» lo r dutch
P ell; o steps ol one tueh e a iii, e»
lieuie diumeler io m ines; also o melt
d m u pulley with 4 melt luce.
1 he
Sculiuvi.
sVllp
You Need That Tractor Now
The ruin liua put the gronttil in the pink of eoiulilion for
plowing. You h I iou M get your ground turned over ami your
inll
Wanted Work fo r heavy truck aud
trailer; lumber, logs, wood, etc., luug
or snort hauls. U lcu u m i Gaiage. slOtl
For Bale Good broom house, with
balh aud ouxiou iol, located oh
p aied »K e e l, i-k&hib aud W in leak ef, ^
IVw blocks Horn n oslollicu ; very tea
suuablu price aud cusy lerlus il de
sired. W n lo W. B. Hodge, Goidsou,
Ore.
l i d o< pd
For Bale or Trade lo r C ity Properly
_u acres, ii iu cultivation, .1 iu Urn
ber; good o room house with hut ami
cola water; buru, two chicken houses,
fuuiiiy oicburd; Iwo cows, horse, wug
ou aud buggy. Ucorgu Jacobsen, Hnx
61, Cottage u n ite.
s J J o ip d .
For Bale Good heavy team, would |
consider trade for milk cows or light '
uulo. Chas. Cochran, pkouu 169 J, Col
luge Grove.
»23 or pd
For Bale 250 White Leghorn hens,
Tam red strum; bo ceuls each. H. A.
Buuuer, plume 20 F I 2.
sZJorp^
Lost, Strayed or Stolen Hhepucrd dog,
lroiu uiy place ou Mosby creek. No j
l if y inu fo r reward.
N o queslious
asked. N . A. Cobieutx.
»2Jo7c
I he e o l l l llllleil
I' all
I mils
put
I lie
g'l i i l l d i i
¡11
D K M D N S T K A T I O N S D A Y nit N I G H T
Woodsons—for
THE CASH STORE
$1.25
j
Wanted To hear from owner of good
ranch fo r sale,
Hlate ensh priee,
full |»ifileiilars. D. F. Bush, Mlnneap
olis, Minn.
oet7 dcr.'lOp
Fresh Salmon, 7 cents a pound f. o. b.
Mnplcton.
Fish sent by express r.
o. il. E. G. I.ielilenthnler, Miipleton,
Ore.
o7egah
Apples- Apple» Apples- Waiiterl
1(H)
fam ilies to lake It) bushels o f S|at |
zenbiirgs at fili.
Bring holes.
J. I. j
Jones, rear o f H. I*, denot,
o 1 21 pd j
For Sale « lots. 2 mile» south from
p. o., near new highway, inquire o f
F. F. Wells, Klkton, Ore.
o7 28|«l
For Sale. -1920 Ford touring car In
first rlnsM condition,
starter
anil j
elect fie lights.
For quick »ole priced
at 9365. I). L. VanNeeiln.
n7pil
Fordsons
Sample Store
reeeived a large UHHurl
of uinlirellaH.
Chil
ilren'M iiiubrellaa
For
Bale One
four year old
mare.
broke; one set light work harnesa; j
fine single harness;
12 yards
rag
eur|s-i. ttsenr Jackson, Delight Valley
(Hngiiiuw p. o.) Phone 38 F 5. o7 — IJ>
»
By the iihc ut u Fori I anti tractor, whieh dues the work an
iplickly, yoll ar«« cerium to la- ulile to gel the Jiili ('Iilllpletiil
The Fordann tractor way ia the ulenl way hern use it i* hi
much earner and I n ' cuusc it in the only way whieh unsure* you
that you can heat the iuiiih hoiiii to eoine.
iii eii t
Want to take 100 to 150 sheep on
shares. Ellsworth I hi me wood. o7 21 p |
Notice is hereby given thnl Eliza
Hubbard was appointed Administratrix
of the estate of Wiley M. Hubbard,
deceased, liy the County
Court
of
Lane County, Oregon, on the 27th day
of ¡September, A. D., 1921 and that nil
persons
having
claims against said
estate are hereby notified to present
the same, duly verified, to the said
Eliza
Hubbard,
administratrix,
at
Dorella, Oregon, within six months
from the date of the first publication
of this notice.
Date of first pllldicatinn o f notice
the 7th day of October, 1921.
E L IZ A H I B B A R D ,
Administratrix.
H. J. HH IN N,
Attorney for estate.
o7 nS
ill f i e l o l ' e
•I ii h I
For Rent - 6 room bouse aud about 2
acres o f luml with burn. Also house
fo r sale. Furnished housekeeping rooms
in modem home fo r rent. 624 Gibbs
uveiiue Cherry court,
sd0ol4|ai
N O T IC E TO CREDITORS
Heed
HUi'li condition that you r t u i’t get onto il.
Ladiea’
hrellaa
and
men’a
uiu-
$1.50 and up
!Mi comforters junl reeeived,
Hplendid iiHMortnient
$2.45 to $4.65
NVe have a large aMMortinent
of lilanketH.
('nine in and
nee them before purehna
$2.75 to $10.00
Blue ami white luneh elotlm
ami napkitiH
$1.45 and $1.95
Napkiim,
each
....
10c
Large uHHortmen! of outing
flannel, all color*, dark and
light, the yard
20c and 25c
Heavy hliifk sateen, also fig­
ured aateena, the yard -
35c
Dhildren’*
Mize*—
play
I ’hihlren'H aboca, all Mtylen,
all colora, priera
A
$1.50 to $2.95
•IllHt reeeived a large Hill i |>-
mellt ol hoya’ dreas simes
I 'ome in and are them
$3.25 to $4.50
Ludirá’ and miaue*’ alinea
and oxfnrda,
iu all
the
wauled atylea, receiving new
altipiani!, daily
$4.95, $5.50, $6, $6.50
Men'a dreaa alinea in
many
atylea,
lilaek
brown —
tin*
and
$5.50 to $6.50
M en ’s leather jerkins, ju*t
the tiling for cold and wet
weather, price
$8.50
9
M en ’s night shirts and p a ­
jamas -
$1.25 to $1.95
All ki ii <I m of wool nnd cotton
HiiitN,
all
ROX —
2 for 25c to 95c
98c
M en ’a
underwear,
uninn
HiiitH and 2-piece garmenta,
wmd and cotton —
Ladies’ winter underwear,
low and high neck,
short
and long sleeves and bodice
top*
95c to $5.50
$1.25 to $1.50
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