Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current, May 30, 1912, Image 8

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CHURCH NEWS
♦
A u i i i c a i F in e st F lu vbinc M u x s *
PER
Costs more SACK
Costs less LOAF
W T H O R I T l l - S concede that the F t s n c i
. FtOOUMG M iu a c * ’
has the MMt per-
, _
fectly constructed, heal ktiM fid and nodera
equipped plant ever built ttt this country. It employs
only the most experienced millers and uses selected
Kastern Hard Wheat and choice Western Soft Wheat
in producing
FISHER’S BLEND FLOUR
Naturally, it coats more to turn out this new. hvah
hlcn.t than
it dor* tv> make simpler »ml lex* carefully handlet! Hour*. Hence,
it* price per sack is slightly more. Inasmuch a* it »» not “ v'ur
but loaves o f bread that we cat. and a* F isher s K le n p makes
more loaves, in proportion to its cost. than di>es any other
dour, housewives and others using it have the satisfaction
o f knowing that they are reallv fettin * m. re and better
values for their money. F isher ' s nt run coala mof#
as flour, but it give* more, both in quality
and quantity o f loaves, ami i therefor#
actually more economical to buy
and use than are the
cheaper brands.
On* Prut at ill
1 « I
• flou £
H j O ü S
fLOOR
Men’s Work Shoes
A t this store you can save 50c to $ 1 . 0 0
a pair on Shoes, over credit store prices.
W e have no bad credit account risk and
therefor can sell to you on a closer margin.
Pay cash here and get the cash saving.
M e n ’ s Black Calf-Skin
Shoe, unlined. Heavy linen
stitched.
Leather insole.
Extra heavy, solid leather
soles— both sewed and brass
nailed.
This is an extra
good wearing shoe. M
JC
Cash price a pair. ^ Z . 4 u
$ 2 .2 5
Boys Shoes.
Sizes 2 to 6.
Black calf shoe. Six inch
top. Soles and uppers made
of solid calf skin. Soles
are sewed and tacked. All
linen stitched.
Leather
back-stay. Cash
price a p air.........
$2.25
Reliable
9 bars Savon
Soap for .............
Mad? on wide easy lase.
Soles are of best oak leather
and very soft and flexible.
Smooth leather insole— no
nails. The upper leather in
this shoe is o f finest grain
calfskin. Cash
frQ 1 C
price a pair________ I J
$ 2 .9 5
Viscilized Calf Shoe. Heavy
double soles from toe to
heel. Soles are both sewed
and fastened with standard
brass screws. Heavy back
stay.
Heavy li-nen sewed
throughout.
Tan
color
only. Cash
frQ Q C
price a pair______
^)Z . J J
Fruit or Berry Sugar (fo r
remainder of
& O QC
w eek), 100 lbs___ 4)0. Z3
Dry
Granulated
fbeet)
Sugar per
100 lb s ...........
6 bars White
Laundry Soap.
$6.05
...25c
Umphrey & Mackin
THE CASH ECONOMY STORE
Everybody Uses It-
or Ought to—
H .& H .
HARD W HEAT FLOUR
A High Grade
Hard W heat
Home Made Flour
Spray s Column
$ 12.50
These suits are guaranteed all wool and the tailor­
ing is equal to thut of suits selling usually at S20.00.
<1 The colors are fancy blues, blacks, browns, grays,
tans and fancy mixtures
Q O u r personal guarantee* goes with every suit. If
you are dissatisfied with your harg in after w ear­
ing the suits six months, come to our store and we
will give you a new one or refund your money.
4] This offer is open to our old patrons and will he
taken advantage of by scores o f them who already
know that we sell the best clothes in the world for
the money.
<] To the people who are not acquainted with us or
our methods of selling clothes, we earnestly invite you to come and look them
over. W e know you’ll buy one of them and ever ufterwards be a booster for us.
q W e have 50 boys’ separate coat* taken from suits worth up to six dollars,
which we have divided into two lots and are going to sell as follows:
All Coats from $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 Suits on Sale at
$ 1 .4 5
All Coats from $4.50, $5.00 and $6.00 Suits on Sale at
$ 2 .1 5
THE OREGON WOOLEN MILLS STORE
Leading Clothiers, Furnishers, Men’s Heavy and Dress Shoes
«2»
Get the Cash Savings Here
$1.50
25c
Presbyterian Church.— Sunday, June
2, there will be the regular services.
Sunday school at 10 a. m. A t 11 a. m.,
Rev. Dr. Ford o f Eugene w ill preach.
Christian Endeavor at 7 p. m. A t 8 p.
m. there will be a union service at the
Christian Church in the interests o f
the graduating class o f the High
School.
____
For the purpose o f gaining new friends and en­
larging our clothing business which has so far been
very gratifying indeed, we are going to sell, during
the next 15 days, 200 new. clean, up-to-date suits,
everyone of them worth to $18.00 for
* 1 * ♦ X *>»**X m M **»*
*♦*
****** * 1 * *** ♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ * 1 * * 1 * «£♦
Shoe.
G ro c e ry D e p a rtm e n t
Fancy Burbank
Potatoes, 100 lb s..
The open a<r festival to be given by
the I.a>iics Aid Society and the Ep-
worth League in the front and rear of
the Methodist Church, Tuesday a fter­
noon and evening. June 4th, is some­
thing out o f the usual order o f things.
The booths for the sale o f useful and
fancy articles, the tables where ice
cream and strawberries w ill lie served
and the platform upon which the en­
tertainment is given are all to be in
the open air. W ith fine, warm weather
a most enjoysble time is assured. If
the day is rainy the spacious League
and Sunday school room w ill be used.
$ 3.15
Our Old
Come and See These Shoes. Satisfaction
Guaranteed in Every Pair
Carnation or Vienna hard
wheat Flour
1 QC
per s a c k ...........I . J j
The topics to be studied in the Lend-
A-Hand Class during June are most in­
structive.
Influencing the Public Through the
Home.
Influencing the Public Through the
Church.
Women in Organization*.
Woman's Suffrage.
The Woman o f 1-eisure.
A general discussion takes place at
the next session upon whether the
father's or mother's influence is the
m«re far reaching and longer abiding.
Church o f Christ. Regular services
next Lord's Day. Bible school at 9:45
a. m.. preaching at 11 o'clock. Union
service in the evening, at which time
the baccalaureate sermon w ill be
preached to the high school graduates.
D o lla r s S a v e d
$ 2.4 5
Methodist Church. Next
Sunday
there w ill te these service*: Bible
school at 9 :45. Graded classes
Pub­
lic worship with sermon at 11
Ep-
worth l.esgue devotions! meeting at 7.
A special gathering for all young peo­
ple. No gathering at 8, owing to the
union meeting in the Christian Church.
fest
Great Advertising and
Trade Promotion Sale
Here we have a Moline wagon made
by the John Deere Plow Co.
This is
a first class wagon, well finished, good
material and guaranteed by the John
Deere Plow Co. The price is right,
when you come and see us at the big
hole in the wall.
Now is the time to look over mowers
and binders to see what repairs are
needed to be ready for harvest.
Cupid flour is as good as the best—
$1.40 per sack. J. F. Spray, phone 162.
I have Planet Junior and John Deere
planters and cultivators. With plant­
ing and good cultivation you will be
surprised at how your land w ill pro­
duce.
L. C. Parmalee hall a horse for sale.
W eight 1,000 pounds. Gentle. Price
*75. Phone 20 F 32.
Do you want a new wagon or buggy?
When you come to town come in the
big hole in the Wall and see what
w e’ ve got.
W. A. Hemenway has White Pekin
duck eggs for sale.
Buff Orpington eggs, Plymouth Rock
eggs, $1.00 per setting. Phone 125 to
Mrs. J. F. Spray.
Remember the goat. He will kill
the brush and make the gratia grow
while you sleep.
More cows, more goats, more hens,
pays your bills in cash and makes long
friends.
A. B. Atkins has choice Black Mi­
norca eg£s for 8a le.
Bales Bros, have Black Orpington
eggs for sale.
1 pay cash fo r chickens, eggs, h des,
grain.
Fage field fence is a spring steel,
best by every test. Phone 162.
Lime and cement at Spray’ s.
John Deere and O liver plows at
Spray’s.
Hood River Niagara Sprays, the best
by every test at Spray’ s.
Buy your feed and flour o f Spray.
Phone 162.
Shingles and posts. Phone 162.
I deliver free to all parts o f town.
Spray, phone 162.
Try a load o f that oak grub wood.
Lots o f heat to the square inch.
Spray. Phone 162.
When you buy flour o f Spray you buy
it straight from the car to the consum­
er.
McDole Bros, have 100 goats for
sale, also one milch cow.
J. F. Spray haa a pair o f young
mares for sale.
W eight 1,250 Iba.
each.
I f you want to buy or sell anything,
aak Spray at the big hole in the wall.
Curtis Veatch has 3 good milch cowa,
also Jersey and Holstein bull calf, for
sale.
GRANGE ADVOCATES EXTENSION
Agricultural College Has Many Calls
for Help from State.
"T h e greatest demand now being
made upon the college is a demand for
more extenaion w ork,” says the report
of the committee on the Oregon A g r i­
cultural College presented at the State
Grange couvention a t
Roaeburg.
"T h a t is,” it continues, "g re a te r ser­
vice to the people o f the state who are
unable to come to the inatitution for
the regular residence work.
"T h e demand ia coming not only
from the farms but from the shops and
more particularly from the great body
o f business and professional men of
the country who realize that the pros­
perity o f the city depends primarily
upon the farms. There ia a complete
appreciation o f the scope o f the work
which can be done along this line.
Such states as Wisconsin, Iowa, Min­
nesota, Illinois, Kansas ami New York
have already demonstrated what can
tie done through extension instruction.
The production o f these lands o f these
states has been enormously increased,
farm life has been made easier and
more pleasant, the farm ing communi­
ties have been improved, the rural
schools have been revolutionized and
the tendency for the boys and girls to
go from the farms to the cities is be­
ing rapidly overcome.
"O regon is practically the only pro­
gressive state in the Union which la
not doing high grade work along this
line. The college is doing very much,
in fact everything in its power, but ia
absolutely handicapped by the lack o f
funds. It should have an appropria­
tion sufficient to hire instructors who
w ill have nothing else to do but work
among the farmers o f th’e state. There
should be itinerate schools with port­
able laboratories and a staff o f in­
structors to go from place to place and
give instruction.
"Valuable assistance ia being ren­
dered the agricultural interests o f the
state through the work o f the co­
operative branch o f experiment sta­
tions and demonstration farms recent­
ly established. The three day farm ­
ing stations in Eastern Oregon and the
horticultural stations in Umatilla and
Rogue River Valleys w ill doubtless
prove o f great benefit to those in­
terests.
Notwithstanding the fact
that dairying is the greatest single
revenue producing agricultural interest
in the state, no provision has been
made for practical dairy farm demon­
strations elsewhere than at the home
station at Corvallis. We believe that
the dairy interests o f the state are en­
titled to ami should have a demonstra­
tion farm under the direction o f the
dairy department o f the college, where
the moat approved methods o f milk
production would be demonstrated un­
der practical conditions. Such a farm
should be self-sustaining when once
cstabliahed, and would increase in
value with the general advancement
o f the state.
signs fail. There w ill be a big apple
crop. The Bald wins and Mpitzenlierga.
which furnish the bulk o f the apples
in the county, will give an unusually
heavy yield. Other varieties except
Northern Spies w ill have a full crop.
The Spies were hurt by cold rains, sn<l
w ill yield but a third o f a crop, but
there arc not vary many treea o f that
kind around Eugene,
"T h e peach crop w ill be fa ir and the
"T h e re should be more bulletins
written in the language o f the ordi­ pear crop g«aal. The only fruit which
nary farmer. There should be more shows decided indication o f a shortage
exhibits o f the résulta and methods of is the prune. This w ill probably yield
the best agricultural products. In the | but little if any more than a third o f
advancement o f this work, we ask the a crop thia year. It Is too early to say
influence o f the State Grange. The anything definite in regard to gra|tes,
Oregon Countryman, a monthly maga­ but Indications so far are fa vo ra b le."
zine published by the students o f do­
mestic science snd agriculture, dis­
seminates much o f the best thought of
student and faculty. We recommend
this publication to all persona in­
terested in the farm and the fsrm
home. The teachers in our public
schools w ill also find much o f interest
ami help in this magazine.
Residences for Exchange.
Eight bargains in residences in the
City o f Grand Junction, Colo., valued
at from $1,800 to $1,60« each, now
rented for $13 to $16 per month.
W ill exchange for property in and
around Cottage Grove.
Here ia a
chance for you to get a good deal. I f
"T h e summer school, o f six weeks you have a bargain to offer, let us co­
duration, Is attracting more and more operate with you. Our aystem reaches
the teachers of the state each year. at Icaat 50,000 proapective buyers every
This is going far toward the training month.
o f those who must carry on the in­
Bargains is every state o f the union
struction in the technical work which for sale or exchange. CO M M ISSIO N
is being installed ao rapidly throughout HOUSE.
the state. The winter courses, o f sis
The Commisaion House hss for sale
weeks duration, are designed to give « $>'15.00 diamond ring guaranteed to be
to the busy men and women o f the genuine. Would turn it in as part pay­
state the most practical inatruction ment on a cow. Boys, look this up.
possible. These courses are attracting
more o f the men and women o f the
Notice of Final Settlement.
state each year, and are very much
Notice is hereby given, that the un-
papreciated by those in attendance.
deraigned has filed his final account In
“ Your committee respectfully asks the matter o f the eatate o f J. 1).
the complete support o f the State Petrie, deceased, in the County Court
Grange for the advancement o f this for Lane County, Oregon, end that
work. We respectfully request that Friday, the 14th day o f June, 1912, at
our legislative committee be instructed the hour o f 11 o ’clock p. m. o f said day
to aid in securing appropriations in has been fixed by the Court as the time
order that the complete mission o f the for hearing objections to said re|iort
college may be rea lized ."
ami the settlement thereof.
I. W. P E T R IE ,
Administrator o f the estate o f J. 1).
Strawberry Crop Is Best for Years.
Petrie, deceased.
"T h e strawberry crop thia year ia
the finest I have ever seen, and they
are coming in rapidly a lrea d y," said
J. I.awson, the Eugene fruit man, re­
cently. Continuing, Mr. Lawson said:
AT A BARG AIN
“ As a whole the fruit prospects for
Only 1J miles from Cottage
Lane county in the vicinity o f Eugene
were never better. The cherry crop,
Grove, .15 acres under cultiva­
with the exception o f the extra early
tion, 40 acres fine piling tim­
varieties, promises to be unusually
ber.
200 acres good foot-hill
large. There are only a few early
woodland pasture. Price 820
cherry treea and the crop is o f no im­
per acre. A snap. Kasy terms.
portance commercially, so the shortage
is o f no moment. The standard va­
AlllIKKHH OWNKK
rieties o f white cherry and the black
Box
458,
Cottage Grove, Ore.
cherries will produce heavily unleaa all
ST O C K RANCH