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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (June 13, 1912)
— 150 YEARS A POSSIBLE ACE. ! New A rc tic Expedition ' Will Start North In July Edison Predicts Mankind Will Soon Be Living That Long. HE HAS JUST PASSED 65. As A e t iv s s s T w e n ty V ssrs Ago and F o a ls s s C o m p o to n t— M a n I s B a l sn ood A g v in s t G e rm e — N o t h in g Dieo. O th e r T h o u gh t« . PtttnUer. H . C . M A DSEN onknoMo ««M o i rom am *ou»rioM Monograms for Breast Pins and Fobs Hand Bags, Etc. Drives Off a Terror. The chief executioner o f ilcath in the winter ami spring months is pneu monia. Its advance agents are rohla ami grip. In any attack by one of these maladies no time should he lost in taking the beat medicine obtainable to drive it olf. Countless thousand» have found this to be Dr. Kina's New Discovery. " M y husband believes it has kept him from having pneumonia three or four tim es," writea Mrs. George W. Place, Hawsonville, Vt., "and fur couahs, colds and croup we have never found its eq u a l." Guar anteed for all bronchial airections. Price f>Oc and $1.00. Trial liottlc free at A ll Druggists It’s a Fair Prospect Tor the horse that is led ujmti our matchless Feed, for he is sure to benefit by the diet. Our Feed and ('•tain uie well known for their peculiar nourishing pro|>erties and they are the most economical on the market when the quality is con sidered. (>ive them atrial and note the result in your stock. The im provement will be most marked — the animals can work harder. STERLING FEED CO. Could Shout for Joy. " I want to thank you from the bot tom o f my h ea rt," wrote (I. H. ICader o f I^wiaburg. W. Va , " f o r the won derful double benefit I got from Klee- trie Hitters, in curing me o f both a severe esse o f stomsch trouble snd of rheumatism, from which I had been an almost helples» sufferer for ten years. It suited my esse a» though made just for m e ." For dyspepsia, indigestion, jaundice and to rid the system o f kid ney poisons that cause rheumatism, Electric Bitters have no equal. Try them. Every bottle is guaranteed to satisfy. Only 50e at A ll Druggists. IF YOU WANT TO BUY Sell or exchange anything this store is the beat place TW BcBiagkaa Secant Haad Stare Famous Stage Beauties, look with horror on skin eruptions, blotches, sores or pimples. They don’ t have them, nor will any one who uses Hucklen’s Arnica Salve. It glorifies the face. Eczema or Salt Rheum van ish before It. It cures sore bps, chapped hands, chilblains ; heals burn», cut« ami hrulsen. Unequaled for piles. Only 26c at A ll Druggist«. Finest Suburban Homesiles For Sale I have decided to offer for Hale all my land within the city limits, con- aiating o f 20 acres, making three very desirable places with apringa o f the best o f water. The home place o f about live acrea, has a spring, piped to the house, furnishing about 7000 gallons water daily, with fall enough to furnish power for private light plant. Better See Me Right Away S. B. Calling cards MORSS The Sentinel. " I t ’s a good age to begin your useful year,” said Thomas A. Edison on Ida sixty fifth birthday, which bna just passed. “ You begin to think you know a few things from experience. “ I'm us active its twenty years ago slid feel ns competent. It's n matter o f n short time when we will lie sure we can live to I Ml years. I f a com munity should stop short and follow the teachings o f canarll or spirilla and bacteria—thorn Is no reason why the life o f the coming people should not reach 1M> years “ Our life Is relative to that o f onr ancestors. I f they led a go.si one It lengthens ours from ten to fifteen years. I f we tn turn did nothing to shorten It there would t*e added thirty years more. “ Forms o f germ life prove It. Home go on and on and on. There's the sequoia, the big California redwood tree It has lived • ¡.IMS) years. “ I f one form o f organism can do that, why not anottier? “ W e humans nre up agnlnst bacteria. Infusoria and spirilla. They’ re trying to live off us W e're g.ssl farina for them. We must adjust ourselves to them or conquer them They are our tin la nee In nature In the animal king dom; enemies to overcome. “ Years ago Minnesota's legislature offered a Isiunty for coyotes. Its hidts tiegnn to overrun the state. The boun ty had to lie rescinded, and the atato tiegnu to try to breed coyotes, which are hard to breed. This Is what 1 mean by the Italauce of nature. This s|>oclnl adjustment the leglslnlure dls- t n rlied. “ Man la Imlauced agalust germs. Home are malignant, and some Are In nocuous As they dlsap|M-ar tie floiir- tnh cm as those rabbits did. "Today the deuth rate In most cities Is much less than It used to tie. Our modern knowledge o f care o f the In fectious. isolation and o f preventive measures brings It down. “ It will continue to bring It down as |iol!t!i-s allows It to. Hoards o f health do the I>e»t they can. Politics doesn't run along equally with science.” “ What can the Individual do. asldo from the community precaution, sani tation and disease prevention, etc., to prolong life?" Mr. Edison was asked. He answered: "A man can take everything ns It routes calmly, lie's Dot running the universe. I f things go wrong no one need worry about It. for things do go wrong. “ Analyse most o f these worrlments and you'll tliul that they're from had organisations These usually result from excessive eating. “ Down tn Wall str«*et If a man asks you to lunch tie thinks you ought to have two or three eocktalla first "N ow , cocktails mostly defeat na ture's own system o f taking care o f digestion. I know nothing more devil ish thun the concoction called a cock tail.” Mr. Edison added: “ My w ife thinks my worst habit la chewing tobacco. 1 got It when they forbade my smoking In a telegraph o f fice. The trouble with man Is that when he takes up morphine or tobac co or whisky or eating he overdoes It. es|>e<'lally eating. Eating is too much o f a function. I f you found out you would probably learn that linrrlman died from too much eating for tbo amount o f fuel he needed. “ t ’ lilldren ought to tie taught at ta ble to eat little. Four tons o f coal should not In piled into a boiler that needs only two tons. Aa a uinttcr of fuct, we take tw o nnd a half times more food than we require—and that adds some to our coat o f living. It may feel good to eat more than we need or want, hut It’s a poor proposi tion and not scientific. “The trouble Is eating Is a social function. It should not tie. It should tie Just s fuel proposition. I f they want social grace with eating they should go to the drawing room and have music or conversation or read ing.” “ A fter death comes la there life afterward, do you think, or conscious ness?” he waa asked. " I believe,” said he, “ there la Intelli gence In all matter.” "Oust and even planta nnd rocks?” ho waa asked “ All matter and rocks? Why, If you put rocks under a mleroaoope you will see their elements working like bac teria. A rock hss a lot o f Intelligence. It glvea hromlutn movements. It shows living movements. A piece o f raw stiver shows It.” “ Then you think nothing dies?" “ Nothing dies,” wns hla respoi "Intelligence continues to exist.” L io n M e n u m o n t F o r H a r v a r d . The government o f the duchy o f Brunswick, Germany, la about to pre sent to tlie Harvard university a hronse cast o f the celebrated Eton monument, erected tn Castle square by Henry the Lion In the year 116*. Borup and MacMillan Will Seek New Land That Ad miral Peary Saw. I NOW FOR THE SEASHORE! VI A T H E Backed by Natural History Museum — Indorsed by Peary and Others. » yr m 3-Day Tickets on Sale Saturday and Sunday to V / f SUNSET \ m ' [OGDtN*SH*TA| SOUTH ► ► I ■ ► I : ► I TT f f m T T f T T y T T T y t T » C U R IN G from the same base available about Crocker I And they o f supplies and using the will start the return sledge Journey of same Eskimo tribes that approximately 500 miles to their head IVary used In bis conquest quarters on the Hache peninsula in i f the north (mle. u new arctic eipedl May, 11*13. tlon will put out during the coming The return Journey. It la planned, summer to explore and map what la will la- made with more leisure than uow said to be the only considerable attempted while outward txiund. The |K>rtlon o f unknown territory on the route through Ellesmere, Axel H ei glolie. berg and Grunt Ijm d will tie careful The expedition’s objective is to bo ly uin|>i>cd. und collections o f marine Che lund whose mountain penks Peary animals will lie mail«. saw dimly In the distance from the May Be Heard From In a Tear. auinmlt o f Cape Tbomas Hubbard on The tlrst chance o f the world at Juno 30. 1!»»). while he wua on bis way northward toward the pole. Peary large to hear from the two men after left a record tfiat the land was visi th eir Isolation In Grnnt I ji im I should ble to the "northwest above the Ice Is- late In the auminer o f 11*13, a full horlxon.” He named It Crocker Land year after their departure. They plan In honor o f the late George Crocker of to dispatch a messenger to North Htar tiny promptly u|s»n their return from the Peary Arctic club. Tlie title under which the new arc Grant ¡.and. thin messenger to carry tic exploration will be attempted la for trniis|H>rtntlon by n Danish steam “The Crocker I .and Expedition.’’ In ship back to civilization a full report charge o f the work will lie two o f the o f the ex|iedltlun's progress up to that young men who went with Peary on (joint. The summer o f 11)13 and the winter tils final expedition to the north pole. They are George Horup, assistant cura and spring o f 11)1-1 will still lie ahead tor o f geology !u the American Mu o f the explorers In tin- arctic, and this seum o f Natural History, and Donald period they |*ro|sjMe to utilise flrst by1 H MacMillan, a graduate o f Howdolu transferring alstard their power boat their headquarters from the Hache university. peninsula down to Etah. Support For the Expedition. At Etah early In the spring o f 191-1 Ib-caune Its directors tiolleve that the Borup and MacMillan will organize a work o f Horup nnd MucMIllan will lie sledge party cnmisised o f Eskimos of o f great value to the cause o f scientific the rielghlsirhood for the purpose o f exploration and a distinct credit to the proceeding directly eastward to the iiullou first accomplishing the results summit o f the Ice cap on Greenland promised, the American Museum of at the widest part of that island, Natural History has assumed charge which Is the second object o f their trip. They have an engagement to o f the eX|iedltlou. The museum has associated with It keep at Etah with a steamship that self In the enterprise the American will he sent north especially to re Geographical society, Y'ale university ceive them In the autumn o f 1014. ami a numtier o f other Institutions and Rootevelt’i Indorsement. Individuals. The letter o f Indorsement from (Colo Henry Fairfield Osborn, president o f nel Roosevelt, in which tie sets forth file American Museum o f Natural H is tory; Chandler Itohtdna. chairman o f the pride he would feel as nil Am eri can In having bis fellow- countrymen the executive council o f the American Geographical society, and Thomas reach Crocker Land drst. was written to President Oshoru of the American Hubbard, president o f the Peary Arc- Museum o f Natural History. tie club. ap|s-ar as signers o f a docn- “ I have leurued with gieat Interest,” nient setting forth the ex|>edltlon's Colouel Roosevelt wrote, “ of the expe scope and (dan. dition to the north |>olnr regions w ith a With this statement Is appended let- view of reaching Crocker lamd. which ti-rs Indorsing the plan from Theodore Admiral Peary re(iorts actually seeing, Roosevelt. Hear Admlrnl Peary, Pro and of discovering the vast unknown fessor llerliert E. Gregory o f Yale, nnd area which, according to tidal experts, a uuuitier o f others familiar with the must exist In the arctic sea. problems of Arctic exploration. “The scientific work that la mapped E. O. Hovey o f the American Mu out In geology, geography, biology, me seum o f Natural History, and II. 1« teorology. oceanography, magnetism, Bridgman o f the Peary Arctic club, glaciology, etc.. U. o f course, o f prime have beeu named as a committee on ltu|K>rtauee. All our |ieople are the arrangements for the explortug tour. debtors o f Admiral Peary for the fact that he added a signal triumph to the Hope to Start In July. sutn of ucbievetiieut of American men Horup and MacMillan will take with of :tctk>u. Messrs. Horup and MacMtl- them when they start out three years' lau (Kissess the very qualities which provisions for four white men. their enabled Peary to do such work, and bel|>ers nnd their d o g s ; a power boat, their success should lie a matter o f con a moving picture machine. Instru ceru to all their countrymen They ure ments for all kinds o f records, a phy s< leutitlc men of the tie.-t out o f doors sician. n cook and cameras for use type, scientific nicu who nre equally whenever a moving picture machine good lu the laboratory and in the field would not be available aud at the same time able to take the It Is pro)insist to take the expedition lead lu hazardous ventures. They pro northward on* a special steamship In pose now to attempt the most daring July o f Hits year and to send another and haxardous feat o f geographical ex s|iec1uI steamship to Etah to tiring It ploration, aud I should think that every trnck tn tiil-t. In the Intervening two man able to appreciate and to admire years the explorers will have at their during and prowess when shown tn a dls|Hisal the power bout carried with fine cause would feel hts bhsid stir them and such sled,Ting outfits and when thinking o f what they lutend to stores o f pemmlcnn and walrus meat do. ns are collected en route. “ It would Is* a fine thing for America After lenvlug Sydney, atiout July 20, If the discovery o f Crocker Land could the explorers will make their way lie placed to our credit ns a nation.” northward by ship to s point 70 de Peary Approve* the Plan. gress lO minutes north latitude, which From Admiral Peary a letter o f In will tiring them to the south coast o f ih c Hiu-tie peninsula, about sixty miles dorsement came. In which be (minted out that the two young meu who pro northwest o f Etah. Here they will go Into winter quar pose to undertake the exploration are ters and w ill establish thetr first prin knowu to the Eskimos personally and cipal cache. Aliont the middle o f Sep- ure above the average lu physical temlier they will begin sledging north * strength aud (lower o f endurance. "They have had the experience,” he ward toward Cape Thomas Hubbard at the extreme northwest corner of said, “ o f my last expedition to train Axel H ellsTg I*n d . the point from them In the methods aud equipment which Peary saw the mountain peaks which have been found so satisfactory In the north.” o f Crocker laind. The plau Is to do all the sledging be tween the headquarters on the Bnehe HOLE SHIPPED TO MUSEUM. peninsula and Cape Thomas Hubbard, s distance o f 330 miles, during the In ca se d In A n o io n t L im e sto n e — F o u n d long arctic night. This will find them In 8t. L i w r . n e t C o u n ty , N. Y . with stores and provisions at Cape The Museum of Natural History. Hubbard at the end o f the long night New Y’ ork. recently received a perfect ready to push off across unexplored Ice glacial ¡nit hole whleli was discovered Helds with the return o f the dawn In by l>r. E. O. Hover o f the museum's February, 1013. I staff last year In Bussell. St. Lawrence The dnsh to Crocker Land, an esti | comity. N. Y. The reason the hole did mated distance o f 150 miles. Is sched not arrive soouer was because It could uled to end the drat portion o f the uot lie moved until there was pleuty o f cnmpnlgn. Once on Crocker Land It Is snow mu the ground to permit Its being proposed to look about throughout carried on a sled to the nearest rull- March and April. These two months | road station, a distance o f five miles. nre counted on to see the fulfillment The hole Is two feet In diameter and o f the expedition's most serious hopes four feet deep, but It could not be car- In the making o f maps nnd surveys, , rled away without sufficient rock taking o f photographs nnd recording ground I t It wns found necessary, of tidal nnd temperature observations therefore, to cut out a block 0 by 0 feet nnd the collecting o f Hors nnd fauna. to secure the hole. What they find tn Crocker Iaind The rock Is crystnlllMd limestone o f may largely determine the course o f the arrliaean age and contatna much events to tie pursued by Horup and Mint. The hole wua made by swirling MacMillan thereafter. I f they Hud water and stone«. game nnd can bag enough o f It for a comfortable living they will not be In F ir s t N e g r e s s F o r Jurer. no much o f a hurry aa otherwise to Dorothy Coates, a negress. summoned press liack to their cache at Cape for Jury duty In the superior court st Thomas Hubbard. Spokane, ts believed to be the first I f they And that two months Is time woman o f her race to be called to such •uougb to collect all uaqful knowledge service lu the United States. 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