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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (May 22, 1913)
HEMENWAY & LOCKWOOD S The Eugene Guard has leased a two-slory building on Willamette Street, which will be remodeled to suit the lessees. The Guard suvs 164 «orea. i| m il*« from railroad and it will have a plant that will not be excelled by any city the size of station. 3* m il*« from Cottage Grow. gO acr*s in cultivation, good farm Kugeue iu the United States. cow t ?/>e Cottage G rove Sentinel A W E E K LY N E W S P A P E R W IT H P LE N T Y q/* B A C K B O N E ! BE OC A G R A N T E LB E R T BEDE Publishers Editor . , | Ready-to-wear Garmen || Can Be Purchased hous*. barna and all kind« of outhouses. {Orchard, b*rrl*a o f all kind«. H'c b*isn>‘* o f th* place I* pasture and tini bar. Large outrange for stock. Kun A D V E R T IS IN G RATES I nlng water through the place with first (( I what we there think, Display 26 cents per inch. 15% discount on contracts; reading notice ads., water right on the creek for Irrigating 10 cents per line; legal notices. 6 cents per line; surrounded ads , 35 cents per •T the things « 1 farm. On good wagon road This inch. Classified ads., Scents per line each insertion. Cards o f Thanks and Resolutions, 6 cents per line. __________________ | farm haa good land, good water and With all the " d ig s ” thst are being good timber. 1‘r.ce *9.0W>. Terms. B u s i n e s s O f f i c e : 2 6 S o u t h F i f t h S t taken at the deep waterways project, 392 seres three miles from town on A first class publication entered at Cottage Grove as second class mail matter. tbs excavation work ought to be pretty [ the Pacific Highway. 342 «. res in cul well along by this time. T H U R S D A Y . M A Y 22. 1913 tivation and pasture. 50 seres timber. for the Price of Naiftii]j S U B S C R IP T IO N S RATES One Y e a r ..........................................$1.60 Six Month« ........ ..............................80c Three Month«........................................ 40 Single Copies.....................................6c No subscription token unless psid fo r in advance. This rule i« imperative. vu Things We Think White Embroidered Voil Dresses — Latest amdel*. trimmed with wide handing. suitable for eve ning ami afternoon tfowue. At _$ 5.85 Ladies' and D ress« I«», blue, betlo, t * r Fancy 1 »’all.,iwd • ■ k«* a « 6 *2 5 «■red Dutch . ..lUr, o f . 5 .. . . . . . . . . . . . - 5 16. 18, J ti ><-urw— ,\4 v $1.25, $ 1.50, $ 171 Sense and sentiment don’ t always A large farm house, three Igrge barns _ $2.50, $2.75 for hay. grain and stock. W stsr piped mix. S ELECTED into house, runuing water through There is considerable agitation Here is a toast thst I want to drink to a fellow I'll never know— place. 200 yard« from railroad, orchard towards the elision o f the word “ obey” To the fellow who’s going to take my place when it ’ s time for me to go. I ’ ve wondered what kind o f a chap ne'il be, and I ’ ve wished I could take his from the marriage service. We fail to in hearing, with all kind« o f small — Panel skirt, m ail* of gingham hand. see that its presence there has caused fruits. This place can be bought for anil iwrt a lr* In sti«|»r*. |«»lku Just to whisper. ’ ’ I wish you well, old man,” in s way he’d understand. any harm, worked any hardship or $65 per acre. Any one wanting a large — W h i l e m a te ria ls , 1 *^ I'd like to give him the cheering word that I ’ ve longed at times to hear ; caused any qualms o f conscience upon farm can do no better than this placa. ■ > tint and plain colors. etulin.idrrv imnmr .1 >. I ’d like to give him the warm handclasp when never a friend seems near. 48 acre*, seven miles from t’o ttsg * years I ’ ve learned my knowledge by sheer hard work, and I wish l could pass it on the part o f the parties pronouncing it Grove, on the Coast Fork road. All To the fellow who’ ll come to take my place some day when I am gone. in the ceremony referred to. Its re Wc. 75c. 95c. 11.25, $U moval, however, w ill cause nv great bottom land ami cultivated. There are <> W ill he see all the sad mistakes I ’ ve made and note all the battles lost? no improvement« on this tract but It is | W ill he ever guess o f the tears they caused or the heartaches which they cost? seaamic disturbance in the martial con Will he gaze through the failures and fruitless toil to the underlying plan. ditions o f this great lanJ o f the free No. I good land. The soil will pul on And catch a glimpse o f the real intent and the heart o f the vanquished man? the improvement« if cultivated. I’ ric« and home o f the brave. I dare to hope he may pause some day as he toils as I have wrought. $75 p*r acre. And gain some strength fo r his weary task from the battles which I have An equilibrator attached to the ro — Black tatren, I leatlirrldoom Cloae-in home cheap. 8 acre« three- -—III solid fou gh t ■*'"! «tned tunda o f the capitol at Washington and and soft clinging materials; n o But I ’ ve only the task itself to leave with the cares fo r him to face. fourth« mile« from town, upland, but with |)u t< h c o lla r« . J to ¡i allowed to float out around the country, And never a cheering word may speak to the fellow who'll take my place. comparatively level. He we d log years, at hroiderv and k n i f e pleated might come in contact with distur house, two acres clear«*!, the balance j Then here's to your health, old chap; I drink as a bridegroom to his bride; flounces. 60c. 75c, 85c. $ 1 00, JljJ bances that spell disaster to the ca young timber. I f taken soon can be | I leave an unfinished task for you. but God knows how P ve tried. reers o f many rising statesmen now I ’ ve dreamed my dreams as all men do, but never a one came true. — Linen c ra s h , n a tu ra l bought for SHOO; $501) cash, the balance And my prayer today is that all the dreams may be realized by you. attem pting to ateer the gasbag of N o r f o l k s ty le , k i l l tk ,n j tioie at 7 per cent. Thia tract will And w e’ ll meet some day in the great unknown -out in the realm o f space. atate. l»ell and D u tc h collar, You 'll know my rlasp as I take your hand arid gaze in your tired face. make good chicken farm, or fine for V W ith jcrirv foundation, pleatrd 10 and 12 years, at Then all our failures will be success in the light o f the new-found dawn— I f God was angered about the ten fruiL flounces, h l a c k and colors. So I'm drinking a health, old chap, to you, who’ ll take my place when I ’ m gone. lawa that Moeea broke, what must he We write fire inaurance. farm riaka, $1-25 Prices rang* front think o f the goin’a on o f the present buaineaa riaka and plate glass insur — Purr liurti dtr*«*», P IT Y T H E POOR SPECTATOR. time. ance, automobile Inaurance and liabili and a a t u i. olora , rl»i<a 'H E S E N T I N E L greatly fears that it will shortly lie denied the ty inaurance. We have town property ately trimmed, at W e notice an advertisement of pleasure which it has for some time taken in perusing the pages to trade for country property, and shredded aabestoa in a magazine. We $3.50 of the Portland Spectator and lingering long upon the ravishing, country property to trade for town wonder if a book o f dainty reeipeagoei mellifluous and well rounded phrases with which that paper has been property. W rite us or come in and see with each package. wont to express its ideas. us. The flowing, flowery, faintly humorous style that formerly graced 'Three Days' Courtship Ends in One fine residence lot with 5-room its pages has been gradually giving aw ay to a certain acerbity as The M arriage,” aaya a headline. We have house, chicken house, wood ahed. Thia Sentinel has enlightened it against its will upon certain features of the always warned young people that those property is located on Weat Main St. organized labor proposition which do not readily occur to a person short courtships often reault disas Street ia paved. Cheap at the price S ta r B ra n d S h o e s A r e B e tte r like the editor of The Spectator, who has never enjoyed the blessed trously. o f $700. privilege of working. 56 acre*, five miles from town, The C. Q. D. signal has auch a start The sourness and bitterness of disposition were bad enough, but in good condi ling fam iliarity that some people would four • room house The Spectator has allowed its congenital love for big business to lead recognize it as some kind o f a diatresa tion. Barn 30x40. Eight acres in cul it into expressing opinions so ridiculous, so ludicrous, that there can signal even i f never having heard of tivation and 8 acres slashed. Other no longer be but small doubt that a once brilliant mind in atrophying, buildings. One-half mile to nearest it before. that soon the thread will snap, aud The Spectator will be no more church and one-fourth mile to school. forever. Croker, whose name was at one time This place will make good dairy or A s proof of these statements we ask anyone with sufficient patience somewhat fam iliarly associated with chicken ranch. Ia also adapted to to do so, to read The Spectator's latest ululation about the open shop. Tammany, aaya he w ill not viait A m er fruit. There are a£go<Ml well and spring W e defy auyone to find anywhere in the weak, childish attempts at ica again. So far as we know, no one water on the place. I'lenty o f timber humor a single argument in substantiation of its formerly expressed but on this aide o f the pond w ill interpose for all farm purposes. Price $4») per unteuable position that nothing but capital is necessary in building up objection. M cK inley and Century Editions of 10 c Music. acres, $1,500 cash, balance time, 4 a great city and that labor, if any be allowed to lodge temporarily in " W e live too rapidly,” ia a common years. Portland, must be subservient to capital. The peripatetic Spectator complaint. The street car companies 4<l acrea three and one-half miles discusses nearly every other subject under the sun, but when it comes seem to have thua far auoceaafully es from town. Box house, barn and out to answering our question as to why capital should be allowed to caped the tendency o f the times in thia houses. About 7 acrea open land. ofganize and labor should not, its mind is in the antipodes or some respect. Place all fenced. Plenty o f timber for other equally distant place, where inquisitive people do not ask such Everything in Musical Instruments and Suppil I f money ever gets to be a drug on farm purposes. Thia place if taken impertiuent questions. Send for Free Catalogue : r Order* a Sf The Spectator for a time was amusing, but the actions of one sud the market, there w ill be a lot o f dope soon can be had for $1,250. Terms on part. denly bereft of the power of reasoning are not those to cause laughter. fiends. 8 acre tract adjoining Cottage Grove. Where we formerly smiled we now feel keen sympathy for The Spectator Paper money spreads di aeaae germs This place ia the most desirable resi in its lowly and pitiful condition. W e truly hope that Providence may scientists insist, but none has aa yet dence property near town. House not long keep it in this sorrowful plight. Better by far that it should ; EUGENE. OREGON been returned to us with a request that nearly new. small barn,’ large chicken at once take its flight to that bourim from which no traveler ever doctor’s certificate o f good phyaical house, large wood house, wash house returns, that its senility might never become generally known. It condition accompany same. and other out buildings, 150 selected might then be remembered only as it was in the strength and glory of I he value of a paper’s advertising is gauged by the numbs A petrified leg haa been found in a fruit trees, larger part will bear thia its prime, when it disported wisely upon subjects with which it was year. A ll kinda o f small fruits in people it reaches. N o other paper reaches m«>re than a quaf.rr^ Evidently familiar and had not yet become so incautious as to descend to subjects Pennsylvania coal mine. the present day methods o f leg-puliing bearing, the beat o f garden land. upon which it was without information. are only a continuation o f more crude There are 700 goose berries in bearing. A strong spring o f water runa the year methods used in by-gone ages. PO PU LAR G O VER N M EN T. around. Can be put into the house. 'H E Oregon system of popular government is being much pat Three acres o f pasture. About 5 acrea “ Magazine exploder,” says daily. terned after in the East, where it seems to be the opinion that cultivated. W ill sell or rent. W rite. Oregon has a nearly model form of popular government and This is the first noise Mr. Roosevelt 80 acrea, four miles from town. Box that every thing in this great and progressive state is being done by has made for aome little time. A T O A S T \\ One-Piece House Dresses Children’s and Mme Dresses jj $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 New Line Sample U’rskirts Gingham and P erci Dresses Messaline and Silk 1152 c to $ 3.50 c? ^M U S IC • Popular and Classical Song Hits Edison, Victor, Columbia Talking Machines | R O A C H M U S I C MOUSE c? Our Obligation“^ majorities of the common people. Most of the people in Oregon probably think they are enjoying popular government and would raise a howl that would resound up and down the ages if an attempt were made to return to the old style. It is true that under our system we could have what is generally called popular government, but the trouble is that the people as a matter of fact don’t seem to really desire popular government. In the general election less |than half the vote was cast. Surely if there ever was a call for a popular expression of the desires of the voters the last election was the occasion, and yet less than 50 per cent of the vote was cast. This condition prevailed the country over, and Wilson was elected by the votes of about 20 per cent of the electots. When the revolutionary charter was voted upon a couple of weeks ago in Portland, less than half the electors voted. Nothing can be imagined that would have been more likely to have gotten out every vote, yet less than 50 per cent took enough interest in the matter to express an opinion. One quarter of the electors adopted the most radical piece of legislation ever voted upon in the metropolis. W hich figures make one wonder whether the people really care what kind of a government they have. The most utter lack of popular interest in a vital proposition recently occurred in Tacom a when only 6111 votes were registered upon a $222,000 bond issue. A few over 3,000 people in the election referred to could have put a $222,000 bond issue upon the city of Tacoma. . W hich again seems to show that after all the people really care very little about exercising their rights, and the more opportuni ties they are given to exercise them the less interest they seem to take. The Sentinel ventures the opinion that the majority of those who expressed a popular opinion in these elections are those who would prefer a strictly representative government. I f those who want popu lar government do not make use of it, a few more years may see a retrograde movement to representative government. The life of a popular government can only be preserved by exercising it. The Klamath Oregon outside of W hen we note the inclined to remark, Falls Northwestern has the best printing plant in Portland and gets out an expensive daily paper. amount of advertising space being filled we are “ Unappreciated and unremunerated effort.” Commonwealth D ay did much to interest several hundred more people in the activities of the state’s university. It’s worth while to get aw ay from home once in a while just to hear what outsiders think of Cottage Grove. Summer hasn’t arrived at a pace this year to make prostrations from heat a probability. We notice a song recital advertised to be sung in Esperanto. It is well to have this latter fact w ell advertised, aa otherwise the audience would never notice the difference. Ex-Speaker Cannon studying French. He able to fully expreaa dulcet phrases o f that is said to be w ill never be him self in the language. I f astronomera want to open up con versation with one o f the planets, why not try Venua. She would be the more likely to answer back. We have failed to note any acare- headed articles daring the peat year or so telling o f the president going on any 2U0-mile jaunts aa an example for other officers o f the army. In a campaign for lower gaa rates, it would be interesting to know what the price is in the District o f Columbia. There are a lot o f figure-beads in the navy department—and not all o f them are used fo r ornamental purposes on battleships. American school children would be delighted to live in Russia, where there are about 90 public holidays. Notice to Creditors Notice ia hereby given that the un dersigned, Emmett M. Sharp, haa been duly appointed by the County Court o f Lane County, Oregon, administrator o f the estate o f Joseph H. Sharp, de ceased. A ll persons having claims against the said estate are hereby noti fied to present the same duly verified to the aaid administrator at the Firat National Bank, o f Cottag# Grove, Ore gon, within six montha from date o f the first publication o f thia notice. The date o f this notice ia May 8, 1918. E M M E T T M. S H A R P . May 8-June 6 Administrator. house, one acre in cultivation. 1,500,000 feet aaw timber and 1,600 alicka o f pil ing. About 72 acre« can be tilled when cleared off. Creek water through place and place all fenced. Price $20 Per acra. Terms. 160 acres o f logged off land and all fenced with woven wire fence. About 16 acres cultivated. Ninety head o f angora goats go with the place. Old family orchard, creek water, only 3$ m ile« from town. A ll for $2,400. Thia ia a good bargain. Now is your best time to invest I d property in and around Cottage Grove. Properties are cheaper for the same value« than anywhere in the W illam ette Valley. Come In and see ua or w rite ua. Hemenway A Lockwood. 100x100 with 6-room house, 100 feet from Main Street. Thia is good buai- n**as tract and in the buaineaa part o f the town. For good reasons will sell cheaper than other properties adjoining aame. Write. 234 acrea. surface rolling, but not ■teep. Watered by river and springs, 40 acrea cultivated. One and one-hatf million feet o f good aaw timber besides piling and mining timbers. One and one-half miles from shipping station, one-half mile to school. Thia ia good «oil and cheap. Price $36 per acre, 15,000 cash, balance time. 80 acrea. 64 m ile« from Cottage Grove on good wagon road. River bottom land. 70 acrea in cultivation and pasture; 10 acrea timber. The beat o f «oil. free and easily cultivated. good 7-room farm house, barn 40x60 with all other out building* usually found on good farm.. Good fence* and watered by Moaby Creek. Irrigation ditch on place. A good family orchard in bearing One and one fourth mile« to .hipping . u - tion, three-fourths mile to school. This is an ideal home for a good farmer. $8,000; $6.000 rash. balance t IT H every sale that we md* w e incur a n obligation loth* customer. W r feel respond ble for everything w e sell, and do not consider a sale c o m p le te d tfr* less there is entire satisfaction with W the purchase. This policy of our store i* P*'* ticularly valuable to the patron» « our Corset Department. We gu* • antee the best fitting, most sty»“ and serviceable corsets. That’s why w e sell Henderton Corsets. W e have found that we can fit every figure, large, aVC^*** or slender with these popular p r ^ IIC N D E R A m i models. Our o blig a tio n i* kl carried out whenever a Hendon* Cornet is sold, for we k n ow that wearer will be more satisfied with her c o r s e t the long® she wears it fashionable women everywhere wear these corset* because they are so styUshly d e s ig n e d and becs«£ they can be worn with such comfort and rase, longest service is possible because o f the extra construction of Hendernon s. ».«vwvu wi nenaernon C ornet o rs«r*. A large selection of the latest styles is here for y approvi o va l See Our East W in d o w REES-WALIACE 0 W h ere Y o u D o B etter va*,,e of a paper to a community can I k ’ accurati Iv 10 * y what outsiders think of it. The Sentinel ¡9 wiH")|í ,0 1 measured.