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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1913)
Good Reason for Hin Enthusiasm. Whim M inan iiHN «uffurud for several days with nolle, diarrhoea or otlinr form of bowel coin|daint and ia then cured aoiitid and well by olio or two donen of Cham harlaina Colic Cholera and Otar- rhovu Remedy, aa ia often the caau, it ia but natural that lie ahould bo ell- thuaiantlc in hla preis« of the remedy, and especially ia tiiia Ilio cane of a ec vero attack when life ia threatened. It never falla. Sold by all dealera. H. H a r r in g to n W il l. INI YOIIK promptly and HatiHfuctorily. They haveevery facility for hamiliiiK all c I uhho . h of good», and nimply solicit a trial. Feed Hum and Fire Proof Vault *11 < fcmnaet ion. Ail kinds ol llduling & I’idiio Moving Phone No. 72 ('«llaqr Oro*e “ Talca of Honey and Tur" from Went and East. Win. I.ee, i’ankenta, Calif., aaya, " i t gives univeraal satisfaction and | uae only i'uley'a Honey and T ar Com pound fur my children." K. C. Khodaa, Middleton, tie ., writea, " I had a rack ing lugrippe cough and Dually got re lief taking Foley’s Honey and Tar Com pound." llae no ulher in your fuinlly mill ref uae aubalilutca. For aale by all dealcra everyw here. Finds Cure for Epilepsy After Years of Suffering “ My d au g h te r wa* afflicted w ith rp llrp tlc rlli for Ihre.j year», th e attn*'ka com ing »very few w.«-ka W» employ««! aev rral dta-tora but they did h**r no good. A bout a y ear a g o w • h e a r d o f I>r. Mil»«' N ervine, und It certain ly h u e proved a hleeelng to our lltlle girt Hhe I* n o w ap p aren tly ured and la e n joying th e beat of health It la over a year elnce »he hue had a flt W e cannot apeak too highly of Dr. Mile«' N ervine " M IM Kit A N K ANPKRHON. (.‘orufrey, Minn. T houaanJa of children in the United S tates w|jo arc sulfcriug from attack* of cpilcpay arc a burden and »orrow to their parents, who would give anything to restore health to the »uffcicr*. Dr. Miles’ Nervine is one of the best rem edies known for this affliction. It has proven hrnelicial in thousands of cases and those who have used it have the greatest faith in it It is not a “cure-all," but a reliable remedy for nervous diseases. You need not hesitate to give it a trial. Sold by all D ru ao 'sts- If the first bottle fails te benefit your m oney Is returned. M ILES M EDICAL CO., E lk h a rt. Ind. S Suffered Eczema Fifty Years—Now Well. Seems n long tim e to endure the aw ful burning, itching, sm arting, akin disease known a* " te tte r " —another name for eczema. Seems good to realize, alao, th a t Dr. ilobaon’a Eczema Ointm ent haa proven a perfect cure. Mrs. I). L. Kenney w rites:—" I can not sufficiently express my thanka to you for your Dr. Hobson’s Eczema Ointm ent. It has cured my tetter, which has troubled me for over fifty y ears." All druggists, or by mail f>Oc. Pfeiffer Chemical Co., St. (.ouis, M o.; Philadelphia, Pa. SSBaSnSSnBBSMBMBMSMMMMSSMMSMSMI ‘ Here is the Answer,"in W ebster ’ s N ew I nternational T he M im ham W ebster Kvrrry rtey In your tnlk And rending, a t home, on the »trt r t enr. In the offitt. «hop n i id ntliool you likely quoit ion the m orn ing o f nonio m*u> word. A friend imkn: ‘ W hat nmkea nm rtnr tifirdenf" Yon net'll th<* location o f i.orh K atrine nr I hr j.rontin- clntlon of Ju /u t hu . U lint la irk ite coal? This Nrw ('n a tio n atuiwrra all kinds of qurationa In I .iunrui*»\ History. Biography, Fiction. Foreign word», I radra. Aria and Science«, u tlh /Inal authority. 4 0 0 .0 0 0 W o rd « . 4 0 0 0 Illu s tra tio n « . C o s t $ 4 0 0 .0 0 0 . 2 7 0 0 P aso«. The only dictionary w ith the » n r divided page, —char acterised aa “A Stroke of Octiiua." India Paper Edition: On thin, opfitjuc, strong. India paper W hat a «»tie* fuction tooW li the Merriam 1 \V«dwter In a form «10 light ainl a«» convenient to u*e! t One h a lf th e tin* kitraa ends w eight of Regular Edition. Ragular Edition : On Ntrong l*>ok paper. Wt. 14 V 4 iimb . Siao i*H * * ft Inches. Writ« for «p—irnae | lilM lratlons, *b Mention this public» Horn and receive rtB la s a t •f pocket w»pe. c .u CO, MERRIAM SprlagfMd, M $»»miininiuiiiiimiiiiii B R IE F N E W S O F OREGON lli'rt Itigln, Ihn 17 year old son of A. N login, a wealthy sheepman living near linker, met his death from an ac cidental revolver shot while evidently cruwllng in pursuit of some animal. Work on the aecoud unit of the Al.ininth reclam ation project la prac th .illy completed. W ater will be fur nished for next year to about 7000 acres. Advices from Florence say the Port of Hlusluw commissioner« voted to Is sue 11 HU, 00 b of port bonds for the pur- pottc of extending the north Jetty at t!i« mouth of the Hluslaw. Itepresentallve Mlnuolt haa Intro- duced u bill approprlullng $*¡0,000 for tlie Pendleton poatofflce, the treasury departm ent having reported this amount ua neceMaury to complete the building according to the original plans. With the rem arkable score of 103 out of a poHsihle lot point«, Hergeant 8 W. Pearson, Company Four, Coast Artillery, who live, at itoseburg, won tIn* t'utrow cup match In th . Natloual It I fit. association shoot at Camp Perry, Ohio. D. L. Itood, of Marshfield, has been appointed official sealer of Coos coun ty to carry out the provisions of the new Oregon law providing for the in spection of weights und m easures used In selling commodities. Cocked in a cage und pluying with a swarm of bees will be the form of entertainm ent for state fair patrons furnished hy Junies Davis, a bee ex pert. Mr. Davl* has signed an agree ment with Frank Meredith, secretary of the fair board, to give "demonstru tlons" dully. The fisherm en of Tillamook bay near May City have organized to aell their own fish, being dissatisfied with the prices offered by local canneries. They will seek m arkets In the east, and have decided to build a salting and cold storage plant to handle the season's catch. The authorities of Pendleton have arranged to purify that city's w ater supply with hypochlorite of lime. There have been but few cases of ty phold fever in Pendleton tbts summer, but It was deemed best to take meaa u r e . of prevention until the gravity w aterw orks system is completed. Charles V. Calloway, tax commls sloner. In an opinion, holds that fish Irig rights and w ater rights are ''rights and privileges“ anil “local advantages" belonging to the land. He says they should be taken Into consideration in determ ining the value of the laud for assessm ent and taxation. Kecall petition, have been circulat ed at 8ulera against three counctlmen, the chief of police and city recorder, and It Is reporU'D that a recall petition will soon be put out against Mayor Steven*. It la alleged that the offi cials have not been faithful to the city's best Interests. The state railroad commission sus pended the freight schedule recently adopted by the Sum pter Valley Rail road company on the ground that sev eral Increases In rates had been made In violation of orders of the commis sion The suspension will continue un til November 8. Steps are being taken to eradicate the fire blight which Is threatealng the destruction of the orchards of the Orand Monde valley. The disease has progressed to an extent that It will be necessary to cut down many valuable trees to save the entire orchard from destruction. In a fit of ungovernable tem per and Insune Jealousy. D. L. t'artw rlght shot and killed his brother's wife near Rye Valley, and dangerously wounded his nephew. David Powell, who may not survive. Cartw right then killed him self. Although himself a m arried man, Cartw right la said to hav« been Jeal ous of hts sister-in-law, who was a wo man of estim able character. Sixteen per cent of those who took the spring state teachers' exam ination failed. How this com pares with for mer exam inations is not known as it hus not been the custom to keep this record. There were 16(2 applicants who took the exam ination, the largest num ber yot given the exam ination at one tim e in Oregon. A large gHsoline tractor of the cater pillar type will be put to use In ore hauling by the managem ent of the Ben llarrltlon Mines company near Sump ter. It Is expected that the cost of hauling its ores to the Sum pter Valley railroad, 21 miles distant, which now reaches $80 per day, will be largely reduced. M J. Loielle, the dairy expert from Corvallis, has opened aa office at Her- eilston under Joint auaplcos of the gov ernm ent and the Oregen A gricultural college Cooperative dairy extension e«rk is is b« carried out undor his direction In a region em bracing 110. •00 acres already under Irrigation or soon to be. Oregon youths who aspire to roach positions in the United States navy by way of appointm ent to the naval acad emy at Annapolis may take competi tive exam inations at Oregon Agricul tural college ea Septem ber 18 and M next, to determ ine eligibility for ad mission to the entrance exam inations to bo hold .1* February sud April, 19U. % ï Popular Talks on Law f f WHO OWNS THE AIR? Hy W ALTER K. TOW ERS, A H., J.D ., of the Michigan Hsr "F ree as a ir" Is proverbial and so long mud had not succeeded in mus tering the air this was true enough. There was air sufficient for all of us snd as none could navigate It with any success, questions of the control of the air did not arise. Hut now we have the aeroplane and the airship and we are in what prom- isea to be the beginning of an age of aviation. So it is that the law la be ginning to develop to keep pace w ith the developm ent of aeronautics. As yet, Dying machines are few in num ber, but it seems th at we may well look forward to a tim e in the not far distant future when the passage of aeroplanes and airships above us will be no uncommon spectacle. W hat right has the aeronaut to pass above our property? W hat are his liabilities in case he causes injury to those below him? These and many sim ilar ques tions are arising, and the law is pre paring to answ er them as they arise. If one passes over your land, on the surface, w ithout perm ission,he has com m itted a trespass and though he rnay have cauacd no appreciable dam age to your premises you may recover small damages in a court of law by way of vindication of your rights. W hat are your rights against the aeronaut who passes through the air above your property? It is a fundam ental rule of English law th a t a person’s property extends indefinitely upward and indefi nitely downward. This rule has ex isted since the beginnings of law, and under It one has control of the area above hia land. A strict observance of this rule would lead to this resu lt: An aeronaut who passes above yuur land is a technical trespasser, and though he drops nothing upon vou or yours, though he causes you no real injury, he has violated your rig h ts—he has trespassed—and you may sue him and recover dam ages. Such would be the logical result of the application of the law as it has long existed in E ng lish-speaking countries. Hut it seems highly improbable th at the law will be allowed to rem ain in this condition. Aviation has come to stay and it would seem to be a neces sity th at aeronauts ba allowed to pass freely over the property beneath, w hether it be privately owned or a public highway. This necuswity seem s certain to cause a change in the iaw, which is likely to come in the form of legislative enactm ents concerning Dy ing -machines. The French have al ready taken action, a law having been recently enacted, which extends to aeronauts free rig ht to navigate the air, passing w here they will. The na tion retains the general control of the air, however, sc that it may Drevent any but French airthipa from Dying over French territo ry , and m ake such regulations as may be necessary. Among the American states Con necticut has taken the lead in passing legislation of this character. A law entitled "A n Act Concerning the Reg istration, Numbering, and Use of Air Ships, and the Licensing of O perators Thereof’’ was passed by th a t sta te in 1811. Under this law, airships are subject to regulations sim ilar to those generally applied to autom obiles. The owner must Die certain inform ation with the Secretary of S tate, pay a fee. receive a certificate entitling him to Dy, and a num ber. This num ber m ust he displayed on the airship in letters not less than three feet in height. Airships may be operated only by li censed aeronauts. This law Dxes the responsibility for all resulting dam ages in the following sectio n : "E very aeronaut shall be responsible for all damage suffered in this state by any person from injuries caused by any voyage in an airship directed by such aeronaut; and if he be the agent or employee of another In m aking such voyage his principal or em ployer shall be responsible for such dam age.” The states of M assachusetts and New York are considering sim ilar legisla tion and before many years it seem s probable that every sta te will have acted on this subject. The question of Dxing the responsi bility for dam ages, which has been cared for in the Connecticut act is oue th at is likely to be of im m ediate im portance. The dangers of airships passing over property are considerable. Parts, baggage, or ballast m ight be dropped, causing injury to persons or property beneath. The fall of an aero plane upon a city m ight pccaaion se vere damage to those on land, as well aa to the unfortunate aeronaut. But fancy the dam ages resulting from a collision betw een tw o giant airships of the Zepplin type! With the present in terest in aviation and the popular encouragem ent which it is receiving, the attitu de of the law m akers is likely to be favorable to them as far as granting to them the rig ht to freely navigate the air is con cerned. Landowners are not likely to endeavor to demand a fee from aero nauts passing over th eir property. ms F IF TY -S E C O N D ANNUAL OREGON STATE FAIR J ? Salem, Sept. 29-0ct. 4, 1913 The legislators are likely to grant great A Whole Week of Pleasure and Profit freedom of passage and the courts are likely to sustain the legislation. Of course, a property owner m ight object that when the legislature grants the right to navigate the air freely it gives a right to pass over his land and thus on Agricultural, Live Stock, Poultry, Textile and Other Exhibits takes away from him a portion of hia • H o rse R aces, S h o o tin g T o u rn a m e n t, F irew o rk s, Hand C o n certs, property. Such a contention, if made, ! K u g en ica E x p o sitio n , C h ild re n ’s P la y g ro u n d an d o th er will raise some interesting cases, the F ree A ttra ctio n s, in c lu d in g Boyd an d O g le ’s result of which no one can forsee. O ne K ing C ircus— F ree C am p G ro u n d s Hut as to fixing the responsibility for You Are Invited injury resulting from the operation of Send for Premium List and Entry Blanks airships, the law seems inclined to hold the aeronaut to strict account. If the A aeronaut wishes to take the risk of .£ REDUCED RATES ON ALL R A I L R O A D S riding in the air, he must further take For Particulars A ddress all the risk of causing injury to persons FRANK MEREDITH, Secy. SALEM, ORE. or property over which he passes. As m atters stand now, even in the shsence of s statu te Dxing the responsibilities, aa in Connecticut, a person injured by Every patron of The Sentinel is helping to give Cottage an airship may almost certainly re Grove what eminent authority has stated to he the best cover damages from the aeronaut. If a passing airship lets fall any object country weekly on the coast. which injures property you may sue the person who is responsible for the operation of the airship. v A few caaes have already arisen in Y England. A British aeronaut was £ driving hia aeroplane and attem pted to descend into a Held. The fleld was oc- Y <¡°G cupied by a cow and the cow ap p aren t-! •{• ly resented the appearance of this strange object from above. As the They are without a peer. J - W e do not sell stoves aeroplane descended the cow rushed or hay rakes, but we do sell toward it, m aking hostile dem onstra- : tions. The aeronaut endeavored to avoid the infuriated bovine, but was £ unsuccessful and her cowship succeeded I ¿ in plunging beneath the machine just as it reached the earth. The results were disastrous to the cow, and the se quel came when the farm er who owned the cow sued the aeronaut and re covered dam ages for the loss of the cow. The aeroplane has found its way into the classified aa. columns as well as into the courts, as witness the follow If you don’t read The Sentinel you don’t get more than ing interesting ad. which appeared in half the news of the Cottage Grove country. a German new spaper: "L ost from an aeroplane, gold watch and chain. Last seen disappearing in large ataca of rye on a field near U lxen." (Copyright. 1931, by W alter K. Towers.) $20,000 Offered in Premiums Sherwin-Williams House Paints I FORj ALL PURPOSES Doors, Windows, Shingles, Building Paper, Beaver Board, Lime, Cement Etc. :: Ask for a “Home Decorator” Cottage Grove Manfg. Co. W .......... Don’t Mistake the Cause Many Cottage Grove People Have i Kidney Trouble and do Not Know It. .............. »q H O M E S T E A D S ! g KF. YOU LOOKING for the BEST HOM ESTEAD there is to be found in the Northwest? Well, 1 have it for you and it will onlv cost you the usual location fee to get it. It is 320 acres and will grow almost any crop you wish to plant. Plenty of water, wood, etc. Close to the town of Imperial with all advantages of small town Daily freight and passenger automobile stages connecting with railroads. Railroad now building. q I spent several hundred dollars and nearly a year’s time in vestigating all the homestead districts of the Northwest and found nothing as good as this land here at Imperial. You will find the same thing if you make a thorough investigation, but why waste your money, come here first and you will be satisfied. q Write me, enclosing stamp, for further information. Address Do you have backache? Are you tired and worn out? Feel dizxy, nervous and depressed? Are the kidney secretions irregular? Highly colored; contain sediment? Likely your kidneys are at fault. Weak kidneys give warnings of dis tress. Heed the warning : don’t delay— Use a tested kidney remedy. Read this Roseburg testim ony. SHERMAN MONTGOMERY G. W. K ezartee. carpenter and con IMPERIAL, CROOK COUNTY OREGON tractor, 102 N. Flint St. Roseburg. Ore., says: "O nce again I confirm my e!4-s4 recommendation of Doan’a Kidney Fills and tim e has only added to my confidence in them. 1 have hail n o ! A newspaper that gives you twice as much as some other serious trouble from kidney complaint for a long tim e, thanks to Doan’s Kid paper is worth twice as much as the other. Are you getting ney Pills. However, I have taken your money’s worth? That’s the vital question. them for slight trouble with my bladder and hnve had good results. 1 believe Doan's Kidney Pills are the best of all kidney and bladder rem edies." W HY NOT SPEND For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-M ilburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole Bgents for the United States. Remember the name—Doan’s—and take no other. a21-28 :Æ COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS (Official Publication.) August 18, 1913. Council m et i n ' regular session. On motion ordinances num ber 380. 381 and 382 were passed, being for the assessm ents for the p av -; ing of Douglas and Monroe Streets, Cherry Court and Seventh Street. ; M eeting adjourned to m eet August 25. J. E. YOUNtx, City Recorder. Rodents to be Poisoned. August at Newport ? Get away from the heat and dust of the valley. Newport is now a its best, and the beach season is in full swing. Recreation and sport for all. Deep-sea fishing, surf bathing, drives to Otter Rock, the Punchbowl, Lighthouse, etc., with boating and fishing on Yaquina Bay. Low Season, W eek-end and Sunday ! X I W ithin a week, according to A. K. Cahoon, supervisor of the Siuslsw Na AND tional Forest, a dozen men will be sent to Tillamook County to spread poisoned Double Daily Train Service grain over sume 2000 acres of burned over lands, to kill field mice, gophers Leave Albany 7: .10 a. m. and 1:00 p. m., connections with north and other animals th at m ight eat the and south bound S. P. trains. Douglas fir seeds which are to be planted there. As soon as the poison crew has finished its work, 60 or 70 Call on our Agent for copy of “ N ew port” men will be sent to do the seeding, booklet, or Vacation D ays,” they are free for taking three months or more in the the asking. planting. Two thousand acres will be sown. JOHN M. SCOTT The value of a paper’s advertising is gauged by the num ber of people it General Passenger Agent reaches. No other paper reachea more Portland, Ore. *14-28 than a q u arter as many Cottage Grove people as does The Sentinel. • x k ~ x -* x k k -- x k -- x k -- x k - x ~ x -- x -- x -- x ~ x -- x -- x -* x *- x -- x ~ x <"X-- x -- x -- x -- x ~> Round Trip Excursion Fares I