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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 13, 1915)
g be Cottage Crovc Sentinel A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER WITH PLENTY OF BACKBONE ELBERT BEDE, Editor BEDE à ORANT, Publishers A t n t d u i publication enterad a t C otta«« Orova as Mcood-claaa m atter. SU BSC R IPTIO N RATES. O aa Y e ar...................................................$150 Three Month* ..............................................40 Six M onth* i* . . . . . . .................... *80 Single t o p i e i *.............. 5c No subscription taken unless paid for in advance. This rule is im perative. A D V E R TISIN G RATES. D isplay, 25 cents per inch; readiug notice ads., 10 ccuts per line; legal notices, 5 cents per line; surrounded ads., 50 cents per inch; Classified ads., 1 cent per word. Special discounts on contracts. Cards o f T hanks and Kesolutions, 6 ceuts per line. ___ __________________________________ W ednesday, Jan u ary 1», 11*15. 20 80U T H F IF T H ST R EE T B U SIN ESS O F FIC E : Be Sure to G«t Stop Over at Cottage Grove. B« Sure to Get Stop Over at Cottage Grove. higher we should rem em ber thnt some NOW FOR HARM ONY ^ ^ ^ l l K country press lost its noble thing like #7.00 is spent on labor to £ fight for a square deal for produce a thousand feet of lum ber and Eaton and the country in the j th at the $7.00 is spent in the commun speakership fight, but it has gained the itv. respect of those it fought. Selling 's One way to bring back prosperity is boast th a t one country editor (who was to find a m arket for our product*. We a candidate for a position in the House* certainly should not overlook a m arket would be properly punished, was car w ithin our own borders. ried into effect as far as he was able to carry it into effect. Mr. Eaton and A JO B FOR PA R EN TS Mr. E a to n ’s staunch supporters were Every once in a while The Sentinel properly chastised from the Selling has its attention called to the deseern tion of priv ate property by boys upon standpoint. Such action is custom ary. W hether m ischief bent. wise or not perhaps only the future will Flow ers in p articu lar seem to be un fortu n ate at the hands of these youth reveal. The country press m ade its fight ful depredations. against The O regonian and against dom The latest pieces of m ischief reported ination by The O regonian aud those have been more ag gravatin g than ser behind The O regonian. It made its ious. fight for a square deal for the country Several tim es the sign on the Meth candidate, Mr. E aton. odist Church property (which gives no tice th at the walk built across it is on This tim e it lost. How the fight could have been won private property) has been removed, m ar be easily seen now. But th a t is carried short distnnees aw ay and left neither here nor there at preseut. there. Some children with a seriously . . . . * undeveloped sense of hum or have also N early every member of the Legisla played pranks w ith the sign announcing tu re is pledged to economy, retrench the revival m eetings. The word * • ser m ent and sane legislation. This is to be vices” has been changed to ‘ ‘ ic e ” , and a business session. other like sm art disfigurations. But th is can only be brought about P aren ts should look bark to the tim e they were children, should bring up in through harm ony. It is therefore up to the members to mind some of the trick s of th eir child m ake best use possible of the m achinery hood and should then have a very con fidential chat w ith the grow ing male at hand. I t is up to E aton and his supporters members of th eir fam ilies. T heir boys to try to get through Belling the pro may be doing the same things their gram of safe, sane and econom ical legis fathers did w hen boys. A good paternal lation th a t it is certain would have re talk to the boys of the city may put a sulted from the election of E aton. stop to some of this ag gravatin g mis If the country press has done an y chief. thing to interfere with the carrying out of such a program it should now do Oregon, old Oregon, with m ineral re w hatever is necessary to m ake the ear sources untold and alm ost untouched, rying out of such a program possible. whose mines have added m illions to the The country press has shown th a t it wealth of the nation, is to have no is a pow er to be reckoned w ith. L et it m ineral exhibited at the Panam a Pa use th a t power for the greatest good to cific Exposition. It has a splendid the greatest num ber a t this rime. The building. It is to have un exhibit to way to do th a t seems to be to try to cost $175,000, but in th at exhibit there b ring about harm ony betw een city and will lie nothing to indicate th a t we pro duee gold, silver, copper, lead, quicksil country during the session. The country press has dem onstrated ver and other m inerals. th a t it may be a trouble m aker. The Now w hat do you think of th a t? D on’t you think the present Legists proper course now seems to be to dem on strate th at it is also a trouble sooth ture should make a sm all appropriation to repair such a serious oversightf er. In his splendid address, in which Mr. OUR PA R EN TS E aton paid a trib u te to the country W uen P a Is Sick press, he indicated th a t this course is the one he would wish. He promised W hen Pa is sick, to do everything w ithin his power and H e ’s scared to death, ab ility to m ake the session a success. A n ’ ma a n ’ us To anyone a t all fam iliar w ith things Ju st hold our breath. of th a t kind the fra n tic effort* m ade at He craw ls in bed the last moment by The O regonian’s An ’ uffs an ’ grunts, candidate and his w orkers to win the And does all kinds speakership fight, it was quite evident Of crazy stunts. th a t the claim s th a t had been made for He w ants ‘ ‘ Doc P illem ,” weeks th a t the fight was all over had A n ’ m ighty quick; very slight foundation. Two votes se For when pa ’* ill, cured a t the last mom ent gave selling H e ’s m ighty sick. exactly the num ber he had been claim He gasps and groans, ing, but not until the roll was called A n ’ sort o ’ sighs, did be know th a t he would get th a t He talk s so queer, num ber. A n ’ rolls bis eyes. E very claim made by E aton about the Ma jum ps and runs, position of the candidates was proven An ’ all of us, true. Had he been w illing to work the An ’ all the house bandw agon movement he m ight have Is in a fuss, won. T hat was the system th a t won for An ’ peace an ’ joy bis opponent. Is m ighty skeerce— In the good fig h t m ade to try to keep W hen pa is sick, The Oregonian from gaining control of I t ’s som ething fierce. the L egislature The Sentinel neglected W hen M a Is Sick to m ention the special New Y ear num When ma is sick, her issued by th a t paper. This is one She peg* aw ay; o f the few good things The O regonian has done during these turbulent p o liti She ’* quiet, though, N ot much to say. cal tim es. She goes rig h t on A-doin ’ things, U SE HOM E M ADE M A TER IA LS A n ’ sometim es laughs, M anager Dixon of the Booth-Kelly E r even sings. Company makes an im portant point in She say* she d o n ’t the cam paign for a return of prosperity Feel ex tra well, when be, mnde an appeal for the use of But then i t ’s just Oregon fir at home whenever p ractic A kind o ’ spell. able, in the place of cem ent and steel S h e’ll be all right m anufactured outside of the state. Tomorrow, sure. Mr. Dixon showed th at in bridge con A good old sleep struction it m ight be possible th a t even W ill be the cure. for a long term of years fir bridge* An ’ pa he sniffs would prove as cheap as those of steel. An ’ m akes no kick, If such is the case we should certainly For women folks use the wood of our own county in pre- Is alw ays sick. icrence to sending our money out of the A n ’ ma she smiles, l,et ’* on sh e ’s glad— Htate for the eem ent of W ashington or W hen ma is sick the steel of P ittsb u rg . It a in ’t so bad. Even were the cost o f f i r a trifle —Selected. W oman has a most peculiarly const! tuted mind —one th a t remember* all the com prom ising statem ents made by her hubby aud forgets the things her hubbv would like to have her remember. Now some one claim s th at the chang ing of styles in fetuiniue wear is one of m e causes of unem ploym ent. That is alm ost au unjust and unfounded charge. Why the quick change* in fem inine apparel keep all the men busy guesing w hether it is the style that m akes woman look as if she d id n ’t have anything on or w hether it is be cause she is m aking another change th at she looks th a t way. They must have unusually courteous burglars at Salt Lake. A man whose caught up w ith the robbers. He politely requested the return of his money and the burglars as politely handed it over to him. A Chicago girl named Nellie Lemon gave her sw eetheart u pair of pajam as und some lace cu rtains for a present. Soon a fte r his love begnu to cool and she is now sueing him for breach of promise. It seems th a t she should hnve bought him a chest protector. W onder w hat she would have done if he hud sent her a silk uightie w ith a lure yoke? W hen we see the lazy, shiftless good for nothing get a soft job and fall heir to a lot of uiouey someone else has worked hard for, we are led to usk, ‘ ‘ W h a t’s the I 's e f ” Good cooking is the best thing in the world for a man 's morals. Throw ing kisses is som etim es ,i dun gerous sport. A word to th" cook is su fficien t- to cause her to look up a new job. The most pleasant way to live in a city is to live out in a suburb. We generally adm ire a fig h ter but pity the man who fights the inevitable. I t ’s peculiar th a t so few of th e un usually bright children ever get to b< presidents. We are adm onished th at the Jap.' will bear w atching. We could nam e some others th a t w on’t. - The anarchists are zealous, but they d o n 't get anyw here. There is alw ays someone ready to tak e a king job. Uncle Same believes in easting bat tleships ujmn the w aters. They seem to return every few days— for repairs. English women say American women d o n ’t know how to walk. They know how to run their hubbies, however. The piano tru st is said to be in dan ger of breaking up. Probably, because the members d o n ’t work in accord. If Mr. Carnegie is sincere about dying poor, why d o n ’t he sta rt a harem and buy his wives all the hats they w ant. | E arly train in g and surroundings a f fect a person ’* later life. The fath er of the W right boys is a preacher—n sky pilot. A C anadian scientist makes the bold assertion th a t steam is the cause of crime. The jan ito r m ust have been hold ing him up again. The English law »ays a man is e n tit led to his w ife ’s savings. But English husbands have the good sense not to stand too much on th eir rights. We an ticip ate an issue of postage stamp* directly advertising the Han Francisco exposition. Those Han Fran ciscoans are some stickers themselves. Dr. Cook says he has discovered th at lots of folks d o n ’t believe he was ever at the pole. I t 's a sham e, but even there were others ahead of him. A religious body has been form ed in M ichigan th at practices the eating of dirt. The members c a n ’t expect to keep their souls w hite as snow th at wny. ‘ ‘ K issing A nother M an ’s W ife Cost Him His L ife ,” is a headline in n daily. The increased cost of living is a more serious m atter than we had supposed. W hen rules of the air are put in force we presum e it will be strictly under stood th a t the m achine th a t has taken a tum ble has the rig h t of way over all others. Hing Hing must be a place where they put people who insist on exercising their vocal cords at the hour when others in the same flat building wish to retire. A university physics faculty recently dem onstrated th a t the earth still ro tates on its exis. T his will greatly re lieve the great m ental strain many of us have been under since congress conven ed. To Plnr« O raler L ake l’ark N eurer ¡u sar Prosceni, just over the si...... . of Will U. Steel, Superintendent of the the (’«sonilo mountain* front thè upper P rater l.nke N ational l’nrk in southern W illam ette Volley. The propesoti ehanges are n* follows: Oregon, ha* w ritten to the Eugene Pom m ereiai club atuting timt he ha* remili l.ouvtng tlie soutli line of the park n* niended to thè depurim eli! ut Wüstling it is but exteuiling the west line of thè ton, D. C., a chuiigc in the boundarie* of boundary between K lauiath aliti .link thè park. He S t a t e s th at if the chaugea «un collutto* apprestinole!^ tuie fourtli are inaile and a new en tra n te a* pian mile; extending the oust line to coin olile w lth Klauiath I mi tu ti reaervn ith the Klam ath ludían reserva ned nt thè north end of the pnrk i* eitle adopted it will bring tliia great stenle (Ion ami extending the north line so its spot w ithiu l e s a thau 100 ielle* of Eli to inelude Mt. Tnlelsen ami Diamond gene. The proposte! new e n tra n te is Lake. The board of trustees of the local club will take the m utter up III the near fu ture mul will probably ask the depuri meat to change the linea a* petitioned tor. When tlie Southern I'unifi« m il way, known «• the Klnnuith cutoff, I* completed over the mountain» from Ku gene, the train* will run within u few unii'» of the proposed northern entrance to the purk and Eugene will then be the ucurcNt m il point to this national plnvgroiind for traveler* from the north, while Klum ath Falla will be the nearest for t h o s e coming from tin- - o o l h . You Can Save $1 The Cottage Weekly Grove Sentinel Northwest Weekly Farmstead • • 1 year $1.50 ! B o th | 1 year $1.00 . 5 0 $1 Total Value <£2.50 ®ne Address This is a most unusual offer and a remarkabe bargain- prices have been slashed. By dividing the expense between ourselves and the publishers of NOR TH- O WEST FARMSTEAD this special price is possible, and you can save $1.00. 1 s^i£2*»»S£WS>'S3» T1IB UOYH* MAUAZINK I» a big m onthly mngtirlit«*, rhork full of just th«* km«l of rrad in g you a ant 1 your boy to hat«*. 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T O D A Y ’S M AGAZINE for wo men contains all the latest sty I«-«, newest fancy work pattern s, dr lightful atnrie*, money m i ing and labor saving ideas ami u hundred other things to interest the wo men. The price we offer this high cluss W om an’s m agazine at would hardly puy the postage for m ailing same. Sam ple copies may be seen at The Sentinel of flee at any time. Bring or send your subscription to The Sentinel today while the m a tu r 1* frerh In your memeory. THC V BOYS’ MAGAZINE CIRf UWTK* 0VfR 100000 FOR THOSE WHO DO NOT WISH A FARM PAPER WE HAVE THESE Special Offers Cottage Grove Sentinel - - - $1.50 Today’s Magazine for Women .50 BOTH Total $ 2.00 Cottage Grove Sentinel The Boys’ Magazine Cottage Grove Sentinel Today’s Magazine - - The Boys’ Magazine - - $1.50 - $ 1.00 $2.50 $1.50 .50 1,00 Total $3.00 These are the Greatest Clubbing Offers any Cottage Grove Paper Ever Made. Send in Your Order now-Today The Cottage Grove Sentinel „ lo n a o E z - j o n o a o c jl