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About Cottage Grove sentinel. (Cottage Grove, Or.) 1909-current | View Entire Issue (June 14, 1916)
*< ^ o o o o a o o o o o o o o o o e o o o o o D A IR Y WISDOM. O <? o A WELCOME RELIEF— o o o o o o o o o after a hard day’s work. Light "zyloware” frames that will not hurt your nose. Let us show you the styles we carry. o o o o o o o o o Broken 881 Willamette Street. Eugene. Oregon Successor to Burgess Opt. Co. Replaced O o u o o o o o o O o o O o o o o O o o o o O o o o o o o o ooooooooooooooooo SHERMAN W. MOODY VISION SPECIALIST ----- A simple maintenance ration la a loss; don’t forget It. sa.vs the Farm Journal. Feed cows for profit, either lu growth or pro- ductton. He sure that the calves get all the suushlne that Is coming to them this winter. Suushlue Is warm, kills germs and Is free Arrange windows to let It lu. The brush aud the comb are Just as necessary to dairy auc- cess In winter as the milk pall aud scales. Any breed o f rows Is a good breed provided the right klud o f Individual selection Is made. A heifer ou starvation rations while she Is developing will nev- er make the cow she would hare made If fed with Intelligence ajnl a generous hand from calfhood. Factory on Premises DAIRY COWS NEED LIGHT AND EXERCISE Ily this we mean, il envelopes, possibly blanks of a certain kind. be printed. purchase their goods in their home town, which is only right and proper, lb* consistent then, and when you need goods buy them at home if you can. Take a pail cover or a shallow tin of a suitable size to fit your kettle. With a nail and hammer punch holes in it so the water ean have free play through it. Placed in the bottom o f a kettle in which meat is to be boiled, it prevents burning. C H R IS T IA N SCIENCE. The Christian Science society hold services in the chapel at 242 Second street each Sunday at 11 o ’clock and each Wednesday evening at 7:30 they hold their regular testimonial meeting. Each Wednesday afternoon from 1:30 to * * • 4:30 the building ia open for tha use o f No doubt every housewife knows she the circulating library. A ll are eordially should not break the skin o f beet roots invited to these services, as well as to before boiling, or they w ill be almoet make use o f the literature. white instead o f a nice, deep red. Per haps all do not know that i f the raw A PO S TO LIC F A IT H M ISSIO N . beet should be broken or bruised a Fred Hornshuh, Pastor. touch with a red hot poker will form a Services every Wednesday evening at new skin. Mission Hall, opposite depot. Sunday afternoons at 3:00 o ’clock. Every Wed Take a strip of leather an inch wide nesday evening at 8:00 o ’clock. Every and as long as you w ish. Tack it up near body invited to attend these meetings. your cooking table and put in tacks at No collections taken. regular intervals down its length. Hold it full enough so a spoon or a knife will C A TH O L IC CHURCH slip easily into the openings. This little Father Moran, Pastor. kitchen help will save a lot of worry. Mass every Sunday at 8:00 and 10:30 Just a glance, and you will know where a. m. Sermon at 10:30 a. rn each spoon or knife is, without looking in the knife drawer. C H R IS T IA N CHURCH * * • Elizabeth Ware, Supply Minister. To clean fly specks from varnished Bible school 9:45. Christian Endeavor wood wipe with a soft cloth dipped in at 7. Services at 11 and 8. equal parts o f skimmed milk and water. • • • M E TH O D IS T E PISC O PAL. To pick up little piece« o f broken Horace N. Aldrich, Paator. glass wet a woolen cloth, lay it on the Sunday School every Sunday at 9:45 floor where the broken fragments are, a. m. Service with sermon, 11 a. m. and pat it. The little particles will ad and 7:30 p. m. here to the damp cloth. Junior League 3:00 p. m. • • • Epworth League 0:30 p. m. I f curtain rods or poles are rubbed with hard soap before being put up the B A P T IS T curtains will slip on them easily. Rev. C. C. Van Gorkum, Pastor. • • • Sunday School, 10 a. m. Preaching, Eyeglasses need an occasional wash 11. a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Y. P. 8., 0:30 ing with soap and water. A fter drying p. m. Prayer meeting Thursday, 7:30 give a final rub with tissue paper and p. m. powdered whiting or prepared chalk. Dim glasses are bad for the sight. S E V E N T H D A Y A D V E N T IS T • • • Prayer meeting on Wednesday even Heavy hats cause headaches and are ing at 7:30. very bad for the hair. A bat should be Young Peoples’ Missfonary Volunteer light and should not be worn so tightly Society, Friday evening at 7:30. on the head as to exclude the air. Lack Sabbath School each Sabbath at 1:30 o f ventilation for the hair is one o f the p. m. Services following. causes o f baldness. • • • Bixth Grade Pupils Pass. To prevent stoppers from sticking in The follow ing is a list o f the sixth the necks o f bottles, rub a little oil on grade pupils o f Cottage Orove who have them. This is good for both glass and been given a panning grade in the phys cork stoppers. iology examination taken June 1: • • s District No. 45—Lloyd Cox, Hazel For a broken needle holder a pretty Swanson, Marie Veatch, Thomas Mat useful thing for the work basket is a thews, Jennings Counts, Velma Hart. small round bottle, two inches long, District No.-93— Pearl McCuleum. j Now It suits me I lliul far too many barns still built on the old plan, though, w-ith low ceilings aud few windows The result Is that the cows bare colds a good share o f the time, aud they do not feel as well as If they had pleu ty o f light and air. But 1 do not think we ought to be satisfied unless our cows have some exercise out o f doors every day. IJght aud air are good, hut If coupled with exercise we have a strong combination working for health uud efficiency The problem o f dairying Is largely solved when we have mastered this trio of factors—life, air aud exercise. T o live every animal, human or otb erwlse, must have a chance to move about, setting the blood lu circulation and aerating the lungs. Any living creature w ill breathe more if compelled or allowed to work. That seuds the air away dowu luto the luugs and purifies the whole circulatory system The man w ill die If his blood gets stag- uant, as It w ill if he sits around aud never takes any exercise. So the cow that can get out aud walk or run If she wants to will come In with a better appetite than If she L shut up all the time. I have tried that to my satisfaction. 1 do not think cows that have the privilege o f exer clslng this w ay are as apt to have tu berculosls or other respiratory diseases as those which are couflued constantly. Feed is all right, care Is good, but ex ercise la absolutely necessary. Cere of Calves In Winter, Calves that come late In the fall or in the winter need to be cared for better than those which are dropped in warmer weather If they are to do very well. Like babies, calves must be kept warm and dry aud clean. One o f the best tbluga 1 ever have learned about the care o f calves Is to keep them dry. A wet bed. especially In cold weather, draws tbe very life out o f tbe little fellow a They abould have a chaoge o f betiding every day, and. unless tbe drainage Is good. It would be better to give them a change twice a day. For this bedding nothing la better tban good dry oat straw. That is softer than wheat straw I have seen calves get quite sore with wet buckwheat bedding — low s Home-dead. I1 Y o u r home pa|>er is prepared to handle all kinds ol printing. W hen we say all kinds ol printing we mean A l L. K IN D S , just liera use you may have a big |ob don’t think for a minute that it is loo big lor us to handle. W e have never been "stumped” yet, and we don’t propose to be. No matter^how big or how small the job. let your home paper handle it for you, and it will be done in a way that w ill more, than please you. i8> Tbs record making Holstein cow herewith utiowu Is Duchess Skylark Ormsbjr, owned by John B. It win of Minnesota. 8he has produced In 345 consecutive days 27.741.7 pounds of milk, containing 1.2U6.0S» pounda o f butter fat. This test was made under the supervision of the Min nesota Agricultural college. She gave toS.l pounds o f milk arid 31.34 pounds o f butter In seven dgyw maintained an average butter fat record of 4.32 per cent, ate fewer than twenty pounds o f grain a day. consumed only grslns within prac tical reach o f every dairyman ami remained In perfect health through out the test period. Fhey have to Y o u expect the jieople of this community to M i! [E very religious organization is in vited to use this column for announce ment o f its services and other news. Contributors are requested to omit ex hortations and other editorial matter, and to make the announcement o f ser * • * vices as concise as possible. Social When the metal tip comes o ff your functions, etc., and news outside o f the shoelace, wind the end firm ly and close weekly announcement may be elaborat ly with black thread and sew. You ed upon.] w ill have as good a tip as the one that came o ff. P R E S B Y T E R IA N CHURCH • • • D. A. MacLeod, Pastor. Phone 137R I f tne kitchen sink drain pipe has be Bible School at 10 a. m. Morning come clogged by grease, try putting a worship at 11 a. in. Junior Christian handful of table salt over it and let it Endeavor at 3 p. in. Evening worship gradually dissolve. This is one of the at 7:30 p. m. beet ways to cut the grease and often Service 11 a. m. Subject, “ The Fin times will save the price o f the plumb ished W ork.” Subject for evening, er ’s bill. “ Your Own Talen t.’ ’ • • • • tain amount of printing to do. you hap|H’t) it) be a merchant you would need letter heads, Place a small amount o f water in a pan and put the soles of the shoes in the water for 20 minutes. Beniove them and you will find not only the squeak gone but the shoes soft and pliable. • BUY AT HOME C ©nrirtu * and ^ H O S f : who have anythin}) lo sell .ilw.i\s ha\e a ce.r- Oue o f tuy drat ami most serious mistakes upon coming ou the farm was to uiuke (be ceilings o f my cow sta bles too low aud not to provide light enough, writes E. L Vincent lu the Iowa Homestead. I found an old bam ou the place, which 1 soon made 1 had a chance thou to put There have been no social events this with plaiu crochet covering o f silk in over. week on account o f chautauqua. any desired color, the mouth o f the the basement higher aud furnish much latttle covered with a piece o f silk tied more ligh t But I did not realize the ♦ ♦ ♦ The M. P. G. club meets next Tuesday 1 on with a narrow ribbou. A medium Important*» o f these things then as 1 1 made the celliugs hut with Mrs. S. B. Smith. sized cork covered with crocheted silk do now. ■0 ♦ in which to insert the points of scis eight feet high, aud I fell luto au It is learned that Miss Margaret sors is also useful and pretty for the error common to the times o f putting wooden slides In the place where glass O ’Mara, well known here, is to be mar work basket. • • # should have been for the wludows. ried today to Max W. Kirnmel of Yon It did not take me long, however, to calla, the ceremony to take place at the A little kerosene applied to corns and home o f the bride's mother, Mrs. Louis callous places on the feet is most help discover my mistake and set about Jensen. making It rig h t I took the basement ful. • * • all o u t dug down and put lu a ceuieut ♦ ♦ ♦ The Woman’s Missionary society of The seams o f dress sleeves can be door, raising the walls so that there the Christian church will meet with Mrs. easily pressed open by placing several were nine feet in the d e a r for air A. W. Kime tomorrow afternoon. I get It too. I never have thicknesses o f paper the length o f the 1 space. ♦ ♦ ♦ sleeve under the seams, being careful felt sluce 1 made this cbuuge that The Constellation club meets tomor not to let the iron crease the other parts | the cows w ere not getting all the fresh row afternoon at Masonic hall, with o f the sleeve. air they needed. Mrs. Andrew Brund, Mrs. O. L. Nichols Then, too. 1 made sure o f the ques and Mrs. Lydia Stouffer as hostesses. lion o f light. 1 put lu windows so that I the stable Is really as “ light as day.” AMONG THE CHURCHES Read This Ad