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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 19??-1917 | View Entire Issue (May 18, 1917)
In Justice Stanley’s court here l%st Monday John Martin, of »larshfield, was tried and convicted of having boose in his possession—24 quarts of it in two suit cases a nd Tuesday Judge Stanley sent snood him to SO days in Jail and lined Mas >60 and costs, amounting to 837.60. However, the Jail sentones was suspended dur ing good behavior if the >87.60 was paid at ones. He was thsn relshsed, in the custody of Joan Kendall, to go to Marshfield to yet the money. Stanley informed us this morning that the fine had not yet been paid, though Mr. K. agreed to stand good Many Additions and; Changes at Creame Under the New Mahagement—Big Va Dropped in River. Perozzi Withdraws. r up to Pewom about 4:80, expecting to be there before the boose. But the train crew discovered the suspicious suit cases between Beaver Hill and Coquille and from this sta tion notified District Attorney Hall, who called up the sheriff’s office here to take the young man from the local. sage arrived, so Clyde Gage phoned Marshal Jim Brown at Myrtle Point to arrest Martin and to seise the suit oases and Saturday the Myrtle Point officer brought them doom and turned them over to the sheriff. When arrested Martin naively ask ed Brown how he was to get out of the trouble. He mid a stranger asked him to deliver the suit cases at Pow- TO IMPROVE OUR RAILROAD it the Coquille depot recently have failed to note that the business at this station contributes more than its full proportion of this increase. The production of our two lumber mills is in fact a big factor and ears are new going out from here daily to •U sections of the country. Indeed one day lately it was Agent Sterling’s duty to find a car with an end door to load for Montreal, Canada. The air is almost electric with increased ac- place while we wore there. This ban a capacity of 8500 gallons an hour, The whey runs out into big tanks be- nsath the first floor among the piles that support the building. The rest of the milk goes into those big double bottomed vats about 86 feet long, 8 feet wide and 2 feet deep, Thera are four of this sise only ana of which eras yet in place, though another was being raised from the river by the combined efforts of the entire feces. The tackle for this work was suspended from a heavy beam projecting from the top of the door on the river side. There was a little smaller one there the day before when they tried to Uft the first of thane tanks and it broke, the vat dropping into the river. Besides them larger vats there is one of 700 gallons cap- F. E. McKenna informs us that the Oregon Power Go. has this week com pletad the work of installing three- fourths of a new Une in the Norway section. The copper wire Is the seme as formerly in use as It Is impossible to buy a pound of wire on the Pacific has made choose in Russia, in Po- coast, even at 42 cents per. land, in Germany, in the Argentine *nd at many places in the United Btatcs. Indeed we may say that he ms made mors cheese than the av- Braga man ever smK ~ ' Then there is the company aecre- tary, Mr. G. R. Harper, whom home vUl be in Coquills, though he will mve other lines of business to look rfter for the Conway companies, Mrs. If. J. Longs ton is installed in the old s*ce room upstairs in the southeast corner as stenographer and bookkeep- *> with an up-to-date office equip- ment. ; In this hasty articlo we can’t begin Is tefl of all the activities of the new Dairy Products' company here, but We must not omit to state that this company is making arrange- MORE PURE BRED STOCK listed. Good breo picked up rapidly **&m?*r kBOW After a fatherly talk by Mr. Sten- ley, which Martin seemed to take Se riously, the latter promised to quit the stool pigeon bumams It is re- Perm! Cannot Remain. Siaee the above was written young Martin, who was formerly a resident of this eity, has shown up and paid his $60 fine. He has also arranged At the meeting of the Port of Ban- with the witnesses to satisfy their don Commission at Band on last Sat coots, leaving about $17.60 more that urday it was voted to increase the he promises to dig up soon. wages of the six members of the crew of the Fort tug, Klihyam. It used to Sixth Declamatory Contest. require only four men to run her, but the LaFolletta- bill makes a fifty per The Sixth Annual Declamatory cent increase necessary. The port Contest of the Coquille schools will charges, however, are scaled to fur- be hold at the Ms sonic Hall next Thursday evening, May 24, nt sight- fifteen. The contestants have been well trained and tha program will be purchase. With the increased com a good one. The entriee are aa fel merce promised for the Coquille wa lows: First section, Kathleen Siler, terway in the near future it may al Raymond Irvine, Clarabel Peart and so provide s staking fund for the ex Merle Landreth; Second section, of that debt The more Beryl Woodruff, Kenneth Staainger tinguishment chore is paid on the principal the less and Chester Howard; Third section, the interest will be. Leanna Curry, Nellie Johnson, Mar vel Skeels, Ruby McDonald and Katie Probably no more important na tivity is carried on by the school in the course of the year than the de clamatory contest. Through the con tests of the past five years, inter est in public speaking has been great ly stimulated and many pupils have discovered that they possessed a tal ent before unsuspected. The full value of such an activity can be se cured only through the hearty sup port of the community in the wuy of Recruits from Pert Orford. Eleven study young follows from Port Orford and vicinity cams up the men, F. W. Racey and A. R. Weid ner, who tried to get rich embeesling the Agitator’s subscription receipts. They were taken ever to the Bay to day for a preliminary hearing in Justice Schuster’s court. U. 8. Navy and enlist. They were recruited by Asms 8. Johnson, poet- master ut Port Orford. Their names are Ofie NT Knapp, Marl Woodcock, Lynns Woodcock, Clarence Wright, Robert Smith, Francis Smith, Oliver Corbin, J. Larin Forty, Letand L. White, James H. Hill, and H. W. Mr. F. E. Conway, who is in charge temporarily until an experienced and efficient cheese man is secured for the position, says that as soon as the milk receipts reach the maximum ca pacity, an additimi will be made to the factory on the east with another unit of the same capacity. Then when milk production increases sufficiently to bring the receipts up to 60,000 pounds a day, the company will be ready to begin the erection of the con- densary, which they all the time have in view as the ultimate goal ef the enterprise. Even if they had planned to start with the condensary, however, it would be impossible to put that in operation this year, as the tin for the cans could not be secured now— nor perhaps until the war is over. Among the changes we noted in the building was the fitting up of thè northwest corner room, at the main entrance as a public office, with coun ters, desks etc. Next east of this is the butter pack ing room. Back of these is the room where the butter is made, the tank and churn there having a capacity for 3,000 pounds of milk a day. Of course, it will be the cream rather than the milk that will come from a considerable distance and butter mak ing will ge on as before. The big southwest room with vats covering moat ef the floor and the presses on the east side win be de voted entirely to the cheese busta ms. In the southeast corner is the small are given a three days’ bath in brina. Upstairs at the front of tha building is the room wfll bo ripened, Up A the find extend gross. Hen those of th room bore, i ry sappUed D. Perozzi, of Ashland, has made arnny friends during his brief stay hero, in the capacity of manager of our new Dairy Products Company, and his retirement from the field be fore bo had consummated the pur chase of any stock in the enterprise will be widely regretted. His other in- of any stock in the enterprise will be widely regretted. His other in terests in this state and in California were so extensive that he finally de- New Secretary Arrives. Guy R. Harper, formerly ef Jack sonville, Oregon, where he served as deputy tax collector of Jackson coun ty, has Just taken the position of sec retary of thé Darifood Products com pany here and expects to bring his family bore in the future. Mr. Jack son does not, however, expect to de vote all his time to the company hors but will also bo engaged in the stock loan department and other business of the F. E. Conway Mortgage Com- The Honor Guard Benefit. naturally seem a million fold greater unless—perish the thought— the Times editor stole that article from the Sentinel and planted it in his col umns with a Coquills data tins, as if it had bean written by soma one over here end sent to tbs Times. Dairy Products company that io now ninmng thè crsamsry and waata something to flt an establishment that will produce condonsod milk, buttar and rii cose. One ef theee daya ws are anticipa ti ng a move to change thè urne of this volley to thè “Cow- quille,” for thè cow la getag to bo ccole an even more important factor in thè agricolture of this volley. marni ■' ' » I "The Bugler of Algiers" -produced by Rupert Julian from the famous novel, "We ere French,’’ by Parley Poore Sheehan and Robert H. Davis is a five-reel BtuaMru featuring Ru pert Julian, Ella Hall, with Kingsley Benedict. It is an inspiring picture ef patriotism that is particularly ac ceptable at this time rto living Am-