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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (April 8, 1921)
■ , ; > f fit I till*Mu Stoi i f . - - 4 ■ '-’M - zj & ! j ' ' * h .f ; ' . * fj A S r rpu i » . , ■ a - •* •»••••->* ■ ; . ( na fi? df£» ry,r< i > •-* •" g < » r‘itA '*» . '• % j . V fiaaiuifc■ ■'! fi* * - •fr:*»- >, • ; j t * , ' ' ‘ ______ w >m r- • ^tVSRà »rvvs.jr itjji .VflA v Ä * ' -«-*“ * r-ininy/.. ÿ ^ \ .ÏSjç * - V . *r — . K T v W ’ i testam ent history, tha eveas was aa im portant factor hi the Uvea of t4 * '- s t • t .)iS tic . • 1 ‘WÄ-ffJSß kae V- RM ; ■ > Mfou*. % ià fnÿfcisf î ’ m yViv e t '>,,i É * • î ■ i*. v l<t‘' .«I - tViV.IJ-M > kvkv, 'C ' .A^ j f a r,' i i iiipisv , ■& ;. Delivered to All Parts of the City f Beaver Hill^Nut $9.00 per ton Beaver Hill Lump $10.00 per ton Libby Lump $9.00 per ton i.jrtea” »: % c a Jf-T ' - \ J 't jf f T, ;..; -c Delivered in ton lots where it can be shoveled , from wagon ■ Phone 763 Room No. 9, First National Bank Building Original Galoshes. The fashionable galoshes .that are low flapping about the ankle* of pretty girls were first Introduced In America about 1830 la Boston. The galoshes or hoot* were iV ugly and clumsy os they are today, but were even more popular. They required peculiar cure, as (W m anufacturers had llttl* knowledge of thF'*u*c of lubber gum. In wljater they T’rose hard and stiff, and had to be thawed out before thgyj couM be worn, arid care had to S* taken not t o ' thaw .them too well, or they would run Into • atycky mass. In the summer they got sticky a a f shapeless unless kept on let snd taken out during a raln- ntorm only. No one who was snyons .thought his o r her tollat complete Without a pair. They had to be Watched carefully, for once they Start- to rot the smell was terrible, and was necessary to take them out and f Plan War on Hair Sails, ting ’talr eeela l>\ airplane and destroying them by machine-gun tire has been seriously proposed to the Canadian Ashen*» department by fish ermen, says a report from Vancouver B. O. The scheme proposed and tried last spring of trapping the xalmon-de stm ytng hair seels a t the mouth of the F raser river by means of set lines and short laterals armed with atroog hooks brought a measure of flnccess. but was n<*.enttrely a victory over the wise mammalia of the w ean. The new proposal I* to come down on them from the unsuspected heights, a* they bask on the sandbars In thou sands, and pour a stream of b u lletf Into theta: W tlding Optical Glass. Th* Improved method of welding optical fiass worked out at the Unlb ed States bureau of standards, gives ym fset uhlnh with practically no dls- enrtlon. and U adapted for many pur poses, such as making glass cells and hollow prisma. Joining lenses and clon ing glass takes with accurately fit ting flat ends. T he sbaped-glass ob ject Is Waled la an electric furnace to the annealing point, when the appli cation of n small blowpipe flame along the edges to be-uni ted produces a quick welding. Calling Cards, 100 for $1.60. A Z k r o l k n b d i s c ia th e identifying m ark of high-grade lubri cants, the sym bol of an efficiency in the m anufacture of fine lubricants hard to duplicate elsew here in th e w orld. Zerolene /a C orrect L ubrication. Follow th e recom m endations of ou r B oard of L ubrication En gineers em bodied in th e Zerolene C orrect L ubrication C hart. m é m k À grade fir • . . ■ . ■. ■ 1 "**: ■ 1 ,.. I A ...... each type of engine L ft The arose in Ma prim ary signifi cation is understood to dsnoto an in strum ent fa r ishment, or a gibbet fi pieces of wood ftxad togothsr wise without any reference to relative proportions. Mataphoricaliy, tha tan a erosa implies, death thaa dieted, and so it becomco oyuonym with crucifixion, and is often used to denote any severs gain or heavy trial. The asanner in wii suffered has oanaad tha cross, as ^ho instrument for crucifixion, eith er to bo sasociated directly sr indirectly with his «tenth, or to bo regarded aa having a reference to that tal fact of Christian history. Tha an- -u » t praettee of oxecuthm b y hang ing criminals on tress apparently lad to the adoption of crooaoo construct»« for a similar purpose. The barbarous execution by cruel flxton, of which traces are to bo found from remote time among the nations of the East and West was carried in to effect in two forms. 1. When tha sufferer was left perish bound to tree or upright stake. S. And wh by nails driven through Us hna and feet, hie limbs also sometime* fur ther secured by eorda, the being fixed with outstretched arm s to a cross having a hortaontal well as a vertical stake. The term s employed in tha narratives render M eertali Christ was thus crucified. What became of the true the cross upon which Christ w rifled—is on* Of the groateot miracles of all time. It U true th at there are in many old and bits of wood purporting te bo parte of the true crocs, in some cases no tably th at which concerns the fimg> i ment of tile tablet placed over the | cross by'P ilate’B order, and which is now in tha ancient church af Croce at Romo. Their authenticity seems fairly wall established, but so ( minute are the fragm ents that, ae- i cording, to one ancient w riter, if all ware collected and put together they would only ( make a block of about twenty inches long, sight in ch e s wide, and three inches thick. It waa three centuries after tha cru cifixion of Christ before the i found. It's discovery was duo to tha devout Helena, mother of the peror Constantine, crucifixion, and to whom the Christ ian religion owso the tion of the cross as a symbol Over the spot whore the cross was dis covered a chapel waa erected and tha sacred wood'waa retained by Helena in Jerusalem and deposited under the g n a t church or basilica erected by Constantine over the place of ftxion and burial. For three hundred peaceful years the,crow remained to the custody of the Biohop i f Jsru Unable te Choose National Tree. American forests are so rich with Infinite variety th at President Wilson Is unable te name a choice for a na tional tree, he w rote to the American Forestry association, wtych Is com piling a national referendum as tn what tree best represents America. ■ “Speaking for myself," said the Pres ident, “f find th at I am quite unable to chouse amongst tbs lafialte variety Every Easter K was exhibited to and richness o < American forests.” the pilgrims wbo thronged tha Holy ‘J V « » -i in III ■ • Ka'symbol of correct lubrication ... . , . . , T he O p en Old City. Then came three hundred year* of comparative obscurity, from which the eroes emerged te become the cen ter of upheavals th at convulsed entire civilized world, arrayed the West against the ^aat and caused the spilling of oeeana of blood—tha w an of the crusades. The story of the j valiant crusaders and thoir series af attem p ts,to rescue the Holy Wood from Moslem hands ia waO W O M 1 A fter a series of vicissitudes, victory Anally perched on the banner of the Saracens. ff Prior to the fourth century the hoi lest of Christian symbol* was the monogram of Christ. It was x into all ecclesiastical vestm ent formed a prominent feature of decorations. About the year 393 the first crucifix was introduced into the church. It was made af- dark rad wood and at tile intersection of the two parts bora the figure ef a lamb, the using of tha Christ being still A* I undewtand it, one notion that opponent» of ta m m ’ crgMuiBtioofi h»v« got to get outof their ia that the farmer vanta an arti- fidaUy booeted price for hia produce. What he a after ia juat an hon— t price and an o p e n road to market. I know mgr opinion ia Bound, be cause I pot it from <Bte COUNTRY GENTLEMAN In next week’« iaaue is a most helpful article which discusses plans for coöperatiye mancet- , |n g , n o t o n ly locally, b u t a t th e te rm in al mAricet points. I wish all you farmers could read « . 1 Stuart O. Blythe writes it. He b probably as well interned as dpee t ouch vdth SISTy « seen* t e w ^ a s ^ p - - —^ Just Spent the b e tte r part o f a round esrriea, helping m every r investigator* wfao^beep . 1“ Mrs. G. Belieu Phone 678 ffe&i V*?;- v '»v, ' ' Coquille — 'ff An ■ ■ S n iln l n le (b * e W n W * Q •* ------1 , ‘ J . . I -L Welcomed by the Whole Fam ily Wa fast aura that thia clubbing offer will prove highly pep- alar with every one of our readers who |i lota rested is the fam ing and fruit growing aetMtiea of hia or hear state. Tha Oregon format b not a paper of other times or elimee. It b devoted to the commonwealth where yon are making a living, not o f aoma distant region, whore everything frost seed to markets i* different Jn Addition to covering every angle of agriculture to our — atate. The Oregon Former gives o wealth of reading matter for the family circle. Every bauo b rounded out with enter taining stones, feature articles, household helps and hints and I • corner filled with good thing, for the childmi The wei tore of each and every one of ua b closely linked with the proapenty of the farms and ranches roundabout ao we ere ell interested to the work whieh The Oregon Farmer b persistently pushing forward for better roada, better farm tou», cleaner seed, and improved conditions all around for •* * -» . « • Coqnille Valley Sentinel The Oregon Fanner iaa religion and deprive H of Its true meaning. It was pointed out that the signs and symbols used in tha service ware becoming a o re a s d seers impor tant than tha things they stood for, and that to tha ignorant mind the story of tha Ufa and sufferings of Somewhat later cams the Greek creciflx, one of the moat beaatiful of Christ hagaa to ho only a sort af all forms, snd which many contem porary divines contend would form a Greek cross was assent to typify tbs triumph over death, but in such a manner as to divest as far as possible the entire subject af Ms graeesaae and morbid aspect. It blossomed with flowers of gold and aflvsr a n t was richly Studded with gams, fat Ä »