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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1921)
MYRTLE POINT ITEMS. The Healty of Your Live S t o c k Depends on your knowledge of their ail ments and the care you give them. To help relieve the common ailments of dogs, horses or cattle we have no hesi tancy in recommending— E L K A Y ’S Veterinary Remedies EACH PREPARATION GUARANTEED v Colic Remedy Gall Remedy Eye Wash Worm-Powder - *• - Sprain Liniment Wire Cut Liniment Also a complete line of Stock Foods FHOM C U W R W A N l P m A H M A . < COQUILLE (4 ■ * i ■ ; Biß IT Urli ,K f i l l Ir If j m i í ■ 1 A • ( j | i | ... 9 I Rev. and Mrs. J. D. Woodfln re turned Wednesday morning from their trip to the Methodist Church Confer ence. While in Salem Mrs. Woodfln received- dental treatment from a specialist there. Mrs. Tom Kennicutt has moved to town to care for her mother, Mrs. Culvei. who is suffering from a stroke of paralysis. J. O. Clinton, Dewitt Clinton gad J. D. Clinton enjoyed a short hunting trip last week end. Frank Davis was removed from the Pemberton hospital to his home last Wednesday, having recovered suffi ciently from the severe attack of ty phoid fever he has' been suffering from the past few weeks. - Mrs. A. C. Chase and daughter, Margaret, are both very ill with ty phoid fever. Mis. Ray Lee died last Friday after a long illnett of nearly a year. The funeral services were held in the Chapel on Sunday and she was laid to test in the Myrtle Point Cemetery. Besides her husband and infant son slie leaves five brothers and six sis ters and a host of friends. Otto Schnieder is here visiting frier.ds and relatives. Miss Blanche Lee is recovering ■ nicety from her recent operation for appehdicitis. M. J. Harts.on and Levi Bunch pass- ed through town Tuesday en route, they said, to get their quota of deer w before the close of the season. Bud Haggherty is suffering from ^ the typhoid fever. ■ Mrs. Ida Billings and daughter ■ mvoed into town this week, jjj W. V. Schroeder and family spent H Sunday visiting in this city. | The High School gave the fresh- I men an initiation party in the Wood- | man Hall last Friday^night. A love- I Beef Pot Roast Beef Boll _ 15c 13c Mutton Roasts —20c A 25c Muttom C h o p s _____ —25c Beef Steak Veal Roast 25c 20c Mutton S t e w _____ 15c Pork R o a s t _______ 25c CD. RITTER Phone 881 if . V Orchard Grass • Timothy Just Received Grey Winter Seed Oats - lim ited Supply - Order Early The Busy Comer Ill IJ ■V’ ’ ( . i l Italian Rye Grass White ” - English ” ” Alsyke Vetch Red Top B OREGON . ■jo! ••¿I R ed Clover 3 Phones—Call 69 Free Deli EAST FORK NOTES Marshfidd-CoqaiUe-Myrtle Point Roseburg AUTO STAGES Subject to change without notice Marshfield • Roseburg Leaves Marshfield a t 7:00 a. m. Leaves Coquille a t 8:00 a. m. Leaves Guerin Hotel, Myrtle Point a t 8:30 à. m. Leaves Hotel Umpqua, Roseburg a t 7:00 a. m. WE USE 7-PASSENGER CADILLAC 8 CARS Tickets for Rosoburg on sale a t Cçast Auto Lines office, telephone 371, and a t the Baxter Hotel Marshfield ” £ f l * « ---- -• liX ■Il il • 1 H 1 1 n Il ■ Leave Coquille for Marshfield 7, 8, 0, 10, 11 a. m. 1, 2, 8, 4, 5, 7 p. m. Leave Marshfield for Coquille 7, 8, 9,10, 11 a. m. 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 10 p. In. Saturday night only, leaves Marshfield s t 12 instead of 10 J fl ■ Í il# yj z i * i A *]| l l il- 4 f ¡ L . M j. ' i ïr -1jtt n fi 111 ¥ kl 1 ? ^ ¿j[ffj 62 i ■ j III - Coquille Myrtle Point • Coquille * ^ I A 1 î f ... * . . M R ■ * il l 7:18 a.m . Leave Myrtle Point for Coquille 10:00 1 . »u. 1:00 p.m . 3:00 p.m . 5:00 p. m. v Leave Coquille for Myrtle Point 0:00 s. m. 11.*00 a. m. 2.-00 p. m. Bandon 4:00 p.m . 7:00 p. m. - Coquille Leaves Bandon for Coquille - 5:30 9:00 1:00 2:00 5:00 Leaves Coquille for Bandon 8:00 10:00 2:00 4:00 7:00 COAST AUTO UNES George W. Bryant, Menagi Oregon History That Interests Sacrifices Her Life for Cube The library of the University of Fred Gardner had rather exciting Oregon receives 96 daily and weekly adventure on n recent trip up Rogue newspapers of the state. These ans river, says the Gold Beach Reporter. kept on file in a special room, which While traveling through the woods in Is daily crowded with students seek jcompany with his dogs he suddenly ing “home town” news. No works of came upon n varmint which ha took to fictions,, no magasines, can compare be a wildcat and wishing to give! his in popularity with what the Oregon hounds some training be set them up editors and reporters write, says a on a h a beast. Abeut that time tho University letter just received. At dogs discovered another varmint and the end Of each year the papers are Fred found his supposed wildcats were bdund and kept permanently on file in a couple of panther cubs. When a t the library. In many Instances tacked, the cubs set up a wail that scholars engaged in research have was heard by the mother and she found these big gray volumes of great came tearing down the hillside to the value. rescue. Fred was afraid his dogs would be disabled by the old female so * Goldwyn .Weak a t the Liberty Oc he took a shot at bar, but the bullet tober 23 and 29. A specially selected only wounded the beast which sprang list of features will be found on page toward Fred, coining so close that he three. Don't miss a change ns« Sam ammed the gun into her mouth and says 'thef bast is yet to cosne.” pulled the trigger« The bullet tore away the panther’s lower jaw, and Don’t forget what a big eaused the varmint to seek refuge in bargain the Oregon r nrm< a tree, a well directed shot suddenly remitting fa r the î i d h f i Rev. H. S. Garret is holding even- gelistic meetings at the M. E. Church South a t Fishtrap this week. ’ Mrs. Rockwell', of Bandon, spent the week in this city visiting his daughter, Mrs. Young. Needed-Money Quick L a st week Grover Haynei had to go to Coquille for a load of gas. He got stuck once on account of the wet. James Ben ham, who has been work ing on the road with his team: at Lee, came home last week. Julius Ben- ham and Mrs. Julius, who have been on the road job at Lee nearly all sum mer, are home again. The rains of the past two days are causing the grass to make a showing and the sunshine between rains it of the warm spring kind. Alex Anderson, the engineer a t the rock crusher, was in Company C, 319 Engineers, California troops, 8 Divi sion. They were in Francs. The day I went to town with him, I asked him about the work they did; it Was lay ing out trenches and building roada and bridges. For nine days they were under fire when they were laying pontoon bridges across tho Meuse river. Our artillery put up a bar rage to protect them and the Huns replied. The guns were back beyond Beginning in a small way, with la borious effort, they acquired a_ sav ings account of two thousand-odd dollars. They had in mind the pur chase of a home, but were Waiting their chance. And as such chances often do, it came unexpectedly. One day the husband, a city sales man, ran across an auction sale of a cottage. , The owner was lesving town with his sick wife, and wanted the money quick. The house was knocked down to this salesman for a price easily eight hundred dollars be low its value. His two thousand dol lars was accepted as half payment. The possession of CASH at the psychological moment frequently re sults in a series of profitable episodes. In this case the period of housing shortage came on, and the salesman sold his cottage a t a profit of three' thousand dollars. He put the money into another house—and made two thousand dollars more. v Thus making money is largely a question of having it when somebody must have money quick. CASH ia King. Plan to Se^aside a fixed percentage of our income for your savings banlr c., but for the" Red Cross and the Sal- account and WATCH IT GROW. ration Army, he has nothing but Farmers A Merchants Bank words of praise, for they were on ' their job morning, noon and night Cutting 250,000 Feet a Day and between times. Lumber men of Reedsport are en- Dr- E B- Rosa, °* th® Bureau of tusiastic over the -business prospects Standards, has it figured out that of the future, according to C. McC. w lr co)rta 83 per cent. Johnson, president of the C. McC. B- A. Easton. Ghosts a t McKinley Hallowe’en comes but once a year, Over at McKinley Hall you Will find good cheer. We shall expect you by half past eight, Later than that the ghosts Will have fastened the gate. $1.25 O-Cedar Mop • I .96 ‘ . * Hallowe’en Novelties of all kinds f Have you seen our n^w stock of A gate R ings Lavalieres Charms and Loose S tones W. H. Schroeder & Sons Watchmaking — Engraving — Jewelry M anufecturiag Has 32 Children Vivid pictures of the whirlpools of 1M4 is “THE PENALTY” at the Lib Race suicide doesn’t seam to be very erty October 26 and 26. See the popular in Georgia where one father program on page three. has cut 32 notches on his stick. Is the bunch there were seven pairs of twins and two sats of triplets. That almost double discounts the record of the- Sentinel editor’s great graadfa- ther, who bought the old family stead, now belonging to * wo have just visit«!, two_y* fore M m Declaration of Was w ritten. That a « children, two pairs of * set of triplets.