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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1921)
J THE COQUILLE VALLET SE N T » BU COQUILLE. OREGON. FRIDAY, OCTOBER « . If Jl. S t* More Exhibits Wanted OLDWYN WEEK leatre Oct. 23 t» OcL 29 ■A Goldwyn Feature Every Night SUNDAY AND MONDAY, OCTOBER 23 and 24 Jack I’ickford in ; “THE LITTLE SHEPHERD OF KINGODM COME? By John Fox, Jr. V A drama of Kentucky hills and Southern THRILLS! ROMANCE! LQVE! TEARS AND LAUCFT TER! Ji»Bt the land.of.A story th at you cannot h e t l S ' The struggles and loves of a runaway mountain lad The difference between blue blood,and red blood. An outcast orphan and a fighting son of ’61. outcast And - “MOONSHINE” A Mermaid Comedy .u* TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25 and 26 .' Lon Chaney in “THE PENALTY” - A Remarkable Story by Qouverneur Morris —— An amazing sto ry of New York Life, Romance as strange I ^ edy “ terrible, Humor as bright as only the master hand of Gouverneur Morris can -aint them. A man—one of nature s terrible jests, posses ;d of mystic powers and a strange passion, straggles-with Ytfifof wealth, a gambler and a failure, for the love of a beautiful American girl. A picture packed with tense, vivid action and startlimr Hi. maxes. ■■ *-• . * Proved i sensation in the Cosmopolitan Magazine and in book form. . And * BRAY COMIC Cartoon and Lampoons THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27 Tom Moore in “HOLD YOUR HORSES” Adapted from the Saturday Evening Post story, “Canavan” gL- ■ ■ by Rupert Hughes • - He started out as a street-cleaner—he ended as the political boss of New York And the husband of the haughtiest beauty “ ciety.. He used to be as weak as Near Beer, "but he 1 up as the toughest scrapper that ever cleaned up a or pulled a cop’s, nose. A comedy drama spark- Irish Humor. * One Day Only. And ‘ - PARAMOUNT MAGAZINE ap ■■■■ i ■ ■ ’ ................ i t - FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 * Chenille Post No. 36 of the American Legion will present Is /«■ THE MAITLAND ENTERTAINERS / Second number of the Lyceum Course I “THi DIAMOND QUEEN” SERIAL will be run on Satur-, day night instead of Friday as usual .. ^ * SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29 Will Rogers in * “GUILE OF WOMEN” ¡V , - ', A Comedy Drama As Yal, the Sweedish sailor, he will furnish you many Hughs. A human interest story sliced right out of life— f showing how two girls played ping pong with his heart and. incidentally harpooned his bank roll. A picture crammed Ml of action, surprises and humor. . And The Vanity Fair Girls in T “OH PROMISE ME” Anff PATHS n e w s — And Eileen Sedgwick in “THE DIAMOND QUEEN” $>iaode No. 8, “In Merciless Clutches.” A Serial of Sky— 8« and Land. Mr , • Another Daily Suspend« ineral Hauling id Delivery to all part* of the d ty v. Meet all Trains and Boats Agent* tor SHINGLES and JOHNSON’S MILL WOOD ill Drayage & Delivery Co. Phone lQ U . The Klamath Falls Record has suspended publication. Three Oregon newspapers have joined the silent mi nority m-ihe past year. The reason is the excessive high cost of opera tion. Both paper and labor costs are still a hundred percent higher than they were in 1916. The paper that holds ita own during the readjust ment period may be congratulated. Only the strongest ones will be able to survive.—Corvallis Gazette Time«. Lewest Price in Six Years „ North Bead Won 48-0 Coos county is to have an exhibit at Beaten but not disgraced might be the Pacific International Land Pro used as a terse description of the Co- duct« Show at Portland, Nov. 5th to quBle high sobool football W m iu t 12th. The exhibit will be put up by Saturday, for/while North Bend rolled and in charge of County Agent Farr. up a score of Us tp Coquille’s nothing, The exhibit will include fruita, vege- the local boyk were fighting every tableat cheese, butter, condensed milk, minute and the' visitors had to work timber, minerals and wood products, for every one of their seven touch grasses, grains, potatoes, root products downs. They tore big holes in Cq- and many other thinga that make Coes qnille’s line through which their half county the most resourceful county in backs made yardage, but there was the Pacific Northwest. Do you know DeLaval Separators have declined in price? no quitting on the part of any of the So fine an exhibit was made at the Coquille youngsters. They pluckily They have, and now with the rains starting, it is time to state fair this year that many invita tackled everything in sight and only get to skimming you milk and sending cream so you will tions have been coming in to have a once did a visitor get d ear away, and not have the bother of going to the river or creamery every Coos county display at several-of the that was when Shriver ran 40 yarda day with your milk, but just go twice h week with cream. big fairs in 1922. Special inducements fer a touchdown. The company has reduced the prices to the 1922 basis.. Bet were offered by the Washington State With a team which outweighed them Fair at Yakima, the Inter-State Fair several pounds to the man it would ter give me an order for a De Laval Separator today. at Spokane, the California State Fair appear to have been Coquille’a part and the Duluth, Minn., Potato Show. tc have played an open game when Ip fact, Coos county is becoming known they found they could do nothing at Also remember we have in stock the following seeds: nationally for the quality of its coun line-bucking but it was not until the Gray Winter Oats, Fall Vetch, Rye Grass, Red Clover, Al- ty exhibits. last quarter that the forward pass was In order to keep up the quality of attempted, the second effort being a syke and White Clover mixed, Alsyke, Timothy, Red Top, our exhibits County Agent F arr is in complete success and gaining first Orchard Grass, and Alfalfa need of several fresh supplies of vege down. North Bend confined its ef 1 tables " and fruits mhong which he forts to bucking the line, mostly, all AH new Stock at the lowest possible Prices would be very glad to have anyone their passes failing of attainment supply him with the following: Extra Claude Brown hid to retire in the large smooth potatoes, three pounds second quarter -when he missed his or over, one layer each of Cooa River man snd fell on hjs shoulder, and Ir Beauty, Northern Spy, Summer Rose, ving Lamb was taken out in the last Blue Pearmain, King, Banana, Jona quarter on account of an injury to his thon, Rome Beauty, Spitxenburg, leg. Winesap, and other standard variety Coquille has no game scheduled for apples, free from blemish, disease and tomorrow, but next Saturday, Oct. 28, worms, packed carefully in paper; fif goee down to Bandon to meet the high teen pounds of uniform sample, of school team there which was defeated standard variety potatoes; six large by Marshfield last Saturday 28 to 0. carrots, beets; and mangels. Send all your material to C. C. Farr, aV Co- Investigating the League qullle, before October 30. .. . -»— Instructions to investigs A the fi nancial status of the Oregon Dairy- Cost of Picking Up Spuds Men’s Co-operativs League, to exam Coquille valley ranch«? have been ine the books and to report on the cembing the county for the past week prospects for the future stability of SAVE MONEY BY PAYING CASH or t«n days for help to harvest their the organization have been given a potatoes which this year are very committee of the Oregon Co-operative abundant. THe ranchers have been Counci}. The members of the comm t offering seven and a half cents a tee are George Mansfield, head of the sack for picking the spuds off ti e Oregon Farm Bureau; N. C. Maris, Garage and chicken house. On Oe- ground and sacking them, after the chief deputy in the office of the state quille-Marshficld highway. Two plows go t hrough and throw the tu- dstry and food commlslloner; and C. blocks from High School. Five bers out on the surface. Although E. Spence, master of the state grange. blocks from postofflea. See Geo. N. The appointment followed a deeli help is supposed to be plenteous in O m Cent a Word Bach Battey. 28tf Cobs county the ranchers complain nation of K. C. Eldridge, manager of 1 _______________ 'i.-STF? ■ the league, to attend a meeting of the FOR SALE — Register«! Cotswòld that they are likely to lose a good share of their potatoes because of co-operative council, it ia said.Later, ' buck.. Hugh Hastings, Coquille, To Draw on Cataatropha Fond Oregon. 40t2* lack of help, if it should commence N. A. Loucks, representing the dairy Demand will be made upon {he fat- . men, appeared and made an optimistic to rain soon.—Coos Bay Harbor. astrophe fund of the state industrial report concerning the beneficial effect LEFT—at.tits Auction Stale last Sat accident commission for the first thno urday—a Black Handled Umbrella. Having just returned from an east of the organisation’s recent reorgan Owner can secure same at Sentinel sines the department Was created as ern vacation trip during which we ization, and tha. adoption of a severe the result of an explosion at the mines . . — - I office by ptaying for thia adv. , spent a month in the greatest spud policy of retrenchment. At. of tha Bravar Hty Coal company hare '■ growing section' in New York state, meeting reports were re »e!v*A 'Vnm FOR SALE—Good true ranch team, last Fridaÿ.; „ V thé co-operative associations of wool, we are able to give some figures on In' order to provide for such acci wagon and harness, will sell togeth the price paid for picking up potatoes egg, wheat and hay product«.—Ore er or separate. Address Chas. E dents the workmen’s compensation ------ . ’ \ there now and heretofore. Pickers be- I gonian. Pu lien, Box 42, Bridg* Ore.' 40t2 set was amended in 1 9 » and a fund fore the war got 2 cents a bushel and | established by setting aside 150,000 Spike Leslie the Hero » same price was paid by a few ording IcT-W. A. Marsali, chairman WE aro ready to do all kinds of 1 I f 0 growers this summer. Nearly all, Spike Leelie wee the big noise hi 01 t the «tate industrial accident cam- en Of dressmaking, One block oast from however, paid three cents. At' the the Oregon-Idaho football game at the north end of the Henry «Jtt. mission. peak of war prices, when spuds were Portland last .Saturday, aa it w*a hie There is now $100,000 in the fund. bridge.’, Beckett 4 Staninger. selling at 83.60 to $4.00 e bushel, perfect 46-yard forward pass which The law provide« that expenditures pickers got 6 cents a bushel. At that prevented the Gam state university WANTED—Beef hides, green . and are to be made in th» event of a slnglo rate some of the swiftest of them from achievffi$~an ambition of twenty salted. Geo. T. Moulton, Coqui}^, accident causing tha death of per made 310 a day. Picking and sacking years standing—the defeat of the Uni- manent disability o! more than, -one is much easier there than here, how varsity of Oregon. In the second WOOD FOR SALE—Old growth fir, workman. Records in the state industrial ac ever, as they use the latest improved quarter Idaho had scored a touchdown 32.75 a tier. Orders pormptly de cident ~ department «how that tha machines for digging. They are drawn and kicked a goal,: making it stan i livered. Leave orders with H. L. by horses but carry a gasoline motor, 7-0, but in the earns quarter Spike’s Varney or phone 6021. 88tS* Beater Hllljgoal company .had obtain ed protection -naffer the workman’« which furnishes the power to run the great throw resulted in a touch down works, the team doing nothing more and he 'deked goal, tying the score. LOTS AT RALF PRICE—We have compenratioh act and that it had paid than to haul the digging shovel This was the last point made during to sell one of the best views and ita ass«»amenta regularly. «——. ■ ■ ■ I. "■» through the ground. The vines and the game, and Idaho had to bp con residence sites in Coquille, just r Goldwyn Week at tha Liberty Oc weeds are deposited to one side of tent with a 'no-decision contest as she east of the new school house, about the row, the earth is sifted through on was twenty years ago When the two 8 lota, 116 fast daep, for only tober 28 and 29. A specially selected to the ground and last of all the pota universities met for the first time. $650, on the best of term«. See list of features will be found on page Since,then every game has resulted toes are smoothly strewn on the si Tom Walker. SStf three. Don’t miss S change aa Sam says ‘the best Is yet to come.” , in a victory for Oregon. face. Translated into the 100-pound sack FOR SALE—2 scree and good 5- for West Point Send the Sentinel to eastern friendè. room modern house. Lots of fruit. price, which prevails here, the fig- rate the figures would be: ' Two Marshfield boys, Nad Patter At 2 cents a bushel, 8 1-8 per sack. son and Hayold Savage, have decided At 8 cents a bushel, 6 centa per sack to become applicants for West Point At (yjents a bushel 8,1-8 centa per instruction and will take the neces sack. i • sary preliminary examination* to Probably 8 1-3 cents per sack where del«nr..ne If they would be success the potatoes are simply plowed out ful fai writing the main examination would not be a* good pay as 7 1-2 submitted by the government, when cent« after a digging machine, but candidates are chosen. certainly even picking up after a plow omb the three cents a bushel n 6 cents a sack price paid on the eastern coast would not equal the 7 1-2 cents per sack price paid hew. Attention Dairymen 4 ( ■ I Snow Flake Flour 49-lb sack a t $1.85 NOSLER’S CASH STORE Want Ads I am the Handy -t PERFECTIONOff Heater W Mr. Parent: Logger Dies From Injuries Robert D. Cook died at Mercy hos pital, North Bend, Saturday ovenintg as a result of injuries received a few hours before at one of the camp« of the Smith-Power« Logging company, near Power«. He waa severely crush ed when a heavy log rolled over him and died about »even hour» after he reached the hospital- * Robert Cook waa thirty years old and unmarried, and wasjoiewn among his friends as “Doug” Cook. He Js the »on of Mr, end Mr«. Frank Cook, of Bandon, where he made hla home and is well known. Coos County National Bunk The Scandinavian-Amertean Ba It’s high time the price of bread went on the tobaggon. Flour drop p .* “ w ped to • 37.00 . . , . t a .• m . i I» h .. i »— »— The controller of the this week, which is lower than _ . b efo w , National Nation^ Bank. nan - PAGE T* not expected to be made ble for this boy’s eyes. If in doubt about them, bring I li L ight m e— see how quickly I get going, bow clean, odorless and com fortable m y heat is. Lift m e—see how easily I can be carried from room to room. I offer you conven ience, comfort and reel econom y — 10 hours of “heat by the roomful” m a gallon of keroeene <gL tA Be sure and ask about the * him to me. -S e e BIRCH Perfection H eater Prize Contest and See Better 5 • , V ■ ■ I P C » i^ i» >>—> «*•-1 i1' lri„ i Chaney, who vota fame in the will be no Man,” has an onforgetable officers or directorate. cnaJ» ______ , J “TBE PENALTY” at the Lib- at once. They can't evade « long. ! October 26 and 3«. See the pro- CaD « ua for Send the Sentinel to I Ptaff tu rn . you are directly responsi in and see v me. I am filled with oil, ready for you to light and lift \ i ’ m