THE COQUILLE VALLBY SENTINEL, COQUILLE, OREGON. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 4, m i. Guarding Against t] of the Range-.RUst E all know that, in addition to spoiling the ' appearance, rust is a bad thing for the i It eats into the metals. The result is a U and the average housekeeper “j ust can’t (stand what did it.” _ HE Monarch Duplex draft safeguards your baking and-your cooking and insures uni­ form heating. No half-burned coal or charred wood with the Monarch Rangerv Any fuel burns to a clean fine ash. - • Monarch ranges are made of malleable iron, ,not cast iron, because malleable iron can be made thinner and therefore gets to a heating point that much quicker. Malleable iron permits the use of riveting hammers. Neither bolts nor stove putty are used in Monarchy That’s why they stay tight. The Monarch features are ones which we are desirous of demonstrating to you. There are other “important quality and value points in Monarchs which you should investigate in person. i are lined with vitreoq^ enamel which cost Monarch Company thousands of dollars to eet Every inch of the flirt: walls has this lent and lasting protection. The system of eradiation made possible with Monarch con- ction provides an equal temperature in all I of the oven or a t any point on the range top. See our 42 piece Dinner Sets for for Saturday only One pattern of Dishes, 18 karat dull ^ Unsettled Everything • Eugene Register prints the taf Interesting interview with Frederick G. Jennings, son-in- i Ur. and Mrs. A:~3. Sherwood: Igi George has betrayed his kr in his failure to fulfill prom- ■sde. He waits to see which li cat is going to jump and then i the eat to it. i far from having gained ‘the t industrial conditions are worse Wfwt the war. , certain restlessness among the H people of 'th e agricultural lb, hot more especially in the astsrt of population, is all too “It is a common sight to see crc ACROSS CANADA of willing workmen unable to find ployment beseiging the doors of. the ‘poor relief’ offices for a miserable (Continued from first page.) dole insufficient to keep body and soul together, or as an alternative, begs ging in the streets. What an end of thi3 will be no man can tell. The population is in a state of anxious ex­ pectancy*.” These are the high-lights of the im­ pressions gleaned by Mr. Jennings j during his stay in his troubled home- | land. The sentiment in regard to Ire­ lan d is briefly, he said, “that Ireland I has had all offered to her that she can expect.” ; . • Many experiences were crowded into the Eugene rector’s two months of travel which carried him many thou-1 sands of mile«.- From being at first refused a passport because one Fred­ erick Jennings, a “.red,” ^was denied one in pre-war days, to'christening twp babes on the passage eastward on the Empress of France his «exper­ iences run. I In Chicago he spoke to the Kiwanis club and again on his return before the New York Kiwanis. His stay in Bngland where he was called early in August by the illness of his mother, who is now improved, was enlivened by a visit at Beau Desert, Lord An­ glesey’s estate. During his absence Mrs. Jennings and her infant son vis- ited in Coquille with her- parents andI in Portland with her sisters. uiioes were snout tne worst we ever L kaw served anywhere.. This was due tortile fact that none of the new crop . were yet available ih Canada at this . time and so late in July the vintage of t 1920 wouldn’t pass mruster anywhere. e The waiters on the steamer were, g college students wnose vacation peri- n od nearly coincided with the season 3 for steamer travel on th* lake—from | t June until September. 'They were f pretty good boys, too, and as accom­ modating as lively sense of tips to , come could make them, t For some time we viewed the smil- t ing scene along shore as we sailed up > to Port Arthur, which is also a pretty I little city, with more elevators and . indications of busy traffic.' — ! i Turning our prow seaward at last , we kept compsny for some time with • Isle Roysle, whose great sise war-] i rants that high sounding cognomen. ’ As the afternoon wore away on these ’ almost unruffled summer seas the I ’ shores began to grow dim and faded I i to the vanishing point. Then, is the sun sank slowly in the west we had again, as on St. Georges Straits the first of the week, the experience of being out of eight of land—on a shoreless sea. j The boats of this line sre like ocesn- going steamers, in fact they were built on the Clyde in Scotland and the Kewatkin’s first voyage was a trans­ atlantic one. They are large and well n are somewhere about one Trespasa Notice U f Billions registered as un­ The undersigned gun club has fed in England and an equal leased fr4m Jos. A. Harville all of r who have from pride refrain- the land previously owned by Russ All Hunting and i feeling of resentment is em- and Branstetter. i when ex-service men remem- Trespassing is forbidden. China Camp Gun Club •yd George’s repeated promises 41t4 : the war that one of its effects i aake Britain a land ‘fit for Vulcanizing and battery service at tottve in.’ Graham’s Garage. number of pieces you want, Take the Scenic Shasta Route Sunny Southern Through Sleeping Car Service Sacramento—San Francisco Los Angeles offers all the comforts of modern travel Convenient schedules, observation cars, and excellei other features of the Shasta Route. t Round Trip W inter Excursion Tickets Reduced Fare For tickets and information ask Agents, or write causas tire Many small tires are made on a lighter scale than are the larger sizes—the purpose being to tu rn out a product for factory equipment or for the buyer who is gufted by price only. Sm&l^size Michelins, on the . other hand, are made proportionately-just as sturdy as the tyg sizes. The 30 x 3 1-2 Michelin, for in­ stance, is over 8-4 of an inch thick through tread and carcass. The result is unequalled economy, for the user. Try Michelins and prove it for your- p. m. standard time. We had never before seen the sun set so late, but we had ju st turned our watchee forward an hour at Ft. William. -. Although it was still “berths" and not beds in our stateroom, the quar­ ters were a good defl more Commodi­ ous than on the—Pullmans we were about to saY, but that name doesn't „pply to the Canadian sleepers on which he had slept the three previous Southern Pacific Lines JOHN M. SCOTT, General Passenger Agent ATTRACTIVE surrounding«, combined with excel- In the morning we found the lake dotted with islands, where the sum­ mer visitors and fishermen were much either side; and centage of the wheat shipped from !ti evidence through these approached the Soo, Winnipeg requires much financing. iSauH Ste. Marie, or St. Mary’* Having an hour to two to spare this Jump), where Canada and the United morning, we found the Carnegie Clt, State* almost touch hands again. hi library, was, as is so often the case, these straits the drop from Lake Su­ a rest room where it could profitably perior to the level of Lake Huron on be spent. The last thing wy had to the other side ia eighteen feet, and to attend to in Fort William was mailing get down through smooth water re­ some letters, and we went up to the quires four canals, one in Ontario railroad station .to do that-, crossing and three in Michigan. The locks of a maze of railroad tracks between the these are one of the great engineer­ steamer and the post office box. The ing feat* of the continent and proba­ bly rank second to the Panama canal as an artificial waterway. The Cana­ dian lock is nine hundred feet long The present pay for the service ia $2,- and sixty feet wide, and when built 090.60 per year and C. H. Woodward about thirty years ago cost nearly has the contract. Bids are to be open- ad in Washington Janaary f0, 1922, four million dollars. and the contract t* to run five years. Our experiences at the twin citiee of Sault Ste. Marie hare been nar­ A bond of $SJi00 is required. * The other ia between Marshfield rated in a former travelogue; in the next we hope to cover the remainder and Easts ids, six days per week. The of our trip by lake, train and river to preeent contract ia held by Wilkes New York City and the Atlantic Cavanaugh and the job now pays $6*6 per year. A * contract is for five ocean. H. W. Y. road yards to the other, seemed to re- years and the bond required is $700. ! quite fifteen or twenty minutes to cov­ Bids on it will qlsti be opened Janu­ . Sitknm Contract Let er the distance we could have walked ary 10, In Washingtea. Postmaster MeLain is in receipt of in three, but it waa still “safety first," for the tunnel under the tracks reach­ notices that new contracts will be Just received today a new lot of swarded lo t carrying the mail on ed only a part of the distance. ladies' Blouses, Preesse, Skirts, Coats three routes out of Marshfield, ssys About noon we east off and a little and Bails. Yea will be delighted with after enjoyed our first steamer meal the chic appearance of these articles in the spacious upper deck dining sa­ of apparel. Mfa. Beanie Walker's loon, of which all our recollections are pleasant, except that the boiled po* lont food well prepared, makes this restaurant the rendezvous of the beet people in town—people who under­ stand and appreciate what good eat­ ing is. In- service, too, we easel. N o ----- ■mall par£ of the enjoyment of a meal is the'way it ia served. You will be satisfied with the way we serve yon. MERCHANTS CAFE Coquille, Oregon Sink Sentenced Edwin Sink, a young man, who has been In trouble in this county on a similar charge, waa found gnilty of obtaining money under false pretence in Judge Skipworth’s court at Eugene and sentenced to two year# In the penitentiary. Sink impersonated an army officer at Cushman Some time ago and ob­ tained the uec of a hone and waa giv­ en a loan of a eum of money on the strength of bis story. It as allegsd that .he got away with both. He waa triad on. this charge but thsN«ae waa dismissed before it went to the jury end his second trial was for the pass­ ing of worthlseo checks at Sprinfisid.