Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (March 10, 1922)
•J Si I g fl Í VOL. XIX. N O .* « <_ a m HIGHEST III STATE who returned from tost Monday,' says that the California lumber Market is J: H. McCloskey Top» the List pretty well shot to pieces, owing to the fact that moat o f the mills along for Butterfat Payments the eou t are- shipping down there, and that if it wasn’t for the oriental •u there wouldn’t be a mill run- . ■* . a in Coos county now. No rcHaf - Ah Astoria dispatch too first of The county court w u in noria» the present depression is ex tho weak roods: The highest price I Wednesday and Thursday this «w rit period for sixty days. paid at any point in Oregon for but- While is the sonth Mr. Johnson se I with Judy» Wsd» and Commissioner terfat in February was that of 42 cured order» for shipment* both to Yc#kam present. cento a pound, toe amount authorised C hiu and Japan. A vessel far »hip L The people of the Johnson MOI dis by the directors o f too Lower Colum- ment to Chinese ports ia expected to trict asked the county to appropriai» taa Dairy Association at a m uting C m Bay asxt week, where she will $760 for an overhead crossing over to be paid to toe petrosa of the as- take on thru million fu t of lumber. the railroad at that place, the «Mi dociatiOh’s creamer*». During the Mr. Johnson w ill furnish a part of sons up there to furnish the real of first part o f the month in some parts that cargo u well u some for tho the funds required and perforas the o f the state the price was 97 cents vessel to be in the'Bey early in April necessary labor in building the and in one or two instances 42 eenta Bridge. The appropriation wap made. was paid for a short time only, but In order to comply with the state maniately went after Billings, who Chicken» Moat Be Kept Up tho local association paid 42 cento statutes, the court ordered that each premised to make it good. About Marshal Hollenbeck requests the G, A . R. camp or post in the county for the entire month. that time Billings went over to the lentinel to inform the public that which desiree to provide rehaf far Bey and purchased a $160 phone- Coquille cannot 1st the above state 'rom this date on, the city ordjpance .ndigent old soldiers or their widows, graph from L. L. Thomas on which hieh forbids chickens running at' ment pass unchallenged. J. H. Mc must Aie beforc Aprii 6 a statement hn w is to pny $20 down but in some Closkey, of the Coquille Valley largo is to bo strictly enforced, and of their intantion to do so; aleo to way he was able to bring the machine Lroeaory hero, a privately outoed hat all violators «rill bo proaeeut furniah a atatamant of all telici prò- over hare without paying a cent He and privately managed institution, the penalty far violation ia a A m of 4dcd thè previene year and a head took it to Quick's store and than went h u just sent out checks for his cream rom 96 to 926. in tha sum of 9600. to Mr. Folsom and toid him hs had receipts for February and they ware For tha right of eray far tha Raoaa jast brought a phonograph to town, ell made out on toe basis o f 46 cu ts volt Highway betwaen Lake.ide and now and Httle usad, which ha would per pound for butterfat iaundato Lake, tiwpppnrturs report sail hfap for $90. Folsom did not Tha Astoria people crowed too soon was adopted, tha "necessary land ap wan* tha machine, bat Billings claim and will now have to take a back seat propriated, and Wat. McNaUl and ed he had to have some money at and u t humble pie, u 46 cento a Martha Ksilty each allowed 910 dAta- once, and if Ends would lot him have pound Ik sure more then 42. Bov. J. J. Handsakar waa called -get and H. Short 9t> 97JO more in goods and 990 in cask The Coquille Valley Creamery hu I mck to Portland hut Friday after- Tha contract with A. B. Gidley for he would give him a hill of sale for always stood well among the Dairy- ■oon to sfidato at tha funaral of » Wta i t » «Mua, he to kata the privilege m u o f tho Coquille Valley and paid Hand tha next day and was unable -f'- the highest possible prices far dairy we be preeent for the ahowtag o f the products, and Mr. McCloskey hu no .dotare, “ Alice in Hungertond,” at The indigent relief hamtofon paid Idu of taking any back stops. But »ouldal Hall Friday evening. Mrs. Cora Gilpin, of Coquille, waa or- in paying u high a price u sound However, W. A. Sellwood was pros dared cancelled, aha and her family business management would warrant it to give a talk in connection with .isving gone east for the cream he bought ia February tha pictures, which so accurately por- Grace Hahn, of Bandon, was grant- he probably bed little id u that he •rayed the suffering and starvation ad an allowance of 916 per month far was making a state record for that at hundreds of thousands in the Near .ter dependent mother’s relief. '„{L m on th . - • ¿ -¿ a - ¿-'-i1 -- East The collection, amounting to Tha application of Cart Enaeli The Coquille Valley Creamery w u 1106, was considered very good ‘ in a permit to oponte a dance hall first built twelve years ego ia 1910. view of the storm prevailing that The money to finance its building w u tight end the large number who w en - "A v subscribed by business men at Co kart ewey on account of slcknes* quille end dairymen at the CequiQe Mr. Sellwood requested the Wo Valley. Jack Nunley w u its first men’s Club to take charge of the cam- ’»ign in Coquille to make the total obscriptkms hen an even thousand position until »1 6 . Tha original creamery building was destroyed by he «Tede building ia roque/ ted to fin in the summer of 1916. It was riag tea coals , a months far this rebuilt the seam toll as it now stands, und, and the pupils at tha high the money for the purpose being pro choel building 28 cants a meato. No vided by the sale o f new stock end urther campaign far donations w ill' from the insurance. ■a mads ta Coquille, but it ia expected In 1916, F. E. Conway, a Manhfleld ■> collect for the tone months of va promoter, conceived tha idea of es ation before toe schools an closed tablishing a milk ooodensary hen, bout toe first of June. and ia further ones o f that plan pur chased the factory, adding to its F I « B p U e n ic A b a tin g equipment a chasm making plant In The flu epidemic had ao far sub 1916 Mr. Conway, finding the invest ment unremunerative, sold it to J. H. sided at Qpndan that the ben was lift- id at noeu yesterday, though the city McCloskey, who had for soma yuan previous been the proprietor of the chqpl* will not reopen before Mon Norway Creamery, which he had built I sy Morning. At Myrtle Point also t Is expected to reopea the schools up to be n tory successful butter and n that day. cheese making factory. The schools of tha county, Superin Mr. McCloskey continued to man endent Mulkey seye, have been In aga both factories until the summer ad shape during the past two weeks of 1990, when the Oregon Dairymen’s u*d running at groat disadvantage, Co-operative League purchased near «atting behind with their regular ly all tha cheese factories and cream courses, not only in the three dries eries in the Coquilla Valley, indading vbore they have been dosed but in the Norway Creamery, which Mr. Me naay other districts, where a large Cles key had sold tost spring to an association o f local dairymen end the Coquille Valley Creamery, which be] was still running. A fter toe League went into liqui dation last winter meet of its fac tories in to il county were sold back to the former owners, and in January of the present year Mr. Mcdoskey repurchased the plant here end soon began buying «silk. Ik e feet that thore is a local demand for all the batter he can make there and that he therefore does not have to go to the expemo o f finding an outside market for «t or shipping it away from home is possibly the reason why he w u able to pay the highest price In the state for his February cream. " " - ■ q i i ■ il HEW MEMBERS . L . ‘» r e ® , O nunerctoJ Chib to S ta rt * Con- tm t to Inerena» Ito im m o* ASK HELP OF CHILDREN ----- tag Wednesday evening, decided to hold « membership drive contest; by means of which it is hoped to not only get a number of new members enroll ed, but to renew the enthusiasm of the old members and attr up an inter- est in the city's progress among all eitiaens. E. L. Parrott and L. C. Newman were appointed captains of the teams, and they will chooea from FOR CRUELTY- TO ANIMALS menial Club mon prominently to a t tention, the ehib decided to have membership cards printed to be hung in stona and offices. I The 960 appnprlatod a few weeks ego to assist the Woman’s Club in im proving and beautifying tha grounds of-the grade school building was or Some of the merchant mam btn of tha club aio planning on starting n -•o-opermtive advertising plan, each «to n in town offering special bar gains ovary Saturday and using • page of toe Sentinel to tell whet ell tome special seles a n to be. The |plan has not been worked out, bo» it will prove beneficial to toe bolineas pi Coquille when it to. damages allowed on the same road van Amelia Pederson, for land, 9*0; Wm. Anderson, land and buildings, 460; Norman Wilson, land and build- jigs, 9400; Cash Goodman, land and mprovernanti, 960; M n. Neta Peder- The following damages were al lowed, in conformity to the viewers* appraiament, for thS right of way de- tired for the Extension of the North 3ank Bond, from Rocky Point to Ran dolph Slough: Mrs. Jos. Perkin*, not co exceed 9100; James Walstrom 960; dr. Culver, 970. Hardy Mast was granted penais- aary to use an unusual amount of tori to “ keep the home fires burning.” Tha first of this wash wa had the usual mixture of storm end sunshine and aimeot hourly changes ftom rata to dear. Wednesday was tha finest day far weeks, and old stagers began to sort over their garden seeds and sharpen their hoes. Wednesday was another day of wintry rain and this morning tha ground waa whitened by e snowfall. I f the ground hog will forgive us this time we will never speak slightingly o f him again. jjeal of writing at homo, and has turnad the activo management of the Sentinel business over to his son, who 1er many years has made his right I hand man. So Allen’s name now ap pears at the head of the paper, and if any one has any kicks to make he'll listen to them. A fter almost fifty yean at the helm and nearly 76 year* jn sarto it is very enjoyable not to iave to do a darn thing he doesn’t F ir » A b r a T h is M orning l An alarm of fire was turnad in a i 10:90 this morning and too new fire [truck was given its initial run. The fin w u at tha Stanley Bartlett rari- donee or ou t P in t street, whan Mrs. Harry Kelley had observed flams« ¡breaking through the roof end around kfte flue. Before the arrival of tha truck Everett Brinar had got up OU the roof and extinguished the blase erith a garden hose, bat u toon w u ita tocaos to the attic, when the flames had started, a hola had to be chopped through bufare the base of The Myrtle Creek Loggiag Ce. bava disposed of the lega brought down a month or so ago by the high water, to Maura. Conrad and A<i*l*p*rg«r, a . „ I J V . ______V Jury Dtontanad H Q ÜM 27th A * too conclusion of too Annin caso lu t Monday Jndga Ceka dismissed the jury until Monday, March 27. win April L p*t «a tito ♦ . The tor 1116 a I A .1 J . A ------- •rv'«a