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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1922)
at, IMS. WFÏT." i> t hi« tosun took down a load o f apoda and seiU brine back from Coquille a load o f stih igw s fo r the school boose. This is his first trip away from home fo r about six months. R e kills two birds with one stone, fo e s a visiting and makes soase money at the same AN OREGON PRODUCT N O D IR T NO S O O T NO ASH Use It and Save Money "■ . ' ! PROM PTLY Delivered to A ll Parts of the City Beaver Hill Lump $9.50 per ton Beaver Hill Nut ' $8.50 per ton * e j ,,<u . § -w .1.7 3 EST Delivered in ton lots where it can be shoveled from wagon K': , Hwiv "it' ?' • * ».• iflwVvV •» D] § ' ,4 ( .* w T Office open till 5:30 p. m. Wednesdays LEO J. CARY First National Bank Bldg Gxape Crap 978,000,000 PACIFIC FARM JERSEYS TRILBY IT . M AW RT LAO YOUNG BULLS FOR SALE .L NORDSTROM, Taste it a matter of tobacco quality belief that the tobeccos qm 4 ia Chesterfield sie o f finer quality (sad hence o f beam tsste) then in sny other cigarette st the price. Liggtn Of H jtrt r d s o i Cs. Time to Clean House 'i Your opportunity to get your busi ness in good shape was never better than now. The wise merchant w ill take advantage ..of present conditions and give his business a good “ going over,” eliminate leaks and w asteful methods. A N IN TEN SE H E A T -i ft The value o f California’s gi crop, inclusive o f raisins, fo r the ySSr 1921 has bean estimated at 978,90,- 000. During the harvest season o f last yea r 28,689 carloads o f fresh grapes were moved from the vine yards, ths m ajority to Eastern mar kets. The total raisin crop o f tha stats, including a ll varieties except dried black grapes. Is around 200,000 tons, with ths grosser getting ten And eleven cents a pound fo r his product, say* a w riter o f special articles fo r Coming to the Liberty Theatre tha Country Osntismau. who thinks 'next Tuesday and W ednesday “THE the grow ing o f “ Juice grapes” in Cal LOVE FLOW ER.” W ords o f the ifornia ia likely to ha overdone, t- moot superlative degree have not The vinyardist who last Oct ober been found to expreoa in adequate sold his Emperors on the New Y ork market fo r aa high as 9190 a ton waa lucky not many years ago to take one-tenth o f that pries. A t on# time during the last selliiur «—sen freak Plea far the One Roam School ; I f we can help you work out your “ Resolved: That we believe fa the pians toward building up your business Rural schools located within reason and' conserving that which you already able walking distance o f the rural have wé will take pleasure in serving home, and strongly oppose any effort to deprive the rural inhabitant« o f you. . r, . * . their school* as located; “ And be it further resolved: That we are opposed to such centralisation o f power aa would place the control o f education o f our children in the hands oi a select few and that any effort to centralise power, which is in offset the power to consolidate, ■hall at all Unies be opposed by our rural comm unities.” The above are two resolu tion the Pulaski, N. Y . Grange passed March 7, 1922,. published in 'Rural New Yorker” A pril 1. Re____ whose only asset ia the teaching tins write W alter 8. Buchanan, Past Na “That w o are opposed to such cen is looking wise. tional Aid-de-Camp, Arm y and Navy tralisation o f power as would place I Dell C sthesrt, when you were sur U n iof, Route 2, Louisa, Virginia. the control o f the education o f our veying and camping nights with .the Prompt action is desirable, as a pen children in the hands o f a select few .” Coos county ranchers, who “ saped sion if allowed begins from the fil W hat the Grange opposed is that their eows,” they g ot the sap didn’t ing o f the claim . which Germ any did, and cursed not they? You camp with the ranchers, Mr. Buchanan, him self s Spanish only herself but tbs world., the chance* are you will got separat W ar Veteran, desires to assist his • If the one-room country school ed milk fo r the reason the rancher comrades ih every possible way to has been and is such a failure haa been “ saped” by the «duestor secure any pensions to which they throughout the United States, why is and near educator, who gathered the may be entitled under this law. W rite it that those who know the conditions cream and fa t through the dairy him fo r advice giving him your ser in Mexico add other backward coun men'« league ami whoa« stock in vice record, and enclosing stamp fo r tries are agreed tkat the “ hula red trade is the kings o f their Jaw bone. reply. ' i aehoolkouse” is their one great need. I repeat with all the energy and In the same copy o f R. N. Y. is an emphasis that I poesefs that when M ckinley notes article on “ Maintain the Rural the one room country school ia con Easter came end it rained. There School” b y a Michigan woman. She solidated out o f existence then the 1* mn old »eying that it will rain fo r attended the district school, attended devil ha* th« innings. Ths one room »even more Sundays if it rabis that college, married e college professor, country school is the landmark o f day. That w ill not be so bad if it is and she stands with both feet fo r the this nation from its beginnings. May nice during the week daya. su e room country school. She says: those Who would deetroy that land A . L. Brown brought his new Olds “ The mere poseesston o f tools does mark be anathoaaa. m obile truck home. He haa some R. A . I set on not giro skill in their use, beet re k to build a body fitted to haul sult« are not obtained by an examin the passengers and freight which he ation study o f many subjects, and will need to beeide the mall. real 'training in few or none.” Mra. W . H. Bunch v isited . Mra. Another woman w riting in the R. tbs follow ing notes o f a foregather A lva Brown fo r a few days this w vek. N .. Y . a few weeks earlier made it ing o f form er Cooe county people A . M. Shepherd came home Satur plain that bar little children shall down in that section, says: day. Ha had boon working at Powers not go to a consolidated school. She r soase time. This was not an officially announc had reasons. ed picnic but a reunion o f old friends, L. A. La whom ate Eaater dinner R. R. Peterson fat Harbor o f Pah. relatives and neighbors o f form er with his children at La whom camp. 17 w rites a squib on the waste o f a days in Oregon. The place was Hugh La whom haa bean helping at child’s time in the one room country Maat’a loggin g camp fo r a fow daya. school. Is there so waste o f s child’s hn#r R ing’s fam ily spent Easter time outside the one room school T with home folks. Something like three y ea n ago I Karl Holmetrom waa home over ate a dinner in a hotel in this county. Sunday. He returned Sunday oven- A t the table was s man I have known r off and on sines ha was a hey, also Lyman King, who has been work- a man whom I had aeon once before Jhg fo r Mast’s, has not boon able to k fo r a weak, ow ing t o several school. They were talking about boils on bis hand. schools, high schools, and ths teacher 'M ike Summerlin spant Kastor at said, “there arq 90 in the high school and only SO o f them a n working.” Any waste o f tim e there T It U pos sible that high school was not an ex ception but I have nevyr known n one room district school with as high n percentage o f culls as that. Mrs. W . A. Moo maw and children, A fter I was 90 y ea n old I had ona M n . O. L Nosier, D. H. Johnson, year In the Sandy HiH. N. Y , (now Mrs. Gertruds Luedka, Mr. and Mrs. Hudson Falla) Union school and C. A . Moo maw and Maxine, M n . and Aeadsmy. The great maJoAty were Mrs. L A. Moomaw and Dorothy, on the Job fo r what was in it, but Mr. and M rs. M. H. Dament and Sunday at La w hom ’« camp. there were a few tim e-killers. Mias children, Mr. and M n . J. T. Dunlap, Mra*. Ollie McDonald was horns last Tefft, who was the vice principal and Mrs. Fannie Dixon and Max, Mr. and waek visiting her parents. She re was known aa one o f ths bast teach Mrs. Tom Dixon, Jack Millar, Mias turned to her work Monday. . ers and mathamaticlans In ths state Ray Lenhsrr, Mr. and Mrs. & E. W hat m ight have been a serious ac became later the superintendent Nosier and children, Miss Marie E *r- cident but fortunately was not, whan o f the Hudson F alk schools with 28 land, fcorm an Dodge, Weak Bullard, a ear «hrhrar by Wm. Mast was turn- teachers and 1,000 children, gave fif- Mim W ilma Lett, Mr. and Mrs. M. bd entirely upside down. It happen R . Carl and children, Mr. W ilson. ed Just below Grandpa Maiden’s pises. Ths car light* w a n bad and A n You E lig ib le ? in a sharp turn the ear turned out o f I f yds served ninety day« or more the road, which resulted In the car in the Spanish-Amerioan W ar, the overturning and breaking tha wind China R elief Expedition, er in the shield and the top. Hugh La whom Philippines prior to July 4, 1902, you and Phil Johnson were with him in w ill be interested to Know Congres» ’the car but none o f the three wpre ) - , i i , has passed a Pension Lew o f vital hurt. interest to y ou .' David Maiden, brother o f A lbert This law contains tw o provisions: Malden, is here visiting fo r a time. 1st, it allows pensions to all ex-sol diers, sailor* and marina» witS the' Farmers & Merchants Bank of CoquHIo, Oregon General Hauling aHd Delivery • to all parts o f the dty Meet all Trains and Boats a jubilant note in that “ Bo did I.” F or it is considered aa honor to hqve been to sehoel to Mias Tefft, fo r she ffid not tsa eh sh m er fashion but de manded o f herself and o f her pupils individual responsibility. Her opin ion o f ths one room country school JOHNSON’S MILL WOOD ManseD Drayage ft Delivery Co. Phone 101J yffiuKJI *>dM Skim I