*
COQUILLE TALLET
P A G E PO V E
to ssake good, his four-year term will
be a memory and a warning not sooa
to be forgotten by the people. But to
a g o o d p*pcn in a « good towws cut him off during hi* first year would
him the finest kind o f a chance
to rehabUtete himself politically. It
rouNG,
m ight make him United States sen-
or, even as the recalled Governor
e „ .
ption Ratea
rqser o f North Dakota was mad«
Senator as the direct result o f hi*
tving been recalled from the |
Three Months
noraship. The recall is a two-edged
No subscription taken uni«#« paid
This,
rule
is
impera
for in advance.
rive.
'
The S e n t in e l
Inch, less man o men«»,
r-
inch. No advertisement inserted foi
less than 60 cents. K*adin* cotict»
6 « » U p*r Hno; ui«4«
tion, 10 cent« per line. W ant adver
tisements one cent a F “ rJ- N o read
ing notice, or adyertiaeanent o f any
kind, inaerted fo r lea* than 88 cent*
Entered at the Coquill« Poatoffice as
Second Class_M ad_M atUr__e_ ;
The war department
ton has allotted $26,000
the Coquille river the
week, from the rivers
fund.
at Washing
fo r work on
first of this
and harbors
a
- The Ceee Bay Harbor has |ust puf
on a new type dress, the sssne the
Sentinel has used ever since It first
installed ita linotype— Csntury Ex
pended.
^
Eight hundred thousand ladybugs
valued at $6,000 were recently dietri
buted to the orchard is ts o f the Rogue
River Valley. There were to be used
to d ear the orchard« o f scale and
aphis.
Calvin Coolidge, Jr., son o f the
President, has been picking tobacco
for the firm o f Dickerman and Day in
Hatfield, Massachusetts, fo r $3 a day
He rode a bicycle to and from work.
Surely this indicated true democracy.
The recent call fo r bank statements
develop« the facts that the Marsh
field banks r.ow have deposits aggre
gating almost three million dollars,
While during the past ysar the First
National at North Band has risen
from three quarters o f a million to
$1,167,40$.
The late President Harding’s tomb
will be guarded by a detachment of
regular army troops fo r six months
as required by law, and perhaps Io n *
at.
Regular troop« were on duty
about the tomb o f President McKinley
for two years to prevent souvenir
hunters and other vandals from dis
turbing the sleep o f the dead.
North Bend has had a wonderful
increase in school population during
the past year, the enrollment at the
start o f this month being $66,
pared with 699 in 1922 and 662 in
1920. In the three years the increase
has been over 80 per cent and about
$6 per ceat in tbs past year
new teachers have been employed
North Bend has made a much greater
proportionate growth than Marsh
field has made, and at that rata North
Bend will soon outstrip ita neighbor
to the south.
FAC TS AB O U T OREGON
Consider the following facta about
Oregon:
Oregon has the most rugged and
picturesque scenery o f any weatarn
state, coupled with the finest road sys
tem.
Oregon has more standing timber
than any other state— one-fifth o f the
remaining timber
of
the United
States.
One-third of the undeveloped hydro
electric power of the United' States is
in the Columbia River basin.
Oregon is only ten per cent develop
ed agriculturally, yet this state holds
seven o f a total o f eight world’s rec
ords fo r milk and butterfat production
in the Jersey division; four-fifths
the world’s supply o f loganberries is
raised ir. Oregon; the world’s record
strain of egg-laying hens was da rel
oped in Oregon; Oregon apple«, pears,
walnuts and cheese command a pre
mium on the markets of the world.
Oregon has a greater diversity
soil and climate, according to the
United State« Department o f A g ri
culture, than any ether state iu the
Union.
W ARNING
WORDS
The following word o f warning
against the proposed recall o f Govern
or Pierce is from the Oregon Voter,
which, whatever it bass been, certain
ly never was a partisan o f the Gov
ernor:
“ There’s no telling whether a new
governor, elected on a recall, would
prove to be any better than Pierce.
With all his weaknesses Pierce’s
ministration has not been so bad as
to become intolerable, and there
no certainty o f what a — -
might do after a recall election. The
safe and sane thing to do l i to give
Pierce hit full four-year chanca. I f
be make« good on hit
promises, as seems impossible,
taxpayers will ba grateful. I f he fa il*
C O Q U ILLE . OREGON. F R ID A Y ,
L A K E M E R R IT T
applied for, obtained am
iu baring filled prescriptions fo r
i-.tr« M erritt, Lake Merritt,
whiskey, gin and other “ alcoholic
And news o f ite beauty.
tin es” during 1922 in Dlinoa. The
With you we will share it,
prescription blanks returned number
W e know you will spread i t
ed nearly half a million more than
The boats and canoes,
the government issued. This counter
A re all o f them yours.
feiting w ill bo urere risky hereafter
To use for your pleasure,
as the government is now printing all
In momenta o f leisure.
its prescriprions on paper bearing the
watermark “ U. 8 ." and counterfeit
The docks have aa island
ing fit reproduction in any form Is
A ll at their own,
puidshable by heavy fines and im
They come there each winter,
prisonmenL
And call it their home.
A m ajority o f the reputable phyai
cians o f Chicago refused to w rite any
There’s fish in the lake.
whiskey prescriptions, but those who
They're all yours to take,
specialise in this branch o f “ medi
I f on to your hook
cine” made approximately $7,000,000
There’s the right kind o f b a it
during 1922, while druggists who fill
There’s a part at on# side.
od the prescriptions mads a profit of
And a drive all around;
$2,600.000, says the dispatch.
With a great chain o f tight, ^
Friaods o f the liquor traffic will
The moat beautiful found.
point to these figures a* evidence in
support o f thsir contention that pro
The walks and the drives,
hibition has failed to reduce liquor
As well Ss the view,
• ■ ■ .1
consumption.
A re all o f them telling
Druggists by moans o f the
* A story to you.
*.
scri prion method made 2,289,600 sales
The grounds fo r bowling,
in the state during tha year. When
Tennis, croquet
the prohibition amendment became
Were built fo r your use,
operative there were more than 7,000
You may use them each day.
saloons in the city o f Chicago alone.
These sales equally distributed among
You may sit in the sun,
these 7,000 Chicago saloons would
Or under a tree,
give each saloon 827 sales during the
* And list to the band
year— less than an averaga o f dfce a
And It’s all free.
day.
O f conns, this does not take into
Copyright 1928 by Mary G. Harris.
account tha thousands o f saloons that
wore operating in the other cities of
RICHES
the state. Thus it w ill be
By Frances Holmstrom
las by the prescription subterfuge
U infinitesimal compared with aid sa My neighbor’s acres stretch all
around,
loon sales.— American Issue.
And Pve but a bit o f garden ground,
NO PROTECTION FOR HIM
But mine are the white clouds in the
»ky,
It la getting so that the man on the
street, if ho is in a car, has no re Mine are the sea-bird* that wheel and
altar deducting t i e monthly coat of
operation, amounting
to
$600,000,
was autre than $1,600,000. The duly
tolls figured $2,124,399, a record. In
the first 16 days o f August more than
$1,000,000 was taken in. In the nine
years o f operation 20,474 vessels hare
passed through and the tolls paid
have totaled $76,640,346 on 84,234,474
tons o f cargo. The average return on
the initial investment has been B ore
than interest on bonds.
Neither President Booaevelt nor
the American people who .approved
o f his action in pushing through the
building o f the canal, thought o f it
as a money-making venture__ The
outcome up to date encourage the
idea that it may become very pro
fitable. The commerce o f the world
is using the highway freely, despite
high charges. The number o f trans
its is not so large; even in duly it
was not an average o f more than 16
a day. The tolls paid were $68,629.86,
an average o f $4,481.8$ fo r each com
mercial vessel. But the saving in not
going around the Horn la fa r greater
than the charge.
In other words,
the bargain is a good one fo r both course, i f he is the victim o f a drunk
sides, which is the basic principle of en or reckless driver. The latter’s
punishment even in case the victim of
legitimate business.
his heedlessness is killed by a colli
W H E A T A S M A L L ITE M
sion for which he alone is responsible,
So I
An erroneous impression has grown is ridiculously inadequate.
up in tbs public mind concerning comes about that every person in |
w heat It has been taken as a symbol car on the highway is at the mercy of
o f the farmers’ prosperity, and when any drunken or reckless driver. If
a drop in the price o f wheat occurs ho isn’t killed or maimed fo r life he
it is immediately presumed that the can thank his lucky stars, rather than
any defense the state provides for
farmer is facing ruin. .
That such 1* ndt the case is horns him. Some tins« we may have laws
properly punishing reekless drivers
out by these facts:
The drop in wheat was 10 per cent, fo r the injuries they inflict on inno
or 10 cents per bushel. Considered in cent people; but we certainly don’t
ita relation to tbs total fi
have them aow. The only way it
o f $14,000,090,000, the drop in wheat possible fo r the innocent driver to
was about ode-half o f on* par cant of protect himself and hi* fam ily now
the total farm income. K I* only i* to g o to the expense o f securing as
three and ona-half par cent o f the nearly adequate insurance as noasi
wealth produced each year by farm ble on his ear and him self and has
cows. The American haw alone pro family.
duces mere wealth each ysar than
Knowing that sues conditions pre
the wheat crop.
vail, and that tha reckless, incompe
I t has been the public habit to think tent, or drunken driver, whose pi
o f wheat aa the .g re a t, staple farm ence jeopardises every one ho meets,
crop. Aa a matter o f fact the wheat cannot under our laws be punished
crop represents only seven per cent even by the confiscation of hia ear,
o f the total farm income. There are it is the greatest wonder that so many
four other farm
products o f fa r people dare use the highways where
greater value than wheat, namely, the peril to life and limb fo r them
animal products, corn, hey and cot selves and those riding with them
ton. The com crop, fo r example, la so great. But when we realise how
about three times as large as w heat insignificant is the fraction o f wil
in d while wheat dropped
ful murderers who are adequately
punished in this country, we can
bushel.—Oregon Business.
hardly wonder that thoae whose care
lessness hourly endangers the lives
C A L IF O R N IA H A S OVER
o f their fellow travellers, are not kept
During the first six months e f this off the roads. It used to said that
year, the total number of motor cars nothing was cheaper than human
registered was 18,002,427, as against fife, eveen before the automobile be
a total o f 12,238,37$ during the en gan to taka its toll. Conditions to
tire year 1922. This is practically one day only afford more striking evi
fo r each eight people in the United dence o f the truth o f that statement.
Statos on an average, though in some
■tatoe, like California, the average is
A NEED ED W A R N IN G
nearer ene to six people. Now York
In view o f the disaster at Berkeley
stands at the head with 1,026,71$;
last week the warning aa to the dan
Ohio comes second with 966,000; Cal
o f fire* at the end o f the dry
ifornia third with 083,806; Pennsyl
cannot be too strongly em
vania fourth with 922,062; and Illi
phmsized.
The following from the
nois fifth with 883,920. More states
Oregonian is timely and should in
are bound to join New York in the
spire caution everywhere:
million'class next year.
Since the above was written, from
an article in the current issue at the
Saturday
Evening
Poet, entitled
“ California Takes to the Road,“ we
learn that our southern neighbor has
already issued its millionth auto li
cense to Dan Doig o f Loa Angelas.
Think o f it, a million autos fo r Cali
fornia— qne fo r every four people in
the state— while Great Britain with
ten times aa many peopla ha* only
$63,000 automobiles and Franca, with
almost as many as England has only
200,0001 California 1* the first state
after New York to pass the million
mark and if ahe doesn’t eventually
distance the Empire state, it w ill be
remarkable, although her population
is hardly half as -largo .
The California automobile clubs
are bettor organised than those o f
any other state and their sign posts
are to be found on the highways half
way across the continent— between
80.006 and $0,000 of thorn.
O N E S A L E A D A Y FO R SALO O N S
Tha Detroit Pres Press In a story
------ 1----------------- date line o f A u g
nava that figures just compiled
by 8tate Prohibition Director Moaa
of Illinois show that 2^89,600 peraoi
“ The foundations o f the earth trem
bled in Japan, and east down many
structures, but it waa fire that to.
lowed to perfect that tragic desola
O f all destroyers fire i* the
most fearful to contemplate, the most
thorough in it* fury.
Considering
this, it i* singular that wa should
neglect to remember, and by such
neglect invite the visitation.
“ A t this season tha states that
border tha Pacific
are
like
tow
awaiting the spark.
From a hun
dred sources Are threatens and
strikes, until ws have corns to re
Card it as inevitabls that each au
tumn should be haxy with the smoke
o f sacrificial forests— burned at tre
mendous economic loss and at the
expense o f the future. Brush -Ares
menace the little towns and the great,
and so casual have they become that
few are alarmed by them. A brush
Are at the outskirts o f the city is a
spectacle, something to motor out to
see— but never more than a negligi
ble peril. Never T It waa such a fire
that caused a $6,000,000 property losy
Berkeley. Under certain condi-
m , usually unforeseen, the brush
fire is capable o f dreadful extension.
That which happened in Berkeley
could happen in Portland, where in
fly.
And all the^ieanty that I sac,
By the grace o f God, belongs to ms.
My neighbor rolls by in an automobile,
While I trudge in the dust o f ite
haughty wheal,
But I fly with the gray gulls over the
And I float with the mist above tha
tree.
And the stars in the sky are signal
lights
That lead the way to unpieced heighta.
That neighbor’s mansion is fine to see,
While a shabby gray house la home
to me,
But happy children play on ita floor«.
And God loves the blossoms
that
£ ' crowd the doors,
So, neighbor, keep that poor wealth
e f thine.
For all the r*
.rth is mine.
many districts the tinderlike second
growth touches and even invades the
city.
“ A sound rule fo r camp fires
never to leave one until it la out,
net fo r even a few minutes.
For
once out o f hand no human effort
can stop it immediately, nor until
it has done great damage.
Camp
fire« la the timber
are deceptive
things-
They are .not always ex
tinguished when they seem to be
O ftfa the ground U carpeted with
a heavy weave o f fallen
fir and
pin» needle« and leaves,
to
the
depth o f a foot or more. In tt
a spark may linger and eat
ite
way, unperceived upon the surface
until it breaks into red and nearing
flame. In the forest a firs should
always be kindled on bare ground,
from which the Utter has been care
fully swept back.
I t should b a _n (
small firs, sufficient only fo r the im
mediate need, and should be extin
guished so soon as that need
served.
81. IM S .
Gives Confidence And Strength.
It w ill surprise
you the amount you can save by this plan.
One
D ollar or more start* a Savings Account.
Farmers & Merchants
... .
,
, \
w
of Coquille, Oregon
Mr. Fanner!
Do You Need a Gas Engine?
W e have a number, ranging from 1 1-2 to 12
H. P „ which we have p ot in A1 condition.
$40 up
Also
A few Steam Engines, from $20 up.
Gardner’s Garage
-
Phone 46J
It is not without reason that P ort
land expects to benefit by this change,
fo r development o f tile resources
within the state is o f most impor
tance to the s ta y itaalf, and to P o rt
land as the metropolitan city o f tha
state.
The fact at access to new
forest areas alone is o f stimulating
value.
Klamath is on# o f the counties that
still has land at reasonable prices
uhder conditions that provide irrig a
tion Thee« lands are adapted to dai
rying, to the raising o f livestock and
poultry, and to varied agriculture in
cident to these pursuits, under pleas
ant climatic condition*, with a abort,
•harp winter but a long working sea
son from spring plowing to fa ll harv
esting. There lakes are drained to
make way fo r the plowman, aad
where lakes were, there are
now
“ Too much emphasis cannot be laid
farms as fertile as any in the Union.
upon the need fo r caution, nor can
The great and beautiful Upper Klam
caution itaalf ba exceaaive. Until the
ath Lake la too important to drain, bo
rains faU ail residents o f the north
ride« being o m o f the beautiful
west should keep before them
o f the world.
wholesome fear o f fire. The partial
It la not Idle to predict that tha
destruction o f the California city
pew railroad construction will bring
a grim object iesaioa.”
new prosperity to Klamath county in
industry and travel, ia production and
N E W M A IN L IN E
lopulatioa.
The new Southern Pacific construc
As to travel, it w ill give Oregon
tion now in progress means that
Klamath Falls, which is now (v ia two lines between the north and
Weed, California,) 609 miles from south; one via Eugene and the Sis
Portland, will be brought 180 miles kiyou Mountains, and other via Eu-
nearer to Portland, the distance being * * ne « “ I the Cascade Mountains.
cut from 609 mUes to 820 probably Thus, travelers by the ShasU route
will thereafter have tha choice o f tw o
says President W illiam Sproule
line«.
the 8. P. In a recent article.
1
distance o f 820 miles, Portland ~
The new line might well ba know*
Klamath Falls, compares with 408 m the “ Line o f tha Lake«,” M it w i l
miles, San Francisco
to
Klamath bring within easy access o f through
Falls. I t means that this aew con passengers such lakes, fo r example,
struction will give the state o f Ore- as Odell Lake, Creaeant Lake, Dia
gon new transportation important
mond Lake, Crater !« !■ «
and tha
the state, in linking
together
Klamath Lakes, including magnificent
steel rails parts o f the o f the state mountain scenery, thus adding to the
which are now separated by the bar attractions o f Oregon fo r tha traval-
riers o f great mountains in the Cas er on tha Shasta route.
cade range. San Francisco has easy
Our present line ha* aptly
access to the Klamath Falls region. termed the “ U m o f the Rivers,” mak
A fte r this railroad is built, Portland ing the Shasta route undoubtedly the
will also enjoy easy access, and the most attractive fo r its distance o f
people o f Klamath county w ill have
*^U * ™ * t country, traversing
ready access to consumption and trad the Willamette valley, the Umpqua
ing markets both in Oregon and Cali TaBay and the Rogue River valUy,
fornia. This new situation will as- with ite rise ever the 81skiyou Motin
paeiaUy benefit Klamath eouaty pro- tela*. The line ever thei
Coquille
arouses the wonder o f every traveler
as a fast e f railroading, and the
landscapes,
which include Mount
Shasta, are inspiring o f themselves.
On the Shasta route this “ Line of
tile Rivero1' w ill continue to allure
the traveler, covering as it does the
W illam ette river, the Umpqua river,
the Rogue river, the Klamath river\
and the Sacremeto
river.
These
principal water*, each o f them with’*
ita own characteristics o f beauty and
e f interest, eeastituU, with the lands
through which they flow, a territory
unrivalled in holding attention and
enthusiasm.
M yrtle fo r Gompera
Goes eouaty m yrtle w ill
figure
largely in the souvenir g ifts to be pre
sented to Samuel Gompers, president
off the - American Federation of La
bor, when he presides at the national
convention in Portland this fall.
Pres. Otto Hart w ig o f the Oregon
federation is arranging with Earl
Duncan o f Marshfield to make a spec-
1*1 gavel and box o f handsome myrtle
wood a* a g if t fo r Mr. Gompers while
Mr. Duncan la turning out a special
m yrtle wood fru it bowl which will be
presented to Mrs. Gompers.
The gavel will carry a apecial en
graved Inscription and the world re
nowned leader o f union labor will
doubtless be delighted over the raro
g ift, says the Times.
W arranty and Bargain A Sale
Deeds fo r sale i t the Sentinel office.
N o mere craakiag your car when
you bave your battery repaired at Co-
teglie Service Station. A ll Work guar
nii teed.
états atome, city <X T 0 M 0 .
Leeaa County, sa.
.
Frank J. Chonoy a s i n i oath timi » •
ta Staisi partner et the Gras e t F. J-
Chener A Co., «a te o buoi im m la tho City
et T e la ««. County and Stata atorwald.
3 ?
_ < woru to bot
â
V
u S t
*
Notary Public
tfalFa Catmrrfe M e A d n « la Uk*n In-
■VËTI