The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, November 21, 1924, Page 6, Image 6

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    Liberty Theatre-Monday, December 1
Laundry Special!
INCERE
ERVICE
PELLâ
UCCESS
Phone 119M
Home Electric
HATS REVEAL WIDE SCOPE
IN THE GAMUT OF STYLE
rest has been handled by its own
erew in the Coquille Laundry here at
nights, A. L. Simpson having very
courteously and in a spirit of eo-op-
eration offered them the use of IVO
plant when the conflagration des­
troyed their building.
The new plant is built of concrete,
flreproof and a credit to any city on
the coast.
Fatally Hurt in Ball Game
As the result of a seemingly harm-
leas injury received in a basket ball
tussle, Morrison Miller, 18-year-old
Eugene boy died Friday.
His ill­
ness was of such a nature that phy­
sicians were powerless to save him,
says the Cottage Grove Sentinel.
Morrison was a junior in pre-en­
gineering at the University of Ore­
gon and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ran-
iom Miller, 334 Fifteenth avenue
east. A week ago last Tuesday his
nose was smashed in a lively basket­
ball practice on the gymnasium floor.
Three players, each after the bal’,
collided with each other.
After he had been treated by the
university physician, his condition
was not thought to be serious. How­
ever, infection developed back of the
injury and attacked the brain cov­
ering, causing spinal meningitis.
Jersey Heifers’ Record
The beet year’s milk record to be
completed in Oregon during the
month of September was made by a
Crexs well Holstein heifer, according
to the report of H. G. Coleman, su­
perintendent of official testing for the
state. The leader is Esther Henrer-
vied Aantonia, a senior, four years
old, with 722.983 pounds of butterfat
and she is owned by A. Benter A
Sons. Oregon is one of the strongest
Jersey states and a Jersey is in sec­
ond place, • mature cow with 754.7«
poffiids fat, or over 18 pounds under
the Holetein four-year-old. The Jer­
seys, however, held the majority of
the leading places oh the honor roll
for the tnonth.—Cottage Grove Sen­
tinel.
Why not have that superfluous hair
permanently removed.
Blanchette
Beauty Shop. Noaler Building, Rooms
the upbuilding and progress of Co­
quille and the Coquille valley.
Xhe
chamber at the metropolis has a fund
of 1300,000, which they are spending
for the development of Oregon; not
one eent of it in. Portland.
He learned on his arrival on the
Bay that he was in the home of “the
World’s Bost Cheese," and to digress
a little, why would that not be an
admirable slogan for every merchant
and business man to put on his letter­
head, throughout the county.
The future of the dairy industry in
Oregon is cheese. Various sections
of Oregon produce the “best cher­
ries," “best grapes,” ‘¡best walnuts,”
why should not Coos county be na­
tionally known as the home of the
“best cheese?”
Mr. Cuthbert is an enthusiastic
booster for the Roosevelt Highway.
In the era of development, which is
really just beginning in southwestern
Oregon, the Roosevelt Highway will
play a most important part in bring­
ing thousands to this section weekly
—hundreds of thousands a season. It
will produce the most prolific crop
yet attempted in Oregon—the tourist
crop.
Oregon is the garden spot of the
United States and the wonderful Ban­
don beach will soon attract visitors
from clear across the continent.
“What are you going to do with
them? You have a splendid hotel
here, which would be a credit to a city
five times Coquille’s sixe,” he said jn
conclusion, “but it isn’t half big
enough.”