Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1925)
The Sentinel y«u will Subscription Rates »2.00 Ono Year ............... .................... 1.00 Six Months ................................. Three Months .................................... -fi? No subscription taken unless paid for in advance. This rule is impure tag. Your weight is your size in a Jantzen! Entered at the Coquille Po*>®ee Second Class Mail Matter THE ftt-by-weight x method is another Jantxen innovation — originated because the surprising springiness of . the original Jantxen stitch accommodates the build of the body’ ‘across”, and “up and down” re gardless of waist or chest measure! One' hundred and sixty potinds, for instance, takes a Jantxen rise 46. As easy as that I There'» a weight- and-rixe scale on every suit. .. Only in a Jantxen, also, do you ge t She patented bow- trunk pattern, the non-rip crotch. The reinforced Jant- sen shoulder strap h sur mounted by an unbreakable rubber button. The most widely-sold swimming suit in America! ife sr ’W Bothell Bankers Shoot Straight 1 WHAT MAY HAPPEN what mat MAY GO OVER THE POLE The old man of The Sentinel when he made a trip to Alaska and nearly up to the Arctic circle two yearn ago this month, never expected to make another journey so near to the North pole. But whether he does or not he is convinced that airplane trips di rectly over the polo am going to be come common in a comparatively few yearn. Read the following from the Ontario California, letter published in the Christian Science Monitor of the find instant: H appen in i » n Mark Sullivan, the well-known Washington correspondent, calls at tention to the thin sledding the re publicans may have to face, after the next batch of senators are chosen in 1926. That party has a nominal load of fifteen in a senate which con tains 56 of their political faith and only 40 democrats. But of that fif teen, four senatom have already had the caucus doors of that party shut against them on account of their sup port of a presidentfail candidate of their own number, La Follette of Wisconsin who headed a bolting tick et last year. And them am enough more who vote against republicaon measures whenever they feel like it that the candidate Coolidge- named for attor ney genera], Charles B. Warren, of Michigan, failed tlT secure confirma tion last March. This isZpaid to be the first time in fifty yearn that an American president has received such an affront The people elected Cool idge last November by a majority of more than four millions, but congress pays no heed to popular majorities and when it oouid have Hs way, had no hesitation in giving him a slap in the fines. The very fact that congress does not hesitate to belittle the president in this way is to be taken into the account in forecasting w hat the people will do to the republican mem- bom of the senate who come up for m tact ion a year from next fall, as about a third of them should net be astonish« enough of the candidates jarity party defeated to * The proposed recall of Justice of the Peace L. J. Hadley, of Bandon, on Saturday of next week, may be one of those in which a recall is not a recall unless the voters are very careful in marking their ballots. On the ballot the voter can regis ter either for or against secall of Radley and at the same time vote for election of Radley or M. B Hayden to bo justice of the peace. Unless every voter is careful to state his intention plainly it is possible for Radley to be both recalled and elect ed at the same time. It is also possi ble for the recall of Radley to fail and at the same time for Hayden to receive the majority of votes for the position. If the voters do not mmd their p’s and q*s it will be possible for them to recall Radley and re-elect him kt the same time. Radley will be given an opportun ity to state his ease as well as ho can do it in 200 words on the balolt. In Bothell, Washington, they not only ere prepared for bank bandits, but when such worthies appear the bank official* or citizens comport themselves like veteran sharpshoot- era. Every bullet finds its billot. Thus it is that of three men who robbed the Bothell bank, two are dead of gunshot wounds, and a third, grievously wounded, is a prisoner in Porttenff-—A frwwr episodes t>f like nature would serve to deprive the profession of most of its bloom. Hazard considered,, the average fel low would prefer to try his hand at g.more or less honest endeavor in another field. The story of the wounded robber is that he drifted into the Craft of criminality. He was a rum-runner, but from ram-running to bank rob bing seemed no more than a -slight and immaterial step. The returns were larger and more speedy. As for the risk he ran, this appears not to have troubled him greatly. General ly speaking, there is little risk in rob bing a bank, and if you are caught there are always ways that give one a chance of beating the law. But the Bothell bankers were not rabbit- hearted. They Refused to play the game according to the rales. They emerged shooting, and shooting straight. In similar adventures of the sort it has nearly always been the robbers who shot straight and the citizens who shot high, low or wide. Is there a hint tai this fact of a disin clination to slay even a bank robber? Criminals do not concern themsetvee with scruples against the taking of human life. In dealing with an arm ed criminal no shots should be Wit tingly wasted. The young in a prison pital, crippled for life and certain to spend a number of years tai prison, is an object lesson to all smart youths who believe that a living can be col lected without work—by criminal means, if such seem easiest. Ho b paying the fiddler and the account b a lengthy one.—Oregonian. - - - / High Prairie swains failed to find Selina alluring? She was too small, too pale and fragile for their robust taste. More will be told about Se ine m a now aerial novel soon to be published in The Sentinel. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION penartssam of the Interior U. S. Land Office at Roseburg >» 1er- bert A. GiMHlan, of R. No. 1, Marsh- flejd, Oreuon who, on February 12, 1924, made Homestead E the lffth day’’<rf Jdy/iwsT' Claimant names at witnesses: Mm. J. B. Daughterly, of George Chard, of Ole Noah, of of Catarrh ta fie!! OraSr^ * L U * Mar'h’ * We carry Jantrens in attractive 1M5 styles for men, women and children— also a new speed suit 1 • Come in and get your free automobiledivina girl sticker r The suit that chanwrt bathing to w / wm »)»*? Bub Clothing & Shoe Co. Coquille, Ore. -Ä- 3EJOOÖU SET1HK mum» unnnm Euran unn onr< iitc ------ --------- rana TIC DE na se n □□□□□ rcnrvjn h nan iinn □áa □SR □ g nran BBn □ ■un E»OQ aaa eh □m □ran anu □na z“_ ra nannr.i naono b □s sn as can nua Hou □an ____ □□□ ___ , □auTi anana Haan □n^roan i------------- *1 Only »2.25 for the Oregon Fanner with the Sentinel for one year. The two papers make an excellent com bination.