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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 21, 1927)
■ f THB COQÜILLB PAGB BIGHT r I II u I High School Basket Ball I. S. Robinson was »rested by Mar 11 shal Trott Saturday .evening on the charge of disorderly conduct and re sisting an officer. The marshal came felling About People upon him and another drinking in front of the recorder’s door in the city Events in the City and hall. Before the arrest was completed County the two were clear out of the building on the corner and the bottle was Arthur A. Selander, who came down broken. Recorder fined Robinson $76 when Friday from Salem, returned to the capital Sunday afternoon. He is clerk he appeared before him Monday even of the Senate Highways committee, of ing. Zdwud La Braaeae was arrested whGh Hal! fe chsinnzz. The organ at the Liberty Theatre by prohibition officers for being in toxicated Saturday evening. He de has been gone over this week by Jos. posited $10 bail for his sppearance be W. Klein, of Los Angeles, inventor fore the recorder but failed to show of the drawl attachment to the organ, up and the bail was declared for who keeps the instrument serviced. feited. “I am in need of a position,” says E. G. Cornwall was also arrested Mrs. Belle H. Zunke, of Bandon. “My Saturday night for disorderly conduct. husband has left me with debts and He -was fined $35 by the recorder Mon a car not. paid for and which I am day. arranging to dispose of. I need a position. Would like clerking, office She Will Teach Voice Culture work, or sewing.” Miss Jessie Thorpe, who came here Special Chicken Dinner at the new this -week from Omaha, Nebraska, is Coquille, Hotel every Bunday. " a voice teacher of several year« ex Her Supt. L. W. Turnbull with Mrs. perience in her chosen field. Turnbull and his mother, Mrs. Clara study was carried on in Chicago, her -Turnbull, of North Bend, spent Sat home; and in the beet schools. She urday in Coquille. While Mr. Turn studied first in the Chicago Musical bull was attending to business affairs College under a retired opera singer the ladies spent the afternoon with and later in the American Conserva tory tinder Karleton Hackett, the head Mrs Wm. Candlin. of the voice department of that The Missionary society of the Pi school, from which she has her di oneer church will hold a cooked food ploma. sale at Nosler’s store Saturday morn She is specialising in tone-placing ing (tomorrow) beginning .at 10 a. m. and interpretation, diction and all of Mrs. Richmond’s Sunday school class the things that combine to bring out will also hold a sale of home-made good tone quality and range or com candy at the same time and place. pass of the voice; correct and pleasing Radio Batteries and ; tubes a: delivery of the text. Oerding Hardware. Miss Thorpe had a desire to live in In order to give more prompt ser Oregon and had been informed df the vice to its customers the Sentinel has need of a voice teacher in this local this week added another printer to ity.. its mechanical force. He is Macey Power Team Lost, 27-19 Anderson, a former Coquille boy, Wilkinson’s eagers, from North who has been employed for the past two years on the Reedsport Corner. Bend, cleaned up on the Coquille Pow Tenn Robison came over here Sun er hoopaters at the Community build day from North Bend where he had ing here last night 27-19. They did been in Keizer Bros.’ hospital follow it by shooting hard while they were ing an operation, performed bp Dr. fresh, for the score at the half was G. E. Low. Mr. and Mrs. Robison are 18-4 in their favor. The Power quint at present visiting their daughter. played the best ball in the last half. Tiire for the preliminary game, so the White Waists and the Red Shirts fur The lady of ^be house is entitled t" nished the opening attraction. The one day of rest • week. If you tak« White Waists—Doris Kay, Alice your Sunday dinner at the Hotel Co as! E. U. Carroll, of Kelso, Wash., who is seeking an opening for a clothing store. Was a Coquille called yester day. He agreed with the statement that another such store here ia not a necessity. He visited all the Coos county cities while here, but made no announcement of his intentions. Geo. W. Meore, president of the Moore, Lumber Co. at Bandon, whoae home ia in San Francisco, was a Co quille visitor yesterday. He was up on one of his regular Inspection trips to the mill and the camp at Leneve. Mias Maude Porter, of Eugene, came down Tuesday morning to take the position of stenographer in A. J. Sherwood’s law office. I I I K I ! I E. W. Gregg has enlarged the ca pacity of his shop on Front street, by moving all the wood working machin ery to the basement, and has secured a skilled workman to run it. Any thin* in the line of window and door frames, cabinet work, cubboard doors and drawers, screens and all kinds of mill work can be secured on short notice. Miss Genevieve Chase spent most of last week in Chicago attending religious and educational conference due to her membership on the Nation al Board of Education of the Presby terian Church and her fellowship at Columbia University. One year ago now she attended the national stu dents* council at Evanaton, Ill., reprs- senting the student body of U. of O. Wm. Ferbrache, who Is tackling the mining game in the Applegate coun try, near Grants Pass, was home over Sunday and left Monday morning for the property, accompanied by Leland McGilvery, who will work on the claim. Several years ago $70,000 was taken off from ten acres in placer min ing and Mr. Ferbrache will work on ths remaining hundred which was not touched at that time. I ) >4 i I f f Friday, Jan. 14 Coquille 49, Arago 9 Marshfield 2«, Myrtle Point 17 North Bend 17, Bandon 9 Saturday, Jan. 15 Powers 81, Arago 11 Tuesday, Jan. 18 Marshfield 22, North Bend 12 Myrtle Point 20, Coquille 15 After winning an easy game at Arago 49-9 last Friday night, the Coquille High School five met a tar tar in the Myrtle Point quintet her. Tuesday evening and dropped to third place in the conference standing, and a three way tie for that, when the visitors won» 20-15, simply outplaying the locals. Coach Levar has his boys trained on a bounce fiass that the Coquille hoopeters seemed unable to break up. They worked in to the basket well and played all around good ball. Add to this the uncanny shooting of Smith, who dropped three baskets in row from the middle of the floor in the second quarter and you have the story. The reverse play which succeeded so often against Arago was entirely ineffectual against Myrtle Point. But worse than anything else the Coquille boys did was taking a step with the ball. Time after time they lost it for failing to regard that rule. Then, too, the boys were slow in getting the ball away and Myrtle Point had the jump on them. With the score 17-8 against them at the half Coquille came back in the next and played faster, «nappier game, cutting their opponents’ lead down, but not enough. The statistics of the game show that Myrtle Point made seven bas kets, Coquile five; Myrtle Point scored six free throws, Coquille five; Myrtle Point missed Ave chances af ter foul, Coquille missed seven. The line-up Coquille Myrtle Point Richmond 8 Montgomery 6 F Agostine 3 Druliner 2 F ICurts 8 Hartley,* C Call Smith 6 G Carter 1 Johnson G Butts Forest 1 6 Schroeder S Rowboat Tossed on Tug’s Deck To nave ins rowooat and himself , picked up by »big wave and set down ua toe deck of a tug on toe high seas waa the thrilling and novel exper- ' lence of First Male E. R. Jackson of the tug Oregon Tuesday morn mg. Jackson had taken Pilot Ed Skog from the tug alongside the Japanese freighter Gyoko Meru to bring in the big ship, which had just arrived from Japan.. On rowing back to the tug in the face irf thsppo bv&i, XuU JaMMHMI waa maneuvering to get in. position so that the hoisting lines could be hooked on to his craft to lift her up on the deck. He had just got in position when a big sea struck, his rowboat At the same time, the. tug was pitching side wise. In an instant the rowboat was on the crest of the wave, which swept the deck of the tug. ’ As the sea sub sided, the rowboat was resting flat on the Oregon deck and Mate Jackson with a bewildered look was sitting in his craft, trying to figure out how it.all happened. Capt. L. P. Harvey of the Oregon has spent a lifetime at sea but this is the first time anything of this kind has happened to him, he said. The Gyoko Maru had a rather stormy trip across and if she had not been able to get in this morning would have had to make a special trip to some other port to replenish her fuel oil supply; She will load 2,200,- 000 feet of Cedar lumber and logs here.—Coos Bay Times. i, covering every I city oí 25,000 »nor«. ~ The birds are fast, maintaining a About Former Coon Men speed of fifty miles per hour on long Rev. Wm. R. Sanderson, former flights. Three io five hundred miles pastor of the Marshfield Presbyterian is the usual distance allowed before church, is now located at Newark, relaying the message by other birds. Fortunato It Was No Worse A newspaper man is not supposed New York, only thirty miles from —Times. to toot his own horn, but when his Rochester, where Coquille’s last accident is a matter of news it must Presbyterian pastor is now located. During the month of November, be treated as such. Last Saturday It seems rather strange that two 1926, the United States mints execut evening a little after seven, S. P. former Coos county pastors of that ed 38,119,055 pieces of domestic coins. Bail was struck at the intersection of church should be located so near each This production included 635,000 First and Taylor streets by H. A. other in the writer’s home state. Mr. double eagles and 390,000—quarter Young’s auto. He was unconscious Sanderson has just completed post eagles, 80,055 Oregon Trail half-dol for a few moments as a result of his graduate work in Auburn Seminary, lars, 7,500,000 dimes, 8,784,000 nick head striking the pavement. The in and now has the pastorate of a els and 20,721,000 one-cent pieces. jury was not serious and he waa down church with 650 members. He and Mr. Bergner are both young men town the next day. A native of Baalbek, Turkey, un A car passing between Mr. Ball and and may have many yean ef useful earthed a small Roman theatre in his the car that struck him prevented ness before them, -At the writer’s cellar while building and although him or the driver from seeing the old home on Eastern Long Island in realizing its value he pleaded with other, and he stated Monday that he that state, the Presbyterian church archeologists not to report his dis did not consider the driver to be at was not largely represented, though covery to the government for fear of there were more Swedenborgian fault losing his homo. — churches than we ever found in any other section of the country. Truck Accident on Camas The walls of a bungalow erected by the town of Middle boro, Kentucky, Clovis Church received a cracked Law Violators in the Valley to advertise the chief product of the rib and a wrenched shoulder last Thursday afternoon when the Farr 4k The biggest catch ever made in district, are made entirely of bitum Elwood truck he was driving went Lane county for game law violations inous coal, laid in mortar. over a five-foot grade a few hundred waa made last week when six men feet from the top of Camas mountain. were taken in a raid on the Thomp A wild goose tagged and set free A flat tire is supposed to have been son resort on the McKenzie. Fiv« of by Jack Miner at Kingsville, Ontario, the cause of the accident. them are members of the Thompson on the north sh.ore of Lake Erie, was The frame part of the truck was family and are brothers. The sixth, shot four days later at St. George jammed considerably tut the chasis E. C. Clark, ia a resident of an east Island, Florida. was injured only slightly. ern state and is believed to have come here for the purpose of joining Mrs. Van Scoy Society Editi with the Thompsons in illegal hunt- Mrs. Paul Van Scoy ia the new edi ing. The Thompsons conduct the re tress of social notes and affaira fot sort during the summer and spend the Sentinel, Mrs. H. W. Pierce hav their winters trapping and acting as ing resigned because of other duties guides. Following are those arrested which take all of her --------- time. ------------- Those and the chargee against them: Milo Thompson, charged with hunt- having items of social nature will con- fer a favor on the Sentinel and upon ing female deer; Dayton C. Thomp Mrs. Van Scoy if they will notify son, charged with sale of deer meat; her. E. C. Clark, hunting female deer and hunting without a li cena«; Cary W. Thompson, I. York Thompson and N. C. Kelley Is Improving The illness of Ned C. Kelley was Cary W. Thompson Jr. are charged more serious than was thought last ointly with the others with wastage Thursday noon when he collapsed just of parta of game animals, having un as he sat down to dinner at the regu tagged deer in their poasession and hunting in closed season.—Cottage lar Lions Club meeting. It waa a slight stroke which affected hia power Grove Sentinel. I * HfHl AHI rHi RIASCMl' urmep • IC ' 9M" 1 1 -T 1 . \ ziti» t .0Cl»» ’ •’’•Hi' . 'tt utzflfiy« I«; ,v .’t ' . Hot Water Mrit 0»’• 7» IMI.) ; t 'INI i 'MS ' ‘ Bottle* 0 « • ’ » $2-50 are the best we ever had. Finest Para Rubber, mould ed in one piece, so they atches, can't leak. No seams, splices or inding. Guaranteed for two years < 1 S Fuhrman’s Pharmacy, Inc. Man YÄe STATIONERS DRUGGISTS Carrier Pigeons at the Bay A loft for carrier pigeons will be installed in Marshfield this week by the Sperry Flour Co., which is devel oping the service on the Pacific coast. Marshfield will be the first town in Oregon except Portland and Medford to have this feature. The inclusion of Coos Bay was a special favor to Matt ■L. May, district representative. C. F. Bulger, in general charge of this feature, arrived last week to .make preliminary arrangements. Supt. Gilliam was also expected this week to construct the loft and to train the first six birds in flying. The service wj 11 be gradually developed. ■. Jt .is expectodthax- ■ Coquille Won qnq brought here to carry messages to 29 to 19. It waa the Ko-Keel Keen Portland, to Medford and probablye Ke.tchers which defeated a Myrtle to San Francisco, where they will be Point alumni girls’ team. The visi relayed to other pointa. The service tors played good bail but they .could. KOXCI gg J V——• 'S J Paint Inside and Out NOW Use Heath and Milligan Quality Paints, Lacquer, and Varnishes. they are the very best. A special lot of paint at 6*, . z ‘ A/LsSfcÄtL It comes in Brown and Gfay, especially adapted er. p to Uat. Red defeated by a 33-22 score Shirts, composed of Alice Fish,- Alice Collier, Mildred Chapin, Lois Kay, Ruth Wilsie and Elizabeth Mintonye. Dr. W. V. Glaisyer received word yesteday morning that his sister, Mrs. G. E. Howe, of Creswell, died that morning at a hospital in Port land. Pneumonia was the cause of her death. She visited ths doctor’s family here a few years ago. The doctor intends going out for the of speech and has kept him confined funeral. Dr. L. E. Glaisyer, of Marsh to his bed sine«. field, left yesterday morning on the Elrod Is Having a Sale same mission. Iris A. Elrod today inaugurated his FOR SALE at a bargain—Harley- January sale. Every item in the Davidson motorcycle with side car, store is marked down from 10 to 50 1924 model. For further particu per cent and offers up-to-date i«r- lar« ree R. M. Shely at the Wimer chandiae at bargain prices to make Service Station near the cemetery. room for his spring stocks. 5114* I 1 * Was Drinking in City Hall YALLKT SKNTINRL. COQUILLE. OREGON, FRIDAY, JANUARY », 1927. haw ■ «g- • Use Otfr building material service, it is at your disposal. Everything building material, plumbing and builders* hardware. Radio A Hardware Oerding Hardware No more cranxing your car when you have your battery repaired at Co quille Service Station. AH work guarantied. — 1 Why not eat Sunday a dinner at the Hotel Coquille 1 You'll enjoy it, as well as a day of rest. Calling cards 10* foe FLM. .................... -• • 7 I4 ‘ • t. *—■ Chadwick Lodgi Ni. 18 A. F. & A. M. Stated Communication Wed. Jan. M, M. M. Degree Dupont t Pacific Stumping Powder Blasting Caps and Waterproof Fuse Logging & Farm Hamess Harness Accesone» of AU Kind» Radio Stock of “A" and “B” Batteries, also all Radio íes on hand Our Cunningham Tubes stock is complete Cx301A—<1.75 Cx300A 4.00 Cxll2A— 4.75 Cx371A- 4.50 Cx310A 7.50 Cx374A- 4.25 Cx37SA- 4.75 Baptist Evangelistic Services The Baptist church will begin their Evangelistic meeting Jan. 80. We will hav« with us State Evangelist Bentley. Rev. Mr. 'Bentley ia an evan gelist who is proving himself to be a real soul winner w V-V'-' 4 TMK Rev. I. N. Turner, pastor. The Bank of England recently is Mofe than one billion dollars waa sued an order to their clerks that FOR SALE—1923 Chevrolet in good condition at Sa^Fs Auto Wrecking spent on roads in the United States mustaches were not to be worn during during 19M. H oum , Coquille. business hour«. STORK I * " ■