Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 4, 1931)
TBB COQUILLB TALLBT SENTINEL, COQÜILL8, ORBGON. FRIDAY, DBCÄMBER A IMI. PAGB BIX Announcing a NEW II —r V THE GREAT AMERICAN VALUE FOR 1932 f r 9. 4 n » t 1 1 Ó ★ « « “ I Z Z** Silent Syncro-Mesh shift Faster, quieter getaway Simplified Free Wheeling Smoother operation Improved six-cylinder engine Smarter Fisher Bodies 60 horsepower (20% increase) "Greater comfort and vision 65 to 70 miles an hour / Unequalled economy % I HE mw Chevrolet Six comes out tomorrow! Its appear ance strikes a smart new note in motor car styling. Its perfo mance combines the greatest thrills of modern T motoring. Its new features include many of the impor tant developments in engineering and craftsmanship. It actually looks, feels, controls and performs Eke nothing And all of these each styled in a hew and distinctive manner in keep ing with the finest traditions of Fisher craftsmanship. To develop such an outstanding automobile aa the you have ever associated with low price before. new Chevrolet Six at such low prices, Chevrolet has utilized every advantage of its present position aa the A few of the outstanding highlights of this new car are world’s largest builder of automobiles. And Chevrolet listed above—a few of the typical advancements and presents this new car—proud in the knowledge that it represents the Great American Value for 1932. improvements that make the new Chevrolet such a Chnrul't Mutur Company, Detroit, Ul&pn. LHmtion of Control Momn t PRICED AS LOW AS « « remarkable low-priced automobile. new features are offered in twenty different models— '475 F.O.B. FLINT, MICH. On display tomorrow, Saturday, December 5th SEE YOU» HEALER BELOW Southwestern Motor Co. t t COQUILLE » r MYRTLE POINT r To Deliver Freight at Door Effective Dee. 1. the Pacific Motor Transport Company, is inaugurating service between Portland and points as far south aa Gold Beach, including Coquille, Norway, Myrtle Point, Riv erton, Bandon, Langlois, Port Orford and Wedderbum. Under the now ar rangement, freight will be handled from Portland to Marshfield in the head-end care on the passenger train, thence transported by the Central Transfer Co. to the destinations named. Deliveries will be made in Coquille, for example, by 9:30 a. m. and in Gold Beach by 2 p. m. the day following shipment from Portland, and give the lower end of Coos coun ty, also points in Curry county, the beet through dependable service they have ever had. The Pacific Motor Transport Co. which io a subsidiary of the Southern Pacific, provides store door pick up and delivery service at the same rates as carried by the truck lines. They are in position to pay claims promptly and when they handle collections for a shipper, to remit returns without de lay. These are just two features, while appearing of minor importance, go a long way to prove the new ser vice •» • dependable one. L. A. Brockwell, Asst. Genera] Freight Agent of the Southern Pa cific Co., and L. E. St. John, Jr, Mgr. of the Pacific Motor Transport Co., both of Portland, were in the city Tuesday with F. A. Pook, local S. P. agent, and J. E. Walstrom, of the Central Transfer Co. r Junior Hi Noten We had another interesting assem bly on Monday in which the 8th A presented a group of clever jokes; the 8-B girls in Misa 8hono’s room gave a stunt song, the 8-B’s in Mr. Kathan’s room gave a musical selection, the 7-A’s gave a play, “The Employment Bureau,” the 7-®’a also gave a musi cal selection. The 7->B’« have voted to have a spelling match every week and the side that loses must treat the rest of the class, including the teacher. The Eighth B has a new student. Leonard Giles, from South Dakota. The Junior Hi library la being wido- ly used by all classes. Many of the new books are very interesting. Mar gery Rowe and Doris Compton are in charge of the library. The students of the 8th-B room ex pects to break their record of attend- ’ »nee. They are figuring on six weeks of perfect attendance—none tardy, none absent. Their present record is five weeks and three days of perfect attendance.