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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (July 8, 1932)
TD COQÜILLB VALL1Y SENTINEL, CQQUttXfc OBBCKW. MUÖAT. JULY «. »»> PAOB FOUI Rasarvi District No. 12 The Sentinel Mea a sasa -m a mm raws Entered at the Coquille Postoffice at Second ClassMail Matter. Office Corner W. Firat and Willard St KOAC Now on Full Time Subscription Ratos One Year................................... $2.00 Six Months ...................................... L00 Three Months........................... *60 No subscription token unless paid for in advance. This rule ia impora- Advertising Rates Display advertising, 25 cento per meh; less than 5 inches, 86I cents per inch. No advertisement iifmrted for lew than 50 cento. Readings notice« 10 cento per line. No reading notice, or advertisement of any Jund, insert ed for less than 25 cents. THEARÎ OF LIVING HOSS TO BE COMMENDED Desirable as the quarterly issue of license plates might bo, the thinking public quite generally agree that Sec retary of State Hal Hoss’ position is correct when he refuses to submit to Gov. Meier's dictation and do some thing not authoriiedLby law. The laws of the state are made for a purpose and not even the governor has au thority to compel their disregard. Nor is it probable that Secretary Hoss will submit to Meier’s announced intention of taking the license business out of the secretary’s office and placing it in the state treasurer's office, without testing the matter in the courts. The Slur east by the governor on Mr. Hoss when he said, “You are not a business' man, you're Just a news paper man,” is also quite generally condemned by men who have no con nection with the printing business. Julius should get the idea ont of hie head that he is the state. Louis, >f France, found that he wasn’t when he made such a claim. H. A. YOUNG and M. D. GRIMES Publishers H. A. YOUNG, Editor It treatment of ite soldiers. The Science of It Written for The Sentinel by R. A. Easton at Ashland Savings in excess of $125,000 are expected to accrue to the general fund of the state through salary reductions during the next six months providing elective officials and employees under contract at stipulated salaries, accept the slashes recommended by the gov ernor’s committee which presented its report this week. Appointive officiate and employee* in state departments and institutions under the jurisdiction of the board of control or its individual members are expected to accept the pay cuts» as proposed by the committee Without question. In fact comment about the state house has been entirely favor able to the report of the committee, many expressing surprise that great er reductions were not recommended. Pay cuts recommended by the com mittee range from 15 percent for salaries of $6000 or more down to three percent for salaries ranging from $100 to $129 per month. In the higher bracelet ie included the salary of the governor, the heads of the state college and university, purchasing agent, budget director, secretary of the state colege and university, pur chasing agent, budget director, secre tary of the board of higher education and a number of circuit Judges, as well as the seven memebrs of the state supreme court Moot of these officiate are elective and can refuse to accede to the recommendation of the com mittee if they desire to do so. No reductions were recommended for salaries of less than $100 per month which exempts entirely the large army of clerks, stenographers and typists employed in the numer ous atate departments and institu tions. While the salary cute recommended by the committee will be temporary, a further study is to be made of state salaries with a view to recommending a schedule to the legislature for its adoption next January. Report of Coedition of the FIRST NATIONAL BANK of Coquille in the State of Oregon, at the close of business on June 30th. 1932 ns'amrnrr..q - RESOURCES $ 63,756.45 Loans and discount« .......................... ............................ 1. 2.68 ft Overdrafts ............................ ............................................ 42,500.00 8. United States Government securities owned............ 153,240 31 4. Other bonds, stocks, and securities owned ...... Banking house, $36,444.46. Furniture and fixture«, A 38,244.46 $1,800.00 .......................................... 30,321.52 Reserve with Federal Reserve Bank A 101327.16 Cash and due from banks ................. 9. 2,128.66 10. Outside checks and other cash item« Redemption fund with U. S. Treasurer and due 11. 625.00 from U. S. Treasurer............. •••••'.................... • (Continued from last week) I see it all as though it were but yesterday. In Yosemite I would have thought I saw it all had I not heard a San Francisco man say, “This is the third time I have been to Yosemite and 1 see new beauties and grandeurs each time." It was not for me then to comprehend his words; for was not $482,046.24 TOTAL J in Yosemite, was not 1 seeing itT LIABILITIES In later years I knew what he meant. $ 50,000X10 Capital stock paid in ...................................................... He meant that Yosemite is too big to 15. 10,000.00 Surplus ............................................................................... taka in at one or two or three sittings. 18. 20,958.80 Undivided profits—net........................................... .. 17. He meant a man must live with those 12,500.00 Circulating notes outstanding ...f................. • • • ■ • gigantic cliffs end towering waterfalls 20. D m to banks, including certified and cashier«’ 21. and become acquainted with the floor 8,134 16 checks outstanding ............................................... of the valley if he id able to absorb 192,515.69 Demand deposits ............... ............ .................................. the glories of its heights and the 22. 137,942.59 28. Time deposits ..................................................................... beauty of its peace. Webster defines' Zion as originally $432,046.24 TOTAL ........................•«......... a hiU, a MU in the city of Jerusalem State of Oregon, County of Coos, m : which after the capture of that city I, B. D. Webb, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear by the Israelites, became the royal that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. residence of David and his successors, E. D. Webb, Cashier. the place of the temple, the center of Correct—Attest: L. H. Hasard, O. C. Sanford, H. A. Slack the Hebrew government, worship and - Directors. national life. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 1st day of Jujy, 1932. Zion has a meaning for us, not be (Seal) Joseph E. Axtell, Notary Public. cause It was a hiU, but for ths reason it waa the place of the temple, the a center of the Hebrew government and worship .influencing the individual life which made the national life of the Hebrews possible. Zion was the O ¡n life of the Jews. It was from that they derived their art of living. TVatfical fot ttlOo In Psalm 4», the Psalmist wrote, ^ d^Cothen “Beautiful for situation, the joy of the whole earth is Mount Zion. Ws ■ - 7______ By Dr. ERNEST H. LINES —-------------- have^thought of thy loving kindness, I 0 God, in the midst of thy temple, ac cording to thy name, O God, so is thy 1 praise unto the ends of the earth: thy right hand is full of righteousness. “Let mount Zion rejoice, let the daughters bo glad, because of thy judgments.” Tl)en the Psalmist says prove it Not by stretching out your arms to measure the tree; if you doubt its sise, walk around it and took towards its top. “Walk about Zion, and go round about her: tell the towers thereof. Mark ye well her bulwarks, consider her palaces: that he may toll it to the generation following.” Then of the God of their life he says, “For this God la our God for ever and ever; he will he our guide even unto death.” If we consider life as the Psalmist considered Zion we will not make any snap judgments about the site of life or the art of living, for if we do we would be like the man whose friends thinking to give him a rich experi ence, took him to see Crater Lake, who when he had looked over the rim, turned to his friends and said, “We have seen the thing. Let’s go." It is for us to walk around life, and go round about her: “tell the towers thereof, mark ye well her bulwarks, consider her palaces: that we may tell it to the generations following.” To do that we simply consider the char acters of men and women who were partners with the Almighty in devel oping the individual responsibility of man toward life. The books of his tory and biography are full of the names of men and women who hare might comprehend, and in which his ter of the life of God. Of that life ha placed enduring locations on the map. soul might reach out tuned in to the said, ”1 am come that they might have Abraham’s town of Ur is today a song of glad tidings and great Joy iife and that they might have it more scene of desolation and desert waste. that for the average man the day of abundantly.” Chrbt interpreted that Yet no man can survey that country opportunity had dawned. life-giving life, not as water chemi or measures its distances as it has Jesus Chrbt was not solely inter cally compounded, but as water from reached out into the Hves of men, only ested in samples, he waa interested in living fountains, from living streams, aa its one great Citizen is taken into the crop. It is in thb that the teach aa from wells of living water that the account ing of Christ differs from that of all never go dry. If Jesus the Christ had not been would-be teacher«. He was not color And he defined the Art of Living born in Bethlehem of Judea, there blind and knew no Individual or peo when he said, “The son of man came would be no Bethlehem of Judea as a ple as untouchable«. The Art of Liv not to bo ministered unto but to min landmark on the map. And Phillips ing he preached was, “Whosoever will ister." Brooke would never have written that may partake of the water of Ufe And Paul added, "Lot this mind be great song, “The Everlasting Light” freely." in you which was abo In Chrbt Nor can the enduring government Whenever I hear the musician ren Jesus.” of the United States of America be der from the instrument one of the (The End) measured without including as a land great songs by a master composer, I mark the log cabin birthplace of am thrilled not only by the music but From th* State Capitol Abraham Lincoln. It is.no exaggera by knowing that I am listening to the Father Thoa. V. Keenan, memebr of tion of thought or speech to say that music that was in the soul and mind wherever the name of Jesus, the of the man who wrote it; and that the the Mate parole board for the past Christ, is known, the name of Abra one who is playing the instrument is ten years, has tendered his resigna ham and the name of Abraham Lin only the interpreter of the mimical tion to Governor Meier. Press of per coln are also known. So it has been soul and mind of that composer. The sonal and parochial into rests makes throughout all the ages: the lives of nearer the soul and mind of the play it impossible longer to continue Ma men and women have been and are er gets back to the spirit of the man duties as a member of the parole the milestones of life. who wrote and b in imaginative board, he declared. A 12-bour schedule daily except OREGON VOTER ON Sunday has been resumed by KOAC, JUDGE BRAND the Oregon State college radio station, In its primary Section summing which on July 1 began a series of pro up, the Oregon Voter has the follow grams which will include lectures, ing to say about Judge J. T. Brand, music and other talent from not only who did not win the nomination for the college but from University of Justice of the atate supreme court but Oregon and Oregon Normal school who can be proud of the vote he re as well. ceived in tiie section where he is best Control of the station waa recently known: placed under* the general extension service headed by Dean Alfred Pow James T. Brand, whose exceptional ers of Eugene. Studios for this year qualifications won more enthusiastic at least will be maintained only at support through the legal profession Corvallis as lack of funds have pre than was accorded any other aspirant, vented contemplated remote control carrjed only three counties, and was connections with other campuses at fourth in the state total. Salem. Brand’s achievement in hb homo Under the new organisation a much county of Coos and the adjoining broader list of program offerings is county of Curry waa an election tri made possible by bringing specialists umph unparalleled in Oregon in a to the studios from Eugene, Mon field of four candidates. In Coos mouth and the Portland extension county he received four times as many center. The farm and homemaker votes as the other three candidates features as wall as other offerings together, and in Curry three times as from the State college will be contin many. In Douglas county, where he ued aa formerly. W. L. Kadderly, abo has presided and where his program director for several years, brother lives (Charles A. Brand, continue* as manager of operations scholar, fruit-grower and barbecue and programs and head of the radio caterer), Brand won nearly as many department of the general extension Live« of Oregon residents are in votes as .the other three combined. In division. sured for an aggregate of $702,487,- thb vote we have a demonstration of 361, according to the annual report of what hb running power will be as he Opposition to West Truck Bill A. H. Averill, state insurance com become«« better known through the missioner. The report shows a total Indignant opposition to Os West’s state. of 466,506 life insurance policies in initiative measure was unanimously force. --—~--------- voiced last week by members of the The vote in Coos was Brand 4437, Oregon Mill and Truck Operators’ Bean 509, McCullough 328, and Hew Faced with a serious shrinkage In Association, in session at Salem im itt 148; and in Curry county Brand reevenues through failure of the mo mediately following a special hearing received 821, Been 146, Hewitt 88, Mc toring public to buy new license before tiie State Highway Commis Cullough 60; while in Douglas the ¡dates this year the state highway sion. says a dispatch from Salem. vote stood: Brand 2784, Bean 1771, commission has announced that it will Mill and logging truck operators Hewitt 776, McCullough $68. be necessary to float a bond issue of are alarmed because of the threaten $2,000,000 this summer in order to ed destruction of an already serious SENTINEL GUESS NOT SO HOT finance curemt operations and to ly crippled lumber industry. In a res As a prognosticator of what a olution declaring their opposition to meet bond and interest payments due democratic national convention would the West bill they assert that if the on October 1. Automobile license re do, the Sentinel pleads guilty to be people of Oregon vote favorably on ceipts to date this year are $750,000 ing a poor guesser in its issue last the bill it will be impossible to pro below the figures for the same period Friday. The guess was based to a fitably use trucks in logging and mill a year ago with prospects that thou large extent on what such conven operations and that many additional sands of cars will go unlicensed due tions have done in the past. But in thousands of people in Oregon will be to inability of their owners to finance ailing up the probable action of-that thrown out of employment and prop purchase of the new plates. convention, we failed to take into erty investmenta destroyed. Failure of members of the state consideration that the democracy of board of higher education to confirm the went and south might have gotten Ask for Earwig Parasites the rumor that Dr. W. J. Kerr was tired of Tammany dictation and were The offer of the Oregon Experiment being seriously considered for the as fearful of it and its grafting pro clivities as are the people generally. Station and the Portland city earwig position of chancellor of Oregon’s in Al Smith was given his chance four insectary to supply Oregon communi stitution of higher education, has yeans ago and he failed as completely ties with colonies of parasitised ear only served to strengthen belief here as any candidate for the presidency wigs has proved so popular that 30 in the report that the atate college ever did, losing several of the south colonies totaling 35,000 parasitized proxy will bo the choice for that posi ern democratic states. Smith may be earwigs will be distributed through tion when the board meets to pass on a power in Tammany but the United nine counties. No more orders can that problem later this month. The _ move for Dr. Kerr’s selection for the States is more than Neew York city, be filled this season. chancellorship, while originating although the denisens of that me English Laws Explicit among member« of the college alumni tropolitan area do not believe it. as to “Leap Year” Rule has gained the support of university Whether Franklin D. Roosevelt is as thoroughly anti-Tammany as his One of the curious complications alumnus and Eugene business who see supporters try to make him appear is caused by the addition of an extra day in this “compromise” a means of not yet evident. His action, or failure every fourth year la the creation of a checking the demand for consolidation to act, in the matter of removing calendar date which occurs only once of the university and state college on Jimmy Walker, mayor of New York In four yeara Ho who io born on Feb the Corvallb campus. City, from office, will be a pretty good ruary 2» hue. In a strictly technical sense, no birthday eave daring leap indication of his real attitude toward Gasoline sales for the first five years, In 1910 this prank of the cal the Tammany wigwam. months of 1982 in Oregon were 8,- endsr ms k era came in for a legal dis puts when an English father of a son 428.164 gallons under sales for the U. S. NOT NIGGARDLY born on February 2» asked whether same period in 1931, according to a In a weekly letter from Washing bls son would attain his legal majority reeport by Secretary of State Hoss. ton, D. C., commenting on the “Bonus twenty-one years after his birth, de Only one month—March—shows an Marchers” who are now in that city, spite the fact that In that time be increase in gasoline sales over the it is stated that this movement ha« would have bad only five technical coresponding month for last year. Dbtilate sales are also far below called attention to what the United birthdays First reference to the law indicated those for 1981. Revenues from the States has already done for its veter that the boy would have only one le ans in comparison with other coun gal birthday every four years Black state tax on motor fuel oil sales for It is not only ths outstanding his tries. Thia year the American relief stone's language was unequivocal, stat this year have bumped $149.679.21 bill for ex-soldiers ia $1,072,064,527. ing that a man child attains bls ma under revenues for the same period torical markens of life to which I call your attention—look those up for In contrast with this vast sum. Great jority "on the day preceding the tweo- a year ago. yourself—but also to those every day Britain, France, Italy, Canada and ty-first anniversary of the person's Germany combined will spend on birth.” J. E. Bennett, state senator from folks who have influenced for good But furthei search revealed a law Multnomah county and sponsor of a your life and my life and are pos their veteran relief oifly $891,190,860. For the approximately 34,000,000 men among the statutes of King Henry “fiat” money bill in the last legisla sessed more or Isas by every neigh mobilised by all these countries about HI, made at Westminster In 1236. The ture, is now proposing that the sever borhood. It is not Just the few outstanding 10 per cent lens is being spent than language was ambiguous, the text an al counties of the state issue their for the approximately 4,000,000 men tique, but the lawyers Insisted It left own scrip to finance emeregney em characters who are evidence« of the no doubt about Its Intent By say mobilised by the United States. This ployment relief. Benmettte plan in upward development of the race; it ing. ”... the day Increasing In year’s American relief bill for the the leap year shall be taken and reck volves the payment of workmen on is the character force of the average ex-soldiers means about $223 for oned on the same month wherein It emergency construction Jobs in this man and woman that is the barometer every man mobilised. Great Britain’s groweth. and that day. and tho day scrip, the workmen in tarn to ex showing whether mankind is surely You bill averages about $26 per man, next going before, shall be accounted change the scrip for produce on the moving forward and upward. France’« about $33 per man and Can for one day,” King Henry had meant farm or any other necessities, the may pick the choicest fruit on the ada, the most generous of the lot, will that the boy should have a legal birth county in the end to accept the scrip tree to exhibit at the fair and even give out about $98 per man on the ba day on February 28 In all except leap in payment of delinquent taxes. Thu« win a prise, but it fa when the fruit sis of the number mobilised. These years. the county would be out no cash in from the tree or vine guts to the mar are striking comparisons and they the care of its unemployed and woifid ket place that you learn as to the real Safety First! Use Cow Beil Dairy’s in turn have collected much delin value of tiie crop. leave little ground for complaint on the part of the bonus marchers that Pasteurised Milk and protect your quent tax money that will otherwise' Christ did not preach a greed. He America has been niggardly in the health. not bo paid. lived • life that the avenge human H ealth H ome Studio an presence by the aide of the man aa he writes that music, then b the in terpretation of the song more com plete. That never came to me to fully as when I heard a young people’s violin quartet with piano accompaniment give that beautiful seleetion,”the Largo Movement of the New World’s Sym phony,” by Dvorak. Not only was my hou ] lifted up and exalted by its beau ty and peace; but looking behind the scene 1 saw the author working out an inspiration of his life which would be interpreted to future generations. And the mind that was in the author of that music waa in my mind. It was along this lino that J mm . interpreting the science of living, «aid of himself: "If I he lifted up I will draw all men unto mo." The life of Jesus, the Chrbt, waa that of an interpreter. The interpro- The state house is a 1/, note/ , pi*«» these days as a giant excavating ma chine assisted by a crew with pick and «hovels engage in the task of «cooping out an extension to the boil er room in the basement of tho Cap itol building. The Job which includes the installation of another boiler ws* authorised by the board of control several weeks ago. Money for tho improvement was appropriated by the last legislature. Added Mil.^. ’ Civilisation has complicated life by «quijiplng the straight and narrow path with soma very Interesting de tours.—Ran Diego Union. Seme Image) The hippopotamus Is able to remala under water for as much as t«i mio- atee at a time. i /