Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (July 15, 1932)
m COQUILLE VALUT SENTINEL, COQUILLE, OREGON. IRRÌDA Y, JÜLT «, IMS. The missionary program and tea of ths Pioneer church will be given at tbe home Mrs. Jaa. Richmond next Thursday afternoon at 2:15. A very interesting lesson ha» been prepared and a short patriotic program will al so be included. A very cordial in vitation ia extended to all, newcomers and strangers are especially invited ta attend. Chas. W. Upton was an early morn Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Waterman and ing visitor from his ranch at Lamps, two children came in last Saturday today. from Portland to visit her slater, Mrs. See how the men do things at the M. C. Miller here, and her brother, E cafeteria dinner at Pioneer Hall next P. S. Abernathy on the East Fork, ex pecting to remain a week. Mrs. Wa Tuesday evening, July 19. terman wm formerly a resident in ^Xoure for a good square meal, cafe Brewster valley district but has pot teria style, at Pioneer Hall, Tuesday, been here for a number of years. July 19.—The men of Pioneer Church. Wednesday they all went down to V. R. Wilson, Optometrist. Eye. Bandon for a day on ths beach. examined. Glasses fitted. Broken F. E. Bennett accompanied by hit lenses duplicated. Grimes Building, daughter, Patricia, left Saturday by Coquille, Oro. . 1« train for Peekskill. New York, to Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Marrion left make their future home and where Wednesday foe Portland, but they will Mias Patricia will claim her estate of be back by the time the casing for the more than forty-one thousand dollars. They went the Sunset route going oil wall arrives. Earl D. Graham, who now Uvea on through Los Angeles, Calif., El Paso, a ranch near Ashland, was a Coquille Texas, New Orleans, La., Atlanta, visitor for a couple of days the fore GaM Washington, 'D. C., and New York City, expecting to make sight-seeing part of this week. trips in the important cities. Peek Dr. J. R. Bunch and family are ex skill on the Hudson is about twenty pected home before Sunday from their miles from New York City. two weeks' trip to Portland, Seattle and eastern Oregon. Directon to Meet Next Week Born, to Mr. and Mr«. Harold A. The meeting of the directors for Bender, of this city, a ton-pound boy, school district No. 8, scheduled for at the Mast hospital last Friday, Dr. Tuesday of this wook, was postponed M. Earl Witoon officiating. until the return of Dr. J. R. Bunch, Dr. W. V. Glatoyer to expecting who expected to be back from his Se Mrs. Glaiayer and their three children attle and eastern Oregon trip by to home from their month’s visit in Ta day, or Sunday at the latest. One of coma, today, or within a couple of the matters to come up at the board session is the awarding of a contract days. for 80 cords df wood. The district Mies Gretchen Mehl has this week paid >2.80 and $8 00 a cord for the enjoyed a visit from Miss Grace 1000 cords purchased earlier this year. Hardie, of Condon, Ore. The two were room-mates at tbe normal at Attending Reserve Officer Camp Monmouth. Dave E. Rackleff left Sunday for Mrs. W. H. Pook and her daughter, Vancouver, Wash., where be was or Doris, are leaving today by the coast dered Monday to report for duty at route for their home in Seattle, after the Reserve Officers’ Training Camp. spending the past ten days at the Dave holds a first lieutenant commis Frank Pook home. sion in the Reserve division of the O. C. Sanford to enjoying a week’s regular army and will spend the next vacation from the First National .wo weeks in camp. Mrs. Rackleff Bank, at the Kanu Klub grounds and daughter accompanied him as far where he and Mrs. Sanford have been xs Canby where she ia visiting his camping since Sunday. parents. Wm. Hicking ia in charge Kenneth (iBucko) Btaninger came of the drug store during Mr. Rack- in last evening from 8tockton, Calif., lefFs absence, to see his parents, Mr. and Mr*. Joe. Staninger. He may decide io again make his home in Coquille. ltrs. Ralph M. Cake and two chil dren came down from Portland last Friday for a three week's visit with her mother, Mrs. A. J. Sherwood, and her other relatives and friends here. Some men are good cooks. You can learn whether the male portion of the Pioneer church come in that class by attending the cafeteria dinner at Pi oneer Hall next Tuesday, Serving starts at 5:80 p. m. -• > >;1 Paul C. Bates, of the insurance firm of Bates, Lively A Pearson, at Portland, was a Coquille visitor last Sunday. He came down especially to visit the oil well and spent consider able of his time there. Three sisters and a niece of Gov. and Catherine J. Rolph, of San Fran- the Coquille Hotel Sunday night. They were Mrs. Jos. N. Moore and daughter, Jane, and Misses Elisabeth and Mary Astor, Hugh Herbert, Ralph cisco. Applicants for chauffeur or driven’ licenses will have their next opportun ity to take the examination on Tues day, July 19, between 1 and 6 p. m. at the Coquille city hall. Ward Mc Reynolds, examiner, will be here on his bi-weekly visit at that time. ' Kennett Lawrence expects to go down to Gold Beach Sunday to meet Mn. Lawrence and their children who will be home from their month’s visit in Oakland, Calif. They will bo ac companied north by Mr. and Mn. E. G. Lawrence who will visit old friends here for a few days. County Clerk Rotot R- Watson to taking a few days’ vacation this week. In company with Martin Stscksl and Don Pierce, he left Sunday for the Looking Glass country in Douglas county, and tramped over the Comt range, fishing. They are expected to come out of the Tioga country today. Geo. W. Stokes, of Portland, and E. A. Taylor, of Salem, inspector* from the fire marshal's office, were in Co quille Monday night. Their inspec tion is of fire hasards and they found nothing to criticise here in their talk with Fire Chief Gardner. They also visited Myrtle Point, Bandon, Marsh field and North Bend. l . ................. .. Stanley Warren at Tripier Hosp. From Stanley D. Warren, former Coquille boy, who is one of the army staff at the Tripier General Hospital at Honolulu, Hawaii, the Sentinel has received a copy of the Organisation Day issue of "Liquid Sunshine,” the official publication of the hospital. The hospital waa named in honor of Brevet Brigadier General Charles Stewart Tripier, who was a distinguished au thor and doctor aa well as an able of ficer in the Civil war. Hotel Rated Al in Sanitation F. L. T oom , inspector for the dairy and food commissioner’s office, was in Coquille Wednesday morning. Af ter inspecting the Coquille Hotel kitchen and coffee shop he gave the hotel what ia practically a 100 per cent rating, aa to cleanliness and san itation, everything being scored as Al. He stated that the equipotent of the hotel culinary and restaurant de partments is one of the best in Ore- gon. Shrine Picnic Enjoyed Attendance at the Shrine picnic in the Mast grove at Lee last Sunday was not as great as in former years, between 100 and 150 being present, ft was not a combined Masonic and Shrine affair this year, which ac counts for the smaller attendance. But it was a very enjoyable affair. Music by the Al Kader band, the barbecued beef, the fraternal inter course usual at such events, making it one to be remembered. The Shrinere from Portland and Ashland were de lighted with the picnic and promised that they would be here in increased number» next year. Louis Axsell, of Tacoma, awarded the piano given the Shrine Club by T. R. Grubbs, gave it back to the club for next year's event Horse shoe pitching, racing and other games furnished entertainment. Potentate Harry E. Cowgill, of Al Kader, Potentate G. R. Chapman, of Hillah at Ashland, and many other of ficers of the two temples, and their wives, were included in the list of those present. Goat Ranked Above Cow in Mountainous Lands Although they keep themselves dis tinct and appear to affect disdain one for the other, sheep and goats are, and apparently always have been pastured together, the goats eating tbe brush and roughage which the more tender mouthed sheep will not touch. la rough, rocky mountainous dis tricts as to a great part of tbe land of Canaan, the goat to a more serviceable unlmal than the cow, more agile and wonderfully sure footed, content to wander about and pick a mouthful here and there, able to live without much more moisture than the heavy dears supply, long-lived, end generally free from sickness, especially from contagious diseases They thrive best In tbe higher altitudes, and tbs wild varieties which existed until compara tively recent days In Syria and about the Palestinian Lebanon, are always sought On mountain tops. As the Psalm- tot says: “The high bills are a refuge for the wild goats.” It to worth no ticing that among all his riches of flocks and herds. Job counted no goats, as was to be expected, since he lived on an Arabian plain where was abun dant pasturage for hts “fourteen thou sand sheep and atx thousand camels, Marriage Licenses ■ and a thousand yoke of oxen, and a July 10—C. H. Cameron, of Broad thousand she esses.“ (Job 29:12) as bent, and Magdeline Higgins, of well doubtless ns Immense numbers Marshfield. They were married Sun of cows. day by Rev. P. I). Hartman at his home here. July 18—Lawrence Edward Duley, Modem Detective Not of Empire, and Leona Vandevort, of “Sleuth” of Old Times Myrtle Point They were married by When did detectives finally discard Justice C. E. Maybee at his office in the black mustache? We observe that North Bend, Tuesday. detective fiction, at least, with which July 14—Madison Jay Jones and the book market to flooded, has quite Jeneva M. Chappelle, both of Baker, withdrawn from the black and scowl Ore. They were married at the M. ing sleuth with his all too visible trap E. parsonage here yesterday by Rev. pings of the chase. The truth to, It was the melodrama more markedly G. A. Gray. than the novel* th,t so pictured the pursuers of the transgressor. Broke the Glass and Escaped The best detectives, we learn, are Miss Betty, daughter of Mr. and those whom nobody suspects of “de Mrs. A. A. Dimmick, of Marshfield, is tecting.” It to your mild-mannered fortunate to be alive today, and the man, often of fair hair and guileless reason is that she kept her head when eye, who leada the wicked, step by her ear plunged off the Coos river step, Into the trap of the law. This “detecting" la a gift, bestowed for the road last Sunday and into the river. good of mankind. Its possessor learns She broke the glass in the door and his powers little by little and to pos quickly reached shore, with only one sessed by them. Combined of Intuition arm cut and minor scratches. and an uncanny suspicion, the ferret ing sees Its hypothesis grow Into stern facts. Such a detective to as clever In Poultrymen at O. S. C. After omitting one annual meeting constructing the plot of crime as the scientist to In creating the whole pre last year, the poultrymen of Oregon historic animal out of a single leg will gather again this year for a con bone. Plato's logic, apllttlng hairs, to vention August 11 and 12 on the cam as nothing Io It.—St Louis Olobe-Dem-y pus of Oregon State college, the gath ocrat ering being sponsored by the college and open to every poultryman of the Flace of Tragic Memory state. The Black Hole of Calcutta is the popular name of a cell tn Fort Wil- llam, Calcutta, formerly used as the Habits ef Boll Wssvil Tbe boll weevil Is entirely help- guard room. On the night of June 1», 17M, tbe lees and without power of locomotion In Ito larva stage, when It Infects the season when the tropical beat of Cal scales and holla of cotton planta. la cutta to moat oppressive, Suraj-ud- Its adult stage it moves from place to Dowlah, the nlneteen-year-old nabob place by flight and files at night as of Bengal, who had broken with the well as In the daytime. However, the British a other I ties, thrust 146 em boll weevil, unlike other weevils of ployees of the British India company tbe same group of Insects, to not at into this cell, a room 18 feet long by tracted by light and consequently can 14 feet. 10 Inches wide. It had but two small windows covered with iron not be ‘ snared In thin manner. bars and obstructed by a veranda. The beat and lack of air killed 128 of Clew to Happiaess them before morning. I am middle-aged and my life seems The site of thia cell to now covered to have lost all savor, mourns a corre with a black marble sink and the spondent New thought Is new life and event to commemorated by a mono- renewal of life. Make a new plan, mental abaft erected in 1002. find hope In carrying It out. and for get your yea-s I/m.lon Tlt-Rlts. Felly ef Anger Lisard. That "Swim” Llsards found In the region of the Sahara deaert are called sand fishes because their method of wriggling through the sand resembles swimming. Anger la the most Impotent pt-salon that accompanies tbe mind of man; it effects nothing it goes about; and hurts the mao who is possessed by it mor* than any other against whom It is directed.—Clarendon. Paid His 1200 Fiae G Seth Landon, who had just been re leased from the county jail a few days previously, eras arrested by Sergeant C. A. Hearing last Friday for killing deer out of season. He pleaded guilty in Justice Stanley’s court on Saturday and waa fined >200 and costs, which he paid. The deer was killed on the Seven Devils rood. Sergeant Hearing was assisted in getting the goods on Landon by Ed Rose and Francis Ball. H ealth «. a. H ome 'Practical Studies far ‘Witts and ¡¡¡Mothers J B. P. W. to Meet Monday nourish- < with a Finer Powder Instant new beauty is yours when you smooth on Cara Nome Face Powder! Soft, caressing, and fragrant The choice of smart women everywhere! Try it at Rexall Drug Stores. face CARA NOME powder DOW! ■ _a Fuhrman’s Pharmacy, Inc. DRUGGISTS STATIONERS Sperry’s Big Feed Show and Pigeon Race Free Prizes Given TO THOSE WHO GUESS THE PIGEON THAT WILL WIN THE RACE, AND MANY OTHER PRIZES ARE GIVEN AWAY. ’I Mayor Berg of Coquille will send a Pigeongram to Mayor Baker of Portland. REMEMBER THE DATE AND VISIT OUR STORE. FARM & ELWOOD, Inc. Saturday, July 23, AU Day In Circuit Court This Week At the conclusion of the Miller vs. Gant esse which went to the jury this morning, Judge Brand announced motion day for thia afternoon and will then adjourn court till the first of the week. The esse of Percy Lloyd Hale, charged with burning his home at the Bay, and to which he pleaded not guilty on July 6, waa act for trial yes terday, but was stopped when ho asked for a change of venue, hie at torneys claiming prejudice. The Max Main vs. State Industrial Accident Commission case was non suited Tuesday when it came out that the accident which caused the suit oc- cured in Douglas county. The jury in the ease of J. V. Koski va. W. O. Clinger and Wm. Raddick for rent of the Palacene restaurant and pool hall in Marshfield, brought in a verdict last Friday night for >1,140 at >125 per month. Lee Reed, sometime« known as L: E. Rice, who was indicted on two counts for obtaining money under false pretenses, pleaded guilty to one charge on Tuesday, and the other was dismissed. On Tuesday Judge Brand ordered that the indictments against Wm. M. Nygren and C. P. Zumwalt, for driv ing while under the influence of li quor, be resubmitted to the grand jury for investigation. latter installation has attracted a great deal of interest in this commun ity since it was first completed sev eral weeks ago. Ges refrigeration is becoming in creasingly popular all up and down the Pacific Coast, and many are find ing this the ideal method of mechani cal refrigeration, as it is absolutely silent, and presents very economical operation, just as it does for cooking and water heating. Courts Cannot Initiate Measures An opinion by Attorney General Van Winkle for the district attorney of Clackamas county is of intereat to every county in the state, This opin- ion holds that the county oourts are without authority to place any meas- ure on the ballot This can only be done by legislative action or through the cireifiation of intiative petitions. Alpine Coal delivered in Coquille for |6 a ton, cash. Phono 71. Helmkin 4 Son. Chadwick Lodge No. 68 A. F. A A. M. Stated Communication Tuesday, August 9, 8 p. m. 100 Per Cent Gas Installation FOOD FOR THE FAMILY The B. P. W. club will meet at the home of the president, Mrs. Bertha J. Smith, next Monday evening at eight o'clock. New committees will be ap pointed for the ensuing year and the present committee chairmen are re quested to have written reports pre pared, to be read and filed at this meeting. Lovelier Complexion Further improvement« are contin- qally being made at “The Coffee Cup," the latest of which has been a largo gan refrigerator installed by The; Natural Gas Corporation of Oregon. J The Morris Bros., proprietors of the I "Coffee Cup,” state that this now ( gives their restaurant a fully one- 1 hundred per cent gas installation, aa previous to this time they had already J installed ga>? equipment for cooking,! water heating, and for lighting. This g . es. Blacksmith Shop ia in operation and equipped to handle all kinds of blacksmith work. Fred Schaer is manager of the shop which is located on First stffet, alongside Richardson Gar age. SEE US FIRST AND WE WILL GIVE YOU A SQUARE DEAL. H. S. Tattle Back to Pacific Harold S. Tuttle, principal of Co Coquille High School, back in the days between 1916 and 1980, has been chosen as dean of the newly establish ed school of education at Pacific Uni versity. For the past six years Prof. Tuttle has been aaaociate pro Thirty-five or forty Associated gas fessor of education at U. of 0. dealers and others attended the ban quet and program presented at Myr NOTICE tle Lodge Wednesday evening by the Having again taken over my farm gas company official. One of the two on Fishtrap, known aa the Hollenbeck speakers from San Francisco stated place, I am offering the entire place that the company was spending a of 168 acres for immediate cash sale, quarter of a million dollars in adver For particular* write tising their new gas, the Flying A. ' J. H. Radabaugh, Having been compelled to get a It Rt. 1, Eugene, Oregon carpenter to finish my home I will not Alpine Coal delivered In Coquille be responsible for any material or for M a ton, cash. Phono 71. Holmkin dered by K. E. PettengiM. « Son. 27 tf Lisle Goodwin. Hiland Theatre! MYRTLE POINT - SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY, JULY 17 - 18- 19 Is justice really blind? Can an innocent person be eent to jail? Are there two kinds of law—one for the poor—another for the influ ential? See this gripping drama of corruption and jurisprudence: “NIGHT COURT" with this Grand cast—Walter Huston, Phillips Hohnea, Anita Page, Lewis Stone, Jean Hershoit, John Miljan WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY. JULY 28-21—Na Show FRIDAY - SATURDAY. JULY 22-23 Joe E. Brown, the ocreamingeet character ever to fall across the screen “FIREMAN SAVE MY CHILD" The Four-Alarm Comedy Riot! Siuling, Steaming, Sparkling Fun! Adults 35c ADMISSION Children 10c