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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (April 21, 1933)
PAGE FOUR H The Sentinel a sooo r*ri» is a ssoo tows H. A. YOUNG and ML D. GRIMES Publishers It A. YOUNG. Editor SubKcription Batea Qne Year.............................. 32.00 Six Months ..................... 1-00 Three Months....................................... No auuscription taken unless paid for in advance. This rule is impera- 7 epi iffi Advertising Rates Display advertising. 25 cents per inch: less than 5 inches, 30 cents per inch. No advertisement inserted fot less th_n 50 cents. Readings notices 10 cents per line. No reading notice, or advertisement of any kino, insert ed for less than 25 cents. Entered at the Coquille Postoffice as Second Class Mai) Matter. Office Corner W. First and Willard St. MOTT FIGHTING TO RETAIN O. & C. PAYMENTS Vigorous opposition to a bill intro duced in Congress by Representative McClintic, Oklahoma, repealing the O. & C. Land Grants, will be voiced by Congressman James W. Mott of this district. It was with the idea of being better able to present his ease that Mott sought t and- anti obtained a place on the Public Land/ committee of the <nd/ c ------ House af Repre; 'tentatives. The McClintic measure ha« been in troduced at three consecutive sessioqs but its passage has not been insisted upon by MoClintic. While it is be lieved that the measure will not come up for consideration at the special session it is eertain, however, that +t" will be cylled up at the- regular ses sion. After conference vyith Chair man DeRouen today, Mott stated that the bill would not likely be con sidered at this special session. Nev ertheless, Mott is making a determ in fight to kill the bill. It is understood that McClintic is making a determined fight to have the bill brought up at thia time, stat ing that it is an economy measure. Representative Mott today indicated that he will use every method in his ' power to block a favorable report by the committee on the bill. He added that the measure affects nearly the entire state of Oregon and all but one of the 17 counties in this district. He intimated that the legislation was the most important bill, inasmuch as it affects Oregon, which will be intro duced this session. ♦ The bill involves repeal of payment by the government to Oregon counties of approximately $500,000 annually in taxes. THE COQUILLE VALLET SENTINEL, COQUILLE. OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 31. 1333. State Grange, in an address at Rose burg, speaking in opposition to the proposed sales tax, said: “The farmer would be damaged in three specific way’s: on hia living ex penses; on hia farm operating expens es, such as feed, fertilizer, machinery, garage bills, and so on, and by a back-up tax, which the wholesaler and retailer will try to escape, if they cannot place it on the consumer, by attempting to push it on to the farm er. “If approximately 50 per cent of the taxes of the state are delinquent, as* they are reported to be, how can people afford to pay a sales tax’ In stead of reducing delinquency the sales tax would tend to increase it, because there are thousands saving and pinching in order to be able to pay their taxes now, who if called up on to pay a sales 4ax would also be forced, into the delinquent group.” A sales tax ia an insidious thing. Thoughtlessly it is called painless, like many diseases that flesh is heir to, but destructive and fatal in the end. With our entire ptaeent system of taxation wrong, both morally and otherwise, a sales tax is only a tem porary repair—like putting a patch on a rotten automobile tire. . - The claim is made by sponsors of the sales tax that it is,not an addi tional tax; that if the p4oplle of Ore gon do not accept it, then the proper ty tax, which has already been au thorized, will be applied. What dif ference does it make which of these last straws breaks the camel’s-back? LOOK HERE FRIENDS!^^ i à feLLLUUJ Secretary of State Hoss suggests that the state negotiate a new loan of $2,250,000 to put thff general fund back on a cash basis immediately. Audit ors in the state department have point ed out that, except for a loan of this kind, the state will remain on a war rant basis until the latter part of 1934. In a letter to Governor Meier con taining his suggestion, the secretary of state declares that it would be a good business to underwrite a new 'loan rather than continue indefinitely the laborious and expensive task of indorsing otate warrants. . In his letter to the governor Hoss points out that by negotiating a loan of this size the existing loan of $1,. 024,600 could be absorbed, approxi mately $¿50,000 of outstanding in dosed warrants could be paid off at once and the general fund could con tinue on a cash basis. Retirement of the Iggn could be started on or before December 31, 1933, with the entire loan wiped out by the end of the bi ennium. The problem, in some respects, is as broad al it is long except that a bank loan would concentrate the state’s obligation in the hands of one creditor while continuation on the war rant' basie will scatter the same ag gregate dbligation among thousands of the state’s creditors, including of ficials and employees. The interest burden in either case would be ap proximately the same, and the state, in either case, will be back on fairly solid ground financially by the end of 1934. MAKE UF YOUR OWN CLUB! ALL4 ONLY CHOOSE 1 Magazine From Group “A” 2 Magazine« From Group “B" And THIS NEWSPAPER (1 Full Year) WHYPAY MODE? Your Choice of Any Two Magazines in This Group Your Choice of Any One Magazine in This Gro □ □ □ □ □ □ □ GROUP A McCall’s Magasin«----- —I Woman’s Hom« Comp... .l Pictorial Review------------ 1 Screen Play I Hollywood Mori« Mag...l .1 Open Road (Boys)-. .1 Pathfinder (Wkly.) Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr. Yr Yr. 1_ . Y^Chojetof AuyTwo 1Ü9SSÜJ 15 Í52ÜÉ Í THREE IN ALL O giptfCIIArr} 1 àw S tories I k (ano’ io] □ □ □ □ □ □ OROUP B Better Homes A Gardena 1 Yr. Woman’s World............... 1 Yr. Household Magazin«....... 1 Yr. NwdJecrait____ _______ 1 Yr. Good Stories........................ 1 Yr. Country Home....... ... _» Yrs. Successful Farming.. —1 Yr. riad Your Choitt oj Auj Quo hiogantu m Group A. . THREE IN ALL To get $22,000,000 in one grab ought to satisfy the mott ambitious . THIS OFF8R ««••• . of Uncle Sam's taxgatherens, buk, Gentlemen that’s what happened in Pennsylvania 1 «netos« «... a few days ago to the heirs of the late Dr. Dorrance, one of the Camp checked with a year’s subscription to your There are no strings attached to this , bell’s soup manufacturers. The dece- offer! Every magazine subscription . lent must have been an honest man, Name... is there .are many ways to cheat the will be filled exactly as represented. Accident prevention propaganda is ■nheritance tax, which, along with the apparently bearing fruit. Statistics ' If any of your subscriptions are re Street or R.F.D ncome tax and the property tax lead compiled by the state department newals the time will be properly ex to dishonesty through general em show that the number of persons in Town and State tended. ployment of'evasion. Here’s a trick jured in motor vehicle accidents in you may use in making out your 1933 March ------- , this year, were 27 percent income tax: If your yearly salary is under the record for the same month 5100,000 have your checks for the^ a year ago. The figures are 323 in years made up'so the total .will equal jured in March, 1032 as compared to election act mentions initiative meas Chances of Heart Disease Death activity they may safely employ and only $99,999. Thus you will drop only JB5 injured during the same ures the body of the act does not and not exceed it. Shortness of breath is fregón State Board of Health) a fair indication that the heart is be 'nto a lower bracket and the saving month thfa year. The number of fa the attorney general holds that .either Tne decided upward curve in the inclusion of the words in the title was incidence of fatal heart disease, not ing overworked. Besides, you will be considerable, in addition any talities resulting from traffic acci-. will feel quite smart about it. Thus dents, however, remains unchanged at ' ' a clerical error or that sponsors of only in Oregon but throughout the na sign« of dropsy such as «welling of I the bill changed their minds about in methods of taxation become moral. 17 for each month. tion; ia sufficient reason for everyone feet is a danger sign. Individuals of cluded initiated measures and pur lueetions because they are breeders of mature years to pause and consider mature age must realize that high • posely omitted mention of the mat >f dishonesty; and it haa followed that the possible part they may be playing speed living, excessive use of atimu- All told a total of $2,09«,026 in Re j* lanIs and other unnatural drain« upon ter in the body of the bill although in this unfortunate situation. he national conscience haa become construction 1.. Finance corporation / 1_1,‘ .!"** to dulled in the matter of beating . k.. .ua - neglecting to take the words out of fact, without the individual’s person- _: the vitality such as consistent lack runds has been either.paid or approved a. ... - .axes that ethics have almost disap- - * n . Anyway the matter of re- ■ al co-operation the chances for r 1 of proper rest, ami over exercise are for payment to Oregon . -to , date, the ™ neared from business. If thia coun m >ney being allocated among 28 ¿oun- t marked improvement in thia deplor- ♦ likely eventually to break down a try is suffering from a moral break ties. Appbfeation for another $1,287.- t,On - U>UCh,n< wn. io, anomer aijcof,- _ - , , . . ■ .. able condition are somewhat slim. weakened heart. Proper food, plenty down, surely our methods of taxation 990 was forwarded to Washington this “"i? F<w of greater impor- I of fresh air and rest are essential. have been a contributing factor. muet now wait for the re *ul*r tance than those grouped under the | week by Governor Me.er. These fede- tjon jn November name of heart disease. Heart disease, Calling cards 100 /or $1.00. ral funds are available only for direct Throughout the United States the is responsible for. one ninth of the relief or for payment of wages to men ' However, there will be plenty of telephone business has lost 340,000 deaths of all ages and one sixth of employed on emergency relief work. issues <m the special election ballot subscribers during the first quarter deaths in persons forty years and Many counties are using the money at that. In addition to the eight of 1933. Since the peak of 1930 there over. It not only exceeds deaths in employing men on emergency high propositions presented by the legis-1 has been a loss of 2,525,000 subacrib- from pulmonary tuberculosis but also way improvements. lature, petitions are now in circula em. The American Telephone & Tele exceeds deaths from apoplexy, can tion referring two other measures to 1 graph Company says so it"*lf. It “I'm a user of Kruse hen Salts as a Chas. M. Thomas' protestations to the people. One of these ia the meas- j cer, pneumonia, and kidney diseases. reducing remedy and can say they are is said that Coquille has lost 200 or By W. 8. Sickels the contrary notwithstanding, his ad ore taxing oleomargarine. The other The mortality,.*'from heart disease fine. Have lost more than 40 lbs. in more since 1930. An examination of gives only «¿.very incomplete idea of the past year. Am gradually reduc- dress at Klamath Falls thia week in “All I know is what I read in the ie the Upton-Corbett-Duncan bill the current directory shows there are Miss Ber Ber- dviees.” ™iaa which he peeled great patches of hide amending the initiative and referen the great problem. It is not only in ing as my doctor “ advises." paper«.”—Will Rogers. about 500 telephones connected to the I .3^ tha Waldo, Haman, N. Dak. (Oct. 30, the actual loss of life that the great- " ‘ from the backs of the public utilities dum law. •uoi. local exchange at the present time, est drain ia placed on the community,’ Once a day take Kruachen Salta— and denounced the state legislature as 125 of which are rural. The local Perhaps the most delicate compli but it is also in the army of young one half teaspoonful in a glass of hot utility controlled, is generally inter Candidates for delegate* to the ment one can pay a man, even though telephone people say the matter of preted in capitol circles as the opening children, young people, and adults water first thing every morning. Be losing ugly fat SAFELY you’ll it is couched in rather inelegant rates has nothing to do with the loss gun in his campaign for governor two state constitutional convention next who lead stunted and painful lives sides gain in health and physical attrac language, is, ‘‘he is a good sport.” of business. We cannot dispute this. years hence. When the political prog August, will be listed on the special 1 handicapped by defective hearts. An tiveness—constipation, gas and acid This term connotes a sense of fair The reader is left to do his own think nosticators speculated on Charley’s election ballot in alphabetical order as 1 approximate estimate of the amount ity will cease to bother—you’ll feel ness, a broad and liberal nature, a ing on this point. The American T. gubernatorial ambitions a few weeks in a regular election and will not be of actual organic heart disease among younger—more active—full of ambi — clear <kin—sparkling eyes. frankness that rises above petty A T. report further reveals that the ago he emphatically denied that he ex rotated as is done in the primary the population would be two per cent, tion A jar that lasts 4 weeks costs but a election, according to Dave O ’ Hara, number of toll and long-distance calls prejudices and personal sensitiveness. 1 although it seems probable that there trifle at Fuhrman’s Phcy, Inc., or any luring the quarter was 20 per cent pected to hurl his hat into the ring clerk in charge of elections in the And this goes for women, too. are more than two million persons drugstore in the world—but demand but time will tell and we shall see •rtate department. less than for the same period during handicapped by heart disease. It at and get Kruachen and if one bottle what we shall see. doesn’t joyfully' please you—money 1932. tacks individuals in all walks of life. bat*. Alf Landon, new Republican gov Applicants for forest jobs under ernor of Kansas, has at his disposal Thirty-three state ’ game wardens the new unemployment relief plan Neither social position nor economic An economic survey reveal»’ that only 100 pieces of patronage pie, ac commodity prices have dropped an are going about their tdaily duties must register with the relief com status offers barriers to its depreda r tions. Its victims are found in all cording to a writer in a Kansas news iverage of 35 per cent since 1929. these days in spick and span, brand mittees of their own counties. The ages and as a cause of death it ex paper. In quest of a nibble at the po Rents have dropped more than 50 per new automobiles bought for them by executive department here as well as litical pastry there are 15,000 people ~ the boys drove the state forestry departmen has been ceeds any other disease. cent Why haven’t utilities rates the state. Heretofore The economic aspects of heart dis- in the line leading to Ute governor’s on all kinds of come down? Really, this writer isn’t their own oars charging the state besieged with young men anxious for ease are related to the degree of dis- I office. Some pie line! peeved or »ore about the matter. Like five cents a mile for this service, a chance to work in the woods. All ability and the length of'time such compiled statistics, • ------ how- nave the Japanese school boy, he merely 'Carefully , , • have ueen been rererreo referred 10 to cneir their own CC cOun- a disability is likely to exist. It is The jig-saw puzzle should afford ‘‘inquires to know.” ever, show that the state .can operate ty committee< who will m.ke i se 1 its ♦ tat ntan of lzswa s*n cents A* . . a known fact that in a patient suf own flavn cars at less then than three excellent training for those queer lection of candidates for these jobs. Local and Long Distance fering ‘from heart disease some de a mile, including depreciation, hence specimens of humanity who like to In a recent editorial, the Portland gree of incapacity ia often present for piece together torn correspondence Oregonian endorses in the main the the change in the policy with respect The Hawes-Cooper bill permitting many years, and that before death that hae been consigned to the waste government’s program for debt relief to this department. states to restrict the .«ale of prison- Anally occurs there ia usually a long paper basket. It is recalled that one for farm-owners and city home made goods is not expected to have Phones 101 J—224L Incidentally the state now owns any effect on the Oregon linen in period of incomplete invalidism and of these boys turned up the first in owners. That editorial closes with more than 1,000 pieces of motorized dustry. While flax for the Oregon dependence on others. In childhood criminating evidence against Winnie the following paragraph: . this disease may cripple the prospec Ruth Judd. ‘‘But let there be no mistake as to equipment, including 477 automobiles mills is processed at the state peni tive wage earner; in adult life the and 536 trucks, all of which are used the implications of the vast govern tentiary plant this is the only estab Mansell Drayage & Gray-haired men, wearing glasses, mental schemes for liquidating the in the conducting of state business. lishment of its kind in the United earning capacity of the individual may are now to be seen seated on the fire depression. Debts are in effect mort The highway department alone oper States and it therefore does not come be permanently limited or even de man’s side of freight locomotive cabs, gages. Then the government holds ates a fleet of 156 automobiles and into competition with other indust stroyed so that he and his dependents where husky youth once held sway. mortgages on moat of the railroads, 425 trucks while the state police bu ries, officials at the prison point out become charges on the community. A modem program to prevent heart Formerly they were engineers. thousands of the banks, many insur reau's fleet of ears now numbers 125. Except for the flax’processed at the disease include,’, among other things, Freight train engineers of today for ance companies and building and loan « prison here most of the flax used in Blanks for the use of sheriffs in the manufacture of linen in this- , the education of the public to the im merly hpd passenger runs, and so on. associations. It now proposes to take portance of the following facta; that throughout the operating departments mortgages on millions of farms and collecting delinquent taxes on the 10- country is imported from Europe. tonsilitis and rheumatism cause a of the railroads. Other employees, millions of city homes. That will em payment installment plan authorized large part of the heart diseases of who through years of service had brace a large proportion of all the by the last legislature will be sent Youngberry a Hardy Fruit T he out to the counties' by the state tax children; that heart disease in a child worked their way up to good jobs, are property.” commission within the next few days. The Youngberry, the rather new, with tonsilitis or rheumatism may be now back to where they began rail When the government Anally takes A tlantic monthly popular small fruit which was devel in many canes absolutely cured by roading. The inexorable rule of sen over this property all taxes against it Motorists beware! Traffic viola oped by crossing a southern dewberry bed care for a period varying from a AKE the most of your read- iority works that way. It ia said gill cease, as the government pays * - to two - ............ the months years; that ing hours. Enjoy the wit, that trainmen who haven't been; with no taxes. Users will pay rent for it tions tesulted in 294 arrests by the with the Phenomenal berry (similar to few the wisdom, the companion the railroad companies for at least and the Henry George system, that state police during March. Warning a large loganberry), has proved more annua] physical examination followed hardy in Oregon than the logan and by the correction of all remediable ship, the charm that have made twenty-qve years have lost out alto- ground-rent should pay the coat of slips were handed to 14,212 others. may have a real place in the Oregon defects fouhd is the moat effective in the ATLANTIC, for eenvty-five gether. Accustomed to good wages goverment, will be in full1 force and years, America’s most quoted Voters of Oregon will not be given berry industry, according to a new surance against that 'type of heart and the accompanying high standards effect without further waiting /or the and most cherished magazine. of living, and untrained for any other ' slow processes of an evolutionary an opportunity to pass on the pro circular of information just issued by diseases which insulta from hidden pursuit, the condition of these men change. Sometimes things happen hibition sections of the state consti- the Oregon Experiment station deal foci of infection in tonsils, teeth, Send 31 (mentioning this ad) sinuses, etc.; and that a well ordered and their dependents is indeed piti this way. tution at the forthcoming special elec ing with this berry. to life free of excesses aids in postpon able. tion. Attorney general Van Winkle The Atlantic Monthljl, 8 Arling ing incapacity and death. Alpine Coal, lump 84.50, 2 tons has ruled that initiated measures See Mansell Drayage A Delivery ton St., Boston A Matter of Owe More Straw M.50, nut coal 13 per ton. E. M. have no place on the special election Co. for Alpine coal. Orders filled Every one suffering from heart dis- 45t2*tf ballot. While the title of the special promptly. Ray Gill, master of the Oregon Brinar, phone 71. tf mm should determine the degree of j j LOST 40 POUNDS ON DOCTORS ADVICE TABLOIDS New low Price COAL a jsam HAULING Send $1 ‘