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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 4, 1933)
FAGS BIGHT TUI COQUILLE VALLEY SENTINEL. COQUILLE. OREGON, FRIDAY, AVGUST 4, 1»M. and his orchestra were playing. She also saw Buddy Rogers, Donald Novia, Ted Weems and many others appear ing personally at hotels and theatres. She attended the play, “Dinner at Eight,” at the Grand Opera House in F. S. Emery left yesterday morning much her uncle, Paul 'Harvey, plays for Portland where he will meet Mrs. one of the leads. She found Chicago Dmery and their daughter, Betty, who to be a very entertaining city. are returning from a month's visit at Mias Patricia Buokley, who was their former home in Boston. Evi dently Ferb’s “thinking” was inef an instructor iq the Coquille schools fectual this year for he restrained hie for two years and who left Coquille two years ago in May, was here Monday, inclination to join them at Boston. accompanied by her mother and two Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Beyer* last Sun girl friends from her home in Port day celebrated their tenth wedding land. They were on their way home anniversary with a dinner at their from a 10,000 mile trip during which home in Riverton. Those present were they visited the World's Fair at Chi Mr. and Mrs. G. F. Vetter and ions, cago, in Montreal, Canada, and other Henry end Fred, of Arago, Mrs. M. points in the east and south. Miss Scranton, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Willett Buckley has been an instructor in and son, Harley, and Elton Beyers, the Camas, Wash., schools for the past all of Lee. two years. Old Beaver Hill Vein Coal, $4.50 « per ton for lump delivered in Coquille. He« Subdued Them Leave orders at Roosevelt Service iH. E. 'Hess, vice president of the Station, phone 114. C. Jack Shumate. Lions Club, came through with flying 7tf colors at yesterday noon’s luncheon, . W. H. Mapsell, grandson of Wm. H. although there was a disposition to Mansell, veteran transfer knd dray get hi« goat at this, his first tim? to age operator of Coquille, who arrived act as president. He overruled mo here recently from Oakland with his tions and declared motions lost on wife and small «on, will occupy the w>hich there was not a dissenting house on Division street just vacated vote, with an aplomb and ruthless by W. L. Kistner. “Bill,” who is the gavel-wielding that put Ray Jeub and «on of Bud Mansell, is employed at Dave RacklelTff to rout. the Smith plaht Entertainment was furnished by Mr. and Mrs. Ray Detlefsen return Miss Lillian Schwur, of North Bend, ed last Sunday from their honeymoon who not only delighted her hearer«, trip to Crater Lake in Oregon, Oak but gave Ernie Ferrari a lesson on land and San Francisco in California. how the accordion should be played. Other guests at the luncheon were At the latter points they visited rela tive«. Until their new house is com her parent«, Mr. and Menry Schwur, pleted they are making' their home and Mrs. L. Page, all of North Bend, with Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Detlefsen in and A. A. Frentzel, International Truck representative. the Roy district. very good job of road building from the end of the county road at the Powell place up to the Ash hatchery. They have about two miles of it slashed and the road graded. Telling About People and Events in the City and County Buy your music and book and ata- tionery needs at Norton’s. The Oregon State Fair will cele brate its 72nd birthday with a six-day program opening on Labor Day.- Good Old Growth Fir Wood, any length desired; Alpine Coal, delivered anywhere. E. M. Briner, phone 71 or 74J. 29tf E. E. Johnson wa« down here from Portland Tuesday on one df his regu- lar trips to confer wioth M. O. Haw- kins at the mill. five-room For Rent—Furnished modem house. Piped furnace, fire place, hardwood floor. C. D. Walker, Coquille Hts. E. L. Perrott, who has been work ing at lllahe this summer, helping in the building of a lodge, returned to Coquille last Saturday. Dr. and Mrs. M. Earl Wilson re turned Wednesday evening from their week's vacation trip up into Washing ton and British Columbia. See Mansell Drayage and Delivery Co. for Mill Wood, $2 a load. Orders filled promptly. Mis« Jean Pierce, who has been at tending summer school at the Ashland Normal, came home last Bunday, the session having closed Friday. Miss Avis Hartson has been acting a« clerk in the county superinten 'Recorder F. G. Leslie left Wednes dent’s office since Tuesday when Mm. day evening for Bandon, accbmpanied Mae Waggoner started her vacation. by Mrs. Leslie, for a two weeks' va Insure your car with Ned C. Kelley cation. He expects, however, to be in a reliable Oregon stock company. up here for next Monday evening’« Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Sickels would council session, and to attend to city like to hear from anyone who has business the next day. City Treasurer «een their large pure white cat which W. S. Sickels is acting recorder dur disappeared from their home on east ing Mr. Leslie's absence. Second street Monday. Geo. H. Chaney, who was in town Roger Stewart, manager of the Wednesday morning, say« that he Thrift store here, who with Mr«. has 30 men at work on the camp he Stewart enjoyed his vacation on a is operating four miles south of Pow trip to San Francisco, returned to ers, near the Hayes place. Provided the trucking season is not curtailed work the first of this week. he expects to get out a million feet Jack McCue, who had been laid up of timber' on a contract he has with for a week after being hit by a snag hi* brother, E- Hall Chaney. at the Moon Prairie C. C. C. camp Ned C. Kelley will insure your near Ashland, came home day before trucks and write your bond«. yesterday on a week’s leave. Mr. and Mr*. Paul Van Scoy and Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Bonney enjoyed a visit from Saturday until Monday daughter, Anne, and Fred Fuhrman wibh his grandmother, Mrs. J. L. left this morning on a camping trip. Luckey, of Prineville, and his aunt, They are going first to the Three Sis ters and will spend a week at the foot Mr*. G. S. Wright, of McMinnville. of the mountain and plan to climb Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Kelley and their one of them. After a week there they grand-daughter, Patty Noaler, and expect to go up into Washington for Vada Swinney and AMa Sloan went a few days. They will be gone a over to the coast in the Seven Devil« couple of weeks. country on Wednesday for a week's Lafe Compton returned Tuesday vacation and camping. evening from a business trip to Port Mrs. Carrie B. Harden, who has not land on which he left last Saturday. been here since she. sold her ranch While mixing in the crowd at the ter near the oil well several yeans ago, minal hotel and office of the stage came in Tuesday from her homo in line he heard Coquille mentioned so Story City, Iowa, and will spend a many time* that he knew thi« city little time with old friend* her*. was getting a lot of publicity, in con V. R. Wilson, "Optometrist” Errors nection with the Coast Highway, in refraction corrected, without the from the Oregon Stage* organization. use of drug*. “For glasses” aee Wil Dr. and Mrs. Jas. Richmond, Bar son first and aav* money. 7tf bara and Jimmie, returned Wednesday J. A. Fitnpatrick, of the City Clean from a trip to Yakima, Wash., on The ers, who underwent an appendicitis which they left last Sunday. operation last week is well on the doctor expresses indignation at the way to recovery, although it is not highway commission for their work known yet how soon he esn be brought in rebuilding the highway from Port home from the hospitsl at Myrtle land, through Newberg and McMinn ville to the coast. He claims the road Point. being replaced is as good a« our Co Rev. and Mrs. P. D. Hartman re quille city paved streete. turned yesterday from their vacation Misses Elynor and Lucille Oerding spent at Missoula, Mont., visiting their daughter. Mr. Hartman says returned home from San Francisco they are glad to get back and that last Sunday, accompanied by their he i« feeling much better than he has sister, Evelyn, who has been residing there for the past several year*. Miss for the past year. Evelyn intend* visiting here for sev Mias Jeanette Pook, who returned eral weeks before returning. It hav last week from her month's trip to the ing been 114 degrees when they came Chicago Century of Progress exhibi through the Sacramento valley, it tion, resumed her duties in Slater’s seem* good to the girl* to be back Variety Store Monday morning. Miss again in a normal climate. Florence Folsom had been substitut Muri F. Pettit returned Sunday eve ing there while Jeanette was away. ning from Philomath, Ore., where he Mrs. C. N. Chapelle, whose home is and Mrs. Pettit went to see hi« fath in Berkeley, Calif., and small daughter er, J. B. Pettit, who suffered a broken came up here for a week or two visit back when he fell ten feet, striking on with old friends and is making her the edge of a box. Fortunately the headquarter« at the H. L. Johnson Mow was up just under the shoulders home. She was Miss Edith Cadle be and the physician think« he has a fore her marriage to Mr. Chapelle good chance to recover. He will be here seven years ago. ” in a cast for three months. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Johnson and Pettit remained at Philomath for a «mall son, enroute to their home in week’s visit Berkeley, California, Tuesday, stopped Denton Ellingson secured his dis- over here to visit with an old school charge from service in the C. C. C. chum of Mr. Johnson, A. O. Culbert camp at lllahe, and has returned to son, and family. Mr. Johnson has Coquille to help hi* father in the been principal of the Berkeley high hardware store. He walked over the school the past five years. mountains between the camp on the Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Ulett will leave Sunday for San Francisco where he will participate in the sessions of battery separator manufacturers who will prepare a code for submission to the National Recovery Act officials for conduct of their branch of the lumber business. Lloyd Clever, who was fishing the upper North Fork yesterday, says that the C. C- C. boys are doing * I Smith-Hughes Conference Being Held This Week (Continued from first page) of agricultural education, Salem; W. T. Spanton, federal agent for agri cultural education, Washington, D. C.; H. B. Swanson, federal board for vo cational education, Washington, I). C.; W. A. Schoenfeld, dean of agri culture, Oregon State College, Cor vallis; E. W. McMindes, representa tive, state board of vocational educa tion, Astoria; John D. Goss, state sen ator, Coo* county, Marshfield; Ray W. Gillt master of the state grange, Portland; George H. Jenkins, Coos coupty agiculturk] agent, Coquille. Among those attending is O. K. Beals, now in the Corvallis high school, who was Smith-Hughes , in structor in Coquille High School, preceding Mr. Cunning, and who left here four years ago. Mrs. Beals was aUo an instructor- here. They now have two children. The fun organization of the confer ence held its annual initiation in the gym there Tuesday eveing. This is the Oregon Vocational Agricultural Kennel of Yellow Dogs, a branch of a national organization. Homer Grow; chief cur of the Yel low Dogs, was ably assisted in con ferring the Yellow Rod degree on seven candidates which included R. L. Tucker, Myrtle Point Herald, County Agent Geo. T. Jenkins, C. J. Gillette, Coos Bay Time«, H. A. Young, Co quille Valley Sentinel, Kenneth Beach, Roseburg, Joe Jarvis, Amity, and J. L. Winsten, Dayton. This writer has been the candidate in a great many lodge initiations, but never before has he experienced one comparable to that given the curs who wish to become Yellow Dogs. We have learned since that there ar© B. P. W. Picnic Sunday three other Yellow Dogs in Coquille The Business and Professional —J. L. Smith, F. W. Martin and C. Women of iRoselburg, Cooa Bay, and C. Farr. Wm. Cunning is al«o one and Coquille will join in a picnic at Ban there is talk of organizing a Coquille don next Sunday, August 6, 1933. local boneyard for th© Yellow Doge. The group will meet at the Coquille Hotel at 9:45 and will leave promptly Coos Bay Has Bad Fire at ten for Bandon. The worst fire in several years on The luncheon at noon will be in the Richmond cabin or on the beach'just Coos Bay was that on the North Bend below the cabin. A tempting menu waterfront Sunday evening, starting has been arranged and a good time is about 9:30, when the Kruse & Banks shipbuilding plant was destroyed and being anticipated by all members. On Monday evening, Aug. 7, 1933, the Western Battery and Separator the regular meeting of the Coquille plant in the building was burned. The Club will be held in the Coquille Hotel Mt. States Power Co. also experienced at 8 p. m. There will be an interest considerable loss in the destruction ing program consisting of music and of its fuel bins, conveyors snd screen short talks by Wade Arstill, Fred house through which waters from the Fuhrman, Duane Fitzgerald, and Geo. Bay are carried to the condensors. (Jlett on their trip to the Century of The lose is estimated at from Progress. After the program a short $200,000 to $300,000, and it was not business session will be had. until Monday afternoon that the fire men of Marshfield and North Bend had made safe all' the property in Bridge Ordered Repaired that section, for brush fires kept The/patrolman of the Bridge road starting clear up the hill. district reported to the county court Besides all their equipment and thia week that the bridge across the stock on hand the veneer plant lost Middle Fork on the Bridge-Bancroft a carload of battery separators, load road, was not safe for loads of more ed and ready for shipment, and valued than five tons, and with the logging at $7,000. That company had ar now being done above there, the logs being brought out over this bridge, rangements made to work a second that it should be repaired or limited shift Monday, doubling their working force of 65 men and women. to its five tone capacity. The court Coos county had a narrow escape; instructed W. D. teaman to have from total darkness that night for the1 such repairs as are necessary made, Copco line from Roseburg was the the cost not to exceed $1500. Upon application of C. J. Budelia, first to go out, and had the fire not superintendent of the C. C. C. camp at been stopped just when it was the Loon Lake, he was authorised by the screen house would have gone and county court to improve the county the plant would then have had to be shut down. road from Silver Falls, though the The concrete power house, nor the Loon iLake country, to the Douglas adjoining Culver mill, were not dam-' county line. The boys in his camp aged. will do the work. A Trip Around the World The missionary society of the Church of Christ is sponsoring a trip around the world, during which Africa, India, Thibet and Japan will be visited. Starting from the church any time between 5:30 and 7:00 p. m. on Thursday, Aug. 10, each traveler will receive passage and board for 10c if they are under 12 years, or for 25c if older. Each station will serve its own food. After visiting all these stations, the globe trotters will re turn to America (the church) where they will learn something about the stations and enjoy a program of music and one of Mrs. Nosier’« fine picture«. The public is invited. Ask Mr. Niles for the Book Clyde E. Niles, local Ford distri butor, this week received several copies of a booklet showing by pic ture and statistics the tremendous in crease in business, and the wonderful improvements made in Ford care since production was begun thirty years ago. The advancement in type from the Model A in 1908 to the 1933 V-8, as well as the improvements in chasaes, engine, crankshaft, radiator, tights, and wheel«, is all pictorially shown. Rogue river and Power« three times Mr. Niles will be pleased to give to complete the discharge formality. these booklets, aa long as they last, He came up first to get Judge Thomp to those who are interested. son’« consent to his discharge, then back to lllahe to have the paper* Notice signed by the officer in charge, and Hereafter I will not be responsible then came back home. for any accounts or contracts contract Miss Lyndell Southstone returned ed with the Economy Cash Mkt. by thi* week after a month’s visit in anyone except myself. Chicago. While there she visited the Signed, Marc H. Shelley Blue Ribbon Casino where Ben Berni* Owner. Found a Fine Spear Head M. G. Sumerlin brought to the Sentinel office yesterday an Indian «tone spearhead which he found in his hay field. It is five and one-half nches long, and an inch and threc- luarters at the widest portion, taper ing to a point. The stone is a dark -eddish color, but «o far Mr. Sumer- in has found no one who could tell him which tribe in the olden days vas responsible for it« manufacture. Calling cards 100 for $1.00. MISS INEZ ROVER Piano Instructor Along the lines of the most ap proved modern method«. 105 W. 2nd St. Phone 30-L Prevent Blackheads and Enlarged Pores Be sure that your skin is more than surface clean! Get a jar of Jasmine Cleansing Cream and watch how it reaches deep into the pores to remove every trace of dirt, grime and makeup.- See how it leaves the skin fresh—clean. At Rexfill Drug Stores. • ' • jQ/mine Ï of Southern France CLEANSING CREAM • • • 506 Fuhrman’s Pharmacy, Inc T»e 3fe2£fiOt DRUGGISTS STATIONERS < I L METSKER’S COUNTY ATLASES Metsker’s County maps and town ship ownership maps are for sale at The Title Co. and County Assessor’s office, Coquille, Ore., and the Cham ber of Commerce at Marshfield, Ore., the best maps made in Oregon. “Met- sker the Map Man” 215 Commerce Bldg. Portland, Ore. Calling cards 100 for $1.00. Chadwick Lodge No. 68 A. F. & A. M. Stated Communication Tuesday, August 8 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, AUG. 4 - 5 Zane Grey’s “The Golden West 99 with GEORGE O’BRIEN JANET CHANDLER WHEN WE HAVE SUCH A PICTURE AS “THE GOLDEN WEST’ WE PROBABLY BECOME OVER ENTHUSED. THIS TIME WE WILL REPRODUCE THE FOLLOWING COMMENTS OF OTHER SHOWMEN OVER THE UNITED STATES: The Golden West: George O’Brien—A truly wonderful picture that should pleaee anywhere. Really much better than the "Covered Wag- an.” Historical, comedy drama and action. A picture for the masses. Fine direction and produced on a big scale. A picture for the children as well as adults.—^Guy W. Johnson, Johnson Theatre, Bowman, N. D. The Golden West: George O'Brien—A Zane Grey story, almost epic in form, of the early West, excellent, a« it contains those excellent shots of buffalo herds and wagon trains and the building of the first railroad. The Indian dance is authentic.—G. C. Moore, American Thea tre, Harlowton, Mont. The Golden West: George O’Brien—I believe that this is the best Zane Grey western that I have ever seen. The production is made up very elaborate, as one seldom sees in a western. Fox made a big one when they made this picture anr some of my patrons thought it better than “The Big Trail. —W. L. Stratton, Challis Theatre, Challis, Idaho. Small town patronage. PREVIEW SATURDAY NITE CHARLIE RUGGLES in “TERROR ABROAD” ADMISSION Children 10 Adults 25c SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY, AUG. 6-7-8 EYES UP FOR THE “CROWD ROARS” OF THE AIR! i c h a n D L BARTHELMESS SALLY EILERS TOM BROWN CENTRAL AIRPORT r I he thundering t1 SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS Admission Kiddies 10c Adults 35c to«Mzrf zWeMbMfUUfe/ 1 NEW SCHEDULES .effective Aug. lat NORTH BOUND leave* 6:50 A.M. 10.35 A.M. 6:45 P.M. SOUTH BOUND leave* 7:04 P.M. 10:57 P.M. 8:11 A.M. OREGON STAGES Coqaill* Hotel Phone 609 ® WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY, AUG. 9 - 10 PAL NIGHT 2 ADULTS FOR 35c STORKS! SANTA CLAUS & LITTLE BOY BLUE! are all right enough for children - - but thin story was written . - this *—'■— picture was made for adults . , MODERN. FRANK, . REALISTIC MIRIAM HOPKINS an the untamed modem % ‘ The STORY of TEMPLE DRAKE” from Wm. Faulkner’s famous story LIBERTY”E