Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1933)
OOQUTLLl TALLHT ■IN’HÑKL. COQUILLE, OBMON. FRIDAY, AUGUST 1*. IMI. PAGI BIGHT Rev. T. R. Jackman intends leaving tomorrow morning for Ashland, where he will conduct a series of Bible Conferences in the Foursquare church which will end Sunday, Aug. 27. His Telling About People and duties as field superintendent for the church for Oregon, Washington and Events in the City and Idaho, are likely to take him away County from home most of the time this next year. ' The picnic next year will be held Mrs. Zula Buchheister and Mrs. in Myrtle Point. Elizabeth Ward left this morning for Pickling Cucumber» for eale, 15 Newport to spend a couple of weeks cents a gallon. Prank Bullack. It* at that popular resort town. From there Mrs. Buchheister will go on to Mrs. George Martin, who resides Vancouver, B. C., to resume her teach near Myrtle Point, was a Coquille ing duties in the Foursquare church business visitor Tuesday morning. school and Mrs. Ward will return to Buy your music and book and sta Coquille. tionery needs at Norton’». See Mansell Drayage and Delivery Mrs. Pearl Ellingsen is expected Co. for Mill Wood, *2 a load. Orders home in » day o r tw o fr o m her two. nnea fill »wl — promptly. Tt.Fl xg ____ -________- weeks’ vacation «pent at San Jose, Mrs. Harry H. Oerding and mem Calif. bers of the 4-H club of which she is Mrs. J. S. Barton, Anne and Ben leader returned Sunday morning from are expected home this week-end from Portland. They went up Friday night their visit in eastern Oregon, Port to visit Old Ironsides on Saturday. land and Woodburn. , The girls making the trip were: Irene Elder J. K. Fish and family re »nd Irja Sqlin, Freda Young, Laurel Bieeke, Barbara turned Wednesday evening from at Bullard, Bertha tending the camp meeting at Glad Brown and Dorothy Winters. stone Park held by the Seventh-Day Lee Herron, who has been in the Adventists. Veterans’ Hoepital at Walla Walla for a potluck dinner at the Clifford Kern the past three years, wae greeting old home next Monday evening, Aug. 21, friend« here Friday and Saturday. He at 6:30. All members are requested is in better health than he has been The Ladies of Woodcraft will have for some time but is in hopes that life in the open will still further bene to be there. fit him. He left Saturday for Gold Insure your car with Ned C. Kelley Beach and will go back in the hills in a reliable Oregon stock company. for several months. Ask for Cow Bell Dairy cream and Mr. and Mrs. S. V. Epperson are enjoying a viat from Mr. and Mrs. T. milk, the only milk and cream made A. Sutherland, who arrived here Sun safe by pasteurization. day for a two weeks’ stay from Oak Mies Edith Scott enjoyed a visit land, Calif. The two ladies are sis Wednesday eveing from her cousin, ters. Miss Isabelle Martin, her only living Mrs. Harold Gould writes from relative except four cousins of th$ Portland that her mother, Mrs. A. W. second or third degree. Miss Martin Chapin, is better and able to set up was accompanied by her half sisters, f¥ a little while each day. She ex Mrs. Bonney Tinney and Mrs. Stella pects to be able to come home in an MdCullom. They were driving through other week. 'rom their home in Seattle to Mna. Mrs. Catherine De Veto and little- Tinney’k former home in Long Beach, Calif. son, Dave, are here visiting her par Buy your music and book and sta- ents, Mr. and Mra. Frank A. Pook. Their home is in Santa Rosa, Calif ionery needs at Norton’s. They were met in Eureka last week Mr. and Mrs. M. W. Pinkston, who by Mrs. Pook and son, Bill. •ame over from Applegate, near Good Old Growth Fir Wood, any length desired; Alpine Coal, delivered anywhere. E. M. Briner, phone 71 or 74J. 29tf Mrs. R. L. Stewart and daughter. Margaret, are expected home Sunday from a ten days’ trip and visit in Port land, Albany and Roseburg. Mr. Stewart expects to go out to Rose burg Sunday to meet them. ■T- Sam Taylor, clothing merchant, left Tuesday on a two weeks’ trip which takes him to Eugene, Portland, east ern and southern Oregon. It is in the nature of a merchandising trip through territory he formerly covered. Grants Pass, last Saturday, left again Monday with another load of house hold articles. He is building up a dairy on the ranch he purchased there. He says that Dr. Harold Gillie is at the Agnees C. C. C. camp, and that Dr. I. B. Gillis has closed his Medford office and is practicing at Jackson ville exclusively. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Thompson and Mr. and Mns. K. M. Thompson re turned to Coquille Tuesday evening from Portland and are now settled in their home« and the men are ready for the opening of school in a couple >f weeks. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Thompson and Ivan Thompson, the men being an older and a younger brother of Ken neth’s, who came down for a several days’ visit Mr. and Mrs. Lex Cope and .daugh ter were Coquille visitors from their home near Langlois Wednesday. They were accompanied by Mrs. Cope’s mother and sister, of Roseburg, who Old Beaver Hill Vein Coal, *4.50 have been spending the summer with per ton for lump delivered in Coquille. them. Leave orders at Roosevelt Service V. R. Wilson, "Optometrist” Errors Station, phone 114. C. Jack Shumate. in refraction corrected, without the 7tf use of drugs. “For glasses” see Wil Marion Clayton returned last Fri son first and save money. 7tl day evening from a week’s vacation Mrs. Lawrence Rackleff, who had from duty at the postoffice. He stop been visiting for a week in Canby, ped at Springfield, Bend, The Dalles returned Wednesday, evening, accom and Portland. He found the same panied by Mrs. Ed Rackleff who will traffic conditions that this writer did spend some time visiting her sons last week—heavier traffic on the Dave and Lawrence here, and othei Coast Highway than on any of the relatives in the county. ■there. And when he reached the J. A. Fitzpatrick, who underwent coast at Newport it was like getting an operation for bursted appendix into a different country, the heat of three weeks ago last Monday, was ‘he valley being replaced by the cool able to be brought home last Sunday. ness of ocean breezes. Although still weak he is gaining rip* Rev. T. R. Jackman, Mr. and Mrs. idly now and will soon be back on R. B. Knife and Mrs. Tracy Leach left duty at the City Cleaners. for Portland Sunday night to attend Ned C. Kelley will insure your the Rev. R. G. Sumerlin funeral there in Monday. Mrs. O. L. Newton joined trucks and write your bonds. the party there and returned with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Thomas drove out ’.hem Tuesday evening. Her mother, to Albany last Saturday and on their Mrs. Knife, remained in the city for return Sunday were accompanied by s longer stay. The temperature in Mrs. Thomas' brother, V. D. Smith, Portland Tuesday was 104, but when of Fullerton, Calif., whom she had not the party reached the coast at Otis seen for twelve years. He remained ‘.here wm a general scramble to find for a few days’ visit before returning ind don the coats that had been cast home. aside over in the valley. Mrs. E. A. Woodyard end daughter, Louise, returned last Saturday from a week'« visit in San Francisco and Palo Alto, Calif. They accompanied Geo. Unsoeld and his brother-in-law, Wm. Trehearne, of Arcata, Calif., who went on a buying trip to the bay region. A Brake School August 23 A “Brake School,” conducted by a brake mechanic of the Multibestos Co., will be held at the Geo. F. Burr Motor Co. Garage next Wednesday evening, Aug. 23, at 8 o’clock. Anyone inter ested is invited to come and learn something about brakes. C. D. Walker says that he expects to be back in Coquille for a few days Cariosity around the first of the year, and is A woman wrote to the Bank of Eng sure to come back if an oil field is land asking how she had suddenly be developed here. He and Mrs. Walker come credited with some <80,000 left Tuesday afternoon for Seattle (about *180.000), her investments hav where he is going to be associated ing been a tiny fraction of that sum. investigation showed that a clerk had with a new insurance company. copied Into her account the serial H. A. Niergarth attended the camp number at the top of a page. meeting held at Gladstone Park near Portland, by the Seventh-Day Adven See Mansell Drayage and Delivery tists, from August 3rd to 18th. Leav Co. for Mill Wood, *2 a load. Orders ing here on Friday morning with Dr. filled promptly. and Mrs. J. R. Bunch and family, he returned Sunday evening. There were Treepass Notices, printed on cloth, some 5000 in attendance on Sabbath. for »ale at thia ofllce. 4-H Livestock Clubs, Aug. 23 Members of 4-H livestock clhbs in Goos county will assemble at the Arago store next Wednesday, August 23, at 8:45 a. m. and will start from there on a tour for stack judging practice, it ia announced by George Jenkins, county agent, who has just completed arrangements for the af fair. L. J. Allen, assistant state club leader, will be in Coos county that day and will assist in training the mem bers in judging various classes of live stock which will be assembled on dif ferent farms in that section of the county. Some of the club leaders have been assisting their club in stock judging work at some of the club meetings al ready held, according to reports. This will be the first and probably ths last county meet which will be held for judging practice. Classes of beef cattle, dairy cattle, sheep and hogs will be judged and a record kept of placings made by each member. The team scoring highiet in the entire contest will have an op portunity to represent Coos county in the 4-H judging contest at the Btate Fair and the team placing second at the Pacific International. A judging team is made up of three members all from the same livestock club. To Revisit Childhood Home Mrs. Wm. Roberto and son and daughter arrived here Monday from their home in San Bernardino, Calif., to spend three weeks visiting rela tives. Mrs. Roberto is a sister of Mrs. Jas. Richmond and A. N. Gould. Dr. and Mrs. Richmond drove out to Roseburg to meet them. When they left home the thermometer stood at 116 degrees and in Bakersfield it was 120, and they are certainly enjoying the Coos brand of weather. Wednesday afternoon the visitors, Mrs. Harriet Gould and A. N. Gould went out to his cabin at Brewstej for a couple of days, and tomorrow Mr. Gould, Mrs. Roberts and children, and Mra. Richmond are going up to their old home above Allegany which re quires an eight mile hike. They have not been there since 1912. Mrs. Harriet Gould expects to go south when her daughter does in early September. Fox Breedens School Held Here Ijwt Sunday (Continued from finit page) or twice a month. Every a<\ often they send delegates to a large convdn» tion. He eaid in this way they had a very active organisation. G. H. Jensen, chairman of the Fur Sales committee, spoke next, dealing with the work of the committee and how the fur industry had weathered bhe depression better than any other farming industry. Dr. Beck, who has charge of the fur dhow to be put on in Seattle this fall, discussed their plans for that. They plan to have a style show, at least 1,000 pelts on display, a great number of live animals and several minature pens. The show will cover a period of three days and gives promise of being one of the finest ever put on in the Northwest. Dr. Dederer, of the Seattle Fur Ex change, exhibiting eight or nine pelta, telling of their assets, defects, approx- mate value and he also told what fur farms should have and what foxes should have in the way of pelts; also how to ship pelts. C. D. Garfield spoke on the varieties of fur animals in Alasko. There are to date 180 blue fox, 130 ailxer fox, 40 white, 140 mink, 2 racoon farms in Alaska, with a total of 600 farms. C. W. 9tacy, of Salem, spoke on his eight years’ experience with polyga mous matings. He also gave a sug gestion as to what i fur farmer should do for each month of the year. A 500-foot motion picture of the McKenzie Fox ranch at Rainbow, Oregon, was shown by Geo. P. Wil liams, of Portland. It showed their pens, bhe big five-acre furring pen, exipert pelting of foxes, etc. Mr. Stacy illustrated on two live foxes how to cut the tendons of a fox's foot to keep them from fighting. Next came the question box in which breeders had put questions to be answered by Mr. Finlay, Mr. Walk er, the Washington men and several others. The last thing on the program was the giving of the door prizes, present ed by various dealers. OU never have to tease childrert to take Rexall Orderlies—for children and grown-ups, too, like this delicious candy laxative. Rexall Or derlies never gripe or irritate—for only nature is kinder. Rexall Orderlies are sold only at Rexall Drug Stores. Y tert ORDERLIES THE ORIGINAL Chocolate Flavored Pheno lphthalein Laxative. I ===== Fuhrman's Pharmacy, Inc. Jtera The DRUGGISTS STATIONERS ■c fendants as to the Chas. Oerding In Justice Court Yesterday The case of Western Mecantile claim. None of the parties have thus far Agency against Wesley and Thelma given intimation of an intention to Downs was tried in Justice Stanley’s court here Thursday. The action was appeal the case to a higher court. brought on three assigned claims; one Ask for Cow Bell Dairy cream and in favor of Garoiitte Bros, of Bandon for *11.65, one in favor of Dr. Loiwe milk, the only milk and cream made for *56.00 and one in favor of Chas. safe by pasteurisation. Oerding for *2.46. The case was Mining Location notices for aalo at tried before a jury consisting of Z. C. Strang, E. L. Hand, Faye Meredith, thia office. Minnie L. Johnson, T. B. Currie and Neil McGilvery; the plaintiff being MISS INEZ ROVER ■ represented by Carl M. Mack and the Piano Instructor Ths Bridgs sf Siglw defendants by Clarence Barton. The famous original Bridge of Sighs After being out about an hour, the Along the lines of the most ap pads across one of the canals In jury returned a verdict of *9.15 in fa proved modern methode. €. R. Webb Leases Stauff Ranch Venice. It connected the palace of the vor of Garoutte Bros., *1.00 in favor 105 W. 2nd St. Phone 3*-L The ranch in Arago owned by Jamer Doge to the state prison In the days of of Dr. Lowe and in favor of the de- II and William 11. Stauff, of Santa 'he Venetian republic. In imitation, a '■ridge In New Tork city, over which Monica and Grenada, California, re ■rlsoners are taken Into the Tombs, Is spectively, was leased Saturday to C. ailed the Bridge of Sighs R. Webb, formerly of the Coquille- FRIDAY AND SATURDAY AUGUST 18-19 Marshfield highway. V Turtle 250 Years Old Now _ _ _ See the WILD men, WILDER women and all the Mrs. Dan Miller had been occupy A seventy-eight-pound turtle.’whlch ing the Stauff place but after the was dubbed Methuselah because II Is beasts of the VIRGIN JUNGLE! death of her husband was forced to estimated he la two hundred and fifty Amazing Death Battles of Birds, Beasts and Reptiles! make different arrangements. She rears old. was found In a pond near has moved to the Mra. Pearl Mann Tyler. Texaa. It has a shell so thick ranch on the North Fork of the Co nnd tough that a man can stand on Its quille river, to make her home with '•ack. Methuselah was placed In the Ity park. her son, Tom Royer. Mr. Webb and hi« wife took pos session of the Stauff ranch Monday Myopia I and intend operating the dairy ranch Approximately 230.000,000 persons, on a large scale.—Myrtle Point Her or 21> per cent of the entire adult pop ald. ulation of the world, suffer from myopia, or nearsightedness. “UNTAMED AFRICA” To Whom It May Concern The Best for Every Child From amf after August 18, 1933, I Why does it pay to study music will not be responsible for any bills other than those contracted by my- with an accredited teacher? 1. She is experienced; must have self. Anyone having claims against me will please present them at once bad several yeans’ successful teaching before taking the state examination. P. O. Box 753, Coquille. 2. She is educated; must pass an Ernest Whereat. examination, given by the State Board Constitutional Monarchy, Kingdom of Education in presence of Superin The difference between a conatltu tendents of Schools. 3. These teachers are established tlonal monarchy and a kingdom la that a constitutional monarchy la a here; they have given their talent' sovereign state having a constitution, and time to the community, proven and a king, queen, or emperor aa the their ability and deserve your patron highest executive authority. A king age. 4om Is a country ruled by a king, and Members of the Oregon Music ■nay he either a sovereign state, a de Teachers Association. pendency, or a sphere of Influence. - ---------- -- Mrs E A Woodyard Bac. Mus. Peaaal Batter Peanut butter first came Into use about 25 or 90 years ago as a food for Invalids. It soon became a staple ar ticle of food. Peanut butter contains only the ground kernels of roasted, blanched peanuts, with the addition of 1 to 4 per eent of salt The food value of peanut butter Is very high. Chicago Pit Corner» Wheat All attempta to corner wheat hare been engineered In the Chicago wheat pit, alnco Chicago la the ruling grain market of North America. Accredited Teacher of Voice and Piano announces the opening of her studio Sept. 5th. Beginners to advanced students 550 N. Henry St. Phone 230-L TWO YEARS IN THE MAKING Picture produced under direction of Wynant D. Hubbard PREVIEW SATURDAY NIGHT “SONG OF THE EAGLE” with Richard Arlen Charles Bickford Mary Brian Jean Hersholt Andy Devine Louise Dresser ADMISSION 10c A 25c SUNDAY MONDAY & TUESDAY AUG. 20-21-22 THE GRAND SLAM OF ENTERTAINMENT Mad Wags and Funny Gags _ _ New Song Hits _ _ Beautiful Giris Wrapped in Cellophane BRIDAL SUITES and BRIDAL SWEETIES! INTÉMUTIOHIL MRS. H. H. COLEMAN Accredited teacher of Piano and authorised teacher of the Moore System of Fundamental Music Training. Musical Kindergarten. Sudio will open Sept. 1 241 No. Henry St Chadwick Lodge No. 68 A. F. A A. M. A faramounf fitfur» riccv sortisi jovci w. c. ntiM suer vauu GKXU IUINS » GSAlll AUIM COI STOOSMACll * sues CAS CA11OVAY « OtCHUTSA MM MAMT2A HUAIT OWIH Huuwtii SAsraotiMAtu cuit la ciiiosmani Metro ADM “Taxi for 2” i Betty Boop Cartoon Children 10c Adults 35c Stated Communication Tuesday, Sept. 12 WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY AUGUST 23-24 PAL NIGHT 2 ADULTS FOR 35c SAVE MONEY! Have Your Tire« Re-Groved Travel! See the virgin beauty ef the famous Ore gon Coast and Redwood High way! at SOUTKWESTUUI MOTOR CO. Coquille Hotel Phone 6OT 1 For a Daring New Slant on Modern Women Look THROUGH “The Key Hole” KAY FRANCIS GEO. BRENT THEATRE COQUILLE