Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1934)
14, 1M4. » fAOtrov» :3U h --- ----- ------------- MYRTLE POINT ITEMS Complete Line Montag Ranges BURNS WOOD OR COAL The modem desire for color in kitchen furnishings demands new color as found in Montag ranges. Combining soft and pastel colors together with modem trends and styles. All cast ovens fin ished with porcelain enamel easy to keep clean. See the new copper coils. Heats quicker, does not rust or corrode. Trade In Your Old Range Adams Furniture Co. Coquille Oregon Phone 55 420-426 Front St. Live News From Arago The Arago school opened Monday morning with an actual enrollment of seventy-one. Several expected pupils were not there for the first day. The total enrollment may reach eighty by the time the first six weeks is over. Seven freshmen enrolled in the high school to take the place of the three seniors in last spring’s class. There is a majority of boys in the high school, with eighteen boys and fourteen girls. Ellis Barklow, a for mer student in the Myrtle Point high school, is the only student new to tliis school. Keith Kribs is missing from the senior class; he is in Cali fornia. There are seven new first graders, the largest beginning class for several years. Girls are the ma jority here to even thing* up. The beginner* are, Glenda Steward, Lil ia verle Myers, Glenda Jean Lillie, Bonnie Jean Barklow, Marion Hoxey, Kent Hickam, Donald Patrick. Gwen dolyn Shane joined the second grad ers. She was formery in school in Portland. Evelyn and Bobby New ton were added to the fourth grade and the rest are old students. There is a class of ten in the eighth grade this year. Lynn Pauli is at his usual post as janitor. Ray Cornwall and Ernest Watkins are driving the busses. Special services will be held at Arago Sunday morning, September 16, with Miss Goldie Wells, a mis sionary from the Belgian Congo as the speaker. Miss Wells is not a stranger to this community as she was in Coos county some years ago before she was sent to the Congo A basket dinner will be held after ward so that her friends will have an Gano Funeral Home 109 S. Coulter «orner Third & Coulter) Our new Funeral Home has been completed and we are ready to serve you. Ambulance Service At Any TIME ANYWHERE » ■ opportunity for a personal visit with her. The Arago missionary society has made some contribution to the work at the school where Miss Wells is a teacher. Everyone is urged to eome out and hear at first hand about mission work in Africa. There will be special music. Miss Wells will speak in North Bend Sunday eve ning, her only other speaking en gagement in the county at this time Mrs. S. C. McAllister is somewhat better after a ten days’ illness. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Jackson have moved to the L. A. Myers place, where they will live this winter. Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Lawrence »nd daughter, Patty, left for their lome in Los Angeles Friday morning fter spending a week visiting rela- ives in this vicinity. Mrs. Sarah lobinson, who came up with them will remain in Oregon for the winter. She had been visiting at the Law- ences for several months. At pres ent she is visiting in the home of her ton, Claude Randleman. Miss Inez McAdam left Friday for ?owers, where she will visit her sis- er, Mrs. Ernest Wiebe, for a weei jefore returning to her home in Mon ovia, California. She has, been vis iting her brother, L. W. McAdam. Fred Lafferty loaded some calves from the Watkins-Damron herd Sat- jrday. He took them to northern Cal ifornia Sunday morning Bible study was held at David Root's home Thursday evening with -leven present. T. B. MacDonald ted the evening’s study. • Herbert and Wallace Carl drove to the State Fair Thursday of last week. They visited relatives in Hubbard be fore their return Sunday afternoon. Word has been received of the birth of a son, Larry Alvin, to Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Allen in Portland September 4. Rev. W. Raymond Wilder, of Co quille, had charge of the services in the Carl grove Sunday morning. He delighted the audience with a solo as well as his sermon. Walter Farrier is about on crutches ifter dislocating his ankle last week. Mias Antonia Sinko, of Portland, /[sited her family for two day* last week. Mr and Mrs. George Hampton re turned from the State Fair Monday They had charge of the Coos county booth there. Mis* Eleanor CortheU, of Marsh field, arrived Saturday. She will board and room with Mrs. Clarence Schroeder. Ray Parker is also stay ing at the Schroeder’* until hl* fam ily arrives later in the month. Ellis Rackleff returned Sunday from the state fair. His team in poultry judging placed third in the state and Ellis was high man for his team. He will exhibit a pen of poul try at the county fair thia week. C. A. Swift is working in the wood* at the head of Bear creek, where he is making a road for Ernest Wilkins. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lawhorn are camping at the Watkins place, while he is getting out some shingle bolts for the E. E. Brodie min. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wright, of Cal istoga, California, and Mr*. Laura Broadbent, of Lindsey, California, were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Barklow. » Mr. &. Mrs. C. W. Gano »00 M 00 »»»»00» Warrants Must Come First J-’*’ * a * I - * No school district having old out- standing warrants can pay its obli- Rations in cash, stated Martha E. Mulkey, county school superinten dent, in a warning just issued to school clerks in the county. Mrs Mulkey said that the recent audit by Wann and Collier of school district records showed that some districts were paying cash illegally under the above conditions This procedure hurts warrant buying and is likely to get school boards into dif ficulty, it is said. Calling SO for 11.00. Going to The Fair Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Bothwell and two sons returned home the last of i the week a trip ;o Albany. j Fred left Saturday on a few 'days business trip to Klamath 1 Falls. In accordance with the Mayor’s Proclamation we will close at Ms. W. R. Nortbup and son, David, returned 'Wednesday from Portland, 12 o’clock today and meet you at the Fair. where they spent a week on a busi ness and pleasure trip. Mias Priscilla Deyoe returned home Sunday f .om Powers, where she spent several months at the A. Pow ers home. She will leave in, two we will be back on the job, ready to take your orders for any or weeks fo • Ashland, where she will all of the bargains quoted below. We’ll be seeing you. attend Normal school. Mr. and Mr*. R. Swinson, of Pow ers, and Mr. and Mrs. R. L.* Tucker motored to Glendale Tuesday. LIPTON GREEN TEA Mr. and Mrs. O. Parry spent Sev WESSON OIL eral days thi* week in Crescent City One *4 lb Can on a business trip. I Qt. Can and 1 Covered Glass Mr. and Mrs. Hollister are the One l/t Can proud parents of a baby girl bom Mixing Bowl, all for at the Mast Hospital Sunday, Sep Two l/2 lb Cans I tember 9th. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Schroeder and Mr. and Mr*.’Henry Hermann re NU BORA turned home Sunday from Salem, GOLD BOND COFFEE where they sepnt the week-end at Refined Granulated Borax Soap 'he State Fair. 1 lb Package and Mis* Helen Vincent, of Corvallis, 40 oz. Package and arrived Saturday and will teach home 1 beautiful Water Glass economics in the union high school. 1 Piece Glassware She will make her home at the T. G. Sumerlin home. , The officers of the Woman’s Club met at the home of Mrs. Henry Ross- Sunblest Brand OVALTINE low Thursday afternoon to make plan* for the winter. The officers in-I SWEET GROUND CHOCOLATE elude Mr*. Roeslow, president; Mrs. j Large Can, $1.00 size C. E. Huling, vice president; Mrs. 1 lb Can Paul Breuer, secretary; and Mrs. A., Medium Can, 50c size M. Sunstrup, treasurer. The board of High Quality director* include Mr*. L. P. Linn, Mrs. L. A. LaFlamme and Mrs. Chris Nelson. The first meeting has been Standard set for Monday, September 24. CALOL LIQUID GLOSS Mr*. Laura Broadbent, of Lindsay, HOUSEHOLD LUBRICANT California, is visiting friends and While present stock lasts Cleans and Polishes elatlve* in Myrtle Point thi* week. I Jim Bartlett has returned home' 8 oz. Can ... J5c ’rom North Dakota, where he spent' 1 Pint Can, special * • ' ■ -J the summer. 2 cans for H. S. Howard returned home Regular 35 cent size Less than half the usual price. Thursday evening from Portland, .vhere he spent several days on busi ness. Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Rouppe have as quests this week Mr. and Mr*. Arthur Waymire, of Klamath Fall*. Mr. Waymire is a nephew of Rouppe’s. R. C. Young returned home last of the week from a several days’ stay in Portland. Miss Ruth Young, who accompanied him north, went to Aloha and will vtart her gi mother for a few weeks. A lovely shower was given Miss Delores Davenport Friday af The member* of the grade school Wheeler and Woolsey to Be Shown in “Cockeyed Cavaliers” at ternoon at the home of Mrs. Earl board are: Mrs. Jeffries, H. J. Berry, the Liberty Theatre on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Adajns. Many useful gift* were re and Joe Nilsen. The high school ceived. Late in the afternoon re board consists of J. F. Van Leuven, freshment* Were served to the fol Mrs. D. P. Jenkins, Mr*. Bill Carlson, lowing guests, Mesdame* Geo. Hoff Conrad Borgard and Mr. Nilsen. Mr*. man, Albert Davenport, Ernest Pear M. E. Borgard is clerk of both dis son, Iva Hall, Paul Breuer, R. A. trict*. Redell, T. Sullivan, Henry Knight, Miss Gertrude Bullard, primary Florence Evans, John Felcher, M. L. teacher, spent the week-end With Aasen, R. F. Garrett, Elmer Russell, her parents at Randolph. H. R. Haughton, Rodney Davenport, Mr. and Mr*. Joe Nilsen and Mr. Floyd Leatherman, Ferris Lundy, W. and Mr*. Randall Johnson and three W. Deyoe, Mary Campbell, O. H. children returned home Monday, af Clark, E. H. Schroeder, L. P. Trigg, ter having spent nearly a week at L. P. Linn, R. C. Young, J. W. Hall, the state fair at Salem, and visiting Roy Robison, E. G. Rranton, Elton friends and relative* in and around Aasen. Bert Davenport, Mary Adams, Portland, Silverton and other places. Paul Davis, R. L. Tucker, Merle Ken They spent some time with Dr. and yon, C. Nelson, Earl Adams and the Mr*. H. E. Johnson at Siverton. Dr. Misses Audrey Davenport, Hildred Johnson is Mrs. Nilsen’s son and Ran Rodell, Mary Hoover, Mary Robison, dall’s brother. While away Mr. Lois Davenport. Mary Davenport. Johnson took his little son, Randall. Lila Davenport. Dorothy Goldsburg, Jr., to see a specialist, who reported Genevieve Norris, Ellen Monrad, the little fellow was doing very nice “As The Earth Turns,” th* picture plomacy on the part of the director. Margaret Garrett, Paula Breuer, El- ly and he didn’t believe he would A hilarious cinema concoction, da Aasen, Leia June McDonald, Cleta have to be brought in for another ex based on Gladys Hasty Carroll’* ro mance of New England rural life, is suggested by the characters in the Robison and Vera McNair amination for several month*. Mrs. Lorin Guerin, of Loe Angeles, There will be no school here Fri the feature attraction at the Liberty famous Ham Fisher comic strip, "Pa- look*,” tells the story of a loveable arrived Thursday and will visit with day. It is Children’s Day at the Fair Theatre today and Saturday. The picture deal* with the lives but not-quite-bright lad, whose relative* for a few days. She was and all will be dismissed to attend. and loves, the joys and tribulation* of mother tries to prevent him from go called here by the illness of her Miss Faye La Branch, intermediate father. a small community of farmer folk ing the way of his bright-light-loving grade teacher, and her sister, Mrs. which Miss Carroll ha* painted so dad. Will Kay, spent the week-end with vividly and picturesquely in her Riverton News her parent* at the La Branch* home novel which was the best selling book The famous infirmity, kleptomania, in Bridge. The grade school enrollment has of the year. Though she has dealt provides much of the joyous action in Miss Mary Donaldson leaves Fri with a simple people living compara “Cockeyed Cavaliers” Bert Wheeler exceeded the 70 mark. The. high school ha* not quite reached 50. The day for Monmouth, where she will tively quiet live* she ha* made them and Robert Woolsey’s gay musical latter is less than last year, due prin resume her work as instructor in the live and breathe. The homely events comedy, coming to the Liberty on cipally to several families moving out Normal School. She will be accom have been brought out with a realiBm Sunday. of the district. It is said that every panied as far as Eugene by Miss that make* them lifelike. Wheeler Is seeh as a medieval one of school age, with a single ex Helen Nulf, who will attend the uni The picture is said to have caught vagabond whose kleptomaniac ten versity this year. ception, living in the district, is at the exact spirit of the novel and to dencies lead him and his partner into Fritz Hull brought back a splendid have brought the many unusual char a maze of misunderstandings and tending school here now. It has not been for years that we have had such record from his prune picking em acterizations to the screen with a misfortunes which Woolsey endeav a splendid record of school atten ployment in the Willamette valley sincerity and adherence to reality ors to straighten out in hilarious fash dance. during the late summer. In the or that makes the players seem not as ion. The comics do their singing, Frankie Edgmon is at home now, chards where he was employed, actors but as real flesh and blood hu dancing, romancing and joking in from the Knife Hospital in Coquille, where several hundred other pick man beings, each going through hi* early European costume against me- where she recently uhderwent a very ers weft also at work, Fritz was rated or her part as naturally as though , dieval backgrounds, while their wise- serious operation for appendicitis. as the best picker that had ever they were actually living on a .. New cracks and practical jokes are 1934 ------------ She is doing very nicely but will be worked there. And the tree* have England farm. “vita-fresh,” ultra-modem and brand unable to attend school for several been in full bearing for over 20 year*. new. weeks. That is a record to be proud of. Dorothy Lee, as the comely daugh The largest collection of stellar The Lee Bryant school bus. which talent ever recruited for a feature ter of a commoner who is trying to operate* between Randolph and Riv 20-30 Chib Holds Session comedy is represented in “Palooka,” evade a family-arranged marriage erton, transporting both high and with a Duke, carries a sweet romance grade school students to Riverton, re The Coquille 20-30 club held its to be shown as the preview tonight with Bert Wheeler Thelma Todd, a and tomorrow. Making one great ceived a broken axle Tuesday night regular weekly dinner meeting Tues Baron’s wife, and Robert Woolsey are at the ferry. day evening at the Club cafe, with big happy family out of such cele mirthful in, their complicated love brated personalities as Jimmie Du The two school board* are sponsor President William Barrow in charge making. . ing a reception for the teachers at George Stambrough, who was on the rante, Lupe Velez, Stuart Erwin, Marjorie Rambeau, Robert Arm the gymnasium on Thursday evening entertainment committee for this at 6 p.m. A nice program is being meeting, gave a talk on stamp col strong. Thelma Todd. William Cag MRS. ZETTIE M. HAWKINS worked out, and refreshments of lecting as a hobby. The other mem ney—(brother of Jimmy in his cine ACCREDITED TEACHER ma debut) — Mary Carlisle and cake, sandwiches and coffee will be ber of the entertainment committee, served. Every one in the district is George McClellan, talked to the others, with Ous Amheim and his Or OF PIANO invited. The ladies ar* being asked members about saw filing in the lum chestra in the offing to grab their »17 West Foarth Coquille, Ore. to bring either take or sandwiches. ber industry. share of glory, called But Tomorrow 34c lc 35c 35c 65c 37c 27c ... Phone 25c Busy Comer Grocery for super-di Delivery