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About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1935)
pie Sentinel November i They' did not J think that 1 would be felt so soon that it would be used against them to force legislation through, con H. A YOUNG and M. D. GRIMES gress. One nationally known writer pointed put recently that without the H. A. YOUNG. Editor threat of withholding money alloca tions, the administration would be to tally lacking in power over cqngress despite the huge majorities in both houses. This to attributable to the hesitancy of staunch democratic lead ers to accept the continually evolved theories and reforms drafted by the young professors and brain trusters. 1 ßtato Smith Wood-Products, IJIII .F, OREGON Charges of misappropriation and extravagance in connection with the administration of relief funds in Ore gon were not sustained by evidence produced in the investigation of re lief activities, according to the report of Governor Martin's special com mittee. “The few minor irregularities in cident to work projects which were disclosed are mainly attributable to want of proper supervision by the po litical subdivision in which the work projects originated," the committee declared. Salaries and wages paid to admin istrative officers and employees en gaged in relief work were found to be "reasonably low.” Members of the committee making the investigation included E. A. Mc- Cornack, state senator from Lane county, and Verne Dusenbery and Grace Phelps, of Portland. The report was by no means a whitewash of the relief administra tion. Many of the complaints regis tered by relief participants were found to be justified. Dissatisfaction among families on relief rolls, parti cularly in Multnomah county, was found to be due to failure to keep the social service department separate and distinct from other social service agencies, lack of centralized control, want of uniformity in the standard of relief given and employment of in competent case workers. The investigators found many in eligible recipients on the relief rolls of several counties and recommended that “very definite steps be taken by state and county commttees to weed . out all such excessive and unjustifi able relief.* ? Feature for the Coming Week < Editor’s note: This is the second part of a statement recently made Entered at the Coquille Poetoffice as concerning the Reserve Officers' Second Class Mail Jdatter.__ Training Corps at the University of Office Comer W. First and WUlord Si Oregon by Dr. C. V. Boyer; university, ■2- president. The statement was made a, an explanation of his vote at a re BONUS VITO STANDS cent faculty meeting which defeated Now that the Patipan bonus bill has a motion to recommend that the mil-, been so vigorously denounced by itasy training be made optional in President Roosevelt in his veto mes sage to both houses of congress, it stead of compulsory.) "Pei haps I jfiould think differently may be confidently expected that the about military training if I had not bonps issue will rival the Townsend plan as a leading issue ip the 1938 lived through ihe late World War. presidential campaign. Whether you Before we declared war igainst Ger many there was the san . ■ peace agi agree with the president or not, no tation that we liavc now. The same one can help admiring his courage in organizations were working against doing whal he believed was the right military training, which t ien existed thing. At this writinig the senate ? in the land grant colleges, and for the has not voted to sustain the veto, 'as same reasons as no-.v. But war was it is expected to do. but the house by no sooner declared than these same a two-thirds majority passed the bill organizations became madly militar over the veto. Later— The senate yesterday after istic and perse<ited with cruelty those who still were of their farmer noon sustained the veto by voting 54 opinion and iu>d the courage of their for the bill and 40 against. It re convictions. They bounded them, os quires a two-thirds vote of each tracized them, tarred and leathered house to i»ass a bill over a presiden them, and threatened them with pven tial veto. direr cruelties. Professors of history forgot all they had learned through A MAY WITHOUT FOG years of research about evaluating The month of May, 1935, has been evidence, and poured out on their a more beautiful spring period than classes—compelled to attend—British any experienced here in the past 30 propaganda and the assertions of years. It is frequently the most dis screaming newspaper headlines as appointing month of the year, with holy truth. Reason took a holiday. “Jim" Lewis, warden of the state lots of fog, especially in the early "I do not believe that the days of penitentiary, denies that his institu morpings.i But this year it has been war are over. And if We are to have tion has gone high-brow. The course different with the sun rising dear war every dictate of humanity de in sculptoring conducted for the ben nearly every day. J. D. Clinkenbeard, mands that we enter such a war pre efit of the prison inmates by Prof. O. who is out "early every morning, de pared. If people would only reacj the L. Barrett of the University of Ore livering a daily paper, calls attention military history of the United States gon, Lewis explains, is just an exper to the fact that on only two or three -which they will not—they would iment and does not seem to be taking mornings last spring and summer did learn that from the time of the Revo very well. Only 11 pupils were en we have the sort of bright early lution until the time of the Rebellion rolled in the class last week Lewis mornings that have been the rule for r not a decade passed without a major says that there is no intention of ex the past several weeks. or minor war, that we entered every tending the prison curricula to in-' But the ground is dry and hard and i I, I war unprepared relying on raw dude esthetic dancing or other cul if there is no more rain until Septem troops (with possible exception of the tural subjects. ber there is possibility of a water Mexican War) and that in every in ■ . i '!■ ■I".11.,1 fl shortage and very short crops. stance war was prolonged, treasure Attorney General Van Winkle has --------- !. needlessly expended, and men advised the board of control that the THERE IS SCHOOL HARMONY of age or over regardless of their Buses Direct to Fair rGounds slaughtered as a result of our unpre state can not compel the telephone ter and weigh several ton«. Not in years has there been the need, the size of the pension to be de paredness. Untrained men are a company to hook up to a state-owned As an added service to the thou harmony in Coquille school affairs mob. Trained men are an army. An switchboard in the event one is in An electrified Oregon with the in termined by the size of the fund and sands who will visit the San Diego that has prevailed the past year. So If his army of a thousand men will put to stalled to serve the capitol group of candescent bulbs displacing coal oil the number of participants. Exposition opening this month. Grey far as this writer can learn the three flight a mob of five thousand men, buildings. However, there is nothing lamps even in the most remote cor petitions are signed by at least 18,371 important elements—the instruction hound announces transportation di and has done so innumerable times in to prevent the company from enter ners of the state and electric motors registered voters the measure will be rect to the fairgrounds. “This will be department, the pupils, and the peo history, United States history includ ing into such an arrangement if it doing the back-breaking tasks of the on the ballot at the next regular elec ple of the district, have all been sat a great convenience and will elim- ed. The defeats of Long Island, wants to do so, which is somewhat farm, is visioned by Governor Martin tion. isfied with the manner in which the ate parking problems and driving Camden, Queenstown, Blandensburg, doubtful since it would involve a se- ' as a realization of the near future, Coquille schools have been operated worries,” said L. D. Jones, general and Bull Run are a few examples of rious loss of revenue over the present The governor has all of his forces at Orders for forms, blanks and sta manager of Pacific Greyhound Lines,, and, with the annual school election the loss incurred by sending untrain arrangement. work now on a survey of the state to tionery to replace stocks destroyed in scheduled to be held three weeks in seaking of this service. ed men to the front. The brilliant determine the possibilities of rural the capitol fire have so swamped the from next Monday evening, on June Many additional schedules are be successes of the Mexican War were Congressman Walter Pierce has electrification so that Oregon will be state printing plant that it has been 17, the general thought seems to be achieved by a small army of veterans. written Governor Martin that the ' in line to take advantage of the new found necessary to farm a lot of the ing added throughout the entire Pa to continue in charge of school mat “The military policy of the United federal government is apparently all i rural electrification program as soon work out to private plants. The state cific Greyhound System to comforta ters those who have served the past States in the past has been dominated set to go with the construction of , as the administration gets organized plant was more than 300 orders be bly accommodate the already increas year. | Superintendent P. W. Lane ed travel demand. by the Angle Saxon prejudice that transmission lines from Bonneville, , and ready for business. hind on its deliveries last week and and practically all the instructors To provide for this Mr. Jones also "standing armies are a dangerous dam when the time comes. Also that | department heads demanding more have been re-elected for next year, menace to liberty." And because we there will be no difficulty-in securing J State Treasurer Holman wants the speed. The plant has been operat announced the purchase of 38 more and to continue the “let well enough feared this menace we have sacrificed i a Public Works loan up to $3,000,000 > state to generate its own electricity ing on a two-shift basis ever since the new model streamline buses at a cost alone” policy it will only be necessary of practically half a million dollars thousands of young men on the battle to finance a new capitol building. All, for lighting the buildings in the cap- fire. 1 for the voters to re-elect Dr. J. R. This equipment, most of which has field. Military training in our col of which is based upon a conversa- ’ itol group as well as the institutions Bunch as member of the school board already been received, to of the very leges was established during the Civil tion had by Pierce with President ' in the vicinity of Salem. He believes and Keith Leslie as clerk. Whether latest design. One of the main fea- War and further developed after the Roosevelt whom he describes as “af- that it can be done in connection with Hudson & Duncan Bay this will be done or not, of course, World War in the hope that the costly rable, genial and pleasant, as he al the heating plant with a sizeable sav Large Dry ing Plant type ■ Sig MK. SSI J EUR» I *A!!l • lurcl • iB • new flexibl< -- --------- ■ pillow ------------ cannot be foretold, but the expres — | headrest. The seats are of a new de- mistakes of the past might be thus ways is." ing in t^e annual "juice ” bill. sions already heard are in favor of Hudson-Duncan & Co., wholesale slgn’ ar* adjustable to three comfort averted. It was thought that such that course. *nd are spaced farther training as the ROTC affords would Governor Martin was not born in a A commercial artist has been en grocers of Oregon and Washington. able Unless all signs fail the next pres remove the menace of a large stand log cabin as were so many of the na gaged by the state highway depart have taken over the large drying and apart, »«tting a new standard of lux- idential campaign is to be one of the ing army while affording the protec tion's great leaders but he was born ment to sketch the proposed new packing plant of the Dundee Drying ury" ___ ____________ corporation at Dundee, which they; ____ __________________ and Cas- .icorporauon most notable in many years Six tion of a citizenry sufficiently trained i on a farm in southern Illinois and as highway between Troutdale to afford the inevitable sacrifice and a boy did hto ftint at milking cow, INTERESTING ITEM FOR cade Locks as it will appear when wil1 operate as a new division of the months ago not even a dyed-in-the- defeat of raw troop,. j and pitching hay, he told a group of completed. This is a new wrinkle in ' firtn- wool republican would have bet | RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS “Whether this hope is well founded { Farmer, Union members who called road mapping and is believed to be This Dundee plant has maintained against the re-election of President dryers' 1 Mrs Ivan Yargus, Belknap. Iown. original with the Oregon department. first place among commercial dryers Roosevelt. Now, as one New Deal to a question. But some knowledge at the executive office this week, --------- of Oregon for many years in the i *r4te* that her 20 years suffering experiment after another has become of arms andenilitary sicence i, better I Hopes for a $4,300.000 gift from the handling of walnuts and filberts with ' hh T J?1eurti?ticVn*uralgia and neu* shaky, the republicans have been than ignorance. In the end the men | Rodney Alden, editor of the Wood- considerable 7 , 1 , ,ls P*.’01 **«" remarkably re stirring about more. At the same would have to be trained. The more bum Independent. Is again preparing federal government to finance con considerable business also in drying heved by taking Williams R U X time the third party talk continues, rapidly and the greater the number; to go into court to test the constitu- struction of the Bonneville section of and packing of prune, and black' Compound In her letter she states state, with the possibility that it might so that can be trained the greater the tionality of the governor's salary, the upper Columbia river highway raspberries • To these activities will I ***, ala° takea Williams S.L K Tor- elminate the cause. Fuhr- of cherries Jg* cause ___________ affect the situation as to throw the safeguard for the men themselves now fixed by statute at $7500 a year, faded this week with receipt of a tel- I now be added the brining against hasty engagements, needless • Alden started a suit in the circuit egram by J. M. Devers, attorney for ,nd packing and distribution of wal- ' election one way or the other. court of Marion county to test out the highway commission, from Sena nuts and filberts. „ Reports from all over the country casualties, and prolonged wan.” _ - i Body an<* Fender repair work done this issue several months ago but tor McNary, stating that the PWA indie ate that the people are no longer Of.'*n additlon to the by experienced mechanics Our body later dropped the matter. He con- would limit its grant . to 30 F rhb L obb Rato, 4% per win cent - present plant * » to planned immediately.' painter to an an expert exnert Let - following with blind faith but are „V pe. ---------------- pumnea immediately, painter is us prove ------- - Th® •— ; __ ____________ r casting critical eye, both at the The new interest rate on Land bank tends that the constitution limits the of the total need. bert of repair service highway commission will have to put (35 feet wide, two stories high* Southwestern M^tor Vo' Roosevelt program and at offerings of loan, made through and indorsed by salary to >1500. iltf up the other 70 per cent of the 1 Machinery for grading, bleaching and U>We, tern Motor Co republican leaders. All of thia has the Coquille farm loan association of money, probably through sale of packing walnuts and filberts will be! Automobile fatalities are lagging the makings of a sizzling election Coquille is 4% per cent and not 41k Calling cards, to »or 31.00. | Figures more bonds if even this much federal installed. campaign which will find houses di per cent, according to Secretary- behind the 1934 record. r — ' — Robert A Hudson, president of the compiled by Secretary of State Snell aid is to be forthcoming. The high vided against themselves as during Treasurer R. H. Mast. the Smith-Hoover race of 1828. “The reduction to 4V4 per cent ap show that only 74 persons were killed way commission had proposed that it grocery firm, has purchased three' . - —- - . plies on all new loans closed through in traffic accidents during the first would pay off the entire Coast bridge large walnut groves adjacent to Dun dee, and has invested in large filbert debt at once if the PWA would give the association since April 10, as the four months of the current year com result of the Land bank's ability to pared to M toy the same period last the state an equal amount for the groves near Gresham. He is residing — on all kinds of at Dundee. market a new issue of its bonds to the year. Traffic fatalities for April to Bonneville project. Hudson is one of the leader, in the investing public on a 3% per cent in talled only 17 compared to 33 for Bjorn Johannsen, of Portland, is fight against California domination of terest basis. The bank's lending rate April, 1334. the sponsor of a newly proposed ini the Oregon walnut industry, and is a on new association-approved loans Local and Long Distance may not exceed by more than one per When the board of control ordered tiative measure providing for old age director in the Associated Walnut Growers of Oregon, formed to gain a cent the rate of interest borne by the the Corinthian columns of the old and disability pensions. Johannsen bond, test issued by this co-operative capitol building preserved for use in wants to create an Honorable Retire-, divorce of the Oregon industry from mortgage institution a colonnade, it appears they failed to ment commission composed of the la the national walnut marketing agree Phones 101J—224L • ■ “The new 4 Mi per cent rate is the take into consideration the size of the bor commissioner, insurance commis ment. sioner and three industrial accident lowest in agricultural history, and order. F. C. Leary, professional many local farmer, who are paying a wrecker in charge of the job of commisisoners to administer the fund Report cases of cruelty to children higher rate an mortgages held by razing the ruins, says that it will be which would be raised by a tax on t0 Hurn>ne Society, other lenders now have the oppor impossible to save the columns tn- all property with an assessed valua Medford. Complaints must be signed tunity of refinancing on ,a lower tact. They are constructed of brick tion of 310,000 or more. He would by two or more witnesses. Informa 1 X 3 & 1 X 4 Kiln Dried Flooring 1 X 12 Kiln Dried Knotty Port Orford Cedar Kiln Dried Channel Rustic Complete Line of Dried Fir Finish from 1 x 3 to 2 x 12 i Complete Stock of Dimension Lumber for All Building Purposes The Public is Invited to Come to the Mill and Look Over Our Stock. We have any kind * of Lumber for the Builder’s Needs si • New low Price COAL HAULING covered with • heavy coating c< flag pay a pension to all persona 30 years tion confidential. Mansell Drayage & Delivery Co. i7tf *ei M L, ■k I