■» „— has declared that he will not .recom­ mend either the buildings or more land but will content himself with 0 SMB MMS IS « SMO TOWS presenting the need of both to the H. A. YOUNG and M. D. GRIMES lawmakers together with such sug­ Publishers . gestions as the planning board might - H. A. YOUNG, Editor work out. . The Sentinel Sabecription Bates $2.00 One Year----- --------- ---- ------- Six Months------------------------ Three Months.......... ................ No subscription taken unless paid for in advance. This rule is impera­ tive. ______ _................. .Ug Advertising Display advertising 30 cents per inch. No advertisement inserted for less than 50 cents. Reading notices 10 cents per line. No reading notice, or advertisement of any kind, insert­ ed for less than 25 cents. Entered at the Coquille Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter. Office Corner W. First and Willard St A dispatch from West Palm Beach says that the Paul Brown situation is somewhat complicated. Paul Brown, Sr., married a second time about three years ago. A few months later Paul Brown, Jr, mar­ ried a younger sister of the new Mrs. Paul Brown, Sr. The Junior Paul Browns now have an infant son, Paul Brown III. So Mrs. Brown Sr. is her sister’s mother-in-law and a grandmother of her nephew, and that is just a start on the list of scrambled relations. Two hundred fire wardens and pa­ trolmen. all seasoned veterans, are now in the field protecting state and privately owned timber from inva­ sion by the fire demon, according to J. W. Ferguson, state forester. In the event of a serious fire 3000 CCC workers scattered about in camps ouer the state, an drilled in fire fight­ ing, are available for ‘ instant duty. State laws requiring fire permits for logging operations and providing safeguards against careless campers and smokers will be rigidly enforced, according to Ferguson who warns va­ cationists to watch their step when entering timbered areas or travelling along highways bordering forest lands. There are now 369,594 licensed au-> tomobile operators in Oregon, ac­ cording to Secretary of State Snell. There is also a better compliance with the law requiring permits for learners than ever before. So far this year 7183 of these permits have been issued compared to an aggregate of only 3497 for the previous four years. 100,000 to See Landon Notified Smith Wood-Products, Inc. Day of Celebration Planned July 23 to Honor Nominee. TQPEKA, KAS —Tens of thou­ sands of prairie state Americana, joined by additional thousands of visitors from every section of the United States, will gather on the grounds of the state house here Thursday, July 23. to hear Alf M. Landon accept the Republican nomination for President. The quiet, businesslike governor, who balanced the budget of Kansas by simple economy, in his speech of acceptance, to be broadcast na­ tionally, will tell the American peo­ ple how he proposes to handle the problems of government. I Hl 1 r, OREGON Knotty Port Orford Cedar 1 X 4 to 1 X 12. For fine paneling Port Orford Cedar Shiplap 1 x 6 to 1 x 12 Day-Long Ceiebratioa. Topekans, under the . leadership of their chamber of commerce, have arranged a program of pageantry, which will last from noon until nearly midnight. Indian ceremonies, parades and a giant fireworks display will portray the spirit and history of Kansas, and voice the “typical prairie" states’ approval df Alf Landon. At the Kansas state fairgrounds 20 tribes of Indians will conduct a ceremonial barbecue at noon in the colorful Setting provided by their villages of tepees. Haskell Indians frbm Lawrence, Kas., and groups from Marietta, will unite with other Indians from points as far-removed as New York and Ari- zona to smoke the pipe of peace with the Republican nominee. Douglas Fir Moldings & Finish AU Designs in Stock Distribution of $31,964 among the counties and cities of the state, repre­ In Jack Juza's Crescent City Tri­ senting the second quarterly alloca­ plicate last week appeared the fol­ tion of beer and wine taxes, was lowing paragraph in the story about completed this week by Secretary of Crescent City’s Fourth of July cel­ State Snell. The little community of. ebration: Cornucopia in Baker county received ’’Hotels, camps and homes from the smallest check, 34 cents. Port-' Brookings to Trinidad, were jammed land’s share amounted to $10,114.68. | by th,e crowd, principally from Ore­ Coos county’s share amounted to gon, that wanted to cool off and help $412.98. The city of Coquille receiv­ Crescent City celebrate.” 100,006 Can View Ceremonies. ed $91.56; Marshfield, $177.18; North Oregonians may have wanted to Bend, $134.45; Bandon, $50.81; East-1 We carry a complete line of 1x3 to 2x12 No. 1 and No. 2 Common A triple parade, lasting an hour ~ help Crescent City celebrate, we will I side, $18.63; Empire, $16.52; Lake­ and a half, will march down Kan­ Cedar, suitable for all building purposes, surfaced or rough. grant, but that any Oregonian went' side, $3.08; Myrtle Point, $45.65. sas avenue to the state house, be­ Consult the Retail Department for our low prices on Cedar. ginning at 4 p. m. down there to cool off just isn’t so. “ More than 10,000 Landon boost ­ No one goes from Coos and Curry Claims totalling $81,120.75 against anywhere to cool off. It isn’t done in the several counties for the care of ers are being marshalled to partici­ the best of circles or in any other. non-violent insane under the so- pate in the parade,” said Robert M. Owthwaite, president of the To­ But probably the Triplicate referred called “ward” act of 1931 were wiped peka chamber.' “Their lino of to Grants Pass and Medford Oregon­ off the books by the.board of control march will be decorated with sun­ Let us show you our Lumber Stocks in warehouse ians. Very possible. this week. The claims were based flowers, for as the sunflower was and on dock at the Smith upon the arbitrary charges of $20 per planted by the early pioneers to Wood-Products Plant She is also the step-mother of her month which the counties protested guide those who followed to their brother-in-law and Paul Brown, Jr, as excessive inasmuch as it was more destination in safety, so is the Lan­ is the brother-in-law of his father. than the actual cost of the care of don sunflower destined to show the By the same token Paul Brown III these wards to the state. In wiping way back to the security of the American form of government.*’ is the nephew of his grandfather, out these claims the board of control The notification ceremonies will who is the brother-in-law as well as conceded this point. The charge take place on the south steps of father-in-law of Mrs. Brown, Jr. against Coos county wiped out was the state house, where 100,000 per­ sons will be able to see Gov. Lan­ $769. don against the background of the | Governor-Martin wants the “back building from whi.-h he has sprung to fame with the swiftness and seat drivers” who are continually power of a prairie cyclone. knocking the government to quit For sound Fire Insurance, go to of this Summons: and if you fail to ly newspaper published at Coquille. their croacking and get out and push. Drouth Emphasizes Folly appear and answer said Summons by Coos County, Oregon, once a week Ned C. Kelley. The “defeatist” attitude which he de­ the 7th day of August, 1936, the last for a period of four weeks. of New Deal ‘ Scarcity ’ date of publication thereof, Judgment clares to be so deep rooted in the Harry A. Slack. WARRANT REDEMPTION NOTICE will be taken against you for the re­ Attorney for Plaintiff Chicago, III. — Drouth disaster, Willamette valley is especially scored Warrants No. 316 to 341, inclusive, lief demanded in the Complaint, a QyHIs.E.i Residence and Post-Office address by the governor who declares that plus artificial crop restricton, for drawn against School District No. 72, succinct statement of which is as fol­ Coquille, Coos County, Oregon. 2flt5 the second time in three yean is Coaledo, will be paid upon presen­ lows: what western Oregon needs most of Budget Director Wallace Wharton demonstrating the fallacy of the tation to the First National Bank of That the marriage contract now NOTICE OF FINAL ACCOUNT proposes that relief profits be dump­ all is some of the fighting spirit New Deal theorj of “economic Coquille. Interest will cease on Fri­ existing between you and Plaintiff Notice is hereby given thst the un­ which he found to abound in east ­ ed into the state’s general fund and scarcity,” writes Frank Ridgway, day, July 3. be dissolved and held for naught. dersigned, Executrix of the Last Will Mrs. Helen M. Anderson, that the counties match the state ern Oregon in his recent visit to that agricultural editor of * the Chicago That Plaintiff be awarded the care, 25t3 Clerk S. D. No. 72. custody and control of your minor and Testament of Marion T. Clinton. Tribune. dollar-for-dollar in future relief ex­ section of the state. Deceased, has filed in the County child, Patricia Dolores Long. Ridgway declared that it was dif­ penditures. * Court of the State of Oregon for Coos Service at this Summons is made State officials and employees who ficult for many to believe crops NOTICE OF FINAL SETTLEMENT County, her final account as such Ex­ If the budget director attempts to NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that by Publication in pursuance to an ecutrix and said Court has appointed put this program through the next are not satisfied with the kind of au- again are being destroyed so that Order made by the Honorable Hugh Monday, the 10th day of August, farmers can qualify for payments the undersigned has filed his Final legislature as he now expects to do, tomobiles the state buys for them McLain, County Judge for Coos under the new federal soil law, Account in the matter of the admin­ County, Oregon, dated the 3rd. day 1936, as the day for the hearing of must either swallow their pride or istration of the estate of Sarah L. county courts'can be expected to in­ objections to the Mid final account when the country is faced with a terpose strenuous opposition. Mr. buy their own cars, the board of con­ shortage of human foods and live­ Wood, deceased, and the County of July, 1936, directing that service and the settlement thereof. thereof be made by publication in * Court for Coos County, Oregon, has Minnie M. Clinton, Wharton apparently assumes that the trol declared this week in turning stock feeds, and foreign grown set Saturday, the 8th day of August, the Coquille Valley Sentinel, a weak- 2815 Executrix liquor profits belong to the state and down requisitions for three new cars farm products are being imported 1936, as the day, and the County that under the present program the of mor* expensive make. The board into the United States in increas­ Court Room in the County Court been confining its automobile ing amounts. House in Coquille, Coos County, Ore­ state is bearing the big end of the re-1 has ' “Farmers have a feeling of pro­ gon, as the place for hearing objec­ lief load. In this assumption he errs.' purchases to the lighter and less ex­ tions to said Final Account and the Seventy-five per cent of the liquor pensive models on the theory that test against being forced to clip settlement of said estate. or pasture their green oats to pre ­ profits belong to the counties by vir­ the primary interest of the state is vent them from maturing a crop Dated July 8, 1936 O. C. Sanford, tue of the Knox Liquor Control act to provide economical transportation. of seed, or to plow under tons of Executor of the Last Will and Test­ which reserved only 25 per cent of green soy beans that would make ament and of the Estate of Sarah L. After taking up the $250,000 in needed food for live stock this Wood. Deceased. the revenues to the state. 26t5 After allocating the profits from li­ certificates of indebtedness issued to winter,” Ridgway said. He cited quor sales and licenses under the finance June and July relief needs some instances of Illinois fanners IN THE CIRCUIT COITT OF THE Knox act the legislature turned, the state liquor commission will have who decided not to plow under their »■ STATI OF OREGON IN AND FOB THE COUNTY OF COOS right around and impcsinded these only $630,000 available for the relief soy beans to receive government Mme revenues up to $3,000,000__in-' work during the remainder of the checks for $12 an acre when they creased to $5,500,000 by the 1935 ses-1 F*r- «ccording to an estimate by A. could make $15 an acre by harvest­ HANNAH O. LONG, Plaintiff, vs. ing the beans and selling them. sion—for relief needs But this di-, K McMahan, chairman of the liquor NICHOLAS LONG, Defendant version was definitely understood to commission. With five months to go Predicts G. O. P. Sweep To Nicholas Long, the above named be only for the duration of the unem- ith,t means the state’s share of relief to Majority in House defendant: must * * be ployment emergency. Once that expenditures * “ * kept * below IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF Chicago, Ill.—The steady trend OREGON: You are hereby notified emergency is ended—and Governor $150,000 a month if the work is to be Martin insists that we are already out kept on a pay-as-you-go basis as towford Landon and Knox through­ that you are required to appear and of the depression—the county courts Governor Martin insists that it must. out the country will help sweep answer the Complaint filed against a Republican majority into the you in the above entitled suit within can be expected to insist thst the ori­ Approximately $200,000 of the anti­ house of representatives st the ap­ four weeks from the 10th day of July, cipated revenues for this year will ginal provisions of the Knox act be proaching election, says Earl Ven­ 1936, the date of the first publication carried out and the liquor profits be come in for annual license renewals able, executive secretary of the Re­ diverted into the county coffers to during the last two weeks in Decem­ publican Congressional campaign committee with offices here. relieve property taxes now being ber, McMahan said. “We will retain all the seats we levied for mothers' aid, old age pen­ sions and direct relief. If the State Industrial Accident now have,” said Mr. Venable, ‘and from among the remainder, now commission expects to avoid payment represented by Democrats who of the state “ tithe ” it must look to Added impetus was given to the came in on the 1932 landslide, a the courts for relief. Attorney Gen- | sufficient number can be swung new state building pogram this week —«* to w give the u,w iirpuuucani com- back Republicans a corm when Governor Martin referred to eral Van Winkle has advised the — the state planning board the prob­ commission that in the absence of a, fortable majority in the new house. Supreme Court ruling to the contrary wh ”'h ■' m support Landon '------ after **-- <-•' which will his lem presented by the need for an ad­ election.” ALL WORK it must be assumed that the act re- ditional office building and a library ----------------- r building. While the probable coat of qfuiring self-supporting boards and Exports Drop Under New Deal GUARANTEED ■e"da«Uortak"Mak these buildings has been estimated at commission to pay a “tithe” into the Washington, D. C — During Pres­ For tea and coffee use $1,000,000 and $500,000 respectively general fund, is valid. The commis­ I ident Roosevelt's administration Alpine just as it is—"double rich.“ FREE sion had sought to evade the tithe on cotton exports decreased 33 per this is one of the features of the pro­ gram which the planning board is ex­ the ground that tl tja workmen’s com- cent, lard exports 83 per cent and ESTIMATES pected to develop in its study of the pension is a trust : fund and not sub- wheat exports 99 per cent, accord­ ing to department of commerce re ­ ject to state regulation. state’s needs. New buildings will ports. also necessitate the purchase of addi­ More than 80 law school graduates tional land and in this connection Largest Peacetime Deleit Governor Martin will present to the participated in the annual bar exam­ Washington, D. C.—The national inations here this week. This was a' next legislature the suggestion ad­ deficit of 4 billion 764 million dol­ U. E. McCLARY lars for the 1936 fiscal year, as re­ Radio Service by vanced by the capital architects that smaller class than usual. Last year Refrigerators, B . I the state acquire the four residential 103 applicants for admission to the ported by the treasury department «• West First St D. E. STRONG was the largest peacetime deficit blocks immediately north at the cap­ bar took the testa. I’hone 10-J in the history of the United States. ital site, two on either side of Sum­ 1x4 Tongue and Grooved Port Orford Flooring and Ceiling No Order Too Small—A Stick or a Carload FREE SPECIAL PREMIUM OFFER GLASS BAKING DI5H PIE PAN PIE ANO CAKE SERVER RADIO SERVICE KT First Na't Bank Bldg. mer street. The governor, however, Calling carda. SO tor 11.00. I