The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, October 23, 1936, Page 11, Image 11

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PAO« ELEVEN
1111
UNDER THE BLEACHERS
Red Devils Play Great
Eugene“Gene"
Laird
Republican Candidate
for
District Attorney
OF
Coos County
Born and reared in Coquille Valley; Acquainted with the
people and their problems
• • •
If I am elected, I propose to represent the people actively
and personally in all cases in which the County or State is a
party. In so doing I will prevent any and all illegal ex­
penditures.
I will establish and maintain such regular
office hours at the County Court in Coquille as are neces­
sary to the proper conduct of the office.
J
Wrestling Card Tonight
(Continued from Page One)
Dickie Trout, the well liked ex-saiior
from San Diego, will lock horns with
Jack Lipscomb, otherwise known as
the Indiana Hoodlum. Lipscomb be­
lieves that a sock on the chin is worth
two on the foot and patterns his
wrestling along that line. Truot uses
a variety of holds and should give the
Indiana Hoosier all he can take.
In the preliminary an unknown
who calls himself the Dark Secret
will go against Whitey Wahlberg of
Detroit. Just how much ability the
Secret has can be estimated from the
fact that he has lost but one match
since he came unannounced to Ore­
gon two weeks ago. The Secret takes
advantage of his hidden identity to
dish out plenty of rough stuff to hrs
opponent. He wears a white mask all
the time and goes about in white
shorts.
It should be a wild and wooly eve­
ning, folk^ and the general admission I
seats will be first come, first served. I 1
Body and Fender repair work done
Reserved seats may be obtained be-
by experienced mechanics. Our body
fore the match at Bill's’ Place.
painter is an expert. Let us prove
we have the best of repair service.
.Calling carda. SO tor Bl 00.
Southwestern Motor Co.
lltf
(By Mark Seeley)
North Bend’s roaring Bulldogs
In the event you don't know it as
feated the Coquille Red Devils, 19
t, the Coquille Red Devils are not
12, last Friday in a game replete
inculded in the list of undefeated
with thrills and which placed the vic­
tors up in the top of the heap in the teams\ But say what you may about
scramble for the county champion­ this. th\ locals have reaped as much
praise iri) defeat as they would have
ship.
The Bulldog lair has been the scene
Put it any way you want
of many wild contests, but few ex­ to, but as
yours truly what rings
ceeded the battle staged there on Fri­ true to m
act that Coach Vic
day, for plenty of everything which Adams of North
lis Bull-1
goes hand in hand with football to dogs beat the bes
leven he
make the game an entire day of has even seen represent Coquille, as
thrills for the crowd.
well as many other like comments
Both teams marched up the field from officials and others, who seem'
by means of plays which included to know a few thnigs about the great
everything in the books. The North sport of rah rah and such.
Bend team was paced by a fast, hard­
Yes, indeed, it hurt to hear that
hitting ball carrier, named Cutlip. Coach Hal Hatton and his lads faced
This player lugged Jhe pigskin almost defeat. I wanted the team to win as
continually against the Red Devills much as anyone, but not for one min­
and was able to gq places often.
ute have the Red Devils lost any (
Allan Bailey packed the heavy load backing from this ignoble personage,
of mail for Coquille, he being as­ who resides under the bleachers.
sisted by Kenny La Branch and Curt
This afternoon the team is meet­
Williams. The trio was directed at ing Myrtle Point and I think that the
the Bulldog wall by Quarterback Red Devils -will win. A defeat hasn’t [
Jimmy Richmond, behind a line undermined morale at all and the
boys are out after that top rung in!
which cleared wide holes.
North Bend won the game in the county football as much as ever. Nor
final minute, it being then that the has defeat dimmed the hopes of the
j winning touchdown was put over Coquille fans, the same fans who are '
The score was even up, at 12 to 12, really talking football for the first
when the final drive culminated. It time in years.
was a figh^ up to the end but the
It's a hard-playing Red Devils
Bullodgs had the power.
team and a clean-playing Red Devil ,
In the first half Coquille scored team.
first when Everett Smith received a
I dislike looking ahead before the ,
pass which ended in the touchdown. current seaosn is over, but I do hope j
North Bend came back to tie it up, that Coach Hatton is greeted by a .
at 6 to fl, by the halftime.
whole flock of veterans next fall. This
The Bulldogs scored first in the year he moved in on a new scene,
third quarter, and this time it was settled on the ground floor and start­
the Red Devils who came from be­ ed the up climb. Let’s keep going up
hind to even it up.
the ladder with Hal Hatton and his
Red Devil football.
Several Coquille American Legion
Auxiliary members were guests of the
Marshfield Unit Monday evening.
A lovely potluck dinner was en­
joyed at 7:00 o'clock and a business
meeting attended afterwards.
Those motoring over were Mes-
dames Don McCune, Clifford Kern, R.
S. Wheeler, Lee Hand, and Rock Rob­
ison.
The regular sewing meeting of Co­
quille Unit will be held Tuesday af­
ternoon, Oct. 27, at the home of Mrs
Edna Kem.
and
State Land Board farms
ranches for sale, low prices and easy
terms. Apply at the office of James
Watson, Attorney for the State Land
Board.
The First National Bank
Building. Coquille, Oregon.
tf
TAX
RAIDS
£> FARMS
lion can. sian iti
Home and farm owners are now 46 MIL*
LION Dollars behind in their taxes!
One out of three homes and farms in Ore*
gon are subject to sale for taxes! And
still the burden mounts! YOUR HOME
MAY BE NEXT!
These headlines are only warnings of
what is in store for you unlettyou ¡top it/
The TAX LIMITATION Bill on the
ballot November 3rd is YOUR Bill; your
,way to call a halt on needless extrava­
gance; your way to demand a voice in
the ever increasing amount of taxes lev­
ied on your property. ITS UP TO YOU1
Bob Braddock, star back on the
Uuniversity of Oregon football team,
once had a hard time breaking into
the lineup of the Ashland Normal
eleven. Yes, this strange fact is true,
occurring in 1934, when as a fresh­
man there. Bob was only a second
team player until he got a break that
put him on the varsity.
Braddock made a good showing in
a practice tilt between first and sec­
ond teams before the season opened,
but when the schedule got under way
he was decidedly not on the reserve
outfit. Anyway, on that day Bob tore
up lots of football ground and be­
cause he continued to do so through­
out the season Prink Callison obtain­
ed him for coast conference play.
At last the grapplers are here
again. Tonight the boys who give the
fans more entertainment than Laurel
and Hardy will throw themselves
around the Community Building.
Lined up this time are Mr. Williams,
Mr. Sugai, Mr. Lipscomb, Mr. Trout.
Mr. Wahlberg and Mr. Dark Secret,
the Unknown. Six fast-moving mid­
dleweights are there, and rough, tough
boys at the same time. Master Wil­
liams is especially adapted to the
gentlemanly art of punching a guy in
the nose, biting him on the leg, or
rubbing popcorn in his eyes. In Don
Sugai, Williams may meet someone
who will not give in to such treat­
ment.
Promoter Harry Elliott had prom­
ised to put on a show two weeks ago
but use of the Community Building
by the Red Cross stymied him.
Just for fun let's guess some out­
comes:
Coquille will beat Myrtle Point.
North Bend will do the same to
Bandon.
Southern Cal. over Stanford.
Washington goes along to beat Cal­
ifornia.
U. C. L. A. over Oregon State.
Oregon will defeat Washington
State.
Yes, sir.
Officers Training Meeting
An officers’ training meeting will
be held in Coquille at the city hall
on October 30. Thia msating la held
to train the officer! at any organiza­
tion in the county on how to conduct
a meeting according to Robert'! rule!
or order. Officer! from any organi­
zation such as local grange!. Boy
Scouts, school student-body officers,
woman's
clubs, extension
units,
lodges, and fraternities are all wel­
come to come and learn correct par­
liamentary procedure.
Mrs. Azalea Sager, state home dem­
onstration leader, from Corvallis, Will
be here to conduct this meeting wljjch
will begin at 10:30 in the morning and
lasts until 3:00 p. m. Training and
duties will be given for presidents.
and
-i-vice-presidents,
secretaries,
reasurers or organizations.
Royal Neighbors Notes
'JvY
yg
JOHN A. BIEGGER
DODGE and PLYMOUTH
Dealers
New 1937
Dodge - Plymouth
Now on Display
Final Cleanup of USED CARS
24 Hr. Wrecking Car Service
_ Gas, Oil, Tires and Storage
344 Front St.
Coquille
Phone 103J
24 Hr. Shop Service
Visit Marshfield Auxiliary Unit
ß.üc/gefto
IW» ’>rW-u1 oe«w“
I
to LimiT propertü trxes
3IDXYE5
Mrs. Jack Leach. The local Neigh­
Ask for Cow Bell Dairy cream and
bors are busy, making quits for some milk, the only milk and cream made
of the Bandon needy. Refreshments safe by pasteurization.
were served at the close of the ses­
Radio tubes i nd light globes, also
sion.—Press Correspondent.
your tubes tested free at Norton’s.
Calling All Women
Women have a definite responsi­
bility tn the 1936 presidential cam-!
paign. Whether they are housewives,1
or occupied with industrial or pro- ;
fessional activities, they represent a
forceful factor in spreading the truth
about campaign issues.
They can.1
and should, contribute their services
to the education of all voters in all *
groups.
Women are the purchasers of al- i
most every item in American family,
living. Therefore, they are in a posi­
tion to know at first-hand what in­
creased taxation—present and even­
tual—means to the average house­
hold.. Alert thinking women know
'.hat the present spendthrift policy has
caused increased prices, and thus
lessened the chance of getting the full
value of a dollar.
They are learning at every tick of
the clock that the most subtle form
of taxation is the “hidden” kind—the
kind disguised from each of us. What
ire these hidden taxes, and why are
they? They are taxes concealed in '
the purchase of'every household item.
They are in your daily bill for bread,
clothing, medicine, gasoline, tele­
phone, and sundry other needs. We
have these taxes, solely because the
federal government expenditures, as
■ndulged In by the New Deal regime,
are mounting daily.
Many women know that bread
'axes amount to about two cents a
loaf. Similar tax raida occur on
other necessities. But not all voters
are conscious of the heavy "hidden
texes” loaded by the Roosevelt Ad­
ministration on each of us. To edu­
cate voters on thia one issue only is
a task for which women are well
qualified. It is a challenge to each
one. There is one way to remedy this
tax situation—rid the country of a,
jselesa,
wasteful
administration,
which has (jurdened thrift-loving
people with tremendous texes, Vote
for Landon and Knox.
HEART FAILURE 2'/2
TIMES GREATER IN
FAT FOLKS
Says Medical Authority
Insurance companies
constantly
warn too much fat puts an added
strain on the heart—overweight peo­
ple are more liable to high blood
pressure, indigestion, diabetes, kid­
ney. liver and heart disorders.
So if you want to help yourself live
to a ripe old age and enjoy robust
health get rid of that dangerous bur­
den of fat this easy safe way:
Cut down on fat meats, butter,
cream and sugary sweets. Eat more
fruit and vegetables. Take a half
teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a
glass of hot water first thing every
morning to aid proper elimination.
Kruschen helps important body or­
gans to work normally—it eliminates
excess poisons and waste from both
UPPER and LOWER bowel—insures
blissful daily bowel action—no purg­
ing or harsh cathartics—helps keep
you feeling fine and fit day in and
out. Jar lasts for weeks and costs
but few cents.
The Royal Neighbors held their
■egular meeting Wednesday night, in
the W. O. W. hall. Mrs. Ada Lemon,
district deputy, and several Neigh­
bors of the Myrtle Point Camp at­
tended this meeting to make plans
for the joint meeting Nov. IB.
A
‘White Elephant” sale waa held and
Keys made for all locks. Stevens
proved a success. One more applica­
tion for memberhsip was accepted Cash Hardware. Coquille. Ore.
and this candidate, along with the one
Dr. C. O. Stem, Chiropractor. 292
now in waiting, will be initiated Nov­
22 tf
.
ember IB. The prize was awardsd to Moulton St., phone MJ.
/
I
r
VOTF FOR
Ben R. Chandler
Republican for
STATE SENATOR
Coos and Curry counties
face major problems during
the coming year, Reconstruc­
tion of fire-swept Bandon, re­
seeding programs, debt and
tax adjustments in fire areas,
plans for conservation of val­
uable timberiands—these are
but a few of the problems
which likely will have their
hearings in the halls of the
legislature at Salem.
Coos
and Curry counties need a
man of ability and experience
to represent them as state
senator. Ben R. Chandler, for
36 years a resident of Coos
county, has long been known
as a keen, conscientious, cap­
able man—a man who knows
YOUR past, present and fu­
ture needs.
Choose
Chandler
November 3rd
Coos and Curry republicans
are invited to a rally and din­
ner next Tuesday night, Oct.
27, at Hotel Coos Bay, North
Bend, 6:30 o’clock.
(pd. adv. Chandler
for Senator Club)