Image provided by: Coquille Public Library; Coquille, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 6, 1936)
« . y; « *'*■ ■ If ■ ’/■ V . ■ • , ; ’.7 ■ î ■ ■' * ■ . ... /■', I' » f •' • • ;*'• • uzstions and protests about the new he total state revenue that can toe taxes. The taxes start, for instance, at one raised within'the cunstitu .onal liml- a « mo ruta te a mm tmm per cent and gradually increase. Thus ftation : for 1937 from both income and H. A. YOUNG aad M. D. GRIMES an employee making only $20 a week property taxes amounts to $3,640,520 I’ubiishaag will, beginning January 1, have 20, i which represents an inc. ease of six H. A. YOUNG. Editer cento deducted from his pay each per cent over the current levy. Rev- week, for bls employer is forced to! I enues from ineome taxes alone this Subscription Rates collect the lax for the government. 1 ! year will total an $3,300.000 this year One Yea»----- ---------- $2.00 Eventually, that deduction from the when the returns are all in. This Six Months------------------------- 100 Three Months------------ 60 520 employee's pay will reach 60 wMl represent an increase of more No subscription taken unless paid than $700,000 over the revenues from for in advance. This rule to impera- cento. Simultaneously, each employer will this same source last year. If a simi ie paying an equivalent amount. This lar increase can be depended on next Advertising Ratos ax on the employer will be reflected year bringing income tax collections Display advertising 30 cents pel n an increased cost of living, for the up to $4,000,000 thia will more than inch. No advertisement inserted foi less than 50 cents. Reading notice» mployer has no choice but to include cover the state tax within the consti tutional limitation without the neces 10 cents per line. No reading notice n his sales price the taxes he pays. or advertisement of any kind, insert It sounds bad enough to say simply sity for a levy against property. ed for less than 25 cento. hat the government eventually will The 1936 state levy against proper ty amounted to $884,640. If this can Entered at the Coquille Postoffice as collect each week tor each $20 salary, specially since nobody has any be entirely eliminated, as now seem« Second Class Mail Matter. - promise of a pension under it before provable, plus the $650,00J levy for OffiM Garner W. First and Willard st 942. It is worse when it is consid- the World War Veterans State Aid red that pensions will range from commission which iia^ already been Thank heaven, it’s over! We can 15 to a maximum of $85 a month, waived Oregon property owners are all settle down now and relax and en nd that a man wilj have to earn not due ’or tax relief in excess of $1,- joy the strike which gives promise of ess than $200 a month for forty years ¿50,000 in 1937 from the state alone. W ____ *■ being the most harmful disaster n order to collect the maximum I 1 ¿mount. In addition, statistician* ! Cost of Tuesday’s election to the which ever hit the Pacific coast. dd another 60 cento which the em . taxpayers of Oregon was estimated at One thing was demonstrated by the ployer will have to pay every week j ■ approximately $80,000 by Dave results at the close of the campaign. on the same $20 salary for unemploy- ' O’Hara, elections clerk in the state Criticism of the administration in .r.ent insurance. And the benefits department. Of this amount ap power by the opposition gets nowhere under the unemployment insurance proximately $23,000 is to be paid by with the average voter. t$e slate for printing and mailing the ire decidedly more indefinite. voters’ pamphlets, poll books and “We move to make it unanimous,” other election supplies, and $57,000 says the state of Maine. “Second the by the several counties for printing, motion," chimes in the green moun the ballots, wages to election officiate tain state of Vermont, and io. Presi and rental of polling places. O'Hara dent Roosevelt has what no other points out that approximately 12,190 president in U. S. history since the judges and clerks were employed in days of Washington has had, a unan the 1625 precincts throughout the imous endorsement in the electoral slate, including those employed on college where presidents are chosen. the counting boards in the larger city Oregon school districts clipped an precincts. BANTA CLAUS WAS NO DRINKER aggregate of $2,229,521 off their deb* Rallying to a demand to “clean up” load in the past two years, a survey Plans for the refinancing of Ban holiday liquor advertising, alcohol by State Treasurer Rufus Holman re don’s $277,000 municipal debt are control boards in a number of states veals. The school debt load—bond now being worked out by Fred are on record today pledging their md warrants—which totalled $19.- Paulus, deputy state treasurer, in co support to a campaign to eliminate 145,871 on July 1, 1934, hpd been re operation with a committee of the Santa Claus and Bible characters duced to $17,646,349 by July 1 of this Bandon city council. With the city’« Let us show you our Lumber Stocks in warehouse from beer, wine, and liquor advertise year. assessed valuation substantially re and on dock at the Smith ments during the forthcoming Christ Twenty-five of the state's 36 coun duced by the recent disastrous fire mas season. ties reported progress in the reduc it is expected that bond holders will Wood-Products Plant “The attitude of this board,” wrote tion of their school debts during the be asked for a moratorium on interest George W. Offutt, chairman of the biennium ranging from a low of $449 payments and a reduction of the in alcoholic control board of the Dis in the case of Union county to $1,- terest rate if not an actual scaling trict of Columbia, in response to an 655,238 for Multnomah county. Elev down of the principal amounts of. appeal from Ethel Hubler, member of en counties, on the other hand, show some of tiie bond issues. t the National Temperance Council, “is increased debt loads at the end of the definitely against any advertising two year period. Of this latter class Oregon’s new $2,500,000 capital1 We carry a complete line of 1x3 to 2x12 No. 1 and No. 2 Common copy which links liquor to the Bible, Marion leads with an increase of building in miniature is now on dis-1 Cedar, suitable for all building purposes, surfaced or rough. or which pictures Santa Claus dealing $556,536 in its school indebtedness, play in the lobby of the state office or carrying in any wise alcoholic bev largely accounted for by new bond is building. Consult the Retail Department for our low prices on Cedar. The architect’s model erages.” sues to finance new school buildings which depicts in detail the new build in the Salem district. ing as it will appear when completed WILL HAVE NO UNION Lincoln county with only $8800 of is valued at $1500. The real news behind the news in bond and warrant debt to shown to the struggle to unionize the steel in- have the lightest school debt load The stete liquor control commission _ ____ _____ _ „ duriry by the Committee for In- with Jefferson’s 822,692 ranking sec- reports' profits of more than $1,028,- academy, seminary, college, univer- < dustrial Organization, headed by ond and Gilliam’s $47,449.05, third. | 000 during the first nine months of sity, or other educational institution John L. Lewis, is that the ' Among counties which report an the current year. within the State of Oregon. Each of C. I. O. set out boldly to mus increase in the school debt load dur ‘.he four prize winners will also re ter the steel workers Into a union, ing the two years are Benton, Clacka Robert L. Johnson, president of the ceive a handsome bronze medal. whereas in the past they had consis mas. Crook. Lake, Linn. Marion, Polk Civil Service Reform League of The conditions governing the com tently declined to enroll. After and Yamhill. Those which succeeded America, recently announced the or petition are as follows: months of rallies, with hundreds of in reducing this debt burden during ganization of a nation-wide campaign (1) The essay submitted in compa organizers in the field, the drive has th« biennium include Columbia, Coos, for the adoption of a constitutional ction must not exceed two thousand Licensed Carrier Coquille been an almost total failure. Now Curry, Deschutes. Gilliam. Hood Riv amendment to eliminate the spoils words in length. V < the C. I. O. gives Indication that it is er, Jackson, Josephine. ‘Klamath, system from government service. He (2) The essay may be in handwrit ready to back out gracefully if the Lane, Lincoln, Morrow, Sherman, stated that 38 per cent of the national ing or in typewritten form, preferably ' ditorium, 235 S. W. Market Street, Federation will agree to try and pick Union, Wasco and Washington. tax bill goes to pay 3,006,000 public upon paper of commercial letter size, . Portland, Oregon, not later than up the pieces. Apparently there are servants throughout the country, of either ruled or unruled, the several I Tuesday, March ¡6, 1937. State police presented arrest tickets whom 2,000,000 are selected "because _ two reasons back of this failure; first, ______ ________________________ _ ' sheets being numbered consecutively (t) All essays submitted in compe- the steel industry’s per hour wages to 685 erring motorists during Sep they are faithful servants of one po- and written on one side only, with i tition will be numbered and sub-1 are higher than in 1929. Most plants tember, resulting in fines totalling lltical party or another.” blank space of about one and one- ■ mitted, without the names of the have their own plant organization $7655 and jail sentences aggregating quarter inches at top and left-hand I writers or other identifying marks, to through which the men deal direct- nearly seven years. Druken drivers, Historical Essay This Year margin. , three judges selected by the under- ly with their employers in a demo- of whom 38 were apprehended during i (3) The essay shall be accompanied : signed committee. to Be “ B. L. E. Bonneville** cratic manner through delegates of the month, were the hardest hit by by a separate sheet containing the (7) All competitive essays will be their own choosing who know their the courts, drawing fines amounting The Oregon Historical Society has name and post office address of the judged according to their general to $2943 and jail sentences totalling particular problems. That is the real selected “B. L. E. Bonneville” as the writer, date of his or her birth, and merit and excellence; but the judges basic reason. But also working 1738 days. Warning slips were pre subject for the 1837 C. C. Beekman the name Of the school attended. will also take into consideration, in against the C. I. O. was the fact that sented to 7258 motorists during the essay contest. The prizes offered are (4) There shall also be delivered passing thereon, neatness of manu the steel workers resented the intru month. four in number, viz., first, sixty dol- with the essay a certificate signed by script, accurate orthography, correct sion of so-called "carpetbaggers” 'ars; second, fifty doiairs; third, for the principal or a teacher of the edu grammar and composition, and purity The state’s cut out of betting on from coal, garment «nd printing in cational institution attended, stating and clarity of diction. dustries who knew nothing of sf^el. hone and dog races this year ty dollars; and fourth, thirty dollar«; SINUS TROUBLE, CATARRH, and will be awarded tor the best four thnt tile writer of the essay is a stu The Oregon State Library in Salem HEADCOLDS, HAY FEVER, Steel workers as a class are proud of amounted to slightly more than $100,- original essays on the above named dent attending the same. has a reading list of bibliography up- CATARRHAL DEATNESS their trade They are the “he-men” 000, according to a report of the state (5) In order to be considered in subject written and submitted by ■ on the above named subject, which Each of the SATIS!SCIOR* RESULTS OR MONET BACK of industry and are inclined to look racing commission ■competition the essay must be de girls or boys over fifteen years of age | will be sent to any Oregon student on state’s 38 counties will receive $702 78 down on workers in other trades and und-r eighteen yean of age, at livered, by mail or in person, to the I request. Fuhrman’s Pharmacy The steel Industry has long been a for fair purposes out of this fund, the tending any public or private school. Oregon Historical Society, Public Au- plum sought by labor leaders After Pacific International Livestock ex Jg.1. I many years the A. F. of L. has never position and the State Fair will each been able to muster more than a receive $31.749, the Pendleton Round- small minority of the nation’s work Up and eastern Oregon Livestock ers. *■ The total had dropped a few show, $3000 each and the Northwest years age below ten per cent and has ern Turkey Show, $1200. risen only slightly since then. In the Old age pensions to aged residents steel industry are 500,000 workers, receiving high wages. At $1.50 a of Oregon averaged $20.90 in Septem month dues, they would drop $9,000,- ber. according to a report by the state 1 000 a year into the coffers of unions relief committee, accounting for the And in those figures is the answer distribution of $238.436 among 1486 Eat More Butter recommend. Any one at all familiar to attempts of the C. I. O. to grab individuals eligible to old age assis Scientists have proven what ths with food science will recognize at them off, and the Federation’s de tance. One-half the money was sup cooks long ago discovered—that there once that butter is classed as a vita sire to retain whatever chance there plied by the federal government, the i is no substitute for butter. Butter min sufficient fat. It is a concen might be of bringing them into the state and the several counties putting has held a place in the human diet trated source of vitamin A—the vita up the other half. union, slight as the chance is. since pre-historic times. Its deli min needed for growth and health. < i vivM*? vuç IIIUBL rious flavor itvo has iiiauc made IL it the most An excellent example of its impor BEGIN TO PAY JAN. 1 Evidence that hundreds of visitaros popular of food fats. Yet, it has re- tance is found in one of the classiic Kornrnr» permanent nnrmhHhnt resi- mrined _ j i . ... . íe- becon,e for m<^¿ro scientists The Potomac river is quiet and Í tales of vitamin history. We all know within its banks, but there’s a flood dents of the 7.7 state is contained in re- vea i that the vitamins in —- :----- .—:----------- veal that the vitamins in butter, butter, milk milk that Danish butter is famous and in the national capital just the same. plies to questionnaires being returned and crcjam are necessary for health casks of it are shipped all over the It’s mall—protests and questions that to thejravel bureau of the state high- and growth. Moreover, the vitamin world. Before the world war when threaten to swamp one of thè new way departments. Buyers of farms ' content content of of butter butter is is intimately intimately con- con- the Danish butter trade with other federal agencies. , ' predominate among the visiting tour- „ected wlth thé delicious flavpr nations was especially brisk, the chil It seems that after five months, iris who have succumbed to the at- which has persuaded cooks for more dren of Denmark suffered from a se many of the nation’s 26,000,000 em tractions offered by the state and de- than a thousand years to use butter rious eye trouble. Then came the ployees who will be affected have cided to become permanent reri- in preparing their mori appetizing naval blockade restricting exports begun to find out what the new so dents. • « | dishes and Danish children had whole milk cial security act’s taxes will do to I Fats muri be included in any instead of skimmed milk to drink, their pay envelopes - Oregon property owners may rea- proper diet but fats are clearly di- and decidedly more butter for their The social security board already sonably expect a substantial reduc- vided into two groups—vitamin suf faced a tremendous task in finger lion in the tax levy for state purposes ficient fata and vitamin deficient fata, bread. Their eye trouble disappeared printing or assigning numbers to the next year. In fact present indications Officiai records ' show that th« con- because the general supply of butter 28.000,000 employees by January 1. are that the entire levy against prop- : sumption of vitamin sufficient fats is and cream gave them the needed vit Now It la up to ita neck in mail— erty within the six per cent limitation. far below what competent scientists amin A. The Sentinel COQUILLE, OREGON All Grades Red Cedar Shingles Douglas Fir Flooring & Ceiling l x 3 to 1 X 12 Clear Kiln Dried Douglas Fir Finish 1x4 Tongue and Grooved Port Orford Flooring and Ceiling We Carry Portland Cement No Order Toó Small—A Stick or a Carload BENHAM’S TRANSFER ANYWHERE FOR HIRE WOOD and COAL HTW a Y/ TO HMLTM by ADA.R,-MAYN E OREGON DAIRY COUNCIL THE ADOPTED BABY I *■