■k PAGE FOUR The Sentinel PabUaban H. A. YOUNG, Editar One Year ____ $2. Six Months.----------------------------- 1- Three Montha................. Entered at the Second Class — J Postoffice Matter. as Offioe Corner W. a pati • * A WINNING TICKET NAMED BY G. O. fr. The enthusiasm in the press of the nation, and locally by words at praise, which followed the nomination of Wendell Willkie for president and Senator Chas. L. McNary for vice president, by the republican conven­ tion in Philadelphia last Thursday and Friday is in marked contrast to the apathy which followed the G. O. P. convention four years ago. The republican party has a ticket of which the members can well be proud and one which will bring all the republicans who slipped off the reservation during the past eight years back into the fold. The re­ ported jubilation of democratic lead­ ers over the nomination is more a whistling to keep up their courage than anything else, for Willkie whipped the New Deal to a standstill a year or so ago and he believes he can do it again. Commenting on the nomination last week a prominent democrat of the valley referred to Willkie as a turncoat It to true he voted for Roosevelt eight years ago, but like thousands upon thousands of demo­ crats and probably like thousands of republicans, he has seen the error and like them will not repeat it We of Oregon are proud also of the fact that Senator McNary who has represented Oregon in the upper branch of congress for so many years was selected, practically without op­ position, to be Mr. Willkie’s running mate. They make a strong team and the New Dealers have cause to fear the November1 returns. WATER METER FOR EVERY FAMILY WOULD BE EQUITABLE Coquille who to charged a minimum of two dollars per month, it to diffi­ cult to see the point of view of land­ lords who may own one or two or four houses or apartments and insist they are entitled to a master meter by which the water used by all their tenants to measured, and at the min­ imum price if the reading is not more than 7,000 gallons per month. In the late fall, winter and early spring months no household of three, four or five will ordinarily use the 7,000 gallons but they have to pay for that minimum amount, and it to not justice to the majority of home own­ ers to let other homes off for less. • Fragment» at Fact and Fancy • he win i F. r ------ ~~-------- ~- TWENTY YEARS AGO A 6000 HKI la A 6000 TMM H. A. YOUNG and M. D. GRIMES a. -.... i: We hope names mean something in the coming events of the next few months. Wendell L/Wiilkie to known as “Win" to his close associates, which to a good omen. And Win­ ston Churchill, now bead of the British government, also has the lucky “Win” in his name. Although John Gunther in “Inside Europe" says no one ever dreamed of calling Churchill anything but Winston, we think he meant that his surname was not used, for it is our recollection that somewhere we have read that his nickname was “Win." Speaking of auguries, a little over a year ago we read that Hitler’s sooth­ sayer foretold that his star would be in the ascendancy until September, 1M0. Not because we place any cre­ dence in the prophecy do we mention it, but for the reason that we are hoping Hitler's faith is such that he will falter and fail in a few months due to lack of self-confidence. (Taken From The Sentinel of Friday, July 9, 1920) J. F. Schroeder came home from Portland carrying the badge of an Oregon Piooeer, having resided in Oregon for over sixty years. His brother-in-law, Vale N. Perry, who came early in the forties to now, we believe, the oldest member of the Society. that of the $3 head of cattle exhibited fully half were from the Coquille val­ ley. Sheriff Gdge tumod $21,020 over to County Treasurer Dimmick as the tax collectione for the month of June. John Stanley and Stanley Emery started Wednesday afternoon in the former’s bug for San Francisco with The county court has been in ses­ the idea of staying there. sion here since Wednesday morning. That airplane mail service to It has provided for the organization of the Coaledo drainage district and Marshfield last Saturday night got taken further action in regard to the stalled at Albany and again at Eu­ construction of the North Bank road. gene and was finally brought in by the afternoon train. I There has been talk at various Bringing up ihe water question and times about building a new Methodist church here, and this week we have the absolute necessity of using Dutch to chronicle another step towards that John water during the dry season, consummation. Last Saturday night Mayor Johnson stated that a chlorin­ and Sunday morning the official ator for purifying the water there board of the church met with Bishop could be installed tor $700, to which Sometimes Providence looks out DuBoae and Presiding Elder Fenton it was sarcastically added by a coun­ for fools, little children—and repub­ and decided to make a drive for funds cilman, “The people will go crazy if we put chemicals in the water.” lican conventions. Willkie and Mc­ for the work. Nary are the answer to the grand old There will be a meeting of the When the ladies of Coquille are re­ party's prayers. It seems too good quested to put anything over, there is business men and citizens of Coquille to be true! no question but that it will be well at the court house next Wednesday Recently having the opportunity to done and the parade last Monday was evening at eight o’clock for tl^pur- post of considering the question of look over an issue of the Sentinel but another proof of this statement published about twenty years ago, we The Woman's Club had been asked by securing a landing field for aero­ planes and also a camping ground for were interested in two or three edi­ the Legion to arrange for the parade, automobiles. The provision of a race torial opinions of that time. Appar­ the result being the largest and best track for automobiles on the same ently the first world war glorified that Coquille has ever witnessed. . . best business float ground will also be discussed.—Com­ spending as much as the more recent Prizes were: depression has done for the editorial Knowlton’s Drug Store; fraternal mittee. comment was: “The American people float Loyal Order of Moose; best dee­ Theodore Roosevelt was assistant are regaining their poise and begin­ orated private car, J. J. Bateman with secretary of the navy and later be­ Mr. Malehorn driving; most comical ning to recover from the nerve strain came vice president and president. of the world war. Thrift is again be­ character, A. T. Boldon. Franklin D. Roosevelt is assistant ginning to be esteemed a virtue; and J. L. Smith is quite enthusiastic secretary of the navy and candidate it is becoming to be realized that the way to have more things to not to over the success of the stock show at for vice president, but the parallel Marshfield on the Fourth. He says will end there. produce fewer things." Thus the doctrine of scarcity apparently had been tried and found wanting two decades before the new dealen again fumbled with it Another editorial: “Then must be something stable and abiding in gov­ ernment, industry and the social or­ der. There has been too much of a disposition in recent years ... to ques­ tion every institution that has grown up with our modern civilization and to consider none of the eternal verities sacred. What the American people »spf tally need to to ‘hold fast to that which to good.’ " That need to pos­ sibly greater today than it was twenty years ago. We have seen a govegp- ment in Washington which placed ex­ pediency ahead of honesty and pa­ tronage ahead of welfare of the peo- pie. In the third item from this file of other days, we find an article about a new caliber machine gun, practically soundless, with a capacity of eleven thousand shots a minute. This gun may be outdated now so far as we know; at least the dosing paragraph of the story expressed ideas which we have recently been forced to discard: “We can hardly imagine any ruler to ever again going to be ao fatuous as to deliberately pick a quarrel with Uncle Sam. Probably the world will never again produce such a fool as William Hohenzollern." Pondering the above, possibly it to correct after all. Even though the kaiser may have been called a fool. Hitler cannot be so labeled. How­ ever, Hitler is infinitely worse and his name will be lynomymous with per­ fidy, treachery and ruthlessness for generations to come. Due to the false ideals he has forced upon his people and the human misery and suffering for which he to responsible, he to the antichrist of the 20th century. 1 ■ .■J.1 . i ■ :f-t ' * • fete? / liôiüïïô IBS have found two men more sharply contrasted than their 1940 nominees. For five days McNary reiterated he would not be a candidate for vice president; and yielded only when he was drafted. Here to the republican ticket: Will- kie voted for Roosevelt in 1932, sub­ scribing $190 for his campaign; changed his registration only four years ago. McNary, republican lead­ er in the senate, suported most of the new deal legislation — AAA, NRA, social security, aetc.; finds the demo­ cratic administration gradually com­ ing around to the McNary-Haugen farm bill which McNary succeeded in passing twice and which was ve­ toed by Coolidge. Finally, the re­ publican candidate for vice president is thought so much of by Mr. Roose- vert that he is invited to the White House for consultation, and because of his legislative record the demo­ cratic spellbinders will be unable to attack him. Washington, D. C., July 1—John Nance Garner, vice president since 1833, was one of the first to con­ gratulate Oregon’s Charley McNary on his nomination for vice president on the Republican ticket. At the opening of the baseball season each year Garner always invited McNary to occupy his box while, from the adjoining box, President Roosevelt threw out the first ball. Most of the republican senators were at the con­ vention (Senator Holman was at the Things are moving so rapidly in the seaside in Oregon), leaving only dem­ national capital these days that in- ocratic senators in town, and a dozen of these hurried to McNary's office to congratulate him on the nomination but, of course, did not wish him luck —that would be expecting too much. The United States senate to a sort of club, like all clubs, some members are not like others and are “not talk­ ing,” but one and all take a personal pride in seeing one of their number accorded a distinguished honor. Washington’s Bone and Schwellenbach lost no time in felicitating McNary, for in him the Pacific northwest and the entire west were recognized. [side news becomes stale over night. On the chance that the story will not break before this to printed, however, it has been tipped to a few adminis­ tration senators that the White House is prepared to send up a messaMt re­ questing another seven billion dollars for national defense. Before its re- n4as last week congress appropriated five billion six hundred million, thus if the report is correct, congress will be asked to vote almost fifteen bil- Uon dollars this year for national de­ fense. After thinking of this all-time high for defense, remember that it all must be paid for from the pockets of the American people. Several high ranking diplomats who have the ear of the president are strongly urging a naval deal with Japan to keep Herr Hitler out of the Pacific. The combined navies of the United States and Japan would more than match anything in Europe and could forestall any grab of Pa­ cific possessions. Japan has express­ ed a desire to maintain the status quo in the Far East and to anxious to con­ tinue friendly relations with the United States, and has made over­ tures in that direction. Northwest canners may be using silver lined containers for fruits and vegetables. There to a shortage of tin and the chief source of supply to the Dutch East Indies. Tin to also an essential war material and a gov­ ernment official has suggested that silver-plated containers be used by canneries. Keys made for all locks. Stevens Cash Hard ware. Coquille. Ore. tf Eleven Antelope Kids Being Raised In Eastern Oregon Next fall thousands of Oregon citizens will be able to view a group of pronghorns, commonly known as antelope, a specie of quadruped that once was almost extinct. At present eleven little kids are being cared for at the Ontario Game Farm and the task of raising these little fellows to a delicate one indeed Five times daily the antelope are being fed from bottles filled with a specially prepared formula, but be­ fore the summer to ended they will be weaned and required to hustle for food in a ten acre field at the game farm. The month old pronghorns have as their custodian, Don Devlin, an em­ ployee of the Oregon State Game Commission, who was one of a party of Oregon and Washington game workers who captured a number of the little kids on the Hart Mountain game refuge in Lake county. Incidentally, the kids must be captured practically at the very moment that they are dropped be­ cause almogt from birth they are so fleet that it would be unable to catch them even with the use of a horse. When they have grown to maturity, a number of these antelope will be placed on exhibit at the Salem State Fair, the Pacific International Expo­ sition, and such other places as the commission places wildlife exhibits Thus all Oregonians may become as well acquainted with this interesting, specie of desert wildlife as are the ranchers of Malheur, Lake and Harney counties. LOOK (¿I ECZEMA BEFORE and 12 Days AFTER TREATMENT WITH COLUSA NATURAL OIL Just as it coases from the ground in Colusa County, California, which is credited by other users with producing relatively u remarkable results as above pictured in relieving tori, tatioa of external... PSORIASIS.. 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