The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, March 04, 1943, Page 4, Image 4

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    rhe Sentinel
TWENTY YEARS AGO
(Taken from The Sentinel of Friday,
March S. 1923)
Remember Norton’s for all school
supplies.
s
Our friend. Editor McDaniel, of the
Coo« Bay Harbor, says he used the
first vacation he has taken in IS years
to go to Salem and see the legislature
In action, and do all he eould for the
Roosevelt highway.
To increas the the amount of rubber
for flivver tires, Henry Ford is said
to contemplate investing fifty mil­
lions In rubber plantations in South
and Central America and the Philip­
pine Islands.
Sixty years ago the
The following firm names appeared
in a Tlrade-at-Home one-page boost­
er advertisement: The Variety Store,
J. E. Quick, Coquille 1-aundry Co.,
The Rainbow, Henry Lorenz, Forbes,
Currie & Co., Hancock’s Coquille
Trading Co., Inc., The Liberty The­
atre (C. A. Gage), Highway Garage
and Coquille Service Station (Battey
& Richardson), Fuhrman's Pharmacy,
Graham's Garage, Long's Machine
Shop, K. E. Johnson Retail Lumber
Yard, The Candy Kitchen, Hudson's
Drug Store, The First National Bank,
Bolden A Kibble Millinery A Dress­
making, McNelly's Dairy, City Clean­
ers A Tailors (L. C. Newman), May-
belle Ford Indies Wear, The City
Meat Market, The Busy Comer,
The Coquille Valley Creamery,
Grade III War Tires.
We have
lots of them. Southwestern Motor
Cp. Car and Heme Supply Store.
Hare’s a i»ot one for’you. Senate
bill 274, it passed, would tax all con­
fectioneries, restaurants and grocery
stores 75 cents per ethploye, or a min­
imum of $2 a year to a maximum of
|25 a year for ail .such businesses
outside of Multnomah county. The
amounts would be paid to the state
department of agriculture as an in­
spection fee, and the money would go
to their fund. As if to say that such
businesses in the small towns of Ore­
gon didn't have trouble enough al­
ready.
Many cities now tax such
concerns tn augment their local rev­
enues and also have a sanitary inspec­
tion system; so why is such additional
legislation necessary, say many of
the lawmakers.
W'.'L
PAINT and COLOR Headquarters for
Srftftw in -W il 11 a ms P aints
GREGG HARDWARE
921 W. Front St.
to 'discourage development of sponge
iron as this would be competition with
their elaborate blast furnaces which
use another method.
In the first
world war everything was ready for
a new steel plant inf the vicinity of
Portland until a steel executive was
placed in charge of steel production
for the nation, and he promptly ve­
toed the Portland plan, asserting it
was unnecessary.
. State House, Salem, March 4—The
voters of Coos county made an ex­
cellent choice when they elected
Ralph C. Moose,.of Bandon, to tha,
lower house. Moore is one of the,
many freshmen members serving his
first term; however, he has proven
himself a veteran legislator. Seldom
taking the floor to make a speech,
which very often Is the failing of new
members who talk themselves out,
the new lawmaker from Coos county
commands and receives attention of
his colleagues when he has anything
to say. Flanked by that able veteran
of the senate, William E. Walsh, of
Marshfield, who is chairman of the
potent cAnunitlee on revision of laws
and considered one of the outstanding
members of th«' upper house, this duo
know how to gel things done. Moore
is chairman of the important commit­
tee on land use. Veteran observers
of this legislature rate the Coos
county delegation tops.
Phone M
Coquille, Ore.
The OPA has announced
that ALL Passenger Car Owners
may now have their tires recapped
without applying to the ration board.
You can have your whole set recapped in one day with
Goodyear's exclusive Grade r Camelback.
Chainlet L«dge No. 68