The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, August 19, 1943, Page 3, Image 3

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the Beyers home Monday evening. Members attending were Donna Dean ■“
Mrs. Smith, -a- past president ot tha nnasarmSn. Maxine Johnson. J—n
Coquille Woman’» Club, of the Coos Watkins, Margaret Bellani, ALA»
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he (uut
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lias had U,
to gpend
spend two »nd
and a third
County Public Health Association, Allen, Georgianne . Perrott. Eunice
month» in the hospital, having Buf­
The first district conference of the and active in both clubs until her Howe, Sammy Swain and Jean
fered with an attack of pneumonia in Business and Professional Women’s death will be greatly missed per­ Bryan.
June, and again being in the hospital Club for the year was held last Sat­ sonally and for her civic interest.
Calling cards, &C tor 11.00.
now with rheumatic fever.
urday and Sunday in Marshfield at
4T
the Chandler Hotel. A meeting Sat­ Mother Nature In A x
Mrs. Gene Laird in Portland has
Five Coquille high school graduates
urday evening and a breakfast at 9 Generous Mood This Year
of the class of 1941 and one of the received a postal card, throu^i the
We call and pay cash for what
a. m. Sunday was attended by the
1940 class held a reunion here last regular Red Cross and War Depart­
Nature la showing considerable
following: Edith Walton, Florence freakishness in Cries county this year.
week-end, all of them being in Uncle ment channel^, from her husband.
Hallock, Florence Barton, Viola New­ On Monday morning'Mrs. Guy Torrey
Sam’s uniforms and two at least hav­ Major Laird, who is a prisoner some­
Technical Sergeant Laurie Robison, ton, Clara Bosserman, Ida Oerding, brought in to the Sentinel another of
ing seen foreign service.
where in Japan. At least the card
Bess Mailly^ Hattie Mae Holimon,
One of the five was Harvey Cole, Is supposed to be from him, but his son of Mr. and Mrs. Rock Robison of Beas Maiti-yk
those potato plants on wtiicb the
Our store is almost Empty
who enlisted in the army soon after signature us well as the rest of it is this city, was one of the 223 U. S. Clara Stauff, Lois Fenn, Martha spuds were growing up un the vines
Mulkey,
Leia
Elrod,
Jennie
Price,
Army
air
forces
troop
carrier
com­
typewritten.
On
the
card
it
is
stated
gradua^on. He saw service in Africa
I instead of beneath the ground.
this year, being with the U. S. 9th that he is well, is working for wages mand who have been commended by Bertha Smith, Dorothy Bishop, Inez
Another unusual exhibit »lie placed
Division Anti-Aircraft unit and later and mentions five questions that he ! the war department for their cour- Chase. Leona Bryant, Jessie Kay and in our display window was a black­
with the British Commandos in the can ask on matters about which his : age and devotion to duty during the Inez Rover.
cap berry vine, which they had
_ ______
_ parachute
______
An effort was made to key the
of
Tunisian campaign. He was badly folks in the United States can write ¡July 9 transportation
transplanted from a field, and which
troops
to Sicily without the loss of a wh°le meeting to the conference is already this year bearing its second
1
burned when a tank of high octane to him.
—
theme,
"Winning
the
War
and
Win-
I jingle transport plane. Their com­
gas blew up some months ago and
John I ning the Peace•” Presiding .officer crop of fruit. The berries on still
manding officer, Lieut.-Col.
____
he will carry the scars on his arms Harold Norria Graduates
another vine, a raspberry, are un­
Cerney, of Spokane, Was awarded the 1 wa* Isabelle Brixner of Klamath usually large too for that fruit.
and hands as long as he lives. He was As An Aviation Cadet
j
Fulto.
Agnes
Matson
Was
local
chair
­
' distinguished flying- cross.
..
■
.
overseas 11 months and arrived home |
Mr«. T. H. Benham of Fairview,
v ,
Laurie to an aerial engineer in the man. During the executive board
last Friday on a 30-day furlough. He
' received a formal announcement from Army air fore«. *•<
meeting, Leona Bryant was elected Magazines At A Discount
is at present unasaigned.
state chairman of Public Affairs and To Sentinel Subscribers
Another of the *41 class is Robert I the commandant of the Santa Ans
‘Air Barn of Santa Ana, Cal'f.. that
Florence Barton was elected chair­
The Sentinèl has not had a com,
Churchill, who also enlisted, in the
Fire At Plant Friday
.her
oldesf
son,
Arnold
Harold
Nqrrto,
man
for the coast district. At both bination offer—this paper and mag­
Navy soon after graduation. He has
Noon Did No Damage
meetings boys from the Coast Guard azines—to present to its readers for
seen a lot of action in the south Pa­ had been one of the few cadets
Die fire at the plant at 12:30 last entertained and were enthusiastically the past month or more, bqt it stands
cific, was at Pearl Harbor for a time i selected by the classification boaird to
and when his leave to up, is to re- j be trained for pilot training and he Friday noon did no damage except received. The next conference will ready ut all times to send in sub-
( scriptions for any magazine pub­
' port later this month io the Navy will soon be transferred from Santa to dry out the electrical Equipment be held at Heppner in October.
Ana to a went coast training cen te^ somewhat.
It, started under the
lished and the charge to Sentinel
Flight School at Dallas, Texas. He
elementary flying school. Upon com­ barker platform where the logs for B. F. W. Loses New
subscribers to always at thé dis­
also arrived
d home last Friday, «
repair and recondition
memefir of that class was pletion of flying training, Norris will the plywood plant are stripped of Member By Death
count rate which we have to remit.
Another 1..
all of the above before
their
bark
at
the
river
’
s
edge
and
in
receive
his
wing»
and
the
rating
of
a
Corporal Ron Dungey, who had just
The members of the Business and This applies to practically- «every
some
manner
the
pitch
caught
fire.
pilot.
goes into use again.
magazine
published
in
the
U.
S.
finished his course in drafting at the
Professional Women’s Club, individu­
The sprinkling system had extin­ ally and as a group are mourning
University of Kentucky and left
I Powers Young Man Named
guished the blaze, which was burning the loss of a new member, voted into
Monday for Camp Pittsburg, Calif.,
Venture Club
fiercely, before the arrival of
after a week'., visit with his parents, | A Naval Aviation Cadet
the club at their last meeting. Pearl
Members of the Venture Club with
i
fire
department.
Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Dungey, and ! Stephen E. Gam well, 22, son
Smith who tragically lost her life their president, Donna Dean Bosser-
of.
______
friends. He to how ready for duty i James W. Gamwell of Powers, was
through accident Wednesday, attend­ man. met at the hotel for dinner arid
Calling cgrds, SO tor »1.0C.
ed the annual barbecue and supper at a social meeting Tuesday evening.
overseas.
recently appointed a Naval Aviation
A fourth member of the '41 class ' Cadet and was transferred to the
was Guy Stem, who left Monday to Naval Air Trainink Center, Pensa­
rejoin his vessel in San Francisco cola, Fla., for intermediate flight
Bay.
training. Upon completion of the in­
The fifth clasmate was Dale Stev­ tensive course at the “Aonapolto of
Sr
i s » 5 V
ens, who has been home longer than the Air,” Cadet Gamwell will re-/
... <
the others and to now awaiting his | ceive his Navy "Wings of Gold” with
call to duty in the Army Air Corps. the designation of Naval Aviator, and
The 1940 C. H. S. graduate yas will be commissioned an Ensign in
Clarence Cunningham, who is in the i the Naval Reserve or a Second Lieu­
Army Air Corps.
tenant in the Marine Corps Reserve.
Boyd Hendricks, of the 1942 class,
Jack Carroll In Naval
was here last week from Farragut,
Idaho, where he to in Navy training. Hospital At Farragut
Jack Carroll, who was employed
I in the Earl Littrell store here last
CERTO 3 bottle deal Al-
year and who has been at the Naval
|
ta
lÄys ta taœ
Seven C.H.S. Grads
Have Reunion
Conference At Bay
vonrerence
DO
Major Laird, In
Japan, Heard From
Coquille Boy Gets
Dept. Commendation
People Need
Washers
Bed Springs
Ranges
Heaters
Sewing Machines
K
Beds
Mattresses
Furniture Sets
Davenports
Davenos
«
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N
Î II í*
Al
Canning Heeds
Three Cornelius Boys
Now In Service
¿Ve/y Jar yeu
Verne Cornelius, youngest son of
Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Cornelius, who
left Tuesday morning for Portland
where he will enter the Navy, joins
It was very gratifying to
his two older brothers serving in the
lebrn just how interested
armed forces of the United States.
the motoring public is in
T/5 Robert H. Cornelius -of the
keeping their cars in a safer
Services of Supply, Ordnance Section,
^nd more economical oper-
Base Headquarters, in Northwest ■
at|ng condition.
Africa, to completing his second year
Last week*We asked those
of service and Pvt. Richard G. Cor- ,
interested to drop us a card
nelius, who last week visited his
regarding a periodic inspec-.
home here while on furlough, has
tlon service we were com-
finished training at Fort Benning,
templating.
Gg., and is now at Camp Mackall,
N. C„ as a full fledged Paratrooper.
Not a single card was re­
Also entering the Navy this week
ceived but one party agreed
to Neil J. Carlson, of Marshfield,
verbally it would be a
son-in-law of Mr. and Mrs. Cor­
» worthy service.
nelius.
Mrs. Cartoon and baby I
“At least the majority
daughter, Sherrill, will arrive this
was for it.”
week to make their home with
parents for the duration.
Howdy folks
/
Donald Boone In Naval
Training At Iowa State
,
Learning to operate the motors
that drive the huge warships in Uncle
Sam’s Navy to Donald W. Boone, 18.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Boone,
Fairview Route, Coquille. Oregon,
who was recently enrolled in the Na­
val Training School for Dieselmen,
located on the campus of Iowa State
College, Ames, Is.
Upon completion of this course, he '
will be eligible for advancement to a
petty officer rating, and will be as­
signed to active duty at sea, or at
some naval shore Station.
•
Jim Richmond In No. Carolina— |
“Puts” Arens Ii^ Sicily
Dr. and Mrs. Jas. Richmond have
just received a letter from ‘'Puts”
Arens, husband of their daughter,
Barbara, who is still In Reedsport, |
that he was expecting to get over to
Sicily soon after he wrote. Ha Is in
the Sea Bees and had been in North
I
Africa since February.
Their son, Jim, has recently been
transferred from Fresno, Calif., to
the North Carolina State College at
Raleigh, wherg he to taking further
training and instruction in the Army
Air Corps courses.
Former C. H. S. Young Men
Graduates As A Flyer
i
4
Mrs. Marjorie Child writes from.
drant*. Pass
that »he wds leaving
Monday afternoon for the Naval air- j
port in Oaklahoma to spend a week
with her son, Ray Rowland, who had
just passed his exams and stood
third from the top in his class. Ray
was a C. H. S. graduate with the
class of 1MB. He expects to be sent
on active duty soon.
Just heard the/ Radio
News by Macmillian “Ring
Free” Oil Co. The most im-
Criant
w fin<
really is.
We have stocked, and
sold! Ring Free motor oil
for 2'jj years and listened
to testimonies, “plenty,” by .
the evergrowing number of
Ring Free users.
Now we don’t recommend
any particular oil and un­
less you’re willing to tol­
erate a smoother motor,
never use Ring Free.
AMZY
KRNIR
M&WAuto Service
, P. S. After losing some sleep
to help fill Editor Young’s
columns, I glanced through
Monday’s Times and there
saw in “bold face type”
Nine Helpful Suggestions
listed to keep cars in good
condition. Did you read it?
I’m serious, Folks, when
I say that the fellow that
discovers the right bait, or
designs a drag net that will
get the motorist in regular­
ly for preevntlve service,
will have contributed more
to the •ofriy'’«nd «economy
of motoring than any en­
gineering genius.
If you bos-tful, tough
guys on automobiles gave
them proper
ir care you’d
have whiskers to your belt
buckles before you could
wear them out.
1
SUGAR—
M Uy is a Jar to toe Us is
This summer. Home Canning counts more than
ever. So don't waste an ounce. Be sure the food
you can to fresh Produce sold by Safeway ia rushed
direct from farms to you and to guaranteed to be
farm freeb. Take advantage of the low pricee now
when crop» are plentiful. Start canning today.
Merfii. J for
Fall Mailing
Thera's still time to fill those cup­
boards with home canned foods for
enjoyment next winter Scheduled
for fall canning are all those tomato
^products, pickles, relishes, and
sauces which gjve winter menus a
lift. The equipment you need for
putting up these products is no more
than a preserving kettle or any other
. large kettle, and a few gadget» that
you use every day So get ready for
fall canning.
I
TOMATO HOT SAUC1
Wash. cofe. and quarter tomatoes
Peel onions and cut in wedges Com­
bine tomatoes, onions and spices
tied in a bag in large preserving
kettle Cook until tomatoes are soft
and alightlv thickened. Remove
spice bag Cool aryl sieve tomato
mixture into large sauce pan. Cook
until thickened, about 20 minutes,
stirring frequently Pour into hot
sterilized fruit jaws, seal at once.
Makes 4 qta.
Safeway
Homemaktn' Bureau
JVUA LEE W RIGHT. Dir«t«
Salad Dressing
Duchess
""
1 lb. jar
’•
1
■
’
‘
'
rt£P W FIGHTING!
.......... 1
Svy War S»»A end Stamp» »•pvtarly
15c
V-9 (2 points) No. 2 can
HI-
TOMATO JUICE
Sunny Dawn (• pts) 46 ea“**^
TOMATOES Del Monte Id-
■“•C
8olld (18 pU.) No. > can
TOMATO SAUCE
K _
Gardenside («) buf. H can
I
I
CORN Golden Bantam 1A —
D. Monte (16 pta.) Na. 2 en
SPINACH Emerald Bay 1 Yc
No. 2H can
(19 ir-a.;
CATSUP
I
j re
Sea Reek (15 pta.) 14 os.
1 “y
Libfry’s (14 Pta.) No. 2 cn ■ F C
APPLESAUCE
i
ttinrfi Wu:s
Crisco Shortening
(4 pts.)
71c
3 lb 64c
Lb. < tn
SHORTENING
Royal Satin (12 pta.)
CHERUB MILK
(I pi.)
Fruits & Vegetables
ORANGES lb...........
GRAPEFRUIT lb.
TOMATOES 1« 1b luc Jl.49
GREEN BEANS lb. ...... :.... 7c
CABBAGE lb.
PEACHES for Cunning
at MARKET PRICE
<
lai AAA-CB Oakland
4.
,
k.
Vegetable Cocktail
4 I
1
.
PICKLING SPICE
Creseont Pkg.
’
f JdFFHMX MFdTF
Uu Sttnt ><!•«
HOT POO SIUSH
Wash peppers, remove seed cores.
Peel onions Put vegetables through
food chopper, using coarse krufe.
Place in large preserving kettle:
cover with boiling waler and let
stand S minutes, drain thoroughly.
Add vinegar, sugar, spicee. and salt;
cook until vegetables are tender,
about 10 minutes, stirring occasion­
ally. Pour into hot sterilised fruit
jars, filling to top, seal at once.
Makes 6 pta.
Beverly
pint
Bread, Julia Lee Wright’s
t% lb.
Ry Tak Wafers
26 ox. Pit«.
Corn Meal, Mammy Lou Yellow 4^ lb. 21c
Dehyd. Soups, Kettle Split Pea, etc. etc. 10c
Egg Noodles
Sunrise 14 oz.
pkg. 24c
Cottage Cheese
Kraft
pint cup 24c
Ficgo Beverage
1 lb. pkg.
Sanka Coffee
1 lb. jar
EdUards Coffee, whole bean 1 lb. bag 27c
Nob Hill Coffee,
whole bean,
1 lb. 24c
Jell Well Desserts,
asst. pkg.
Sc
Sweetheart Soap
per bar 7c
Swan Soap
medium bar 2 for 19c
12 lbs. ripe tomatoes
1 lb. onions
1 tbsp, whole allspice
1 tbsp, celery seed
2 tsps, whole white pepper
3*/j lbs. sweet red peppers
3 lbs. green peppers
3 lbs. emens
4 cups vinegar
'/z cup sugar
1 tsp. mustard seed
1 tbsp, dry mustard
1 tbsp, celery seed
2 tbsps. salt
Peanut Butter,
Use stamp 14,15 or 16
White Satin 5 lb. x **’»**’
Tall Can
/
MEAT — Our Fighters Need It — Our
Allie» Need It--Our Worker» Need It —
MAKE EVERY POUND OF MEAT
COUNT.
MEAT— i
Loin Pork Roast, loin end cut 7 pts 1b 33c
Pork Crops, center cut
9 pts. lb. 38c
Perk Liver
lb. 24c
4 point»
Grade A Lamb Features—
Legs
7 points
lb. 39c
7 points •
Rib Chops
lb. 45c
Trimmed shoulder roast (5 pts) lb. 35c
FISH—
Sliced Chinook Salmon
lb. 40c
Fresh Black Cod. si. or pc.
lb. 28c
Safeway Will Buy Your
VEAL
At Highest Ceiling Prices (Dressed)
Be sure all OPA regulations regarding Veal
are strictly fcllowed. The Safeway Market
Man will gladly aqswpr your questions.