•»A Pioneer Miners In Coos Black Sands j* Mrs. R: B. Cummins l: Buried In Portland By R. M Harrison 1 * 1 L f Mrs. R. B. Cummins passed away at Knife Hospital Monday afternoon, after three months Illness. —Born Bve-Margaret Ceewe< near Eugene, Oregon, of pioneer parents, all her young girlhood was spent in this state and in 1887 she was married to E. E. Pierce. From thia union the following children survive: Mrs. Louise Wheel on, Mrs. Lillian Johnson, both of Oakland. Calif.; L. A. Pierce,, of, Seattip. Wash. and. L. G. Pierce, of Coeur d’Alene, Idaho. Mr. Pierce was drowned and his T__ ____ CM just beginning to ing to the north where his long- widow later married Robert B Cum* nt blue Pacific, time companiqn, Capt. Berg, was mins, who survives her. Their sur­ den rays, to mingle 1 resting and where the blue and the viving children are: Mrs. W. L. Keyser, of India; T. F. Cummins, of «nd Its enchanting gold would come at sunset. ; Portland, and M. M. Cummins, of Al­ sndacape, aa if S (To be continued) XL----—- ----- *- bany, Ore. Two children preceded her in death. Also surviving are twelve grandchildren and three great grandchildren, three sisters and one | brother. . . Services were held from the Gano Funeral Home Wednesday at 2:00 p. m. and the body was sent to Portland for interment at Lincoln Memorial ! Park- >.1 <. . eroes, who had washed The following morning, the Ajax 1 waves of that terrible I weighed anchor and, on the outgoing he burial of their com- Ude, she slipped out through the [ they had completed Golden Gate onto the broad blue ’ y, they felt that their Pacific and once more spread her 1 > and all stood by the great .white wings, homeward bound, of earth, with bowed Lieutenant Wingate’s heart was 1» ,K... K .U--• « l‘ • The Industrial Repair Co. of Coquille . MACHINING WELDING METALLIZING PRESSING BLACKSMITHING Repairing Aids Victory “WALLY" Pallbearers were Herman Plaep, R. B. Knife. Darrell Cox, and Elmer HoiyerstotL Mr. and Mrs. Cummins have rr.m- aged the Knife Apartments the past twelve year*. She was a member of the Baptist Church and an active worker there till ill health prevented. by Archie Probate Court items A petition for administration of the $2000 estate left by Thomas Cooper, also known as Alexander Thomas Cooper, who died October 12, was filed by J. B. Bedingfield in probate court yesterday. Just As Tomorrow's ■ lit' J Service and Protection nriHKY ARE GROWING UI\ TOGETHER ... tomorrow’s citizens and X eight million acres of junior forests on the West Coast. Trees are a re­ Bny Tear source that can be renewed, and lumbermen are growing trees! Yea—the forest industries ARE making real progress in a program of pro­ tecting junior forests from fire and renewing the old forests. Logging is planned by.foresters to leave at least 32 acres of seed trees on every section of harvested timber land. And the forest industries—logging, sawmill, pulp, plywood and shingle companies—operate the West Const Tree Farms’ Forest Nursery near Olympia, Washington, with production of five million seedlings a year. Despite giant war demand for West Coast Lumber and timber products, pri­ vate enterprise is acting NOW to provide trees for *tomorrow’s citizens. • Auto • Fire • Life MCE . VUW^. F— --------- J -a--------- ->***—• FREE BOOKLETS TAe printed itorj of “In­ dustry Starts a Forest Nursery“ by Stewart H. Holbrook, will be 'Pent to you free upon postcard request to thia newspaper. Three other bookleu on the future of Americc's great renewable resource, the forests. will be in- cltgfed without eaff.