PAGI FOUR-A Personal Mention "Spike" Says Goal . k Mr. and Mr.. P. A. Livesly, of Port­ land, spent from Friday • to Monday with the J. S. Barton family. Mrs. Livesly is a sister of Mr. Barton. Part of the visit was spent at the Barton cottage at Bandon. The rela­ tives were' on their way home from a six weeks trip to California. Mrs. Jess Barton, Jr., and baby, Jac­ queline, returned to Portland with them for a visit there and later In Astoria. many new drivers in Oregon, the sec- sell and Julius Ruble. ' Iretary of stale quoted the Oregon Mrs. L. H. Hazard ai ID FOR (ri“ht ul w*y taw: Barton attended RSION “t Drlv,r,> when approaching The tea table was i highway interactions, shall look out unusual arrangements c for recon- | for and 'give right of way to vehicles ers and large waxlike xpansions on the right, simultaneously ap- candle* and th« fine a ployment, proaching a given point, 'Whether coffee service, assurance such vehicle first enter and reach the Pouring from 2:30 t from gov- , intersection or not; provided, that the were Mrs. Hawkins ai foregoing provision shall not apply ford, 3:00 to**3:30 Mrs to have a to any interaction where and when »nd Mr*. Geo. Chaney " ... She said on return last Football Prospects Coach Spike Leslie is optimistic over the prospects for a good football team at Coquille High this fall and says it is the best looking squad, on the first day, he has had since 1939, There are ten or twelve more boys, in addition to the following list which did turn out, who would like to but there are no more suits available: George Hurst, Bob Alborn, Bud Meek, Dave Kline., Floyd DeNoma, Bob Kelly, Joe Stone, Harold Train. Roy Porter, Wayne Cheezem, George Johnson, Bob ftepass, Clare Gray, Corky Johnson, BUI Kistner, Mlren Ken Neeley, Elvin Fetch. Jack Blum, Morris Williams, Cliff Wil­ liams, Harry Slack, Homer Anderson, Dick Morrot, Walagmott, Don Min­ ard, Jack Buckles, Jim Kimsey, Noble Chowning, Dewey Gilkey, Dick Buckles, Dick Martindale, Dale Courtright, Bill Train, Walter Mc­ Kinney, Jack McKinney, Glenn Thommen, Jim McNamara, Billings, Louis Pinkston, Harold Stock, Pres­ ton Willis, Vernon, Bud Hickam, Charles Stevenson, Robert Shrug, George Litzenberger, Claire Reeder, Pierce, Clovis Knight, Belmore, Good. Haga and Boot*. Donna Dean Bosserman entertain­ ed a few friend» Tuesday evening at her home. The time was spent at bridge and Margaret Belloni won high score. Guests were Dorothea and Marybelle Yarbrough, Maxine John­ son, Georgianna Perrott, Alberta Will Examine Prospective Brandon, Norene McKeown, Jean th« entrance to a through highway Geo. uiett. A. Berg, H. A. Stack, Bryan, Mona Bryan, Dorothy Belle Football Officials In Valley .hall yield to the other vehicle. r . A. Jeub> u A Lundquist, Georg, Newton, Jean Williams and Margaret Supt. Carl E. Morrison, of this city, within the intersection or approaching j a membership of Portland. They are living on the 1 asks thUt anyone interested in acting ^ 213- Overland road near one of Mr. Toon’s 'as referee, umpire or head linesman, !oug i ughwaj shall yield to the Mrs. Boober states the new vear coal mines in a rharmino hnmn contact him so that time and place Mr. Toon purchased and remodeled for the examinations may bet set. extensively. i three which i. within the interaction or so cloae thereto a. to constitute an im- Mrs. O. C. Sanford will leave Thursday morning for Portland to attend an important meeting of the Scholarship Loan Fund committee, of which .he is state chairman, in the Oregon State Federation of Women'. Clubs. Don Farr left for Portland business trip Sunday. L. L. Hooker was in town Monday from hi* cranberry bog near Bandon |—the former A. T. Morrison ranch— and said the bog would have a larger crop of berries this year than it ha* ever had before. He is also adver­ tising the need for pickers, about Oct. 1. Mrs. Vaughan Entertains Bridge Club Last Thursday Mrs. Georgianna Vaughan enter­ taiped her bridge club at her home Tuesday evening.' Esther Litzen- berger won high score and June An­ derson, second high. Members at­ tending were Wilda Schroeder, Mabel Gould, Esther Litzenberger, Eunice Barrow, Wanda Cochran, June An­ derson, and Hazel Foss. Ruth Axtell was a guest. Mrs. Jean Wilkinson left Monday evening to return to her work ih the Boeing plant in Seattle after being here since last Friday visiting her father, Martin Nye, and other rela­ tive. and friend*. Her father had just returned from a week .pent down in Eureka, Calif. DEFENSE AND WAR EXPENDITURES WORLD WAR 2 done at once. While efforts to bring* about na- n has been reported that many sta. tional prohibition have ceased to hold tion* and tire owners have been tern- public attention, the growth of the porartly booting and then leaving the local option movement continues and tire in that condition. in Texas many of that state's j rrom now on there wll[ be closer 254 counties are now In the inspections made and if there 1* a dry Column. As liquor.tax revenue',l