The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, September 28, 1944, Page 4, Image 4

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    ♦
The Sentinel^
TWENTY YEARS AGO
At the Oregon Conference of the
M. E. Church at Medford last week
Rev. J. E. Penix was returned to
Coquille.
Students at the University of Ore­
gon leaving here recently for Eu­
gene were: Miss Camilla Lorenz,
Misses Helen and Delia Sherwood,
Miss Adrienne Hazard and Pat Har­
ville.
Wilson.
A larger percentage of laat year'*
graduating^aM have entered O.A.C.
this year^jhan is usually the case.
Those who have gone from Coquille
during the past week are- ClarabeUe
Mintonye,
Dena Ellingson,
Elva
Cranberry Pickers
Important Notice
Please Read This
The fear of a ceiling price on cranberries hasliad our growers
badly
badly worried.
worried However, advance information just received
indicates the ceiling will be sufficient to permit us to raise
our picking price to
Mr. and Mrs. Louis C. Sanders, of
Portland, are announcing the arrival
of their new baby girl, Louise May,
born Saturday, Sept. 20.
Deal is finding it Impossible to over­
come the distrust and lack of con­
fidence built up through years of
bitter
hostility. " The enormous
national debt precludes any large
leaf-raking program to take the
place of small enterprise in making
number one fear is not monopol is- Jobs. New Deal politicans see plenty
it tic big business but government i of trouble ahead and are anxious to
relinquish the task of job-making to
private enterprise in order to save
their own skins.
American enterprise is resourceful
aQd will deliver the goods, If given
a fair chance, just as it did inaupply-
ing the munitions of war. But it
needs a square deal from govern­
ment and freedom from crippling in­
terference. It needs an administra­
tion in which it can have faith and
confidence, one that will promote its
welfare and not bludgeon it With
malicious regulation in the name of
of social reform. The budget must
be balanced to preserve the intregity
of finance. Harmony and teamwork
must be promoted among our people
to insure maximum productive effi­
ciency.
The scandalous waste of.
man-power so prevalent all through
the last decade of government opera­
tion must be forwith eliminated. In
short, government must first set its
house in order before calling upon
private business to do its duty.
There is no occasion for pessimism
so often voiced in discussions of what
will happen alter the ' war.
The
pent-up demand for goods in our
country alone Is so great as to defy
the imagination. Add to this the
vast potential demand elsewhere on
the globe and there will be business
enough to keep our manufacturers
running full time for a generation.
But we must produce our goods in
quantity enough and cheaply enough
to be priced within the means of
other nations. Labor, capital, gov­
ernment and all other factors in pro­
duction costs will have to be geared
to produce more goods for leas dol­
lars. There must be a change from
the economy of scarcity to the econ­
omy of plenty. The way to accom­
plish these things is plain. But we
still need the will.
During the 1M3 season of the leg­
islature two measures were passed
providing for the education and
financing of returned service men.
These measures are to be voted on
who are driving the German Army was stopped, after a by the people next November in ac­
a house by house con- three-year conquest that had made a cordance with the referendum pro­
'whole continent red with blood.) It
visions contained in the measures
ago this week Japanese was this week, two years ago, that themselves.
,
id French Indo-China, United Nations forces were climbing
Since the enactment of these state
a base for operations the Owen Stanley mountains. Just measures the national government
», Burma and Malay, starting on the push against the has set up the G. I. Bill of Rights
17, IMO, Japan formal- Nipponese that was to drive the Japs which is far mare efficient and gen­
Berlin-Rome Axis. (It ,rnm the South $eas.
erous in scope than the state meas­
i now since we have
A year ago United States Army ures. The latter are therefore not
Axis powers. Indeed, forces had been fighting along the only superfluous at this time but
s nov^ our ally, accord- Mediterranean for more than ten actually would interfere with the
st decision by Churchill months. On Sept. 27, 1»43, its Fifth workings of the superior G. I. Bill.
I.)
Army was advancing above Salerno For this reason the public should de­
i ago this week Ger- in Italy and it was the British sub- feat both measures notwithstanding
nes were sinking ships marine which was on the prowl, ten the natural desire for everyone to
from a convoy operat- enemy ships evacuating Germans do right by our servicemen in all
Gibraltar and England, from Corsica were reported sunk cases. The state pleasures will only
smber 17, IMF, Berlin that day. The Red Army had re­ get in the way and will be a burden
st “the big battle near turned to the Dnieper and were on rather than of any great benefit.
bed” and the Russian its east bank, facing Kiev.
While this column is an ardent
advocate of states rights it wishes to
point out that there are many mat­
ters of economic importance that
more
properly
fall within the
province of the national government.
The care of our service men is in­
disputably of this nature. The states,
therefore, should keep the track clear
for the federal handling of this lm-
60c per Measure effective at once
This is the highest price we have ever paid and is just double
the price we paid three years ago. Those pickers who really
work at it may earn from 58.00 to $10.00 per day.
With an extremely short crop in the big pastern growing sec­
tions, it is vitally‘necessary that all of our local crop be har­
vested, as cranberries have been declared an essential war
food by the W.F.A. Even if you have never picked cranberries
before, you are urged to do so this year. Our growers have
Please apply to any of the following agencies who will direct
you to the bogs most in need of pickers.
County Agent's Office Court House, Coquille
Extra gasoline coupons are available for car owners who will
haul a carload of pickers.
COOPERATIVE