THE COQUILLE P age four ZAHS I» * 8®«® TWENJY YEARS AGO ,®wa Ger- 'miles of the earth’s surface, . many has 70 millions 1....... — . people and 180,000 quare miles of the earth’s . surface. are offering nothing ; Our leaders --------- - ' _________ ________________________________________ 1____________ to remedy such condition, Just a H. A. YOUNG and M. D. GRIMES (Taken from The Sentinel of Friday, two cars went off the fill,' a quarter little more' charity, Please do not Publishers of a mile above the Hail street bridge. June 2«. 1925) •ReF'Ujat what the people need ever forgel 11. A. ÏOUNG, Editor tem^bred with charity, not At its meeting here Wednesday the No one was injured after a 2*'-foot i is justice temi. Subscription Rates drop. y: • — » 7 The Sentinle A 6000 V a LLEY SENTINEL, COQUILLE. OREGON. THURSDAY, JUNE 28,4945. /I One Year ............... ................ Six Months............ - ------- 12 90 Cots County Good Roads Associa- * ™ #(J tion endorsed the 1980,000 bond is- " stäää «ss ‘““i ,u' ter’u. IdT.Sie. Th., rule U »per. ttve. Entered at the Coquille Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter Office Corner W. Hr»» »nd W lllard 81 NATIONAL (DITORIAL_ I14lrfe-Qz/AT,ON k Special elections very »eldom bring out the vote that the merit of the measures submitted on the ballot justifies Last Friday's election was no exception to this rule and the 2700 votes cast was just over 20 per cent of the 13,000 cast in C qo » county at the last presidential election. I Timely Topics By HON R T. MOORE charity tempered with justice. X —Jas. Richmond, M. D. The preliminary organization of the“* _ _____ —------ ._7"' Coquille branch of the International Na(ionaj Safel.V (’HrtTCil «’! • . _ _ _ The directors for school district. Lions Clubs was perfected he»» yes- Urges Safe And Suae Fourth No. 8, have held two meetings during terday nooh ‘ at the hotel with 20 ______ r_________ ______ r planning on having yourself" a the past week to consider the plans _________ members. Twenty-five are required and specifications for the new grade before the charter can be issued. The time over the Fourth of July, with members to date are: Bob Stewart, more gas, V-E day and all? school building. , Geo. Johnson, C. J. Fuhrman, C. C. | Don't do it, suggests the National Geo. H. Chaney announced this Archibald, Fred Wimer, Lafe Comp-; Safety Council, whose headquarters week that one side of his camp on ton, John E. Ross, F. G. Bunch, S. MJare in Chicago. Instead, stay close Glen Aiken creek would be opened Nosier, N. C. Kelley, Geo. W. Bry-,to home, take it easy, and help pre July 10. Mr. Chaniy says that about ant, Wm. Oerding, A. L. Hooton, vent an avalanche of holiday a'eci- 30 men will be employed in the* camP Homer C. Gant, C. W. Gardner, Phil- dents that would delay, the knock lip Johnson, Wm. Zosel, Perry Law-'out blow to the Japs. With ai>—apppal-to- -‘'put victory Wednesday was the hottest day in rence, J. L. Stevens and Earl D. i first on the. Fourth,” the Council is Coquille this writer can recall in over Graham. __ o— .______________' asking every .citizen tb enlist, in a eleven year»' residence here. There The seats in the balcony of the nationwide campaign to aveit the are no registered, thermometrs in finished ' usual huge holiday toll thpt this Coquille but others varied from 99 Community Building were.------------ - ______ i.. Y year to 101 degreA. In Bigelow’s Con Wednesday evening. Accommoda- eur would waste manpower, ma- fectionery, where reflected heift from tlon« for nearly three hundred people 1 terial and time-deeded to speed final ’ ■ the street had an effect, the ther are thus provided. With these and victory. One hundred and thirty other na- mometer stood at 104. Jas. W. tbt bleacher seats on the main floor Laird's instrument, at his home north close to 1500 people can be accom ' tional organizations have joined the of the old Academy, showed 99 de modated at the Chautauqua, which ■Council in the holiday safety cam- 1 paign, designed to help public of grees The figure of 101 degrees started this afternoon. I If - ficials, traffic officers and safety was recorded by C. Vernon Smith at J leaders hold the Fourth of July Oc his Jiome on Sanford Heights. . .' . Mrs. Ralph Cake and daughter, cident toll down to a minimum. Back in 1905 or 190« there was a "Let's take it easy, put victory hot day which cooked apples on the Martha, are here visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Sherwood. She first on the Fourth and be back on trees came down With them^from Eugene the job on the Fifth,” says the Another miraculous escape from after the graduation exercises at the Council’s president. Miss Helen Sherwood serious injury in an auto acident was University. was one of the graduates. that last Monday afternoon when WHINNY to your Mate, take the I I I LET’S KEEP THE FOURTH A - ' DAY OF. FREEDOM! BUY AN EXTRA BOND! [ ★ )---------- 7 j J •J" ’M A at ♦ n ». l—.K , • 1 Parades Drill Teams • • 4 Bands Street Sports Square Dancing Contest In extending OPA another year, the Congress took the only course open to essential defense against I inflation. Though disapproval of OPA policiet >• general and vocifer ous, price controls must be kept for the time being. The piling up of Bit in your teeth, and head straight vast sums in savings accounts and “ the continuing pressure for higher government can be umpire but. it f<y the B a RN at Bandon-by-the-Sea wages and salaries may blow the must not be one of. the players Open-, City Park July 3-4; Grand ~ Close economic control» were nec- ing Dances with Bum Gartin’s lid off present dollar values unli . ! ‘ s held in check until production c can eaaary as war measure» but should Band. , be shelved us museum pieces to clear catch up with demand. —I------------------------------------- The New Deal theory of the the path toward peace-time progress, Insurance is too important to take chances. SEE ME. economy of scarcity that has in-' The reason for the decline of all As important in domestic affairs civiliiations is found in the law of fluenced OPA policy to date has , F. R. Bull Many as the settlement of the Polish ques 11 worked with a vengeance, progress. There are two Phone 62M Night 106-L staple foods are scarce and some are tion in international diplomacy is tarts to it. The first part is that of tfs non-existent. In its anxiety to en the seniority policy in regard to issocifction. There can be no prog- veterans' employment. ess Without association and there Qe{ a gooq txjok at Norton’s Rental force rationing equitably, OPA hss returning overlooked the important fact that Controversy now ragas over the are onlly two ways you can associate, Library. tfs Starting goods must first be produced before adoption of the super-jcniority ad either 'to a greater and greater equal . (hey can be rationed. Mistaken vocated by WMC and most veterans' ity ori in the opposite direction. policies that have rfif“® opposed to the or- " If we become more equal financial- ■ duction are now interfering with the dinary seniority proposed by labor ly and socially, we are developing war effort and causing severe and unions, in the direction of a more perfect AT 9:00 O’CLOCK The super-seniority plan gives the union or government. I do not mean [ unnecessary hardship among our CROWNING OF THE QUEEN 10:30 service-man preference to say that absolute equality is pos- I people. returning May Warn of Disordered other worker regardiesa of Kidney Action sible but the difference in men, if1 OPA was given rough treatment over any in the Congress and has emerged whether such worker has greater given an equal opportunity, is not Modern lite with ite hurry end worfy, irrefular habits, improper eating and en'or**y ,ban (he soldier when very great. 1 do not think they dif looking like a freshly sheared sheep ® ®*niority drinking—ite risk of exposure and infec tion—throws heavy atrain on the work Changes in pricing methods to pro- measured by normal union practice, Changes in pricing methods to pro- .------------ fer any more mentally than they do of the kidneys. They are apt to become vide production incentive have been, "D** unions propose the counting of physically. A man twice as smart over-taxed ancMail to filter excess acid and other impurities from the life-giving made. Theorists are currently being wag gcrvtce work days so that the as another would be just as rare blood. replaced by men with practical ex- UBU®1 seniority procedure will fit. You may suffer nagging backache as a man twice as tall as another. headache, dixtineee, getting up nighte, perience. Administration is being question then resolves itself Anyone who thinks otherwise is just leg pains, swelling—feel constantly ----------- (A)—— tired, nervous, ill worn out. Other eigps streamlined to meet shifting condi- *n'° whether the service-man is to kidding himself. The great dif-1 of kidney or bladder disorder are eome- ICE COLD POP —LEMONADE timee burning, scanty or too frequent tions quickly. The general alm is to,have Wg w,r ®*rvl<* regarded as ex ference we see is due to some form urination. I IIAMBERGERS & HOT DOGS create a new confidence and to court traordinary work performed entit- of monopoly. Try Doan'i Pillt. Doan'a help the (A Loaf of Bread and a Pound of Meat and kidneys to pass off harmful excesa body ling him to preferential treatment or the backing of the public. Let us first ake the churches. One waate. They have had more than half a All the Pickle You Can Eat) whether it is to be regarded as on a of the chief reasons for division is century of public approval. Are recom Nearly all federal agencies, in mended by grateful users everywhere, I par with war-industry employment. their social standing. ■isk your neighbor! One of the cluding OPA, have followed the pol If all service-men were engaged in prominent members of one of the icy of never hiring anybody who had 'active combat during their period of prominent churches said his church direct interest in, or practical know enlistment there would be little ar- appealed to the intelligence. That is ledge of the industry to be regu lated. The idea is to avoid risk of 8umenL But large numbers of them not like the carpenter, it more like I necessarily were engaged In work the master and slave (St. Paul). Such rr«i individual profit by position, This that differed only slightly from that a division can never lead to anything has compelled the taxpayers to pay performed by war workers in indus but chaos. huge sums for the education of the try. To give such service-men pref The idea of the lodge primarily!! amateurs who held the agency ex erential treatment on the same basis ecutive offices and for the repair was a builder of society but it has | ( as those who actually endured the fallen from grace, of damages caused by their blun The lodges are hellish hardship of front-line com usually designated ders. Such controls are better placed by their social bat is, indeed, open to question. But standing. in hands that understand. The In-1 terests of thè nation can be more ef the fact can not be escaped that all Let us look for a moment at our ficiently served by the patriotic, service men were subject tn call for civilization as it is developing here. public-spirited citizens who have combat, which' the vast majority of Our cvilization is an old civiliza them arJently hoped for, and the . made a success of the particular tion and we have had a very check ¡mere accident of position which saw business to be regulated. ered career. We have had nine ma them prevented from combat parti jor depressions in the history of this The OPA has had one of the most cipation should not be held against country, divided nearly equally be difficult war-time jobs and in spite them. There is much to be said on tween the two major parties. The of glaring blunders has done much both sides of the argument. last depression began in 1929 and to hold inflation in cheek. But it At present, while the Jap war1 should have done much more, and at progresses, the pressure for final [ ended in the greatest war in history, four years of Hoover and six years far less cost. The shaking up it has determination of this question will received should bear fruit in the ¡not be irresistible. Both unions and I of Roosevelt. There were anywhere I from 10 millions to 17 millions idle future. Its greatest need is a more veterans' organizations have taken1 laborers in this country, nearly half flexible price-fixing by experienced firm positions in support of their re the population on charity. men and one that can be quickly spective views and arc hoping that In this period all of the baser ele adjusted to meet the exigencies of ¡Vie turn of events will tip the scales ments came to the top. Pauperism, rapidly shifting conditions. Much i in their particular favor. The unions insanty, suicide and all kinds of production has been lost, at cost of are anxious to gain the favor of re- I future inconveniences if not actual crime increased—the elements which turning service-men while at the suffering, by delay and vacillation I are lacking independence and a job. same time protecting the seniority in handing down decisions. There How easy it would have been for i rights of their members. The veter- have also been determined attempts your so-called civilization to have •,ans' organizations are equally anx to use the agency as a punitive Weap vanished. In discussing this subject, ious lo avoid direct conflict with the on against business rather than a it was frequently said that the de I unions but are insistent on prefet- pression could easily have marked T'" We think it's quite nice. Wouldn’t you like to try it and bv new annoi / 8?g ng„ 'SP?.C? in 8ccord with traditional American the grave of our civilization. I wish by new appointments. 1 Hope is high you would get clear the twd chief tell us whether we should keep on making it? The loaf serves 4 I».»4 ADA 1-1_____ s__s . . ............................ UUMUm. j symptoms of the depression—idle i that OPA is headed for better things. I I An ugly economic civil war could as a bread or a pastry. Another unfortunate circumstance easily result from this difference in men and idle opportunity aad the! I union of these two elements is good for OPA is that it has to serve as opinion which could seriously dam I ■ whipping boy for the mistakes of age post- war economy. The situation times. / other agencies, Note the following: United States It suffers for the should be taken firmly in hand by has 135 million people and three mil- ! blunders of WMC and NLRB, for ex the Congress which should make lion square miles of the earth’s j ample, because it gets the blame for definite rules, unmistakable as to in things occurring as a direct result Russia has 170 million. tent, for handling the matter. A surface. of their policies. Since OPA deals ____ _ people and eight million square compromise is probable and desir- ■ ___________ j,__________ With just about every citizen, it falls ableTuT long" delaTmay make Concessions Horse Show Firemen's Show Yes Siree Folks I Why Civilization Is Declining—Remedy Is To Remove Cause There's Something Doing •. Every Minute 3 Big Nights of Dancing Monday Night, July 2 That Nag^in^ Backache Medford Fuller and His Orchestra Visit The Big Gay Way I D oans P ills There’s Fun For Everyone Home Made o We Have Something New ' E D »V neir to the K accumulated “ccun,ula‘ed protests impossible. It is one of those de- against the whole economic program, cisions very distasteful to politicians d^r .T hBVe ,ox‘hmes to but unavoidable in the probation of duck into but poor old OPA is right the national interest, out in the open. _ The appointment of General RYad- BVad- 4U1 ' » . . ' ® i Tbe One th ng learned from OPA ex- ley a. administrator of veteran? af- »«r enee is that such forms of econ- f.;.. „ „ ; 1Hppv onc a ’ an? ™.c contri “ a h-™ ™ any time.“ u"n- omic control are not for a democracy, der present circumstances Cgu^ti enterpr‘Se 8nd rig,d federaI fortuitous, ------ a it is ex- regulation are incompatible. The of this able officer The decisions will have uni- ' versal backing. No doubt his recom mendations will prevail in estab lishing the policies for handling this and other vexing questions affecting our returning veterans. The nation is plainly determined to see that the splendid young men and women who have carried the Stars and Stripes in this war are well taken care oft It bodes ill for any person or groups of persons to attempt to interfere N A ♦ Coquille Bakery j I f Made