Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003 | View Entire Issue (June 21, 1951)
i ' “ This refusal, i f acquiesced In by Oregon’s officials, ,would prove a cruel disappointment to thousands of Oregon veterans, who un doubtedly w ill feel that they have been cheated and that the mandate of Oregon people has been thw art ed," Pearson said. VOTERS’ PAMPHLET ALTERED A ll initiative and referendum measures published in the voters’ pamphlet, printed and distributed to all registered voters prior to prim ary and general elections, w ill have two im portant additions to th eir presentations. One provides that all referen dum measures published in the pamphlet, when revenues are in volved, must include an estimate of the cost. This estimate must be printed directly above the re f erendum and initiative measures. In the case o f constitutional amendments there must be printed in the pamphlet a clear-cut and VA LU AB LE ADVICE—G. Plymyer, veteran airlines captain, gives contents fo r information of the some flyin g pointers to L arry Grant, age 8, youngest model plane voter. The statement would be pre enthusiast to enter the Oregon Plymouth Model Plane Contest so far. Looking on w hile Plym yer inspects L a rry’s plane are his brother, pared by the state treasurer, secre Ronald, age 1», and LeRoy Morris, age 12. The three boys, all from tary of state and state budget director. Portland, are among early entrants in the contest which is expected to draw a field of more than 100 contestants from throughout the state. IMPRESSIVE M ILITA R Y DISPLAY Free flig h t events are set for M cM innville airport July 1, w ith con- M ajor General Thomas E. Rilea, tro l line activities at Jantsen Beach Park in Portland on July 8. There adjutant general of Oregon, was w ill be $1850 In prises offered in the competlon sponsored by Oregon’s presented the Legion of M erit at FI th dealers. McChord Field, Fort Lewis, Wn., last Saturday, fo r his outstanding work as assistant 41st Division commander during World War II. The accolade was made by Gov ernor McKay preceding one of the i greatest shows of Pacific N orth west National Guard strength ever k t .., . . . . . .staged at this m ilita ry post. The A LB A N Y . ORE., June 20. (Spec-¡world compete fo r fame and cash, part. time soldiers displayed the ia l)—Bing Crosby, radio and Para in spectacular contests. Bring the: brisk and intelligent action of mount Pictures star who was re fa m ily fo r the time of your life ’ army regulars and don’t worry about the hotels— , Qn hand fo r toe review were fused admission to a Vancouver, everybody dresses that way! S in -!many lta te officers, members of B. C. hotel last month because of cerely, Ted Lovelace, president, j the legislature and friensd and rel- his denim garb, today was invited Seventh Annual World Champion- atives of the guardsmen in annual ' camp. to be a guest of the Timber Carni ship Timber Carnival.” val here July 2-3-4, where such “ Were sending the old groaner IRRIGATION FERTILIZER dress became the order of the day a real logger’s shirt today,” L o v e -, t r ic k lace said, “ in case he decides to. R took 150 years to discover that Monday morning. “ M r. Bing Crosby, Paramount come on up—and doesn’t have one. • ¡t is easjer to button a man’s shirt Studios, Hollywood, Calif., Dear We’d hate for him to get in trouble :down the front than up the back, But ¡t took 2400 years to dis- Bing: Those denims are manda because he didn’t have the right tory dress here in Albany, Oregon, attire.” cover that It Is easier to fertilize a starting today fo r the W orld Cham crop while irrigating than to make pionship Timber Carnival July 2- two jobs of it. John Kim m, an alert young man 3-4. Any loud plaid shirt w ill do, 'o f Korean tieqcent, who runs a and a red hat, loaded w ith cele * I tru c k -fa rm near Canby, in the bration pins and old fishing flies heart of the Willamette valley, has w ill strictly conform to the law of * demonstrated a valuable econom the woods. You are most cordially ic feature'ln agriculture. On A p ril invited to be our guest at the Paci * 15 he planted 15 acres of spinach, fic Northwest’s most exciting event S 2 /F M u r j ' V a d p and on May 15 harvested .and where loggers from all over the hauled to the cannery an excellent * * * * * * * * icrop. , v Kim m gave his planting two IN ITIA TIV ES AND shots of fertilizer, using organic REFERENDUMS forms of nitrogen-urea and a fa irly A long ballot fo r the 1852 gen new product called Whale, a by eral election, now less than 17 product of whale plants. He In months away, is in the political in jected the liquid fe rtilizer into the cubator. pipes of the irirgatlon system. Eight filings of petitions have • • been made w ith the state depart See “Spike” Leslie fo r insurance ment of elections and signature of a ll kinds, phone 4891. tfc seekers are again abroad in the land. Four of the petitions are initiatives. Circulators must ob tain the signatures of 8 per cent of Does $37.50 per month the voters at the last election by July 3, 1952, to get these measures sound good to you? on the ballot. The percentage is Then throw off your based on the vote cast fo r justices of the supreme court at the last shackles and move into election. YOUR OWN HOME! The initiative measures would IT’S FULLY LIVABLE ask the voters to make barbering but partly unfinished. illegal on Monday; prohibit fish You can live in your ing on the Columbia riv e r between dream house as you sunset and sunrise; do away w ith finish the interior to daylight saving tim e and repeal the m ilk control law. your own taste! All The referendum measure if j F.H.A. inspected and passed would reduce the ton-m ile financed. Payments in fees for truckers, which were rais clude principal, inter ed by the 1951 legislature; n u llify est, taxes and insur the reduction In the truck loading ance! lim its which were lowered by the sftme legislature; repeal the cigaret Full price only tax of 3 cents a pack levied by the state legislature and n u llify the school consolidation law passed this year by the legislature. The referendum measures re- on your lot. quire only five per cent of the vot- • Only $300.00 DEPOSIT era’ signatures (16,429), but these; required when you petitions must be completed w ithin order 90 days following the adjournment oPthe legislature, which is on Au-1 SEE US TODAY! g u iF l, this year. LET US EXPLAIN VETERANS’ BONUS’ MAYBE! | Portland bankers are apprehen THIS WONDERFUL sive of the probability that bonds OPPORTUNITY TO offered by the state to pay veter YOU IN DETAIL! ans a bonus w ill not be purchased by banker groups. In a sim ilar situation in West V irginia the credit restraint com mittee refused to approve bonus bonds, and the same thing could happen here. State Treasurer W alter Pearson threw a beanball at the Head of the bond ’ buying syndicate this week. He is greatly concerned Roxy Bldg. Phone 3501 over reports that certain eastern capitalists have refused to bid on Oregon veterans’ bonus bonds. Bing Crosby Would Be Welcome At Loggers Carnival— Albanyites Say t ★ ★ ★ ★ * * aSe p<,»Mde * ♦ * ! ¿ C apital Are You Shackled by High Rent? Something new Added to Sale of Fine Stock the annual financial report. There were four people present. Mr. and Mrs. W illiam Stratton became parents of a baby daugh ter June 18, at Mast hospital. She is the firs t child. She weighed four pounds and fifteen and a quar ter ounces and has been named COQUILLE, OREGON. Cora Ellen. The Verne Hatçhers have joined the new car owners, as they are Lakeside was the scene of the driving a new fo ur door Stude- baker. Southwestern Oregon Motorboat Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schrag and association races Sunday afternoon fa m ily have returned from a vaca tion trip north. They visited Mrs. where 14 men competed in run Schrag’s brother at Vancouver, about and hydroplane races. South Washington, took in the Rose par lake, where the races were held, ade in Portland in which Lynn I was slightly windy but it did not saw Hopalong Cassidy, which is i hamper the racing much. Two th rill enough fo r any small boy. boats turned over, both in the hy Mr. and Mrs. Bert Taylor Mr. droplane race. Many people were and Mrs. Wallace Taylor and fam on hand to view the exciting races ily , Mr. and Mrs. Andy Feichtinger ' and the town was fille d w ith cars, all of Coos Bay and Mr, and Mrs. i R. L. Bickett, Coos Bay, announced Andy Parks of Fairview spent Sun i results and racing sidelines over day together, picnicing at LaVerne i the Pier broadcasting system. Entering in group one, runabout Park. j races, were C. E. Nelson, Coquille; Mrs. Bethel Norris was out Fair- Carl Woods, Coos Bay; Leonard view way over the weekend as Zwicker, Coos Bay; Harvey Peter guest o f the Webb Van Ormans. son, Reedsport, and Carl Riiho, Mrs. Norris has just returned from Coos Bay. Results of that group visiting her brother in Beaverton were Riiho, firs t and second; Carl and viewing the Ice Follies in Port Woods, one place and two seconds; land, also from Grants Pass where Zwicker, first, th ird and fourth, she was accompanied by her sis and Peterson, th ird and fourth. ter-in-law, Mrs. M yrtle Aasen. In group two, also runabouts, • • were Albert Powers, Coos Bay; “ Success comes from the ability Jack Hilton, Eugene; H arry Moore, to get aloqg w ith some people and Coo« Bay, Frosty West, Coos Bay; to get ahead of other people.” — B ill Hilts, Coo« Bay; Chet Fors, Coos Bay, Zwicker received two Knoxville News-Sentinel. firs t places; H ilton came in w ith a second and a th ird ; Nelson placed second and fourth, and Powers, fourth. In group three, the hydroplane race, only three were entered, in cluding John H artly, Coquille; Lyle Knox, Coquille; and A rt Pierre, North Bend. This race was not completed because Hartley and Knox both turned th eir boats over. In the free-for-all, Woods came PAGE <Jentlnel Something new in the sale of fine Jersey stock has been added. That’s the word leading Jer sey breeders of the area told The Sentinel this week when report ing on the forthcoming Booster Sale of Jersey Cattle the latter part of August. Members of the Coos-Curry Jersey Cattle club are planning on having a consignment sale of pure bred Jersey heifers at the M yrtle Point fairgrounds this year. This is a promotional sale and w ill consist of nothing but the best of selected quality animals* from 5001b B. F. dam s.---------— An advertisement containing notice of the sale w ill appear later in July. • • JUNE 21, 1M1- Thrilling Boat Races Held a t Lakeside A t Fairview Mr. and Mrs. W inifred Bardwell, small daughter, Janet of Empire, were Sunday guests at the Loyd Wilson home here. They were old friends who had lost track of each other fo r several years but Mr. Bardwell reads the Fairview items and there was mention of Mr. Wilson in last weelre Fairview news, so the Bardwells came a- visiting Sunday. The Wyant home has had num erous visitors this past week, of relatives and friends. Included among the visitors were Mr. Wyant’s sisters, Mrs. Allie Hamp ton, Grass Valley, C alif.; Mrs. D. W. Foster of Langlois his niece Mrs. Joe St. Peter, Coos Bay. Others were D. W. Foster, Lang lois, Mr. and Mrs. Shannon, Port land, Mr. and Mrs. “ B rick” Davis, M yrtle Point Mrs. Dorothy Hol land, Coos Bay, Mrs. Nora Allen. Mrs. H arry Rogers, Mrs. Dick Summers and Vicki, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil McCurdy, Mrs. Ruth Shaw and Patty 'a l l of Coquille and Miss Nadine Fueston, Cottage Grove. Mrs. Jack Anderson has gone to Iowa to visit her mother. Francia, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Webb Van Orman, of Fair- view, and Douglas Jarrett, were married in San jS-anciaco June 26th. The groom is an officer in the navy and uses the letters R. E. L. E. before his name. Mrs. Dick Summers and Vicki, Mrs. Harry Rogers, Mrs. Nora A l len, Coquille and Miss Nadine Fues ton, Cottage Grove called at the Iv y l Frye home Wednesday. The annual school board meet- ing was held Monday night, to ballot fo r a rural school boar 1 director and fo r the reading of in firs t; Riiho, second; Zwicker, third, and Hilts, fourth. Hartley, who went over back ward w ith his hydroplane in the race, breaking a hole in the deek, is brand-new father of a set o f twins born last week, a g irl and a boy. • • Miss Erna G ill was a weekend visitor to Eugene where she had a check up follow ing a recent op eration. • • Mr. and Mrs. George Laird leave this week fo r Vancouver, B. C. where they w ill attend a conven tion. • • Mr. and Mrs. John Shilling and daughter, Joeann, o f Portland have been visiting in Coquille w ith Mrs. Shilling’s grandmother, Mrs. Mina Jackson, and her aunt, Mrs. Er nest Batty. cofysw HO*»1* MoCoPe Jam* Jelly PECTIN THE iR U lIl! N T 'S E A S Y T O < EXAGGERATE. . . BUT WE MAKE EVERY EFFORT/ TO KEEP OUR N E W S < AUTHENTIC PORTRAYALS^ OF NEIGHBORHOOD H A P P E N IN G S ’ Bert’s Kash & Karry 378 Front Ph. 1351 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. iS SeWcit $ 4 4 5 0 .0 0 Th* lusciout red-ripe strowherries , ; on the package tell # J glance —It's Arden Fresh Straw F &M M arket MEAT MARKET CLOSES AT 8:30 P. M. \ berry Ice Cream. And what'» more, if» TlA V O tt FUESH" . . . chock - full of delicious garden-ripe ber Ernie Smith ries . . . (e cooling . . . t o delicious. TURKEYS young lb 6 9 c FRESH — 4 to 6 lb. Average — Roast or Fry Enjoy this delightful treat tonight. Real Estate & Ask for Arden Flavor-Fresh Ice Cream . . . at your nearest Arden Insurance Be sure! you at a * FOR THAT BEACH PARTY ; ; - WIENERSskin,ess ,b 5 9 c FRYERS 2 colored lb- 5 5 c FRESH NOT FROZEN ArdeaDM FORK STEAK lb 5 9 c SHOULDER CUTS VEAL STEAK lb 8 5 c SHOULDER CUTS CREAM BACON squares FOR FRYING OR SEASONING b * -V » lb- 2 9 c