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About The Coquille Valley sentinel and the Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1917-1921 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 19, 1917)
CAR R Y 1 adUMBtit-». V irigo # 'I m lieve you of that trouble and reqmnMbiHty. We will deliver them almost «a quickly as you can get home yourself, amd yeu wfflflnd nothing over-looked, and no “subfftituteg” rang in for what you ordered.' We kefl> a splendid Mae of tip-top Groceries at right prices, and we know that we can save yon money if you deal here. ... . , W. H. P in t National Bank Building September the U t 1; [ 1 L 1 j [ F . i J I I H I rn Is a gedl U bm far yea to start taarketiag your la the right way. Wo are fa RIGHT, aad wo waat to convince YOU. A trial aUpaieat, or a month’s trial la hotter, will prove to you that our broach— COQUIT IIB -haa, ta the short time wo have been op era Hag, done much toward puttiag the aad it Isoks like than M yrtle P rin t, ta r Guy W ilbarger, 2100 ta t 8." B. Wood, •TOO » ; Gee.. W ilson, 2200; and Tern K night, «700 f t . The man w ith the bean thresher chargee 7$ cents per too ta. = : aad ham •* -- - •* ** But the present time, if he makes the most o f it. crop D E P E N D S on having seed to plant. Procrastination is the thief o f time and this coming season it will be the thief that steals Y O U R PRO S P E R IT Y , if you don’t SECURE YOUR SEEDS EARLY You may not be able to get'w hat you w a n t M ake up your m ind what ¡H S „ d choiee w ill be. D O N T W A IT U N T IL R E A D Y TO P L A N T . your Look this list over. The price is right; the supply is limited. •'Wholesale prices are changing daily. Vetch - - - - - .05 Alsyke and White Clover, mixed .27 1-2 W hite clover and Aisyke .36 - Red C lo v e r ...................................321-2 Crimson Clover - - Imported Italian Rye Grass - - .22 - .17 1-2 Give us your order for fall oats, Busy Comer Grocery DAY FOR BUTTERFAT 5 1 u m «»»V». * • ~ G. G. Swan aad w ife with th eir son- in-law, Guy W ilbarger, sad fam ily are a t Bandon tid e «reek. Mrs. A lv a M iller her husband ia this week th eir h«ate oa Catching Creek. W alter Colvin, a farm er e f North Fork o f Qoquille river, has threshed Ms beans aad has 200 s a d ». L eslie T rig g , o f N orw ay, is serioely sick w ith typhoid fever. Dr. Rich- o f Coquiilo, is Him Ed C arter and M r. Clayton have also built eiloo fo r to conserve the ju icy cow food. M rs. Sarah E. away Thursday, O c t 11, a t the hi e f her nephew, Maurice Ray, hi M yrtle P r in t was a sister e f the sev eral R ay brothers Jn this county. She bom in M erest, county, Missouri, in 1884. W ith to Ksnsas in 1870 and was m arried to M r. M elton in 1881, livin g there 10 yea n , hi Decatur county. From there they moved to W oiaer, Idaho, whore M r. M elton died in 1012. her home w ith her son, Jeaag, a fter the passing « f M r. M elton. She leaves tw o daughters and five seas, two o f whom as w ell a f three o f her brothen w ere w ith her in the lost hours. The funeral was conducted a t the N orw ay cem etery. The service was conducted by Rev. Theesaa Barldow. The city council turned down* the im provem ent proposition o f upper Spruce s tre e t N either- pavement nor DAIRY BUSINESS ea the PROPER BASIS. Don’t delay, bot start Madtoff your cream to us. PRICE TO I y TO M A K E M O N E Y , was never better than at the home If you wish, but we would sooner re ' it r n ORTUNITY YOUR ■ m ™ i 52c per pound Front and C Streets ' Coquille, Oregon Phones 601 and 541 T. S. TOWNSEND CREAMERY CO. u i C harlie Haines w ith tw o o f his sis te r« from H arrisburg passed through here Monday on th eir w ay to the old fa m ily homestead a t Ecklay, where th eir brother, Ed, has his home. Zack G rant has sold the balance o f his farm tO fjtrs . Emma R ook«, o f N orth Bend, and is new ready to take kis fa m ily and go to C aliforn ia. E . C. Roberts effected the sale. M iss Edna N orris, a daughter o f Tom N orris, who lived here before M yrtle Poin t had a sidewalk, is here from her present home in the K lam ath country. She is a guest o f the R. C. Dement fa m ily and visits other rela - BROADBENT BREEZES. roles where they expect to winter. E van gelist Marshall and Rc .. Mosh Miss A da Nicholas, who trim a er, o f the Baptist denomination, are school g irl a short tim e ago, w ill be holding service in the school bouse m arried in M arshfield at her mother's home to R ay A . S tillw ell, an automo 8. 8. Reed’s ensilage cutter finished bile machinist from "som ewhere 'in fillin g M r. B ell’s silo Tuesday, and has C aliforn ia." moved to J. R. LattrelTs, from there The women o f the Rad Cross ate they w ill Journey to the J. M. V’ agnar busy every <Uy in the R. E. Shine dairy farm . R ay Haworth, Jim Barki.o’.l and Lute M yers w ere visitors at Broad- bentTuesday. Th ey reside at Norw ay. M rs. Charles H arrington returned P ip er Jehnsea and Geo. Gilman, o f Monday n igh t from a v is it to relatives C oquill«, passed through hers Tues in H illsboro, O r«., sad w ith her caipe day. Th ey w ere returning from a her niece, M rs. Eula Parrott, and her hunting trip ; they faded to g e t any W E ARE PAYING 52c today for i butterfat for BUTTER a ----- a*— ■ — ^ --------------------- o f Coquille, was a t |U Copic vaficy creamery Ct. m NEED TRAINING be reports that potatoes w ill be 6c per pound this w inter. W . R. Ocheltree and H. A . Johnson are d iggin g their potatoes with a four horse d igger. They w ill have from 20 to 40 tons. the credit o f M r. and M is. Jim Apple- M rs. Claypole visited Miss M gnees ton on M iddle Fork. I t weighed » a t the Livingston home last Saturday pounds. and Sunday. M r^D avis, the lu m berjack mission- J. R. W ade, o f Bandon, attend id the TO la O u W T w Oo rrsep Mr. Roselle returned 8unday from Marshfield end North Bend; he had some castin g« molded a t the foundry. He reports lively times on the B ay; ha was offered $«.00 a day to do black- sm ithing In a ship yard. M r. Hannar, the tic man, was seen on our streets Monday. Thos. H aggerty and fam ily, o f M yr tle Point, visited a t the H. A . Johnson «H » & W . W arner houses last 8unday. (Tu xedo.) By authority from the Postm aster General L ib erty Bongs m ay be pur chase! a t any poet office, in nil denom inations from $S0 to $6,000. T. ould- bo purchasers can obtain an appHea- is a man who has cheered many sick and lame ones by his practical meth ods o f presenting the truth. H k par ish extends from B ritish Columbia through C alifornia. « The spelling contest at the gram mar school between the seventh and eighth grades resulted in a decisive victory fo r the seventh last week. The funeral o f M iss Lois Bennett at Dora was la rg e ly attended. The seats were taken from the building and the serviee was held in the otan. Rev. T aylor Bunch was m inister. Messrs. Doane, o f Chicago, «¡pd ChapUa, e f W isconsin, fo r the govern ment, a re here tide week looking aftar the betterm ent o f dairy conditions. Corporal Fen der, o f the A rtille ry Coast Guard, is a t home on a short furlough, visitin g his parents and many friends. H e is yet carryin g his broken leg carefu lly but w ill soon be ready fo r duty. Mr. Black, the assistant cashier o f the Flanagan A Bennett bank, has t.v .n the U o yd Spires house fo r his home since the arriva l o f Ms fam ily. Jamas A rrin gton , who is somewhat indisposed, is being assisted in his stare by T a y lo r Johnson. A mpst enjoyable tim e sms spent a t the home o f Dr. O. H. Clarke on F ri day evening o f.la s t week when Mrs. Clarke gave the first o f a series o f musical «v o tin g s fo r the pleasure and in terest o f the ««em bers o f her music Mr. and M rs. M iller, o f G old Beach, class. A fte r a quisx on musical ques are here visitin g Mm. Dtm Bnrklow tions, a recital was given by the ment Mm. M iller’s Meter. T h eir tw o a » » F ollow in g M rs. B arker's loss o f “ put-up” fru it by the shelving fa llin g , came a “ shower” o f fru it from her friends and now she has m ore va riety i f Sot quantity that before. ‘ Gale Abbott, a rather «m all boy, who, realisin g that he is grow in g and w ill not alw ays be a little boy, made his first m ove accordingly when he took his bed to the ga rret in a nice U ttle room Just his sise, but when night came and the dark fu ll o f bears, he persuaded his grandm other to m ove it back agdln near his mother. Dr. F . M. W hite, late o f Klam ath, passed through here this week on his w ay to his new location at M arshfield. H e first practiced medicine here but fo r the last fifteen years has been in Klam ath. His fam ily is already lo cated in M arshflell. O w ing to the general apathy o f the local pram w e w ill say that Thursday evening, the 18th, an enthusiastic m eeting was held in the Unique The atre when Hon. E arl K ilpatrick, o f Portland, addressed a fu ll house en the subject o f buying L ib erty bonds in which it was d e a rly shown to be the duty o f every d tlsen to buy these bonds as w e must d efeat our enemies, the Germans, as w ell as protect our selves again st traitoes a t ¡jom e, fo r fnadn ana the sinesra e r w ar "and these bonds axe bast investm ent today o f fered. The “ four-m inute” men, J. O. Stem m ier, president, w ill occupy the fo llow in g evenings w ith fou r, minute struck his shoulder in ju rin g him se verely. H e says Ms doctor says he w ill have to w a it three months more before he m ay w ork. M r. and M rs. Tucker have been fo r svereal weeks in M arshfield in the heapital business. H enry Hansly «is keeping th eir house here. The telephone says that Jim Apple ton’s baby, a pound g irl, ia named L ila Dolores. Mias M ary Pika, Of Coquille, is this week a guest in M yrtle P o in t M yrtle P oin t H igh SchooL The General Science class in order to keep in touch w ith the work o f the scientists have organised a club. The organisation meats tw ice a month on F riday afternoon a t which tim e a pro gram w ill be rendered. A t the first m eeting the follow in g Rears w ere elected: Pree., Ruth Adam s; V ice Pree., V ivian Anderson; 8ec.-Treas., C lara M cDonald; C ritic, M r. Gary. On Friday, October 10, the dub w ill h ava.it« first regu lar program . During the year it w ill give open program s to which ths public w ill ba welcome. The first student body m eeting o f the year was held on Oct. 4. The fo l low ing officer* w ere elected: Pree., James W hitaker; V ice P re e , Forest S ec, M o lli« Johnson« T re e s , Orvin Gant. The number o f the students now en rolled is 78, showing an increase from the first registration . The lib rary welcomes a box o f new books. On thew fternoon o f Oct. 8, M r. Tom Orderman, an accomplished vocalist from N ew Y ork, delighted the teach ers and atudepts w ith several solos. Tennis enthusiasts in the school •use have form ed a club. A t their _ the follo w in g people ehoaen to look a fte r the w elfare o f the organisation: P re s , L y le Nos- le r; V ice F re e , Orvin G ant; Sec.- T ra a s, Jamas W hitaker. F a ll w ork ia the cause o f a great any absences am ong the m ale con tin gen t e f the school. Silo fillin g, po tato d iggn g aad siaailar occupations ha farm have called out a great number the las* weak or so. fo r a L ib erty Loan bond soldiers figh t our battles. 100 tar $1.00 100 ta r $1-00. ►