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About The Coquille Valley sentinel and the Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1917-1921 | View Entire Issue (April 26, 1918)
“YOU MUST WORK 8 HOURS EVERY DAY FOR BONDS" A Patriotic American. A Native of Wisconsin. Age 47. K rt. Frank A. Vanderllp of Now York City, treasurer of the Notional Woman'» Liberty Loan Commute», 1» For 27 Years a Resident Oregon. S S L 'S A Vigorous Champion of the Rights of the People. Gtis;C. Moser lUpobllcan ' ^President Oregon State . Senate ^ A - • B J i ’or a vigorous prosecution of the war to a vic- ioriou s conclusion. v ' ' . v . * v.^ - * v - ' 'v For strict, business principles in management of state affairs. For Rural Credits Extension, Irrigation, Drain age and Development of all our resources. For assistance by Portland capital and business to every section of our great state. For the rights of both L^Jtor and Capital under a scheme of mutual co-operation. For Good Ronds, But F a tin g the Paving Trust We are paying about $8000 more per 16 foot mile of Bitulithic Pavement in Oregon than is being paid in Washington. Let us build good roads in every county in the State—GIVE EVERY COUNTY A SQUARE DEAL. Elect MOSER and you Will forever banish the subtle influence of the Paving Trust from Oregon politics. Aggressively Independent (PAID ADV.) Recipes for Whsatls— Bread. Monday’s 'Portland Market. Whoa ties« w ar breads have -boot made the subject o f much experim en tal work a t O. A . C. w ith the result that some excellent and wholesoc products have been secured. la order' to give the women o f O regon the ben efit of this work the recipes are o f fered them through the prose: e ■ Steamed Bread. H cup corn meal H cup corn flour H cup oat flour 1 cup sour m ilk (cla b b er) % teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon soda > 1-3 cup moteisso r~' H cup raisins ( i f dscired) Put together in order given . F ill can 2-3 full and steam l t t hours. Makes ons loaf. Potato Corn M eal Moflbso 2 tablespoons fa t 1 tablespoon sugar (siru p ) 1 egg well beaten 1 cup milk 1 cup mashed potatoee 1 cup corn m eal K cup oat flour. teaspoons baking powder. 1 teaspoon salt Mix in order given . Bake 40 m iv utes in a hot oven. “ Oregon women are p atriotic and went to save wheat fo r the arm ies fighting our battles,” sags Dean M i lam, “ but thejr h a vj n o t*a ll had tbs means o f finding out Jlow a good, wheatless bread can bo made. We have offered a four-lesson course to the women o f C orvallis and vicin ity, and a great m any calls have already come for theee w heatfess bread r cipes. I am glad te o ffe r them to housewives in other p eris o f the C attle receipts A p ril 22, 600. A l though receipts era somewhat heavier today thaa a week ago they are s till a Way below normal. Prices have con tinued to clim b since a week ego until Monday 14X10 waa realised fo r some excellent steers. A n advance o f 1.26 to 1.60 a ll along the line is e phenom enal record in any m arket. Portland claim s the distinction o f having this advance Monday. W all finished steers sold at. 18.26 end higher while ordinary stu ff sold up as high as the top price obtained a week ego. Quo- Good to choice steers 12.- 76 to 18.76; medium to good steers 11.76 to 12.76; common to medium steers 1025 to 11.26; choies cows and heifers 11.26 to 1226; common to good cows end heifers 7.26 to 10.76; cannera 426 to 626; hulls 626 to 10.- 76; calves fltffiAto 1826; stocken and feeders 70.00 to 90.00 pm- hoed. H og receipts Monday, 110. On a vry sm all run hogs climbed 16c that day. Q uality was vary good in the and the advance o f 16c was wall earned by quality. Quotations are; prim e m ixed" 17.6fr to 17.90; medium m^ced 17.40 to-17.66; rough heavies 16.40 to 16.66; pigs 16.00 to* 16.00; bulk 17.66 to 17.70. Sheep receipts today 800. No lange in quotations, which are; prim e spring lambs, 20.00; heavy Iambs 1620 to 18.00; yearlings 16.00 to 1626; weathers 18.00 to 1820; m 12.00 to 12.60. state." _ Eureka Mine Prospects. C. A . Paterson, who has been con nected with M. W . McCormick in opening up the coal m ine a t R iverton, left for San Francisco, an rou te to Eureka, where he m eets directors off the mins company. About 810,000 is needed to finance the commencement of operatione end provisions o f an ad equate reserve fund. I t is s till in doubt whether the stockholders w ill put up the desired sum. I f they do, deal* fo r m achinery w ill be made b fore Mr. Peterson returns.— Ceos Bi Times. Butter Signs at Wrappers consistent w ar la a recent Interview ■he »aid: "American women must quit paraaftes and learn to give Instead of always taking. An hour or two a few days a week la not enough for any woman to glye her country. W e must give a full business day, an I- hour day every day of the week j f we art to count for anything while the war lasts.” Mrs. Vsndsrllp outlined the spli did work which has been done by the of Grant Britain and France and congratulated American women on having as their allies In theto new work such woman.' If w * evef have another ■aid Mrs. Vanderlip, “woman will be In the trenches. W hat do the pa- mean when they want ua to •top before our present Job is dons? "There Is but one standard for ensuring a woman In this new day of war. That la dependability. The woman who can be depended upon Is the on* w s want. The one who can not be counted upon Is the one who will bo dropped forever, A profee- ■pirit Is the need of Ameri can women, who have been parasitic for too long. W e must stop taking glvo. Bight hours a day Is a short day for this great wora w s have before ua. Two or three hours a day to the Red Cross 1* not qpongh for any woman to give so her war w orkr “W e must get as our personal point of vlsw the realisation that We can not have oer cake and eat It too. W e must ask ourselves, la this w ar of equipment rather than men, who must go without If we have the things we have been accustomed to. Business and pleasure cannot go on as usual If ws are successfully to conduct this tremendous new business of war. W s have forgotten, when w o are buying new clothes and eating the wheat and sweets that we want and riding In our motor oars, that wo ars hampering the Government. W o are standing In th* w ay of the Govern ment’s buslnees which Is war. "W hen you want to spend s dollar for candy or unnecceeary clothes (and we buy mors clothes than wo used auae of pride) count that dollar a traitor dollar. I f you eave that dollar and Invest It with the Govem- t you. ars serving the Government doubly, for you are Aiding In financ ing the war and you are releasing the labor and materials needed for the nnneceeearlee which you have de, nded formerly. W> are fighting an enemy that la far from beaten. It has won every thing It started out after. Its dream of Mlttel Euro pa is realised now. Only a military victory can save de mocracy. W e moat sacrifice ourselves as we have sacrificed our men folks. W e must learn to hate that we may affectively kill the evil thing that la ruining nob' only the bodies but the souls of Its people and threatens the of the world.” LIBERTY BONDS 1. Are United State# Gov ernment Bend*. 2 Are supported by every dollar of th* enormous re source* of th* United States. S. They bear Interest at a rats higher than earned by spy other elaa* of Government bonds. A They do not represent a war gift or donation but the highest type of profit-produc ing Investment. 5. They ars In denomina tions ranging upward from $80 to suit the convenience and the finances of every American who /wants to help hi* country. 6. They ere transferable and constitute an Ideal security. 7. If you are willing to help your country any bank or trust company will hslp you by ac cepting ""your order and arrang ing terms of payment, without th* Imposition of any commis sion or charge for Its service*. A N Y B A N K W H ,L H C L P Y O U About Letton to Soldiers. t When you w rite e soldier, alw ays rite w ith ink and address him by Ids arm y title instead o f m ister, end w rite his name in fo il instead o f us in g initials. There are ssfreral hun dreds J. F . Smiths in France end else- tqre in the arm y. Theee su ggw - ms come from the poetoAqe depart ment a t W ashington. Another thing, it your own address on the envelop*. I t takas about th irty days fo r a let- tsr to reach a soldier w ith his com- snd in Francs although many let- ra g e t through in from 16 to 20 days. About 2 , 000,000 pieces o f mail a month go to the soldiers in France. H w y can be prom ptly delivered only i f addressee are plainly w ritten end the address designates company end LIB ER TY LO A N M OTHER GO O SE R H Y M E S Bing a song of pennies. For pennies now rank high! Five and twenty pennies A thrift stamp will buy. Sixteen stamp* of thrift W ill buy a little bond And bond* will give abort shift To Hens and Frits beyond. Buy Baby Bunting A baby bond for banting Submarine and Zeppelin Baby kin. Before they hunt Mae aaw, Marjorie Daw, Prnaala ahall have a aew masts His name will be Democracy Which apella a Junker disaster. whet shall we sing? eoe open his owa p Club meets t at TdO. 1 •tria» N*wU FARMERS! THIS IS YOUR WAR. BUY UBERTY BONDS Let us think for a while how the war concerns the tarmar. W e went to w ar with Germany pertly ; because the rulers o f that country refused to let a n , send to Europe our ships laden with grain and cotton. They sunk the ships and cruelly murdered our »abort. Now suppose we allowed them to stop all our shipplqff, where would you be? None of your goods would be sold In foreign countries, with the result that you would get nothing like the prices which you get today. Thle war Is being waged partly that you may obtain fair prices for your goods. What la going to happen If we lose this war?'- Prices of farm pro duce will drop; the Germane will impose taxation upon you which will cripple you for the next twenty years. W orse than that, If the Germane get over here, they will treat you In Just the same way as they have the farm ers o f France, Belgium and Italy. In these sections farm houses have been ■hot to pieces, crops wasted and burned; even fruit trees chopped down, the cattle stolen, the men sent Into slavery to work for German masters, their women ill-treated in ways that cannot 6* talked of In print, their little children have had their iiands ‘Chopped off tn order that they m ay'never fight or do aqy more useful work again. You may say "such things will dbt happen here.” They said this in France, in Belgium and In Italy. Such things will happen here Just as sure as you ard alive, unless we smash the Germans so utterly that they are ■ unable to reach this country. The German fleet and the German army will take jnst one week to get here if we are beaten. They have made np their minds that America ahall The Right Kind of Man for Senator Robert N . Stanfield Farmer, Stock Raiser and Producer T h e State is entitled to the a ctive services o f a man w ho knows how to work, w ork fo r the State gen erally and w ork fo r the people o f the State, both individually and collectively. O regon does not need any orators fo r orators are a dru g on th e m arket, and like constitutional law yers, they do not g e t anything. pay. - Is there ■ farmer who will stand forward now and say, "This war does not concern me?” Ton have money that you do not need at present. Loan It to the Gov ernment at good Interest; when you want the money badk again, you can borrow on yoar bond, or sell It Uncle Bara will take care of your money until you need It and pay you-lnterest en t t # Go and buy a Liberty Bond t » morrow. Don’t be a slacker, and don’t fool yourself with the Idea that you are too far away from the war for It to hurt you. Remember 1914, when the Germans upset the world’s shipping, and you took what you eould get for your product*. Thtnk of the twenty years starva tion prices ah gad of you, In case we are beaten. Thle la your war, and If you won’t get In It you deserve to lose your American Cltlsenebip. . Call In at the bank tomorrow, and talk It over. Third Liberty Loan ■y Celia Louise Crlttenton Seriously considered, with Insight and understanding, the Third Liberty Lean mesne but one thing— stability. The unification of Government and people. The much or little which the peo ple place at the hands of the Govern ment, proportionate te what they poa- a. will have behind It not alone th* voice of the people but a* well the united will and force of the peo ple against a war which threatens to engulf th* whole national family. W e ars being Just to ourselves If w s place our money where It Is rate. And we are living up to the dictates of our national conscience, which also Is our family conscience. The most safe and reasonable In vestment possible Is. with our Ctovern- ment. For the Government is but on rec fires viewed through the magni fying glass. If we were born In the United States ws love our birthplace. It is home. If we were allowed to adopt the United State* that offered to us more than onr oppressing birth-coun try; offered to u* more freedom, a wider scope, then through that adop tion We have gained a Privilege worthy of even greater devotion and love. So, let us all be glad that a Third Liberty Loan la pending. It la a good sign that we trust ourselves, that w * are ready depositors In the Protect!«* Bank of Borne. Keep the home- fires burning*’ IS no light slogan, lightly spoken. Only when the fire Is quenched by a bomb dropped down through the home chimney, can we fully realise how preclou* and prised Is that cherished and cheerful flame. W * must not and Shall not wait for that T h * Third Liberty Bond awaits us and ws tire randy. YOUR DUTY AND W HY "W e are fighting this war for th* next generation a* well as this W e are dedicating the Ufa blood of tala nation that our children and oor children’» children M A Y ENJOY T H E BIJCSS1NG8 O F U B B R T Y — OTH ERS IN TH IS C O U N T R Y W I L L GIVE T H E IR BLOOD: Y O U G IV E T O U R M O NEY.” —Ooorgo W. V. ft T h e Federal G overnm ent needs all the assistance O regon can g iv e , but is not receivin g it because it has not been p u t up to the departm ent on a business basis. •> • • " « . ‘ T od ay business men are h avin g m ore to do w ith the govern m en t affairs than e v e r before. W e are spending tw en ty-fo u r m illion dollars a day and the people who w ill pay this m oney are the people who actually create wealth, -the farm er, producer and the toiler. \ Our prosperity depends on our continued indus trial activities- and every one o f these should be maintained a t a m axim um capacity, . ✓ The prosperity o f the small farm er, the small producer and the small m anufacturer is as essential to th e State and the N ation as the prosperity o f the b ig m an— e v ery one o f our occupations should be g iven equal consideration regardless o f the am ount produced. E v ery encouragem ent m ust be g iv e p to increase production and this can be obtained only through as surance th at the small farm ers as w ell as the b ig man is g o in g to receive ‘his proportionate share o f the w a r expenditures, and that there w ill be a m arket fo r his products and a profit to him fo r his w ork, based proportionately upon his cost o f produc tion. ( There must be equality in alH p h a ses o f our State and N ation al industry, and the small fe llo w m ust not be forgotten , overlooked or crowded out through the rush fo r b ig things and b ig orders and b ig accomplishments. I f the people o f the Statg w an t a business man, a w orker, a man who knows, is thoroughly ac quainted w ith e v ery phase o f the industrial situation in.O regon, a man w ho is capable, honest and fe a r less, a man w ho has by his own labor and through his advancem ent aided in the progress and develop m ent o f Oregon, they w an t R obert N . Stanfield. Paid Adv., Stanfield Senatorial Lcagua, JOS North »»tu r n Bank Bid*. The notorious “ H alfw ay House” on the w aterfron t road between Marsh - Aeld and North Bend has been closed again, and the U. S. secret service men Say it w ill have to stay closed this tim e. Ope town with less than tw ice aa many people aa Coquille, located in Germany near the Dutch border, re ports that 67 o f its men have been killed in the month since the Hinden- hurg drive began. Çall on"Us fo r Stationery. Cdtarrh Cannot Be Cured with LO CAL A PPLIC ATIO N S, as they cannot reach th* seat o< the disease. Catarrh Is a local dloeeso. greatly ln- fiuencod hr constitutional condition», and In order to euro It rou must take aa ly /H Hall Internal remedy all’s e Catarrh Meoi- :en Internally and acts thru cine la take the blood oa tha mucous surfaces of the *‘ ■yetem. Hall’s Catarrh one of ot ine Desi pi pnyeiaans prescribed by ons the best ry for yeas*. I t is cors la this country posed of some et tha beat tonics knowa i some c f tha best blood m B M irldsts. The perfect combination of Ingredients tn Hall's Catarrh Medi cine la what produces such wonderful ■Its In catarrhal conditions. Bond for sr i CO.. Props., Toledo, a The ship knee industry is a grow ing business in Coot county and .the*de- mands are not confined to local con sumption. There are hundreds o f men employed in Coos epunty taking out stumps, the roots o f which are form ed in a natural shape fo r knees. Several carloads have been sent out, one shipment goin g to H og Island, near Philadelphia. On* o f the big knees sold there fo r |109 in th * rough. — Oregon Farm er. CUNY COUNTY IANCI FOR SALE 160 acre ranch in Curry coun ty fo r sal*. Suitable fo r dairy or stock ranch. acres river bottom in cultivation, 12 acre* bench land, raat in posture land, some farm in g tools. 6 head o f cattle, 8 cows and 8 yearlings. N n r rustic house, fa irly good barn, 80x40. Fam ily orchard. Crop moat a ll in. Price 86,000; $3,000 cash and balance to suit the purchaser at 6 per cent. A d dress Parley C row ley, Bitkum, Oregon. 14t4 I . ’