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About The Coquille Valley sentinel and the Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1917-1921 | View Entire Issue (March 14, 1919)
pag i an » TA U M f ; MA U No. «849 «f tko FIR ST N A TIO N A L BANK a t Coqulll* ta tfca Stata of O ncoa, a ttk a dose a ffia ta— am Mar. 4th. t i l t eopt tkoM «haïra ta k aad a). A U. 8. Beads (at! a U. 8. bonds deposited to secure circulation (fa r value) .............. t V. 8. bonda aad awnad aad oaptodgad A Liberty loan baada: a Liberty Lena Bonda, IK , 4, aad 414 far cent, unpledged ......................................................... . 1 R a d i. — —in — « 1 » (ethar tkaa U. A ): e Bonda aad securities pledged aa collateral lav State, or other depoaita (portal excluded) or Mil« payable.......................................................... a Securitlea ether thaa U. A bonda (not including etoeka) owned uapledged...................................... Total bonda, aecuritiea, etc., other tkaa U. 8 .. A Stock of Federal Raaarre Bank (60 par coat of •ubacrlption) ......................................................... 10a Value of banking house owned aad unincumbered 11. Furniture aad fixture*............................................ 1A Lawful reaerro with Federal Baaorv* Bank . . . . 1A Cash in vault and net amount« due from nation- bftllkSi # e *** e •»-*•**• • o ****** • #*•••*•««•*• 1A Net amounta due from banka, banker», aad treat companies other thaa included in Items 10, 14,16 1A Chocks on other banka in the same city or town as reporting bank (other thaa Item 17) Total of Items 14, 16, 18, IT and 18. 1A Check* on banks located outside of city or town’ of reporting bank and other cash item s.............. 20. Redemption fund with U. A Treasurer aad due from U. 8. Treasurer............................................ t l. Interest earned but not collected—approximate —on Notes and Bills Receivable not past due.. 23. Other Assets, if any, Due ua on Advanced L. L. S u b s................................................ 60,000.00 6240040 10400.00 40,820.14 664*6.14 % 1400.00 82,700.00 6,40040 21400.00 ’ 74,66948 847847 80244 77,641.74 TOTAL........................................ ...................... 162.00 0*640 2,014.64 166.00 $377,686.88 State of Oregon, County of Coos, m: - I, L H. Hasard, Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge aad belief. L. H. HAZARD, Caahior. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th day of March, 1818. (Seal) 3. 3. Stanley, Notary Public for Oregon. My commission expires Jan. 4, 1820. Correct—Attest: A. 3. Sherwood, C. T. Skoals, O. C. Sanford. Directors. Farners & Merchants Bank TOTAL ......................$164,669.66 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in........$ 25,000.00 Surplus fund .................... 1.300.00 Undivided profits, lees ex penses and taxes paid 86147 Individual deposits subject to check . . . . . . . . . . . 87,608.86 Demand certificates of de posit ........... 641148 Time and Savings Deposits 24482.74 Oar Vmwm Covrite GM bm H. rig Jorogy Writs* A h *« Things fai Bute The Sentinel is in receipt at s long id interesting lottar from H. de Jer- y, who will be ?— smhireil as one of our etisons her* flv*^years ago. He writes from Faria telling about living conditions there aad what he says is especially interesting because he has both the French aad the American viewpoint. The first paragraph Is noteworthy for coinciding so exactly with the observation made in another hnan by a Corvallis soldier: 80,000.00 TOTAL. . .. fc............................... k ...................... 6*77,63648 LIABILITIES 24. Capital stock paid in ........ ................................... $ 60,000.00 26. Surplus f u n d . . . ................................ 10,00040 26a Undivided profits . . . ' . .......................................... 6 4442.77 b Leas current expenses, interest, aad taxes paid. 146848 847848 27. Interest aad discount collected or credited, in ad vance of maturity and not earned (approximate) 603.00 2A Amount i marred for taxes accrued ................... 140040 /to. Circulating notes outstanding................................ 12400.00 8A Net amounts due to banks, hankers, and trust companies (other than included in items 81 or 82) 2482.62 Total of Items 82, 38, 84 andS6 ..................... 2482.62 Deauad dspastts (ether thaa bank l i p mite) dhh- v Ject to Reserve (deposits payable within 80 days): 14. Individual deposits subject to chock ............. 268486.26 IT. Certificates of deposit due in lorn thaa 80 days (other than for money borrowed) .............. 8747048 8A State, county or other municipal depoaita secur ed by pledge of assets of this b an k .......... A .. - 2466.78 Total of demand deposits (other than bank de posits) subject to Reserve, Rosas 36, 87, 88, 88, 40, and 41................................................................. $287421-27 a t Coquill«, in the State of Oregon, at the doe* of business March 4, 1818. RESOURCES Loans and Discounts......... $ 76444.74 Overdrafts, secured and un secu red ..................... 81.68 Bonds and w a rra n ts .......... 82,11441 Banking House................. 12,600.00 Furniture and F ix tu re s... 6,000.00 Due from banks (not re serve banks).............. 78646 Due from approved re serve banks................ 12,700.64 Checks and other cash items ......................... 618.84 Exchangee for clearing h o u s e ......................... 618.14 Cash on hand..................... 1249844 Other resources ................ 796.00 LIFE III FRANSE 16844 taAafctaiaaaa No. 28. REPORT OF THE CONDITION OF THE OOqOUILLR, OREGON. FRIDAY, MARCH 14. 1*1« Soils Schools This Month Wo are arranging with the depart ment of Soils and Drainage of O. A. C. to conduct a series of meetings or two-day schools in the following places: Myrtle Point in Lundy Hall from 10:80 a. m. to 8 p. m. each day, Mon day and Tuesday, March 24 and 26. Coquille a t City Hall 10:80 a. m. to 3 p. m. Wednesday and Thursday, March 26 and 27. Marshfield in Chamber of Com merce, 10:30 a. m. to 2 p. m., Friday and Saturday, March 28 and 28. Sabjocte The following are some of the sub- jocts which will bo handled a t these schools: 1. Formation and Classification of Western Oregon toils. 2. Physcal properties of soils and their improvement. 3. Value and us* of manure—illus trated. 4. Organic matter. 6. Control of soil moisture. 6. Drainage. 7. Us* of fertiiers in Western Ore gon. 8. Soil acidity and limiag. thee* schools are to be free to all, providing there are twenty-five farm- ■ in each of the above-mentioned place*, who will agree to attend the meetings for two days in a t least one of the thro* place* mentioned. If you want to help put on the schools kindly sign your name in the following coupon spues showing which school you wish to attend, clip it out then and sand to our office. If you do not send in your name, it will indicate to the Extension Ser vice of p. A C. that you are not in terested' in having them send Prof. Rusk, the soils specialist, down hero to conduct the schools for you and TOTAL ......................$15446846 State of Oregon, County of Coos, m L A H. Mast, Cashier of the above- named bank, do solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the beet of my knowledge and belief. A H. Mast, Cashier, Subscribed and sworn to before mo this 10th day of March, 1818. (Seal) W. C. Chase. * Notary Public. (My commission expires Nov. A 1818) Correct—A ttest: the Sentinel far $140 a year C 3. Fuhrman got the Oregon Farmer ta add J. E. Norton paying only lA m ata mete. “The ether day a t the restaurant w han I was taking my dinner I heard sous* factory girls tolling about get ting married. With the untrammell ed freedom which prevails in that class, I took out my memorandum book, and in a spirit of fun, said I was about to start a matrimonial bu reau and would they kindly give me their names T' “ Did they wish to marry: I asked each oa* in turn, Each one answered quit* simply and naturally that she did. What do you know about that! Now, our American girls under fir* would have blushed or tittered, I pre- Whyl I have even known self- conscious Uttlo things barely in their refuse to entertain the company with a solo when the one suggested was the Sunday School song begin ning with “Where is my wandering boy tonight?" n L A Y the amohegama w ith a Jimmy I pipe if you’re hankering for a hand* out for what ails your sm okeappstits! For, with Prince Albert, you’ve got a new listen on the pipe queetion that cuts you loose from old stung tongue and dry throat worrtoal Made by our exclusive patented proceea, Prince Albert is acotfo— from bite and porch and hands you about tb s biggest lot < that ever w as scheduled in your direction! Prince Albert is a pippin of a pipe-pal; roUad into a beats the band! Oaf the riant that P. A. is simply everything any man ever longed lor in tobacco! You never will be willing to figure up th e sport you’ve slipped-on once you gst that Prince Albert quality flavor and quality satisfaction into your fimekssyatem! You’ll talk kind w ords every time you get on the firing line! “When I was working as orderly in the big military hospital within fifteen minutes’ walk, and the last Roche of fensive almost disorganised our ser available cot was filled Ikeemmd*—«.iMrmdia»» ee—rfi d American tads. As our young hero* arrived, bloodstained and bedraggled, the overflow filled the cor ridors aad temporarily the stairways. R. J. Reynolds Tobocco Company, N .C T hope, w* shall not have to work long like this,* exclaimed a distracted young American doctor during the tone* it is beautiful and enthralling as house afirq in the night. As the daily dressing rounds as a constant stream of nurses, orderlies and chore- tongues of flame leap into the sable women edged by. sky, and the showers of sparks fly up ‘Why! the French work like this wards, 'and the elemental, roar domi all the time,’ answered somebody. And nates all other sounds, so the spirit of to my mind this crush and discomfort sacrifice and enthusiasm catches a is typical of the struggle for existence whole nation in its blase and momen which is the rule for the poorer classes tarily stills its small quarrels. But in France, and probably in all of Eu draw near, and you will see the blanched faces of the women, and you rope today. m ■ “Wo have been led ,to believe that will hear the sobs of the children as * English and French working familiar articles endeared by long as dashes, wee* rioting in easily acquired sociation are twisted and tortured in wealth during the war. That is all the intense heat and fall a t last to red And when the sword Is slush. The few skiled wage earners embers. wLose capacity commanded the top sheathed there remain the destitute figure have been taken aa a sample widows and orphans, and the battle fields devastated as by volcanic up of the whole mass. “It is only the other day that the heaval, and the hatreds engenered and operators of the Paris subway struck the moral damage to the souls of our for a trifling raise in wr.ges. They young men, seared by what they have are actually getting tea francs ($2) witnessed and experienced. “We had to protect civilisation day or even lees. And an amiable young lady with whom I was talking against unreasoning hordes of the Red thought they wore enreasorable in Mattoid, who coveted the wealth their demands. She had herself been which was not his. But if Society as whole had not been frenzied in Its reared in a refined Christian lx never felt the pangs of hunger, cult of money and barbaric display; nor known what it was to sloop in i if plain living and high thinking had room without light and outside ven been the rule; if Society had been slm tilatioa. pi* in its standards and had drawn i distinction between^ the selfish, “Yet th at very day a pound of but ter sold in this ward for ten francs paralytic wealth which enervates its and twenty centimes—more than the possessor* and the creative, fruitful daily wag* of on* of these ear eonduc wealth which spreads the blessings of to n and ticket venders women who civilisation over wide areas and within have to breath* the vitiated air of the the reach of all; in short, if Society subway all day long. had had a greater social morality; then this cowardly ass with the exul “Now some on* will perhaps cairn that the state-fixed maximum tant bray, who has insulted the intel price of butter has never exceeded ligence of man for the last three dec . > two and a half francs (60 cento) per ades, would have been squelched long -— This Is the only time this lot pound. True. But when the maxi ago by the instrumentality of the will be offered at that price mum price of an article is fixed by pen alone. For the pen is mightier law, experience has proven that It than the sword. And now that the ord has done its work, there re simply disappears from the open mar ins a greater work for the pen to ket and surreptitious salee a t higher prices are the reeult, unless heavy accomplish:1’ penalties are imposed. "The American army has not paid Coquille Won and Lout m on than the maximum state-fixed Coquille and Marshfield went fifty- price. I have been told without ran fifty on victories last Friday night cor by the French people, but have a t the doubleheader basketball game and not investigated the charge, that our at the gymnasium in which the Co army commandeer* the butter right quill* independents defeated the at the farm. If that is the case it is Marshfield independents by a score of a somewhat selfish course, for the U. 26 to 21, and the Marshfield high quin A canteens have in stock a great tet romped off with the laurels, scor many delicacies, such as chocolate and ing 84 to the 9 scored by the Coquille sweets, which the poorer French civ- five. iiian has neither seen nor tasted for Over 200 were present for the con months. We have oven sawdust in tests, one of the largest crowds which bread. Fact And I have been i gathered for a basketball game seriously inconvenienced by the dearth in many a day, and general hoarseness of candle*. ¡>ng the high school students the For reliable Abstracts of “The French have been very lenient day day declares that there was lot* *nd generous with the aggressive and of noise. spirited young army which turned the Urn first half of the game by the tid* of battle Just a t the very time independents ended with the score when the hated Boehe seemed about 13 to 10 in favor of Marshfield. Co to sweep down in a resistless tide on quille took 16 in the last half to Paris. They have kept the rough- Marshfield’s 8. stunts and hold-ups out of their Score« were made as follows in this P*P«* ta. a magnificent spirit of for tin*: Coquille—Stanley, 6 points; test ended with a score of 17 to 2 Potato; McCarborry, 4 potato. bearance. For some .of our boy»-an Pika, 8 points; Watson, 8 points; in favor of Marshfield. Coquille The Marshfield high school »__ n I minority fortunately— Shreevsr, 2 points; C. Oerding 2 in the last half to Marshfield’. 17. will go to Coquille to play on Karen have not behaved well. point Marshfield—Morrow, 18 points; Scores were mad* as follows: Co- 81. I t is probable th at oa the fol ‘War,’ a* seam on* has said, is Watters, 2 potato; Musson, 1 point | quill*— W. Oerding, 9 points. Marsh- lowing night, Saturday, K will play The first half of the Ugh N h o r iM d - Chapma n, i f prints; Alton, 12 at Raen from a dta- “— 7 will buy the best residence lot in Coquille this week. Smooth and level. Just west of the City High School. This lot is worth $500; adjoining lots have sold for that price, and it will be good for that again before many years. Sewer taxes all paid and street improvement taxes to date. This is the greatest bargain ever offered in Coquille city prop erty. For further information call at SENTINEL OFFICE IflE COOlllLlf VALLEY SENIML T H E O REG O N F A R M E R For one year in advance $ 1.65 ABSTRACTS B* - r - '-