The Coquille Valley sentinel and the Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1917-1921, February 27, 1920, Page 5, Image 5

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of the foot. It just look* like an than through cotton or Unen doth,
and even a t that it deoo not fall, which keeps the moisture la Its texture
; rolls ever if it gives awa>." says uatU tt U thoroughly saturated,. Aa<l
Frederic 7. Cotton, a foot expert'
« '« * » **»
«•ton. wl f you w c n tto g a tr id of
weakness practice the rolling ex-
But, see that you wash ’em right I
is, which is, w eiglt on feet, body
Ton kill their berreraeae right off If
you let little Mia of eaap gat M b e
roll outward 12 to 80 times twice dal tween the fibers and thus doc up the
ly. Then for a second exercise—up chauaeie through which the moisture
tions of revolution, Prohibition canee
sad th s government a t Washington
We are in receipt of a circular Is­
still lives. The allaita* who loved
sued
by Dr. 8. L. Burton, state direct­
boon better then America have (one
or for Arizona of the Modern Wood­
and th o n th at love America better
men of America, in which he says that
in epidemics of influenza it it safer
to attond school and church, if the
are a batter class and will be more in­
buildings are well ventilated, than to
dustrious and more capable. Fewer
walk the Streets of a city.
of thorn will become public chargee or
social menaces. Indirectly, Prohibi­
' SOMETHING LINCOLN SAID
tion is an* effective immigration low.
Bead the following extract from • It operates to keep out the undesir­
Washington’s birthday spaaeh Abra­ ables and secures a higher type of
ham Lincoln made tlx years before prgspeetive citizens.—American Issue.
the Sentinel editor was born and you
will have no doubt where the “Great
Emancipator” would stand an the
The Marshfield schools have re­
prohibition question if ha were alive ]
mained closed this week on account of
the prevailing epidemic.
today:
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Of our poli .¡cal revolution of "18 we
are all justly proud. It has given us a
degree of political freedom far exceed­
ing th a t of any other nation of tbs
earth. In it the world has found a
solution of a long-mooted problem a t
to the capability of man to govern
himself. In it was the g u m which
has vegetated, end etUl is to grow aw
expand is to the universal liberty ef
mankind. But, with all these glori­
ous résulta, past pre sent, aad to come,
it Rad its evils, too. It breathed forth
famine, swam in blood and rode in ir a i
and long, long, a fte r the orphan’s cry
and the widow's wail continued to
brash the sad alienee th a t ensued.
These were the price, the inevitable
pries, paid for the blessings it brought.
Turn now to the tem perate revolu­
tion. I t it we shall find a stronger
bondage broken, a viler slavery man
H mors of want suppiisd, more disease
healed, more sorrow assuaged. By tt
no orphans starving, no widows Stoop­
ing. By it none wounded ha f ooting,
none injured in interest; oven the
dnun-m aker and dram-seller will have
glided into other occupations so grad­
ually as novsr to hsva felt the change,
and will stand ready to Join all others
in the universal song of gladness.
And what a noble ally this to to the
cause of political freedom; with such
an aid its march cannot fail to bo on
and on; till every son of the earth shall
drink in rich fruition ths sorrow*,
quenching draught of perfect liberty.
And when the victory shall be com­
plete—when there shall be neither n
slave nor a drunkard on earth—bow
proud the title of th a t land which may
truly claim to be the birthplace and the
cradle ef both those revolutions th at
have ended in th a t victory.
William Shakespeare, wall known
dramatist, was the cause of a demon­
stration in the theatre here which
nearly resulted in a riot following the
plebiscite in favor of returning the
province to Denmark.
Hamlet waa being presented a t u
local theatre in the German tongue
and the demonctration was precipitat­
ed whop the melancholy Dane remark­ SEA SCOUTS FROM ENGLAND
ed, “There la something rotten in the
state of Denmark.”
“That the splendid work done by
There was an immediate volley of British sea scouts during the war pe-
kieses, catcalls, and protests from rlod It appreciated by England ti
every anti-German and pro-Danas in shown by the special arrangement*
which have been made for their bene-
fit with the White Star line," write*
James E. West, chief scout executive:
“Every White Star liner, whether
making port In New York, Boston or
Halifax, carries two or three British
sea scouts who are Shipp»** as ’cadets,'
ere regular members of the ceew and
are gettleg an unforgettable and faact-
natlng-asperience of real sea farina.
“Some of these boys learn to love
their «ood ship aad the Ufa of the see
so well that they continue in the serv
ten months’ supply a t a figure near 10 Ice, sail the seven sees, make strange
cents a pound, two and a half tons a t ports, end eventually become mates.
,
flM a ton. This will proknbly last officers or skippers.”
In New York, Dr. J. J. Macdonald,
with what we have on .hand until June
1921. Of course we are hoping that an American scoutmaster, la always
by that time paper will be cheaper, ready at tho pier to greet these Brit-
ish boys, end to take charge of them
but th at’s what we have been doing as long as they remain pa shore.
ever eince the spring of 1917, three
years ago, when paper cost less than
ISO a ton. The price has risen more
ip the last four months than in the
four years prior to th at including the
entire war period.
But a t a time when the supply of
news print in the country is only
enqugh for u few days ahead w# must
consider ourselves fortunate to have
sixteen months’ supply on hand.
GENERAL WOOD
General Leonard Wood. is without
DON’T DRIVE OUT CAPITAL
You can fix interest rates a t 4 per doubt the leading candidate for the
cent by law, says the Oregon Journal, republican nomination for president
b u t t o n cannot by law force men to this year. An editorial in the New
lend their money a t 4 pec cent. An York Times thus summarizes his
attem pt to do th at in Oregon would Btrongesttjtotota:
“General Wood is strong in char­
cause men to send their money to be
loaned in other states where they could acter and public service, yet hla great­
get 4 or 7 or S per cent. That is est strength is to be found in his tact,
exactly what would, happen, and Ore­ energy and success as an administra­
gon be left W e of money to loan if tor in Cuba and the Philippine*. He
the constitutional amendment for is strong because his firm acts and
which petitions are now in circulation' words in respect to plots of dangerous
agitators have won public approval.
should be made effective.
Suppose for iBustratioa, a consti­ As administrator and man of action
tutional amendment should be passed
in Oregon fixing wages a t 82 a day candidate for President. • • • He is
He has shown a .
and th at Washington had no such law strong positively.
and wages there wererf4 a day. How gain and again, and continuously,
many, workers would stay in Dragon courage, patriotism, force.”
to live on a $2 wage When they could i
get work in Washington a t $4 or In
California a t $8.
It would ha exactly the rams with
money. Money, in fact, can move to
other states easier and with iaaa coat
than can workers.
la there a mortgage'em your home T
And is there one on your friend’s
hornet I t would be a heavy "blow to
both if the 4 per cent amendment
should pass. Both of you would
promptly receive notice th at so aeon
as the mortgage fell doe it would have
lenders would call in their money and
send it to state* where they could get
larger interact?
Nor could you or year friend or
any <Rher m*-. or woman with a mort­
gage borrow money from anybody else
to pay off the d eb t All mortgaged
homes would bo in immediate danger
of being told for debt.
If you want to knock Oregon into a
cocked hat you can do it by helping
pass the 4 per cent amendment I t la
one of the moet vicious measures ever
offered for adoption in this state.
A good way Is to soak the garments
Ila lukewarm suds, then squeeze out
like water by pulling the wool eos
through t£e hands And dont twist or
wring, If you don't want to invite
stretching or shrinking.
Just get out us much of the scuter ne
you possibly can and hang the “dude”
up to dry.
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The Farm ers & Merchants Bank
invitee the business of those de­
siring the best in service.
Farmers & Merchants Bank
OF COQUILLE, OREGON
At u victory celebration for the sol-
•Mers at Geneseo, N. Y„ the bay
scoots were asked to take care of two
airplanes and guard them through the
long algbt.
Some happy scouts are those of Los
Afigalee Troops 1 and 2.
A short
time ago they went over to Hollywood
and were the guests of Mary Pick-
ford, the movie star, who not only
gave them a royal reception, but elec
presented them with $29 for troop
•COUT» AS PRIMITIVE ARTISTS.
'Dee Moines boy scouts are In a fair
way to become rivals of the Indiane
erd Mexicans In the art of porteci
Gilbert H. Gendi
ecuHve. hft# a dtspl
flee «neu with the
young sandstone art
The contour end
qulred by using a
stone on the aandstr
One enthusiastic
fered $100 for a sup
Seme of the yen
stone receptacles ad
wild and nntamed I
daubing Mack paint
a red sand (urfan
the sand from drop)
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SCOUTS BRKAK
__
Detroit boy scouti
record In their sun
connection with tl
paint-up" campaign,
custom la larger c
the need of cleanlni
prior to the campaign
by having your
work done by the
Gardner’s Garage
who had barn busy for two weeke mak­
ing the survey had tu n e d In more than
1R0OO report cards.
Laundry Dries F ru it
Drying fruits and vegetables la now
a laundry by-product. Tbs mechanical
driers era thus made use of when not
otherwise employed.
IN COQUILLE
To many of our roadora the streets
of Cottago Grove are almosOm fam­
iliar as those ef our own 4nwn, and
wo are naturally interested to read of
happenings there. The following re­
port from a well-known and respected
resident will be helpful to numbers of
men and women here in Coquiile. *
LA. Rogers, retired farm er, 407
North G. Street, Cottage Grove, Ora.,
says: “I hava taken Doan’s Kidney
Pills off and on for several years and
they have always done me good. I
have been subject to attacks of kid­
ney trouble which made it hard for
me to control tho passage of tho kid­
ney secretions. I have found th at af­
ter I have taken a bex of Doan’s Kid­
ney Pi lie, my kidneys have become
Electric Light makes the home s more attractive place for
the whole family—makes studying more easy and pleasant
—saves eyesight—gives Mother more time, to devote to the
children through the use of the many electric household
helps now uvailable^-and in all aorta of ways assists the
family in getting more out of life.
'
Wire Now for Electric Service
Telephone 71 and ask* for an estim ate.
Mountain States Power Co.
Coqm fle
-
O regon
Know ft Yet”
norm al ”
JPriee 60c at all dealers.
-
~ Don’t
says the Good Judge
Tftitt Class of tobacco v
gives a man a lot mode
satis faction > Mum be
C
i
OF THE YEAR
ERSKINE DALE,
PIONEER"
J O H N FO X , J R
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ROOSEVELTS
LABOR LETTERS
Up & Two Stylm
RIG ST CUY is a short-cut tobacco
W-B CUT is a Iona fin©-