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About The Coquille Valley sentinel and the Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1917-1921 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1920)
v M3 M I'anuT -nmnarrur : . W hy lili? ■ a h u m ó m u s t “B o l d t e m p o s t mid Harding be sleeted p as he no ddubt will, an tote to gotog to <to’ at hie being a member of . We tafer from what to printed eu the subject that no preei- haa ever sat to tito senate, and the expected thing to case a sen te elected preeident te for him to his senatorship. But th* re- ... ah uncertain majority e f one to that body—LaFollette being the one—end if Harding resigns that will be changed into a probable demo- m ajoritA of one. The itrang- ing about ft though, to that, Harding resign before ike middle o f January, Gpvemer Cox will hie successor to tb* senater- og ta may resign as governor and be waster, by a demo cratic Soutenant governor. So Hard ing will be forced to stay on the job uatfl a republican governor takes his seat at Colmabas, or if by any chance Per nearly twe yean sto«* Armis tice Day we bava sosa price# going up when we knew they ought to be coming down. Now that the tide has tr a e d the danger to be is that they will fall too fast. — PPM— Out of 8677 suits for divorce filed ernor should be to Chicago to eae gear, enly 70 J* until th* fourth of Mareh. At couples owned their hemes, «ad to 2171 eases there pere ne children. Washtopton they are talking about i have a family are enlarging toe accommodations for to the senate, as people are to ! to crowd the senate gal tor tas An get a glimpse of a senator who to to he president m %i ing to elect Harding. Harding la- bars under drawbacks and is far from bsiaf the Srsl chotee o r Ms own par- ty. as evidenced by. the primar, vot* but it is either he or Cox; if they both Uv. and a . d ation is held for prtoi- im t In this country in Novambor; th atia inevitable. Bot aa te the pro^ ition -th at any- one who votes for Herding >. bound in morality er consistency to vote for a repubMcan candidate for sena- ter, aa an. advocate o f the League of nations I dissent utterly. If I vote for " 1 ,TOt* *’! for president, it will be in spite of and not booauae of his opposition to the League of Nations. P setog thus, other things being teh to all hat go to make a “ la V certain town to yet Ite progress to Mtosouir, s -newspaper offi being held a standstill bills oitb a yased e f the profiteers, from a to toe time to call * hah on Sikeeton. The OHer was given ea June 29, and the work was for June 80, 1919. "June 80 being toe last day before V otin g the prolonged prohibition drought, the printer decided he would take one hotch,’ in kpnor of the occasion. One glass brought free company, and the wine flowed freely for many mente. Suddenly the printer re■ ter ad of his public sale job he had promised for that dc.y. He hast to the pitotery and set type with 7 * (800 Y *»-80 1 No.) both hands. His togs were slightly Ballot titlte v wobbly but his head was aa clear as Submitted by th# Legislature— bell. He set the job, read the CumfluUory voting and registration proof, and printed the bills, wrapped thorn up, preparatory to de livery. ‘The farmer called for his job, paid the bill, and started tacking np his bills. This to what he found printed thereon: “Twenty-five cow* broke to work, | 41 head o f cultivators, coming te soon, 10 head o f shoveling boars with scoops by side; 8 piano n a n s ; 120 rods o f canvas belting, better than new; D* Laval cow, with ice cream attachment; Case tractor to foal; Poland China bobsled due to shortage in the northwest. But the Hawley Pulp and Paper Company at Oregon has just bought a 10,000 acre tract at spruce and hemlock en the upper Necanlcun river which will keep down. There is nomans* er wisdom in k running for ton years at its pre trying to maintain any artificial ssât rate of production—10S torn a standard of values. For the best to- terests o f all, it is thus that a real practical effort was made to bring the business of the country and the life of the eoantry deem to normal. “ Inflated prices always retard prog- reas. We had to stand it daring th* war, although it was not right, so th* Ford Motor Car company will make the prie*« «f its products th* same as the? were before the war. This to the free of th* fact that we have orders for immediate delivery of 146,065 cars aid tractors. •* • We must o f course, take a tem- porary lota because of the stock o f materials gp hand, bought at inflated price«, and until we use that stock up we will have to submit to a loss, but we take It willingly in order to bring about a going state o f business throughout the eoantry. "There.is a lull in general bnsineaa; we are touched by the waiting period that always peecedas a reaction. Poo- pie to every walk of life are ujkittog for prices to com* lower. They re- aHs* that ft is aa enwhcleeome, un- natural, unrighteous condition, pro- duced by th* war. In every line e f activity there is Browing idleness be- cause the demand is not there. • “ Bap materials are beifig stored; maaufretured goods are being stored beeaoes the »slums e f eoaasmptto« is growing toes through the self denial e f th* people, many o f whom could not afford to pay the kick prices, T H IE V E S sad BU RG LARS have a way of finding out who hides money or carries It around. They are D A N GEROUS M EN and they come around often. a Behind our strong locks your money is S A F E . W s make our bank a bank e f SER VIC E. and see ns. Come in W e will make you “ feel at home.“ W e Invito YOUR Fanners & Merchants Bank of CeqniQe, Oregoo ^ ma)lm . requiring every legal ToUr to W regisured in hU precinct before he can rote, and thus abolish the amiaring to of vote. by ate free- ^ election day? ^ ^ believe the peopl. should p „ t f to * , k, . Uw ^ ^ allow à legal voter to cast his ballot by mail if he should be serving in the United state. army, navy, or ma- rin, corp-> *r If he is absent from his TotÌBC pndaet «]] on Section y |>o you' believe the people should h r a Power to make e lew requiring ^ 1#ol y#Ur>to ToU cn ¿.ction or prov, that he wee not able to do.sat ^ ^ ^ ^ p^pU of Ore- Ettoeb Arden Up*To Date An Enoch Arden story was told in the Gatea-avenue police court in Breoklyn last Saturday, when Mrs. Frederick Mark, 28, o f Brooklyn, was arraigned before Magistrate Geismar on e charge o f bigamy. She pleaded not guilty end was held in $1000 bail for examination tomorrow. Mrs. Mark, between sobs, told the magistrate that ner cecond marriage was contracted when she firmly be lieved that her husband was killed in the s sound battle of the Marne. This >1 f if T » » " * HnTT,n favosable to the League o f Nation« in order to defeat Harding’s evident plan to samp the league. Cox says he favors the league, and I have no doubt h^does, but he is simply a pol- ttician, trying to carry water on one shoulder and boom on t k other, aa during the war he played for the pro- German vote the best he knew how until we «stored the war and then faced equate shoot. . So far as Harding’s position at op position to the League at Nations is concerned, I want to ledge against it as much Ss I can by voting for « can didate for senator who has at all times stood for the League. M oony ia your house or {u your pocket is unsafe. The . proposed amendment makes absolutely no change in the constita- tion or latrs o f Oregon except to grant additional power to enact laws for the purposes above named. U n ja L whom she married November 8, 1017. Sergeant Lloyd went overseas with the 44th United States cavalry. In August, 1918, Mrs. Lloyd received a letter'from a buddy o f her husband informing her that be had been killed in the second battle of the Marne. Later she said she met friends bf her husband who gave her similar in formation. Shortly afterwards Mrs. Lloyd met Frederick W. Mark, and in Septem ber last year, more than a year after she had been informed of the death of the first husband, she became Mrs. Mark. It now develops that her first husband returned from Prance in February of last year as a casual. He began searching for his wife, and was unsuccessful nntil last Thursday night, when be found tier at the Hart- street address, where the Marks hava a five-months-old daughter. Lloyd caused her arrest. Com fort and E ffid on cy go hand in hand O U R office force will turn b o fln o re work U a given tim e and make fewer m istakes i f they are com fortable. Fans pay for themselves in increased accuracy and volume o f work. Y - Local Dealer or tain cases. This opens up th* way for manipulating the ballot. The Non-Partisan League suported a sim- Oar measure to North Dakota at the recent election and ft was turned down because of abases possible to mail order ballot system. This meas- ure is just one more attempt to use Oregon as a political experiment sta- tion. W* have had enough ex peri - ence—wait until some other state tries this out There are many people to the state, and people who should know, who do not know that a citisen, no matter where he may be on election day has the right to vote on state meatores; and no matter where he happens to be located to the county on election day, he is privileged tb vote on county measures, and he Woo id only have to be to his particular precinct to vote on the measure* that pertain to that particular community. So that the argument aa presented to give peo- pie the privilege at voting on impor- tant measures, la all bosh, because they have that privilege, and will take advantage o f ft by arranging to be at home to vote on election day, if vital- ly interested to their community. We all realise that the average person who is incapacitated by sickness is not in a condition, mentally, to vote intelligently on measures that change end tend to change the application of owr state or county laws. This is simply another step to have more freak laws put on our ptatuto books and eould he used by nmnninuluu* See you r For fu ll inform ation call at the oifece o f the Mountain States Pow er Co. Coquille Oregon ‘Just Between You and Me” they furnish, we don’t understand. If you want a Portland daily to con nection with your Sentinel enbeerib- tion you will find that we make an attractive combination price. say» the Good Judge H ere’ * genuine chewing satisfaction for you, hook ed up with real econom y. a tessente e f Gettare Greve Citisene Are Always sr Interest to _ Our Eradme To many of ear raadara-to* streets Grov* are almost aa fam A sm all chew of this class o f tobacco last* much long er than a big chew of the ordinary kind— that’ s be cause the) fu ll, rich, real tobacco taste lasts so long. happenings there. The following re port from a well-known and respected resident will be helpful to numbers of A n y man w ho uses the R eal T obacco (S e w will tell you that. IN COQUILLE -V • . / t o ufi tn two styUs W -B C U T ia a long fine-cut tobacco • H T C U T ia a short-cut tobacco