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About Coquille herald. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1905-1917 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 24, 1916)
THE COQUILLE HERALD PU B LISH ED EVERY T U E S D A Y _________ Entered as second-class matter May 8, 1905, at the post office at Coquille, Oregon, under act of Congrees of March 3, 1879. C ojö c o u n t y The Herald'* Special Coo* County News Service A New Kodak in a B ridge B riefs ! W e Are Adding to Our Stock Continually j New Size ( Herald'* Special C. C. News Service) P. C. L E V A R , LESSEE A N D E D IT O R Mrs W. A. Lett spent last week R O Y M. A V E R Y . BUSINESS M A N A G E R at the home of her brother J o h n Carl at Arago. Devoted to the material and social upbuilding of the Coquille Valley School was dismissed at noon particularly and of Coos County generally. Tuesday, for the remainder of the week so the teachers could atteud Subscription, $ 1.50 per year, in advance. Phone Main 381 the institute at Marshfield Miss 1 sella Biyaut visited her parents the first ol the week It appears that the word has gone out th a t “ Coos K C E odicott caught a large county is going Democratic,” meaning that Wilson will wild cat a lew days avo. get a majority here. Considering the large normal Re Joseph P. E v em d en has been spending some time at Bridge re publican majority in this county, it hardly seems possible cently th at this would be overcome. The same may be said of Mrs M. E. Welteh and sons Ad- the whole state. Nevertheless, as the whispers come to diow and Paul and daug hter. Miss came over Irom Powers S a t the Herald, it is evident that there is a widespread deter Dollie, urday to spend a short time at their mination among Republicans to vote for Mr. Wilson. place here. They were accom pan This is easy to understand, for anyone who has ever seen ied bv a friend, Mr. Brown. A new size Kodak that T h e school is planning! a H allo the light which makes the old political palaver so trans we'en parly for Saturday evening, just fits the coat pocket— parent. The American people are tired of the politics of Oct. 28 An excellent program is yet makes the most pleas 40 and 50 years ago, which consisted mainly in the waving being prepared. T h ere will be booths at which cake and candy ing landscape or single of the bloody shirt, and of the later “ issue” when the and perhaps other good th ing s will tariff was the only thing worth consideration. The war be sold, the proceeds to be used to view. basket ball equipm ent. A Equipped with all new is finally over, long ago, and the tariff is a joke—serious buy splendid time is assured to all who features y e t moderately though it may be. Even the later fight over che “ tru sts” come. is fa r less acute since it is seen th at neither party can sug Mr Jam es and family moved to priced at gest a remedy which is in the slightest degree effective, Marshfield this week. Mrs Nellie Briggs is visiting her and that the Socialitts have the only cure, which we are sister, Mrs. J. T. E v em d en . not quite ready to administer. There are still many mis Mr. and Mrs. C- E . H ouser stayed guided but well-meaning individuals whose loyalty to over night at the R. A. Cribbins home this week, as th ey went thru party is their guiding power in voting, but they are grow on their way to their new borne in ing fewer with the years. If Mr. Hughes has gained eastern Oregon. Mr. and Mrs. Swisher and child anything since the campaign opened it is not apparent. ren have moved into the H atcher T hat he has steadily lost by his abuse of his opponent is house near the Bridge postoffice. firmly believed by many. How it could be otherwise H . H atcher and Mr. Swisher when the people are sick and tired of th a t sort of thing is have gone to Sandy on a hunting trip. (We Teach Kodakery) hard to see. In one other way worth mentioning Mr. R C. E ndicott expects his mo Hughes has lost ground. We all remeipber the portraits ther, Mrs. S S. Endicott, and sister we used to see, which showed a grave, serious and unap Mrs K A Leep, both ol M yrtle Institute Big Success next week for a few d a y s ’ proachable sort of character. We could accept th at with Point, visit. (Continued from Pagel) out aversion, in consideration of the straightforward sin Bryce Nosier came out from were read and adopted: cerity with which he was credited. Now, however, he Myrtle Point F riday to spend a day ton, “ Whereas, the Coos County Teach has shown himself in an entirely different light, and in a or two with his young friends here ers’ Institute is now closing a most Now Pictures 2 7 - 8 x 4 7-8 East Fork Items (Herald’s Special C. C. News Service) T h e teachers from the East F ork took in the teachers’ institute at Marshfield C. N. H a rry took his d au ghter W anda, who is teaching at McKinley, and Miss Deveres who is teaching the Brewster school in his car and stayed uutil the close uf the institute. H a rt, the Rawlelgh man, worked up the East Fork last week. T h e road that Austin & Charle ton built down Middle creek and the grade on the East F ork by Mike M inard's that Fred Baker bossed are two good jobs. W ork is being done on Brewster grade tak in g out a slide. R. A E A S T O N . ■ — « • B eaver Hill N ew s (Herald’s Special C. C. News Service) L y m an Bunch ol Powers spent PORTLAND'S TRADE CAMPAIGN tbe first part ol the week at Beaver In another column will be found an extract from the Hill. Capital Journal touching the trade relations of Portland, Jo h n Barnett, of Delmar, is a San Francisco and Coos county. After making it, the visitor at the borne of his son.James editor is haunted by the idea that the Journal has been Barnett at this place. saving one of his own expressions of opinion and now pre Wilbur, the seven-vear-old son of sents it as the proper dope—which it is. With the last Mr and Mrs W. Holmes ol this was severely kicked by a sentence, however, the Herald will not quite agree, ex place, horse T h u rs d a y but not seriously. cept with modifications. That “ Portland will lose more Mrs. F ra n k N orm an spent the than it gains from Coos Bay” is absolutely true—if we day in Coquille W ednesdiy. look far enough into the future. But for the present Arnold McClay and bride started Portland is gaining more than it is losing, and far more housekeeping this week. than it is entitled to, from Coos county. When a dollar Pete S m ith and family left T u e s of Portland capital is invested in the development of this day for P ortland , where they in section, or in an industry which gives employment to one tend to m ake their future home. man, or when Portland shows the slightest disposition to Miss Alice Harrison, ol M arsh is spending the week en d at BUY and consume our products, she will have some field the home of her parents at this standing when she asks us to buy of her rather than of place San Francisco. When she even gives us a steamer line Jim Barnett of this place went to without tying us up in a guarantee or asking us to put up Delmar on business S unday a good share of the money to furnish her a way to ship us Miss Susan Brown was in Co- her goods, our people will feel more inclined to buy those quille on business Wednesday. goods. Portland can run excursions of her business solic Bancroft Briefs ito r , in fine special trains of buffet and sleeping cars which do awav with the necessity of buying anything of our hotels and restaurants, till she is black in the face, T h e work on the new road grade Banciolt is to he rushed and some of our merchants will still hold their orders for near thro u g h in good time and good the boys from San Francisco who used to wade through order. the mud and snow to get here, or brave the terrors of one Ole L u n d bro ugh t a wagonload kind of bar to reach us and another kind while they stayed. ol supplies up to the ranch W ed In the long run, the Journal’s prophecy will work out, nesday. Miss Della came along to for there will be established on Coos Bay a shipping point, help install a new cook stove. a distributing center, a metropolis, which will calmly take T h e farmers in this locality have waging war on the opposing over a large part of the interior territory over which Port lietn logs and stumps d u rin g the fine dry land now has a strangle-hold. Portland knows this, has weather. known it for years; and has exercised an underground but Mr. and Mrs Thos. H ayes and very effective intluence inimical to the improvement of the dau g h ter Frances, ol Powers, are Coos Bay bar. So long as she can with palaver and visiting for a lew days with Mrs smooth promises, keep us believing in her desire to assist | H av es’ parents and picking some us in the struggle for recognition of the claims of Coos apples for winter use. W arner and d au gh ter Del- Bay as a harbor worthy of government aid of an effective tna Chas. went to Myrtle Point F ridav to kind; or so long as the people of Coos Bay will keep quiet do some trading and to meet Miss while the engineers waste the years with an aoortion Helen Robbins on her return fr . m called a "bar dredge,” she is safe, and the Columbia river institute. will be known as "the only” deep sea harbor in Oregon Mr. and Mrs W. A. Fish will and Portland as the only seaport. But the time is coming visit and assist at the A. L- Rice ranch du rin g the work on the grade when all that will be changed, and when Coos county will as Mrs Rice expects to board the not pay tribute to either Portland or San Francisco. workers Block Swiss Cheese Cream Brick “ Limburger “ Blue Hill Pimento “ Blue Hill Cream “ Blue Hill Chili Holland Herring Salt Mackerel Bulk Mince Meat 3reakfast Suggestions Mother’s Wheat Hearts Pattijohns Breakfast Food Olympic Wheat Hearts Wheat Eats Farina Flaked Wheat Cream Oats Post Toasties Kellogs Corn Flakes “ Toasted Wheat Biscuit Albers Peacock Buckwheat Albers Pure Buckwheat Due Today: Head Lettuce Bell Peppers Chili Peppers Sweet Potatoes Egg Plant Cauliflower Tokay Grapes Black Grapes Casaba Melons Bananas Oranges Tomatoes I W e have the largest shipment of Canned Fruit now on the way ever made to the Coquille Valley. The greater part of this shipment has been sold and will be delivered to our customers in a few days. W e may have a few cases left at Bargain Prices. If you haven’t bought, come and see us and we will take care of you if we can. $14.00 Try our A lba and Cham pion Brands C o ffee—prices right and quality guaranteed to give com plete satisfaction. L e t us D e m o n strate its Possibil ities. Busy Corner Grocery KNOWLTON’S DRUG STORE light which one cannot help believe to be false and assum ed for its effect on the people, for whom Mr. Hughes ap parently holds the old-style politician’s contempt. Instead of the austere gravity which formerly bedecked his face, along with a pair of whiskers which no other human being would want to wear, we now see him showing a genial good-fellowship; a joy in meeting the common people; an anxiety to reach by the well-dressed to shake hands with the man who wears a patch on the bosom of his overalls; a general and unappeasable propensity to grin like a Ches hire cat, th at we cannot help but regard as assumed. The people are not so easily fooled by that sort of buncombe as they used to be, and not only that, but they resent it. This may not be an important phase of the situation, but is one of the straws. Another is seen in the fact that the campaign portraits of Hughes and Fairbanks, which have been shown on the screen a t the Scenic here for over a week, have not, in th a t time, aroused one audible whisper of enthusiasm. The funereal silence that follows their appearance is really appalling. The editor of the Herald is registered as an independent Republican. One devel opment of his independence is the belief that Mr. Hughes stands no more chance of election than a rabbit. I Enroute: I Phone 691 and 541 Front and C Streets Coquille, Ore. tion. I will on Saturday the 25th day of November, 1916, at the hour of t*n o’clock a. m. of said day at the front door of the County Court House in Co- quille, Coos County, Oregon, Bell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash in hand on the day of sale, all the right, title, interest and estate which Baid defendants Mary Awilda Clark and Claude L. Kidder, and all persons claiming under them subsequent to the Are Guaranteed for T W O Y E A R S profitable session in the City of Marsh plaintiff’s mortgage lien in, of and to field, be it resolved: said real property, said mortgaged pre “That we express to the teachers mises hereinbefore mentioned are des They are the Maximum quality- the very best Para rubber and citizens of Marshfield our apprecia cribed in said execution as follows, to- possible to obtain tion for the many courtesies that have The west half of lots 1, 2, 3, 4 , 5, made our stay delightful; and 6 in block 69, Coquille City, (Not- •J Maximum workmanship—tbe highest degree of technical “That we acknowledge our debt of ley’s Addition), Coos County. Oregon, gratitude to the musical artists for the according to the recorded plat of said and mechanical ;kill in every process of manufacture. pleasure they have given us during the addition on file and of record in the office 0 / the County Clerk of Coos •J Maximum uti ity— reinforcements where needed extra thick programs of the session; County, Oregon, said sale being made That we congratulate Superintendent subject to redemption in the manner ness where needed, extra sizes where needed. R. E. Baker and his able supervisor, F. provided by law. •J Maximum good looks—perfectior of outline and finish that Dated this 17th day of October, 1916. A. Golden, for the successful planning ALFRED JOHNSON. Jr.. and carrying through of the best insti stamps every piece a work of art, a thing of beauty. Sheriff of Coos County, Oregon. tute evei held in Coos County; 10-24-5t “That we express to the lecturers our appreciation for the excellence of Notice to Creditors their instruction and for the inspira tion and encouragement we have de Notice is hereby given that I, C. R. The Rexall Store Barrow, have been duly appointed As rived therefrom; signee of the estate of the Recorder “That we hereby make acknowledge Publishing Company of Bandon, Oregon, ment of the great work being done by and in pursuance of an order of the the educational institutions of Oregon Ifon. G. F. Skipworth, Judge of the % in furthering the interests and increas- Circuit Court of the County of Coos and » ? - 'ng the efficiency of the teaching force of State of Oregon, notice is hereby given to all persons having claims against the State; that we endorse the present said Recorder Publishing Company, policy of broadening the field of these iately doing business in the City of institutions through Extension Courses Bandon, to present the same with the and Summer Sessions and urge a fuller vouchers thereof duly verified, to the undersigned, C. R. Barrow, who has participation in these advantages on the been duly appointed assignee of said part of the teachers. Recorder Publishing Company, for the “That it is the sense of this organiza benefit of their creditors, at his office tion that the establishment of a second in the Robinson building, in the City of Coquille, on or before the 30th day of Normal school to be located r t Pendle December, 1916. ton, Oregon as provided for in an initi First publication, September 26th, ative measure to be voted for at the 1916. Last publication, November 7th, coming election, would meet a real ed 191«. C. R. BARROW, ucational need and should have the Assignee. hearty support of all who are interested in the educational welfare of the State; Candidates of the “That it is the sense of this organiza tion that the district system of school Republican Party administration should be condemned as inimical to the educational interests of the State, and that we heartily endorse For President CHARLES E. HUGHES. any movement which has for its object the enlargement of the administrative For Vice-President CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS. unit.” For Representative in Congress W. C. HAWLEY. V ote for For Secretary of State BEN W. OLCOTT. LLO YD W . O D D Y For Justice of the Supreme Court Candidate for FRANK A. MOORE. COUNTY CLER K GEO. H. BURNETT. and Food Commissioner on the Democratic ticket. For Dairy JOHN D. MICKLE. Economy, Experience and For Public Service Commissioner FRED G. BUCHTEL. A" & Ability. The man w h o For Circuit Judge JOHN S. COKE. stands for the people’s in-1 EDWIN S. POTTER. J. A. BUCHANAN. terests. I respectfully so For State Senator I. S. SMITH. licit your support. For State Representative, Coos County Paid adv. L. W. ODDY. ARTHUR K. PECK. For State Representative, Coos and! Curry Sberitt's Sale of Real Property on Foreclosure S. P. PIERCE. Attorney Notice is hereby given, That by vir For District L. A. LILJEQVIST. tue of an execution duly issued out of For Sheriff and one-twenty-fifth of a mill for a normal th* Circuit Court of the State of Ore- ALFRED JOHNSON. on, for the county of Coos and to m* For County Clerk school only 2 1 miles from where the state owns irected on the 9th day of October 1916 ROBT. R. WATSON. upon a judgment and decree duly ren For Countv a good plant at Weston which requires but one- Treasurer dered. entered of record and docketed T M. DIMMICK. in and by said Couit on the 16th day of For County fortieth of a mill annual maintenance to put it in Assessor September 1916 in a certain suit then J. P. BEYERS. successful operation? Read page 28 of the in said Court pending, wherein L. B. For County Superintenddent of Schools , Fetter was plaintiff and Mary Awilda RAYMOND E. BAKER. voters’ pamphlet; and if you want to avoid need Clark, a widow, and Claude L. Kidder, For County Surveyor were defendants in favor of plaintiff less taxation, vote C. S. McCULLOUCH. and against said defendants by which execution I am commanded to sell the For County Coroner F. E. WILSON. property in said execution and herein For County Commissioner after described to pay the sum due the ARCHIE PHILIP. plaintiff of Seven hundred ninety-thre* For Port Commissioner (Port of Ban snd no-100 Dollars, with interest there on at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum don) J. E. NORTON. from the 16th day of September 1916 W. H. LYONS. until paid together with the costs and R. H. ROSA. disbursements of stid suit taxed at One Published by the Coos County Repub-' hundred nineteen and 50-100 Dollars Paid Advertisement—S. A. Barnes, Weston, Oregon and costs and expenses of said execu- lican Central Committee. Paid Adv. MAXIMUM Household Rubber Goods FUHRMAN’S PHARMACY Dry Shiplap, Finish, Flooring and Rustic W ISC O N SIN SILO S Several Lots of Lumber at S p e c ia l P r ic e s E. E. JOHNSON Why Should Oregon Vote Pendleton $125,000 5 309 X No I