\ The Amount You Spend for Your C othes is of Litt e Concern to Us— Motion Picture Notes Item s of In terest to Those Who Are Interested in Motion Pictures— Inform ation of Coming A ttractions and Comment on Pictures , The Thought We Want to Drive Home I* Thi»: No Matter How Much or How Little You Spend A Treat for the Lovers of Music and High ITalent You’ll Get More Real Value For Your Money From Our Cothes Irving Clothes $15 For next Saturday night, the Scenic has booked a big musical attraction that has been filling an engagem ent at the Strand theater in Portland. This is a young ladies’ orchestra, known as “ The Five Pilgrim Girls” and they will make a tour of the county, being book­ ed iu by Robt. Marsden, of the Noble theatre in Marshfield This will be a strictly high-class entertainm ent, on the order of the Lyndon-Gordon Lyceum number which pleased the audience so much at the Scenic on Jan. 1st, but there will be a greater variety. A bright program containing orchestral numbers, solos, trios, duets and read- ngs will entertain and interest, from start to finish. Press comments from papers in M assachusetts, G e o rg ia , Pennsylvania, Indiana. Illinois, South Dakota, Nebraska and other statse show that the young ladies have made a hit wherever they have appeared. No one who appreciates a thoroughly re­ fined and talented entertainm ent of this kind should miss seeing this. The usual run of pictures will be shown, and prices have been placed at 15c and 25c. Sophomore Clothes $20 to $35 BROMBERGER’S THE BIG STORE FOR MEN & BOYS 250 FRONT STREET Marshfield, Ore.—Landos Old Place y>aW;,. Great Art Production To be Shown Tuesday Belt a G-E Motorio Let the G-E Motor take the grind out of your chores. Motor-driven machines will milk, separate cream, churn, grind tools, pump water, cut feed and ensilage, grind and shell corn, split and saw kindling, thresh grain and perform practically all ordinary tasks requiring steady applica­ tion of power. A G-L motor will soon pay fur itself in labor and time saved. Ask our power man to show you just where a motor will help on your farm “ P urity,” a stupendous art produc­ tion in seven acts presenting Audrey Munson, the famous model for Am­ erica’s most celebrated paintings and statuary, in scenes of marvelous beauty in which the action of the powerful dram a are laid, will be shown a t the Scenic theater on Tuesday, January 1G. Audrey Munson is noted for the beauty of her figure and the grace of her poses. She posed for three-fifths of the outdoor sculpture work at the Panama-Pacific Exposition, also for many of the great murals. * Priestess of C ulture,” byj H erberst Adams is one of her most notable poses. As “ Lady Godiva, ” her figure in silver, done by Scarpetti, is installed for life in the Fifth Avenue, New York, show* windows of the Gorham Co., silver­ smiths. She posed for the famous l painting of “ G alatea” by the noted artist, Albin, giving her poses free to that genius when he was so poor he was unable to pay for the services of a model. She was a model for the figures on the Pulitzer Memorial, opposite the Plaza hotel, at the Fifth Avenue en­ trance to Central Park, New York; posed for the figures on the M anhattan Bridge, the Firem en’s Memorial and “ Music of the W aters” on Riverside Drive, New York; model for “ Civic OREGON POWER CO. Coquille, Oregon [= = = = i r = = = i r = = i r = = = INCOME and OUTLAY One side of your Pass Book will show all the money you have received. The other side will show all you have paid out, and the cancelled checks are your receipts. This fine arrangem ent Is yours if you will open your check ac­ count here. Your account will be given careful and considerate attention. F IR S T CAPITAL NATIO NAL B A N K and SURPLUS $60,000.00 A. J. SHERWOOD, President R. E. SHINE, Vice President D O N ’T L. H. HAZARD, Cashier O. C. SANFORD, A sst. Cashier P ride,’’ a great gilded statue which surm ounts M anhattan’s huge municipal building. Three reproductions of her figure are seen on the McMillan memo­ rial fountain, by Herberst Adams, in the grounds of the National Capitol at W ashington. She recently posed for the figure of “ Suffering H um anity” on the Booth memorial to be erected- in London after the .var as a tribute to the founder and 1» ader of the Salvation Army. Film Fans in South America Charlie Chapin anil Mary Bickford are as much at h< me in the hearts of our South Amerit in cousins as they are in our own. Your little P epitaor Man- oel of Brazil begr> just as zealously to be taken to the i .ovies on a summer evening as Mary >r George of Buffalo or St. Paul—with this very im portant difference, according to the interests of father, th at the South American prices are far in advance of ours. The people are glad to pay anywhere from forty cents to two dollars for an evening of film fun, and even at that rate the theatres are continuously thronged. Almost everybody goes to the movies or, as they are called there, “ cinem as.” The sam e crowd f enthusiastic young­ sters, of tired parents seeking restful am usem ent or gripping thrills, will be found in Bio theatres as in the family houses of American cities. But there are everal points wherein the admin­ istration of these amusement places differs. William A Reid, in The Bul­ letin of the Pan-American Union, writes entertainingly of some of the curious features to be found in going to the “ cinem as” in the Latin-American countries. He tells us: In Rio de Janeiro, the best motion- picture theatres do not follow the cus­ tom of allowing patrons to drop in and out at will. A film is advertised to be­ gin at a certain hour of the afternoon or evening; at the appointed time,doors are closed, or in most cases a heavy and highly decorated curtain is dropped and the show in the auditorium begins. A rath er novel arrangem ent is the waiting-lobby immediately in front of the entrance. A fter purchasing a tic­ ket, the patron enters the lobby or cor­ ridor, takes a comfortable seat, and waits until the termination of the first section of the play. While waiting, one may listen to the band of music, which may be heard equally well by those within the lobby or in the theater. A t times the crowds become congested and all the lobby seats are occupied in such case the ticket seller withholds further admissions and the swelling crowd of waiting patrons must remain in the street until seats are available. FORGET THE FREE TICKETS H O T E U nder L New B Management A X T E R Given with Herald Subscriptions Having leased this well-equipped hotel, I propose to conduct it in such a manner as to merit pat­ ronage and give satisfaction to the traveling public. The W orld’s Greatest Model AUDREY MUNSON ‘PURITY’ Last Seen in ‘INSPIRA TION” Presented in A Masterful Photoplay in Seven Parts A Remarkable and True Interpretation of the Beautios of Sculptnre and the Feminine Form Cl Scenic, Tuesday, Jan, 16 A STUPENDOUS ART PRODUCTION The frank clearness of this picture will cause much comment on account of the man'/ disappointments in the past by the suggestive treatment of nude in motion pictures. There is nothing in Miss Munson’s poses in the nude that should wound the sensibilities of even the most Puritanic person. The posing of Miss Munson assumes the paramount interest, while the plot and action serve to make the poses acquire a real signif­ icance and to give them adequate dramatic • setting. The picture gives a new view of the motion picture as an art medium and marks a new era in the presentation of artistic film specta­ cles, says A U G U S T U S LUKEMAN, the world-renowned sculptor. ) Two Shows— 7:11> and 9 p. m. J f y o u can t co m e e i r / y , w a it t i l / 9 Adults 25c, Children i 5c Children Under 16 Excluded Unless accompanied by Parents or Guardians CHARLES BAXTFR, Proprietor SUMM ONS In the Circuit Court of the Slate of Oregon for the County of Coos / ■ I Iti I UPPOSE that tomorrow yon see a chance where by investing $.r>00 or $1,000 in a busi­ ness venture you can douhlo your money. Are you ready for that opportunity? if you are not, tiie man with the ready check book is. He always carries a goodly balance in bank waiting for the opportunities which daily present themselves in the business world. This is an age of qniek action. Heal estate and busi­ ness deals are consummated within the hour. '> our credit in the community may be excellent. \ ou may be able, if given a little time, to borrow enough money to put through a deal. But the man with the ready cash, the man with the cheek book, will get the prefer­ ence. BE R E A D Y W IT H A C H E C K BO O K TO U U A S P AN O P P O R T U N IT Y . Farmers and Merchants Bank GUARANTEED The extra strength of the Rex Type­ writer can be seen. The type-bars are of 1-16 inch thick­ ness, instead of the usual 132. The type-bar-bcaring surface is, on the average, four times greater than on any other typewriters of standard de­ sign. In every part there is extra strength. The Rex is built to outlast all others. Factory tests show an equivalent of 25 years’ daily service. The manufacturers consider 10 years a reasonable guarantee. Why buy a typewriter of less strength ? TE N YEARS folds from 5 to 20 carbon copies at one writing. The tabulator and back-spacer are operated by keys. They are in-built— not added attachm ents. When the end of the line is reached, the Rex locks automatically. The Rex is a full visible writer—not necessary to move any part of the typewriter to see all you are writing and have written. Why Buy a typewriter th at lacks any e f these features? Extraordinary Price $57.50, f. o. b. factory, would be a lew price for any standard typewriter. Extra Capacity For a typewriter of extra strength, Letter writing is not all a typewriter extra capacity,extra features, it is an | should do. extraordinary price. I The carriage on the Standard Rex Why pay more and receive less? Model is 11 inches instead of 9. It is Compel those who ask more to give built for writing on wide blanks, in­ more. surance policies, deeds, abstracts, Monthly Payments contracts, etc. For a little the Rex can be had Why buy a typewriter th at only on monthly more payments. It will pay writes letters? for itself from earnings. It writes on cards, labels, tags. It Ask for Demonstration prints in two colors without changing ribbon—serves as a check-protector. Make us prove our claims of superi- It is made ready for stencil-cutting < m \ : if we fail you lose nothing; if without removing ribbon. I t mani­ we succeed you s^vc about 40%. ROY M. AVERY, Agent Herald Office Coquille, Oregon C uthbert Peart, Plaintiff, 1 va John Peart, Will Peart, | A rt P eart and W. L. Kist- | ner. Partners, doing busi- f SUMMONS ness under the Hrm name f and style of,—P eart Bro- I thers and Company, Defendants. J To John Peart, Will Peart, and A rt Peart, defendants above named: IN TH E NAME OF TH E STATE OF OREGON:—You are hereby required to appear and answer the complaint filed against you in the above entitled action, on or before the last day of the time prescribed in the order for publi­ cation of this summons, which pre­ scribed time is six weeks, the last day of which time is Tuesday the 20th day of February, 1917, ana if you fail to so appear and answer the said com­ plaint by said time the plaintiff will apply to the Court for the relief de­ manded in his said complaint, a succinct statem ent of which is as follows:— For judgm ent against you for the sum of ¡1350.84, together with his costs and disbursem ents in this action, and for an order of sale of the real prop­ erty and the personal procerty attached herein. Service of this summons is made by publication in pursuance of an order made by the Hon. Jam es Watson, County Judge of the County Court of the County of Coos for the S tate of Oregon, dated the 6th day of January, 1917, directing the publication thereof in the Coquille Herald, a newspaper of general circulation printed and publish­ ed at Coquille, Coos County, Oregon, once a week tor a period of six conse cutive weeks, commencing on the 9th day of January. 1917 and ending on : the 20th day o f February, 1917. C. R. BARROW. Attorney for Plaintiff, Residing s t Coquille, Oregon. l-9-7t Sheriff's Sale of Real Prooertr on Foreclosure N otice is hereby given . That by virtue of an execution duly issued out of the Circuit Court of the S tate of Oregon, for the County of Coos and dated on the l i t 1' day of November, 1916. upon a judgm ent and decree duly rendered, entered of record and docket- id in and by ^aid Court on the 30th day of October, 1916, in a certain suit then in said Court pending, wherein William Norris was plaintiff and Florence A. * Barton, J. S. Barton, her husband, C. 1\ Me Knight, E. I). Sperry, and Geo. j». Robinson, were deTendants in favor ct' plaintiff and againat said defendants by which execution I am commanded to roll the prof“- rtv in said execution and I .*reinafter described to pay the sum d ie the plaintiff of $1108.00 with intcr- * st, AMorney tee of $100.00, Taxes paid ly plaintiff on said premises $55 87 and ( >sts and disburaemt nta taxed at $23.90, { ad to pay tli j sum due the defendant, Geo. A. Robinson, of $'.'59.20 with in­ terest and the further sum of $50.00 as A ttorney fees ai d the costs and ex­ penses of said execution I W LL, ON WEDNESDAY, T1!E 7th DAY OF } EBRUARY. 1917, at the hour of Ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day at Ihe front door of the County Court House in the City of Coquille, Coos County, Ciegon, offer for sale and sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash in hand on the day of sale all of the right, title and inter­ est of the said defendants, Florence A. Barton anu J. ¡8. Barioii, tier husoaiiu, and all persons claiming under them subsequent to the plaintiff’s claim in, of and to said mortgaged premises. Said m ortgaged premises hereinbefore mentioned are described in said execu­ tion. as follows, to-w it; Beginning at a point on the South Boundary of the extension of Spurgeon S treet, in Co­ quille City, now City of Coquille, ( ,oos County, Oregon, 971.1 feet South and 918 feet W est of the quarter Section corner on the North Boundary of Sec­ tion 1, ;.i Tcv.iiwhip 28 South of K n.ge 13 W est, of the W illamette Meridian, ind running thence South 680 feet, mere or less, to the North line of the ¡and of William K istner as no* estab­ lished; thence E ast 100 feei; thence North 680 feet, more or l e s t o the .South boundary of said e> tension of Spurgeon S treet; thence W est 100 feet along the South boundary of said ex­ tension of Spurgeon S treet tc the place •>f beginning, containing l.f * acres of land, more or less. Said sale being made subject to re­ demption in the m anner provided by AW . Date l this 8th day of January. 1917. W. W. GAGE, Sneriff of Coos County, Oregon. 1 9 5t exports-of foodstuffs th at it comes as somewhat of a shock t-> b C-om official figures th at during the past y .a r our exports of foot! supplies w* re in reality something like $1*¡0,009,COO Jess than the previous year And it is i tat- ed on V e sam e auU.ority that, never before has L.c visible tapply been so low. The food s p . ulato's have been yell­ ing th at Europe was making such a tremendous demand f.*r our food sup­ plies th at the enormous shipments in themselves wi re the cause of sky-high prices. That, too, appears lobe a mix­ ture of financial wind and hot air. Congress is “ inve stigating” the price boosting c< nbines. B at d.d you ever hear of t! j politicians of either party doing anything more than to “ investi­ gate?” Did von pvor hear of a con­ viction? iVioie winu—political wind. There are two distinctive causes for the prevailing high prices of foodstuffs. We lack producers, an i we are cursed with a set of food speculators who would starve a baby to death for a penny. Our production is not keeping pace with the demand, because our farm ers ?.re leaving their acres and turning their faces to the aller.i. er.Is of the town and city And there rre none to take their places on t:.e farm s. As Mr. Cleveland so tersely put it, “ this is a condition and not a theory.” Food speculators know this and are buying and hoarding the supply and doling it out in driblets at their wn prices. Foreign demand? Bunk! Wholesale robbery? Yes! When we get rid o f four fifths of the middlemen, and jail the speculating price bolsters, find keep the mi n on the farm s and put more of them there, then we will nave ample supplies at reasonable prices, and not until then. And m the meantime Congress will Want-d—Producers keep right on periodically “ investigat­ ing.” ard m aking an ass generally of (Myrtle Point Enterprise) itself, as it has always done and always We have become ? rrerstom ed U w ill dc, i. respective of party. i w*c.y t: . :I. prev ding high prices We need more producers and few er of living are the resu.t of our increased robbers.