The Coquille Valley sentinel. (Coquille, Coos County, Or.) 1921-2003, July 28, 1938, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    . ■
New Gym Is
rly Completed
Gold
Paris'
«ntinued frutti
soot*, hundreds of thousands of full-color reproduction* of the state *
4“ou. »erne* wilt be ai.«ribut-:frro^thta thejmixt fjw week.
the 1938 Portland Ro*e Festival, receives a framed copy of t
first picture to be given away, a beautiful patural
•f Crater Lak*. Edward Dow, special emissary from Standard make*
th* uresentation.
—■
1
lì'
1
f
I
„ • 1
. fl
.
I» I®?*
fl !■’***'.......
il l
A Cornerstone for Lightning
.
-1
1
I
I
I
join force* to present on« of the
■o*t spectacular shows of th* com-
lag N*w York Wortd’s Fair, official*
of th* General Electric Company
recently altered precedent to at
facts. As construction on their fair
building began on Fluchtag Mea­
dows, Charles E. Wilson, executive
vice president, affixed a cylindrical
copper •cornerstone’’ to the base of
the trst pile. Owea D. Young, board
chairman, climbed to the cab of the
pile-driver and drove the dedicatory
symbol to feet Into the earth. In
the finished structure, model of
which is shown here, 0-8 will next
year evoke 14-million-volt bolt* of
man-made lightning and hurl them
th* length of the building tor the
education of fair visitor*.
WaUiwl9ta*t'
PATHFINDER
America's O/dest, Largest and
Most Widely Read News Magazine
PATHFINDER overlooks no Important event . . . misses no
interesting personality. Crisply . . . dramatically . . . right to
the point ... it boils down for you everything that goes on . ..
giving you both the plain facta and entertaining sidelights, all
verified and interpreted. PATHFINDER, fresh from today’s
center of world interest, is the choice of more than a million
fully informed subscribers every week. PATH­
FINDER’S nineteen illustrated departments are
sure to inform and entertain you too.
Other weekly news magazines sell at 84 to 85
a year. PATHFINDER sells for 81 a year, but
for a limited time we offer you a greatly re­
duced combination bargain price for
*
of the Roxy
The m
Theatre i
that it has been
able to secure one ef the earliest book­
ing date on “Gold Diggers In Paris,
the latest and most elaborate of the
famous Warner Bros, musical aerie*.
The opening date ha*, been set for
tonight and plans are being made
for a gala premiere. It will run three
day*.
Especially notable because it brings
Rudy Vallee back to th* screen after
an absence of three years, “Gold Dig­
gers in Pans,” fifth In the “Gold
Digger*’ aeries, has a poke full o|
nuggets in the form of laughs, catchy
tunes, spectacular dancing numbers
and, ot course, pretty girls.
Almost rivalling in importance the
return of America’s prince charm­
ing of the air lanes is the film debut
of Freddie Fisher’s Schnickelfritz
Band, a sextet of the maddest musi­
cian* that ever succeeded in wedding
hilarious comedy to infectio* music.
These Schnlckelfritzers are destin­
ed to be a riotous success on the
screen. They can’t miss, for they've
got something that no other comedy
band has ever given the public­
music.
Funny a* their comedy
may be, they could dispense with all
of that and still be a treat to listen
to, for they make th* most entrancing
hot music of any outfit their size In
the country today.
Sharing the romantic interest with
Rudy and also sharing the pleasant
burden of singing .several of the
beautiful melodies which grace the
score is Rosemary Lane.
Gloria
Dickson also ha* a large role as
Rudy’s estranged wife.
The comedians—enough of them
to stock at least two such picture*
headed by Hugh “Wu 10F Herbert,
including also Allen Jenkins, Mabel
Todd, Fritz Feld, Curt Boi«, Ed
Brophy and Melville Cooper.
Finally, there is the large chorus
trained by Busby Berkeley — the
“Gold Digger Girls.”
The story revolve* about a sillly
mistake which only a Hugh Herbert
character could make—and he’s th*
one who make* it, when, a* a repre­
sentative of the Paris Internationa]
Exposition sent to engage America’s
foremost ballet troupe to take part in
a contest at the exposition, he gets
into the Club Balle in New York, »
very hotcha night club, and engages
the equally hqteha chorus to represent
America.
’y
‘
The engagement, with the sizable
advance payment, comes as a life-
saver to Rudy Vallee and Allen Jen­
kins, who have been operating the
club at a loss, and they permit them­
selves and their chorus—the Gold
Dig«* girls, n.turelly—to be trans-
ported free to Paris.
Here dangerous complications en­
sue when the true identity of the
“ballet” troupe is disclosed, but ev­
erything ends happily when the
chorus girls gq on at the exposition,
give the Parisians a pyrotechnic dis­
play of modem American chorus stuff
instead of ballet.
The performance of the American
girls at the exposition constitutes the
finale of the picture and it is a Berke­
ley number in the true tradition.
Twelve-Year Old Girl
Killed By Falling Tree
Funeral service* were held al the
Dora church at 2:30 p. m. Tuesday,
for Norma, the 12-year old daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Conlee, of
McKinley, who passed away at the
Coquille Hospital early Monday
morning, Interment was in the Dora
cemetery, with Schroeder Bros, in
charge.
Norma had gone with her father
last Thursday afternoon to gather
honey. She was watching her father
go up a tree when another tree which
had not fallen when previously cut
crashed down unexpectedly.
Her
left arm and shoulder were broken
and her left ankle so badly crushed
that It was necessary to amputate the
leg just above the ankle.
Births at Coquille Hospital
P hw
One)
. H. 8’. athlete
There are
worker* la a Pittsburgh
elate to a thousand.
School district No. 8 now has a
gymnasium of which it may well be
proud. When entirely completed it
wUl have cost the taxpayers 827,000,
which is a great deal less than it
umaalgl
l*m*»gs eJa^^Pw
f
FhAdi - • it'
lertt
th* 4ews*—a . 8848
< . - thAHk
WIOU
• ■ 88AFw
beep for the 1’WAgrants.'**"'”'
b
Rodeo Stars Coming
For Celebration .
'Continued from Pace Ona)
There will also be such bronco-bust­
ing' champions as Dell Smith, Joe
Coonya and Jerry Amber. Many of
those who recently competed at the
Salinas, Calif., and Fortuna rodeos,
will be here and one reason such a
congregation of riders, bulldogger*,
etc., is available for the show here is
that it come* between rodeo* in Cal­
ifornia and shows to the north which
climax at Pendleton.
Stone, trick roper; Pon Hart,
er; Bernie Thumbler and son
and Art Burchfield, Pendleton’s fam­
ous Roman riders, will be here.
The rodeo management states that
between fifty and sixty professional
rodeo hands and some six or eight
professional women rider* will take
part in the Golden West Rodeo Fea­
(
tures.
Mr. Telkamp state* that there is a
twenty-five dollar prize for any of
t»yf ¿at cap ’ritfe any'oqJ
Dismissals from the hospital the
past week ware Mrs. Frank Cary on
Saturday, Virginia Oden on Sunday,
Dick Slver and Mrs. A. B. Collier to­
day.
........ -r
Lee Evans, of the Bear creek sec­
tion, was admitted for treatment last
Thursday.
Vernon Winborn, of Bandon, un­
derwent an emergency appendicitis
operation on Tuesday.
Mrs. Cherry Cupinski, who lives
between Myrtle Point and Powers,
entered yesterday for treatment. She
had injured her knee with a hatchet.
Mr*. H. F. Hagedorn, of Portland,
underwent a major operation this
Fred L. Houston, of Grants Pass,
who with Mrs. Houston spent a
couple of weeks here visiting at the
M. E. Nye home on Willard street,
in writing to renew Ms subscription
to the Sentinel, says, “We must say
that we now wish we had some of
that delightfully cool Coquille weath­
er that we enjoyed so much while
over there for two weeks; we have
had unusually hot spells here lately
just the other day it was 104."
Don’t wait unti/school start* to buy
a Band Instrument Call and see
about it now. H. S. Norton, Music
and Stationery.
r
FAVORITE MAGAZINES
NOW , . . You can renew your subscription to the
COQUILLE VALLEY SENTINEL . . . ONE YEAR
and get 3, 4 or 5 of your favorite magazines at a tremen­
dous bargain. Don’t wait ’til your subscription runs out
Renew NOW before this offer is withdrawn. n_’
—.—
—.
—
—
Get
only |3.M
only 3J5«
only AM
N4'S HP^E
New Grade School
Under Consideration
Acting on the school board* in­
structions, Clerk Keith Leslie thi*
week forwarded to C. C. Hockley, re­
gional PWA director, an application
for a grant of fund* with which to
build a new grade school in Coquille
to replace the frame Washington
building. The application ia for a
grant of 833,000, which would mean'
that if the application 1* granted the
voter* of school district No. 8 would
be asked to authorize a band issue
of about 840,000, the 833,000 grant I
being 45 per cent of the entire cost.1
With a* nearly fire-proof struc-'
tures a* can be provided in use in
the north end of th* city, the next
improvement in school facilities will
be on the Washington school site and
at this time when PWA funds are
available would seem to be the logical
time to do it.
The deadline for
filing of new applications for PWA
grant* and loans is Sept. 30.
Enjoyed Coquille Weather
Belle Knife Hospital
of the three bulls.
The fiddler«’ contest already ha*
eight contestants signed up and more
are expected.
The log sawing contest is also at­
tracting a good deal of attention and
good cash prises are being offered.
There is also considerable interest in
the ladies’ buck sawing contest
These contests will be held on the
street here on Saturday, the 13th.
To Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Stephens,
July 23, a 7% pound boy.
Yellow Lantern Closed
To Mr. and Mr*. Victor Denning,
July 23. » baby daughter, weighing
Monday By Creditor
10 pound«, 8% ounce*.
I
To Mr. and Mrs Clyde Blavlock.l The Yellow Lantern restaurant was
This Newspaper and PATHFINDER last Saturday, a 6 pound baby boy. closed Monday afternoon On a writ of
'Trx
K/fr and
a*%*4 Mrs.
lie* Ed
EM Brown,
Denum July
T*»l« ' aHochniAnf
iftsiipd hv
.Tiifitir*» Clarence
r*laY*f»nra
attachment issued
by Justice
To Mr.
Barton on relation of the Ideal
25, an eight pound son.
year
iso
To Mr. and Mrs Walter West, the Bakery Mrs. Hazel Sturgis, the pro­
same day, a 7% pound baby girl, prietor, went up to Portland a few
week* ago but evidenUy was not suc­
named Charlotte Lois.
To Mr. and Mrs. Howard English, cessful in her attempt to arrange for
financial assistance which would en­
on Monday, a 714 pound daughter.
H!
---------- ... j.'.»........ 1...... a -e
Coquille’s population was thereby able her to carry on until business*
Take your insurance problems to
Keys made for all locks. Steven* increased by six within two days for improved. It is reported that labor
Spike Leslie, 414 Front St Your Cash Hardware, Coquille. Ore.
all of the above are residents of this and other claims against the cafe to­
protection our chief consideration, tf
tal quite a neat sum.
city.
Th* Yellow Lantern has always
iocal bread and support nom*
Calling carda, 50 for 4100
enjoyed a
patronage since
Calling cards, 50 for 81-00.
Both Only $
Coquille Valley Sentinel
sards in auto accidents used to be
glass, which was th* most comm o n
of injury. Now all American cars
(Check the Magazin
You Want)
Woman’s Homa Companion
,•
Me CALL'S
REMEMBER—when you accept this offer your present sub­
scription to THE SENTINEL will be extended one full
year, and in addition, you will receive the magazines you
select for the full period shown above. Check the magzines
you want and mail or bring this ad with remittance to THE
SENTINEL.
Coquille Valley Sentinel, Coquille, Ore.
I accept your offer. Enclosed find $______ M
which renew my subscription to your newspaper for
meJh! magazines 1 have checked above for
the full time specified.
Name.
R.F.D. or Street.
P. O...
Date.
■