The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 7, 1929, Page 3

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s 1 - . S = LAST 2 TIMES TONIGHT IR o lllllllllllHlllII}I}II!IIIIIl!lllll"llllll"l"" TUESDAY and LR L P R e B TR E T TR T “Pread Upon “THE PRIVA HELEN O - PR WOMAN EATS ONLY | BABY FGOD 3 YEARS “For 3 years I only food, everything else formed Now, thanks to Adlerika everything and enjoy life M. Gunn. Hven the FIRST spoonful of | Adlerika relives gas on the stom- | ach ~and removes :'\(ulli-‘\i!l}-fi‘ amounts of old waste matter from the™ §ystem. Makes™ you enfoy your meals and sleep better. Noj matter what you have tried for| your stomach and bowels, Adler-| ika will surprise you. l',uvhrrr]‘ Mauro Dtug Co. In Douglas,| Guy's Drug. Store. —adv. | ate From the famous novel of PETER B. KY THURSDAY—The $1.000,000 Production TE LIFE OF WEDNESDAY | | TR G T TR G LR the Water” £ F TROY” L T T Sandwich, Net Oratory, Used in Bid for Office Texas, Jan. 7—J. Wad. | who distributed “hot dog voters Dalla again candidate lwiche rmong when he mayor of two for the f set an example in the pre- abandonir tory and playing host to m D00 voter ot Dogs crowd When the ballots counted, Tate ended third, but he hopes to listribute more “hot dogs” in this vious campaign b than t-an outdoor ‘meeting were served the entire were campaign. U. S. Girl Jailed by Turks o But Neither Culprit’A Nor, Court See Anything # To Worry About By SHIRLEY KIRKE EW YORK—In the reign of Abdul Hamid, the “Red Sultan,” a cablegram telling of the imprisonment of a young and beautiful Amer- ican missionary in far-off Tur- key would have sent a wave of horror and indignation over the United States. It probably woyld have been fol- lowed immediately by excited ac- Uvity in Washington, international coriplications and the dispatch of gunboats to the Bosphorus. - Nobody Has Gotten Exclted _Itds therefore Interesting that als thbugh word comes from Constanti= nople to the effect that Edith San- derson, pretty Omaha, Neb., teacher,! has been tried, convicted and sen-’ tenced by an Ottoman court to a term In jall for converting young Moslem pupils to Christianity, no- bedy has gotien yery much excited about it, Least of all the heyselt, The pretty missionary’s school is situated in Broussa, a qulet, an- slent, picturesque town In the mountains, where Americans are and have done a lot of good, So old Judge Nizamedine, who happens not to be fanatical about anything except his bridge, pent a policeman to call politely and request the attendance in court of the teacher. | She duly appeared and stood trial, The diaries of some of her pupils Indicated a certain amount of sec- tarfan Christlan propaganda had been going on. It seems that Miss Sanderson bad given Bibles to sev- eral youngsters and had “discussed” the New Testament with them. In addition one of the girls testified that they and the teacters put on dhsis best dresses on Bundsy, but ] young missionary . Teaching . MISS EDITH SANDERSON worked at their classes on Friday, which is the Moslem Sabbath, Law Bars Religious Propaganda ‘These certainly weren’t serious offenses nor did the judge Imply that Miss Sanderson had done any- thing particularly dreadful. She had, however, violated one of the laws of the land, a statute which prohibits the spreading of religious propaganda in the schools. The court therefore imposed a nominal sentence of a fine of three Turkish gold pounds, about $13, and a term of three days in Jail, which he told Miss Sanderson courteousiy, she might serve at her convenience, Indeed he suggested that she might “rest up” the three days in her room and call things square, Thus the world gradually becomes more tolerant and by the same token a pleasanter place to live in. (Co; 1928, Int (Copyright, b, tional Illus- W 2| An unqualified ¢ | back,” Attractions At Theatres —— AL L S8 T ORCHESTRA AND COMEDY ' IS AT PALACE TONIGHT Mae | the and | won Pauly’ orchestra pit a! the Palace last night, gave concert numbers whi applause from the audience and also played for the two shows. ‘Motios. . «tures Open New Field for Musical Developmen The orchestra will play for the iight, giving the con-| next Thursday and Friday nights. musgic furnished for the fea. was right up to the and well put over. The feature at the Palace is one the best comedies seen months, Laura La Plante in “Beware of Widows.” Bryant Washburn plays' opposite the s The story is a fasi moving farce The ture of successful stage comedy of the same name, which had a long run !in New York several years ago. | SHOWING COLISEUM Action mo! Siren,” which opened at the Coli- seum Theatre yesterday. There |not a dull minute in the produc- {tion and at times the excitement |reaches fever heat. It is one of those love stories which illustrates how the other half of the lives. The plot revolves around a pretty young girl, whose beauty, {and personal charm make her pop- |ular with the social set in which {she moves. Until she meets the hero love is an unknown emotion Men, to her, were pla; with whom s | heated flirtations just the monotony of dinners and the usual round of so- cial functions. The girl innocently acts as & decoy for a card sharp; but when finds out where she has been »d there plenty of action, interspersed with thrills {and a red-blooded fight against the background of a burning build- ing Dorothy | tures conducted to relio tric is tense Revier and Matt Moore the two stars ably assisted by Norman Trevor, Otto Hoffman |.HM Jed Prouty. |are i b4 i —— 1 HOOT GIBSON IS AT | treat 1s in the Palace Hero store tomor- Hors: for row, patrons of wher “A a Unive |its featured run | popular western star, Hoot Gibson, playing a new role in an old set- | ting. | on Jewel, sta ‘The pictu Peter B. > 4o« SCTE2N Version Kyne's popular short entitled “Bread upon the Wate! with a plot strong in originality, embracing a plentiful m of thrills, fast-action, and a pleasing love story. “A Herp on Horseback” concerns the adventures of a bueckaroo | turned banker, a great for Hoot Gibson fans The tit of story as the heroine and portrays her role with vi ity and charm. \ Edwards Davis, well-known as a screen character actor, is cast as film father, while Edward Hearn is a most personable and heart- palpitating villain. Dan Mason of Toonerville Trol- ley fame, pla in the comedy re- lief role and his antics are sure- fire loads of laugh " UTHE MATINEE iDOL” COMING, COLISEUM Bessie Love and Johnnie Walker ex-perienced the adventures and hardships of tent show troupers during the making of Columbia’s “The Matinee Idol,” which is com. ing to the Coliseum tomorrow. The production was made in a completely equipped circus tent, Under the big top Miss Love and Walker performed the regulation two-a-day before the same critical audience. Bessie portrayed several roles in a rather terrible Civil War melo- drama while Walker was acted as a “super” The melodrama was cast and rehearsed with the pre. ision of a road company and after a week of barnstorming in the Columbia tent both Miss Love and Walker are glad that they are not required to earn their livelihood as “ham” players. TT“HELEN OF TROY" / | PALACE THIS WEEK Troy” will be shown at the Pal. ace for three nights starting Thurs- day, two shows each night. There is a large cast including Lewis Stone who will be seen in an an- cient garb, with his hair curled and his moustache missing. Mae Pau- ly’s orchestra -will play for the shows on Thursday and Friday nights only. e A flapper's idea of a hypocrite is a thin-blooded “gister who'll wear two pairs of stockings in order to look in style and at the same time keep her legs from getting frost bitten, | minute here and is adapted from Owen Davis’ world | hings, crea- | bridge, dancing, | | | fame, not heaven, the concert hall, PALACE, TOMORROW || with the always., “break”| | baired Ethlyne Clair is captivating] 22| boys, o a7 = v e o v ream_of i -lac-time, - Your efes, fl\;x beam Joaa-ning, T ) Li-lac-time, ] Nathaniel Shilkret Makes|in fifteen moods and eighteen dif- < : ferent arrangements. Heretofors Famous Musical pictures have usually been scored 2 with compilations of foreign clas- weore s meant trying to tell an \merican story in a foreign lan- guage. Shilkret in “Lilac Time"” b told a foreign story in an Ametican idiom. He has inter- preted a French story for Ameri- cans in their own musical lan- guage h New York Cit; ¢hild of the ar 5 a place in the hall of musical but the cinema palaces. | . Motion pictures, according to | Nathaniel Shilkret the country’s | most famous musical _director, have taken jazz under their wing and have given it the opportunity to be accepted as ous musie, Heretofore our modern American music has been confined prinei- pally to dance orchestras and a few concert pieces. Now it is be- ing used to tell a complete story. When Mr, Shilkret wrote the score for “Lilac Time,” a Colleen Moore picture, he didn’t at first realize that he was opening the door for jazz to climb the heights. His work revealed for the first time the gossibilitios of a score in modern ks ythm. The story is told by music and by camera at the same time, “Jeannine I Dream of Lilac 'l'jme," the theme song for the picture, is remarkably developed greater works in modern American music will make pos- sible greater developments in pic- ture scoring,” Mr. Shilkret com- ments. “Our music i$ too new for us to know what we can really do ith 'it. Our children and our grandchildren who have absorbed the American jazz idiom will prob- ly be able to do the real thing. | loneer as we may, we still have | certain foreign musical influences l\\'hnc];_we cannot and do not want to leave behind. The next genera- tion will have shed this.” Nathaniel Shilkret is a native Ne\v: Yorker, and has been a pro- fessional musician since the age of seven. He plays every instru- ment in the modern orchestra, and is probably the greutest musical arranger this country has pro- duced. His earnings are far great- ;: than yfl‘\wo of any composor re or b FOUR NEW BABIES GVER WEEK-END et Four new habies/ three boys and a girl ,were born to happy mothers in Juneau over the week end. The f a pretty 7% pound blonde-haired girl was born to Mrs. Charles Miller early Friday mornnig. Both the mother and child are doing well. The Millers | Mve on Gastineau Avenue. 1 At St. Ann’s Hospital three baby | a¥l husky infants, arrived | to proud parents. Mrs. Dick Me-| Cormack gave birth to an pound boy early Sunday morn | ‘New Representative - o O The McCormacks reside in Doug- 1as. A 7% pound boy was born| to Mrs. Don Skuse yesterday and! Mrs. Ed Hansen gave birth to a 7.pound boy. The three mothe and new babies were reported as doing fine. AT ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Lee Usher was received at the| - hospital yesterday evening to u Robert R. Butler of The Dalles dergo treatment for the flu h¢|ig the new member of Congress’ recently contracted. Usher is lower house from the second Ore- member of the crew on the cutt | 3on _district. Unalga. | = Mrs. Mildred Stanton underwen a major operation this morning At an early hour, after the opera tion, she was reported as doin as well as could be expected { L. J. Sharick returned to his| home today after having been i | ——————— |Two Bombs Exploded In Chicago; Damage To Two Restaurants |8th at the hospital for three weeks. M Sharick underwent a major ope cond bombing of the New ation and at the same time shattered the entramce to a new- suffering with the flu, which hell|ly opened West Side restaurant him in a weakened condition for this msorning. Windows in ad- some time {joining buildings were broken by Demetri Lutzendo, who was,seri-'the bomb made from plaster of ously injured while working in the paris and black powder. Alaska Juneau mine about | The third bombing wrecked the weeks ago, is mow up, though a entrance of the Crawford Grill patient in the hospital. several hours later. S The police describe the ings as rivalry bet en runners, Frank Koseneska, owner of the West Side restaurant, was hurled from his bed in the rear of the |establishment but was not in- Jjured, CHICAGO, 111, Jan. 7.—The Year six bomb- beer A Special Ferry will leave Ju- neau Tuesday evening, January, 7:30 p. m. en account of Joint Installation at Douglas for 'the orders of Eastern Star an Masons, CHAMP MAKER PASSES AWAY IN MIAMI, FLA. Tex Rickard, Formerly of‘ Juneau. W(’,llknown in Alaska, Is Dead (Continyen 11 «r One.) | winter, because of cold. MADE WORD 600D SEATTLE, Jan Sourdoughs | | here recalled Tex Rickard as a| gambler who made .his word! gqod and was one the best| liked men in Alaska. His Nome| gambling house was known all| over Alaska a gentleman’s resort, declared H. S. Turner, now a Seattle realtor of FEARED KNIFE YORK, Jan. 7.—If Tex| | Rickard had not feared the sur- | geo knife more than he did appendicitis he might be alive |today. He suffered attacks from |time to time for the ast 12 | vears. Dreading an operation, he |avoided it by repeated applic | tions of ice-packs during each at- |tack. Finally surgery was nece: He used to say: “They [will never get me with their bowies. They can shoot me but not cut me.” NEW [ wHO'S wHO 7 AND WHERE | Louis Juren return- on the Queen after spending a month’s leave in the south. He is stationed at the Chilkoot Barracks and the trip just ended was his first outside vacation in two years. ed north H. Caswell, U. 8. Deputy 1l of Ketchikan, arrived in 1 on the Queen. Mr. Cas- jwell is making the trip in con- nection with the business of his office. Clarence Smith, sales | tative of the Ivanhoe Candy Com- any of Seattle, wa snger on the Queen. He is making his winter sales trip to the Terri- tory. Rev. G. J. Dau of the Catholic Church at Sitka, is a passenger for that town on the Queen Saturday evening. Rev. Dane has been in Juneau for the past week confer ring with Biship Crimont and vis- iting his numerous friends T. H. Dunlap, travelling auditor for Frye-Bruhn Company, left Ju- neau for Sitka on the Queen where he is to audit the company's books at that place represen- (Ofticiai Publication) Report of the Fix}ancinl Condition - : THE B. M. BEHRENDS BANK located at Juneau, Alaska, Terri tory f Alaska 1% the ciose of %1 D RESOURCES Loans and dis- counts PRI | Leans on real estate Overdrafts ¢ United States bomds owned Wi oot Other bonds and warrants owned Banking house, fur- niture and fixtures Other teal estate owned . Due from other banks 772,696.47 221, .00 2,782.07 137,912.50 740,319.31 52,162.33 36,282.8 Checks on ®otuer barks and other cash items ... Exchanges for clear- ing house ...... Cash on hand TOTAL 4 $2,420,964.99 LIABILITIES Capital stoek paid in . i ] Surplug fund |Undivided profits less ‘expenses paid |Due to other banks —deposits . Individual and sav- ings deposits 2,112,809.28 Demand and time certificates of de- posit X ; Cashfer’s and certi- fied che Letter of credit 1090,000.00 190,000.00 24,235.85 31,008.41 48,879.41 3,834.01 200.00 TOTAL $2,420,964.99 United States of America) Territory of Alaska )s8. First Judicial Division ) 1, Guy McNaughton, Cashier of the above mamed bank, do sol- emnly swear that the forcgoing statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief GUY McNAUGHTON, Cashier. (Correct Attest) — B. M. BEHRENDS, J. F. MULLEN, Directors. (NOTORIAL SEAL) Subscribed and sworn to bhe- fore me this 7th day of January, 1929. G. C. WINN, Notury Public in and for the Ter- ritory ot Alaska. My commission expires July 22, 1929, | M LAST TIMES TONIGHT Tom Moore-Dorothy Revierr y ¥ \ COMING SOON “Clanc y-Koshers Wedding” YOU’VE SEEN JMEDY—BUT NEVER ONE C( FUNNY AS THIS Stoves We have a few used ones which are in good condition — Cook Stoves, Ranges, Heaters and Laundry Stoves. HARRIS Hardware Co. sh Creamery Butter (Gold Medal Brand) 55 CENTS POU Fresh Ranch Eggs 50 CENTS DOZEN And Honest to Goodness Swift’s Bacon 45 CENTS POUND Sliced—55 CENTS POUND CALIFORNIA GROCERY FREE DELIVERY TELEPHONE 478 ire Offic Old Papers for sale at Emp NORTHERN HOTEL ROOMS—50 cents per night and up; $3.00 per week and up. Public shower and tub baths 50 cents. Ray Oil Buraer in operation—Hot water day and night. Rooms $12.00 per month and up—steam heated. Fullness Marks the New Skirt Vi ; i Net content with added breadth to the skirt, Paris designers have ‘jm e sle:nll::;m «Imd used boxpleats as well.. This gives the grealest pos- sible fullness to this beautiful circular skirt which adds ¢ e b e e B oty s oy

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