The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 14, 1930, Page 3

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. sings and the result is most sat)s~|g PALACE TONIGHT THE ONE AND ON ‘“BROADWAY”> New York’s famous stage play with a musical back- ground—All Talking and Singing METROTONE NEWS CHARLEY CHASE—AIl Talking Comedy 10—25—T75—Loges $1.00 WATCH FOR “MELODY | RUDY VALLEE OF in LO ' SABOND LOVER’ Molnar family. When he becomes a jazz musician after a fruitless search for concert work, his father is shamed and heart-broken. How- ever, all ends well, with Ted a musical hit, just as he is in real life. Alice Day also assists in making | ==—————— this picture a hit. She is a beau- tiful and capable leading lady. Oth- " ers in the supporting cast include | |Julia Swayne Gordon and Law- rence Grant. IMOOSE DEFEAT LEGION SUNDAY ; WIN 6 STRAIGHT Pete Schmitz Shuts Out Vets 6 to 0 as Moose Win Sixth in Row The Moose continued their un- broken winning streak Sunday, de- feating the American Legion by a score of 6 to 0. sixth straight win in the second half of the City League's schedule. Pete Schmitz held the Vets to five hits, not more than one in any single inning, and walked but one man. The Vets didn't get any man around to third and had but three on second. Keaton pitched a nice game, also, but his support was not up to standard, and the g ® M bunchs heir hits i “IS EVERYBODY HAPPY" | |prose, Dinched thelr hits in three IS SHOWING, COLISEUM | | The Paps scored two in the sec- jend on two hits and two errors. {Kearney and Jack Schmitz led off | iwith singles. After Orme popped Atl;ractions At Theatres | “BROADWAY” IS NOW t . SHOWING AT PALACE | L] . A top-price Broadway revue and a New York play hit rolled into one at the price of a’ motion pic- ture—such is “Broadway,” the Uni- versal super talking and singing production now at the Palace. Bargain sales in entertainment are something new, but that is literally what such an all-sound production as “Broadway” gives to the theatre-goer. After seeing the film, it is easy to believe that Carl Laemmle, Jr, spent $1,500,000 to make it. “Broadway,” to begin with, was a sensational play, which kept New York itself on edge for almost two years. The action of the play has been faihtfully reproduced in the picture, not only with full dia- lcgue, but with two outstanding characters of the original produc- tino playing the parts which they made famous throughout the coun- try. The characterizations of the play are enacted by Glenn Tyron as Roy Lane, Merna Kennedy as Bil- lie Moore, the “hoofer’ ’team; and, Evelyn Brent as Pearl. Ted Lewis in “Is Everybody Hap- py?” is now playing at the Coli- seum Theatre. It is Mr. Lewis’ first | ‘out to short, Pete Schmitz hit ;:‘toaspho::d p:od;it::; i::uw;;::;;down thirdbase line and Man- seeing. It is entertaining and lives $EDE let the ball get through hitn. ly with a story that suits the per-| A tretse B S sonality of this famous star of fhrem 1 Mvay: iyl (0°ged Koad- vaudeville. ney at third and the pair of Jacks There are many things in ,‘I!,romped Sl find highly entertaining. Ted Schmitz and Andrews stngled and himself plays on several instrut 5 ments and sings his songs in the ! Lansing scored them with a two bag; to left. manner that has earned him the gy i title ‘of the “high hatted tragedian In the fifth Bill Schmitz doubled of jazz’ He acts " rather than"nd scored on Andrews’ three-bag- Bill scored; again in the seventh. Ted’s band accompanies him' !He singled, advanced to second on Fritz Schmitz’ sacrifice bunt, to through the picture and the mem-| bers are a talented group of musxc}'mrd on Andrews’ single nad scored on Big Mac's single to left. makers. Ann Pennington does \ several interesting dances. Rdx Hoorw andt Subiiiny { The story opens with Ted and |LEGION-= i his mother and father arriving in‘rgh;m zgt f" America. Ted is to have a great 'v?an::‘in 'rab"' career in a symphony orchestra, for g, Roller, ss music is a tradition with the ‘The: lHames, lb 2b Keaton. B p Koski, 1 Goss, rr iBrown, 1b factory. [T 1 coooccoccccol comommoo~all ao.—»umu—»—-_a codNvwurLAOOR corocococomooH 9 £ ' Totals .. MOOSE— Schmitz, zSchmltz. : Andrews, {Lansing, McSpdn, Kearney, |Schmitz, Jr., r! {Orme, cf .. Sehmitz, P, p ... Totals . 611 27 13 Summary—Earned runs, Moose 4; two-base hits, B. Schmitz, Lansing and Orme; three-base hit, An- drews; first on balls, off Schmitz 1, off Keaton 1; struck out, by 3 NooONUOORO RN FRESH as new-laid eggs. . ™ Hills Bras B e s soaieg 12 Stk HmHroNMOoORN~ Schmitz 8, by Keaton 4; left on In the bases, Moose 5, Legion 6; passed original balls, Thomas 1; sacrifice hits, P. vachNm Schmitz 2, Manning and B. Kea- pack ton 1 each. 5 4 COFFEE Umpires, Nostrand and Botelho. —C=r © 1930 Scorer, Mize. ControLLep Rossting gives Hills NOTICE Bros. Coffee a flavor no other coffee st has. And becausc Hills Bros: Coffec; Notice is hereby given that all is vacuum packed, air, which destroys | partnerships existing between my- the flavor of coffee, is completely taken self and all others are not to be outofthccanand keptour. Ordinary | considered in effect on and after It was their)d | Railroad Oithe admittance of these two com FUNDS ALLOTTED FOR ROAD WORK Forest Sefvnce Cels $126 000 for Additional Road | Work for This Year A total of $126,000 has just been | allotted by the Secretary of Agri-| culture to the Alaska Forest Serv- | ice district for read construction | during the curtent fiscal' year, it was announced today from local Regional Forest Service hudquar-" | | ters. Of this sum $1,000 is allotted for | a location survey of a short spur road conneeting a summer home- site area at Point Lena to Glacier Highway. This will be made in the near future. ‘To reconstruct two sections of Moose Pass Highway on Kenail allotted. This covers a stretch of | approximately 20 miles. Eighty-five thousand dollars was allotted for building an extension | of two and one-half miles to Sal- mon River Highway in the Hyder district. This will earry the high-| way from the town of Hyder to the | international boundary at Stewart. Bids will be called for this season and work started as soon as snow Denny Hill is being leveled by the Washington city to provide n trict and (lower) an elevated conveyor belt carries the dirt acréss’ eig traffic. Upper photo shows four forks at hill leading to conveyor belf. —Associated Press Photo. more flat area for the business dis- ht streets without inconvenience to conditions ‘will - permit’ next spring. e DISTINGUISHED . LAWYER | AND U. & “JUDGE ARE | JUNEAU VISITORS SUNDAY | cxpemo that would be entailed’ b Statehood. “Population would increase’ be- cpusv resources would be more'ex tensively and more rapidly - devel- icped, if self-government were ac- |corded the people. With thei'pro- gress of the commonwealth, .reve SULZER TO FLY [ NORTHVISITING PLACER GLMMS‘::';;;‘;:':,;:: R Ex-Gor. Sutzer s B,PR. OFFIGE] OFFICERS Statehood as Cure for { Alaska’s Ailments T William Sulzer, former Governor | and former Congressman of New Williams and York, who first came to Alaska in| 1881 and who has maintained hvs\ interest in the Northland sin(-v! then by frequent visits and ac- quirement of mining properties, was ' enger on the steamship Al-| J. F. Bright Return from Inspechon of Western Roads , After an inspection of roads in . which was here Sunday en|[eStern Alasks, and a trip infe the route to the Westward. The Gove ) Y gk neer Ab White Williams, United States Bureau of nor is on his way to the Wh River and Chandelar River dis- Public Roads, and J. F. Bright, zep- | tricts, in both of which he is de-|Tésenting the Regional Offige, San | veloping placer prospects. He board- | Francisco, of the same hureau, ar-\ ed the vessel at Ketchikan, hay- Tived here this morning on the| {ing been there a few days looking |Steamer Aleutian. | Mr. Williams met Mr, Bright, at | | Cordova. From there they went to Seward and covered roads there and on Kenai Peninsula. Later they went over the Alaska Railroad to Fairbanks, and returnedyto the | ccast over Richardson hway. Mrs. Bright and son accompanied Mr. Bright to Seward and returned emplane there, fly to the White from there to the States. River and, after a brief stay, con Mr. Bright will be here sev tinue to the Chandelar. He willldays inspecting the local road return to the States in about six tem. Later this week he and Mr. weeks. ,lehams will leave to inspect roads Optimistic Over Prospects south of here to Hyder. The Governor is very optimistic| - i o A e ALEUTIAN IS HERE ON WAY TO SEATTLE er district. “The airplane makes accessxhn! mineral regions in the interior that heretofore could not be prospected| Steamer Aleutian docked here. this morning at 8:30 o'clock from {the westward on her way south. | Passengers for here were: Sam or developed because of the lack of transportation facilities,” he said. “I have great confidence in boin| the White River and Chandelar; Shucklin, W. Lindsay, Mig w. districts. In the White River, my Lmdsay J. 8. Bright, M. D, Wil- holdings give excellent promise of | liams, A. R. Butterfield, K. L, Gald| en, Frank H. Foster, Mrs. J. Thom- |8, George Fedderman, J. Scamén and Mrs. M. McGriskenwitz. over his mineral holdings in that neighborhood. The Governor expects to make use of a plane in going to his interior properties. He hopes to he met at Seward by an airplane from Pairbanks, but if this arrangement fails he will travel by the Alaska to Fairbanks. He will ARRIVE TODAY |in certain areas. | was reported today at local head- RED FISH PACK IN BERING SEA DISTRICT FAILS Bristol BayP_ack Is 500, 000 Cases Short, Cor- dovan Man Reports A. J. Falknor, a leading lawyer/ of Seattle, and Mrs. Falknor, and Judge T. W. 8lick, United States Distriet Judge of the Northern Di- vision of Indiana, and Mrs. Slick of South Bend, were visitors Ing Juneau yesterday. Mr. Falknor was | a law partner for many years of | the late P. M. Troy at Olympia. Mrs, - Slick and Mr. Falknor ar: sister and bréther. - Judge Slick. Mr. Falknor and the late Mr. Trov of Olympia were classmates at the University of ‘Michigan. Mr. Falk- nor moved from Olympia to Seattle jabout twenty years ago to becomsz a trial lawyer for the Seattle Elec- The Bristol Bay pack of red sal- nion is 500,000 cases short’ this sea- scn, according to Frank H. Foster, veterapn Alaska Legislator and Cor- dova attorney, who arrived this a8 Vo Vel morning for a few days’ visit on legal business. This estimate, he caid, was conservative and was made by one of the leading pack- ers in the district who has been on the ground for the past threz weeks. Most of the western districts ha sz been experiencing light runs. The Alaska Peninsula pink run.was fair| § At Kodiak it was practically s failure. Prince Will- iam Sound is far short, and Cook Inlet has had light runs, Mr. Fos- ter said. Southeast Alaska, particularly Icy Strait and Cross Sound, offer ) a contrast to these conditions, it quarters of the United States Bureau | of Fisheries. One of the heaviest P runs of fish in recent years is re- ported in progress in the northera districts. Indications are said 12 be extremely good for similar runs all over the Panhandlc C. N. STEAMSHIP ouT A, SOUTH EARLY SUNDAY ’ The Cnnndmn National Line$ steamer Prince George, Capt. Ma~- Lean, artived in port shortly after midnight Saturday and sailed for \ Vancouver about on hour later. Passengers leaving here on the steamer were: for Prince Rupert-— Mr. and Mrs. William Muir; for ‘Vancouver—D. C. McKechnie; for Seattle—C. T. McDonald and M. B. Frickson. fulfilling every expectation.” The Governor, of course, evinces a lively interest in the political progress of the Territory. The Alameda sailed at noon for “There is only one remedy for Seattle with the following pa gers: Mr. and Mrs. Leon Harper, James and Virginia Harper, Mrs. Nina Jacobson, Mrs. O. O. Carpeny the ills necessarily incident to the ter, Dolly Carpenter, A. Whitficld, bureaucratic rule, of distant gov- ernment,” he explained. “The rem- L. Bender, Mrs. Marie Warlor,! Grace and May Warlor, Mrs. Al- edy is certain. It is feasible, too, if residents of the Territory will stir themselves to an insistence on e npp‘l:i;:;tl;?(x‘; olrt ll:lpsrliiifi;m‘ bert Brown, Claris Carpenter, Louis | “Because of the opposition of|Crogan, T. Hagan, M. Gerome, Ole| Alstead, Pete Sutter, for Seattle; Miss Venetia Pugh, Mrs. T. M. Reed, Mrs. L. Smith, B. B. Gfeen, Bill Peterg, .J. W. Gucker, ,)ohrfl Eastern and Southern political in- terests to Alaska Statehood on the Hirlock, John Eriss, Georgé Fed- derman, Ted Haugan, and George ground of paucity of population, the people of Alaska have come to suffer an inferiority complex in this respect themselves. Alaska’s population compares favorably in|Paulson, for Ketchikan. ——e-— ® 000000000000 TODAY’S STOCK L QUOTATIONS . numbers with Nevada’s, and virtu ally equals that of Montana wl » it was admitted to the Union. In-}® adequacy of population was an ob-|® jection raised against New Mexico|® and . Arizona, when I introducsd in Congress the bills providing for sy NEW YORK, July 14.—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau Min2 stock today is 5%, Allegehany monwealths. Statehood invelves no rumerical test. The tests—the only |poration 237%, Bethlehem Ste: tests—should be, and are under the |General Motors 43%, Granby Constitution, capacity for self-gov- International Harvester 837, K ernment and ability to meet hom: |necott 38%, Montgomery Ward 35%,) rule expenses. In neither does Al-|National Aeme 18%, Packard Mo’ - aska fail. ors 15, 13%, 15, Simmons Beds 24'%, Home Rule oN Stranger Standard Brands 20, Standard Oil “The great majority of Alaskanfof California 62%, Standard ©il of residents have exercised the rights;New Jersey 72Y%, United Aircrait of*self-government in some of the|57%, U. 8. Steel '163%, American various States. To ‘Northerners,|Can 126%, Fox Films 45'%, Hupo Statehood would not be at a'l{Motors 14%, 14%, 1. Stewart- strange and would merely bestow {Warner, no sale. on them the rights they have en- ———eeo— joyed elsewhere. If there wer: only 10,000 citizens in Alaska, they should not be denied self-govern-|fred Carlson. She arrived on the | ment. Dorothy Alexander, and will visit Miss Gertrude Walling, of Port- land, Oregon, is visiting Miss Wini- he cans will sot keep coffee|July 15th, 1930. u%“th:umlflthcm,adv (Signed) “Alaska’s resources are amply|until the Dorothy returns on her sufficient to support the modmt. next trip. ooonoooo-ooo‘|. New Goods - Arriving art of loveliness. Every Boat Peninsula, the sum of $40,000 was \ Announcmg the O y34 igd T .Y Iy TRIANGLE BUILDIN “IS EVFRYBODY HAPPY?” IF NOT GO TO THE COLISEUM (Where Stund Sounds Best) TONIGHT—AT 7:30 OR 9:80-AND SEE TED LEWIS in ‘IS EVERYBODY HAPPY?, < with ‘Ann- Pennington, Alice Day and chovus -of* o Dazzling Beauties and Lewis's Own Band VITAPHONE ACTS ALL TALKING.COMEDY FOX MOVIETONE NEWS. Tuesday—WINNIE LIGHTNBR'n “SHE COULDN'T SAY NO? X ‘5 e AT e g 1557 on W e B A5 ‘V:.;-a. § on every boat ARNOLD’S BOOTERY Goldstein - Bmldmg ing trial lawyer of the firm of jon the Poe, Falknor, Emory and Falknor. The members of the party, all of whom were passengers on the Prince Henry, were guests of Joha W. Troy while in Juneau. They continued on the Princé Henry and will visit both Dawson and Atla before returning.’ A. WHITFIELD GOING SOUTH FOR HEALTH To seek' miedical !rultm'ent‘ 'Alle’n 1 from Tebenkoft, Imc Company. He is now the lead- Jof this city, left, boday (or s-m- vacation. Whitfield, son of R. H. Whittield nm b i4 Teleplpone 427 ’ E NEW ALL KINDS OF NEW FOOTWEAR For Men, Women ‘and €hildren, arriving A complete Beaut»y Servwe ¥ | We invite you to cl" or phone fo: nppomiment. . Our Clmrge: Aro Truly Modorda Bas wi 3 o NEXT TO PALACE 'mBAm This new shop will auucxpate your évery wish from an ex- quisite manicure to a new 'restorative facial : i & frlget that endures ... . a permanent that looks natural. ‘Al} lwo-t plished under boudou-lnke privacy by vxpcn.: long learnéd ilrfllb FEATURING THE NEW FAIRY STONE SKIN PRGI‘m AND POWDER BASE o — A s S

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