The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 2, 1930, Page 3

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'PALACE ! TONIGHT Talking Reporter Movietone Act All Talking Comedy SECOND WIFE with “~ CONRAD NAGEL LILA LEE 10—25—50—Loges T5¢ A WATCH FOR 'COHANS and KELLYS in SCOTLAND AGHA IS INJURED NEW YORK, Oct. 2.—Zaro Agha, the Kurk, who claims to have bur- ied eleven wives and lived through 156 years without a scratch, was injured seriously when he ran afoul of a modern juggernaut. ; The aged man, accompadied by his great-grandson, Ahmet Mussa, and his manager, Assim Riydon, stepped out into Broadway at Sixty tirst street. The runningboard of an automobile brushed his shins and he fell, striking his against the car. He was taken to his hotel where specialists said his condition was too critical to re- move him to a hospital. A postman and a policeman at- telpted to halt the automobile but l};}ep! going. - RTHA SOCIETY IS TO “MEET TUESDAY AT CHURCH o The Martha Society of the Pres- byterian church will meet next Tuesday afternoon in the church Flors. Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren will . the hostess for the afternoon. IARA RELIEF FROM CURSE """ OF CONSTIPATION i A Battle Creex physician says, “Constipation = is responsible for more misery than any other cause.” But immediately relief has been found. A tablet called Rexall Order- lies has been discovered. This tab- fet. attracts water from the system ! into the lazy, dry, evaculating bow- el called the colon. The water loosens the dry food waste and gauses a gentle, thorough, natural maovement without forming a habit or ever increasing the dose. Stop suffering from constipation. Chew a Rexall Orderlie at night. Next day bright. Get- 24 ror 25c E)day at the nearest Rexall Drug tore. ! Butler-Mauro Drug Co. adv ! LADIES: Protect your hands. Buy a pair of St. Regis Household Rubber Gloves 50c¢ per pair 3 AT Junean Drug Company Free Delivery = Phone 33 Post Office Substation ¢ No.1 Have you tried .the newest GILLETTE . BLADE2 $2.00 per backage 8 BUTLER-MAURO DRUG CO. IT'S_RIGHT head | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 2, 1930. to put it aboard a railroad train so it could catch a steamship about NFws GATHERED{LO leave Skagway for Vancouver, B. |C. Capt. George Black, member- FRU’M AI.L PARTsmect of Parliament for Yukon Ter- {ritory, was in Vancouver and need- led a copy of the Yukon election uF N URTH LA ND returns, which had to be in Van- couver by a certain date. The | express or plane carried no other mail, no no passengers ecither Brief Items of Interest V& ¥ | British Columbia has granted Concerning Persons e & - and Occurences Harvey Grant, interested in min- | ing ground on Eagle Gulch, tribu- tary of Coffee Creek, in the Kou- | garock district, north of Nome, | f took the principal part in con- structing an airplane landing field | a quarter of a mile northeast of | Shelton. The field is 150 feet wide | and 1,000 feet long. | By HARRISON CARROLL Copyrigh, 1930, Premier Syndicate, Iné. A at| HOLLYWOOD, Cal—Most lead- Nome, petit jurors reported for|y,g women prefer to forget their duty September 15. Grand JUrors cnorus days, but Lilyan Tashman had reported one week previously. wi; yevive hers in a series of Herbert W. Johnson has been ap- | sy, grticles for a national mags- pointed United States Commission- | ;i er at St. Michael; Jacob I. Ander- | Sl';e has just signed a contract son, United States Commissioner at | wyicn prings her $750 a story for Teller; Stanley R. Morgan, United | po. initial literary output. The States Commissioner at Point Ear- | series will be called “Gangway for row and Arthur J. Allen, United |iye Ghorus Girl” and will be based |States Commissioner at Wmnwr(ght_m. her experience in the “Ziegfeld by Judge G. J. Lomen of the Unit- ‘pojjies» The characters will be |ed States District Court at ND“‘E"Ilcnonalv % | In addition to this, Lilyan will In Petersburg, children With ,,gertake to edit a fashion page mumps must be more considerate |yo. Roh Wagner's Script, a zestful than they ‘are of children Who ,upjication that originates in Bev- haven't mumps. Those With mumps ery pills, home of many of thé must remain at home while they gn, people. are afflicted or their parents Will|" A¢ ysual, Lilyan and Ed Lowe be prosecuted for violating health |, . (alkmfi about a New York regulations, according to notice trip, but they seldom are able to given by the City Council. ‘uct away from picture engagements jat the same time. Deer are plentiful in the vicin- ity of Blind Slough, the source of | Petersburg’s water supply. J. L.'E BRIGHT SIDE McKechnie, who is repairing the| “One good thing about the prop- dam for the city, urges residents osition for daylight saving in Ca who like deer meat to get it at fornia,” observes Joe Farman, “is Ithe slough. |that it would give song-writers an extra hour in which to leave town,” | Labor liens to the amount of ANOTHER FOR GRETA $34,208 have been filed against| The puzzle about Greta Garbo's the Wrangell Narrows Packing next picture grows more compli- Company of Petersburg by fisher- | cated each day. men and by persons who supplied| Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer now has !material and labor in the con-|bought “Inspiration,” an original struction of the company’s can-|story by James Forbes, and is con- nery and wharf. |sidering it as a vehicle for the ' [Swedish star. ¢ A boom of spruce logs, contain-| The choice lies, to date, between ing 1,100,000 feet, has been given “Red Dust,” a story that has been its final lashings at Ketchikan, | in possession of the company for and will be towed to Puget Sound {some time; “Matahari,” a play re- by the tug Akutan, Captain Jen- |cently purchased from “Barney” nings. A similar boom of 1,000,000 Glazer, and “Inspiration,” or, feet, which was towed to Belling-|may be something else entirely. !ham last August by the Akutan,| Finding a part for Greta pre- was the first boom of native tim-|sents obvious difficulties. ~More- ber ever taken south. The ex-:over, in her case, the studio is not portation of these logs is under satisfied with a mediocre success, |special permit of the Forest Serv-las it might be with other stars. ice, as regulations provide that no|Greta must be sensational or noth- logs or unmanufactured timber can ing. be taken from Alaska, ' For the fall term of court Incidentally, the theatre men are putting up a bitter fight here against the proposal. They point C. T. Gardner of Juneau was a guest of the Ketchikan Chamber 18600 to Frank Jackson to aid hlmll |in building a road to his mining property near the mouth of Clear-jout trouble, especially when one ¢ |the disputants is the arbiter’s hus- | water,, northeast of Wrangell. | A bull caribou, on whose hornsj was impinged a dead wolf, was p |seen by Felix Boucher on Birch count. Under the regulations, in this | The tWo cxhibition he must not allow any |animals evidently had fought alhall on the table to touch a cushion, | duel, and the victor evidently could/which nece: get rid of the body of the control of the cue ball. |Creek near Circle City. not, vanquished. The caribou was walk-| ing slowly with another bull cari-'yr, Mr. Boucher was unarmed;.cmpetitive contest bou. and did not | them. attempt to molest Mrs. J. W. Pritchett, widow of{] the late cditor and publisher ©f hunting trip. jthe Wrangell Sentinel, has taken of the newspaper. over publication \! | free women, are urged to attend. | Boughton's here he | After ‘Wash, 1go tq Dayton, O., to compe |national tournament for the c! There was an offer|pionship of the United States. He to do a New York play this Fall,|contested in the national tourna- but Freeland vetoed the idea. The ment of three years ago, and then motor yas' defeated by Ralph Greenleaf, present champion and screen. couple took a two-weeks' honeymoon. thy Sebastian’s example in asking Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer to release her from her contract. She was| getting good roles at the studio,| but thinks she can better herself free-lancing. And there seems to be justice her argument, for | she already has lined up three leads at Tiffany and two at Co- lumbia. Lillian Roth is another player to join the free-lance field. She has left Paramount to go back into vaudeville. Later, she’ll be back in Hollywood. | in | | | DO YOU KNOW | That Lewis Ayres formerly was ‘\a banjo player in a Los Angeles jorchestra? IVORY BALLS " AGT QUEERLY AT STOCKER'S {Frank C. Boughton Defeats | Billiard Hall Owner," ;E Jungau’s Best Ivory balls performed all kinds of | queer tricks last night and this af- Iterncon to get into the pockets of la pool table in Stocker's Billiard Hall at the Triangle Corner. The (rolling spheres acted as if they |had been bewitched by Frank C, | Boughton, champion pocket billiard {champion of New York state, wha lis on an exhibition tour of westq ern states and Alaska in the intery |est of the Brunswick-Balke Com-+ | pany, dealer in billiard tables of all |kinds and their accompanying sup= | plies. | | Last evening, Mr. Boughton cnsy |gaged in a match of 125 points with {)}.Afl(l. | This _evening, Mr. Boughton will lay 15 balls no cushion or no to meet Sa ! {pa Mary Doran has followed DOTO-|cqiq Mrs. Boughton, “and if Ralph {has much, {will be transferred this year to our household.” | of Commerce last week and ex- tended to that organization the greetings of the Juneau Chamber of Commerce. of the Alaskan Airways Corpor- ation, who is. honeymooning with his bride in the States, met the French transatlantic fliers, Capt. Dieudonne Coste and Lieut. Maur~ ice " Bellonte, at St. Paul, Minn, last week. Mr. Crosson will go to Hatton, N. D, the home of the late Carl Ben Eielson, to con- fer with a committee that is ar- ranging to erect a memorial there to Lieutenant Eielson. E. L. Bartlett, associate editor of the Fairbanks News-Miner, and |Miss Vida Gaustad were married lin Valdez and will make their home in Fairbanks. The bride was {born in Dawson and brought up /in Fairbanks. She taught school for & while in Wrangell. Mayor Bahlke, who for many years was owner of Bahlke's Res- disposed of the business to engage cess of his new venture. He bought breeding stock from Susitna Valley farms near Anchorage. He is now advertising in the Nome Nugget five pair of young mink for sale, at $125 a pair. One hundred and, twenty - two| /mink from the Wasilla farm of Gerit Snidey, near Anchorage, were | shipped the middle of September | to the Hercules Fur Farm, near |Spokane, owned by €hastik Bros. The animals will form part of a |large shipment by Chastik Broth- ers to Eurgpe. Last year they shipped breeding stock, valued at $250,000 to Norway, Sweden and Finland, with the loss of only two animals. Besides the fur farm near Spokane, the brothers also own one at Glencoe, Minn. On both places, there is a total of 1,200 fox hreededs and 700 mink breeders. To get one letter, the airplane Claire, with pilot and mechanic, flew from Mayo to Dawson, and after obtaining the single piece of i mail, started at once for cu‘oroipi to the fact that when daylight sav- |the proprietor, J. J. Stocker, wh ing first went into effect in New |is regarded as the best pool player Joe Crosson of Fairbanks, pilot| Last year| she taugh school in the States. | taurant in Nome and last year| /in fox farming, is making a suc-} York, there was a 30 per cent drop in box-office receipts. The theory is that when it does {not get dark until around 9 o'clock, ithe average. man will putter around the house until too late to start for the theatre. A slant on the situation came out of a talk that theatre executives had with the head of a local department store. When they had finished their sales talk about the proposition, he re- plied: “You know, that makes me think. I will be able to get in 18 holes after work instead of 9.” JOVIAL JACKSON When Joseph Jackson, the scen- arist, left for Europe, the wag car- iried a package of colored post |cards showing the Warner Broth- |ers’ studio, and is mailing them {back to his ‘friends. ] | EXPOSED During luncheon with a British newspaper correspondent, a _Holly- wood actor discovered that - they iboth, knew a wejl-known English- man_here. Desiring. to, impress the !conespondent. he remarked care- |lessly: “Qhb, yes, I owe him a book. i1 left it on his yacht, during a |cruise.” After the actor had left, the |correspondent said: “I don't know labout him owning a book, but I do know that Lord hasn’t a yacht.” When June Ciyde entered the marital contract with Thornton Freeland recently at highnoon, she exited from her picture contract with R-K-O. In the future, she plans to free-lance between stage in Juneau. Mrs. Boughton Refereed With championship rules in forc the players called the balls ,‘13 were penalized for fouls. Mrs, Boughton, easy to look at and @ officially licensed national pocke} - “Tomorrou's Styles Today” Jersey Dresses Shown in sizes 14 to 20 years—in a clev- er assortment of col- ors and styles. Price, $7.50 “Juneaw’s Qwn Store” r e UNITED FOOD - .COMPANY S. A. LIGHT, Manager WELCOMES YOU “Goldstein Bldg. 2nd and Seward liard referee, demonstrated how differences can be settled with- SIX-YEAR-OLD BOY IS PUZILE TOLEDO, Ohio, Oct. 2—What to| do with a 6-year-old boy, who has | DOUGLAS NEWS SOPHS TO INITIATE The Sophomores will initiate the ongman | Freshmen Friday, October chool of- | F Hall. Following t J refreshments will be COLISEU LAST TIMES TONIGHT 7:30—9:30 a Paramount ALL TALKING FROSH itates perfect position Tomorrow' nightf Ladies’ night, Boughton, will engaged in a He had hoped | Dr. W. W. Council;, who is pocket billiard player of some . but the doctor had previous- rranged to go to Cordova on a stunts is puzzlir icials, as wel The boy is three fc hty-fou is who | bang ’ A shot inthenight 2 a scream-—then lence / WHO was guilty of the most baffling crime ever committed ! t five inches t pounds, and OFFICIALS LEAVE and exhibitions CANNERY afternoon and are absolutely both ‘men and All the contests night, tomorrow morrow exening, The public, and Island accompanied by nl B. Dudden, ient the ng Company ohn Marks, cannery ‘foreman, a W. H. McDermott, stant - x e Northwestern this where they of Will Play for Titie - 4 The Juneau engagement is M. last in Al From will return to State: exhibitions at atchee, and Butte, Mont, will the am- X Kehr, arranged > go to Columbus to take up 2 Ohio department of edu- » matter of his educa Toledo public school officials cli (&} ence Jr., in & s of the Cath- | Toledo have taken |, A 1 after examinations | physician and psychiatrist Meek, superintendent of | schools, said that neither the wel- fare of the boy-man nor the best interests of his classmates could be served by permitting him to enter the public. school - e - he winter. >t MEETING meeiinrg Fire this even- el FIRE t Octoher Volunteer will be held o'clock Pl BT JUNEAU WOME Will hold its regu con Saturday, October fourth, a the Coffee Shoppe, 1:30 p. m Members and friends requested to attend. Mrs. Kendler will give a resume of her trip abroad. Lunch- eon, 50 cents —adyv. | grad dic imil a The Dou men alic o a by Cha S at 8 . VITAPHONE ACTS i en || and SOUND NEWS “Frank’s gone ahead since then Chung Hoom, a 160-pound Ha- wailan, is a candidate for quarter- back on the Navy Academy plebe team. not advanced championship stood still or the national Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. A SIGNIFICANT EXAMPLE Says SAMUEL HARDEN CHURCH President of the Carnegie Institute — that great enterprise founded by Andrew at Pittsburgh for the promotion ol art, science and literature. Known throughou! the world as a student of current problems. Chairman of the Board Carnegie Institute ol Technology, Director American National Theatre. Member American Mission to Morocco 1923, Officer of Legion of Honor (France). “Perhaps the most vital influ ence in the American business world in recent years has been the tendency of industrial lead: ers to join hands with science. No more significant example of this trend exists than your mod- ern use of the Ultra Violet Ray in the ‘Toasting’ of the LUCKY STRIKE tobaccos. The great success of your experiments dem- onstrates the wisdom of this union between business and science.” LUCKY STRIKE — the finesf cigarette you ever smoked, made of the finest tobaccos —~the Cream of the Crop—THEN—"IT'S TOASTED.” Everyone knowsthat heat pu fies and so TOASTING removes harmful irritants that cause throat irritation and coughing. No wonder 20,679 physicians have stated LUCKIES to be less irritating! Everyone knows that sunshine mellows— that's why TOASTING includes the use of the Ultra Violet Ray. It's toaste Your Throat Protection —gagainst irritation - against cough Consistent with its policy of laying the facts before the public, The American Tobacco Company has invited Mr. Samue! Harden Church to re the reports of the distinguished men who have witnessed LUCKY STRIKE’S % famous Toasting Process. The statement of Mr. Church appears on this page. © 1930, The A n Tobacco Co., Mirs.

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