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PROSECUTION IN PANTAGES' CASE STARTSASSAULT Endeavoring to Disprove of Theatre Man's Claim of Frame-up TWO WITNESSES GIVE DAMAGING TESTIMONY| Former Assistant Manager, Also Usher, Are Plac- ed on Stand ELES, Cal, Nov. assault on Aiexander Pan- S aim of a frame-up in the charges he Eunice Pringle here in Augzust, 1929, was deliv- cred yesterday by the prosecution at the theatre magnate's second trial. Roy Keen, former assistant man- ager of the theatre, said Pantages told him to place a desk in the ¢mall room, where it is asserted the attack occurred, to “make it ok more like an office.” e Russe, former usher heatrz testified that Pantages to tell the District At- the told her torney she saw Miss Pringle leave | a seat in the theatre alone and that she was not escorted to the office by Pantagss as the prose- cution claims. MAYQ GOMPANY OPERATES IN EAST CANADA Treadwell Y‘u‘k_on Becomes Active in Ontario and Northern Quebec T— A further in- terest in gold properties is evi- denced by the Treadwell Yukon Company, which recently optioned the Young-Davidson property in the Matechewan area, says the Dawson News, and cites as its authority the Financial Post. The News continues: “Young-Davidson Mines was in- corporated in 1926 to develop five claims, 160 acres in Powell town- ship, Matachewan area, Ontario. A shaft was sunk to a depth of 200 feet, two levels were established and about 425 feet of drifting were carried on on the 200-foot level. Substantial Tonnage Indicated “In 1926 the Porcupine Gold Fields Development & Finance Co., carried on an extensive diamond drilling program indicating a sub- stantial tonnage of relatively low grade ore, but since that time de- velopement has been quiescent. “A few months ago Treadwell Yukon, which operates the well- known silver property at Mayo, Y. T. optione d agroup of claims near Amas, on the transcontinen- tal line of the Canadian National Railways, in northern Quebec, and at the present time has a party en- gaged in exploration work and in sampling. Active In Exploration “The Treadwell Yukon is man- aged by the Bradleys of San Fran- cisco, who are active in the ex- ploration of new properties all over the continent. Recently reports were circulated that another of their companies, the Alaska Juneau was interested in some properties in Ontario and Quebec, this rumor evidently having arisen owing to the activity of Treadwell Yukon, which they control.” P AT THE HOTELS Gastineau S. A. Smith, M. Joyce, Seattle; Mrs. Sam Anderson, Port Alexan- der; Frank Weinberg, Duncan; Ray Getty, D. E. Hanbury, Juneau. DAWSON, Y. Alaskan W. 8. Pekovich, Funter Bay; J. O. Davidson, Douglas. Zynda Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Nicholas, Funter; L. G. Morrison, Juneau. Box of 21 Newly Designed Christmas Cards with Embossed Seals and Tissue Envelopes, $1.00 Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery Phone 33 ! Post Office Substation -:Neo.-1 criminally attacked ) young girl daneer | in | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 13, 1931. RECEPTION FOR ' "MANNING SET | | FOR TONIGHT Pianist, Whmves(:oncerl Sunday, Worked Hard | | for Success | To give residents and visitors in (Juneau an opportunity to meet John C. Manning, eminent pianist. | who will be heard in concert here| ‘Sundn night, a public reception will be held at 8 o'clock this even- 'ing under auspices of the Business and Professional Women's Club in (the Northern Light Presbyterian !Church. Mr. Manning arrived in this afternoon |the wharf by Club. He was greeted at members of the Everything his concert. is in readiness for a large Tickets may school children. The net proceeds of the concert | attendance be is expected. ! a girl graduate of the Juneau high school. Worked Hard to Succeed Mr. Manning : an American | pianist who has climbed to the top by sheer perseverance. He was born in Indiana, and is) a descendant of an old colonial family. He started music early in life with a music teacher as most children do. As a boy he was much in demand as an accompan- ist because of his sympathetic touch and fine sense of phrasing, ! which has been the feature that the critics of his more mature years have so loudly praised. But his father objected to his son fol- lowing a musical career, and re- fused to pay for his musical edu- cation. Just as in his boyhood days he had to earn the money |for his music lessons, so he had to earn money for advanced musi- cal instruction later when he defi- nitely decided to follow a musical career. Studied Under Exacting Teacher ‘When ready for college influen- ces led him to the University of Kansas, where on the side he studied music with a thorough but exacting master. Later he went to Boston. Here he studied with the best and received from them every encouragement. It was here that he became the pupil of America’s foremost pianist and composer, E. A. Macdowell. Later Manning | went to Paris and became the pupil of Isadore thlppe to whom the American owes his ma»terrul tech- nical training. Returning home, he soon became promlnent in musical circles in and around Boston. Gradually his fame as a pianist broadened. Calls‘ came from New York, Pennsylvania and various northeastern states. In 1911 Mr. Manning went to 'San Francisco, where he has since resided. And just as in New Eng- land, the public has been equally as enthusiastic whenever he has| paused long enough in his busy life as a teacher to give concerts. In fact always the general cry has been just like Paul Pearson’s in the Swathmore (Penn.) Talent: “Give us more like Mannmg, the best thing of the season.” "nnrd Degree’ Methods Defied by Broody Hens KNOXVILLE, Tenn., Nov. 13. 13.—|the city on the steamship Alameda Cruel treatment and third degree “break- methods gain nothing in ing up” broody hens, says A. J. Chadwell, University of Tennessee extension poultryman. Hanging the hens by their feet, dipping them in a creek or pond |of the methods disparaged. Chadwell says the broody hen of time she will stay broody. ———— MRS. MONTGOMERY DAVIS SUCCESSFULLY OPERATED UPON, SEATTLE HOSPITAL Mrs. Montgomery Davis, who left Juneau ten days ago, underwent a successful operation yesterday in the Providence Hospital in Seattle, according to word received by her son, Trevor Davis. Christmas Cards Finest Selection We Have Ever Had. Prices Reasonable Butler Mauro Drug Co. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS 8 am. to 11 p.m. Phone 134 We Deliver UNITED FOOD T0 TAKE FUR STORE SPACE Delicatessen to Be Added and Fruits and Vege- tables Enlarged ‘With the completion of extensive changes now under way, the Unit- ed Food Company will be able to boast of being a modern food de- partment store. | The storeroom in the Goldstein | building, that has been occupied by the Charles Goldstein & Co.’s fur store, has been leased by the “grocery firm and will be added to| the present quarters. The addi- tional area will provide spacious | quarters for a new delicatessen de- |partment and an enlarged fruit ' and vegetable department. Three Distinct Divisions | “Departmentalizing our store into | From the advance sale of tickets, 1qing them under a water faucet, | three distinct divisions—groceri |and confining them under a box m-}dellca essen goods and fresh fr obtained from | ¢yl without feed or water are some [and vegetables—will enable us | ‘nge our customers much bet 1 wservlce than in the past and the | will go into the scholarship fund should be placed in a coop the first !benefit of lower prices through | that the Business and Professional night she remains on the nest, as| greater purchasing power,” said S. Women’s Club offers every year 0 gny gelay will increase the length A. Light, general manager of the |Unlbed Food Company, today. “We have been badly cramped | for room owing to the unexpectedly | rapid growth of our business, and | in making our expansion plans we | decided to add to our present lines a thoroughly modern delicatessen | department. This is something that we believe will appeal to the people of Juneau. Salads and Other Delicacies “We shall keep on hand a large, choice stock of salads, meats, cheeses and other food delicacies, !and in this department will feature Manning's coffee, fresh roasted in Seattle and ground in our store as wanted, and teas, spices, etc.” | | The fruit and vegetable depart- ment will occupy an important place in the new store arrange- ment, said Mr. Light. According to present plans, the United Food Company will blossom forth as a full-fledged food em- 5. Central part Daily Cross-word Puzzle ACROSS . Frolie . Precise location Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle . Rub out Cover the Inside of . Allowance for the weight of a con- tainer Badgerlike animal . Exist 5. Winglike Unuccubled . Baseball club . Spenser's per- sonification of truth Small stalk Stary Hotels Disturb . Type measure . Root out Italian river Buy back Remunerate . The bitter vetch . Color Lairs . ltesembling a certain um\er o T é/nf/é-% W, 7 fllll% | 7 fllfllll/ ) I//fllll///flllI = l fll . Large deer 5. Merchandise 66. People under Evergreen 67 Moderately tree 1d [ 6) Grimaces 70. Mark of & 0. the care of one pastor 1 59. Greek letter . Direction . Unadulterated 5 62. Exclamation 6. 8. Long: Celestial body Perfect golf 7. Alternative . Small car at- tached to a locomotive Gaelic to call attention Each without exception Give forth 9 Il// l . Flllr 52. Aerifor 53. Remote . Methods . Golf stroke . Foot coverin® . Sacred 0. Sin . Rodent 1L Nna l&x leat : Hongon . Tree £ . Parent’s sistet . Print in sioping let- . Roman road Title Stuft . Sound of the surf on the shore . Metal-bearing rocks . One of the . Playthings . Weird | Tapering solld Writing table . Persian fairy 3. Separated . Stralght . Drive oft fruit rm fluld -I’///fl H7dER flfl |porfum in its enlarged quarters !the latter part of next week. [ | Goldstein's fur store is moving |into the store room adjoining ifs| i former location. ———-——— | |JAPANESE BOOKS COLLECTED | | EVANSTON, Ill. — Northwestern | University boasts the largest col-' ‘lectlon in the world outside Japan; of books and documents in thel Japanese language on Jflpanese| law and politics. { ———— old papers n ‘The Emplre. FRESH KILLED TEA, MANNING Dicans .. . .o PRUNES, large, 3pounds .. .. .. MILK, Darigold, 18cans.. .. .. . 3largecans... . CHEESE, Full Cr pound .... .... Budweiser B 34 deg. Fahrenheit FOR YOUR SATURDAY EVENING REFRESHMENTS Ginger Ale Coco Cola FOR SATURDAY CHICKENS, ouRd: L T e e BROILERS, large size, Lt SRR e . SRR ’S, TOMATO PUREE, No. 1 tall, ¢ e e PLUMS, Class A, eam, ON ICE - eer Golden Glow Beer Pickwick Pale TELEPHONES 92 and Beer 95 34 deg. Fahrenheit Mission Grapefruit Dry Mission Orange Dry. Mission Lemon W hite Rock Sparkling Lime George Brothers _FIVE FAST DELIVERIES» .25¢ 39¢ 000 A ¢ Grapejuice Old Papers for sale at Empire Office BLANKET SALE - 4%-pound double bed size, part-wool, in colors, pair All-Wool Blanket, 4-pound, double, Cotton Blankets—double bed size, in white, grey, tan, pair . LEADER DEPARTMENT STORE PUBLIC GIVES FINE RESPONSE T0 ROLL CALL Preliminary Reports ‘from Workers Indicate Town Will Exceed Quota ‘Canvassers in the local Red Cross Roll Call campaign have reported: ia fine respomse from the public, | with indications that the commun- ity's quota will be attained with- out diffteulty, it was announced today by B. D. Stewart, Roll Call| Chairman for the Juneau Chapter. | No complete reports have been received from any of the local workers, but preliminary estimates | indicate better than normal sub-| scriptions. | In one large residential district,| the workers reported it only par- tially covered but it has already exceeded last year’s total, Mr. Stew- art said. In the business section. it was reported that workerz were ahead of 1930, also. Taking advantage of the fact that today was mail day, with a boat in port from Seattle, the local committee established a table in the post office lobby in charge of Mrs. Dan Ross who was kept busy most of the day giving member- ship receipts and issuing Red Cross buttons. Workers in the Capitol also re- vorted uniform success and it is expected it will be represented 100 per cent strong in the final tabu- lations. —wvo—— ATTEND THE LECTURES on Bible Prophecy every Sunday, Tues- day, Thursday and Friday evenings at the Odd Fellows Building. adv. MR, AND MRS. NOWELL BACK Willis E. Nowell, agent in Ju- neau of the Alaska Steamship Com- pany, and Mrs. Nowell returned today on the steamship Alameda from a brief visit in the States. ————— T. F. BRENNAN IS BACK T. F. Brennan, traveling sales- man, has returned to Juneau from & business trip to other Southeast Alaska towns. Old papers at The Empire. ;Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;”’ House Frocks A splendid new assort- ment in a full range of sizes to 48 bust. Shop while the selec- tion is complete for Holiday Gifts. PRICED at $2.25 “Juneaw’s Own Store” APPLES! Large, juicy Delicious APPLES! Apples, box ...._$1.75 At GARNICK’S-Phone 174 Leather your name or initials charge. ’ GOO(]S Just received from a prominent Eastern style center a rather large selection of leather goods for men and women, such as BILL-FOLDS, PURSES, MEMOS, KEY- KASES, HAND BAGS, UNDER-ARM BAGS, CIGARETTE CASES, CIGAR- ETTE BOXES, BRUSH AND COMB SETS, ETC., ETC. at the lowest prices for quality goods. Prices range from one to ten dollars, and we put on with gold, free of THE NUGGET SHOP IIIIIIIIIIIIflIIIIIIIlllllIIIIIHIIIIIlIIIIlIiIllllIIIIIlIIIIIIIIII|IIlllIIIlfllIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIII]IiIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHllllIIIIIHIIIilIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIlII Saturday Last Day conomy Week Sale FUR TRIMMED ress Coats $15.0( Values to $39.50 THINK OF IT! SAVE LAYy ’; SAVE NEW FALL Values to SAVE ~ SAVE $4.95 Silks, Silk-and-Wool Tweeds $12.50 Coleman’s Hollywood Style S OP