The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 8, 1932, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, TUESDAY WEDNESD! Conrad ,\fagnl. and Catherine Dale Owen in “TODAY” JIMMY SAVO in “THE HOUSE DICK” NEWS———CARTOON CHINA NITE Coming THURSDAY—Wheeler and Woolsey in “CAUGHT PLASTERED” SATURDAY ONLY—BUCK JONES in “FIGHTING SHERIFF” and “BOTTOM OF THE WORLD” OTHER COMING ATTRACTIONS—“Fannie Foley Herself,” “Man in Possession,” “Shipmates,” “Pol- itics,” “Are These Our Children,” “Frankenstein,” “Unholy Garden,” “Street Scene” All-Alaska News Mrs. Andrew Johnson, of Pete: burg, returned to her home Petersburg from a trip to the S during which she attended Ben Benson, watchman at Kar- American Teglon Auxiliary Execu-!heen and Mrs. Flora Herbson of tive meeting at Indianopolis Jan- Klawak were married at Craig by uary 29 and 30, the seventh!the Presbyterian minister there. ‘Women's Patriotic Conference on;The license was fssued by Mrs, National Defense at Washington, Hattie Bagley, the - only mnotary D. C, February 3 and 4 and the public in the town, on telegraphic First Conference on Child Wel- advices from United 'States Dis- fare in’Cincinnati, O., Februray 6. trict Judge Justin ‘W. Harding, She was a delegate from Alaska|who was in Ketehikan. He was at these meetings. lasked by wire if a notary public could issue a marriage license. Mr. Car Anderson bought the gas- @nd Mrs. Benson will make their boat Tasmania for $500 at a Uni- home in Karheen. ted States marshal’s sale at Peters-[ burg. rs- for the Ward Cove Packing Com- in {pany’s cannery. When a letter from a Seattle firm of accountants was read at Fire, caused from sparks from a |& meeting of the Ketchikan council chimney, destroyed the residence asking for the work of auditing of Mr. and Mrs, Wiliam Moss-|the city's books, there was con- berg at Ward Cove, near Ketchi- i siderable quick-fire comment and kan. Mr. Mossberg is watchman unanimous opinion was expressed \that the council would not go {outside of Ketchikan for an audi- Clasence Bailey and Mrs. irella Bullock were married at Ketchikan, Miss Janice Aikens, of Ketchikan, who plays the violin, has been selected as a member of the ma- tional high school orchestra which will awemble ‘and play in Cleve- land, O., before the mnational con- vertion of ‘music supervisors there. {A ‘concert will soon be given in Ketchikan to0 raise funds to de- fray the young woman's expenses to Cleveland. | J‘ Between $12 and $14 in nickles land dimes were stolen from the |cash register of the Pioneer Pool |Hall at Ketchikan by burglers Easter Candies ;wlho roxloeil;; entrance into the s & place & : Candied Eggs i | Seventy-five men will be putl Ba:skets !Lc work when the Vermont Mar-~ Nests |ble Company's quarries at To- 3ty keen resume operations March 18, Chicks the ‘Wrangell Sentinel reports. The quarries have been idle several years. J uneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY” With the object of studying dramatics and technique of the | stage, the Ketchikan Little Thea- tre movement has been organ- |ized in Ketchikan with 20 members - Four public. exhibitions will be | given each year, part of the pro- |ceeds to' go to charity ‘and the | other half for paying for equip- ment and expenses. Rev. Mark T. Carpenter of the St. John's Epis- copal church is the president, ‘Other officers “are Mrs. Allax Miller, vice=president; Daisy Race, secretary, and Maurice Oaksmith, treasurer. Peter K. Johnson an dSig Han- sen recently left Kechikan'in Han- sen's boat 'for ‘Ernest Sound 1o make a search for the trolling boat COMMERCIAL PRINTING BINDERY Geo. M. Smvpkins Co. FRIENDS-- We are having a nice quite little Silk and Parchment Lamp Shade Sale. " If you need new shades an inspection of our complete stock will. prove profit- able to all parties concerned, yourself in particular. Yours Very Truly, W W SRR\ Alaska Electric nght\& Power Co. “TODAY” BEGINS CAPITOL SCREEN Conrad Nage:xnd Cather- ine Dale Owen Star in Love Drama “Today,” starring Conrad Nagel and' Catherine Dale Owen, is the featured photoplay on the new pro- |gram that will be presented at the Capitol theatre tonight. An added attraction will be “The House Dick," the leading role. Besides, there will be a Funny Cartoon and a News Reel. Chinaware Night Tonight' ' is "“Chinaware Night.” Every woman attending either of the performances will be given a piece of table chinaware. “Today” is @ romantic drama. It is 'a Majestic ‘Prodiiction offering and, like all the plays by this com- pany, can boast of an interesting theme, a good cast and expensive settings. Many Tense Situations The "love story revolves around Nagel and Miss Owen, and develops numerous tense situations. Both he and she are performers of extra- ordinary ability, and in this pho- toplay they have ample opportuni- | ties to manifest their exceptional talents “The House Dick” is a clever comedy of the farcical sort. Savo| is funnier than ever as a detec- tive. Frances TI, reported t0 have been missing since it left Mayefs Chuck December 17, with Holger and Jer- emias ~ Johnson ' on' board. = Peter Johnson, who just came from the ‘States, is the brother of the two missing Johnsons. ‘Anton Nelson, of the Sadie Cove Fox farm, near Seldovia, ‘suffered | lost his Columbia river type of gas boat the other day when a south- wester crashed the craft on the beach near the Nelson home-place, and a pounding surf completed the Job. Neil Noonan, a trapper at Mile Nineteen, out of Cordova, arrived in Cordova with a good cateh of furs. Noonan reported that he had | THIS EVENING ON, with Jimmy Savo in Masters of erfl! 1r0 Comm é Wheeler and W Woolsey Co~‘ 1932. COMEDIANS DO 4 THEIR BESTT0 - MIDEACH DTHER operate to Make ‘Caught Plastered” Funny nt | tomorrow night Here are Bert Wheeler, his Weclsey, minus his cigar. These two ¢ and merrier than ever in “Caught Plasicred,” which will begin show- | ing at regular perfcrmances Thursday at the Capitol Theatre, hilarious comedy, they are a couple of two-fisted, hard-ridin’, ‘em-dead cowboys. They lasso gags, bulldog boen guffaws all over the place. *brated funmakers are madder Pioneer Packing Company, and 'in [near Nome. They have a shaft so doing dislodged the end piece, |down 100 feet and good prospects | sending the entire lot of coal down |have been found. The ground is| on his back. He was quickly dug |fr but some water seepage is out .add rushed to the Cordova |givi a little trouble, but not General hospital where he was|enough to dispel their spirits. found to have several ribs broken and severe injuries to his back. vard of Directors of the| ern Alaska Fair n the office of Pre: D. Jensen, at Nome, ted considerable the plans for on March 30, Along the Yukon River five In- dians are said to have died from exposure to the ecold. At Pmn,‘ ransa Barrow several airplanes Were | perf forced to remain on the ground a| week due to high’ winds. dent and the 31, Fair and Anyone who nas the impression | that airplanes are suitable for only light freighting would have got a different ipression had he been at Takotna recently when an Alaskan Airways plane landed there from Iditarod with a half ton of hay to be used for reindeer fecd. Car- goes of oats and wheat and frozen wh fish have been carrieid ‘on hops between Kuskokwim points and the Iditarod. Unusual depth of snow Iin the peninsula district is proving able of a handicap to the , according to Pilot Al- , of the Pacific {nterna- ys, who made a flight i and return to Anchorage. i of 13 moose was obs: T of 11 and numerous mals, an& ther that they were having a busy g through the deep The herds dre not in any icular da r now but should now be crusted lat ion become ly [ ne Carl Lindell, Fred M s and Ar- nold Thommen are engaged inmin- ing on the second h line about on east of Fi,Davis, may With ‘cooperat: the slogans of the day, it 18} ion’ and ‘team- esting to note the relationship of Bert ey, liam S¢ comedy stars,” success, Wheeler and Robert declares Wil- Wool- who directed their lat- “Caught Plastered,” ich will bo previewed at 1 a. m, flashing smile, at left, and Rob(-rt\ chh and whic ] ly at will b Thursday the Capitol the- showing “They have appeared together in | seven successive In this |pecome o famous com: kll‘vflk!thfi talking picture scr mots and throw said, triumphs “solely because of | erosity their consideration for each other's | success, towards oné anot and have pair on ir gen- her and No Semblance of Jealousy the business | coope: of “At least filming {Woolsey came { which | funniest | Wheeler “But {'cautioned. | sent them as tion | nier if Wool ift a of he in the don’t to bilities. dozen to me believed get It this would world . . me Whee times duw produc with gags the a8 be were allowed to do them. wrong,” “I'm_not trying to pre- Damon and Pythias,’ nor ‘to imply that they carry their extremes “Bach of them is well his c: line he aware of r has a ch he thinks would be fun- patter, with his should say particular he gests such a change immediate- 3%y can better than Woolsey, was evi-|a ¢ | for a and hone uation and Wheeler does the same, One might say, T b tremendous s ness and honest desire on the part however, speak one of he believes that Woolsey he also Appreciation Is Mutual “In that | their lies the real depth fo mutual appreciation. In such imstance, ‘Woolsey will, think moment, mull the matter over say y ‘ye! believes cee or ‘no,’ Reverse is due just as he the sit- ieve, that their to frank- YOUR OPPORTUNITY to have a Beautiful Eight-Piece Diring Room Suite at|a Remarkable Low Price Buffet, 6 Chairs and 8-Foot Table $89.50 6 Chairs and 6-Foot Table $79.50 Buffet, Juneau Young Hardware Co. “Furniture Worth Living With” DAYS OF ' BE RESTAGED FRIDAY NIGHT American Legion and Aux- of each to give their best and to help each other do likewise.” “Caught Plastered,” with t,hc stars backed by a strong cast 1n~ cluding Dorothy Lee, Lucy Beau- mont, Jason Robards, DeWitt Jen- nings, Charles Middleton. Nora ! Cecil, and Josephine Whittell, is) the strongest story yet attempted by the duo, and ranks as their done better than he anticipated this season and had closed down | his trapping operations now unt d\ next fall. ( Paul Graham and Paul Wa u"k§ were in Cordova recentlyl from | their trap line on the Copper River | flats. They report excellent catches of muskrats. Word has been received in Cor- dova that 'the Pioneer Packing| Company would operate about as usual this season. This brings defi- nite announcements from three Cordova district canneries, the Pio- | neer Packing, the Pioneer Seafoods and the Cordova Packing Company. Indications are that the majority of the canneries in theé vicinity of Cordova will be in operation. Three deer were seen down near the Ocean Wharf in Cordova the other night and one of them was attacked by a dog before he could be rescued. The deer was so badly injured in the attack that Game ‘Warden George B. Nelson found it hecessary ‘to” kill him. The meat was turned over to the Salvation Army for distribution among the needy. Charlie Patten sustained serious injuries at Cordova when caught under a ton of coal and sevral tons of snow and ice. Patten was at- tempting to dig out some coal in the shute at his home near the| Newest in SPRING FROCKS Arrived on Last Boat SPECIALLY PRICED Try us for Quality, Style and Price Open evenings until 7:30 Copr., 1933, Tho Amcriced Tobicco Co. POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL Sue Carol's wealth was a hin- drance rather than a help. Holly- wood thought she was ritzy, but Sue soon proved she was a “regu- Tar guy” ... she made 14 pictures her very first year. .. her latest is UNIVERSAL'S “ GRAFT." She has reached for a LUCKY for two years. Not a farthing was paid for those kind words. That's is grand.” iliary All Set—Sky to Be Limit One billion dollars, & small sized fortune for these days of war debts, are stored in some place in Juneau—a safe place. This money will be taken to'A. B. Hall next “Now | use LUCKIES only” “] have had to smoke various brands of cigarettes in pic- tures, but it was not until I smoked LUCKIES that I dis- covered the onlycigarettes that did not irritate my throat. Now I use LUCKIES only. The added convenience of your improved Cellophane wrapper that opens so easily ofue/eef) Friday night and let loose at the {Days of '98 which will be held under the auspictes of the Amerfcan Legion Auxiliary. Of course the one billion dollars is phoney money, but it will serve its purpose. b The Days of '98 will be all that this indicates. There will be all kinds of gambling games in prog- ress during the night, with old- flme dealers in their chairs, ‘There will also be a bar with dance hall girls galore ready to so- lieit drinks ‘and & dance. The lid will be off on all games for the sky wil ibe the limit. Prizes for the best. gambler among the men and also the best among the women, will be given, these awards to be made to those making the heavxest, winnings during the even- The affair starts at 9:30 o'clock sharp Priday -night. A junior class/ ° girls from the Presbyterian -Church is giving an entertainment.. Wednesday night at 7:30 o'clock to raise FREEMAN SHOES ALL SIZES Blacks and Tans » N $5.00 “It's toasted” Your Throat Protection ~againstirritation=against wu! And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps that “Toasted” Flavor Evor Fresh $6.00 "l'he Sm ffi M Sy A W Juneau—Phone 6 Douglas—Phone 18 EDISON MAZDA LAMPS—The Standard of Comparison JUNEAU FROCK SHOP Gastineau Hotel Bldg. white of you, Sve Carol. TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE—60 modern minutes with the world’s finest dance orchestras and Walter Winchell, whose gossipy of today becomes the news of tomorrow, every Tuesday, Thursday and Sanmiay evening over N. B. C. networks.

Other pages from this issue: