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. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1932 SUNDAY “Big Parade”— “Ben Hur” Sunday Matin e¢e—2 P, and now Selected Short Subjects COMING—*Pagan Lady,” “Phantom of Paris,” LAST TIMES TONIGHT All Woman’s Clul 0. K. It——Childre CAPITOL Buster Keaton in “Sidewalks of New York,” Laurel and Hardy in “Pardon Us” ——“ARE THES MONDAY E OUR CHILDREN?” n Should See It Ali-Alaska News ‘George S. Dyer, one of the Al- Twenty-two mining engineers who worked | were reported by the Siberian gold fields, has | Cmflf of Police to the City ‘the Fairbanks in returned to Fairbanks and will ‘ cil at the end of the fiscal year have charge of some of the drcdg- March 31. The arrests €s of the Fairbanks Ex| |for drunkepess, four Company this s the Lena field is one of Lhe richest aaluvial deposits in the world and (hat 60 per cent of the gold re- covered s in coarse nuggets. He | declares the Russians “don't know | how to work themselves, and wor't ‘ learn modern methods.” } ons, led weapons, weapon. '_—.____—_.;_ 34 Years in Alaska Democratic Candidate for REPRESENTATIVE First Division Subject to April Primaries Your Support Is Appreciated ALBERT WILE UNITED FOOD CO. “CASH 1S KING” arrests in one year Coun- |2 paid by the City of Fairbanks were 15|building for all earth that is ex- for traffic [cavated for the struciure. cne for carrying c(,n_‘curch is wanted for binding rip- one for insanify Tap Wwork on the watenfront. nd one for assault with a deadly 2eipts totaled $18,694 and ex-' a itures amounted to $11947 in) ‘dirbanks in the fiscal year ended 31, a City Clerk to the City Council, ; Al a meeting of the Fairbank: | Schocl Board, Lodls F. Joy w cbed president; George B. Weach |tréasurer, and Forbes L. Baker, | clerk. T cents a yard will \(1 congractors on the new Federal The { . Miss Phyllis Crooks was queen | f the Nome Kennel Club Carni-| this year. Salaries of Nom#'s City Clerk was |fixed at $200 monthly; City At- {torney, $25 monthly, and City Treasurer, $1 monthly at a recent megiing of the City Council, { Fur clothing for 40 men ordered the Lomen Commercial Com- pany of Ncme by Admiral Byrd ‘for his mnext .Antarctic expedi- (ticn, has left Nome by dog team end plane for the Stales. The clothing was sent parcel post and | {filled 125 mail sacks. The Lomen jcompany distributed the order jamong Eskimos at Cape Prince of | }\«Ia‘ s, Teller, Mary’s Igloo, Golo- | vin, White Mountain, Egavik, Sha- lik, Unalakleet, Candle, Nuna- James Herdman and Gust Borg, i two irappers in the Portage Creek i section of the Chulitna district, Inorth of Anchorage, obtained 1| | beavers each. scar Breedman, heéad of the Rlcharclon Highway Transporta- !tion Company, refurned from the iStates with two new busses, a se- :dan and three trucks, and it is un- | derstood that the company will op- |erate out of Valdez as well as | Chitina this year, hauvling freight ;as well as passengers, in compe- | tition with the Alaska Rafiroad. The Umnak Bskimo trappers bave relurned to their homes. {Nearly 1,000 red and cross fox pelts are in the village waiting to be sent to the States. The Alaska Railroad river steam- € rscperating from Nenana to Holy Cross will connect at Nulato with a vessel for Koyukuk River points up fo and including Bettles, leay- | Ve ording to the report | * * YOUNG PEOPLE ARE FACED WITH HARDPROBLEMS ‘Are These Our Chlldren3 Will Show for Last Times Tonight The nay not be visited upon their chil- today, according to, Wesley | film director—but ‘those | solate the “Modern disregard for law, the enacdtment of foolish laws, th farce .'of trying to enforce them, things which have created & uni ¢ ounger generation,” R“@lfl Not So Precocious “Our youngsters of sixbeen or | y aren't so precocious as we nk. They have had their inde- ‘penden e fcreed upon them. The! ladults, they can ses, are in a {erand muddle and seem unable to grope their way out of it. What | can the youngséers do but real- {lze that they must depend upon | [themselves? Why should they turn | to adults for counsel and advice whose inability to cope with mod- ern problems of life is so palpable? On Their Own “No, our young:liers are on their | lown. They are facing the might- |est preblems an American genera- {tion has ever faced, and if I may venture to say so, facing it brave- ly at least, Perhaps they may succeed where we are heflplessl perhaps this indepedennce of their |1s the salyation of our country?” | “Are Thesé Our Children?” will {be shown for the, last times to- \night at the Capitol theatre, Howard Estabrook wrote the dia- | logue. | The cast inclides’ Evic Lifiden, | Rochelle Hudson, Arline . Judge Ben Alexander, Roberta Gale, Rob- | ert Quirk and Mary Kornman, The “extras” in many scenes are | real high school youths, facing the | |camera for ‘the first time. { the meteorite is suppossd to n_we turied itself in the frozen bed- rock of a mountain slope, has sold his homestead” at the mouth of Indian Creck, north ‘of An- chorage to Gust Borg and is re- ported to have gone to Nenana. |Borg has also taken over the Lepker trapline but it is not known | if he acquired title %o the myster-! ious meteorite. t John Mutchler and Dorothy Ann Rex were married @bt Fairbanks. | The bridegrocm first came to Al-| laska as a boy in 1898, when ha| {was ab Skagway, He has lived many years at Fairbanks. He met | his bride during a brief stay in| Seattle.. She arrived in Fairbanks from Scattle a few hours before | the wedding. i sins of modern parents | “younger gen- | |the disclosure of adult America’s| corruption—it is these | 4 declare. as yet.” |&n appropriation of $120,000 to be spent on sending athletes to Los Angeles to represent France,” -jare, off than other European coun-| | | | Mary Cooper of Sayre, Okla,, is FRENCH HIDE GAMES PLANS [Much Sec1ecy Prevails Re- garding Competition i Olympics PARIS, April 23.—The French should win the hide-and-seek con- Angeles if the completeness with which ihey have concealed their | plans and headquarters is any in- dication. Only the ‘scandal con- fected with the disbaring of Jules Ladoumergue, sensational miler, finally smoked them out. Even then, Charles Denis, ad- ministrative secrefary of the French Olympic committee, when ¢inally discovered in a small office on the Boulevard Haussmann, declared — well, that there was nothingt to “Nothing, ne siated, “is settied | “But the government has voted “Ah," he said. “Quite s0.” We I must admit, much better| Cratory prizes offered high ent-Teacher Association . of Fair- McDonald, first; Cora Rust, sec-| ond; Betby Spencer, third. lode resénting (Seattle capital. The o tion covers sunface improvements consisiing of a 10-stamp mill, mess ete Three hours before the sieam- ship Yukon on a; Hayerstock and i‘{urse Martha Da- vidson hastened on a gasboat com- ‘mand>d by Capt. BEd Olsen, to the lincr. On the arrival of the Yu- kon at Seward, Mrs. Hanshaw was taken to the hospital. ‘Anchorage’s flying school, con-| ducted by 8. T. Mills, J. E. Wa-! terworth and C. H. Burton, is g‘et-! ting off to a good start. It has| four students. E. Gustofson, John M. Cook, of the Anchorage Post-. office, Dr. Lawler Seeley of the of the Willow Creek Mines, i Stanley McLane, age 7, son ' of Archie McLane of Kusilof, is the | youngest trapper in Alaska. For-' ing Nulato about June 1, July 6, AngustflandAugunz's A smal- ler vessel will coj at Bettles, for Wiseman, up the Koy- ukuk. 1 seen an over-size meteorite land of his labors but_the size and! Charles Lepker, who startled the [beauty of the pelts more than! world recently by claiming to have [offset the limited bag. rymfiegxeesbabwmodurma the winter last ending, did not' prevent him from mushing regu-| larly over his trapline, One mink ' and four weasels are the fruits' . school oys and girls by the Par- \‘;fles' banks were awarded to M(xmfofl’“‘em“m e bhad 250 Dodnpetity | sixty-five.” eventaen ' O Cptlon &o. purchase . sevent oD e, '4 minutes 9.2 seconds, had besn | | disqualified and labeled a profes- ‘was by no means finally sotiled. bunkhcuse and gther build- | T attle, But even so we can send | very small number. At Am- At Los Angeles we shall have only M. Denis ehook his head sadly/ er the fact that Jules Ladou- | who has run the mile in, The matter, hé agresd, - ol AT THE HOTELS | . ro 7 , Margaret Harvey, Seward; Mrs. test at the Olympic games in Los icirculation among | The article Hh ~ Associated Press Photo one of the latest to catch the eye of Hollywood film producers. She's soon to appear in & big production. ALASKAVALUES SEFFORTH IN | FEDERAL PAPER {Statistics by Territorial i Chamber of Commetce | Are Published On statistics supplied by the of- rflce of the Executive Secretary of he Alaska Chamber of Commerce, | teresting article on the chief I’muu tries of the Territory has been '|written by Everett A. Chapman, {ef the Division of Regional Infor- mation of the Department of the |Interior and appears in the issue f<t Commerce Reports of April 11, Commerce Reports is a weekly | publication on trade conditions throughout the world—issued by the Bureau of Foreign and Do- mestic Commerce and has a wide industrial and business . interests. Two Fine Piotures is illustrated wiih|{ two fine pictures of the Healy Riv- €r ccal mine amd of a fish wheel taking salmon, Figures are given on the pro- iduction ,of fish, gold, copper, coal and other minerals; on the ouf- put of furs, fthe worth of the reindesr industry, and the possi~ I bilities of forestry and water-pow- er resources. Tables are given showing .the value of ccmmodities shipped from tes to Alaska and of com- modities chipped from the Siates to Alaska and of commodities shippe = dfrom Alaska to the States. Interesting Reading Magter ‘The stabistics are interspersed with interesting reading matter in explanation of them. ANl in all, the article is a succimet, truthfut receni voyage, ome of the, sen- Alaskan ! gers, Mis. Youall Hanspaw :of Val-| Mrs, Anna Partridge, Miss Anna oz, bethme so serfously fll that|Pasitridge, Hoopah, | ‘he liner wi to, Seward for| Zynda a dootor and a Dr. A. D' Mrs. James R. Crawford, Be-f and entertaining account of the chief industrial and trade aoti~ vities of the Territery, and is sure to attract favorable attention. — et Daily Empln Wmt Ads Pay Race Tra@k Dmma T@ps Bill Tomorrow NEW FILM FIND_ FRO OKLAHOMA E|_|'|'E OF TURF ' TAKES PART IN. Gable and Madge Evans as Stars | 8T dios, when tion being at inee, Among the act in the afterncon mat- racers engaged to the picture were “Il Ele- former “Duck Pond,” *“Blue “Blue Cedar,” and ather horses equally well known to the | track. Panarama of Racing The story deals with the career of a mracehorse, but the human beings who affect his fate are real- ly the dharacters of the play, al- though the entire panorama of ‘tucky Derby, exposure of crooked tacing and gambling, and other detalls fcrm a background. Charles Brabin directed. Clark Gable and Madge Evans pay the lovers, as a gambling dealer and a gambler's “moll” who find regeneration in bringing back | mistreated. Notable Supporting Cast Ernest Torrence, Lew Cody, Ma- vie Prevost, Harry Holman, Hal- lam Cooley, J. Farrell McDonald and others are in the cast. The actual - derby, and several other races, furnish thrills and suspense, and intimate scenes in Kentucky paddock, racing stables and horse farms dre among the interesting touches in the production. One race is filmed in “close-up” track. FILM GONTRAGT 1S GIVEN GABLE HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Clark Gable has been signed to 4 new long-term contract with Meiro-Goldywn-Mayer. First 26 by a M-G-M official when he was enacting the pamt of “Killer” Mears in a Tos Angeles stage, pro- duction of “The Last Mile,” Ga made his motion picjure debut in Joan Crawford’s “Dance, Fiools Dange,” Since then he has phyefl opposite Gmbo, Norma Shearer, Marion Davies ' and Miss ford in such films as “Susan Le- nox,” “A Free Soul” ‘Polly .of the Circus,” and “Lauging Sin- ners,” Other films in which, he appeared include: “The Swut Six,” “Sporting Blgad." p Nurse” and, “Hell Divers. es newest role is in Fugene O'Neil's “Etrange - Inherlude” in which’ hé plays crpposne Nm ‘Shearer and which is now in production under the direction <f Robert Z. Leon- ard. 4 Twelve: deafludresultod from a recent epidemic among Indians aztwwmnm %‘l seourge has abated. It affected children chiefly, but Lhegewggg p few severe cases NO Dr. C. L. Penton, Chiropractor, now located in the Hellenthal Buil ing, in the offices formerly. occi- pled by Dr. Barton, whose “fixtures and equipment’ he has purchased. ~ SUNDAY'S PLAY {"Sporting Blood’ Has Clark| American tunf aristocracy lined |Up as a company of screen stars tthe Meiro-Goldwyn-Mayer stu- “Sporting Blood” ad- apted from Frederick Hazlin Bren- nan’s Saturday Evening Post story, “Horseflesh” was filmed. This pic- | ture will open at the Capitcl thea- lire tomorrow, 'the first presenta- record holder at. racing, with thrills of the Ken- | tc form a racehorse that has been camera and microphone following the careening horses around thet} April 23— FAMOUS INDIA Com’ing Generation Stops Tonig[\tmmn UNDER ARREST, BOMBAY Last Outstanding National- ist Removed from Public View BOMBAY, April 23~—India’s most ramous woman, Mme. Sarojini {Naidu, was arrested yesterday in the Government's campaign against Mahatma Gandhi’s boycott of Brit- ish, goods. The arrest of the woman removes the last outstanding Indian Na- tionalist from public view. The 53-year-old woman patriot, poet, orator and mu\oaa;mer. was arrested on & charge. of disobeying an order restraining’ her from at- tending the Nationalist Congress. He, ARt o \THEILE AND DAVIES WILL GO TO CHICAGO IF NAMED DELEGATES Both Karl Theile, Secretary of Alaska, and J. H. Davies, Ketchi- kan business man, who are candi- dates for Delegates to the Repub- lican national convention, will at- tend thai gathering in Chicago next June, it was announced Yo- day by Mr .Theile. These two candidates recerttly Joined forces for the campaign. “Both Mr, Davies and myself will make the trip, if we are elect- ed, and be on hand when the gon- vention is called to order on Jupe 12" Mr, Theile said wday He xpx\zssed confidence. in the out- come of the election. ———— Dr. R. E. Southworth left on the Northland for Petersburg on ‘a professional visit. m THEO. S. PEDERSON ALASKA HOME DECORATOR Estimates Furnished Free General Painting Contractor Shop Phoné 354—Residence Phone $7--2 Rings Shop at Third and Seward COAL ALL KINDS CALL US DIRECT PACIFIC COAST GOAL CoO. l_’imNE 4512 “Tomorrow’ s Styles T, »m- 2 Wash A clever new assort- ment just réceived in missey sizés suitable for school or cxffioe wear o at Junean’'s Own Store For Auditor