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—— - 1" Canvas and Leather “THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNESDAY }UNE I 1932 GAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT HIGH ADVENTUREAS' ONLY THIS STAR CAN PLAY IT!.... DI X..In Al His Sweep and Power - Brave, Romantic, Gallant and « a Hero to Youth NS s o @ Thrill - Bearer RICHARD #0 All the World! g NANCE O’NEIL Directod by i J. WALTER RUBEN Fom WILLIAM GILLETTE'S IMMORTAL STAGE SUCCESS RKO RADIO PICTURE Also—“No Holds Barred”—Sport Reel ANDY CLYDE in “HALF HOLIDAY" PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 A, M. “GUILTY GENER'\'I'ION“ comm"—-ROY OXMAN in Person | JUNEAU SAMPLE | SHOP The Little Store with the | BIG VALUES New Shows For Tomorrow to Previewat 1 Tomght : BERAEET N RICHARD DIX IN | CIVIL WAR PLAY WINS TRIUMPH “Secret Service” to Show Last Times Tonight at Capitol “Secret Service,” Richard Dix’s starring picture based on the fa- meus Willlam Gillette sta play, will be shown for the last times tonight at the Capitol theatre. Based on a Civil War incident the Confed- erate lines, * t Service” gives Dix a fine oppmtumtv to display his talents. Members of Cast In the ecast are Shirley Grey, Gavin Gordon, William Post Jr., Eugene Jackson, Fred Warren and Nance OWNeil. Bernard Schubert who is himself an authority on Civ- il War history, wrote the adapta- tion from William ‘Gillette’'s play, and J. Walter Ruben handled the direction. Famous as Stage Hit “Secret Service” was one of Wil- liam Gillette’s most successful stage triumphs. As the adventurous Cap- tain Lewis Dumont, Yankee officer, Gillette immortalized the play he wrote by acting the chief role up and down the country for a num- ber of years. Dix steps and is a worthy successor stage star's mantle. VOCALIST TO BE AT CAPITOL TOMORROW Roy Oxman, youthful Seattle vo- calist, who has gained renown as a radio entertainer casting stations in the St into the same role to the , will iappear in person tomorrow night on the stage of the Capitol thea- tre and sing some of his own compositions. He is the author of the success- ful song, “In Heaven,” and re- cently brought cut “Put the Blame on That Old Refrain” and “Comes Sunrise.” e Juheau Beauty Shoppe SYLVIA BRUMBERG »ecializing in Permanent and § Finger Waves—Facials ¢ Telephone 384 \ Goods MADE TO ORDER E. McClaire, Prop. | 223 Seward Street NEW CHEVROLET SIX The Great American Value New reduced prices delivered at Juneau Equipped Roadster $675.00 Coach 735.00 Coupe ...... 735:00 ! Cabriolet 830.00 Sedan (4 door) ... 840.00 i Free Wheeling and Syncromesh CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. Goafariteed SHEET METAL WORK PLUMBING GEO. ALFORS PHONE 564 1‘ BEACH PAJAMAS In: novelty . prints, plain colors and com- binations —one-piece and two-piece styles. Sizes 14 to 40. .$2.25 Dailv Empire Want Ads Pay Do You Sufler from RHEUMATISM? Use what millions have found to be the best cure for it Genuine European GYTJE North Sea Medical Mud Used by Europe’s famous baths and nerve specialists. Imported and sold exclusively by A. JACOBSEN 1519 3rd Ave., Seattle, Wash. Price, $5.00 per bottle Post Paid. Laundry Service The New Roto-Verso Electric Wringer-Washer is made by Landers, Frary & Clark to you years of flawless lg;\mdrysemoe. Its ete up-to-date equip- ment mclndg a cushioned poreelain-enameled tub, Lo- "& it with e—vaneaglm ttanmnlmom and my other modern fea- tures. - It will do your weekly wash- ing faster and better than you ::lgagme-(:omoinmd THOMAS Hardae Lo Two F earful One Susplcwus Robeft Yméo d:Leo Carrillo lumbla Pictute COnsum:e Cummmgs, In “The Guilty Generation?—A - | children with his fll-gottén riches? with froad- | All-Alaska News —— Two swans are building a nest) Three hundred taxpayers in Ket- | and a lynx is raising her litter of chikan have applied to the City kittens in the Eyak Game Reserva- Street Commissioner for work. His tion near Cordova, according to Dr. force consists of 16 men, and each William H. Chases, former member man gets about 40 days’ work be- of the Alaska Game Commission. | fore giving way to another. { Mrs. Pearl Douglas has been el-| For exploration and development ccted President of the Cordova ©Of mineral bearing .ground in South- Women's Club. = Mrs. FElizabeth Gwin was chosen Vice-President; |Ploration Company Mrs. Lora McTaggert, Recoxdmgwhdmzed at Ketehikan by y; Mrs. Florence Nafsted, Ferris, hotel proprietor; George | responding Secretary, and Mrs. | King, geologist and airplane pilot, Mary De Leo, Treasurer. and Lester O, Gore, recently ap- pointed United States District | ! Judge. Y 'airplane to transport prospecting ing MEIE 8,000 feét lonk ‘dnd 400 ..b ong supplies. 3 WAR jput et wi Cordova is under con- i p :?d”ér;;gt;m“by Tie (;hambcr of | five parties in the field this sea- Commerce there. F. A. Hansen ™ will make a survéy of the project' i A to determine its cost. It would be| Vhile H.E. Westlake of the Gti- o ) . » | zens Light, Power and Water Colfi- the “finest airport in Alaska.' ‘pxmy of Ketehikan was bossing | workmen moving a pole it fell and broke his right leg: In the 50-foot auxiliary schooner Ida Helen, Rev. Leon S. Vincent; his brother, Lloyd M. Vincent, and Mrs. Lloyd M. Vincent have arrived has been or- Construction of an airplane land- Congress will “be ‘asked by 'the Cordova Chamber of Commerce for | legislation to protect the American clam industry from Japanese com- petition. Nipponese clams are sold in the United States cheaper than the cost of digging and canning gt Seldovia. They will make their clams in Cordova, it is declared. | headquarters there. ‘Rev. Leon S. | Vincent will conduct missionary Dr. Stanley Jorgensen, dentist, who recently sold his practice in Cordova to Dr. A. W. Coutts, plans to open a dental%office in Faip- banks. (work in communities in the neigh- borhood of Seldovia. His wife and child will soon réach there on an ocean steamship. The Ida Helen (left Seattle last September enroute ’to Seldovia. Many long visits were Residents of Chitina feel that made at various communities. they live in a favored place, me" Chitina Trail says. But few per- sons receive any tax bills; grayling V. H. DeBolt has been re-elected !Public School Superintendent at are available in the chain of lakes, Seward. The teaching staff for a mile or more from town; salmon ' the next scholastic year will con- are soon due in the Copper River; sist of Miss Opal Sheets, Miss berries are to come; caribou, sheep, | Patricia Ray, Miss Lois Sears, grouse and ducks in the fall; fuel Glen Rogers, Miss Erdman, Miss lin the woods. Man has only to Edith Kaemer, Mrs. Willlam Rager |supply the industry. {and Miss Olive French. In a communication to W. le Commencement exercises were Stewart, of Valdez, Senator Robert held at Seward May 19. The high B. Howell, Republican of Nebraska, school graduates were Ruth Pros- denies ths statement that the Ser, Agnes Anderson, Vivian Nilson, transter of the Alaska Road Com-'Eva Olaoswine, Norman Nilson, mission to the Department of the Thomas Neville, Barton Stanton, | Interior will in any way be detri- | Nick Heidel and Bennie Benson. imental to the functioning of the| Richardson Highway Senator Officers of the Anchorage Wom- /Howell further stated that he was'an’s Club for the ensuing year are pleased to hear from Alaskans on Mrs. Anne deck, Presidertt; st Alaska, the Alaska Aerial Ex- | LS‘ The company will buy an | CHILDREN LOVE DESPITE HATE OF THEIR FATHERS Gurlty Conpranion” Pre [ views T A. M. and Shows Tomorrow “The Guilty Generation,” ILeo | Carrillo, Boris Karloff, Robert | Young and Constance Cummings in leading roles, will be preview- d at 1 o'clock tonight and shown |regularly tomiorrow night at the Capitol (heatre. “The .Guilty Generation” is a tensely dramatic story, presenting |an interesting problem &f whether | innocent members of a family |should suffer shame for the guilty |ones. TIf children want to be up- |right, honorable, honest and live | peaceful ricrmal 1ves, shotfld they |be tied to lawbréakeérs and mur- derers just betause they ‘are their parents’ ¢hildren? Oan a racketéer father buy respectability for his Enact Roles of Fathérs Carrillo plays 'the fathér of Miss Cummings, and Karloff plays the fatheér 6f Yotng. The fathers are | racketeers engaged in a Mtfle for | suprémacy and the children are in love, despite the fact that it will WILL GIVE WAY MISS MACKAILL T0 WILL ROGERS ‘Reckless Hour' Will Show! Last Times Tonight at Coliseum With “The Reckless Hour," star- ring Dorothy Mackaill, showing for the last times tonight at the Coli- | NUMBERS NOW |bearing animals in Western Alaska ‘lwaters is reported in Seward by SEA OTTERS ARE} SEEN IN LARGE | SOLSEUM PAL NITE—Last Times To- night—Anybody, 2 for 1 DOROTHY MACKAILL in ‘The Reckless Hour’ with CONRAD NAGEL SELECTED SHORTS PREVIEW TONIGHT WILL ROGERS in “YOUNG AS YOU FEEL” rs. Open 1230} Show. at' 161 Animals, Once Greatly Decreased, Increase Under Protection SEWARD—As a result of rigidly enforced regulations prohibiting killing or trapping sea-otter, a not- able increase in thesé valuable fur- travelers from the Aleutians, cording to the Seward Gateway. Fishermén and traders operat- ac- seum theatre, “Young As You Feel,” with Will Rogers, will head- line the new program tomorrow night. “Young As You Feel” will| be previewed at 1 oclock tonight Tonight {s “Pal Night,” two pe: sons being admitted on one tic et. Beautiful Fashion Model “The Retkless Hour” the checkéreed oareer of a beau- tiful fashion model, who learns to hate life through one man and to| love it through another. Conrad| Nagel and Walter Byron portray the lovers. John Francis Dill directed. Has to Step Fast In “Young As You Feel” Rog- ers, as Len Motrehouse, dyspeptic| presents | Hurler’s Hea(i i In Making Putout ODESSA, Tex, Jine 1.— Floyd Oarr, negro pitcher from Pecos, | Tex., used his héad to retire the side in a gameé here. With two out in the last of the {ninth and Odessa at bat, a line drive struck Carr's head and rico- cheted onto the first bastman’s hands for the final putout. Carr, unhurt, was tentatively giv- en an assist. ing among the islands state that |these animdls are more numerous today than in many years past and |are steadily increasing. 119 6n One Island | From the deck of his vessel one | mariner counted 119 on the rocky |shores of Ulak Island. Others réported seeing many of |them swimming in the kelp beds and channels between the vtflum islands in that vicinity. | A trader passing Sanak Ismd \cnunted 63 sea-otter there while many more could be seen on the |beach of one of the islands of the | }Shumrga‘h‘ group. | Divided Into 3 Districts | When under Hussian dominion, old widower, has to Sstop many |the sea-otter growhds were divided times to catch his second wind, as i, thves districts; one-third being Fifi Dorsay in her portrayal Fleurette léads him along the fast | |mean death for 'either or both of them if their fathers leéarn of it. The story is primarily a drama lof love and the relationship be- tiweén children and parénts. Gorgeous Florida Estate The action takes pléce almost entirely on a gorgeous Florida és- tate, where the girl fs surrounded by every luxury that money can buy, but is denied the happiness of openly conféssing her love. How- | ever, the authors have worked a happy way out for the lovers and all ends well in' a powenful cli- ‘max. Inciuded in the supporting cast are Emma Dunn, Leslie [Fenton, Ruth Warren and Murray Kin- inel. | o | Mrs., Maud McDonald, first Vice- President; Mrs, Edith Miller, sec- ond Vice-President; Mrs. Eva Cun- ningham, Corresponding Secretary; Mrs. Dorothy Moore, Recording Secretary; Mrs. Mary Kelly, Treas- urer. Development of the big sulphur deposits on Akun Island will be undertaken by Lynch Brothers, dia- mond drilling contractors, who will drill 4 series of tests on the hold- ings of the Pacific Coast Sulphur Corporation, according to an an- nouncement made at Seward by A. 0. Adams, who will be general sup- erintendent with a force of 10 men. Oliver - Robidoux, 74, trapper in the Talkeetna district north of Anchorage, |shooting himself. He had killed his dogs, evidently fearing they would not be cared for after his death, the gold lode property of the Eva iCreek Mining Company, eleven miles from the Alaska Railroad at Ferry. Arrivals at Anchorage from the interior bring word that the mine has shipped five carloads of ‘concentrates to the States and the committed suicide by|e Work is progressing steadily at c road that makes young people old and old people young. 'STRAWBERRY CROP IMPROVES OUTLOOK ON OZARK FARMS SPRINGFIELD, Mo, June 1.— Agricultural conditions in this sec- tion of the Ozarks don't look as gldomy as in some other areas— strawberry crop. Shipping organizations, anticipat- ing a brisk business, laid in sup- plies' of crates well in advance of the picking season. Quotations ranging around $250 per 24-quart crate at the shipping polnt were expected t6 be maintained unless offerings from other areas. During the season strawberries are shipped from many South Mis- souri points in carload lots. The late wintéer freeze, working havee with the nation’s peach crop, may prove a help to Ozark orchard- ists. Late in the summer they will harvest 30,000 acres for sale in a market which will undersupplied. With only 50 per cent of & nor- mal apple crop anti¢ipated incoma from this source is expected to compare favorably with last year's on account of Iower yields report- Atlantic. | AT THE HOTELS Gastinead Mr. and Mrs, E. C. Baker, R. . Peacock, R, L. Clark, T. J. Kwapfel, éewle Glenn Carring- and Mrs. Fred ' Henning, Louisa. 'Point ; Mlagian L. H. Lunt, Frank O. Johnson, report is that the returns thus far received from shipments have been very satisfactory. —— e - Abe Stein, pioneer merchant and fur-buyer of Fairbanks, is refurn- ing there after an extended mp I'ts m States. Oscar Olson, Taku; E. E. Mead, Point Retreat. Zynda Jessie ‘A, Blake, Mrs. Sally Sha- fer, Juneau; J. E. McKinley, W. G. Teho, Seattle; W. 'A. Galle- more, Rogess, Ark. |topics vital to. them and urged’' & others to communicate their opin- K ions. | | One girl and seven boys con- stituted the graduating class of the Cordova High School. They were Grace Dooley, Patrick O'Neill, | Michael O'Neill, Richard Davis, Richard Date, Edward Haltness, Wilbur Lane and Woodrow Johan- sen. Commencement exercises were | held May 13. Francis C. Bowden, druggist of Cordova, and Miss Lurene Roop of Anchorage, were married in An- chotage. They went to the States on their honeymoon. They will make their home in Cordova. Anthony Goessman, who is cred- ited with having made the first gold lode discovery in the Fair- banks district recently died in Fair- banks. He ¢ame to Alaska from the States in 1896, spending the winter of 1896-7 in, Juneau. After- wards he went to Diwson and later to Fairbanks. Thirteen buffalo of the Terri- torial herd were recently seen near Beal's Cache on the Richardson Highway, says the Fairbanks News- Miner. Two calves were with the herd. Three cents a share on the $5,- 000,000 capiatlization of the Pre- mied Gold Mining Company Premier, B. C., was the regularly quarterly diyidend declared May 3. It 1§ payable July 2. It will bring this year’s dividend payments to o uumo and grand total for e ten years of operltbn mm, . : : A New Pieces in the most up to date styles and fabries.’ to select from, Priced frpm $7.65 to $37.50 JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE (0. OCCAS living The touch of color, A large variety upholstered chair brings to your home will brighten and make it more. livable. m CHAIRS Add chdrm and eomfort to your room which‘a beautifully of | open to hunting each year thanks to prospects for a bountiful the market became ghutted with! likely be | ed from the Rockies clear to the | ton, Kefehikan; Mr. and Mrs, John || Haapala, Nevada City, Calif.; Mr, | Firéarms werée prohibited and only | bows and ‘spears were permitted |to be uséd, and whites were never’ employed as hunters. After the cession fo the United States many whites engdged in "hunting, and} vessels were fitted out from Pacific | ports, principally San- Francisco, |'with otter boats-propelled by steam. Alinost Wiped Out This advanced method of hunt- ing sea-otter nearly resulted in extinétion of the animals by the |irresponsible and unscrupulous /white hunters. Because of this indiscriminaté slaughter 'in the past, sea-otter were very séarce. To prevent their extermination, these valuable ma- |rine animals are now strictly pro- tected from Killing. - e, B. P. 0. ELKS Meeting tonight., Initiation, Feed. NOTICE A reward of $50.00 will be paid to - difyone furnishing informyation leading to the arrest and conviction of adhy persor or persons bréaking instdntors on the power lines of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company. ANNOUNCING .. . THE NEW Yoss Eleciric Washm MaChine Prwe, $75.00 and backed with a standard reliable sérvice gnarantee Free Trial in the HOME First Ask for # list of the éutisfied Juneau users of this remarkable washer Alaska Elecmc Light & Power Co. i Juneau Phone No, 6 Douglas Phone No. 18 Méh showld mot go to' Chichagof seeking employment. There are no accommodations in the camp except for empléyees: When mien ‘are re- quired they will be hired at Juncau. CHICHAGOFF MINING COHPANY