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| ¥ “ Allen informed GAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT For Gangsters O‘t.he Au‘ THE DAILY ALASKA l;MPl RE, WEDNESD AY, JU\IE 15 1932. THRILLS ABOUND IN “SKY RAIDER" NOW AT CAPITOL Pla_\‘ with myd Hughes; and Marceline Day to | 1 End Tonight | “Sky Raiders,” starring and Marceline Day m for the last times || nig t the Capitol theatre |is a Columbia picture and is fill- | jed with thrills | | The story revolves around Pat {Rogers and Jimmy Devine, two pilots for the O. & P. Aerial Ex-| press. One night, Bob and Jimmy sent out on a mission together. | cpressed after a quarrel —Jimmy's sis- | N ce—tries to drown his sor- Liord Eriighes | liquor. | Marceline Day | < Controls to Jimmy ( ECER—— | He turns over the controls of CHIC SALE COMEDY |the plane to Jimmy, who has just! B [received his fiying license lis a crash for which Bob s —— [ full blame. ‘ PREVIE \\,,,| A. M. ‘ Realizing that he must pay the g penalty by losing his license, Bob TONITE — LEO CARRILLO in |escapes in an old plane to Mex- “LASCA OF THE RIQ |ico. There he is pressed into GRANDE” MEMO CAMERA Demonstration at BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS Phone 134 Free Delivery OLD DONNA LANE BRINGS $16,000 iN OPEN comm (Setatle Times, June 7) ‘ Federal Judge Jeremiah Neterer yesterday found himself playing the | role of auctioneer when he took the bench after noon recess. Several | attorneys were in the courtroom as the Federal jurist came to a case on his calendar entitled, “The Don- na Lane admiralty matter.” ! tello, service to act as pilot for a gang| of robbers who plan to rcb the O. & P. Express. Escapes in Parachute ‘ When he finds out what their |game is, he makes a thrilling es- cape in a parachute, brings the gangsters to bay and saves the day for the O. & P. Hughes gives an excellent trayal por- in the role of Bob, the da | devil pilot, while Miss Day make fascinating heroine. Excellent is given by the rest of |the cast, which includes Whesler Oakman, Emerson Treacy, Ed Le Saint and Walter Miller, | Christ Cabanne directed BARRYMORES HAVE " BABY SON, BORN IN | | LOS ANGELES, JUNE 4 A boy baby was born to Mr. and Mrs. John Barrymore at the Good Samaritan Hospital, Los Angeles at 3:45 o'clock on the dilt!uo(m of June 4, according to announce- | ments received in Juneau. Mrs. |Barrymore, the former DoloresCos- and the tiny infant are in| the best of health. The Barrymores have girl, Ethel Mae, April, a little born in Dolores 1930. oo — M-\RRH‘ D IRDAY HOONAH (OLPLL BY JUDGE f 2 | In the office of Judge Charles Sey, United States Commissioner. Miss Rose B, Fletcher was united | in marriage to Mr. Sebern Pos | Both are residents of Hoonah V\ncl(’ The Donna Lane, as all SDat’.]“.Mr Mi. Posey is engaged in the | waterfront men know, is & motor |fishing industry. M™Mr. and Mrs.| fishing schooner, well known in|Posey wili make their ghome in} Alaska and Puget Sound ports. She |Hoonah for the present. is equally well known in legal -— . e circles, having been subject to | numerous libels. United States| Telephone, telegraph instrument Marshal's Deputies say her cabin|@nd flashlight are combined in a new nand signaling set for usel walls at times have resembled bill poster boards from the many legal attachments. Auctioneer Forestalled United States Marshal Charles E. | the court he could get $7,000 for the Donna Lane at a| marshal's action sale, but when | Judge Neterer took the bench At- torney Dan Trefethen appeared be- fore him with an offer of $10,000 cash. Judge Neterer asked if any- one else was bidding. “Yes,” said Attorney F. B. Fite, Jr. “My client, Mr. Nils Fauchald, | over short distances. ~John Mack Brown, big Texas Ranger, Grande,” Dorothy Burgess is colerful photoplay will be previewe regularly tomorrow night at the Capitol Theatre. in “Lasca of the Rio Based upon the Frank Desprez en in the above illustration, The poem, “Lasca,” the story concerns a dark-eyed senorita of the dance Story WILL PREVIEW ATI AT 1 TONIGHT “Lasca of the Rio Grande” Comes Soon to Capi- tol Theatre ‘ ca of the Rio Grande,” Uni- raight-shooting Spanish- Tromance of the Mexican be previeved at 1 ht and shown regu- row night at the Capi- Included in the cast v Carrillo, John Mack Brown Burgess and Slim Sum- “La. flavored i Dary Eyed Senorita ! d at 1 o'clock tonight and shown | halls nderly murderous half- | breed tle owner who likes his Madeline Slade Contact wii Buddha, Christ, Gandhi women beautiful, and a handscme Texas Ranger in love. The picture is packed with hflrd riding, bellowing guns,, lilting Span- | ish melodies and romantic scenes.| Thrilling Cattle Stampede There is a thrilling cattle s!a.m-‘ | pede, a rousing gun-fight between the Thali-breed's none-too-careful sharpshooters and the Rangers, and some choice comedy, furnished by Summervi and Frank Cha- peau Carillo, suave star of the stage and screen, appears as Jose Santa Cruz, ca's half Portuguese, half‘ Indian admirer, and Dorothy Bur-| one of the scenes in “Illicit,” gess is Lasco. | which will be shown next Sun- John Mack Brown, Is seen { dAay at the Coliseum Theatre, {w the strapping Texas Ranger. i ner, but she always has refused | interviews, But now she was ready to talk and this is her story. Claims h Divinity; James Rennie and Barbara Stanwyck are portrayed here in as 1 | Mrs. Edwin Bahre, 36 years old, “I was reared in luxury and|died at Seldovia ease. I had a splendid education, | —— |traveled widely, danced, had pret- Miss Margaret MacKenzie, pri- ty clothes, lovely jewels, many ad- mary teacher in the Seldovia school mirers. for two years and recently engaged | | “But I lacked spiritual satis- |for next year, has given notice that | faction and real contentment |she will not return to Seldovia and I decided that life was an |next fall. Her successor has not| cmpty sham. been chosen § as well as laughing Perils Are Mlngled Wlth Laughs on Local Theatre Programs M'LAGLEN PLAY T0 GIVE WAY TO AYRES DRAMA ‘Annabellc's—_/gfairsv to Bel} Concluded at Coli- seum Tonight 1 “Annabelle’s ‘Affairs,” star- Victor McLaglen and Jean- nom‘ MacDonald, showing for the last times tonight at the (Coli- m theatre, “The Doorway to Hell” featuring Lew Ayres, will be presented regularly tomorrow night The Doorway To Hell” will be previewed at 1 o'clock to- night. Annabelle’s Affairs,” is based on Clare Kummer's successful farce so popular on the stage. Drama and Comedy In film form, material The supporting cast includés such well known players as Rol- and Young, Ruth Warren, Wil- liam Collier, Sr., Sam Hardy, Joyce Compton, Sally Blane, George An- dre Beranger, Ernest Wood, Wal- ter Walker, Hank Mann, Jed Prouty and Wilbur Mack. Doorway To Hell “The Doorway To Hell" tells the story of a dethroned king of the underworld whose young broth- er is kidnapped and accidentally killed by gangsters who think the former leader has double-crossed them lare being sprayed and old pools resprayed with oil. Several Eskimos lost their lives in a flood that destroyed their habitations on Nelson Island, which is east of Nunivak Island, just prior to last Christmas, according to a letter received by the Nome Nugget. One thousand and sixty cases of canned clams constituted the first shipment of the season from the North Pacific Packing Company of Seldovia. Destination was Seattle. Livengood offers no opportuni- ties for men seeking employment, according to a communication from residents of the town to the Fair- banks Chamber of Commerce, “T found people vain, petty, am-! — bitious, jealoous, selfish Twenty-five men are employed ! “They sought only their own!in the sawmill of the Independent’ ! | comfort, happiness and gain, Hu-| Lumber Company at Fairbanks. 1man y and its sufferings and sor- Fifteen others are at work in get- | ITows was secondary to them. They ting out and driving saw logs. Mrs. Joseph Condra, who with' As if spinning threads of fate, Mirabai, the former Madeline British society butterfly, strives to attain the infinite while stunt accordance with Mahatma Gandhi’s Slade, she does her daily teachings. (EDITOR'S NOTE: In this — i exclusive interview, given to MR R ctaff correspondent in India, |gicohedience campalgn, seemed Madeline Slade, a daugiter of | pove impenetraple than ever. | a British Admiral and now T e e Mirabel, disciple of Mahatma s s te Rear-Ad- miral Sir Esmond Slade, command- er of British Naval forces in Bast In she abandoned her | identity as M{m eline Slade and her high social place in London and | Bombay to become a humble dis- ple of Gandhl. Her rea 3 Gandhi, tells for the first time why she abandoned her high cocial pesition for a place among the humbie.) By JAMES A. MILLS BOMBAY, June 15- freed from cell the W have been known Income Taxpayers, Small and Large, Curry Big Load Under ZV()w Tax Bill WASHINGTON, June 15—In- | come tax payers in all brackets, | low, middle and high, will have to | contribute several times as much | {money as they do now for gov- b : 2 ernment support, if the increased will b“fi‘?l‘.f‘;m; st AL TreL}ieYies gE income voted by the | hthre‘:;lu thousand,” said Mr. Tre-|genate gre finally enacted into | gt Y % law. Tae Senate rates were agread | F“;I(/'ell meet that,” retorted Mr’]upm by House and Senate con-| Seold for $16,000 The bidding went up a thousand | dollars at a time, until Mr, Fite’s| client was awarded the Donna Lane for $16,000. Mr. Fite said Mr. Fauchald plans| to take the Donna Lane to the Alaska fishing banks again as soon as the court dispose of exceptions to the libel, still awaiting hearing on 'Judge Neterer's calendar. - eee Russian steamship, Andre is carrying 13,000 barrels The Marti, of herrings from England to Mur- mansk, North Russia. NEW CHEVROLET SIX The Great American Value New reduced prices delivered at Juneau Equipped Cabriolet Sedan (4 door) Free Wheeling and Syncromesh CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. ferees. | Besidas giving big boosts to the come tax rates, the Senate bill ¢limina‘es the substantial deduc- tions for earned income allowed |under koth the old law and the House measure. This year a married man with Ino dependants and a net income of $3,000 paid no tax because of the married person’s exemption of $3500. Under the House bill he would have paid $2.50 next year but under the Senate bill he would pay $20 A married man with a $5,000 net income and no dependants this year paid a $1688 tax. Under the House bill he would have paid $37.50 in 1933 and under the Sen- ate bill he would pay an even $100. The House measure provided for a $2500 exemption for all mar- |ried persons regardless of size Of income but the Senate bill stipu- lates that married persons with a net’ income of more than $5,000 get only $2,000 exemptions. So Bill Smith married, no dependants and an income of $10,000, who contributed $101.25 in 1932, would dig down for $210 under the House bill and $520 under the Sena'e provisio:. The exemption of a single per- son under the old law was $1500. th House and Senate measures | permit $1,000 exemption for the unmarried. A single man, with |a $2500 earned net moomc und (SINGLE |MARRIED | MARR(ED | MARRIED WD DEPENOENTS N0 DEPENDENTS $5,000 510,000 NET INCOME | VET INCOME /0 DEP ENPENTS| No DFPENOENTS] $3,000 VBT NCOME TAX PAID IN I93Z] 516.88 wd NO TAX [7533 unots senave GILL $2.0.00 $100.00 bE‘M UNDER SENATE BiLL, MARRIED MAN WITH $100,000 NET INCOME AND MO DEPENDENTS WOULD PAY $30,190 ... 31,000,000 WVET 1/COME WOULD PAY $57/,140,0R MORE THAN The ehart above shows the part the income taxpayer will play in balancing the Federal Budget. The taxes that would be paid under the Senate Bill are compared with the amounts under the House Bill and the amounts paid in 1932. no dependants will pay a $60 tax|in the very high income brackets|come a devotee of Kirsima, the if e Senate's provisions pre will cortribute from 30 to more Hindu god, and that that “bel”) in the law as it finally is en-|than 55 per cent of their net in- is a Hindu feminine suffix. She is acted. Under the House bill his|comes to the Federal treasury. A sometimes called “Mirabehn,” the WHEN YOU A\ T IT tax would have been $23.75. married man with a net income termination “behn” meaning “sis- The difference is due to not only |of $100,000 and no dependants ter.” the higher rate of taxation but to the elimination by the Senate al- so of the earned income credit. The House tax rate for the first $4,000 was 2 per cent while the would pay $30,140. With a $200. 000 income “he would pay $144,640; with a million dollar income, $571,- 140 or more than half of it. with a $500,000 income, 263,340 and cluded. had no ideals. | “T began to seck {it when T met Romain Rolland, the | great French philosopher. He ad- {vised me, if I wanted to do the {her husband kesps a roadhouse at Marion Dunu, In charge of the Big River near Mc¢Grath, was Pfaffle and Company store .x!Coun-‘b,ou&m in an ailing condition with | cil, died at Nome. He was an old- 'her two daughters, one 8 and the timer in the Nome country. loaher 8 years old, by airplane from | light light T found | utmost E’,Ood' in the world, to join| {Big River to Fairbanks for hospital Mr. Gandhi's Ashram (retreat) at William O'Neill, son of Mr. and u(x(m“em One of the daughters Ahmedabad, on the banks of the Mrs. H. I. O'Neill, of Cordova, is' also was ill. A baby of the Con- sacred Sarbarmati “I went to Switz |a year lived in se River. ‘m. eman at the Chititu Mines Op-|dras had died a few days previous- rland and for erated by Charles Cramer, and will 1y at the roadhouse. sion with the be there for the summer, as will: poorest Swiss peasants. I .sludl(‘d‘his‘ brother, Patrick. spinning and weaving; I familiar-| ized myself with Hindustani; I read| Anybody knowing of workable all of Mahatma Gandhi’s works; 'placer ground near Hyder should VANCOUVER, B. C., June 15.— I dressed in homespun |communicate with the Hyder Her-|pr, W, H. McKenzie, Dominion “Then T came to India, landing aid, which has received a letter from \government veterinarian here, has JRERL 5 7 A SRR B. C. LIFTS BAN ON CALIFORNIA PRODUCTS at Bombay, where, many years Robert A. Heavenston of Port-' \been advised from Ottaws, that previously, T had been a social land, Ore., asking “if there are any'the embargo against all fruit and butterfly. 1 went straight to Mr.|streams not less tan five miles|ye etables from California, Wash~ Gandhi’s Ashram, 400 miles from|from Hyder that show good results ington and Nevada, placed as a Bombay. with placer mining by hand mem"pror,ectlon against hoof and mouth “In Mahatma Gandhi I felt I ods or sluicing,” and inquiring ‘if giscase, has been lifted. not only had met my parent, but it would be profitable to dig my guide and teacher. Tt was like straight down to the bedrock on finding something that I had lost. the possibility of finding a good “On November 7, 1925, I took quariz “vain.” 40-DAY ROMANCE ENDS ¢ LOS ANGELES, Cal, June 15.— the vow required of all whq enter Charging cruel treatment during Mr. Gandhi’'s shrine This en-! John “Rusi-tea” Ketooroky is|ihae forty days of their married joins strict chastity on all, even me head of a party of four that|jire Ajlene Mercedes, stage and married couples, who henceforth | will prospect the beaches of the | must live as brother and sister.|Lower Cook Inlet country, says the | It demands that one's service be Seldovia Herald. Those with “Rush- | dedicated to the poor, that one On” are Michael Zadorico, Michael must pray, fast, spin, weave, and Ageef and Herry Sherz. |eschew all worldly pleasures. [ " “I was in daily contact with | Recent flood waters at Fairbanks Mahatma Gandhi, and through |formed new pools and destroyed Miss Nathylie MacDonald, Uni- him, with God, I found myself the efficacy of oil sprayed on old | versity of Washinglon student, ar- ~—through Mr. Gandhi. | pools to prevent them from becom- | rived on the Princess Norah last | “Through the teachings I came ing breeding place of mosquitos, | night and will visit with her his- |to understand the beauty of other but at the direction of the Fair-|er, Mrs. C. J. Balley for the com- ;rellgmm and to know C}msuan-‘bankb City Council all new pools ing months of vacation. 1tv better. For he is a greater Home-Grown Radishes of those 10c PER BUNCH CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 radio actress, has filed a divorce suit against Stephen Kingsbury Simkhovitch, writer, She asks for $1,000 a month alimony. e, IS VISITING HER SISTER who call themselves such “The political side of lis the least part of him. As a | moral teacher and reformer the iworld has not kndWn his equal since Buddha and Christ. H “He made no attempt to con- |vert me from Christianity. 1 am| {not an orthodox Hindu. The Ma-| |hatma did not baptise me or im-| merse me in the holy Ganges, a, has been reported. “Gandhi hates conversion, and | believes that all religions are good. , “The past is absolutely ef- 1 faced. Madeline Slade, as such, is dead. Only Mirabel, which is the name given me by Gand- hi, lives.” Hiss Slade explained that Mira was a Rajputana Princess, who 'gave up mundane pleasures to be- Gandhi Prompt Delivery | i [ LUMBER “My former life is erased from the tablets of my soul,” she con- “As a worshipper of Ma- Hatma Gandhi and of Rema, the Hindu god of gods, I have an JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS Senate rate is 4 per cent. The House measure allowed 12!2 per|net income and cent deductions for earned in-|childrer would pay n otax. If hoi come. Under the Senate Dill persons A married person with a $3,000 infinitely richer spiritual existence two dependent 10 look forward to. “Even while T was in prison the | mahatma guided me though [hfl w:.\h“ol jails separated us.” b | 1 ha done dependent child, his tax PHONE 358 it embraces drama [ COLISEUM TIME- “PAL ANNABELLES AFFARRS with VICTOR MCcLAGLEN PREVIEW TONIGHT —1:10 A.M. “DOORWAY TO HELL” LAST Independent Druggists NEW ONE-PIECE SEGAL RAZORS With 10 Segal Blades $1.00 Juneau Drug Co. “There Is No Substitute for QUALITY” Post Office Substation No. 1 PHONE 33 ——— SMITH and CORONA i TYPEWRITERS J. B. Burford & Co. “Our doorstep worn by satisfied | customers” | ' e e | L ©. 1 DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS Telephone 496 RUTH HAYES NEW BERETS In white, tan and eggshell Silk Boucle and Wool $1.00 to $1.95 H arry Dawson’s Cafe FROM 11 TO 3 We Serve a Special Plate LUNCH for 50c¢ Come and get acquainted