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GAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT Under Cuban Skies! with LUPE VELEZ Ernest Torrence Karen Morley Jimmy Durante Directed by W. S. Van Dyke & 4 ——Dogyille Comedy— PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 A. M. TIBBETT STARS ATCAPITOL IN | ROLEOFMARINE “Cuban Love Song” Will Be Presented Last Times Tonight “The Cuban Love Song,” dra- matic romance of a man and a gir] in the tropics, gives Lawrence Tib. bett, famous baritone and screen star, what is undoubtedly his most |interesting role since “The Rogue | Bong.” | “The Cuban Love Song,” which will be presented for the last times tonight at the Capitol theatre, i a4 modern story, replete with dra- ma, comedy, adventure and haunt- ing music. Tibbett is seen as a { Swashbuckling marine. The story begins before the World War and comes to the present day. Outstanding Songs There are | imported Cuban orchestra and Lupe | Velez dancing the Rumba; Ti |bett learning “The Peanut Vende: in Spanish from the lovable Lupe; {outstanding songs for Tibbet, such as the official U. S. Marine Corps hymn; “The Cuban Love Song” |“Tramps at Sea” and a thrilling |deep sea chantey. W. S. Van Dyke directed the = J * Ie C"" % |production, and crammed it' with uneau Ice Lream | (gert little touches such as the ’ Parlor } | “singing lesson” 4in the Cuban jun- Try our fountain lunch. Salads | |8le- and Sanowiches. Horluck’s and Comedy In Capable Hands Sunfreze Ice Cream in all | Comedy is in capable hands, flavors. for Ernest Torrence and Jimmy P RO S —— ¢ |{Durante provide it as the two ma- rine cronies of the hero of the = S ———9% [story and the amusing Louise Fa- The Florence Shop Permanent Waving a Specialty | Florence Holmquist, Prop. Phone 427 Triangle Bldg. 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 Free Wheeling and Syncromesh CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inec. Men’s Wear AT NEW LOW PRICES A complete line of W. L. Douglas Shoes SAM THE TAILOR “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Swimmin g Togs The last word in Bathing Suits, Caps and Belts just received from the Eastern Market AT Juneauw’s Own Store | |zenda plays a domineering shrew. i Miss Velez is charming as the wistful Nenita and her exof charm has a foil in Karen Mo ley’s aristocratic beauty as the ri- val heroine. ALASKA NEWS {breaking of the Yukon River was |won this year by Mrs. Negun of §Gold Bottom Creek near Dawson. The pool was small, $1,200, because ‘partlcipauun was limited to per- sons in Dawson and immediate | vicinity. The ice moved at 7:32 p. |m, May 4, the earliest in the |memory of Dawson's oldest inhabi- tant. Mrs. Negun had guessed 7:37 |p. m. May 2. Gold is being panned and rocked |on the site of the demolished Bon- anza Saloon Building on the main |street of Dawson by Louis Lagorio. |Fair pay, which includes a half- ounce nugget, is being obtained. The gold dust being recovered by Lagorio sifted through the floor {of the saloon in the days when gold dust was the principal med- {ium of exchange. A Core drilling operations, for the investigation of coal beds in the anthracite area beyond Chickaloon, north of Anchorage, are now under way. The work is being done under |contract by Lynch Brothers, pio- neer drillers of Seattle. Formation of a glacier 2,000 feet long and 10 feet in depth last win- ter on mining ground that had been stripped last summer on Am- erican Creek for dredging opera- tiens this summer is causing con- siderable trouble to the American Creek Dredging Company. The |glacier could not be controlled by |the two winter watchmen and the dredge pond was filled with glacial — |ice and ice accumulated on part of the dredge hull. The ice will |not disappear from the area until {about July 1, the Fairbanks News- Miner declares. Numerous changes, some already made and others planned, are ex- pected to increase the tonnage ca- | pacity of the Eva Creek Gold Mine mill from 50 tons to 100 tons in & |24-hour period, according to E. A. | | Harry _ Dawson’s Cafe [} FROM 11 TO 3 1 & We Servg a Special Plate - LUNCH ' for 50c Come and get acquainted am TONIGHT; “SPY" * BEGINS TUESDAY | {Drama of Soviet Intrigue Previews | A. M. *at' Coliseum \ | { | ] ! { “Tllicit” starring Barbara Stan- ‘wyck. will be followed by "The‘ Spy,” featuring Kay Johnson, Neil | |Hamilton and John Halliday at! | the Coliseum theatre. ‘Tllicit” will ibe shown for the last times to- |night. “The Spy” will be pre- |viewed at 1 o'clock tonight and (shown regularly tomorrow night. | Ultra Modern Girl “Illicit” deals with an ultra-mod- ern society girl, played by Miss THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 20, 193 A Happy Movie Family —LAST TIMES TONIGHT Barbara Stanywck in “ILLICIT” Starting Tuesduy,‘The Spy’ PREVIEW—1:10 A. M. Tonight | Walter Huston is portrayed | above as the deadliest shot in the deadliest town on earth— Stanwyck, who refuses to marry |her sweetheart because she does Inot think men make as good lovers in wedlock as they do out of it. Two of the most beautiful and popular sisters of stage and sereen, Joan and Constance Bennett are shown with their husbands, Gene Markey and the Marquis de la Falaise respectively, as they attended the premiere of “Grand Hotel” at one of Hollywood’s palatial cinema palaces. The Marquis is at left; Joan and Gene in center. | novelties galore—an Tt is a daring story that required ivery delicate handling. Intrigue and Oppression | “The Spy,” reveals the intrigue iand oppression and the manner in {which the Soviets deal with ari | tocrats after the Red Revolution. | |It portrays the struggles of a) young couple fighting to maintain the ideals of their lost cause in the face of persecution from a hated agent of the Tcheka—sec- ret service system of the Soviet.| ‘The picture is charged with thrills and suspense, and rises to the heights of screen entertainment with its masterful direction and emotional acting. his character in “Law and Ord- er,” which will be previewed at 1 o'clock tonight and presented regularly tomorrow night at the | Capitol Theatre. GUNSM OKEIS HUSTON'S HALD "IN COMING PLAY ‘Law and Order’ Previews 1 AM.—Shows Reg- \ ;j ularly Tomorrow can ignited. The cabin was de-| stroyed, the loss being estimated at $1,000. The bears ate and ruin- Guns L 3 worth more than $100. Raymond, junsmoke was his halo—a "“‘lwm\ his face badly blistered, was | shooter his harp—yet he w taken to the hospital in Fairbanks. man of peace—a “saint” of sagebrush country! He had a heart |of gold and a hand of steel; he| : P et § ibrought law and order to an un- plentiful last winter on the Arctic I X oo | COast Of Alaska, 300 miles east of ‘131{1‘;.30, ,,hf,.i:fff":f) o 'Tl_lb“‘SL‘.Point Barrow. Tom Olson, Harry ];, fiian ke i ?)é[(;x:"u NEVEr ME | hutson and Gus Masik, formerly { Coming to (fi;piw[ of Nome, trapped on the Arctic ” Coast during the winter. the Foxes are reported to have been | AT of which gives you a rough lea @ vhat 3 t i store ’;;!‘ ‘?' w “‘I A treat ds in store| 5opy clum, former Postmaster With thelr © entertainment oment|at Fairbanks and declared to be et au?l“O":l‘(“-[’ [i}”“"‘f’ WHEN | the first Democratic candidate for Moot (Ai’”l.l popibnd dra-) ajaska Delegate to Congress, died a of the deadliest town on the i T oo Anocie: map and the deadliest shot in the oWy, come he Capitol theatre.| pctyal construction of the new Law and Order will be previewed |peqora] Building at Fairbanks start- | at 1 o'clock tonight and present-l.q June 4 with the pouring of ,ed regularly tomorrow night. concrete for the footings. Walter Huston is featured in the |cast with Harry Carey, Raymond Hatton, Ralph Ince, Russel Hop- ton and Andy Devine Marshal of Tombstone You've seen Walter Huston in many exciting pictures; but wait until you see him as the dead- New arrivals in Ruby cannot ch- tain employment, according to & message to the Fairbanks News- Miner from the United States Com-| missioner at Ruby. Already some unemployed men in the camp are| receiving charity. Almost all road shot Marshal of Tombstone, Ari-|york has been abandoned and the zona, in this he-man thriller! It's|mining outfits have all the help! a prize performance and a breath- they can possibly use. taking adventure! The picture was directed by Ed-| About 80 men are employed at| ward L. Cahn from an adaptation|wages in mining operations at| of a novel by William R. Burnett.|Mayo, B. C. 4 The screen play is by John Hus- ton, son of the featured player,| Gen. James Gordon Steess, on and Tom Reed. The action is laid in the Tombstone, Arizona, of a generation ago. his present visit to the Interior, made his first trip over the Steese Highway. When Gen. Steese last was in the Interior five years ago, the highway was not completed. Austin, Manager of the company, as stated in the Fairbanks News- i Miner. The ore is described as| Ed Dwyer has bought the Blue| {being soft and easily ground. Fox Cafe and lodging house on Front Street, Seldovia, from Jack | Stripping operations on mining{Coburn. The price was $3000. | ground on Fish Creek in the Fair- banks district are progressing rap- idly, but dredging work will not be resumed until next year. Twelve fish traps have besn in- stalled in the Seldovia district by the Cook Inlet Patking Company. Fire destroyed the home and two other buildings of John Bragga at the mouth of Scroggie Creck on Two hundred and fifty visiting men and women attended a rein- deer convention at Teller April 11 and 12. There were 1,151 dogs in!the Stewart River, Yukon Terri- the town at the time, most of{tory. He lost a two years' outfit them brought by the visitors. A{of provisions and clothing, four program of entertainment, which{guns and his two-year's fur catch. included many dog races with both |A valuable dog was burned. men and women drivers, was ar- e ranged by the town for the oc-{ Carl Johnson, 42, died at Nome | casion. Representatives were pres-|after an illness of several weeks {ent from all reindeer herds in the|that followed injuries he suffered Teller unif, namely, Teller, Cape{when skiing. Prince of Wales, Shishmaref, Mary'’s | Igloo, Douglas and Cape Espenberg.| Nome's city officials, lately in- Plans were made for a big rein- stalled, are Mayor A. F. Wright, deer round up at Teller this sum- |Councilmen A. Bahlke, Charles Ma- mer. son, Albin Polson, City Attorney Hugh O'Neill and City Clerk M. J. Fifty reindeer constitute the!Walsh. The Treasurer of the Nome | bounty offered by herd owners in|School Board is Mrs. Tolbert Scott. |the Unalakleet distict, near Nome, | for every slain wolf. More than, Officers installed by the Moose 1,500 deer were killed in the district Lodge at Nome for the ensuing in the past winter by wolves. |year are Oscar Lay, Dictator; C. L. Calkins, Prelate; Carl Hereim, Alrplanes are displacing sleds | Treasurer; Edwin Hoven, Trustee {and dogs for carrying mail between for three-year term; John Sali- | Fairbanks and Nome. In conse-inacka, Sergeant - at - Arms; Mike quence, dried fish as food for mail Bloom, Inside Guard; Gus Crem- |dogs is no longer in demand at|ides, Outside Guard; B. W. Neily, | Unalakleet, to the disadvantage of |Past Dictator; W. H. Koch, Secre- Indians. ‘i tary. |had been scared out of the Gus Eagles recently installed are Presi- | Bolstrom cabin on Treasure Creek, |dent, D. W. Ballentine; Vice-Presi- !near Fairbanks, which the animals dent, C. J. Lelievre; Chaplain, A. | had broken into, John W. Rav-|G. Low; Secretary, G. W. McKay; mond, Jr., went into his father's|Treasurer, O. Nordling; Conductor, cabin nearby and was badly bumediD, W. Forbes; Inside Guard, J. |about the face and hands when Britton; Outside Guard, P. Lenz; he lighted a match for the purpose | Aerie Physician, Dr. H. J. Nunn; | After shooting two bears that| Officers of the Dawson Aerie of ed provisions in the Bolstrom cabin |t SCOUTS BACK FROM OUTING BOyS Re turn . to Juneau ing the second week West was in Saturday—Washed Out During First Week Twenty-eight members of the Juneau Boy Scout organization re- Ofer, Capt. Ben Talmage. turnéd to Juneau Saturday after- noon after spending two weeks a the Eleventh Annual Encampment at Eagle River. From almost weatl every angle except the Scouts had a suc- ful outir During the first week the rain fell so consistently the boys were forced to return to Juneau Sunday. -All but two of them returned the following Tues- day. Cook Tom McMullen was on hand aga‘n this year to feed the boys three times a day, and his werk was most satisfactory. Some difficulties we perie 1 with the new cook stove, but the quality and quantity of the meals did not suffer. Fewer Instructors Fewer instructors visited the camp' as compared with the 1931 encampment. This year E. C | Guerin took thé boys on an over- night hike. The Scouts received instruction in Botany from C. H. Flory, while L. H. Metzgar gave them the fundamentals of geology. J. W. Leivers and Brice Howard sted with routine Scout work. Actual Scout work done in camp this year was practically the same as last. There were 115 tests pass- ed, and twelve boys raised in rank. LeRoy West qualified for a merit badge in swimming, under adverse weather and water conditions. Those who went from second cluss to first class rank were Bill Lowe, Joe McLean, Tom Stewart and Harry Sturro from tender- foot to second class rank, Henry Behrends, Mitchell Daniloff, John Davis, Tom Hall, Kenneth Keller, Jack Schaefer, Roy Smith aend Lewis Taylor. Honor Scouts Camp Honor badges were award- ed to Earl Beistline, John Davis, Brice Howard, J. earney, Ken- neth Keller, Bill Lowe, Joe Mc- Lean, Walter Scof son, Eanner Smith, Tom Harry Sturrock, Lewis Taylor and LeRoy West. Satisfactory pins were given to Henry Behrends, Mitchell Daniloff, Eckley Guerin, Tom Hall, Irving | t end by the Reliable Transfer, op- Robert Simp- | Stewart, | Krause, Frank Lamb, Harry Lucas, Frank Metzgar, Jack Schaefer and Joe Smith. During the course of the En- campment an Inter-Troop contest Wwas held. Points were given for promptness in answering calls, tests passed, rank gained, neatness in tents and at the cabin, and athletic competition. This was won by Troop 2. Organization Officers of Troop 2 at Eagle River were LeRoy Wi Assistant Scoutmaster; Capfain, firs OF CREDITO! In the District Court for the Dis- trict of Alaska, Division Number One, at Juneau. In the Matter of ED SKARET, Bankrupt. IN BANKRUPTCY. To the Creditors of Ed Skaret, of Juneau, in the First Division of the District aforesaid, a bankrupt: Notice is hereby given that on the 15th day of June, A. D. 1932, the said Ed Skaret was duly ad- judicated bankrupt; and that the first meeting of his creditors will be held at the office of the under- signed referee, at 181 South Front Street, in the City of Juneau, in the First Division of the Territory of Alaska, July 1, 1932, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon, at which time the said creditors may attend, prove their claims, appoint a trustee, ex- amine the bankrupt, and transact | such other business as may proper- ly come before said meeting. H. B. LE FEVRE, of building a fire to get lunch, Trustees, D. A. Cwrrie and E. E. Vapor gas from a leaking gasoline | Hickey. Referee in Bankruptey. June 18, 1932, Tent Captain, second week. Rob- ert Simpson was Assistant Scout- master in charge of Troop 1, and his Tent Captain was Walter Scott. During the first week of the Encampment, Simpson was in general charge of the camp under Director Curtis Shattuck, while dur- L WHEN YOU WANT IT JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS PHONE 358 charge. All supplies of the Scouts were taken to Eagle River by the High- way, Capt. Nels Rogne, and were returned to Juneau by the Sea Transfer work was done at this erated by Art' McKinnon. Mr. McKinnon had done this work for many years for the Scouts, and has been of great help to them in | ways. many other THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. Phone' 186-2 Old Papers for Sale at Empire Office 1 ncreasingly Aware of the Value of N e_wspaper Our wide circulation guarantees you a read- ing public, and a buying area that will pay ten- fold the cost of adver- tising. THE ADVERTISING STORE DAILY ALASKA EMP PHONES 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY “The Store That Pleases” GROCERY . # W They haye learned through experience that to look in The Empire first is to save time and money afterwards. They have learned that adyertisements in The Empire give them the information they want, and the places where they can make their desired purchases. The Empire is really a sort of .clearing house of shops, those advertising in it steadily come under the notice of the many women sub- scribers, and they come into their stores, while those who don’t advertise lose out. You have a business, why not make it‘.pa.y'.' Appeal to one woman and you appeal to many. The chance is open to all, a guaranteed area | of women buyers. 1S THE BUSY STORE RE