The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 21, 1933, Page 3

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THE = DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TI{ESDA Y, MARCH 21, 1933. CAPITOL TONIGHT! A BIG 2 FEATURE THRILLING ACTION PROGRAM! A fiONOGRAM MELODRAM And Another Stirring Blood-Tingling Action Full-Length Feature Hoot Gibson'’s “THE GAY BUCCAROO” SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS and of course Capitol Service and Perfect Picture Projection Soon—-*“Secrets of the French Police” “r, il S \Noted American Comic QI 8 00es ik Opera Star Takes His | Last Curtain Summons |~ (Continuea 1rom Page Crae) harbor for the role and the whole I|thing “went over big.” Goes Over Big Everybody liked the presentation and the improvised “Uncle Tom's Cabin” remained the company’s ,vehicle for the remainder of the tour. It was played throughout Australia, then in Shanghai and !Canton, China; in India and Mad- 'agascar and finally in Africa. When the company was at Kim- berley, the old sea captain Uncle Tom quit to return to his craft. Barney Barnato, the diamond king, ;volunteered and was accepted for the role. At Caps Town the troupe jcame into possession of a real stage version of “Ungle Tom's |Cabin,” - substitubed for their own |version and immediately began to lose money. n | De Angelis disbanded his troupe and went to India, where he ob- tained backing of a wealthy firm and leased theafres in Bombay, Calcutta and other cities, He was ‘;doing well when the longing for ihome impelled him to return to |California, “the most foolish act NON RUN HOSIERY A new shipment! All latest shades! Full run of sizes! Only $1.35 Pair “Juneaw’s Own _ Store” fof my life,” he said in later years. ® |He was sure, if he had remained, |that he would have become a ‘knight and would have had a jew- eled turban. - eee———— MRS. SIMON HELLENTHAL IS NORTHBOUND PASSENGER ON MOTORSHIP NORPHLAND Mrs. Simon:Hellenthal, who has MIDGET LUNCH Under Old Management TOM and MARIE STURGE Open Sunday i) |been spending the winter in Seat- tle, is returning to Juneau on the motorship Northland which left ithe Puget Sound city last evening. {Mrs. Hellenthal left for the south last September with her daughter, Miss Mary Claire Hellenthal, who is remaining in Seattle where she HORLUCK’S PALM BEACH Brick and DANISH Ice Croam ALL FLAVORS Juneau Ice Cream — FAMOUS NAMES ONCAPITOL'S - DOUBLE BILL ‘Thelmia T(Fd,- Henry B.| { Walthall, Pat O'Malley Priscilla Dean Appear | { | | i If you're looking for sensational action and drama sympathetically and skillfully presented, ~“Klon- |dike,” which shares honors on the double feature bill at the Capitol tonight with Hoot Gibson’s “The Gay Buccaroo,” should satisfy. The cast alone, in ‘this unusual ipicture should make all of the generation of' movie fans| to see “Klondike.” Henry B. 11, Tully Marshall, Priscilla {Dean, Pat O'Malley, Myrtle Sted- |man and Ethel Wales, all old fav- will be seen with Thelma |Todd, Lyle Talbot and Capt. Frank |{Hawks, who holds more than 30 jair speed records. | “Klondike” is no ordinary melo- drama of ice and snow and the igreat open spaces. Lyle Talbot, the star, is presented in the role tor a brilliant young surgeon who! joins a friend on an almost s suicidal trans-Pacific flight which results in a spectacular crash which provides the motivation for the |Alaskan sequences. | Hoot Gibson Starred | The other picture on this double |feature actior bill, which will probably have half the youngsters (in town beggmg to go to the first show at the Oapitol tonight, is “The Gay Buccaroo,” a fast-mov- ing western that promises plenty jof thrills. Moreover, the presence in the picture of Hoot Gibson, one of the two or three ranking west- ern stars and his famous horse are attractions enough to please any- one, young or old, who enjoys fine horsemanship and quick gun play. FIVE INITIATED INTO MOOSE LODGE At initiation ceremonies at the Moose Hall last evening, a class of five became members of the Legion of the Moose, and following the initiation a supper was served in the banquet hall. ‘Those becoming members of the organization at the ceremonies| were Paul Brown, William Roden- | burg, Ed Redenburg, Carl Ander- son and James Primavera. Mr. Brown’s part of the initiation was | to sing a solo which he did with excellent grace. On next Monday evening a iarge class will be initiated in the Le-| gion of the Moose, the exact time to be announced la: NOTICE OF HEARING No. 406 In the Commissioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct, Territory of Al-| aska, Division Number One. In Probate. In the Matter of the estate of Charles Larsen, deceased. To Jennie Smith and Elphe Kath- ryn Smith, and all other heirs and other persons in interest: Notice is hereby given that a hearing will be had upon the peti- tion of Dave Housel, the Admin- istrator of the estate of Charles Larsen, deceased, who prays that an order be made herein directing the heirs and all other persons in interest in said estate ‘to ‘appear before this Court at Juneau, Al- aska, on the 20th day of April,‘ 1933, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, and show; cause, if any there be, why an order should not be made to sell the real property of said estate| to pay the claims allowed against said estate, and to pay the ex- penses of administration of said estate. The real property of said estate consists of a two-fifths undivided! interest in the Camel -Gypsum| Group of Claims situate at Gypsum[ or Yankee Cove on the -east shore| of Chichagoff ‘Island, Territory otl Alaska, said group of claims com-| prising the following named claims: | King = Gypsum - Claim; Gypsum Claims Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7, all of which claims are located in the 'Sitka Recording District - and! recorded on pages 179 to 183, in-| clusive, in Mining Record Book No. 3, of said district. Done &t Juneau, Alaska, this 13th day of March, 1933. | (Seal) CHAS. SEY, United States Commissioner and, ex-officio Probate Judge. First publication, March 14, 1933. Last publication, April 11, 1933, | “IBRIDGE OVER jand more concentrated effort in 0 maintain municipal |that direction is planned for the buoyed solely by the jdown the shore to Fritz Cove, the | Frances Perkins, First Woman in Cabinet, Brings Sociologist’s Zeal to Labor Post NEW YORK, March 17.—Ameri- ca’s first woman cabinet member has an eager eye for such things as shop windows filled with bar- gain price frocks. To Frances Perkins, new secre- tary of labor, price tags unreason- ably low suggest the possibility of sweat shop conditions for the girls who make the dresses. New York, under her direction as state industrial commissioner, has been agctive in' attempting to eradi- eate the sweat shaop. Hers Is Many-Sided -Attack., ' Not ' only . sweat shops, -but .old age pensions, - unemploymens . in- surance, minimum wage laws, labor exchanges, jfuller -statistics op un- employment—all of - ;these items | which have engaged her.attention ' i on a state-wide seale now become | pdints of attack on a national Miss Perkins speaks her opinions in an “even,.calm -voice, but her sparkling knowing eyes bélie -any : lack of interest. She is of medium height and meédium stature. Her black wavy hair 'surmounts a high wide brow. She smiles easily, gestures little. [ With a master's degree in sociol- ' ogy from Columbia’ university and Wwith many years of praétical work | as 4 social welfare worker ‘she has | spent much . time. since she left Boston, her birthplace, studying la- bor’s preblems, and seeking to. solve | them. | Frances Perkins, Secretary of Laber in the Roosevelt Cabinet, is used to desks loaded with many problems. dealing with industrial relations and problems in New York State is expected to aid her in the new post. Long experience in Urges High Wages She urges wign . wages, believes erly shore of Douglas Island made most employers agree that they are Possible by the bridge. necessary for sustained purchasing | Douglas Population power. She has’ studied England’s ! “dqle,” and is convinced some form ,ilies residing in Douglas and 190 of unemployment come to the United States. As New York's industrial com- missjoner she has argued with- the federal - government as to the ac- euracy of the latter's figures on unemployment, quoting New York's figures- to support her contention that the government’s estimates were too low. She is married—to Paul Wilson —retains her maiden name because °18l life of Juneau. it is less confusing. She has one' “The bridge, with its approaches, daughter. ywould open five miles of desirable At home she calls her office her residence locations along each side hobby, At her office the home is ©f ils way and afford opportunity the hobby. to connect numerous homesites with short private roads. Plenty of Room “In the townsite of Douglas and Treadwell there is ample room™ for twice the population of Juneau and the increase in the value of prop- insurance will children under 20 years of age; 65 |vesidents of Douglas are regular 'employees of the Alaska Juneau 'Gold Mining Company; eleven reg- ular commuters to Juneau reside in Douglas besides students attend- ing the Juneau Business College, shoppers, patients of physicians and the hospital, consultants of professionals, attendants at the theatres and paticipants in the so- DOUGLAS NEWS the two townsites would certainly reflectively enhance the value oi Juneau property. « ¥Though 28 cars are owned and ‘operated in Douglas, each paying a license tax of $10.00 per year, (there are no available roads over |which to drive them and a num- }ber of cars belonging to residents {of Douglas are maintained in Ju- ! neau. | CHANNEL NOW DOUGLAS' AIM Island Chamber of Com- Ipresent conditions, practically iso- \lated. At many periods during the !year a trip to Douglas on the \dimunitive ferry boat entails dis- tle s comfort akin to hardship. merce Outlines Ob]ec' {reasonably certain that the bridg- "mg of the channel would create tive for This Year an hourly flow of passenger and At the last meeting of the Doug- freight traffic to and from the las Chambeér of Commerce the fol- |Island. lowing data was presented in sup-| “For lack of adequate means to port of the great need and desire |Cross the channel the homesteaders for a bridge to be built connecting on the Island have been starved {Douglas Island with the mainland. Out and their claims are aband- The local body has been wormng;lmed. ‘The people of Douglas have on the project during the past year ;ror years made an heroic struggle existence hope and ensuing year, belief that the bridge will be built “The proposed bridge over Gas-|—2 Patient waiting as an alter- tineau Channel to link Douglas Is- |native of abandoning all they land with the mainland. is of par- 'have.” amount and mutual interest to the! S incorporated cities of Douglas and | MRS. FOHN-HANSEN GIVES Juneau with their combined pop\l-; INSTRUCTION ON GLOVES lation of 4,636, of which, aceord- ing to .the census of 1930, 593 re- | Another depression-chaser was side .in Douglas and 4,043 in Ju- |added to the list of community neay. “Juneau is congested. There are YeSterday when Mrs. Lydia Fohn- few vacant areas remaining for HAnsen introduced glovemaking. building sites with its city limits | Pémonstrations in cutting. pattern and were it mot for the suburban |'0 Measurement and stitching were expansion made possible by the 5'VeR: Glacier Highway, - extending to Eagle River, and its laterals to, the Glacier, around Auk Lake and | —e— D. I. W. C. MEETING Mrs. Glen Kirkham and Mrs. realty business of Juneau would be Charles Holmer- will be hostesses to at a considerable comparative | the Douglas Island Women's Club standstill. About all the desirable meeting to be held at the home of building sites along these high- | the former homorrow evening. ways are occupied and the only| ————————— hope to take eare of a- further| Let the aaverusements help you, expanding population is the west- 3 P arlor z ! }is attending Forest Ridge Academy. POLLY AND HER PALS There are 117 home-owning fam- | IS cR ITIcls Eu erty along the bridgeway and in| ‘While the two towns are in| . close proximity, they are, under|Meeting today, including Ways and It is) HARMONY LACK BY COMMITTEE Spirit - of Budget - Act -Is| Evaded Through Non- | Cooperation, Is Charge | (Continued from Page One) contract to an out-of-town prinler} who, apparently, the Committee SECRETS TOLD IN COLBERT'S NEW PICTURE | | | Coliseum Presents Charm- ing Star in Role of Secretary BT I Claudette. Colbert, the tiny stage: star who has so thoroughly cap-! tivated film audiences that she can rely on her reputation as a movie star for any claim to fame she desires, is featured in “Secrets of a Secretary,” the picture which opens at the Coliseum fonight. A secret marrlage with a gigolo and the death of her father which leaves her penniless both -involve Claudette in a series of complicat- ed affairs which eventually lead to her second marriage with the English Tord who had been picked as the titled husband desired by her employer for her daughter. George M , a London stage star, is Claudet! menace in thisyg picture and Herbert Marshall he: hero. ———— MOOSE ENTERTAINMENT, DANCE Legion of the Moose, No. 25, will meet Tuesday night at 7:45 sharp. All Legionnaires urged to attend. Starting at 8:45 there will follow an entertainment and dance, ‘to which " all Moose and Women of the Moose, and families, are cor-| dially invited. Visiting members welcome. —adv. COMMITTEE. Classified ads pay. Spring Check-Up !said, was not notified of any time limit. And the Auditor, Mr. Hel-‘ lerich said, took the position that | the printed budget was not re- {quired to be delivered at any speci- } fied time to the Legislature. Print- ed copies, Mr. Hellerich added, are§ promised for delivery after the' jarrival of the motorship Northland'| next Friday, two weeks later than| the legally required day. House Session Short The House sessfon this miorning was brief. Four bills were re-’ ceived from the Senate, including | Ithe measure re-organizing the school system. The other three' seek minor code amendments. Many House committees were Means, Fisheries, etc, Judiciary, - and a meeting of the Education’ Committee was called for tomerrow || afternoon. I Have your car checked after the wear and tear of winter driving. REASONABLE PRICES Expert Workmen CONNORS Motor Co., INC. £ [ COLISEUM Tuesday and Wednesday—Pal Nite 2—for—1 - * CEAUDETTE COLBERT in “SECRETS OF A SECRETARY” “ Preview Tonight—1 A. M. “Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm” OUR COAL {will give as much heat as two of the dirty, slaty kind. That’s why you save money by getting your coal from us. If you want coal that will not klink up your stove, will _burn down to the fine ash, that will give the most heat pos- sible you should give us your order. WE SPECIALIZE IN FEED D. B. FEMMER PHONE 114 MAY HAYES Modiste Bergmann Hotel PHONE 205 JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUES L. SCHULMAN Manufacturing Furrier Formerly of Juneau Reasonable Prices 501 Ranke Bldg., Seattle — Reasonabl Monthly Bates | GARBAGE HAULED E. 0. DAVIS TELEPHONE 584 e —— 1 BERGMANN DINING | ROOM Board by Week or Month I Meals for Transients l Cut Rates Chicken dinner Sunday, 60c MRS. J. GRUNNING - Classified ads pay. i | Old Orchard - Whole Juicy CHERRIES projects of the . government schooll make your shopping plans. SHHIA MR y CLIFF STERRETT Chocolate Covered in Cream JUNEAU DRUGC SUBSTATION NO. 1 our reputation on o G-E CLEANERSI No matter how large or small your -home we' know there is & G. E. Cleaner to meet yoar household needs. Trade your old ~brogmy or cleaner on a new GE that will give .you more power with no oiling. Ask. about qur liberal trade in allowance, GE Standard $30.00 GE Deluxe $42.50 Alaska Electric Light & Power Company JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18

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