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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 27, 1933. CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY and TONY % FOURTH HORSEMAN NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S SALE United States of America, District! | of Alaska, ss. Public notice is hereby given, that by virtue of an Execution dated the 3d day of March A. D. 1933, issued out of the District Court of the United States for the Territory of Alaska on a judgment rendered, in said Court on the 10th} day of January A. D. 1933, in favor of George M. Bidwell, plaintiff, and against E. E. Harvey, defendant, and certain property hereinafter described; which said Execution provides that the property previous- ly attached in this cause, which property is described as follows, to- wit: the amount due the defendant E. E. Harvey from Leo Haider and Tony Steele upon a contract, bond or option under which the said Leo Haider and Tony Steele contracted to purchase and obtained an option on, those certain lode mining claims situate on Woedesky Island, Peters- burg Reco g District, Alaska, to- wit: Maid of Mexico, Maid of Mex- ico South Exrension, Maid of Mex- ico, North Extension No. 1, Maid of Mexico North Extension No. 2, Maid of Texas, Maid of Texas Ex- tension. The notices of location of said mining claims have been duly and regularly recorded with the Recorder for Petersburg Precinct, where the said notices are now of record, to .which notices reference is hereby made for more particular description; which said agreement to purchase was made and entered into by and between E. E. Harvey and Ida J. McGinnis, parties of the first part, and Leo Haider anq Tony Steele, parties of the second part, and was duly and regularly recorded in the office of the Re- corder for Petersburg Precinct, on page 400 of Miscellaneous Records; together with the interest of the defendant E. E. Harvey, to-wit: a two-thirds (2/3) interest, in the above referred to six (6) mining claims: be sold; and I will accord- ingly offer said personal property and real estate for sale at public venue to the highest and best bid- der, for cash, on the 10th day of April A. D. 1933, at 11 o'clock A. M. of said day at the front entrance to the Federal and Territorial Building in Juneau, Alaska, Dated this 4th day of March A. D. 1933. ALBERT WHITE, United States Marshal for First Division, Territory of Alaska. By DONALD E. MARTIN, Deputy First publication, March 6, 1933. Last publication, March 27, 1933. A Nurse's Experience Everett, Wash. — “As a trained nurse in different parts of the country, I have had much experience with Dr. Pierce’s Remedies and their great value as tonics and builders eannot be over-estimated,” ore of 2811 Norton Ave. “As a !)t)Inin, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discavery is wonderful. I suffered very much from constipation, bilious head- aches and indigestion, and a bottle of the ‘Discovery’ corrected all these symptoms and regulated. my system in a short time.”” All druggists. to, Dr. Pierce’s Cline, N. Yo or “froo medical sdvice, Buffalo, Let the aaverusements help you make your shopping plans. _ HORLUCK’S | PALM BEACH Brick and D, Nce Cream FLAVORS l | | Juneau Ice Cream | Parlor | | | | | ___._"____r | MAY HAYES Modiste Bergmann Hotel PHONE 205 . at the Right Price | Harris Hardware Co. | Lower Front Street JUNEAY SAMPLE .. A ’ el 2 3 BIG VALUES ] .- DOUGLAS NEWS — MRS. MARTIN'S FUNERAL IS LARGELY ATTENDED A large crowd attended the last rites for Mrs. Andrew Martin which were held here yesterday from the Congregational Community church. Father A. P. Kashevaroff conducted the services, assisted by the Native choir from the Russian Caiholic church of Juneau. Mrs. W. E. Ca- hill sang “Safe in the Arms of Jesus.” Interment was made in the Doug- las cemetery, a large number fol- lowing the remains to their last resting place. The floral contri- butions were very beautiful. GUILD SEWING PARTY St. Luke's Guild will meet Tues- day afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Charles Fox, for the regular sewing party. Everyone in- terested is cordially invited. e NOTICE OF APPRECIATION We wish to extend to our many| friends our heartfelt thanks and| appreciation for the kindness shown to our wife and mother during her| long illness, and for their assist-| ance and expressions of sympathy fellowing her death. ANDREW MARTIN AND SON. —adv. - e During 1932 the number of tele- phone calls originating in the Lon- don area were 745,000,000 - Read the ads as carefully as youf read the news articles. ! NOTICE OF ELECTION UPON FRANCHISE | To the Electors of the City of| Juneau, Alaska: NOTICE IS HAEREBY GIVEN that on the 3rd day of March, 1933, the Common Council of the City of Juneau, Alaska, enacted, subject, to the ratification by the electors) of said municipalty, that certain Ordinance No. 211, entitled “An Ordiance granting a franchise to W. H. Bacon, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, to use certain streets, avenues and ways of the City of Juneau, Alaska, for the operation therein and hereover stages, and to operate and main- tain an automobile passenger bus or stage line in the City of Juneau, Alaska, and to charge fares for the transportation of passengers in automobile busses and stages,” which ordinance grants a franchise to W. H. Bacon, his heirs, ex- ecutors, administrators and assigns, to use certain streets, avenues and ways of the City of Juneau, Alaska, for the operation therein and thereover of automobile passenger busses and stages, and to operate and maintain an automobile pas- senger bus or stage line in the City of Juneau, Alaska, and to charge fares for the transportation of pas- sengers in automobile busses ard stages, % NOTICE 1S FURTHER HEREBY GIVEN that said franchise will be submitted to the qualified electors of the City of Juneau, Alaska, at the annual municipal election to be held therein on April 4, 1933; and that at such election the el- ectors of said municipality may ex- press by their vote their approval or disapproval of said franchise, and that such franchise will not become valid until it has been sub- mitted to the electors of said municipality at said annual muni~ cipal election and unless at least 556% of the votes cast at that election shall be in favor of suen franchise, . NOTICE IS FURTHER HEREBY GIVEN that by said ordinance the Common Council designated said annual municipal election to be the election at which said franchise should be submitted to the quali- fied electors of said municipality: NOTICE IS FURTHER HEREBY GIVEN that a eopy of said Ordi- nance, - containing gald franchise, may be inspected at the City Clerk’s office il the City H4ll, in Junean, Alaska. ¢ Dated at Juneau, Alaska, March 4, 1933, g ¥ H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk: First publication, March 20, 1933. Last publication, April 3, 1933. of automobile passenger busses and| MONEY MADNESS PRESENTED IN | American MadnessOURRENT EPIC {Capitol Screen Reveals | Powerful Drama of To- day—Huston Starred “American Madness,” which op- ened at the Capitol theatre yester- one of the most dramatic spectacles ever filmed. This is not only one of the finest pictures shown in Juneau in recent months, but is intensely interest- ing because of its timeliness, and ’credn goes to Erik Paulson, Capitol manager, for its opportune show- ing. It brings to life the marble pillars which are the symbols of the nation’s great banking insti- tutions; and it makes intelligible the drama that seethes behind the hundreds of doors marked “Bank President,” Huston in Lead No character that Walter Hus- ton has played since he portrayed tality and the moral courage of Tom Dickson, bank president whose O'Brien are excellently cast as two young lovers who are consta.nt!y‘, vexed by the problem of getting | married on a bank clerk’s salary. | The characterization which Kay Johnson gives as Dickson’s wife has warmth and charm. And Gavin Gordon is one of the most con- ! vineing “weak heavies” we have yet seen on the screen. Dramatic Scene The scenes of the run on the! bank are so dramatic that the| audience feels itself in the midst | of the mob. Dickson sees depositors he counted on to believe in him, because he trusted them, forgetting what faith is, taking rumor for fact, driven into frenzied fury at| the thought of losing their money. | Apparently his bank must fail. Why | It doesn*—how Dickson’s philoso- | phy proves itself right—is the cli-! max of the picture. ! With so supefB an actor as Hus- | ton in the feature role, so talented ' a directorial hand as Capra's and so competent a cast, “American | Madness” would have been a super- | ior picture had it had no story at? all. Its wide, sweeping power makes | it a screen masterpiece. TOM MIX, TONY, DUE AT CAPITOL | Tom' Mix will shoot, ride ahd| | |punch his way through “The Fourth | E f Horseman,” coming to the Capitol been announced. It is possible a|0f hiring a quarter of a million |Grand Jury will be drawn shortly Theatre Tuesday. A real drama of the Golden West burly bandits lose a stirring fight to him—includes Margaret Lind- say, Raymond Hatton, Fred Kohler, and Edward Cobb in an excellent cast. SIXTEEN YOUNG GIRLS JOIN JUNEAU SODALITY Sixteent young girls were forms the Blessed Virgin Mary at services Sunday night. The new members of the organi- zation are: Mary L, Norton, Anna M. Doogan, | {Helen Ritter, Ruth Geyer, Virginia | jLund, Anna Norton, Caroline Mc- | Allister, Marjorie Doogan, Mary | Lennon, Evelyn McCormick, Vir- {ginia Mullen, Mary Jean McNaugh- fton, Beatrice Mullen, Dolores Smith, | At the conclusion of the formal investiture Rev. Wm. G. Le Vasseur, S. J., Pastor, spoke on the purposes and ideals. of" the Society. Officers of the Sodality are: President, Mabel Blanche Ritter; Secretary, Lucille Norton; Treas-! urer, Mary Lennon; Sacristan, Mary | Louise Norton; Assistant Sacristan, | Ada Giovanem; Consultors, Ruth | geyer, Anna Norton, Beatrice Mul- | n, ——————— FRED SCHREY ARRIVES HERE ON ESTEBETH Fred Schrey, prominent Sitka ! business man, arrived in Juneau, on the motorship Estebeth this morning. He will be here for sev-! eral days on business, : day, makes of a run on a bank, | Abraham Lincoln has had the vi- | code is character—not collateral.. Constance Cummings and Pat! * * * JANET GA! mutilated weekly stipend. Movie Stars Brilliance of Holl.ywood Luminaries Undimmed by 50 Per Cent Cut in Salaries. Many Notables Must Stagger Along on $2,500 a Week. NancY CARROLL 5 ! her fortune, and the lovely Janet Gaynor, whose dimples and artless manner placed o ekt alyvars Inuabi UAERTN too, will Aekeiitva: tha ohto Yo 8. cut of AS0D 5 H oL AL is rather tough on Jimmy, seeing that it was only recently he crashed into big money. In all, more than Must Twinkle on * S Half * * Pay ROMANTIC TEAM 1S 00-STARRED IN LOVE-STORY Charles Farrell and Marian Nixon Enact Human Drama of Love | Hollywood has learned that the word “cut” has another meaning besides that for which it is usually employed in the studios. Hitherto the word was used when a certain scene or part of eliminated. from a GI:‘ :{ow it has :g“i' tka' be re . Due to the depression a anking mo; 1 3 ivz:.’u:::t‘:d in the film u;inl. Salary slashes of 50 and 25 per cent are the rule, and the industry is taking it with Spartan fortitude. The big stars, of course, are taking the biggest whack of the axe. Notables like Joln Barrymore, whose weekly pay check called for $5,000, will have to get along on just half that amount—but even at that, a good-sized family could easily manage for an entire year on John's |(inag tonight, | In the same category are Nancy Carroll, red-haired star, Marlene Dietrich, | % 3 scene was to be ognized as the painful operation performed upon a oria, a strict program of retrenchment has been er i k re affected, including actors, writers, executives, stagehands and a host of others. O A g From 350 o0 willl ek, the 50 per ‘darit $l1zs,. aad M Dulow thas will URe1RE it caft But there consolation in the knowledge that it is only for the period of the dep ion. FEDERAL COURT DUE TO RETURN IN SHORT TIME Work About Finished at Ketchikan—Harding to Arrive Next Week The Federal district court party, at Ketchikan since early this year, will leave there next Monday on its return to Juneau, according to Deputy Clerk of Court J. W. Liev- ers, who returned home last Fri- day from the First City. Only a few matters were on the docket to be disposed of this week. Just when another jury term of court ‘will be held here has not after the arrival of Judge Justin —wherein the virile cowboy saves W. Harding. an entire town in real estate for' There are three murder cases the girl he loves as & troupe of pending for submission to that body. Several ing robberies tions of the minor cases, includ- and alleged infrac- National Prohibition Act, are pending, requiring grand | {Jury investigation. | party arrives, however, nothing will be known of plans for handling these matters. {SAM OPICH LEAV THE Ann's Hospital on December left the hospital yesterday. Iplans to leave for the south on the | Claudia Kearney, Yvonne Forrest, motorship Northland late today. |heavy rains. At Capitol Tomor_row Tom Mix < inThe TGN R, BARNEY GOOGL i E AND SPARK PLUG Until the Court | L e N LANDSLIDE lally received into the Sodality of, Sam Opich, who entered St.| 13| in the Catholic Church of Nativity With a broken leg, injured while |than 120 “persons are reported to working in the Alaska Juneau mine, He |when a landslide buried half of FRED KOHLEL end MA FOURTH HORSEMAM “omvensrac per CHANGES MADE REFORESTATION MEASURE 0. K. |Roosevelt Approves of Re- draft of Bill to Be Made by Senate ‘WASHINGTON, March 27— Chairman Walsh, of the Senate La- bor Committee, after a talk with | President Roosevelt, said the Pres- |ident approved the changes in the! | reforestation measure which would |give thé President power to put in effect as he saw fit. Senator Walsh explained modifi- cation of the bill would take out any stipulation as to the method men expected to be employed, and other details relative to hving con- ditions. The changes will still enable the President to carry out the provis- ions of the present measure as he | saw fit, The bill will be drafted by the Senate. B 5 TS SCORES BURIED LIMA, Peru, March 27.—More | have been killed at Tantaday today, The slide followed the village. b GARET LI IGOTA FOR Y/ JUDGE ORDERS MAYOR OUSTED PHILADELPHIA, - Penn.,, March 27.—Judge Thomas Finletter has ordered Mayor Charles Kline, of | Pittsburgh, ousted as the result of his conviction of malfeasance in office in c¢onnection with alleged illegal letting of city contracts. —————————— Promote Prosperity With Pmni- er'’s Ink! or so charactreistic of the A can home. In addition to the ! splendid performiances of Farrell {ment will take place in the Odd Charles Farrell, who has won | himself a permanent place in the hearts of the public by his por- !trayals of ' sympathetic, romantic |roles, is starred in “After Tomor- the picture which heads the program at the Coliseum | Here is shown young love's strug gle against the domination of sen- i timental mothers. Living their ro- | mance in the whirl and bustle of |New York City, Charles Farrell jand Marion Nixon in the leading |roles typify the wholesome, opti- imistlc and cheerful self-sacrifice ithat is being lived today by thou- Isands of similar youngsters with ! dependent relations. Rich Humor | The story is told swiftly and ef- | fectively, spiced with the rich hum- jand Miss Nixon, “After Tomorrow” | boasts of some strong character and humorous portrayals by such| celebrities as Minna Gombell, Wil- |liam Coller, ‘Sr., and Mrs. Jose- | phine Hull. This charming picture will be shown at the Coliseum for the last FUNERAL SERVICES FOR OLAF OLSEN 70 BE HELD TOMORROW Funeral servces for Olaf R. Ol- sen, who died at St. Ann’s Hospital last week, will be held in the chapel of the C. W. Carter Mortuary to- {morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. Ritualistic services will be held Tonight Only Preview 1 A. M. “Road to Singapore” o e JPTER TOMORROW CHARLES FARRELL Marian Nixon Minna Gombell William Cellier, Sr. A large and attractive range 35¢ 3 pair for $1.00 H.S. GRAVES The Clothing Man under the auspices of the - Silver Bow Lodge, I. O. O. F,, and inter- Fellow’s plot in Evergreen ceme- tery. Mr. Olsen, better known to his many friends in Southeast Alaska as “Admiral” Olsen, was a member of the Odd Fellows lodge at Omaha, | Nebraska. bem st can o om e ] Classified ads pay. When Jos | L THIS WAY. . HURRY! You'll Do Better Your Job Printing by Placing Your = Order with the 0. EXPERT FLOOR SERVICE New Floors—Borders Refinishings—Cleaning Sanding—Waxing ESTIMATES FREE GARLAND BAGGAN Phone 582. 408 Goldstein Bldg. l Buying * Formerly of Juneau Reasonable Prices 501 Ranke Bldg, Seattle A complete overhauling by our skilled mechanies will give it the power and zest that makes driving a true pleasure, Really reasonable rates! JUNEAU MOTORS e