The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 13, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, W NESDAY SFJ’T 13, 1933 Juneau Greater Movie mnumummmuuuuuuuuuumluuumllulmlummummmuuuu’uuu PITY “THE POOR LITTLE RICH GIRL® "~ | JUNEAU GREATER MOVIE SEASON | THH“-LER Is ; GUVEHNMENT TIME TONIGHT WHO LONGS FOR A SPOT IN THE FIL NEW FEATURE | ,.moeomm e, § e — HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Sept. 13.—| Monaei Lindley" doesn't feel sorry for herself, or she might go into detail about the tribulations of a “poor little rich girl in Holly- EMPLOYMENT JOBS READY The Penguin Pool Murder'| Monaei is a pretty, brown-eved Competitive Examinations Comes Tonight B IS girl with reddish-] brown hair and <lim figure who lives in & big hill- Are . Announnced by Mystery Comedy : |side ‘nouse, drives an _expensive il SEiice ALAN DINEHART MAE CI.ARKE-' NEIL HAMILTON car and carries the air of refine- “The Penguin Pool Murder,” mys- | ment! ‘and culture that both house tery ecomedy thriller opening at the|2nd car need. & Capitol Theatre tonight brings SRR three popular stars to the screen| ALL THE TRIMMINGS ] She lives, in short, like & mov- ie star who has- *arrived.” She has all the things that little girls} ‘The United ‘States Civil Service Commission has announced op« competitive examinations as fol- lows: g Nurse-Technician (Bacteriology and Roentgenology Combined), In- i |dian Service; Graduate Nurse, Adults Graduate Nurse, Visiting Duty, 30¢ Veterans' Administration, Public Children Health Service, Indian Service and | elsewhere. In addition to other 10¢ R 5 s | requirements, applicants must have Junmm lfigw-vt 14',,[,,r,,,i,,,,w,u Value had not less ‘than two years' post- graduated experience in nursing. Medical Officer, Associate Medi- cal Officer, Assistant Medical Of- ficer; optional branches, cardiol- ogy, child hygiene, eye, ear, nose and throat, genitorinary (urology), in character roles, ideally suited to their talents according to advance > » ! reports on the pieture. y ri When thebodywas found . N8 4 Edna May Oliver, who has hand-|0ut on farms in Iowa and Louis- in the New York Aqua- ed many a laugh to thousands of iana ‘and Vermont imagine movie rium, every eel in the audiences throughout the - country| Stars have, and Monaei has al- was: examined for : s heads the cast ‘as & school teacher | ¥ays had these ‘things. She was finger prints. Not a fish f who solves the ‘mystery that has| DT to-wWealth, her father being bowl was left unturned. baffled New York's brainiest crime | mfim‘; Sanufatvarer it Jars The detectives were H experts. Robert Armstrong, rated wet until the:h:clm:: as one of the screen's most ver- lsmz:xethe x;hixa\gdshe éf 1’":;::5 le; from lowa tracked down satile and popular players, con- meemem“’&" P i i & tributes one of his best perform- o R :for that satisfaetion she is pres- heavy . thinking detective is sn\d];mnlly ’rlskmg thg tthinbgrs‘ ROV Sj:, to be a perfect foil for the -clever SN0 % Tmody ! 1 | internal medicine and diagnosis, Edna May Oliver and Armstrong. ,heE‘;‘;,s g M i m'n neurol-psychiatry, pathology and A news reel and other interest-| . .../ "l'here were: complications, Mcnaei Lindley has found | bacteriology, roentgenology, sur- ing short subjects make up the|y . e of Quaker stock, and my| that a gifl who doesn't meed |gery (general or orthopedic), tu- balance of the program. father was opposed to the thea-| the mcney has a time getting a | berculpsis, venercal disease, gene: tre. To get me away from it and| Job in pictures. But now this |al practice; Veterans' Administra-| my ambition, T've been sent away Indiana hopeful, who has been | tion, Public Health Service, In-| GULLEQE YEAH to schools, girls’ camps, even to} able while waiting to indulge in dian Service, Coast and Geodetic PFVN and PENC'L SETS LY Burope: But I always had to come| the luxuries of a star, has a |Survey, and elsewhere. 4 pack to it, because I knew that| second lead in a new film and | Engineers Wanted | i ! D N A M AY 1¥F0 sometining ‘inside me would burst| bopes of other parts. | Engineer, various grades rang- he ing in salary from $2,600 to $5.- if T did not. 1 couldn't, stand not 4 Starts o L I v E R doing anything” 400 a year; subject to a deduction 9 S , 4 of not to exceed 15 per cent as R s Y54 ol e Ay v 0PENS SEPT 18 GETTING ALONG NOW a measure of economy and to a| L To_ W So she came paek. She played retirement deduction of 3% per| in a few pictures in-the east in cent; optional branches, aero- |me ! a Mttle stock, 4 nautical, agricultural, civil, con- Largest Enro nt Expect & i in one flop play in ARE jAI |- ED IN struction, electrical, heating and . Hollywood. - 8 in n- nght ed — Students from nenycomefles ;new:‘:};e:on anSeoc_ ventilating, highway, mechanical, ‘All Parts of U. S, casional. bit in-other: pictures, but mining, radlo, struwctural, tele- Made by the PARKER PEN CO. to sell D" ISEELERERE NARGOTIC WAR Plus Four Fascmaimg ‘Short SubJects (Farthest North Collegian) | Helen Mitehell, in whose produc-| ] Photogrammetrist, $2,600 a year, for a great DEAL MORE than the Probably the greatest year in tion, “Waffles,” Monaei has second o Gl less a deduction of not to exceed the history of the Alaska Agricul- lead to Sari Maritza. Parts. in 15 per cent as a measure of econ- PRICE WE ARE ASKING. - = tural College and School of Mines other Mitehell pictures are prom- ISTANBUL, Sept. 13. — Since|omy and to a retirement deduc-! 4 will begin with registration, Sep- ised her. - She -is now dependent|Mustafa Kemal said ‘“‘Stop it!")tion of 3% per cent. ‘War Depart- tember 15. Classes will w‘m onlon her picture earnings, for the|to the contraband traffic in nar- | ment. | Where the BIG Hits. Play Monday, September 18. Drsaric %o Sbar ol RN ko - drie W D DT AT I L & rangement with her father. police have been so active that in Junior Forester, 2,- "llllllllllllll|||||||||||||||IIIIIII|||||Illllllll||||||||Illllllllll||||||||I||||||||||||l|||" e e ot and in.| The odd part of Monaeis story|two weeks 200 arrests were made|600 a yesr, Junior Range Exam- quiries have been received. Cata- |15 its dieproof of the popular no-|in Istanbul alone. {iner, $2000 to 2800 a Jear, less) ] U N EAU DR UG CO. tion that an entre to upper cin-| Smugglers of opium, heroin and|a deduction of not to exceed 15| ema circles is the open door to|harshish and clandestine manu-|per cent as a measure of economy fame, Through social connections| facturers of these drugs, which|and to a retirement deduction of “The Corner Dr“g Store”’ she is acquainted with many of|a new law has made a state|3% per cent, Forest Service, De-‘ the screen's most noted figures,| monopoly -in Turkey, are bemglmrtment of Agriculture. | but that has mot hKelped her any|rounded up and imprisoned dur-! Full information may be obtain- | logues have been mailed out by the score to prospective students. Already several new students have arrived on the campus, and it may be necessary to devise R Sk uip BOY SAVED BY SPEND WINTER . SOUTH i e o o e ns| PLANEy RADIO, additional plans to aecommodate % band is Director of Experimental F e lsoLx\:?iem‘; when the dormitors in getting movie Jobs. ing the kamalist erusade agninsc\ed from the Secretary of the Unit- Stations and professor at the Al- i ies are full & ‘“You can’t go to your ftiendsfthe drug evil 'ed States Civil Service Board of | peee—eeu aska Agricultural College and ! s MW For Increase and ask them to give you a part” Like all other reforms launched‘ Examiners, at 211 Federal Build-| School* of - Mines, * in - Fairbanks, t si s Steamship | She '88¥s. « “Besides, most péoplé| by the Gazi, this one, to0, js be- ing in this city. J C h G passed through Juneau on the 3 com:;ro; ::; the Al:nka Rauroag think that a girl who doesn’t really | ing conducted with speed and in—} ———,——— uneau a’s rocery Yukon on her way south. She 1s (Seattle Times) are jointly providing transporta- need the money is om"y Tooking | flexible determination ELKS ATTENTION CASH AND CARRY accompanied by her son Larry and tiom-pates 40 sindents, many exd| Jor:WnriliTeom plebures. TR e Meeting tonight at 7:30. adv. Corner Second and Seward Mrs. Howard Thompson, whose| ‘Toddling uncertamnly as he|tolling letters have been received kst Ao thouye. a0 HHoRy -4 ATARUISENIA 8P T AR A woud) R Free Delivery Phone 58 ' husband is fu charge of the U. S.| walked for the fist time in a|because the lowered transporta- wood's “poor little rich gicl products betore you.. | oud papers av mr nmpm s S G SN S, WD b i ": Weather Bureau office in Fair-| month, 5-year-old David Loof, who » banks. owes his life to the skill of a Se- The party plans to go to Ver-|attle amateur wireless operator and mont for a visit and spend some|the daring of an Alaskan air- time at the Century of Progress|plane pilot, played today on the v Exposition ' in Chicago before re-|lawn of his parents’ Whidby Is- turning to the Pacific Coast. Mrs.|land home. . Gasser expects to put her son in| David was danhgerously ill early school in Hollywood, California,|in the morning of August 3 when some time in November and they| Ed Stevens, the radio operator, will remain there during the win-|915 13th Avenue N., heard of his ter. plight from the operator at Ali- Mrs. Thompson, who used to live | tak, on Lazy. Bay, Kodiak Island. in Juneau, visited with a number | Noting the child’s symptoms from - of her former friends while the|the Alaskan operator's message, steamer was in-port. Stevens - asked Dr. A. H. Seering for a diagnosis, learned the case was one of peritonitis due to ap- pendicitis and relayed a request for an .airplane to they Army wire- less station at - Anchorage. | Thousand Mile 3rip The plane left at once with tion rates are enabling more: stu< dents to attend the Alaska Col~ lege. Another reduction on student expenses was put into effect last spring . with student board at the dormitories decreased from $45.00 to $40.00 per month. This will make a saving of from $40.00 to $50.00 'per year to; the collegiate pocketbook. Increased optimism toward the depression abatement is encourag- ing educational possibilities among high school graduates !or further work here. Curricula: Besides ,new . bullding merave- ments on the campus, a critically selected teaching staff, the num- ber and practicability of courses offered have induced young Alas+ kans -to take advantage of the opportunities offered. The College Special EVENING TN PARIS - Silo k Pilot Harry Blum, who made the v B Llp Shd‘ L | thousand mile journey of mercy ;‘;mt;;!eies’r:rfixor;he,wficn needs - Perfumes ' § | through dense fogs and blinding [0S P L oenes approps rains to bring Dayvid to the An- chorage hospital on the afternoom of Saturday, August 6. after be- {ing forced down by a storm on a barren island for an entire day. With the boy was his mother; { Mrs. Henry Loof, and Dr. A._ 8. ‘Walkowski, who operated after ithe lad’s appendix had been rup- tured for ten days. ‘Today the family was divided. | Mrs. Loof and David, after arriv- ing.. in Seattle. Friday. morning on the Alaska Steamship Company 11mer Aleutian, were on ‘Whidby Island for David’s forthceming “rest cure” prior to a second op- eration doctors say ‘will be neces- 'sary. in riation cut no courses will be dropped from the college curricula. Regular four-year courses are of- fered in agriculture, arts and det- ters, business administration, civil engineering, geology and .mining, and metallurgy. Short courses are given in mining and home ec- onomics. Largest Graduating Class The largest Senior Class in. the history. of the: College is expected to be graduated in May. | Both men and women will leave the colloge mext..spring with divers branches of majors, to teke ad- vantage of Alaska’s apportunities. Individual ‘Advantages Because of, the soderstely wsmall size of the college, professors and instruetors come to know the stu- dents . personally -and the scope of edncation is Widened becayse & great deal of individual help end interest not found in larger institutions may be received by « , Face, Rowder ,‘; $1:10 ' 3k Butler Mauro Father Is North The father, a former Bureau of Fisheries - warden is - on *Kodiak with David’s 3-year-old brother, " A J. Of Donnie. 4 “He’s the bravest boy you e'va saw,” the mother said of David. “He declares he. enjoyed his air- plane trip very much—~although he | SRS (T s 1n atudent was half-conscious. throughout it. Jeadership and responsibility are seldom found elsewhere. Athletic Facilities 4 College and Fairbanks are sur- rounded by numerous playground facillties. Besides nature’s advant- ages of hunting, fishing, dog- ! stayed with. her sister-in-law, Mrs. H, W. Loof, 5517 33rd Ave, N. E. 1 : mushing, skating, skiing, 0% hik- v T. H.'Bond, Mississippl delta|ipg, sports exuberant on the cam- ? 2 mwnphmdmwmnmmmmumu.w.m- - ¥ 3 - 3 ¢ ipg, wrestling, tennis, tumbling, 4 - - hockey and .minar, activities. ——————— LARRY PARKS RETURNS TO WRANGELL ON NOKTHLAND Chestexfield ‘ the cigarette ‘that’s MILDER €. . . . lthe cigarette that TASTES BETTER

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