The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 11, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESD{%Y, OCT. 1 1933 EAST TIME TONIGHT | IMEN. .MUS COLISEUM ihflgdu’élB;’iggs( Entertainment Valiie quELL GROUND AT 'NOME 15 OPTIONED Accormug to latest advices, the Hammon ‘Cénsolidated ‘Goldfields of Nome, took up in August last, the option held on a considerable tract of mining ground, formerly con- trolled by E. E. Powell of New York. Mr. Powell mined in Nome during the early days of that camp. Thi§ ground was optioned to the company early this year and has been thoroughly prospected by drill- ing to ascertain the values con- tained. The fluctuating price of gold with its upward tendency was, it is said, a prime factor in the taking up of the option. On the last sailing for Nome of the steamer Victoria, about October 15, 750 tons of mining equipment and supplies will be shipped north. This consignment consists mostly of up to date thawing equipment intended for use on what is termed the Powell ground, and it is ex- pected that the company's thaw- employment: to: many men, ; . sec000e000 0000 . AT THE ‘IOTELS . S0 o0 ePeevoecoe Gastineau Mr. and Mrs. Frank Curtis, Se- attle; S. J. Stanley, William Sny- der; George Diston, Juneau; Wil- | liam C. Hill, Tererro, N. M.; John S. Severson, Wrangell; George W. Moser, Seattle; H. Morrell, Ketchi- kan; A. W. H. Smith, }vmngen: Herb Dunlop,* Seattle; H. B. Sar- ber, Petersburg; W. M. Gustafson, Seattle; R. D. Beeler, Seattle; W. S. Hulzer. Alaskan Louis Carlson, Hood Bay; lie Orton, Anchorage; monson, Juneau. Zynda William A. Hesse, Juneau; Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Hayden, Annex Creek; Warren S. Harding, Ju- neau; Mrs. E. W. Hoffman, Se- | | attle; F. E. Bannister, Petersburg. Bil- UMBER ing operations next season will givs | Jonas Si-{ Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc. BROADWAY JUST LONESOME ROAD If You Have Money, Love- ly—If You Are Broke, It Is Vicious By JAMES R. STREET Associated Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—Broadway —the most maligned street in the Held Over ‘fof"f?rie More Nzght world—really is just a long, lone- some road where lights blink kind- ly if you have a dollar and leer if you are broke. A razzle-dazzle thing that mur- mers at dawn and roars at mid- night, it sprawls across Manhat- ‘mn without rhythm or reason, { haughty to those who want so, awesome to the timid, kind to strangers who are unafraid and honest. A babel of tourists—women with platinum hair and slinky clothes and funny little friendly dogs— crying babies who should be in bed—maidens who look in win- dows and say “Oh” and “Ah"— Broadway really throbs with all the emotions. They say it is vicious. That's slander. Doormen will spend min- utes giving directions to a strang-| ler. The chances ‘are he camel {thers a stranger, too, and within cral tenight, accerding to ment. production led to final arrangements for the him still is a yearning for the whitewashed elms and the picket fences and the meadow lanes of his home. They say it is hypocrmcal but | it hates sham, for it understands it so well Proi jonal South- erners who saw “yawl” singularly— something they never do in the South—bore it, and Westerners who wear ten-gallon hats and talk about butter and eggs make it laugh. 2 They say it is cold, but it is warm and considerate of decent | folks and a master of the wicked. There is music everywhere—bla- tant, brassy notes from the taxi i dance halls, soft sounds from the restaurants. walks are like bees that swarm when the queen calls, British sail- ors who have traveled the crooked | streets of strange citles—swarthy gentry with rakish caps and smart | shoes — nonchalent strollers with | canes—women whosé eyes are dry {and whose lips are red—mothers !who hold their daughters by the hand and fathers who point out the sights to their sons. | ' The street has the curliques of |a fussy spinster. It is jealous of |its heritage. It is geographically illegitimate, runs from down by the waterfront and kind of slash- |es across town, chiseling territory | from the avenues and stealing corners from the streets. | From Bowling Green, where the | founders of this city once played at bowls, it meanders like a country pike, democratic as Bruns- | wick stew—nondescript as burgoo. | Moses King, who wrote a hand- \book of New York in the mauve bustle and buggy age, said of it: | “There are few loiterers and few pleasure seekers in this part of town.” If he could only see it mow? . ———— MISS ALEXANDER GIVES LUNCHEON FOR MOTHER Miss Jane Alexander entertain- ed at luncheon today in honor of | her mother, Mrs. George F. Alex- The crowds that clog the side-|] on the screen for sev- for the last two times made by the manage- cf this pepular star’s last showings. T Mae West in “She Done Him Wreng,” days at the Capitol, will be seen an anneuncement Repeated requesis for a ecntinuance lemg Gossnpers a Real Gasp < hen Bette Davis’ musician husband went East to fill engagements, Hollywood’s gasping gossipers linked her with every young man who escorted her here and there. Bette made a grand entrance at a big premiere squired by no less than eight of the alleged swains—and that Advises Limit on Grain From Brewers for Feed ‘WOOSTER, Ohio, Oct. brewers’ smothered the goss: connection with nay and grain, advised A. E. Perkins of the dairy dzpartment of Ohio experiment sta- tion here. Wet brewers’ grains most nearly esemble corn silage, Perkins de- 11.—Wet | = grains, wprincinal by-pm-‘clflres, being slightly lower in duct of beer, now being offered | both dry matter and total digesti- to dairy farmers as an additional bl nutrients than silage, but about source of feed, should be limited | fcur times the digestible content to about 25 pounds a day, fed in|of silage. 1. 5. — ACROS>, Snare Make dim ~- Daily Cross-word Puzzle . Bird’s home Rotate rapidly An incarnation 18! J Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle 22, GECIL RHODES IS SHOWN UP, LATEST BOOK ‘Fade-Out” By JCHN SELBY NEW YORK, Oct. 11.—Perhaps | with tongue in cheek, perhaps not, Cecil Rhodes declared that he gave himself 4,000 years when someone asked him how long he| expected to be rememberzd. Yet his name -would be almost| entirely unknown in this country if it were not for the Rhodes scholarships, and there would not be so many of them as remind- ers, had Rhodes and his various lieutenants realized how many states there were in the Union. Sarah, Gertrude Millin’s “Cecil Rhodes” is none the less interest- ing because its subject's fame has faded. Mrs. Millin refrains from condemnatidbn, although the evidence she lists as to his meth- ods is hardly flattering. Through it all she finds him somewhat of a romanticist. He had gone to Africa as a youth whose physicians had given him| up, and he had made a million before he was 20. Things moved fast in Africa. In those days. Then the young man returned to: Englan<i to take as degree at Ox- ford, was bitten by the Empire bug, and turned his unquenchable energies toward making Amca‘ safe for the British. The Jame- son raid crushed him, but he rose again. Then death stopped him. One gathers that death was the only thing that could stop him. “DARK HAZZARD” W. R. Burnett's latest is called| “Dark Hazard.” Dark Hazard be- ing a dog instead of what it sounds | HELD OVE “Dark Hazard” Is Another| ! Publication with Dog | like. Mr. Burnett is out to make the conflict between the free and | easy way of life arfd tile more | restricted attitude seem credible.| He does it, not without a struggl> here and there. Jim is a gambler at heart, pre- ferring horses and roulette to most other ways of losing money. His| wife wants above everything else| security and respectability. ~Jim| is forced into the dog racing game, which he cordially detests until he | sees Dark Hazard. He loses his| heart to the dog, and it is the dog that is the means of bringing the book to a very affecting and well thought-out close. Mr. Burnett's great gift is in appreciating the drama. inherent in the commonplace, and “Dark Hazard” is a good example of it. THESE ALSO Two very curious novels are set- ting sail also: “The Gold Fal- con” and “The Kaiser Goes; the Generals Remain.” The first is an allegorical affair,| the writer of which is not named, although is is hbelieved by a good many to have been Henry Wil- liamson. It is the stery of a man‘s‘ attempt to regain his personal “sunrise” (the book calls it that) | after the spiritual devastation of| | the war, and it contains a good bit | | of excellent writing. | The second is the story of the| | German revolution and its betray- al, told in the formr of a novel oNE, w '\IO Thousands have seen it again and again . ., . dozens of our patrons have seen it twice . . . hundreds of phone calls force us to hold aver this dynamie picture— Positively Last Showing TONIGHT AW IT ONCE SEE IT AGAIN! BUT SHE KNEW WHAT SHE WANTEDH!I Diamond-decked Lon, the Bowe light o’love... mistress of the st where beer was a nickel—and love! had a price too! The sizzling pemnnhty that nude Broadway blush...ia her own brawle ing story of the Bowery's scarlet days. E DONE HIM Am‘t Picture LowELL SHERMAN CAPETO Premew Tonig ht-—l :10 A M WHE‘ELER—WOOLSEY “So This Is Africa” IF YOU W here the BIG Georgia's bright leaf tobacco erop this year brought farmers more ! than $6,000,000 in cash. SUMMONS No. 3516-A !In the District Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Division Num- ber One, at Juneau. MARY F. GORDON, Plaintiff, vs. HERBERT GORDON, Defendant. The President of the United States of America, to the above-named Defendant, Greeting: You are hereby required to ap- pear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Division. within thirty days after the last {publication of this summons, name- within thirty days after Lhev ly, 18th day of October, 1933, in case this summons is published, or with- in forty days after the date of its service upon you personally, and named pigintiff ‘an’file in gheisgid | court in the above-entitled action. The said plaintiff in said action demands the following relief, to- | with: a decree of divorce upon the ground of non-support and deser- tion. And in the event you fail to so appear and answer, the plaintiff will take judgment against you for want thereof, and will apply to the court for the relief demanded in her complaint and as herein- above stated. WITNESS, The Honorable George F. Alexander, Judge of said Court, and the Seal of said Court here- unto affixed, on this 27th day of September, 1933. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, (Seal) Clerk. Date of order of publication, Sep- tember 27, 1033 First publication, Sept. 27, 1933, Pajama Sets Béught Before the RAISE! | But Theodore Plivier, the author, | declares that all the facts and most | of the dialog are historically ac- | curate, so that the hook actually’ ns a colorful and swiftly moving | history. Those who are watching the re- peal movement may find another | straw in the wind from the hook shelves. It is Philipr M. Wag- | ner's “American Wines and How To Make Them,” a sort of manual | for the amateur. H ————— |ALEX WRYTE AND §ON | RETURN NOBTH TUESDAY of Vishnu 25. Snake . Rendered fat of swine Goddess of the moon and the hunt . Sprites Jest 3 Al\\ays contr. 21 Guide the helm ' strenth to N gfi\:‘\;};’ at neral fight 3 r orse 26, Religious poem EIN] IEIK] arice . Onencapabe Stair of self- . Lubricate support 5. Starting oint 32. Cripples of Atetic ander and her sister, Miss Lillian Alexander, who arrived last evening on the steamer Yukon. George, twelve-year-old son of Judge and Mrs. George F. Alex- ander accompanied his mother and sister north and will enter the Juneau Public Schools soon. ——————— All of the steer calves used in feeding tests at Iowa State College the last year paid for their feed and returned profit margins. D S S S U. 8. Department of Agriculture, Bureau of Public Roads, October 6, 1088. Sealed bids will be received at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, 419 Federal & Territorial Bldg., Juneau, Alaska, until 9 o’clock 10. Reach across answer the complaint of the above- : Last publication, Oct. 18, 1933. . Natural covers ing ‘of the hea 28, 18, Bring into line . Gaelic . Not clear . English river . Precipitous Regular s Price NOW $3.50—Hand Embroidery Silk and Rayon ... L e $2. $3.50—Hand Embroidery Silk and Pongee, hand made $7.50—Crepe Pajama Sets, hand stenciled, fast color SCANDINAVIAN AMERICAN . DANCE xpediti 312. Scotch river .. \tly uu\( al g . Precious stone 50. Robe . Prayers Diminished Mistake Archaeological 43. Cancel gor chests for More orderly . VHml'n‘ or sacred . Contend turning utensils . By birth about 5. Object of de- . Item of . Occasional: votion property . Ibsen char- . Removed tc an acter 2 Bombastic talk . Assistant N l'orm upell- rove . Ny acmruP anim; Alex Whyte returned on the } | steamer Yukon last evening accom- | Scote cotch panied by his son, Charles Whyte, | $8.50—Crepe Pajama coats REPLACED AT broidery, with long er shert ....................... 4---$6.. THESE GARMENTS CANNOT BE Sets, hand em- THESE PRICES REDUCED TO Op site | L & 5 R R e ALL LIGHT COLORED PARTY DRESSES Values up to $16.50 A. M. on November 16, 1933, for 5.606 miles of clearing and grubbing an_the Mitkof Highway, Mountain Point-Falls Creek Section, in the ‘National Forest, First Judieial Division, Territory of Al aska, involving 375 acres clearing and 24.0 acres grubbing. The atten- tion of the bidder is directed to the speefal pravlsions covering sublet- ting-or assigning the contract, min- fmum wage rates and alternate bid to be submitted in case he may de- |sire. to offer and foreign articles, mhfl-fll or supplies. Where plans ‘and speci!lcauons are requested, a of $10.00 will be required (to ln.surc their return within thirty |days after opening of bids. Checks shall be made payable to Bureau |af” Publie Roads, Juneau, Alaska. Plans and specifications may be examined at the Bureau of Public |Rogds, Federal & Territorial Bldg,, Juneau, Alaska; Forest Service, Commercial Bldg., Ketchikan, Al- aska; Associated General Comfract- ors, Multnomah Hotel, Portland, Arcade Bldg i attle, Washington; Pacific Builder | & - Engineer, Seattle, Washington !and, Western Public Works: Z BautLottoa. i'l ;l“l::rn f bee: . Homes of s 60. Roused from sleep 64. Bolemn form of does . Test . Biblical region . Deposits . Places to sit . Qovered with condensed moisture DOWN 1. Demonstra- tive pronoun inferior 8. Silkwarm position Small quarrel 61. Cattle . Sufficients . And.nt Gruk cl . Mark of a blow Enter on a - Nelites 5 Surpassing 3 On fln ocean Doet. . Assert to be untrug 5. Owns 67. Elevated rail- ways: collog dEEEEERT 4 SII// 27| | 21 1] | Ii/fillfll// fll “1T Ve V7 = fl/%fl JdNER 4N ANEE aEEEN who has been reéceiving treatment | for tuberculosis at the Riverton Sanitarium near Sesttle for the| last several months. His condition |1s greatly improved. Production of ry butter last year was the largest on record, totaling '1,694,132,000 pounds. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” EXCLUSIVELY TONIGHT MANDARIN BALL ROOM ———featuring—— '"HARRY KRANE (Accordion) and Jimmy Steele’s “REVELERS” Scandinavian Dance Music American Dance Music Men, 50¢ Ladies, 25¢ 9:30 till 1 HI-LINE SYSTEM Groceries—Produce—"resh and Smoked Meats Front Streét, opposite Harris Hardware' Co. CASH AND CARRY

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