The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 16, 1933, Page 3

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THE TONITE and TUESDAY - FIVE GOMING HERE TO MAKE FUTURE HOME - Ex-Army Man and Famlly Leave South to “Get Out of Depression” A party of five persons are in | Ketchikan from the south today on the Yacht Liota, registered from Olympia, on their way north to “get out of the depression,” says the Ketchikan Chronicle of October 12. Mr. and ‘Mrs. A. F. Bixby with| their son Gilbert, and their| daughter and son-in-law, H. s‘ Simons, all from Chehalis, Wash- | ington, comprise the group. Mr. Bixby is a retired officer of the United States army, and! Mg ord i CAPITOL | W here the BIG Hits Play | during a period of eight years! that he was stationed at Chilkoot Barracks formed a liking for the Territory. Now, since his retire- ment, circumstances have allowed him and his family to come north to settle. They intend to make their home in Juneau. The Liota is a cruiser-type yachc about 55 feet in length, pow-| |ered with two 100-horsepower motors and is equipped to prov1d= living quarters for the entire fam- ily which also serves as the crew. | The trip from fhe south was made in easy stages, the party stopping over at whatever places suited their | fancy. —_— MR. AND MRS. C. J. ROGERS RETURN SOUTH ON LOUISE MY ‘and-“Mrs. C J. Rogers, who have been visiting Mr. Rogers’ par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Rogers, in Skagway, are on their way back to their home in Seattle | aboard the Princess Louise. Mr. iRn“rs is purchasing agent for the | White Pass and Yukon Route in Seattle. DANCE WITH Pioneers of Alaska THE SEWARD’S DAY OCTOBER 18 - ELKS HALL ;\dmission——dluples;%i 00. “Should auld acquaintance be forgot - UNITED FOOD o. . | CASH GROCERS A /1 Phone 16 "We Deliver ""Meats—Phone 16 your problems the day Mr. Knox at the Piano Lunches, Sandwiches, Ice Cream, Coffee and Beer PLEASE REMEMBER erican dance every Tuesday—Come and have a good time. & oL B Ak A0 bt 6 MUSIC EVERY NIGHT AT CAPITAL BALL ROOM—Co your mind rest . . . you will sp CAPITAL BEER PARLORS e and Tet faster on after: — Scandinavian-Am- ot - - “RED DUST" IS DRAMATIC FILM Clatk- Gable, :Jean Harlow Have Fine Support in Tropical Feature Show brutal, The fever-bound, dan- i gerous, but withal glamorous plan- tation in Indo-China is revealed in all its dramatic perspective in “Red Dust,” which opened at the Capital Theatre yesterday after- noon as a co-starring vehicle for Clark Gable and Jean Harlow. Apparently no effort was spared to bring the Wilson Collison stage hit to the screen with all its orig- inal power. This picture has just about “everything,” from sizzling love scenes between Gable and the seductive Miss Harlow, to intense- |1y exciting situations in which the | entire cast is involved. Shots of terrific jungle sforms and hurri- canes that sweep through the lit- | tle known locale of the story pro- | vide many breath-taking thrills. { Picture Perfectly Cast The cast of the picture is well chosen. Gable offers a brilliant { performance as the brutalized plan- tation overseer who repulses a girl jof his own sort when a French engineer brings his beautiful young wife to the ffopics. Miss Harlow is splendid as the woman of easy | virtue who makes regular trips up the river from Saigon, eventually | finds the man she really wants to settle down with, and then has to put up a terrific fight for ‘him. Mary Astor plays the role of the unfaithful wife in an affair with Gable. The part offers many dramatic opportunities and Miss | Astor takes advantage of them all. | George Raymond as the young husband handles a difficult part ;deftly Donald Crisp and Tully { Marshall deliver convincing per- formances in minor roles and For- | rester Harvey provides comedy Te- | lief with his “Limey” English wise | eracks. Victor Fleming again proves his | ability as a director in providing an excellent follow-up on his film- \ing of “The Wet Parade.” All of the directorial touches were in- | telligently placed to keept he course |of the drama moving swiftly. \TEXAS COWBOY IS AT ROADHOUSE TONIGHT Owing to the late arrival of the {steamer Alaska, L. L. Shaw, the | silver-toned Texas Cowhoy and his l(i;un,ar has been persuaded to make one more appearance here and this will be at the Salmon Creek Road- Ihouse tonight. Assisting Shaw will be Old Man Phillips &nd his or- {chestra. Shaw leaves on the Alaska |!or Fairbanks to fill an engage- {ment there. IR WILLIAM NICHOL IN | HOSPITAL FOR CARE |, willlam Nichol, member of the crew of the United States Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa, entered St. Ann’s Hospital this morning to receive medical care. | .- U. TUCHER LEAVES HOSPITAL U. Tucher, who entered St. Ann's Hospual for medical care on Sat- ‘urday afternoon, left the hospital , this morning. e ||l Daily Empire Wany Ads Pay SUMMONS In the United States Commission- | er's Court for Juneau Precinct, Division Number One, District of Alaska, {JUNEAU - YOUNG HARDWARE | COMPANY, a corporation, Plain- tiff, vs. E. A. DE WITT, De- fendant. The President of the United States of America, to the ‘above defendant, Greeting: | You are nereoy requested fo 8p- pear in the United Btatés Commis- sloper’s Court for Juneau Precinct, Division Number One, District of A}asku at Juneau, Alaska, within thIrty days after the 30th day of October 1933, in case this summons is_ gubllshed or within jnfty days after the date of its service upon you, in case this summons is served upon. you personally, and answer thevcompla.mt of the aboye named pm‘.{nuft on file in the said court {in,_the above entitled action. “The said plaintitf in said action’ demands the following relief: Judg- ment in the sum of $2046, the contract price of hardware goods sold and delivered you by plaintiff, terest thereon at 8% from Aug- ust B, 1932, costs and disbursements of the action, and a reasonable attorney’s fee; in which action a debt owning you from Mae Kilroy, of Juneau, Alaska, amounting to’ $67.00, has been attached. And in the event you fail to so appear and answer, the plaintifi will take judgment against you for, want thereof, and will apply to tHe court for the relief demanded in his complaint and as herein- above stated. Witness, the Honorable J. F. Mullen, Judge of said Court, and Seal of said Court hereunto affixed, on this Tth day of October, (Bea J. F. MULLEN, United States Commissioner and ex-officio Justice of the Peace. ATTHECAPITOL officers from the country’s air ACROSS Solution of Saturday’s Puzzle 7. Mingling | bases, 1. Small rug 8. Agreement of | g 7 - 4. Be in error final sound | (OFFICIAL PUBLICATION) (T 9. Hail (Bank With Branches) motion of a 10. Know: | Report of the Financial Condition vehicle 11. Super of the 12. Second note ending gL Quiooy 17. Roofing mate- BANK OF ALASKA, 19 HeO bR rial ‘Iucated at Skagway, Territory of 14. Blographles 19 “"ai;‘:' study | Alaska, at the ¢lose of business on . Faiut 22. Footlike part the 6th day of October, 1933 16. Diminution it | ) "y : 18. Kind of tree - Dig s | RESOURCES 20. Tlé‘l;:l":n Brios Loans and discounts ....$ 71,746.54 21. Suitable or |Loans on real estate 17,655.00 roper |Overdrafts ... NONE 22. Be | 3 leolg'f.;'éz';:f(':;, |United States bonds . Intimidate | owned 11,650.00. | 26. More. flis~ | ,650.4 _courteous Somoun |Other bonds and wnr- n what wa; o e Twwint way. .| THBIE S O 99,280.00 tains y | Banking hause, furniture a. Breathea 41 Clty in Por- Boorly | and fixtures 28,500.00 T Shen s k. Partfoing fo An;rac::st Due from banks and cash . Inn the largest N 34, Sound In_the Gontinent 3 Feminine gitle | .on hand: .. 55,737.85 %;'at' T :114 granlformcd § “(:r“.dar ss {Checks on other banks . Cover i 5. oy ) i n?u:lng 3 M r%t. I g and other cash items.. 316.61 3¢ Sucted tmage 4 Guido's nign- & Acdbr Danish money (Capital ‘assigned to . vision an it te . 2 ece ECOT { automobile 50. Night before G mbrelia 45, Grow drowsy | branches .. - 50,000.00 highway an event 6. Elonu ionist 46. Yale i pREia s TUS DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 16, 1933. Footprmt for Posterltv PARDLE AL | i CLOSES RUN - AT COLISEUM Dramatic Eazu‘e Picture Stars Mae Clarke in Title Role with Good Support * IL isn't the heavy prison sen- tence that hurts the most, but the steady pounding one is compelled to take from the law and sociaty i alike when released on parole, if we are to believe the Columbia pic= ture, “Parole Girl,” which is presj sented for the last time tonight afi the Coliseum theatre. i3 Written for the scresn by Nof- 3 man Krasna and directed by Eddiz Cling, “Parole Girl” features Mae Clarke in the title role, Ralph Bel= lamy, Marie FPrevost and Hald Hamilton. As Sylvia, a pretty young girl who is innocently un- der the .domination of a slick con- fidence man (Hamilton), Miss Clarke is caught in the act and sent up by the manager of a large depariment store, played by Bel= lamy. She stages a prison fire and then plays heroine extinguishing the blaze while the other inmates stampede in panic. She is reward- | ed with a parole for her “bravery” but once outside the prison walls, Sylvia isn't at all sure the move was a wise one. Things are entirely different now. The “parole girl brand proves a | difficult one to shake. The picture goes on from this polnt to show ! in dramatic, forceful, yet thorough- | ly entertaining fashion just what a girl out on parole is foresd to face. Jean Harlow, platinum blonde of the screen, achieves the great a: nbit’~n of filmdom and records her footprints on the sands of tinie, or, to be more exact, on a slab of concrete which will be placed in the forecourt of the Grauman Theatre in Hollywood. At right, s:d Grauman, origin- ator of the novel “hall of fame.” M.S. ZAPORA IN NORTHWESTERN PORT SUNDAY |IN FROM WEST A FORFEW HOURS EARLY. SIINBAY rious in tone. There are plenty of . The n;:'orship z;mfl o Many Abonrd Steamer on laughs in it, provided mainly by McDgnald, commander an that favorite of years, Marie ypre. son, purser, arrived at the Juneau | Way South .from_ West- ward, Interior Districts vost, and Ferdinand Gottschalk, ‘Commercial dock at 5:30 o'clock | veteran character portrayer from Sunday morning with passengers| the Ilegitimate stage. There are and general cargo. At 11 ocls"k‘ With ¢ = e he Zapora left for| wenty-four passengers for thrills, too—notably a raging fire in the morning tl ap ; | Sithodh, G T inse HH Yo e 2 hagof and the south. in the women's workshop of the Douglas, QUICEARY g hi ‘wuth from the Westward and In- Arriving here on the mol penitentiary. | Eddie Cline, who mgde “So This were: from Ketchikan, J. J. Me- 106:1::1‘ dlstélcts, Lgc sfieamir r(l}olrm. Is Africa!” starring Wheeler and herin, E. H. Clifford: from Kla-|Western, Capt. Charles A. ass- cock, commander, and Joseph | Large, purser, docked here at 1 | o'clock Sunday morning and sailed Those who ook passage on m}‘fro]m khere for the south at 3:30 { -] % i o'clock. | Zapora. were, for Klsaewoc:(, I‘g"fil Arriving here on the Northwest- g:;:";"' and for Seattle, Dan .., gere Mr. and Mrs. B. H Par-| —————— ESTEBETH IN Girl" wock, R. J. Peratovich and wife; from Tenakee, Mr. and Mrs. J. A Berg and Al Axelson. Woolsey, directed ‘Parole from the story by Norman Krasna. Hale Hamilton, Ernest Wood, Sam Godfrey, John Paul Jongs and Lee Phelps complete the cast. ———.———— SALMON BROUGHT IN OVER WEEK-END PURCHASED HERE \L. M. Carrigan, J. W. Gucker, J. ‘H Handrahan, B. F. Heintzleman, Agnes Hammersley, J. B. Johnson, | | Mrs. Mervin, Frank Parrish, Aud- || rey Wilkins, Miss G. Waltonen, Fishing boats bringing in sal- man over the week-end were: the ‘Washington, Capt. Jimmy Martin,, 8,000 pounds; the Sadie, Capt. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Polley, Karl Sandy Stevens, 800 pounds; T-3922 ‘Larmn Lydia Fohn-Hansen, John Capt. Ole Frisbold, 700 pounds; A. F. Ghiglione, R. W. the Fern, Capt. John Lowell Faull 'C.”R. Maynard, W. McAlls-| THIS MORNING brought in 3,000 pounds of salmon ter, Sister Mary Adolphus and as freight and Henry Moy, skip- | twelve steerage | per of the Celtic, shipped in 3,000 Those who left here on the| pounds of salmon on the Estebeth.! | Northwestern were, for Petersburg, ANl of the salmon was purchased On the return from its Weekly ! ;oo Simonsen, Hans Wick, C. V. by the Juneau Cold Storage Com- mp to Sitka and wayports, the’ Brown, A. Abadella, Henry Roden pany. | motorship Estebeth, Capt. Edward ;.4 1 g raBlanc; for Wrangell, | from here were, for Wrangell, ( FRED R. PATRICK ENTERS ‘tnn Mrs. Hilda Edmon, O. Clasonl - 'NORTHLAND IN LAST EVENING ON WAY SOUTH - On the tvay south from Sitka, e motorship Northland, Capt.) sonard Williams, and E. P. Winch, | docked at the Juneau Cold | e wharf last evening at 7| and sailed from the Union dock around midnight. Passengers who took passage R. ovich and R. Ly Wolfe; for ikan, Mrs. Harry Race, Mrs, Savin, Mrs. Joe Waite, Mrs. McCall, W. M. McCall, and Janet Johnson; for Seattle, and Mrs. J. B. Burford, Henry Max M. Stoeckert, Leif Wick, C. C. Karels, Mrs. E. H. Rob- erts and two' children, Patricia and | Benetta Arriving here on the Northland | a were, Mrs. F. L. God- dard, Miss Madge Clunas, Miss Julia Berg, John Kasnikoff, Mrs. Hilda Johnson, Al Tilson and Herb (4 Redman. ' LE GRRL’ RALPH MAE ——————— HOSPITAL, MEDICAL CARE s BELLAMY ' CLARKE Fred R. Patrick, who returned ' last Wednesday morning from a prospecting trip up the Alsek River, with H. S. Graves and Jack Marsh, LAST TIMES TONiGHT on which they encountered many hardships, entered St. Ann’s Hoa-‘ Y E iy pital yesterday for ‘medical care am the result of the exposure Bnd\ - poorly balanced diet, during the Adults 30c Kiddies 10c latter part of the trip. ——————.——— Daily Emprre Want Ads Pay Closing Out! WATCHES JEWELRY AT YOUR OWN PRICES! 1-4 karat Diamonds $ 45 1-2 karat Diamonds $100 NEW YORK JEWELRY STORE \Bach and David Ramsey, purser, | docked here at 6:25 o'clock this | John T. Jackson, Philip S. Smith, —_— mornmg, with mail and passengers.' g nrorrell, B, Barclay and M. A. Gus Lundell, who has been re-| B. Bender was a Juneau- -bound ! Snow: for Seattle, John Olsen, ceiving treatment for a toe smash- passenger from Kimshan Cove and| yopn, " gelevold, Mrs. John Selle- ed while working at the Alaska Jake Rice and Mrs. P. Hopkins vold. William B. Berry, R. S. Beel- ! Juneau Mine a week ago, left St.|from Tenakee, er, H. M. Gustafson, Arne John- Ann's Hospital today. On the outbound trip the Este- () "p @ Slopkin, George Snyder | — - beth is due to leave here at 6 1nd Clyde Brown. 1 Daily Emmre Want Ads Pay o'clock Thursday evening. Daily Cross-word Puzzle ————— — LUNDELL LEAVES HOSPITAL | Aiding the Civilian Conservation forest tracts are 34 regular army | Capital stock patd in Surplus fund |Reserves ... Undivided profits less ex- 7 ’/ - % . flll// _dEEEN LT L] S o Due to branches HIII% T Gt 22,709.32 601.10 88,198.31 72,315.38 Time deposits AA{A i a l/fiIlI%flfifi%mP”W*m Chet. Johnson; for Ketchikan, MHL Corps by making aerial survey of Arthur Kukkonen Lower Front Street Are the many letters praising our worth received from Satisfied Customers! Furs shipped to all ‘parts ‘of ‘the world. YURMAN W ‘ “.. n.zq ... | TOTAL .. $334,886.00 / | United States of America, Terri- | tory of Alaska, Pirst Judicial flflll v B, -%.-.-%% I, H. B. Thornquist, Cachier of iIll i 4 R aNdd V2 7 the above named bank, do solemnly swear that the foregoing statement is true to the best of my knowledge and ‘belief. H. B. THORNQUIST, 7 | & 1% | - Wi, III fillllmem user | P. H. GANTY, Director. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 10th day of chber 1933. | (Notorial Seal) JOSEPH J. F. WARD, United States Commissioner. flflfilll.i.flll. III%HIIW“II Furrier Triangle Bldg. " Juneau Cash Grocery .. CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward . Free Delivery Y Phone 68

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