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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE TUESDAY NOV 21, 1933. J)’ The city awoke to find one 1 leading citizens mur- derca in cold blocd! Beside m lay the bound and gag- ged figure cf his beautiful young wife. She told a story of ceeing her wealthy maic chct down by burglars he had {ried to res! But nothing of value had been taken . . . ncthing had even been dis- turbed! WAS LOVELY MARCIA FERGUSON SHIELDING THE TRUE IDENTITY OF HER HUSBAND'S SLAYERS? with JOAN BLONDELL Vivienne Oshorne Leslie Fenton A FIRST NATIONAL PICTURE v/ Adults 30c tells what yeu want to know abcut the most sensational ¢ crime cf the decade. STARTS TONIGHT COLIZEUM Kiddies 10c DO TELL Says One Duck Is Lost for Beer Consumptlon in Towa Every Two that Are Bagged WASHINGTON, Nov. 21.—A bird in the hand may be worth two in the bush, but W. C. Henderson of the Federal Biological Survey estimates that for every two ducks | bial battleship—12,500,000 gallons— hagged by hunters one is crippled | during the first year of operation‘ | of the Towa beer law. | Pointing out that 15,000,000 ducks | and lost. are counted in the bags of Amer- ican gunners every season, derson says this means that 7.- 500,000 birds each year neither are included in the hunter’s kill nor are allowed to return north to rear young the next season. Prevention of this serious wast- age of a stock of birds growing | Hen- | © WILL DRINK IT Estimated Enough to Float Battleship DES MOINES, Ia.Nov.2l.—lowa revenue officials estimate citizens of the Hawkeye state will consume enough beer to float the prover- During the five months in which the state tax has been levied col- lections recorded by the state treasurer’'s office totaled 366.51. At the rate of 4 cents a gallon, P tax that figure represents 5,684, | 162 gallons consumed to date. To- | tal tax collections for 'the fir: year are expected to excesd $500,- Jow may be partially prevented, 000. Henderson says, if hunters refrain from shooting at long range, from | using shotguns of too small gauge g i Under a new rule, the verdict to be effective, from “flock shoot- |Of a referee in a boxing or wrest- jng” and if they make conscien- tious efforts to recover wounded birds. ——ee——— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay ling match in Missouri is subject 1 by the State Athletic| jon or_its representative. R AR~ SRR R Daily rmme ‘Want Ads Ply No paper label to cut! Nolid to pry loose! . cf) We have perfected the tin to match the perfect Baking Powder. Best of all it now costs you less. IDEAL PAINT SHOP If It's Paint We Have It! PHONE 549 Wendt & Garster UNITED FOOD (CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 Juneau Cash Grocery .. CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery b rrrrrrrrrre Phone 58 $2217,- | COMIC TEAM IS CAUGHT ASLEEP | IN LOVE NEST Slim Summervnlle, ZaSu Pitst, Out All Night by Funny Accident “I build a love nest and make a joint out of it!” Strong words, but never before applied in so innocent and ludi- crous a situation as Slim Sum- merville and ZaSu Pitts find them- selves in “Out All Night,” Uni- ! versal comedy riot showing at the Capitol Theatre for the last times tonight. It seems that two bashful play- ers in the persons of Siim ZaSu had wandered into a ple” bedroom designated as Love Nest” in a department store at about closing time, and were unsuspectingly locked in by the night watchman. They had to stay all night! They were dis- covered next morning by the flab- bergasted department store man- ager and Slim’s doting manager, calmly asleep. ZaSu, even keep- | ing her hat on, had slept on the bed and Slim had sought repose on the floor. And so, to save his reputation, Slim’s mother tearfully decided that he had to marry the ~ girl! This is only | situations in “Out All Night.” picture is a swift amusing predicaments, you one of the hilarious The devastating and their | subsequent too much mother-in-law. Important roles in Summerville and Miss played by Shirley Grey, Hope Crews, Alexander Carr courtship Pitts are Laura and directed by Sam Taylor from: a | Anthony McGuire. | e —— RECORD SET {National Forest Tires st I All-time Low Mark This Year WASHINGTON, Nov. ports received from all national foreign districts by the Unitzd tates Forest Service indicate that there has been a decrease this | year of 60 per cent In the arsa | burned by forest fires and that an all-time low record in fire losses has been hung up. The number of fires was 8 per | cent lower than for the same per- jod last year. The area burned over so far | this vear is 128,000 acres, as com- ared with the five-year average | of 600,000. Favorable 21.—Re- | | | | | | | | | | | weather conditions jlian conservation corps camps are Fallen Next to —adv. Don't neglect your feet. arches corrected. Corns. Brownie's Bnrber Shop succession of | following | the couple through their short but marriage with always' support of Rollo Lloyd, and the picfure was| | story by Tim Whelan and William Adrienne Ames and Bruce Cabot of the films are shown after their marriage in Carisbad, N. M., a Nevada divorce from Stephen Ames, New York broker, Preu Photo) only a few hours after Miss Ames obtained (Associated AUG. BIRRELL ANSWERS LAST CALL, ASLEEP Wellknown —B:Eish Aulhor-il Politician Is Dead— Loved to Fight (Continued irom Page One) '"AUGUSTINE BIRRELL lotte Bronte” ond series of In politics a Liberal, he went to until Parliament in | ACROSS | 1. Pretense | 5. Cola dish 10. Unable to find Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle and good work by hundreds of civ- a volume of essays marked freshness and sparkle. held responsible for the decrease. ter he published his “Life of Cha and, A year in 1887, a se “Obiter Dicta.” 1 88‘3 13, the way 14. Outdoor game 15. Draw forth 16. Notion 17. Masculine name 18. Is furious 19. Implement for dressing the air 20. Cylindrical 22. Genus of the 1 candytuft | 24. Units of | weight 26. Metal 27. Restaurant entertain- ment 30. Communica« tion 34. Embellish 35. Tear apart 387. European 3 Cha cter in ckwick Papers” . Continent . Last name of Columbus's flagship . Terrible | fabric 5. Orderly | 46. Small in- 66. Coral island glosed fortl- 8. W icked | catio 68, Venture 48. flnexpecmdly Narrow parts 50. Heap of bottles 51 Dry nch 38, Smail horse 39, Saltpeter 41 Any Hindu deity 42. Before 43. Cooking con= trivance . Openwork ). Refuse DO 1. Small quarrel 2. Cavity 3. Winglike 4. Pertaining to money 5. Calm 6. City in Okla- homa 7. Carry with difficulty 8. Playing card 9, Wish 10. Having au- thoritative permission 21. 23. where, Daily Cross-word Puzzle . 2. Half: Scent prefix Shoe latchets Lacerated Political dicta- tor . Marked with small par- allel grooves 26. Momentum . Antic . Worship . Having the bones re- moved . Sphere of action . Donor 3. Growing out . Pronoun Peer . Extensions of subscriptions Destroy 44. Uncommon . Narcotic United by fusing heat . Finely divided rock 53. On the ocean 54. One who can- not be be- lieved . Reside Ireland . Depend . Devoured Fabulous bird . Kind or class IV//HI mma) o vy !%fll ] NN/ /Al dENE il JEEN JENEN JNE Adad Aaaas dis il Il/?ll MEEEAE - %/flllflfiulll flflfll.ll%nlllnfl [ 701 1 | in 1900, no less he was defeated he played a tongue than his pen. Back To Parliament In the general election of 1906 was returned to Parliament and appointed to the Cabinet as President of the Board of Educa- tion. He then became responsible for the education bill which was the chief government measurs of the time. It was defeated and Birrell was transferred ear in 1907 to the post of Chief Secre- | tary for Ireland. He succeeded James Bryce, who was appointed Ambassador to Washington. His prestige was wounded at the outset when a bill he introduc- ed for the establishment of an Irish Council was rejected by a Nationalist Convention in Dublin. he of home rule was uppermost, but Birrell viewed the situation with an equanimity that sometimes was marked by flippancy. that there would be no civil war. {but in 1916 the rebellion of “bloody | Easter” occurred, Birrell resigned | in May and two years later retired | from Parliament | Birrell was married twice. ¥ | first wife was Margaret Mirrie jees, who died a year after their wedding in 1878. Ten years later | hé married Mrs, +widow of Lionel Tennyson and daughter of Frederick Locker Lampson, the poet. She died in 11915, Two sons were born to i them. | witn TEXAS RANCHERS la- CUT THEIR DEBTS AFTER PRICE BOOM| BARNHART, Chuck wagons Tex., rolling Nov. into 21— th West are rolling along to money” and other these days. A sudden upward turn in th2 market for sheep, goats, wool and mohair has enabled many ranch- men to pay off 50 per cent of their debtedness in a single year, they report. Wool prices are up 300 per cent. Mohair has risen from 6 to 45 nfs a pound, and there are 3,- 000,000 goats in Texas. ambs have risen from 3 to 4': and 5 | cents a pound. Leading ranchers esti | fall wool clip brin money this season than any ce 1928. The fall's lamb st, most of which is being moved to rail points by truck, is timated at 2,750,000 animals, nging Texas owners about $6.- 000,000. lively tunes mated the P ye har- is GOODY SALE Hospital Guild id Goody mh» Sat- urday, Dec.'2, i irocery. s e Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. gilflllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllHIIlllllllllllIII -| pos From 1911 upwards the question | He felt| Lionel Tennyson, | & T F‘w PLAYERS WED IN NEW MEXICO MYSTERY |:||_M CONTINUITY BY NEWS REPORTER ‘Famous Ferguson Case’ Is Based on Real Exper- iences of Terrett Courtenay “The Famous & First National featu Joan Blondell and an ali-st porter-actor case, which opens a the Coliseum Theatre today. be- came New York's ace newsgather- er in nine } a brief time as | reportorial success g0es. Terrett, known to fellow-re- porters as “Brick,” began his news | paper career in Butte, Mont., as cub reporter on the Butte Miner. | Coming to Columbia University | Terrett could not wait for his de- but immediately sought em- ployment in New York's historic | Park Row. At eighteen he was | given a job on the Tribune re- | write desk. In two years he had | become Assistant Night City Edi- Hor. Terrett then moved over to | the Evening Post transferring to Hw Telegram after two and a haif | years with the Post. His Telegram | job was followed in 1920 by & ition with the Morning World, until that paper became gree, lasting histor; Terrett's nine years saw him covering the Hall-Mills murder | mystery, the Snyder-Gray tragedy, the sinking of the submarine S-4, an r\)m;mfl of racketeering, gang- sters' funerals, the return of Lind- bexgh. the Vestris tragedy and the Red riots at City Hall and Union Square. On the Vestris story he set an all-time el record for turning out copy, writing ten col- umns in 265 minutes. Supporting Joan Blondell in this Terrett written and Lloyd Bacon- directed success, is one of tbe largest “name casts” gathered for |one picture. It includes Tom | Brown, Adrienne Dore, Leslie Fen- | ton, Vivienne Osborne, J. Carroll . Purnell Pratt, Russell Hop- Kenneth Thomson, Grant Mike Donlin and hun- | dreds of others, SRS B 5 NOTICE | ton | Mitchell, Ladies' Guild Rummage Sale The Ladies' Guild solicits dis- carded articles for a rummage sale, Thursday, Nov. 23, in store next to San Francisco Bakery. Packages may be left at Deanery or called for. Telephone 604. —adv. e Daily Empire Wanv Ads Pay. GORDON’S 'l Ladies’ Ready-to- Wear Seward St, near Front | | Texas sheep shipping center, “We're in the, You can’t buy style “off the shelf!” True style isn't stamped to a pat- tern — it’s moulded to confirm to your figure. That's one reason why a hand-tailored suit by me gives hard-to-fit men a style that can't be dup- licated. Custom Tailored Suits as low at $50 SAM The Tailor Lower Front Street IIIiIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIII||IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIllIIIlIIII Slim Summerville " ZaSu Pitts CHANCE TO LAFF! “OUT ALL NIGHT” LAST SHOWING TONIGHT! CAPITOL Nancy Carroll Paul Lukas PREVIEW TONIGHT Annual BAZAAR FRIDAY SATURDAY—(This Week) Nativity Parish Hall BEANO BOOTH—NOVELTY BOOTH—BARGAIN BOOTH—FISH POND—WELL-FILLED HOPE CHEST Four-Piece Orchestra Each Evening—Dancing A GREAT TURKEY DINNER SATURDAY NIGHT $1.00——FROM 5 to 7 Music by Filipino Stringed Orchestra during dinner hour \.'()(‘AL SELECTIONS by Madame Orloff, Dramatic Soprano, formerly with Chicago Civie Opera, and Miss Minnie Morris, Lyric Soprano, star pupil- of Madame Orloff. EVERYONE INVITED and ¢ ADMISSION FREE TICKETS GOING FAST ON THE Turkey and Chicken Dinners DID YOU GET YOURS? 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