The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 1, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE I, 1934. [SOSSUUSS ST TSIDUSPSPIRSP DSBS # © 4+ $ 4 STARTS _.TONIGHT - N N 3 \ s \ . with the slashing low- acket! The truth about 'certain men who « ng to chunge varsny sport into' a major ry . .. who 'send "gallant boys out to fuce hired ihugs of the gnd:ron' For the greotesf football event of the year'see— COILEGE COACH Warner Bros." latest hit, with yeor’ shlggn! Surpvlu Ccu— DICK POWELL, ANN DVORAK PAT O’BRIEN, LYLE; TALBOT and “a ‘score of famu; _gridiron” mml).,.‘...‘.. MATlNEE SATURDAY—2 P. M. Sunday—Wallace Beery in “THE BOWERY” ANDY GUNDERSON 'HOONAH MERCHANT IS ARRIVES HERE WITH CANNERY TENDER |SHORTAGE THAT TOWN ‘The cannery tender S. J. Kane, prominent Hoonah nold, Capt. W. D. Stack med | merchant arrived in Juneau yes- by the New Ensiand Fish Com-|terday afternoon on the purse pany, left last night for the can- ner Rio Grande, Capt. John Sur- nery at Chatham with a load of | | yan, one of the fleet belonging to lumber, oil and other supplies. the Icy Straits Salmon Corpora- Superintendent Andy Gunderson, | tion with headquarters at Hoonah. who came in yesterday on the O.| Mr. Kane reports a serious short- M. Arnold, said that he was just in | age of eggs, butter, potatoes, onions town on business and that he | and other vegetables at Hoonah. He would probably be in again soon.| made purchases yesterday to go out In response to a question as 10| on the Rio Grande today. plans whether or mnot operations were to remain in Juneau awaiting the being held up by the longshore- | arrival of the steamer North Wind. men’s strike, he stated that every- —_—eeeo—— thing is in good shape and that NOTICE if no more boats arrive for two| Tl weeks, the cannery will not suffer.| Durinz my absence, Dr. W. J. B. He spoke as though there was lit-| McAuliffe, will be in charge of tle danger that the plant would not| my practice and office. open wnh the season. adv. DP w. W. COU\ICIL Womer Bros. smc: down‘on the touchs { \ 3 N \ \ \ \ \ ) N ) N ) § § \ ) y ) N ) ) y \ ) 3 3 \ N 3 ) N 3 ) | \ N ) i ) y } h y ) ) ) \ 3 \ i § ) 3 ) 3 \ %! N N N by \ \ ) E 3 N ) N ) ] N \ N y N ) { ) i 3 | \ HERE; REPORTS FOOD | ditions. | pilot, and is cast in every conceiv-| ican do things in real life but never | TITLE ROLE IS TAKENBY STAR FODTBALL MAN Pat O'Brien-at Capitol in ‘College Coach” Once " | Marquette Player | When Warner Bros. cast Pat O'Brien in the title role of “College Cceach,” the biting football picture which comes to the Capitol The- ater tonight, they upset the prov-| erbial apple-cart and one of Hol-, lywood’s seemingly staunchest tra- ually when a motion pcxurc { has a special talent he is as- ed every possi role except the one depicting his forte. wmi Rogers, for instance, is one of the | greatest newspaper columnists in | press history, with his daily story read by millions, yet Rogers has never played a newspaperman’s| part. ,Ben Lyon is a licensed transport | able role except that of an avia- tor. Gary Cooper dr racing cars ) for a hobby, but G never dons f the goggles for the cameras. And | so on down the line of stars \nho% get to do them on the screen. Therefore it was a real surprise to have Pat O'Brien cast as the professional football coach in the| Warner Bros. picture. Few movis | fans know that the Pat O'Brien of screen fame is none other than the Pat O'Brien who a few years back guided Marquette University teams to gridiron victories. His sparkling run for a touchdown through Notre Dame’s outfit in his senior year still remains one of the highlights of Marquette's football history. e i 2 SN Shop 1a Juneam Found Dead Lew Cody, aged 47 years, film star, was found dead in his bedreom in his Beverly Hills home yerterday afternoen ac- cording to an Ascociated Press dicpatch roceived by The Em- pire. Ccuy apparently was a vietim of a heart attack. He entered the movies in 1915 and was alse a stock and vaudeville plam- RESTAURANT,BOARDING| HOUSE OPERTORS TO| MEET SATURDAY NIGHT| Al restaurant and voarding house operators are requested to be predent tomorrow evening at 8 o'- clock in the Council Chambers of| the City Hall for the purpose of! discussing an NRA code and to choose a commission to draw up a suitable one. This is to be the final meeting of restaurant and boarding house operators as the commission ap- pointed tomorrow evening will draw up the code which will be adopted if approved. P Daily Empire Want Ads Pay [ Garden Patc LETTUCE— 9 pounds '.... l | | | sack FRESH EGGS, dozen ONIONS, pound HONEY, DRIED FRUITS, NUTS ORANGES, GRAPEFRUIT FLOWER DAHLIA BLUBS Free Delivery CARDNAL CABS invite you to “COME DOWN?” they guarantee you royal entertainment. @ FINEST MUSIC! BEER CHINESE DISHES LA AR LR LIGHT WINES .Phone 1 for Cardmal Cabs large crisp heads .......... .10c NO. 1 YAKIMA SPUDS, NO. 1 YAKIMA SPUDS, Aodc Sc, and 6¢ PLANTS PHONE 342 tonight and 3 Inches—Highest Tem- perature 71 Degrees May was warmer and drier thanl more than one-tenth of ar according to the monthly)| issued by R. C. Mize, inch, | summary Meteorologist in Charge of the lo- cal United States Weather Bureau station, | The mean temperature was 49.27 15 above the normal. Thel May of record was that with a mean of 542° and| the coldest was that of 1899 with| a mean of 44.3°. The highest tem- perature recorded was 71° on the 22nd and the lowest was 35° on| {or o st the 158 inches and the wettest was month. Measureable precipitation | was recorded on 17 days and the| greatest 24-hour fall was 0.75 inch| on the 17th-28th, There \.ere six, consecutive rainy days at the be-| ginning of the month and five the average, with slightly more than Hollywood Shoe, Shop the average amount of sumhlne,;edly || There were more than the average|chlorcform used for cleaning white v of days with measureable | shoes, { tation, but only seven dumFthel Barton, in the day afternoon ported as out of da though he will rem: hoespital ‘for a day or so to recup- erate, According to witnesses, Lehto en- | T€ after cup of black coffee waiting White Line ambulance, which took Rainfall for Month Under Drinks Chloroform Before Mother-in-Law Yester- day Afternoon ST tionioe of the who alleg- ttempted suicide by drinki in the presence his motk Juneau Restaurar at 4 o'clock, tered the restaurant, sat down, and saying that his wife had not treat- ed him right, form. drank the chloro- Mrs. Barton made him drink cup while for the arrival of the shine. velocity 7.2 miles per hour. The New Mountain Park SANTA BARBARA, Cal.—A re- MAY IS WARMER FRED LEHTO TO NEW ROMANTIC R AND DRIER THAN RECOVER AFTER DRAMA TONIGHT “=reeax=el NORMAL MONTH DEATH ATTEMPT FOR COLISEUM Picture Deals with Possible > only. ' popular story of the same name bv | strangers whose Evil Effects of Too Much Mother Love | “Pilgrimage,” ma m Fox Film, is to be seen at the Coliseum Theatre 1t an adaptation of the Ida A. R. Wylie. Dealing with the innermost emo- | tions of a mother who cannot see son taken from her by the man he loves, the story has been rted as one of the most power- ful of recent screen dramas. It de- tails the reactions of a devoted woman to the romance of two lives are on the verge of ruin through just such selfishness as she herself showed. She has sent her son to his death. But she sees her error in the er- The locale of the film goes from a motion picture. The cast by Henrietta Crosman, veteran of the stage and screen; Heather An- gel, newcomer to American films; Norman Foster and Marion Nixon. Some of filmdom's best-known play | new romantic dra-| today | is al LAST TIME TONIGHT! She Closed Her Heart tolove... and brought bitterness into the lives of those dear to her ..before suffering taught her sympathy | | KR tHw | !tl\.x: of 1884 with a total qi 13.11| maximum velocity ‘was 29 miles per | large one, involving the appear- W octed by Joha im:hvn Three months of thisname | your from the southeast on the | ance of hundreds of extra players. have been drier than the pastjg The featured roles are portrayed | 1 'HEATHER ANGEL and understanding The Triumph ot A Great Love |the 10th. Previous extremes were|him to the hospital for treatment. ror of another woman who is about 80° and 25°,, respectively. The| " ito do the same pitiful service for| b greatest daily range was 30° on| : her own son. | BHE! ETTA CROSMAN the 22nd and the least was 4° on 2nd 5 days with 100 per cent sun ! NRIETTA CRO! . ] The mean relative humidity was the backwoods community in Ar-! he total precipitation was i75|gy percent at 4 a. m., 58 percent kansas to the cosmopolitan atmos- | NORMAN FOSTER inches, or 242 inches below the; 55 { phere of New York and Paris. The | at noon, and 55 percent at 4 p. m. P! normal. The driest May of record | The, prevailing wind direction was | Picture reveals some of the mosi MARIAN NIXON was that of 1905 with & total of { g0 the south and the average |elaborate settings ever achieved for| Story by 1. A. R. Wytie "JONES GORDON | creational forest park is being built around the summit of Figueroa . ers are cast in important roles. P peiiyiled consecutive days, from the 16th to Among these are Lucille La Verne, GiHOST CITY 20th, without a measureable quan-|jookout station 4,500 feet above sea | Charley Grapewin, Robert War- ANY | tity. {level overlooking Santa Ynez valley | wick, Louise Carter, and Betty 600 25e There were 6 clear days, 4 partly and the coast. Giant timber and |Blythe. Others in the cast are Mau- SEATS TIME | cloudy and 21 cloudy days. There \were 2205 hours of sunshine, or| 42 percent of the possible amount,' wild flowers cover the area. - Daily Emplire Want rice Murphy, Hedda Hopper, Fran- ces Ford, Jay Ward and Frances Rxch [Next—“Cnme of Century” Pay ALL AMERICAN BEER FOR FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY HORLUCK'S WHITE AND GOLD BEER, Quarts, EACH . . HORLUCK’S WHITE AND GOLD BEER, Quari" BY THE CASE .. B e e e e S 25¢ .. $2.80 guarts v e PErSET We carry ajl leading brands of beer in pints and BUDWEISER RAINIER SCHLITZ OLYTVIP[[A BLUE RIBBON HORLUCK’S—Dark BALLANTINES HORLUCK'S 6% "+BLATZ * ! RHEINLANDER ACME HORLUCK’S Export HOP GOLD—Light HOP GOLD—Dark ' * BOCK ®ORDER A KEG OF BEER FOR YOUR NEXT PICNIC OR PARTY —— We furnish the pump WESTERN BEER, 6 pints $1.00 EASTERN BEER, 6 pints $1.10 JUST RECEIVED @A FULL STOCK OF SCANDINAVIAN AQUAVIT, ARAK PUNSCH AND SAINT HAYLARD « LIKOR—Both lmp‘rted and Domestic Brands. ; rrborrrrrrrr e JUNEAU LIQUOR CO. PERCY REYNOLDS, I/lmuer TELEPHONE 36 R

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