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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, JULY 5, 1934. 3 POSITIVELY LAST TIME TONIGHT | COME ALONG! Sell your troubles for a 200 BEAUTIES CHOSEN as you go . . FLYING ™S DOWN ~RIO The greatest sky spectacle ever born to rhythm! e Wit 3 DOLORES DEL RIO | GENE RAYMOND /RAUL ROULIEN ! GINGER ROGERS FRED ASTAIRE Music by VINCENT YOUMANS RKO RADIO Piclvre Lyries by Edward Eliscu and Gus Kahn Directed by Thornton Freeland. . .\ . MERIAN C. COOPER. executive pro- ducer. Lowis Brock, asseciate procducst, ) CAPITOL PREVIEW TONIGHT JOHN BARRYMORE LIONEL BARRYMORE BOB MONTGOMERY —in— “NIGHT FLIGHT” fast, lunch or dinner— you'll find at Bailey’s a great variety of tasty dishes. You'll like our special business men’s lunch. BAILEY’S ! BEER-If Desired “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Juneau’s Own Store” o ) | THE MISSY SHOP Specializing in HOSIERY, LINGERIE, HOUSE DRESSES and accessories at moderate I ' | | | | UNIVERSAL | Bond and Mortgage Valentine Bldg. Investment Service | ALASKA WELDERS J. R. SILVA, Manager ‘ I Possible to Weld We Can Do It Willoughby, Near Femmer Dock PHONE 441 Mining Locativn Notices at Em- pire affice. > ) s = CURRENT FILM SHOWS CHORUS DANCING ALOFT Flying Down to Rio’ with Dolores Del Rio, Closes Tonight at Capitol “Flying Dd\n to Rm RKO-Ra- dio Pictures’ musical extravangaza, closing tonight at the Capitol| Theatre, with its flying chorines,| its soaring pianos, its marimbolas and its chocalhos, literally knocks the spots .off anything hitherto produced under the title of “mu- ( sical production.” ' Handsome Gene Raymond takes his American jazz band to Rio de | Janeiro to open a show in a new hotel. He falls in love with Do- lores Del Rio, daughter of the hotel owner, and a hot rivalry de- velopes between Raymond and Raul Roulien, a situation compli- tated by the fact that Roulien has been engaged to Del Rio for| years. ‘When the ‘“heavies,” a syndicate of Greek gamblers, try to spoil the | deal and ruin Dolores’ dad by get- ting city officials to prohibit MANY EVENTS RUN OFF BY BOYS, GIRLS Children’s gporls at Ball, ark in Morning Draw Good Sized Crowd Fourth of July sport really be- gan for the children of Juneau at 11 o'clock yvesterday forenoon when 36 separate races were run off at the baseball park with cash. prizes for first, second and third win- ners. Willlam Franks and Harry Sabin acted as starters; William Garster, official. judge and M, S. Sides was paymaster, A big crowd |was on hand to watch the races and much fun and merriment re- sulted from the sack, three-legged and egg contests. Races—Winners Races run and the winners were as follows: 50-yard dash, boys 15 years and under; Roy Smith, Billy Alexander, Henry Behrendts. 50-yard dash, girls, 15 years and under, Pat Harland, Beatrice ( Primavera, Louise Nielsen. 50-yard dash, boys 14 years and ! Gene's show, that young man foils | them all by taking his band and| his 200 beauties aloft. ! In full view of the thousands of awed Brazilians, girls sing and| dance on the wings of airplanes,| adagio dancers- hurl their fair partners from one plane to another | and ballet dancers trip the light| fantastic while fluttering earth- ward in parachutes. KIDDIES FORM LARGEST PART FOURTH PARADE Prizes Are Awarded for Various Turnouts, Singles and Also Doubles The Boy Scouts, as Color Guards, | led off the Fourth of July parade yesterday, forming at the City Dock and proceeding up Front| Street to Main Street, to Second, ! to Franklin, to Front, to Seward, and up Seward to the Federal and Territorial Building. Units of the parade were the Boy Scouts, the Juneau City Band |of 14 musicians, costumed children, | doll buggy section, wagons, girls’ | bicycles, boys’ bicycles, Girl Sce out;. Girls' Loyal Club, part of the hugle | and drum corps, one float and both | trucks of the fire department. | When the parade reached the | Pederal Building, prizes were awarded to the participants as follows: ‘ Parade Awards Best decorated car, $10 to Sam Fendon; most appropriate costume‘ for boys, $2 to Hally Rice, and $1 | to Johnny Douglas. | Most appropriate costume for girls, $2 to Beverly Leivers, and| |$1 to John Jorgensen; best sus-! tained character for boys, $2 to | James Goenett, and $1 to Minard | Mills, Jr.; best sustained character | for girls, $2 to Betty Jane Mills, and $1 to Florence Hdwkesworth. Children’s floats, $2 to Jimmy and Jack Glasse, and $1 to Marian | Skinner and Miss McAuliffe. Best decorated boys' bicycle, $2 | to David William Klaich, and $1 to | Byron Personeus. Best decorated girls bicycle, $2 to Ruth Allen, and $1 to Mary Elizabeth Rice; best decorated doll| {cartibge, $2 to Lois Allen and $1 |to Susan Jane Helgesen. 1 | Best' decorated wagon, $2 to Dean' Allen, and $1 to Betty Ellen | Nordling. Best turnout to any boys’ organ- ! | ization, $5 to the Boy Scouts, and | $5 to the Bugle and Drum Corps. | Best turnout of any girls’ organ-| ilmlion. $10 to the Girls’ Loyal Club. | ——e——— A LETTER TO MY FRIENDS | Not in the hour of sorrow nor with the pangs of anguish econ- |trolling my sense, I truly offer thanks to you who have contribut- ed a thought of kindness in re- membrance of one who has untir- ingly and unselfishly given her life to others. You have paid homage to a character and personaltiy endowed with a simple philosophy taught only by example. She fullfilled her mission in this great scheme of things by radiat- ing that something, understood only by those whose minds are.receptive to constructive things of, life. She was one of the sweetest products of God's own hand and it was my privilege to' share her companionship to the end. She loved the flowers—she loved | all Nature—she hunted the birds | without a gun, and they seemed to sense her language and understand her kindness of heart. Now she has passed beyond. She livesyonly in memory and my last tribute to this dear girl who made me what I am, she done her best, she lived her life in its fullness, she was happy and glad to live, but not afraid to die. Once again accept my thanks. —adv. GEO. L. BARTON. .- Daily Emplre Wamt Ads Pay e s junder, Barbara MacSpadden, under, Roy Smith, Billy Alexander, | Henry Behrendts. 50-yard dash, girls, 14 years and under, Beatrice Primavera, Alice MacSpadden, Ada Mangsol. 50-yard dash, boys 13 years and ! under, Roy Willard, Buddy Brown, Charlie Miller. Girls Dash Along 50-yard dash, girls 13 years and under, Bernice Waugh, Alice Mac- | Spadden, Olga Paul. 50-yard dash, boys 12 years and under, Roy Willard, Keith Reischl, Jack McDaniel. 50-yard dash, firls 12 years and under, Beatrice Waugh, Martha Harris, Muriel Wallstedt. 45-yard dash, boys 11 years and under, Charlie Miller, Austin Brown, Irvine Lowell. 45-yard dash, girls 11 years and Mar- tha Harris, and Bonny Coldwell and Iris Morris tied for third place. 40-yard dash, boys 10 years and j under, Billy Rice, Roy Brown and Malcolm Faukner -and Warren Haines tied for third place. 40-yard dash, girls 10 years and under, Lois MacSpadden, Fields, Helen Miller. Boys In Race 35-yard dash, boys 9 years and under, Roy Brown, Charles Fel- lows, Warren Haines. 35-yard dash, girls 9 years and under, Lois MacSpadden, Jane Clarito, Verna May Gruber. 30-yard dash, boys 8 years and ,under, John Fluberson, Wallen Stolpe, Evonne Scot 30-yard dash, g:r]s 8 years and under, Emma Nielsen, Betty Ellen Nordling, Sophie Harris. 25-yard dash, boys 7 years and under, Donald Daigler, John Flu- berson, Wallen Stolpe. 25-yard dash, girls 7 years and | under, Milly Miller, Angeline Sav- ovich, Alice Powers, Six-Year Olds 25-yard dash, under, Jimmy McCloskey, Georgie Paul, John Dapcevich, 25-yard dash, girls 6 years and under, Patricia Marten, Milly Mil-| ler, Natalie Bailey. 20-yard dash, boys 5 years and under, Tommy Fukuyama, Terence Magorty, Edwin Fohnhansen. 20-yard dash, girls 5 years and under, Bernice Harris, Natalie Bailey, Doris Mae Clark. 20-yard dash, boys 4 years and under, Johnny Harris, Rhodes, Dustin John Irvin. 20-yard dash, girls 4 years and under, Anna Nielsen, Marilyn Jew- ett, Tony MacSpadden. Feature Races Boys' sack race, 30 yards, 16 years and under, Roy Willard, By- ron Personeus, Billy Lowe. Boys' sack race, 25 yards, 13 years and under, Albert Brown, Austin Brown, Lyman Snow. Boys' sack race, 25 yards, 11 years and under, Bob Firby, Eddle Nelson, Chester Brown. Boys’ sack race, 20 yards, 9 years and under, Perry Tonsgard, Charles Fellows, George Osborn. Boys' sack race, 20 yards, 7 years and under, Donald Morris, George Tonsgard, George Osborn. Egg Races Hazel| Buddy | | boys 6 yars and | | Girls’ egg race, 30 yards, 15 years ' and under, Vivian Gruber, Barbara MacSpadden, Ruth Allen, Girls’ ggg race, 25 yard, 11 years and under, Bernice Waugh, Ada Mangsol, Olga Paul. Girls’ egg race, 20 yards, 7 years and under, Verna Mae Gruber, Susle Winn, Betty Nordling. Three-Legged Events Boys' three-legged race, 50 yards, 15 yeass and.under, Roy Willard ln Wildemar Jones, Ddniel Jenks Ausiin Brown, Buddy Brown and Harold Wald. Boys’ three-legged race, 50 ya,rds, 13 years and under, Daniel James and Austin Brown, Buddy Brown | and Harold Wald, with Robert Firby and Kenneth Allen, and Elmer Brown and Powell Bell tied for third place. Special girls’ three-legged race, Alice MacSpadden and Pat Har- land, Olga Paul and Bernice Waugh, Irene Probably the most popular men at the ball park were Waino Hend- rickson, head of the American Le- gion Committee in charge of sports, and Jim Doyle, who gave con- solation prizes of ten cents each to the losers in the various raml McCormick and Beatrice Primavera. 2 “Zoric” and 'Sim . MacKinnon, Pals; Fish Gét Chance Juneaw's gone “Zoric” and at the same time lost one good sport- fisherman. For the ime, Sim MacKinnon jis ‘the only qualified. operator of cleaning system, ¢¢ 'the new Zoric that the Alaska Laundry has re- 'cently installed, and the volume of suits, coats, dresses, hats, neck- ties and multitudinous other arti- 'cles of apparel and cloth house~ hold ‘accessories, has kept Sim so much on the job that he just can't stay away long enough to get in his fishin’, he says. However, Sam Daniels, now vaca- tioning in the States, is due. back soon, and will assume the Zoric duties. In the interim MacKinnon finds consolation and diversion in watching the shabby, tired and broken down hats, suits and dresses go into the gadget and come out with their. faces lifted ready to go places. BAND CONCERT BIVEN TUESDAY Over one thousand persons en- joyed the open air concert given by the Juneau City Band on Tri- angle Place last Tuesday night from 8 to 9 o'clock. Starting off with a march time selection, the band gave a varied program.; which: included two- lively overtures with solo parts for vari- ous members, popular fox trots dream waltzes, as well as several march numbers and ending with the National Anthem. The band also appeared leading the Fourth of July Parade and then gave a concert at the ball park before the baseball game and played between innings. SR SRR GROUP OF JUNEAUITES ENJOY CRUISE TO TAKU ON FOURTH Thomas L. George, Joseph L. George, Mr. and Mrs. Gus George, F. 8. Scobee and Mrs. Elsie Minch were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Bixby on a delightful cruise to Taku aboard the latter’s yacht, Leota, yesterday. During the cruise a bountiful dinner was served by the hosts. . e BROTHER OF ELWOOD M'CLAIN DIES SUDDENLY IN TACOMA Bovia McClain, brother of EIl- wood McClain, Cashier of the First National Bank of Juneau,died sud- denly July 3 in Tacoma according to word received here. In addition to his brother, Mr. McClain leaves a widow and four children. For many years he has been an executive for the Y. M. C. A. and during the course of his connection with that organization had traveled over practically the entire world. e et 1 g | Smith Electric Co. Shattuck Building EVERYTHING | ELECTRICAL — 3 RYAN TRANSFER. CO | Transfer—Baggage—Coal PHONE 29 Opposite Colseum Theatre PIONEER CAFE 3. K. Paul “THE HOME OF GQOD EATE” DAILY—A full course dinner you will enjoy for 75 cents. Gastineau Cafe AL D T S A | GARLAND BOGGAN |~ Hardwood Floors | Waxing Polishing Sanding L1 | | MODERN i BEAUTY SHOP || 403 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 357 ALicE CrArk | | l JOAN BLONDELL HAS NEW TEAM MATE IN SHOW Lawyer Man" with Will- iam Powell Opens To- night at Coliseum William Powell and Joan Blon- dell are teamed up In pictures for the st time in “Lawyer Man” a Warner Bros. produetion which comes to the Coliseum Theatre tonight. Despite the fact of the great dissimiliarity in their char- acteristics and personality, they are sald to work together with® unusual effectiveness, each proving an excellent foil for the other's temperament. Powell is of the ultra-correct and dignified type of player, while Joan is wise-cracking and slangy, and inclined to be a bit hoydenish. As feminine lead, she has just such a role in the picture, being a typical East Side New York girl who has worked her way up to secretaryship | of a leading attorney, but who/ never forgets her early training. Powell's characterization is quite different from what he usually plays, he being an East Side law- yer, whose brilliance brings him to the forefront of his profession. They have an excellent supporting cast which includes Helen Vinson, | Alan Dinehart, Allen Jenkins, David Landau, Claire Todd and Sheila Terry. The picture is a revelation of metropolitan intrigues with a ro- mance in the background. It is based on the novel by Max Trell, and was adapted for the screen by | Rian James and James Seymour. It was directed by William Dieterle. —,,—-— { MEET TONIGHT Billy Hajek, sailor jazzman, En- derancer, holder of world’s record far continucus piano playing at the Capitol Beer Parlors tonight. adv. v ——— . WOOD FOR SALE Block wood and klindling. Phone ! 388. —adv. nmlllfl“mfllmmlll|||ll|||l|||||IIIIII|||||II||||I|IIN|||||||II||||||||||||IIHII||lll|ImllllllllllllllllllllflIlmllmflm S BUILT ON LOVE LETTERS—uwritten by other men! Snatched from actual court records . . a notorious counsellor-at-law who turned from Blackstone to . Who started with nothing—and stopped at noth- ing , . . Who stood the big bosses of the Big Town on their hcads—and tock the count from a dizzy blonde! HIS FAME W/ Blackmail . |l|IIIIIIiIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIImlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII{HIIIIII|IIIIII|||||||||||I|||||II|IIIIIIIIIIIII Bl THEATRE] COLIZEN nd STARTS TONIGHT . The astounding story of LAWYER MAN with JOAN BLONDELL HELEN VINSON. SHEILA TERRY ALAN DINEHART, ALLEN JENKINS DAVID LANDAU, GLAIRE DoDD :EIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlHIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIHIIHIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIHIIHIIIH i MR., MRS. JOHN McCORMICK | ARE GRANDPARENTS OF BABY | GIRL BORN IN WALLA WALLA Word has been received in Ju- |neau of the birth of a seven I pound, ten ounce baby girl named Nancy Clare to Mr., and Mrs. Al- | fred McVay, son and daughter-in- |law of Mrs. John McCormick. The event took place in Walla Walla, ‘Washington, on Friday, June 22. Mrs. McCormick, who left Ju- { neau nearly two weeks ago, is now | visiting Mr. and Mrs. McVay and after spending some time there i will .continue to Rochester, Minne- sota, and Chicago. At the latter place she will visit the World's Fair and attend a beautician's | convention before returning to the | Pacific Coast. She planned to make the round trip by air. HOME GROWN Vegetables and Berries FRESH DAILY ® CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 Prompt Delivery Old Papers for Sale at Empirefifii&: n Farst Church of Christ, Scientist JUNEAU, ALASKA ANNOUNCES A FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE BY pe Fred'k C. Hill, C. S. Of Los Angeles, California Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. SCOTTISH RITE TEMPLE TONIGHT, JULY 5 8:30 P. M. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED