The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 16, 1934, Page 3

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THE MICKEY MOUSE LATE NEWS frrrr e /INTENSE DRAMA ). H. BROOKS, OF THEATRE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 16, 1934. FIRST OF WO, CONCERTS WILL BE GIVEN TUES. Miss Ellen Reep and Willis Nowell to Appear Before Public Tomorrow Night { More from your ore! ! 13 # i Ball Mil's | | | 3 { { X ! i s200 { COMEDY RELIEF DIES SUDDENLY Requirz less water, power and 3\ | ELLEN REEP SEonad ek s the 200 A R . Tomorrow night Miss Eilen AR ¢ ZP.} Dressler -Batrymore Team Famous Packer on White reep, moted contralto and Wil ] T 2 tad )1 g 5 1 ol E. Nowell, violinist, will appear in {an el Tasiy tansported || Gives Something New | Pass and Chilkoot Trails, E: Nowell, violinist, wil appear 1 ! Wire or write for details of in Personalities Straub complete equipment, and ( abeut our ore testing and assays. | 3 i SINCE 1502 ! Marie Dressler and Lionel Bar- 5 Straub Mfg. Co. | rymore, a co-starring team new £ - to the screen, give picture fans Li’f,‘i’l"j‘,“,“ii',‘,oj“‘,l",“f;,cfll something decidedly new hoth in | personalities and in a story, in L m .| “Her Sweetheart” now playing at T the Capitol Theatre. | PERMANENT WAVES | In the first place, the story is rmi intense drama, though amid its Thelmlque Healerless heart throbs and human touches NO BURNS are many comedy interludes. The . EDSGN’S, No. 5 Valentine | contrasting work of Miss Dressler Bldg., Phowe 241 jand Barrymore is interesting in [ ‘i the tale of the New England S— , country doctor who, under the - ot i .o!lash of avarice, turns from an T B | honest, kindly soul to a grasping LADIES’ HEEL schemer, only to be guided back 1 LIFTS to his lifelonz path of honor by | Leather—35c—Composition | the faith of an old servant. | The Best Shine in Town | | Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer adapted | HOLLYWOOD SHOE PARLOR | it from the famous New York I\ FRED LEHTO stage play, “The Late Christopher 5 P e _g¢'Bean.” The story concerns the - posthumus fame of a long dead > N e e i artist, his paintings suddenly dis- S | covered to be worth fabulous for- | HOSIERY, BINGERIE, | !into the home of the country doc- | HOUSE DRESSES tor who had most of v.l}im. | and accessories at moderate | | | prices il Shop in Juncau 3 — o] SRR S P R T 5 b 3 « Help Kidneys ! b | @ Hufiols,fogionisy Fime sod | GARDEN PATCH || Up Nights, Nervoumen, Rheumati v | Fruits and Vegetables | Doctor’s Prescription Cystex (Siss-tex) : —Must fix you up or moncy NIVERSAL U Bond and Mortgage i \) Corporation | Valentine Bidg. Phone 508 Investment Service back. Only 75c at druggists. Cystex MODERN BEAUTY SHOP 403 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 357 Avrice CLARK J | | | Rare Musical Treat Ellen Reep, Contralto 4 Change of Program Each Night Viilis Nowell, Violinist IN CONCERTS Presbyterian Church TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY at 8 P. M. Prices—Single admission 60 cents. Both ; nights, combination ticket, $1.00 and Introduced at the recent auto shows. Connors M otor Co Paint ] ob! Treat youd car to a new coat of paint and you won't need a '34 model! Drive in today for a free estimate. You'll like our price — and you'll appreciate our service and workmanship. Inc. ’97-'98, Passes Away (Continuea from Page One) pack train operators ny that time. He ran a string of nine pack train animals, some 250 head of live- stock over the trail between Skag way and Lake Bennett. He made money fast and spent it freely. A born gambler, he was willind to take a chance on most anything, and thousand-dollar bets on the high card were just ordinary wag- ers for him. He opened his outfit out of Skagway in 1897-98 and 99 and then moved to Atlin after the com- ing of the railroad. He continued in. the freighting busine: there until he went to Vancouver in 1905. He engaged in the transfer and hauling business in that city which was just beginning to boom Again he accumulated a fortune and prospered until the auto trucks drove him out of the field. Buys Stock For U. S. During the war he purchased livestock for the Canadian Gov- ernment first and, after the Unit- ed States entered it, ought for the American Government. He made more money. In recent years he had been stock ranching in Cali- fornia until very recently when he disposed of his holdings and start- ed back to Alaska. RANGER IX LEAVES FOR SHORT CRUISE; | PICK UP ONE CREW The Ranger IX., Capt. George Sarvela, left port today for Pack Creek with materials and supplies for the crew constructing a trail! up that stream and will return via Windham Bay to pick up the ECW crew which has been at work in that district for the past year. This crew, under Foreman Wal- ter G. Hellan, will bé moved to Taku River and engaged in trail hehabilitation there for sev:ral weeks. Some bridges are to be rebuilt and it is possible a shelter cabin will be erected at Boundary, Creek. ¢ INTER! 'early next Spring to begin NATIONAL TUFVE certs to be held at the Presbyter- ian church here. An entirely dif- ferent and varied program is to be given on the two evenings so that lovers of fine music who wish to attend both evenings will more thoroughly enjoy them. Miss Reep, who is well known here through her previous pearances, in addition to a charm- ing personality and stage pres- ence is gifted with a wonderful contralto voice, fine in quality and wide in range. She ha$ recéived training from August Werner, Norway's foremost baritone, My- ron Jacobson, voice coach and opera director as wel of the best instructors Pacific coast. Mr. Nowell's artis- try is well known in Juneau though opportunities of hearing him are all too few. On Wednesday Night In addition to Mi: Reep and Mr. Nowell, Helen Torkelsen will play a oup of piano solos on Wednesday night. She has studied at the University of Washington during the last year under Ruth Allen, McCreery, who secured her musical education in New York and ope. Miss Torkelson K was prominent in high school musical circles when attending the Ballard High School. She played for the opera given by the school, for a greup of selected seniors at com- mencement and accompaniey a tri- | ple trio of girls wiich saug regu- larly over the radio in Seattle. Her playing is said to show great skill and careful work. . ALBERT A. GEISER LEAVES FOR SEATTLE ON YUKON Albert A. Geiser, architect who has had charge of construction on the Jaeger and Ericson build- ings on Front Street, is to leave for Seattle on the steamer Yukon He was called south to do ap- praisal work for the Home Own- ers Loan Corporation in that city and expects to return to Juneau con- struction on several building for which he has already prepared | Steel ap-| 'BREMNER PROPERTY LOOKS FAVORABLE * "EARL KNIGHT SAYS STOCK PRICES KEAVY TODAY; [ “The Bremmner property looks very encourain declared Earl TRA DE U|ET Knight, editor of ka Week- ly, who with M. E ofy, Presi- Sakery dent of Bartley and Company, New . i York City. Lee m Wilson General Strike atSanFran-/ zng payton o ased cisco, Fears of Further through Juneau yesterday on the Y way to Seattle in a z boat of Trouble, Hit Exchange | American Power and Light|ceaqing south. |61 I x_Aviation 1%, Bethlehem| oninue to Seattle toda 3214, Cawumet and Hecla' 414, Chrysler 40, Curtiss-Wright 3.| General Motors 30%, International Harvester 33'%, Kennecott 21% | Electric Auto Lite 213%, Ulen Com- {pany 2, United States Steel 38" L er Pictures 4%, Pound $5.04's, 'Nabesna bid 131, ask 145, ‘;‘Cd"‘-‘d on { > (huge shipment i | Shoes. ICOL. W. C. MILLER AND| | | men and children. [MRS. MILLER ARE ON eedeiis Daily Empire Want Ads Pay e BEHR[;NDS RECEIVES Inc. The B. M. Behrends Co., of Star |WAY TO NEW STATlONi 2 | Col. William C. Miller, who has| | been commanding officer of Chil-| 1}\ Barracks for the last three| years, and Mrs. Miller were in | Juneau today while the Alaskni was in port and continued south |on their way to their new station | !in New Brunswick, New Jersey,! | where Col. Miller will be incharge | {of the military department of | Ru University, as professor of | milit, science and tactics. Both Col. and Mrs. Miller h: essed deep regret at leaving| Alaska which they have grown to |love during their years of resi- |dence. Both have traveled ex- | tensively over the Territory during | their stay at Chilkoot and ac- !quired a wide knowledge of thei jhistory and affairs of the coun-| try. “I only hope that I like my | {new duty as well as that I have | had up here,” declared Col. Mi]-; |ler. | | Though it has not yet been def-/ initely determined, Col. Miller hopes | | to receive a month's leave which | ers Miller and he will spend on. the Pacific Coast' before proceed-| |ing East. They will go by train| |to San Francisco and there board | a transport to go east through the | Panama Canal. i | Col. Ralph Wayne Dusenbury, i who with his wife, passed through | | Juneau two weeks ago on his way | |to Chilkoot, has dlready asswmed |the command of the barracks re-| | lieving Col. Miller. ex- | ———————— AT ANY time—break- CANNERY fast, lunch or dinner— FROM TAKU INSPECTION you'll find at Bailey’s HEAD HERE | | a great variety of tasty dishes. You'll like our special business men's lunch. BAILEY’S BEER -If Desired | D. W. Branch, head of the sal- mon department of Libby, McNeil! and Libby, arrived in Juneau Sun- | day noon on the cannery tender | Willard B from Taku, where he in- spected the company’s new can- nery plant for the first time. ! | He expressed himself as being | very pleased with the plant, which is one of the largest and most up- | to-date in Alaska. y plans and sketches, he said today What has become of Agnes Tufverson? If she is dead, then W Austria and other nations in one of the most baffling mysteries on Miss Tufverson (left center) in New York last December, was he sride’s disappearance. Miss Tufverson hasn’t been seen since she left Ne trunk which Poderjay is said to have guarded closely on his trip to Europe, heér RSON 'MYSTERY DEFIES iy ¢'s the body? Those are the questions puzzling police in the United States, record, lvan Poderjay (right center), man of many armot s who married id in Vienna with another woman, while police searched for clues to his York at that time presumably for a honeymoon. A mysterious was hunted by officials who advanced the theory the body might have been taken away in it. Sally Tufverson (left) and Olive Tufverson (right) Insist their sister met with four play. (Associated Press Photos) Anficonda 13%, Armour B 5%.istay Jast night in Ketchikan and | | STAR BRAND SHIPMENT the Alaska another Brand The shipment includes all of the latest styles for men, wo- RAISING Murray, after an inspection trip NE WYORK, July 16—Stock to the mine. VIENNA, July 16—A powerful prices turned heavy today coinci-| Mr, Erdofy was so impressed blast Saturday midnight wrecked with the San Francisco geN- with the prospects of the property the electric light plant at Op- strike and. fears that 1abor that he has agreed to finance the Ponitz, lower Austria, and stopped unrust will spread to other See-|installation of @ mill next fall to!@very street car in Vienna for an tions. the extent of $100,000, Mr. Knight hO [ Trade was quiet today. said. | ther dynamite charge snap- Losses of one to around three | pete Ramer, who accompanied Ped the power line between the poin predommated for mOSt the party north ten days ago, ,.‘u‘.u:‘:nl nd Vienna and for a time groups. \mained at the proper t which |the service of the Austria radio Today's close was heavy With'{he rest spent one ds While | Vas interrupted | | s totalling only 625,000 shares.in the nity fo Cordova they| S€ve ons of the city were { visited the Nabesna property, Plunged in darkness | 1 CLOSING PRICES TODAY |\ Knight said. Wrecking of the plant is be- NEW YORK, July 16—Closing| The plane arrived in JuneaulicVed to be blasts on the part of quotation of Alaska Juneau mine shortly after noon and remained political disturbances. i | § | stock today is 21%, American Can|pere gbout two hours before pro- | Sunday four persons were knllc_d‘ {983, They expected to D turbulent disorders in Austria dynamiter i destruction persons b i between | Republican {hold a meeting Su | Another persons -|clash between Na {ists Saturday d guards Forest S he: rvice mer local Saturday on the gach, Capt. Earl | william Sound d gach National For his headquarters overhaul and there about three e IKIMSHAN | day, according W. T. Mahoney | were given | tion decided that autopsy conducted. DYNAMIT LOWER AUSTRIA {Vienna Ph;nged in’Dark— ness for Time—Power | Plant Is Wrecked the Gorst Airways, piloted by Stuart| several battles flared. f gendarmes night. | - HAROLD SMITH HERE | FOR WEEK’S VISIT To spend a week al Regional | District Ranger Harold Smith, for-| resident, Smith has charge The Chugach sailed from here | today for Ketchikan where it will | go on the Forest Service ways for repairs. COVE MAN | COMMITS SUICIDE, - | Joe Ryan, Kimshan Cove resi- | dent, committed suicide there Sun- received by United States Marshal | sioner Louis Smith of Chichagof, | who held an inquest. A jury sitting in the investiga- |inflicted and waived having an interred at Kimshan Cove. i RIS | HAVOC, continued wide- to property. lied in a clash s and outlawed | attempting to | anday. as killed in zis and Social- a adquarters here, arrived here | motorship Chu- | Jacobsen. Mr. of the Prince istrict in Chu- rest and makes | in Cordova. Alison It will be| weeks. i 0 a radiogram Aap @G A Paramount,Picture whib W~ C-FIELDS COLIJE Sfl LIJE WARRACK Construction Co. LAST TIME 1 WE’RE GLAD, THAT YOU’'RE HERE, YOU RASCALS YOU! If there was a law against stealing laughs, you’d be in jail for life. . . . ) Meet ybur long-lost relatives. . , . ILLY SKIPWORTH BABY L-ROY T ) | from Commis- |z (ks Fhane 41 No detalls | — { RYAN TRANSFER. CO death was self-| | Transfer—Baggage—Coal PHONE 29 ' The body was Opposite Coliseumn Theatre r : Indian Egg Lump Phone 2 Process Served PERMANENT W That Keep the Ends Always in Curl No more straggly ends—with this permanent that’s rolled up from the ends. And the soft- est, most natural wave on top. It’s only $5. Peter Pan Beauty Shoppe PHONE 221 Indian Egg-Lump PHONE 412 Your $ is bigger when you burn $12.00 per ton at bunkers WM. FEERO, Manager Room 1, Shattuck Building SR AVES Confidential Investigations Alaska Detective Agency P. O. Box 968 Evenings by Appointment SECOND FLOOR—TRIANGLE BLDG.

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