The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 7, 1934, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY A LASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST. 7, 1934., MRS . Wit COLIZEU Bl THEATRE | ti:nl (...5 the screen to cverilowinglL1:} of wxdy. litting yc.: {5 your feet! 120 MINUTES of epic cntertainment you will never forget! ~ 4] 57} Caddirr 00 18, o 7o 600 Seats 25¢c Any Time CELLO - PIANO PRESENTATION IS BRILLIANT Arenstein and Goding Thrill Juneau Audience with Artistic Ski'l 2 applause of a thrilled aud- hed for Juneau's appre- cert at the Scot- last night which nted Michael Arenstein, cell- and Howard Goding, planist, ist, in as a fine a musical program as has ever been heard here. ‘The concert, arranged by Willis” Nowell at the suggestion of Dean TUhl of the University of Wash- ington, where Mr. Goding appeared in concert, breught ocut a large crowd of Juneau music-lovers, all of whom were happy to have the oppertunity to hear these famous artists, Scnata Appeals First cn the program was Sonata, A Minor, by Grieg, presenting the three movements Ailegro Agitato, Andante. Multo Tranquylo and Allegro with Mr. Arenstein and Mr. Goding. Especially beautiful was the interpretation of the Andante, in which tone color,' brought out ky both artists, was' remarkable. A Chopin group, Ballade A. Flat Major, Nocturne, F Sharp Major end Polonaise, A Majcr, played by Mr. Goding brought forth a demand for an encore and Waltz, by Chopin. was graciously added to ths group. Mr. Goding’s inter- e s e e o e FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin. Front and Franklin. Front, near Ferry’ Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Wharf. Front, near Sawmill Front at A. J. Office. Willoughby at Totem Grocery. ‘Witloughby, opp. Cash Cole's Garage. Front and Seward. Front and Main, Second and Math, Fifth and Seward. Seventh and Main. Fire Hall. " Home Boarding House, Gastineau and Rawn ‘Way. Second and Gold. Pourth and Harris. Fifth andd Gold. Fifth and East. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power h Distin’ and fndian. Ninth and Calhoun. ‘Tenth and C. Twelfth, BP.R. garage. 24 2-8 2-7 2-8 2-9 3-2 3-3 3-4 3-5 3-6 3-7 3-8 3-9 4-1 JAPAN, FRANCE NOW IN SPLIT | PARIS, France, Aug. T.—Denied Japan support toward abrogation of the Washington 1921 Naval treaty, France announces intention to adhere to the treaty provisions pending “some change in the Eu- ropean situation. - MISS BELVA WILLIAMS TO VISIT RELATIVES HERE FOR NEXT MONTH Miss Belva Williams arrived in Juneau on the motorship North- land to spend the next month visiting her sister, Mrs. Leonard Holmquist and other relatives the ctiy. Miss Williams has been away siightly over a year during pretation of the Ballade was most brilliant. Arnstein played Schubert's ) Ava Marie and Popper's ungarian Rhapsody with remark- | able skill, and followed these with | a Russian composition for an en- | core. C “ling Brilliant The billiant Venetian Regzatta, Rossini-Liszt, was Mr. Godin; final presentation on the program, followed with Hungarian McDowell as an encore. Nocturne, E Flat Major, Chopin; Scherzo, Van Goens; Frasquita. Kreisler, and as an encore, The Swan, Saint-Szens, played by Mr. Arenstein, completed the splendid program. Both musicians were skilled tech- | nicizns ‘and each presented his art with rare ability. Mr. Goding was not only a brilliant and facile solo- but a fine and gracious ac- ccmpanist for Mr. Alenstein. Mr. Arcnstein’s cello was a remarkable rument and his appearance was the first ever made here by a cellist of note. BRANT ARRIVES IN PORT EARLY TODAY FRCM SOUTH ist, in costume designing and achieved a definite place in that fleld in Lcs Angeles. Miss Wiliams studied costume de- signing at the Wolfe School of Costume Design and sketching at the Frank Wiggins School, both located in Los Angeles and since her graduation has been associatea with a well known designer of that city. During the year she his entered original designs in two centesis, one inh Los Angeles and the other in San Francisco. In the former she received first prize and in that held in the Bay City, honorable mention. The motorship Brant, Capt. Ol- son, flagship of the Fisheries fleet in Alaska, arrived 'in port early this morning from Seattle and probably will remain in Southeast Alaska waters for several weeks. Lester. Wingard, Bozeman, Mon brother of Lemuel G. Wingard, Al- aska Agent for the Bureau of Fish- eries, made the trip on it. S, MRS. AMY TAYLOR IS WED LR it AL YESTERDAY TO N. W. SWAN SGUTHBOUND PASSENGERS In the office of the United States' Pa;::;:::” zf;gav:n;:flr: Commissioner, Mrs. Amy Taylor : Skagway for Juneai were William A. Hesse, W. P. Johnson and Fred Crdway, arriving at the Pacific Coast dock at 12:10 p.m., yesterday The Northwestern sailed for Sitka yesterday became the bride of N. W. Swan. The ceremony was per- fermed by Judgeé J. F. Mullén. Both have resided heré for some time. Mr. Swan is an employee of the Alaska Juneau. {ing Mr. and Mrs. Randall A. Brown, — e — .Alma Overman, Hattie Fountain, 18 RECOVERING | Jose Quinis and .Geor; % s ge Johnson Joe Wilson, Alaské Juneau miner’ y,. gegiife: A, p. Kashevaroff, R. who underwent 2 major operation g mayer ‘Laura P. Ordway and at St. Ann's Hospital yesterday p g Ordway for Sitka, and R. H. morning, is said to be doing WA ‘yamonteor Ketehikan, today. : | Only a last minute cancellation R P AT S by the Wrangell agent made it possible for’ the Seattle passengers to get out, as the ship was filled with tourist passengers. i e SEAPLANE CHICHAGOF | HERE ON CHARTER TRIP Saturday evening the seaplane Chichagof, of the Alaska Southern Airways, Pilot R. E. Elli§, A, P. Brewer, mechanic, arrived here from Ketchikan on' a charter trip’ from that city. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Meherin were Juneau passeng- ers from the first city. Pilot Ellis and Mechanic Brewer | returned on the Chichagof to their| 3 Not é‘c"u” w.‘ Aré Ketchikan base early Sunday morn- .+ Cheaper Lo i CANADIAN PLANE HERE BUT BETTER SATURDAY ON WAY :I‘O —_— : CARCROSS FROM SOUTH i Bound from Vancouver B. C. to Carcross, Y. T. an Eastman plane, piloted by L. M. Staples, arrived here Saturday afternoon and re- malned in Juneau overnight. Pilot Staples took off for Carcross Sun- ady morning at 10 o'clock. RICE & AMLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING which she has completed a course | at 2:30 o'clock p.m., Monday tak- | RICHA YOUTHFIJL BAND | GIVES BARDIT . RIDE DR RAIL | ing at Coliseum Shows Youth vs. Gangsters ‘This modern age is not ‘without its spectacular happenings, and it took Cecil B. DeMille to capture its | epic proportions and transiate it to | the screen in his latest Paramount picture. * “This Day 'and Age,” | which cpens tonight at the' Coli-| | seum Theatre. | Abandoning ancient themes for the time being, DeMille depicts the revolt of the younger generation against the corruption which al- 'ow s racketeering full sway. With a rovel and well-knit story, which ‘.v.as provided by Bartlett Cormack, | events move to a thundering cli- | max, | Said to be of particular brilliance | is the performance contributed by | s Bickford as the boss rack- etcer who evades the law only %o | fall into the hands of the young, ) Vigilantes. The only feminine role -of im- | portance was played by Judith Al- {len who made her screen debut in this picture. Other principal roles «re played by Richard Cromwéll, Fddie Nugent, Ben Alexander, | Harry Green, Lester Arnold, Fuzzy | Knight, George Barbier, Oscar Ra- dolph and Michael Stuart. Calling a judge away from lunch, ried to Virginia Webster of West Los Angeles, at Jersey City, N. J, The marriage resulted from a romance started in Dix’s business office in Hollywood, when he selected Miss Webster as his secretary from 600 applicants. (Associated Press Photo) RD DIX/WEDS SECRETARY Richard Dix of the films was mar- THREE ScHooLs |DAMON RUNYON | - STORIES BRING | . = Hee Tracy Forgot Assign- Maid of OrleansHasMater- \,ent — Glenda Farrell ials for Nushagak, Crook- | Nyuises Movie Moods ed Creek and McGrath | The Bering Transportation Com- | By ROBBIN COONS + 3 HCLLYWOOD, Cal, Augz. 7 “pany steamer Max}i_ur Or!eans left Since “Lady For A Day’ made Tacoma this morning with three T tudios have been cry- complete school hou aboard, car- | |rying everything from boards to {finish paint. ! ing Runyon mov, On the surface that would seem ito have no conmection with Lee | The schools are | x i destined . for i yacy and it hasn't. But it might ‘mxmedlaue erection at Nushagak, | nave had. { Crocked Creek and McGrath. The | «Before I left New York to come |tirst of the three is to be builg by | to Hollywood, I happened tosrun ‘Hm'ry Ellingin, who is finishing!jnto Runyon, an old friend of mn t'he Port {xy.exm\dm" hool this imm.fl.-v says Tracy. {week, and will go directly fiom | o make* 1t “short, it developed |there to Nushagak. The other #wo|that Runyon had just finished a }nc to be’ constructed by Ray Pet- ,number of short stories. When he i erman, who is likewise finishing |isarned that Lee w coming to this week on his contracts | filmland, he suggested: “Since he had for Seldovia, Portlock and youre going out therz anyw |Port Graham. | maybe you could get rid of one or | It will take 20 days for the|two of them for pictures.” materials for the Crooked Creek| “Okay,” said Lee. “H: and McGrath schools to reach their | I ask for them?” destinations, and they will have to! “Well,” Runyon {be transshipped at Bethel to a|“Maybe you can get river steamer, which will take|take any them several hundred miles up the s | Kuskokwim River, | ———.e—— s, ow much’ll medidated $1 But ing and we'll i got About It” y, getting off, fo: about it. He never became a "lite |acy agent.” His only busine: | FOUR INTERESTED TOURISTS | connection with Runyon, if it SPEND SEVERAL DAYS HERE be called that, is that Lee's next | picture will be the writer's “Lemon Four interested tourists who Drop Kid.” stopped off in Juneau while the| And Runyon's stories now se!l to steamer Northwestern - made the |the studios for as high as $25,000 trip to Skagway were Miss Louise | apiece. Lesher, Lora Allen and Mrs. Anna | R. Brown, all teachers in the high !suspect of nursing “moods” for a schools of Pittsburg, Kansas, and |picture is Glenda Farrell. The {Miss Mary Nelson. The four calied | public has learned to expect that ;uDon Gov. John W. Troy while |from players like Francis Lederer, {they were in Juneau and visited | Edward G. Robinson, Paul Muni Ithe flower gardens, museum and [et al who go in for painstaking But T other pcints of interest in this| character delineations, but scarcc- vicinity. All declared they plan to |ly from blonde Glenda return to spend their summer vaca- | When she gets a vacation in tion here next- year. |the middle of & pictare—one of - — [those spans of two or three days NOTICE OF HEARING ON FlNAL\thn her character is not before ACCOUNT AND REPORT AND | the camera, she never skips off to | PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION play or relax. She makes it a rule |In the United Staves Commission- | to rest. She’s the kind of girl, | er's, (Ex-officio Probate) Court | she'll tell you, who plays when she for the Territory of Alaska, Ju- plays and works when she works. neau Commissioner's Precinct. | She's “afraid to relax” in the mid- In the Matter of the Adminisnru-fdle of a production becayse she tion of the Estate of MICHAEL |has found from experience, she McKENNA, Deceased, % |says, that “It is harder to get NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN |back into the feeling of a charac- that on July 16th, 1834, MARY M ‘tel' the ‘second time than it was MONAGLE, as Administratrix®of 10 create it in the first place.” the estate of MICHAEL McKENNA, | {Deceased, made and filed in the | Signs of the times: above-entitled Court at Jurieau, Al- | Mille abandons *‘Buccar aska, her final account and report | Moment and announce: and Petition for Distribution, and|tpectacular procuciion that on said' day the said Court|the crusades, R-K-O also has jentered its order directing that a|POstPaned a film about pirates, héaring be had upon said final | Which was to have centered around Acccunt and Report and Petition |the Lafitte brothers of old Louis- for Distribution before it on Secp- |iana. tember 15, 1934, at 10:00 o'clock am, at the Office of the said United States Commissioner, in the Federal-Territorial Building, in Ju- |Police patrol car soon. In the neau Precinct, Territory of Alaska,|Competitive bids entered by garage and that all persons then and|Men, Peterson and Rockhill were there appear and make their ob-|Warded the sale. Jections, if any, thereto or to the| £3 o settlement thereof. MARY M. MONAGLE, Administratrix of the Estate of At very reasonable rates | Michael McKenna, Deceased. First publication, July 17, 1934. . PAUL BLOEDHORN || . FRONT STRERT ., -, g1 Cetil B. De eer” for the | instead a based on — .o BUY PATROL CAR Ketchikan is to have a new Last publication, August 7, 1934. an § Probably the last actress yowd OFFICIAL OF ELKS LODGE AND WIFE COMING ON YUKON J.Edgar Masters, of Chicago, Past rand Exalted Ruler of B. P. O. Elks and at present Grand Sec- retary of the order, and Mrs. Masters are round trip passengers for Alaska board the steamer Yukon which sailed from Seattle Monday. This will be the first trip to Alaska made by and Mrs. M be met here by the Juneau of inter- the city and nity while amer is in por e Edward 96, of Norwalk, Conn., pr ent of the South Nor- alk Savings Bank, is said to be the oldest living chief executive of a savings bank. the ste I LUDWIG NELSON | 'WELER ‘Watch Repalring Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET I | Pay Less—Much Less Front at Main Street tal “Liké 4 dip into"a of milk in one foo livered to you absol to stay pure. . at Capitol Theatre The BEST SUMMEI DRINK of Thepj ALL Menden- REFRESHING ? stream! | Heéalthful? has never ‘been able to- com- bine the complete food values Mendenhall Milk comes from pure-bred herds . . . it’s de- Menf:lenlmll Milk Is Your Finest-Safest Drink aemaxass inid kv Bl béddeaidss 3 Last Time Tonight “DINNER ot EICHT” STARTS TOMORROW PREVIEW TONIGHT BARRYMORES IN SAME CAST FOR FIFTH TEAMING ‘Bolero,” with George Rait, Opens Tomorrow Night It's hard to keep tha ¢ Barrymore brothers careers. respective creen scored together in “Grand Hof % o ) L and created a public. demand [ which prompted their reunion in ~ “Arsene Lupin.” Followed the o Ny B spectacular “Rasputin and the Em- [Bortrayirg the’ lifs’ * press” and the all plcture, story of .a public ido}, “Night Flight.” Now John and Lionel appear together in a picture for the fifth time. /In the a production, “Dinner at | closing tonight at the Capitol Theatre, John plays a h ecn | matinee idol and Lionel is seen as an aristocratic shipbuilder. Marie Dressler, Wallace Beery, Jean Harlow and Lee Tracy are also seen in “Dinner at Eight." | Opening Tomorrow i “Bole picturization of the ilife of a dancer who uses his many {love affairs to elevate himself in his chosen profession, opens to- bt, with a midnight i w tonight. | George Roft has the leading male role, and ks stepping stones ‘are played by Gloria Shea, Frances Drake, Carole Lombard and Sally (fan dance) Rand. | | HEATERLESS | Permanent Waves i NO BURNS Shampoos, Finger Waves Lady’s Haircuts [ N WAVE SHOP 5 V:lentine Bldg. PHONE 241 | Juneau Ice Cream | Parlors Exclusive Dealers HOLICK'S DANISH ICE CREAM . il GARDEN PATCH BEEFA . L e ot e | JUNEAU "LADIES' IEEL | LIFTS | Feather-—35c—Composition The Best Shine in Town . | HOLLYWOOD SHOE PARILOR | FRED LEHTO | Drug Co. : P 0. Substation Ne. 1 : LA mountain Science d. Pure? utely pure TELEPHONE 985 B sl g8 6608 3o 84 BANies

Other pages from this issue: