The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 17, 1934, Page 3

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YALAsKAS FINES tainmen. 1934’s Greatest Cast, .in @ human, puls- ing "~ romance..: that’ will be engraved in) ‘vour memory Robert Yoyng Richard Cromwell HenriettaCrosman Mono Barrie Shpi'n Fetchit C///eou//// Berkeley from " The ovse o Connelly” by Paul Green ! Help Kldneys . 1 poorly funct 'xo ly functionin 'n n-hu. © Ttk ot Ahity o Doctor's Prescription O Cystex ervousness, back, Only 75c at druggists. LADIES' HEEL | LIFTS | | Leather—35c—Composition | | The Best Shine in Town | J HOLLYWOOD SHOE PARLOR \ FRED LEHTO 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. ‘Willoughby, opp. Cash . Cole’s Garage. § Front and Seward. 2-5 2-6 2-7 Fifth and Seward. 2-8 Seventh and Main, 2-0 Fire Hall. 3-2 Home Boarding House. 3-3 Gastineau and Rawn Way. 3-4 Second and Gold. 3-5 Fourth and Harris ' 3-6 Fifth andd Gold. > 3-7 PFifth and East. 3-8 Seventh and Gold. 3-9 Fifth and Kennedy. 4-1 Ninth, back of power ‘house. 4-2 Calhoun, Apts. 4-3 Distin and Indian. 4-5 Ninth and Calhoun. 4-6. Tenth and C. 4-7 Twelfth, B.P.R. garage. » 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby. 4-9 Home Grocery. §-1 BSeater Tract. opp. Seaview d by HENRY KING su on ploy by Reginald Kidneys and e you suffer from Getting Rheumatic iffness, Burning, Smarting, the guaranteed 'ystex (Siss-tex) —Must fix you up or money JANET GAYNOR IN “CAROLINA" IS AT CAPITOL Lionel Barrymore Co-stars| in Charming Story i of Old South With an outstanding cast, headed by the charming and, popular Jan- et Gaynori'and Lioné} Barrymors, {"Carolina,” current: attractich at | the Capitol Theatre; furnishes fas- cinating. entertainiient fon member of the family. i With 'a ‘fine, clean: story, and drama-tinged romance, “Carblina” | has an atmosphere of charming | the lovely old south, about forty years following the civil war and is dramatic without being theatric. Miss Gaynor has one of the most appealing roles of her notable ca- reer as Joanna, the strong-willed girl who defies the traditions that threaten to ruin her happiness, and Robert Young, who plays op- | posite in the romantic male lead, | gives a splendid performance. | Lionel Barrymore, who justly de- |serves his laurels as the finest | character actor on the screen to- day, gives a marvelous presenta- i tion of Bob Connelly, eternally liv-| ing in the days of Fort Sumter and the triumph 6f Manassas. The play reaches a dramatic climax as Bob, | azain the cld soldier. roeconciles tr» |“pirit of the Old South and the New North, ere he parades in mar- tial style to the end. Others in the fine cast include Henrietta Crosman, Richard Crom- well, Mona Barrie, Stepin Fetchit. Russell Simpson, Ronnie Cosbey, 1 Jackie Cosbey, Almeda Fowler, Roy Watson, John Elliott and others. Among the famous characters rep- resented are Jefferson Davis, Gen- eral Robert E. Lee, General ‘‘Stone- wall” Jackson, General Leonidas {Polk and General Beuregard. — e MISS JOHANNA FORD MARRIED S AT URDAY TO R. PADDOCK, Miss Johanna Ford became the bride of Raymond Paddock at a quiet ceremony performed at the Walstein G. Smith residence on Saturday evening. About eighteen friends of the young couple were present and the Rev. W. G. Le Vasseur officiated. Joe Paddock, brother of the groom, was best man. and Mrs, Joe Paddock attended the bride as matron of honor. After the ceremony, tea was| | served with Mrs. Frank A. Metcalf, | Miss F. J. Baer, Mrs. Smith Cass' and Mrs, Jake Cropley presiding st' the attractively arranged table and | Mrs. Joe Paddock and Miss Vivian Cropley serving. Later a large dance | to which many friends of the newly married couple were invited was given at the Paddock resi- { dence. ANNABEL FREEBURN AND GUESTS HERE ON WAY TO SCHOOL Miss Annabel Freeburs, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. James L. { Freeburn, of Chichagof, arrived in Juneau aboard the steamer Kenai from the mine where she has spent the summer with her parents. She | attle to re-enter the University of | will leave on the Yukon for Se- | Washington where she is in her sophomore year. Miss Freeburn was accompanied‘ to Juneau by the Misses Virginia | Jarvis, Jean Castleton and Maryl Wightman, all of Seattle, who have ' spent the summer visiting her at Chichagof since school closed last spring. —— s INLET PEOPLE BUSY Cook Inlet people, who hnvc‘ spent a busy summer fishing and | farming, are now turning to win- ter pursuits, coal deliveries from the Homer beaches, building repairs and road work, according to Oscar Munson, who recently arrived in Seward from his home at Homer. BAILEY’S CAFE TELEPHONE 478 i 24-Hour Service H | “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS” Beer, if desired Merchants’ Lunch Short Orders Regular Dinners MARINOFF BEER in half gallon jugs, 65¢ CALIFORNIA GROCERY | Prompt Delivery “Process Served Phone 2152 Alaska Detective Agem:y \ WM. FEERO, Manager o . Room 1, Shattuck Building Confidential Investigations P. 0. Box 968 severy | and simple sincerity. It is sef in| Seven persons were seized by federal agents in Chicago on charges of having harbored John Dillin. ger, Hoosier_hoodlum known as the nation’s public enemy No. 1 until he was trapped and siain a few weeks ago. Top row, left to right: Louis P. Piquett, Dillinger's attorney and former Chicago city prose- cutor; Dr. Wilhelm Loeser, Dr. Harold Bernard Cassidy, plastic surgeons who admitted performing operations on Dillinger and Homer Van Meter, also slain. Bottom row, left to right: William Finerty, Mrs. Ella Finerty, his wife; Arthur W. O’Leary, investigator for Piquett; Marie Comforti, sweetheart of ACCUSED BY GOVERNMENT OF HARBORING DILLINGER i Van Meter. (Associated Press Photcs) TIMMINS 6O T IDEVELOP MINES NEAR CARMACKS Great Results Expected for Development of Yukon Gold Groups by Firm Important news ior the Yuken was the announcement recently made by Oapts-George Black of Dawson, that the N. A. Timmins Mining Corporation of Montreal, had closed the deal he had made with the company last month for W. J. Langham, E. Forrest and A. L. Major, for a group of lode gold mining claims west of Car- macks. The Timmins corporation is beginning mining at once. This announcement, according to the Dawson News, heralds what is probably the greatest gold discov- ery made in the Yukon since the strike of placer gold in 1896. Other groups of claims under consideration for development by, the Timmins company are held by Fred Guder, Forbes and Carpen- | ter and Brown and Fairclough. [NEW DAWSON AIRPORT |WILL BE CONSTRUCTED' Construction of a landing field at Dawson, and reconditioning of the airfields at Mayo and White- horse has been authorized by the Department of the Interior at of-" tewa, and the work is to be com- pieted this fall, according to G. A. Jeckeil, comptroller of Yukon Ter- ritory. The site for the Dawson Airport: was chosen this summer by A. Carter Guest, inspector of Civil Aviation, and should be ready soon | for use by all types of land planes. The work is being done under the supervision of J. H. McNeil, super- intendent of Public Works. B Mining Locatlon notices at Em- pire_gffice. Price Sees Roosevelt Foes Having Hard Go to Even Get United | (Continued from Page One) that at all opposition is on practical, not traditional, grounds It fears the outcome of the Roose- velt regime simply because it doubts whether it will work. Such a doubter, apparently, Mr. Lewis Douglas, who has just left as budget director because he is JAGK HOLT HAS His. life He of tha Boipad of st hers. | Jean Arthur Donald Cook Alien Jenkins Lila Lee PIE BAKERS WIN PRIZES FOR DISPLAY cooking department of the South- east Alaska Fair exhibits, awards were made on Saturday. Judges were Mrs. Guy McNaughton, Mrs. Frank A. Boyle, Mrs. Harry C. De- Vighne, Award winners. were: Mrs. Mary Crewson, apple pie, apple pie, second premium; Mrs. William Reck, butterscotch pie, first premium; Mrs. Mary Crewson, but- terscotch pie, Mrs. C. P. Seelye, berry pie, first premium; Mrs. Shafer, berry pi9g second premium; Mrs. N. L. Troast, pumpkin ple, first premium; Mrs. C. P. Seelye, pumpkin pie, second premium; Mrs. C. P. Seelye, choco- late pie, first premium; Muvs, Fred Jones, lemon pie, first premium; Mrs. C. P. Seelye, ond premium; Mrs. lemon chiffon pie, first premium; Mrs. Byington, lemon chiffon, sec- |ond premium; Ruth Allen, pie, first and second premmms s i DRAMATIC ROLE IN ‘WHIRLPOOL' Jack Holt, perennially the popu- lar screen idol of thousands of the- ater-goers, has clicked again in Columbia's “Whirlpool,” his newest | is apprehensive of the effects of continued large-scale ‘spanding | He does not talk about the:con- "stitution; he is quite willing.to lot the past bury its social cemeepts and his friends hardly can see him enlisting with Mr. Hoover. But he |15 interested in national solvency. The problem troubling Mr. Roose- velt’s opponents today is not the arousing of opposition sentiment, which they are convinced already exist in appreciable strength. Their | problem is the organization of that sentiment and the elimination of | difficulties among themselves To Mr. Roosevelt’s partisans the | dilemma of their enemies appears wholly impossible of solution. is why they show so little worry about the outcome. e ISABEL PARSONS IS HOSTESS AT | LUNCHEON SAT. | Miss Isabel Parsons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Parsons, cele- brated her eleventh birthday on Saturday afterhoon with a lunch- eon party after which games were played. | | Prizes were won by Betty Ellen Nordling, high, Betty Rice, second and Sylvia Davis, third. | Guests at the delightful party were Sylvia Davis, Betty Jane Mill, Betty Rice, Betty Reed, Susie Winn, Maydelle George, Dorothy Fors, Joan Morgan, Pauline Petrich and Betty Ellen Nordling. e Miss Edith Mable Harrison be- |came the bride of Robert Allan | Bowman _in Fairbanks, September 1. Miss Ethel Ghezzi and Carl \Wel]s were attendants and gang leader. starring vehicle which opened yes- - cemnee terday at the Coliseum Theatre. sl iy P DA T AT THE HOTELS . the| ® Fast moving and well-knit, i plot concerns.the career of Buck|® ® ®®®® ¢ e e e s 000 Rankin, a small*thne-carnival own- | » er, who, while wedding chimes are | Zynda still loud in his ears finds himself | Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Sullivan and sentenced to the penitentiary for |daughters, Haines; E. B. Elliott, twenty years on a charge of man-|Ketchikan; Fred Anderson, Juneau; slaughter. Carl Nelson, Juneau; Capt. John C. His bride, Helen, swears by mm;Hollmnd Juneau; Fred Nelson love that she will await his re-[Sitka. lease. Realizing the injustice with which this course of action would | burden her, Rankin forges the war- den’s name to a letter informing his wife that he has been drowned in an attempted escape. At the expiratiof: of his term }‘e; assumes a new identity with Lhc“"("hz‘“ . Sea :flzsl‘x)fg h}lfy]fgg}l:?d,?:e' :/,l:jc' bs:‘n | Annabel Freeburn, Seattle; Mary comes the mysterious and grmm‘Wm tman, Seattle; M. McKallick, Sheldon, gambling czar |Chichagof; Robert Cockburn, Sitka: s SambTnE ' Nirs. H. C. Redman, Sitka; Eiler |Hansen, Sitka; B. I Ficken, Sitka. | Helen has married a Superior Alaskan Court judge, and her daugh{er‘ R. B. Mclver, Juneau; Charles | Sandra, Sheldon’s child, has be- 'y, parker, Gustavus; J. W. Felix, come a newspaper woman. Sent '-D‘Swndu ; Rado Pekovich, Sumdum; interview Sheldon, the girl rrcog»lg Fremming, Juneau; Nels Mook, Gastineau W. Terhune, Juneau; A. P. Ketchikan; J. Bertrand, | H | Brewer, Ketchikan; scn, Juneau; Fred Lessard, Juneau; Jr., Islander; Jim Art Thane, Eagle River R. Hartley; Virginia Jarvis, Jean Castleton, Slack; nizes hith as her father from aniygonah; G. Beauvold, Tee Harbor; | old picture her mother has pre- G, served. The story speeds on to a tense dramatic denouncement in which Sheldon makes a tremendous sacri- | fice to protect his former wife and his daughter from ruinous exposure. | Holt delivers a telling perform- ance as Rankin, and later as Shel- don, squeezing everything possible out of his part. Allen Jenkins, as “mac,” gf his usual more than adequate por- trayal, and Jean Arthur is con- vincing as “Sandra.” W. Samples, Tenakee; George !an. Ceatham; M. Remmer, Sit- |ka; Harold Grimstad, Hump Island: Louis Sande, Sitka; George Colette, | |sitka; A. McDougall, Sitka. -——— SELDOVIA, COUPLE WED Lauritz Olson and Miss Mary Michikoff, were married in Seward August 31. |Mr. Olson has been employed as la fisherman by the LibbyMcNeill and Libby Company in the Bristol Bay regien. Mining Location Nutices at Em- | pire office. SHOP IN .‘UNEAU ! When th1s © wily be convertzd in QUINTUPLETS SOON TO HAVE PRIVATE HOSPITAL g under constructior at Corbsil, Ont., is completed within the next !m w9 o ¥ a hospital for the exclusive ca 1 2l Digr nuintuplets. The five tiny girls recently were given their first sun bath and all bzt Photo during the win froo fif incubators in which they had been placed, (Associated Pre: Stomach Gas RS S | | @ 'y genile and cntirely safe |ADLERI K Al Butler Mauro Drug Co. ,—-ln Doug ]!as by Guy's Drug Store. —ady. In the pie section of the home | first premium; Mrs. Lydia Webber, | second premium;’ B. Wilcox; W. L. John- | Sealtle; | residents of Seldovia,! Iy Fcaluring a guaranteed L out BOTH W you to Ht lnd PERMANENT WAVE E for ag low as u. s DL"ARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUR“D The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) i Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, beginning at ¢ p.m., Sept, 13: Fair tonight and Tuesday;moderate easterly winds. FY LOCAL DATA : Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 4 pm. yesty 29.82 50 87 s 12 cldy 4 am. today 29.54 54 28 NE 21 Cldy” Noon today 2974 55 31 N 7 Clear CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS " YESTERDAY | TGDAY Highest 4pm. | Lowest4am. 4am, Preclp. 4a) Station temp. temp. | temp. temp. velocity 24hrs, Weather Barrow 26 26 e el 18 0, fi Nome 56 56 | 38 .88 2 0 E*thel 56 56 | aa. e 4 0 Clear Fairbanks 4 a2 30 30 14 [ Clear Dawsen 42 40 | 18 18 0 0 PLCMy St. Paul 50 50 | 4 o« 4 .02 Cldy h Harkor 4 54 | 40 42 0 0 Cldy Kodiak 82, 52 ° 48 48 4 02 Rain Cerdova 60 60 0 40 °* 0 0 Olear Jroext 55 50 45 54 a1 0, Cldy Sitka 53 — 49 - 0 40 PtOMy Ketchikan 58 54 48 52 4 140 Rain Prince Rupert 54 54 | 42 k13 24, 92 Rain Edmonton 56 50 | 40 e e 08 Cldy Seattle 0 7 | 52 52 4 0 Cldy Portland %16 ‘ 56 56 4 0 Clear (San Francisco 68 60 54 54 4 0 Clear I A storm is central in extreme Southeast Alaska with heavy rain at Ketchikan and Prince Rupert and gales to the southward, and another storm is centered south of the middle Aleutian Islands wiih showers in southen Bering Sea and the western porticn of the Gull of Alaska. The pressure is high in Northern and Cenirsl Alaska (with clear weather in the Interior and on the Bering Sea coast “uJ 1c eastern portion of the Gulf. Temperatures were lower yes- Ler in the Interior and North cnd were higher in the extreme Southwest. o e S e - | Junecu Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Corner Second and Seward Free Declivery LAMPSI The way to judge an orange is by the quantity and qual- ity of juice it gives, The way to judge a lamp is by the quantity and quality of light it gives, ‘ We consider General Electric' MAZDA 1 lamps, made by General Elestric; the ! best lamps for the money—because ! they give the most light for the money. m)rm 58 lemon pie, .sec- | C. P. Seelye, ; ' That’s why we sell them. ! . Why not take home a carfen mduy | 20c for 25-40-60-75-Watt Sizes 2 iRBe for 100-Watt Size . BETTER LIGHT—-BETTER SIGH’P | Alaska Eleetric Lig ht and Power Co. JUNEAU—8 DOUGLAS—18 - : CAPITOL BEER PARLaRs AND BALL ROOM Private Booths ~ Lunches Dancing Every Night PETER PAN:,.‘, BeautySkoppa Second Floor Triangle m Phone 221 for upnolmnu: 1 PO Try us for fancy We are featuring WE DELIVER meant! Fresh Olympia ered to your home——makmg any dinner a comgleg gnowu,‘ TOM RADONICH——Capital Beer Paglors (EN SHELL) e, b pepper rodsts, milk or cream stews, fl:ys, eu.- a special oyster cocktail which will be deliv- PHONE 569 -, I

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