The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 26, 1934, Page 3

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- R A R AT T R, EXTRA! SPECIAL! TONIGHT MORRO CASTLE BURNS AT SEA ACTUAL SCENES TAKEN AT SEA AS THE GIANT LINER BURNED BEGGAR MEN PITIED HER! mil- ed ncver spent Eccentric— dime. a dynamic — qui ted. May Robson thic ch sieal ¢ pas cter & w crm (hat even her n “Lady " She'll have | emiling thru your ] tears as she blends merriment and pathos in a superb perfrom- ance. MAY ROBSON JEAN PARKER LEWIS STONE MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT 1:10 A. M. Next Governor of Texas Started Out as Bootblack =Ll f The | he has had his share of defeats AUSTIN, Tex. Sept. 26. — Hinad It hem being uit t governor of Texas once shined Laet Delt s il companies anc Tirad 35 Petroleum institute s Jumm.V. Alred, 35 > s of $17.000. \\'ho»*.\ on the Democ 000 s of anti- ation from Tom birust THas: Hunter, “Jim Ferguson's candi-§g Born in krontier Town date. Ferguson is| Bi of dollars in casn thousan a former Gover- and valuable lands have been nor and husband ecovered by Allred for the free of the present in- chool fund, one suit netting the cumbent, “Ma” state more than $1,000,000 cash Ferguson. + The guber nominee VETERAN STAR IS FINANCIER IN NEW FILM | . 1 {May Robson Gives Splen- did Performance in Gold- en Anniversary Picture 1ling the ago, in , a timid alked out in in her long and these oman Brooklyn and third ven 1 the and and she ¢ ore the 1er fiftie picture h finance tieth cent as d the very she want to quit work So long as 1 am busy I have no the worr; t nsist- ently accompany idleness. The picture, produced by Lucien Hub and directed by es Riesner, has a cast that includes Jean Parke Lewis Stone, M Reginald Masc William Bakewell, Tad Al Walter Walker and Reginald “You Can't Buy Bobson, to w. ve who has endeared ousands in her long actress, one of the roles of her experience in She conve, an indefineable 2al to the m genius and newspapers. he served a y eaman. Tt was t thought of becoming apprentice | first | no; | “I'm going home and run for | Governor some day,” he told three I 1 friends at San Gover- 101 the s mission > prohibition. He blishment of a state pol | improvement in Texas' pa tem, adoption of | amendment to per |of property for ta {of tr | ting i His ing His wife is the former Joe Betsy ler of Oklahoma, an accomplish- i . They have two chil- a and repeal law legalizing race track bet- favorite recreation is fish- 1ts to play the| lng” gives| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 26, 1934. QUEENS HONO SCREEN Two of Hollywood’s reigning motion plcture queens, Marlene Dietrich (left) and Norma Shearer (right) were among a group of some 300 distinguished Southern Californians who attended a Los Angeles reception In honor of Max Reinhardt (center), famoue ===~ | pean theatrical producer. (Associated Press Photo) UNITED £TATES GENERAL District LAND OFFICE Land Office Anchorage, Alaska REBEKAH LODGE Notic proof on his homestead entry, An- together with hi, s Lund and Lockie Program, Dancing, Cal‘ds,ig,‘,“f“ff{“f'\"' i S g Refreshments Included in Tonight's Entertainment the Rebekah Lodge will observe the 83rd of the organization celebration tonight in I. O. O. F. Hall to which all{ kahs and Odd Fellows of Gas- Hig in latitude acier 2121 itude {located along the C within Survey 580° 2 " N |W. con g s {now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if {no protest is filed in the local land off within the period of pub- it n final certificate vaMl be is- sued and final proof accepted. way No. lor 134 and it 21’ tineau Channel are invited. | T The open house will begin at| = 8:30 o'clock following a short busi- ks : First publication, Aug. 1, 1934, Desy S Juneau Re-|y, . ublication, Sept. 26, 1934 bekahs and will ¢ B0 PuEaLOn, BOEh 2 . out the ‘evening of 2. 4 en ment provided AT . s ot Anchorage Alaska ures will a .’"h‘\:(il'\'; June 6 1934 Notice is hereby given that Byron Benson, entryman, ha proof on his homestead ent h Lodge orage 07817, for a tract of by Monte Snow and Miss 809 located along o e Torkelson will give a1 |} lghway abou 6 miles J.)‘l\.ll( W 2hd Sion {Town of Juneau, Alaska, longitude s e R Y '1134° 35 W. Latitude 58° 23’ 50" | heads the committee on entertain-|N: embraced in U. S. Survey No.| | {2091, together with his witnesses ment. Clenna F. McNutt and Mons Ander on1 all of Juneau, A and it ram be ng supper will MENT OF THE INTERIOR made | LAST TIME C°|’= TONIGHT HE DESERTED HIS DAUGHTER T0 QUIT FILMS SAYS DIRECTOR Rumors Star of ‘Long Lost | Father’ atColiscum to Re- | tire Declared False Barrymore wil motion wres i despite Hollywood f'or col eived rumors, is a ! straig! t B. Schoed- e ... but now he fought of put the and Donald in “Long e ¥ growing domes- and his habit of dashing off ht to some far corner of world between pictures, there been talk that Barrymore of screen acting na would like to retire, and that would like to spend all his being the family man. | bas tiring is he he time A Barrymore achievement with Helen Chandler Donald Cook from the novel by G. B. Stern - Directed by Ernest B. Schoedsack, sEaTs 28 €C bilities over Lindsey but she only fvrls' of Cordova, continued to Se- mocks him. | attle after the conclusion of the The working out of the story, | American Legion Convention held which comes to a eclimax when |last week in Ketchikan. They plan Bellairs saves Lindsey from the |to make their future home in Ore- results of her own folly by making |gon. Mr, Ellis is former Assistant “Barrymore will continue in har- ness indefinitely, because he loves to act,” declared Schoedsack. “I've never seen another person who gets as much pleasure from his work as he does. True, he loves to hunt and cruise. He is a born ad- venturer, the type of chap I'd like to have had along on some of my own frips. I am looking forward with a lot of pleasure to our planned jaunt to Alaska to photo- graph Kodiak bears. With all his love of adventure and the out-of- doors, I expect to see him starring in pictures—and good ones—for a long, long time.” Barrymore himself is somewhat Merian C. Cooper, \ executive prodvcely ANY TIME noncommital about the future. He a personal sacrifice, makes a dra- | District Attorney of the Third Di- has a lot of plans, one of which matic picture and one which all|vision and Past Department Com- is to produce “Hamlet” in the Hol- Barrymore fans will enjoy. \mnnder of the American Legion, lywood Bowl. Then, there is that > s — —— .o Alaskan venture with Schoedsack. Many picture engagements loom ahead of him. Tempting lures have been cast his w time and again from noted stage producers. RDOVA DELEGATE TO LEGION CONVENTION TO SPEND WINTER IN SOUTH ‘[CO UPTOWN THEATRE IS BUILDING NEW SIGN OF LATEST DESIGN | Walter Mickens, delegate from Cordova to the American Legion In “Long Lost Father” Barrymore Convention in Ketchikan, is con- is seen in the title role in a com- W an are busuy c: G in imi\-(hunmn wherein a father labors placing the new Neon type Unuiak wuth G the AR SN {to regain his daughter’s love. As on the Uptown Theatrs a! u=o |0 spend the winter in the States. {Carl Bellairs he is the father of corner of Seward and Third | — a | Lindsey Lane whom he deserts as Streets. The sign is the latest type i A} an infant. Twenty years later fath- of design and is wired the entire ~ 9 er and daughter meet in the elite length of the marquee on both | I (OLEM AN S London cabaret which he man- streets. | | HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP ages and where she entertains— S e | | Pay Less—Much Less Lindsey hating her parent more MR. AND MRS. CLYDE ELLIS | Front at Main Street than any other man on earth for his treatment of her as a baby. | cCarl essays to show his responsi- Mr. LEAV FOR SOUTH RECENTLY | f 1 form- oo 8 BEULAH HICKEY and Mrs. Cly | i 9 w i e files e S nation is tanta-§ “showman,” with a flair for “mix-|dren, five, and William remainder of the evening will |/ ”(;’ o‘(" !.1“ ”i] of the I,]. S.| sunt to election ling it N : o a e Waneing nd:cards, ac an ffice, Anchorage, Alaska, | m ing it” with the opposition, bothDavid, eight months. i pent in dancing and car S Whwrer: 4 ; { i he Lone Star| & | | 4 A & " nd if no protest is filed in the T g on the stump and in the court- - - {cording to the inclination of the 0, T P O e ehorage state. room. One of his opponents “la- gue \ e ¥ Bl age, As Bl | mented” the loss sustained by the| National Forest Timber | e : R perion 0 i bein; compare " R tage W 1 ecs Ve | v 3 K INN 3 y ) e \-\‘;mgma; o?ame JAMES V. ALLKED tage whon Alised;lmeamesadawyes | For Sale | ME. AND MRS. D. MACKINNON Is:nd final proof will be accepted Allred was born in Bowie, Tex. March 29, 1899. His father w a rural mail carrier. Bowie was a | frontier town then, and one of Allred’s earliest memories is of a zun fight between the town mar- shal and the county badman. Once Washed Bottles Allred’s four brothers are law- yers. His first job was washing bo! After that he shined shoes former Governor, Dan Moody, youngest chief executive of Texas, who was 34 when elected. Both started in politics as prosecuting attorneys, and both served as at- torney-general. Hundreds of suits, sald to be a record, have been tried and filed during Allred’s two terms as at- torney-general. Many he won, but Egg Prices Are A;lvancing EXTRA‘LARGE (A Real Bargain) dozen . 32¢ At GARNICK’S, Phone 174 LEADER DEPT. STORE George Bros. Grocery | Sealed bids will be received by |the Regional Forester, Juneau, Al- aska, up to and including October 26, 1934, for all the merchantable | dead timber, standing or down, and | !all the live timber marked or desig~ |nated for cutting on an area con- | taining approximately 80 acres, lo- cated about cne mile south of Staney Creek, kan Passage, West Coast of Prince of Wal |Island, about 150 miles from Ket- ‘(h:ke\n, designated as Staney Creek iArea No. 1, Tong National For- |est, Aiask: timated to be 3,760,000 feet B.M. ore or less of spruce nd hemlock sawtimber and 25,000 more or less of piling. No {bid of less than $1.50 per M feet {BM. for spruce sawtimber; $1.00 per M feet B.M. for hemlock saw- | timber; 1c per ft. for piling up to and including 95 feet in length jand 1'%c per lin. ft. for piling over 95 feet in length will be considered, $1,000 must be deposited with each |bid to be applied on the purchase price, refunded, or retained in part as liquidated damages, according to the conditions of sale. The right is reserved to reject any and all bids, |inciuding hids the acceptance of which would involve the manufac- ture of the timber outside of the | Territory of Alaska. Bids will be iconsidered from only such firms or individuals who have accepted the general provisions of the so-called anket code of the Natlonal Re- 0 Act. Before bids are sub- mitted, full information concerning the timber, the conditions of sale, and the submission of bids should be obtained from the Regional For- |ester, Juneau, Alaska, or the Re- gional .Forest Inspector, Ketchikan, | Alaska. { AND SON ARRIVE FROM |0q final certificate issued. CRAIG FOR MONTH'S \'IN’ITE GEO. J. LOV | Registrar. Mr. and Mrs. Donald MacKinnon mirst puplication, Sept. 5, 1934. nd their small son, Donald, Jr., Last publication, Oct. 31 1934, arrived here on the Alaska yes day from Craig to | the next month. They | their time between Mr. MacKin- non's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Loc {le MacKinnon, his brother and| July 16, 1934. | sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Simp-/ Notice is hereby given that Joseph | son MacKinnon, and Mrs. M - 'Simpson, entryman, together with non's sister and brother-in-law,' his witnesses Henry C. Gorham Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Wade and Oscar Koski, has made final for! UNITED STATES t here GENERAL LAND OFFICE Anchorage, Alaska. : Mr. Donald MacKinnon is the preof of his homestead eptry, An- | Standard O1il representative at chorage 07885, for a tract of land | Craig where he was transferred|embraced in U. S. Survey No. 2135, from the Juneau branch two y |ago. ars | located on Douglas Island N. and |'W. of Survey No. 1361 and Survey e ee— {No. 1096, in latitude 58° 18’ 10” N. | MR. AND MRS. KOHLHEPP ;Lungitude 134° 26" W. and reestab- TO RETURN HERE FROM {lishment of U.S.LM. No. 5, con- SOUTH EARLY NI WEEK ' taining 31.56 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land { Mr. and Mrs. George Kohlhepp|Office, Anchorage, Alaska, and if plan to leave Seattle on their re-.no protest is filed in the local land |turn to Juneau next Saturday offfee within the period of pub- morning, according to word received |lication or thirty days thereafter here from the travelers who have said final proof will be accepted spent the last several weeks tour-'and final certificate issued. ing the country. | GEO. J. LOVE, Mr. Kohlhepp is buyer for the| Register. men’s department of B. M. Behr-|First publication, Aug. 15, 1934. ends Company, Incorporated, and, Last publication, Oct. 3, 1934. |has visited the leading markets for S R men’s apparel for his firm while! NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, |away. [that on August 28, 1934, in the e, | United States Commissioner’s Court |R. C. W'DOUGALL IS IN | for Juneau Precinct, Division Num- | ST. ANN'S RECUPERATING 'ber One, Territory of Alaska, in FROM INJURIES RECEIVED Probate, the undersigned was ap- | pointed administrator with the will -| R. C. McDougall is in St. Ann’s annexed of the estate of WILLIS | Hospital recuperating from injur- W. BATCHELLER, deceased. All jes received while working on the Persons having claims against said |Douglas bridge yesterday morning. estate are required to present them, |Mr. McDougall fell a distance of With the proper vouchers, and veri- !abouL 30 feet and suffered a broken fied as required by law, to said llittle finger of his left hand, a administator at his office, within | broken bone in his right leg and a SIX months from the date of this proken bone in his right heel, The Notice, to wit, within six months last was shattered into six pieces, from August 29, 1934 | R | HOWARD D, STABLER, Idaho will produce approximates Attorney-at-Law. 1y 19,610,000 bushels of potatoes this: Office: Shattuck Building, Ju- year or approximately 2,000,000 neau, Alaska. bushels below the state’s five year First publication, Aug. 29, 1934. average. Last publication, Sept. 26, 1934. y will divide| DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | & | | | | INDIAN COAL To Put It There CARBONADO To Hold It There A TRIAL AND YOU'LL AGREE—It’s certainly great on these cool, crisp mornings to watch the thermometer shoot up to 70 degrees in 4 few minutes with only a couple of shovefuls of Indian Coal to put it there. " And then just watch the way the house will hold that warm and comfortable temperature ‘when you 'bank thie fire with a small amount of Carbonado Coking Coal.~ Furthermore, if you will bank the fire with Carbonado before retiring, you will not have to cut kindling or shiver for an’hour waiting for the house to get warm because there will be fire in the furnace when you get up and a couple of shovelfuls of Indian Coal will heat the place as quickly as any fuel yet dis- covered. That’s why Indian Coal “to put it there” and Carbon- ado Coking Coal “to hold it” is the favorite economical heating recipe for Gastinean Channel residents. Best on the market for your furnace and may be used to equal advantage in your heater. $12.50 PER TON AT THE BUNKERS———— { § PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. | Phone 412

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