The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 20, 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)

LAST TIME TONIGHT—— GEO. WHITE “1934 SCANDALS” Starts Tomorrow FOR HER CHILD. ANYTHING! She was ready to sacrifice all, even marry 6 man she did not love! \ | | | { | i { { | i JOSEPH M. SCHENCK presents 9 CIVE t-Lady. BROOK OTTO KRUGER TULLIO CARMINATI « DICKIE MOORE a DARRYL F. ZANUCK production Directed by Gregory La Cava APITO THEATRE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU TWO TRUE BILL RETURNED TODAY BY GRAND JURY Moses Phillips Indicted for Second Degree Murder— Orville Wheat, Assault Two indictments were returned by the Grand Jury when it re- ported to the U. S. District Court this morning after one day's de- liberation. One.indictment was for murder in the second degree and the second was assault with a dangerous weapon. 4 Moses Phillips, bound over to the Grand Jury, for the alleged killing of John Lindoff at Hoons ah on August 12, was indicted for murder in the second degree, in violation of Sec. 4759, Compiled Laws of Alaska. His bail was placed at $10,000 by Judge George F. Alexander and his arraignment set for tomorrow morning. A true bill was returned in the case of the U. 8. vs. Orville Wheat charged with assault with a dan- gerous weapon in violation of Sec. 4718, Compiled Laws of Alaska, against Victor Erickson. His bail was set at $1,000 and his arraign- ment set for tomorrow morning by Judge Alexander. Further Court Business Following the report of the Grand Jury this morning, the members retired to continue their deliberations and additional mat- teds were taken up by the Court until it recessed at 11 qclock un- til -2 o'clock this afternoon. Gerald W. Hudson was granted a decree of divorce from Anita Hudson in a default case. In the civil suit of Rice and Ahlers vs. Olive M. Teel and oth- ers, which came before the court for trial, the Court decided in favor of the plaintiff and the judgment was granted. .- * “HEALTH TREAT” Famous Soap Lake Mineral Baths, ‘Botly Manipulation, Drugless | Institute. 1 ——————— Dqu Empire Want Adn hy' —adv. MARRIAGE LICENSE IS ISSUED YESTERDAY P. M. Yesterday afternoon a marriage hceme was issued in the United s Commissioner's office for M1.~5 Viola Riendeau and Eske Eskesen. Miss Riendeau is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Riendeau, a graduate of the Ju- neau High School, and has spent most of her life in Juneau, while Mr. Eskesen has lived here for |some time and is employed as a | blacksmith at the Alaska Juneau The wed- the near Gold Mining Company. ding will take place in future. - oo - GAULTS GOING SOUTH Roy E. Gault, of Skagway, ac- companied by Mrs. Gault, will leave the Gateway city on Decemer 9 on the steamer Yukon, enroute to Los Molinos, California, to spend the Christmas holidays. Mrs. M. E. Troberg and son Roy, of Daw- son, Y. T, now visiting in Van- couver, B. C., and Edwin Gault, University of Washington student, INTERESTING | its | was produced by Charles H. Rog- THE DAILY ALASKA E'\!PTRE TUESDAY, NOV. 20, 1934. ROMANCE AT GOLISEUM ‘Eight Girli in & Boat’ Has Background of Exclus- ive Girls’ School “Eight Girls in a Boat” is the title of the feature attraction coming tonight to the Coliseum Theatre. Brought to the screen by Lewis | Foster and Casey Robinson from the original by Helmut Brandis, “Eight Girls in a Boat” has for leading players Dorothy Wil- son, Kay Johnson, Douglas Mont- gomery, Walter Connolly and Bar- bara Barondess. In addition there are eight beautiful girls who were selected in beauty contests held in | as many different cities. Richard Wallace directed the picture for Paramount, and it tells in interesting fashion the story of what happens when an inno- cent, sheltered girl gdares experi-| ment with romance. The picture ers. It is laid against a background | of an exclusive girl's school whose walls and stern rules thunder “No Men Allowed!” One girl falls in love with a young medical stu- dent outside the wall Tragedy | is inevitable. She tries to keep her secret to herself, but fails. It is only through the sympathy and understanding of one of the teach- | ers at the school that the girl finds the happiness for which she yearns. Adventures, which befall the oth- |~ SECOND SHRINE ers, are woven into an extremely interesting story in a picture which is most entertaining. The pro- gram also-includes selected shorts. | ————— INCOMES ARE ESTIMATEDTO | BE GOING UP NEW YORK, Nov. 20.—A sharp| curve upward in the income of the | American people this year is indi- | cated by estimates of leading trade ! analysts who place the income| around nine billion more than last year. This reversal of the pendulum | which has swung steadily in the wrong direction from 1929 when the national income was roughly estimated at eighty six billion, six million dollars, to 1933, when it was about forty-nine billion, five| hundred and sixty million dollars, is believed by some economists to form the groundwork of a broad concave base which will sustain a relative degree of prosperity over a number of years. R R will join Mr. and Mrs. Gault at Seattle on the trip to California. e i % MRS. WARSING VISITS Off on a journey to San Fran- | cisco, Mrs. Frank Warsing, wife of the owner and manager of the Quartz Creek Dredging Company in the Candle district, is a passenger | on the Alaska to Seattle. She boarded the vessel at Seward, after a train ride from Fairbanks and | an airplane jaunt from the Candle | district. ~Mrs. Warsing will visit her children and sister in Cali- fornia. e — EVERETT NOWELL LEAVES FOR SOUTH TO REMAIN UNTIL EARLY JANUARY Everett Nowell, representative of Blake, Moffitt and Towne, paper manufacturers, and Ballou-Wright, automobile accessory manufacturers, left on the Alaska southbound. He plans to stop in Ketchikan for a week and will continue from there to Seattle to visit the com- panies’ headquarters. He will join Mrs. Nowell and their daughter who preceded: him . south, in the [Puget Sound city and remain there unm early in January. | steamer Alaska and will visit for | MRS. J. M. MALILA LEAVES }end of the Pznhandle MRS. WILLIAM T. MAHONEY LEAVES ON ALASKA FOR SHORT VISIT IN SOUTH Mrs. passage William T. Mahoney took for the south on the several weeks in Seattle and other cities of the Northwest. ——————— FOR SHORT TRIP SOUTH Mrs. J. M, Malila left for the south on the steamer Alaska to be away for a short time. She was called to Longview, Washington, by the serious illness of her father. —— e FRANK A, METCALF LEAVES ON BUSINESS TRIP MONDAY Frank 'A. Metcalf, mining and civil engineer, left on the steamer Alaska for a business trip to Wran- gell. - e MERCHANDISE BROKERS LEAVE FOR SHORT TRIPS R. H. Chadwick, D. M. Bothwell and H. B. Crewson, well known merchandise brokers, left on the Alaska for cities in the southern i this Broken Butterfly ‘There’s a broken heart fm- every | bright light on Broadway,” . The other day Audrey Brothers was one of the toasts of the Big Town. To- day she is in a hospital, recovering trom poison she took as ’dawn eame and she realized her day as a Broad- way favorite was over. The t- light is cast upon her story, which is that of hundreds of other girls of whom you never hear, because she is the daughter of a once promi= nent lawyer. DANCE HELD ON FRIDAY NIGHT Next Friday evening the Scottish Rite Temple will be the scene of the second Shrine Club dante of season. Always among' the most popular and enjoyable dances to be held during the winter, the party on Friday is in the hands of a capable Shrine committee and according to plans, will nfore than live up to previous entertain- ments held by these expert hosts. Excellent dance music will @ be provided by Earl Blinzler’s |five- piece orchestra, engaged forj the evening and during . intermibbion, refreshments will be served in the banquet room. Mrs. Katherine Hooker is to be in charge of the supper. - - SHOP IN lemfl!' ‘GALLANT LADY' IS VEHICLE OF !‘uxN HARDING Lo\(l\ Star Comes to Cap- itol Tomorrow in Poignant Drama | | the 20th Cen- ng Ann Hard- at the Capitol \esday, presents one | poignantly dramatic stories which reen this season. for her understanding portrayal of feminine character in is picture this capable star | has a unique opportunity to exer- cise to the fullest her ability to to emotional heights. The ory deals with a young woman, mother of an illegitimate child, who i ed to assign the child for adoption immediately after its birth, agreeing never to see it again | As the years pass she becomes al phenomen successful business wom and at the height of her fame accidentally meets again the child whom she had counted lost to her. The story brings her to the point where she is forced to choose between several courses of action and is ¢limaxed in a tense- ly dramatic scene which gives full play to Miss Harding’s histronic capabilities. Joseph M. Schenck ‘and Darryl | F. Zanuck, who produced “Gallant Lady” for United Artists release have surrounded Miss Harding with | an exceptionally able supporting cast. This array of talent includes such names as Clive Brook, who 1chw\v(1 such notable success in vacade,” Otto Kruger, famed Broadway star of “Counsellor at Law,” and others. Last Times Tonight George White's famous dals” will be seen for the times tonight. Valuable Clay Prod;lct Just Paint to Natives| opens “‘Scan- last MANILA, P. I, Nov. 20.—The discove that a small island in the eastern Philippines is a mass of kaelin, the white clay used in making porcelain and chinaware has caused comment here on the | lack of commercial values among | many primitive natives. Nearby villagers had been using | for years to paint their s, little knowing its worth to industry. The island, Cagbalisay, is in the province of Camarines Sur. Its kaelin deposits were reported to be among the largest and richest in the Philippines. Eleven per- sons staked a group of placer | claim. I t’s Demure-——and Modern “Liftle Woman” is the name of his demure evening gown which Lelong designed for modish mederns. It is fashioned of dove gray faille touched with a cluster .of coral velvet lilies at the waistline and its wide circular skirt, indicative of ome of the season’s most important night-time trends, is finished with corded bands. has |t |ous reels of film |late NONSENSE AND FUN IN COMEDY AT THE UPTOWN Ben Lyon z;n& Sally Eilers Play Leads in “The Morning After” It's a long trail Ind, to Ruritania, but Sally Eilers ind Ben Lyon, the stars of “The Morning After,” opening topight at the Uptown Theatre, both hit the rail happily in seven gay and joy- We urge every one to see this bit of foolery whi¢h is sheer nonsense but nonsense in the same sense “Alice in Wonder- land” is nonsense. Two youngsters, born and reared in the same town, go to school together, play together and then grow up to drift apart. The boy becomes a successful zipper sales- man and goes to Europe for a spree. The girl is there, too. Hun- dreds of miles apart they each fall innocently into traps set by con- iring revolutionaries of a small kingdom and fate throws them to- gether again to face a firing squad. In that tense, awful moment sweet memories of their childhood together come to them and inspire them to cheat death for love. They do so successfully but let no one take this story seriously. Every- body, players, director and story writer have a lot.of fun and have stored up a lot of pleasure for movie goers in their concentrated from Kokomo, | celluloid. Old Wntlngs’Sup;o}t Bible Story of Isaiah BERLIN, Nov. 20.—Inscriptions found on ancient stone fragments brought here for deciphering tend to support the Bible story of how the Prophet Isaiah cured King Hezekiah of Judah, of boils. According to II Kings, Chapter 20, Isiah cured a milignant boil on King Hezekiah by applying “a cake of figs." Cuneiform inscriptions on two slabs unearthed near Ras Shamra Northern Syria, tell that ancient Phoenician doctors cured boils with a mixture of figs, flour and dried raisins as early as 14 B. C. - - YOUNG RETURNS Alsie M. Young, brother of the Ed Young, aviator, and Jim Young, is a passenger on the Al- aska, southbound to Seattle. Young is returning to his home in Cole- man, Mich., after visiting in Fair- banks for two years. i STARTS TONIGHT YOUNG and RESTI.ESS & & call of Spring=.» dreaming of romancel A Yigorsns ek TIacero irdolinesr cha denig INOAR DORO"HY WILSON *DOUGLASS MONTGOMERY KAV JOHNSON WALTER CONNOLLY A v fa_charies 8. Rogers Production ramount Picture ——PLUS BROADWAY NIGHTS SCREEN SOUVENIRS LATE NEWS 5c¢ TIME 600 SEATS ()ld Papers for bale at hmpxre -~ UPTOWN - “THE BRiGHTEST SPOT IN JUNEAU” TUESDAY WEDNESDAY Allan Dwan’s Greatest Achievement AN AMERICAN ZIPPER SALESMAN ZIPS THROUGH EUROPE ——ADDED ATTRACTION— i« " GLEASON’S SPORTS FEATURETTE ‘“OFF HIS BASE"” LATEST METRO NEWS COMING SOON—Something Different in Entertainment “VI SOM GAR KOKSVAGEN" (Servant’s Entrance) SWEDISH MUSICAL COMEDY THE FIRST SOUND MUSICAL SOVIET UNION IN THE 1934-1935 § MEOUT OF THE ASON COMEDY TO © ‘“ MARIONETTES ¥ WATCH FOR THESE / D OTHER NOVELTY PROGRAMS to come to THE UPTOWN THEATRE where we strive to give the best in Sound— Service—Comfort and Couresty. WATCH US! We will bring you MANY NEW and NQVEL FEATURES during the "34-'35 season. BT Y

Other pages from this issue: