The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 28, 1935, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA hM\’lRL MONDAY, J\N 1935. The MOST GLORIOUS MUSICALROMANCE OF ALL TIME! Added Musical Treat “AVA MARIA” “MADAME. BUTTERFLY” “A DREAM” Original Recordings by Enrico Caruso Courtesy Anderson Music Shoppe Show Place of Juneau 1 left - Ishmay, Michigan, | “far-north” and when they arrived jon that old steamer Topeka, they | found the weather like spring. | There was no snow and no cold. | They landed in Juneau as Douglas had no docking facilities in those DOUGLAS NEWS ~=ee-¥ was made in a canoce. Today is a CLASS REUNION IS | usual one for reminisences by Jer- | HELD BY 1931 GRADS ry Cashen and Mrs. Franks. e Mrs. Fred Gebhart and Miss| NEW DELIVERY TRUCK Ruth Lundell were hostesses to. A new delivery truck, not new the Douglas high school class of in service, but new to Mike Rieser, | 1931 at the apartment of the for- was brought fo Douglas aboard the mer in Juneau Friday evening. |Norco Saturday night from Jus days and the trip to the Island | for this| IGRAGE MOORE IN COMEDY ROLE ON CAPITOL SCREEN \Star of Stage and Screen Wins Success in “One Night of Love” Heralded by a fanfare of nation- wide praise and acclamation, the sensationally successful Columbia production, “One Night of Love,” | serves as a starring vehicle glamorous Grace Mcore, een and radio fave the . current attr: pitol Theatre. The film play, based on a sto y Charles Beahan and Dorothj Speare, and adapted to the screen by S."K. Lauren, James Gow and Edmund North, presents an en- trancingly novel blend of romance comedy, music, drama and exotic settings. It concerns itself with the operatic aspirations of an am- bitious, carefree young midwestern girl who travels to Italy to study voice culture with the prize money won in a local radio voice contest | There she meets a gay young Am- |erican blade with a fortune in the bank and romance in his heart | and also a charming, debonair music teacher, | minati. LUMBER TEAM 'BEATS GROGERS IN PIN GONTEST .Columbla 2 Trio Winner Over California Squad, 1,382 to 1,339 Columbia Lumber Company's | bowlers defeated ten-pin players from the California Grocery last| night at Brunswick Alleys, 1,382 to 1,339. J. Snow was high for the winners with 489, ‘The Lumbermen also will see ac- tion tonight when they meet the Frye- Bruhn team at 8 o'clock. Last night's summary: Columbia Lumber 130 134 200— 467 151 130 14 121 200 168-— 4EJ 1382 | is | | | | {J. Halm Johensen J. Snow Totals California Grocery 146 158 171— 475 120 144 154— 418 117 177 152— 446 Galao G. Bavard C. Jensen Totals . 1339 TR R [NICK BAVARD lS BACK FROM BUSINESS TRIP; CONDITIONS IMPROVE Nick Bavard, of the California Grocery, arrived on the Yukon af- |ter a business trip to Seattle and Tacoma. He reports conditions in the two cities greatly improved from last year when he visited them and noticed a more optimis- tic feeling among business men and the general public. SRS ILLNESS OF R. E. ROBERTSON DELAYS ELECTRICAL CASE | { | | { | | | | | I | | Due to the illpess of R.E. Robert, ‘<0n one of the attorneys for the| plaintiff in the case of the Electri- cal Research Products, Incorpor- ated, vs. W. D. Gross, now on trial | in the United States District Court, | was continued until tomorrqw morning, when Court met today. S RETUR.\' TO CORDOVA | Louis Giske and C, Chester Carl- | son are returning to Cordova from Juneau on the Yukon, They were \C/erova delegates to the recent| All-Alaska fishing ‘workers con-| vention held here, | | e Departmem of Ag u]ture.‘ |Bureau of Public Roads, January 23, 1935. Sealed bids will be re- ceived at the office of the Bureau of Public Roads, 419 Federal & Ter- portrayed by Tullio Car- - | base. Cards were played with high prize neau. It came from the Alaska being won by Miss Isabel Cashen Dairy owned by Joe Kendler, and and consolation, Mrs. Leonard: Mr. Rieser will use it to take care Johnson. Favors and decorations of the greater business he antici- for refreshments carried out the|pates when Douglas begins to grow. class colors of orchid and green‘ R <6 The girls presented Mrs. Geb- hart with a farewell gift before her RHE]NLANDER BEER departure Tuesday. She and her husband are leaving on the Prin-| REPRESENTATIVE ls cess Norah for the south. MAmG FlR.sT TR[P They expect to spend several days in Seattle and then proceej! H. C. Dunlop, Alaska Distributor to - Sacramento, California, ‘where| for Rheinlander Beer, and the| they plan to locate permanemly Iman responsible for the huge sale‘ntoria] Bldg., Juneau, Alaska, until | They will visit With Mr. dnd Mrs.|of tne special holiday brew, so!9 o'clock am. on February 28, 1935, virgil Wilfert in San Francisco.|evident in Juneau during Christ- | for clearing and grubbing of 4,002 | Mrs. Gebhart is the daughter ‘of mas week, arrived on the Yukon miles of the Sitka Highway, Sitka- | Mr. and Mrs. Herman Savikko of ‘on his first sales trip in 1935. Dun- Halibut Point Section, located with- | Douglas. | ARG ON SHORT TRIP 4 Mrs. Henry Nelson went south on | the Norca Saturday evening. She expects to return to Douglas in| about two weeks. - DIVER UNABLE TO LOCATE BODY OF EVERETT FLEEKE | | | After two days .of unsuocessfuli diving efforts of H. LaGasa to lo-! cate the remains of Everett Fleek,| drowned eight days ago, the search by the diver was abandoned yes- terday. The ‘only hope, of finding the body lies in the possibility that it may yet he cast up on the beach should it be released by the sands which undnubv,e y hold it. FOB’I‘Y YEARS AGO Forty years ago today, it is, since Jerry Cashen, pioneer of Douglas, and his sister, Mrs. William Franks, of Juneau, arrived on Gastineau Channe] to make their home in) Alaska. In the dead of winter they lop reports a very nice business on ms various lines in points sout] of here and looks forward to a greatly increased Alaskan business this year. — e —- MWEACHRAN NOTES IMPRO VEMENT IN ALASKA BUSINESS| N. A. McEachran, representing the Schwabacher Grocery Company in Southeast Alaska, and who re- cently returned from a combinéd business and pleasure trip to his Seattle headquarters, reports a greatly increased business in his territory on his first trip in 1935. Also, generaly speaking, business conditions in Seattle and Sound cities show a great improvement over the same period of a year agp. “Mac” is now busily engaged calling upon his Juneau and Doug- las trade. e Shop in Juneauy in and adjacent fo the Tongass Na- onal Forest, First Judicial Divi- ion, Territory of Alaska, imvolving 220 acres clearing and 170 acres grubbing. The attention of the bid- |der is directed to the special provi- |sions covering certificate of compli- |ance with codes of fair competition, subletting and assigning the con- itmct minimum wage rates and al- térnae bid to be submitted in case |he may desire to offer any foreign | articles, materials or supplies. Where plans and specifications are requested a deposit of $10.00 will | Ibe required to insure their return | within 30 days after opening of bids. Checks shall be made payable to the Bureau'of Public Roads, Ju- neau, Alaska. Plans and spécifita- tions may be examined at the Bureau of Public Roads, Federal & | Territorial Bldg., Juneay, Alaska, | {and Forest Service, Commercial | Bldg., Ketchikan, Alaska. Bid blanks may be obtained at the ‘office of |the Bureau of Public Roads, Ju- |neau, Alaska. M. D. Williams, Dis- 'trict Engineer. PRISON FILM INj== UPTOWNPREVIEW THIS EVENING “Worst Woman in’ Paris” to Close Uptown Run at Regular Show What goes on behind the closed doors of a prison death house where the relentless wheels of jus- tice grind their 'daily toll of re- tribution? There is a sensational, gripping answer to this question coming to the Uptown Theatre. A preview of the film will be shown tonight “The Last Mile,” based on the releorated stage play, the dramatic n-ation that startled the modern theatrical world, is laid almost en- tirely in the death house of a State prison: The souls men are bared in a pulsating, stirring drama with a smashing climax. This World Wild film, by Sam Bischoff, has a famous names that includes Pre | ton Foster, as™ {Killer" Mears; How ard Phillips, as the youth convic ed on circumstantial evidenc E. Stone, Albert J. Smith, Fix, Alec B. Francis and others. “Worst Woman in Paris” Anchm age Men Forced Down & e o Toment. in Plane in thzarc! Enrouteto: * * ;. States, Finally Reach Seattle - i N. A. McEac:’a:‘x‘\’:‘ e i at the bedside Brothers; A. B. Chapman, Junea J. P, Morgan, Juneau; AugusL Fritsche, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. S. N. Greenleaf and family, Seattle; O. H. Hegre, Seattle; Mrs. W. H, Cleveland, Sitka. Gastineau directed cast of g MERSSE 1 icus Grace iwe S’ who! has (he ht of Love” now r'lrv«ing in Jur ling feminine role in « v NOTELS SEATTLE, railroad man of Ar lis enroute to San visit his wife who hospital. | Reed arrived here by bus from Vancouver, B. C., and took & Unit- ed Airliner for the South at 6 o'clock Sunday mc When he left Anchorage he had intended to make the entire trip by plane but bad weather interfered, fore- ing the plane down near Hazelton, B. C, and he made the remainder lof the trip here by sleigh, train land bus | Herbert Reed and Gus Gelles, who made the trip out with Grant Reed, remained here. Pilot Frank Dorbandt with his |three pasengers, left Anchorage by 6 | plane on Thu Janu 17, Fifty deg below zero ither, |caused Dorbandt to land at Atlin !He took off atur , January 19, for Hazelton, but w forced down in a gale, 26 miles from that place. On Sunday, Janua 20, he took off from where he had been forced down, for a ranch to se gasoline. After getting gasoline, he attempted to return for hi passengersbut oneski hit a snow pocket and the plane was dam- |aged. Dorbandt went to Hazelton, cured a dog team and returned for his passengers, later taking them to Hazelton. From there the three passengers made their way to Se- attle. Dorbandt is understood to negotiating for repairs to his p and expects to arrive he or return to Anchorage, his fl Jan, Grant Reed, e ill wife last night. underwent an opera-| oid infection. - > She recently is sick in a|tion for a ma e 00 sces0e 00 00 HOSPIT NO o e000 00000 %’ | compeny; K B Edwards, Heins Company; D. Turner, Juneau; O. Is in St. ADN'S|g "pongen, Juneau; Jack Clifford, result of &| yuneau; T. J. Kubley, Ketchikan; hich he Sul-| ging Bruce, Ketehikan; Herb C. He distocated S| pynion Seattle; Miss V. Simpson. Seattle; James L. Freeburn, Chi- chagof; Mrs, W. H. Cleveland, Sit- | ka; S. J. Kane, Hoonah; J. Barker, Los Angeles; H. Olsen, Seatfle; H. Norheim, Seattle; Mr. and Mrs. W. Bacon, canien Pl Imlach, Latouche; Mrs. ances Hadden underwent| j . .qy ration at St. Ann's morning. | 7 D. Van Hospital toda fall on an icy s fered last night shoulder. et Wi Darnell entered St. Ann’s last night for medical at- ¥ Ho:p! tention. G Alaskan P. F. White, Juneau; Iver Reppe, Juneau; Earl F. Blinzler, Juneau. - - Hospital this Mrs. Jean Curran is reported in a critical cc »mllh(u\ at St. Anrn |TELLER FISHING AREA Ann's Hos- | been a Robert Martin left St. pital today after having medical patient. - LIEUT. AND MRS. ARE PARENTS OF BABY BOY |ing to' report of the Bureau of - Fisheries. The area was closed in and Mrs. Beverly Eoff 1931, the intent being to protect formerly stationed in Ju-|spawning grounds. are the par of a baby| Native fishermen, who were plan- boy, Beverly Eoff Mocdy, Jr., born |ning to do some salting, found the on January 7 at Staten Island, |condition unsatisfactorily and Rep- New York, according to word re- |resentative ‘Arthur Chamberlin "of ceived by friends in Juneau Deering through Delegate Anthony - > - IS LOCATED % Fishing in the Port Clarence dis- | trict between Cape Douglas’ and | Cape York and in back of Teller se-| Lieut. Mood; neau, be made that the native fishermen might have food for man and dog. Albert Wile, Juneau Postmaster, The exception has been granted )/ has taken up his residence in|and those in the district will be | Apartment K in the Coliseum|allowed to resume salting this 28— Apartments. | season. WILE REACHES SAN DIEGO SAN DIEGO, Cal, Jan High Salaries Lure Hollywood Stars to England 4 Anna May Wong orge Arliss Marian Marsh o wood for lucrative bits in English films are Charles Laughton, George Arliss, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., Marian Marsh, Anna. May Wong and Fay Wuy. In most cases, the stars are paid much more than they receive in Hollywood, and film companies even pay their income taxes as_a further inducement. Threatening to replace Hollywdod as the movie’ capital of the world, English movie producers are explndmg the ~film industry in that country by drawing many of the outstanding American stars to appear in British movies with a lure of big. salaries. Among the stars who have left Holly- “sos oo Schwabacher | P. H. Adams, Seattle Hardware | B. E. MOODY will be allowed this season, accord- | | 7. Dimond asked that exception be | { LAST TIME TONIGHT of eight| soul PREVIEW TONIGHT | 600 SEATS 25° | | “Return of the Terror” 25° ANY TIME i | |® THREE TRAVELING MEN TO ARRIVE IN CITY ON NORTHLAND Word has peen received by Ju- nes 1 merchants that Lisle F. He- bert, Schwabacher Hardware Com- pany, Gil Rich of the Black Manu- facturing company, and J. 8. Jef- {fries of the ‘M. Seller Co., will arrive here ‘on the Northland. They afrived in Wrangell on the Yukon and are making Petersburg by small gasboat and from that point |will come to Juneau on the North- land. > CARD PARTY PARISH HALL FRIDAY NIGHT - CITATION In the United States Commission- er's Court for Juneau Precinct, Division ‘Numbér One, Territory I of Alaska. IN PROBATE. In Re the Estate sf WALLIZ W. BATCHELLER, Deceased. The Territory of Alaska, to Len- ore Tryon Batcheller, Willis Tryon Batcheller and Elva Lenore Batch-| eller, devisées ‘and helrs of Willis! W. Batcheller, deceased, and ‘all| | | Willis W. Batcheller, deceased, if any there’ be, and all other persons | concerned in the estate of Wmls W. Batcheller, deceased: You and each of you are hereby summoned and notified to be and |appéar in''the above entitled court torial Capitol Building at Juneau, {in""Juneau Precinct, Torritory -of Alaska, at the hour of 10 o'clock a.m. on ‘the 14th day of March, 1935, and show cause, if any exist, why an order of sale of the real property of the estate of Willis W Batcheller, deceased, and the whole thereof, should not be made as prayed for in ‘the petition for sale above ‘entitled court and cause on December 31, 1934, by the admin-| isttator with the will annexed of othor Heirs ‘and devises' of sald ™ ATTENTION .MASONS Stated Communication of Mt. Juneau Lodge No. 147, Monday evening at 7:30 o'clock. Work in the M. M. Degree. By order of the W. M. J. W. LEIVERS, Secre!n.ry Need Building-Up? W/ HEN ybu feel wuhdown, need to' put on healthy ‘flesh, when your blood is_thin or stomach gives tro;bl;, with g-s or dyspepsia, Dr. Pleree’s Golden Medical Discovery. Read what Mrs. H. r.,(.a..u of 29 So, W. Meade St., Port- an said: “Years o i Ane.r‘r‘lloc “L"a? hoted strength, Mother gave me % Galde Medical Discovery .md it ‘lmllt c!:m up l: (|II| 1 felt stronger and betfer dn 4 aTod Y AL Ree i New size, tablets 50" cts,, Ii L-\me size, or liquid, l!!.mmd " s TONIGHT—1 A. M. —ady. THE PLAY ROCKED - THE NAT |holden in the Federal and Terri- { of ‘said’ real property filed in the said estate. The real property of sald estate, described 'in said petition, is de- scribed ‘as follows: | Lot 'Eight (8) Block Two (2) of the townsite of Juneau, Alaska, and | the buildings thereon and appur-| tenancés thereunto belonging. | Dated: Juneau, Alaska, December 31, 1934. | J. F. MULLEN, United States Commissioner and | ex-officlo Probate Judge. ) HOWARD D. STABLER, Adm’r with will annexed. First publication, Dée. 81, 1934. " WILL ROUSE ‘THE waRLD! PIESTON‘ FOSTER IIOWAIO PHII.LIPS Last Times Tonight “WORST WOMAN:

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