The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 6, 1935, Page 3

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| STARTS STRICTLY The Fashion Plate of Hollywood and a Dangerous Man with Women Yet he was PUTTY IN HER HANDS! SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU - NORMAN FGSTER MAR”\N NIXON " WILLIAM GARGAN ®-X-o RaDIO PICTURE TONI TF DYNAMI‘I‘I —— HERRING BRING HUGE REVENUE Plant Reduction Men Stress| Value of Industry to Alaska Tax Sources (Continued from Page One) ies and purse seines, the speaker said, there has been a steady gain in the amount of fish caught, in- dicating a constant supply rather than depletion as charged. Summing up his arguments, Poehlitz said the extermination of the industry would result in elim- ination of tax and license revenue; unemployment of all crews; loss of established market for products, curtailment of steamer service due to less freight, curtailment of mail service due to less traffic, loss of business to merchants, loggers and mills. “All of this harm, with benefit to none,” he concluded. Says Economy, Not Waste Mr. Imlach pointed out there was no way of determining the size of fish in the catch and that when the market demanded fish of nine inches or more, the small ones caught in the nets would have to be dumped at the salteries, pollut- ing the waters, if they were not used in the reduction plants. “The House Joint Memorial No. 5. states that it is the purpose of reduction plants in the Territory to take herring in vast numbers FREE Tickets to the Uptown Theatre given to persons whose names appear in the Want Ads. Find your name, call at the theatre box office for your tickets. Tickets T0_TERRITORY, out of the waters of Alaska and grind them into fish meal” Im- lach said, “but as a matter of fact the primary purpose of taking the herring out of the waters of Alas- | ka is to salt and prepare them | for the market in the States. Of course only herring of a certain class or kind is marketable, and natural- ly. a herring - fisherman cannot sort the fish on, the fishing grounds, | but must bring his entire catch to the saltery where they are suitable for the cured herring mar- ket are therefore waste, and it is | more profitable to the Territory | and the people thereof that this waste should be turned to a mar- ketable product.” Challenge Statement Mr. Silvers challenged the state- ments that herring were caught| primarily for salting, charging that they were often caught just for the reduction plants. Charles Mur- ray, committee member, and A. P.| | Walker, also of the committee an author of the memorial, also chnl- lenged several statements. Murray | said he would have to have proof that any girls working in the| plants made as much as $1,800 a| season as contended. — .- ATTENTION REBEKAHS There will be a regular meeting at the I. O. O. F. Hall tonight af 8 o'clock. Drill practice. All mem- bers urged to attend. EDITH F. SHEELOR, Secretary. B — —adv. SHOP IN JUNEAU! When the coffee is good —it’s a friendly world. When the Coffee is Schilling ~—Oh, B-0-0-0-0-y! Wings of the Morning! “There is a sturdy quality in Schilling Coffee which with reasonable cate in making it, will deliver a fragrant full-flavored cup with delicious regularity. Schilling Coffee TThere ate two Schilling Coffees. One for percolator. One for drip. sorted. The herring that are not| | lin U. S. Survey, No. [ lon the Glacier Highway 14 miles | | northwest .of Jupeau, 123" 30" N. Longitude 134> 34’ 00" . | period of publication or thirty days | First publication, Jan. 16, 1935, f (Last publication, Mar. 13, 1935, '|liam Henry Feight, entryman, to- } Rae, all of Haines, || made final proof on his homestead, f|see. 23, NEY%NWY4, || Land Office, |land final proof acepted. | FLORENCE L. KOLB, RING WILL OPEN HERE TOMORROW Coliseum t;_s-how “Per- sonality Kid™ Star- ring Pat O'Brien “The Personality Kid,” a Warner Bros. romance of a conceited, col- orful Nmflxhter. which is sched- let .the feature attraction at tf‘w Colfseum Theatre beginning to- | morrow, is said to be an unusually \thrilling 'drama . with plenty of punch, both literally and figurative- {ly, and with a unique underlying love. story. The story is set in the atmo- phere of the squared circle, the gymnasiums and boxing emporiums, |and deals with the characters who | follow the fight profession; from | cheap pugs and roustabouts to the | high pressure promoters and ring champlons Pat OBrien heads the cast in the role of a flashy fighter, with and no “punch,” but whose inordi-| Inate vanity ieads him. to believe that he is actually knocking out the set-ups his promoters provide for his bouts. Glenda Farrell h'Ls the role of Pat's wife and his man- ager who knows both her husband and the fight game thoroughly and | only hopes to make enough of a stake to start them in a small business. ing at the. Coliseum tonight, is hy Elizabeth A. McFadden, the |In the film, both Mary Morris and created on Broadway. Evelyn Ven- able, Standing are also featured. Charles Vidor directed FRED CHAPMAN VISITS ELKS LODGE TONIGHT Oldtimers’ Night Will Also Be Enjoyed Starting at 10 o’Clock The Juneau Elks will double ' feature tonight, movie man_ says. Fred W. Chapman, District Dep- uty Grand Exalted Ruler, will make his official visit and there| will also be initiation at the regu- |lar lodge session. | At 10 o'clock open house will be| held for all Elks, their families| and ladies, the occasion being the | annual Oldtimers’ night. There | will be dancing, cards, bowling and | | refreshments and all members, as, | well as visiting Elks, are urged to| | attend. | ———————— | Zane Grey Sued for Taxes on His Yacht| ! LOS ANGELES, Feb. 6—A suit| | against Zane Grey, the author, for taxes on his vacht, Fisherman II,| | which is assessed at $50,180 for | 1934, is on ffle here. It is alleged| | by County Tax Collector H. D.| | Alfonso that Grey owes Los An- | geles County $4528 in taxes, hav- ing paid only $400 taxes on the | boat during 1933 and 1934. enjoy a as the Anchorage, Alaska. December 17, 1934, Notice is hereby given that Har- {old Windsor, entryman, together with his witnesses, Ludwig Chris- tian Baggen and James Edwin Sparks, has made final proof .on his homestead entry, Anchorage 08322, for a tract of land embraced 1521, situate latitude 58° W. and it is now in the files of the U. 8. Land Office, Anchorage, | Alaska, and' if no protest is filed |in the local land office within the | thereafter said - final certificate will be issued and final proof accepted. FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. UNITED STATES. GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. December 20, 1934. Notice is hereby given that Wil- gether with his witnesses, Oarl Roberts and Frederick Hugh Mec- Alaska, has Anchorage 07412, for the 8%SW%, | sec, 26, SE% |SE% sec. 22, T. 28 S, R. 4 E. | CR.M. containing 160 acres, and it |is now in the files of the U. S. Anchorage, Alaska, 'and if no protest is filed in the {local land office within the period |of publication or thirty days. there- | after, final certificate will be issued Acting Register. plenty of flash, considerable class| " Paramount’s “Double Door,” clos-| from the New. York stage success| Itirst of the 1933 hits on Broadway. { Anne Revere have the roles they| Kent Taylor and Sir Guy‘ DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR | "TO BECOME BRIE OF D. BAKER SATURDAY Cr wide im.erest to a, large cir- cle of friends is the marriage of M Dorothy Aalbu and Dewsey | er, which. will. be held at 8 k Saturday -evening in the Lu.‘w ran Resurrection Church, the Rev. Erling- K. Olafson read- ing U]e VOwWS, Only the attandants will be prés- ent for the actmal ceremony; & re- | ception following: -immediately af- | terward at the H. H. Hollmann res- idence for which® more than. 80 invitations have been . issued. Mrs. Sten V. Grummett will' be | matron of honor and Leonard Holmquist - the - best -man. Miss Aalbu is the daughter’ of Mr. and Mrs, K. K. Aalbu of ‘Ev- erett, Wash., and is connected With the Bureau of Fisheries, having: re- cently returned here from the .Ser attle office. Mr. Baker is connect- ed with the Juneau Bakery-and is | widely known in- athletic circles here, being a member of the George Brothers basketball team. He is William Baker and years. of Seaside, Ore, has lived in Juneau several| R b B STOCK PRIGES.. SLIDING DOWN - ANOTHER DAY [ | 4 Losses from Fraauons to, More than Point in | Listless Trading | NEW YORK, Feb, 6.— swcks | slid lower today in another list- less market. Losses were from fractions to | more than one point in other cas- es and were numerous at the fin- ish. Today'’s close was_heavy. CLOSING. PKICES TODAY NEW YORK, Feb. 6.— Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 16%, American Can 112%, American Power and 2%, Anaconda 10%, Armour N | 5%, Bethlehem. Steel 28%, ¢ | umet and Hecla 3%, General | tors 30, International Ha 39%, Kennecott 16%, United States Steel 35%, Pound $4.88%. = OTHER. STOCK QU " The follos " are |of various issues today on the York Stock Exchange, furnished by /lpany’s Juneau office: the son of Mr..and: Mys.| ‘airbanks and. Com- Amer. Radiator 13%, Amer. R. M. 20, Amer. Smelting 33, Amer. T. &| T. 103, Amer. Tobacco 82, Amer; W. W. 12}, Atchison Topeka 42, | Atlantic Refimng 24, Bendix 14% C. P. 12% | Caterpilar 38, ‘Cerro' de 189%, C. & O. 41, | Cont. Can 6 { tiss-Wright 2 mours 92%, Electric Auto-Lite 23% PFairbanks-Morse 13% Gen. Electrio 22'% (xl' y 6% g N 12%, Holland Purnate 8%, Hom('- :smko 341 Hudson 8%, Int. Nickel | 22% Liggett & Myers 105, Liquid Car- bonic 25%, Loew’s 31'%, Loose-Wiles | 343, Lor l]lud 19%; MM shall. Field 8%, Mathiesen Alkall 27%%: ‘ McIntyre 38'%, Montgomery Wird 25%, Nash 15'%, Nat. Cash Register \lfi’ , N. Y. C: 16; N. P. 16%, ney <65, } -~ Pullman Pasco‘ Chrysler 36%, | Cont. Oil 17%, Cur- , du Pont de Ne- 47, Radio 5, Reynoldy | Tobacco 47, Sears Rochuck 33344 S. P. 14, Sccony 13%, Sperry. &%, Stand. Oil Cal. 20#%, Stan. Oil N, Johns-Manville 49% N MOVIE WNGE AT THE GAPITOL ..|Snoozle and Lupe Velez Blend Comedy in ‘Strictly Dynamite’ “I'm Putty in Your Hands” sings Jimmy Durante to Lupe Velez in “Strictly Dynamite, at the Capi- tol. Theatre. tahight, tha RKO-Radio ‘[laugh plot” about radio broadcast- ing. comedians. —. and that's _um | what he is. Pen | As Moxie Slaight, Durante cun‘ ee no.further. than his nose while hig air wave mate Vera is two- ‘iming, She enchants Nick, his gag ‘yriter, and lures him away; while George, Moxie's agent, is attracted J. -393¢, Texas Corp, 19%, Timken 3264, U. S. Rubber 13% ‘ing 110, West. | Electrie II(:‘ United Airaraft 12%. ;U 8 Smelts Air Brake 24, Wast. Woolworth 53%, Hugd- 5. | mining exchanges: Bralorne $10.00; | Bremner 42c at 50c, B, Ry 3, 17%0, Cariboo Gold Quartz $L.15, Gol- conda 29c, Montana Consolidated 19'2c, Nabesna 80¢) at, $1.00, Pioneer Gold $10.00, Premier $1.48, Silver- smith 6c, Sunshing 51120 Cresson 1%, at; 13 TITLET OF F FHA IS SUBJECT OF CHAMBER TALI( Pegues to Tell City Lead-| ers How New Homes Can Be Financed John E. Pegucs Director of the | Federal Housing Administration -in ! Alaska and Dr. Charles E. Bunnell, President of the Alaska Agricul- tural College and School of Mines at Fairbanks, will be the honored speakers at the regular weekly session of Juneau's Chamber of ‘Commerce tomorrow noon at Bail- bey’s Cafe. Pegues is expected to tell the city’s business and professional leaders how new houses can be con- structed under- the, FHA. “I do 'mot’ planm to make a k*Speech’,” Pegues said today. “But L do intend to tell the Juneau Yo Nick’s wife Sylvia. Moxje is wrathful when Vera and Nick return, but only because he is Jisappointed in the gagster's liter- ary material, It brings a mad a merry climax to Durante's g laugh hit. “Strictly Dynamite” Sings “I'm Putty in Your Hands” and “Hot Patata;” Miss Velez sings “Oh Me, Oh My, Oh You;” Four Mill Brothers vocalize “Swing It Sister” and’ “Money Clothes.” Norman. Foster, William Gargan ‘and Marian Nixon roles, Chamber how homes. can be fi- mnanced under Title Two of the FHA, “Bractically. all: the banks in the [Rerritory. have applied to qualify Iunder- that Titie. - Probably within |two weeks, all their applications as| lmoruqees will, be apprc?«ed Then, | new construction; work m go ahead at a rapid rate. Much, linterest has been shown in this| ITme throughout the Territory, |especially in Jupeau, Fairbanks and | Nome.” Dr. Bupnell is a recent arrival, in Juneau, having arrived from the ! Westward. on, the southbound Yu-| kon. which docked here Monday. | The President of the “Farthest| North” college is here for a meet- | ing; of, the Board of Trustees of the institution. Tomorrow's session of the Cham- ber will be the first “regular” meeting since Gov. Johp W. Troy and members of the House of Rep- resentatives and Senate of the Twelfth Territorial Legislature were honored at two .successive gather- ings. Business details, suspended at those meetings, will be brought up . tomorrow. C’éntlémen $1. Pirst publication, Jan. 16, 1935, 'Last publication, Mar. 6, 1935, N BALL FUN! GAIETY! MERR 00 Juneau Firemen’s ELKS HALL TUESDAY—FEBRUARY 12TH ", IMENT ! Ladles Frée! blgnds com- J° edy, romance and melody. Durante |} expected | in Your |§ Elliott. Nugent directed | PREVEW TONIGHT He modestly admitted HE WAS THE GREATEST GUY IN THE WORLD —until he found out how his wife made him a in supporting | @ 600 SEATS 25¢ success! Warner Bros." great wise- 1| » cracking stars teamed in a story that's lightning action— breathless 4 ramance — glorious fun — from sizzling start to knockout finish! 4 G 25 LAST TIME T()NI(‘H ¥ - SHIVERING—QUIVERING—THRILLING DOUBLE DOOR with Mary Morris STARTS TOMORRO ( W: ANY TIME DflllBLE BLL FOR UPTOWN THIS EVENING and “The Savage Girl” Ken Maynard Are Divide Honors Rochelle Hudson n the ‘“let's go native” feature, “The Savage Girl,” and Ken Maynard in “Dy- namite Ranch” is the double of- fering tonight at the Uptown. “The Savage Girl,” featuring beautiful Rochelle Hudson, Walter Byron and Harry Myers, is the story of the discovery of a white Jungle Girl in the midst of savage blacks and ferocious animals. The western picture is indeed | coming into its own when such fa- mous talent can be engaged for| to these pictures as Ken Maynard has in his supporting cast in “Dyna- mite Ranch,” his latest ‘Wide picture. Starting with Ruth Hall, the leading lady, and running through Wednesdey World | a list of names that includes Alan Roscoe, Martha Mattox, Arthur | Hoyt, Al 8mith and George Pearce, the roster reads like a feature pic- ture assemblage of players, The story is about $200,000 miss- ing from an express car, the ban- dit free and the wrong mar &c- cused. INA M. JACKSON, : BECOMES BRIDE OF H. W. ANDERSON Ina M. Jackson, owner of the 'Ina J, and well known, Jupeau | resident, and Henry Willlam An- | derson, employee of the Alaska Juneau, were united in marriage at the Lutheran parsonage last Sat- urday evening by the Rev:. Erling | K. Olafson. Attendants were Mar- | garet Agnes Patterson and Mel- | vin G. Brenno. | Following the wedding ceremony, | a reception was held at the home ,or the newlyweds. ere— Nearly 13,000 acres of farm land owned by Indians of the Kiowa reservation in Oklahoma have been terraced In a soil conservation pro- | gram. .—— | SHOPR s JUNEAG! IIIIIIIIIIIHUIHIHWWHHWHIIIIIIIHIIHIHIIIIHHIHIWNIH!IHIIIIIII Thu»rsd'gf COME AWAY WITH ME! ... Where strange emotwm cause slignger situations . A story of mtrigue and weird jungle madness.

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