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with ELISSA LANDI CARY GRANT SHARON LYNNE A PARAMOUNT PICTURE “ENTER MADAME” IS NEW PRODUCTION AT COLISEUM TONIGHT Filmed against an actual back- | ground of opera scenés and voices, the diverting tale of a beautiful primadonna’s adventures in pursuit of love and fame, Paramount’s “En- ter Madame” opens at the Coliseum Theatre tonight. Elissa Landi and Cary Grant are the principals in the film which was adapted from the popular play of the same name. Lynne Over- man, Sharon Lynne, Paul Porcasi| and Adrian Rosley appear in sup- porting roles, and two wellknown opera singers—Richard Bonelli, the Metropolifan Opera star, and Nina Koshetz, celebrated soprano—are heard. The plot of “Enter Madame” re- volves about the efforts of a prima- donna to kpep up with-her opmauc career and at the same time do jus- tice to her handsome husband. ——eee— — ATTENTION WOMEN OF THE MOOSE Regular meeting tonight, Moose Hall, 8 o'clock sharp. Please be there. MRS. A. F. McKINNON, Recorder adv. KEEPS GARBAGE CANS SWEET — INOFFENSIVE Even in the nottest weather you| can keep that smelly and often disgusting garbage’ ‘can \sweet and clean—free from maggots and of- fensiveness. Simply sprinkle Bu-hdch over the contents occasionally ~ that's all. This great 60 year old insecticide ‘will surprise and please you—it acts like magic. in Bu-hach is safe — inexpensive— odorless. In handy sifter cans at drug, grecery, seed stnres, pet shops ‘everywhere. HANW SIFTER CANS . GROCERY ~~ SEED STORES B ' 50‘ w“'ficH |NSICT PWDKR MADAME A Sky Larking Riot of Romance and Song! Youw'll cheer its musical loveliness — shriek at its many mad moments — sigh at its endearing love story. —ADDED— | Stuffie's Errand of Mercy Pictorial-M-G+<M News B e e | DOUGLAS ELECTRICITY TO COME FROM 240‘ | The Alaska Electric Light and Power Company has a crew of men working here this week on their| line service, moving poles already in | |and setting new ones. Due to the| \\udonm" of St. Ann’s Avenue sev- |eral poles there had to be moved and the service extended to con-| nect up with the 240 Power plant | at Treadwell from whence the juice | will have to come Jn the future. | - DOUGLASITES TO TRAVEL Mrs. A. E. Goetz and two chil-| dren are planning to leave on Lhe‘ North Sea for a six or seven weeks' | trip south. They will visit most of the time with Mrs. Goetz' parents, | Mr. and Mrs. W. Snyder, at Orch-| ards, Washington. The latter for- merly resided here previous to a| couple of years ago. Miss Margaret Abrahamson who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. C. F. Wyller since completing her teaching term at Anchorage, is also leaving for the south. Miss Abra- hamson plans to remain south a year. She has resigned her position at Anchorage. Emil Uberti is making prepara- tions to leave on the North Sea for a visit with his family in Seattle. ——,—— ELECTRICITY OFF NOTICE Electricity will be off in Douglas, all sections west of Second | Street, including St. Ann’s Avenue, intermittenly from 9 am. to 5 p.m. tomerrow, July 12. ALASKA ELECTRIC BIGHT & POWER COMPANY. - e CANARY FOR HOSPITAL A baby canary was donated to St. Ann’s Hospital today by Charles Switzer. adv. — - .- —— SHOP IN JUNEAU! WANTED Katie Georges On important business. Write your brother A. F. GEORGES 917 North 7th St., Boise, Idaho. G!-:T IN THE su\cvm" \ Sitka Hot Springs FISHING HUNTING oddard, BOATING Reasonable Rates |was served at the Juneau Coffee |leave for Skagway on July 20. | cludes | made on a previous trip to Alaska | good MISS LOVEJOY BECOMES BRIDE OF EDW, POOLE Ceremony Performed at Home of Mrs‘ C. R. Wil- lard Last Evening | A ceremony uniting Lois Lovejoy | and Edward (Buster) Poole in mar- riage, was solemnized at the home | of the groom’s mother, Mrs. C. R. Willard, last night at 8 o'clock by the Rev. O. L. Kendall. The, bride wore a dainty wedding gown of white organdy and car- ried an arm bouquet of roses and sweet peas. Mrs. W. E. Poole, the bridesmaid, wore blue crepe. trim- | med with silver and a corsage of roses and sweet peas. Mrs. Willard, matroy of honor, was gowned in| midnight blue silk-velvet, and also~ wore a corsage of roses and sweet| Donald Ccok, Mary Brian ai above in a scene from “Fog,” the at the Uptown. nd Roginald Donmy are pictured mysiery picture now being shown peas. Following the wedding, a dinner Shop. The popular young couple, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Poole, will be at home to their friends at the 5 ARRIVE HERE ¥ SR TS COING TO NOME: WORTHY GRAND 70 TAKE PLANE MATRON 0.E. S, ®itc, 5 G A Mlmng Men Come on c 0 MI N G HERE MrAleunanvFly North and Mrs. B. W. Neily, Jr., Mrs. Frances Haun, Most Worthy | Ednh Klinkingbeard, Carl Jepson Grand Matron of the Geneml‘flnd Harold Dill, who arrived on Grand Chapter of the Order of | the Aleutian, will leave Juneau on Eastern Star, Washington, D. C., the PAA Lockheed Electra tomorrow is to be a Juneau visitor for one for Fairbanks enroute to Nome. week. She will arrive on the| Neily, who is a nephew of U. S. steamer Victoria Saturday and will Marshal Thomas Gaffney of Nome, |is taking his bride to Nome. He was married last December while an undergraduate at St. Martin's University at Lacy, Washington, and a short time later went to years Alaskan Chapters have been|Nome. Mrs. Neily, who was an visited by a direct representative undergraduate St. Mary's Uni- of the General Grand Chapter. | versity remained in the States be- Preparations are being completed | cause of the uncertain winter by the Channel Chapters for transportation schedules. series of entertaining features dur: Neily and Jepson, the latter who ing the visit of Mrs. Haun whoselis a Deputy U. S. Marshal from home is in Milan, Tenn. She 15‘Nomo‘ sailed from that port on the | making her first visit to Alaska. | Victoria in June with a prisoner The itinerary of Mrs. Haun in-| Dawson, Fairbanks, Nome | and other coast cities. This is the first time in several | ab B e | for McNeil Island. Jepson is inter- ,LANES ARRIVE To |ested in the Bonanza Mine near Nome and while in Seattle con- RENEW FRIENDSHIPS ticted Eugene chiterg, of the P Chilberg Insurance Agency, who Making a return visit to Juneau,| has authorized the taking of an Vennie Lane and Mrs. J. Lane ar-| option on the Bonanza ground and |rived here this morning from Seat- expenditure of $10,000 for drilling. |tle on the Aleutian. Vennie Lane is from Forsyth, Mont., while her mother is from Torrance, Cal The Lanes will visit with friends Harold Dill, a mining engineer |of long acquaintance in the Sew- ard Peninsula, who left Nome shortly after the fire, is returning o Nome to conduct drilling and prospecting of the Bonanza ground in the event that an option is taken. Dill reports that he is fam- iliar with the Bonanza ground which is about 80 miles from Nome, and hopes to see it devel- oped. then will board a Westward-bound ship soon for an extension of their current tour. CONCORD, N. H The New Hampshire Agricultural Extension Service helps tourists to have a time by supplying a free leaflet suggesting 13 games to be played while traveling. | DAILY EMPIRF. WANT ADS PAY! A Kiss {rom the Champ £ 4! Braddock gives an * bout that switched the world’s heavyweight ch-mplmhx& “but friend and severest eritic,” and gets a kiss as a reward, Mrs. Braddock didn’t see the fight that put her husband on boxing throne WINGARD HERE AFTER UNUSUAL PLANECRACKUP. Fisheries Agent Tells Rare! Experience at Yakataga Rolurning to B. B. After making the longest trip he| has e made between Cordova | and Ju au by any means of trans- portation, L. G. Wingard, Alaska Agent, for the Bureau of Fisheries| arrived here last night by air and| is leaving tomorrow by plane for Bristol Bay. Wingard, it will be recalled, was one of the passengers on the seaplane which léft Cordova last Saturday bound for Juneau and spent three days on the beach at Yakataga after the plane went down in a flat spin 25 miles from that point. Tt ever tg dova and Juneau by boat, plane or anything else,” commented Wingard this morning as he recounted his unusual experience. vown 1n Alders The seaplane went down in some rs near the beach 25 miles from in what Wingard labelied ne of those accidents.” For- tunately, no one was injured al- jat the Century Brewery in Seattle, |ing and Malting Co., tested out the| | attle,” he said. at’'s the longest time it has, en me to get between Cor-'t0 be placed jpHifatily RAINIER BEER IS NOW MADE - INWASHINGTON Fnsl Beverage, So Manu- factured, Has Reached Consumers Here } 4 The first shipmgnt of | Rainier Beer as brewed' in "Washington ar- Tived in Juneau this week and is now on sale at: Jogal NSErs; This beer was first made IR“Seattio} in 1878 and gained a natiénal repu~ tation even before the turn of the century. i ) Since the relegalization of beer, Rainier has been| brewed in San| Francisco and shipped into the| Northwest. However, under the re- cent merger of the’ Rainier and| Century Brewery interests in the Pacific Northwest, Rainier beer again has. become a Washington product. Karl | | Heigenmooser, brewmaster | is brewing bothiRainier and Rhein- | lander beers.in'fhe Century plant. | “It really is not difficult,” he | said."“When I operated ' a' brewery |in Havana, Cuba, many years ago, | I was brewing five different types of beer in the same brewery at the 'same time.” ‘ Louis Hemrich, president of the| Rainier Brewing Co., at San Fran- | | cisco and chafrman of the board of the new company formed in Seattle | after the merger—the Seattle Brew- | Washington made Rainier beer and“ { pronounced it perfect. | “It has all of the quality of the | original Rainier @¢' made in Se- “I'don’t think there is any finer water anywhere in the| world for putting quality into- beer than the Cedar River water of Se- attle.” Emil G. Sick, president of the, Seattle Brewing and Malting Co.,| quality of the 'Rainier 'as turned out in the Seattle plant. “We are starting immediately on a large scale advertising program,| through‘ newspapers, «to ” tM1* thie Parlrlc‘ Northwest about the homecomlng‘ of Rainier. We also are planning another large campaign, similar to| the one that ran last summer on Rheinlander” Beer”" ' These two beers—Ralnler and| Rheinlander—will be maintained not only as separate beers, but will be, spld. hy separate..sales organ- though the Fisheries Agent is nurs- ing a tender shoulder as a result of the jar when the craft came to rest in the trees. Realizing that they must get out where a searching party could find them and having no means of transportation, the occupants of the | plane, Wingard, A. W. Hawkins, As- sistant Fisheries Agent, M. D. Kirk- patrick, pilot, and the latter’s wife, battled their way through the brush | to the beach and then started the long trek up the beach to Yaka- taga. Five miles of the going wasn’t 0 bad but the rest was plenty tough, the Fisheries man explain- ed. When they arrived at the vil- lage, they were shown fine hospi- tality by the inhabitants, Indians, with the exception of four white men. Hopeful that a searching par- ty would soon find them, the stranded plane passengers acquired a cart from the village and cleared off a stretch of beach for a plane runway, put up signal flags and kept signal fires going. Every time after the tide would go out, the party would get out the cart and clean up their improvised run- way. Never was an émergency land- ing fleld kKept in such excéllent con- dition, Wingard can testify. And it | developed that the scheme worked | for Tuesday they were réscued by a V\hip that flew out from Cordova |and landéd on that beach runway | with wheéels. ‘ The Alaska Agen: reported that izations. Each:;has: made for itself an ‘excellent réputation and this individualism of formula, flavor and taste will be kept. The Juneau Cold Storage Co.| distributes Rainier Beer in this sec- | tion of Alaska. fishing conditions. are fairly good but the pack this season probably will not run more than from three and & half to four million - cases, | about half of last season, a banner | year. He had no comment to make on opening Bristol Bay other than | to say the Bureau had opened n and would close it when the occa- | sion warranted. | also expressed pleasure at the high|_ MURDER MYSTERY [solving of the mystery and the ap- |harmonic Orchestra. | play opposite to Mary Brian, TONIGHT is the For all those who loved “BLOSSOM TIME” The sublime love story of Franz Shubert WOMEN WITH A PASSION SUBLIME OR ‘The Unfinished Symphony’ MIDNIGHT PREVIEW A—N—D Championship Fight Pitcures of the BAER-BRADDOCK FIGHT at the New York Madison Square Garden Bowl June 14, 1935 AN M-G.M PICTURE See a New Champion Crowned “LOVER DlVlNE" IS NEW FEATURE WHICH IS OPENING TONIGHT One of the most difficult pictur From its delightful beginning in ever in Hollywood is “Fog,”|a pawnbroker's shop where young which will be seen at the Uptown|Franz Schubert comes to leave his Theatre for the last times uuul;zm..fviolnn the story of “Lover Divine,” Instead of the customary five or six | which opens at the Capitol Theatre FEATURE IS BILL . SHOWING, UPTOWN i | cast impertant characters, there are tonight, is closely interwoven with fourteen prineipals |the choicest of Schubert musical Laid entirely on board a trans-|gems including “Rose Among the Atlantic liner at sea, the story Heather” sunmg by the famous Vi- ‘Etarts With the murder’of dn eccen- [enna Boys';Chofyr, and the glorious tric millionaire. There are a half- ' “B Minor Symphony” and “Ave dozen possible suspects, and the Maria” played by the Vienna Phil- Schubert’s prehending of the real criminal, | ‘‘Serenade,” sung by Marta Eggerth, and his motive, form an absorbing |is one of the highlights of the film. drama. There are gay and impressive scenes Donald Cook and Reginald Denny ‘at a gypsy festival and some elabor- who | ate costumed scenes at a Court in | Musicale. Story, acting and music | combine to make “Lover Divine” a treat. the romantic interest RYANMREELEGTED L eee— ODD FELLOWS ATTENTION Regular meeting of Silver Bow While in the Westward, Wingard other nominees oposing him, Jos- and Warden Fred Lucas of the Al-|¢Ph Ryan was today reelected Pres- | aska Peninsula Distriet piloted me’tdcm of the Longshoremen’s Asso- | Fisheries vessel Brant through|cation: s | False Pass enroutp to Bering Sea,| ," the first time a Bureau ship has| SHEE IN JUNRSD fm!'n ever beepn taken through that way. By taking that route more Lhan‘ ° Schilling 24 hours were saved. ESTEBBTH SAILS ON X Lini¥ PURE \/ANTLLA Its exquisite flavor never run to Sitka .and .way ports. The ! REGULAR SITKA RUN fn‘ezes A out of’ outbound list: For . Chichagof—Al | [ The motorship; ; Esteheth smlod from Pacific Coast Dock at 6 Low; for Tenakee—B, F. Kane. | FROZEN \Qf DESSERTS | | | o'clock last night on her regular| SHOP IN JUNEAU! Water Colo ; = E I E E E % | al ulmflnmflmnmmmmmnmmmmnnmmllmmmmuuummu|||||||||||||||||uuummmuuuuuuuuu Ifl‘ Clay Modeling Specializing in Kindergarten Classes Lessons in fashion design for' women and g FOR FULL PARTICULARS SEE MISS LADDIE KYLE 1. Ropm 434, Gastinegu Hotel 0000000000 A wurs Sketching Hand Crafts for Children Is Phone 10 for Appointment IIIIHIIIII!HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllmlllIIlIIIIIIIIIIlllllllflfllllllllllllfilflllflll||IIIIMHIIIIIIIIIIlIIIII|l| Lodge No, 2 A, I. O. O. F. this NEW YORK, July 11—With no|evening at 8 o'clock. Installation |of officers, A special invitation to visiting brothers, PETER CHRISTENSEN, Noble Grand. UPTOWN Last Times Tonight —adv. |25¢ BARGAIN NITE 25¢ y> MARY BRIAN DONALD COOK REGINALD DENNY