Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
was beautiful — but dangerous to two groups of international crooks! See— FAY WRAY MAX MARCIN'S © stage play. With . Cesar Romero, ~ Minna Gombell, chry Amflh, Hugh O'Connell, Francis L. Sullivan. .Dm:hdby ichard Tm: nley Bergerman Presented by Carl Laemmle. A UNIVERSAL PICTURE. Reesree s s i ettt ] —PLUS— “At the Mike” “Strange As It Seems” ‘Mr. and Mrs. Is the Name’ News THI MISS COLBERT TO BE SEEN FOR LAST TIMES AT CAPITOL When Claudette Colbert was sign-| ed for the lead in “Imitation of ==\ OVELIST OF | BACK, JUNEAU | NORTH COMES Yex Beach Visits Interior, First Time in 25 Years —His Expenences Rex Beach, famous novelist of the North, who left Juneau two weeks ago on an extended trip to the In- terior, returned on the Alaska for a. week's stay before going to his New York home. Tomorrow, Mr. Beach will fly to Toy Straits for a few days’ visit with his old friend, Joe Ibach, who was. his guide on his last Alaskan hunt- ing trip 25 years ago. ‘I'm looking forward to seeing Joe,” he said. “We had great times together. He is a fine person.” Mr. Beach, who was an intimate friend of Will Rogers, was in Ju- neau the morning the news of the/ tragedy arrived here, and at that time made a statement to the Em- pire. He left that afternoon for Fairbanks, whete he remained un- til the bodies were flown south. Visits Matanuska Mr. Beach's return to Juneau was| by way of the Matanuska Valley Project, which he said he found “surprisingly interesting.” ““The people are of a much high- er typé than one would expect to find under such conditions,” he said. | !“And in answer to the much dis- cussed question—yes, I think they| are satisfied now.” | He added that there was no rea- |son they should not be. “The pe-| ‘rlud of inefficiency and mismanage- | |ment is over,” he said. “Col. Roy| Hum is not only a good organizer 'and a commanding officer but also a good diplomat. He is the kind of a fellow who can kiss a baby and | kick the father in the pants at the same time. He's making the dirt; fy.” Fishes With Dunkle | With W. E. Dunkle, operator of | the Lucky Strike mine near Ancaor- | age, Mr. Beach indulged in consid- erable fishing. “We were luckiest at Russian River,” he said. “The place is famous for its rainbow trout; it was the finest trout fish-: ing I ever had. The only trouble was that they wouldn't bite atany- thing but salmon eggs, which made it somewhat a matter of bait sling- ing instead of fly-casting.” Experiences Shock One of the interesting things that confronted Mr. Bedeh in Anchorage {was an earthquake coincident with his ‘arrival there. “The best way to AWAY SUDDENLY an, ‘earthquake is on a Beau- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE tiny film actress, takes a smiling bow from the arrives in Honolulu with her parents for a va- (Associated, Shirley Temple, rail of her liner as she jcation. Ten thousand jammed the docks to greet her. 'Press Pmno) AUTO INDUSTRY SCHOOL BUS LEADER PASSES SCHEDULE IS . John N. Wlllys Dies at The new schedule for the school Summer Home Follow- busses was announced today, as follows: ing Heart Attack | The new bus starts at the junc- tion of the Auk Bay and Glacler Highway and goes completely - around the loop picking up all childen enroute from Duck Creek to the Two Mile Post. This bus will pick up ichildren living on the hill side of the road only. The bus will leave the starting point at 7:40 o'clock except on the first day when it will leave at 8:30 o'clock. (Continued irom Page One) The other bus starts at the far end of the Fritz Cove Road and picks up all children between there and Duck Oreek. From Duck Creek to the Two Mile Post it will pick up all children living on the beach side of the road. This bus also startes daily at 7:40 except the TUESDAY, AUGUST 27, MADE PUBLIC Life,” which will ‘e shown for the- last tinles tonight at the Capitol} Theatre, the gossip of Hollywood saild she would be very tempera- mental. Most players-to lessen the nerve! 3 tension of waits between scenes cul-| Asked as to what his impressions tivate off-set occmpations. Warren |Of the Interior were on this, his William, male lead, during "Xmua-;mfl return in 25 years, Mr. Beach tion of Life” worked out chess prob- | onfessed to a certain amount of lems. Rochelle Hudson read detec- |disappointment. “It hasn’t develo_p- tive fiction. The ‘‘temperamental” fd like I had ‘expected,” he said. Miss Colbert watched what was, And what developments there are happening on the screen or played |Seem to have drifted into the ham?s with Baby Jane, the three-year-oldOf the big corporations. The indi- tot who, acts as her daughter in the|Vidual struggle for achievement was picture. ‘She thinks she has a sym-|Alaska’s big glory, ‘and now that pathetic role in “Imitation of Life.” is youe everything seems rather Like Bea Pullman, the part she|drab. : ’ plays, she has become very rich Unprecedented Wealtn from being very poor. He expressed faith, however, in PRI AL - SRR the future of Alaska as a ‘“‘country | of unprecedented wealth.” ATTENTION JUNEAU WOMEN'S CLUB Mr. Beach was the dinner guest| _11gst night of Dr. and Mrs. W. W. All members are requested to at: uniéll., He ‘s fegistered at the tyrest’ mattress,” he.remarked. “It| gives you a cort of panning motion | —the good old goldpan twist. It was the swellest earthquake I ever experienced.” business six years and during its biggest year had produced 47 cars. Mr. Willys proposed to take over the sole agency of the company, much to the amazement of D. M. Parry who then controlled it, for it was planned tfo manufacture 500 cars that year. In the midst- of the negotiations came the 1907 panic. Officials of the Overland Company notified Mr. Willys that their business was in financial straits and was about to close. Reorganization Making a hurried trip to Indian- apolis, Mr. Willys found that the tend the luncheon in honor of ‘ " Sadie Orr - Dunbar, Pirst - Vide- Gastineau I-mg i entire fotce had been dismissed — e — President of the National Federa- and in' the plant were parts for about three automobiles. That wes on a Saturday with the company to go into the receiver’s hands on Monday. L4 After conferences in Indianapolis and communication with friends in New York and Chicago, Mr. Willys finally ‘obtained $7,500 from the directors of his bicycle company in Elmira. With that capital he began reorganization of the company, which was completed early in 1908 as the Willys-Overland Company, with - Mr. Willys as President, Treasurer and General Manager. He also assumed the duties of sales manager and purchasing agent. ' Under. the direction -of Mr. Willys the company mdnnalned its ' place as 4 leader in the automobile in- dustry. | Mr. Willys was born at. Canan- daigua, N. ¥., October 25, 1873, the son .of Donald Smith Willys and | Lydfa North Willys, On December 1, 1897/ he married Miss Tsabel Van Wie of Canadaigua. Late in 1929° Mr. Willys kold hls heldings in the automobile industry to. & syhdicate, the deal involving several millions of dollars. I —— i EDWABD BOWDEN, JR., RETURNS FROM KAKE; TO ENTER JUNEAU H. S. 3 JUNEAU YOUTHS 'GET FINE CATCH OF SALMON SUNDAY Three Juneau _youngsters have become members of the salmon ang- lers' fraternity as a result of their ability to hook the big ones. They are Malcol Faulkner, Harry Sperl- ing Jr., and Stanley Heisel. Sunday they were taken out off the south end of Shelter Island by Weitman Holbrook, Assistant Re- glonal Forester, and such good fish- ermen did they turn out to be that each got two salmon. Stanley took high . honors iy fanding an 18- pound king. - EXCAVATION WORK ON. STREET JOB ES TODAY Continuing excavation work, the power scoop shovel of the Gastineau Construction Company . “rounded” the corner of Fourth and Seward Streets this . morning and began work in front of the Federal and Territorial Building. One-half of Seward Street, be- tween Third and Fourth streets, has beéen excavated, preparatory to fill- ing with crushed rock and concrete tion of Women's Clubs to be held at the Moder Coffee Shoppe Thurs- day, August 29, at 1:15 p.n. Mem- bers of Douglas Island Women's Club are especially invited. DOLORES DUDUEFF, Secretary. e SHOP IN JUNEAU! —adv NOTICE OF HEARING OF WIDOW'S PETITION In the United States Commission- er’s urt for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before :J. F. MULLEN, Commis- sioner Annd Ex - officio Probate Judge, J\meau Precinct. In the . Mntter of the Estate of JOHN. H. CANN, Deceased. PUBLIC, NOTICE is hereby giv~. en that JENNIE. RUTH CANN, surviving widow of John H. Cann, deceased, . has filed in the above entitled. court her petition to have set off and awarded to her certain property of the estate of deceased under the provisions of Chapter 156 of the Compiled Laws of Alaska, 1933, whieh sald property includes the gas-boat “Triton” official num- ber 220,309, described in the in- ventory, on file herein, and the sum of '$2,000.00 cash; and that a hearing will be had upon said pe- tition kefore the undersigned at Juneau, Alaska, on August 3lst, 1935, at 10 o'clock A. M. at which. time and place all persons inter- ested in said petition may appear and filg objections and oppose the same. GIVEN under my hand and seal of the probate court above men- tioned -this 26th day of August, 1935. Edward Bowden, Jr., who has been employed at Kake by the Alaska Pacific Salmon Corporation, re- Second Street and, the Eks Clubjy;neq t5 Juneau last night on the building on Franklin Street, are ready for pouring. —..——— LENHART COMING HERE Juneau ‘high schdol for his senior | yéur, ——te—— A. Lenhart, formerly attached to HILL TO ARIZONA the Juneau Radio Office of the| Kenneth Hill left Juneau on the Commjssioner and Ex-officio Pro-|United States Signal Corps, is alZapora for Seattle, from where he bate Judge, Juneau Precinct. passenger due on the Yukon to-|will;journey to Glendale, Ariz. First pi - AUB. 1835, night, coming here for another| - —— sSHOP AN JUNEAMS. . - 5 1 . J* F. MULLEN, Last pul Ang. 1935, {trick. A : - tender Phoenix. He will enter the | & first day when it 'will leave ‘&t 8:30. The small bus goes only to Thane. The Thane bus .will leave the end of the Thane road at 8:25 daily except the first day H when it will leave at 9:25 o'clock. SHOP IN JUNEAU! HIGH OFFICIAL | OF CANADA ON - JUNEAU VISIT Noel J. Ogilive Goes South to Confer with Riggs | * Nocl J. Ogilvie, Commissioner of I the' International Boundary, for J Great Britain, left Juneau on the | Princess: Louise, bound for. Vancou- {ver, where he will confer. with his Ohelime chief, Thomas Riggs, who ‘directed the first boundary . survey Landlater became Governor of Al- aska: Mr. Ogilvie has been regist- ered for the past week at the Gas- tineliu Hotel. I Mr. Ogilvie is 'a nephew of |David Ogilvie, first Governor of Yuk Territory, and has been 31| yédrs in the Northwest. “I started work the first international TRtV he said. “Thete were 5, 000 of international boundary measure. The boundary ran| rto irQ neouver to Maine.” | In Juneau Vicinity 1909 Mr. Ogilvie had charge Juneau vicinity and sur- LY of ' the {¥é¥ed around Lynn Canal. {01 am delighted to be back in | Juneau” hHe said. “It is beauitful {dountry. And I was glad to. see my friends, H. L. Faulkner and @harles Goldstein.” In addition to his other duties, Mr. Ogilvie is chief of the Coast and Geodetic Survey for Canada. e 1‘RUCKMEN WARNED BY CHIEF HOFFMAN , Chief of Police Roy Hoffman has’ warned truck drivers on two items: Speeding and dropping rock. He Sald that, with Lower Front Street newly paved, it was a temptation to. speed, but he added that he had cautioned drivers not to ex- ceed 20 miles an hour, as many: | pedestrians are forced into the street by lack of adequate side- walks. Rock, Chief Hoffman said, is be- ing dropped along Willoughby Ave- nue, especially where sharp corners are encountered. .- CHICAGO RES:DENTS ON SUCCESSFUL FISHING TRIP WITH ED JAHNKE My. and Mrs. E. L. Kent of Chi- cago, who arrived on the Princess Louise on August 16, have been on a fishing excursion for both salmon apgd trout with Ed Jahnke. They returned to Juneau last night and saflgd for: Vamcouver on the Prin- cess Louise. R P . MISS GRAY RETURNING Miss Helen Gray, who will teach home economics in the Juneau h School, will arrive tonight on the Yukon. In addition to the home ecdtiomics course, Miss Gray will 193 T Ty e Simre iheard him. He has that kind of | a voiee. |VAGRANCY OBJECT 'day by ecity officiale as it was an- Wear | That W hite Linen Suit? There are those Juneauites who are woridering today just why Bob Crawford, Alaska's own flying bari- tone, chpse to wear a white linen| suit at his concert last night at the Northern Light Presbyterian Chureh. The truth of it had no other choice. It seems that Crawford and his wife had made arrangements, be-| fore géing on a hunting trip in the Interior, to have their ‘two; wardrobe trunks shipped to Juneau on a friend’s ticket from Seward. Feeling*ssecure in the matter of clothes,. the pair enjoyed their hunnnx trip. 1 Imngme their chnmm wher ‘they disdovered, after boarding the Ju- neau-bound ship at Seward, that is: The singer their friend had changed her mind, || and was not coming here as soon as ekpocted. 3 So Crawford appeared in last| nights’ rain in & white linen suit Byt it didn't matter to those that| OF POLICE DRIVE STARTED SATURDAY Vagrancy in Juneau was hit to- nounced from City Hall that a de- termined drive by the Police De- partment had started Saturdgy to *clean up” the city of all undesire- ables without means of: xuppon City Magistrate A.“W. Henning announced that six cases had been tried by his court on charges filed by Chi and other members of the Department. Most of the vagrants are being subjected to fines, and, in. four cases, it was announced that the men either had left town yester-| "W day or had promised to do so today. Police PORERG PR &SI EVA S S DEER, FISH BROUGHT BACK BY ONE GROUP H. M. (Doc) Hollmann, of the Juneau Drug Store; Johh Hermle, of the Home Grocery; Jack Kear- ney of the Pacific Coast Company, D. E. McConell, Superintendent of Construction of the Pacific Coast Coal ' Company, Bob Keeny and Thomas Dahl engaged in a very succesful hunting and fishing ex- pedition 19 large king salmon, several cohoes and two fine buck aeer. Kearney, Hermle and Dahl were put ashore near vhe lower end of Douglas Isiond to hunt deer while the others of the party fished in neighborhood waters. They were picked up at Garden Point on the other side of the island tip late in the day. Kearney and Hermle had ‘ed¢h killed & deer. e tench gradL school biology Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! { cally. ing sure it’s from ~ Juneau D: DELIVERLD PROMPTLY TO YOUR DOOR Now He Will Need More Milk! MAKE SURE IT’S JUNEAU DAIRY He's starting to school ‘again. Studies and his vigorous life on the playground will combine to burn up energy that must be restored quickly, if jhe is to go through the year with a good record mentally and physi- He'll need that “extra” ishment it contains and he’ll need your good judgment to buy it for him regularly-—mak- for the nour- JUNEAU DAIRY and serving it at every meal. STARTS SCHOOL NEXT WEEK! airy of Police Roy Hoffman Sunday, returning with; TONIGHT GHANCE TO SEE TH My WITH WARREN WILLIAM NED SPARKS & ROCHELLE MUDSON UNIVERSAL PICTURE ; Midnight Preview “BIOGRAPHY OF. A ‘BACHELOR GIRL” “Cheating Cheate: pared en the play by Max Marcin, with Fay Wray and Caesar Romero, in the leading roles, opens at the Coliseum tonight Romero plays the part of young Tom Palmer, who loves precious gems more than anything else in his life until he meets Miss Wray, who is cast as one of the Brock- tons. She is fond of rare stones too, but is even more interested in the Palmers who happen to be really maniacs when it comes to jewelry, Their love for precious baubles is! so strong they don’t imind it’ they | ‘CHEATING CHEATERS e NEW BILL AT COLISEUM IS POSITIVELY YOUR LAST IS GREAT PICTURE : ; HE PICTURE YOU WILL LONG REMEMBER! COLBERT IN FwNIE HW‘T'S :mxuans, provide gales of laugh- ith thelr natics: Then there 1, Fi mncls L. Sullivan, Minna Gom- bell, John T. Murray and many oth- ers, all sailing under false colors. e MRS. JAM COOPER HAS JOINED HER HUSBAND WHO IS NOW IN ANCHORAGE Mrs. James C. Cooper, who re- cently underwent a major opera- tion in Seattle, has joined her hus~ band, wellknown certified public accountant, formerly of Juneau, who | s now located at the westward with his headquarters in Anchorage. - HERMANNS RETURNING R. R. Hermann, of the Juneau LDrug Store, accompanied " by his” belong to someone else if they £ et their handsion' thém in one vz; cr another. There is comedy galore in “Cheat- ing Cheaters,” Hugh O'Connell and chry Armettn, two apontmmoub‘ (" BAILEY’S CAFE 2% Hour Service “WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" Wite, son and daughter, are re- unnlnu to Juneau aboard the Northland. e SHOP IN Merchants’ Luneh Short Orders Regular Dinners o Jry ‘Gang Plank of Every P: P A A | THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS | The Gastineau | OQur Servicés to You Begin and End at the assenger-Carrying Boat Heating ~ Plumbing RICE & AHLERS CO. PHONE 34 Sheet Metal Work FEATURING CARSTEN'S ALASKA MEAT CO. TC HAMS AND BACON-—U. 8. Government Inspectéd BABY BEEF—DIAMOND Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single 0-2 rings For Every PACIFI Purse and Every Purpose C COAST COAL CO. PHONE 413 2 ek ~'....—'..-'..._-..-.,,—-......—.......—.‘...-..-—.-.'.,.._..,.—.,‘_.-_.--_.V,'.,.-_-.v...‘,,“' PR ab ot us " ol 1o 62 9