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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE;WEDNESDAY; SEPT. 4, 1935 LAST TIMES TOMQHT. I'HE SWEE1: ) HEART OF HERE COMES THE NAVY" TEAMED WITH THE TOP CA- DETOF"FLIRTA- TION '[A LK™ GLBIIIA STHAHT ROSS ALEXANDER A RUDY VALLEE, ANN '’ DVORAK AT CAPITOL In “Sweet Music,” which opens at the c‘xpxtol ’nxeauc tonight, Rudy Vallee is ‘cast. as a popular band leader engaged for a Chicago club show, pursuing a feud. with Ann Dvorak, who plays opposite him as a small-time: song and dance gml with large hopes for a bright fu- ture. Her agent’is the rapid-tongued Ned Sparks, who is‘in ‘love with her—and his 10 percent commission. The story is interspersed with comic mothents involving the insane connections of Press Agent Allen Jenkins; .the attempts of Robert | Armstrong, - racketeer -brother of Alice White, a chorus girl, to be- come a ‘trooner because it seems to Le a'good business, using a gun to 21l hLis Yidea; and the dialect com- cdy of Joseph Cawthorn and Al Shean a&s gwo cigar marfl#ac&ufln& Lrothers. Who sponsor thé fadio”ap- pearance of Vallee. Helen Morgan in'a brief moment sings one of her b«»zter known numbers. BUSINESS COMEDY AT COLISEUM TONIGHT| The First National comedy, “May- be It's Love,” which opens at the Coliseury; Theatre tonight, is based on a stage hit by Maxwell Ander- son. The story deals with a pretty sLenngrahher who is in love with the office manager. He returns her af-| factions but shies at the altar. Fin-| ally the boss’s son becomes inter- ested, and by following her married sister’s recipe for landing a hus- band, she ‘succeeds in obtaining a pmposa!"'l‘hen trouble starts. How their affairs are smoothed out leads up to a ¢limax that is not only un- usual but entertaining. Gloria Stuart is cast as the pert younz stenographer. ‘Ross Alexander plays opposite. Frank Mcliugh and Ruth Donnelly, screen ' comedians, are the meddlesome sister and her henpecked - husband. Phillip ‘Reéed is cast as the son of Miss Stuart’s em- ployer, & part portrayed by Joseph Cawthorn, and Dorothy Dare is the | office vamp. AUNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR GENERAL LANDOFFICE Distriot Land Offjce Anchorage, Alaska. : August; 28, 1935. Nouce ‘is hereby kfifin af Henry Hendnchwn. entryman, together with his witnesses, Isadore Gold- stein and Lance E. Hendrickson, all of Juneau, Alaska, has made final proof of'-his homestead, Anchorage 07871, as additional to his home- stead. Amghorage 04146, ‘for A tract of land_ situate along the. cuncxer Highway in latitude 58° 21’ 44" N. and longitude 134° 33" Ws embru ed in U. 8. Survey No. 2125, con- taining '1051 atres and it s now | in the files of the ¥J.'S, Land Of- | fice at ‘Anchorage,” ‘Alaska; afid if no protest is filed in the local land. office within the period of publication or thirty days there- after, said final proof will be ac- cepted dnd final certificate issued. .FLORENCE L. KOLB, Acting Register. First publication, Sept. 4, 1935: Last pubncaflon. Oct. 30, 1985 sgm#h&ga TR l | kee GRIMONT BACK FROM TRIP T0 ALASKA CITIES Bishop of Alaska Has' Vis- ited Virtually All Points in North ‘‘Describing his trip to the west- ward and the interior as one “filled with sunshine—hbdth the inner sun- shine of religious satisfaction and progress and the outer sunshine of unparalleled weather,” J. R. Ori- mont, Bishop of Alaska, returned to Juneau on the ‘Yukon for a stay of two or three months before journey- ing to Rome. “I left here on June 26, Bishop Crimont, constantly moving ever since. It has been a wonderful trip in every way said and T have' only good to report of‘ avery town I visited.” Bishop Crimont visited Cordova, Valdez, Seward, and Anchorage, “n his westward voyage, giving con- firmation in all, making a special side-trip to visit the Matanuska Valley. In Palmer he visited with Father Sulzman, the Catholic priest for the colony. “I found that everything was at a standstili,” said Bishop Crimont. “The project was so vast and had been launched in such a hurry that fusion and the work was not mov- ing rapidly enough to install any confidence amdng the colonists. Consequently many of them grew discouraged and returnéd home." Project Humming On Bishop Crimont’s return, how- ever, he found everything changed. “It was like night becoming day,” he said. “I spent 24 hours there. I found everything humming. Every- one in the place was workipg with enthusiasm. The outcome was that the valley couldn't be recognized for the same place I had seen two months before. Roads ran every- where in every direction; houses were being built ‘a half-dozen a week; optimism prevailed in the minds and hearts of those who had the courage to wait. I was assured by those in authority that at' least | by the fifteenth of October the whole. project would be carried out. | Edch family will be in jts home,! barns will be built, ‘and all trans- portation facilities will have been provided.” Bishop Crimont joins all who| have visited the coiony in -enthusi- astic praise for Eugene J. Oarr and | Col. Roy Hunt. “They have worked a miracle,” he said. From Matanuska Bishop Cnmon!r went: to Pairbanks ahg from there| 16’/ Nehana-+and thento"Holy Cross. where he spent two weeks. While he‘ wds there a beautiful program wns< rendered by the children in honor of his Diamond Jubilee. ' Hely Cress In Goed ‘€ondition “I found Holy Cross in fine con- | \dition.” reported the Bishop. “The | gardens ‘were fine, although the| summer had been too dry‘and too hot for record crops. I gave con- the other cities I visited.” | The Bishop flew ‘from there to Hdmilton, where he remained for Iive days. While in that wicinity he | visited one of the missions of Fath- |er: Lonneux. “I‘was surprised to the religious progress of the people there,” he said. ‘‘One eyening Father Lonneux was with me on my boat, and we ‘heard 'a strange tmurmur risiig over the' town. ‘Lis- ten,' said Father Lenneux, ‘they are saying their prayers, each fam- 11y in-its own home.” He explained that it was their cystom each eve- ning to say their prayers alone, family after family,-afid that often he sat and listened to them chant- ing. It WRS very beautiful 'to wit~ hess and most comforting.” f Visits- Nome After visitng”St. Michakl, Bishop Crimont went to Nome in the little mail boat "Meteor; “We came into the harbor ‘at five-o'clock one morning,” he. said. “The sun was Just rising. The city looked so beau- tifulful we could not move our eyes from it. In the bright light the bhuildings loomed so brightly that .the /little yacancies could not be seen and the icity looked as large as it had before the fire.” From Nome, to' save time, Bishop Crimont flew to Fairbanks, and re- turned from there by railroad to Anchorage. He came into Juneau on the Yukon., Glad To ‘Be Back. .. “I am glad to: be back in Ju- neau again «n the ‘miidst of my friends,” declared the Bishap, whqge amond ‘Jibilee will be celebfhted Aday in ghe Chuwh'gm tiv- .- Father“-Bernard” R.' ard, Glacier Priest,” will deliver thé ser- mon. 4 " 1t is the Bishop's intention ¥0:re- main in Juneau until he has pre- pared himself for his trip to-Rome, ‘where he will give an account ‘of himself and his organization to the Holy Father at the Vatican. — - — FLOWN TO TULSEQUAH Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bharpstone jwere passengers to Tulsequah yes- |terday aboard’ the‘ PAA Fairchild flown by Alex Holden. e SCULLY TQ WESTWARD Frank Scully, Stewart - Holmes and McKesson Drug Company agent, is a passenger on the Alaska from Junead’ for Séward, * “and 1 have been | there resulted a great deal of con-; | writes, | muffled, of lions. They are at the Life in Etidopia o the roar ‘of pahee “tHons | practice. ASHINGTON, Sept. in, notonous daily routine of life in IAddLs Ababa, are described by W. Perry George, American charge d’- ican Foreign Service Journal.” George’s article, written before the Italo-Ethiopian crisis assumed its present seriousness, pictures the Abbysisian capital as it was before throbbing war drums called the tribesmen to prepare against pos- dible invasion by Mussolini’s le- glons: “One wakes of a morning, George “to the roar, distant and Imperial Gebbi (palace), some en- caged and others loitering about the stairways, and they want their breakfast. Then the lions have | breakfasted and throughout the day the only sounds are the meaning- |less, ‘carefree chatter and laughter H the crowds that throng the ats, the plaintive squeal “brown ?’mwkl clrélmi Léx?d’e ly over the town, and the cawing of the crows. “There is something’ undisturbea 4nd eternal about this mythical land I that denies the existence of other- | where and otherwise, and it seems to reside in the faith that has be- come tradition. The beginnings ol Ethiopia are lost in the prehistoric ifirmation at Holy Cross, s in ani’mists. “The error of the foreigner has been uncomprehending impatience. The Portuguese missions and the floods of Islam’s hosts shattered their lances against the Ethiopian beliefs that are as firm and vigor- ous' today as they ‘were when the Queen of Sheba trekked homeward from King Solomon's court, the God of Israel'in her heart, and when Menelik, her son, bore home the ark’ of the covenant. ! “Tomorrow the routine of every day Will'be enacted. Caravans of cof- fee anid hides will slowly wend their way for a few hours over mountain trafls. Trade will be carried on ‘in remote parts of the realm with salt bars as a medium of exchange. Feu- dal“chiefs will travel on mule back through the streets.of the capital, their irank and' dignity attested by she mumbers and equipnment of the then-at-arms trotting alongside with their stubbed bucklers of rhinocer- ous hide, their spears, and their rifles. ' ! “Great ladies, veiled' to the eyes, and wearing large felt hats, will tide solemnly by, their mules sup- ported by the hands of a‘dozen re- fainers on foot. Many . priests will walk more miles, prayer staffs in their band and the Psalms of Dayid slung * over “their ~shoulders as- a| tourist would carry a camera. ‘“And about it all there will be no 'sign of haste. There will be no concern’ for market quotations, or for'thie news ‘of the day or for the pnssake of bflme DAUGHTER OFDORA’S SKIPPER RE - VISITS The fdct that Miss Dora “Mc- Mullen is a.;round-trip, passenger on the steamer Alaska from Seattle. is ‘enough reason for reminiscing’ on''the part of pioneer Alaskans. Miss McMullen is the daughter of the skipper of the old steamer Dora, which plied to far-Westward ports in the' early days.' Miss Mc- Mullen, born in Naldez, s return- 4—Roar- | lions that awakem him morn- | ings, hyenas that prowl through the | streets by night; and the calm, mo- | affaires in Ethiopia, in the “Amer- | { Pre the! calm, says W. l’erry George, Americhn Charge 'Affaires in Addis Ababa. George is seen here indulging; a pastime which is an Ethiopian antidote for boredom—slingshot Above, 16ft; is one of the palace lions that aets as Gearge's alatm clock, and at right, a scene of maximum activity in “pre-war” Ethiopia—market day. Speeches by Roosevelt, - Snell, Seen as Opening | Guns in 36 Campaign (Oontmued from Pan One) tors, a speaker commonly regarded as a staunch conservative was se- lectel to make the Republican re- ply. Both addresses were couched very largely in general terms, with little Bpecific mention of concrete gov- ernmental problems or individual egislative proposals. ‘The one specific measure to which Mr. Snell devoted considerable space was the bill increasing the tax on wealth, which he condemned as de- signed to “confiscate property.” The special points advanced by Mr. Roosevelt were in relation to regulation of banking and industry, which he spoke of as necessary to save the economic structure. i , BACKGROUND SHADOWS Easily discernible in the back- ground of the discussion lay the shadow of the constitutional issue; but its outlines remained almost as nebulous afterward as they were be- fore the two speeches were delivered. Mr. Roosevelt talked of challeng- ing “the methods of the old order,” but he did not say what, if any, constitutional amendment he favor- ed. Mr. Snell rejoined by protesting against any new order which would require “that our federal constitution must be wholly rewritten.” The disparity in terms between these two utterances is obvious. Whether Mr. Roosevelt’s mind and Mr. Snell's mind met in a clear-cut constitutional issue remains a mys- tery; certainly their words did not. Nor is there any real assurance that this issue will be more clearly defined before election day—that is, that the Democrats will say ai- rectly that they favor any consti- tutional change, or that the Repuh- licans will say directly théy oppose all ‘constitutional changes. Such issues have a way of getting tangled up in inconclusive language when. the platform committees of political parties come into posses- sion of them. That ‘easily’ might happeh to this issue next year: Louka Ltke Jean' Harlow, William l’unbe!l Are Engaged HOLLYWOOD, : Gal, Sept. 4~ There is; a iarge diamond ring be- ing worh on' the slsm nxh finger of Jean Harlow. Both William Powell and Miss Harlow are in“smiles “but “héither” have anything to say. The two well-known film stars recently went on a shopping expe- dition to buy kitchen utensils. Claim Smaliest Dwarf in World Is in Manchoukuo g MUKDEN, Sept. 4—A .dwar{ re- ported ' to, be the smallest in the world has appeared in. the Yenki district of Kirin province, according to telegrams from Shupinkai. ‘The midget is 20 inches tall, weighs 30 pounds, is 48 years old[ robust and well formed. The dwarf was reported starting on 'a tour of the world. On 'his ar- ing to old haunts on the Alaska of her father's.ship. Her father now is a.local jin- spector of hulls with the Bureau or Navigation at Los Angeles. —————— Dlfly Empire Want Ads Pay!, rival here a parade will be held as this week. She was given the namejpart of a public reception. He will| ride a goat in the procession. - ., — GOES TO HOSPITAL Mrs. Margaret Erickson was ad- mitted to the hospital last -night | for surgical treatment. _W"’ Ew ARCTIC GRASH | | i o NEW-HIGHT-ON- 1 START TONIGHT-.“\. aa 1S ANNOUNCED | IS THE HO w\mfl" JUNES ooac,eo“" WS Government. Experts Give Ideas on Post-Rog- | ers Disaster | WASHNGTON, August 4—Gov- | ernment experts have decided that | & nose-heavy plane and a carbure- tor fouled by ice or spray “goul | have plunged Will Roger: z,.nd'Wflw | Post- toi their deaths. i 'Eugede L. Vidal, Chief, ih making ‘the Department of nwnmv, anub‘%’& crash foi | eoincident fac fuding al | climibing turn. Pkt decribed as | bmlpvln' the ship® ' nosesheavy ] 'arter ifstallation o pontoons. « Vidal suggested th(n “thie - altitude | iof the fall was prol y near 200 | feet. He said he had discussed the| | accident with Joe Crosson, who | | quoted Post with having said that | | “under no circumstances would hej fly with Rogers in or above any! {cloud or fog bank.” | LAWYERS 10 HAVE NIGHT Bigi Doings Promxsed at] Elks — Attorneysin | orce inves-| 1 oM ly Charge of Event§ An evening of unusual emefl,ain- GRANDMOTHER ASKS { Imentr—baw)era Night—the opening wH E E ABOUTS OF ievent in’a series of special nights to GIRL, LOIS HYN Es be held on alternate Wednesdays, will be a feature of the meeting to se find Miss Lois Hynes, 21, \be held by the Elks in the Club fa. resident of Juneau seven RoOM tonight. years ago. | An elaborate program has been That is the plea sent Postmaster |'prepared. No details regarding the Albert Wile from Miss Hynes grand- | Program were given but Norman mother, Mrs. 'Louis Johnson, Star|Banfield, Committee of One, in route, Port Blakeley, Wash. Mrs. | charge of the entertainment, stated | Johnson writes that her father, Tom | that all of the lawyers in Juneau Hynes, has remarried a Mrs. May have donated their efforts toward Smith and they have “taken Lois| the success of the program. Prepar- from.me twice without me km)wmu atlons have been made for a special anything about it.” “free beer” buffet lunch. Mrs. Johnson says that the girl AR o TE A was brought here in 1928 by Mr. TO JOIN HUSBAND { and Mrs. Hynes. At that time she| Mrs. Miles Imlay, wife of Lieut.| was “tall for her age and a blonde; | (sg) Imlay, second in command of | very prétty blue eyes and fairly good | the Coast Guard cutter Tallapoosa, " looking; clean and neat.” |is travelling to Vancouver, B. C., Mrs. Johnson wants her grand- on the Prince Rupert. She will join daughter to write to her. She says|her husband in Seattle while the she wishes Lois “could take a trip|Tallapoosa is receiving her semi-an- home to see me. nual overhaul. TO TEACH SCHOOL 100 “I think I'll have another slice of BREAD MUSICAL IDOL OF AMERICA IN HIS LATEST ROMANCE ,, Sitka, retumed to Lnnt oommunlfl' from Seattle on the Northland. Miss Signe Dm\dll school teacher She took a post-graiuate. course at the Sheldon Jackson School at | in the'Sta’e ¢s this summer. o bob g2 LY PEERLESS BREADS at YOUR GROCER’S! FROM fOLUR OVENS Iv’s Up to You to MAKE .}S_URE IT’S PEERLESS He S ;mrtmu to school in the morning. Studies and his v:gurouq ife on* llt‘wlnygmund will conibine,{o’ burn. up energy that must he restored quickly if he is to go through the yearwith a good record'mentally and physical- ly. He'll need that “extra” slice of -energizing' bread for the'noutishment it contains-and helf:heed your good judg- ment to buy it for hlmflmiy'—*dakfig m-'ws PEERLESS and aervmg‘ n al‘every M All Vdrieti’éé OfH‘ghBStQuahty Bk 5’ Coods! y “Wha,i Bread Will !Il? %e &