The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 1, 1935, Page 3

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LAST TIMES TONIGHT THE CAST IS A RIOT SQUAD ALL BY TSELF—AND THE STORY'S A #HowuNe P e o ""‘A“‘f“t ‘with 3 CHARLES LAUGHTO MARY ‘BO'LAND CHARLIE RUGELE S ‘2‘;“6’”}\ kUl‘\':rU\fl G“‘ MIDNIGHT PREVIEW Clark Constance Gable in Bennett ‘AFTER OFFICE HOURS' REPAIRING' I Dogs Work G. C.M dody. Is Dead at Fairbanks‘ Funeral of Former Terri- torial Legislator Held This Afternoon A well-known pioneer resident of Fairbanks, George Clifford Moody, 63, died at Fairbanks Saturday morning from a heart ailment. He is survived by his wife and four ildren—Bertram Moody and J. n Moody of Fairbanks, Clifford H. Moody of New York City, and Mrs. Reed Harris of Cordelia, Cali-| fornia. Mr. Moody came north to Daw- son in 1899 and to Fairbanks in 1904. His last active work was as foreman in the machine shop of the Fairbanks Exploration Company. He was Grand Secretary of the oneers of Alaska for one year and cretary of Igloo No. 4 for ten years. He was past president of the ~~ver of Eagles and he served a term as representative of the Fourth Division in the Territorial Legislature. ! Funeral services for Mr. Moody were held at Fairbanks at 2 o'clock this afternoon in the Eagle: Hall under the auspices of the Plonsars of Alaska and interment was in the Fairbanks cemetery. ln\'cstiga‘tibn into' the ‘denth of 2 P L Evelyn Hoey, musical comedy fa- | vorite of New York, who was m "Ctur() | found with a 45-caliber bullet . [N | wound through her head in a bed- mn In te FLOT|' room in the Downingtown, Pa., | home of Henry Huddleston Rog- s I plarboy son of the lste | Universal Film Party Using| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. TUESDAY, OCT. I, Release Rogers as Torch™ Singer r Henry H. Rogers II, millionaire oil man, disclosed that the shoot- ing “looked more and move like suicide,” according to Distriét At torney William E. Parke. ' Both Rogers, and William J. Kélly, New York cameraman, also ques- tioned in econnection with the death, were released on,$2,500 bail posted by Rogers’ mother, Mrs. H. H. Rogers. After being released, Rogers and his mother fied out a back door and disap- peared in an automobile. Three the shooting maintained that the cates, ‘Suicide’ 1935. roreny s — 5§ Ry e sheoting was a suicide. Rogers, who is estranged from his first wife, had entertained Miss Hooey for a week, and they, had quar- reled shortly befofe U‘e’ sHooting, according to household employes. men in the house at the time of | Photos above show H. H. Rogers III, the bedroom and Miss Hooey. STARTING TONIGHT (D558 Ly unconctaf Lovis FATE TWISTED HER FIB I%O A WEDDING KNOT FRANK MORGAN REGINALD OWEN e ALAN HALE o ADDED 600 Sky Larks Cartoon 000 Latest News {LOUNSBURY IS HERE ' miROW MAKES SOLO Canines of Fai.rbanks “THE GOOD TOMORROW ABOARD | gjIGHT NORTH WITH in Movie FARY’ AT | T/ : W eather NEU-LIFE and VITEX WATCH HOSPITAL P. L. McHALE “Next to First National Bank” Clean $1.50, Jewels $1.25, Main Spring $1.50, Balance Staff $1.50 Crystals 50c and 75¢ “All Work Guaranteed” MODERN FACILITIES GIVE YOU LOW COSTS It has always been our object to provide the ul- timate in service at the lowest costs. Our thor- cughly experienced staff and our modern equip- ment have helped us in reaching this geal. The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-2 “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” DINE and DANCE Wise to Call 8 Juneau Transfer Co. MOVING o STORAGE () or Coal Stentor was one of the Greeks pefore Troy, whose “stentorian” yoice was as loud as that of 50 men. COLISEUM TONIGHT The members of the Universal Film party, who spent several days The screen adaptation of Mar- lin Juneau a few weeks ago photo- garet Sullivan's latest Universal graphing scenes for a new feature picture, “The Good Fairy,” which |film, started work last week at opens tonight at the Coliseum The- iGraehl. across Chena River from ater, was written by Preston Stur- | Fairbanks, where a replica of an|ges, famous Broadway playwright, Norman Dawn, director; Dellly Dishonorable.” Cambre, film actor, and James' When he was assigned to do “The \Loucks, property man, who com- Good Fairy,” Sturges built a model iprise the party from Hollywood, stage, four and a half by .three employed a crew of Fairbanks men feet, and carved out little models Indian village has been constructed. who wrote, the stage success “Strict- | |and a miniature section of timber. | Del Cambre is cast in the pic- |ture being filmed as an aviator {who is attempting to make his way back to civilization after crashing his plane in the Arctic wilderness on an attempted flight over the (North Pole. The sequences being ‘photographed at Graehl concerns |the aviator’s discovery of an In- (dian village where he expects to find aid but learns that the human population has died of an epi- demic of influenza and the streets ;are full of hungry and vicious dogs. About 35 dogs were hired for the scene. The aviator is shown climb- ing to the top of a cabin to save his life, and casting down fire brands. Under cover of the flames he runs to a nearby inlet, leaps into the water and swims away. “I'm sure we will have no dif- ficulty in getting the dogs to chase Del Cambre,” Director . Dawn as- serted. The film company's work will soon be completed in Fairbanks and they will then leave for An- chorage. FOUR HUNTERS GET GAME, 4-DAY TRIP, BUT WEATHER BAD Waino Hendrickson, Trevor Davis, | A. Rodney and Russ Hermann, who went on a four-day hunting trip to Oliver’s Inlet aboard the Cordelia, jreturned with several deer and ducks but reported “rotten weather” | —rain and wind, practically through- out the entire trip. pine blocks which he painted in colors for face and costume. He made three of the tiny dolls for Margaret Sullivan's three changes of character in the production. Working with this model theatre | Sturges plannetl. biit &I’ his “action and -dialogue: The filmr was direct- ed by William Wyler. - - MARY BOLAND CLAD AS ‘GIBSON GIRL’ IN ‘RUGGLES OF RED GAP’ Mary Boland, feature player in Paramount’s “Ruggles of Red Gap,” which is now showing at the Capi- | tol Theatre, says that any woman ! who complains about fashions now- | adays should wear a bustle to real- lize how well off she actually is. Miss Boland is clad in the fashions of the early 1900s in her new pic- ture, but says that no law could make her adopt them for her daily vse. | “Just look at these pointed | shoes!” Miss Boland declared on the set, “During the ‘Gibson Girl' era women seem to have done anything to be fashionable. I can’t sit down in this dress without spoiling the | ruffles, and the bustle and padding that I have to wear to obtain the old fashioned ‘hour-glass' figire are strongly reminiscent of an article T once read about Chinese torture.” The high-boned collar of the dress and all the petticoats and under- skirts that go with the costume did ! not add to her comfort either, Miss Boland declared. | SHO¥ IN JUNEAU, FIRST! YUKON SOUTHBOUND G. L. Lounstury, an. oldtimer of the Fairbanks district, who was well- |known there in the early days as ‘u footracer and miner on Engineer Creek, is a passenger on the Yukon, Freakish | on Flight Smoke Encountered by 2| 3 3 which will arrive here tomorrow, Pilot Bob Ellis on Trip | 5 W0 St e to his home from Ketchikan | in Towa. | Lounsbury returned to Fairbanks Unusual weather conditions were Aafter an absence of 22 years when reported by Bob Ellis, PAA piloty he arrived there about a month [to ‘set up several halves of cabins of the characters from soft White] o™ o1 vived here late yesterday|#%0 to Visit his son and daughter- from Ketchikan at the controls of Ii-]aw, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Louns- the PAA Lockheed Vega. | bury. Near Ketchikan a band of lowd| lying smoke was observed which had apparently travelled all the way .- — CHANNEL CABS Phone 108. Stand at BUS DEPOT adv. 7-PLACE LOCKHEED Hans Mirow, of the Mirow Alr | Service of Nomej:who arrived here several weeks ' @go’ enroute to the | States to buy a new plane for use |in the Nome area, returned te |Nome from Los Angeles last week | with a new 7-place Lockheed plane. Pilot Mirow flew the new ship |from Los Angeles to Nome alone, | via the inside route. e SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG- LAS! Dajly at 16:00 a.m. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. £HOP IN* JUNEAU, #iRST! Two marvelous Hcalth Products which strengthen the glands and nerves with renewed VITALITY, correct” chroni¢ indigestion and rebuild a NEW HEALTH. Invaluable for preventing colds and glandular weakness. You wil! find these and many other splendid HEALTH FOODS at the " Health Foods Center SECOND ST.—Near Franklin from Canada. “I could see along) one side of the Streamer of Smoke,” ! Ellis said, “clear past Cape Chacon, ' and there is nothing but water be-| tween the cape and Canada, about| 80 miles away.” | Smoke from the Juneau Lumber Mills was observed lying near thel‘ water at a distance of several milés from Juneau. MANY INTERIORITES - ! ARE ABOARD YUKON | | ON WAY TO STATES l Tickets for Seattle on the Yukon | which will arrive here tomorrow | 'were sold by the Fairbanks office of the Alaska Steamship Company to |4 the following passengers: Edith Harris, Zaphys Tognetti, Ray Car- den, Miss O.'A. Waldron, A. P. Bur-| dett, Harvey Bohn, H. N. Ursin,| Herb Carbray, G. L. Lounsbury, Mrs. Ida Bartlett, Kenneth Denver, G. W. Rathjens, Helga Forssell,| Howard G. Wilcox, Mrs. James Wilson, Jr., Merle H. ‘Guisé, Mr and Mrs. Park A. Reade,‘Mrs. Clay- toh Washburn, Robert Owensby, Carroll Owenshy, Dr. O.'M."Owens- | by, Ted Thorson, Mrs. Jdy F. ‘Kelly, Mrs. Larry Nelson. R | - e | {SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOUG-| LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blaké's SPECIAL DE- |LIVERY—Phone ‘#42. D1 ady. | | ! Now being featured by" Goetz’s "+ Grocery in Douglas' Fresh every morning at 10 o’clock Juno Bread PR ; NERRT 4 5 Ask for HEY were’nt really an extravagant family. But they enjoyed new things, and. liked new conveniences, and bought new clothes. And the bills continued to go up, because trotting from store to store was too much trouble, and they didn’t realize that there was an easier way of shopping jaround. yThenjythey started to read The Emypire l/idpn, ‘.:m‘dk E)e‘gzn tE see {L!:;ythey’d been missing out on any number of baragins . . . as well as missing quite a few things that were really new! So the family budget chart is sliding down now,.and Dad is ever so much happier than he used to be; and the family is buy- ifig more really new things, and they’re all thanking the DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE

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