The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 8, 1935, Page 3

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i Al , sald real property for sale at Pub- LAST TIMES ' TONIGHT EXTRA “Star Night Cocoanut Grove” A e o e | NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S SALE : United States of America, District of Alaska, First Judicial Divi-; sion: ss. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN| that by virtue of an execution dated September 16th, 1935, issued out of ¥ the District Oourt for the Territory | of Alaska, First Judicial Division, ‘ on a judgment and decree rendered | A said Court on March 16th, 1935, | *in favor of F. W. Harris, Plammf,, and against Charlie Gray, also| known as Chas. Gray, defendant, in Suit No. 3656-A upon the records and dockets of the District Court for the First Judicial Division of | Alaska, at Juneau, and in accord- ance with said judgment and de- cree, I have levied upon this 16th day of September, 1935, the follow- ing described real property situate’ oin the city of Juneau, Territory of | Alaska and more particularly de-[ scribed as follows, to-wit: | “Beginning at the northwest | corner of Lot No. 4, identical | with the northwest corner of ‘ Black No. 221, thence north 56 deg. 38 min. E., along the south } side of Seventh Street, 40.75 | feet to Northeast corner; thence south 33 deg. 22 min. E. along the west line of Lot No. 3, 83.90 feet to southeast corner; at in- | tersection with the north side of Willoughby Avenue; thence | S. 80 deg. 35 min. W, along Wil- | loughby Avenue 448 feet to | southwest corner; thence north | 33 deg. 22 min. W. along east side of “D” Street 65.80 feet to northwest corner, the place: of | beginning, containing 3045.50 sq. ft., or 0.070 acres,” together with | the house and appurtenances thereon. ! and public notice is hereby further | given that, accordingly, I will offer lic vendue to the highest and best| bidder for cash, on October 24th, 1935, at 10:00 o'clock a.m., at the| front door of the United States| Court House, in Juneau, Alaska.| Take due notice that above men-| tioned sale will be held, and the| above described real property will b sold at said time and place. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, Sep-| tember 17, 1935. WM. T. MAHONEY, U. 8. Marshal. By C. H. MacSPADDEN, Deputy. R. E. R.oberwon and M. E: Monagle, Attorneys for Plaintiff. First publication, Sept. 17, 1935. Last publication, Oct. 22, 1935. | Beaver castoreum .. +Whalebone |Platinum ...... | Gold | Silver EXPORTS FROM | ALASKA SOUTH ~ HOLD BALANGE Salmon, Gold Contintié to| Lead Though Falling Behind August THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 8 1935 Exports from Alaska to the Unit-| ed States held a steady balance| during the month of September,| although dropping behind last month and the same period a year ago, according to the monthly re- port of Collector of Customs James J. Connors. The total value of shipments for September was $12,087,450 compar- ed with $15,751,106 last month and with $24,429,141 in September of 1934. Salmon and gold continued to lead the exports, more than $8,000,- | 000 worth of salmon being shipped out and in excess of $1,750,000 in| gold. The complete report follows: Fish: Fresh and frozen cept shellfish): Halibut Salmon Other Salmon, canned Cured or preserved (ex- cept shellfish) : Cod Herring Salmon Shellfish: Clams Crabs Shrimp Fish products: Meal Oil .. Other fish products.... Furs and fur-skins: Beaver Fox: Black and silver .. Blue ... Red . White ... Fur-seal skins Hair-seal skins Marten Mink ... Muskrat .. Otter ... All other Manufactured furs Whale oil ‘Whale fertilizer a.nd menl { Wool, manufactured . 3 Wood, timber and lumber Ore, matte and regulus: Copper ... Lead ... Stone, mcludmg marble.. Trophies, specimens, cur- ios, ete. - Ivory (ex- 6,668 279,817 1,169 339,680 8,885 455 509 15,655 48 3,764 27,250 3,085 12,460 8,900 662,293 3,124 18,568 3,081 2,210 120 1,088 | Total value of products of Alaska iValue of U. 8, producbs returned ......oqoeiges 302,200 | Total value of shipments of merchandise . $10,251,883 | 56,323 | Grand Total . —————— ALASKA DAY DANCE In commemoration of Alaska Day, on October 18y the Petersburg branch of the Eastern Star will sponsor an Alaska Day Dance the following day ni the Sons of Nor- way Hall. Schilling Buy pePPEerinthe larger sizes. ‘Look what you save! 2. pepper 10¢. rtm pepper 15¢ SHOP IN JUNEAU, FiRST! o pEPpenr 25¢( Mmstre Beriefit - l Show El:]piscofial Church Organ Fund OCTOBER 15and 16 ' General adniission 50 cents 246911 | 32422 | 14911 99,857 | 13,015 | 4,170 | 100 | 2’70;()13 part has been played by Jane ' | 120 | 383:ry, and Julia Marlowe, 690 | cnly 1,422 | 1,730 | $ 9,949,593 | | SjNorma “Who Dul Not Screen Well,” Is Now ' New Laurels, | By ROBBIN COONS { HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Oct. 8-— A famous director some years ago said seriously to Norma Shearer: |“You don't screen well. You ought to give up pictures.” Miss Shearer today likes to tell the story because she has pr she not only can screen well but can act. And it is the same Norma | | Shearer who shortly will undertake | the most tradition-weighted role {of her whole career, the heroine of “Romeo and Juliet.” | For more than 300 years have been leading actresses playing the romantic role. In later days' Cowl, Katharine Cornell, Mary An- derson, Helena Modjeska, Ellen Ter- to mention a few. ‘Juliet’ From memories of these perform- | ances Miss Shearer has most to | fear, but they are all of the stage, | past or present. The screen’s Juli- | ets, Theda Bara and Beverly Bayne, 4worked in the now out-moded si- lents, in their earlier days at that. And the only Juliet of the talking | screen with which her work may be compared is Norma Shear herself, unless Katharine Hepbur) recitation in ‘“Morning Glor; | considered. Miss Shearer appeared in the “balcony scene” with John Gilbert in “The Hollywood Revue of 1929.” | Absorbing “Romeo and Juliet” |and becoming letter-perfect in | Shakespeare’s lines for her role has 1been Miss Shearer's preoccupation | | | the past three months. More than | 1,779,244 | 400 volumes on the play, together Kshearer custpm of alternating mod- ,wuh 18 versions of the tragedy as 1L has been presented on the stage, ]rave constituted her research li- $12,087,450 brary. Thinks Screen Greater Miss Shearer has no desire, how- there | Stars on Juneau Screen yegt | Guy Kibbee and Aline MacMahen in “While the Patient Sleeps,” ton the feature attraction at the Coliseum. Setto Garner M ovi e Plctures {small mill on ’m:e labout a mile and a half from the ‘Dease and Liard rivers. about November 1. ! Capt. Strong will make a trip up | | MRs. (COLLISON RECOVERS Plane Crash i Vit Going Fur Buying with Capt. Strong N. Lynch Collison, who has spent almost all of the last two momhs‘ in hospitals here and in Whitehorse, | is now well on the road to recovery from injuries received in an air-| plane crash at McDames Lake on August 13. Collison was taken by airplane from the scene of the crash to| Whitehorse where a broken arm was plaged in a plaster cast. Six weeks | later, when the cast was removed, it was discovered that an_operation was hecessary. Collison arrived here on: September 2 aboard the PAA Electra. He éntered St. | pital and underwent an[ cn September 12, when | vas again put in a plaster cond cast was removed on went into the McDames| country by dog team from wmngml last March. He acquired Some mining claims on Trout Creek, i lake, put up several buildings, built a bridge across Trout Creek, ran; s"i!ml open cuts, and was leaving| ,his mining ground aboard an air- plape for additional supplies when the crash in which he was injured iocwrren He expects to install a/ his mining ground ! next spring. | This winter Collison and Capt. William Strong expect ‘to make a | fur-buying trip to the Mackenzie River country, going by way of the: The two| men will leave for the fur country| Collison undll the Taku river within the next few’ days. e BLANTON GOES SOUTH Mrs. William P, Blanton, wife of | Dr. Blanton, is a passenger south, iwho spent the past month in St. |Ann's Hospital will undergo special | In Silents RS Norma Shearer . . . she was advised tn give up pictures. ro}e on the ever, o play the stage, because, she says, “‘I consider | medium of | expression—and too, if I am fortu- the screen a greater nate enough to be acceptable to the critics and the public as Juliet on the screepn, I shall be as thrill- ed as any triumph on the stage| could thrill a stage star.” “Romeo and = Juliet,” to be fol- lowed, by “Marie Antoinette,” will mark a deviation from the past lern and costume dramas in her career. She used to go from ex- treme modernity to old-fashioned quaintness in her characterizations, | and always seemed equally happy /in both. FIELDS DISLIKES W. C. Fields, Bing Crosby and Joan Bennett are co-starred in “Mississippi,” Paramount’s presenta- tion of the old South of crinolines and sideburns, now showing at the Capitol Theatre. Fields plays the trayed in his recent hits, “The Old: Fashioned Way,” and “It's a Gif Now that he has again climbed back to the peak he once occupied, Fields wants to explain how he fell off and how he got back. he said, “I was told that, they had| specialists who did nothing but | think"up plots, embellish them into | | situations. All I had to do was go |out and play golf until they were ready for me. I tried it and in six months I was out of a job.” After the depression, when Fields was practically broke, he got a break in “International House.” He | wrote his own acts, figured out his own gags and wrote his own dia- logue. “The people must have liked it,” he said. —— - SPECIAL DELIVERY TO DOuG- LAS! Daily at 10:00 a.m. and 2:30 pm. Kelly Blake’s SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv. A QUICK ‘PICK-ME-UP’ FOR RUN-DOWN FEELING When you feel run-down, slug- gish, with no appetite for food or zest for living—all because of pois- ons in your system from clogged-up |bowels and inactive kidneys—that's !when you need a good tonic like {wiliams S.LK. Formula which is bringing quick relief and added joy jof living to so many ailing people. ;A.sk Butler Mauro Drug Store to- |day for Williams S.LK. Formula. Take a few doses and see how much better you feel. The first bottle must satisfy you or money back. MOVIE SPECIALISTS| same type of role as that he por-| ‘‘When 1 first came to Hollywood,” | screen plays, and think up funny| |CLUE CLUB MYSTERY AT COLISEUM TONIGHT “While the Patient Sleeps,” First National’s second Clue Club produc- | tion, opens tonight at the Coliseum | Theatre. Based on a novel by Mig- {non G. Eberhart, the film presents Aline MacMahon as Nurse Sarah town sleuth. {murder, the picture also includes \much hilarious comedy, a romance | betweén Miss MacMahon and Kib- \bee and a more serious romance between Lyle Talbot and Patricia Ellis. | ‘The story concerns the kinfolk of |a wealthy recluse, all hating each other, all greedy for money, and what happened after his mysterious death. e cast includes Allen Jenkins, | Rol {ba Cavanaugh, Dorothy Tree, Heldn Flint, Henry O'Netll, Brandon Hum and Walter Walker. NUGGET CAFE IS OPEN FOR ORDERS lunch room, opened for business yes- | terday in the rooms recently oceu- | pied by the Midget Lunch. The Nugget Cafe is operated by Fred M. Judy, well-known Alaskan chef, and is equipped to offer the best foods at the right prices. Spe- cial fish and chips are a feature of the daily menu, Mr. Judy said. e EXPERT PIANo 1UNING George Anderson, expert piano " LUMBER SASH * mu‘mml n —adv,) Keate, and Guy Kibbee as a smnll-l While the plot includes a double| rt Barrat, Eddie Shubert, Ho-, The Nugget Cafe, attractive smsu on the North Sea. Mrs. Blanton,| treatment in Seattle. It is possible | she may remain South for the winter, | P | A S i TRANSFERRED | < Miss Leonaine M. Hill, who has| 1been with the Bureau of Disburse- | ments here, has heen transferred to the Treasury department at Wash-| ington. Miss Hill, who has been wlm‘ the local office about four months., expects to leave for the south on' ! the Alaska. She is a former school |teaéher at Cordova and Ketchikan. BRGS0 AT WARRACK GOES TO SITKA J, B. Warrack, of the Warrack Construction Company, and Al Eng- fman and J. Theodorson, Warrack Construction Company employees, were passengers for Eitkn on the North Sea. —— e, — GOES TO SITKA Gordon H. Proffitt, PWA In- spector, was a passenger to Sitka on the North Sea. — e+ GO SOUTH FOR HOLIDAYS Mrs. James R. York and her small daughter, Dorothy York, aré aboard the North Sea, enroute to (Los, Angeles, where they will spend the“holidays with Mrs. York’s par- ents. They expect to return to Ju- neau early in the spring. " " Foss CONSTRUCTION CO. |} Phone 107 * Juneau | b o LADIES GUILD IS SPONSORING- DINNER A get-together dinner and social evening at Trinity’ Hall' will ‘be sponsored by the Ladies' Guild of Holy Trinity Cathedral tomorrow evening. Dinner will be served at 6:30 oclock. All members of the church are invited to attend and enjoy a pleasant evening, Members of the committee are as follows: Chairman, Mrs. Wellman Holbrook; Mrs. Willlam Jarman, Mrs. Harry Lea, Mrs. E. M. Polley, Mrs. J. B. Bernhofer, Mrs. Frank A. Boyle, Mrs, Daniel Ross, and Mrs. C. E: Rice. e MRS. C. MORGAN IS GOING SOUTH; .HONORED, PARTIES Mrs, Clifford Morgan, popular gm- ployee of the Federal Housing Ad- ministration, has taken' passage on the Alaska tomorrow, bound for Seattle, where she will spend a month visiting friends before joining her husband in San Francisco, where she expects to make her per- manent residence. Mrs. Morgan has been the reci- pient of several parties given in her honor by Juneau friends. B AR JUNEAU MEN OFF ‘ ON HUNTING TRIP +On a two weeks' hunting trip to Rocky Pass Lodge, a group of well- known Juneau men got away Sun- day night aboard the Wanderer with Captain Larson. In the party are | Guy McNaughton, Dr. Robert Simp- ' son, T. J. McCaul, Ed Jones, Allen Shattuck, Jeff Marshall and Her-| man Gru the cook. D MRS. BOYER GOES SOUTH Mrs. E. H. Boyer, of Juneau, left on the North Sea. enroute for Se-| attlé, where she will, spend several | | weeks visiting with friends. She ex- | ipects to return to Juneau be{orel the holidays. B — TORKELSON RETURNS Olaf Torkelson, City construction foreman, and Mys. Torkelson arrived | {on the North Sea. He received med- | jical. treatment while in Seattle. ‘ ———— | RODENS ARE BACK | Territorial Senator Henry Roden | boarded the North Sea at a way-| port and accompanied Mrs. Roden, | who was returning from 4 trip to| the States, to Juneau, arriving here | Saturday ke, | LAl SILVA ON NORTH SEA Jack Silva, of the Alaska Weld- ers, arrived aboard the Norfh Sea from a southern port. 3 B e LA SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! i [ SSUSEEBUCESUS TS Apartments Scarce in Seattle Wire or write reservations NOW THE PRESIDENT APARTMENT HOTEL 1119 OLIVE WAY SEATTLE AL B H , Weel lonth AN APAR' ING DISTINGUL BY THE QUALITY OF ITS SERVICE; THE HIGH STANDARD OF ITS TENANTRY AND ITS EXCEPTIONAL LOCATION ATTRACTIVE NEW LOBBY The most exacting tenant will admire these beautiful apart- ments, - NEW decorations - and NEW furnishings. You may choose either Early American or modernistic design; 2 rooms from $42.50, which includes electricity, elevator and switchboard service. ‘White & All Priges, Sizes; Loepflonl. lflfl—md Ave. ™ TIME! 9:30 t6 1 A. M. Next wn.™PLACE! Elks And The G “The Bndge Queen’s Coronation Ball’:: - 5 SEo ed by the ';’ iuning and repair work. Phone 143.' | JUNEAU CHAMBER OF COMMERCE Tickets $1,00—Extra W All of Them—Fot All J"lr“ Will Be There! -Juneau will Saturday, October 12 Hall IRL! at the es Free Music by “RANDS” TITTERS ! THRILLS! TICKLES ! Just enough of each to keep yow in stitches and suspense ! HAIR - RAISING ! HILARIOUS ! y n GUY KIBBE ALINE ‘MacMAII)I LYLE TALBOT PATRICIA ELLIS— WARNER - FIRST NAYIONAI. PICTURE “Oh, What a Business” “Jolly Little Eyes” Going Places News r. John Pastl You are invited to present this coupon at the box office of the Capitol Theatre and receive tickets for yourself and a friend or relative to see “Mississippi” As a petid-up subscribér giiést of THe' Daily Alaska Empire "Good only for current offering “Your Name May Appear me WATCH THIS SPACE Thanksgwmg Award 1st—TURKEY DINNER 2nd—CHICKEN DINNER 3rd—HAM DINNER CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 - OPEN ALL NIGHT v Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. Phone Single 0-2 yings Juneau Cash Grocerj‘ CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward Free Delivery FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B, M. Behrends Bank Bldg. GO v se e é &% CEEPEVPIPE200 004000000 PN - - PR - SR VISP LEPL0000PIEPOIVITLLOPI VIV UPEOIE LT H 39960980000 SROEROCELIVIIOPIIOIEPILETIINIIVIINILL IS PIRIPEPIEEIIE

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