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3 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, OCT. 26, -1935. HERE IS A HONEY - IT WILL SURPRISE YOuU! —MANAGEMENT. Sh should have begn € n the Ziegfeld Follies . . . but was driving a hansom! The Horse been on should have a race-track . . . but was pulling a carriage! He should have been busting Broadway heads . . . but was break- ing his heart over both! PARKER MORRIS in DAMON RUNYON'S Collier's Magazine story Carl Laemmle presents A Universal Picture with Leon Errol * Henry Armetta * Vince Barnett ADDED MUSICAL CHARLIE DAVIS LAST DOGGIE NEWS SUNDAY MONDAY LAST TIMES TONIGHT DeLuxe Double Features “MILLI DOLLAR BABY” —and— '“LAW BEHIND THE RANGE” SUNDAY MONDAY In Exclusive Color Blends JUST RECEIVED You’ll proudly wear these fall creations that reveal a refreshing newness in style. Penn-Craft Felts Made by STETSON $5 SABIN’S “The Store for Men” Sabin’s - Stetson For Every Purse and Every Purpose PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PHONE 412 Allen Shatuck, Inc. Juneau. Alaska Established 1898 P s e re——— WINDOW . CLEANING PHONE 485 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH GROCERS Cerner Second and Seward Free Delivery A T DAMON RUNYA STORY PLAYS AT COLISEUM Jean Parker Cast as Little Irish “Princess O'Hara” in Hilarious Fim Jean Parker and Chester Morris are co-starred in “Princess O'Hara,” the racy Damon Runyan story which cpens at the Coliseum Sunday. Among all of Runyan's snappy stories, his “Princess O'Hara” is considered the best. It is the story of how a poor little Irish lass becomes involved in the theft of a famous race horse and how she almost comes to grief over it. Vic Toledo, who own a string of taxicabs and a stable of horses on the side, doesn’t realize he's in love with the little Princess with his society girl friend, whose h it was that was stolen, because cess” O'Hara for the theft. There is action, movement and in- [| trigue all through the story and some hilarious moments of comedy capably supplied by Leon Errol and Vince Barnett, as two tough mugs | ind the explosive Italian, Henry Ar- | mietta, who is seen as a veterinary. Some of the interesting landsites in New York form the background basis of the picture. One of the highlights of the film is an elaborate scene and a bang-up floor show | with 24 dancing beauties. Miss Park- | er surprises with her adept dancing| feet in this scene. Tonight the Coliseum screen pre- sents a dual offering—little four- year-old Jimmie Fay as “The Mil- lion Dollar Baby,” with Ray Walker “Law Beyond the Range,” adventure picture starring Tim McCoy as a lurest ranger. {SHELDON SIMMONS HELD UP, CORDOVA| | Sheldon Simmons, Pacific Al \Transport pilot whose ship, the -ai- | co, has been held up in Cord~ = .or | some days due to weather condizions, ‘wday moved his plane from Eyak |Lake to the bay and is awaiting |signal from the Juneau Weather | Bureau before taking off for Juneau He is expected home in.the next rnw days. —— - —— | |SPECIAL DELIVERY 10 DOUG-| 'LAS! Daily at 10:00 am. and 2:30 .m. Kelly Blake's SPECIAL DE- LIVERY—Phone 442. adv., until they take her to jail. He breaks | she insists on prosecuting the “Prin- | {and Arline Judge as his parents, and | FIVE CIVIL CASES | UP, FEDERAL COURT Five civil su‘n.s were brought up in Federal Judge George F. Alexander's {court this morning. The case of Gordon C. MacDonald the Ketchikan Spruce Mills, a hoaring on a demurrer, was set over to next Saturday. The suit involves a contract on logs. A demurrer was filed in the libel suit of former U. S. Marshal Albert White again Niel Heard, onetime | editor of the Alaska Labor Dispatch. Hearing on the case was set over CAPITOL SHOWS “G MEN," TALE SUNDAY MIDNIGHT PREVIEW MONDAY TONIGHT TUESDAY MATINEE SUNDAY—2 P. M. OF CRIME WARS,{ uNGLE SANF'S FIGHTING AGENTS James Cagney Has Stellar' Role in Story of U. S. Fight Against Crime “G Men,” long awaited picture ofi three days by Judge Alexander. Hearing on the demurrer filed in he suit of William L. Paul against Nick Bez was scheduled for next Saturday. The suit is an equity case p. The personal injury suit of Peter Loe, s2aman, against Isadore Gold~ tein and Tom Sandvick, will also e argued nex: Saturday. A motion s been filed to make the complaint e certain. Loe is said to have en injured when he was caught n aboard a fishing vessel personal injury suit, that |2f P. J. Hu against the Juneau Lumber Mills, was also set over until noxt Saturday. MAYOR OF PETERSBURG REPORTS UNUSUALLY PROSPEROUS SEASON Business conditions in Petersburg are better now than at any time in the last four years, according to Ed. Locken, Mayor, who ‘arrived here on | the Northland. The Pacific Alaska Fisheries cannery at Petersburg \packed more than 100,000 cases of \fish this year—20,000 more than last | year, Mayor Locken said, and the |cannery at Scow Bay, three miles {from Petersburg packed 45,000 cases —10,000 more than last year. Two crab canneries and a shrimp |cannery, whose closed season occurs during the busiest part of the fish- | packing season, which serves to bal- |ance employment, also contribute to the general prosperity in Petersburg, Mayor Locken said. An appropriation of $50,000 of Fed- |eral funds has been approved for use |in paving the streets of Petersburg, Mayor Locken stated. | Mr. Locken was subpoenaed for service on the petit jury, but was excused. He expects to return to | Petersburg on the Northland to- ROITOW. | e ENTEKS HUSPITAL W. J. Newell, resident of Juneau {and employee of the A-J, has entered St. Ann’s hospital for treatment for | rhetwnatism. ' APRON DANCE DOOR PRIZE [ MOOSE HALL [ TONIGHT ® HOPE CHEST AW ARD [ ] - PRIZE WALTZ ® Music by PAUL BROWN and HIS ISLANDERS _oil fields and citrus lands of Puente| DANCING 9:30 Ladies, 25 cents WINES Men, 75 cents ] :glllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIIIIIINIMHMIHGHIHIIHIIHIIIIMfllmmfllflmflflmg “HEN- Come back here this very minute!’; Don’t you know Hemry, your wifie enjoys a There are other WINE, DINE and DANCE ONLY ONE Glacier Tavern BEERS Al B v ¥R TONIGH‘I‘ lfllflflflflfllflflfllfll“flllmlIlflmllllllll|IIIIII|II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll the war of the United States Gov-| ernment against organized crime, comes to the Capitol Theatre Sun-| day, with a special midnight preview' Saturday night. James Cagney has the stellar role as the "G Man” who set the deadly| trap for the mad dog of the mobs| zht the ‘‘big shot,” whom no d hold, to an ignominous | The picture follows his cal the time | un b]LI‘B) with ganzsterw Ning ¢limax in which he rounds up, and exterminates | ; of murderous kidnapers. On') »site. him is charming Mar- a s2y, Who has the part of of Robert Armstrong, Cag- i's superior officer, and the girl vhom Cagney loves. Ann Dvorak pormtys a night club | entertainer who is in love with Cag riey but who, when her affection is| uot returned, marries a gangster. The role affords her another op- | portunity for the singing and danc- !/ ng she displayed in Rudy Vallee's| film, “Sweet Music.” | Playing at the Capitol for Lho: last times tonight, Paul Lukas i3} seen as the inimitable Philo Vanct: in “The Casing Murder Case, FOREST FIRES IN CALIFORNIA UNDER CONTROL Fifteen Hundred €CC| Camp Workers Re- ported on Lines | | LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 26— Fires raging unchecked through the nearby moutain and foothill ceuntry | for the past five days are temporarily | under control and are believed to! have been turned back, especially in | one sector by favorable winds. | Fifteen hundred men from CCC| camps are on the firing line. Flames for a time threatened the' Hills. The damage is now estimated to| have reached the ten million dollar| mark. RANSFORD AND.;IiFE | ARE VISITING CITY| Harry Ransford, President of Ransford and Frith, Limited, of Vancouver, B, C., investment brok-| ers, accompanied by Mrs. Ransford, are visitors in Juneau and are guests at the Zynda Hotel. This is Mr. Ransford’s first visit to Juneau in 22 years and he is impressed with the city’s growth and general air of prosperity. Mr. Ransford believes that great benefits will come to Alaska through construction of the proposed Inter- national Highway. \ ST . o opce ood FUNERAL SERVICES HELD HERE FOR KETAH Funeral services for Paul Ketah, who died at the Government Hos- pital on October 19, were held in the chapel in the C. W. Carter Mortu- ary at 2 o'clock this afternoon, Rev. David Waggoner officiated and in- terment was in Evergreen Cemetery. Ketah was taken to. the Govern- ment Hospital by plane on Augus: 13, of treatment of injuries received in a fall at, Klgwock, i R-RY! little treat once a while? palaces BUT— FOODS ¥ e CRASH THE SCREEN IN A BLAZE OF GUN- FIRE AND GLORY! The wholeamazing Iiofithefederal men put a strangle-hold on the underworld—revealed for the first time in a mighty motion picture! “"S M.I. "ERE! Before your eyes is re-enacted every heroic episode in America’s war-to-the-death with Crime! It’s real! Stirring! Breath-taking! And it tells everything that happened right from the day Uncle Sam wrote the death decree of the Public Enemy by sending special agents of the Department of Justice out to fight him with his own bloody weapons! INSIDE FACTS! Now you'll really know why it is these mighty man-hunters never fail to get their -nllY-u’llpwifluhumuthm.h the Department’s amazing scientific laboratories — learn how the notorious Mad Dog of the Mobs was “captured” with a microscope before the men in the field were sent out to hunt him down! CAGNEY AS A "G MAN'! None other than the once famous “Public Enemy” of the screen has been picked to lead the “G Men” in this joined in labelling it his greatest performance — and you know what kind of performance that means! ANN DVORAK MARGARET LINDSAY CAST OF NUNDREDS Directed by Win. Keighley A First Netlonat Pictore —ADDED— * Silly Symphony Tortoise and the Hare Vaudeville Universal News And that's only one of the amazing scenes Warner Bros. have filmed so America can know at last the real story of these men whose gallantry ended the Reign of Terrorism. You'll see the attack on the road-house arsenal; you'll thrill to the Battle of Allen Street; and you'll really find out how that mysterious beauty lured the Big Shot of gangdoin to his rendezvous with death! LAST TIMES TONIGHT “CASINO MURDER CASE” JUNIOR CHOIR HAS HALLOWE’EN PARTY A Hallowe'en party was held last pight by the Junior Choir of the Resurrection Lutheran Church ml the social parlors. Guests arrived in costume, wlm[ witches and ghosts much in evidence. Eerie noises and darkness greeted each arrival, who was then taken to the old witeh’s cave to learn his for- tune. The remainder of the evening was spent in games and contests, a Ches- hire Cat contest being the feature of the program. The Committee-in-Charge was: Beatrice Bothwell, Jurdis Winthers, Elizabeth Tucker, Barbara MacSpad- den and Ruth Torkelsen. The latter has recently been elected president of the Junior Choir. Decorations were made and ar- ranged by Beryl Marshall, Secretary, Janice Botduc, librarian, ‘and Astrid Varness. Refreshments were served by Bet- |ty Rice and Frances Tucker. A voluntary group formed the ne: cessary clean-up committee. Twenty-three girls attended the ‘party, and all pronounced it ¢ un- qualified success. PALEONTOLOGIST TALKS TO MINERS "The lecture on Historical Geology and Paleontology, presented by Joht: B. Dorsh, Field Man for the Frick Laboratories of the American Mu- seum of Natural History, at the even- ing session of the mining short course, at A. B. Hall last night, proved to be of exceptional interest to the students and visitors who were present. Open Challenge ‘Dorsh reviewed the different geolo- gical eras and mentioned the animal life from the early invertebrates on- ward. He spoke of the “open chal- lenge to geologists and allied scien- tists"—the gap in the development of animal life on the earth. Dorsh stated that no evidence of animal life before the Cambrian period has ever been discovered and that there must have been some earlier form of life E!flilllIIIIIlIIIlIlIlIl!Il!IIII|l|l||||||||||IIIIII |changed today. known to have existed in that era. | ‘Well developed animal life couldn’ :‘ happen all at ence,” Dorsh sald.‘; ‘there must have been something .eading up to that stage.” Pl S A LEAVES ST. ANN'S Do'uglns ‘Wahto, young Douglas boy #ho recently underwent an appen- Jectomy in St. Ann's Hospital, re- surned to his home today for con- valescence. —————— LEAVES HOSPITAL wilfred Rice, who has been con- fined to St. Ann's Hospital with a severe case of tonsillitis, was dis- —————— — MARINE IN ST. ANN'S C. R. Overend, of the Coast Guard Cutter Tallapoosa, has entered St. Ann’s hospital to, undergo medical treatment. e QIR LIGHT TO SITKA _ Sam Light, representative for Sea- gram’s Distillers Corporation, sailed for Sitka on the Northland last night. ———————— SHOP IN JUNEAU, FIRST! (White Dot) is uncondi- Built to last tionally guaranteed (ex- for besaty and cept against loss and §] wilful damage), tive expenses. preceding the well developed types 1 RAINBOW GIRLS WILL GO TO CHURCH BUNDAY“ The Rainbow Girls have accepted the invitation of Dean C. E. Rice of Holy Trinity Cathedral and will | attend the 11 o'clock service tomor- row forenoon. e, WILL WED TONIGHT Miss Sigrid Coolin and Mr, Willlam. ‘Walther, the laster an A4J employee, will be married at 7 o'clock this evening at the home of Rev. John A Glasse. R o SCHOETTLERS LOCATED Mr. and Mrs, A. E. Schoettler and family are now, located in one of the apartments in the Holbrook resi- dence on Seventh avenue and Seward Street. ——e—— In a recent vote on its “blue laws,” Payettesville, N. C., decided to allow the sale of gasoline and soft drinks during church hours, but veted against dancing after mid- night on Saturdays. Ccnamm o e SHOP IN JUNEAU! your lifetime, and less writing fatigue. supply. Instant writing assured subject phu-nm in the channel. A splendid only to a sm:llnserv:ne ment in a lifetime of smooth, satisfactory fee of 35¢ for duties, in- yri and ideal surance and administra- ;5 :‘::,u., .‘m'ywn*‘flfl S AT LEADING STATIONERY AND JEWELRY STORES Y i