The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 12, 1935, Page 3

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STARTING TONIGHT ——— A CROWDED COURTROOM ——— A Man’s Life at Stake! YOU READ THE STORY IN LIBERTY MARAZINE Carl Laemmle presents a Universal Picture from Octavus Roy Cohen'’s Liberty Magazine story with GENE RAYMOND HENRY HULL FRANCES DRAKE —ADDED— Fixing Stew Pharoah Land News THEATRE Tears Are Shed as ‘lff:f:,fo‘m“‘“"“l" “Billy Sunday” Is Laid to Final Rest CHICAGO, Nov. 12. — The Rev Wwilliam A. “Billy” Sunday was bur ied in the Forest Home cem y 1 Saturday afternoon. He died sud- denly last Wednesday night The funé was near as Sun- day ordered, without crepe and oth- er forms of sadness, but many in - Mother of Four Is Strangled; Posse Out LORDSBURG, N, M., Nov. 12.— rmed po:semen stalked the ranch nds near the International Boun- dary hunting the person who stran- gled to death Mrs. Pauline Marcos 27-year-old motHer of four children THE DAILY ALASKA N SCREEN AT SIHGS TONIGHT COLISEUM NOW [} 1, L. CHURCH Former Eric Frey to Be Heard in| Concert—Swedish, Nor- | wegian Songs Included 0 “Transient Lady,” Liberty Serial, Stars Gene Raymond ent, Lady,” Octavus Roy Co- which ran serially in Lib- arty magazine, comes to the Coli~ cum tonight. Gene Raymond, Hepry Hull, Fran- ces Drake and June Clayworth are seen jp this story of 4 sleepy bama town. A wandering Miss Drake a Willlams, arr town for the purpose of setting mp a' temporary rolle run afoul of any of tiy a creoked politician and a . The crook tries to the guilt on one of the promot- TS & then the thrills begin Through it all runs a beautitul love story The story is a vigorous denuncia- tion of small-town politics, and packed with tense situations wl escgpe melodrama by the saving ce of typically Cohen wisecrack- ing ght Presbyterian Church| YOUNG WOMAN “Tran ives 0 ERIC FREY Blind Baritone” of the! sings tonight at the! worta hearing and which promises n ntertainment and beauty | of music. ny of Ayzust Werner, Frey has been highly successful in the, five years he has devoted to music, | woman judge, placing Miss Kaaren and has won high praise wherever Johnsen, aged only 35, in charge of he has appeared in public. Tonigh: the ninth chamber of criminal cases| concert marks his debut before Al- in the city courts here. Miss John-|askan audiences. He leaves tomor- son holds the gold medal of Copen-|row to return to his studies at the hagen University for an essay on of Washington. et AL Willis E. Nowell, violinist, will ap- 2 T SR | pear on the program also, and Mrs, !Trevor Davis will serve as accom- panist Swedish and Norwegian songs, in HOLLYWOOD, Cal.—Lynne OVer- qgition to classical renditions, will man always rates star billing when ' pa included on Mr. Frey's program his pictures play in Birmingham, . P e England, because of his popularity when he played in two shows there Author of Outdoor Life Novels Is Dead CCPENHAGEN, Nov. 12—For the nd time in history the Danish y of Justice has appointed a Remember Lynne PIRE, TUESDAY, NOV 12 E RAYMOND sfFNQ.ANCES DRAKE. -~ TRANSIENT LADY" UNIVER SALe" Fumblings of | RA Revival Held as Certain Indication Actto Rai By BYRON PRICE (Chief ¢f Bureau, the Associated Press, Washington.) Tk to revive NRA, or at st Lo erve its essentials in one rm or another, quietly is assuming portions which seem to insure pread discussion during coming session of Congress and in 1e 1936 campaign Already there have been many mblings of speculation about the t that NRA headquarters carries on, with hundreds of employees, months after the Supreme Court de- clared the codes unconstitutional; but less public notice has been ta- ken of numerous scattered hints that he venture scarcely can be regard- ed as a closed incident. Until recently, the official expla- nation of the continued presence of a large NRA staff in Washington | was that it was compiling a “his- tory” of the experiment, and was seeking to conserve for the future the lessons learned in the drafting ind administering of the codes. Just before he left for his Pacific trip, however, the President issued the | 1935, qulate industrial competition is “of ,dirst importance Presumably, he not talking about the Fede Trade Commission, which is a manent institution devoted to regu= lation of cor ition, or p s aws enacted for the pose, since he something bviously which does not has 1 ence to now exist Major Berry has beeq in touc labor leac He enjoys a T woiaoie footing there, e of these him egard i of NR v can be recordad in t “ive that the American Fed: of Labor has voted at its Atlanti ¢nventien in favor of a con- ticnal amendment which, among | other things, would seam to make it possible to re > NRA. Major Berr) has been touch with industry. The de! main undisclosed, but it ca e 1 also that the autom 2 in- _ dustry the situa Y hed \ staze where it is time to declare ——— 'itself. Accordingly it announc publicly that it does not want to see NRA revived Simultaneously a highly interest- ing article appears in “The Con- sumer,” a publication put omt by the consumers’ division of NRA, of which Major Berry is kingpin The unidentified author of that rather indicates he does not the Supreme Court’s anti- code edict as entirely overpowering. He cencludes by suggesting the pos- sibility that “a national industrial administration™ might be founded to replace both NRA and the Federal Trade Commission. the tory also cord se New Storms, without comment an executive or- der appointing George L. B “co- dinator for industrial cooperation.’ |and giving him powers of consider- able scope with respect to the con- fuct of what was left of NRA Washington took no particular note of this act, and the country | appears to have been even less in- terested in it. ‘‘Coordinators™ of one |kind and another have come and gone with frequency on the national scene, and most of them have left OTHER SIGNS ‘There are other signs, such as the continued protestations of General Johnson that the old NRA was far better than it has been painted, and the recent suggestion of Secro- little trace. It now develops that Major Berry !4y Roper that the Supreme Court’s | findings did not injure the basic ob- has been taking his job quite ser-|. 2 fously. He has not been saying very | Jectives of the Recovery Act much for publication, but he has| Where it all will head up—wheth- er the swing will be to the A F of |not been idle. What little he has * 3 l”"d‘ and the evidences of his ac- 1..” constitutional amendment or to I tivity, have been exceedingly inter-|S0me less drastic action—seems any- esting. body’s guess. That it is heading to- ward renewed controversy certainly is beyond question. OF ACTIVITY - 30 P55 For the “coordinator” OLD NEWSPAPERS is quoted as saying that he under- In large bundles for 25¢ per bundle. |stands one of his duties will be to Just the thing for' starting fires | find out whether industry and labor these chilly mornings. Get them | want some sort of permanent NRA. at THE EMPIRE'S office. | 'To this he adds his own conviction - B — |that “a permanent institution” to Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! 12 years ago. i, Truchs | LD HEWOEATTRS | wEW YORK, Nov. 12. — Frank In large bundles for 25¢ per bu"f”e'} Kimball Scribner, author of outdoor Just the thing for starting “r“s'lu‘e novels, died last night, these chilly mornings. Get them o LAY at THE EMPIRE'S office. HOP IN JUNEAU® Fi tevKill(“é(I as & Five hundred cases of dynamite, floating in San Francisco Bay, peril:d storm that lashed the entire bay region, causing the deaths of five! per sons an Wreaks Havocin San Francisco Bay Region i A pping and the two bay bridges in the wake of an unprecedented injuries to as many others. The dynamite was washed from the barge Adelia after it broke adrift with a cargo of 1200 cases. Nine case s of dynamite were recovered by the Coast Guard. The forty-five mile an hour gale ripped dewn signs, flung huge trees to the ground and br cught rain, sncw and reccrd celd to the bay area. Photo shows a scene in the National Cemetery at the Presidio of San Francisco, where 75- Power 2nd telephone lines w ere also downed and emergency crews spant hours realigning them. strewn on many rcads in the reserv:tion. feot ireec were felled by the gale. All traffic was halted as trees were T Printing Company Expert Work DAILY EMPIRE BUILDING Phone 374 CONSIDER the pleasure greeting cards bring, whether simple or elaborate. Regardless of kind, style or price we can help you. Our staff is at- tuned to the work of expressing person- ality with type, typography, art work and fine printing. Have You Economical! —and Delicious, Tried CINNAMON TOAST Made w ith PEERLESS BREAD? You'll Like Peerless Bread This Way!: The smooth texture of Peerless bread makes it ideal for sandwiches of all kinds, and good bak- ing makes it the standard for good toast! 232 “Ask for it at Your Grocer’s Peerless Brea GREATER THAN “HELL DIVERS'! Wallace Beery in his greatest role in this romantic spectaclef COLCR CARTOON NEWS Midnight Preview “MY HEART IS CALLING"

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