The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 26, 1935, Page 3

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YENGEANCE TRAILS ‘A LOVE-THIEF A KILLER GETS HIS MAN THREE PERSONS CONFESS “MONOGRAM PICTURES presents STARTING TONIGHT WHO IS GUILTY .....7 with CONWAY TEARLE HARDIE ALBRIGHT BOOTS MALLORY ¥ —ADDED— “Are You Superstiticus?” SEE SUPERSTITION “Walking Under a Ladder” | CONWAY TEARLE PLAYS IN NEW Galaxy of Stars—H. Albright Lea “Einz Sing Nizat di= Albright, Conway Tear Mary Doran, comes to the Col tenight Tearle, uc of course, needs no intro- bsa ' ta 20 yaars, I dom on the Je; such celel years ago. i2 Albright, 1 debut in city, ha 2ffort, wi before com- The Greeks ng the rol» the picture was featured in both the Scandals | Follies, while Barton ieved fame, in the title he Deacon.” has to as yet, so you'll have to out about that for yourself. It s qonight .- MARY HAMMER IS RECIPIENT OF ODD LETTER FROM EAST Curio. dealers receive various kinds of “fan mail” from summer tourists, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 26, 1935. | New Coliseum Show Tanight g j ASSERTS H(]MER a s * PROMISED. LAND, . COLISEUM FILM “Sing Sing Nights” Has ) his | b Sophia Disaster nything about | Conway Tearle and Mary Deran are featured in the production “Sing Sing Nigl The abeve picture 0 2 scene frem the movie, NEY/ HFEATING Pi ANT SKULL FOUND EAR JUNEAU |CCC. Worker's Discovery Rice « Anters, | Believed to Be Rélic of air-conditio today in the Nor ning has not, until this time, seen its way | clear to provide a heating plant ade- 1 quate to the size of the building, Rev. A man’s skull, thought to be a relic|John A. Glasse said today |of the shipwreck of the Princess So- | Present plant,” he declared, “cost :D ia in 1918, has been found by a|$1600, most ef which has been paid. CCC worker on the beach near the | We are certain that friends and pat- | Boy Scouts’ cabin at the Eagle River [7ons of the church will cover the [ cutstanding bills on this very neces- Authorities were informed of the|$ary equipment.” discovery, but the obvious age of the| Althovgh installation will not be skull makes an investigation un-|Complete until Monday, enough work likely. Absence of teeth or jawbone | Will have been accomplished to pro- [prevents any attempts at identifi- vide sufficient heat for the Thanks- on. giving services in the Auditorium The wreck of the Canadiani steam- | Thursday morning. il CHIRT a0 |er Princess Sophia on October 24, | 1918, was one of Alaska's greatest| marine disasters, rivalling the sink- | FUNERAL SERVICES IN N. L. CHURCE Built nine years ago, the church “The s 3 . ¥ but Mrs. Mary Hammer, of the New |ing of the Islander. The ship was| hnap:hot.s Iceal Shop is the recipient of one!taking a full load of Klondikers out- | FOR ‘IACOBS TO BE s SRR of her funniest letters in years— side when she struck Vanderbilt reef. THEATRE Latest News by from a tourist in North St. Paul,| elRRRI Y Tl Al | HELD WEDNESDAY b Paramount Minn. So;lthem Accent Leads FILM ACTRESS, | . NOW MOTHER VAN NUYS, Cal, Nov. 26. — union of Mrs. Peggy Peterson, to Long-Lost Brother chdnce remark brought about a re- an = Letters in the movies, was typed as follows: 1 “New Ideal Shop, Juneau, Alaska.| “Dear Madame — Among other | things that I purchased from you | 1e gust was a pair of beaded hai; moccasins. These have made such a hit with my family that | A The missive, similar to Dumbell | TWO-DAY HOLIDAY IS GIVEN STUDENTS Following the fFaditional school | custom, which allows one day in which to recover from the feasting of Thanksgiving, both Thursday and Friday will be holidays for Juneau | \ | Funeral services for Albert Jacob, 31, Indian, who died Saturday night at the Government Hospital, will | be held at the chapel in the C. W, Carter Mortuary tomorrow at 12:30 p.m. Rev. David Waggoner will of- ficiate and interment will be in Ever- green Cemetery. Albert Jacob is survived by his (ALASKA SECTION = ;Gommunily Grows Stead- 1 ily—More Families Are Coming to Lacate (Convinue Trom Page One) { n for livestock from ruff said. “We have few vate roads but A road frem Homer ecting’ wilh the would opeén up a| tural land and from 12 to 20 he' said. The Seldovia * of Commetee has estimated | re 3090 sections of fine | "a¥m land available in that area, and | '"mat it would support a population | £ 100,000 people, he said. Scil i¢ Fertile ® Homer district has the most | virgin soil T ever saw in my | life,” he said, “and it is particularly wdaptad to stock raising.” Woodruff xpects to bring a team or horses, three or four cows, and a herd of Teep with him'' when "he returns. Forty beef animals' were butchered At Homer'this fall for sale in Sel- The dvoia ‘and other nearby ports. Tetsie Lee Home in Seward has tablished a farm at Homer, he which' has shown splendid results.; While in the States Woodruff hopes to interest the Government in fur- nishing cheap transportation for live | tock from the States to Homer, The climate is very mild and there | are no mosquitoes in Homer, Wood- ruff said. “I was used to tempera- tures as low as 45 and"50 below zero | in Utah,” he said, “and I was very | much surprised at the fine weather in Homer. Last winter the lowest temperature recorded there was sev- n degrees above zero.” Oats, barley, rye, potatoes and oth- er root crops, timothy, and clover | were all successfully raised in that | district this year, Woodruff sald, and | the community held an agrlcultuml} fair this fall, which was well attend- ' ed by people from Seldovia, Seward and other nearby ports. Ceal in District Vast deposits of coal of good qual- ity are found throughout the district, he said. A railway, from the end of | 1 | 1 i Homer Spit to the coal deposits, six | No Mosquitces le HOLLYWOOD, Cal, fov. 26— Evelyn Venable, film actress, wife of ¥ Hal Mohr, movie cameraman, gave birth to a nine pound daughter to- day. Mother and baby girl are in a fine condition. e FRYE-BRUHN MAKES CHANGES IN DISPLAY AND REFRIGERATION The Frye-Bruhn Company, under the management of C. W. Durgin, s just completed a general re- odelling under the direction of Kinney. new arrangement, which in- the latest type of refrigera- tion, is not only brighter and more att cor urgin said. { ctive, but gives the meat de- | August 25, as the result of a fract ment a better display. All meats leg sustained in a motorcy: are kept in the best of refrigerated dent at that time, was dise’ ition under the new plan, Mr.!this morning in a much improved Nuys cafe operator, and her br J. O. Williamson, cameraman, a they had not seen each other since separated as children at New Or- leans 15 years ago. Elmer Dyer, another cameraman and friend of Williamson, had din- ner at Mrs. Peterson’s restaurant, and remarked: “your Southern accent is exactly like that of a friend of mine—Jimmy Williamson.” “My long lost brother,” Mrs. Pet- erson exclaimed. So Dyer arranged a meeting. eee— ACCIDENT CASE BETTER Henry Nebel, who has been con- fined to St. Ann's Hospital since ured col- condition, BEER for T Thanksgiving 3 T Insist on Bottled Order by the Case At All Alaska %@ubgy Distributors . H. C. DUNLOP, Manager ;QUIS DELEBEQUE, Asst. Manager A parents, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Jacob, three brothers and two sisters, all of whom are residents of Haines. This gives a four-day vacation. The relatives were notified by tele- ——————— * {gram but were unable to attend the Listers were operated 24 hours a| funeral day in Meade County, Kansas, in a| campangh to halt soil blowing. grade and high school students, an- nounced A. B. Phillips, Superintend- ent of Schools, today. I want more of them. One of Lhc; ladies is about 21 years old with feet | to correspond. Another is big enough | above the ground but is short on; he ground but wide enough to even things up. The other two have feet without any outstanding oddities in 85 far as my knowledge goes. “Frem this description you should | certainly be able to send just what I want. Anyhow they will fit some- tne and as I am blessed (?) with six risters amything built in the line of a foot should fit one of them “I have forgotten just what you set me back for the pacs but I am enclosing enough to make you cafe. |In case there is a surplus, stick in come little gadget. If you can send I'pacs without “Alaska” in the heading it will suit me. 'I would like to have ! them by Christmas time if it is pos- sible.” - SHOP IN JUNIAU, FIRST! IR Make This The e TS SPEND WHERE YOU MAKE IT! jueanse = Of Them All! TR e personal, distinctive . M0 N We ofier create for you an enti design. The Empire Printing Co. Dealers 3 lllllflIHHHIIIIIllllllllullllmlIIHIHIIIHI|HHIIIII|IIIII|IH|I|II|MIHIINHIHHW|I“IHHIIHHII L e Merriest Christmas This year make your gift an ultra- appreciated, out-of-the-ordinary GREETING CARD a lcofilplé‘;g: H:es;gn',- iljus- tration and copy seryice. Let us card at a surprisingly low cost. PH()NE 374 for ah éstimate and g { miles away, which was built before the memory of the oldest inhabitant —probably by early Russian col- [anlsts — indicate that at some time coal was exported from that region, Woodruff said. The water is 75 fa- thoms deep off Homer Spit, he stat- .- sure to be 00000 sag o rely griginal ¥ Catisne: in t ships could berth ed, and the la f hat point i | : natural g along | of from panned where in [¢ ¢ itiative, as have a fi Woodruf ffcm the governmen . CARIVAL tion for live i pensive it | the ave e fa and we nced roads ATENTTO A ¥ - PENTHOUSE | BABY ROBERT MAKES DEBUT IN ‘RECKLESS' Six-months-old Baby Robert An- drews celebrated his half-year debut as a motion-pictu or in the rolé of Jean Harlow’s sin in “Reckless," now showing at the Capitol Thea- tre Director Victor Fleming wanted a scene of the infant with his fin- gers crossed. While awake, Baby Robert refused to cross his fingers. The director decided the trick could be done if the tot were asleep. All members of the company—in- cluding William Powell, Miss Har- low, and May Robson—were ordered t completely quiet in their chairs. Sta hands were warned not to budge, and nobody could leave or en- ter the stage. The child was put| crib and lights and camera were red upon it. | en all the lights on the stage were turned off, plunging the stage into darkness. When 20 minutes of silence were over, an electrician | switched on the lights. Miss Har- low, Powell, Miss Robson and the director were sound asleep— and Baby Robert was wide awake, chew- ing on a pink toe. M-G. L “BLACK FURY” FReliilsd Al it e | Robert Bryant, who recently suf-| = fered the amputation of several fin- The British public spends approx- gers, was discharged from St. Ann's | imately $5,000,000 a week on choco- |late and confectionery. Hospital today. Lowest Priced and Strength ‘Considered, insist on Monogram & OLD MONOGRAM . Imperial Quart $5 another shipment of Bottled in Bond ® Juz;l arrived . . . this famous CANADIAN RYE WHISKEY and we are offering it at a SPECIAL HOLIDAY PRICE ® Juneau Liquor Store PHONE 36 PERCY REYONOLDS, Mgr.

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