The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 3, 1936, Page 3

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G TONIGHT ...as this gofiy team try to climb the ladder of secial success! v h .- . f‘ 455 ALSO Chas. Chase Comedy Celored Cartson Sports A MICKEY MOUSE MATINEE SATURDAY 1 P. M. “Going Highbrow” 8th Chapter “RED RIDER” Comedy Cartoon CANDY He has nieces and nephews and perhaps other relatives living in LAID TO REST ™ = ON SATURDAY = e Funeral Rites to Be Held Tomorrow in Chapel of Carter Mortuary Last rites ior Jack Barnes, 70, night watchman for downtown Ju- neau stores, who was found dead Monday night, will be held at 1:30 | tomorrow afternoon in the chapel of | the C. W. Carter Mortuary. | Father Wm. G. LeVasseur will of- ficiate. Interment will be in the | Pioneers’ Plot in Evergreen Ceme- tery. Barnes was last seen alive at 3:30 || Christmas morning, when he com- | plained of ‘not feeling well. Anxiety | over his failure to appear as a | Christmas Day dinner guest of Mr. | and Mrs. Goodman Jensen caused | an extensive searchi directed by:the | marshal’s office, which ended by | Charles Ashby finding the body un- der the city wharves. Since there | was no evidence of foul play, it was ¢ assumed he was the yictim of a heart atlack while making his rounds. Judge Ben B. Lindsey, who was disbarred by the state of Colorado when 1 judge in Denver, was re-in- stated by the state. He is now a superior judge in the Los Angeles courts. (Associated Press Photo) Temple is shown here with fi: Shirle; d ere with i Dionne quintuplets for Chris! lis sent to ti ( “SWELLHEAD” IS STORY OF HOMERUN KINE Wallace For—d,—B'arbara Kent| and Dickie Moore Seen in Comedy Romance “Swell-head,” a comedy romance featuring Wallace Ford, Barbara Kent, and Dickie Moore, plays to- night at the Coliseum. | The story is that of an egotistic baseball player who suddenly finds he road a surprisingly hard one. d is seen as Terry McCall, home- | un king, who takes credit for every- hing but the discovery of America. He tries to take Mary Malone (Bar- bara Kent) also, but she shoos him Hif with the admonition that he stop being a boastful. swaggering bully. The girl really loves Terry, even ¥ she looks distastefully on some ¢f his mannerisms. When Terry goes blind from a head injury suffered accidentally at the hands of a rival suitor for Mary’s hand, he is no longer allowed to play with his team. The blow to his self- esteem is staggering and Terry dis- “ppears from his old haunts. When Mary’s kid brother (Dickie Moore) ! goes searching for his idol, the de- | posed sultan of swat, he is caught | in a rainstorm and is put to bed | severely ill. In his delirium he keeps | calling for Terry. Of course, the fa- | mous ball player arrives at the child’s bedside in time to help him | through the crisis and as a reward | for himself and the audience is also | allowed to regain his eyesight and | berth on the team. Mary Malone be- | comes his umpire for life. | METALS STRIKE RECOVERY MOVE ORDERS PILE UP Entire fndustry Witnesses Gigantic Strides Dur- ing Past Year {ripe for a dicta (Ceatinued from Page One) ‘The non-ferrous meials led by cop- per, ed their swiftest gains in the last half of 1935. Betterment reflect ed world-wide recovery, war scares abroad and the tightening of the | statistical alignment of all indus- trial metals, with the possible ex | In purchasing Sinclair Lew | ple have been Vermonters for ZaSu Pi. Kibbee is east opposite Miss Pitts FIERY LEWIS NOVEL ADDED T0 LIBRARY | “It Can't Happen Here” Is Story of Possible Dic- tatorship in U. S. s fiery {new novel, “It Can‘t Happen Here," | the Juncau Public Library has made available to Channel readers one of { the most challenging books to come | out of the political situation. Based on an imaginary third-par- ty victory in the 1936 election, the | bock pictures the establishment of | dictatorship in America. To quote 2 New York review | “Doremus Jessup, hero | book, is a country editor. of the His peo- | en- | erations. He believed in the Amer- | ican democracy—but he believed too [that no country in history was so ship as America. | “It can’t happen here!” hard-head- led business men of Fort Buelah, Vermont, told him—but Jessup had 'en the rise of Huey Long’s empire in Lousiana. had seen Father | Coughlin and Bishop Prang sway millions over the air, had watched | the swift rise to power of Senator ! Berzelius Windrip, greatest of the emble her which her film studio said J i iy e ception of lead. | demagogues, and his League of For- Copper’s year had three important | gotten Men. He sensed the chang- mile-posts. The first was the agree- | o5 in the air, the coming of the ment of the international copper day when freedom, constitutional conference in March to chop out-put | guarantees and truth as a democ- abroad by about 30 percent from the ' racy understands it would be lost then current rate for three years and | to America. But even Doremus to eliminate price fixing. The second was the U. S. Supreme | the terror that was to sweep the Court’s invalidation of the NRA in | country; the maelstrom that was | May, which brought a drop in the to crash across America in a fury! price of “blue eagle” copper to 8 of blood and hate, carrying to de-| cents from the 9 cent peg, where itjstrucuon himself and all that he had hung since the summer of 1934. | held dear. | The third was the subsequent re- | “It is a novel to stand with Bab- | covery of prices to around 9% cents. | bitt and Main Street on the shelf | It was hauled ba¢k uphill by both ‘ of great American novels; a furious | | domestic recovery and by aggressive | and inspiring story that probes buying for war purposes on the con- | deeply into the troubles of our| tinent and the far east. | chaotic modern world.” As business drove ahead, it also| Also available at the Juneau Li- took lead and zinc in tow for price | brary is Rider Haggard’s famous | Inovel “She,” picturization of which ! i | 1gains of 4 to 5 percent. | it iwill play at a Juneau theatre oyer | The Japan Air Transport company the week-end. has started weekly airmail servi: i L T it e between Kyushu and Formosa, cov- | lering a four-day steamer route in 10 i DR. RAE L. CARLSON hours, e ARRIVES IN JUNEAU, After East Texas farmers for years T ¥ {had regarded the “partridge pea” as| Dr. Rae L. Carison, optometrist, |2 harmful weed, Cliff Wells, Franklin arrived on the Nortiland for a !en-i {county farmer, used it for hay with |48¥ business stay in Juncau. She| {success and is planning to harvest | Will make her headquarters at the| again. Gastineau Hotel, where she will be | - A vl & available for consultation. | : ; i | Dr. Carlson reports Ketchikar, | The nazi workers' organization, | 1 Power Through Joy.r mmade seq | Merchants had their best Christ=| 'mps possible this past summer for ! mas business for many years and 133.000 Germans, | that a general feeling of optimism 4 e | prevails. > | SHIRLEY TEMPLE’'S GIFTS TO QUINTUPLETS e in Oklas | |homu from Texas on the south, gog its name through being fed in parg | by the waters of Red creek, Mud creek, Muddy Boggy creek and Deep'| ed run. | PO | could not foresee the full force of | ° s at the Capitel tomghe in PRAYER WEEK IN THIS CIT Sil(‘ 'iill ."Y!Il‘.)'\”(‘(‘”i(‘l’.l Made Today by 1stern ] [ Y Is Min- The Minist \ Juneau and Douglas w Universal Week of Pr 6 to 12. The plan this omewh differen year: he first part th gram the Association will 1 u vad- Fach observe the anuary will be of yea an pro- ning thet n Ser The Bethel Pent old Week of day, Tuesday terian Church Army ar of > Week of will be held on y in the Salva- nd W First dnesday Presby- re welcome any of these services, he hour w be the same in all places at 7:30 o'clock Bleondiit for Taole with @ cMlaslers Touits . ‘ ward Ka former | EE o e Y KIBS AT CAPITOL Ku @ ¥ I tory of Farmer, y Gains Riches 1 Warner Highbrow,” t& y based X on y, opens tc n Theatr es the r e of Guy o Cibbee and lar roles of the ambitious wife, irading comedy parts. «tt Horton appears a ; premotion manager jer and June Martel . role: and Iy dicture by 100l. Robert ted from the screen p! ufman and Sy Bartlett. Success Story Renee Norton, Brooklyn stenog- rapher, was so eager to become a singer that she went to work for Elizabeth Major, New York voice coach, to pay for her lessons. Now her perseverance has been reward- ed, for the soprano has won the an- nual prize of the MacDowell Society and is the recipient of radio and concert offers, EN HE GOT HIS MAN ...HE GOT HIS WOMAN! « RED - BLOODED " ACTION WITH THE NORTH- i el COLUMBIA PICTURE DICKIE MOORE BARBARA KENT ALSO 8 Chapter “RED RIDER” NEWS INSURANCE HAS BIG SALES IN - LATIN COUNTRY 15 fore Stati n companies in the country. cs for nine months of 1935, | show 1 21 persons insured for a al o as com- pared with 120,289 holders of 1,883,- | 047,152 pesetas worth of life insur- ance for 1930, There was a sharp increase in fire insurance sales, thanks to pub- lished accounts of the destructive | power of new incendiary bombs. > War Scare Cause Spaniards nt to Buy Many Poli- e s SR . cies in 1935 MADRID, Jan ~Sharper reali- on of the uncertainty of life, dus is believed by .experts e for recent in es in the sale of life and property in- built at nearly upied-by ents of the college, four became bishops in the Episcopal church, Sttt Two hundred pheasants were lib- erated in the government forest pr serve on Maui of the Hawaiian is. > in Spain. | lands in advance of the 1935 hunting since the World War have | season. mpanies here seen such | ere are 24 domestic and even pres | of whom Methodist south. e e o SHOP IN JUNEAU! When you say “Make it with Seagram’s” At any Better Bar The Barman knows that You Are 2 man Who knows Your way Around. That's why You always get A drink that’s Both* Better Made and FINER TASTING. Say Seagram’s and be Sure ¢ f‘fm/ ‘j:'d‘/r?dfllfl and

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