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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 27, 1936. LOVE, DANGER' GILBERT ROLAND MONA BARRIE - DONALD COOQK ADRIENNE AMES SHOOT ENDS IN TIE FOR FIRST, Results of the re-entry merchan- dise shoot held during the past week by the Juneau Rifle and Pistol Club necessitate a shootoff for first prize in the metallic sights division be- tween George H. Leonard and Dan H. Moller. Leonard and Moller each scored 45 out of 50 in the matches held in the A. B. Hall and completed last night. The scope sight prize was won by Patrolman Kenneth Junge, who scored 43 out of 50. A new merchandise shoot will be | held this week on tonight, Friday and Sunday, according to sncrelarx\ L. J. Jewett, with prizes donated by Thomas Hardware and H. S. Graves. The shoot-off between Leonard and Moller also will prob- ably be held tonight. .- The average life of an automobile has risen to 8% years, compared with 62, the average prior to the depres- sion. A D, ENROLL NOW! CLASSES in DRAWING LETTERING and ILLUSTRATING EVERY Monday and Friday Evening 8:00 o'Clock LOVEJOY SCHOOL of ART and LETTERING 111 Main St, . _Phone 1701 CHLD STAR IN D CIRCUS PICTURE STEALS HEARTS IShirley Temple Scores Mag-: nificent Performance in | “Our Little Girl” Shirley Temple, favorite star of he screen, plays tonight in “Our Tittle Girl” at the Capitol Theatre. | Each year the Motion Picture Herald, a trade publication, polls housands of theatre owners over the entire country for the list of stars who attract the largest num- ner of patrons into their theatres. 14 little child, Shirley Temple, |1eads them. | Others among the first ten stars heading the 200 players named by’ exhibitors, in order of importance, | are Will Rogers, Clark Gable, Fred | Astair and - Ginger Rogers, (they | rate as a team), Claudette Colbert, | Joan Crawford, Dick Powell, Wal- lace Beery, Joe E. Brown and James | Cagney. In this compelling picture Shirley | lsmgs a song which bears the title of the picture. She captivates young | and old, tugs the heart strings with hsr unassuming but perfect art, rm:'mg with the same rich human- \ity that holds her audience when she is acting. Shirley plays an adorable little charmer whg touched the heart one | | Duncan Renaldo. "LADIES LOVE Released; Now | DANGER'PLAYS. tnBeDepuned AT COLISEUM Star of Trader Horn Wlll Mona Barrie, ie, Gibert Ro- Fight Order—Native | land Share Honors in of Rumania Mystery Show TACOMA, Wash. Jan. 27.—Dun- can Renaldo, star of Trader Horn, | barreled mystery, plays tonight at| {left McNeil Island Saturday morn- | the Coliseum Theatre, with Mona ing after serving more than twn{ Barrie and Gilbert Roland sharing yvears on a fraudulent passport | honors. charge. Mona Barrie plays the lady from Renaldo was taken into custody b) nowhere, beautiful and young, who the Immigration Service for de- |barges into a wealthy young bach- portation. He is a native of Rumania. , elor’s apartment (Roland's) and The charges were vigorously fought | claims his time for that night and “Ladies Love Danger,” double- | by Renaldo, with the aid of the movie | all the next day, meanwhile being ' colony people, but to no avail. suspected of the multiple murders | His real name is Vasile Duimtree | that tally with her movements Cochieanas. To clear the lady, Roland s(‘t? about in nonchalant manner TO FIGHT DEPORTATION | solve the murders, which commuc SEATTLE, Jan. 27.—Duncan Re- |t0 Dbile up almost until the last | naldo arrived here late Saturday. He | Scéne. said he expected to be released un- | Suberb support is provided by the der bond. cast: Donald Cook, Adrienne Anmes, | Renaldo declared he intended to | Hardie Albright, Herbert Mundin, {fight the deportation order. He said | Nick Foran, Marion Clayton, Ray his true name was Renaldo Duncan, | Walker, Rita Rozelle and Snowflake. but that he reversed it for screen | The direction by Bruce Humber- purposes. stone is right. Of the government charge that his T DTNt name is Cochieanas, he said: “It's| been sneezed at me dozens of times | Blc JIGGS DINNER instant and sends you into gales of | mirth the next. { Another outstanding feature is the | SlAGgA e circus, complete with clowns, acm-‘l {bats, wild animals, elephants and uN PRIN NORAH [ all. “Poodles’ Hanneford, famous |clown” and rider heads the circus| fcast. There’s thrills galore here, as | the “Clarkonians” leap from swinj to swing, while the clowns Ham- | bone, Oscar, Dumbell and Smilin: PREATSEN | Sambo cavort. Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- | cess Norah from Vancauver berthed | at Pacific Coast Dock at 1:30 o'-| ACCOUNTS OFFICIAL ut"eucitc Gont Dok BACK FROM COLONY i o v, "o s |m. Capt. W. Q Palmer is master J. George Wenzel, Assistant AC-|of the vessel, and E. Cornelius is jcountant in Charge for the Treas- purser. {ury Department, returned to Ju-| Passengers for Juneau were:| supervising the setup of an accounts | Robertson, Mr, system at the Matanuska colony.|Goldstein, Mr. and Mrs. A. Van | 8. Daniel Putnam, Deputy Disburs- | Mavern, E. J. Cowling, R. B. Dailey, ing Clerk, is to return on the Alaska | Miss Alice Moran, Mrs. B. Weston. 'after doing . similar work for the| prom Prince Rupert—Mrs. Helga Bureau of Disbursements. He has|johnson, W. Strong. {been succeeded by Arthur Adam: and Mrs. Isadore FOR THIS PORT neau aboard the Northwestern after | A, Shattuck, Mr. and Mrs. R. E.| LEGION DUGOUT A gala evening is planned for to- [night at the American Legion dug- | out when members of Alford John Bradford Post and their friends ! gather for the hig Jiggs dinner, scheduled to start promptly at 6:30. A program of interest has been ar- ranged by a committee headed by: John H. Newman, and a real feed is promised by chef John Walmer and his assistants, V. A. Davenport jand Charles Seelye. Frank Metcalf is slated to act as toastmaster and music will be fur- nished by Harry Krane. All men eligible for Legion mem- | bership or members of other posts are exeted daspwmyefr cmf cmfw | are extended a special invitation. PPy s A3 LAKE REPRESENTATIVE Harold Glaser, Southeast Alaska representative of W. J. Lake and Company, arrived in Juneau on the | Northwestern, completing a business n 1p to Skagwa! Wind Blows Huge ‘ Derrick Off Bridge, Also Twists Steel ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Jan, 27. —M. C. Edmunds, District Sup- erintendent of the Alaska Road Commission, said a terrific wind down Knik River Valley swept a 30-ton derrick off a bridge under construction, twisted a steel span four feet out of po- sition, and did other damage that will set back the project at least two weeks. The derrick fell through the ice into the river, but since it happened at night no one was injured. The bridge is on the road leading from Anchorage to Mat- anuska. e MISS ROGERS, MR. PINKNEY WED TUESDAY - Popular Juneau GirlIs Ma ried in Wasilla to Mem- ber of Road Commission Miss Mary Rogers last Tuesday became the bride of Mr. mation given to The Empire her mother, this city. The young bride, who is a teach- | er in the Wasilla school, will con- tinue her work until the end nr the term, at which time she will join her husband in McKinley Park, | where he is assoclated with the| work of the Alaska Road Commis- sion. ‘ The bride is a popular Juneau girl. She graduated from the local high school, and is a graduate of Bel-| lingham Normal School in Wash- | ington. She taught last year in Ft. Yukon i The groom is a graduate of the University of California at Berkeley. It is planned that next fall the| young couple will go to that state to spend the winter, returning to Alaska in the early spring. \' Rudyard Kipling, who was born in | Bombay in 1865, was the son of John | Lockwood Kipling, an artist of con- | siderable ability. b; Mrs. John Rogers, of You Can Help Infantile | Paralysis' THURSDAY EVENING P o B The Juneau l.aundry Franklin Street between Front and Second Btreets PHONE 388 \ I 'l | pa Cigars Cigarettes (andy Cards The New Arctic l’lb;t Famous Draught Beer On Tap ~JIMMY" CARLSON , | JANUARY 30 Elks’ Baliroom of the Fund Raised STAYS COME T0 THE P 5,000,000 WILL DANCE SO THAT OTHERS MAY WALK! HiLAEE flmlIIIIllli‘IiI|IIIIIIIIIlllllIIIl|||IIIII|IllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIII|IIIIIIIIII|III||IIIII|II|III||||IIIII|||I|I||||I||||||||||||I||||I||II|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIH|I|IIIIIIIIIbIlllIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllluIllllIllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIII |great part of the route to be covered |in the Better Times itinerary, and I'~|he realizes the attractions of such |2 tour. Too, Mr. Pullen added, Alas- | ka, and pa Rex Pink- \und with the June: ley in Wasilla, according to mfnr-‘“m‘“‘* making ths W, $ PULLEN Voveds Mo Crowel When Charming Shirley is the third Party' TOGIVES2 T0 Head of Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. Tells Value of Vote Contest The biggest since the c ing of the Better Times Drive b; today from the office of W. 8. Pullen, head of the Alaska Electric Light »nd Power Company. To the young lady registering the highest number of votes at the end of the Better Business Drive Contest, Mr. Pullen will present $25 cash Realizing the publicity that will result from the coming tour to Me: Mr. Pullen is awarding the Ala ht and Pow 0. prize money gesture of co-operation on the 1e firm whic ill afford some worthy n money” to further e y vacation. Mr. Pullen returned from the States recently, travelling over 1| yi T MPLS ROSEMARY AMES TONIGHT AND lflEl k (“fizn cularly Juneau, will de- rive a great deal of publicity from the trip. More and more publicity is | being given the territory, he said,| 1 and Douglas trip down the acific Coast just ahead of the tour- One Run Elmer Hark Ye Hark |er publicity are unlimite l SHOP IN JUNEAY, FZRST! t season, the possibilities of great- “Now, go out and win!” | Pullen. .- STEWART TELLS OF | MINE SAFETY WORK Territorial Commissioner of Mines | B. D. Stewart was back. at his d today after a two weeks’ minor ness Mr. Stewart reports that safety work conducted by the Bureau of Mines has been dela. resentative from Ketchikan, is now a safety instructor is pe District Attorney in the Third Di- start a series of lectures to Alaska ! vision. Juneau employees in the near fu- Before returning to Seward the ture. Safety Instructor Con O'Con-|Kehoes will visit in Portland, Ore- nell recently completed his work at|gon, Los Angeles, Texas and Wash- Kennecott, after lecturing to miners | ington, D. C to the westward and in the inter-| Mr. Kehoe was elected at the Sew- ior. |ard convention delegate to the National Democratic convention at | Philadelphia KEHOES GOING TO Mr, k | Seward, former resident of Juneau, | - | visited briefly with friends last night while the Northwestern was in port Mr. Kehoe, former Territorial Rep- -+ IIIIIIIIIlllllIIIII|IIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIII|I|lIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||!IIIII|HIIIII|IIIIIII'lIIIIIIIIIllllI|I|IIIIIIIIII|||l|IIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIII|IIllIIIIIIIII|II||IIIII||IIII||I||IllIIIII|‘IIII|I|IIlI|IIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIllIII|lllllllIIl|IlllIlIII|IlIIIIIllllIllllllillllllllllllillllll esident’s Birthday Ball Buy a Ticket! (This space donated by The Daily Alaska Empire) STATES ON VlSlT and Mrs .Joe W. Kehoe, ol’ Daily Alaska Empire News KETCHIKAN PLANE LEAVES FOR SOUTH The Ketchikan Flying Service Bellanco Sky Rockét seaplane flown by Charley Anderson with flight mechanic Clyde Lynch, who arrived | here Saturday morning, took off | for Ketchikan at 2 o'clock yester- day afternoon Pilot Anderson, who came to Ju- | neau to take his physical examina- | tion for pilot’s license, had intend- ed to return to Ketchikan Saturday | afternoon, but in the act of taking | off from the Alaska Air Transport float he discovered that his stabil- izer needed adjustment and repair, and upon completion of the work decided that he would remain over- ! night in Juneau. i 0 OO0 0000000000000 00 00O 00O