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lHF DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, Wl:DthDAY MAY 13, 1936. HE HAD BROKEN HER HEART and HAS LEADING ROLE IN FILM Coliseum Theatre Shows “Dressed to Thrill” This Evening Opening at the Coliseuam Theatre tonight is “Dressed to Thrill," with Clive Brook in a pict which launches the starring eer of Tutta Rolf. the luropean screen s Brock’s romantic sed to Thrill” da NOW COMES HER CHANCE TO GET Gt mnlhe o EVEN HE DIDN'T KNOW SHE WAS THE Rolfy, &, drese: SAME WOMAN HE ONCE HAD JILTEDI [§ provincial who € he retur to America. \ ¢ ter she catches up with iim. He is now a banker, she is a| Russian s Although he' r T“RIll// e = Tutta ROLF Chve BROOK heart ROBERT BARRAT NYDIA WESTMAN Cruelly PICTURE STARTS TONIGHT dilemma tes frfom Leaving in a him village loves to recognize she leads fortune and | him. Then, as the dress- old, she returns to him and comforts him in his love for this wicked woman! Changing from one personality { N\ to the other, she finally manages o convince Clive Brook that it is| the simple little dressmaker he has | ioved all the time and not the| worldly enchantress. And deliberately his on, wastes eserts aker of —ALSO— Stars of Tomorrow Stranger Than Fiction Gentlemen of the Bar News THEATRE com- slock, and - SAVE THE DATE! outs Goodie Sanitary 10 am. Saturday, ing at the r some time Sunday night left his home about 8 p.m. and it was thought he ha down town, but was found hanging from a tree the next day by a son, Lee. No word was left to the sur- viving family and no motive for the act was made known. Deputy Marshal B. F. Ficken with a cor-| oner's jury visited the scene im-| mediately after discovery was made | and the jury's verdict was death| by suicide. Burkhart was a veteran of the Spanish-American War and was a member of the Sitka Moose Lodge, which he joined in the summer o 1913. He was a native of Indiana.! The surviving family includes the widow, who operates a small dairy business here; two sons, Louis and Lee, both attending school here and a daughter, Charlotte, now living in Seattle. Funeral services will! be held Wednesday at 2 pm., under the direction of the Moose Lodge. reveals her hoax ,ee ¢ (MINING GROUP INCORPORATE COMES NEXT WEEK{ | Articles of incorporation have [ {been filed with Territorial Auditor ' G. C. Fields, architect in charge} ¢ | Mines, Inc. of Seward. The pment between Fifth and Sixth, | HA L |pany has a capital stock of $100.- Harris and East Streets, notified the - . A. Tecklenburg, Ora B. Hubbard fice here that he could not leave Turney Louis Burkhart ana cnares 6. Hubbara le until next Saturday, arriv. MRS. WICKERSIIAM LEAVES The development includes the Reason Is Known Aivk:: ThTEs. RIS lding of seven new homes on the 11.—(Spec- | University of Alaska, sailed on the ial Correspondence)—Turney Louis!Alaska, enroute to Fairbanks to at- '$\| khart, suicide by hang- Which will be held next Monday. himself in a patch of woods - - Burkhart | Princess Louise for the south where Sunday | she will visit for some time. i | Frank A. Boyle by the Oro Placer of the $50,000 Malony Estate de 000 and incorporators are Charles Fed 1 Housing Administration of- Commits Suicide—No | 2 - in Juneau on Tuesday, May 19 |a member of the Board of Rege modernizing of seve; SITKA, Alaska, May a resident of Sitka since |tend Commencement exercises , committed r of the Burkhart home Mrs. M. C. Sutton left on the 16. gone | - ! R SHOP IN JUNES g L o Dan R. Jackson, bookkeeper at, the Sitka Wharf and Power Com- | pany office, was released from the Pioneers’ Home Hospital Sunday after a two weeks illness. With Oscar Shineman he left for the hot springs at Goddard for a rest of two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. McDonald are receiving congratulations on the birth of a daughter at the home of Mrs. W. Anderson here last week. Mr. McDonald s a troller, owner of the gasboat “Janie.” Hollis Benjamin of Red Bluff, California, arrived here on the liorthland Sunday fer, a visit at t9e home of his uncle and aunt, Ir. and Mrs. Rudolph Sarvela, Jamestown Bay. Mrs. Andy Lorentzen is confined to her home, suffering with a broken ankle which she received in a fall last week. Father Joseph Allard, who has been in Sitka for the past month, holding church services and car- ing for matters pertaining to the church here, left Monday for Chi- chagof. A large group of Sitka men and boys answered the call for volun- teers to work on the new com- munity playfield and recreation park Sunday, May 10. At this time the ground was surfaced and it is thought that the field will be in use during the summer months. | The Ladies of the Moose Lodge' have completed plans for a public card party to be given Wednesday evening, May 13. { | Mr. and Mrs. J. Petetlin of! Haines, who have been in Sitka' the past week while Mr. Petetlin was receiving medical care at the hospital at the Pioneers’ Home, left Tuesday on the Northwestern for Seattle. ———t ——— SAVE THE DATE! Girl Scouts Goodie Sale, Sanitary | Grocery, 10 am., Saturday, May| 16. 2 Two Radio Entertainments-a Week WEDNESDAY, 5. M. (P.T) LILY PONS with Kostelanetz Concert Orchestra and Chorus FRIDAY, 6P. M. (P.T) then she |jal exting { castle {my was caulking his boat { hike {ed by all iyof rain | K Stars Seen Here Tonight GARY COOPER, "~ ANN HARDING “Peter Ibbetson” Opens at Capitol Theatre Tomghl and Ann Harding appearance Gary Cooper make their first romantic team in the immortal [classic “Peter Ibbetson,” which opens at the Capitol Theatre to- night. “Peter Ibbetson” is the screen dramatization of George Du Maur- ler's famous novel of the same jname. The story revolves around |the beautiful love that binds two {people together for a lifetime even though Fate sees fit to part them Friends, playmates and sweethearts in Paris, as children, the two are separated when the boy’s mother dies and his military uncle takes him to England. As a talented |young architect, Peter Ibbetson is sent to a wealthy aristocrat’s es- as a | | | Gary Ceoper and Ann Harding are seen “Peter Ibbetson,” feature at the Capital. together in i) { | Simmons, called in at Angoon May tate to design new racing stables. ‘({ with the Director of Education Ibbetson discovers that the mis- ,|and the Supervisor for the Bureau tress of the house, the Duchess of [ f Indian Affairs. Mr. Van Mavern|Towers, is none other than his the West Coast Grocery Com- childhood sweetheart. At the same v stopped off for a half-hour on[time she recognizes him | business. | The Duke, suspecting their love, Dr. Harry L. Brewer is painting | threatens to kill Ibbetson. In the (Specs | | his outboard skiff for the umpteenth ensuing argument, the Duke is | ime in the last three weeks. This accidentally killed and Peter is ime the chameleon boat has a v sentenced to life in prison for the gorgeous array of coiors, copper bot- | erime. But his love never dies for tom, aluminum sides, bright blue|iha Duchess who remains true to gunwales, and red varnished inter- |pim ‘forever. Although prison walls “”“‘““‘RB;‘ ‘:"; 1oE e fseparate them they meet in their Miss Ruby Soboleff arrived in{ywn dre 3 s TR Socks | S figoon Watnesiinsh Mhy..0 {own dream world as the years pass | ton, their romance stronger than e AR life, more powerful than death. ANGOON Corre irned hi: Alaska, May 11 1dence)—Jimmy Browl nds severely last week ng a fire in the fore=| of his seineboat Mary V. Jim= | and had | a can of grease on the galle§ The grease overheated and aught fire, and Jimmy dashed into, mes and extinguished then, t burned his hands. A group of young folk and picnic to Killisnoo May 3. Those in the pa Mr. and Mrs. James | nd Mrs. Chas. Ct & Antrim, and Fred { nice time was report- spite of several drops|LINCOLN left tove. GOLDSTEIN LEAVES enjoyed & ¥ last| Charles Goldstein, local fur deal- o ler, left Juneau abomrd the PAA Lockheed Electra for Fairbanks on three weeks' fur-buying trip hrough the interior by plane. I -+ - RADIO INSPECTOR IS COMING NURTH .. C. Herndon, inspecior-in-charge of U. S. Radio District No. 14, will | head a tour of inspection of Alas- kan stations, leaving Seattle June 6th, according to word received by the Daily Alaska Empire today. Mr. Herndon, who is making his first trip to Alaska, plans to arrive in Juneau June 12, and will remain here four days. D SHOP IN JUNEAU? Sunday, were Brandes Jr. / in URNEP IS “TURNING TO JU U 6 on| w trolling raft for her S. Ito left for J ideh trip of his ne She is a speedy ¢ son of Mr. and J. Turner a pas- aboard the Victoria for Ju- He has been attending his Lincoln Turner. Mrs. Harley size. 3| senzer Paddy Paul left Angoon on th®{ neau Estebeth May 7. He is going to Chat¥ first year at St. Mary’s College, ham, where he has employment. ¥ California, and will spend the va- The AAT plane, pilot “Shell”; cation months here. the me boat equally true of shoes..coats.. hats Joods.. cigarettes... almost everything If a thing does not SATISFY it costs too much On the other hand.. p if it DOES satlsfy it is worth all it costs...and more That’s how it is with Chester- fields. . .they are made to satisfy. Chesterfields are different from other cigarettes in that they have not only different kinds of to- bacco, but the paper from the Champagne Paper Millsin France is different .« . the tobacco from Turkey is different . ..the way the ciga rette is made is different. Chesterfields are made to satisfy... that’s their business; that’s their reputation. . . they live up to it. 1936, Lioghrs & Myass Tomeoo O \ STARINFILM Starts Tonight Starts Tonight Only the screen could graphically | interpret this tender love story that has echoed throughout the years! ‘ ANN HARD}ies in the Paramcunt sensation ALSO—Edger Hamlet . .. Dmly Alaska Empire News . . GENERAL ELECTRIC 53 WASHER $70 CASH—$7 DOWN—Balance Monthly ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CO. JUNEAU DOUGLAS GASOLINE SHOVEL and 2 DUMP TRUCKS——now open for hire on any dirt, excavating and moving jobs in or about Juneau. GASTINEAU CONSTRUCTION CO. Phone 4503 AFTER 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 1f your Daily Alaska Ympire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY.