The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 5, 1936, Page 3

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WP oy 55 & THEATRE ROLLICKING - NEWMUSICAL PLAYS HERE “Broadway Hostess,”” Com- edy of Great White Way, Opens at Capitol Today Hostess,” rollicking drama, with catchy music roadvay new musical comedy thrilling high light and mammoth spectacles, will open 2t the Capitol theatre tonight, with an all star cast. The story treats of lite on the Great White Way, particularly the night clubs and the palatial gamb- ling halls. It is the story of a little country girl, who goes to the big city to make good in theatrical work She finds it a tough job to crask Broadway, however, until she meets a big shot gambler, who puts her over and makes her the toast o the town. Comedy and thrills fol- low in quick succession until the smashing climax in which the gam- bler is slain by the brother of the woman he loves In the play are Winifred Shaw Phil Regan, Lyle Talbot and Gene- vieve Tobin. DENTAL BOARD 1S IN SESSION Dr. W. E. Peterson arrived from Petersburg aboard the Alaska and with Dr. George F. Freeburger, began the regular dental examina- tions this forenoon in the offices of Doctors Kaser and Freburger. The examinations will continue to the week-end. Those taking the examinations are Dr. R. J. Foore, of Seattle, and Dr. Roy C. Hill, loca¥ young man who recently graduated from the North Pacific College of Dentistry at Portland, Oregon. VISITORS HONORED AT THANE TUESDAY A_charming luncheon was enjoy- ed yesterday by a number of Ju- neau friends of Mr. and Mrs. Hans Goldfield, former residents of the Capital City, who are visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Jacobson. The affair was given by Mrs. George Getchell at her home in ‘Thane. - VACATIONING HERE ‘The Rev. P. Casey and the Rev. A. J. Condreye, Jesuit priests, ar- ——— DOUGLAS DOUGLAS WILL ENFORCE LAW ©man ve, @ Whose .fea urin Aan q turing,,, 'ove rs of tro-Go, , Wyn LIQUOR HOURS City Council Passes Ordi- nance—New Contract for City Work Let All liquor regula ruled by tions conforming the T Board of Liquor Control can now be enforced by Douglas officials with infractions punishable by the local to those tic torial magistrate. This is the result of the final reading of amendments to! city ordinance covering them anrd which passed through its third reading by Douglas City Dads last night. Other business transacted at the regular nteeting of the Council con- sisted of payment of two bills for labor on water works mains and consideration - of ‘the public works projects ‘now nearing completion Chlorination of the water mains was discussed as was also the problem presented by several new hydrants being installed which will have to be re-adapted to fit the fire hLose. Financial report rendered gave the figure of $53,680 expended right| up to date on the contracts and the sum of $1,100 as the amount re- quired to complete them. The to- tal of the contract price was $55,- 98250 and that leaves $1,202.50 which together with $1,800 left over from miscellaneous estimated ex- pended costs leaves $3,000 balance for extra work. Plans to spend the balance left| over from the main contracts in —ALSO— “I Surrender Dear” “Some Class” “Shorty Goes South” News SOUTH SEAS ARE SETTING FOR PICTURE Eskimo Ac.tor Plays Lead in “‘Last of the Pagans” Tonight at Coliseum of a Dreamy romance the South the fury of maelstroms Seas; tropical ty- phoon; of primitive passions and emotions, and the haunting loveliness of a Pacific Par- adise all these elements are into a sometimes haunting, some- times exciting, sometimes roman- Pagans,” now showing at drama in “Last of the saga of the islands the Coliseum Mala imo actor, and Lotus Long, play the hero and heroine, the rest of the cast being compos- ed of natives of the coral island where the picture was five months in the making. The only white layers in the cast are a few sail- ors and overseers islands. “Last of the Pagans” is more than Screen entertainment for it veritab- ly bares the soul of a gentle people of enchanted islands whose only enemy is the white man’s civiliza- tion. the first ago. being a visi little over a y S e to Douglas, ar SCOUTS ON CLEAN-UP The regular meeting of Douglas Scouts was held last night and ar- rangements made to continue cer- tain clean-up work around town which they started some time ago. - EQUIPMENT SHIPPED Wright and Stock shipped the ditch digger they have been using on the Douglas water and sewer | systems to Petersburg last night on a scow in tow of the Lone Fisher- man. R. H. Stroud, operator, ac- extending the six-inch .iron water companied the equipment. main and eight-inch sewer main| along St. Ann's Avenue to Sumner Street and a four-inch water main| up the latter street were discussed. It was decided to adjourn the meet- ing so the members of the Council could contact Mr. Stock of Wright and Stock, who was coming on the Alaska at'9:30 p. m. for the pur- pose of getting a bid on the latter| work. Later in the evening the purpose was accomplished and according to verbal contract made with the con- tracting company the extension work will be started immediately on a cost-plus basis. ——,— MRS. HOLBROOK HERE Mrs. Ed Holbrook, mother of Mrs. rived on the Alaska for a short|T. N. Cashen, arrived here on the stay. They are guests at St. Ann’s|Alaska last evening from Miles City, Montana, to visit a month, Mrs. S. Zynda, of the Zynda| Hospital. ————— Mquick results. > WOMAN ADOPTS NEW TRAVEL ITINERARY Traveling from Florida to her home in Los Angeles via Alaska is the unusual itineary of Mrs. A. A. Standart who arrived in Juneau aboard the Alaska last evening. Mrs. Standart is a sister of Mary E. Arnold and aunt of Mr. C. B. Arnold, manager of KINY. Mrs. Standart, who planned her visit as a suiprise, overlooke® the printing of the passenger list of incoming steamers in The Empire. She will stay in Juneau as the guest of her| | sister for about a week. e e———— MRS. ZYNDA LEAVES with her daughter and her sister, Hotel, left on the Yukon for Seat- Try The Empire classifieds for| Mrs. Felix Gray. /tle on a business trip of two or| This is Mrs. Holbrook’s secondthree weeks. woven, enlisted on lhe[ "TLOCAL CHURGH HAS SPECIAL - RITES THURS. | | | | {Dean C. E. Rice Celebrates: | 34th Anniversary of | Ordination as Priest The Feast of the Transfiguration{ |will be observed in Holy Trinity| |Cathedral tomorrow by a celebra-| tion of Holy Communion at 10 lock in the morning. The serv- |ices will also mark the event of '\hv 34th anniversary of the ordain- ation of Dean C. E. Rice as & priest | The Juneau clergyman was or-| dained August 6, 1902, in Milwaukee and left immediately afterward for Alaska, his first station being at |Circle City on the Yukon | The next spring Rev. Rice joined | the stampede to Fairbanks and held -the first religious service in| the new mining camp in the old Fairbanks saloon. | After spending eight years of ad—t | venture and opportunity for serv- lice such as few ministers ever ex-l perience, Rev. Rice returned to the | States and had pastorships in Seat- | tle and Port Angeles. Later he went to St. Mark's Cathedral in| |Salt Lake City. } | During the World War, Dean [Rice served as rector of St. Mark’s | Church, Durango, Colorado, and| Gener Missionary for all of | Southwestern Colorado. ; Juneau has been the home and| al |pastorate of Dean Rice for the past | {15 years, during which time he has {held a highly respected place in the community making hosts of friends, who will attend tomor- row’s services in honor of his| anniversary | - FLIER'S WIDOW | LEAVES BY AIR ' Beau | essentially ;Colorlial Unrest Stirs French North Africa I ] TMQVES LIKE i é Manhattan night life, with drama that zooms thru' the gold and gay spots! Spain’s disorders, which began in Spanish Morocce, direct atten- tion to hints of unrest in France’s North While French Morocco grapples with the { movements are cause for apprehension in on the natio; Tunisia, map. NATIONALISTS ACTIVE IN ALGERIA PARIS, Aug The French Government, combating Algerian agitation of a potentially revolu- tlionary nature, has extended a two-fold promise to natives of its A, {North African territory—suppres sion if violence persi benefits if peace is restored Governor General Georges Le carried the alternative back to Algiers after a flying trip to Paris during which he conferred {with the chiefs of the leftist Peo- ple's Front. Acknowledging ‘“agitation of an poitical character,” of- useful dispositions were | ficials said * taken to suppress all public dis- order.” A series of legislative bills de- signed to give greater freedom were considered, on the other hand, to be brought forth when and if situation quiets. Arabs vs. Jews Government is “The in fact, equally determined to assure main-' tenance of public order and to grant progressively to Alegria new {legislation, inspired by a spirit of greater democracy,” they declared. ! The = Algerian troubles, growing jout of a long period of economic distress and racial animosity be FOR FAIRBANKS Ms. Wllev Po t Has No| Other Purpose in Trip than Fuendly Visit Mrs. Wiley Post, who arrived here on the Alaska, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Crosson, stated soon after her arrival that there was no object in her Alaskan trip beyond | having a friendly visit with the | Crossons at Fairbanks. | The widow of the world famous | aviator added that her plans were | indefinite, but that at present they | did not Include going further north | | than Fairbanks. She has set no| | time limit on her stay as yet i The party left for Fairbanks on| the Electra this morning Mr. Post was killed in the plane crash at Point Barrow last sum- mer, which accident also took the| life of Will Rogers, - | | | | Rich SIav Starts Mustache Hobby VICTORIA HAS wfi HALIBUTERS 1) PASSENGERS | SELL, SEATTLE SRBOBRAN, Yugoslavia, Aug 5 —Just as some persons callect | coins, postage stamps or anuques George Terzich gathers mustaches, new and old. He returned to his home town three years ago from the United States, where he prospered. He has| no relatives here, and not much use for his money, so he hit upon the hobby of mustache buying. | When Terzich meets someone| | with a pair of handlebars to his lik- ing, he starts negotiations with the grower about shaving them off | Sometimes he closes the bargain | for as little as 100 dinars ($2), but he paid 2,000 dinars ($40) to Yotsa Gavarnski. e BOYLE LEAVES ON | CAMPAIGN JAUNT| Taking time off from his official duties as Territorial Auditor, Frank A. Boyle took passage on the Alas-| ka for the Westward, expecting to touch various places in Westward | and Interior in behalf of his cam- paign for re-election. Mr. Boyle was accompanied by Mrs. Boyle and Mrs. J. F. Mullen, | who is going to Cordova to be with her father, B. M. Behrends, who is ill there, but rapidly improving. e ONE BOAT SELLS HALIBUT, JUNEAU, TWO TAKE ON ICE In the only sale on the Juneau Fish Market today, the 30E398, Capt. M. Lopp, sold 1400 pounds of halibut to the Alaska Coast Fisheries at 7.00 and 5.00 cents. Two boats took bait and ice: The Northlight, Capt. Nels Landin, and the 31A63, Capt. Carl Weidman. | ——— The public is a product of the printing press, believes Gabriel de Tarde, the French socioligist and | criminologist, {up with the nationalist right, Jews in Algeria supported the left. ' jan attempt |over but .denied to Arabs because they|moderate centrist in politics before tween Arabs and Jews, head affer the formation on June 14 of Socialist Premier Leon Blum's government Strikes spread Africa. The from , France Arab population lined while The in tightening tension culminated isolated clashes. Mayor Leads Agitation In the center of the conflict was Abbe Lambert, tall, active Mayor of Oran, northern city of 190,000 per: sons. A leader of the nationalist movement, he claimed the suppert of thousands of natives for this program: “We defend the tri-color and the ‘Marseillaise.’ the ‘Internationale’ Flag.” On the economic side, forms announced here may extend to Algeria a broader program to stimulate agriculture and industry. On the political side, there m be to end the controversy citizenship, accorded to Jews flag We combat and the Red p| actice polygamy FOR THIS PORT Steamer Delayed in Sailing from Yesterday Morn- ing to Midnight SEATTLE, Aug. 5.—Steamer Vic- toria, on the Southeast Alaska Route, delayed from sailing at 9| o'clock yesterday: morning, sailed at midnight last night with 159 first| class and five steerage passengers | aboard. Passengers on the Victoria book- ed for Juneau, inelude the follow- ing: Martha - Kite, Fred E. Brandies, Janet Gosich, |Mrs. Prances Hanson and two chil-‘ |dren, Mrs. O. Fulton, Miss Marshall, N. K. Jensen and wife, Romanof, e Marx Bros. Get Plagiarism Writ Miss F. CHICAGO, Aug. 5. — The three Marx Brothers—Chico, Harpo and Groucho—were served with sum- mons recently in a suit filed sev- eral months ago charging them with plagarism. a playwright, accused them or us- ing some of his lines in their last movie. The case is expected to be called to trial in Chicago Septem- ber 28. CONTINUE TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Percy Whiteside of California, who have been stopping at the Gastineau Hotel, left on the Yukon for Cordova. ———— GOES TO KETCHIKAN E. Jakeway is is aboard the Yakon| enroute to Ketchikan on a short ‘ business trip, ) J. E. Thompson, | the ' me to a, to \ Afri n holdings, shown ROADWAY HOSTESS ’ LYLE TALBOT depression, Algeria and DEPRESSION PINCHES MOROCCO PARIS, Aug. 5—Resident Gen- Metropolitan Hostess eral Marcel Peyrouton, figuratively, Winifred SHAW g has hung out a “Man at Work”| A R B . cvieve TOBIN o wants no interference from Paris i« o 3 France's section of the Empire of Phil REGAN High Lights Morocco, in principle an absolute| ige monarchy under Sultan Sidi Mo-4| Allen Universal News hammed, has . given the mother T country a series of colonial head-| JENKINS aches in the past | STARTING TONIGHT Peyrouton, who learned about 0S. PICTURE North Africa in Alegria and Tunis; has promised to make Morocco & model protec if Premier Leon | Blum's government lets him stay. The Sultan’s subjects in lh(‘ .ll\d Spain a long fight before Al)d- torate- I-Krim and his harem were mllrd Me-Biepeits =5 Wi i fied, French colonial urmmls\ Seattls. ‘He ' also e | Shrine Convention. Religious Unrest I i NEWS NUTES £ Pan-Arab and pan-Islam agita- | C. B. Lien received the sad dews tion carries little weight in Mor- Saturday that has wife had passed occo, they add, because Sultan Sidi PETERSB ATASEG: B 3 away at their home in coma Mohammed is the religlous “De-| o0 oF=0 e oA S ">-\I*_ Wash. Mr. Lien, owner of the Star {fender of the Faith” for Moroccan | U “,’ - ;_) i 1 fam. | Bakery left on the Alaska and wll Mobhiniedang: »"‘\“ (\‘;" g ing Joh :“‘ n ~'”< ""3(‘ not return to Pntersburg, Knottiest problem remaining in thely e where they plm to their fu-| om0 Nave ” o . Morocco is the economic depres-' {ure home T n had been| . 1he Navy planes circled over Pet- t rine ] rOSDE! ; ) e bound. 0 bring back prosperity for many years. Mr. Norman Rus- His predecessor, Henri Ponsot, tad has purchased the JOMAmsen| ne crab seasom opened August left his post to become France's| home T e Alsskn T G e FL ks Ambassador to Turkey when Berb : G o s Yy t"“l“m” “:“’L P°e°t“ and Arab chieftains decided Wednesday evening Mrs. A. B.|ershure. Hoonah and Gordova. Kay change of the French resident gen- ' Holt and Mrs. Horace Adams en-| jn. and ; y ; ler and Otness will operate only eral might help the depression. ertained at the home of Mr. and| in petersburg Moroccans Want Peyrouton Mrs. Roy Watson with a surprise S Moroccan colonials, who sent a | i¥thday party for their husbands.| gq preuschoff, who formerly has delegation to Paris to ask Blum to' oL cren been *packing clams has started keep Peyrouton on the job, said r"-}*\ i 8, -"““,"!""V"“‘I -“‘“ canning smoked salmon. Mr. Preu- {they believed he could solve Mor- | %% ' yon the Northwest-| schoff has named his products occo’s economic problems, if he O ° = Briny Breakers Brand” and they {could keep French politics out are for sale at all local grocery C 3 y has bee stores Recently, however, old Berbers o R oL who knew that Morocco's standard : - T s e i irecn )y home 1| NOWELL 3 b since the Arab invasion of the elev- | o . i e i VOWELL FOR KETCHIKAN lentlg century had been a red flag, | ~cicrikan or EWkon Everett Noweli, representative of were startled to see young Mor- , | Blake, Moffatt and Towne, paper insis. under . Ahe. comikinikt: wed Ole Ekrem returned on the Yu-| firm, left on the Yukon on a bus- ;T:f‘ I:uh‘l:‘n‘l' s Mm_”w“;\ i kon from While South | iness trip to Ketchikan. rying the Sultan’s red flag. ; T B P — the re-} | hona, 40,000 pounds, 8': | | | | | Lawrence Wayne| |for sale at The Empire office. While rightists warn Premier Blum's government to “keep politics out of Moroceo,” political observers at home ask what the leftist gov- ernment’s attitude will be toward Peyrouton, who was known as a fhe went to Africa. travels FAST! An enth@siastic customer tells a friend, whe in turn becomes a customer . . . and he too starts spreading the good word. So our steak dinners have become something of an institution in Juneau. They're deliciously juicy and tender . . . that's why we feel we'll earn your gratitude by »Jmea(’nlug the good work ourselves. Try our steak inner SEATTLE, Aug. 5—The follow- |ing halibuters arrived in port today with catches and sold. as follows: the western'-banks—Lia- and T4 cents; Addington, 24,000 pounds, 8% and 7 cents; Lindy, 40,000 pounds, 8% and 7 cents; Eagles, 30,000 pounds, 8% and 7's cents From the local banks—Aleutian, 2,000 pounds, 8'2 and 8 cents; Bernice, 1,600 pounds 8% and 8 cents; Rosario, 1,500 pounds, 8% . and 8 cents; Albatross, 5,000 pouuds.‘ 9 and 8 cents. - - LARGE DULUTH PARTY | GOES TO TULSEQUAH A party from Duluth, ancsata.l including W. Newman, Robert] Congdon, W. B. Congdon, Chester, Congdon, Jobn Congdon, Guilfordi] Congdon, T. F. Field, Mr. and Mrs.{} H. Carver, Hugh Roberts and James, From FULL COURSE DINNERS from 50c up BAILEY’S CAFE AFTER 6:00 P. M.!!! PHONE | Wanless arrived in Juneau on thed . Princess Alice last evening enroute | to Tulsequah. The Congdons own the White Water group of mines}] in' that area, which wgre operated for the first time last year. Thov party plans to return to Juneauf preparatory to the journey south: ward in about a week. - e, —— NEON REXALL DRUG SIGN IS~INSTALLED AT BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO, 226 If your Daily Alaska Empire has not reached you PHONE 226 and a copy will be sent by SPECIAL CARRIER to you IMMEDIATELY. Lu Liston is installing a new Neon Rexall Drug sign over the en. trance of the Butler, Mauro Drug Co., on Lower Franklin Street to-§ day and together with the fres| painted exterior the Butler, Maurod Drug Company’s store presents ajf very pleasing appeararce. i R Lode and placer location notices}]

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