The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 1, 1936, Page 3

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SHOWBOAT T0 END RUN HERE | THIS EVEN!NG Coliseum Atlrachon Deplc:s ‘ Troubles of Two-Fisted | LAST TIMES TONIGHT at the Show Place of Juneau Ship’s Engineer | 1 “Show Boat,” popularly |as Edna Ferber's best sclle and as the Jerome Hammerstein stage hit, ibl‘oup]t to the screen and s now showing a ) Tho romantic musical drar tains songs which have n play a memorable success through- | out this country. The 1936 screcn| | version has three new numbers | written by the same autho | Eight of the principle recalled | novel | Kern-0Ox | portray roles which they 10‘1‘m‘l‘ll_\'1 interpreted on the stage. Irene| Dunne, starring as Magnolia, is g the center of « love story that re LATE veals Allan Jonos as the carefree PARAMOUNT Ravenal. Charles Winniger is the | genial Captain Andy; Helen Mor- gan makes the same attractive Ju-| lie that she did on the stage. | Poul Robeson, splendid baritone, again plays Joe. A chorus of 200 “Top of Town” Is in Mak- Kelly, Mrs. Sam Baker, Cincinnati ' and a total cast of 3,500 pla have dcne likewise, so the iormer dicate the grand scale on \.]”(v | BRIEF slGHTS title would arouse only memories James Whale directed “Show Boat.” |and re S With bu rs on the k e, hon'l-‘ Today Edward Everett Horton, Jums in hold and smugglers in | BEH'ND SGENES playing a veteran v onsorec the scrupy “Here Comes Trou- | oil enterpri a dud ble,” the Fox picture now at the | jittering along Main g Coliseum Theatre, takes a boatload | lN MBVIELANDIH friends he had per uadea to of stars out to sea and brings thrills, | | He is getting pleniy of ccld drama, comedy and romance to the| |shoulder. First men he meets is seroen | i |Roy Brent, who blasts him with' The entire story revolves around ! ONGE CAKE SPECIALIST | emphatic frigidity. Brent is Hor-'the romance of Paul who ! | | 5 i » ton’s stand-in, ionally en- gets the role of third engineer on 2 ing—"'One Man’s Bon- [zcts bits in his picture |2 Havana liner and his manicuring| wirs. Rossovelt 9 g After the scene Eddie reveals,'sweetie, Arline Judge. i 4 us” Is Change |vibbingly: “Roy has played many, produced under the supervision | | parts in pictures, but is the of John Stone, “Here Comes T.‘ By PAUL H. MASON | By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal first time he ever had a c Dee. 1. g | FORT THOMAS, Ky, Dec. Sam Becker paused in the en- * 19 ble,” and directed by Lewis neer and features Edward Brophy, Halli- K‘I openly—sneer—at’ me!” Touring the film factor | When Bing Got Bum’s Rush |well Hobbes and Andrew Tombes | '2¢tic stirring of two dozen egg| Doris Nolan is “Top of the Town"| McCarey, Leos brother and get-'in the chief supporting roles yoiks in a hig blue bowl i is playing a balmy heiress $50,000.-| ing finz as a director . : “And wrac difference would it 000 worth) who seeks to put night|self, homes up with an “I re- Try 'Ine ranpire classifleds for | make,” she smiled, “if I did give club entertainment on a hx;thrvr‘ member when.” 1ok, Taxalis’ " |you the recipe for my famous sponge planc—and star in it herself. 1"6he day dn’ the'ol Pathe Iotihe Icake? The knack of making it & To discourage her, Hugh Her-|decided to make a col comedy NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT AND it weuld still be mine, wouldn't i bert, pay of Hero George Murphy,|“short” with a young chap he knew' ARREST OF PROPERTY, H And that is the answer to what has devised an “uplifting number” | who was singing at the Cocoanut ING AND RETURN OF PROCESS s become a frequent request, about firemen and fires. He figures | Grove. No. 3972-A ever since Mrs. Bec wife of a Doris will get enough in rehearsals| “So I made the picture, he .| In the District Court for the Ter- |Cincinnati clothier, came into na- to cure her. Today's scene is the|“and when it was donme the bosses| ritory of Alaska, Division Num.|tonal prominence by baking a cake rehearsal, and Doris and the Scotch|took a look and threw me off the| ber One, In Admiralty, {and handing it personally to the girl Ella Logan and other are all|lot—along with my singing chap. CHARLES WALTER, LIBELANT [President and Mrs. Roosevelt as clad in flannel nightgowns, fire| Funny, too, because the picture s, The gashoat or vessel call {|they paused on a campaign visit victims, | made a lot of money when they put| the “VERA”, her tackle, apparel | € New Fire Technique |1t ou furniture, engines, etc. LIBELEE | Qe oue, oo To show Doris clutching a doll| And the singing chap was Bing| TO ALL CONCERNED The nation’s first (her chee-ild) and surrounded by|Crosby, and McCarey got him to, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN | °d8ing ARy flames an interesting technique isimake the picture for a fee o ( that an order was issued out of the cake ‘“delicious.” involved. Doris stands kelore the| - = the above entitled court on Novem-| TAarly this year, Mrs. Becker baked camera, beside which is firepot in| pREPARE FOK NEW YEAR |ber 16, 1936, ordering notice to be | SMilar cake for tuatigy o front of a big light. A workman| glven ‘o he Torlohia: | banquet of Gov. A. B. Chandler of " lams the dre with a loaty VOUEh| Gordova, Firemen are planning a| That the undersigncd has attac. 5 °R (UK. Postmastor-General twwti; 168 in’ Tiakiagion thi vl'l\New Year’s masquerade party and ed, attested and seized the gashoat ‘__l”" " for . foh Himael & . sting, reaping flames on the wall|go506, A radio was sent out recent- | “VERA”, her tackle, apparel, en-| nted” for one for himself. H behind Doris, and (in the camera’s got it and likewise sent his “cordial gines, equipment, etc., entitled action, ly for noisemakers and other para- phernalia. The committee feels that in the above |} | thani eye at least( she is in a hot spot. civil and maritime, | and testimonial of its ex- ,'mLe[LOS MOE‘::‘ &M{m;’;n‘i ,i,l!i)l;?;;:\\ |when the final plans are announced in which libelant demands the “‘il/“ t 4 4l Bout e, Bed tor Ray MoGarey got reactions of|fF the celebration it will be seen'sum of $300.00 together with inter- \“_“ sl Sy ek ol arey ot reactions ofly, pe one of the most elaborate,est from September 25, 1936, at 8« |5 SPonge cakes that make them his workers, including many veter- / ans, to the bonus title and decided it would not go. All the veterans » on the set had spent their bonus, and they argued many others would | “different?” Mrs. Backer, tall, |mother of a daughter, 18, and a son 15, professes she doesn't know. How is it made? Lots of Cinnamon | |affairs of its kind ever staged in Cordova. per annum in payment for an en- gine furnished said vessel, together — e iwith his costs and disbursements WANT PUBLICITY BUREAU |herein; and that all persons inter- The proposal by the Territorial |ested or concernad herein are re- |Chamber of Commerce to establish jquired to appear and be in the auburn-haired 4 3 Well, the recipe which she says an Alaska publicity bureau, for the |District Court above mentioned, at) .o fom Russia and has been purpose of giving out accurate and |Juneau, Alaska, at eleven oclock |y .4 qown from her great-great 0 extensive information on Alnsku.[bk M]’g;;)en thed ffmh day of Decem- |, .ngimother, calls for two dozen has been endorsed by the Cordova 'ber, , or default will be entered | oo upng some sugar and butter | | Chamber of Commerce. It was urg- |and condemnanpn ordered as pray-| .. coma cinnamon.” ed that a full time secretary be (ed for in the libel filed herein. | ore o e b 1 | But there again, just how much employed to handle the publicity | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, Novem. | s ber 17th, 1936, sugar .u..d I)'uuer 'and cinnamon 4 et | WO T MARONEY, 1ol Ty o tumily pesrets KARNES VACATIONING 1 U. 8. Marshal _for the Territory who recently were fa- . D | Territorial Commissioner of Edu-| of Alaska, Division No. 1. | vored ‘with what she described as & BYB o cation A, E. Karnes is taking a brief | By R. L. JERNBERG/ duplicate of the cake given to the vacation from his office and is | DY, | Boocevelts iwers. Sornik by its re spending most of the time working N. C. BANFIELD, % | semblance—except in color—to the | moist fluffiness of angel food. The analogy stops there, perhaps, and one is surprised further to find “pinches of ground memrm, flecked through its fine grained tex |'on his new home. Proc mr for beelant ‘| RIDE A COMET YOU MAY BE AWARDED .. . FREE GROCERlEs at Sanitary Grocery Becker graciously imparts a | “secret.” There is, she says, the tiniest bit| of cinnamon flavoring in the cake |itself, aside from the ground pro-| |duct dotting the slices. This house- | Wives may accept as something out of the ordinary if not new—for al- mond, lemon or vanilla extract is |the more usual flavoring for cakes |of that variety. | Dislikes Icing | Mrs. Becker, who insists she is “just a homey housewife who loves| to cock” despite her prominenc in club affairs, says she “will ice| a cake if they ask me to,” but pre fers them “as they are.” She explains: “Too much sweet is too much.” { And what does her family think of it all? | Mr. Becker, sports enthusiast and a leading Cincinnati clothing mer- ‘chant, says he ‘“even gets letters from woolen mills” with whom he does business, saying the writers | “expect to sample that sponge cake some time.” Dorothy, attractive daughter whose education as a student in Wellesly college “will not be com- |plete until she learns to make that |cake, frequently gets one by mail 'her mother says. HONE : | l s l 3 | Business meeting Tuesday, 2 JUNEAU WOMEN'S CLUB R R S L S T o'clock, in City Chamber. CLARA MCcKINLEY, Secretary. Thursday. Decemk;er 31, 1936—3:30.P. M. 4 —adv, THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, DEC. I, | How’s that Famous club woman, Cake Mmle? Ah, Says Baker, It Is Jusi a Knack T’~m s It stirs up one of her widely heralded sponge cakes which scored a hit with President and LI & Gastineau Annabel Freeburn, Chichagof; James L. Freeburn, Chichagof; A Tenakee; Roy tson, gof; G. Rout E: L. R ld, Seattle; Robert Mille ttle; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mu- seth, DuPont; R. E. Murphy, Se- attle; J. C. Felkel, Jr., Los An- geles; F. Jacobsen, Tacoma; Helen Johnson, Seattle; Mrs. Nan Rade- maker, Red Bluff Bay, Alaska; G. Battello, Seattle; Thelma Smith; C. Eames; Arvid Randapaa. Alaskan Billie Vogan, Juneau; C.L.Black- stone, Juneau; James Lloyd, Hoo- nah; Y. Lehto, Juneau; Alex De- mos, Juneau. Zynda Peter Fellstrom; Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kenyon, Juneau; George F. Laiblin, Nome; Grace Lowe, Fair- banks; R. W. Blanchard, Seattle; E Seattle; Carl A. Peter- som, > MINING COURSE A six weeks' course in prospect- ing and mining, under the auspices of the mining tension service of the University of Alaska, started ze. There is no > which is open recently in Anchorag tuition for the cour: to all, but books d other mater- jals necessary for the course cost cach individual about $2. Howard G. Wilcox is the instructor - ee- LUTHERAN SALE Postponed due to conflicts to! | Thursday, Dec. 10. itemember the date. —adv. NOTICE OF ATTACHMENT AND ARREST OF PROPERTY No. 3979A t Court for the Ter- ritory of Alaska, Division Num- ber One, at Juneau. In Admiralty . B. WOODMAN and ANDREW BERNTSEN, doing business under the firm name and style of Wood- man & Berntsen, Libellants, vs. The gashoat or vessel called the “DOWNEASTER”, her tackle, apparel, furniture, engines, equip- ment, etc., Libellee. In the Dis! |TO ALL CONCERNED, NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned, the United States Marshal for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One, on [the 7th day of October, attach, arrest and seize the gasboat r vessel called the “DOWNEAST- :R”, her tackle, apparel, engines, furniture, equipment, etc. in the above-entitled court in a certain action in admiralty brought by C. E. Woodman and Andrew Berntsen against the said vessel, her tackle, ipparel, engines, furniture, equip- ent, ete, the cause of said action ng a cause of action, civil and | maritime, in which said libellants |demand the sum of §710.74, with interest thereon from April 24, 1936, at eight percent per annum, and their costs and disbursements therein. All persons interested or con- cerned herein are requested to be and appear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, Divi- sion. Number One, at Juneau, at eleven o'clock A. M. on the 28th day of November, 1936, or default will be entered and condemnation ordered as prayed for in said libel DATED at Juneau, Alaska, Octo- ber 13, 1936. WM. T. MAHONEY, U. S. Marshal for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. By R. L. JERNBERG, Deputy. FAULKNER & BANFIELD, Proctors for Libellants, | hands of the Fifth and Sixth G 4 Grades at | In 1936, did | 1936. DOUGLAS. NEWS BE HELD WEDNESDAY program for the December of the Douglas Parent- gram, scheduled for to- will be in the rade It will conrist of selections The meeting Teacher pr morrow ¢! appropriate to the holiday season, as follows 1. Song “Father We Thank hee"—Class. 2. Reading “The Art of Being Thankful”—Solveig Havdahl Christmas Carols “We Three Kings of the Orient, Ave,” and “The | First Noel."—Class. | 4 The Christmas Story. “The | Tree That Got Trimmed”—Ken- neth Shudshift, Evelyn Spain, Borg- hild Havdahl, Wayne McGee, Doris | Cahill. | 5. Christmas Carol “Deck the | Hall"—Class. | 6. Grand Finale—Olass, in the form of a lively dance The entiré program will be con- ducted by the pupils in a very in- formal manner with announcements {mzde by Doris Cahill and Alfreda Fleck. Committee in charge of the pro- gram is Grace Naghel, Mrs. Cahill and Mrs. Rice. | —a— HONOR ROLL The honor roll for the past six | weeks for the Seventh and Eighth Douglas was issued to- day. Glen Kronquist is on the spec |ial honor roll for receiving all A | Those having an A and B lare Dorothy Langseth, Billy Feero, |and Robert Fleek. Honorable men- tion for having a B average goes | to Elmeo Savikko, Arline Rice, An- nabelle Edwards and Gordon Wah- SCHOOL HOLIDAYS co-operation with recent re- quests of the students, the School Board at Douglas decided that the Christmas Holidays this year would |include December 24, 25, 26 and 27, January 1, 2 nd 4. The short- | ening of the Christmas vacation vill make it possible for the stu- dents to start their summer vacation one k carlier. oo CHRISTMAS PINS Christmas pins are being sold by teachers at the Douglas School for a penny each |go towards the The proceeds will T. B cause. LE CORPS Douglas scnool boys were asked morning to try out for the m and Bugle Corps in Juneau. Those interested will meet in By- ron Miller's room in the Juneau school house at 7:30 o'clock to- night. Walter Bacon is furnishing free transportation for those boys who wish to meet. - - CORDOVA WOMEN'S CLUB KEPT BUSY! Under their new President, Myra McDonald, the Cordova Women's Club met on November 17 in the City Council Chambers. Mrs. Flor- :nce Storey gave a talk on the life and labors of Dr. Sabin, only wom- an member stitute for Scientific Research, after which Mrs. Viebienna Hansen gave a dissertation on the life of Dr. Mary Walker, concluding with a brief summary of the life of Sid- ney Smith and his famous char- acter, Andy Gump. FLORENCE RYAN as a paid-up subscriber to The Empire you are entitled to 2 free tickets to the motion pic- | ture showing tonight at the DOUGLAS COLISEUM equal | of the Rockefeller In-| COLIZEUM ‘HERE COME LAST - TIMES TONIGHT S TROUBLF’ with PAUL KELLY—ARLINE JUDGE MONA BARRIE--GREGORY RATOFF LJ PLUS Carnival Time Broadway Highlights 'Roosecvelt S pent Speed Mad Pathe News $670 for H is Re-election WASHINGTON, dent Roosevelt reports that his re- election cost him exactly $670. His personal campaign expendit- ures statement, written in his own hand, listed one contribution of $150 to the town committee of Hyde Park, N. Y, during the last month of the campaign. The only other expenditure noted in his post- election report was $10 for “addi- tional postage.” An earlier statement had recorded another $10 for postage and a $500 donation to the Dutchess County, Y. Democratic Committee. He reported that he had received mno contributions. Robert Jeffreys, Secretary of the special Senate committee investi- gating campaign spending, said he had not yet received a report from Governor Landon, but he under- stood that “most of his expenses were borne by the Republican Na- tional Committee.” Two other Presidential candi- dates, however, have turned in their personal expenditures accounts. | William Lemke, Union party can- didate, spent $2,866, and received contributic totaling $5,753, com- Dec. 1.—Presi- mittee records showed. The Prohibition party candidate, Dr. Leigh Colvin, listed expendit- ures of $1,106 and donations of ‘$1 131, ‘MATANUSKANS ~ VOTING TODAY To Decide Whether Colony Is Success or Agree with Thomas | ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Dee. 1.— The Matanuska Colonists are to give their answer today noon to Senater o1 s statement that the Mat-~ inuska Valley project is a failure. They are to gather in the Com- munity Hall while news reel cam- er click. They will have a black- board announcement asking those who believe the colony to. be .suc- cessful, to step to the left, and those who agree with Thomas to step to the right. A fleet of busses covered the col- only this morning bringing in the farmers for the ceremony START PILING WORK ° AT SALMON CREEX Work of driving piling for the new bridge at Salmon Creek, taken out in the recent flood and slide, | was started today by a crew under the direction of the Bureau of Pub- | lic Roads. It is expected to take from | a week to 10 days to get the tem- SHOWPLACE IS DESTROYED IN LONDONBLAZE Historic Crystal PalaceIs Turned to Fiery Furnace in bpeclacular Fire LONDON, Dec. l«Londons most spoctacular fire of medern times last night Crystal Palace, showplace amusement center of millions simce the days of Queen Victoria. The blaze started in a women's cloakroom, in a manner not as yet determined, and within an hour had turned the vast glass and iron building into a fiery, furnace. Streams of molten glass drove back the fire fighters, several of whem were injured. No lives were lost, but the prop- erty damage, not yet estimated, is believed to be large. R oo FLORYS TO SAlL LATER Regional Forester Charles H. Flory and Mrs. Flory will not sail tonight as originally planned on the Princess Norah. Mr. Flory said today, due to inability to get their affairs in order in such a short time. He anticipated they might sail on the next Canadi- an boat south, perhaps about the middle of the month. Mr, Flory is going to take up new duties in Washington, D. C. FOR SALE AT YOUR FAVORITE DEALER Alaska Distributor (W. J. LAKE & COMPANY, | porary structure in shape for cars to travel over it. Seattle, Washington COMPLETE SERVICE PRESCRIBING,DESIGNING AND FITTING OF FINE EVEWEAR ANNOUNCEMENT To My Friends and Patrons: On December 16th I am leaving on a business trip to the States to be gone until February lst. If you wish to consult me about your eyes before I go, please call at my office or phone for an appointment. Dr. Rae Lillian Carlson OPTOMETRIST Office in Ludwig Nelson’s Jewelry Store

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