The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 15, 1937, Page 3

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THE. MONDAY TUESDAY MIDNIGHT PREVIEW TONIGHT SUNDAY MATINEE—2 P. M! FREDRIC MARCH WARNER BAXTER LIONEL BARRYMORE with JUNE LANG Gregory RATOFF ALSO Music Hath Charms POPEYE in WHAT NO SPINACH Daily Alaska Empire News “THE DEVIL Baccalawreale Services to Be Helq_T omoITow Juneau High School Grad- uating Seniors to As- semble, Ceremony With the Ri ing the pri cvening, the Ba for the 1937 Juneau High School graduating class will be held tomor- row evening in the High School John A. e giv- of the gymnasium beginning at 8 o’clock.| The 32 graduating seniors will cnter in a precessional, with the bigh school orchestra playing the “Grand March” from Tours. Dean C. E. Rice will give the invocation and Carl sition, “Green Cathedrals,” will be presented. Giving the scriptural lesson, Ad- Hahn's musical compo- s war-torn world of men Three famous ST TIMES TONIGHT— IS A SISSY” |jutant George Tanner will speak, following which the hymn, “All | Through the Night,” will be sung. “Do You Have What It Takes” is the topic upon which the Rev. John A, Glasse will speak The Bacca reate address will be fol- lowed by the singing of “Man of Upright Life” by the High School Boys quartet. The Rev. C. C. Per- soneus will deliver the benediction, following which “Pilgrim’s Chorus” from Tanhauser will be presented :by the high schol orchestra. | Guests in attendance at the Bac- | calaurcate service, which is open to the public, will enter the gymnasium by the Sixth Street entrance. Diamond Found In Hair of Dog| PITTSBURGH, Pa., |William J. Black’s pet collie dog !got plenty of extra bones on his platter the other day. While scrubbing himself he hed out of his hair a $175 dia- mond which Black’s daughter had lost and hunted unsuccessfully for several days. A0 AR O You Can't Afford to Miss the GOoOOD TIMES DANCE SATURDAY NITE Elks’ Hall Rands’ Music Admission $1.00 BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL WOMEN'S CLUB iy May 15. —| GREAT CAST IN STRANGE DRAMA OPENS, CAPITOL (New Yea;'s Eve Brings Thousand Dollar Frac- I tions to Two mn Crowd Widely heralded as’the strangest! drama ever lived and acclaimed as onz of the outstanding fil: h ment: ever produced in Hoilywood, “The Road to Glory,” Twentieth- Century Fox production, comes to the Capitol Theatre Sunday. Frederic March, Warner Baxter, and Lionel Barrymore ‘are starred| and the supporting cast includes June Lang and Gregory Ratoff, as well as a host of other screen players. Howard Hawks directed the film,| | based on the screen story by Joel| Sayre and William Faulkner. Nun- nally Johnson was associate pro- ducer. i John Qualen, famous for his| \characterization as the father of the gintuplets in “The Country Doc- | |characterization as the father of the 'quintuplets in “The Country Doc- ‘cast supporting Frederic Marsh,| |Warner Baxter and Lionel Barry more in “The Road to Glory.” | Two people out of an entire city —out of a whole world—are the cen- | tral figures in Universal’s “Two in| ],;\ Crowd,” sprightly comedy, which | {will be shown at the Coliseum | ,Theatre on Sunday. | I Joan Bennett and Joel McCrea,| in the star roles, meet on New Year’s Eve when both of them are broke. Old Man Destiny, who pro-' tects babies and sweethearts, whirls the torn halves of a thousand dol- | lar bill from the grasp of sevelers ! at a wild party, out of a window,| and into the hands of this pair. \ Just when everything starts to| look as rosy as a summer garden, | romance in full bloom almost turns | into a bloomer, when it develops that the bill had been robbed from the very bank where Joel tries to eet it changed for smaller notes, He escapes jaii, only to be threat- ! ened by the bank robbers who be- | lieve. he has sent the police after them. .,—— San Franciseo Is Favorite City | of Miss Danner Contest Winner Returns from Good Will Excur- sion to Mexico | | | ! | | i | Back again at work in the office | of the Juneau Dairies, Inc., Miss | Rosa Danner returned this week from the Good Will contesttrip to | Mexico, visiting in Ashland, Qregon | and Seattle for several days be- fore returning directly to Juneau. Miss Danner, who left with Mi: Clara Hansen, Miss Geraldine Bod- | ding and Miss Helen Junes, when 'the group left for the south several ‘wcelm ago, enjoyed the trip with scores of other contest winners !throughout the States. Although impressed with Mexico dnd Los | |Angeles, Juneau’s Miss Danner found San Francisco her favorite lcity. She liked the Golden Gate | area best at night, found the bridge to be as wonderful as she had ex- pected, and expects to go back for | (the exposition in San Francisco in 11938, | “The traffic bothered me a lot,| at first,” Miss Danner said, adding that she had not been outside since 1925, “and though I had expected to be very impressed with the great buildings, I found them to be much as I had imagined through having seen motion pictures.” | Miss Danner stayed in Ashland |with her high school clum, Mi: |High School with the class of 1935, Staying in Seattle Tor a short while, Miss Danner spent a week with Miss Sylvia Rosenburg, formerly of Juneau, and while there, saw many| Juneau friends including Miss Flor- ence Rutherford, Miss Emily Dalton, Bill Winn, Miss Marjorie Aiken, John Finnigan and Miss Mary Pearce. Miss Joyce Morris, grad- juate of the Class of 1934 at Ju- \neau High Schoal, met Miss Dan- ner during the stay of her train in |Albany enroute mnorth. Miss Geraldine Bodding, Miss {Danner states, is visiting in Mount | Vernon with a friend she met while on the excursion, and is expecting |to leave Seattle for Juneau on June 16. 'RAINBOW GIRLS TO ’ HOLD INITIATION Initiation services will be held by the Order of Rainbow Girls this evening, preceded by the regular meeting which is to start at 7:25 io'clock. : Miss Pat Harland, Worthy Ad- visor, will preside. f B NOTICE For special fresh dressed chickens, call Femmer, phone 114. adv. .- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MAY 15, 1937. WPA FORCES Leota Harris, graduate of Juneau pire classifieds for|Pirst publication, May 15, 1937. Try The Em) g AR R S AR | SUNDAY and MONDAY THEATRE ONLY! — BOTH WERE BROKE! BOTH WERE LONELY! Two strays in a city of seven mil- lion! She wanted fame! He wanted riches! Instead they got a half-own- ership in each other! A story that begins with an empty purse and ends on a “grand” notel t Attorney William Geoghan, of Brooklyn, blaming burlesque shows for an increase in sex rimes, directed three simulta us raids on Brooklyn strip palaces. Managers and 11 girls were hustled off to a police station. Most of the girls hid or kept their faces covered when news photog- raphers appeared. New Radio Stars on Horizon 51’7 SIudéntE to Graduate from | U.of A, Monday | | | Thiee Siudents from Doug- las Are to Be Grant- ed Diplomas BENNETT - HerRER IN A UNIVERSAL PICTURE Monday evening will be the oc- casion of the commencement exer- the University of Alaska hich Willard W. Beatty, di-| of U. 8. Bureau of Indian will deliver the graduation before an assemblage of and friends going to from throughout the rector Affairs, address relatives | Fairbanks Territory. Due to business which called him yton, D. C., aboard the Thursday afternoon, fol- lowing a brief visit in Juneau, Dr Charles E. Bunmell, president of the University of Alaska,- will not be able to preside at the graduation exercises. Seventeen students are to receive diplomas, Monday evening, includ- ing three from the Gestineau Chan- with REGINALD DENNY- ALISON iK!? W'Ilolfll NAT PENDLETON ./, HENRY ARMETTA BILLY BURRUD ANDY CLYDE ELISHA CQOK, Jr, Directed by Alfred E. Green .. CHAS. R. ROGERS, Executive Producer i ALSO ° ntrained Seals—Moonlight and Melody—News ALSO LAST TIMES TONIGHT—LAST TIMES TONIGHT nel distriet, Vieno Wahto, William B s e Cashen and Harry Lundell, an of WHEELER and GENE AUTRY ’ WOOLSEY in in The candidates for degrees are | “MUMMY’S BOYS” “SINGING COWBOY” {Howard Esteele, agriculture; Gene Blumenstock, economics; Helen Mc- |Crary, English; Margaret Ronan, e - English; David Tewkesbury, his-! tory and political science; Paul Seldovia Packing Firm Dryden, general business; Cathe: ine hezzi, secrel al training Robert Hoppe, general business; Tim Twitchell, general business; Vieno Wahto, commercial education; Jo: eph Emmet Walsh, civil engin ing; William Cashen, mathematic In no other: field of show business is there such an amazing turnover 'y, Dalton, mini engineering; of entertainers as in radio. Newcomers shoot to the top in meteoric 2 i % oy tashion and apparently well-established headliners drop out of sight g(m;](]ll melk, d}“;“ 24 Hul; ry! in unexplainable fashion. The “mortality” rate is greatest among |-undell, gcology and mining; Har- featured vocalists who depend on their singing voice to carry their |1V Mikami, chemistry; and Jaames, personality and appeal. Jane Froman, Connie Boswell and Doris Rob. |Humbel, civil engineering. | bins are among those who are in this class., And, although such - - eee - | veterans as Jack Benny Eddie Cantor and Al Jolson carry on from year to year, each season seces a remarkable turnover in the head- BIG DRIVE nF uners of the radio world. | | Gricket Swarm TOBE PARED Expectd, Utah i Administration Is Going to' SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, May| “DARKEST AFRICA” [of Chambers and Colwell and will operate them in connection with a Takes Over Motorships floating cannery on Cook Inlet. s o2 3 Capt. Jack Anderson is head of the packing company. He is mas- of eannery tenders. Doris Robbins SEWARD, Alasks, May 15—The ' {Anchor Line Packing Company at|'F Seldovia announces it had to take R over the motorships Princess Pat| Lode and placer location notices and San Marco from the trustees| for sale at The Empire Office. IillIllllillIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlIIIIITIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIm The Greatest Refrigerator Value ’ in 10 Years:g-“ o snielj! Thirty -two Rivermen Are Guiding 23,000,000 Feet of Pine Down River 5—C. J. Sorenson, State Cricket| LEWISTON, Idaho, May 15. Cut 252,000 Persons conirol lcuder, said Utah faces the | Thirty-two rivermen began driving F s 2 greatest cricket invasion in the his- 23,000,000 feet of white pine logs from Relief Rolls tory. This is because of the lack|100 miles down the Clearwater river of sea gulls. ito this city. WASHINGTON, May 15. — The The crickets caused hundreds of| The drive is the largest in the WPA is facing the task of cutling thoysands of dollars worth of dam-|west and it is estimated that it will 525,000 persons from the relief rolls age 1o crops last year. take two weeks. and has notified state WPA direc- - e | i L Rt fars to make thelr o ATTENTION MASONS | Organization of coast-to-coast pay a larger patt of the cost of| "y Galled Gom- [air service in Canada is proposed in| mmr;lll;:v-;lfi‘:}r i " munication of Mt: Juneau Lodge |# Pill introduced in the House ofj £ . o NO. 147 Monday evening at 7:30|Commons ar the House Ak Harry Hopkins told th o'clock. Work in the E. A. De-|m = to re- sub-Committee, that a drive duce the rolls depended on the suc- cess of the drive to require private industry to hire those removed from the relief rolls. i By order of the W. M. J. W. LEIVERS, Secretary. e — Lode and nlacer 1ocation notices | for sale at The Empire Office. gree. PHONE 206 Juneau Radio Service For Your RADIO Troubles 122 Second St.—Next door to San Francisco bukery —ady. | I | ! NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, that Daniel Ross, administrator of the estate of Catherine Bianche R deceased, has filed his final account together with a petition for the final distribution of said estate, and that July 17, 1937, at 10 A. M. at the office of the United States Commissioner for Juneau Precinct, at Juneau, Alaska, has been set for settlement of said ac- count and hearing of said petition for distribution. All heirs, cred- itors and other persons interested in said estate are notified then and there to appear and show cause, if any they have, why said account should not be settled and allowed; and distribution of said estate should not thereupon be immediately made to the persons entitled thereto without further no- tice or proceedings. Refe: ce 1s hereby made to said account and petition for further particulars. DANIEL ROf Adminis HOWARD D. STABLER, Shattuck Building, Juneau, Alaska. Attorney for Administrator 2—Uses Less Current! 3—lasts Longer! e Here’s the refrigerator sen- sation of 1937—the greatest dollar value ever offered! You'll thrill to the beauty of the new G-E cabinets. And you'll be amazed at the price n’/n 1937 G-E’s are competitively priced! You save 3 ways—on first cost, on operating cost, on upkeep. The G-E sealed-in-steel Thrife Unit is the only cold- roducing mechanism with ;;rud- feed lubrication and 0il cooling that means lower operating cost, looger life. SEE YOU at the FIRST GAME of the SEASON We'll give an ARROW SHIRT to the man who makes the ‘, FIRST RUN ‘ ; [ ] H. S. GRAVES [ J Alaska Electric Light & Power Company i "THE CLOTHING MAN" Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothing ator, 1037 Last publication, June }

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