The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 22, 1937, Page 3

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with HEATHER ANGEL JOHN CARRADINE ° RALPH FORBES CLARENCE MUSE An RKO Radio Picture —ALSO— Dumb Luck B3 Going Places L The Sailors’ Home * Fox News LAST TIMES TONIGHT “BENGAL TIGER" and “LONELY TRAIL" “DARKEST AFRICA" FIRST SHOW STARTS AT 7 P. M. HARPOLE HERE FROM LUNCHEON IS GIVEN COLFAX, TO GO BACK| BY MRS.COOPER FOR |aav. HOME WITH DAUGHTER| MRS. J;Sr. MONKMAN 'oming here to join his daugh-| @ L J_ . | iz on Tuesday to return to her fon, S B0 Hamols; Spho | home in Anchorage, was the guest been teaching school in Juneau dur-| of honor at a luncheon today at ing the past r, Ed d Harpole,| which Mrs. J. C. Cooper entertained of Colfax, Washington, ar »d in|at Perc Cafe. AR Showta: Lo lers provided a setting, assembled anof. |Mrs. Edwin Sutton, Mrs. J Mr. and Miss Harpole will return|wyilliams, Mrs. A. M. Geyer, Mrs. steamer Bar- south to their Colfax home aboard|H. s. Graves, Mrs. R. R..Hermann, |that on May 20th, 1937, the under- the steamer Northwestern, the first|Mrs. Ray G. Day, Mrs. O. S. Sulli- of the week. Accompanying them to yan, Mrs. Howard Wilcox, Mrs. C. the States on the Northwestern will| p. Jenne, Mrs. Walter Hellan, Mrs. be Miss Pauline Monrt another | claude Hirst, Mrs. J. M. Clark, Mrs. ‘ Mrs. J. S. Monkman, wiho is leav- | | The affair, for which spring flow- | | | later became Kentucky aroused the i1 | spirit of adventure in the Yadkin UN NEXTM[)NDAY ' D 0 u G L A S | settlers. ! They urged Boone to lead them | | to this new land, and he finaily e ;" N E ws { agreed. } . i S ! b | Various Troubles, Lspecnal—‘ | H NOTIOE | ly Labor, Have Beset is#———————i | TO SPONSOR CARD PARTY | | | P. '\HARRY RAY HALL, deceased. |of the estate of HARRY RAY HALL, jare on time. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1937 Mis Cinems. 1937 BFERY STARS ON G — (APITOL SCREEN AS TOWN LOAFER 515 Reunitedw;l;h Eric Lin- | den and Ceclia Parker Romantic Team Daniel Boone’s Noted Exploits Shuw!,_culisgum Conquest of Kentucky Is| Theme of First Photo- | play of Series SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU A renowned episode of the Amer- Millions of readers roared at “Old icean colonial period is unreeled in Hutch” when the story appeared in historic adventure picture, a national magazine. They and ad- ‘Danizl Boone,” which comes to the| ¥ ditional millions will laugh when i they see Wallace Beery in the title role of the film version opening Sun- day at the Capitol Theatre. The “laziest man in the world” finds $100,000 in stolen bills—and he can't find a to spend it T 's the predicament in which Wallace Beery finds himself in Met- screcn of the Coliseum Sunday. Ge.rge O'Brien is cast in the title] role, this being the first in a series of films of frontier heroes in which George A. Hirliman. will prr.xonl‘ this = well-known star of out-door| melodrama. In “Daniel Boone” the| purpose is to bring the theatre- geers in authentic form the tondi ro-Goldwyn-Mayer's “Old Hutch.” tions which surrounded the settlers { Eric Linden and Cecilia Parker, of this country when they were the lovable romantic team of “Ah, pushing forward the pathway of | \ess!” supply the heart in- civilization. | for the production, which was This episode in the life of Boone, ed by J. Walter Ruben, of greatest of Prontiersmen, revolves | “Riffraff” and “Trouble for Two” At a gala ball given by the Corpora. tive Federation of the French filn | fame. about the period of 1775, when the settlers in the eastern colonies worv‘ industry in Paris, Mlle. Monica Joe!| Elizabeth Patterson, who recently looking toward the western hm'imnJ tabove), 16-year-old student, wat scored as Janet Gaynor's mother They wanted newer and more fertile| sclected as the loveliest girl preseni in “Small Town Girl' appears in lands, and had visions of founding 8nd was given the title “Miss Cin|the role of Mrs. Hutchins, Beery's a new empire in which they would ema, 1937.” {wife be the dominant factors. Boone - =% 7 $ #| The original story by Garret had but recently returned to the Smith was hailed as a screen natural frontier town of Yadkin, in North ExPusIT'UN IN when it appeared in “The Saturday Carolina, where the story opens, and ! Evening Post.” It was produced by his description of the fertile lands iHarry Rapf ,r- beyond the Cumberland mountains in the then unknown territory which PARIS TO OPEN All persons indebted to the latc | International Fair Fred Mattson are requested to malke | payment of their accounts to me. | Eight members of the St. Luke's {Guild of the Episcopal Church met By HENRY C SIDY the undersigned, at the office of| PARIS. May 22—The Paris ex-|1ast evening at the Parish Hall my '|'t/f\|yrm;(_v‘, Henry Roden, at Ju- | position rising along the Seine hu;‘ifi:;\’”m L (_u]:,[u 1\(;1‘ l])iv-‘ e acali, Alaska. been praised by the People’s FrontPual sale of the Guild was the: di- CARL MATTSSON, Igovernment as a symbol of political Yersion for the even EXTRA Administrator of the es- gryce but criticized by the opposi-| Arrangements were made by the tate of Fred Mattson, de-lyion ac a “foyer of revolution” _|members for a public card party MARCH OF ceased. c-|t0 be given at 8 p. m. on June 18, Strikes and demonstrations, a cidents and floods, have marked the!With auction bridge, whist and pin- |laborious growth of the 190 pavil-|ochle to be played. Refreshments NOTICE TO CREDITORS IN THE UNITED STATES COM- . sy g o {will be served following the card MISSIONER'S COURT FOR THE ’!‘i’;‘;\“f ehyee BR4. A0 YRGB i SR, SR D TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DI-|"7 " Hostesses for last evening were | oOriginally planned for May 1, inauguration of the show, which will 'run to November 25, has been de- layed until next Monday, May 24. ¢ VISION NUMBER ONE, BEFORE FELIX GRAY, COMMIS- SIONER AND EX - OFFICIO Mrs. J. O. Kirkham, and Mrs. Inga Dickinson. Refreshments were serv- following the meeting bROBATE JUDGE, JUNEAU i & ;’:;FC!NCT ‘Never on Time’ | > In the Matter of the Estate of | The government has indicated r.‘,i MACHINIST TO ARRIVE 'defense will be that the show far| According to reports received, V.| 'surpassed that originally planned, H. MacKay, machinist for the and in any case, it Is a tradition of Douglas Fisheries, Inc., will leave Paris expositions that they never Seattle May 28 on the M. S. North- {land enrcute to Douglas to put the The Seine flooded some of the Plant in readiness for ils summer * NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN signed was appointed administrator [ Douglas Church deceased, and that all persons hav-/| sawlces ing claims -ee o FLIPS § THE LAZI IN THE WHEN LADY LUCK INTO THE SUN. MON. Tl Midnight Preview Tonight Matinee Sunday 2 P. M. 100,000 LAP OF EST MAN WORLD! Cécilia' PARKER AniMiG:M Pi TIME ii The News Behind the News LEO Let's Get Moving Daily Alaska Empire News Elizahetl Pattersor 28 Robert, McWad LAST TIMES TONIGHT NINO MARTINI and CARRILEO in "THE GAY DESPERADO™ ! Sunday services: 1:30 p.m.—Bible School. 2:30 p.m.—Preaching service. All are welcome in these services. DOUGLAS COMMUNITY BUCHANS GO THROUGH | Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Buchan were in Juneau briefly this forencon while | the steamer Baranof, on which they are bound for the Westward, was in port. Mr, Buchan is a nephew Juneau High School teacher, who| . Hornum, and Miss Caroline Todd.|present them in writing, with pro-|rains and winds of the wet spring | : is returning to her home in Port-| Mys, Monkman has been in Ju- \per affidavits attached, to the un-|caused minor accidents | ON ANNUAL PICNIC | land, Oregon, for the summer. |neau in connection with work of |dersigned within six (6) months' Laborers took part in several or-| Members of Miss Grace Naghel's T T e, | the welfare board, of which she is|from the date of this notice. ganized stoppages of work, once, on fourth, fifth and sixth grades left WOTICE |a member. As a special feature of | Dated May 22nd, 1937. For special fresh dressed chicker: |the afternoon, Miss Todd played JACOB E. HALL, call Femmer, phone 114. adv | l Administrator. Huge PAAA Ciipperf —ings W;y b;;err?Chl;;m {hort them to greater efforts, and|picnic at the Naghel cabin on Gla- again March 18 in the general strike |cier Highway. | 1of protest against the Clichy riot. - >-ee | Many foreign buildings were start- FIXTURES ARRIVE ed late. Work on the American pa-| vilion, on the left bank near the parlor being erec Eiffel tower, | April. Second d on ed this morning. | Red Flags Stir Rumpus i e The cabinet had its most serious| COUNCIL MEETING |exposition disputes with its own| ne regular meeting of the City [Speiam. pmona | the Working | Gouncil will be held Monday even-' el ing, May 24, at 7:30 o'clock in the Carpenters, erecting the two mon- office of the City Clerk. | umental towers of wood at the Place 7 O i de I'Alma entrance, floated a giant| i Itri-color, adorned with decorations| 2 °" Emm,,re Bd', of their own making, over each of the columns, The flags bore the three parallel | arrows of the Socialist party on the field of blue, the liberty bonnet of the radical-socialists on the white| and the hammer and sickle of the| Communists on the red. | Police took down the emblems,| because it is an offense to disfigure | the national flag, and the next day| a whole army of red banners ap- peared. The incident, petty at the start, became a test of the government's power to control extremists in its own camp. Bases Hope on Visitors A new quarrel loomed over re- lease of the workers upon comple-| tion of the exposition. To prevent unemployment among the 22,000 men working on the pavilions, the Building Trades union demanded a 10 billion franc public works pr | gram, financed by a new loan, de-| spite a government stand agair |either further expenses or increas borrowing. The government has pressed on with the work, hoping that once the| visiters arrive, political passions will subside. | It counts t00, upon 400,000 Amer-| icans and millions of Europeans bringing to France a vast supply! of ‘the foreign exchange needed to| help make up the deficit in the| country’s trade balance. - ., | NEW SALESMAN HERE | Making his first trip to Alaska, {Percy L. Holil, new sales represe tative in the Territory for We; land Brother, expressed enthu: lin large quantities for Alaska s Alaskans as far as he has seen them. jon_ his arrival in Juneau aboard the steamer Baranof. i Kong after a 9000 mile trans-pacific flight, the huge China Clipper is pictured as it Approaching Hong ; against said estate must grounds during the winter, and the Operations. | ! E began only in mid- Street by Mike Pusich were receiv- ¢ Kenmcky;s Campu§ Sweétheart' 2 = Notices tor tms cnurch column (Feb. 11, to hear Premier Blum ex- this morning to enjoy their annual must be received by The Empire! not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change of sermon topics, etc. Part of the fixtures of the beer ST. LUKE'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH | and p.m.—Vesper service sermon. (No Sunday school.) DOUGLAS CA St. Aloysius Church 9:30 a.m.—Holy Mass. 12:45 Sunday School. DOUGLAS PRESBYTERIAN MISSiON DAVID WAGGONER, Minister Men students at University of Kentucky at Lexington evidently still prefer blondes because they elected stunning Irene Sparks, senior e = soared over a picturesque Chinese river boat. or junk. The flight now links the American and Asiatic Lode and placer location notices| from Ashland, Ky., as cflmpusr!rv'v‘::::.elrt to reign at May festival mainiand with through six-day service. for sale at The Empire Office, l oy ’ L:C CHURCH | . y | CHURCH of one of the partners in the firm I. W. RISVOLD, Pastor. |of Buchan and Heinan, operators ! 11:00 a.m—Sunday School and|of a herring plant at Sawmill Bay. services. | Mrs. Buchan is the sister of Putt i e o | Middleton, freight clerk aboard the Don’t miss the big dance at the |steamer Baranof. fl'ermlnnl tonight. Cover charge DO g s | 50c, ladies free. adv.| pon’t miss the big dance at the R ol 1 T Terminal tonight., Cover charge adv. 50c, ladies free, Empire classifieas pay. | | MOTOR-DRIVEN BRUSH TYPE... GENERALE ELECTRIC ¥ CLEANER FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY | i 3 $4.00 first payment, Immediate delivery. ]‘ $1.00 a month. ALASKA ELECTRIC - LIGHT 8 POWER CO. ‘ PHON Juneau—6 Douglas—18 b i

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