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Show Place of Juneau JACK OHATA, TRAPPER horicq o overcome. his The Japanese found dead on the o OF EXPOSURE, REPORT tie cam two wee cach at Hawk Inle ha been definitely identifiect cens Due to the Jack Ohata, a trapper of of burial wa nity, according to information to the scene, Samples the £ al's ict ' eputy he Marshal’s office from Deput RS Marshal George Sg Samples and C bert Brown of Ho cene on Februa mples of Hoonal mmissione Ro- y 15, the Says Noted Psychologist MOSCOW, IDAHO. revolutionary religious ned to show how we may derstand and use the identicai ich Jesus used, is at -wide attention to its founder, ed psy and autho “Psy this new scient teaching, believes that it is today possible for every normal human understanding spiritual law as Christ understood it, “to dupli- cate every work that He ever did.” Dr. Robinson has prepared a 6,000 word treatise on ychiana,” in which he tells about his long se for the Truth, how he final came That for a surprisingly moderate cost you can have an attachment to your fire policy that protects you, in the same amount and under the same conditions as your fire policy, against wind storm, explosion, hail, falling aireraft, riot and civil commotion, faulty heating apparatus smoke damage and “wild” r See us for full information on the Supplemental contract, that gives wholesale protection at retail rates. SHATTUCK AGENCY PHONE 249 Office—New York Life TANANA RIVER 1ah went to the m: Po! self that all forces fade into insignificance be- to com- mune directly with the Living God, never-failing th, happiness and and how any nor- being may find and use it. ract- side it™ Dr. Frank B. Robinson, not- using thi to Dr reet, Moscow, Idaho. will be sent st or obligation. — Copy- Frank B. Robinson, ch right appai was m the exception of his officer cines he full real r or force other how he onstrate he neial succes: ating story postpaid without Write the Doctor today. 1937. Dr. —Advertisement. © INS. CO. N, A motor vehicles ? ICE MOVE DATES 1917—April 30 1918—May 11 1919—May 3 1920—May 11 1921—May 11 1922—May 12 1923—May 9 1924 —May- 11 1925—May 7 1926—April 26 1927—May 13 1928—May 6 1929—May 5 1930—May 8 1931—May 10 1932—May 1 1933—May 8 1934—April 30 1935—May 15 1936—April 30 1937—May 12 at 11:30 a.m. at 9:33 a.m. at 2:33 p.m. at 10:46 a.m. at 6:42 a.m. at 1:20 p.m. at 2:00 p.m. at 3:10 p.m. at 6:32 p.m. at 4:03 p.m. at 5:42 p.m. at 4:24 p.m. at 3:41 p.m. 7 9 0 7 at at at 1 at at at at at 8:04 p.m. oo o5 o8 oo NENANA ICE POOL CLOSES AL A s D A April 15, 1938—Midnight LAST TIMES TONIGHT SHORTS It May Happen to You Bar-Rac Night Out Fit to Win Carteon—News at an inquest deter- had died OF HAWK lNLET, DIED sure. He ,“‘”‘ been out trapping ing his way to They were unable to find camp, but there were no matches nything else in his clothing with decompos repor nauseous medi- tion of an Unseen so dynamie in it- and learned Prank B. Robinson, 604-2nd This fasci- and ground and TOMORROW Gala Musical “MUSIC FOR ADAME” Sponsored by The Martha Society -GOLD MUSEUM ©FOR NEW YORK : Billy Rose Has an Idea o Which He Intends to Work Out by Fall By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Feb. 2 Billy Rose. the perennial Fairy Godmother of Broadway, tore off a chicken wing and stripped it down to the bone Candid interviews never faze Billy when he is at table. He talks faster over bib-and-tucker than across a conference board. And, But, that's fast: Q. “Well, Butch, now that you've got your Cesa Manana going, with net and its tuneful to A. “Su Just send your name and address tion; suppose you were nuts about pose I ask you a ques- gold. I don’t mean money. I mean that raw stuff that comes out the makes old sourdoughs snort salkali dust! Well, suppose there was a Museum of Gold! Wouldn't you give your eye-teeth to see, say, the first nugget that ever came out of the Klondike, a piece of the actual metal that was in Sheba’s crown, perhaps even some of that gold the Wise Men had with their frankincense and myrrh?” Q. “Mother of Pearl! Don't tell me you've A. “Not so fast, me bairn, but it almost as good. Almost? Hell, it's better. I'm gonna put Broadway into a Museum. I'm gonna bring back the little old sentimental Broadway of the Carusos and the Diamond Jims. I'm going to resur- rect the real Tin Pan Alley and re- enact all the famous Broadway murders — the Starr hful, the Dot King, and the Rothstein mur- ders. I'm gonna collect that string of elephants that Ziegfeld gathered from every country in the world, if I can get Billie Burke to sell 'em or rent 'em to me. I'm gonna collect original manuscripts of the best songs Broadways composers ever banged out on tinny, protesting pi- anos. I'm going back 50 years and I'm gonna house it all in cne build- ing, on Broadway.” Q. “How are you going to handle those murders? P A. “I'll put 'em all in wax figures, displaying the newspaper headlines of the day, blown-up of course. I'l have jewels actually owned by Tex Guinan; there’ll be a theatrical gal- lery of costumes worn by Sarah Bernhardt, and John Drew, and all the old guard. There'll be manu- scripts, originals, too, of famous plays that startled the country and made Broadway history. I'm gonna even move Belasco's office, intact, from the Belasco theater, if I can get it.” Q. “Where’s this goona be, Billy A. “Can’t say yet; I've got four buildings under consideration. But I can tell you this. That whole thing will be one continuous mass of electric bulbs. I got the idea from the Pacific Gas and Electric build- ing in Denver and it's a knock-out. Itll blind Broadway.” Q. “One thing more—how long’ll it take you to assembie all this?” A. “T ought to have three years, but I've only got seven months. We open in the fall, and just thinking about it makes me awfully tired Come on, let's go rest up in a movie.” LAl b A JAIL BREAKER CAPTURED Albert Frank, native, who broke city jail recently at Angoon, has beenn captured and sentenced to jail again for three months and given a fine of $50 on charge of being drunk and disorderly, accord- ing to word to the Marshal's office from Deputy George Samples of Hoonah. e Arch Finch of Wilson County, N. C., recently claimed the title of world’s champion watermelon grow- er when he produced a melon | weighing 113': pounds. Constipated? » “For 30 years I had constipation, awful as bloating, headaches and back pains. Kdlerika helped right away, Now, I eat erk® Benans, pie, anyiiing 1 ‘want. SEnEtert better Mrs. Mabel Schott. ADLERIKA \ Butler-Mauro Drug _ Co.. Guy's in Douglas b ¥ Diug Store. " adv. l o i e v 2 A A AREBE a Star’s Picture Debut ai 13 Duplicated by Little Sister By ROBBIN COON HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Fek Loretta Young's little sister, old Georgianna her firsi pictu 21.- year making Belzer, is girls in Deanna Durbin's “Mad About Music.” Loretta doesn’t approve, “Geor- gianna's so young,” she says, “t0 be starting . And she frow perched on a high stool on the of “Four Men and a Prayer.” “But you were 13 when you be- gan,” we remind her Yes,” says. Loretta and I don’t regert it—for me. But that was in silent pictures. All you needed was a passable face ¢ for a long time my picture work was nothing more than play and more fun than pl Herbert Brenon was the first ector to make me realize it wa W —he put me through 16 weeks of torture on ‘La Clown, Laugh. But it's all different now. It's all hard work--and for Georgian Just child . Oh, 1 wish she wer 2 There's a difference, however, in ° their respective beginnings Lovet- _ 13, tock a bus to the studios or caught rides with friends, gianna sets forth in town car, with chauffeur. and arrive in state! El “Un-Washes" I wish I could be washed up aid El Brendel pensively at lunch the way some of these star are Hollywood says they're finished, so they go out and coliect all kinds of money—washed up, heh? recently out of n. And the Brendel is only the “washed up” div way it happened is used to be a mainstay of Fox’s ear- lier talkies, his Swedish dialect com- edy, an audience panic. But grad- ually he dropped out New times, new faces, new dis ts. Fox be- ne 20th Century Fox, and Dar- ryl Zanuck replaced Winfield Shee- han as big hoss Brendel ap- peared here and there, in bits and small parts, did a few shorts, but for practical purposes he was “washed.” One of his recent bits was in Sonja Heinie's “Happy Landing Zanuck happened to be at the pre- view. When El flashed on the au- dience roared and applauded. “Why that fellow's funny,” said Zanuck. Sign him up.” So, doing the same character t was famous six or seven years ago, 21 Brendel was “discovered” all over again. He'll be in the next Shirley Temple picture! Sometimes Tt's Real Publicity department romances are kidded, but sometimes the real And ith- thing develops from them sometimes romance springs up out the sanction of the publicist: There's the case of Dick Baldwin and Lynn Bari, two nice young- sters just beginning to make the grade Baldwin and Bart were just stoc players. He'd been around HO! wood without advancing far, and she’d beeri “in stock.” about four years, practically standing still. The two met on the lot, became friends talked things over, and formed 2 partnership—to - help each other whenever possible, They agreed (o be seen together at the “right plac- s’ or at least at those they could afford. And so they were, and so they got into the spotlight a little which may or may not have had something to do with Baldwin’s chance in “Love and Kiss and Lynn's in “Walking Down Broad- way.” Well, last I heard it was seriou “SILVER-WINGED SHIP BENEATH A SILVER-LINED CLOUD presented a picturesque study in mod- ern commerce. This is one of Pan American Airways’ clipper planes which took off from Baitimore summer months the craft lard in New York, as do Imperial between that port and Bermuda. Durd next year, huge flying boats will land at New York with alternate bases at Baltimore and trans-Atlantic service cn a regular b as one of the school| Geor- ¢ amusing El ¢ AY, FEB. 21, 1938. “"MAN CHASING TECHNIQUE IS nou; ere upset over Sr’EN iu FlLM a qu romanticists o castin, ir. Moto,” picture to smoothe ! and produce Mirian Hopkins Wins Joel McCrea 1n Comedy at Capitol a happy ending! - e MISS DE LEO e Woman Chases Man,” Samuel anTH T ANV bri A » Hopkins, Joel Mc- Crea, Cha Winninger, Erik 1 ‘;gi the Capitol Theatre tonight for its howing Leona econd day Ella Logan Maricle and 1 Bfoderick Crawford are alsc om Announcement Party Held Proderick Crawiort ait 1 e Before Cabaret Dance irl who chased a man from pillar I him to sign a contrac Last Saturday Night 0 post to get in a series of side- 1 wound up situations, ar o e SRy ing his name on the dotte nce party Sal- —y,., pystone handled the mega- » information o the e et SRR o DUIOTE . oTL U B RRRY And g i T nton story, adapted to the ; = Sher Of sereen by Joseph Anthony, Mauel e o Mr. 1. CARAmRH of du e ’ Rk photography i gg To- y . the sels by Richard Day and A lar p of friends of the yhe costumes by Omar Kiaf goup mbled. for the party .yoman Chases Man” is released ven Mr. Redman’s residence in Marine Apartments. Mrs. J. H Mrs. George £ the ever through United Artists. - - ffair the group at- rvela and af e Territorial Treasurer’s office ended Mills College ir R H| RI Cal. Her father is an of- he Copper River and North n Railroad at Corc SXOT Mr iman, prominent local a Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- chitect, I me in Ju- cess Norah, arriving in port this neau and at- afternoon from Van brought 1 Seattle. the following passer to this to take place in port: Miss H. M. Allen, A Bowmar, Mrs. G. Fi Beaudin, C r, Chris- the fa Presc t for the affair last Satur- H day night were Mr. and Mrs. A tine Halvorsen, E Hill, D. Hol- " Ad Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Ba loway, J. O. Kirkham, L. H Metz- Mr. Mrs. Garland Boggan, Mr. gar and wife, Mrs G. Paine, Mrs. and Mr A. Lavenik, Mr. and M. E. Speanburg, H. A, Stover, E. Mrs Monagle, Mr. and Mrs. B, Townsley, E. Weston J. T. Petrich, Mr. anc 1epard, Mr. and Mr mons, Mr. and Mr son, Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Turoff, Mr. J. H. Walmer, Mr — - Barvela, Mi Edna H le, sS Alice Palmer, Mr. No n- field, Mr. Leonard Berlin, and Mr James McNaughton Two Little Girls and Boy Crash Through Ice on DINNER, DANCE WILL MARK OBSERVANCE OF HOLIDAY IN JUNEAU ; Lake While Sliding LITTLETON, Colorado, Feb. 21.— Two girls and a boy were drowned A dinner to be given Taku Squadron, Sons of the gion, in the Dugout at 6:30 tom yesterday in five feet of water in . Bergen Lake, seven miles west of here. They crashd through the ice A. Jaekson is also a passenger landed here and he is going to be tlown to Tulsequah. ow night dance in the and another of the Si in the Scottish Rite Te evening will be the socia of the Washington’s Birthday ob- cioatidesin For S e on the lake while sliding phinn sk vl y will cease for| . The little victims are Donald the day, All stofes and offices, pub- |Hudson, aged 7, Donna and Lee lic and private, will be closed, it is|Hudson, twins, aged 8 — e nounced. The Empire will pub- ish as usual. BREAKS ANKLE | Mrs. H. W. Douglas, wife of As- 1g nine [sistant Meteorologist Douglas ot inches in diameter and 28 inches the Weather Bureau, fractured her in circumference, on a stalk 11 feet ankle last night while toboganning high, was grown last summer by on Ninth Street. She is confined T. P. Alford of Arkansis City, Kas.|in St. Ann's Hospital for a few days. e A sunflower head measur ©harleston, South Carolina, for use during winter, Chaplin’s Romance F ading Charlie Chaplin, famed film comedian, reportedly married him in a shipboard ceremony, were receniiy hiiaself at Pebble Beiom, Cal, to work on a screen play, and Miss ldard remained in the movie capital taking screen tests for the role of Scarleft O'Hara in “Jone With the Wind.” If Miss Goddard makes a - ess of the role it may mean stardom and screen fame. Sc ‘ne actress has only played in one stellar part and that was m a Chaplin proto Uom, “Modern Photo shows the couplc «i a recent Los Angeles social function. Public Hearing SIMMONS BUSY OnGame Control ~ OVER SUNDAY mored separated as Chaplin secluded imes.” 22 passengers yesterday and today e 3 for the Alaska Air Transport. T 5 Yesterday he flew Dr. J. Aronson Commission Invites Sugges- and Dr. J. T. Fyle to Angoon and £ return, also bringing in Dan Mol- tions from Alaskans on ier from sitka. . . On another flight out yeste: A Work in Territory Shell took to Hirst, '-Tenrl;' Enr::IYz and John Marinovich snd to Chi- chagoff, Dan Klepich, G. Lesher and Jack Mullen. Returning, Simmons brought in M. Haycock, J. Mcore and Henry Ekola from Hirst, Pat McAleenan from Tenakee and R. Peleck from Chichagoff. Today Simmons flew Spiro Paul to Funter Bay, Joe Prepich to Hirst and to Chichagoff he took Wendell Schloss and A. Vanhayt and H. R. Bowers. Five passengers were to come in this afternoon. A public hearing is announced by the Alaska Game Commission for Wednesday afternoon between the hours of 1:30 and 4:30. Chairman Irving McK. Reed said it was the purpose of the Commission, which is now in session here, to hear sug- gestions and recommendations by Alaskans on game and wild life con- trol in the Territory with the view that they will be of assistance to the Commission in framing its rec- ommendations for the 1939 season. The sessions of the Commission are being held in the Commission PGPS offices on the fourth floor of the % | Federal Building. 5 sl Monterey was the original capital of California, Senator Wheeler of Mon- tana Makes Direct Plea to President WASHINGTON, Feb, 21.—Sena- tor Burton K. Wheeler of Montana today disclosed that e nhas written to President Roosevelt asking a par- don for Dr. Francis E. Townsend, now in Chicago euroute to Washe ington, to serve 30 days in jail fol= lowing convicticn of contempt of the House of Reprosentatives for fail- ure to testrfy on old age pension plans. Minneseta Leads In i‘ga_;aeratives ST. PAUL, Minn,, Feb. 2! —Min- nesota has 1,900 cooperative organi- zations, the lazcst number of any state, a Univerdity of Minnesota Ag- ricultural college survey shows. Crear i lead the list with 642, Ilwre are 359 shipping associa- tions, 121 siores, 163 eredit unions, 72 potato and produce shipping as- sociations and 34 cheesc factories. e S _Ann Hathaway, Shakespeare’s wife, survived Lim by scven years. Junel;u's Greatest Show Value “NANCY STEELE IS MISSING” VICTOR harbor to inaugurate service Airways’ ships, With start of