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THI allllillliIIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIlIIIIIII|IllIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIII|IlIIIIlIIIIIIlIII||lI|IIIIIIII|llIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHQ‘ Saturday Sunday Monday Tuesday = = = £ = = = = = = == = E = = = g = ] E = - | = = = = ] = g = == NOTICE Juneau Woman’s Club regular business meeting Tuesday at 2 p.m. in penthouse of Alaska Electric Light and Power Company building. ROSE HARRIS, —adv. Secretary. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the United States Commission- er's (Ex-officio Probate) Court for the Territory of Alaska, Ju- neau Commissioner’s Precinct. In the Matter of the Last Will and Testament of E. J. ELLINGEN, whose full name is EDWARD J. ELLINGEN, Deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the undersigned was, on the 26th day of January, appointed Executor of the Estate of E. J. Ellingen, whose full name is Edward J, Ellingen, deceased, and that Letters Testamentary there- fore were duly issued to the under- signed on said day. All persons having claims against said, estate are hereby required to present the same, with proper vouchers, duly verified, within six (6) months from the date of this OPENS TONIGHT FOR THE FIRST TIME AT POPULAR PRICES! FRANK CAPRA’S MIGHTIEST MASTERPIECE! THOMAS MITGHELL - EOWARD EVERETT HORTON \ ISABEL JEWELL - From the novel by James Hiiton Screen play by ROBERT RISKIN A COLUMBIA PICTURE Shorts: NEWS OF THE DAY— 00 Midnight Preview Tonight 1:15 a.m. THEATR = E3 Matinee Sh Place of Juneau Whr:: th: :\'cws Is Timely | Sunday—z p. m. First Show Starts 7:15 P. M. Here at Last — after Thrilling Millions during Its $2.20 Road-Show En- gagements! Unique . . . Amazing! JOHN HOWARD - MARGO H. B. WARNER - SAM JAFFE "LET'S GO"” (Cartoon) fiIIIIIIIIIIIIII|llIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIINIIIII|I||||IIIIIII|IIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlII.‘.||IIIIIII|||IIIIII|HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIIIIIIIIlllllllmllll AR FATHERS T0 Boreas TrioIs to - DINE WITH | Bg Presented in 330UT30N3 Concert Siree Juneau BOY Scouts to HOld Musical Evenl Will Take Big Banquet April | Place on Monday | Twenty-second ; \ | Evening | Juneau Boy Scouts will have din-| ner with their fathers April 22 in| The first of two Monday soirees 1938, duly | a Father and Son' banquet, it was 'announced today. Charles Burdick, supervisor of the Scout movement in Juneau, named the following committees in charge | of arrangements: Charles Hawkes- | worth, tickets; A. B. Phillips, din- ner; Rev. O. L, Kendall, program. It is expected that about 70 will attend the banquet, the place for which has not yet been decided. NOTICE OF HEARING ON FINAL notice to the undersigned Executor| ACCOUNT AND REPORT AND at the office of his attorneys R. E.| PETITION FOR DISTRIBUTION. | to be given by the Boreas Trio will take place this coming Monday evening when Helen Arlene Parrott, violinist, Edythe Reily Rowe, ’cel- list, and Carol Beery Davis, pianist, will be presented at 8:15 o'clock in the Northern Light Presbyterian IChurch Miss Parrott will be the soloist for‘ the concert this Monday, while at) | the second concert, May 2, Mrs.| | Rowe will be the featured artist. i The program will consist of thc‘ solo selection, “Romance” by Mlss‘ Robertson or M. E, Monagle, at 206 |In the United States Commission- | Parrott, and the following composi-| Seward Building, Juneau, Alaska. Dated at Juneau, Alaska, this 1st day of April, 1938. HARRY ELLINGEN, Executor. First publication, April 2, 1938. Last publication, April 23, 1938, HOME BOARDING HOUSE UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT We serve MILK and BUTTER- MILK EVERY MEAL Our Aim Is—“TO PLEA! OUR CUSTOMERS” MR. and MRS. GEO. SALO | GARBAGE HAULED | % Reasonable Monthly Rates | | LS d Fhone 4753 | er's (Ex-officio Probate) Court | for the Territory of Alaska, Ju- | neau Commissioner’s Precinct. lln the Matter of the Last Will and | Testament of JAMES E. ESTES, Deceased. | NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ]that on March 31st, 1938, FANNIE !C. ESTES, Executrix of the Last Will and Testament of JAMES E. ‘ES'I'ES Deceased, made and filed lin the above-entitled Court, Final Account and Report and Pe- titon for Distribution, and that on (said day, said Court entered its \order directing that a hearing be had upon said Final Account and |Report and Petition for Distribu- |tion, before it on June 4th, 1938, |at 10:00 o'clock A. M. in the office |of the said United States Commis- |sioner in the Federal-Territorial |Building at Juneau, Alaska, and that all persons then and there| appear and make their objections, any, thereto or fo the settle- mem thereof. | FANNIE C. ESTES, 1 Executrix. | First publication, April 2, 1938. Last publication, April 23, 1938, her | tions played by the trio: “Andante” from “Orpheus” by Gluck; “Sara- | bande” by Bach; “Bourree” by Bach. | | “Gopak” by Moussorgsky; “Ber- | ceuse” by Ilynski; “Madrigal” by‘ Silesu; “Dance Caracteristique” by | Rebikoff; and three nocturnes by Bloch. One of the outstanding selections | is Moussorgsky’s “Gopak” a “charc-| teristic Russian Cossack dance of half barbaric beauty. The steady rhythm creates in the mind of the| imaginative listener the picture of | gaily dressed youths and maidens, | stamping, dancing, and clxpplng\ hands. One senses the very frenzy |of joyous revelry,"—Dreyfus. Following the program, coffe will ‘be served downstairs, and assist- |ing will be Mrs. George F. Alexand- er, Mrs. L. P. Dawes, Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, Mrs. Jobn A. Glasse, Mrs. Harold Smith, Miss Frances Har- land, and Miss Alice Palmer. [ e — Many historians rank the inven- | tion of the hand-mill for grinding |grain as the second greatest event | {in the march of civilization. The | discovery of fire is ranked first, 9 EPOCHAL FILM, | L0ST HORIZON, OPENS TONIGHT Roland Coleman Stars in | Picture at Capitol | Thealre l Unchallenged as a masterpiece in motion picture production, Colum- | bia’s Frank Capra production of “Lost Horizon” makes its long- awaited bow at popular prices fol- lowing its sensational nation-wide roadshow tour, opening tonight| for a four day engagement at the Capitol Theatre. Starring Ronald Colman, and fea- | turing Edward Everett Horton, H.| B. Warner, Jane Wyatt, Margo, John Howard, Thomas Mitchell, Isabel Jewell, Sam Jaffe in the much dis- cussed High Lama role, the picture is an adaptation by Robert Riskin of James Hilton's celebrated n()\'&'lr of the same name. | Briefly, the story of “Lost Hori-| zon” concerns five persons who are kidnapped in an airplane in China, and flown deep into the heart of Forbidden Tibet. Picked up by a caravan headed by a mystic and elderly Chinese, they are escorted to what is perhaps the most unusu- al place on the face of the earth— the lamasery of Shangri-La Here, closeted securely by moun- tain impenetrable to the uniniti- ated, is a. setting of indescribable beauty and serenity, peopled by members of the strangest cult of modern times. Romance and ad- venture fall to the bewildered kid- nap victims, and soon, all but one surrender to the utter contentment and rare loveliness that is Shangri- | La. On the technical side, there are Frank Capra and Robert Riskin, | director and writer of such prize-| winning films as “Mr. Deeds Goes to Town,” “It Happened One Night” and “Lady for a Day;” James Hilton, author of the origi- nal novel, who also wrote “Goodbye Mr. Chips;” Joseph ker, noted photographer of Capra’s g test successes; Harrison Forman, Ameri- can explorer and author, who acted as adviser on the Tibetan phases of the film; and Dimitri Tiomkin, in- ternationally known composer, who wrote the musical score. > MARY VANDERLEEST AND JEAN CAMPBELL CHANGE SERVICE Miss Mary VanderLeest, who has been working for the U.S. Forest Service here for the last year un- der temporary appointment, has been given a permanent appoint- ment in the Office of Indian Af-| fairs here and will resume her new duties April 11, it was announced today by Administration Assistant Harry Sperling of the Forest Service. Miss Jean Campbell, who has been with the Indian Office the past year, goes to the Forest Service un- der temporary appointment, assum- ing her new position on Monday. — —e-e - Motion picture theatr in the United States number about 17,- 000 and have an aggregate seat- ing ecapacity of 10,720,000 persons. |Offic | vice who has charge of CCC ‘CONVERSATION PIECE’ head of the clan, soldierly Brig. Gen. Cornelius Vanderbilt, 65, retired magnate who is E DAILY ALASKA FMPIRE, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1938 LACKY THREE BETWEEN VANDERBILTS occupies the titular tering—as is his practice—in Florida. and Mrs. Vanderbilt Davis. They were pictured at Hialeah. MRS. DAVIS IS ELECTED HEAD OF AUXILIARY 's Chosen at Meeting in Union Hall Friday officers was held by Ladies’ Auxiliary, No. meeting held last night Hall where six new t were ini- of u Electior the Junc 34, at th in the members tiated M president; president cording mussen, t ers, vich, w Mrs. Ed Schmitz, Following ments were and their husbands. The next meet- ing is to be held at the Union Hail on Friday, April 15 at 8 p.m. - Many Take Advantage Of “Open House” at Montana Creek Camp visitors took Union joined and e Ernest Davis was elected Mrs. Ernest Stender, vice Mrs. Mentor Peterson, re- ary; Mrs. W. A. Ras- surer; Mrs. Jack Beuk- tress; Mrs. Jack Turko- rden; Mrs. Ivan DeBoff Anderson, and Mrs. Fred trustees. ' the con meetin refresh- arloads of advantage of the “open house” yesterday by the CCC at its camp on Montana Creek in observance of the fifth anniversary of the Civilian Conservation Corps, according (o W. J. McDonald of the Forest Ser- tivity along the Glacier Highway. T were shown some of the work unit has been doing and general up of the organization. Several ¢ rved to the members £ SLETURa T | HOSPITAL NOTES | " Wb el S — John Gravrock of Douglas, a med- ical patient, was admitted yesterda to St. Ann’s Hospital, Mrs. Edward Giovanetti and baby daughter were dismissed from St. Ann’s Hospital yesterday Baby Vincent Isturis, a medical patient, was dismissed thi ing from St. Ann's Hospital morn Mrs. George Martin, a medical pa- tient, was admitted Ann’s Hospital today. to St Mary Johnson of Kake was ad- mitted for medical care at the Gov- ernment Hospital yesterday. FINGERPRINTS ARE STUDIED INLEVINE CASE FBI Men H()l)(‘ to Trace }\l(,“d[)"l.\ ()l’ N( ‘W \()lk Boy Through Prints WASHINGTON, April 2.-+Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investi tion again studied fingerprints to- day in an effort to discover further evidence in the kidnaping of young Peter Levine of New Rochelle, N. Y. Federal men who worked on the investigations at New Rochelle brought carefully guarded dupli- cates of several sets of fingerprints to the headquarters in Washington. The fingerprints were taken from objects suspected of being a part in the kidnaping of the boy. Two ransom nofes were used n the fin- 1917—April 30 1918—May 11 1919—May 3 1920—May 11 1921—May 11 1922—May 12 1923—May 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 9 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. 2:00 p.m. 3:10 p.m. :32 p.m. :03 p.m. 42 p.m. 24 p.m. 41 p.m. p.m. a.m. at at at at >, at at at at at at at at 1:32 p.m. at 12:58 p.m. at 8:04 p.m. ANRA b oRd o IBSS8 o B ICE POOL CLO! SES April 15, 1938—Midnight typewriter believed to ! used in writing the notes D Annexation of Austria By Germany Recognized | By British Government | ve been 2 LONDON, April Austria by Germany. The Foreign —The British| Government extended de facto rec-| ognition today to the annexation of | Martha Society Dfficers Seated Standing Committees Nam- ed by Group at Meet- ing Yesterday | Mrs. Katherine Hooker presided as installing officer at the meeting of the Martha Society, yesterday afternoon in the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, seating Mrs. Ray Peterman as president; Mrs E. M. Richardson, as first vi president; Mrs. George Rice, sec- ond vice-pr ient; Mrs. Glenn Kirkham, retary; and M Sid- ney Thompson, as treasurer. Appointment of standing mittees was made by Mrs. Peter- man during the afternoon, as fol- lows: Floral, Mrs. John A. G Mrs. Gunnar Blomgren; \WlnL“ Mrs. Stacy Norman, Mrs. C. C. Rulaford, Mrs. E. E. Robertson, Mrs. Henry Larson, Mrs. Walter Scott, Mrs. George Rice, Mrs. J. W. Johnson, Mrs. Ray G. Day, and Mrs. Bockmore; tee, Mrs. John Glasse, Mrs. Gun- nar Blomgren, and Mrs. T. A. Mor- gan; Publicity, Mrs. Charles Sey. Plans were discussed for the tur- key dinner to be given by the Mar- tha Society on April 20, with Mrs. Florine Housel as chairman of the kitchen committee, and Mrs. Walter Scott, chairman of the dining room committee. Appointed on the Scout commit- tee were Mrs. N. Lester Troast, Mrs. Sidney Thompson, and Mrs. Bockmore. Mrs. Stacy Norman and Mrs. George W. Johnson were hostesses | at the meeting yesterday, and| Easter decorations and Spring flow- ers added to the afternoon. For the next social meeting, Mrs. Gun- nar Blomgreen will be hostess at | her summer home on Lena Beach. s com- iUHu'e instructed the British Am- | bassador in Berlin to inform the | German Government that the Brit- ish Legation in Vienna will be trans. | formed into a consulate forum. e Queen of Scots became Scotland when only a week Mary queen of {old TOTAL 1631 FOR VICTORY Lackawanna's total of 1637 last night at the Elks Club, with Curt Shattuck rolling the only two games Lackawanna had a man present for, took high total honors in beating Reading two out of three. Southern Pacific won in total by 18 pins over Northern Pacific, tak- ing two out of three, and Canadian Pacific scored a win over Santa Fe by 12 pins inning two of three. Tonight's games are Dispatchers Oilers and Conductors vs. Sup- ers Last night's scores follow: READING 224 158 192 184 149 183 Metcalf Benson Bringdal 185—567 181—557 139471 505-1595 525 LACKAWANNA 184 184 181 181 172 199 184—552 181—543 171—542 7 564 536-1637 SOUTHERN PACIFIC Henning 192 192 192576 Duckworth 159 180—502 Wirt 154 177—-502 Barragar Hagerup Shattuck 171 526 505 540-1580 NORTHERN PACIFIC Stewart 156 172 181—509 Tubbs 172 178 180—530 Blanton 148 163—523 540 498 524-1562 SANTA FE 154 157 175 200 156—531 149 187 204—540 478 544 520-1542 CANADIAN PACIFIC 174 180 180—534 166 169 175—510 *170 170 170—510 510 519 526-1554 Stevenson Pullen Hudson 160—471 Pgrin Holmquist Kaufman ——-———— Two Electrocuted For Killing One Slayers of Pohceman Die in Chair in New Jersey State Prison TRENTON, N. J, April 2.—Twa men were electrocuted in the New Jersey State prison electric chair Calling Commit- | last night for the murder of a pol- iceman. The prisoners Harry Simmons, Albert Farir. They were sentenced to death for the murder of Patrolman Thomas Ennis in a holdup of an East Orange restaurant in February, 1937, COIG,!‘”SEUIII OWNED AND were and 27-year-old 31-year-old .lu.neans Greatest Show Value " STARTING SUNDAY SUNDAY NIGHT IS THE BIG NIGHT BOB BURNS MARTHA RAYE in “Mountain Music” with TERRY WALKER Preview Tonight 1:15 AM. Matinee Sunday 2:00 P. M. LAS’I‘ ’I'IMES TONIGHT “HOTEL HAYWIRE” with Leo_ Carrillo~Mary Carlisle 420’s Hawatian Holiday SOMETHING DIFFERENT SOMETHING NEW ——— - - - - FAVORS FOOD Members Only ADMISSION $1.50 DANCING AT 10 TONIGHT