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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 1. 1939. \FAMED SLEUTH SEEN AT (OLISEUM SHOW IN EXCITING DRAMA | sTamtTs | VELOW JACK" toniguT | ISHISTORICALHIT | . OPENING TONIGHT VUNEAU S GWNED “AND OBERATED © By _W.L.GROSS N”W! Where “Mr, Moto” appears, some- thing exciting is ‘boutid to happen! The audience at the Coliseum Thea- tre will be quick to appreciate this when it sees him encounter his reatest and most baffling adven- ture in “Thank You, Mr. Moto, Twentieth Century-Fox picture | starring Peter Lorre in the title {role, which opens here tonight. The mystery man of the mystic Orient, J. P. Marquand’s famous | Ssaturday Evening Post detective pits his eunning against overwhelming | odds to fofl ‘those who would plun- der Genghis Khan's tomb of its hid- den riches in the newest hit of the | Twentieth Century-Fox series. | - 'EDUCATION BD. MEMBER COMES | . FOR SESSIONS | il ! SHORTS | Mrs. Margaret Keenan ra Sawmill Mystery | member of the Territorial Beard | Cartoon {of Education and U. 8. Commis- sioner at Valdez, has arrived in' Floyd Gibbons [Juneau to attend the sessions of True Adventures Fox Movietonews The Orient’s ace detective risks untold dangers to ferret out the ancient cret to the hidden tomb of Ganghis Kahn! ¢ Robert Montgomery, Vir- ginia Bruce Co-starred | in Film at Capitol | ——— | Modern motion picture magic has colored the brighter pages of history in a new salute to heroic scientists. It is “Yellow Jack," dedicated to | those five soldiers who risked their lives to free humanity from the yoke of yellow fever. Opening tonight at the Capitol Theatre, it will impress the audience with starkly dramatic | scenes, unusual romantic appeal and | new type of heroism Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer spared nothing in making the authentic story of Major Walter Reed a thrill- ing tribute to the man responsible for lifting the yoke of yellow fever from Cuba in the distressing days following the Spanish - American ( A War. They placed Robert Montgom- | A pulse-pounding love story, | [RSSETENNERISErpw ‘Night Must Fall" once more as- | in the Land of the Dreaded! 4} [yt mmpit ey | | | | | the feminine lead opposite him and | gave them a supporting cast of | unusual merit. They present a chap- ter from scientific history which earned its thrills from human sac- rifice, its drama from heroism. The story concerns a commission sent from Washington to wipe out the yellow fever which is devastating Cuba. The small group of scientists finally evolve the theory that a species of mosquito, the Stegomya, is responsible for the spread of the disease. To prove their theory they need human guinea pigs. Montgom- ery persuades four of his compan- ions to volunteer. Their sufferings, etched against the factual back- ground, provide sheer drama un- paralleled in fiction’s pages. | {the Board of Education opening | today | Mrs ®Harrais, who in past years ) |has been Superintendent of Schools at Fairbanks and Skagway, SUI(M RIH.E mission that a man did not to come | will attend her initial session & |in when released on his own recoge a member of the Territorial Board “'“’-”“"‘ Among projects she will advocate | E"DS MA“ "u"'l' ‘ g Al in her new capacity is one to pro- o ; | | vide “elementary class schools for o“ Fox ISlANDJUNEAU S(m !more children rather than higher class schools for a few.” Mrs. Har- 5 b= rais is convinced that too few iso- | | Smws m(m lated sections of Alaska are| g s i i o 1 equipped with educational facilities. “ crflled A I ' e Il Tra p pe r m R‘Emslumu e It is her opinion that development | H of the wilderness section is n’.tard-‘; Bea's I'aw w'th Bu" ‘ g ed by absence of schools which pro- | |e' in Head | School registration for the spring hibits pioneers with children from | semester in’ uneau publi¢ schools 4 featuring. Chicago, Tllinois, daughters of the » b sed and Willlam Howard | settling a new area. shows a healthy increase over the = ROBERT # of Kimshan Cove, Alaska Mrs. Harrals is a guest at the, The mian hunt for Tom Nilsen, preceding semester completed on the " corge Gustave sserschmidt, and | Juneau Hotel. |alien trapper reportedly crazy on jagy of January. chmidt of Juneau | - > - Marsh Island below Wrangell, end-| gnriojment figures for the sehes. Henry T. Messer sons of the 1 |ed yesterday when officers, beat-| gop just beginning show 255 i High RY T. MESSERSCHMIDT. | R MONTGOMERY U. S. A, ! .= . {ing the brush of the small island, ) . . i .: 8 SRR .| 8chool classes as compared to 232 ™ v‘rg""a B RUCE Executor. | . : : p".EDR'VER AN found Nilsen dead from a rifle shot| oy the Fall session. y 3 1 First publication, Feb. 1, 1939. [y - 4 % under the chin, believed self inflict-| * plementary ~ registration 1is 621 Lewis Stone AndyDevine Last publication, Peb. 23, 1039 IS VISITI \ ClTY” e g to wires peceived by thpt oS L PEIAe SE SRS TELL Buddy Ebsen - Henry Hull Nt Or iR i |U. 8. Marshal's office here from | s ¥ AN M.GM BTcTURE " FINAL ACCOUNT | odin Jensen, pildriver operator|Deputy Marshal James Nolan, at| mmpire Ads Pay. TH B ad Rin from Ketchikan, arrived in “Juneau' Wrangell, and from Wild Life Agent ___ — : ,‘m, und‘muz;,;\;dd‘ (I‘( n[m]x»l.xninfr‘l | on the M. S Northland to transact' Hosea Sarber at Petersburg, the 5 e e business here. He will return to the [man hunt started Sunday following| A Thyee Day‘ th Eos e e AR (1939, filed his final account as| ,,ygp pgAT ROCKED AN EMPIRE still seel 1d the Duke and | First City via the same craft leav- | faflure of Nilsen to appear in ans-| o, FYCE OF BEARING ON FINAL{for Distribution, and that on said |administrator of the estate of Harold : r Th ; | Sodtity aarges ot hunting &4'AD AlAR \COOUNT 'AND REPORT AND |day. the s4id Oourt| eriterell ' its|Grimstad, deceased, in the Probate| Duchess of Windsor, who recently granted 4 ¢ view kvt || ECEIBRESY TS e e e trapbine, and af- | AS A OUF LJanger TITION FOR DISTRIBU- order directing that a hearing be |Court for Juneau Precinct, notice is near Cantfes, France, Iy 8 from. this. winte L tha ety .,mfieuififi'“f"or'fm?":fngfify 5':0"3’:117?? ey, Rotdet NSOHARHE Wbl No_mafier, how My "TON' | : it g “ A qurs 2 » repert came tha e » may visi sl 2 i . 6 e | you have trie T TION had upon said Final Account and hereby u.veu‘m all h(?ls, m“dxul) 'tll.ml ."," '“'"f:‘ ame l”]‘v" 1:; "Iuk'. |v1.,?' ”‘.‘ 'l n.l.-u.d‘ |“|‘|d- :h: | eraft in Southeast Alaska. He is|to Wrangell from Marsh Island re- Xough, ‘chest cold, or s IN THE UNITED STATES COM- Report and Petition for Distribu- and other persons interested in said 1 family in March, possibly witheut the wife for whom he abdicated | w1 phown here for his work in | porting a “crazy man loose on thel tation, you m,g gat relief MISSIONER'S (EX-OFFICIO tion before it on Monday, April 3, estate, that Wednesday, March 29,| the threne of England. constructing the Union Oil, Dupont | island.” Creomiulsion. Feribus trsis SENg PROBATE) COURT FOR THE 1939, at 10 am. at the office of 1939, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon and Warner Machine Shop wharves | Deputy Marshal Nolan asked Wild 3 S Erance wios. any rome TERRITORY OF ALASKA, JU- the said United States Commis- of said day, at the office of the | in Juneau. He also did the pile work | Life Agent Sarber's assistance In | jess potent than Creomul NEAU COMMISSIONER'S PRE- sioner, in the Federal-Territorial United States Commissioner, in the | | on the Ketchikan Cold Storage Co, |bringing Nilsen to justice, and a | goes right to the Seat of the A INCT. Building, in Juneau Precinct, Ter- Federal and Territor ial Building, in ! | Jensen is a guest at the Gastineau | party of officers went to Marsh Is- | and alds nature to 1 the Matter of the Last Will ritory of Alaska, and requiring all the City and Precinct of Juneau, | | | the inflamed mucous m% HE Hotel. (land Sunday on the Game Commis- to loosen and expel ar 4 Testament of GUSTAVE HEN- persons to then and there appear Territory of Alaska, is the time and | ! g sion vessel Marten, only to find Nil- | faden phlegm. X place set for the hearing of said ac- | o : | Even if other remedies have failed, | sen dead n't be discouragt 3 try ul- al RY MESSERSCHMIDT, deceased. and make their objections, if any, . NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thereto, and to the settlement that on January 381, 1 HENRY | thereof and to the distribution of » T. MESSERSCHMIDT, as executor |the residue of the assets of this of (he estate of GUSTAVE HENRY |estate direct to Edith Teresa Kyler, MESSERSCHMIDT, deceased, made | Catherine Elizabeth Shaw, Rosina and filed in the above entitled Paulina Schmitz, of Juneau, Alaska, Court at Juneau, Alaska, his Final land Frances Helen Niederhelman, ' Account d Report and Petition residing at 6244 Winthrop Avenue.; Today’s News Toa: Countries that announce they will Nilsen was allowed to spend 3 P v = sion. Your druggist enter the 1940 Olympics are Great Ecnrmmas at home by Agent Sarber :;n. dmrlr;ur money if gfl' are not gnmm,pe;mxurk, Norway, Italy, |when the officer apprehended him ughly %flflgflfld;‘ "“'“b'“'m' oumania, Switzerland, Jugoslavia, | on the game law violation charges, 'S obfained Creomulsion Belgium, Sweden, Costa Rica, Leich- | and his failure to appear in Peters- | "”Jo’,: {g; 1 "n“,",i." P entenstein, Luxemburg, Portugal and | burg as promised, was the first time ‘ ind youw'll em& genuine Gregce. in.the history of the Game Com- ' anr the reflef you'want. count and the settlement thereof. H. B. LE FEVRE, Administrator of the estate of Harold Grimstad, deceased. | First publication, Jan. 25, 1939. | Last publication, Feb. 22, 1939. : Y;ur Pla}; Elothes Sh;)uld Be omfortabi;:, -Cfiic | HIS DESIRE TO SERVE England in some way has loag been the dream of the Duke of Windsor, shown lmv:; A e'é':fl A ! duchess in their study at Cannes, Erance. The ends s;p 2 on the outcome of Windsor’'s plannéd visit to his homeland, | dly scheduled for sometime in March, of the U. S. Land Office, Arichorage, Alaska. i Any and all persons claiming ad- versely any of the above mentioned Mr. and Mrs. M. Rippen are the land should file their adverse claims parents of a. baby boy born this in the local land office at Anchor- | morning at St. Ann's Hospital. age, within the period of publication or thirty days thereafter, or they will be barred by the provisions ‘of the Statute HosriTaL NoTES | W. Houk was dismissed today §¢ from St. Ann’s Hospital after re- GEORGE A, LINGO ] ceiving medical and surgical at- 2 "~ Reglister P t F R t UP tentashy First publication, Jan. 18, 1939, 2 y )§ | Chris Peterson ;zas a surgical 212'&1:"',“””' ?"‘m'“ 1 19??‘ s “ 99 i ‘dismissal today from St. Ann’s UNITED STATES m*m d BENT Ans iu' m £ | Hospital, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR . 8 et 5 7 J on * ¥ i k i — GENERAL LAND OFFICE »is Loray Jackson was admitied to District Land Office Ad d y u m ,]%é | the Covernment Hospital today and Anchorage, Alaska. QW s an “ - . underwent a surgical operation. January 9, 1939; hereby given that George made application for the act of May 26, —_— 11934, for a tract of land situated ’on | Mrs. Haze: and baby girl were dismissed today from the Govern- < | ment Hospital. take it DOWN from your window. Many seeking UNITED STATES Tee Harbor about 18 miles northwest DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR of Juneau, Alaska, Anchorage, serial B 2} | GENERAL LAND OFFICE 08370, U. S. Survey No. 2266, con- || District Land Office taining 4.60 acres, latitude 58° 24’ m ilats and hwm m Anchorage, Alaska. 36 N. longitude 134° 45’ 30" W. and " £ Vi . " b -y - . July 25,1938 . it is now in the files of the U.}S. Notice is hereby given that James Land Office, Anchorage, Alaska. ‘Kem‘y Hewitt, has made application | Any and all persons claiming ad- | for a homesite under the act of May versely.any of the above mentioned % |26, 1934 (48 Stat. 809), Anchorage land should file their adverse claims SN na B 2 G 5P . TP S . |08447, for a tract of land situated in the U. 8. Land Office, within the 1t ‘you are a sun worshiper and plan a trip to | shoes are red to match the trousers, Swealersar® | glong the Salmon River Highway period of publication or thirty days warmer climes, you'll need smart togs. Play clothes always a must when planning a day. Jane | ap5ut 14 mile N, from Hyder adjoin- thereafter, or they will be barred by today are important items tn any girl's wardrobe. Hamilton modéls one of the latest ons with & | ing Survey No. 1764 and Survey No. the provisions of the Statutes. Helen Barker, New York socialite/ has selected an | crew neck and sleeves and waistband” of ribbed | 1920 said‘land is embraced in Sur- GEORGE A. LINGO, alluring beach ensemble made of linen, The trous- | stitch. The sweater is of blue wool. 3 For play, | 'NS’“ ey SmPrace 5,"‘ Fr % . < o < ers are persimmon red. The long beach coat is | Joan Valerie selects & sun protecting robe and Yey No. ”%-,‘la!i}ugg 55° 55 17" e ? i ez” \ Tobin's egg blue, The wide-brimmed chartreuse | suit. The robe is of thin cotton printed in varying’ longitude 130° 02’ 15 w,vmnunnmg First publication, P(.) , 1939. Dbat 1s draped”with & multi-colored fishngt. 5 The | size circles, a7The sult is one piece,” 480 acres, and it is now in the files Last publication, March 29, 1939, . watching The Daily