The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 17, 1930, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. s e PALACE TONIGHT Talking Reporter Movietone Act EVERY AUDIENCE AGHAST . . SPELLBOUND! BEFORE RADIO'S MIRACLE DRAMA! Laughter! Beauty! Spectacle! Drama! . . . Flung in Tower- Magnificence Against a Back- ground of Gorgeous Color! Mighty BEBE DANIELS BERT WHEELER ROBERT WOOLSEY EVERETT MARSHALL N 10—25—75 cents—Lcges $1.00 WATCH FOR A. Malacky FURRIER Satisfaction Guaranteed Goldstein Bldg. L ] ! | | | | Burford’s Corner | CARNATION ICE CREAM TAXI SERVICE ‘ PHONE 314 Boxes from 50c to $2.00 Special Box of 12 Beautiful Cards 50 cents Juneau Drug Company Free Delivery ~ Phone 33 Post Office Substation No. 1 treme North and U. S. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU The Weather (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Juneau and vicinity, be Snow flurries tonight and probably Tuesday; erly winds. nning at 4 p.m., November 17: moderate west- LOCAL DATA Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity 29.16 31 42 E 1 29.45 24 91 w 2 29.68 28 95 w 2 CABLE AND RADIO REPORTS YESTERDAY | TODAY Highest 4pm. | LoweSt4am. 4am. Precip. 4am. | Time 4 pm. yest’y 4 am. today Noon today Cldy Clear Snow temp. temp. temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather -12 -12 -120 -10 ~Clear -6 -6 -10 -6 Clear 12 12 -4 -4 Clear -8 -8 -20 -10 2 0 -8 4 [ -6 0 -2 -10 - 34 34 44 44 4 30 28 28 32 30 16 34 31 24 45 - = 40 36 40 40 44 48 58 38 42 Station— Barrow Nome Bethel Fort Yukon Tanana Fairbanks Eagle St. Paul Dutch Harbor Kodiak Cordova Juneau Sitka Ketchikan Prince Rupert Edmonton Seattle Portland San Francisco Spokane Vancouver, ’ Clear Snow Cldy Cldy Snow Clear Clear Snow Clear 34 Clear - 4 42 44 54 36 40 8 4 6 Pt. Cldy Pt. Cldy Cldy 50 32 34 0 *—Less than 10 miles. B. C. The pressure remains low throughout Alaska and is lowest in Yukon Territory and in the Aleutian Islands. Hawail and but has fallen in Southwestern Alaska and in portions of the Interior and Southeast, and clear weather prevails in the Northwestern por- tion of the Territory. Temperatures have fallen except in the ex- portions of the Southeast. FRENCH BEAUTY FLEES FROM LUXURY FOR CHANCE AT STAGE CAREER HERE RICH ALASICA SHIRT A Heavy Wool Shirt That Wears Like Iron H. S, GRAVES “The ClotHing Man NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—Jeanne Aubert traveled thousands of miles | to escape a life of wealthy leisure, { and now she reports for work each | night at the stage door. As the wife of Nelson Morris, millionaire Chicago meat packer, she could lead a life with every desire granted. But career is more important than marriage to this slim, blonde | French singer. After a whirlwind romance with Morris, then known as the richest student in Harvard, Mlle. Aubert married him in Paris. |" she wanted to continue on the stage but he went into French 1couns and got an injunction pre- | venting this, quoting the French |law that “a wife is subject to her | hushand in all matters.” ! She fled to Liege and to Milan.[ ’ but he kept her out of the theatre; & there. Then she sailed for this country and was given one of the leading roles in the operetta, “Prin-| 1o siates Saturday to visit with cess Charming.” IMiss Dorothy Fisher, teacher of in- “I consider my stage career MOTe|strymental music in the public important than any marriage I gehools. can make,” she explains. “My main| \po g B Jamieson 15 & patient object in seeking a divorce s be- m St. Ann’s Hospital. She entered cause he objects to my stage ap- Saturday night. R Judge James Wickersham return- “I want to work. I've been on the loq gaturday from Ketchikan, where stage all my life since I Was @ pe paq pusiness before the United chorus girl at the Apollo theatre in |States District Court in session Paris and I want to work while I'm | | there. stllf: young.” R. J. Sommers, Territorial High- e o ot TR way Engineer, has returned to Ju- AT THE HOTELS neau from a trip to Southeast |Alaska ports. Gastineau Mrs. W. J. Barrows, whose hus- !band is an aviator engaged in the John W. Jones, G. L. Rich and search for Pilot E. J. A. Burke, A. Larson, Ketchikan; Thomas Hall | was a passenger on the Princess and J. E. Tourney, Seattle; W. H. |Norah. She is going to Atlin, Nobt, Salem, Ore.; A. H. Sonstha- B. C. gan and Mrs. L. Renke, Petersburg; | Mrs. W. R. Burford, who entered Carl Roberts, Haines. St. Ann's Hospital October 29, Alaskans {went home this morning, her 'health restored. b gy it ENTERTAINS AT BRIDGE THREE DIE IN PLANE CRASH GREENSBURG, Penn, Nov. 17. —Three persons were killed in a plane crash when taking off at the ‘airport here. The plane burst into flames. Edward McCune, aged 26, and Hilda Carmel, 18, his sweet- heart, were killed. Casper McCune, aged 24, who was the pilot and a brother of Edward, rolled clear but he was badly burned returning to rescue the others and died later in a hospital. WHO'S WHO AND WHERE Mrs. Frances Tanner arrived from R. Jensen and E. E. Martin, Sew- ard; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kentor, Kake; F. L. Excell, Ketchikan; Leslie Cashen, Douglas. Zynda Mrs. T. J. Hynes, Juneau. .- Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. Mrs. Emma T. White at the Zynda Hotel Saturday night en- tertained at bridge. Several tables were in play. Weather | Cldy | Clear | Clear | Clear | Bombay Society Girl | Divorced by Banker { 1t is high north of| little below normal in Northern Alaska. Light snow | the former Marjorie Burke-Wise, vell-known Bombay 'society girl, nas given her consent to the 7orce decrec just granted her hus- sand, Girault Terril Thach, wexlth) New York banker. Thach is said| to have selected Mrs. Charlotte ago in India. Thach is said ta| have selected Mrs. Charlotte Lewis, divorcee step- -daughter Harry F. Guggenheim, Ambass dor to Cuba, as his second wife. <International Newsre VM | | Damsh Publishers War Against Fee Libraries COPENHAGEN, Nov. 17.—Com-| |bating a decrease in book sales, | which they attributed to rental li-| | braries, Danish publishers, effective | with their October lis made a | provision that such libraries can| not rent the books until April, 1 A special fee, equal to the price {of the book, then will be charg od] for the privilege of renting the| |items, the publishers said | Last spring the Danish Supreme | | court upheld the validity of notices | printed in books which forbade | |rental libraries from eirculating the volumes without speecial permission. —,——— NEAR BEER FLAVORED BY MILK'S LACTIC ACID NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—Near Beer and milk are developing an affin-| lity that once did not exist. | Lactic acid, the substance in| ! milk that sours it in due time, now | is used to improve the flavor of |near beer. This development in the chem- | istry of near beer is reported to! the American Chemical Society by | Dr. H. T. Herrick of the federal bu- reau of chemistry and soils in dis- cussing new things ferments are doing for industry. — | BROOMCORN YIELD IS LOW, BUT OKLAHOMA STILL LEADS OKLAHOMA CITY, Nov. 17.—Ok- lahoma will retain its position as the leading State in broomcorn production this year despite the |fact that its total yield is forecast |at 16,700 tons, more than 8,000 |tons below the five-year average. A report by the Oklahoma crop reporting service said the crop |would be one of the smallest in 14 years. Its condition on October 1 was 51 per cent of normal. Colorado is second with 12,000 tons forecast, Kansas third with 9,900, and Illinois fourth with 6,- 800. o Rl e - In Rome traffic regulation Is en- trusted to a corps of 2,000 officers with military organization and | schooled with special education. IsBut 8 Small Part o> the Cost b 4 EN getting out a circular, circular letterorother pieccof printed matter...the paper, the address- ing, the mailing casi- ly total more than the printing. Yet, in a large mcasure, the Results Depend Upon the Prlming. Let us nkon some samples to trate oar statement | IT'S HOW! DIFFERENT TONIGHT ENTERTAINII WHERE SOUND SOUNDS BEST COLISEUM IT'S 100 PER CE CHARLES (BUI —THRILLING— ALL TALKING DDY) ROGERS in 2—-SHOWS—2 7:30 and 9:30 TONIGHT TENSE—SUSPENSE—COMEDY “Young Eagles” You have had musical comedy, dramas, comedy, etc. — EAGLES”—It has be en founded on the stories ELLIOTT Wi BUT never Who Was SPRINGS “One Clever” IITE e Lot a story like “YOUNG and “Sky High” by POLA NEGRI SEEKS DlVORCE Assoclated Press Photo Poid Negrl, motion picture actress, has filed suit for divorce In Paris from Prince Serge Mdivani to whom she was married In 1927, SIGNAL CORPS MAN HERE Emil Hill, for some years sta- tioned at Petersburg with the U S. Signal Corps, arrived in Juneau on the Queen Saturday night and will be attached to the local cable office. He was accompanied by his wife and child. They have taken up their home in the Radio Apart- ments. W I Art Larsen, who recently obtain- ed a contract for* clearing timber from the site of the proposed in- dustrial training school of the Buerau of Education at Shoemak- | er Bay, near Wrangell, is in Ju- neau, having come on the Queen ‘mndav night. <> ‘The first concrete roads in Ger- | many were bum as early as 1890. fFRENBH WRITER ' COMES T0 GET NORTH STORIES {Princess N;h Calls on| First Trip of Season to Southeast Alaska Instead of love in the gilded palaces of age-old civilization, | French readers of fiction are be- ginning to show preference for ad- |venture on the long trails of re- |mote frontiers, in the opinion of {J. Alloucherie, newspaperman, nov- elist and magazine writer of Paris. !He is a passenger on the steam- ship Princess Norah, which called here last night enroute from Van- couver, B. C, to Skagway. At the {Lynn Canal port, he will board the | [train for Whitehorse, and from | there travel by automobile stage| to Dawson. He seeks material for | literary articles which he hopes| | will reflect rough and reckless char- | acters jostling one another along paths to vaults of gold in a land| |of rigorous and forbidding ele- | ments, | “Ah, mosooo,” he said, in part- (ing as he shook hands, with a jack- “kml’t‘ bow, at the ship's end of the gang plank, “I am charmed all ready with my veezit to ze North.” | The Norah is on her first voyage ‘nl the season to Southeast Alaska, |having taken the place of the | Princess Louise for the winter. ‘The |Norah, which arrived at 6:30 and !departed at midnight, disembarked seven passengers at Juneau. They {were Mrs. J. C. Readman, Mrs. E. A. Friend, Mrs. S. Elstead and [child, Miss Irene Burke, Thomas |Hall and P. Peterson. | The vessel will be back here to- night on her return voyage to | Vancouver. —er——— I NOTICE The electric vibrator displayed by the Parish Bazaar will not be [nwarded Persons interested should apply to Mrs. Skuse for refund. —adv. *“Cheapness®, is contagious The finest things usually come from those who make fine things exclusively. Schilling { makes only fine coffee—so can anyone else — but only Schile | Cheap coffee never enters noe leaves the Schilling roasting rooms, for Schilling believes that “cheapness” is contagious. the quality you would insist | upon if gou knew all of the facts. o iSoN | LUDWIG NE JEWELER L1 AA"LWAYS S Miider . . . and 4 © 1930, Liccerr & Myers Toracco Co. better taste!

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