The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 23, 1933, Page 3

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ST R COlISEUM ADULTS 30c Ce LAST TIME TONIGHT DOUGLAS fllmlm in the ceasen’s ace comedy sensatict— | % | with ANN DVORAK, FRANCIS DEE, LEE TRACY World’s Fair Looking for Visit of Zeppelin Thursday, This Week (Continued from Page One) cign countries. Tv is also used to secure scientific data on meteorlo- gical conditions for future airlines. Duralumin, which is extremely light and yet very strong, was used as construction metal for the ship. It has 530 horsepower directly re- versible Maybach engines, which use either liquid or gaseous fuels. Catries Crew cf Thirty The Graf has a gross confent of approximately 3,000,000 cubic feet. It is 775 feet long, its maximum dizmeter 98 feet and its maximum height 111 feet. It has a cruising speed of 73 miles an hour; and a top speed of 80 miles an hour. The crew averages thirty men, and the ship carries twenty-iwo twenty-three passengers. Accommodations for trans-oceanic air travel are actually palatial. It has a large drawing and dining room, 16'% feet square, beautifully furnished. All cooking is done in an electric galley. There are ten spacious cabins with two beds each. The Graf Zeppelin will be the second great dirigible to visit the 193 Chicago World’s Fair. m]”l in the Exposition the Macon, new pride of the United States Navy flew over the grounds, the object for the cheers and wonderment of thousands of sightseers, — e NO TRAFFIC ON WILLOUGHBY AVENUE PR v No feot or vehicle traffic will be allowed on Willoughby for about three days on account of Rock Filling. I. GOLDSTEIN, —adv. Mayor. COLUMNIST 1§ - ROLE PLAYED BY | FAIRBANKS, JR. In “Love Is a Racket” Coliscum Young Doug Has Fine Support of the Coli- ht Dmxgla.s: creen as & n hero. The| ung star appears as Buadwa i \\hmh concerns his ad-| with the great and near-| New York, as well as his| own love affairs, which parallsl) those he writes about in his col- umn, Doug. Jr. hu nevar appeared to better advantage than in this fa;(‘ paced story o( modern life and| activity in the 'metropolis. He! again reveals his mark>d talents| in both drama and comedy, hand-| ling both with cqual facility The story is amusing, combini the elements of comedy and ma. It i played by an excel supporting ‘cast” which includes finished young actors as Ovorak, Lee Tracy, Frances Deze, Lysle Talbot, Warren Hymer. and| Andre Lugnet. | In “Love Is A Racket” falls ‘in love with beautif chorous girl, played by F‘vn"m\ De2, whosé aumt is ambitious for! her' to marry a millionaire. Shfl‘ cannot agree to her niece accept-| ing a young newspaperman, whj mixes with so many different kin(n of people and seems to have nu more future than his present. The resulting entanglements, following a wealthy playboy's decision t he wants the beautiful chlori for himself, being one of the fas Dot \" |STATEMONOPOLY LIGENSE SYSTEM FOR LIQUOR SALE Relative Merlls Are Dis-|¢ cussed by Rockefeller, | Jr., Committee | 1 est series of dramatic and comic| episodes that the Coliseum screen has shown in mahy weeks. The| climax is particularly spr‘llvmndm"1 and will thrill the wezk's movie-| goers. i (Continues 1n:um Pa{'e One) f— - — I vision not only to see that the | was no encouragement of the sale {of lfuor but to make sure that no| beverages were “sold in violation of | the letter and spirit of the regula- tions. | “Under the license system, on the other hand, competing private dealers are under consta temp- |tation to build up their sales and | profits. The issuance of liquor| licenses to private, dealers, presup- pe the right to make a living by the sale of liquor.. Since his live- lihood is at stake, the private sell always has been and always be interested in sales, and nothing but sales. Price Contrcl VISITING IN ANCHORAGE Otis Ross, Manager of the Peters| Creek Mining Company, and Fern Wagner, Manager of the Alaska Exploration Company, were recent arrivals in Anchorage from Tal- keetna. They expected to return to Tal- keétna, where they have a crew getting out lumiber. R | | HALLOWE'EN CARD PARTY , Ladies Altar Soclety will hold a pard Party Friday, Oct. 27, at Parish Hall. Auction and contract bridge, whist and pinochle. Admis- sion, 50 cents. —adv. 1] in It's TREE RIPENED “The retail price level of alco- folic beverages not only determines profits but also has a direct bear- ing on the amount of consumption and on the problem of the boot-| legger. The prospective consumer desires a low price. The producer | also wishes to set comparatively | low prices to attract trade. The law enforcement officer is con- cerned lest extremely high prices| of liquor encourage the bootlegger to undersell with his untaxed or adulterated products. The Prohibi- tionist generally is on the side of| hxgh prices, for he heheves that if] {afoul of the stronge: |will ensue. William Cagney, actor, and his bride, Patricia “Boots” Mallory, actress, as they returned to Hollywood after an elopement to Agua | caliente, Mexico. (Associated Press Photo) liquor is expensive it will be placed out of the reach of many persons | The tax-levying authorities are nou directly concerned with retail prices, but are eager to have large reve- nues. ‘Here is a knotty tangle of in- terests in the price of alcoholic beverages. Much, of course, will depend upon rates of taxation. But | inasmuch as the retail price of li- quor is a central factor in regulat- |ing both legal and illegal consump- tion, the Authority can use its price- ing power as one of its most ective instruments of con= trol. “Rhode Island has enacted a law giving to its Licensing Board, call- ed the Alcoholic Beverage Commis- sion, power ‘to fix the wholesale prices of all such commodities (bev- erages), to be sold within this State or to be importéd or brought, into the State or exported theré- from, and to raise or lower such prices in whole or in part from time to time,’ etec. “This legislation recognizes crucial importance of r pr but one may doybt whether e Island has proposed a works : method of omplishing the | result. It is not likely thata Stape liquor lcensing board can exercise power to fix prices without running st kind of opy osition and interference from the te business interests involved,| Defects of License “If prices are raised, those with stocks on hand will reap unearned profits; if they are lowered, losses, Under such conditions rs will not be inclined by, nor will the public e the lating private deale to stand id! laccept as reasonable a system which gives such fortuitous or losses to individuals. “We anticipate, moreover, in con- nection with this type of legisla- tion, a veritable field day of cour actions. At the very least, between the licensing board and the privat ‘profits ACROSS . Coagulate Solution of Saturday's Puzzle Dmlv Cross—word Puzdle 10. 11, State tively Bottoms of 08l . Sunken fence CIA[DIERZAIT streams . Dull brownish yellow . A ARZD|1 1. 19. Unnecessary Stronghold 1 [ME . Conceal Goddess of . Male offspring . Talk enthu- R[1[B dawn 3 Hgmn siastically E[T]A Anger Press 6. Having the leaflets on each side of the stem Water bottles . Pitchers Metal flask Fathers . Turf . Mountain in Alaska . Hl‘s confidence n Twisted around: var. 8till AINEAR HI1 |V E N E EZRT T Al L A M P 3 O] F oo Juneau Cash Grocery . CASH AND CARRY ' Corner Second and Seward Free Delivery PRSI E 4 52. Cavern 53. Burn 54, Malt beverage 55. Cabbage salad DOWN And not . Correct Set free . Tablelands . River in Poland Superintends Persia . Short letter iast Indian < v tree 1. Stylish 2, Italian coin 3. Scent » . uu;ujéngx at ridge Phone 58 |2 ',/}’ 1 FRYE’S BABY BEEF “DELICIOUS” HAMS and BACON F ry e-Bruhn Company Telephune 38 / Prompt Delivery // UNITED FOOD Co. CASH GROCERS.. wmflm va—l’immJL flflflll%flllllfli H 1T 111 . Deep wagon 0 L L D (e} rack Re‘;erent won- Animal’ l haun! . S-y !\lrlhat . l‘lral ald in poisoning . Disclose . Scarcer . Passageway between E RIT 1A E -seats Scene of a bat- tle In the world war . Cry of the an- cient bac= chanals . Bristle 44. River in Russia Irlcllen rock fres| mir o o P [<[P I N0ir[>[<|0 K 5. Tree with quivering leu\'u aises lnmachuse!(l Dallnea!ed Quantity Der unit of 6. 1. 8. 9. Greek letter l EIII/HIIIIIII AME e /%%Hlllfllg%%fl flfiflll%flll%iflfi ANNEES dNJ4EEE ANE_dEa . /// /JdEEEE | Tl " and . capahle 4 for the Alaska-Juneau Gold Min- o TuERISED JENNY'E I§ CHATTERTON'S GREATEST ROLE Dramatic Picture of San Francisco and Notorious : ; Barbary Coast, Capitol " Cast in the would of the pic- tures which have been Ruth Chat- terton’s most conspicuous succes: es, and have made hers a nam:? t0 conjure with wherever lovers of fine acting are assembled, #Frisco Jenny” her later First Natfonal production, which op. ed T ranks as lm onutandmg \wrk !n date. “Frisco Jenny” is the story of a woman who ruled the vice element of a city. The sweep of the dra- ma takes it across a quarter of a century of human life. Openinz on the eve of the Great Fire that laid San Francisco waste in 1906—the days when the Barbary Coast flourish=d in all its law- lessness—the picture traces the colerful career of a daughter of the old underworld as it luridly weaves itself through the changing life of the new San Francisco to the moment of supreme . sacrifice that trowns the story. Running through the kaleido- scopic pattern of emotions and events is as vivid and gripping a story of mother love as the mod- ern screen has ever witnessed It is the final inevitable clash be- tween mother and son—the latter utterly unconscious of the realf identity of the woman he sess as his prime adversary—that makes the overpowering denouement of the picture. The scenes of the and the subsequent fire which completed the destruction of the city by the Golden Gate have been pronounced by experts to be mar- vsls of realism and catastrophic power. Old Chinatown lives again in all of the sinister secrecy, with its miles of catacomblike pass- ages and dwellings. The reckle tumultuous night life of San Francisco, uhique among cities of the western hemisphere, is enact- ed so vividly that many an old- timér who has witnesses the pre- iviews of the picture has breath- éd a sigh for the glamor of those days. Under the direction of William Wellman, an extraordinarily large cast. assisted Miss Chatterton in the portrayal of the drama, Donald Cook, Louis | hern, Pat O’'Malley, Jimmie Mur- ray, Robert Emmett O'Connor Helen Jerome Eddy, Hallam Coo- ley, Noel Francis, Frank McGlynn, |Sr J. Carroll Naish, Robert War- | wick, Franklin Parker and Sam | Godfrey ars the important sup- porting artists. The screen play is the work of| Wilson Mizner and Robert Lord.| Sid Hickox supervised the photo- | graphy. e 1 earthquake | | |doalers a state of war will inevit-| y develop into which the Legis- |lature will be drawn. | “In contrast, consider the Alco- ;!m‘ Contrel Authority’s po: | The Authority could fix prices w ‘(u' the slightest opposition ixJ'n :|private business interests because| ithe Authority would own the liquor. | Threugh price control it could v.vilh-I in limits modify sales volume at; |will. On the basis of results, | could, if need be, change the pric | azain. ‘ “The Authority would be equally | concerned with defeating the boot- gger and with avoiding the stimu- ‘Huon of consumption which might | | follow too low a level of prices. | “It would even be possible for “ he Authority to sell certain prod- | ‘u()s at a price below what would | how a profit, if this step werc {thought expedient as a measure of | :romoting temperance through a ange of drinking tastes. The price of liquor is thus seen as = two-edged sword, but to avoid dis-| »ster the wielder of it must have| | exclusive possession of the hilt.” e MRS. B. B. NEIDING ARRIVES ! ON PRINCESS NORAH SUNDAY | EN ROUTE TO CHICHAGOF Mrs. B. B. Neiding arrived m Jurieau on the Princess Norah! Sunday aftefnoon from the south| (and will visit her parents, Mr.j | and Mrs. H. R. Shepard here un-| til next Thursday when she ex-, ccts to leave on the mot ip | F, cbeth for Chichagof where hnr‘ husband is superintendent of 'H"i Chichagof mine. | In August, Mrs. Neiding, accom-| | panfed her daughter Ruth, to Se- of Washington, is taking a five- vear library course. | MRS, LIVINGSTON WERNECKE ARRIVES ON PRINCESS NORAH TO SPEND WINTER HERE| e Mrs. Livingston Wernscke ar- rived in Juneau 'Sunday on the! Princess Norah to join her hus-| band, who is Supervising Engincer ing Company for the winter. Mr. and Mrs. Wernecke are making their home in the Assem- /| bly Apartmenfs on Fourth and _HHIIIIIHHIIIHIIIIIlmlllIIIlllIIIIIIIHIII"HHIH]IIIIIIIII!IIIIIHI!IIHIIII Cal-| TONIGHT You needn’t teil' m T know it! My re broken cvery onc TRISCO T A MINING SHORT COURSE BEGINS NOVEMBER 25 The mining short course at the Alaska Agricultural College and School of Mines at Fairbanks, will cpen this year on November 25. | During the past years 15 to 25! men have taken this work which} has resulted in putting many men bdck in Alaskan hills to prospget,| indirectly resulting in some im-| portant mineral discoveries. On‘ account of the new gold mining conditions in Alaska, it is antiei-| pated that an exceptionally large number will enroll this year tcT prepare themselves for prospeeting activity next spring, for certamly Alaska is going to be the seal of | great gold excitement, and will be rich in activity the coming .sum<; o Get Altenticn | attention will be given to tors for the working of gold . The work will include geology s applied to prospecting for gold; mineralogy; amalgamation of gold ores; treatment of bass gold ores by gravity concentration and flo- tation; fire assaying for gold and silver; and methods of economically opening and equipping small pros- pects. There are no age limitations. ! Many men fifty. or sixty years of age and who have Had only a ru- dimentary education have found much in valuabie returns offered. Little Expense The cost of the course is only $25 to $30 for expenses and mater- ials consumed in the laboratories. Those desiring to do so many stay on the campus where room and board can be obtained for $50 per month. Those planning to stay ir the dormitory should write Presi- dent Charles E. Bunnell for room reservations. This is the year when gold pros- pecting is swinging into its own and now is the time to prepare by taking the Mining Short Course. >-oe — D:ul Emplre ‘Want Adc ] ! of ~Ten (‘mflm‘m.lqu 1 JENA !Stump in Dollars Drives Yanks from Souih Seas PAPEF , Oct. ates wch fran d € ench terms he Fr most opula section of this colony. Ever, ries e for shores buy some Conv previously income have piuanw. fr o1 signment the doll into francs, constituted shrunk to a 23.—Fall dollar has al- American South B8eas rthbound steamer bouna hing near its value. sumsthat est a generous R llIIIIlllIIII!IHHIIIIIIIlIHlllIIIIIlIIIIlIIlIHIIIfllHfl"fimfl! CAPITOL lllllllIIlIIHIIlllillllil!lilllllli. !I!Illll During the Ameri the oodly DPOs wch proportion in st to leave. ture of Americans now OO T EMRERRLE AR RO -War years many N5 and Britishers came to islands of Oceania, a being pension- Those dependent on incomes in English or Australian pounds were The wholesale has ed the whit> population to a care handful. T for rench. except will area in the close to 400 million acres, private ownership, says the o merz il B BY THE BOX! EXTRA FANCY DELICIOUS FANCY DELICIOUS EXTRA FANCY JOHNATHANS EXTRA FANCY ST’AYM;\NS sl EXTRA FANCY ROME BF./\lTY FANCY ROME BE. ITY . Do not confuse these apples with the orchard run packs—our apples are all fancy or extra fancy packs. CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 “Tomorrow’s Styles Today There’s Luxury in Thes Furred Coats And There’s a Great Deal of Sensible Economy in the Price! PROMPT DELIVERY Winter Gloves Warm and cozy for the little miss. as well as for the grown up lady Sizes for Women and Misses! WHATEVER your dream of a coat is, it can come true when you see this ! group. There's every good fashion! Coats with cape- lets, coats with epaulattes; coats: with fur sleeves . . . dozens of styles. Reasonably Pricec Black . . . Brown Blue Eagle Blue Pine Green Eel Grey SHOP WITH US FIRST! the TFour-fifths of the commercial for- United States, or are in De-

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