The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 31, 1933, Page 2

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IR R R AR RIS N AR Ry TR = TLIeY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 31, 1933. That téll' the Fall f:;l"fihion}sl'tir\' and give you VALUE RECEIVED for every penny P\prmled » b wive Dressy types . $plorts niodels Swaggers ——————— S s o Socetes 8 iman | Ao - | Eate Another Group of Smartly Styled Coats, $19.75 Neiwvest Fall Dresses Fashions for . every . eccasign— Street Dresses . Evening .75 Gowns . . . Sport Types £ ry dress in this exceptional assemblage was chosen for its style excelleice and extra- ordinary features of fabric and workmanship —frocks for evening wear, for afternoons and the practical needs of club and business wear! Sizes 14 to 44 WINTER HATS Replicas of Expensive Models " "Modérately Priced New Wool Skirts $3.95 s 26 to 32 Beautiful $2.75 Made in colors to in gay, bright telo mac iend a and give charm to any’ bedroom. ably reasonable in price for.sueh Women’s Flannel Waverlv Bedspreads For Modern Bedrooms—slze 80 x 105 inches $3.75 armonize with cvery decorative scheme . . . feeling ©f coziness and cheer, These bedspreads are remark- style and quality. Robes $6.00 comfortable, smart, 400! These ool robes at an’ unusually low The popular stripes and plain colors with notch collars ‘and contrasting Fine width and 2% yaxds loug. ,4 rp are price. trims. quality marquisette nets . . . Py $1 95 Pair Net Curtam Panels plain and figured. Full TRETCH GIRDLES $4.50 pre-shrunk and gives you that 1 be ever so pleased fabric that does th 50 mu in and try en smgrt * widh'it All pure weol, of exceptional quality. { tinished with three-inch fringe. come Juneau’s Leading Departrient Store ¥ 3 bt L L Plaid effects in rich, darks golors . . ¥ B. M. Behrends Co., Inc. Auto Blarfll{:et Robes -$12.00 fast-color. Soft, warm robes ¥isa L5 g Waleany Film Success Tip Is Civfn,' MISS: WALTONEN ‘Stand in’ for, awith Hepburn HONORED! WITH By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal Adalyn Doyle, the O s W a-‘ « ge3 {I‘i Misses ‘Kiloh ‘and Entertain for Her at Gov't.: Hospital In honor'of Miss Gertrude ‘Wal- tonen, whose marriagz to: Dr. Clay- ton L. Polley will occur on De- cember 21, next, Misses Margaret Kiloh and Elsie Baggen were hos- tesses at a miscellancous shuwgr given at the United States Goy: ernment Hospital Monday wmlns The scheme of decorations struck ; the s concern, | ! of 7 she | her the stage t “but I with ed, would show and then I couldn’t be; an actress.” HUNTING A BREAK “When 1 finish Adalyn says, anted |3 me to go to coll on’s note witn Hailowe'sn tent on getting colors and figures. The central atre. 1t figure was a large-size minlatqre tra, but that didn't s vessél in which many dainty and anywhere Then 1 serviceable gifts were stowed, vaudeville, singing Bridg: was played, Misses Oul'- for a wh before "ADALY delia Smith and Alice Moran Wwin- Hollywood. SATED QOYLE ning first and second, and Mrs. “Adelyn_Doyle 'Ils a “stand- in" for Katharine Hepburn when the yeung actress urged che be given a screen test. “I seemed unable Once I had an app test at one of the st A. Nixon, consolation prize. €r guests were: next morning I read A Misses Mamié Feusi, Elizabeth that the test director had comm Miss Deyle's carcer is B gousi Anna Hil, Edna Smithf ted suicide. Whether he so der i ithad n:‘ull Irene Burke, Lillian Andersonm, death tather than give me a = T Alice Moran, Eunice Anderson, Cor- Ad is in 1 still don't know. Must be mor ! R Smith, O. Andrews, M. Oy- otonous, don't you think, giving L““A?;al“c; “é‘g‘i“‘:”rzle‘;b [ F. Bair, Olive Trower, M. people tests?” | atis ke e . Bleggins, Gladys Naghel, Mesdames .. “About that tims I went to see atharine Hepburn is striking not B. Carmichael H M. Hollmanm, John Barrymore in Bill of Di- ‘lcx‘:‘ because it is physical, but o " yogc0n T E Sweoney, L. x{ vercement’ — and saw Katharine' because their mamnerisms are po ikl wWides, Teo JeW- Hepburn for the first time. 1 similar and their voices are both thought she was my double, so I low-pitched. Sh: shares the rath- decided to go and see her.” er bizarre Hepburn sense of hu- Miss Hepburn saw her, and at, mor, and the Hepburn intensity. once gave her a job. It was only| ‘“But our approach to acting is ett, A. Magseth, H. Davlin, A Dixon, A. Laundstrom Jr., A. J. Blake and K. Junge, ——eee— as her “stand-in” but Katharine different” says Adalyn, “and on Besan preaching her cause on her| the, screen we don't ook, so much Ocean Oil Springs Qwn lot and wherever she went. f““’“ Are Repomd Fomd ———eee _She told Adalyn she should be’ gn Actress. - £ | United States Geodet! CHANCE AT LAST Mrs. T. A Hellenthal, who has | located two. oif sprines. & got her screen test—and now been visiting in the south for sev- ocean bed near Redondo Beach and &m&u under contract to|eral weeks, is a returning pas- Hermosa Beach. The springs in ntury, and on the|senger to Juneau aboard the Prin-|deep water cover the ocean with to0 a2 stellar position oess Norah due late this after- an ofl film with a diamefer 1l be given a “stand- ‘more than a quarter of a mile, and had a bit in —_—— e |gas fumes above the springs are 3 Daily Empire Want Ads Pay | pronounced. VISIT IS .ENDED Los AN‘OZL&, ‘Ot '31. — The SHWERWNMV, Besides the guest of honor, oth- | SPEGIAL RIGHTS <10 BE VAGATED Territorial ~ Policy inManchukuo CHANGCHUN, Meonchuria, Oct. extra-ters citizens xn ithe first to relinquish ritorial rights for its M tkuo. las _the date on which Japanese (onsular courts will close. Also on that date administrative wers, in the South Manchuria lway zone, together with rights relgling to taxation, will be handed | 0! the new State . YIn ‘preparation for these events the Manchukuan Government has hired 1,000 Japanese policemen to ,ijinstruct nafives in law enforcement dufiel, . #HO¥ IN JUNEAU | 1 | i Japai‘to’ Relquuxsh Extra-' 31.—Japan intends to let an @x-| “lample t- ocuner powers by being ptgmber 1, 1935, has been seL1 < | Now | | | | i | | They're. happy and they enj many's royal family, man - throne, ‘and his KREUZBURG, Upper Oct.. 31—A kiss sealed the omic fate of the newly-wed P Wiithelm of Prussia, heir pre tive to the German thronre. Today {he and his commoner wife enjay the smiles of the rest of the fam- ily. “Life is getting to be nicer every {day,” wrote his wife, the former Dorothea von Salvatini, to Cou Hans Juergen von Blumentha, wao was best man at the wedding. Five rooms in a large Kreusburg { villa belonging to a retired Silesi \capna]h' are the princely couple's present home. They might have| |claimea the spacious if old-fashion- ed manor on Sternalitz estate, {some 10 miles away, where Prince Wilhelm works every day as a | farmer, but that would have meant | ousting the superintendent who has grown gray in the service. Anything’s All Right “Anything will do for me pro- Vi I don't have the yard and hold my head under pump for my daily morning | toilet,” Mrs. Hohenzollern told her { husband as they started out house [ hunting. { Their wedded bliss is increased by the fact that contrary to fond- | est expectations Crown Prince Fred- jerick Wilhelm and Crown Princess have taken them to the bosom and have forgiven them for having married in de nce of Hohenzollern house laws | Cecilie | family | § Silesia, | to go out into|; 'Royal Kisses Seal Economic .« Fate, Prince, Commoner Wife y the smiles of the rest of Ger- Pince Wilhelm, heir presumptive to the Ger- commoner wife, Salvatini, met the Prince’s family with trepidaticn but they were unexpectedly received with smiles and paternal kisses. the former Dorcthea von As a result’ their economic future is assured. From Bonn, the scene of their - marriage, the couple went for a honeymoon to Norderney, the cele- | brated North Sea spa. Stopping ai the Mecklenurg estate of Count Blumenthal, they talked over possi-| bilities and. incidents that might' result when they appeared in Oels castle, near Breslau, where Wil-| helm was to introduce his wife to 411.3 parents. Feared First Meeiing With some fear and trepidauon | Dorothea afterwards confided, she unpacke which the young couple was usher- ed, and wondered just how the first meeting would be, when. in came the Crown Princess, threw her arms about her, kissed her fondly and, told her to call her mother. That broke the ice. As an cutward sign of reconcilia- tion, Cecilie handed her as a. be- ated wedding gift the costly jewels —huge aquamarines—given her by he former Kaiser Wilhelm II and he late Kaiserin Auguste Victoria vhen she bore her first son, Wil- 1elm, now the husband of Doro- hea. The Crown Prince, entering a ‘ew moments later, also embraced ung daughter-in-law affec- y, told. her that everything K. and that she . should her irunk in the room 0] J. 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, WEATHER BUREAU & The Weather i By the U. 8. Weather Bureau) LOCAL DATA Forecast for Junean and vicinity. beginning at 4 p.m., Oct. 31: f Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; moderate easterly winds. Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity = Weather 4 pm. yesty ... 29.65 40 58 SE 1 Pt.Cldy 4 am. today ....29.73 42 44 N 1 Cldy Noon today ...2081 42 42 NE 10 Cldy ol CABLE AND EADIO REPORTS e < YESTERDAY TODAY ‘ol 4 Z ') Towest4am. 4adn. Precip. dam. | Station |~temp. te'no velocity, 24hrs. Weathe | Barrow fas 10 6 4 0 _ Cldy 1 Nome <20 22 8 Beibel ... 16 16 4 Fort Yukon 18 16 6 {Tanana 12 14 4 | Fairbanks | 12 12 4 & Bagle /...cqn | -2 ] Calm St. Paul . el v He 12 » | Duten, Harbor | ¢ % 20 \ Kodiak | Cordova . | M 38 4 18 Cldy .Y!!nc:iu 35 42 7 0 Clay ‘ Sitka e 32 —_ Calm 0 Pt. Cldy | Kc_u:hlkan - | 38 33 4 ] Cldy Prince Rupert 40 49 4 0 Pt. Cldy Edmonton 18 20 4 32 Cldy Seattle 46 46 12 0 Cldy Portland e 48 48 4 32 Rain o 'San Francisco .. 5& 56 111 50 Pt Cldy ‘ & An area of high pressure overlies; northwuten Canada and the eastern Interior of Alaska this merning with the: barometer low over north Pacific and extending up over Western Alaska. Light pre- | cipitation has occurred:generally over the “Rerritory exceps. over the | Interior and the Southeast parts. Temperatures this morning are m;:sbiy -Jower over the Interior and -warmer in mar portions - of Alaska; } 5 MES. J. W. GUCKER HOSTESS |a | mnjor operation at"'st. " “Ann's 4 AT BBIDGE-DINNER PARTY | Hospital two ' weeks ago, is npw |home from the hospital and her . 'Mrs. ' J.0 W. Gudker ‘eniériained | convalesence is progressing nicely. 'I?the ev;nlng ‘at dinner and bridge, e a r home.in the Spickett Apart- {ments, Colorful Hallowe'en matits | ¥ AND MRS. FRED HENNING | were used in the decorations of the HAVE MOVED INTO JUNEAU tables and rooms. FROM HOME AT LENA COVE { Following dinner four tahles of ocm.mct were in play and prizes were won by the Misses Lillian and Jane Alexander and Mrs, Truitt | Moehring. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Fréd Henning and their small daughter have mov lm‘m Juneau from- their home at * Lena Cove on -the highway to E AR e o o e ispend the winter. in the city. They (MRS. ¥. J. NEWELL HOME |have taken an- apartment at the ! FROM ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Marshall - Apartments. Mrs. V. J. Newell who undorw: ’lnL, i Daily Emprre 57amt Ads Pay TURKEYS F REE ¥ z\u our” contribution to a fes- tive Thanksgiving under the most encouraging conditions Alaska has seen in years ‘we are giving a free turkey to eight fortunate purchasers. Ask for your ticket! GEORGE BROTHERS PHOENI%S—,-QZ and#95 Five Deliveries Daily worry about the silly $ Faas 32 ;‘~ — i ! WmTE LINE CABS on s p . 1. | <7 25.cents in Cztfy' e Hore's North Dakela's now 19-iory capitcl, the State's tallest building, as it appeared while awaiiing the sccond cornersione un- ‘vefling. The first' Block was chipged bheyond repair by souvesiri hunters, taking advantage of the lcng comstruction delay caused by labor trouble and cther circumstances, - L d BISMARCK,' N. r;\.',‘ Oct. 31— that its new cornerstone, {hewn of native granite, has been iplaced, Norfh Dakita’s new, $2,000,- 000 state capitol building is .near- ing completion after weathering | controversy and labor trouble. "The original cornerstone-laying, 'Jast December, attended by Vice- | President Charles Curtis, was crit- iclzed by | unfit for use. ceremony” | unveiling of the new stone. strikes interrupted its progress. T, i ‘an act of the last legislature. the last state legisla-| Iture as a “deceiving show.” Since | then souvenir hunters had dam-| .aged the first stone to make p. By leguhnve mandate a “fitting was ordered for the Since construction of the build- ' ing was started two years ago, a i ive investigation and labor legislat] \ The old commission resigned and “a pew one was appointed by the Jn July a third com- came into existence under For a few days last June mar- fin\ law was del:mi m;lmm t:lks- marck. in conpection with a strike of laborers employed on the pro- what |1 ject. mmmto!thestmflnuu.mw‘m.mbnw —tum-d/npldw with | yards. ; uled for October. The 19-story building, tallest in souri Valley from Capitol It replaces the statehouse desiroy- ed by fire in December, 1930. Campus Thieves Return BOULDER, Colo.,, Oct. 31.—Last | year hurglars looted every one of the 12 Colorado University campus, tak- ing chiefly clothing and money. School had only been open a couple of weeks this fall when four chap- time they lost furniture. COPENHAGEN Foreign Office has, |work and at play. Rights have been acquired for showing it in American schools. ———— “Uncle Jim” Frazier of Whites- burg, Ky., who is over 80 ye-u old, it AR 'ouupancy of some offices sched- North Dakota, overlooks the Mis-/ Hill.| fraternity houses on the | ter halls were visited again. m b The Danish all sound film showing Denmark ntiv Telephene 444 1o s THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS . The Gastineau Ousmld-w\'nl-dnnflnhd.dth Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat e { UNITED FOOD CO. - CASH, GR Phone 16 ~ We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 | “REACH for the JOY OF LIVING { . WITHRADIO = ..., Now s 'the time to have your radio adjusted for the winter season of bigger and better programs. Prompt and Efficient Repairing Radio and Engineering S‘ervnce PHONE 501—Near Capltol Tllutre E<pia ol — THE TREND is toward “ELECTROL” -of .course! Harrl Mac[unb

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