The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 28, 1934, Page 3

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w THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY JUNE 28, 1934 S ———————— STARTS TONIGHT She was guilty of loving:not RALPH BELLAMY SHIRLEY GRE Warren Hymer Lambert HvH’ycr A COLUMBIA PICTURE —and— BUCK JONES in the Lasi Episcde | | | | GORDON OF CITY GHOST WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— | WITHOUT CALOMEL Many Tense e Moments of FILM SHOWING T*WE CURRENTLY IS TERMED DARING ‘The Solltane Man’ Take Place in Air Liner One of the most daring and un- usual of screen offerings this sea- son is “The Solitaire Man," startl- ing drama of ‘Continental crook- dom featuring Herbert Marshall, that opened last night at thel Capitol Theatre. The new picture, based on' the play by Bella and Samuel Spe- wack, is a distinct departure from the conventional handling = of drama for the talking screen. Many of the tense moments of the picture take place in the confined space of an air-liner cabin, with the conflict between personalities mounting to terrific heights. | Marshall and Elizabeth Allan,! who scored recently in ‘‘Looking Forward,” portray the romantlci leads with Mary Boland and May! Robson sharing comedy high- lights. Also featured are Lionel Atwill, Ralph Forbes, Lucille Glea- son and Robert McWade. — g NOTICE ALL CARPENTERS There will be an important meet- ing tonight at the City Council Chambers starting at 8 o'clock. —adv. Old newspapers for sale at Em. pire Ofllrc. PROTECT YOUR ROSES FROM PLANT LICE | Don’t let your lovely roses be| spoiled by lice when it is so easy | —and cheap—to protect them all| season. | Simply sprinkle the bushes with | Bu-hach and you can know your |roses will be safe. Money back xfl u don't agree that Bu-hach is| {the best protection against mficf‘»‘ This is the third in a daily serfes of six articles picturing conditions 20 years after the start of the world war. YPRES, Belgium, June 28.—This Ypres, focal point of three of the World War's deadliest bat« te: preparing, just 20 years after the shot at Sarajevo, to celebrate cne more step in ‘the long path teward reconstruc- tion. On July 29 King Leopold of the Belgians will preside at the dedicaticn of a new belfry, chewn here, taking the place of the one demolished during the fierce bombardments. | DOUGLAS | NEWS RETURNS TO DOUGLAS Carl Lindstrom, delegate to the Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F, as rep- resentative from Douglas Lodge A-1, returned on the Princess Charlotte from Bellingham, where the convention was held. He also visited relatives in Seattle as well} as Bellingham and had a fine time. — “m JESTS AT ENGSTROM HOME i | Mrs. Marian Holmer and her son Billy are spénding a few days }2s house guests of Mr. and Mrs. jEuun Engstrom. Lennie Engstrom | is remaining in Douglas until after the Fourth @&s there is very little (fish coming into Wrangell at the | present time. - | ‘; GALLWAS’ GO FOR SUMMER | Mrs. F. A, J. Gallwas is leaving 'this evening on the Estebeth for | Chichagof to visit for a few weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Louis De- |lebecque. Mr. Gallwas left a week ¢ |ago in the Mary Ann enroute to | Tyee cannery which has his boat | chartered for the season. ade above the first floor, shelter | statues of Count Baldwin IX of | Hainault #hd Flanders, who laid | the foundation stone of the origi- {nal belfry in 1200; his wife, the late King Albert, under whose |reign the new belfry was to have been dedicated and dowager Queen Elizabeth, King Albert is shown in general's uniform, with field coat and helm- et such as he wore during the war, while the dowager queen is represented bareheaded and in a {robe which flows over her feet. ‘The queen mother is not expect- ed to be present at the ceremony, ‘known to England’s Tommies in but Ypres is preparing an elab- orate welcome for King Leopold, JUNEAU WILL CELEBRATE ON JULY FOURTH Program ot /\nangemenls Announced Today by Those in (hals__,c This city \Hll_ as usual, celebrate the Fourth of July, with special features for the youngsters as well as the grownups and also with the unveiling of the plaque to those who died from Alaska in the World ‘War. The Fourth's program will open with a concert by the Juneau City Band on Triangle Place from, 8 to 9 o'clock next Tuesday. The Moose will also give their that evening. Parade on Feurth At 9:30 o'clock on the morning of the Fourth, those participating in the parade will begin assembling smoker on Lower Front: Street and exactly at 10 o'clock, the roll-off of the snare drum of the band will an- nounce the parade starts. ‘The parade will move up Front Street to Main, Main to Second, Second to Franklin to Triangle Place, along Front to Seward and up Seward to the Federal and Territorial Building where the plaque exercises will be held. Participants In the parade, besides the color bearers, Juneau City Band, Ju- neau Fire Department, and detach- ment for the Coast Guird cutter Tallapoosa, will .be floats of var- ious organizations, decorated au- tomobiles, fraternal bodies, display vehicles of merchants and kiddies with their decorated carts, wagons, ete, and kiddies in costumes. A prize has been offered for the best decorated automobile and also awards will be made for the best costumed kiddies as well as for their buggies, carts, ete. Children’s Sports At 11 o'clock the children’s sports will be held and this year they will take place on Front Street between Seward and Triangle Place. The two blocks will be roped off for the running of the var- ious events. 1 he afternoon at 2:30 o'clock the annual baseball game will be played, the band being present. In the evening there will be a cutter race betwen boats of the Tallapoosa, fireworks and dance starting at 10_o'clock. —— - STAR Cle EDITOR TRAVELS IN ALASKA S. B. Groff, City Editor of the Seattle Star, accompanied by Mrs. Groff and their daughter Miss Groff, and his mother L. Groff of Orting, Wash,, is making a tour of Southeast Alaska on the Princess ., Charlotte, and plans to take the Taku Arm side trip before returning to Seattle. Mr. Groff hes peen associated with the Star for 12 years, and is said to be the oldest man on the paper in time of service. While in Alaska he plans to cather data on mining and fishing with as many facts and figures as he ma be able to obtain, and to get an idea of local conditions. - WOOD FOR SALE Block wood and klindlii.g. 358. Phone —adv. IIHIIHHIMIHMIIHMMWIIIHI ~- iy 4 < THEATRE W MaN PREVIEW TONIGHT “BY CANDLE LIGHT” with PAUL LUKAS and ELISA LANDI !IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIII|I|I|IIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIll'lIIIIIIIIIIIIl!!IIlIII!IllllfllllIIlIIIIIll|IIII||I||HIIIlII|IIflIé You Will Want to Look And You'll Jump Out of Bed in | the Morning Rarin’ to Go | | umlulmmdnnkmdduwda tooks punk, don't swallow a lot of salta, ‘water, oil laxative candy or chewing | o Bt B A D e 30 suddenly sweet and buoyant and full of sunshine. | For they can’t do it. They only move the bowels and a mere movement doesn’t get at the cavse. The reason for your down-and-out | feeling is your liver. It should pour out two vounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily, | 11 this bile s not flowing freely, your food doean’t digest, It just decays in the bowels. | " Gas bloats up your stomach. You have & thick, bad taste and your breath is foul skin often breaks out n blemishes. Your head aches and you feel down and out. Your whole aystem is poisoned. 1t takes those old CARTER'S | LITTLE LIVER PILLS to gec these two poungs of bile flowing (reciy and make you leel “‘up and up.” contain wonderful, harmless, gentle vegetable extracts, amazing when it comes to making the bile flow freely. But don't sk forliver pill. Ask for Carters Little Liver P or the name Carters Little Lit ver Pllll on thl red label. Resent & LADIES’ HEEL | | 232 LIFES | | h Leather—35c—Composition [ 'The Best Shine in Town | | HOLLYWOOD SHOE PARLOR | | FRED LEHTO | [ 3% L e FIRE ALARM CALLS Third and Franklin, Front and Franklin. Pront, near Ferry Way. Front, near Gross Apts. Front, opp. City Wharf. Front, near Sawmill, Front at A. J. Office. ‘Willoughby at Totem Grocery. ‘Willoughby, opp. Cash Cole’s Garage. -4 Front and Seward. -5 PFront and Main. 6 Second and Main. 7 Fifth and Seward. -8 Seventh and Main. 9 2 3 1-3 1-4 1-5 1-6 1-7 1-8 1-9 2-1 Fire Hall. | Home Boarding House. Gastineau and Rawn Wan -4 Second and Gold. | Fourth and Harris. -6 Fifth andd Gold. Fifth and Bast. Seventh and Gold. Fifth and Kennedy. Ninth, back of power 4-3 4-5 Ninth and Calhoun. 4-6 Tenth and C. 4-7 Twelfth, BP.R. garage. 4-8 Twelfth and Willoughby. 4-9 Home Grocery. 5-1 Seater Tract. pests you have ever tried. IN HANDY SIFTER CANS | “martyr city,” whose ancient archi- | tecture was blown to bits in three m"'SEEDSTORES‘of the World War's deadliest bat- 50¢ 7545'125 25¢ | tles, will celebrate on July 20 the passing of another milestone to- HA | ward reconstruction. ’\nvnmn started, King Leopold of | INSECT POWDER of GOLD ! —at the lowest RIB-CONE possible cost for ? Belgium bore the brunt of the BALL eéquipment and || German advance, and Ypres was MILL, power. Rib - cone || writhing under a hail of shells be- | $22() Ball Mills will do |/ fore the war was well started. ST g’vgls‘;;%’:{‘k;g‘:_v | Austria’s Archduke Franz Ferdi- size, 1% H. centrators, water igand Hin beeh: Mueun. R P. 850 Ibs, wheels, flotation || SaTalevo on June 28, 1914 A Others up to and cyanide ma- || Month later Austria declared war 250 tons. chines, plates, | on Serbia, whom she charged with SINCE steel tank and | fomenting the affair. Soon the 1902 pipe lines. | great powers of Europe were lined Q {up against each other in a war Straub leg. Co. | which was to rip Belgium apart 578 Chestnut St., Oakland, Cal. |Get Your Share Twenty years after the Germcm the Belgians will preside over a | dramatic ceremony in which a new belfry, built partly from the | debris of its war-demolished orig- inal, will be dedicated. It stands in the ruins of the thirteenth 9 century “Cloth Hall” once Bel-| gium’s finest civilian Gothic-style monument. | for four years. . | Ypres—pronounced “Eepd” but New Distinctive Packages coTY’S Toilet Water Dusting Powder Bath Salts $1.00 Talc—50 cents o JUNEAU Drug Co. [E CORNER DRUG STORE"| P O, Substation No, 1 FREE DELIVERY FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) GAS OILS GREASES | wartime as “Wipers"—fell | her tragic fame in October, | when Belgian, British and French forces clashed with the enemy in|on a month-long battle. That first battle of Ypres brought losses and ended indecisively as winter closed in. Both sides dugilo in for the long trench siege on | the western front. Open warfare began again in the. spring, the second battle of Ypres lasting from April 22 to May 26. into | 1914, | douin, heavy | five tons; accounts for two tons. nly brother. Queen Astrid, Crown Prince Bau- Princess Josephine-Char- lotte and Prince Charles, the king's The new carillon weighs nearly the largest bell al Part of ng Flemish Tomorfow—France S sugugagiiing i Shop mn Juneau one its : inscpription reads: “I sing Ypres' joyius resurrection.’ Gas attacks found the allied forces | &———— 9 unprepared, and they lost ground.| ! ! Heavy shelling rocked the village. | wARRACK ‘ Inau te - Carill . L by 4 Construction Co. | Summer gnd autun_rm of 1917 =aw | | Juneau Phone 487 almost continuous fighting around| ¢ o Ypres. The Allies gained in the -~ battle of Messines, but other cam- K\ = paigns faltered, and on November| | THE 4 the third battle of Ypres ended GARDEN PATCH ansRy. FRESHER There are 40 cemeteries within| | two miles of Ypres, and its battles Fruits and Vegetables are regarded as costly events in the effort to hold the western \front The village is 35 miles ‘soulh of Ostend in West Flanders. | ‘A 36-bell carillon will peal out |its thunderous music for the first time when King Leopold views the town’s progress toward rehabilita- | tion. Four niches in the belfry's fac-13: l l | The Florence Shop | | Permanent Waving & Speclalty Florence Holmquist, Prop. PHONE 417 Behrends Bank Building closes July when mailed in letter. WANTED FOR YOUR New Theatre HAVE YOU A NAME FOR IT? 10, 1934. Put date ONE YEAR PASS TO WINNER Alaska Theatre Company ERIC PAULSON, President Zo @ i Send in your choice to P. O. Box 21. Contest and hour | | | ) Topcoais Hats . . Shirts Neckwear Garters COLLAR PINS |m||unununmmlumll|umuulnmlmlmluummnmmmmnmuummmmmmummmwmmmmmlmmlmllmmlm|||||m|mm|mummm|||m||||mmmuimmmumumnnunummmmummmmn 5"_' Handkerchiefs Your Best Over FOURTH Check Up Your Needs Now! Suits Shoes Caps Cocks Belts Pocketchiefs § g* SNUBBERS “ LINKS _, BUTTONS "% —WE HAVE '’EM SABIN’S “l'wr)thmg in Furmah;ng.s fqr Mep”

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