The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 14, 1936, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, SEPT. 14, |93 EUGENE O'NEILL'S GREAT DRAMA OF YOUTH'S FIRST TEMPTATION! “AH,WILDERNESS!” STARRING WALLACE BEERY LIONEL BARRYMORE ALINE MacMAHON Eris Linden—Cecilia Parker and Spring Byington ALSO The Alaska Daily Empire’s Latest News CARRINGTON e BOING SOUTH Well Pleased with Progress/ Made in Financing of i \ |NORLITEMEN WII.L BE ENTERT AINED BY GAME MOVIES In interesting meeting has been planned for the Norlitemen for to- morrow evening, consisting of the showing of moving pictures, taken | |by the Game Commission, and a | dinner cooked by Mrs. Lena Crone. Alaska Homes The movies will be presented by . Clarence Rhode and consist of pic- Glenn Carrington, senior mem-|tures of the Kenai moose herd. ber of the firm of Carrington and|Rainy Pass mountain sheep, grizzly Jones of Seattle, and a prime mov- | bears, Southeast Alaska bears, and er in the FHA setup which includes | pictures of ‘the Aleutian Islands. the Juneau Young Hardware Com-| Chairman of the Dinner Com- pany. the Harri Machine Shop and mittee Frank Garnick announced the Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc., is|today that reservations must be) a passenger south on the Yukon made before ten o'clock tomorrow after a short bi | morning by phoning 373. He also| Mr. Carringlon said he was greaf- | Promises the usual nomsense and Jv pleased with the progress made Surprise features at tomorrow's all over the Territory and he be- | meeting as well as a bass sn_lnr_mn lieved that all details were now Bill Bassey. Community singing complete to expedite financing of Wil be by George Wenzel. tomes and business properties un-| P R | der the FHA plan. John W. Jones Connecticut, one of the 13 original of the Juneau Young Hardware|states, has an area of 4965 square Company will handle all matters Miles and a population of 1,606,903 pertaining to home loans at Juneau| (Census of 1930). and will act as a clearing head for| R e | Fishing is the most important in—l stry of Alaska. e | Nevada, smallest state in the un- ranks sixth in { ess VISIL here. aska after the original request has|dus been passed upon by the Afa: Credit Bureau, of which Charles F.| Waynor is manager. |ion in population, Mr. Carrington joined Dewey|5® Mitzdoerf, storekeeper for the Al-| aska Railroad and a heavy \Lo(k- SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATE holder in the new Anchorage H«- No. 3965-A tel now under construction at An- In the District Court for the TPr- chorage, aboard the steamer Yu-| ritory of Alaska, Division Num- | kon. Mitzdoerf is enroute to Se-| ber One, at Juneau. attle and San Francisco to place| ZEPHYRINE F. DEANE, Plaintiff, | the first order for furnishings for| vs. WILLIAM BARRY DEANE, ' the hotel company. Defendant. PR S R {TO WILLIAM BARRY DEANE‘ A man who broke into a tavern ul‘ THE ABOVE NAMED DEFEND- Montville, N. J., ate and drank so| ANT, GREETING: | much he was asleep when police ar-| YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMON- | rived to arrest him. ED to appear before the above- | B i jentitled court at Juneau, Alaska,' The irrigation by an Anglo- | within thirty days after the date Saxon on the American continent|{of completion of service of this is credited to William Carter, in|summons and a copy of the com- ‘rent attraction at the Capitol. \life add a striking reality to the | Tavirls FASHION NOTE o-Hitter | IS GIVEN HERE ~ BY MRS. JONES In Vain Black Falls in First Place— FLINT, Mich., Sept. 14.—Reece | Lewis pitched a no-hit game in the| Two Months’ Buying Trip Is Ended FAMILY.LIFE IS THEME OF ONELL FILM *Silly Bllhes with Wheeler | and Woolsey Showing at Coliseum “Ah Wilderness!” Eugene O’- Neill's great stage drama, brought to the screen in elaborate form by Metro Goldyn Mayer, is the cur- The picture is a smashing tri-| umph for both Wallace Beery and| George M. Cohan, who are assist- ed by Aline McMahon, Eric Lin- den, Cecelia Parker, Mickey Roon- ey and -a host of others. The play's quaint location scenes in the New England town of Graf ton, Mass., its Fourth of July cele- bration, its high school graduation, and other slices of typical American production. Perhaps thé funniest and cer-! tainly the most original of all\ ‘Wheeler and Woolsey’s screen qfler- ings is “Silly Billies,” which opened. at the Coliseum yesterday. The two comedy clowns tap a| virgin field in using the plcturesqum covered wagon era as a setting | for their riotous nonsense. In the roles of a couple of quack dentists they set forth to pull all the teeth in the wild and wooly west. e ee— JOHNSON LEAVES HOSPITAL 1 | { | ydlstrict softball tournament against the Flint Kennedys. But the Ken- nedys won, 2-0. Three errors that followed a base on balls in the sec- ond stanza caused both ¥uhs. The Flint Fergusons, Lewis’ team, had meanwhile hit into a triple play| Mrs. Winifred Jones, part owner and three double-killings. |of the Jones-Stevens Shop on Sew- ard Street returned on the North The steamship company that had Sea after a two months’ |to cart Carl Vinciquerra, Omaha trip which took her to all the im- | light-heavyweight Olympic boxer, portant buying centers of the Unit- back from Berlin, must have lost ed States, including New York and money. Carl had promised March- Chicago. Some anced styles in mont Séhwartz, the Creighton uni-| late fall and early winter styles are versity ‘grid coach, that he would now being featured at the Jones-| report back to school weighing 190! Stevens Shop while the bulk of her | —-a gain of 15 pounds. Eastern purchases will arrive on all| PRI S G |steamers for the next few days. Mrs. Jones is greatly thrilled over !the merchandise she will shortly ‘rflv and has this %o say regard- vle and color trends! | ion has a colorful story to ‘h:ll and a great deal of its success ;m due to the fact that black has ‘bcmmu ~«m'l\ 41 sky- mgh fashmn' |smart; but it L.u- never le'\(‘hvd xru:‘h fashion heights as during the | TEagn T past season . . . and it promises to HOly See Has First RCPY& continue even more strongly for sentative at Internation- |fll Every smart women will have . .. | her first fall dress in black . al Cinema Exposition !but she follow through with pien-| Bt [ty of color. That's why there is VATICAN CITY, Sept. 14.—The|coior, color everywhere and world's moving pictures are 40 per|overywhere it's smart! Youwll find, cent “morally better” this year | pright shades high-lighting basic ol 3 than last, Pope Pius the Eleventh,|costumes of Raisin Brown, Spruce e Johnson, Juneau Cold Stor-|was told today by Guiseppi Cas-| Green, Gray, Wine Reds, Rust age employee, who has been re-isinis, his official representative to|chades, and a considerable ‘amount ceiving medical attention at St. (he International Moving Picture|of Sapphire Blue. There will be big Ann’s Hospital, was dismissed this gxposition in Venice. | doses of color in gloves, handbags morning. | This was the first time the Holy|flowers, belts, scarfs . . . and what, e e {Sec had an official observer at the|with the new vogue for colored NOGTICE Exhibition. | ehoes . it travels right down to From this date, Sept. 14, 1936, I,| Cassinis’ appointment reflected | vour toes! Release your suppressed the undersigned, will not be re-'the Pontiff's unflagging interest in, desire and go color-mad, to m sponsible for any debts unless! the moral tone of the cinema. or harmonize contrast! Anyway authorized by me. B you're to be smart! —adv. MARTIN HOLST. Burglars used an over supply of Color in Coats e e explosive on an oil company safe ere was a time when a coat ! Lode ana puaves .uallun notices in Ontario and blew it through the|was either black or brown . but | for ule at The Empire office. roof. ‘not in this day and age nl flying Alaska’s Salmon Rising in U. S. Favor as Delicious, Nourishing Food Industry’s advertising in States gets more buying | hicome Utah, in 1847. plaint herein upon you, to answer | e, {the complaint of plaintiff filed | 6. I colors! Tt should be the first con-|| ideration in the selection of a new L\“. coat. Look for Boxwood .Green, Brazilian, “Tudor Elue, Keystone \(rlm and Beet Root. because those |are just a few of the shades you an choose for y fur-trimmed coat. They will be the favo 1the football season, for campus we {and for the first fall days in town. |8ports coats are not to be outdone, | jand run a very close march on color Green, Chinook Blue, Italian Wine, and Wool Brown. Should you still have a failing for ‘bht.k give into or your dress feoat . . . but let sports coat be colorful he sweepstake Peacock mzavs yOu | GO OFY! a Gold- sh of Roars! Hands Up! “Don't get excited! This |heldup! It's merely fashio |of telling that hands |and up |sparkle with color! that even very |are switching of Araby | isn’t way e up 1 be if they It's getting tive women h shades London because they and more im- tu conse to the I Green, Oxblood Tan and Chaudron. becoming mc portant in the f day. A new surj Ismart eggplant scheduled to strike | smartness. But fas at gloves . she bags, to create | Thanks to th |matching h | there won't be much hu they can be found everywhere | mon sense part of this color craze, is that it puts a brand-new front on practically any costume. gne, a is! note in stop 3s to hand- colorful du demand for d gloves, ing to do @THY LEE ALSO Snapshots Check Your Sombrero Las y Aces WORD OF DEATH OF BROTHER RECEIVED RY DR W RYSTROM The Are Smart unic unies resembling the | without a ( Mow About Blouses? son. Tt “Fashion plays her best eards on ,} V' |color to m: blouses beautiful! me | With such a vogue for spits . . . it ghcpml, |80es without saying, that there must| ing to almos be plenty of blouses. Although it in at the [stands to reason that every ward-|the s :}It‘l,“ demands at least one white There blouse . . . there’s no getting away | from the {from the importance of colored |dressy typ {blouses. To begin with, they're &0|afternoon wear. t. you won'e be able to resist & princess lines v of them . and they pleated tunic full play to matching an entire en- 1 {semble. Ascot and tr in for their share of bright- -|ness, in high shades and bold prints and lend a gay note to SUILS. Thouette y're new fferent! Smart women will | Word has i them, because they are a|Dr. William feminine fashion; flatter- PAsS of hi any figure, They come Rockford, Tllin line and tldve: from | Oth over pencil .slim skirts many ons of them, ole tunic to the more for formal | Vi he tunic, built on bBave well as the apron- |2 are cited as leader: Y ceived here by strom of the Edwin in ile visiting an« les, who lives in that R Territot from both of k. made many 27 years many rothers, who iends in Al he ¢ trom at the time of 72 years old. He had 1 engineer for the state ka, stationed at the state in Lincoln for 10 years. Pre- ly be had béen a civil engin- for the Union Pacific railroad, and at one time was in charge, of M(,, ful collars. Then, there Pridge work for that company breast jacket frocks, Surviving him are the widow; a owing through 900 Edwin Jr., a grandchild, Nancy houstte. Riliaie 1 all of Lincoin; & brother Thas., the back of jack-|Cf Rockford, IIL; a sister, Mrs. ving an 1880%ish air | Charles Rogers, of Los Angeles, and shoulder width is| @ brother, William, of Juneau. through ht . shoulder R paddir ars ‘are small, and ylmENfF.!gE Qasa m Smcide ratal agad last hi beer of N he viot Jackets Are Shorter for jacket frocks to play ashion picture. his > part i new especi- utton high re topped to !¢ F by | “The Gre | Well, | ning lony ening Clothes had = word for 50 has fashion I Swingown'! Of but that's not swing success! F {basques and peplum {back. Soft, smooth |developed by pleat: ered fullness the back Ibodices, end in gracefully flaring hemlines and dance to swing music | Evening wraps are short and swing . or it beautifully from the jand drop down and sweep the fioor Hemlines of evening frock often encircled with bands | pleating, and cascades of rufflc swing down from the back of waist- lines. mall Eve- ourse, it secret of slicsome little shoot out in flowing lines, or slightly he on the peplum Lee, @ flen centered s act t of of of Mrs. aner the mur airport "Fm--mnum-( coats a ot te % was a case of suicide. Y= prifie A B toLiyE dged b) Two-Hom ] “floor o m.lmmul of w;mgm HiFUa AR At Uty oaists e & ' 3uchanan, airplane pilot and de- | line neatly, and oHlise ont with just Blaze Sunday BOST, WD A INING, | QUATEENG {the right flare from the hips. Fur e PARIS, 14.—A viclent ravaged the old Paris Opera for nearly two hours early Swing Coats jcollars airm high! Flat hair fur BEpt {stand up in high collars. - Long- make big, fluffy collar: ouse | haired furs Sunda and are a flattering frame for your morning before it was brought un- HEL EN PARROTT housewnves to buy Canned Salmon. Builds up the : ace. Practically all fur coats have der control Lode and placer location netices, for sale at The Bmpire office. Here’s a new French toe to gladden the hearts of men who champion this justly famous last. It tapers to a smart narrow toe in a way which gives that “made-exclusively. for-you™ lock. Comes in Congo black Calf and BIG VAN Pho"@y e T 4 ”"'-b““hllnfl'vflmvmhe it herein and in case of your failure | to appear within the time pre- | scribed by law, judgment will be entered against you as prayed for in the complaint, and ‘which judg- | ment is a dissolution of the-bonds of matrimony existing between plaintiff and defendant. | The date of the order for pub‘ | {lication -of the summons is Sep: tember '12th, 1936; 'the time of | publication is four weeks; the first publication is September 14th, 1936, and the last publication is Octo- ber 5th, 1936, and the time within which defendant is required to ap- | |pear is thirty days after ‘the com- | pletion of last publication.” ' } Given under my hand seal of the court aforesafd, this 12th day | {of September, 1936. (Seal) ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, | | } Clerk of the District Court for the | Territory of Alaska, Division No. 1 By PEGGY D. McLEOD, | Deputy. First publication, Sept. 14, 1956. | |Last publication, Oct. 5, 1936. Procurement Division, Puhli;? Buildings Branch, Washington, D. i C., Sept. 3, 1936.—Sealed proposals ‘lin duplicate will be publicly openg! in this office at 1 P.M, ‘1936 for -eonstruction af the U.SP. 0. and Court House at Sitka, A |aska. Attention is directed to the | special conditions of bidding set ‘forth in the specifications. Upon | | application, two sets of drawings | |and, specifications will be supplied | | freé to ‘each .general contractor in | terested jn submitting a proposal The above drawings and specifica tions must be returned to this of- fice. Contractors requiring addition al sets may obtain them by purchase | from this office at a_cost of $10.per | set, which will not be returned.| Checks. offered as payment for| drawings ‘and specifications must | be made -payable to -the order of | the Treasurer, U.S. Drawings and | specifications will niot be furnished to.contractors who have consistentls failed to_submit, ‘One set upon request, and when considered in fl-e interests ql\he Wmfil. chAnm. chunhen of commerce mw other muflnflm who_will guar- ‘make them Avflhhle“?or | antee to lny mb-m i Y lllm material firm/| R P4 LASKA knowsCanned Salmon as a food that’s good to eat—and healthful; but the Territory can consume ‘only a fraction of our an- nual salmon catch. Only through building up the ouz- side market—in the U.8.—~can Alas- ka’s Number One Industry forge ahead of competition from other parts of the’ werld—keep on pay- ing its large share of taxes here— and offer stable employment to Alaskan workers. \ . Alaska people know the Industry is ‘comtucting a‘great advertising campaign in the U.S. As a result of this advertising —now in full swing—Canned Salmon is growing in favor among U. S. families. U.'S. women who have learned the nutritious, life-sustaining values of Canned Salmon are serving it often. And these American house- wives are now buying more of Alaska’s foad-delicacy from the sea. You #nd yotir family always share, m'nu mnemt T e directlyor indirectly, in the benefits brought by ‘this szability in the ' outs1de market for Terrxtory s Number One Product ;; More demand for Canned Salmon means more stable conditions, helps bring better times to all in the Ter- ritory. You can help the good work by serving Canfied Salmon often in = your own home. What Canned \’_Salmon advertising will accomplish for Alaska Canned Salmon advertising to U. S. women is paid for entirely by the Canned Salmon Indus- try. Its purposes include the following : It will seek 10 safeguard this Alaska industry against the competition from other food produets in America. it will seek to stabilize America’s demand for this Alaska product at fair prices— so that good wages may bc paid to Alaska workers. It will, if successful, help make it possible for the Industry to continue its support of the Territorial government through tax p: ments. The Canned Salmon Industry in 1 (last year for which records are complete) paid 77% of all taxes collected by the Terri- torial government. It will create interest in Alaska and its re- sources and help 1o bring more people tothe Territory. It will guard the future of the lndu-lry— protect the future of the thousands of Aliska people who derive income directly and indi- m]y from the eanning of Alaska salmon. R Canned Salmon The flames wrecked the offices and back of the famous landmark but the theatre hall is int Fire officials, after a preliminary tigation, blamed the blaze on electrical short eircuit that certain swing to them. Both straight line and flared bottom tun- c fur coats are effective and show the swing silhouette, Gathers, seam- ings, tucks at the shoulder line, all it 0 to make princess and boxy swag- {zers two of the best for this fashion. - There probably has been enough The first horse-car line in New |<aid about these swing fashions, but York ran on the Bowery and on {high -style stresseg: them strongly. Fourth Avenue from Prince Stree because they have so imuch chic,are to Union Place, now 14th: Street VIOLIN LESSONS ® vanced Students Phone 681 For Appoinment I Ad ‘TREAT YOUR CR AS A SACRED DIT TRUST Easy to Incur... Easy to Disperse Accumulated debts—are they an annoying your peace of mind? Did attarctive offers of * specter continually disturbing ‘installment buying” cause you to inadvertently assume more obligations than your income justified? ; It is said that many people who acc quire things that make life joyable do so under installment bu\n.;z plans. And to the honest person who is in debt and does not anyone, what could be more enjoyable than to ge employ the same principle ? “POOLED ACCOUNT PLEN" y, simplified procedure by which all debts can be dispersed, while working no hardship on the debtor whose earnest wish is to disi- pate all debts and once again enjoy privileges of .an established credit rating. Unded the “POOLED ACCOUNT PLAN” you provide ug w amounts on all past due accounts, we arrange with your cred their acecounts. With your consent, and honest assurance that you will abide by the agree- ment, you determine just how much you can afford to apply each month on your debts, allowing you sufficient for (Luu-nl expenses, and we make regular payments on accounts held against you Simple and easy as dawn and dark, .nui just as certain. You will be .nlni:ucd at the remarkably short time required to clear up all bo!hennme debts. more en- wish to defraud t? Why not t of deb ith a list of itors to pool ALASKA CREDIT nuuAu

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