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ICOLIZEUM LAST TIM TONIGHT CAPITOL SHOWS BITTER STRIFE THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 10, 1936. . Death in Spain! A Submarine Sinks Before Your Eves Adventure! AGA|N§[ GEBMS[ HE’S BACK With His Taking W: “The LONE WOLF RETURNS” with Melvyn Douglas Gail Patrick Tala Birell ——PLUS Deuble Crossed Hermits of Crabland Vitaphone Billboard Fox News Alaswkafl'Salmun Industry Plans off Sgg_sun Work Construction Program Al- ready Announced by akat Pack. Corp. large construction program of the Nakat Packing Corporation in renewing three of its canneries is the dominant feature in the off secson work in the Alaska canned salmon industry this fall. The bigge: job involving the most labor and use of Alaskan materials is the renewing of the company’s Waterfall cannery. About eighty men, a large proportion of them natives, are rebuilding prac- tically the entire plant. A new varehouse, 60 by 300 feet, a new building 60 by 200 feet, a new machine sop, 30 by 40 feet, a new bunkhouse and dining room f white help, 34 by 90 feet, new Oriental quarters, 3¢ by 130 feet, and 10 new native houses are being constructed there fall will continue as into the fall as weather permits, and will be resumed about the middle of February. It is estimated that the plant will be completed around the tenth of July in time for the start of the fishing season About 600,000 board feet of lum-| ber for this job is being supplied |rectly in |but also adds to employment in |the Alaska lumber inearly 1,000,000 board feet of Al- For better biscuits Schilling Baking | Powder | Work at Water- | Lone Wolf Prowls at Coli- seum for Last Times This Evening | Closing its run at the Capitol The- atre this evening is “The Story of Louis Pastur,” in which Paul Muni portrays Louis Pasteur, the great French chemist and basteriolo, who contributed so much to scirtce The story, by Sheridan Gibney and Pierre Collings, centers about Pas- teur's battle against ignorance and | prejudice, to save life through ster- ilization and the use of vaccines against disease. So bitter against him, powerful were the physicians who | hated him, that they succeeded in | having him barished from Paris. ! But Paste did not give up his fight against disease. He struggled on in a different part of France and | lived to see his work recognized fi- | nally and he himself acclaimed. | Josephine Huichinson plays the lpar? of his faithful wife who shar- jed his exile and aided him in his experimental work. The romantic | roles are carried out by Anita | Louise, as the daughter or Pasteur, { and Donald Woods who { one of the few physicians w lieved in the great chemist. | Ending to night at the Colis Theatre, is the screen adaptation | of Louis Vance's famous novel, “The | Lone Wolf Returns.” Melvyn Doug- | las portrays the dashing Robin Hood | of jewel robbery intrigucs. Support- |ing him are Gail Patrick, Tala Bir- lell and Douglas Dumbrille. m | by Ketchikan and Wrangell lumber | yards. New Canning Building At the company’s Union Bay can- nery, a new cannery building, 40 by 200 feet, and a new machine shop, 30 by 40 feet, are being er- ected. Work here will continue until about Deecmber i. Next spring a new fish house, 50 by 80 feet, and a new warehouse, 49 by 100 feet, will be built. Average employment lon this construction is forty men, jand about half the total lumber requirements of 350,000° board feet are being supplied by Alaska lum- ber companies. At Hidden Inlet new marine ways and a new dock have been built. There have also been considerable repairs made about the connery. Last spring a new fish house was built, and the construction plan for next spring includes a new China house and new warehouse. About thirty men have been employed on the construction and repair work at this cannery, and about 200,000 board feet of Alaskan lumber used. s Aids Employment In discussing this construction program, Eigel Buschmann, Gen- leral Superinendent of the Nakat ‘Packing Corporation pointed out Ithat it not only gives off season employment to a large number |of Alaskans who are employed di- the construction work, industry since askan lumber will be used in com- |pleting the program. The shingles all three canneries are being purchased in Wrangell. This |amounts 'to about 600,000 shingles. “It jshouyl also be realized,” Buschmann said, “that this by no HECKER CAB CO. be- | Announces NEW LOW One'ora(:arload Sk Dnuglas e o o o o o o ¢ RO ORI These rates go into effect immediately. RIDE A CHECKER Phone 5 56 Phone and so question trailer becomes a house—if it ever does—has come into court I | when several families settled down for the winter vacant lots nearby. | | trailers’ wheels and jacked it up, | the suit charging this was a violation of a building ordinance have rented the land and have a right to remain there | When Does Auto Trailer T A e APITOL Become House; Now All Together PONTIAC, Mich., of when at the Show Place of Juneau He was hated fo, s greatness, . ! A story based of the great Nov. an 10.—The automobiie Some property owners frowned in their trailers on When one family removed their nearby home owners brought \ LAST TIMES TONIGHT T Storyf Louis Pasteur The trailer family contend they N JOSEPHINE HUTCHIN DONALD woor > y WED IN KETTHIKAN Mae Williams and Richard Hall | |were marrie d recently in the { Methodist Church at Ketchikan by | {the Rev Clarence Purdy | was her only | ence | MacCann | companying | violinist. | This remarkable series of pictures, taken from the deck of the Spanish Rebel warship, Valasco, shows the doomed Loyalist sub- marine B-6 sinking in the Sea of Ferrol, off Northern Spain. the inset seamen on the fast-sinking craft run to the bow. crew are shown struggling in the water. ning of the revolt. means is all the off season employ- ment furnished Alaskans by the canned salmon industry. Every can- nery in the Territory has a good deal of work which is done follow- ing the close of the season. Taking up traps, cleaning boats, nets, and machinery, making the cannery ready for the winter, and getting boats put on the ways gives em- ployment to a large number of men following the close of each fishing season. Some construction work is necessary almost every ye: in addition to painting and minor repairs. Many of the natives who fish during the season are able to work on these repair and construc- tion jobs for several raonths du the fall and spring.” PR 0 it Monkeys in City Hall MANILA, P. I, Nov. ty earthquakes in half a an average of 12 a month, is the record of the Philippine Islands. Earthquakes, of sufficient strength to be recorded, were as follows: January 14; February 12; March 12; April 10; May 10, and June 12. Several of the quakes were felt in Manila, but none caused extensive damage. - >oo Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire office. e e e e, RATES At top, the first shot has registered and Below, with only a few feet of the submarin These pictures are the most sensaticnal to come out of war Life Dull for This Actor Till Sharks Come Along 10--Seven- | | the OLD STUFF Success is nothing new to John Halliday, who calmly tidies up in his dressing room after winning a first-night audience with his new play, “Tavorich.” By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Nov. 10.—Although John Halliday has been one of our most distinguished actors for years, the theatre is still a long way from being his pet enthusiasm. He is a city man and a country man and he delights in excursions after deep-sea monsters—particu- larly those vicious Mako sharks that churn the waters off the coast of Australia. Paradoxically, big game hunting leaves him bored. barrassed. In a previous essay Wwc observed that “Hamlet” was the only real hit among the newcomers on Broadway. Technically this was true, but only techni for a scant half hour after copy was filed Mr. Halliday and Miss Abba were making their obeisance to the new| fall season. The Plymouth was wholly a mad |house that night, back stage and out front, but the calmest person jon the premises was Halliday him- self who, has ears still ringing to BORED AT TIGER HUNTING |the plaudits of the first nighters, ‘he explained to me just why tiger hunting in India left him slightly out of patience. “We rode elephants” he said. dealing rifles. The tigers charged and, from the absolute safety of It was, I think, two years ago that “In our hands were death-| sat in his dressing room and sipped a refreshment while Arthur, his grinning valet, opened a deluge of| congratulatory telegrams. | It was old stuff to him, this suc-| | cess in the theatre. Not in years | has he failed to score with empha-| And so that first night after the sub settled by the stern. In e's prow visible, members of the -stricken Spain since the begin- KETCHIKAN ACTS p FOR ALL - ALASKA ADVERTISING PLAN The Ketchikan Chamber of Com- merce voted at its noon meeting today to recommend the re-estab- lishment of the old Alaskan pub- lic bureau provided that the Legislature, in passing a law call- ing for its re-establishment, speci- fy that the bureau work for the interests of all Alaska and not of just one city or one section, says the Ketchikan Chronicle. The action came on recommend- ation of the legislative committee headed by Walter B. King. The recommendation included a request that such national advertising as| would be undertaken be turned| over to an outside national adver- | tising agency which would have | talent, the contacts, and the | understanding to produce «-Ilccuve; advertising It was pointed out that such an agency acts in a pro- fessional or advisory capacity, and | that it does not have free rein to do as it pleases in the matter of | placing advertising. The members were opposed to any plan which would increase ap- | propriatons for the Territorial| Chamber of Commerce. D Fred R. Isacksen. Mrs. sister of the bride, attendant and Clar- | best man. Larry | the organ, ac-| John Mclntyre, | Purdy Mrs. PLUS Shorty at Coney Island E - Empire classifieds pay. | Cavalcade of Music Schilling [)ure\lznl.lla H. G. WELLS' Amazirg Forecistt lFrozen or baked | ml““'.‘.’ {u“[ IS TN £ SR its 7 flavor lasts | IR 558 Feud Pathe New: ‘ PREVIEW TONIGH'I | Try an Empire ad. Armistice Dance Benefit Boys' Drum and Bugle Corps AT ELKS' HALL YOU ARE EXPECTED! Save the Date—————November 11 Industrial progress in Japan in the last three years has been re-| flected in a sharply increased de- | mand in that Country for office| equipment. The United States dom- | inates the import trade in type-| writers and cash registers. ! WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485 PERFECTION IR our beasts, we drew aim and fired.| 515 It was about as exciting as mount- the first performance of “Tavor-| ling the kitchen table and taking a ich” he wiped away the grease; shot at the family cat.” | paint, dressed and went out with, Not so with those man-killing| the same casual manner as if the Makos that tax every wile and ruse| Play had been running a year. of the decp-sea angler. He recalls| And that's a thought. If Mr. Hal- the torturing and agonizing bouts !iday has any plans for a vacation of wrestling with the poised, vibrant @0d a nice long, fishing trip this steel of those glistening fish-mon- winter, he can forget them. Next| sters as they boiled and strove to SUMMET, maybe. if it's late in the| shake the hook and to destroy the! summer. But not this season. “Ta- {man-monster on the other end of VOrich” is going to be around a long| the line. Hearing even casual ref-|time. | erence to his adventures is an ex-| e i perience, for—aside trom applaud-| M ing his stage performances— one Doctors Find Anemia especially delights in his conversa-| 0 . . 3 h} ,tion. More than any actor I know, riginates in Stomac Halliday has an invigorating sense of humor. | MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 10.—A new explanation for pernicious anemia SUCCESS OLD STUFF is reported in the Journal of Med- Naturally, everyone was excited'ical Progress by Doctors Samuel when he and Marta Abba, the new Morrison and Raymond E. Gardner and fascinating Ttalian actress, bob- Of the University of Maryland. ! bed up in “Tavorich,” which Gilbert They find its source in the lower Miller has on view at the Plymouth Part of the stomach, called the Theatre. And if you happen to no- Pylorus, and in the failure of that ‘tice a Magenta flush spreading over |P8rt:of the stomach to manufacture | the Madison Avenue horizon, that/a Seeretion which stimulates the 1was just this department being em- manufaeture of red blood oells. slMPLICITY, beauty and warmth combine to make our funeral home attain as near perfection as is humanly possible. The superiority of our services may have suggested that our prices are higher, yet that is un- true. At our mortuary you will find the costs more than reasonable. Con- sult us and receive information regard- ing prices and procedures. Charles W. Carter Mortuar JUNEAU : "We Are Always Ready”