The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 30, 1936, Page 8

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JUNEAU B(]UN[] ‘Three Roosevelt Sisters-in-Laws Are Seen as Neww American Beauty Type! ONLY HOP FROM ELECTRA HELD AT WHITEHORSE PAA Hying—fi\irly from Fairbanks to Catch Norah —Hockey Team on Way Taking one passenger from Ju- neau for the Interior, the PAA Elec- tra plane piloted by Jerry Jones and Bill Lav took off from Ju- neau at 11 o'clock yesterday morn- ing, for Fairbanks. The lone pas- senger for Fairbanks was Chris Ellingen. Courtesty mail was car- ried by the Electra also. Two Electras left Fairbanks this morning, one destined for White- horse only, and the other was sched- uled to come to Juneau, but was stopped at Whitehorse by bad weather here. Both planes had full passenger loads. The plane held at Whitehorse will attempt to get through to Juneau tomorrow, but if unable to make the flight here will send its ten passen- gers on to Skagway by rail, to catch’ the Princess Norah there. The other Electra, which return- ed to Fairbanks today, will fly an- other ten passengers to Whitehorse tomorrow, from where, in company with the ten passenigers already in the Yukon City, they will connect with the Princess Norah at Skag- way, by rail. In the group of twen- ty, bound for Skagway via White- MRS. JAMES ROOSEVELT MISS ETHEL du PONT ) MRS. JOHN BOETTIGER NEW DEAL IN BEAUTY: Tn these faces, alike in 10 respects, Penrhyn Stanlaws, portrait painter, sees today the kind of beauty which will typify the American girl tomorrow just as the Gibson girl did yesterday. They are the wife of the President’s eldest son (left), the fiancee of Franklin Roosevelt, Jr., By VOLTA TORREY NEW YORK, Nov. 30.—Miss Eth- el Du Pont, soon to be the sister- in-law of Mrs. John Boettiger, the (center), and the daughter of the President. the chin more delicate than 1a thnt of the present-day r ‘presentative/ American lass. If depicting the latter, Sanlaws would make the nosc | CONFESSES IN Y, NOV. 30, 193 SIMMONS DOES JUNEAU TODAY Making the only flight out of Ju- neau today, the Alaska Air Trans- | port Lockheed, piloted by Sheldon | Simmons, hopped at 12:30 this af- | ternoon *dr Tulsequah, taking W. J. Nelson as the only passenger | | outbound. | brought to Juneau Mr. |D. C. Sharpstone from the Polaris- | Taku Mine. Yesterday, Simmons flew to sltka land return. Leaving at 10:15 yes- ]terday morning, the Nugget carried |as outbound passengers: F. A. Yan- son, Mrs. Peter Kostrometinoff, and J. Roach, for Sitka; William Biggs, for Hirst-Chichagoff; and Wayne \Phflhps for Chichagof. Returning to Juneau at 3 o'clock |yesterday afternoon, Simmons ]bmugm back Dan Dolan, from wchichagof and R. Ruzich, from lest—chlchagor —————— ?JI]HN WENGER | L AAT Makes Flight to Sitka, fi:. | and Return Yesterday, ! with Passengers | i l | l Returning -at 2 o'clock, Simmons and Mrs.| R A GOOD NIGHT’S SLEEP is something everyone needs and something you do not get on a worn-out, lumpy mattress. So, why not get a GENUINE SPRING AIR and enjoy the comfort and relaxation a really good mattress affords? The leading hotels and apartments throughout the country are installing SPRING AIR MATTRESSES because the owners realize how important comfortable beds are to their guests. See the SPRING AIR and ARISTOCRAT in our CELOTEX DISPLAY ROOMS on the Second Floor. JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO. AT st . o horse, is the party of seventeen composing the Dawson-Fairbanks Polar Bears, hockey team which will invade the States and Canada| for a series of engagements against amateur teams. President’s daughter, and Mrs. shorter and the chinhone broader James Roosevelt, his eldest son’s than in painting the Roosevelt| wife, is their sister-in-10oks. | group. Like Mrs. Wallis Simpson, Amer-| But, ican friend of King Edward VIII, | years, three 'GOLDIE HAYWORTH ' |years, and made many srends whike | ir Basil Zaharoff | Laid to Rest Sunday | MARRIES IN SOUTH! it | . | VALLANGOUJARD, France, Nov, LEGION MEETS TONIGHT |30—sir Basil Kaharoff, interna- 35-YEAR-OLD | MURDER CASE Principal in Blg Bond Theft! Jailed, Escapes, But Is Recaptured studying faces through the| the 59-year-old artist dis- represent the coming cerns a trend away from the broad‘ A radiogram has been received | Action on proposed repairs to the >, WHITE GOES SOUTH E. J. White, engineer wilh the Bureau of Public Roads, was a southbound passenger on one of the last vessels, accompanied by his wife, and will spend his vacation in the States. R CARD OF THANKS We extend our sincere thanks and gratitude to our many, many friends for the acts of kindness and sympathies shown us during the death and funeral of our be- ' loved mother, Mrs. James Hoag. Especially for the beautiful music furnished and the many lovely flor- al offerings. MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM ALEXANDER, LEWIS BEAUDIN. - B RHODA MAY CuARK—Foot ccr rectionlst. 517 Goldstein Bldg. ndv ady. A '~ - (_bc/icale- The flavor lasts Schlllmg‘ ! can type of beauty, says Pen- ryhn Stanlaws, New York portrait | painter and former motion plcture director New Typo In appearance, he finds, they are not typically American. Their faces, land Mrs. Simpson’s, are more a {combmrmon of English and Orien- |tal features, but this is the t}pe ‘—more aquiline and more Xnte]lec- tual—toward which he thinks the| feminine flower of the United | States is evolving. As an artist he sees 10 similarities in smiling, slender, blonde Miss du| Pont, Mrs. Boettiger and Mrs. James| Roosevelt: 1 anced roreheads. ; peaks at hairlines. Double-curvey eyebrows. Well-formed, aquiline noses. Prominent, shapely cheek- { bones. Dimples. Oriental mouths. . Prominent, chins. What sculptors call big- boned faces (skulls showing through the flesh.) 10. Slender, graceful necks. Especially admirable, Stanlaws | \comments, is the balance between | perception and intelligence shown ‘by the molding of the foreheads. Portralts of the New Deal trio, he says, would differ markedly only in; | coloring. l Trend Away From Dutch In the pretty English face which they resemble the nose is more aqi- line, the teeth more prominent and well-formed REMEMBER! IT COSTS NO MORE TO ENJOY THE NEW: JUST SEND ONE SUIT OR DRESS . .. any material, the softer and more dif- | explain the present maritime strike Dutch countenance toward the kind | of beauty put on Page One by the romance nf the Roosevexu APASHPTO LEAVE TUESDAY FROM OAKLAND | Boxer Del ayed in Drydock: —Probably Sail North Saturday or Sunday | (Continued from Page Cne) 'n[ the Sailors’ Union of the Pacific, and Mayor John F. Dore, will ad- dress a mass meeting here tonight sponsored by the Northwest Strike Committee. The three speakers will to the public. AID FOR HAWAII SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., Nov. 30. —The Coast Guard headquarters announced that the new 2216 ton cutter William J. Duane will prob- ably sail from here Thursday car- i rying emergency supplies to Ha- waii. e — POLICEMEN SUE | FOR BACK WAGE SEATTLE, Nov. 30.—Fifty-four policemen have filed suit for $32,- 000 back salaries, challenging the city ordinance passed three years ago requiring them to take one day off in eight without pay. One hundred and forty-one fire- men also have a similar suit asking $96,000 which was argued recently. SCHUE IS HELD FOR THREATENING FORD BUTLER WITH RIFLE Accused of threatening Ford But- ler of the Chili Bowl with a rifle, Everett Schue w2s arrested at the week-end and is held on $1,000 bail to answer'two charges filed teday in the U. S. Commissioner’s Court. Schue is charged with as- sault with a dangerous weapon and toxicated. the Chili Bowl late Friday night with a 30-06 rifle and pointed it at Butler, threatening to kill him. He then ran ontside and later was picked up by police in a vacant ‘Slxty four - Year Old Man| possescion of firearms while in- Schue i3 alleged to have entered Says He Killed Fifteen- Year-Old Brother CHICAGO, 111, wheels of the law turned today burglary there, after 35 years to grind out justice.|tured in the .basement of a high aged 64, surrend- school. Charles Kohr, ered to the police Saturday and confessed to the slaying ©of his most sensational bond theft in the | young brother, Henry, aged 15, in|hi; A murder warrant was obtained | in BeHeville by State's fiuorney Louis Zerwick who said, HoWwever, “it takes more than a confession | to convict.” The boy was thrown in a cistern after a fight. This is recorded in the coroner’s office and then “ac- cidental drowning” is noted. Kohr said: “The mark of Culn has been on me but I'm glad I confessed.” Attempted Revolt of Ecuadorian Regiment Is Quickly Put Down QUITO Ecuador, Nov. 30—It is officially announced that 29 per- sons were killed and 69 wounded in an unsuccessful revolt in one sec- ond of a regiment of the Ecquador- ian army last Saturday. Many were arrested and officials said the revolt has been entirely suppressed. The party includes Garland Lin- coln, of North Hollywood, who has done considerable movie flying, and the others are F. P. Combs,*Jr., and Charles Lantz of Los Angeles,| and George O'Grady of Long Beach, “Censor Law” BUDAPEST—A paragraph advo- cating discrimination on the basis of race, nationality, and religion was ‘eliminated by the Cabinet from new laws governing the establish- ment of a Rumanian Chamber of Lawyers. ‘Ray Wenger, 1$200,000 worth ‘bonds and served three years in prison, who broke jail in Caldwell Nov. 30. — The|last week after arrest for a recent has been recap- BOISE, Idaho, Nov. 30. who once In 1931, story of the State. He of Government' |here by friends of the former Miss — John | Goldie Hayworth, announcing her | forged marflage to Mr. S. V. Chapman at Burbank, Califonia, on November 23. Mr. Chapman is a test pilot. He met Miss Hayworth in Seattle when she returned from her trip mer. Mrs. Chapman was bookkeeper Wenger - figured in the! for George Brothers for’ several to the Hawaiian Islands last sum- Dugout will be taken up at the weekly meeting of the Alford Johr Bradford Post, American Legion, tonight and a large attendance is urged by Commander William O. Johnson. Estimates on the cost have been obtained and some action is to be taken by the Post tonight. PR P TR B, White violets grow on stalks four feet high in the Hawaiian islands. tional munitions merchant, was bur-~ ied in a chapel on his chateau Sun- day in the presence of a few rela- tives and friends. No outsiders were permitted at the service or chateau. —— e A hattalion of fire parachutes in Russia reach a remote area of ti where it curbed a forest stole the !bonds from a printing company, ! took possession of the State’s great ‘seal forged signatures of Gov. Ross ! ;and others. He was arrested in Omaha when he tried to dispose iol $5,000 worth of the bonds. | e { | | ROSE PONSELLE | ~ SOON T MARRY BALTIMORE, Maryland, Nov. 30. Rosa Ponsella, grand opera star, disclosed today that she is going‘ to marry Carle Jackson, polo player and business man. He is the eldest son of Mayor Howard Jacksen. She | is not going to give up singing, she says. i Vermont Governor | Arrested, Releued! 1 RUTLAND, Vermont, Nov. 30.—! State Attorney Asa Bloomer has| issued a warrant against Gov.| Charles Smith, President of the Marble Savings Bank, charging him | with concealing thefts, He has been? released on $6,000 bail without be- | ing arraigned. | The warrant was served on the Governor in his bank. John Cocklin, officer of the bank, was recently convicted of embes- zling $124,000 of the funds during| the past nine years. The state; charges $251,000 have been emble/—: zled from the bank. —— "“Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. TR FOLLOW THE SUN SOUTH The golden laziness of California, the desert resorts and guest ranches of the Southwest, where summer basks all winter, are only a day or couver and Seattle when you go by train. And your Southern Pacific trip is a fitting ptclude to the thrilling souxhcm conditi two from Van- r dny: that follow in these sunny . All our trains are completely air- You' vel , safely and com: ou'll tra swifily, safely ed‘-nd fortably, arriving at your destination rest ready ‘to enj fares pi the gay days that await you. Low For example: From Vancouver Frem. JIAE e e Alaska’s Salmon Rising in U. S. Favor as Delicious, Nourishing Food Industry’s advertising in States gets more housewives to buy Canned Salmon at fair prices per can. This helps almost every family in Territory e R e i More demand for Canned Salmon means more stable employment — more money spent for equipment and services here in the Territory. You can help the good work by serving Canned Salmon often in your own home, A.ASKA knows Canned 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 our- side market—in the U.S.—can Alas- ka’s Number One Industry forge ahead of competition from other parts of the world—keep on pay- ing its large share of taxes here— and offer stable employment to Alaskan workers. Aldska people know the Industry s ‘conducting a great advertising ‘What Canned Salmon advertising will accomplish for Alaska Canned Salmon advertising to U..S. women is paid for entirely by the Canned Salmon In- dustry. Its purposes include | rha [oflowlntr 1. Tt will seek to safeguird this Alssks Indus- fond mmmw ficult to press the better . . . to ALASKA ‘campaign in the U.S. Asa result o lot necar the place. LAUNDRY and SEE FOR YOURSELF how much longer it HOLDS ITS PRESS! This is the “Test Proof” that brings you back to s ALASKA LAUNDRY, Inc. mmm 15 Juneens M Exclusive STA-PRESS Agency! - i GROCERY C. M. Cash, the National Grocery Company, of Seattle, in the district of Alaska north and west of Fairbanks, in- cluding the Yukon, Kuskokwim val- leys, and Seward Peninsula, is now in Juneau southbound to his home office, from a swing through the Interior. Mr. Cash reports that the out- look, judging from the barometer of grocery sales, is improved over the past several years in parts of Alaska that he has visited. Mr. Cash arrived here on the Pacific Alaska Airways plane last Saturday from Fairbanks, and will sail for Seattle on the Princess Norah. ——e——— Try The Empire chulxledl ror <uick results. representative of 3t SanFrancisco #79.50 +35.00 '24.00 '2’.00 Los .. 39.50 46.00 34.00 40.00 Low fin; to Palm Springs, Phoewix, Tucson Southwestern destinations, too. pod in coaches and chair cars. Also in Puumm cost a little more. cars, plus small berth charge. Fares For_fol tionr, additional inf B C.T A‘“O? Gonerat e, 1505 Fanreh Aver bouttle e Was General A Granville Street, .mnm. i or J. A. o:fl )hw. Ge: Agent, 705 Pacific B ian . Pass. uilding, Portian of thig advertising —now in full mmg-Cmned Salmon is growing “in favor among U. 8. 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 You and your family share, di- . recily-or-indirectly, in the bencfits -I' ~brought by this s#aé/ity in the o l Canned Salmon Industry. Alaska’s food-delicacy from the sea.

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