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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY IUN.E 21, 1937 IPUBLIC MENACE | Ti{JN TODAY THE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU NOW YOU CAN SEE rw COLOR! Joretta YOUNG DON AMECHE KENT TAYLOR Pauline F! REDERICK ¢ Jane DARWELL ' Katherine de MILLE o John CARRADINE L and a cast of thousands oarevL ¢ TANUCK - production LOW VISIBILITY FORCES AIRMEN T0 COME DOWN Fail to MaEe_'Goal, But Cover 5,300 Miles in Sixty-three Hours (Continued from Page One) report that the plane was believed “down” around the Queen Char- lotte Islands. Then came a cor- rection which siated signals had been confused and instead of the| plane being “down” it was then fly- ing over the Queen Charlotte Is- lands. This was immediately veri- fied by an Associated Press dispatch to The Empire stating the Russian plane had reported “all is well at 8:45 o'clock, passing over Queen Old House Popular Science Daily Alaska Empire News | K. R. Pampin, L. Parsons, Doug- |las; Louis Bouchin, Helena; Nels Peterson, Tenakee; H. Roundquist, Bertha Parson, G. Gillis, Juneau; I. Runquist, Todd; I. D. Radinsky, | Ketchikan. 'PILOT BAKK OUT ON ATLIN FLIGHT OVER YESTERDAY | Following a flight yesterda: morning at 6 o'clock on which he took H. M. Hollmann, Miss Mary Joyce and three others to Taku Lodge on a fishing trip, Alaska Air Transport Pilot Sheldon Simmons Sunday afternoon flew the AAT Bellanca Skyrocket to Sitka, leav- 'ing here at 1 o'clock and returning at 6 o'clock. Passengers outbound with Sim- mons on his Sunday afternoon |Coastal hop were: and Dr. J. E. Edmunds, for Sitka; jand C. F. Lane, for Chichagof. Re- jturning, he brought George Colette here from Sitka, Out again this morning at 7 o'~ J. B. Warrack! | BACK TO FILMS, | COLISEUM PLAY Ace Picture Gangster Marks Return After 6 Months Y " l in “Sworn Enemy + After a six months' absence from the screen, Joseph Calleia, famed as one of the screen’s best gangsters, returns to take up his duties as a public menace. | He appears as Joe Emerald, over- llOl’d of the metropolitan food rack ets, in “Sworn Enemy,” at the Col- 'iseum Theatre. A stage star before coming to Hollywood, Calleia gained fame with “Public Hero,” “Tough Guy” and “Riffraff.” Florence Rice has the feminine| Jlead in the story which, adapted by | \Wells Root from an original by .Richard Wormser, deals with the dramatic smashing of a powerful gang by a young attorney who was a one-time East side gamin. HALIBUT SALMON VESSELS ARRIVE OVER WEEK-END Large Quota of Juneau Craft Take Ice Here Today, Yesterday Fish business over the week-end included two halibuters selling here | today and one yesterday, and five salmon catches brought in yester-| day. Selling halibut here today were: The Little Emma, Capt. John Win- ther, in with 11,000 pounds sold to the Sebastian-Stuart Fish Company at 7.10 and 5.05 cents per pound. and the 31-A-27, Capt. John Pade- | 'meister, sold to the Alaska Coast| |Fisheries at 7.10 and 5 cents. Yes- 'terday, the New England Fish Com- pany took 10,000 pounds of halibut {off the Thelma, Capt. Bernt Alstead, at 7 and 5.05 cents per pound. | The Alaska Coast Fisheries yes- terday received: 3,800 pounds of king salmon off the Dorothy D., Capt. Albert Frank; 200- pounds off 'the 31-A-751, Capt. W. R. Thomn- son; 1,500 pounds off the troller Di- ana, Capt. Waino Kallio; and 5,000 {pounds off the Thlinget, Capt. Jim- | 'my Martin. | The packer boat Helen, Capt.| |John Willis, brought in 11,000 |pounds of salmon to the Sebastian- !Stuart Fish Company yesterday. Boats taking ice here over the \week-end and today included the: Vivian, Capt. Charles Larsen; Mar- {garet T. Capt. Peter Hildre; 31-D-! 12, Capt. Roy Wright; 31-C-477,| Capt. J. Berzman; Yah Sure, Capt. R. Fitzgibbons; Southern, Capt. G. B. Williams; Diana, Capt. Bernt |Alstead; Ace, Capt. Herbert Savik- {ko; Coaster, Capt. Jimmy George; 8-C-51, Capt. Ralph Jameson; Alms, Capt. A. Bartness; 31-A-63, Capt. Carl Wedeiman; halibut schooner Norona; 3¢-B-9; Louhelen, Going to Prison, for 30 Years Donald Wigh! Trenton Pri for the ax-slaying trom Trenton to the :ufi;)llyl(’()()(l Teil; Neighbor To Stay in By ROBBIN (WHERE-AM- n COONS SOMEWHERE IN CALIFORNIA, | June 21.—Seems to be the solution ought to lie in a nytshell. This| Culver City-Hollywood name-chang- | ing feud, I mean. The question i5 can one nutshell hold all the nuts? It's a long story, but a good deal can be left on the cutting-room floor. Hollywood is only a date- line, not a city. Culver City is a city, but not so often a dateline. | Putting those two and two together, Culver City ups and mentions it| would like to take over the name of | a place that doesn’t exist. Oddly,| from such a place, the protesting Nays rose in chorus to put DeMille’s fabled affirmative corps to shame. The proposition has both places in a dither, if you can call a date- line a place. If you know your Hollywood, you' know there isn't uny. It hasn't any| mayor, any city hall, any police de- | partment, any railroad station, any| city limits. It has a chamber of | commerce, a postoffice and a post-| mark, and a name. | One Had Meaning Once upon a time Hollywood was a place. The earliest settler ‘cn]led it “Hollywood"—the story goes Day, No. 2, Roger Mori —after certain natural beauties. Hollywood gave up its identity to Los Angeles in return for—of all things—water. The mother city, I am informed, turned the faucet on tman and Gladys MacKnight are shown as lh(‘y{cntcn\c n, Trenton, N. J., to start sentences of from 29 to 30 years | of the girl’s mother. Gladys is scheduled to be removed ivalley in the shadow of Palomar State Home for Girls, Own Burky( U W, VARSITY IS PICKED TO WIN ROWING CLASSIC California Coach Makes Prediction for Wash- ington Eight POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., June 21. —One the eve of Americ great inter-collegiate rowing event which will bring to the banks of the Hudson tomor- row, Carroll (Ky). Enright, kl-v_n~ faced coach, picked the University of Washington Huskies Varsity to; win in the four mile varsity event. The Huskies will row with the same combination that swept all rac they have participated in this year. In the varsity boat tomorrow will be Don Hume, stroke, Joe Rantz, No. 7, George Hunt, No. 6, Jim Mc- Millin (Captain) No. 5, John White, No. 4, Gordon Adam, No. 3, Charles s bow, and John Rosenkrantz, Coxswain. The average height of the varsity (omitting the coxswain) is 6 feet 2 inches, the average weight 175.8 Ibs. (omitting the coxswain). -{would depart wrd thousands of spectatous s/though he never rowed a shell in his lifee, and came to Wash- | consolidating and ! plants. MISSION TIMES LIVE AGAIN IN ALL-COLOR FILM Moving Picture Director Re-creates Period in Early California { In no detail did Director H(‘nry: King compromise with the histori-| cal records in filming “Ramona,” |20th Century Fox picture produced | in the new perfected Technicolor,| |currently at the Capitol Theatre. ‘This beautiful picturization of Hel-| en Hunt Jackson’s famous novel of | the California of yesterday carries the full conviction of realism. | Many of the articles of jewelry worn by Loretta Young, featured as Ramona, are genuine antiques. Many of the “Ramona” Indians, engaged from neighboring reserva- tions, wear ornaments handed down by their forefathers, natives of this part of the country. | Everything worn by Miss Young, (Don Ameche, Kent Taylor, Pauline | Frederick, Jane Darwell, Kathar-| {ine De Mille, John Carradine, and the other players in the huge cast| —in fact everything they said and| the way they talked was checked by Davison's watchful eyes and ears. | If the ghost of some gallant don| of eariy California should call upon| the hacienda in the broad green| | | Diego, he| with the satisfied | |feeling that “Ramona” has been| filmed with full and careful atten-| i | Mountain east of San |tien to historical accura |beating the California freshmen over two miles in 9:41.5, the old| course record, set in 1923, was | 9:45.7. The recent event marked | the eighth straight victory for the| Washington yearlings over Califor- | |nia. Crews competing in tomorrow’: | Varsity race are Navy, Syracusc.\‘ {Washington, Columbia, California land Cornell, named, starting from the lane. { Will be Watching ‘ When the eight-oared shells from west and east line up for the event | |tomorrow, seven Washington-train- led coaches will be watching their | in lanes in the order west | | Am 1 Haying ALS “KILL OR GET KILLED” This was their pledge! ROBERT YOUNG FLORENCE RICE JOSEPH CALLEIA NAT PENDLETON LEWIS STONE Fun—Vitaphone Gaities— Sunday Sports in Mexico—News | PR LIBBY CANNERY HEAD REVEALS PLANTCOMBINE Bristol Bay Canneries of [ Firm Consolidated—All's ', Well in S. E. Alaska The six Libby, McNeill and Lib- by salmon canneries in the Bristol Bay region have been consolidated into four canneries with the same capaci it was announced here this morning by Capt. Fred Swens- son, General Manager of all Libby canning operations in Alaska, who is stopping here at the Gastineau Hotel, preparatory to leaving for the Bristol Bay and Aleutian dis- tricts aboard the steamer Alaska | tomorrow. Capt. Swensson arrived here last evening from Taku Harbor aboard | the cannery tender New Sunset. [crews in action, while eleven other|He has previously this season vis- | Washington crew coaches all over the nation expectantly await the re-| ! of |sults for word of the succe: |their colleagues. Washington- ed crew coaches now number eigh-| teen in the twenty-odd major row- | ing schools in the United States. Washington's sensational suc-| cess on the water dates back to the| |shell in his life, and came to Wash- | |ington by Hiram Conibear, who, al-| racing | | | lington as a baseball coach {tralner, worked out a system of rowing that revolutionized the pre- |vailing methods. | | lited the Yakutat and Craig can- neries. Both Craig and Taku plants have each put up so far about 7,- rain- [ 000 cases of salmon. ‘We are looking foward to a better than average season,” Capt. | Swensson reported. “All is running smoothly at the plants I have in- spected so far.” Capt. Swensson disclosed that his company expects more efficient production as the result of the of the Bristol Bay| | e —— | Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. 7-Pound Boy Presented Sebern On Father’s Day Father's Day, Sunday, really meant something to Roy E. E. Seb= ern of the Forest Service fiscal of= fice. Yesterday morning a sevei= pound, 13-ounce boy was born to Mr. and Mrs. Sebern at St. Ani'8 (Hospital | The youns man has been named oy Snead Sebern, and he and his [mother are ge along - nicely, proud “Dad” reported today as he passed cigars and candy. ,‘.pl- — — —————ly TOCK QUOTATIONS ) STOCK G oNs | ' ing NEW YORK, June 21.-—Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 11%, American Can 93 American Light and Power 8%, Anaconda 49'%, Bethlehem Steel 80'4, Commonwealth and Southern 2%, General Motors 49%, Interna- tional Harvester 106%, Kennecott 54%, New York Central 377%, South~ ern Pacific 45%, United States Steel 5%, Cities Service 2%, Pound $4.94 5/16, Bremner bid 4 asked 8, Republic Steel 33%, Pure Oil 1%, Atchison General 4s 110% . DOW, JONES AVERAGES ‘The following are today’s Dow, Jones averages: industrials 168.06, rails 52.75, utilities 26.21, — A Birmingham, England, company is said to be the world’s only man- ufacturer of Jews harps. The fam~ ily controlling this company has been producing the instrument for 200 years and no effective competi= tion ever has developed. i e Today's News Today,—Emplre. | Better quality Capt. lapstractly, with a condescending |gesture, and kept a speculative eyee {on the boundaries of San Francisco The mother city didn't know then, that the joke was on her. Just previous to leaving Seattle, | Washington's Coach Al Ulbrickson | expressed himself as being discour- { aged with the recent showings of the | Varsity, but was hopeful of a vic-| Charlotte Islands.” lclock Pilot S8immons returned here A sigh of relief undoubtedly went 20 hour later with Miss Joyce and up ‘everywhere. |three others from Taku Lodge, _ & (Mr. Hollmann remaining there for In Juneau the “down” flash caus-, ¢ tper angling. |Knute Hildre; Tern, Capt. Andrew Rosness; and 31-A-802. Freshly repainted, the halibut schooner Explorer, Capt. Magnus salmon through ed much excitement until Empire| gave out the authentic facts. At 11:10 o'clock, Saturday night, the plane messaged to Seattle for weather but did not give its posi- tion but added “getting along fine.” Over Vancouver Island Just before midnight another re- port was received that the plane was over Vancouver Island. Oakland, at midnight, reported clear skies, brilliant moon and hun- dreds were beginning to go to the Oakland airport ready to welcome the fliers, then expected to arrive between 7 and 8 oclock Sunday morning. The report said bands; were assembling at the airport and a regular fiesta was in progress. Later reports indicated the plane was encountering foggy weatther from 500 feet to 5000 feet. There - would be occasional breaks in the fog but the sky then began to heav- ily cloud up and visibility was re- duced. As the plane wandered around over the western part of the State of Washington, one report said, a' clear spot was indicated as the sun broke out. This was just north of the Columbia River. But visibility again became poor and the plane landed at Vancouver, ——e 4 I AT THE HOTELS Gastineau Mrs: C. G. Powell, Mrs. G. B. Johnson and son, Nome; Mary Joyce, Taku Lodge; Adelaide Smith, San Diego; C. E. Chase, Marysville; J. F. McFarlane, Yuba City; Mrs. N. Crumrine and daughter, Capt. F. Swenson, Seattle; Oscar E. Ol- son, Ketchikan; V. Bartholomew, Vancouver; Al Monsen, August Erickson, Murray Stuart, George Colette, Fairbanks; Joseph Lilly, Des Moines; Miss Margaret Hally, Marshall; W. K. Keller, Anchorage; C. R. Griffin, Juneau George R. Phillips, Chichagof; Anton Strand, Port Alexande: Mabel Holdaway, Helena; Humphrey, Elina Rantakari. Alaskan C. Hornshy Smith, Tulsequah; Leaving here at 10 o'clock Sunday |morning, Pilot L. F. Barr flew the !AAT Stinson seaplane to Atlin, B. |C., with Al Graves and James A. Connors, returning here this morn- ing at 8 o'clock, empty. Returning from a coastal flight Saturday afternoon, Pilot Simmons, in the Bellanca, brought E. Ster- lings to Juneau from Chichagof. HUNTER TAKES FOUR WHALES { Joseph Lillm Des Moines Returns Here from Point Barrow | | | | | Returning from Poins Barrow to jJuneau in just 25 hours, Joseph Lilly, of Des Moines, Iowa, is 'scheduled to leave tonight aboard ithe Yukon enroute south following a big game hunting trip to the westward. Lilly passed through Juneau in April enroute to Kodiak and points north and spent much of his time in whale hunting, taking four dur- /ing a short hunt. ) Expressing enthusiasm for Alaska [on this, his first visit to the Ter- |ritory,’ Lilly regrets his impending departure for the south. A big game hunter of note, he has trav- | eled throughout the world on huxnt |ing excursions. During his stay in Juneau, he called upon his friend, Charles W. Carter. ——————— CANNERY TENDERS HERE Cannery tenders in port here to- day included the New Sunset, which brought Capt. Fred Swensson to Juneau from the Libby, McNeill and Libby cannery at Taku Harbor; and the O. M. Arnold, in‘from the New Chatham, for cannery supplies. Both Mills dock here today. Hansen, arrived back in port here today after selling her last catch at Prince Rupert. e TONIGHT'S BALL MIX MAY SETTLE HALF CHAMPION Douglas Must Cop from Elks This Evening to Stay in Race On the outeome of tonight's battle at Fircmen's Park between the Douglas and EIks' baseball| clubs depend the status of the! first half Gastineau Channel League race for 1937. The Elks swear that they are due to win tonight. Should they, the first half title will be ‘nicely rolled up for the Moose squad, Douglas‘ mathematical chance to win being exploded. However, if the Islanders should win tonight, and the Elks then drop the Moose in the two other postponed games of the open- ing session, the Moose and Douglas nines will be knotted for the first- half honors, and a playoff battle will be necessary to decide the winner. Nick Johnson has come back into | torm for the Purples again, and | is due to start on the hill, backed up by an EIks' club considerably | strengthened by the addition of outfielders Ralph Moreau and Joe Whiting. Mound choice for the Islanders appears to lie between Manager “Big Andy” Andrews and Mark Jensen. The game is slated to get under way at 6:30 o'clock and last seven innings. —— —— Yellowstone Lake, in Yellowstone | ¥ miles and is the largest lake in‘ tude 7,731 feet, Plunging right into the pool, or whirlpool, you'll find you get a wee bit giddy. You might first off, take the attitude that Culver City should | call itself anything it pleases, in-' cluding all cars. The Real Sufferers But there are complications, as if the Hollywood Chamber of Com- merce hadn’t thought of plenty al- ready. I'm thinking of us datelir users. We'd be the ones to suffer. That’s justice, because we probably caused all the confusion. But jus- tice isn't always fun. 1f we'd been specific in datelining, | maybe this wouldn't have happened Like this: “SOUTHEAST CORNER STAGE 12-A, BURBANK, Cal. — Jack Warner today,” etc., etc. Or this: “GARBO'S BUNGALOW, M-G-M, CULVER CITY, Cal Garbo smiled, loved, laughed, danc ed, hop-skip-and-jumped toda; etc. That would have satisfied ev- erybody. But this does worry me. If Cul- ver City becomes Hollywood, North Hollywood will have to be North-! northeast Hollywood. West Holly- wood will be East Hollywood, and | |South Hollywood will have to revert to its original name, Los Angeles. Ii would play hob with our pat language, too. We say an actor “Goes Hollywood” and that cover it. But then—has he gone “Culver City-Hollywood” or just Hollywood- Hollywood ?"” It’s a headache-fraught situation Until this thing blows over, dress me at Little Rock, Ark. he folks down there have made up their minds. RALPH WAGGONERS SAIL FOR KENAI Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Waggoner sailed for Kenai aboard the Baranof Saturday enroute to the peninsula to take over teaching positions Mr. and Mrs. Waggoner returned here last week following an ex - England Fish Company cannery it|National Park, covers 138 square ed trip in the States. Mr. Waggon- er is the son of Rev. and Mrs. David were moored at the Juneau Lumber (North America at so great an alti-| Waggoner who return to Juneau next month, | 1a tory over Buck Walsh’s Navy crews, at least in the varsity tussle. 3 Crews in Races All three Washington crews will defend national titles tomorrow, having wept the river” in last vear’s Poughkeepsie Regatta. The rsity, following last year’s inter- colleg )ry went on to annex the world’ mpionship at 1936 Olympic Games at Berlin, With the exception of last year's coxswain, Bob Moch, who has grad- uated, the 1937 Washington varsity is the 1936 World Champion crew. The Junior Varsity, this year, has turned in sparkling performances, often challenging the varsity, and they beat the California Jayvees Oakland by ten iengths, estab- | lishing a new course record for the course of 14.49. The old javee rec- ord of 1545 was established in 1921, tied in 1931 Frosh Crew O. K. The frosh crew this year also set new cou record at Oakland, oo oo Cigars Cigarettes Candy Cazds - THE NEW ARCTIC Pabst Famous Draught Beer On Tap “JIMMY" CARLSON lhl" prosperity in Alaska 1egg 1 thsp. scraped onion 2 thsps. chopped pars| Dash pepper, sage 1/, tsp. salt 6 slices bacon Combine bread crumbs 1 cup soft bread crumbs Y cup juice from cans of salmon 4 cups (2 1bs.) Canned Salmon beaten egg and salmon juice. Add onion, cooperation SALMON BACON-PATS parsley and sea: QUESTION: What steps does the Canned Salmon Industry take to improve the quality of Alaska’s salmon? ANSWER: Alaskans know the care used in getting their salmon quickly into cans in clean, modern canneries. The Industry also strives in other ways to improve its product. Each Spring— cannery superintendents, foremen and |other key employees, representing every packer in the American salmon industry, gather to inspect samples and check on the quality of fish packed in all districts. These efforts are constantly working to raise the high quality of Alaska’s Canned Salmon —leading to larger sales in the States and increased Sulonon Recipe of e Whch sonings. Mix lightly with flaked salmon. Shape 6 patties, wrap slice of bacon around each and fasten with toothpick. Bake in hot oven (450° F.) for ley 15 minutes, until bacon is crisp. Remove and arrange on platter around nest of carrots and pe: T™WO0: Get the above amounts with slightly taste.) as. Serves 6. (JUST FOR - half-pound can. Divide by four, using egg yolk only, 2 strips of bacon, and seasoning to This recipe is typical of those appearing in the national magazine advertising of the Canned Salmon Industry