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THE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU TODAY 1 Violets in the Spring Grand Opera Musical Comedy Silly Symphony of Ships Pathe News WORK TO BEGIN THIS WEEK ON ROCK DUMP SITE %y Large T a;k to Be gmh Wil ELECTRA PLANES T WHITEHORSE Crosson Flies (Continued from Page One) l‘l\'«" bllfl(lfl_\', Wl’lll(’, JOI](‘& Takes Four to Interior | { | vu the report the cars were ap- ]l"‘uh]“" each other near Lawson | Creek. 1id the one driven by | Hu n the wrong side of | the road. C in attempting m; t\A(h‘ the nn(nm-l g car turned off j¢ he road and struck the otk | vl neing blow which put him into the ditch. No cne was injured. wrecking the old completion of the d that a temporary ay will be built. for that purpose. The large tank will be made use of for the hand- ling of oil on hand while the pres- cnt tanks are being moved e Union Oil Company nece: new plant between the of and It is | and run plar ¢ n float Here wnlf new he airp at 11 o'- clock Sunday for Electra plane pilot and Murray Stuart, terior-bound passer met al Whitehorse Lockheed, coming with Pilot Joe Crosson and Co-pilot Gene Meyring at the control At Whitehorse, Co-pilots and Meyring changed planes, Stuart returning to Juneau with the plane piloted by Crosson, while Meyring |went back to Fairbanks with Jones’ aw the ime ity for nd plans have b its establishment for two ye now, Mr. Boyle stated. Mr. Boyle plans to remain in Juneau until the work is sta , when his part in making ill have been completed ns will ako probably leave soon con- struetion is under way, leaving the job in the hands of Mr. Walker and the foreman of the tank crew. Mr. Boyle stated that the work plane. on the plant at Sitka, is now just| pilot Crosson landed five passen- about. completed, except for thelgers here from Fairbanks yesterday construction there of two new tanks. at-3 o'clock. Most of them are book- The tanks at Sitka will be built by'eqd to continue through to the States the same tank crew, after comple- steamer. Passengers coming tion of the tank work here, he de- here were: Mrs. Sarah Pritchett, F. clared Y. Astuda, H. R. Smith, Alf Andre- {sen, I. F. Phelps Leaving Ju Fairbanks-bou %! Freidman, Roj tine, and F. now here is sch a ome by Jerry Jones | with four In- 's aboard, was big ugo. for y the othe: from Fairbanks Stuart > oo u yesterday in the d plane wi Ray, Louise DeMar- dilligan. The Electrs heduled to refurn to the Interior tomorrow, following the arrival of the steamer Alaska.| The next plane is due in Juneau' from Fairbanks on Thursday. e BANK VISITS JUNEAU J. Dietrick, vice president of the Deer Lodge Bank and Trust Com- Cities Service 3%, pound $4.97%, pany of Deer Lodge, Montana, his Republic Steel 40%, Pure Oil 21 |wife and son Jack, visited in Ju- Holly Sugar 315 United States | ne: Saturday while passengers on' Treasury Bonds 4s 98.12, Atchi- the Aleutian. son General 4s 111%, American S e Light and Power 10%. RECOMMENDED TO ALASKA and Mrs. M. T. McElligott of | Fresno, Cal, who came to Alaska on the recommendation of Aime La | Doceur and Carrie Cowreson, vis- | itors here several weeks ago, stopped | ! oo v e in Juneau Saturday night. They are| CAR ACCIDENT round- trip passengers on the Aleu- \ An almost head-on collision be- | tian. tween the Felix Gray car and one| riven by P. J. Hussey of Juneau 1y evening resulted in both cars being parked in the auto hos- pital for the present. According STOCK QUOTATIONS * NEW: YORK. July 19. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine clock. today is 12, American Can 105%, Anaconda 57%, Bethlehem) Steel 95, Calumet 147, Common-| wealth and Southern 2%, General Motors 54'%., International Har-| vester 115, Kenne ott 60%, New York Central 40%, Southern Pacific| 47, United States Steel 1187 | | | | | DOW, JO! The following are Jones averages: indi rails 53.83, utilities 28.85. Dow, 182.06, < PR A The most recent marked step in the emancipation of women in ina is the addition of 33 women o the Shanghai police force. RIEEEEERETES| SEEEEERS gzEIm ERRERRRR! MISS Margaret Morrison, C. S. OF CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. ENRNEEIEESZEENZER ESEEEINUEREEY 5 Member of the Board of Lectureship of the Mether Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Boston, Mass. e aEEzEE (T T EEENEEENEENEE R OUNNNRRER NI I IRENNEE - AT THE MASONIC TEMPLE July 19—8 o’Clock [T FEERTERE weEs tszazEzszEmzEREy) sEan | CAFE IS USED BY |the Hal L {rent | Threatened Invasion Of Alaska Fisheries} ; o | |interest to every portion of the na- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JULY 19, l()37. PIRATE SHIP LAUREL, HARDY A Pirate .~h||) cafe, complete in its original designs and spectacular in its ornamental and lavish fur- nishings, was used by Laurel and Hardy for many of the highly-en- tertaining and exciting scenes in Roach-MGM feature com- Our Relatons,” which opened the Capitol Theatre for a cur- run | It represents the rpost pretentious and ¢ y set ever constructed at the Hal Roach studios. Its entrance was in the shape of a bow of a ship! dorned with the carved figure of a beautiful woman. A flight of stairs ed to a spacious promenade deck with a commanding view of the main deck, some one hundred feet in length and fifty feet in width.| |Forward were two raised (|L’i'k.~’.§ thirty feet high, reached by winding side steps, and decorated on each| side with hemp-rope shrouds. e edy (Continued from Page One) And the halibut fisheries 1urm.\n 1 wholesome delica Any threat to these fisheries is| u herefore of commercial and dietefic « tion, Danger to International Peace But the present problem has far deepu significance. Perhaps more ' pmplv in this country pray for peace beyond all other appeals. It is not being an alarmist to point lout that international clashes over fisheries have occurred on the west- ern side of the Pacific. Such clash- 5 are not only possible on our side well, but if caution does not il they may be imminent. To understand the problem it is ential to realize: (1) that it has sen demonstrated that certain deep |d fisheries are subject to nercial exhaustion—including those | o t ( o as prev it ¢ WE WILL CONT SERVICE TO JUNI Mayer with with with Camille with Taylor with Maytime with Nelson Eddy Jeanette MacDonald Parnell with Clark Gable, Myrna Loy Good Earth Saratoga and scores of other big hits fea- turing your favorite s Republic With this company’s pro we are bringing the best shows to Juneau—t p: all others—and with can assure every parent able shows for our Mickey Mouse Matinees YOUR ENTERTAINMENT AND COMFORT IS OUR EVERY DESIRE Our New Ventilating System gives you a complete change of air every 3 minutes. 7 Canada the which regulat obligated to respe ing vessels to Ameri built ser the banks to the salmon indus o those that other countries now pr com-|salmon co THE SHOW PLACE Metro-Goldwyn- After the Thin Man Wm. Powell—-Myrna Loy Born To Dance Eleanor Powell Captains Courgeous F. Bartholomew Spencer Tracy Greta Garbo, Robert Day at the Races The Marx Brothers The Poor Man’s Parson Here R tobert Anderson Jardine, the “Poor Man’s Parson” who won interna. jonal attention when he performed the marriage ceremony for the Duke nd Duchess of Windsor despite the Anglical Church’s interdiction, is | hown with his wife looking over the skyline. He’s here for a lecture tour, proceeds of which will be turned over to charity. 2) from Norwe f and halibut; he United States halibut placed the trol and protection international commission 5 the fishermen and both nations; (3) that cor re not t ty but laim the right to send their fish- an waters to ake the supply of fish so carefully up by the commission’s con- tion policy, thereby reducing their former poverty; that the United States B\nt\l\l Fisheries accomplished for similar results of the International Fish- sion as to ha t; (5) opose to Bureau's that saved adopting salmon ests. through the this coast plant of fishing salmon ar anese floa manding mit - them salmon run exploitation they had Siberian s and t Pacilic by -} Panama Canal and tc reaty which the Iishery huge floating freezing| accompanied by its own fleot| The threat to the mder f an from operatos of salion canr ther nations assault the wit methods with eriously imperiled mon supply. Strong opposition to threats of fore ican fisheries labor unions and operators this particular season cerned, no Norwegian nor English halibut ship is expected. But the Japanese have for several year: fished crab and cod on the Amer can side of Bering Sea. And the: is ample ground to believe that this which the all thes 4 has f So far is ries Commi: the results of the ervation policy The threat to the halibut estroy arose NUE THE SAME HIGH CLASS ENI EAU THEATRE PATRONS SHOWING TH PICTURES FROM RKO Radio Rainbow on the River Bobby Brorn Mae Rol Shall We Dcmce Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers Soldier and the Lady That Girl from Paris with Lily Pons New Faces of 1937 Also many more of the same ollibre as these, to follow. United Artists Garden of Allah Marlene Deitrich Goldwyn Follies Gone With the Wind A Star Is Born with Janet Gaynor, Frederic March and all of SAMUEL GOLDWYN’S future productions. Grand National Manhattan Merry Go Round A musical whirligig starring PHIL REGAN. Wagons Westward The Plainsmen of 1938. Hit Parade of 1938 More Names—Moré Laughs— More Entertainment. All Hands on Deck A Hudson River showboat run by a group of Park Avenue Belles. with ac e SOI This is voted by many to be the place amc ing comp live up t Iu Whe is also tars. ductions in chil- hey sur- them we of suit- zian and British inter- They proposed to send down local concerns may break down op- of Jap- ries de- their government per- Alaska | h the same ruthless ign invasion of Amer-| been voiced by con- | s| portant OF JUNEAU UNIVERSAL Columbia Columbia gives you the FRANK CAPRA productions of which “A Lost Horizon” is the next to be shown in Grace Moore in Our Short Featurettes Walt Disney’s Silly Mickey Mouse Cartoons MARCH OF TIME “The News Behind the News” RICH COSTUMES! PARADE ACROSS “LADIES INLOVE™ four Ji Con- As the rules of each of the famous feminine personalities, net Gaynor, Loretta Young, stance Bennett and Simone Simon are mathematically equal in “L: dies in Love,” Twentieth Century Fox picture currently at the Coli- um theatre, so too are the elab- orate gowns and up to the minute fashions they display in the film, | rrty-five thousand dollars worth of gowns, especially designed, will |be displayed in the picture. Each jactress will have on the average of ten complete changes | Although it jis expected the new |styles will be copied, S0 many lof Hollywood'd ‘styles are now, the {particular dresses worn by the stars |became their ‘own property upon completion of the picture as year operations avill include salmon {canning. There is an insidious phase of the situation. English halibut interes |have tried to effect combinations {with American and Canadian oper- lators in the hope that by making it to their finanecial advantage these position to foreign invasion. Simi- [larly, a representative of Japan's \lux;,m\l can making company visited {Seattle in an endeavor to bring ‘nx.m a merger of Japanese and American capital to finance Jap- anese operations on Alaska sal- {mon. Not oniy wowwu such foreign in- vasion bring ruin to thousands who have investmemts in cannery plants and equipment, but it would spell disaster to thousands of American and Canadian workers who cannot ‘l'nmpt‘l(' with Jow Oriental stand- |ards of living. Protect the Consumer There are two still broader as- pects. Fish have constituted an im- part of the diet of many nations. To none is the continu- ance of a supply more important than the fish eating people o[ Jupan |south.and was greeted at the dock itrip, Alaskan trip is her son, {CHICHAGOFF GOLD IIHlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllmllllfllllllllm —~COLISEUM — ——NOW SHOWING— ‘ cJ/‘\NET GAYNOR lADI Es onstance BENNETT Eorette ‘/OUNG‘ L OVE SIMONE SIMONJ ™" —PLUS—— POPEYE in "LITTLE SWEE’ PEA"” ATE FOX MOVIETONEWS—— IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII‘ [pects to return to Chichagot Wed- nesday SEETRNEEIIENEIINSITRNENERESRRNIIIINNNTNINNY TETT L LLLL] pLLTTTETETET T England and Norway It is surely more important to the millions of consumers that the world’s supply of fish be perpetuated than that a few nationals of these countries make a few years' financial profit. Still more important is it that the nations involved remain at peace. Siberian and Japanese fish- ermen have engaged in bloodshed which might well have precipitated war had either nation felt ready. It cannot be expected that Canad- jan or American fishermen will sit | quietly by and see their means of | livelihood destroyed before their very eyes by aliens who will be regarded as foreign invaders, e A. L. A. PRESIDENT IS TAKEN THROUGH MlLL { Headaches caused by constipation | are gone after one dose of Adlerika. WHILE HERE TODAY this cleans poisons out of BOTH |upper and lower bowels. Ends bad National Pres-|sleep, nervousness. Butler Mauro in Douglas by Guy's Drug —adv. - FORMER JUNEAUITE STOPS ENROUTE TO SKAGWAY VISIT Mrs. Dudley G. Allen of Portland, Ore., a former Juneauite, who is on her way to Skagway for a two-week stay with her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth McBrien, visited in Juneau Satur- day night A ps nger on the Aleutian, Mrs, Allen said this was her first visit to Alaska for the past 10 years. Dull Headaches Gone, Simple Remedy Does It Mrs. O. W. Hahn, ident of the American Legion Aux-[Drug Co., iliary, passed through Juneau on|Store. board the Yukon today enroute D IMPROVES EVERY "OLYMPIA" PROCESS * “Its the Water” A rare and special type of nnunl bmw- ing water, combined with skill and fine ingredients, has made certain European beers world famous for quality . . . Likewise, in America, our subterranean by a group of local Auxiliary mem- ber Mrs. Hahn, who was entertained by the Auxiliary during her brief stay in Juneau on the northbound was this morning taken through the Alaska Juneau mill while the Yukon was in port. Sev- eral of the local Auxiliary mem- bers gathered at the dock to bid her goodbye when the steamer sailed at noon. Accompanying her on the William, > MINE HEAD HERE FOR BRIEF STAY ,ing Company, arrived here last ev- ening from his company’s mine at ETERTAINMENT AND B RICK FOF - e Universal Three Smart Girls Deanna Durbin, Ray Milland best picture of the year. The Road Back with Richard Cromwell, John King has always held its ong the top flight produc- panies and will no doubt o expectations this year. Juneau. Take Romance and n Your’e In Love under the COLUMBIA banner. are headed by Symphonies and- his ALSO and the latest of News Reels wells at Tumwater have made Olympia Beer internationally recognized for flavor, clean taste, con- stant purity and re freshing goo Opmi "Ity the Water™ Making a brief call at Juneau on business, James L. Freeburn, Pres- ident of the Chichagof Gold Min- Chichagorf by Marine Airways plane and is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel. Mr. Freeburn reports all running ‘smoothly at his company'’s workings, with production at normal. He ex: A GASTINEAU HOTEL o THE CIVIC CENTER OF JUNEAU ° Travel Information Headquarters Call the Gastineau Hotel for detailed information regarding all scheduled and charter plane trips; ARRIVAL and DEPARTURE times; schedules for all Southeast Alaska airplanes and Juneau-Fairbanks flights. Also STEAMSHIP SCHEDULES and TIMES. Phone lfl For Information On All Plane Service and Steamship Moveinents LT T e The First National Bank TUNEAU CAPITAL—$50.000 SURPLUS—$100,000 ([ ] COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 485