The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 28, 1937, Page 3

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SHE WA THE NIGHT AND INTO HIS ARMS! vee.il @ Mix- up that nearly meant jail! UNWELCOME! THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 28, 1937 THE SHOW .PLACE OF JUNEA STARTS TONIGHT S"VERY . ™ CHESTER MORRIS FAY WRAY A Columbia Pictur: STATE DEPT. IS ALIVE TO ALASKA FISH CONDITIONS Industry Not to Be' Sacri~, ficed to Foreign Inter- ests, Official Assures (Continued from Page One) tion through to a complete solution. Official Well Qualified State Department represen- is pe jarly with Japane: conditions, having cpent some 15 years in Japan and the Orient in an official capacity He speaks several of the numerous Jupanese and Chinese dialects and The tative conversant of their thirty bucks for wages. At the end of the period the money | will be given to them in a lump | sum. ! | The CCC boys are provided with | everything—eats, clothing and all| necessities—and it is said the $10 for spending money will be suf- ficient although many will save perhaps over half of the $10. - D PASADENA PHYSICIAN Dr. Walter P. Bliss, phy Pasadena, Cal, his wife daughter Margaret, ted in Ju-| | neau Tuesday night w the Aleu- | on which they are roundtrip , was in port. | - FARRARS VISIT and Mrs. E. V. Farrar of amento, Cal,, visited in Juneau' Tuesday night. They are round- | trip passengers aboard the Aleu-| tian. | | pas a broad background of exper-': jence in international affairs. He was recalled from England for as- signment to his present mission rel- ative to the Alaska fish This morning he was in confer- cnce with Gov: John W. Troy and expects to leave for the south on one of the next boats. £ee BOYS T0 *. GET NEST EGG Will Be Required to Deposit : $20 of $30 They Re- ceive Each Month £ WASHINGTON, July 28. — CCC u boys who are without dependents, will have a nest egg of $130 at the end of their 6'4 months service. Under a new policy, effective on August 1, the CCC boys, without dependents, will be required to de- posit twenty dollars a month out JUNEAU SPORTS FISHING CLUB Annual Salmon DERBY Finals, 1937 SUNDAY. AUG. 22 Off Shelter Island Open to club members only. Membership $2.00. Entrance fee for derby, $1.00. Transportation for those without facilities $1.00 additional. ANNUAL BOOK is now on sale with all particulars. 1-save on PRICE! 2-save on CURRENT! 3-saye on UPKEEP! SEEEREENREED ® Now you can buy “firstchoice” in refrig- erators and save three ways—on purchase price, on operating cost and on upkeep. Automatic Thrift Unit sealed-in-steel in all models. BesaE "REFRIGERATORS Judge refrigerator values any way you choose—and you'll find the new G-E Triple- Thrift Refrigerator is thebiggestbuyof1937. SOLD ON CONVENIENT TERMS Alaska Electric Light and Power Company PHONES Juneau—6 COLISEUM HAS BAFFLING NEW MYSTERY FILM Ricardo Cortez, June Travis| Have Leads in First | National Feature THEY MEET IN [Liquor Condemned A TAXI, THEN |ByW.C.T.U Head THINGS HAPPEN At Juniau Rally —_ [ Comedy-Drama of Pseudo-| Mrs. Weiss-Smith Address- Heiress Opens Tonight | es Audience on Alco- at Capitol Theatre hol Temptations cox.l"sfiuu ' NOW SHOWING They Met In a 'l Standards of the Woman'’s Chris- comedy-drama of a pseudo-heiress | tian Temperance Union were voiced who turns to a New York taxi driv-! Rl 4 ; AriV- 4y the organization's highest lead= er for help when police accuse her! of tre theft of a pearl mecklace is|€F 1ast night when Mrs. Ida B. traction that will grace the| Weiss-Smith addressed an enthus-| screen of the Capitol Theatre start-|iastic group of Gastineau Channel ing tonight | residents, opening her discussion Chester Morris and Fay Wray|with a promise to send a temper= enact the featured roles in “They|ance worker to Alaska if active Met In a Ta with such outstand- | interest in the anti-liquor cam< ing players as Lionel Stander, Ray- paign is maintained mond Walborn, Henry Mollison and| Elected President of the W. C. Ward Bond in support T. U. just at the time of repeal, Based on a Saturday Evening Post|four years ago, Mrs. Weiss-Smith story by Octavus Roy Cohen, “They | arrived in Alaska on her firs Met In a Taxi” was directed by Al-|cation yesterday, sailing north fol-,Wealth and Southern 3, General from the screen play|lowing attendance at two.major | Motors 54!, International Harves- rd J. Green. women’s convention. As President|ter 113%:, Kennecott 60%, New York The story revolves dbout the plight|of the W. C. T. U., she was hostess | Centr . Southern Pacific 47%, | of charming Mary Trenton (Fay|to thousands of women at the Tem-|URited States Steel 114%, OCities Wray), a dress model who is ac-(perance Union convention during|Service 3%, Pound $4.97%, Repub- cused of stealing a pearl nec e!the first two weeks in June, and“m s“',"l 7%, .p"m Oil (20, Hally from an heiress bride while model-|left shortly after for the Pan-|Susar 32!, United States Treasury ing the wedding dress in the wealthy | Pacific Women's Conference which |Ponds %41, Awhison General girl's apartment. Fearful of police, |ended last Saturday evening. oo L1 y escapes from the apartment | Repeal Backward Step and seeks refuge in a taxi driven by| Speaking last night at the Sev- Jimmy Doolin, played by Chester! enth-day Adventist Hall, Mrs. Weiss- | Morris. | Smith emphasized that although | |repeal of prohibition was a back- ATTENTION MASONS ‘ward step, the goal is still ahead. There will be a Joint Called Com- | “We cannot,” she stated, ‘“repeal munication of Mt. Juneau Lodge No.|the nature and affect of alcohol. 147 and Gastineau Lodge No. 124 in| When youth is educated to its| ARE PARENTS OF the Masonic Temple at Juneau Fri- | manifold dangers, the battle is half 71,-POUND BOY day evening at 7:30 for the purpose | won.” of receiving a visitation from the Mrs. Weiss-Smith, in quoting the" Mrs. Chet McLean, daughter of Grand Master. Details later. B_v: familiar line, “A rose by any other R. A. Rutherford, of this city, gave order of the Worshipful Masters. [name would smell as sweet,” re- birth to a 7'¢-pound boy in a Se-| J. W. LEIVERS and SAM DEVON, | ferred back to earlier days for a attle hospital on July 25, it was adv. Secretaries. comparison of the out-dated saloon learned tods Mr. McLean, who iy o o to the cocktzil bars and taverns formerly was a pilot for the Marine Try an Empire ad. _|of today. “They are the same,” she Airways, was at the bedside of his LA d. “Call them what you will” wife. Mother and son are reported " Columbia’s | | the . STOCK QUOTA L NEW YORK, July 28. quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock today is 11%, American Can 108, American Light and Power 11%, Anaconda 56%, Bethlehem Steel 93';, Calumet 14%, Common- — Closing —ALSO— Selected Shorts 1 News land for a visit of several weeks with their son, Ken Junge, of the Juneau Police Department, and his family, at Auk Bay. HOSPITAL NOTES Mrs. J. V. Hickey, wife of the owner of the Yellow Cab Company, underwent a major operation at St. Ann's Hospital today. She is reported to be in a favorable con- dition | TUBERCULOSIS ASSN. | 'ELECTS E. M. POLLEY ORGANIZATION HEAD E. M. Polley was elected president |of the Alaska Tuberculosis Associa~ tion at a meeting of the organizas tion held last night. Mr. Polley succeeds Dr. Van Ack< eren as head of the Association, the latter having tendered his resigna- | tion prior to departure for the south |next month. | An important meeting of the As- sociation is to be held on August 2, when Mrs. Saidie Orr Dunbar, Sloe) cost no more than ordinary JUNGES VISIT HERE executive secretary of the Oregon gins! —adv.| C. H. Junge and wife, of Ever-|Tuberculosis Association, will be * ett, Wash.,, arrived on the North-'present, it was anhouneed -today. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today’s Dow, Jones averages: industrials 182,57, | rails 5352, utilities 20.93. CHET M'LEANS R Kenneth Lawrence of Petersburg, who arrived in Juneau aboard the Aleutian last night was admitted ! to St. Ann's Hospital for treatment |of a shoulder injury received when he fell aboard ship. - sent by the United States to con-| ‘Mrs Weiss-Smith described the |“loss of face” which America upon voting for repeal. “They can- not understand, and justly so, why against repeal of prohibition. The ;apmh\ of the non-voter is as much | of the vote.” Mrs. Weiss-Smith was presented Wade, organizer of the W. C. T. U.¢ {in Juneau. Singing of several songs | which Mrs. Weiss-Smith was taken| One of the most baffling of all by Pastor H. L. Wood to the Prin-|the Erie Stanley Gardner murder her trip to Skagway. | Black Cat,” has been . picturized - by First National, and comes to the | leardo Cortez and June Travis in ATIONS ;h(hr leading roles [the plot of this highly involved, drama is that while detectives are of one man, the “dead” person him- | lother slaying is perpetrated by a, couple to cover up what they believe first man. The crimes are all the outgrowth of an eccentric millionaire while he |+ is still alive, and later the disap-| | o of securities and diamonds. RN T R Juneau Lumber Mills, to is re- Mike Salo, a medical patient, was covering from a broken wrist at!dismissed yesterday from St. Ann's [dive from a lumber pile to a scow| at the company’s docks Sunday Mr. Rutherford was aiding in the loading of the vessel. He fell six ventions both here and abroad, | underwent in foreign countries Christians did not rise in protest |to be condemned as the outcome |to her audience by the Rev. C also marked the rally, following | cess Charlotte where she continued |mystery dramas, “The Case of the ___4|Coliseum Theatre tonight, with Ri- i One of the unusual features of |trying to solve the supposed murder ' |self commits a murder, and still an- to be their crime in “killing” the of a family quarrel, over the estate| pearance of a million dollars’ worth| BREAKS WRIST IN R. A. Rutherford, owner of the his home following an unscheduled | Hospital. morning. feet FLEISCHMANN'S GINS (Dry or | A world traveler who has been | — TRYIT! Priced with the Lowest Copyright SILVER DOLLAR BOURBON I s These are the finest General Electric refrigerators ever built—the value sen- sation of the yearand America is buying one-a-minutel RETETNNNEREEREEREEINRETEE L EEBIETETNSERTNEREE: . « . 50 spoke the dying Hamlet to Laertes. These words sum up the ardent desire of every man to be fully and accurately represented before his fellow men. To report every cause aright is the task of The Associated Press. Its trained staff of 80,000 patrols the corridors of the world to get the news —to get it accurately and report it impartially, with all possible speed. It performs this task daily with marked success through the coopera- tion of its 1360 member newspapers.’ EENRERRRNTENEERRRNRANENSNRTNESHNECEILINNE, EERERER The Associated Press Reports the News of the World DAILY FOR THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS REREZERENEHERENGRNNINRRAAAN Douglas—18 S rEsEERin # ]

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