The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 10, 1937, Page 8

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EUROPE METAL PRODUCTION UP, AMERICANS SAY Copper, Zinc and Lead Are Going Into ‘Legitimate Business, They State NEW YOORK, Sept. 10 Two minent metal men returned from d today spoke optimistically of copper, zinc and lead situation Europe Bc that the men reed not altc busin: Phillip: ment ident of copper 1 Cates Dodge Company imption is holdin in England operating duction Brownell ican Smelting that apparently lead and zinc itimate" busingss -e DR. WILSON URGES CHIROPODIST TO OPEN OFFICE HERE ting on the recommendation of B. Wilsen, who formerly prac- hiropody in Juneau, Sidney has opened offices here in Goldstein building. Mr. Steves, who arrived in Juneau on Tuesday, has been a practicing iropodist in Seattle until coming orth. His home has been in Se- ttle and he a graduate of the Washington 100l of Chiropody. Mr. Steves hopes to take over much of the patronage enjoyed here by Dr. Wilson and plans to make Juneau his headquarters perm n Through a second doctor, r. Steves learned from Dr. Wilson Juneau would likely be an ex- nt field for the establishing of practice, as with the departure Dr. Wilson, this city has been € without such service Dr. Wilson, Mr, Steves reports, is enjoying an especially fine practice n Phoenix, Arikona, where he went after having to leave Juneau cause his health - e F 1 up well nd Ge: at high rates hairman o Company output goi in into ves 1 i be- of Band Answers Bingham AIRLIT, Scotland—When Rob- right to put both of them on the staff knew ert W. Bingham, United States Am- ghelf if she didn’t like the finished | used it already sald 1N product bussador to Great Britain, = musical Director’s Daughter Takes Real Hard Way to Success By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Sept. Unreel parade yinia Grey old dressing room at Metro y As a child Virginia was given candy b but Wally didn’t remem- She was the daughter late comedy drector, neighbor to Wally Gloria Swanson was Missus She knew all the movie people then but when Virginia got a bit in “Old Hutch” with Beery he didn't remind him of their ac- quainta Thought it wonld coasting on dad’s fame Grey Virginia's moth- to work a cutter ughter got parts in pictures jonally, but had given it up Bill Grady, the ter, saw e danced in “The Great 1d,” later stood in for Madge ens and Florence Rice, but the d opposite George Murphy in a | miniature stepped up her career Now she has her first featured lead, in “Bad Guy.” Personal Service 10. Wallace Beery's 1a ber Ray Grey next-door of and when Berry died as en Zie E | N | The clamp-down on the studios has boomed home guide business The other you could count nine guide| a two-and-a-half mile long along Sunset Boulevard. . .| The boys in an office at Para-| mount were startled by the rever-| berations of pistol fire outside their | windows DeMille's ng| his guns personally” cracked one.| But funnier than that, each wea-| pon he fired—tested for sound— before it won a part in “The Buc- caneer.” [ | Personal impression. Adolph Zu-| kor is best liked by the rank and| Vfile of his employes, among all the | |studio big-wigs . Probably b cause he is unassuming as the least of them Famous Last Line Belated publicity item arrives her- | alding June Lang’s intention to| learn cooking (for husband Victor Orsatti) as soon as she finishes her | current picture Item is dated | a week or two before the Orsattis took it to court But maybe | that's one trouble with Hollywood marriages: they don’t last long enough for the bride to try her first 1biscuits. ) It can't be money that is keeping Katharine Cornell out of picture One of the offers she’s had and turned down was for a million dol- lars (for two pictures) and Kh-" visitors at the movie day cars in stretch cas { The producer who made peech here that Britons as a|this unparalleled bid was the late little about America the meeting struck Spangled Banner.” - knew nd Star The Union Jack, as applied to the flag of Great Britain, is a misnomer Jack” a diminutive, on the 50 that only a small flag is rightly termed a “jack.” is sea Bert’s Cash Grocery THERE IS A —Lowest Pric ciate your business and prices that compare with CANNING FRUIT arriving on Northwestern. FLOUR Fisher’'s Homelike—A Known Brand CRACKERS SODA—GRAHAM 2 lb.boxsoc 3 1b. tin 69c Pound 30‘ SHREDDED WHEAT 2 large pkgs. 33«: PINEAPPLE JUICE—Dole—Fancy 2 No. 2 tins ¢ up + Thalberg In picture, out line. i} . In Living,” a Paramoun Arthur has the fade- his is where we came “Artists and Models” a Paramount picture, Jack Hum‘,‘ has the last line Where We ame In." funny the first time and the second, Ji for the po REASON t but not least the lowest — Larg PRU Leave your order. Ef CRISCO SNOWDRIFT TOILET TISSUE 1000 Sheet rolls 25c CHEESE - Tillamook BUY THE BEST BUTTER EGGS FINEST QUALITY Priced Right SALAD DRESSING-Gold Coin FULL QUART FIVE FASTER DEL 10, 11 a. m., 2, 4, 5:15 p.m. CARROTS BEETS Fresh—Local 3 bu. 25c IVERIES Street est growing food shop. Finest Foods s—Fast Service—A welcome that makes you feel that we appre- PHONE 105 NOW! shipment of PEARS, PEACHES, | GRAPES, and pickling items Price and quality 211 Seward THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 10, 1937. o DELINQUENT - N.Y.RENTERS ‘Novel Method, But Suc- | cessful One, Used by Metropolitan Hotels By GEORGE TUCKER NEW YORK, Sept. 10.—One of the erils of being delinquent with the |rent in New York, if you live in a Bowery or a Times Square hotel, |1s that sooner or later you run head fon into the jigger. A jigger a sawed-off key so that one's own key will not fi This necessitates an (if you have any shame) | i |with the manager, and that is ex is actly what he wants. In this way he the a fighting |is brought face to face with |tardy payee and has |chance to collect a part of the ac |cumulated arrears, or at least o | extracting a promise to pay. | We know an actor who remained five days in his room without once leaving so fearful was he of being | i ihe industry is carrying on | jiggered out of the room. He didn’ {a ; |away from his belongings, so ARCHERY FAN |sat pat, staving off starvation with After a day of getting shot at the studio, Virginia Grey likes |federate sneaked in to him. to get out and do a little shoot- | Any ing of her own with bow and |alw arrows. [tor who visited the tra —__|into a bookmaker who Numeless Pla"es | A re yoit ank ot aag. subly he Credited to Nazis wquired significantly. “No, I don't,” said VIENNA, Sept. 10.—Austrian |candidly, “but I haven't |that T owe you some scratch. ficial circles are deeply stirred by reports that Germ has devel night I made a list of my creditors |in the order they are to be pakl‘I of- |and you are tenth. However, if you | will lend me another $10, I'll move | ou up to third.” oped an almost - noiseless milita 5 airplane Fif the T on the v : | They both still make furtive appear- can be heard, even when 12000 (33100 G0 Lot (BE) Hh DOt feet up, by persons on the ground, |’ o s il to anything save as a curio or a but ection apparatus, rushed ; DI " Ibright publicity stunt. from Vienna, could pick up only e Minetta Lane is a gnarled, nar- L A {row thread only a block in length. | It juts into the Village and is| you hadn't seen “Easy Liv- now a row of apartment houses for | owed hin | the Cut-Throats' Hideaway | such machines flew over| Minetta Lane and Minetta Brook Jl late in July, reportedly |2T€ synonymous with an older New . | Yor whicl psn” exist a y re. 2y f6r abipment. to. Spiin |ors Which doesn t exist any. Inote. C y too, if ing” already Imon dishes with cheese sauces sev- inserted in the lock embarrassing interview | selling are take a chance on being caught,, wjg, relates to the exchange |several cans of beans which a con- mention of financial lapses reminds us of the turf edi- s and ran Bookee forgotten Last salmon in their advertising and selling,” Wittig said Cheese and Salmon “America’s leading cheese manu- facturer has featured canned sal- this rtise- eral times. In return for {Canned Salmon Industry a I ments have mentioned cheese as ani ingredient for delicious salmon dishes. By this simple cooperation, recipes and magazine illustrations showing the use of canned salmon in attractive meals have been plac- ed before several hundred thousand more housewives than those reach- ed by our own advertising “The California lemon the lettuce growers of Arizona and California, flour millers, evapor- ated milk producers, a large baking powder concern, the country's larg- est distributor of mayonnaise, and many other manufacturers have pushed canned salmon sales | !through their national advertising | and through field work by th(‘il" organizations. We have in return given them recipe publicity in Canned Salmon Industry adver- tisements. This cooperation has cost the salmon packers nothing and has added a great deal to the ef- fectiveness of our efforts to in- crease the use of canned salmon.” Marketing Production Another phase of the cooperation growers, f ; according | with other advertisers, of marketing information and ex- I perience with other national adver- |tisers who are also carrying on commodity campaigns as dis- tinguished from advertising of brands. “By discussing such problems as the placing of store display mater- jal and the distribution of recipes | to housewives with other groups | which have similar problems we have been able to improve our ef- iency along these lines, and create a more friendly feeling toward can- ned salmon among other groups. A recent letter from the advertis- ing directors of Norwegian sardines | commended the salmon industry for | its great campaign, and said that | the sardine people felt it was also | helping them because while our! advertising is primarily influencing housewives to serve canned salmon more frequently, it is also greatly stimulating public interest in sea | oods generally. “We feel that by our cooperative ! attitude in our national advertising of canned salmon we have not only been helping others; we have also been receiving a great deal of help in return. In many cases this help h n | e | | . The strange thing|“artists” and students. At one end Artists and Model a patio where the Ital s eat | the other picture had spaghetti and talk of Joe DiMaggio. 3ut maybe that's| But in the older days it was al new Paramount |hideaway for a band of cut-throats | |whose misdeeds were so violent and | numerous that the older inhabi- tants still speak of them in alarm The worst of the mob was Old Blac - |Cat. Another was “Bloodthi ent enroliment is over 45,000, Guinea Johnson, a third, regarded | Harvard University has the larg-|murler as a routine chore. est endowment of any college or % university in the United States. It To Look at Only amounts to $129,000,000 As for Minetta Brook, that lovely, rippling stream with the Indian| (name, used to flow through the |lower part of the island and quench |the thirst of early Dutch inhabi- | tants. But today it is in almost total leclipse, bobbing up furtively as part of a fountain in the lobby of a hotel. Ben Collada is the latest to bring | |Minetta back. He has lurec its cry- stal waters up through a pipe into a pool in the foyer of his Spanish Inight club, El Chico. | | But, alas, Minetta Brook is no |longer good to drink. It is almost en- tirely filled with sand. D ADVERTISING * SALMON BETS —orves N FINERESULTS All Brands—Every Day [l Other Industries Cooperat- ing to Boost Sale of Alaska Product Cooperation of other advertisers |has stepped up effectiveness of |canned salmon advertising during |the last year and a half, A. W.| | Wittig, of International Packing | Company, and member of the in- |dustry advertising committee, de- |clared in Seattle recently in dis- | cussing activities of the industry’s | |advertising committee in promot- | ing the use of Alaska's canned salmon by United States’ | wives. “We have reached thousands more housewives with canned sals mon advertising by arranging with | producers of other food items to |include their products in our sal-| |mon recipes or in our ‘balanced | !meal menus’ which we feature in | ur advertising, in return for which | “they give prominence to canned | | is that the is going to be the slogan . . . - Phi Delta Theta fraternity largest membership of any ional men’s fraternity. TIts ha na pre; | the pularity of Juneau’s Fast- will be right. KITCHEN TOWELS 2 large rolls 29° house- | ROYAL GELATINE All Flavors 4 for 25c 39¢ PHONE 105 301 Goldstein Bldg. My aim is to se: Evenings by has been of a sort which we could not buy, but which has been freely given us because we have ‘played ball’ with the other fellow,” Wit~ tig concluded. | it “KILLED” BY KINDNESS DURBAN, Sept. 7. Aberdeen football team, touring South Africa, has a grievance. Paddy Travers, manager, says the hospitality is too good and the players are feted ev- erywhere they go. .- — When a Connecticut power com- pany needed a reservoir it dammed up a valley, creating Candlewood lake. The lake is only 17 miles long but its shoreline measures 97 miles. - “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson. Wise Woman! A cup of Schilling to soften the blow. That flavor would melt the heart of a miser. It's Wings of the Morning! Schilling (Coffee One for Percolator—another | one for Drip or Glass Maker, | | Keep Your Feet Off Your Mind SIDNEY E. STEVES—Chiropodist Juneau, Alaska ve and render relief to those having painful feet caused by corns, bunions, callouses, ingrowing toenails, club nails, warts and fungus skin diseases of the feet. When your feet hurt, you hurt all over. troubles, I will ease your feet and thus ease your mind. FREE EXAMINATION Hours: 9:00 am. to 6 p.m. daily—Sunday 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Tell me your foot Appointment SECOND NIGHT OF LOCAL FAIR COES OVERBIG Visitors Amaz:d at Exhibits ~Applaud Splendid Entertainment (Continued 1ivi Page One) special entertainment by the pro- fessional performers, Yesterday the Health Department i at the play, Bernice Butler di presented a Fair Grounds He Made ’Em Weep ‘- ELYRIA, Ohio, Sept. 10.—Police |Chief E. J. Stankard, cleaning up | his office in a mild way, found an |empty tear gas bomb which, to his | knowledge, had been on hand for |11 years. Casually he tossed it out a window into a parking lot. The “empty” bomb exploded and sent a cloud of he?uzi:g:tr:mG?:vdanz?nqiglei l:)); ‘a_crid gas drifting back into the pygaria of 'a e disvcovered by 9By S |a Bulgarian herbalist. She had clin- VIENm s ies opened in Rome, Milan wnd Tu- SUPER SPECIAL ITALY'S QUEEN HELPS GERMANS KASSEL, Germany, Sept. 10.—To the initiative of Queen Elena of Italy, Germanp owes its first hos- |pital for special treatment of in- |flammation of the brain (encephal- | |itis) recently opened here. A visit to her elder daughter Ma- falda, who lives here as the wife of the provincial governor, Prince Phil- lip of Hesse, resulted in two German experts being sent to Italy to study the remedy. The new clinic, named for Elena, is to get medicinal sup- plies free from Italy until Ger- many can produce them. Gnerfilgrwndé Sglyml of Art KRONENBURG, (Eifel), Ger- many, Sept, 10.—Hitler's prime min- ister, General Hermann Goering, has founded a school of painting here “to express the German char- acter in art.” Professor Werner Peiner of the Prussian Academy jof Arts has been named director. According to the statutes drawn up by Goering himself, ability de- cides who may teach and who may learn. The goal may be consid- ered reached when masters and students have “laid the foundations for a present-day German school of painting closely knit with a great rected this show. In the cast were Mrs. E. F. Clements, Mrs. Jack Metzgar, Don Johnson and Ned Zen- STURM TRuuPS ger. VIENNA, Sept. 10.—A headache- proof private army, whose members | are experts in ju-jutsu and politics, is being formed by Chancellor | Schuschnigg’s administration. It is called the Sturmkorps, or SK. The troopers wear midnight- blue uniforms with black shirts. In name, purpose, and training they remind one of Reichsfuehrer | Hitler's elite guards, the S.S. | “Der Beamte,” a weekly that cir- culates among government officials, | lets it be understood that the new | organization is something super fextra special in manly courage, | camaraderie, intelligence, fighting |spirit, physique, and ten-odd other +virtues. The S.K. made its first appear- ance July 24 during exercises in, memory of the late Chancellor En- Harry Krane and his orchestra Slebert Dollfuss. The men made a furnish the music for the dancing 800d impression among mose Vi- and also plays for the entertainers.)éhnese — many of them are six Picneer Exhibit Outstanding among exhibits at the Fair is a log cabin model of the first Protestant Church for white people in Juneau, which is the central fig- ure in the Pioneers’ booth. The cabin model was made by members of the United States For- estry Service and is the exact repli- ca of the old church, which was built about 1889. The Rev. 8. H. King was pastor at the time the log cabin was first built and was in Juneau as a tour- ist for the laying of the cornerstone of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church. The log cabin church stood where the Juneau Hotel now is lo- cated. The pioneers, wishing to Kkeep alive their old traditions, have gath- ered many fine old paintings and relics of the old days of Alaska. Dance Music . — Soaring Hopes Soar WARSAW-—Poland's long dream —a flight to the stratosphere in a Polish balloon—may soon becom: | true. Specifications have been ready that the very special task of guard- available. The Polish league for ail defense has started a drive for is to be awakened in these Sturm- | {money so that construction of the korps members — and not mere mer Joe Bryan twirls a radio dial balloon can be started soon. e Models of the liner Queen Mary thousand traveled more than a miles in the experimental before the final designs of the hug ship were determined. PEACHES PEARS PRUNES That we will meet ANYBODY'S CASH PRICES! “The Pure Foods Store” FREE since 1935, but money has not been tank books, he often included disparag- past and passing on a valuable tra- dition to the coming generation. The school is called the “Her- mann Goering Conservatory of Painting.” footers, slender, and physically fit; their uniforms are natty and their boots squeak with the authorita- tive sound the Viennese seem to like. Said “Der Beamte”: “The iron e determination of men who realize Radio Program Is ing the flag of the Fatherland| Popular in Barnyard r Front has been entrusted to them PORTLAND, Ind., Sept. 10.—Far- pugnaciousness, which picks a fight jand gets more milk. for the sake of fighting. | Bryan has a radio in his barn for R 1hi.q livestock. He says when it is When Edgar Allen Poe reviewed turned on the cows give more milk, |the horses are gentler, and all the uulhors'i\mimnls crowd into the barn to Ilisten, e ing remarks about characte the You can save money by taking advantage of the buys we’re offering! Top quality foods at low prices. ‘ VEGETABLES From Our Own Farm BEETS— 3 bunches 25c CARROTS— 3 bunches 25c TURNIPS— 3 bunches ZSC SWISS CHARD— 3 bunches 25c CABBAGE— Pound 5c RADISHES— 3 bunches 25c White or Red WE HAVE EVERYTHING From Soup to Nuts GIVE US A TRIAL! FRESH CHOICE MEAT FRESH KILLED CHICKENS From Our Own Farm. FRESH LOCAL DAILY California Grocery DELIVERIES PHONE 478 THE CALIFORNIA LIQUOR STORE — The Finest Imported and Domestic Liquor at Prices You Can Afford to Pay. PHONE 478

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