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MIDNIGHT PREVIEW Tonight—1:15 A.M. THEATRE A MATINEE SUNDAY 2:00 P.M. Show Place of Juncau SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY A BOMBSHELL OF ACTION " AFIGHTING, RAGING, ROARING CAGNEY AT HIS SCRAPPIEST EDWARD L. ALPERSON presents { ) § \ 3 \ \ \ y In His Greatss? . Picture ; COMETHING . Y10 SING ABOLT Great Song Hits by VICTOR SCHERTZINGER Introduced by Lovely EVELYN DAW William FRAWLEY A VICTOR SCHERTZINGER Production Produced by ZION MYERS Mfi‘“ SHORTS Hawaiian Holiday— (Mickey in Color) Mouse Rocky Mountain Grandeur Golf Magic—Pathe Parade News of the Day—“It’s Timely Gk L DST TIMES TONIGHT ... “WOMEN { Starting New—“JUNGLE JIM” } BUCK JONES MEN ! The Great Newspaper 5 in MARRY” { and Radio Serial ! “LEFT HANDED LAW” 1 T E———— S ———————————r—— ————— pineapples, apples, pears — deli- There’s Fruit Everywhere el el e o) walnut. Very new and clever is the apple-shaped piece with a glass b and metal lid with a cl of leaves. And apples aren’t all—every kind of fruit has become popular in just about every kind of form, whether it is china, glass or linen. Whether the fruits are natural or convention- arming sprig On Newest Dining Tables alized, all are gay and colorful. This spring brings heavy linen table cloths printed in fruit pat- terns., They look as if the designer just threw all kinds of luscious fruits on the cloth and worked out the design wherever they fell—and the result is even more exciting than an orchard. ing, too, in many styles of china, earthenware and glass. They come eight or twelve to the set and each one has a different fruit on it. They are already popular and will be more so. RSt YA Sl LADIES’ AUXILIARY HOLDS CARD PARTY Members of the Juneau Ladxu Auxiliary held a public card party| last evening at the Union Hall. Close to sixty persons were present at the affair and whist and pinochle were played. Prizes were won the following: Whist, Mrs. Ludwig Thorsen, Bernt | Mork; Consolation, Mrs. W. Pege, | Mento Peterson; pinochle, Mrs. F | R. Bates, Dave Carlson; consolation, | | Mrs. Erick Anderson, and I. Diboff. | ORCHARD ORNAMENT Cloth, napkins and plates all have been brightened this season by de- \ signers who have gone back to nature. | the latter part of the evening. Mem- e ' bers of the committee in charge of red and rosy and they're very prac-|the affair include Mrs. Gus Schmitz, tical baking dishes. In these dishes,| Mrs. Jack Schmitz, Mrs. G. Battello, the apples are not only baked in|Mrs. Ernest Davis, and Mrs. Ernest| the oven but are brought to the Stender. table. | The next meeting of the Auxiliar useful and decorative. For the very modern table, there will be Friday, June 3, at 8 o'clock, The new apples are cheerfully)are all kinds of Irult—ehpccmlly and will be held at the Union Halil. sz | C.C. Carnegw By MARY DAVIS GILLIES Prepared by McCall’s Magazine for The Empire The hig apple isn’t just a dance. 1v’s the latest in tableware, both NOTICE TO CREDITORS er’s (Ex-officio Probate) Court for | | the Territory of Alaska, Junmw Commissigner’s Precinet. In the Matter of the Estate of | WILLIAM H. DICKINSON, De- ceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, 21st day of April, ‘polnted Executor of the Estate of | WILLIAM H. DICKINSON, De- |ceased, and that letters testament- ary therefore on said day were duly | issued to the undersigned. All persons having claims against said estate are hereby required to ‘present the same, with proper | vouchers, and duly verified, within |six (6) months from the date of ’Lbls Notice to undersigned Executor AS A PAID-UP SUBSCRIBER TO The Daily Alaska Empire is invited teo ipresent this coupon, at the box office of jat The B. M. Behrends Bank in| *“~CAPITOL THEATRE |5 b AND RECEIVE TWO 'l‘lCKE‘l'! TO SEE | Dated at Juneau, Alaska, ‘Women Men Marry’'—Left Handed Law’ (M ot Moy, s GUY McNAUGHTON, Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE Executor. .| Last publication, June 4, 1938. First publication, May 14, 1938. L] this The new fruit plates are interest- | Refreshments were served during In the United States Commission- | * that the undersigned was, on the| 1938, duly ap-| SOMETHING T0 SING ABOUT' AT CAPITOL NEXT |Cagney Seen in , New Type of Role — Evelyn Daw Stars Opposite Player The most dl;\l;lmn& feature pic- | ture produced to date by Grand | National Films, Inc., the youngest |of the great motion picture com- panies, which, since its inception little more than a year ago ha | scored numerous screen succes:es |is the Victor Schert comedy | with mu: Sometk to Sing About,” starring James Cagney eatur n Daw, which s | coming Sunday to the Capital Thea- tre | The star's versatility is displayed in the intricate dance routines. which he goes through orchestra leader and enterfa back to his vaudeville A!l.' on the New York stage, when he was one of Broadway foremost song and dance men. He also sings 50NE number, which will be a surprise to his many fan Cpposite the fast-stepping-Cag- ney. is Miss Evelyn Daw, who play the part of the featurcd singer witiy the star's swing band “Something, to Sing About” wa produced by Zion Myers for Grand National under Victor Schertzing- er's direction, who also wrote original story, music and lyrics, from a screenplay by Austin Par ker. A supporting cast of Broad and Hollywood headliners- includ Jimmy Newill, Harland Dixon Harry Barris, Candy Candido, Cully Richards, Mona Barrie, Gene Lock- hart, B “arey, William Frawley. William Davidson and Philip Ahn Seen for the last times tonight will be “The Women Men Marry," : ring George Murphy and Jose- phine Hutchinson; and a second feature, “Left Handed Law,” with Buck Jones as the star player. Also for tonight is the serial “Jungle Jim.” e DOUCLAS | NEWS BACCALAUREATE Tomorrow is Baccalaur Sun- day for the 1937-8 graduating clas: etof the Douglas High School. At 2 o'clock in the afternoon Dean C E. Rice will deliver an appropriate sermon for the occasion to the mem- bers of the class, members of their families and their friends. - PLANS TRIP To Spend the summer at least in Seattle and perhaps remain below Miss Agnes Baroumes has booked passage on the North Sea for sail- ing on June 3, to be with her mother and sisters who now live in the Pu-~ get Sound metropoli BN M KIRKHAM ILL Due to a recent set-back in her recovery to good health, Mrs. J. O. Kirkham will probably not be able to return home for another week. Since early this month Mrs. Kirk- ham has been resting quietly at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Robert Rice, after spending a few days in St. Ann’s Huspnml | S(,IIO()L ACC l:PTAN(‘ o MAY BE UP MONDAY COUNCIL MEETING The regular meeting of the City Council will be held Monday night and providing equipment still short arrives in time, formal acceptance of the new school will constitute an | important issue or r.hc session. JACK ROEHM LEAVING | FOR KETCHIKAN AREA Territorial Bureau of Mines Field Engineer Jack Roehm, is to leave | for Ketchikan on the Alaska to- morrow night or Monday morning | to conduct routine mining investig- hmons in that area. | Roehm will inspect properties and | gather field notes, as well as give technical aid to miners in the field. the @ REPRODUCTION OF DIRIGIBLE CRASH SHOWN “The Go Getter,” Co-star- ring Anita Louise, Geo Brent, at Coliseum Movie go today to the openinz of the Cosmopolitan comedy-dr: 1e Go Getter,” which’ oper e Coliseum Thea- tre Sunda W d by critic: to be prep v a shock right at the begir of the picture The epi it introduces the st Geo is a repro- duction «¢ ic crash of the U. 8. Macon into the Pacific ( few year: 0. Brent mber of the crew a she goes down. He eseapes with his lide [ 08¢ a leg and therefor ) quit the Navy and get a ) in eivil life. In this m he meets up with Peter B. K famous old fiction character, Cappy Ricks, played by Charles Winninger, whom everyone remembx w the Cap'n Andy of “Show Boa both on the stage and ihe . Brent also meets Cappy's daugh- ter Margarct, who is played by the ethereal I tar Anita Louise. The m« lea with the variou: lests throu which old Cappy puts nt, before iving his conse: to a courtship—and how Brent suc-| cessfully eme from them Busby Berkeley directed “The Go ;| Getter” from a screen play devise :!by Delmer Daves from Peter B. Kyne's celebrated novel. Besides the three star the cast includes such excellent layer Henry O'Neill, John Eldred Joseph Crehan, Hel- en Lowe Helen Valkis and Mary Treen A double feature, playing for the last tim tonight includes: “The Lady Escapes” co-starring Gloria| Stuart and Michael Whalen; and “The Califorr " with Ricardo Cortez cast in the title role. L —ee 3 + | Dougias Shureh i i | Semices | | S W i) i Notices tor m church column must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Saturday morning to guarantee change of sermon topics, ete. ST. LUKE’'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Thefe will be no Sunday School tomorrow, as the baccalaureate ser- vice will be held in the church at 2 pm. At that service Mr. Howard Burger will play a violin solo for the prelude, and Mrs. Glen Kirk- ham will sing a selection for the offertory Public cordially invited to all services. DOUGLAS CATHOLIC CHURCH St. Aloysius Church No services. tomorrow. ALASKA EVANGELIZATION SOCIETY 10:00 a.m.—Sunday school in the H. D. Schlegel residence 11:00 a.m.—Sunday service, place. Subject, “A Mixed Life.” same 7:45 p.m.—Bible study, with col- ored charts, DOUGLAS PRESBYTERIAN MISSION DAVID WAGGONER, Minister Sunday services: 1:30 p.m.—Bible Schoor. 2:30 p.m.—Preaching service. All are welcome in these services g WINDOW BREAKER GETS FIVE MONTHS Mike Lyons, elderly man who was arrested May 10 by city police when he allegedly threw a piece of pipe through a window of the Miners Recreation Parlor, was given a five months sentence in the Federal Jail | today, for disturbing the peace. . DANCE SATURDAY NIGHT With American Legion Auxiliary, | Elks Hall, Wesley Barrett’s Orches- adv. | tra. Door prize. ment in the sparkling comedy with [ Scene On Local Sereen | ‘ James Cagney and Evelyn Daw are having a serious romantic mo- music, “Something to Sing About.” Miss Daw is featured in the feminine lead, li.swe whose very name was for- ’lH‘h DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, MAY 21, 1938. PREVIEW 1:15 SUNDAY'S TONIGHT A. M. THE GO GETTER FOLLOW GET GIRL TURES IN THEIR You‘ll see more excitement in 2 minute than most people see in i in " “THE LADY ESCAPES” State Medicine May Make Great Noise, June Meet «(,nnl.lnued from Page One) | Tocsin from Within Then six months ago the storm blew up from a new quarter, within the ranks of medicine. It was a letter signed Ly 430 phy- sicians—“the committee of 430" favoring making the health of the people “the direct concern of gov- ernment.” The stunning thing about this letter was that it was first printed in newspapers, the “lay” p , in- stead of in medical journals, as medical ethics would require. The “430” were organized by 2 dozen prominent phys ns who had been actively inte; ed in a study of medical needs made by the American Foundation under di- tion of Esther Lape. This same tudy had been one basis for the New York state resolutions six months before. At that time there | were reports in medical circles that | President Roosevelt was much in- | terested in the Lape report. The “430” charged that the Am- erican Medical Association was re- fusing their side a fair hearing in its Journal. On March 9 the Journal announced that there would be more discussion in its columns of the problems of medical care. This was hailed as ending a medical “revolt.” ! Committee Sifts Data | But even before the March truce the American Medical Association had definitely decided to go into the whole problem in a new way, and on its own responsibility. Its| Board of Trustees announced ap-| pointment of a commisttee to get. a | national, but strictly medical, in-| vestigation of medical care, costs, and how to meet the bills. This action was taken aftey thcl American Public Health Asocmtlon had requested the AMA to do some- | thing of the sort. | For these reasons the American | Medical Association -comes .to San. Francisco committed to study the AROUND Hold tight! Here comes that self-starting, non-stopping dynamite—The Go Getter-... in the fastest-moving, most breath-taking comedy that’s ever shot across the screen! GEORGE BRENT - ANITA LOUISE 'THE GO GETTER CHARLES WINNINGER JOHN ELDREDGE - HENRY O'NEILL - Joseph Crehan Gordon Oliver + Eddie Acuff + Directed by Busby Berkeley+A COSMOPOLITAN PRODUCTION Presented by Warner Bros. ——LAST TIMES TONIGHT —— Gloria Stuart, Michael Whalen Juneau’s Greatest Show Value SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY THE BIG NIGHT! AND HIS HARD-TO- AP ADVEN- WHIRL! MATH THE a Lifetime! “THE CALIFORNIAN" with RICARDO CORTEZ 1t is certain | merly almost taboo. there will be no “rushed” legisla- | HoSPITAL NOTES | tion at San Francisco, for the AMA ' ¢ & is about the most conservative “pri- vate” democracy left in this world. Its legislative body, the house George Matten was dismissed from of delegates, resembling Congress, gt. Ann’s Hospital this afternoon. is elected by states and counties by more than 100,000 physicians Mrs. L. Minkler and baby daugh- who are members of the American ter were dismissed from St. Ann's Medical Association, and who rep- | Hospital today. resent nearly all the doctors in the United States. Traditionally this Dora and Mina Klammott were “house” acts only after the medical | dismissed from the Government democracy has made up its mind. | Hospital today. KELVINATOR SALE CONTINUES Buy your refrigerator NOW and enjoy it ALL Summer. A small down pay- ment puts one in your home. Balance on terms as low as $5.00 per month. Rice & Ahlers Co.—~Phone 34 HAVE YOU INSURED YOUR CAR with the Comprehensive “All Risks” Automobile Policy? ‘This unique policy protects you against loss of or damage to your car from practically ANY cause, including fire and theft. It can be secured with or without collision coverage. It provides much more protection, yet costs only a trifle more than fire and theft insurance alone. SHATTUCK AGENCY PHONE 249 Office—New York Life © B, G o A