The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 16, 1938, Page 3

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L] i —_ [ R o e A S ANNAPOLIS FILM SHOWN LAST TIMES TONIGHT Navy Life Is Depicted in | Picture Now Showing | at Capitol THEATRE The Show Place of Juneau Last Times Tonight s A flag-flyin story of a plebe who fell With Harry Carey, James Ellison and Marsha Hunt heading the “Annapolis Salute” will be showr | for the last times tonight at the | capitol Theatre The plot of the show is | around two na one a son of a petty Navy. the other the scion of a wealthy family who has promised to stay in the Navy long enough to have the other dismissed have fallen in love with Marsha Hunt who has come to visit her brother during June Week centered cadets, office r in the who Many complications occur when - the two Navy men try to win Marsha UIHES ELLISON iHm.( the girl, but they ultimately MARSHA 1] |ing iendship, while the girl HARRY CAREY B/ ) omices to wait until after gradua- VAN HEFLIN |tion to consummate her romance Directed by Christy B| with the son of the y officer. | oy sk Dirccted by Christy Cabanne, the cast includes Harry Carey, James F \. Van Heflin, Arthur Lake, | Kick Hogan, Ann Hovey and Mari- lyn Vernon. : Our Short Subjects MIDNIGHT PREVIEW o LEAGUE OF FRIGHTENED MEN | Delegates from — — | States to Visit | VANDER MEER ' Local Assembly Rainbow Girls' assemblies in the | States plan to leave Seattle July 1 3 | leadership of Miss Barbara Pher ning, Grand Worthy Adviser for the state of Washington Fifteen girls, from the group of | erand officers, will stop off in Ju- 1 and exemplify parts of the alistic work of the order, whi Enters Hall of Fame in Na- tional l,vague Account Two Straight Feats | the other part of the tour will pro- o ceed to Skagway. Delegates from (By, Asoctated Eoem) the assemblies in Fairbanks, An- Johnny Vander Meer moved into! chorage, and Cordova will come to baseball’s Hall of Fame last Satur- | Juneau for the occasion. day and now he owns it Saturday evening a meeting of I'he Cineinnati Red's 23-year-old | the Rainbow Girls will be held at thpaw fastballer, in the first full | the Scottish Rite Temple, at 7:30| o'clock. This will be the last meet- ing of the local assembly before the year in tk leagues, reached a all time pitching high in the Brooklyn . by pitching his sec-| arrival of the grand officers, and ond no-hit e me in a row. | final arrangements for their visit Vander Meer, are to be formulated. All membe: the ton Bees,| of the ord urged to be pre: ing Nation-| eni for this meeting to lend ideas ince Daffy| for entertaining the visitors. A in 1934. Yes-| sccial and informal dance will fol-| low the business meeting - - - TEA IS GIVEN A | GOVERNOR’S HOUSE FOR BISHOP ROWE Bishop P. T. Rowe was honor | guest at a small tea at the Gover- nor's House yesterday afternoon. Mrs. E. Rice presided at the tea table and Mrs. Helen Cass, Mrs. W. W. Council and Mrs. Esther Metzgar served. Joining the party were Mr. and Mrs. Norton Clapp, the Rev. R. W. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Lorne McKen- dry and Bob Barlow, of Tacoma, in Juneau, aboard the yacht Carmelita. - .- | | Today's Ncws Today.—Empire. »aw hurler repeat- 1 the An nkees. Both came from behind to their The Yanks etched the inning streak to games by defeating the White mmy Chapman hit his seventh homer of the season as the Athletics made it two straight over the Tigers. - - Walker’s DeLuxe Rye or 1 vhiskies are Bottled-in- and are 7 rs Old. Available at popular prices. your dealer! adv. Zhom Coety Agl A GREAT \WHISKEY ASK FOR WINDSOR BY NAME AT PACKAGE STORES AND YOUR FAVORITE ogyricht % PROOF = SEATTLE DROPS - ANOTHER GAME, - 8TH STRAIGHT Hollywood, San Francisco| in Spetacular Game— | Stars Make Errors THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY JUNE 16. 1938. - 58 By The “Alice Hayes,” on Broadway in ¢ Temptations, she says 1 me,” onsciousl That's how sly v “Alice Hayes converted by preacher. or the nee 1ia, holding Christi She is | RIGHT Today, “he Cal,, church. Bostor Moose-Elk: rain, hed out Sacramento san Francisco San Diego Los Angeles Portland Hollywood Seattle | Oakland (By Associated Press) Seattle dedicated the new park last night by losing the ei straight game. Portlanc New York winner An eleventh inning error by $an | Cincinnati Diego’s shortstop Bunny Griffith | pittshurgh gave Sacramento a victory yester-| Boston 87 St. Louis Oakland won by a rally in the Byrooklyn eighth inning to defeat Los An- ppjladelphia geles. The big game yesterday in the Amer] Pacific Coast League was between Hollywood and San Frs jame was & the part of were chalk Chicago ncisco. The Clev d “comedy of errors” on New York Hollywood. Four errors poston d up against the Holly- washington wood players and the two pitchers, petroit Stu Bolen and Jim Pendergast, is- walks during As the contest progressed it became gy but San ninth made four runs, sued four better Philadelphia Chicago Louis the game Francisco, in three on a homer by Norbert Boston 2; Pittsburgh 2; Cincinnati New York ic Coast Portland 3; Seattle 1 San Diego 2; Sacramento 3 san Francisco 14; Hollywood 4. Los Angeles National 1 Douglas 7; Oakland 9 filed with the gue chor show nightly one scheduled fo the = Gastineau Channel League Won and AP Feature Service rl, led “I saw many things that shock and yet I wa arning much of them. When T look back, 1 an see that's how Satan blinds us. deceiving to Girl Hits Trail as Evanzeli : ; dubcad Great ed think he Alexandria Nine years ago Alexand silewska danced in a [ cherus as “Alice Hay under her preaches in an Louis 4 Gastineau Channel League postponed Wasilewska, an evangelist Uldine She went to a Bible col~ lege and then was licensed to preach 1 and Missionar now touring Califor- meetings. Utley, own She was child §s name, Oakiand, by last night, again STANDING OF CLUBS Pacific Coast League Won Won 30 29 7 3 2 .- NG FIRM INCORP( Articles o1 mcorporation have been Territorial by the Three Miners, Inc, of Los|banks, daughter of Lost 29 32 317 317 National League Won Lost Lost 3 3 6 Pet 618 579 513 513 507 461 461 Pet, 250 DRATES [ Auditor g - LAST RITES TO BE ° HELD FOR G. WHITE Fu 1 services reorge White son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert White and 1d of Mrs. Roberta White, who was fatally injured in a motor- cycle & last Frid evening, will be held in the Chapel of the Charle W. Carter Mortuary morrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, with Rev. O. L. Kendall reading the e Past Master Councillors of the Ro Arch Gunnison Chapter of the Ord of DeMolays, who will ac pallbearers are Walter P. Scott , James L. G o, th, Earl Robert Cowling, Peter Mels Lager nand Karl Alstead Interment will be in the Ever- ) green Cemctery - > - MAIL SUFERINTENDENT IS COMING TO ALASKA A. D. Lawrence, supcri lent of railway mail at Seattle for the > | distric luding Alaska,’ expects to come to the Territory this month for pection of the mail se ice with an eye to the est lishment of airmail between Juncau Seattle, according to informa- tion received here. E:a date of his sailing has not 3 been nounced. He plans to visit generally all over the Territ necluding Southeast “Alaska, the TWoastward Interior. - - EVA JOHNSTCN TO VISIT IN JUNEAU Fred B. J and Mrs. hnston of Mr. and 3 assenger on Chicago 0 Angeles and Fairbanks. Capital is|H. T. Tripp, is 2 St. Louis 9; Philadelphia 7 listed at $25,000 and directors listed | board the stoamer A due to New York 0 are M. H. Camp, Vice President;|arrive in Juneau cn Monday. Brooklyn 0. Paul E. Younkin, Secretary, and| Accompany Irs. Johnston on American League Dorothy C. Weber. her trip is 1 -daughter, Chicago 4 e — Eva Jeanetto plan to visit Detroit 6. Lode and piwacer location notices with the Tripp iring their stay Philadelphia Washington 4; Cleveland 6. #RPM” is made for today’s high speed motors. Stable, dependable — it keeps your car running cool and sweet as a breeze in any weather. Make it your FIRST CHOICE! for sale at The Empire Office. in the Capitel C FIRST CHOICE ABOVE ALL MOTOR OILS IN THE PACIFIC WEST The Proven Motor 0il For Your Car STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF CALIFORNIA Tax Question Is Not Settled; President, | Harrisan Not Agreed P: ne) age O the present Congre: The wi {hing goes back to Sen Husy Long and his “share the w clubs. In 1935 the clubs were mak headway. In the fall of that year I was assassinated Why nced Roosevelt advs the surpl tax bill next pring, in the tion year, ob- eTYyer nerally agreed it was in- ended to meet the “share the wealth” isst BLAMING THE TAX In presc the bill the Presi- dent certain Treasury e that corporations had DRAMA SHOWN | FORLASTTIME AT COLISEUM Kay Francis and Errol Flyan Co-starred in Ro- | Juneaw’s Greatest Show Value TONIGHT IS THE BIG NIGHT LAST TIMES TONIGHT mantic-Adventure [ 5 | THEIR ‘:,.:;‘ i@ fa v \‘\ ‘».; [v‘u\i{:fly.n fl-‘arts Pounding.. this time chose Traq (which used to| || THEY WAITED FOR be Arabia) as a locale. They placed | A British garrison there, had its ounded by wild na-| red the problem of | d their officers' per declared Lttt 0 be if saved ded over four billion dollars of v 33 which should have beer : s x is the name of dividends to big and : . I 1d. the icture show for the 1 reholders. If it had been 3 ; Sol E % . times tonight at the Coliseum Thea- paid out, he said, the government At e thit would have collected almost a thirg| fe:, Add to that situation the fact : kg 1 2 23 that Kay F s is the lady most of it in taxes, much needed nowa- ; PR son i sl o the chiefly concerned and that the two SB35 G i ke it & men who love her are Errol Fiynn 36 tax biil proposed to tax cor- ; ; and Tan Hunter—and both have a porations on the amount of earn- t y L chance to save her and the garri- ngs tk wded, the bigger the ¢ . : son—and you have the ingredients avings the bigger the tax g L TLht evay both Utile end blgl . yiglim L very thrilling movie, o corporations flocked to Congress to % phhe R Qe ¢ ; penalizing thrift" to ax a company on money it put away for a rainy day Last s ier, with the tax. only a few month: old, the recession set in and the tax got its share of blame. matlor Harrison, chairman of the finance committee which handles taxation, agreed that it was a factor harassing business. Con- gress supported him in striking out! all of the graduated taxes on sav- ings of little corporations and most of those on big ones although a sub- stantial flat tax remains on both “We wanted to do something, if a tax factor could do it,” said Har- rison, “that might assist in dis- pelling fear . . . and restoring con- fidence in the mind of the Ameri- can business man.” The complexion of the next Con- gress will determine whether Pat Harrison or the President wins on that issue. ,- ODD FELLOWS M Tonight at 8 o'clock, the Odd Fel- lows will hold their regular meeting in the Odd Fellows Hall, - e EE DR. EDMUNDS’ Optometrist of Alaska and Seattle, advertisement on page two. adv. and You Bet He’ll be Pleased if you remember that - MOST WANTS And the Shirts that he most wants, and yes, the Ties to go right along with them, ar checks, plaids, or plain whites — DAD whatever he oxfords, poplins; we have them. And — we'll be glad to make sure he gets the size that fits. THE HOME OF HART SCHAFFNER & MARX and preview experts re put it up to the top of the list among the action and romance pictures of the year. | Errol Flynn is said to surpass his performance in that history-making | —ALSO— Selected Short Subjects movie, he Cha of the Light|best opportunity that has come to Brigade.” And it is said, too, that him since the Warners imported Hunter (once the idol of all the| him to play the Duke of Athens in matinee girks in London) has lhel"A Midsummer Night's Dream.” SHIRTS! Match His Shirt with a Tie and He Will Be Doubly Happy! e right here. Stripes, likes — broadcloths, GRAVE “The Clothing Man"” wn iy

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