The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 26, 1938, Page 3

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4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 26, 1938 “STAND-IN" NOW| AT THE CAPITOL STARS BLONDELL Leslie Howard Has Malc Lead in Hilarious Film THEATR The Show Place of Junean with the Hollywood sc and (Ll\l'll HUMPHREY ‘lll‘]’ylvul‘w‘rp, is ‘IHV'\“H‘VHL\/“ | nd-I he 1 ing Wali BOGART [EEUA real ¥ Waltef Wange? Production RS TS RRC RN it th SEE Adapted to the screen from Clar- | MARCH OF TIME Budington Kelland’s hilariou: | The Old Mill ninz Po st story | News of the D: \ and-In" tells the story of Mr [ ettt tter Dodd, the shy youn MIDNIGHT PREVIEW t r who went to Hollywood, tool “She Married ) $10,000,000 studio and tric 'y 1 it according to the science 5 An Artist” matic | her finest role of the title, 'y an Blondell ha the “Stand-In D e ] VOCALIST FEATURES 1. the bewildered ) ROTARY LUNCHEON ; 1 Hollv=ood hural e ) him_and makes him realizc i ihat there are other things in life ral selections by Miss Bernice | des adding machines Juneait vocal- . e phrey Bogart plays Quintait 1y }‘ Ed Shal-| ihe gentus producer who is strug- ] vinst the handicap of Kos- Jeneau 'y moon in | the b " et (I ) it (;;'v;‘i.;v\(lz‘;l : il Y] ”;:””' 3 A ¥ nspi with Na ( office ‘supplies ..., "4 rival producer, to wreck th | §GY L& and Douglas Gray, ', mpany. ) i A Alan Mowbray his maddes & st and funniest as Koslofs} y o. I T_:" . 3 Marla Shelton, the lovely new Wan- ¢ <endall ver discovery, plays Cheri, C. Henry ! ghonetl, W don is hi: usual villainous se o1 i ‘;‘ Yoot :: as Nassau and Jack C; on, an un- 1 wgview, W: known “bit” player, won overnight is at (his meeting that place for|fame in the role of Pitts, the pesky the next convention will be chosen. | e ‘oot Juneau has applied for next year's g conferen Venetia Fegro Shirley Sails | ’ - May Come Here To Tg@h Music Miss . Ventia Feero, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. N Feero of Prince Rupert, has recent- |1y completed her AT.C.M., teacher’ examination, and passed with hon- ors from the Toronto Conservatory of Music. Miss Feero also received her di- ploma from The Home Kindergar- ¥ | ten Institute of Winnipeg. It is the intention of this talent- ed young lady to return to Alaska to teach music, and she may choose Juneau to make her home with her sister, Miss Geraldine Feero. Mr. Feero, father tia Feero, is U. S. Customs Officer, stationed at Prince Rupert, B. C. e % Chiseler Complains That Sand Blasting Is Ruining His Art | CHICAGO, July 26—The Presi- | dent of a National Stone Cutte | Union—who wouldn’t chisel even a | little publicity by permitting use of 'his name—complains that sand blasting machinery has played ha- voc with the ancient hand-art cf carving tombstones. ‘Modern methods have ruined |us,” he says. “Twenty-five years |ago we had 35,000 members in our | union. Today we have 5000 and i |even they are not carving fancy angels and doves on the stones any . | more. | “People want things fast and plain today and sand blasting gives it to them that way. All workmen have to do is outline a name. with rubber composition, turn on the blaster and the job is done lm a few minutes. “That’s all right but T'll lay you 10 to 1 they didn’t cut out this Venus de Milo with a sand blaster, did they?” Shirley with father Clutching two blond dolls under her arm and followed by her fa- ther, Shirley Temple, screen dar- ling, sails from New York for Bermuda where the Temples will continue their vacation which has brought them across the U. S. bv automobile. RAY' CRUDE OIL BURNERS NOW INSTALLED IN. SPICKETT APARTMENTS COLISEUM APARTMENTS REC.U.5. PAT. OFF. SHATTUCK BUILDING GRAND APARTMENTS DECKER BUILDING GROSS APARTMENTS AHLERS BUILDING DOUGLAS CITY SCHOOL NEW ALASKAN HOTEL See the RAY installed in our shop or talk to these satisfied owners who are cutting down fuel costs. 100% GUARANTEED RICE & AHLERS CO. of Miss Vene- | Guard Against New Reign of Terro | d at strategic points e § .“:fl:flm which many were killed and outbreaks between Jews and scores wounded. | terror which was | gorces were taxed to the utmost Christian Science ' Lecture Given Here BvJamg_s_G.Rnwell Christian Science: “On Earth Peace, Good Will Toward Men,” Subject Last evening in the Scottish Rite Temple a lecture on Christian Sci- | ence entitled “Christian Science: ‘On Earth Peace, good will Toward Men’ ” was given by James G. Ro ell, CSB, of Kansas, Missouri, Member of the Board of Lecture- ship of The Mother Church, The | First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. The lectur- er was introducer by Mrs. Gordon | Clithero. The lecturer said in part: Peace a iritual Reality “Peace is not stagnation; it is | the quiet activity of' divine Love. It is the atmosphere of spiritual reality which men can and eventu- | ally must demonstrate in every cir- | cumstance in which they seem to | find themselves. Our individual | peace is our individual demonstra- tion of the spiritual fact that peace ’|is the forever harmonious state of | true consciousness. Christian Sci- ence explains the will or law of God, shows us how to apply it to our problems and to prove by de- monstration that the peace of God is within and all about us. “True consciousness but one God, one divine Mind. Peace is to be found only in acceptance and worship of this one harmonious, holy Mind. If we find ourselves iil, disturbed or confused, it is evidence that we are not having in us that “mind . . . which was also in Christ Jesus,” that one divine Mind. Ac- ceptance of and obedience to an erroneous sense of Mind, God, is idolatry. There is no peace to be found in idalatry. Mrs. Eddy says (Science and Health, p. 146), “The first idolatry was faith in matter.” Maiter a False Mental Concept “Christian Science reveals that matter is not an actual entity. It is but a false belief about Spirit, God; it is error’s attempted reversal of the true concept of substance. The more advanced physical scientis are agreed that matter may be, in the last anaylsis, a mental concept, but they do not yet see that it is a falsely mental concept of true sub- stance, which is Spirit. That there is life, truth, and intelligence in this false concept is a part of the claim of error or belief in matter. This lie Christian Science destroys by the realization that matter is no part of the expression of God, and that “All is infinite Mind and its infinite manifestation,” as worded by Mrs. Eddy in what is known as “the/ “Christian Science teaches Lhal.“ Life is God and cannot be confined | in matter. The belief that matter contains, expresses, or has an mr]u-‘ ence over Life is a false delusive| belief about Life. Christian Science breaks the claim that matter is af thing outside of mortal thought. It shows that the only existence mat- ter even seems to have is as a false| concept of the deceived and deceiv-| ing mortal sense of Mind. Life in matter is impossible, for Life, God, is infinite Spirit. “There is no truth in matter. The world of sense impressibns is shown/ by Christian Science to be but a dream world—a mesmeric state of| consciousness, Christian Science) View of Tel-Aviv Street sniping and bombings marked the worst in Haifa, Jerusalem and Tel-Aviv. recognizes | * scientific statement of being,” found {haye on page 468 of Science and Health.{Father, one Life, Truth, and Love. R in Palestine following fresh reign of British to prevent open civil war as minia- [and God is not in matter, nor even xpressed by matter. wtelligence can never be con- fined in matter. It partakes of the infinite nature of divine Mind. Tn- telligence is not of matter nor in matter. It does not emanate from matter—brain, Intelligence is God. 1t is not originated nor conveyed by matter—nerves. Being God, it is therefore ever - present. Matter, brain, nerves glands, etc, do not originate, convey, or derange in- telligence, Being God, intelligence is reflected harmoniously in each indi- vidual expression or idea of God. There is but one Mind, and that one divine Mind is, in consequence, all there is to your intelligence and to mine. “Finally, the belief in matter, thi first claim of idolatry, says t matter substance. Christian Sci- ence refutes this ¢laim. The Chris- tian Science textbook (Science and Health, p. 468) defines substance as “that which is eternal and incapablc |of diccord or deca Spirit alone | measures up to this definition Spirit alone is substance. The sud- den appearance of leprosy on the | hand which Moses drew from hi bosom and its instantaneous heal- ing, when, at the command of God | drew it forth the second time. | “whole as the other,” proved matter to be only a variable, human con- cept of true substance. This proof i ‘Chn.xu:ln Science furnishes daily {in the instantaneous healing of | physical disease. Material states and conditions are not what they seem to be. They can be proved to be | only of ch stuff as dreams arc {made of” and deceive only those }who accept them as real. “Matter could not be changed in- tantancously from one state to an- | other if it were really substantial True substance cannot be changed at all. It is,changeless. The changes | which we think we see in matte are but changes in human belief Improved physical states are but improved mental concepts objecti- fied. All false beliefs, with their attendant discords, will finally dis- | appear as reality is understood and | demonstrated. Substance will no | longer seem to be material but w:ll be appreciated in its spiritual, men- | tal nature. Salvation Individual “Peace is individual. It is possible | for each one of us to be at peace here and now. Peace seems to the human mind to depend upon others | —what they say or do, how they act. {In truth, our individual peace really results from divine Science, the I | or good will of God demonstrated in our individual thinking and acting. | Each one of us is responsible for his |own peace, for his own manifesta- | tion or demonstration of the will of {good, of God. We must accept this responsibility to see and to do God’s | will for ourselves. Christian Science ! reveals to each one of us how to work out his own salvation, his !peace. In Science and Health )p. 467) we are taught: ‘It should be| thoroughly understood that all men| one Mind, one God arul‘ Mankind will become perfect in proportion as this fact becomes ap- parent, war will cease and the true brotherhood of man will be estab- lished.’ “The prophet Isaiah wrote, ‘The work of righteousness shall be peace; and the effect of righteous- ness quietness and assurance for ever. And my people shall dwell in a peaceable habitation, and in sure dwellings, and in quiet resting places” Through Christian Science, this prophecy is being fulfilled. The spiritual understanding of God and man will bring to full fruition the purpose and mise of Christi- anity, ‘On earfh peace, good will toward men.’ " breaks this dream and shows that there is no truth in it. God is Truth, — et Fmpire elassifieds pay. 4 W ti né £ » i X, 3 ; 3 K British troops Jerusalem | i§ ture battles broke out in the streets of many of the principal cities, Two British warships, the Emerald and Repulse, were ordered to Haifa where the situation was most serious. Both Jews and Arabs adopted an uncompromising stand, Arabs in other sections of the Near East backing their brothers in Palestine with contributions. ¢ in Palestine KIPLING MOVIE | LARGE JOB FOR Punjab Expert Knows 1,- 030 Methods Romero, who plays the role of Kho merce, It W.1.GROSS Junean’s Greatest Show Value COLISE OWNED AND _OPERATED Ay T”RBAN WINDER " LAST TIMES ’I‘ONI(.‘HT,’ Uses Many in ‘Wee Willie Winkie’ Mr. Bhogvaii & Faser Sand- i, nut-brown gentleman from the fr r of Punjab, lent deft _ storring [ and exhanstive knowledge of a (echnical director on “Wee Willie o Winkie,” the new Rudyard Kipling VIcTon MMGL[N film starring Shirley Temple and ¢ Mchitn SRIGH. 18- Dow - G AUBREY SMITH,- JUNE LANS > ot the Ooliseu MICHAEL 'lllll-“‘tll ROMERD fh e A e e G CONSTARGE GOLLIER - DOUSLAS SCOTY 1 play to Singh Directed by dohm Ford tut magic to his non-Indian on- Assoriare: Producer Gene Morkey. lockers, when he takes ten yards of Doyl . Zanusk In Charge of Production loth and twists it around a man’s T e P R ALSO to form a neat turban, That s has been Singh’s business ever| Selected Short Subjects ince hie went to Hollywood In 1914, /Sem— Principal object of Singh's activi-| g 7 ay in “Wee Willie Winkie" is cesar| BERT CARO TAKES GROUP ON CRUISE da Khan, a fierce chieftain of the Pathans, that wild and ferocious tribe who inhabited the Khyber cen enthusiastic fishermen Pass at the time England was left the Lower City Float Sunday morning on board the Umpaua, cap- tained by Bert Caro Following a brief stop at Mar- mion where, incidentally, two whales spouting uncomfortably close to the ship, afforded the movie to keep the pass open for com- takes only a flip of the rist to wrap a turban for a na- ve soldier or for one of the lesser atives in the picture, but Romero plays a chieftain whose rank de- mands a special turban. camera enthusiasts some rare . shots. Proceeding to Limestone In- s ) H let where seven members of the eakers Hlt party disembarked for a liftle p tream hing, returning to the t with a simall caich, but a “nif- unbugn. Mrs, Caro took honors the day, pulling in a 65-pound while Isabel Parsons had Streak Starts 2 e * halibut, u“em Ifl E Man H to be satisfied with the “booby D U U G I- A s I u"gn a prize” for her catch, a water-soaked i ’ j battery |s saved "’um | — Those making the trip included N E w s I | CLEVELAND, July 26. — Tris Mr. and Mrs. Bert Caro, Mr.. and I - 8] the former Cleveland man- Ernest Parsons, Isabel Par- . oo e n ager and outfielder, who held the G. W. Parsons, Ray G. Day, G e ruwnlng u ay major league record for consecutive | L Vestal, Mr. and Mrs. Rod BASEBALL GAME TONIGHT hits until Pinky Higgins of the Darnell, Orrin Kimball, W. B. Kim- Douglas Firemen play the Elks e ston Red Sox bettered it a few | ball, Bob Kimball, Miss Mary Van- tonight, starting at 6:30 o'clock on (Jeqron ]Ohns‘on Fal g0 with 12 straight, tells a derLeest, C. E. Johnson, and Miss the Douglas ball park and it is or ge 3 funny one about how his streak Sybil Godfr wiil be according to present sched- | Bay— Malcolm Morrison | started: ule, the last game of the series “I had been in a slump. Walter Figurcs in RCSCll(‘, Douglas people will be able to see at home. A large crowd is expected over from Juneau for the game. - > SIX CITY ORDINANCE PASS FINAL READING Rescued from drowning when he fell into the harbor from the Com- mercial Wharf this morning, George Johnson, 49, unemployed longshore- man, is in the City Jail charged as i drunk. Johnson fell twenty feet to the water when he reputedly staggered | against the twelve by twelve dock rim Witnes: seeing his fall, rushed to a rowboat and rescued him | Bobby Converse, 12, saw John- son’s tumble from the Alaska Air Transport hangar and with Keith Petrich and Gray Line bus driver Eric Lindegaard, leaped into I W. P. Blanton’ kiff tied at the hangar. While Lindegaard rowed to wher Johnson was struggling in the wa AAT Pilot Shell Simmons, Mary , and Malcolm Morrison, stand- ing near, threw Johnson a rope. Johnson clug to the rope, was lifted from the water and deposited in the bottom of the skiff, a bit dazed, but alive, and asked to “go to jail where I can get straight- Given their third and last read- ing, city ordinances Nos. 6, 7, 8, 9 10 and 11, regulating the order a numbered, licensing of dogs, elec- tions, police and magistrate’s court, assessments and s, public health, and peddlars, are now regu- lar statutes of the town. These ordinances will now be posted in public places by. the City Clerk for a period of 30 days that the public have due cognizajce of them and be guided accordingly. With the exception of the wharf all departments of the city govern- ment appear to be under good con- trol as different committee heads answered “no report,” when called upon .by Mayor Kilburn. Wharf Committeeman Rice told the Coun- cil that certain repairs were badly needed on the Ferry Co. slip and on one of the city floats. The May- ik may Johnson and I said to some of the fellows on the fungo stick guy. I did and swung at the first | % good ball. The stick broke but the | |ball popped over the infield for a! single and my stretch of 11 straight|teacher (in the Jungau Public was underway.’ KEEN INTEREST IN Seward competing for a position on aska at next month have been received by for a place on the team. All clubs ‘ln the T fying cour complete scores all are received, the captain said. eign motorists in European coun- was pitching against us, ‘AsIri_d Ufigfilfi Is Visiting Here Astrid Ulleland, bench: I might ‘The way I'm hit- Jjust well take a | up there against this ng Miss former e Schools, arrived on the Mt. Mc- |Kinley and is a house guest of Mrs. J. Simpson MacKinnon. She will remain here for one week and during her visit will greet her former pupils and renew acquain- tances with her many friends made during her residence here, oo PHILLIP PULLEN RIFLE COMPETITION Scores of eight riflemen from he team which will represent Al- the Camp Perry matches m Captain G. H. Leonard, he| VISITS JUNEAU said today, indicating keen com- | petition throughout the Territory Phillip Pullen, son of Royal R. Pullen, an engineer with the Tread- well Gold Mining Company, before the war, and grandson of Harriet S. Pullen, of the Pullen House in Skag- | way, is visiting in town today on a | short business trip, expecting to stay only a short time. | Mr. Pullen is a student at the tory are shooting guali- No announcement of will be made until -+ Because of the increase of for- or covered the spill-way situation enaa ot | at the dam, describing how it is| g " ; 2 | tries, the League of Nations has School of Mines in South Dakota. b o of £ foAL erflow Morrison, who with Simmons and | % ta mg‘ care of the .nolma o.vt,(} owr Mary Joyce threw the rope to xieconllmendrd international road While ln‘ Juneau, he is a guest at ;“‘uc; g nf‘:x:ru:‘ o P wonld be Johnson, is the same Signal Corps fgpas. | the Gastineau Hotel, G Skl man who has been recommended 2§ T Re B A S e R inadequate, however, he said and G, o Carnegie Medal of herolsm some further work will yet have to ing a rescue Morrison made | be dGU8 there,; Fhis will have G0 be ooy e, S IHecHs Sia i in the chill. waters near Taku taken up as project No. 1, when|:3 1" | ropdiil ‘mit_ it was. brought Glacier recently. | congitions permit, It Was BIOUEHY! 1n the course of that rescue Mor- | > pl p % __rison swam fully clothed with a ‘n;» Council ‘.’f’,“'dl'o t‘flln lC(O"'t‘l““ larger man than himself, both of o “ lle g 28100 (.).““ " tl“; them wearing hip boots. Today, ae 10 foapd. B i AL one Morrison was wearing hip boots janitor may begin his duties there ,..i, when ,Johnson fell in—but about the first of August. By further action the Council designated the City Hall as the of- ficial voting place for Territorial elections September 13. And then as an individual does when he comes to the end of his life the municipal heads took up consideration of the cemetery, which he took them off and was going to leap to Johnson’s rescue, but saw no need for it when Johnson got his arms around a pile and clung there. The incident occurred just as the steamer Columbia was coming up to its dock, and the crowd on the = 2 wharf awaiting its arrival saw 1 e ““}lf;"' i bady v”‘fl““_'u‘isgj Johnson’s fall and rescue. attention. The matter was discus Akttt fonsss dhce 1097 at some length and steps are to be |Johnson has done only odd jobs taken. to improve the situation at| o yoc not worked for several ([ an early date as a resulf. weeks, he said. Taking the plane at noon yesber- Health Service at Sitka after a . o 1 NEW RESIDENTS North Sea to make Douglas their 300-egg strain of chickens have two children have rented the Gray | best breeding flocks are not speedily his wife is pianist at the Douglas Miss Cora Cooke, of the University AUSTIN, Tex., July 26.—Univer- buy stock. 1s.” A driving-machine test re- offspring of such high production ond was required for girls to bring| B P — produced 300 eggs. e AL SOOI R + MISS LUNDELL FLIES | i . day, Miss Phyllis Lundell left to 3““-E chlcka"s resume her dulies in the Public visit here. — eee Mrs. Lonnie Grant and children ST. PAUL, July 26. — Poultry arrived here this afternoon on the preeders searching in vain for a home. been told by a University Farm ex- Mr. and Mrs. John LaForce and | tension specialist that even the house on Third Str LaForce s reaching that goal. employed at the Alaska Juneau and | Eyen if such a strain existed, said Inn, of Minnesota, it would be so costly — - eee | the ordinary producer could not sity of Texas “eds” apparently e “It is well known, too,” she said, better automobile drivers than “co-| “that such individuals do not have eds vealed that an average of .83 \ec-;to a very marked degree.” | Only 38 of 4,786 hens trapnested | the machine to a halt, compared under supervision of the Minne- with .61 for men. [ sota Poultry Improvement board Try The Empue classifieds for| —_— RS s | Today's News Today.—fmpire.

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