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: THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, Horosco pe aying woman, | d— but died yesterday in California, a ving gay blades of a pre the epitor mothers, eneration she was regally society por Dail y Alaska Em pire Published evers evening except Sunday bs the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY to the e of seductive ophisticated woman- - President N 1 f i i fin‘gflmgrwm i 00 Bustness Moo hood. In the period of her greatest stage fame she “The stars incline Rbond Skin au, Ala. was assigned vampire roles because wcers thought but do not compel” Butered In the Post Office CRIECI R PO Cabi AL EE b | cautitui| ® * ot ey — of her widely-publicized topaz eye beautiful SUBSCRIPTION RATES THURSDAY, SEPT. 22, 1938 ¥ neau and Do~glas for $1.25 per month. [ig1 was wooed by m men and won in 1, G Ly S Uk ek B b e hisTase b tive Benefic aspects rule strongly to- Gne vear, in , in advance, $6.00; o 95 5 . intil Broad day, according to astrology. It is a ene month. in -‘d'“\ o hpitts But misfortune trailed her roma ""‘“P Y044 ime for pushing the arts as well office o re arity in the de- WAy evolved a maxim, “It's unlucky to marry Paulin€ g5 pusiness. Trade should be good | Bvery of their paper Fred k and the tendency to speculate vi phones: News Off 02; Business Office, 374, i specuiglie ‘evi- e - o Her first husb: Frank M. Andrews, a brilliant | dent | The A i use for New York architect. divorced his first wife to marry| Women come under plangtary in- ‘ ropubiicstion o it or mot her in 1910, The young actress gave up her career fluences that are most favorable| - copholy A local news | o {)ree vears and then divorced Andrews, who had | to their aims in public servige, They i OTHER PUBLICATION E. R. Thomas, millionaire publisher and Wwal | ¥hich Wwill antagonize uh on _labor . treet op divorced by his wite because of | ¥AS1a & MORE SUSHIIREIENROING " s i P . y G day. Marriages of wide Interest are \tion s Frederick. An actor in her M indicated for the-.autumn. hanged himself in Chicago — This is a lucky date for engage- because ¢ ve for her ments as well as for weddings. .Ro- | In Sept ¥ the actress who in divorcing mances involving bridesmaids and Andrews 1 her motto would be “single-blessed- hers will be numerous. n fore more!” married the te Willard Mack, Reactionary influences, long dis- playwright, ac .nd director, shortly after he was cerned by astrologers, will beiappar- divorced by h cond w Marjorle Rambeau, a | ent in social us avRIE Banon- | .. ern manners. rmer friend PROUBEIK Scandals involving persons of so- The cc h Mack writing scripts in which ' ja) and political prominence ma Frec played the leading roles, teamed to- | preak at this time when astrologers gether for a series of cinema hits. They lived in her warn of the danger of evil com- palatial house in Beverly Hills, a gathering place for munications. — | Hollywood notables. Astrologers stress the portents NEED FOR P R()I’I IH Y \I’l'l( AIS \I. August, 1920, however, she divorced Mack, Which seem to indicate a depression IN JUNEAU an “unidentified woman” as co-respondent, i the early nineteen-forties more| o » ¢ 1 2 grave than any recently endured o — There were reports of a reconciliation, but in Febru- =95 #4° Juneau is going ahe public improvements | oy 1925 Miss Frederick eloped to Santa Anna, Cal,| T i¢ 18 persistently recommended ™ i el Persons whose birthdate it is have | #4#0 keep abreast of 1 growth. Taxpayers Of | with a childhood sweetheart, Dr. C. Alton Rutherford, the augury of a year of importance & $he city went to the polls yesterday 1 by their , geattle physician. He was her second cousin. He in business and social exper -uvexdm left no question of eir, endorsement ol | wqq 46, she was She sued for divorce in Los An- Young folk should be exceedingly ¥'the improvements which the Council has been con- in Septemb 4 charging -Rutherford had | lucky ! S ESidering. Well over the 65 percent affirmative, Which | qecerted her the vear before Children born on this day prob-! “Sas needed for approval, was given each of the five Her 1o se lasted an even shorter time, ably Wwill be alert, ambitious and Ppropositions. on the ballot In April, 1930, at the age of 44, she married Hugh 2halytical. On the cusp of Virgo and Only 30 votes were cast against the small boat Leighton of Greenwich, Conn. a 5l-year-old hotel LiPra they are under two important Barbor bonds as compared with 461 h approvet e i iian T ae e m:nilm guide many successful them. The same sentiment ran throu entire |, nt, propped himself upon an elbow in a Los ' Henrs | PIAck. mislo: obttios =~ was election. Smallest percentage of endorsement Was| Angeles court and asked for an annulment, saying born on this day 1854, Others who given the righ way proposition, the vote being pe had given her $1,000 a month without getting even . celebrated it as a birthday in- | 370 for and 99 inst. a “good kiss” in their eight months of marriage. He Michael Faraday, sclentist The vote represented approximat 50 percent won the annulment John Brown, Scottish physi- of the eligible voters of the city, a total of 499 ballot Although doctors had doomed him to death within cian and author, 1810. being cast against a tax roll cc around 1,000 | 5 year, she married C ph A. Marmon, comm: (epyeight, 190 of tt of the tax- In view of the fact that many name er of the 16th U. S antry, on Ji ary 21, 1934, ps whose names appear on the tax roll were not The wedding took place at Scarsdale, N. Y., and the PRUNE GRUP |8 in town for the election it we substantial turnout whole regiment paraded to welcom he couple to and about what had been expected. Governor's Island. Col. Marmon, 58, had b But in addition to the fact that all the bond pachelor he “was 49, This. martage, her fi issues pproved by top-heavy majorities ur- 1 with the death of the colonel before the year Tu GU UNPIGKED ing the small boat harbor, the paving, the sewers and | was yp sidewa the cial. bond election brought another Now Bt wiitas SV1E £5 116 career of Tha witdow. - s point forcibly to the attention of city officials colortlll lbne, totsay the danst SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 21—Em- That is the urgent need for drastic revision and i 2 ergency plans to save California S prune growers two million dollars adjustment o « roll . c e k R T ne N SRR, Man’s World Shrinks in harvest costs by simply not EHETE e I R —_— picking prunes — is anpounced by the to discover that ed property (Clev the prune program committee of names were not on the tax roll. This was particularly Te o vibestn g 0od man | ErOWers. true in the case of husband wife owr Property | aoun.” but the r in which that adage is cast Committee Chairman W. E. Law- jointly. But it also was revealed that there were a iy no way prot its application to the other sex. son outlined the program, a volun- good many property owners who failed to appear on [y brings news of Wwomen': ments, tary one, under which growers | the roll at all; who had been entirely overlook til man may be 1sed for wonde s his choosing not to harvest their ‘fruit Now that the bonds have been approved, the world after all would be reimbursed for the un- problem of setting aside a sufficient amount of money In a day when records are ¢ more difficult to picked tonnage. each vear for retiring them becomes a matter of first, Win women seem to be winning them icqueline 1s surplus 1938 prunes would | nnortance, Cochran puts an airplane through fast paces to win be “permanently eliminated from 2 & 3 a transcontinental derby from competitors. the market,” Lawson said. He warn- 10 MO8 B adipacatinRly oasy. sk, pIfOOLL Ad- Wilhelmina of the Netherlands celebrates a ed, however, that the program de- ditional burden on the taxpayers if a thorough re- of 40 years of 15 rule in a time when pends wholly upon several exten- appraisal of property in Juneau is made and all seems to he the adjective best fitting many sions of the present porrate pro- property placed upon the tax roll at a fair figure ents. Now comes Louise A. Boyd, known gram to be considered by the state Testerday ion is definite proof that such action only as “a San Francisco society woman” a few years agricultural prorate commission at should be undertaken before another tax roll is made ago, but today a record holder in her ¢ 1 a hearing here Friday. b Arctic explorer—a field for years re Lawson said the plan, never be- Expression has been voiced by some that in order so-called hardy male. fore applied to the prune industry, %o tmest the bond retivement payments, raising of Miss Boyd has reached the northernmost point offered growers a chance to help the present levy will be nec ATY. ey .‘ll‘.rvl 2d by an American ship on the cast coas themselves out of the “serious sit- Ih spenialion ine . ari ofiGirneniad Only the Duc d‘Orleans in 1905 went uation” caused by a heavy carry- L RS City. both real anq | 1aFther north on that forbidding coast ; over of 1937 prunes and an.ex- a 4 11 prog ! # under the auspices of the American Geo- pected 1938 bumper crop of 270,000 personal, should be made first. It is not at all im-| graphical Society of New York, this year's trip was tons. ich a reapy 1l would reveal that the WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 21, *HAPP Y | BIRTHDAY The Empire extends congratula- tions and best wishes ing: | SEPTEMBER 21 J. L. (Dolly) Gray Mrs. Alfred Zenger | sigard L. Olsen Franklin Larsen Mrs. George Jorgenson J. F. Hogins Elsa Johnson MODERN ETIQUETTE By Roberta Lee Q. When staying at a hotel and one sends a suit out to be pressed, is it obligatory to tip the valet? A. One is not obliged to do so, but it is customary to give the valet a tip when he returns the suit Q. Is one expected to send a gift when a wedding invitation or an- nouncement has been received? A. Tt is obligatory to send a gift when an invitation has been re- ceived. An announcement, however. does mnot require this. Q. Do well-bred women and girls smoke in a public dining rocom or restaurant? A. Yes. It has become the cus- tom, and “when living in Rome, we must accept the customs of Rome.” - - » EAUR L A A | LOOK and LEARN | - By A. C. Gordon . | * b average 1. How long does the rson attend school? Who first called Department “G-men”? pel 2 of Justice agents 3. What is the origin of the word “Snob”? 4. What is the area of the | earth’s surface? Where is the only place in (m U. S. where the boundaries of four states come together in a point? ANSWERS 1. The average education today is 9% years of school, including only 1'; years of high school. 2. Machine-gun Kelly 3. The Latin sine “without nobility. 4. 196,950,000 square miles. 5. The southwest corner of Col- orado, where it meets Arizona, Utah, and New Mexico, e nobilitate, * - DAILY LESSONS IN ENGLISH By W. L. Gordon Words Often Misused: Do not say, “I prefer to read than to talk.” Say, “1 prefer reading to talking.” Often Mispronounced: Hypocrisy. Pronounce hi-pok-ri-si, all as in it, 0 as in of, accent second syllable, and not high-pok-ri- Often Misspelled: Timber Timbre (quality of tone). Synonyms: volubility, (wood) Fluency, logquacity, eloguence, loquacious- probable that her seventh. For each expedition she charters RS S o T N present 18-mill levy is ient if all property is Nor n ship, gathers a staff of scientists and sets LI P “Use a word three placed on the tax roll at its proper It may ulti« | forth. They have taken deep sea soundings that ODD FE ows TO times end ¢ yours.” Let us in- mately be necessary to raise the to the limit| vieided valuable results. They have learned a great MEET TOMORRQW |crease our vocabulary by mastering of 20 mills, but if the protests receive erday by deal about Arctic tides. This year they experimented (R ord veach: deyiifoda's B eted i vk ane "t mean i Short wave transmission and uncovered many | A regular R A L :ldw(u;mz men, anything at all eity officials can har fail to make . DU hling’ spots’iiny the, 1gr ngrth lows Lodge will be held tomorrow s i A G E 3 plorations are no lark. They are not i 9 (35 2 {yw |Doth i's as in it, accent second o 3 14 it = k hey are DL ' night at 7:30 o'clock in the 1.0.0.%. | a reappraisal first, before consideri an additional ay lable). “Poverty makes people blicity. Did Miss Boyd not bring back Hall, and Bert Lybeck, Noble Grand, e Gl v tax, howe mall new X bluerl) satirical."—Friswell. wding scientific societies of the world urges all members to be present. would not lend her support and patronage. Scien- Following the business REMEMBER PAULINE? tists have be too happy to have her invade gree practice will take pla —_— the Arctic ch an inaccessible region is no -eo g theater-goers saw Pauline Frederick, who | longer the domain of man alone CUBANS TOURING Hundreds Buried Under H(mkou'Bombmgl)obns Carlos Odriozola, Cuban graduate | of Stanford University, and owner | extensive sugar cane holdings in Cuba, a passenger on the Co- lumbia making the round trip tour. oo empuwe Classitleds for Trv the sults. i B £ 1 NEw ALAskaN | | HOTEL " e o | So. Frarfklin Street JUNEAU:- Phone slnxle [+] Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Emplrr Olfl('e. You DINE BEST WHEN YOU DINE AT THE ROYAL CAFE Dinners frem 5 &ill 9 Daily. Special Sunday Dinners 11 to 9. JUNO-MAID ICE CREAM In Dishes, Cones or Bulk Juneau, Seventy-two Japanese planes, including pursuits, bo nbed three Wuhan cities, Wuchung, Hayang and 445 pankow, on August 12 in the most disastrous bombing in this area thus far. Casualties amounted to more ; H458 thah 1,000, Other thowsands were wounded by fal ing wieckase, Photo shows selief workers climbing One-Half Mil i « ‘(lnnzh Hankow wreckage in the heart of the thic 1y peanlated capital city. Meanwhile, Japancse that the leng delayed cbjective of severing the Peiping-Hankew railway south of the Yellow River was near realization following a surprise ata *k frcm Henan province in the south., The Japanese were reporled within 80 miles of Hankow's gates. The B. M. Behrends Bank Alaska ' COMMERCIAL - and SAVINGS Resources Over Two and lion Dollars today, their |birthday anniversary, to the follow- | 938 From The Empire Bk —————— — 20 Years Ago { \ i Directo DRS. KASER & FREEBURGER PROFESSIONAL FRATERNAL SOCIETIES GASTINEAU CHANNEL - B. P. 0. ELKS meet every Wednesday at 8 i DENTISTS pm. Visiting brothers SEPTEMBER 21, 1918 Blomgren Building welcome. DR. A, W, | Allen Chamberlain received a| PHONE 56 STEWART, Exalted Rul- | commission as captain in the En-| Hours 3 am. to 9 pm. er; M. H. ¢cIDES. Sec~ | gineers Reserve Corps, according m | | Word received in Juneau by Victor | $e——————— & N. Dupuy. in training Virginia Chamberlain was to g0z at Camp Humpheries, | | | i Mrs. P. J. Mahone was to leave| | for the south on the Princess Sophia | ' for Quilcene, Wash., to the home| | of Dr. Mahone's mother, where lit- tle Dorothy Mahone had been vis- Dr Richard Williams | DENTIST OFFICE AND RESIDENCE GOLDSTEIN 3UILDING retary. OUN™ JUNEAU LODGE NO. 147 i Second and fourth Monday of each month G /> in Scottish mm ‘Tempie S\ beginning at 7:30 pm. | DANIEL ROSS. Wor- ship!ul Master; JAMES W. LEI- | Secretary. et % iting for several months. The thirteen Government schools Southeast Alaska were to open October 1, according to C. W. Hawkesworth, who was superinten- dent of Government Schools in this district in /| Dr. Judsun Whittier CHIROPRACTOR | Drugless Physician | office hours: | Rooms 2-3-4, Triangle Bldg. | PHONE 667 REBERAHS ? Perseverance Lodge NG. 2-A meets |every second and fourth Wednes- |day, IO.OF. Hall BETTY Mec- | CORMICK, Nohle Grand; RUTH BLAKF, Secretary. 10-12, 1-5, 7-9 e N About sixty enjoyed the dancing | party given to the faculty and pup'L\" 1 of the high school by the M.D.C.| | in the school gymnasium. This was | the first social affair of the school year. | W. A. Clark, of the Juneau Hard-| Dr. A. W. Stewart DENTIST Hours 9 am. to 6 p.m. SEWARD BUILDING Office Phone 469 Guy Smith | DRUGS ; PUROLA REMEDIES ware Company, received word from Walter G. Johnson, that he was returning with his family from the south on the Princess Sophia. | ) Capt. James Robertson of the Todd Packing Company, was regis- tered at the Gastineau Hotel - - - DR H VANCE | OSTEOPATH | Conkult,auon and examination | | free. Hours 10 to 12; 7 to 9:30 by appointment, | Gastineau Hotel Annex South Franklin St PRESCRIPTIONS CARE- FULLY COMPOUNDED Front Street Next Colisewm PHONE ®i~-Free Delivery e A § 1 to 5; phone 117 | || “Tomorrow’s Styles | MARTHAS MEET FOR . SOCIAL ON FRIDAY Members: ot the Martha Society | Grac will meet at 1:30 o'clock, Friday af- ternoon in the parlors of the North- for, | G ern Light Presbyterian Church, dessert-luncheon and a social meet- | Robert Simpson, Opt.D. | | :ate Los Angeles College | of Optometry and Opthalmology asses Fitted Lenses Ground Today” Tafsnen ing T Hostesses for the afternoon will be Mrs. David Wood and Mrs. Ray Ward. - | MRS. KRAFFT RETURNS | Mrs. B. M. Krafft, who left Ju- | neau last June, returned here on the Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES’—MISSES’ READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street Juneau’s Own Store “The Rexall Store” Near Third steamer North Sea much improve in health. | Have Your Eyes Examined by Dr. Rae L. Carlson R-—————-fl} OPTOMETRIST Office Ludwig Nelson's Jewelry Phone Green 331 tions. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. Visit the 1| orti 1 SITKA HOT SPRINGS | | **° | Mineral Hot Baths |2 - | Accommodations to suit every | taste. Reservations, Alaska Aflr J ‘Transport J - g ZORIC SYSTEM CLEANING Phone 15 2 FINE Watch and Jewelry Repairing at very reasonable rates PAUL BLOEDHORN | S. FRANKLIN STREET | | . ! ‘ H. S. GRAVES “The Clothing Man” Homs of Hart Schaffner and Marx Clothing ——= ""GASTINEAU MOTOR | pg————— | ALASKA LAUNDRY nsamices e | FORD AGENCY (Authorized Dealers) ON THE MEZZANINE HOTEL JUNEAU BEAUTY SHOP LYLAH WILSON | SERVICE | PHONE 727 GENERAL AUTO REPAIRING Gas—Oil—Storage Telephone % 1 e 1 J. B. WARRACK Contoure GREASEN | X-Er-Vac GAS — OILS s JUNEAU MOTORS ;| Foot of Main Street s “NEW AND DIFFERENT 7 FOOTWEAR” DEVLIN’S s Paris Fashion Shoes | Engineers—Contractors I[ JUNEAU = —a COMFE "N and SEE the NEW l For Appointment LI Marie’s Beauty Shop | 231 Seward St. (above Family Shoe Store) - RS e U S IR T CAILTT B :,__ | .IUNEAU MELODY HOUSE | Music and Electric Apphiances (Next Gastineau Hotel) Mrs. Pigg STROMBERG-CARLSON RADIOS J. B. Burford & Co. “Our door step is worn by Satistied Customers” I or :L i hone 65 TIMELY CLOTHES NUNN-BUSH OES STETSON HATS QUALITY WORK CLOTHING Phone 2068 Alaska Music Supply Arthur M. Uggen, Manager | Pianos— Musical Instruments and Supplies GASTINEAU CAFE French and Italian Dinners 122 W. Second FRED HENNING Complete Outfitter for Men “The Store for Men” I ] i Alaska Federal Savings and Loan Association Accounts Insured Up to $5,000 P. O. Box 2718———Phone 3 | OFFICE—119 Seward St. | Juneau, Alaska LUNCHEON SPECIALTIES - Lode and placer location mnotices SABIN’S Front St.—Triangle Bldg. KRAFFT’S Mnfg. & Building Co., Inc. CABINET WORK—GLASS PHONE 62 HARRY RACE DRUGGIST “The Squibb Stores of Alaska” | T PERCYS CAFE | Ice Cream, Soft Drinks, Candy COFFEE SHOP Percy Reynolds, Manager B ! . Lode and pmacer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. The First National Bank for sale at The Empire Office. —————— Empire classifieds pay. JUNEAU @ CAPITAL—$50,000 ° SURPLUS—$100,000 - [ COMMERCIAL AND SAVINGS ACCOUNTS SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 2% Paid on Savings Accounts -