The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 30, 1938, Page 3

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{31} PpLAVEOVS, WAt YOUR S¥ ALLYS THE MARRY Show Place of Juneau NOW! S.0.5. COAST GUARD LATE NEWS MICKEY MOUSE MATINEE SATURDAY—1 P. JACK HOLT in “UNDER SUSPICION" 8. Coast Guard Cartcon—Candy M. THE MYSTERY THAT STUNNED]S 5,000,000 READERS! * i@ A _COLUMBIA BULBS—BULBS—BULBS JUST ARRIVED FROM HOLLAND ALL TOP-SIZE Paper Whites-Narcissus Tulips Hyacinths Crocus Now is the season for planting these bulbs—Select and plant yours today for beautiful flowers in the spring. JUNEAU FLORISTS 311 Seward St. Phone 311 BULBS—BULBS—BULBS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, SEPT. 30, 1938. CAPITOL HAS TWO WEEKEND ATTRACTIONS: “Lady lemw Stars Sally LII(YI.\ Also Jd('l\' Holt in “Under Suspicion™ Lady Behave!”, Republic duction opening tonizht at the Capi- tol Theatre deals with a lady’s ad- ventures in extricating her madcap fiter from a marriage tangle. Sally Eiler misbehaving lady, and Neil' Hamilton supplies the love interest Listed pro- male dire - supporting players are Gr Mitchell, Joseph Schildkraut, Patricia Farr, Jim Lu- cas, Mary Gordon and Robert Greig The picture was directed by Lloyd Corrigan under Associate Producer Albert E. Levoy. Second feature starring Jack Holt, “Under Suspicion.” It tells of a millionaire auto magnate, played by Holt, who decides to retire and turn over his plant to his em- ployees. The move makes enemies of many of his friends. several whom he believes would like see him dead. To forestall any assination he invites all the would- be culprits to his mountain lodge, |and through a series of cleverly planned maneuvers, traps the lurk- ing Kkiller among of the evening is the story of of to as- Another chapter of the |hl'111m‘{ erial “S.0.S. Coast Guard” will alsc be an attraction | e S COUPLE CLUB TO 'GATHER MONDAY Monday evening at 6:30 o'clock |in the parlors of the | Light Presbyterian Church, | bers and all young couples who wish | will meet for the regular potluck | dinner and get-together. | In charge of arrangements Monday evening are the Rev |Mrs. John A. Glasse and Mr. | Mrs. B. R. Glass, |BARANOF WORKMEN .~ TAKE TUMBLE; GO TO HOSPITAL BEDS | | | | Two workmen on the Baranof Ho- [ tel construction project were taken for and and | to the hospital today with minor| injuries following a fall from a ( scaffolding. The two were C. F. Vossar and George Henry. Vossar sprained an ankle and Henry suffered a head laceration, Both were badly hruised Dr. W. W. €ouneil attended them % Garnic'sChats 7= “A Newspaper Within a Newspaper” STORE Friday, Oct. THE FRIENDLY 193 1, MACARONI SPAGHETTI Sc Ib. JUICE PURE CONCOR D Tall Cans 15¢ PEACHES HOME STYLE Large Can 20° AT THAT DISTANCE Captain: “See that man on the bridge five miles away?” Gunner: “Aye, aye, sir.” Captain: “Let him have a 12- inch the eye. Gunner;: “Which eye, sir?” Snowballs Fresh Stock Sc Ib. WORDS OF POWER THAT HELP MEN WIN THEIR BATTLES Ambition Courage Enthusiasm Humility Industry Perseverance Sineerity Vision. HOMELIKE FLOUR Ken Print Bags 49 Pounds $1.89 THE FRIENDLY STORE NU-BORA Giant § [ TOMATO - CATSUP Question on examination paper: “For' what were the Phoenicians famous?” Answer: “Blinds. TOILET TISSUE *Seaport 5c roll m GARNICK’S GROCERY PHONE 174 Northern | mem- | Hide Tide, Parlly Cloudy Weather PromlsedHuntPrs {Exodus bioin City Expec ted * Tomorrow Morning for Opening of Duck Season cloudy weather and winds promised, With partly moderate westerly duck shooters were polishing up their fcatter guns, putting in a sup- ply effammunition and getting their {licenses and duck stamps today in nticipation of the opening of the ory bird se W 7 o'clock oW morning Several partie: away this |end at favorite mig wson tom: were planning (o ening for the we pots out of town while scores w getting ready for an early exodus out the Glacier Highway in the morning to waylay the birds at Salmon Creek, Lemon Creek and other points of vantage all the way to Eagle River. A tide of 116 feet at 6:28 in the | morning. indicated late shooting as {the hunters will have to await the outgoing tide to get out to some of their favorite spots Urging hunters to cooperate in heeding the 7 to 4 shooting regula- tions, Executive Officer Dufresne of the Game Commission that { wardens would Ye patrolling the hunting areas “Last year there were only onc or two violations on opening morn- ing. the finest kind of sportsman- | ship being shown,” the official said |“and this year we are hoping it is a 100 percent record, with not a single violation.” TS ORE ASEL [LUTHERAN FOOD SALE TOMORROW Members of the Lutheran Ladies’ {Aid Society are sponsoring a goody ale tomorrow at Bert's Cash Groc- {ery where Saturday shoppers will |find everything for that “quicky |dinner.” { In charge of get K- arrangements for | tomorrow’s food sale is the follow- ing committee: Mrs. O. Westby. Mrs. H. Snaring and Mrs. M Brenno. - e 'MRS. HAROLD SMITH IS TO SPEAK SUNDAY | AT VESPER SERVICE’ Mrs. Harold Smith is to be guest | speaker Sunday at the 5 o'clock Ves- I per service of the Northern -Light Presbyterian Church. She will dis- cuss Dale Carnegie’s well known book, “How To Win Friends and Influence People.” The Vesper chair, under the di- rection of Ernst Oberg will sing “Omly Believe” by - Archer; and community singing of favorite hymns will conclude the service Sunday. e SONS OF NORWAY Regular Business Meeting and So- cial, Saturday, 8 pm., Odd Fellow Hall. All members requested to at- | tend ady. | - -+ | ALASKANA, by Marie Drake, 50c. A TEXAS ROSE, pretty Mary Osborne will lead parade at rose festival in Tyler, Tex. She'’s a drum major at Stephen F. Austin Teachers college In Nacogdoches, Tex. Get Acquainted Social Tonight This evel members of at 8 Ladies ning the o'cloc] Guild and liams to Camp Perry with instruec-| defiance at the white man’ k, the Junior Guild of Holy Trinity Cathe- dral are quainted” Trinity Ha An: evenir elties and offered church and activities for sponsoing social, to 11 1g of music refreshments all members those interested a be —.e——— CLIPPER SHIP UNEXPECTEDLY Contrary terda Any n's flight plane, Teft Seattle this morn- | practically all of the visitors ing for the Capital City and was| Camp Perry called at least once dur- scheduled to arrive here about 3:30 | ing their s this afternoon day servige™ would o’clock Yest three’ week: imphibian flying equi the to Alaska Seattle tc Slipper it was announc s while another was fitted with pment “Get held of Ac- in be | the in its announcements ed be. discontinued ten-ton | to Alaska two years ago for a bear| FLIES NORTH yes- Pan the for winter The Clipper is expected to return to Seattle schedule, Monday morning GOODIE By l1 at 10 aafr. Luthera atiBert’s Cash Grocery n Ladies’ Aid, SPECIAL MEETING JUNEAU CENTRAL LABOR COUNCIL 7 P, M.—SATURDAY—-OCTOBER 1 CHARLE%’HARDY USE GUNS and SHELLS THAT THEM DOWN. You'll find evvr)lhmg you will need for your. hunung trips this season in our complete stock of putdeor, If it’s an outhoard motor for your beat, a new cleaning rod, or a sleeping bag—you’ll find your decoys, lamps, slings and equipment. choice here. ) S In guns, shel ecretary. belts———WE HAYE THh BEST! JUNEAU YOUNG per sat., Oct, Startin; " JAY WILLIAMS IS TALL STORIES - ' BACK FROM RIFLE MATCHESINEAST R(’prvscntativ(‘ of Territor- ial Chamber of Commerce Makes Contacts for Alaska Jay Williams, who represented the Territorial Chamber of Commeree 1t the big rifle shoot of the War De- partment and National Rifle Asso- eiation at Camp Perry, Ohio, be tween Angust 21 and September 10 returned June the Monnt McKinley Willian that increasing inter Camp Perry has been ens improved until it now the largest and one ranges in the world rifle, small bore, shooting He in 1918 as| team and to i on with the con tantly n rifle sheoting larged and s undoubtedly of the finest devoted to heavy | pistol and revolver competed at Camp Perry a member of the Alaska says about the only feature of the camp that he could recognize on this revisit twenty years later, wi nearby Lake Erie. All of the pres- ent vast camp facilities were util- ized by visiting riflemen this year |and future meets will undoubtedly necessitate further enlargement. Camp Perry is the mecca, annu- ally, not only of target shooters of the various persuasions, but of big | game hunters, prominent members of wildlife conservation societies, and sportsmen of all kinds from every part of the nation. The Alaska | Territorial Chamber of Commerce | thought that a good share of these| thousands of outddor men were po- tential Alaska visitors and sent Wil- tions to devote his entire time to| | talking with _these prospects and supplying them with literature and | pictures: on Territorial subjects cards, nov- |Special attention was given to such|son will outstanding features as big game | hunting, fishing and rugged north- ern scenery. In Prominent Booth | Through a long friendship with Major John W. Hession, Shooting Promotion Manager of the Win-| chester Repeating Arms Company, | the ‘Alaska representative was in-| | vited to-share the booth used by the | | Winchester‘‘@ompany, to meet nml entertain tlye shooters. This com- pany occupied the first and moq‘ prominent booth on Commercial | Row. The Western Cartridge Com- | pany held the next adjoining one This combination of two companies highly important in the sportsmen’s Juneau trinl world attracted a hLeavy patronage, [at St. Ann's Hospital, following a at J. A. L. Moller, prom- inent New York City sportsman and President of the Camp Fire| |Club of America, who made a trip hunt, spent several days at the big| shoot. The friendship and assis- tance of Major Hession and “Monte” Moller gave the Alaska representa- tive the chance to make a wide| range of contacts among sportsmen | who are financiaily able to take agd-| antage -of the wilderness recrea- | tion which Alaska possesses in un- | spiled abundance The public generally, says Wil- Jiams, was extremely eager for in- formation on Alaska, and a large amount of literature, such as pam-: phlets, folders, maps and magazines, was distributed among those from whom some results may be expect~ |ed. Probably the greatest benefit to the Territory came from contacts with those individuals and small groups who showed an exceptional interest and desire for firsthand ins | formation concerning the Territory. | Many stated that they intend o | visit the Territory next year and & \larger number said they were com= et H8 TOMORR( The: bird seasonis: October 1 to November 15. Are You Eetfifl%”‘ © Are You Ready ) !: GET | swift |Osa Johnson flew and filmed with | her ‘Evfl'urcen Cemetery. Wll.l. BRING :LICENSE HERE, NOW! ‘ COI.ISEUII'I OWNED AND OPFRATED A7 COME TRUE IN ‘BORNED’ FILM Mortin - Johnson's Produc- & ticn of Remarkable Ad- ()llS(‘l”H Juneau’s Gireatest Show Value LAST TIMES TONIGHE v Filmed :for ‘the first fime B the jsle - of the «top{y-urvy the wpside- dawn n;mue inrev ventures at etrating the forbidden fast- thé isle of the incredibl » perilous' that gov=| ritfes at first refusec Mr. and Mrs. Martit encountered the greate them all. filming th of Martin Joht & carcer in “Borneo, (2 ury-Fox release whic nit¢ht ‘at the Coliseum 1ts never before and fascinating suc the screen, where tall s true right before your impossible is the daily routine this last, unknown, savage lanc on the earth’s surface, the: land of trec-climbing fish, fabulous crea- tures of paradox; of flying snakes the aerial division of Borneo's sixty-three varieties; of oysters on trees, where natives collect their sea-food by lopping off branche: of the real wild men of Borneo, | whose gruesome pursuit of human | heads is the black eurse of a weird land; of Murut men from whose blowguns sudden death wings sil- ently on darts tipped with venom; | of monkeys with “schnozzolas,” r est of the rare, never kept alive in| any zoo and filmed for the first| titme; and of the “devil-be of the jungle, a huge orang-utan fight- ing a three-day battle against a hundred natives, hurling tree-top | thun- | g der-bird” roaring down out of the sky. | A pioheer in exploration with | camera and airplane, Martin John- photographed, in Borneo, the last of his beloved jungles. This| is the high point in & career that | led him through the dark, mysteri- | ous byways of unknown wor i e nerses o on a venture ernment an pesmision o' neon 1 ture of pit elimax Twentieih h ends (c Cheatre seen pass ion’- onr ories’ eome eyes. The in Dromatically described by Lowell Thomas with hilarious interruptiony by'Professor“LewLehr. Supervised by Trumon Tolley OR ADDED ENJOYMENT: Musical Comedy . Cartoon—Late News "POPEYE MATINEE Tomorrow—1 P. M. Showing “BORNEOQO” Cartoon Free -Candy—Prizes | 5 2 0CCUPATION OF CEDED SECTIONS 1S NOW STARTED Military Units Prepared for March When Clock Strikes 12 Midnight lingering illness, will be held to- morrow afternoon at 2 o'clock in the | (Continued from Page One) Chapel of the C. W. Carter Mor- > ” tuarys i COMMISSION MEETS Interment the| BERLIN, Sept. 30.—The Interna- | tional Commission to carry out the terms of German annexation of the | Sudetenland under the four-power TAKE MONTH TRIP agreement, met for the first time |today to discuss preparing for the Czechoslovakia evacuation of zones Mr. and Mrs. Karl Alstead will| number 1 and 2 for German occupas leave for the south fomorrow on|tion the Alaska to spend a month in the| > B fi:::v:wosl visiting friends and rela- GLAC[ER HIGHWAY SEWING CLUB MEETS They will visit Mrs. Alstead’s pu- ents in Walla Walla, and will also| visit friends and relatives in Ta-| Mys Leo Jewett entertained mem= coma and Astoria. bers of the Glacier Highway Sew- |ing €lub yestefday with a luncheon and informal afternoon at her resi= ing north at the first favorable op- ' gence on the Glacier Highway. portunity. Present for the affair were Mrs. Williams mentioned that he waS pay] Hudon, Mrs. Floyd Betts, Mrs. always careful to point out that Ray peterman, Mrs. N. B. Cook, Mrs. it is highly inadvisable for laborers gaycld Smith, and Mrs. Mae Cro- to come to the Territory in search e of work; that Alaska has its own unemployment problem, the indus- tries here being largely seasonal and the working periods of short duration husband, making a record for of the world’s remote| places, and capturing for screen audiences the thrill of the undis- covered, the unknown, she new and | | the \uangv the screen O MY JOHNSON SERVICES BE HELD TOMORROW Funeral services for Edward John- | son, who died Wednesday morning | will ‘be held at D 'KARL ALSTEADS TO e RAINBOW GIRLS MEET TOMORROW Tomorrow afternoon at 1:30 o= clock, a meeting of the Order- of Rainbow Girls will be held in the |lodge room of the Scottish Rite Temple, with Miss Phyllis Jenne, Worthy Advisor, presiding. Following the meeting a social will be held. All members are uri!!d to attend. ow! EVERY NIGHT ALL NIGHT to the music of RUTH WOOD At the Piano .+ . while you eat open from 5 fir ’Em" & DANCING AND ENTERTAINMENT THELMA BIRD Singing and Dancing at JOHN MARIN’S YOUR

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