The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 13, 1938, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

GENUINESHELL CORDOVAN FOR LEATHER-WISE MEN THE DAILY ALASl\A EMPIRE THURSDAY OCT 13, 1938. HUNGARY-CZECH | [ PEACETALK IS 'WITHOUT EFFECT |Budapest I:; Ask Four Powers for Decision on 8,000 Miles of Land KOMAROM, Hungary, -Oct." 13.— | The Hungarian Delegation 'to the Komarom Conference declared to- .mgm that negotiations on Hun- gary's demands for the cession of Czechoslovakian territory have broken off. 4 | Koloman Konkanya Vonkanya, | Hungary's Forelgn Minister, read a | declaration at the final session of | the conference stating ' that the | Budapest government would hand | over its claims on Czechoslovakia to a four-power conference: for its de- T | TRAVEL HOLDS UP| FOR TERRITORY, + BAKER REPORTS Alaska Line Chief Looks for Another Big Year to U 8. DEPARTMENT OF AGRLCULTURE, WEATHER BU‘REA!I THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast tor Juneau and vicinity, beginning at 3:30 p.m,, Oct. 13: Showers tonight and Friday; moderate southerly winds. Weather forecast for Southeast Alaska: Showers tonight and Fri- day; moderate southerly winds except fresh over Dixon Entrance and Clarence Strait. Forecast of winds. along the Coast of the Gulf of Alaska: Fresh squtherly winds from Dixon Entrance to Dry Bay; fresh southeast to east winds from Dry Bag to Cape Hinchinbrook. who buy finer foot-gear for long-term en- cision. vk joyment. Genuine - Cordovan s _practically ‘“;‘;';‘“m:e"x;{;_'a’:n me‘;‘m:‘::; impregnable to wear . . . holds a high lustrous jan ultimatum ecalling for Czecho-' polish . . . ages beautifully like a pipe of finest slovakia's acceptance ‘of Hungary's Briae. territorial demands, satd to cover i some 8,000 square miles. High priced? . . . Well, good Cordovans always The Hungarian spokesman: said were, till Bootmakers came along. hib goverpment saw uc-Lway 10| bridge existing differences between the two nations by cqnuzmlng the conferepice; | $9.75 Ex : . AUSTRI FLA ———— NAl, OATHOLIG? | Spokesman Says Cardinal, Making it Church Cool fall days and nights call for comfortable house coats. At the left is a wine colored one of naptha-cleansed flannel trimmed with MAKE TRIP TOMORROW blue revers and a tie-girdle. The robe at the right is made of the | Versus Hitler ‘ VIENNA, Oct." 13—Joseph’ Buer-| ckel, Hitler's Deputy to Austria, to- day declared before a monster Nazi mass meeting that Cardinal Innit- zer is attempting to make Austria' choose between “Christ and Adolf Hitler.” He shouted his speech through loud speakers to & cheering crowd of 100,000, saying, “Hitler or Christ| is not the question. Hitler never| |took a position against Christ n | this state. There is only one Fue-, | hrer, His name is Adolf Hitler!” | | He accused the par'. Catholic Enjoy the refreshing goodness of Schilling Tea! Made from | choice tea leaves, it always gives you a clear, delicious cup —delicate in both flavor and aroma. Remember, Schilling Tea is protected and kept fresh | inan attractive, red cellophane- sealed package. chilli Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coom HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Oct. 13.—Some people don’t appreciate how remarkable they are. And Samuel Kayzer is one of them. That young man—he's 85—thinks it's bad business to let the folks know that he is, as .age is figured, an old man. He's in business and he thinks the ~customers will ffigure a man who has lived 85 years is a little tired. So the last thing Samuel said, saying goodbye with a friendly pat on the shoulder that almost knocked me down the hill he lives on, was: “If you can skip the age, you know—." Well, I didn’t answer that, and I can't keep the age because I like to write about remarkable things and Samuel Kayzer is remarkKable. There are lots of dramatic coaches in this town but I've never met any other who is 85 years old, looks a sturdy 60, and talks an aggressive 30. 1 dislike recipes for longevity. Like diet and cures for the blues, they are individual matters. Samuel Kayzer dismisses it with, “I just don’t FEEL old.” He also knows something about breathing. He picked that up—‘oh, about 60 years ago,” as he put it nonchalantly—and he has practiced it ever since. Takes a deep one, through the nostrils, and exhales it slowly through the mouth—with a noise like a subway train roaring down the track. Socially, of course, he omits the noise and, as far as I could tell, takes his ozone in the usual manner. He can keep up that sound effect for two minutes. “Develops the chest,” he commented, lighting a cigarette. Kayzer, until recently, was on the Metro payroll. He had come to town, about eight years agp, at Howard Hughes's insist- Constitutionally, WHY NOT ENJOY A REALLY DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNER AT THE, NEWER—FINER PERCY'S ence that he should accept $1,000 a week for training Billie Dove for the talkies. He also, incidentally, took on Jean Harlow, a Hughes “discove Then Louis B. Mayer importuned him to work on the Metro stock company. To this he gave three days a week. Metro,'like all the others, has undergone a paroxysm of ceremony. It looked like a good chance for our young octogenarian to rest a bit. At one time, back in New York, Kayzer was solacing and coaching a group of more or less famous people that included Dorothy Gatley, Fred Bickel, Lila Lee, Milton Sills, Agnes Ayres, Thomas Meighan, the writer Rex Beach, the songwriter Irving Berlin, and Bessie Love. Miss Gatley became Ann Harding, Mr. Bickel became Fredric March, and Miss Lee, remaining Lila '-# became famous. Ipcidentally, she's back under the Kayzer wing to try a comeback. k “What makes actors,” he insisted, “is the instinct to appre- ciate the moods, thoughts, feelings of others. A good woman can piay a bad woman better than a bad woman, and vice versa, has that dramatic instinct. Edward G. Robinson, a very boy, sweet, gentle and mild, can play a gangster better than ter—because he has that instinct. I believe poets, ‘enlunes great warriors—and actors—are not made or instruction. They're born with it. All gn cap do Is 19 try to guide it, bripg it out, develop if.” GOOD PRINTING? It’s Not Always the Kind of Printing You Get by Paying Extra The Kind of Printing That You Always Get EMPIRE PRINTING CO. same material in rich royal blue. A slide fastening closes it. | Johnny Amundsen returned from = — | Prince Rupert this afternoon 'after I clergy of seeking “to instigate the | flung by passing mobs, and that a"':f“::e; ;’::'::_d:l;u;mm:‘&afl; people against the state.” priest was knocked to the street by | B0 O Every time the Cardinal's name stones. Amundsen is ‘expected to make was mentipned, the crowd shouted ppe Nazis were openly accused bY | another trip to the British Colum- “Pful! Pfui!”, the German equival-/ gijiors of the Holy Heart of the|pia port some tinie toMOFFOW. ent of American “Boo!” More Fuel To Fire Catholics reported tnree new Catholic-Nazi incidents in the midst of the Nazi campaign against Car- dinal Innitzer and what the Nazis called ‘clerical agitators.” 19th District and Convent Oblati- | nen s in Vienna of using all their propaganda against the Car- dinal whose palace was stoned by a mob last Saturday night. | District court by Wilma Fitzgib- R {bons from Richard ' Fitzgibbor There s an estimated 670723 | ot of Yakutat, charging dranken- DIVORCE SPUGHT Suit for divorce has been filed in | ) ¥ LOCAL DATA | North in 1939 Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather | 3:30 p.m. yest'y 20.42 43 91 s 6 Lt. Rain | While passenger travel was off in{3:30 a.m. today ... 20.67 42 89 s 9 Lt. Rain | the States from 25 to 40 percent|Noon today . 2081 46 87 sw 3 Cloudy during the past season, Alaska RADIO REPORTS travel showed an increase in 1938 TODAY over last year, L. W. Baker, Assis- Max. tempt. Lowest 4a.m. 4a.m. Precip. 4am. tant General Manager of the Al-{ BStation last 24 hours temp. temp. velocity 24 hrs. Weather aska Steamship -Company, told theAtka 50 40 48 20 1.46 Cloudy Juneau Chamber ‘of Commerce at!Anchorage 45 37 A L 0 its weekly luncheon meeting this| Barrow 22 16 16 10 .06 Clear noon in Percy’s Cafe. Nome ... 36 | 24 30 8 0 Cloudy With the cooperation of the trans-| Bethel ... 38 26 30 8 0 Cloudy continental railroads the joint ad-|Fairbanks 36 30 30 4 03 Cloudy | vertising program is going forward | Dawson 38 32 32 4 0 Cloudy another year, he sald, and the out-{ St. Paul ... 44 36 42 18 04 Mod.R'n line for next year is endouraging.| Dutch Harbor 48 38 42 4 04 Cloudy He pointed particularly to the ' Na|Kodiak 50 38 38 6 0 Clear | tional Editorial Association conven-|Cordova 50 40 40 4 01 Clear tion and the Rotary District Con-|{Juneau . .. 45 | 40 42 9 20 Lt Rain ference' which will come north in|Sitka . 52 | 4 = s 20 | 1939. There already are 190 reserva- | Kotohikan 50 | 2w 4 08 Cloudy | tions for the N.E.A. trip, he re-|Prince Rupert 50 f 42 42 12 51 Cloudy | ported. ¢ 9 56 32 32 10 0 Clear High school teachers were guests 58 48 48 4 40 Cloudy of the Chamber today. They were 64 52 52 6 41 Clear Alice Padlmer, Myrtle Moe, Henry 80 58 58 4 0 Clear armon, Mrs. Monagle, school nurse, 8 58 58 10 0 Clear | Zora Brown, - Dorothy ‘Whittaker, L 52 54 4 0 Clear | Marjorie Tillotson, Kathryn Long, WEATHER COWDITIGNS AT 8 AM. TODAY | Kenneth Ferguson, Edna Harpole, Seattle (airport), cloudy, temperature 46; Blaine, cloudy, 46; Vic- Pauline Monroe, Superintendent A.|toria, partly cloudy, 44; Alert Bay, showers, 43; Bull Harbor, raining, B. Phillips and Alex Dunham, high|44; Triple Island, cloudy; Langara Island, partly cloudy, 44; Prince school principal. Rupert, raining, 44; Ketchikan, misting, 43; Craig, showers, 48; Wran- Robert Stock of Wright and Stock | geit; cloudy; 42; Retersburg, cloudy, 45; Sitka, raining, 44; Cape also v{n-s a guest toda Spencer, partly cloudy, 43; Hoonah, cloudy, 44; Hawk Inlet, raining, #140; Tenakee, olundy. 45; Radioville, showers, 44; Juneau, raining, 41; Skagway, ‘cloudy, 40; Haines, cloudy; St. Elias, cloudy, 45; Cape Hin- %w W chinbrook, ‘cloudy, 40; Cordova, cloudy, 43; Chitina, cloudy, 34; McCar- thy, eloudy, 30; ‘Seward; partly cloudy, 41; Anchorage, cloudy, 41; Fair- banks, snowing, 30; Hot Springs, snowing, '30; Tanana, cloudy, 29; Ruby, cloudy; 29; Nulato, cloudy, 30; Kaltag, cloudy, 28; Flat, cloudy, 33; Crooked ‘Oreek, cloudy, 32; Stuyahok, snowing, 27; Platinum, clou- dy: Bethel, cloudy, 80; Golovin, clear, 24; Solomon, clear, 24; Council, clear, 22; Nome, clear, 24. Juneau, Oct. 14.—Sunrise, 6:32 a.m.; sunset, 4:59 p.m. WEATHER SYNOPSIS The barometer was low this morning from the Arctic Coast to Brit- ish’ Columbia and east to Hudson’s Bay with one center at Cordova of 20.58 inches and a secondary center at Chesterfield Inlet with a pres- sure of 229.08 inches. The barometer was also low over the western Aleutian Islands. A ridge of high air pressyre extended from Bristol Bay southeast over the Racific Ocean with a central pressure of 30.40 inches at ‘latitude 46 degrees north, longitude 154 degrees west. Gen- erally fair weather prevailed from the Seward Peninsula south over western Alaska to Kodigk with light to moderate precipitation occur- ying gver the rest of the Territory and over southwestern Canada and the Pacific Northwest, during the last 24 hours. 000,000 tons of coal available for‘m,ss mining in Wyoming. _______.__———__’ It is reported that windows in two convents were broken by missiles itis from the United States agricultural ex- mlk, fish, soy beans and meat ports to Canada the first half of are raw materials from which four 1938 were nearly double those of different kinds of new synthetic the corresponding period of 1937. fabrics are being developed. GO MODERN - Do away with old wooden drainboards. Install ‘'one of the New Two-Compart- ment Sinks and make dish washing a pleasure. RICE & AHLERS CO, Third .and Franklin- Streets. PHONE 34 FIRE is not the only destroyer of property. Other hazards take heavy toll, too. For a surprisingly small premium, have an Extended Coverage Endorsement attached to your fire insurance policy. It will protect you, in the same amount and under the same conditions ag. your fire plxcy, against explosion, windstorm, fall- ing on‘c;aft, ail, “wild” motor vehicles, riot and eivil commotion and smoke (from a permanently installed oil bu et) "!L in, write or telephoiie. * i SHATTUCK AGENCY PHONE Office———New, %?k Lifp Speaking of Television, Did You Know . . . ... That television pictures no longer are green? That the television cam- era distinguishes between naturgl red hair and dyed red hair? That television people think they could absorb Hollywood's annual output in a few weeks? Men to whom television is a busi- ness—not a mysterious something in the laboratory — give a lot of other interesting information in a two-part series starting in The Empire today. Read SPEAKING OF TELEVISION. VISION.

Other pages from this issue: