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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, NOV. 7, 1938. ey e ANN.MILLER, ——;:;L__— #88 LAST. rIzS KENNY BAKER; 4 [ A TU R Efl IN TONIGHT “For the Time of Your Life” RDAY'S CROWDS LAUGHED AND HOWLED odie 3 4 ¢ v v . AT THE BAZC )oww ST HILLBILLY OF ALL TIM } = : : . & Dick Powell Sings at Coli- City Revels” BOB BURNS»*THE MAN FROM ARKANSA\N bl W turing Bob Burns at Capitol ae e ; £ . L A most lavish -and spec- Ruth Etting Denies Marriage to Alderman LANE SISTERS | co I.ISEUIII OWNED AND . OPERATED 37 | Juneau’s Greatest Show Value COME ALONG! JOIN THE THRONG CHEERING THE MADCAPS OF £ y S ¢ 3 . MIRTH AND SONG Fea- . ; : ot : 4 scuny in Hollywood Hotel” Here comes the show from Rhythm Row.. with all those stars of radio and screen/ BOB BURNS* JACK OAKIE With a hrilliant array of stars 'to present its unique story and catchy X G ¢ ; : " starring Diek xenny BAKER* ANN MILLER molodics, RKO Radio’s “Radio City | : : : 7 ; ell and fc Revels,” now: at the Capitol " { § . % 5 . cu wih VICTOR MOORE Bob Burns, Jack Oakie, Kenny o 3 B > k. TR s based upon the famous rad LTON BERLZ ® Baker and Ann Miller head the Brges i program carrying the same nam sok Byeont e de cast of the tuneful offering, which| & 2 S i been beloved by air-far b 3 g | f $ A A THE HOLLYWOOD is based on an ingenious theme 2 the past three years. But, HOTEL PROGRAM RKQ-RADIO e (. Burns" queer mf-un;\ of writing i 3 i 5 & |th Im 1 a well-knit story (c ROSEMARY ~ith LOUELLA PICTURE catchy songs in his sleep serve e dramaiic structure. ‘E | The tory shows Povell. as | LAN of the 1938 1 Warner A showboat entertainer from Ar- PARSONS e > . Frances Lagtod kansas, Burns wants to be a son ‘ e 2 § het : in scure crooner who comes o HUGH @ "{.“ HERBERT bt er, but is unaware of his unusu- ) Sy ; for : | Hollywood looking for a break, and 1 talent. But Oakie. a broken-dow : 3 ; i R ; gets involved in no end of unfor- Tomond Figs Tin Pan Alley composer, uses Burr tunate and humorous complicatior GLENDA FARRELL The NS WY peculiarity to his own advantage to ploverdr | before he even gets started on hi LOLA LANE * BENNY ecure a contract to write the score i3 s { E 5 3 | career — 3 for the “Revels” which will cele- & b o ; § A ; & ? Dick sings half a dozen new hit m::nmv 520""“‘ A L s Donald Duck in Lonesome Ghosts | brate the fifth anniversary of Radio : : e songs by the clever composing team H y Latest News Flashes City. Interwoven with this scheme i B & ; ¥ | of Whiting and Mercer, and there . 2 P e ey a romance between Kenny Baker " Nt y is plenty of other music by Benny " COMING TOMORROW NIGHT - THE WOMEN OF THE |4 radio singer, and Ann Miller, Goodman and his famous swing MOOSE LODGE Pre t dan another romance betwe “torch singer,” denied that |band, and Raymond Paige’s well- VICTORIA THE GREAT” Burns and Helen Broderick, a own orchestra. There is plenty the frantic efforts of Oakie and his f danc too, directed (as wa Etting’s divorced husband. Above i pal, Berle, to further Miss Miller A 5 the wi show) by Bushy S Stloin v Mrs. Alderman, whe has filod a $150,000 love theft suit against the singer; Alma 3 Career and tolithep’ their s assceiate oticrney for Mrs ders who has filod % he singe | Berkeley Whittier, cut prize. [ and 5. S. Hahn, Mrs. Alderman’s counsel. Back (o tamera is 1L F. Sonnerman, shorthand re- ich : AldEEmiv R R M i Those clever sisters, Lola and H Pl ltdeq | Meal-ticket happy 3ac) " ge- unfl e[]“ ¢ 4\""11‘1:(.;:;.; lll;)lt-):x)nl(::: ‘r]i(‘::. The - complications that ensu Rotier-oAF Btk Resemary Lane, have the leading ng under cath as a depesition hearing in Los Angeles, Ruth EtU she and Myrl Ald » were married. Alderman was shet recently by Martin (Col. Gimp) Snyder, Miss a scene at the hearing (left to right), Miss Etting, John T. Houser, sl Cook, Trevor Davis, L. P. from these conflicting interests, | feminine roles, with Rosemary as G' S t d S i ‘t”l L Faulk. | he many songs and dance num- then and there be opened and pub- by a certified check, cashier’s check | Dick’s romantic interest and Lola A a S, ouglas. . L Fa K= o " ! ; “ RIS, ¥, bers that form an integral part of licly read aloud. Bids received after or hid bond (with authorized surety|as a highly temperamental movie —ALSO— Wfl“ a ur ay ner, W. L. Grisham, Waino Hend- | ipo sy all keep the picture swing- HosPITAL NOTES | the time fixed for opening will not X ¢ | staz S - rickson, Wellman Holbrook, J. W. ! cempany as surety) made payable CHARLIE McCARTHY e Y e J. W.ling along at a delightful pace and be considered. Plans, Specification | DI FOX MOVIETONEWS Leivers, Homer Nordling, E. M |yoyide something really new for| and form of contract documents WOMA CLUB 1ONL Polley, C. E. Rice, R. E. Robert-| .tyve patrons. And the final| wMys R d Ford. who has been may be examined at the Office of | than 5% of the amount of the bid.| . % SATE e Ur e e Mus. Ril Ford n 1 b | RUMMAGE SALE | A { seenes in the big broadeasting rooms | 5 surgical patient at St. Ann’s| the City Clerk at Haives, Alaska,| The Town of Haines reserves th rmer of Seward and Front Sts, Lede and placer location notices afternoon with luncheon and four M. 8. Whit- |44 the theaters of Radio City offer | Hospital for the past several weeks, and the offices of N. Lester Troast right to reject any cor all bids, and|saturday, Nov. 12 —adv. for sale at The Eapire Office. table of bridge at their residences Grover | pienty of novelty as the background | was qischarged today. and Associates, Juneau or Anchor-| to waive informalities | BLANKETS —— ™ §1 o in the MacKinnon Apartments. WVinn 0 a group of notable specialty act: age, Alaska. A set of Plans, Specifi- No bidder may withdraw his bid Beautiful two-tone and Indian patterns. Fall flowers decorated the table —— Although most of the action takes Greine who received a Cations and forms may be obtained after the hour set for the opening : at the office of the Engineer, N. thereof, or before award of con- MEN’S 1009, WOOL ESTER TROA & ASSOCIAT c 54 ward layed to the Owner in amount not less; Mrs. Jomm Keyser and Miss Dalma Hanson were co-hostesses Saturday in the two apartments, and priz place in Manhattan, one sequence|f..ciure of the lower left leg in were won by Mrs. ‘Wellman Hol Unlike deaths from most causes, occurs aboard a dingy and bankrupt| o, %ecident in the mill of the A brook, first; Mrs. H. L. Faulkner, Mortality due to excessive heal|snowhoat in Arkansas, and al; woo agmitted to St. Ann’s Hos- Juncau, Alaska, upon a deposit of for a period exceeding thirty (30) second; Mrs. H. W. Douglas, third; fuctuates widely from year (o sy in the Corn” number in| i " "o 3:30 o'clock | $10.00. day HARRY’S — THE year an adjacent cornfield S The full amount of deposit for, It 1S estimated that there will be oo - = | one set of documents will be re-| available for the work to be done (Opposite Erwin’s Cafe) T Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Maloney of turned to each actual bidder \HHII{IH under this advertisement substan- Hollywood Sights And Sounds tially the sum of $22,000.00 By Robbin Coons l " | Tee Harbor, are the proud parents @ Teasonable time after receipt of ‘ of a baby boy weighing 8 pounds, Pids and the return of the Pla N. LESTER TROAS' nces, born at St. Ann's Hos- | and Specifications. Other deposits ASSOCTATES, will be refunded with deduction not BRe ks e the i 6% C neath nruwnl“g ' pital Saturday evening. I 4 1 . i AT & exceeding the actual cost of repro TOWN OF HAINES, HAINES. . GTQLM ,‘,\SML,) (/jd'.mi o T W”m: “”!\‘ Mmlf ki h\ } ' Mrs, Keith Wildes, who has been | duction within thirty (30) days after ALASKA. A and large, all in the same boat. And it’s ry nice, if expensive at St. Ann’s | Uhe date of opening bid First publication, Nov. 7, 1938 5 . . { 3 receiving surgical acre at St. Ann's ; e verdlct "I case Hospital, was dismissed today and| Fach bid shall be accompanied| Second publication, Nov. 12, 1938. 247 nklin vin @ boat means, among other things, that the sailor in ¢ To ow: eturned home ey grease-paint has arrived. It means, socially and financially, he o IR SO § T S e v is “in.” He has to be in. financially, of he couldn’t own a boat George Henry was dismissed from A verdict of death by accidental St. Ann's Hospital are such nice ‘places to spend weekends and holidays. The boat- drowning in the case of Emil Oarl son, was returned by a coroner owner finds that out, unless he’s cagey, very soon after the 2 : a ¢ H f { 5 HEEr. Knew jury conducted by Felix Gray, U.| -payme; fc finds that he has friends he never kne $oRT St il S. Commissioner, yesterday after he had noon Owning a boat for show purposes is practically passe, how- B tisnn: B ine ko skt The people who have yachts—schooners and yawls and ow the high tide line béne: He usually gels in, socially, as soon as he dces own one. Boat medical care ¢ today ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed Bids will be received in TRIPLICATE by N. Lester Troast ketches—support them because they like them harles Warner Machine Shop | 44 Associates. Shattuck Building Errol Flynn, naturally, would have to have a boat, if only to ast Satur afternoon, Wwas 2| yuneau Alaska, until 1:30 p.m. on justify his biography: What's life to Flynn without adventures? native of Torne, Finland, and was | November 28, 1938, for the construc When he came to Hollywood he didn't know he'd have one. born there July 24, 1871. He was| (jon of IMPROVEMENTS TO A but here he is with that 75-foot schooner Sirocco and crew of aturalized citizen of the United | MUNICIPAL WATERWORKS five. It's his pet. ates and a resident of Alaska| gygTEM for the TOWN OF X for the past 20 years. HAII\'FS; Haines, Alaska, and will The Daily Ala: SHORT TALKS ON ADVERTISING (FIFTH SERIES) 11 Empire Presents---- Prepared by the The coroner’s jury consisted of: i of Research and Education, Advertising Federa John Ford, the director, has a boat too. No show, although || 8 SGPGA S 1t By o) | the Araner is a slick vessel. Ford and family spend vacations | o \eonoone S it D vies, A“"Gas Gas A" TI me aboard cruising. Ford and Dudley Nichols whipped up the script drew Oja, and John Rykinern. AT o TG onmy NI of “The Informer” aboard it. He's a good sailor. S b ceariioas o Cd.hou‘ ach was go bad I couldn't eat or sleep. the Martha, is an old-timer. Thirty- | will be held tomorrow afternoon | o, ehembrssied On Y Neaet 1 Sat five years old, it's a 64-foot schooner. Jimmy used to suffer from at 2 oclock in the chapel of the| ¥ish slcep fine ncver folt bett seasickness but got over it. After all, a fellow who owns a boat Charles W. Carter. Mortuary. The | A D L R ' K seasickness. The Martha is his hide-out. He Rev. John L. Cauble will read the | s service and interment will be the Evergreen Cemetery. of Amer| More for Your Money Jimmy Cagney’s beat can't put up w Number 4 can catch up on slecp there Flynn and Cagney and Ford and most of the others are Money is important only for what you can catch-as-catch-can sailors when it comes to costuming. They buy with it. | \ wear old clothes, or white ducks, and jersey sweaters, only for the satisfaction it gives you. And pace with a far smaller volume of goods to No so Dick Powell. Dick dresses the part like the musical greater satisfaction is the only thing that divide among us. comedy star he is. W Dick boards the 48-foot power cruiser 3 is important in getting more for your money. IBI)II(‘r-Mx\uYO Drug Co.—in--Douglas by Guy's Drug Store. adv, - ¥ . 3 cess and if it were to be discontinued we What you buy is important would have to slip back to a much slower Without this modern high-speed market- ing machinery IFord, Chevrolet, and Chrys- That is why the service of advertising is ler automobiles would cost much more he- 5o helpful. Merchants and manufacturers cause fewer would be made. The same is advertise primarily to sell their goods, but true of fountain pens, radio sets, and frozen e : in the long run no advertising can be suce- foods, all of which owe their wide distribu- one of those delicious SpeClGl cessful unless it helps the consumer to get lilllm to };]ldlvvrfllis‘in;:. Thus advcrtisin)g, with 4 . more for his mon The most important all its helpful information, costs the con- Luncheon Sandwiches, with a business job that each of us has to d'r., next sumer nothing, and brings many articl bowl! of Soup or Chili?-—at the { to carning an income, is to buy the best Wwithin reach of the common man’s purse. have you tried . . . .. possible living which that income can afford. Advertising has also puf identifying trade- marks on food, clothing, and nearly every- there’s a real treat for these chill days. Eroica he is usually in uniform, gold braid, brass buttons and all the trimmings. 1 imagine Dick is surprised every time he gets @board. He didn’t want a boat, at first . He and Joan Blondell both got terribly seasick when they were boat-shopping. They didn’t last the trial cruise, They thought the boat was very oh yes, but if the salesman didn’t mind would he tack in d shore—and quick! Well, Dick got over it, and Joan has d a new set of sea-le Alien Jenkins' boat isn’t in the social register—not quite. He built it himself. For four years it rested, being worked on, in the Jenkins garage. At least one end of it did. At 18 feet, it stuck out a bit. Jenkins doesn’t aim at world cruises. He skits around preity close to shore. The name of the midget craft, mcidentally, is the Normandie! Preston Foster's Zoa II has a real sailor in charge. Name's ston Foster. Preston’s always painting it up when he isn't sailing it. Donald Crisp's Zahma is one of the biggest—I114-foot schooner, Crisp won't play unless he can play far. At least a week or it's no go. No big brave sails across to Catalina for him. He's got master’s papers. { But when you go over the list of sailors in greasepaint I guess it's Buck Jones who takes the prize. It's funny, Buck being a cowboy star and all, but Buck owns and uses not only Lhe yacht Sartartia but his own plane besides. - That's flying rofessionally, or just for pleasure. Quiet and unassuming but none the less effective is the work of the Red Cross. In matters of National Emer- gency the Red Cross is first to answer the cry of distress. Your local chapter cares for hundreds of needy cas s each year, distributing fcod and clothing through honest and efficient executives whose services are ab expense. solutely free of Red Cross Drive commences November eleventh and con- tinues until Thanksgiving Day —The dollar you pay is the best investment in humanity which you have ever made. JOIN THE RED CROSS Wherever we go, at any time of day or night, we constantly see and hear many kinds of advertising. On all sides, industry offers its wares, presenting an enormous show window of everything that money can buy. Nothing is overlooked. Beans, movies, garters, automobiles oranges, refrigerators, fishing poles, asphalt paving, and corres- pondence courses. You decide what you want and spend your money cordingly. Adver- tising gives you a world’s fair in motion, a continuous parade of merchandise. The more yvou see of it the more you know about the world’s goods and the better you know how to make your material life a happy one. By serving the interests of consume everywhere, advertising does a very impor- tant job for industry. It is the only means by which the huge quantity of goods pro- duced today can rapidly be moveed to mar- ket. Advertising is the most economical and most efficient part of the selling pro- thing else you buy, standardizing the prod- uct of each advertiser. If you like a certain brand you buy it again, and if you don’t like it you avoid it—the trade-mark tells the tale and advertising put the trade-mark on the goods. If you want to know what you're get- ting you buy a well-advertised produect, made by a manufacturer in.whom you have confidence. Because there is so much advertising in this country, we are the best-informed peo- ple in the world on what there is to buy and where to buy it. Because advertising is an economical salesman, we can buy things cheaper and the country is more prosperous. Because advertising identifies products, we can buy with greater confidence in their quality. Advertising is one of our greatest helpers in the important problem of getting more for our money. Copyright 1938, Advertising Federation of Amermca 1——————-—fm