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THEATRE Show Place of Juneau SHORTS Fiddler's Parade Silver Threads News LAST TIMES TONIGHT ""HOLIDAY"’ ™ PHOTO EXHIBIT IS | BEING HELD HERE [ DURING NEXT WEEK From Tuesday to Thursday next week, a photo exhibit will be held | in the Parlors of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, afternoon and evenings The display will be open for pub- lic inspection from 2:30 until 5 o'- | clock during the afternoons, and | from 7 until 10:30 o'clock in the ev- enings. From 9:30 until closing (m: Tuesday and Wednesday evenings| moving pictures will be shown, and on Thursday evening splay of amateur oil and water color paint- ir will be exhibited | Anyone wishing tc enter may ob-! tain entrance requirements at any | of the photo shops or drug stores. Judges for the exhibit wlil be Mrs Sally Shaffer, Mrs. Robert Henning and Alex Dunham KRAUSE T0 PRESIDE | AT COUNCIL TONIGHT Councitman G. E. Krause is éx- pected to preside at tonight’s spec- ial meeting of the City Council in | the absence of Mayor Harry I. Lucas who is ill A regular meeting of the Council is to be held tomorrow night in ad- “ dition to tonight's session, which be- gins at 8 o'clo -+ DIVORCED Jennie Runstad received a divorce decree yesterday afternoon from 1 t a ¢ Hans Runstad on grounds of in- compatibil SITKA, Alaska, March (Spec- ial Correspondence) — Mrs. Doris Pederson and Mr. Oscar Tilson have been married here by United States Commissioner William Knight ceremony was performed at home of Mr. and Mrs. William Smith Mr. and Mrs tendants, The bride wore an ashes of roses satin evening gown while the ma- tron of .honor wore a blue taffeta gown. Open mony. Mr. and Mrs. Tilson are now at home to their friends in the Tilson Apartments Building The bride is wellknown in both Juneau and Sitka and Mr. Tilson is SITKA COUPLE WE 2 the P Smith were the at- house followed the cere- |a business man of Sitka FELLOWSHIP GROUP WILL HAVE DINNER Tomorrow night at 6:30 o'clock in the Parlors of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church, members of the Fellowship group will meet for din- ner and an informal discussion of Legislative matters, led by Mrs. Mil- dred Hermann. During the evening, games will also RSSO LADI AUX. TO MEET A regular busin meeting of the Juneau Ladies Auxiliary, No. 34, will be held tomorrow night at 8 o'clock at the Union Hall. All members are Jurged to attend. - ,Ne.\ff lime you luy g:gcallcé oo’ say “TEACHER'S” Teacher’s...more and more...is asked forbynamebydiscriminating men. Men who really know Scotch | | The | Whisky, who gauge a blend’s supe- riority by these important points: FLAVOUR. .Teacher's never varies. QUALITY... Constant through the years. TASTE... Smooth — just right! STURDINESS...Men like its hearty s quality. BOUQUET...Teacher's is pleasant. TANG...Definitely there in Teacher's balanced flayour, Teacher's Perfoction of -Blended Scotch Whisky has been made by Wm. Teacher & Sons, Ltd., Glasgow, since 1830, 86 PROOF » SOLE V. 5. AGENTS, Schieffelin & Co., NEW YORK CiTy-IMPORTERS SINCE 1754 ATTENTION! JUNEAU MINE & MILL WORKERS UNION Special Meeting +| FRIDAY-MARCH 3-7P. M. Our Next Regular Meeting Will Be: Monday, March 6th, at 7 P. M. Sharp b4 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1939. Nell, Rudy, What Do You Say? WORLD WAR IS THEME OF FILM PLAYING HERE ”Shopworn——lfilgel” Ends Tonight at Capitol Theatre Margaret Sullavan makes her de- ITALIAN IS CHOSEN FOR HIGH HONOR Eugenior CErFinal Pacelli to ‘Assume Title of but as a singing star in “The Shop- worn’ Angel.” The picture, co-star; ring Miss Sullavan and James Stew- | art for the first time, ending tonight | at the Capitol Theatre. Her number is the World War favorite, “Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit Bag and Smile.” The song was chosen by Director H. C. Potter and Joe Mankiewicz, the producer, because the period of the picture is 1917, at the start of Am- erica’s entrance into the World War. The story of “The Shopworn An- gel” concerns a young Westerner who comes to New York to train before being sent to France. He meets the gold-digging, fast-living | showgirl and immediately falls in |love with her. She wants to return his love but is reminded by her manager that the boy loves her be- | cause of the girl she appears to be, not for what she actually is. ‘ She tries to avoid seeing him, but on the day before he leaves for | France they spend the day together. That night the girl realizes that she really loves him and they are mar- ried in a roadside chapel with her manager as witness. His company marches past just as the marriage ceremony is finished. He says good- bye and rushes to join his company All three wonder if hell ever re- turn. Walter Pidgeon plays the “other | man” of the story, and the cast also features Hattie McDaniel, Nat Pen- | dleton, Alan Curtis, Sam Levene. Eleanor Lynn and Charles D Brown | " ELKS AGAINST ~ TERRITORIAL ASSOCIATION Lodges Too Remofe-Past ' Exalted Rulers in Charges of Meet Juneau Elks last night voted down | be played. Reservations for the af- | a proposal for organization of a Ter- | fair are being made by calling Red |ritorial Elks | 170. Association, on the | grounds that lodges in Alaska are too far apart for satisfactory work- | ing of such a plan, now in operation |in most States. Past Exalted Rulers had charge of {last night's program and refresh- ments. Motion pictures of Juneau and other scenic beauties were shown. Norman Banfield occupied | the Exalted Ruler's chair. Robert Kimball and Thomas Jones were initiated, | gt g L 'BRIGHT COLLEGE " BOYS ARE NEEDED BY GOVERNMENT (Continuec from Page One) with a smoky topaz the size of a plum. “Nobody respectable would | wear it,” says she, mischievously. It once belonged to Machado, exiled dictator of Cuba. . . . Fifty steps from the U. S. Treasury you can buy a book entitled: “Your Income Tax, How to Keep It Low.” . . . In Wash- | ington, home of the New Deal, only | five “New Deal” names appear in the telephone book—a New Deal | barber shop, a liquor store, two clothes shops and a paper hanger. - e SONS OF NORWAY Regular meeting Saturday, March| For several years negotiations be- contracted to curb political activities 4, 8 pm, I.OOF. Hall. Initiation, ‘entertainmem and refreshments. adv. Pope Pius Xil (Continued from Page One) April, 1917, the Papal Nuncio at] Munich died, Pacelli was sent to | fill his vlace Gees To Germany He arrived in May, 1917, at a time | when Germany was engaged in her | struggle against the Allies. At the| end of June of the same year Pacelli | had an important conversation with | Bethmann-Hollweg on Germany aims in the war and later was w—{ ceived by the Kaiser at his general | headquarters at the front, deliver- | ing to him a letter from Benedict | XV in which the Pope urged him to | do everything possible for the res-| toration of peace, even if it had to| cost Germany some sacrifices. He ! also asked the Emporer to use his in- fluence to put an end to the de- portations of the Belgians. Pacelli’s | report on these interviews as well as | those from other papal represen- | tatives abroad may have contributed | to the famous attempt made by Ben- | edict XV on August 1 to mediate be- tween the warring nations During the revolution he showed | rare courage when, in 1919, a group | of spartacists, pistols in hands, in-| vaded the nunciature. Without flin- ching, adorned in his purple robe, he met the revolutionists, quietly pointed out that they were on soil privileged as extraterritoriality, and warned them against laying hands on a foreign diplomat. His magnetic personality won the day, and the spartacists withdrew, somewhat ab- ashed. Visited United States \ In October, 1936, Cardinal Pacelli campaign in which Father Charles E Coughlin of Detroit had figured in front page headlines because of bit- ter personal attacks upon the in- tegrity of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Vatican prelate's ad- | vent caused widespread speculation But he insisted his journey was only “for a vacation.” For weeks he was secluded with friends on Long Island. Then he made an air tour which took him to the Pacific coast and back in less than six days. He visited Washing- | ton, Philadelphia, Georgetown Uni- rsity, where he received an hon- orary doctorate in canon and civil |law; South Bend, Ind., where Notre Dame University conferred the de- gree of Doctor of Letters; Chicago, St and Cincinnati. Luncheon With President Oo November 5, two days after the election, Pacelli had luncheon with President Roosevelt at Hyde Park.| Afterwards the Cardinal talked free- | ly and admiringly of the scenes, peo- ple and church organizations he had | encountered on his transcontinental ! |tour. But whenever interviewers' | questions veered toward rumored es- tablishment of diplomatic relations | between Washington and Vatican | | public visited the United States. Coming | 4 in the closing stages of a presidential | Martha Norwood Wagner Is Martha Norwood Wagner, red- service department, Rudy Miss W by the orchestra leader. peared to answer charges of assau headed clerk in the Miami, Fla, Vallee's latest heart interest? agner says the ring she is wearing is Rudy's, given to her The two met in Miami where Rudy ap- 1t brought against him by a night club kusboy. G with Austria in June, 1933, and with Yugoslavia in July, 1935 For a time the relations between the church and Germany were ami- | cable. But by March, 1935, there had | been several bitter complaints from | ecclestastics in Germany in connec- | tion with the growth of neo-pagan= |ism. On March 24th Pacelli sent & message of congratulation to Card- f | inal Schulte, archbishop of Cologne, | on the latter’s 25th anniversary as a Bishop. In it were phrases which® P | Nazis interpreted as a virtual com- mand | Germany to challenge the validity of | neo-paganistic ideas. Within a week there were retaliations, chiefly wholesale arrests of nuns and monks on charges of violating German cur- rency shipment laws. Hitler Attacked In June, 1935, Pacelli warned more than a quarter million pilgrims at Lourdes, France, that the church never would make peace with those “enemies possessed by superstition of | i race or blood.” Subsequent, in!erpre- | tations which applied this phrase to Nazidom were not denied by the Vat- | |ican. Then on July 23 Osservatore Paul, San Francisco, St. Louis|® SPANISH accent has the hairdress of Margaret McComas (the name could be Irish), 23, a blue-eyed blond who, as “Miss Angeleno,” will head a deleg: tion of 10,000 Los Angeles citi- mens to the premiere of the Golden Gate exposition. City or toward Father Coughlin's;» activities, Bishop Francis J. Spell-|ejgn minister of Spain called on Pac- { man of Boston, a member of Pacelli’s| i ’party. intervened, saying the Cfl‘l'd-\e”‘ at Rome. But attempts to carry inal was not giving interviews on |the parieys beyond that status failed public subjects. Pacelli sailed for |There was a complete break in 1937 home November 7. | when, in the midst of Sp: bloody European political developments | cjvil war, Vatican City exchanged formed the background for the chief | envoys with the insurgents problems confronting Pacelli as head! With Germany Pacelli had little of the diplomatic organization of|petter success. After negotiations be- the Vatican. | tween him and Franz von Papen, Nazi Relations | Vice Chancellor under Hitler, a con- Outstanding among these were the | cordat was signed in July, 1933, by | relations with Nazi Germany and|which the Reich guaranteed that | Republican Spain. The overthrow of [no discrimination would be made | the monarchy in the latter country lagainst members of the Catholic | left the church in a precarious con- | Centrist party which had just been | dition after centuries of ascendancy. ! disolved. In return Vatican City [ ) { | tween Vatican City and Madrid hung | by Catholic action groups | fire. In June, 1934, they reached the Sings Concordats | “modus vivendi” stage when the for-! Pacelli signed similar concordats ’ FAL ONCE-OVER, this battleship bucks heavy Care ibbean seas demonstrating m\varlhll”s that’ll be on display when F.D.R. views secret war gamegy | Romano, Vatican newspaper, pub- | lished a scathing attack on the Hit- ler Government, accusing it of vio- Jating the 1933 concordat on at least | three points. The chief of these was | the forcing of Catholics to abide by | sterilization laws. Restrictions on're- liglous practices and on the free- dom of the Catholic press also were | mentioned. It was revealed too that | & note embodying these points, writ- | ten by Pacelli, had been sent to Ber- | lin, 2 | In retaliation the Nazi-controlled press of Germany accused the Vati- can of fostering a world-wide anti- | German campaign, JUNIOR PROM. 15 EVENT HERE | 1 | - FRIDAY NiGHT Tomorrow evening the high school | spring social season will be officially | opened when menibers of the Juthior |Class entertain with the annusl Prom, given in the ‘high gymnasium. Dancing will start at 9:30 o'clogk: | A twofold feature of the eve; | will be the coronation of the queen, ‘'who has ‘been chosen * the Senior ‘Class to' preside ‘o the ‘affair. ‘Another event ‘ot ‘the | evening 15’ the beard growl | test, ‘which is' the reason sale of razor ‘blades during' the ‘past week has been practically nil. Special entertainment has béén and Mrs Walter P. Seot, | Mrs. Hugh Coke; and ‘and | J. F. Worley. o | Territorial Legislature were at toddy's Juneatt Chamber of | merce “Luncheon at ‘Percy’s ‘Cafe. | Speaker Howard Lyng introduced | each member. Several of them spoke| | briefly. . AF RO, ——————— s Empire want adds pay. to all Catholic Bishops inf ["NON-STOR NEW YORK' PLAYS TONIGHT ONLY AS COLISEUM MOVIE Briefly, the story of “Non Stop New York,” playing tonight only at | the Coliseum Theatré, has to do with a chorus girl who gets involved in a New York murder case. Only| her testimony can save the life of the innocent man accused in the case, and finding Scotland Yard skeptical of her story. she stows away aboard the huge passenger plane which will reach New York in 24 hours, barely in time Also on board the plane is Loder, as the disbelieving detective who falls for Anna even if he does not for her story: Francis L, Sullivan, as the menace, and the real mur- derer; Frank Cellier, who is seeking to blackmail the killer, and Des- mond Tester, as the inquisitive small-boy violin prodigy who hates music but loves mystery. And it is Desmond who eventually unravels the plot, and brings retribution to| the murderer. D s TWO-FOLD EVENT MARKS BIRTHDAY OF KENNETH SALO! Yesterday, the fourth birthday of Kenneth Salo, was marked by a two- fold celebration, with a patty in the afternoon given in his honor by his| mother. Balloons added to the fes- tivities, with pink and green decor- ations being used to carry out a col- or scheme for the party table. Guests present included: Vlrglmn‘ and Jackie Korpi, Arlene and Jerry Godkins, Ivonne Isaacson, Velma Pekonen, Frances Karrnen, Marvis Nikula, Leonard Harju, Mrs. Milles Gogkins assisted during the after- nopn. In the evening the honoree was again surprised, and another cele- bration was held with the follow- ing guests present: Mr. and Mrs. Gu Nurmi, Miss Helen Bari Ray Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Raul Nikula, Mr. | and Mus. Vietor Pekonen, Velma Pekonen and Mr. and Mrs. George | Balo. | COLISE um duneau's Greatest Show Valge TONIGHT ONLY A TRANSATLANTIC, PLANE - OF - THE - FUTURE € Winging /. way oves the ocean with a carge of humans enmeshed in a game of lile and NON-STOP NEW YORK Anna Stock QuortaTions | NEW YORK, March 2—Closing | quotation of Alaska Juneau mine | stock *today 1§ 9%, American Can | 93, American Power and Light 6%, Anaconda 30%, Bethlehem Steel 73%, Commonwealth and Southern 1%, Curtiss Wright common 6%, Curtiss Wright A 25%, General Mo- tors 49%, International Harvester 614, Kennecott 37%, United States Steel 63%, Pound $4.68%. FLOYD. GIBBONS i TRUE ADVENTU| PICTORIAL REVIEW COMEDY——NEWS NG 1 e City Clerk promptly, so_ proper record can be’ made of change as to precinct. ETTA MAE KOLASA, City Clerk. DOW, JONES AVERAGES The following are today's Dow, Jones averages: industrials 146.36, rails 32.47, utilities 25,56, — e — ady. FOR ALASKANS WHO WANT THE FINEST Ho“nmix., Sou;s' _Mayor H. I Lucas was admitted to, St. Ann’s Hospital today for rest and medical care, William Peters was a medical dismissal today from the Govern- ment Hospital. Maimi Williams was admitted to the Government Hospital today for my attention, ———e—— REGISTRATION OF VOTERS (Citizens who are not registered voters must register by April 1 to qualify as electors at the Munici- pal nlecuoq April 4, 1939, ‘?ersoxis who voted at the last muplclpg} ¢lection need not regis- ter | as their names are on the pérmanent registration lists. If you are not registered do not y_ {n so doing at once. stered voters who have their addresses since last | election must notify the L] MARCH 3, Ask your dealer also Garrett's delicious | American Savternes, Haut Sautarnes and and after March 15, 1939, the following On retail cream prices will prevail: HaltPind ...~ 30 For ‘your convenience, milk bills may‘!d ¥ paid downtown in Room 1 of the Shattuck Building. JUNEAY DAIRIES. Inc.