The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 3, 1939, Page 3

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Tl ST RS TN o R AT AN T G Vo T R R R e R WA A [ RT3 N T TIERTRREEET, o TSIRERNEINENRRT! TERTE TETTARNRET I EEEERENNRANEE ETTTRIIEEEN EEINH T — THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1939. IIHIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINI"IIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII '"HO"DAY" IS TONIGHT ONLY AT CAPITOL FOR TONIGHT THEATRE Shuw Place of ]uneau y KATHARINE “!m ’ / = Coffee should be the meal’s bright spot When coffee is tasted it should never bring frowns, critical words, or sullen silence. It won’t if you look on coffee as the “Exposition” of the meal—and exhibit Hills Bros. Coffee in Wil : | the cup. For 61 years the matchless, unvarying 1 flayor of Hills Bros. Coffee has produced smiles, compliments, and cheery conversation in mil- lions of homes. Everywhere people drink it with pleasure and women revel in these words when theyserveit—‘Now that’swhat I call good coffee!” HILLS BROS Katharine Hepburn, co-starred with Cary Grant, comes to the Capi- tel Theatre tonight only, being spon- scred by the Pioneers’ Auxiliary. Co- lumbia screen version of the Philip Barry stage success. George Cukor directed the film, from a screen adaptation by Donald Ogden Stew- art and Sidney Buchman. In the cast supporting the stars are Ed- ward Everett Horton, Binnie Barnes, Doris Nolan, Lew Ayers, Jean Dixon and Henry Kolker. “Holiday” is the story of a young debutante, stifled by wealth and family position, confused by the & crowded and meaningless activity 2 of a socialite’s life, who falls in love with a young man with a sense of humor and a sense of proportion. He thinks there is more to life than the accumulating of money for the sake of accumulating money, and he intends to continue his career no longer than he has to. He wants to| retire while he is young and can| still enjoy life. % | Miss Nolan is seen as another member of the wealthy Seton fam- ily. Her gods are family position and a fat bank account, and she has no desire to abandon them for love. Lew Ayes is the inebriate younger brother of Miss Hepburn and Miss Nolan, a boy who finds alcohol a pleasant subsitute for the bpleasure life should have given him but' didn't. Henry Kolker is the compla- cent father. - NEWS ITEMS FROM SITKA SITKA, Alaska, Marcn 2.—(Spec- ial Correspondence)—Eiler Hansen, | Superintendent of the Territorial Pioneers’ Home here, returned to Sitka by plane Wednesday from an absence of ten days, during which, time he transacted business and en-; THE PIONEER LADIES PRESENT = //TgQ?PERFEL PP ssaaza CAYGAN SHORTS Prairie Swingaroo Late News Flashes | DORIS NOLAN LEW AYRES Edward Everett HORTON COMING SATURDAY i Mickey Mouse 1 P. M.—Two Big Features | ey, CANDY—LONE RA\GLR = Can you imagine a woman neglecting her silverware? Its" daily ‘Expo- sition” at the table demands that it must be gleaming and lustrous. " daughter of Mr. eau. | Mrs, "Glamour. Girl No. 1”7 Sails Away William Livingston Brenda Frazier—“Glamour Girl No. 1”—is quite animated in this chat with young Willim Livingston as ghe sails from New York for Nassau on | a vacation. Brenda’s mother, Mrs, Frederic Waters, and Billy's mother | also sailed on the Munargo. joyed a visit with friends in Jun- News has been received here from Lakeview, Oregon, of the death of A. Earl Patterson, who made many friends in this vicinity during her recent residence of about a year here. Mrs. Patterson, with her hus- | band and son, Wade, resided in an apartment at the K. Raatakainen home during the period when the new Federal building was under con- struction. Mr. Patterson was Gov- ernment Inspector of the building project. Mrs. Rudolph Sarvela is able to be about after confined to her home with an attack of influenza A definite signal of the Amnvmtl\’ of spring was observed in this se tion this week with large catches of fresh herring reported by the two bait companies operating here. About two thousand barrels have been caught to start supplying the local halibut fleet with fresh bait. James Carpenter, native has been bound over to the Grand Jury after a hearing before U. S. Commissioner William Knight. Carpenter is charg- ed with intent to steal. He was dis- covered at 2 am. on February 16 in the hold of the Motor Vessel Svete Ana, herring boat, which was tied up at the Cold Storage Company Dock, and the owners brought char es against him, Carpenter was re- cently released from imprisonment for a similar offense. Catherine, five-year-old and Mrs. Lawrence Stainbreok, passed away at the fam- ily home here Thursday night, Feb- Mary | ruary 23, following a very short ill- YOU Ase coRDIALLY INVITED 0 visir MILLS 0OS. EXPOSITION THEATRE AT TNE 1939 GOLOEN GATE INTEANATIONAL EXPOSITION PRESENTING IN CINECOLOR COFFEE FOR BEST RESULTS BY ANY MITHOD OF COIFEE-MAKING Copyriht 4529, Hils Bros. Coffe, I ness. Funeral services were held the following day at St. Peters By The Sea Episcopal Churcii, with Mrs. J. H. Molyneaux reading the last sad rites. The little girl was born in Port | Townsend, Washington and made her home here with her family for | the past two years. Besides her sor- rowing parents, she is survived by a| younger sister, Laura. E Marriage licenses were issued here | in the office of United States Com- | missioner William Knight during the | past month to William Jones and El- | izabeth Jackson, natives, Pebruary | 9; Eli Howard and Margaret Davis, | natives, February 10; and Doris N. Pederson and Oscar Tilson, February [ | 21. Commissioner Knight performed | the Jones-Jackson ceremony in his | offices, while Mr. Howard and Miss Davis were united in marriage with | an impressive ceremony performed ' by Rev. Zlobin at St. Michael’s Cathedral; the local Russian Ortho- | dox Church. The apartment of Mr. | and Mrs. William F. Smith was the | scene of the Tilson wedding on the | evening of February 21, but the event was not made known to their many | friends until several days later. Extensive remodeling is being done | at the Sitka Mercantile Company | store, owned by Tom Tilson, Jr., the | largest improvement of which is to be | the installation of a new meat mark- et and refrigeration equipment. Miss Henrfetta Barlow entertained | with a tea complimentary to Mrs. Jeunie Whittaker, mother of Mrts. Clem Gorsline, at St. Peters-By-The | Sea Rectory Tuesday afternoon. Twenty ladies called during the aft- ernoon. The hostess, was assisted by MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS NOW! ELKS CABARET SATURDAY . . MEMBERS ONLY Music by: Wesley Barrett's Royal Alaskans T m SURPRISE ENTERTAINMENT! | Mrs. William Knigh |asha Calvin and Marilyn Platt. ! | Twentieth Century - Fox picture, |iar roles in the Jones Family circle, | hailed by | moviegoers as the nation’s Number Brenda Frazier Both denied any romance. and Mrs. Theo- dore Kettleson Miss Helen Clark has arrived here from Juneau to assume duties as nurse at the hospital in the Terri- torial Pic s’ Home, during the ab- sence of Miss Rose Andrews, who is recovering from a fractured 1931 which she received recently in a fall on the icy ground Mrs. Claude Rhoades entertained last Friday afternoon at her home to celebrate the fourth birthday of her son, David. The little guests present included Danny Cameron, Teddy Peyton, Wake Andersen, Wal- lace Ganty, Maryjane Ganty, Nat-| Damage amounting to approxi- mately $50 was caused by a fire in the apartment occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Ron Elliott and owned by Clar- "BORROWING TROUBLE' FEATURES JONES FAMILY | AT COLISEUM THEATRE| — | Dad Jones brings home the tough- | est kid in town and Bonnie brings home a brand new husband! America’s favorite family, the Joneses, not only borrows trouble, but pays it back with interest in the fun - bubbling, trouble - brimming “Borrowing Trouble,” opening to- night at the Coliseum Theatre. | Jed Prouty, Shirley Deane, Spring | Byington, Russell Gleason, Kenneth Hewell, George Ernest, June Carl- scn, Florence Roberts and Billy Mahan are featured in their famil- increasing numbers of One family. Japonski Island, rave been rvcolme1 here, according to Lieut. Comdr. Jo- | seph C. Cronin, in command at the base. The building project, which | will amount to $2,884,000 will prob- ably start this summer. At the pre- sent time the base will accommodate | a squadron of six planes, but when | the additional work is done, a twelve- | plane squadron will be able to have a permanent berth and temporary ac- | commodations can be made for 24| |planes. This construction program | will be the greatest ever to be start- | ed in this section. | Patrol Squadron 17, Patrol Wing 4, Aircraft Scouting Force, United States Navy, under the command of Lieut. Comdr. Stanhope C. Ring, U. 8. N, which has been based at the | | Fleet Air Base at Japonski Island since December 1, left Wednesday at 7 a.m. for Sand Point Air Station at | Lake Washington, Seattie. Lieut. | William Rhodes was executive officer | of the squadron, which included six planes, Patrol Squadron 20 will re- | place Squadron 17 and will be on| duty here for the next three months. Lieut. Comdr. Dave Johnson com- mands the new squadron and Lieut. G. T. Washburn is executive officer | The aircraft tender, U. 8. S. Teal, Lieut. Robert Pirie commanding, left the Fleet Air Base at Japonski Is- land early Tuesday morning after’ a stay of less than 24 hours after its arrival. Commander George Hen- | derson, in command of Patrol Wing | |ence Rands, Friday morning, Feb- ruary 24. The blaze was the result of a chimney burning out and the loss was covered by insurance. Funeral services for Thomas Jam- es, native, who is thought to be about ninety years old at the time of his death, were held at the Rus- sian Church here Friday, February 24, The aged man, father of Scotty James of Sitka, had been confined to his home for several years because of blindness and other infirmities due to old age. C. J. McCarter of Juneau arrived here by plane Monday to take up new duties in the office of the Col- umbia Lumber Company's Sitka branch. Mrs. Earle Forsythe and two small children who were en route to Ta- coma from their home in Juneau on the Tongass visited with friends and relatives while the ship was in port. Mrs. Porsythe is the daughter of Jack Lee of Sitka and formerly re- sided here, Blueprints, showing plans for me‘ authorized new Fleet Air Base at NO, I'SAID MEAT/ COME TO DINNER AND YOU'LL DO - SUPPLI£S THAT Ne€DED ENERGY “THE BEST IS CHEAPEST” for Finest Meals Phone 38 & AMERICAN MEAT CO. TOM HUTCPINGS, Manager iand Commander Robert 4, Aircraft Bcouting Force, U. 8. N.| Thomas, | Civil Engineer Corps, U. S. N. of the 13th Naval District, were passengers aboar the Teal, making the trip for| |a preliminary survey for the con-| struction of a permanent base on the Island. They were southbound pas- | sengers aboard the planes of Squad- | ron 17, leaving here Wednesday | mormng, March 1. f D | Tnflnvs Newu ’rucnv l"mmm J OWNED : ANDIOBFRATED . 37~ W.D.5R08S Juneau’s Greatest Show Value TONIGHT and SATURDAY ARD 'THER DELUXE-TWIN HIT PROGRAM POPEYE MATINEE — . She Defied the Rulers of the Underworld . ¢« to clear the boy she loved! w i ..,:w, s wirw SALLY BLANE LLOYD HUGHES * Hllonoglane PICTURE TOMORROW 1:00 P. M. CARTOON--CANDY- PRIZES for 1939 living? Modern lamps are designéd for modern living. You'll find that they give more éf- ficlent light, are more con- venienf, more attractive . . . more useful and desirable in every way. And, the miost attractive and desirable of the new Ismps we have selected for yout choice. SEE THEM NOW ON DISPLAY Some with Table Stands, $12.50 fo $25.00 ‘Table Models as low as $3.95 JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE CO0. There is no subsht_uie for Ne ewspaper Advertising |BERT’S CASH GROCERY Announcing Alterations Completed? We have installed a new store front and a new and modern fruit and vegetable rack. As in the past your fruits and vegetables will be of the finest obtainable at prices thdt are right. Danish—93 Seore b ™ 3¢ EGGS CO-OP’'S FINEST z doz. s’c White or Brown QUALITY CONSIDERED 'mm: ARE LOWEST PRICES IN JUNEAU! CALAVOS Nice Size 2 for 25¢ STAYMAN—WINESAP D e e e PINEAPPLE2™"" " 29c Dole—Fancy, Sliced—A Rare Bargain! CARROTS Large—Fancy 3 bunches 25c GOLDEN RITZ CRA ORANGES | Large—Honey Sweet Dozen 39¢ BAHMIAS 3" e ) B large package m Lenten Suggestions—— DRY or WET 3 tins 55¢ e ROYAL GELATINE ~* PUDDINGS SALMON ALASKA PINK 2 large tins 25¢ ALASKA'S FINEST Hargoth s | Shpeten LUTHER AN L ADIES HERESATURDAY with lots of GOOD COOKED FOODS e e T PP S l’ume“ S T T P TSP m TENDER—SALT AIR—-FOUR SEIVE cn mufl TEXAS—White or PINK mm BOOTH'S Tomato—Mustard—Spice Five Fast DELIVERIES 1011 A. M. 2—4—8:15 P. M. Please Pllm Early! IF YOU CAN! H you can't PHONE ANYWAY! zflo‘lflfn* 3 e 21" U

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