The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 29, 1939, Page 3

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lHl: DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 29, 1939. DAMATIC SCHOOL' I‘W AT "1 1 FEATURED i | CADITOL THE CAPITOL. .\ \S THE BIG PICTURES! H’!“MQ “"! r"‘"“r mEram ; Paulette G i & LR AR . F i ine ! | ! The ambiti v zles, disap- e m a caste by ha ditf rom T K '\\1“. all I in Dramat 2 cl which ccm k £ The new brin r. She even creates 1 44 ry lover whose existence her class- mates doubt. They plan to expose 3 t place her to 1 with I me younz Marquis w i C s ver. Armed G trang . 8 sities in Prague when \'uduuh boys m\d gir o1 »/ He falls*in love X demonstration in Bratislava. Below, i a utiFal romance WS | 1,200 students under arrest. Then calamity falls upon Louise,' wo-feld s threatened with e T S h P KA ol g i b oast to a pams risoner ? \THLETIC YOUTH s abandons her, Paced with de- Wb at on all sides, Louise awakens to| % W ind herself nominated by her class and FLOWERS § (, play the leading role in the year's mest important play. She scores a at triumph and not until the L Harquis seeks a ¥ wal of her her ze that Jem- the r will again serve in the | reh of Dimes parad ‘ | “I volw to say that everyone o7 1in the Unitec ¢ s of his liolgreat interest in aiding those af- | flicted.” Many Enlistments < e S F I W g e March of Dimes en- r m w !] incl those who serv- year Norma Was Origi iearer, Jeanette Can'i e Neutral Power, Lawrence Tibbett, Bing NEW YORK, = Cantor during a recznt cal oy, Gladys, 8 Cantor, noted r s , White House ¢ W Others always prominent in the| personality, today be neutral ainst in- |March of Dimes program includ National Chairman | Walter Winchell, Edwin C. Hill of Dimes of the Air \dorsing this, Chair-|H. V. Kaltenborn, Lowell Thomas, the 1940 “Fight Pars aid c Major Edward Bowes, the Hardy paign. Announcement of the s ! me happier than 10w that | Family _— — | Also, Deanna Durbin, Jack Benny # Jimmie Fidler, Lanny Ross, Fred TheConntessE]mordePou{tales (left) is shown with Mrs, Edith Rogers Old Gold Mlne a Bonanza | Allen. Joe Penner, Ben Bernie. Dahl as they drank a toast in New York, Mrs. Dahl recently arrived in | Alse, Lily Pons, John Charles, U. 8, for a lecture tour, Her husband, a prisoner of Gen. Franco, was Themas, Nelson Eddy Cecil B ’Mlll(z Charles Butierworth. | Many others will help to make | this year’s campaign ever more suc- |cessful than last y Mr. Can- | eommittee is now being e {ed and many new features—all part saved from execution after her personal appeal to the Spanish leader UKION IS GIVEN 127 DOUBLE STARS COURT DECISION = FOUND THIS YEAR De- AT, \u the mm])m"n—am being pl.x ned 752 S a8 ‘FOR HEAVY FINE s | FOR BLOEMFONTEIN, South mv ca, ( ron TAKING BATHS Hosiery Workers Get Hot | imis vear by Prot. ®. A. Rossiter, 8 crl"(lsm lnstead fOr dizector of the Lamond-Hussey ob- | 1 ervatory hes i CLEVELAND, O., Nov. 29.—Em- S d S' k I one ,.,I these newly-discovered ",‘I(.'.m\ of a Cleveland industrial It own ” e birary &ystems, Professor Rossiter |concern are “cleaning up” under a — was {ifteen billicn miles from I safety plan which pays off at| PHILADELPHIA, Pa. Nov. 29— | the earth. j’t\lr-')lls a bath.” The United States Circuit C of Last April, alone, Professor Ros- | Because they work in high tem-|Appeals, in a unanimous opinion, |siter found eighty double stars. Ix tures or under exposure to v: today set aside a lower court jury| In May and June, which he de- |ious dusts, fumes or gases, the firm verdict which ordered a labor union scribed as ‘“usually my most suc- |offered each a daily 25-cent bonus|to pay the Apex.Hosiery Company |cessful mon he discovered 102. for taking a shower bath before|the sum of $711,000 for damages re- - - sulting in a sitdown strike, verdict was originally gcing ‘home. It extended, in addi- The Book ALASKA, Revised and re- | tion, 15 minutes of “company time"| The Enlarzed. Now On Sale: $1.06, | to splash in | turned against the union here in The plan reduces occupational dis- | April by the District Court, involv- eases said a spokesman for the firm. |ing a branch of the American Fed- the Cleveland Graphite Bronze com- | eration of Hoslery Workers and its pany. | president, William Leader. e 1 The Appellate Court said evidence DE. STEV¥=, CHIROPODIST, |showed there was no intent of the Makzs Areh Appiiances to measure— |union ‘to restrain commerce. How- nffice, 10 Valentine Bldg. Phone 648 | ever, the court criticized union tac- ties of which it said,. “Regarding | the sitdown sirike in question, which | was in its most aggravated and ille- gal form, judicial condemnation of | such tactics cannot be ico scver - ~ MAN MIDWIFE | GERING, Nov. H—memeen times ¥ |in 17 years a Bridgeport, Neb. hus- band acted in. a physician's capac- ity whil2-his wife gave birth to chil- How To Reheve Bronchitis Bronchitls, acute or chronic, is an Infidrmatory condition of the mus cuus membxanex lining the bronchial Lubes. Creomulsion goes right to the seat of the trouble to loosen germ den phlegin, increase secretion and . nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, inflamed bronchisl mucous m cmbmnm.'reflyour drugcist to seli you a bottle of Creamulsion with {ha erstanding that you are to lika e way 1t quickly allays the cough you are,to have your money hack. CREOMULSION for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis Major Graham C. Dugas, veteran prospector, points out his bonanza gold strike to Rufus James, at Dahlonega, Ga. Prospecting in the old, aban- doned mine, Dugas discovered the streak of almost solid gold assaying dren.. All but one of the children P‘) ilived, Th sband brought all the | Al‘fhe B. Kelis birth ce: totha court heouse PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT {in a batch. He ds 38, his wife 37. Bookkeeping ko | ot e Room 8, Valentine Build i Lode and placer localion notices Phone 676 | for sale at The Emmu Office. b —er BB z - A - IT'S TIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - CUT LUBRICANTS! CONNORS MOTCR COMPANY Officers and erew of the ill-fated submarine Squalus stand at attention on deck of fl:.m!fin Portsmouth, N.H., Navy Yard as Lieut. Oliver F. Naquin, commander, reads decommissioning orders. The underwater craft in which twenty-six men lost their lives when it plunged to the bottom during a mdivq, will be out .x nrviu until uxt May, anniversary of the disaster. Thirty-two :nnrlvon, indudmg the ) & ~part in the ceremony, - -y E Student Revolt Brmgs Gestapo to Czechs occupied the Masaryk School and other univer- ed against the Nazis, Top, is a recent student the Masaryk school, where shots were fired as the Nazis placed | T T 3 | ey e e = | T - %0 T TR KAY.ERANCIS IS.IN. . COI.ISEum STARRING ROLEFOR _ R8\84 7 B COLISEUM FEATURF Juneau’s Greatest Show Value Starting Tonight Over Broudway,’ “Comet Faith | Baldw.n's Cosmopolitan, Magazine tory,, which wasl adapted for the ecteen by Mark Hellinger and Rob- ert Buckner, comes to the Coliseum tenight. ' | With Kay Francis in the st ring role, the fine cast also includes | Tan Hunler, Jchn Litel, Donald Crigp, Minr Gcembel, the now 9- year-old 'Sybil Jakon, Taw Ksith and Melville Cooper. The produciion was directed by Busby Berkelcy | “The story carries Kay fr a stagesstruck girlhood in a small middle western town through dis- | heartening years 'of playing in trav- | eling tent shows, burlesjue and vaudeville, then recounts her first meve toward success in the mcre ectable stratum of the: theater next covers an interlude in England, during which she becomes a reign- ing stage favorite theve, and finally shows the night of her first great triumph-—where she'is destined to become ‘C(‘nn‘l Over Broadway." WAR PENSIONER KNOWS WHAT IT . 1; SHOWS HAIE PORTLAND, Ore,, Nov. 20.—Mrs.! Esther Ann Hill Morgan of Inde- 3 IAN HUNTER ndance, Ore., is the only dependent Sli'l;(ml (lrfll2x;olltl\wr“ :',;” wing a JOHN LITEL federal pension, At least she is so| * aDONALD CRISP far as she knows. For one magnificent mo-, ment the world was in her grasp! For a lifetime, she paid...in heartbreak! T « KAY FRANCIS a All Finland Works Blind as a result of the Civil War — —ALSO-—- i and 82 years old, Mrs. Morgan has Popular Science had kinfolks in imost of America’s Musical - = “News wars, She doesn't want any more relatives to march away. She Iis sure there is “some wav" for Amer- ica tc stay out this tim % P Janony Mrs, “Mcrgan's grnndia(h»l Jo- HOMING p 6[ fah Hill, enlisted at the age of 15 and fought for two years in the Her father, John Hill, who was L 71 when she was born, enlisted with | {hree brothers for the War of 1813, | i butla i and served in the New. York militia. |, P‘_}f‘f“‘:‘_l‘“; ;l“‘“m‘] ’t.‘"e The soldiers furnished their own i g i lothi . Mor- | Partm ckiusingundbot. TR M 1 plgeon service, and special a ca ean says, while the government fur- > R » nished guns and ammunition. | lotts- are. 20 ‘be orestad At - | Hoights Mrs. Morgs s ,m,““ YROGI G, By T Pigeon fanciers have been asked Civil War and nephews in the ; World War, too, to cdoperate with the department She Jost her sight at the age of 7 and to supply details of birds in their possession. » an enidemic brought home by sol- | Piers _ diers afterthe Civil War,, Some Portable lofts will be provided for z . training purposes in the field. nersons afflicted obtained expert at- tention and. recovered their sight, South: Afrioa Alrwhys withbe asked to carry pigeons for release at in- she recalls, but hundreds remained W blind, The scourge was called sim- tervals duping fUpAI inds vt ply “sore eyes.” also be carried by the South African ] it air force for use during long dis< ‘Eat Out T FOR STEALING HOG | sy o s iyl 1agIet) of A man who stole a hog heard this frem Municipal Judge N. J. Mona- han: “When a farmer had fed a hog merning, neon and night for months, | enly to have some loafer come along | and steal it when it's nice and fat and juicy—one year in the reform-| I atory.” l|IIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIfllIlflIII]IIllllll i L hould war come to Finland as a | esult of Russis’s demands, the re- wblic’s women will not have to step ut of character to share in the rork while their men do the fight- 1g. As indicated by this pair help- 1g to lay down a pavement in front f the new Helsinki post office, the Snnish wamen are already doing “men’s work " TRY THE ROYAL CAFE I E ; = WHAT £ Gives Advertising : Value = foa $ Newspaper" = 4I{Iilflfimmfllll(lflmlWWIHWIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIHII|llIIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIHI"' T | e it i Tice Daily Alas aska Empire Where ercnlahon Counis All lle News—All the Time HlIIIlIIIIIlIlIlIIIIIflllllIIlIIIIlIlIIIIIIllllllllllllflllllIIIlIIIIlllIIIIIIlIIlIIflfiIIIIIlIlllIllllIIIIflHIHlIIHlIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIiI i 2y al e e e -

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