The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 14, 1940, Page 3

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oL SHOW PLACE OF JUNEZAU LAST TIMES TONIGHT OUIS HAYWARD - B£N NETT RELEASED THRU UNIT =D ARTISTS ALSO LATEST NEWS——IT’S TIMELY! PREVUE TONIGHT M. ORTHOPEDIC'S PENNY DRIVE IS OVER SOON Appeal Made fo Help Hos- pital that Helps Alas- ka'sCrippled Children s committee for the Seattle Hospital Penny Drive last call for pennie: g for it's Penny Drive velopes that have been placed through the business district in nean for the past two w There isn’t a store or office one may enter that hasn’t a Penny Drive cuvelope in a prominent place where :t the dcnations of those to the Ortho- 15 making a en- ali Ju- an colle shing to contribute pedic’s worthy charity. it Kind To Alaskans During last year rorty Alask children were treated at the Child ren’s Orthopedic in Seattle for crip- pled conditions that could not have been cared for otherwise. These little Alaskans received 5,- 575 actual hospital days care, an av- of almost five months for each case ex sive of care in the hospit- al's Convalescent Home. Total num- ber of hospital days for all care at the hespital in 1939 was 40,208 davs. Tence Alaskan children received 13% percent of all of the hospitai care provided the Orthopedic last year. Alaskan's te Aids Hespital \ Of interest to Alaskans is the item in the treasurer’s report of the hos- pital which lists among benefactors | the Orthopedic the J. R. Heck- man estate with a contribution endowment fund of $5,000. The Children’s Orthopedic Hospit- | always given generously lo crippled children, the com- mittee in charge of the Penny Drive | reminds Juneau residents as it urges Juneau and Gastineau Channel peo- ic nerously to the Ortiio- | pedic in return. ] Giving their services to the Ortho- | pedic Penny Drive this year are| Mrs. J. J. Meherin, Mrs. C. D. Beale, | rs. R. H. Williams and Mrs. Robert | choettler who will collect the en- | WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go The liver should pour out two pints of | liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is not flowing freel ur food may not digest, It may just decay in the bowels. Gas bloats up your. stomach, You get consti- pated. You fecl sour, sunk and the world looks pus erage by of w0 to give g “those good, effective Carter's i ver Pill to get these two pints of | hile flowing freely to take you feel “up and | up.” Amazing in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter’s Little Liver Pill< e. Stubbornly refuse anything cise. Price : 256 | with difficulty. “HAWAIIAN NIGHTS velopes and their donations this week. Here is the case history of Marie, an eleven year old girl from Ouzinki Alaska, who has been in the Child- ren’s Orthopedic Hospital since De- cember 15, 1937: “Following an injury to her b at the age of one year there w pain and increasing deformity until she came to the hospital. She walked X-rays and physical| examination snowed a tuberculosis of the spine with marked deformity She walked with her head (hrusi forward and a “hunch back" app ance. Due to pain when standing up- right she frequently leaned forward |supporting herself by her hands on her knees “Treatment consisted of head and pelvic traction on a frame for a pel iod of four months until the hunch- back appearance had been corrected This was followed" by surgery in two tages. The spine was fused and the diseased area re-inforced by a bridge of bope from the lower leg. She lay {on her frame for five months after the second stage of her operation, \fter which she was fitted with 2 body brace and allowed to walk “When she was able to be about she was transferred to the Conval- escent Home where she has remain- under observation for about one| year, because her home is o far dis- tant lable “There remains some slight de- formity which could not be correc ed due to the progress of the diseasc before she was put under treatmen but she is well and strong, and 15 able to take her place among other | children of her age. In her clothing the deformity is not greatly appar- ent. Had she not been treated the pain and deformity would have in- eased—her general have suffered considerably, and shc would have become a hopeless crip- ple and a dependent in her com- munity.” - B. P. W. CLUB TO INSTALL ON MONDAY MIGHT Installation of newly-elected of- ficers for the Business and Profes- sional Women’s Club will be held next Monday evening at 6:30 o'clock at the Scottish Rite Temple. As is cusiomary a dinner will pre- cede the ceremony and reservations may be obtained by calling 174 be- fore Friday. Members of the club are expected to be in attendance and all others interested are extended a cordial invitation to be present. HARRY DRAKE IS DEAD Harry Drake, mine owner and resident of Anchorage, died recent- |ly and was buried with military hohors he was a member of the American Legion, having served overseas, Tryl Today... PEERLESS RICH IN VITAMINS 826 No rough f-m'pu Here’s a bread everyone in your family TRY OUR FRENCH PASTRY! will like Vitmins — neither white nor whqlewheat, but an entirely new type. Packed with B, E, and G. Has no harsh nor fibrous portions of bran. High in nutritive value. BUY A LOAF TQDAY. Peerless Bakery On Sale at Junean Stores Every Dgy! | Philippe, | country. | smash | to that no medical supervision is| health would | ! months on Blackwell's Island. Part| {him she would abandon her own THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TU DUMAS’ CLASSIC AS CAPITOL WIT AGAIN TONIGHT ‘The Man in the Iron Mask' | to Have Last Show- ing Here With Louis Hayward and Joan Bennett playing the top roles, Ed- ward Small's new romantic drama The Man in the Iron Mask,” end- ing tonight at the Capitol Theatre, unfolds a thrilling and exciting tale of the 17th century romance and adventure in an era when extrava- gences and excesses ruled the court of France. The central theme of the story revolves around King Louis XIV and his twin brother, who at his birth was away to the province of and brought up secretly a commoner under the guid- whisked Gascony as | ance of the famous Musketeers Hayward plays the dual roles of King Louis and Philippe, while Joan Bennett appears as the lovely ‘and gifted Maria Theresa of Spain, | imported to marry the cruel and sadistic monarch and to thus pre- serve the peace of Europe. As King Louis, Hayward is seen as harsh| and vain, cruelly taxing his sub- | jects until they are on the brink of starvation and ruin. As Philippe, | he is secen as a brave and under: standing son of France, wishing for the honor and welfare of his The story reaches a climax when Louis realize: that Philippe is his twin brother Louis fears that events may lead dethronement and decides he must do away with such a possi-| bility. He takes the most sin: method at hand—the dread mask. Philippe is encased in this monstrous contraption and con- demned to life imprisonment in the Bastille. But the Musketeers who also know the secret, refuse to see Philippe die in this horrible way How they outwit Louis and his Ministers concludes the story, which | is based on the famous novel by Alexander Dumas. EMMA GOLDMAN DIES INTORONTO iron | (Continued from Page One) | being forced to obey laws imposed on them from an outside power. Served in Blackwell's For making speeches ‘“urging revolution, violence and bloodshed” in connection with the Debs nul-‘ way strike of 1893, she was arrest-| ed in New York and served sr‘vcn‘ of the time she was in the dun- geon because of trouble with the| head matron. On September 6, 1901, Leon Czo- | lgosz shot President McKinley at| Buffajo, N.Y. In his confession, the assassin said he had been influ- enced by the writings of Emma Goldman and by some speeches| which he had heard her make in Cleveland. She was arrested in Chi- cago and questioned for two weeks. | cution, but 18 years later, when the deportation proceedings were| brought against her, A. Mitchell| Palmer, as Attorney General, re- vived the subject and there was| sqme evidence that she knew Czol- | gosz, at least by sight. | | | Both Sentenced More years of agitation followed. After Berkman's release from the Frick sentence, the two usually travelled as a team. Convicted of | obstructing the World War draft,| fined $10,000 and Jeffer- | Miss Goldman sentenced to two years in son City, Mo. Upon their release the deporta- tion proceedings were brought. They | fought these up to the Supreme| Court, a habeas corpus writ being sought on Miss Goldman's behalf on the ground that her marriage to Jacob Kersner had made her | an American citizen. She was sur- prised to learn, in court that Ker- sner's eitizenship had been revoked because he took out final papers before he was 21, and still more when it was brought out that he died a few months before the case was started. JParting Threat Finally, findihg there was no hope of saving Berkman, she an- | nounced that rather than leave case. With 247 other aliens they | were deported on December 21,| 1919, and as the transport Buford drew away from the pier, she said: “We expect to be called back to Soviet America.” Because the United States had no diplomatic intercourse with the Soviet Union, Miss Goldman, Berk- deportees were disembarked in Finland. A few days later they went by train to Russia and were given an official welcome. Bolshevism “Rotten” But six months later she was quoted in dispatches as sayingthat Bolshevism was ‘“rotten” and she wrote to her niece in Rochester that the system had taken away 'all lreedom from the Russian peo- ple. Within a year she had quar- | sionment in Russia.” | ognition of Rus: | France and in December | living quietly She was released without prose- | | but was ordered to leave the coun- | Berkman was sent to Atlanta and|- man and other Russians among the |’ Daily Crossword Puzzle 8. Mediterranean Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle mafling ACROSS L. Floor covering w Blunder Ghostly N, Scuttle Perforates All\‘mnll\l Ventiiates Percol Dull finish Spire ndian mul- berry ay's march Of the mornit Living Velocity Rar for trans mitting forc Redacts Tres or shrub Hunting dogs Act It is: contr. 2. Slumber 506 Patron saint of lawyers Station nd: French Irritated rds Cook slowly Abound Forms for st C (o) S| [T[A GG NE [¢) R|C REL] One_who adjusts the vifch The turmeric Siamese coins Low gaiters . Came together H] I Egyptian disk Outfit Literary fragmept By birth * Devour Aloft gla Windflower Teutonic golddess of healing L. DOWN Corded cloth relled with Lenin and Trotzky and fled to the Ukraine Thence she and their way to Riga, in December, 1921 she turned up in April she was® “on her way to Prague to settle down” but on July 15, 1922, was in Berlin For three years she went German cities, lecturing bolshevism. In December, brought out book, “My Disillu- In April, 1924 Communists broke up a Berlin meeting which she addressed In September, 1924, English rec- ave her a pass-| port visa which enabled her enter England. She was there { months as a lecturer “consecrated to the exposure of the Bolshevist | myth.” Then in October, peared in Montreal. Her |was in the name of “Mrs. E. G.| goveral new Colton, wife of James Colton.” She | explained that Colton was a Welsh | miner and that they had been married a few months before 1n/ England. By virtue of this cere-| mony she claimed British citizen- | JUNEAU FUTURE made there 1922 Jerkman arriving Early in Stockholm. 1In about inst 1923, she a * Says New Operations Are in Prospect .Im.r aw’s position as center of the | Alaska lode mining industry | \\Ill be cure for many generations to come, in the opinion of Haury | Townsend, mining engineer and logist for the Anaconda Copper | | Company, who was a through pas- she ap- |senger today on the steamer Yukon | passport | for Seward a i} 1926, operations definitely Juneau and vicinity Townsend is an oldtimer on tineau Channel, having come here first in 1912 and remained until 1918 with the Alaska Juneau Gold Min- & 18- to the In March, United States. 1928, | never returned to Alaska. - HELP AN | | ALASKAN Telephe=e 713 cr write The Alaska Territorial mployment Service for this qualified worker. she was in - 1930, 1\‘ in Nice. The ne. she published an autobiogra-| ‘Living My Life.” That same Berkman was in France, year phy, * summer try. Miss Goldman’s next appearance came in March 1932, when she| visited Copenhagen and was seen ' in the mght clubs there, | D Shmps commzmnrating the 2,600th anniversary of the Jap- anese empire were sold out to philatelists within three hours after belng plau-d on sale. Mann Down—and Out' TRUCK DRIVER — PRINTER'S | HELPER—Single, age 23, high schocl education. Served three years in | printing room, lay-out and checking proofs. Has also done truck driving. w(ldll for ES 103. in prospect will insure the futurc of| Townsend said. | Geologlst Harry Townsend s | geo- i ‘Snslms o( Sl Ann SDAY, MAY 14, 1940. "NAUGHIY BUT NICE SCHEDULED TO CLOSE AT COLISEUM TONIGHT love triangle in swingtime theme of “Naughty But Nice, Warner Bros.' novel musical L'nm-‘ edy which closes tonight at the Coliseum Theatre. Ann Sheridan,| Dick Powell and Gale Page head-| line the cast and are the parties| of the hilarious triangle, with plenty of additional comedy pro-| vided by Helen Broderick, Allen Jenkins, Ronald Reagan, Zasu Pitts, Maxie Rosenbloom and Jerry Col- onna Dick’s a A the is adventures begin whea serious young professor of music, he leaves his aunt-ridden home to go to New York and sell a rhapsody he has written. Helen Broderick, an aunt of his who ran avay from home years before to xpph play guides 1 Pan Alley, where the publishers vie for his com- ition as - Bon Yoyage Lunch Compliments Two Mar Hays and Pentz, who plan to leave soon for the states, Mrs. Ida Inompsen was hostess this after- noon with luncheon at her residence on Seventh Street. Asked for the occasion were Mrs. Mildred Hermann, Mrs. Lois Tucker, Mrs. Mary K. Cauthorne, Miss Jane Alexander. Miss Magnhild Oygard and Miss Adleheid C\lnll\(‘l - REP. XARL DRAGER VISITOR TO JUNEAU Karl Drager, mrmbm of the Legis- lature from the Tihrd Division, 1s spending a few days here on busi- ness.He arrived yester on the steamer Alaska from his home in Anr‘hnrm.’(‘ Hongring Dr. Miss Deborah > - AS LODE MINE Elizabeth Smedley CENTER SECURE Honored at Shower Complimentary to Miss Elizabeth bride-elect of Mr. A. T. lake a kitchen shower was given | B! last evening in the recreation parlors at St. Ann’s Hospital by the nurses staff Those attending included Mus. | Jack Donohue, Mrs. Rose Schneider, |Mrs. Ruth O’Keefe, Mrs. George | Dudley, Miss Jessie Macklin, Miss Edna Thompson, Miss Ada Giovan- |etti, Miss Ruth Briggs, and the MISS spwmuno GOING TO BETHEL Miss Mary Ellen Speanburg, Head |Nurse at the Government Hospital here, left today on the steamer Al- aska enroute to Bethel to be on duty | ship, but she was refused entrance ingCompany. He left for the war and |3t the hospital there while Head Nurse Miss Bernice Britain goes | Outside on leave. - Emprre classifieds bring results. Natie Mann, Connecticut huvvweizhk assumes & prayerful. nmndl a8 he goes to the canvas under the battering fists of Buddy Baer, in the neventh round of their New York fight. Mann went down twice in this round before Referee Arthur Donovan awarded the fight to Baer on 8 | technical kago, } ALL WORK GUARAN I lllIIlIlIIIIIIIHIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIII"IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII RDOFING! OWNED AND onun(r Ann .Slwridal —l)i(-k Powell “NAUGHTY BUT NICE” with GALE PAGE—ALLEN IENKINS—» ZASU PITTS ALso POPEYE LYNG ARRIVES HERE Howard Lyng, Nome mining man is in Juneau today, arriving on the northbound Yukon. Lyng is staying at the Baranof Hotel. He is a mem ber of the Welfare Board and we nominated at the recent Territori Primary for Representative on the Democratic ticket from the Second Division. - oo — ON ARRIVE E. Nelsen, representative Internatjoral Harvester Com- panly, arrived in Juneau on board the Yukon. Nelson is stopping at the Gastineau Hotel - R of R the ENROUTE TO VALDEZ President K. Sharsten of the Na- besna Mining Company was in Ju- w for a few hours today enroute returning to to Seattle on Sharsten i from a trip Yukon - > GEOLOGIST FLIES OUT this morning's Yukon ; out a few hours later for was Ralph Tuck, geo- United States Refining Company. - A and fly Fairbanks ist of the and Smelting HESSE TO WESTWARD Territorial Highway Englneer and Superintendent of Public Works Wil liam Hesse left on the steamer Yu- kon today for the Westward in con- nection with the summer’s road pro- gram. > Today's news today in Tt plre, Shirley, 11, Has Party day celebrations. s e 0 | Phone 34 RICE ® Although she is growing up into a sop! till is child enough to want cal i i The above is her 1lth, obse the film colony. For PERF ORHAIICE and ECDNOHY Own a QUAKER 0il Burning RANGE ON DISPLAY AT & AHLERS CO. A het coating of ASPHALT will add years of life toyour present builc-up roef. Do It Now While the Weather Is Good. hlsucatod young lady, shlrley ke and ice cream at her birth= rved with friends in 3rd and Franklin i | o ot e e ) IIIIIIllIllIIIIIlIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIlllllllilIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIHIIIllIA EED!? MacLEAN METAL WORKS South Seward Street i

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