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e advertis When yeu see it MISSION ORANGE—ROOT BEER 3 BOUBLE COLA FEMATOES o v SN “/lifll! CONE BACON 1m rsci—sny s v TGILE BARY FOOD! BUTTER s son ws v PUDDIN PARD DOG FOOD UNSWEETENED FOR GELATIN [ LOURING RETURNS - K. Louring, well known traveling Mabel Hmu,,‘ of Tnanvln Clean- |man, arrived”in town last night on returned on the steamer the Columbia and is at the Baranof er umbia after spending a month's va- | Hotel She is at the - e~ Try a classified ad in The Empire .nIIII||||IlllIIIIIIlIIIIIlIIIIlHIIl'|IlIIIIlIIIIIIIlII|lIIllllHllllllIIJillllllIlllHllIIllh. Hollywood Sights And Sounds e eceeBy Robbin Caons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal, July 24—It's all right, in case the folks back in Omaha and Grand Island, Neb. are wondering. Henry Fonda still is Henry Fonda, after four years and 20-odd pictures in a town that’s turned older heads than Hank's Take the guy and his family, for instance. Fonda is an old- style family man. He likes to quit work on time and go home. If he's not home by 6:30 the youngsters are in bed, and Papa Fonda feels cheated. He and Fritz Lang, making “The Return of Frank James,” haven't been able to see eye to eye on quitting times lately. Thers Pape Fonda knows about schedules, and he’s reasonable, but a fella has to see his family , doesn’t he? There were locations — seven weeks of 'em — during which he saw the family just twice. Something had to be done. The Fondas broke For the time time, Mrs. Fonda visited the set and brought the children - Frances Brokaw, 8, and Jayne Seymour Fonda, 2. Peter, whose age is still counted in weeks, couldn’t join the party but Papa Fonda had a good visit with the others. cation in the States. Gastineau Hotel. s been overtime. once in a w precedent. Even in a dress suit Henry Fonda looks like the perenial He's the mountain boy of “Trail of the Lonesome Pine” farmer boy of “The Farmer Takes a Wife” and he’s Joad of he Grapes of Wrath” and he’s “Young Mr. Lin- And no amount of polish covers up the genuine earthiness Fonda maks-up. He can have a swell time in a night rustic and the Tom coln.” of the PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT [ ] sTOP at PERCY'S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Juneau is talking about. TRY OUR FOUN- TAIN, TOO! spot and still looks like a lad who'll be up early milking the cows. There's a legend about town that Fonda occasionally visits four-bit flop houses and spends a night with the down-and-outers to remind himself that life is not all beer and skittles. The Fonda life before Hollywood wasn't moonlight and roses. After he got the stage yen from three years in the Omaha community theatre, and went to New York, he had his share of pavement-pounding and his hunger. “A nickel's worth of rice swells up into a mighty filling dish,” he can tell you. Hes' had jobs as iceman, telephone trouble-shooter, garage mechanic, window-dresser—and for painful periods no jobs at all. His favorite scent, even today, is the smell of a bakery in operu(inn. Shortly after he came to town he had an interview with a woman magazine writer who wanted to do a story on “Henry Fonda’s Love Life” Fonda naturally paled and refused to talk. The story came out, quoting Fonda on his ex-wife, Margaret Sullavan, That’s what made him an interview-dodger for years. Lately he has loosened up, but he still is the despair of pub- licity men except that he’s likeable and cooperative and is his own ‘best “story.” ‘Waliter Wanger brought him out here first. Fonda told Wanger he didn’t like the idea and wanted to go back, and Wanger thought he wanted more than he was offered. Fonda couldn't talk fanger offered $1,000 a week. He's still here. BERT'S CASH GROCERY BERT’S Specials Are Real Buys Always? d at BERT'S you know the Quality and Price ARE RIGHT! PRICES IN EFFECT ALL THIS WEEK! 12 FOR 25¢ 939¢ . AF Al DD I‘J", BERT'S SPECIAL “Cups with the Best” POUND zzc “ 1 !QSUHE Madrena ‘Sitk Soft” 4 rolls 2 ,ic ——Ail Flavo SAN H CL“R Perfect Odorless Bleach gt lst v gal. 29c raowss 1 05 rist rape e 109 'SEVEN FLOWN lllllmmIlIlllllllIIIllllIllfllllllllllmlllllllmlflllllIl"'i THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24 1940 Japan’s Duce [S_KAGWAY PROTESTS NEWRATE {Tom George-De(Iares Cost| of Lettuce Is Less than Freight (Continued trom Page One) CASE 1.%5 testified that steamer service was “very good” and that the “new| ‘) | rates are fair and reasonable un- sy pounds | der the present conditions of oper- 23¢ | ation.” He said he had yo com- )y ‘ (X) plaint. Q‘ POUND TIN 6. c | Pullen, on questioning by Long also declared his labor costs have | increased 20 percent in recent year land the general cost of doing busi- | ness has also risen, Following Pullen tatement that Prince Konoye .) 1 freight rate increases will be ab-| POUND ,.8(: | Prince Fumimaro Konoye, form- sorbed on electrical products in | er Japanese Premier, has emergea |Order to encourage incredsed use; | of electrical energy and continue as leader of a new coalition gov- ernment in Japan, replacing Ad- Pullen what dividend rate was paid miral Mitsumasa Yonai as'Pre- | | stockholders last year. Q) miet, The army is reported forcing Pullen, showing resentment of Heinz—All Varieties .‘ TINS ~5c formation of a single, all-embr the question and failure to under ing pelitical party on fascist lines. |siand the bearing the question might have on freight rate hear-| ings, turned to his attorney, H. L. Faulkner, asking: “Do I have m answer that question?” On Faulkner's negative answer, Pullen, flatly told attorney Scoll and the court, “I refuse to answer that question.” Sommers Testifies New government is expected to be more anti-American and anti- British. |sequah last night and made another | this morning. ' Simmons also made ) ) 3 POUNDS 2. [ & !a mine trip this morning and one —~ —pKG. oD | other fllghL was to be made this | i ox | Contractor R. J. Sommers, 21 | years ago a member of the Terri- ,GOAI MIlK torial Shipping Board which re- | ‘))mwd to the 1921 Legislature on | Alaska shipping rates, was the next witness for attorney Long. Sommers declared, as did Pullen, that he felt the rate increases “fair in the light of increased costs of doing business,” that he had no IS ON SALE Announcement, i§ made in‘anoth- | er section of The Empire | today that Juneau citizens can now pur- chase pure goat milk, fresh every day, following the opening this week of the Ravenhorst Goat Dairy, lo- cated out the highway at Auk B: The new dairy, which is supplying |fresh goat milk daily to the Gar- |nick Grocery in Juneau, anngunces | visitors are welcome to inspect this FOR ISlANDS {new induehey. pany was concerned, to like it.” A heavy shipper, Sommers tesli-i fied his freight bill annually was between $10,000 and $15,000. J. A. Williams, General Superin- tendent of the Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Company, also took the stand, declaring the “rates are reasonable enough.” Mine Wages Up The sale of Grade A raw goat }ml]k. which is regarded as one of| In responsé to ‘questioning by the healthier drinks, is increasing|attorney Long as to increased la- weekly, reports Dr. Hans Wolfram, \por costs, Williams said that since owner. The dairy recently passed 193¢, the average daily wage of inspection by local health officers the company had increased about Those going out today with pi- {5 SR, OWTTB 1 |ten percent, and that since 1934, lots Simmons and Holden were R.| T ey |wage increases have been effected L. Dyer, Don Robinson, Julius An-‘ FREE wim |four or five times. derson, all for Sitka; G. VanHatten Annual freight bill of the Alaska for Hirst, Byron Lee for Port Al-| CHARLESTON, W. Va., July 24. Juneau, it was brought out, is ap- thorp, and J. L. Dehuff and 8. War- |—If you belong to the Rev. H.| proximately $60,000, with roughly burton for Pelican City. Lloyd Parkinson’s church, and want {7,000 tons of inbound freight a Last night, Simmons and Holden |[to get married, you're in luck. It |year and 250 tons of concentrates ought in Dan Moller, Ray Burke, | dismayed the Baptist pastor that|going out monthly. Gold bullion in Mrs. H. Jensen, Tom Morgan, Steve|s0 many young couples went to|100-pound bars measuring 11 inches Vukovich, Mark Rigley, Al Hagen,|Kentucky for the ceremopy. He|hy six inches by five inches, ap- aarlo Nasi and Mrs. W. J. Stev. |would like to see them united at|proximately, are shipped express, all from Sitka, and Hency| home, so he offered to officiate at | eight or nine a month, Bradly from Hirst. |the marriage of any church mem- Another witness on the stand Amundsen made a flight to Tul- lber until December Slfifree this morning, briefly, was Capt. o IR i RN, 3 Einer Haugen of the motorship Dart, owner and operator of the Juneau-Petersburg-Kake-Port Alex- ander and wayports run. His tariff schedules were introduced on the record and questioning cut short. Yesterday afternoon, George Brothers grocer Tom George spent a long siege on the stand as sub- poenaed witness by attorney Scoll. Tom George on Stand George disputed the .alternative ssengers were flown to {island points this morning by local fliers, and ten were brought i from the islands last night. SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION No, 4534-A IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT JUNEAU. PHYLLIS L. SBAVERS, Plaintiff,] vs. ant, TO THE ABOVE NAMED AI.LEN SEAVERS, DEFENDANT,| GREETING: You are hereby summoned to appear hefore the above entitled court at Juneau, Alaska, this summons and a copy of the complaint herein upon you, and answer the complaint filed hereih; and in case of you.r failure .to ap- pear within !.tpe time prescribed by law, judgment will be entered against you as prayed for in the complaint, and which judgment is the dissolution of the bonds of matrimony, existing between plain- tiff and defendant, The date of the order for the publication of this summons is July 23, 1940, The time of publi- cation prescribed is four weeks. The first publication is July 24, 1940, the last publication is August 14, 1940, and the time within which defendant is required to appear i§ thirty deys after completion of the last pyblicatjon. GIVEN under my hand and. the seal of the court aforesald this 23rd day of July, 1940, (SEAL) ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, Clerk of the District Court, Co. MAY WE TOOF¥ A few weeks ago in this same space we said: *"We Guaraniee Everything We Sell and Do.” THIS — OF COURSE — INCLUDES GALE REFRIGERATORS That _beautiful new refrigerator sold at unbelievably low prices and on terms that allow you to pay as you save. RICE & AHLERS (30. Third and Franklin Alaska. By J. W. LEIVERS, Deputy. Publication dates, July 24-31, Aug. 7-14, 1940, to sell at Seattle prices, Scoll asked | complaint, and insofar as his com-| nell, “We've got THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA,| ALLEN SEAVERS, Defend-{’ within | thirty days from the service of| Division No. 1, Territory of adv. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU THE WEATHER (By the U. S. Weather Bureau) Forecast for Junepu and vicinily, beginning at 4:30 p.m., July 24: Mostly cloudy with occasional light showers and moderate temper: tures tonight and Thursday. Gentle to moderate southerly winds. Forecast for Southeast Alaska: Mostly cloudy with occasional light showers and moderate “temporatures tonight and Thursday : gentle to moderate winds. shipping practice of charging bulk lor weight and declared that''a one-dollar crate ' of | lettuce in Se- attle costs him $1.45 cents shipping [to his store making a head of let- ‘tuce that costs less than three cents m Seame cost the store 8 1/7 cents (-eo‘ge also revealed, on question- ing by Scoll, that his store, oper-| ated by himself and his two broth- | ers, grossed a little over 3?441%00 Forecast of wings alops (e “MQ Sl Ao lgffzqy"“;a‘:['l':r? ';;;Lm‘;,r:":nr".ucfip;\ Moderate south and southwesterly winds from Dixon Entrance Lo | ion not deducted, Pk LOCAL BAER [ Bgiy. Tomitien Time Barometer Temp. Humidity Wind Velocity Weather 11 baker-owner of e eloc ather | Henty JSUEY, . fieq| 430 pm. yesty . 3002 60 84 s A Aoty (%lvxallly ?w {“w"]qu(mnunie er:l;lp ':: i 4:30 am, today 30,04 56 94 s 1 Foggy in teight T InlFeves: th tos- | 1\0ES, RN 300 IA;?O 82 Sk 3 Cloudy tomers” because bakery goods de- REFORTS mand stable. prices. ¢ TODAY | Mrs. G. Krause, wife ax. tempt. | Lovest 3:30am Precip. 3:30am Councilman Krause, engaged ES“‘"““ "‘“"f:; hours | ‘0‘20- l";;p. 24 hours w»-;n,rw concrete products manufacture o i { 3 a2 Cloudy ;(unln«un' declared freight differ-| AKlavik 7‘; 54 66 0 c [ entials make it impossible for them | Fairbanks L 56 56 T Rain § | to compete out of Juneau, and that| Nome 50 :fl 49 by Rain six-inch concrete pipe purchased fn| Dawson 83 56 56 0 Cloudy seattle at 17'% cents a linear foot,| Mavo 89 61 61 0 Clear | must be sold here at 37 cents to gi‘ai‘e‘)lmge - g: i; i: g f}io\u:\' i make a reasonable profit, . BS Cloudy To buy Seattle pipe for storage| St Paul 47 44 46 01 Cloudy here and sale upon demand ‘to| Dutch Harbor . 56 49 50 05 Cleudy Sitka, Mrs. Ktause declared she| Wosnesenskl ... 60 51 50 T Cloudy 4 Iwould héive to charge 52 cents a| Xodisk 59 | 52 52 92 Rain | linear foot because .of the freight| COrdova 66 45 56 0 Cloudy differential. Juncag 60 56 56 an Fozzy § In response to attorney Long's| Sitka 60 55 p 02 H frequent question as to costs u( Ketchikan 64 56 57 02 l.‘c:nn | labor, Mrs. Krause also agre Buince Rupert .. 57 53 55 0 Clear that common and skilled labor cos 5 Prince George .. 76 [ o 04 Clear | have “gone up quite a bit.” | Seattle 12 | 58 59 0 Cloudy The hearings recessed ot 12:30| Portland 80 57 57 0 Cloudy San Francisco .. 85 55 55 0 Clear today until 1:15 o'clock this after- | Doon. WEATHER SYNOPSIS - o D B , Moderately high pressure aref covered the Northeast Pacific | ©cean and the Gulf of Alaska this mornipg, while pressure was M D "'I' relatively low over the Interior. Cloudy weather with light rain and ( Onne WInS moderate temperatures prevailed during the last 24 hours over most of Aaska. Early this morning, the weather along the Juneau Seattle Bap"zed Today airway was mostly cloudy but with a tendency of improving weath- 2 er conditions. v 5 o Juneau, July 26.—Sunrise 4:34 a.m., sunset 9:34 p.m. The twin daughters of Mr. and h e a. * Mrs, Maurice MeDonnell were bap- 4 tized Maarine and Marian at' @/ going up against tthe fast coming ceremony performed at 12:30 o'clock BASEBAll Douglas squad. R by Father W. G. LeVasseur in St. B i i Ann’s Chapel, TO PETERSBURG | Mrs. Bernard R. McDonnell stood flicindin £as Jupxy, Lok Ehe. Gogmotier, Ris| TONIGHT The Forest Service vessel For- ‘fingl:;}:inxcnfilml& r:ll:oMrCeg::.: csver left this morning for Peters- | i 4 Hrd T |burg taking as a passenger Chief VRS Shdb8, tins, Was, Beey| | Forest Ranger Josiah M. Wyckoff. ent as Godfather. At 6:30 o'clock ‘this evening, the P e R o K R T | Elks baseball squad will“try to hit Emurm cuusmeds bxmz re.sulu. its smde and a new win strenk suhscrlpe for The Empire. . PHONE 92-95 4 Deliveries 10 a.m., 11,am,, 2 p.m., 4 p.m. j DAILY from GEORGE BROTHERS FARM K RADISHES 5° CARROTS > 10° LETTUCE 10° PARSLEY 10° TURNIP GREENS 10° CAULIFLOWER 15° 20° MORE NEW GREENS ERY DAY NEW GREEN APPLES .‘f i BDC GIANT CALAVOS CA N TALQUP Es GIANT JUMBO—EACH 2flc 1 CASABAS poum)sc W A T E RMEL‘)NS POUND 8(2 GRAPE RED MALAGA . v POUND, 19(3 .' SEEDLESS GR APES 2..35¢ TLETT P EARS ............... DOZEN 50(! PEACHE A =25 | % LUMS BASKET 15(3 CUCIIMBERS EXTRA LARGE, EXTRA FANCY - la(! EGG FLAN T ... POUND 150 GREEN BEANS 2..:29¢ GREEN PEAS 2. 27¢€ SUMMER SQUAS" 2 pounds 250 ZUCHINI = 2 v 25 | .....POUND 17e " s 25 o a—— l "GEORGE BROTHEF .. SUPER MARKET gt S A A S i