The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 31, 1938, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TONIGHT The Show| Place of Juneau is the——NIGHT NOW V Love! Mystery! Thrills! . . and plain hysterics | SACK OAKIE Alan Bruce Edgar Kennedy SHORTS “Servant of the People” “Wrong Mrs. Wright” Pathe News Filmdom Is All Boredom At Testimonial Banquets guest of COMING SATURDAY "LOST HORIZON" ) N ) N i hand. This includes the honor. The cloak-room girls .are in dither of proximity to fame. (Quote: “Girls, girls! This silver fox cape belongs to Jeannette MacDonald— feel! And did you see Gene Ray- mond—isn't he DARLING!™) By ROBBIN COON HOLLYWOOD, Cal.,, M: 31— Life goes on more or less enely in Hollywood and then, all of a sudden, there is somebody to whom Holl wood wants to attest its deathless affection. Time was when messages of the sort could be conveyed simply. A| Food, Too goodly bonus, a nicely dictated let-| Dinner, of course—and in couses. ter, or a telegram of love, gratitude, | The usual things. Chiccken or squab, and all that—and that would get|always. And ice cream shaped like over the idea. Leo the Lion, or the Great Seal of No more. Nothing short of a testi- | Warner Bros, or the Goldwyn monial banquet will do. That means | Touch. ,Something significant. Hollywood must drop what it’s do-| And then—at long last ing that evening, put on its glad|soon—the speeches. a i and too THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, | g VIEI®C |HOW HITLER GOT THERE— IACK OAKEETS ™ ‘ STAR IN F"'M’ ?or Becomes Der Fuelirer SUPER SLEUTH ... .- Ann Sothern Plays Femin-‘ ine Lead in Mystery Comedy The audience knows all the an-| swers, and can watch the actors stumble on to the solution of the mystery, in “Super-Sleuth,” screen- | play cffering Jack Oakie and Ann Soihern as co-stars, ending tonight at the Capitol Theatre. Portraying a screen star who believes that his film characteriza- tions as a detective qualify him to be a Sherlock Holmes in private life, Oakie fumbles with the solu- tion to a series of Hollywood mur- ders committed by a maniac, the identity of whom is known to the audience from the start of the film. It is only at the end, however, that the players discover who the murderer is. Ann Sothern’s role is that of a studio press-agent who has had the misfortune of falling in love with the self-satisfied Oakie. Others in the cast include Eduar- do Ciannelli, Alan Bruce, Edgar Kennedy, Joan Woodbury, Bradley Page, Paul Guilfoyle and Willie Best. L et AD VENTURE BOOSTS SALE (This is the last of three ar- ticles which bring inte focus the Guideposts to Hitler's person- ality.) stag a rubber stamp, made the na- tion into a centralized state. Free- dom of speech and the press went by the board, now that y were no longer of use to him. | By MORGAN M. BEATTY | Up sprang the secret police, the rags, and assemble to do honor to Ones Who. The test. bang., Hollywood style, Joe Schenck (or somebody else) | | arises, clears his throat, and with | quite a few well-chosen words pre- OF ORANGE AP Feature Service Writer When Adolf Hitler's march Berlin fizzled in 1923, the chieftain decided to talk himsel on | Organization that paved the way a Nagzi | Year or so later for Hitler's purge ¢/ of enemies within the party. Old 938. Heads Roll, Personal Libery Is Crushe As Nazi Agitat DER FUEHRER IN A MELLOW MOOD war guilt, and suspended tion payments, He militarized the rebuilt and nazified army. Truly, Hitler and Germany were throwing out their ches They quit the League of Nations, and worked for union with Aus- trian Germans Now, an astounded world watched repara- Rhineland the German ts. | Eddy Cantor and Irving Berlin 3 Broker at Probe NEW YORK IS MELTING POT FOR NATIONS Italians, Russians Seem to Predomimate, But There Are Many Others ) William something to rejol 2@l element may have ogitated you r to be nger. But n may fact t wea what- be New it ound of its and i ich build humor Here observations { his from o pertinent the pages F 000 new There barbers they Ttalian in Yo and year did 1) 35,000 000 There 45 olic churches 100 priests and ex podrome ed oper: WOV is tation pr la, business lian Roman Cath- and something like Alired gei head of the Hip- popular pric- Saln cobbler er with el only pure It America and broadco: and pri there. nt the in all ms are in Fiorello LaGuardia, tl iso Italian Then there are 350,000 Russians in greater New York, threefourths of which are Russian-Jews Many of these are White Russian including executives of shippin lines, noted engineers, and doormer . .At least 10 members of the Ro- manov family are in this country and former Russian generals are a drug on the market Hurok, the famous tour manager, is Rus ian radio of Italian mayor its Richard Whitney Assuming full r nsibility for the failure of his brokeiage firm, Richard Whitney, five times presi- dent of New York Stock EX- change shown en route to a hear- ing at the attorney general’s office. said he would “meet the conse- by now has settled down into a com. ’ sents the toastmaster, who is always fortable formula. Like this: Everybody who is anybody—and couldn’t think up an excuse—is on Hearst Weds N iéht.Club Beauty quences” of any “wrong” done. SON BORN TODAY TO ED JAHODAS Friend extending congratu- lation to Mr. and Mrs. Ed Jahoda upon the birth of a son at 10 am. today St. Ann's Hospital. The child, as yet has not been named, weighed five pounds and four ounces at birth. The Jahodas have made their home in Juneau for the past three and a half years. Mr. Jahoda is employed by the Unis ted Food Company i Bl vas personally arrested corge Jessel (never anybody els v arc) A% ower. | pal Roehm was personal George Jessel (never anybody else.) SAN FRANCISCO, March 41— into p 485 “tlitler, -taen it ‘snd shot. At Mr. Jessel, if it was Mr. Schenck, Thirty years ago this month Cal-| But you can’t talk yourself into[ " ] ! 4 | remarks jovially that he and Mr llormi [yarmersgtrxed what then up—lanything from a cell and thats|least 77 other persons were done peared to be a doubtful experiment! where Hitler found himself when away with, —they bought their first full page his 1923 coup failed | Hitler of advertising in a newspaper 8o, the ex-corporal devoted him-| roll, as promised. Moreover, he They advertised oranges. in the self to the next best thing—the writ-| was carrying out some of his Des Molnes' REgister: ing of his autoblography. He called | pledges to the people. Much to the Then they watched sales for that the work “Mein Kampf’—“My Bat- | discomfiture of France he repudi- season rise 50 per cent in the state tle” or “My Fight.” | ated the Versailles treaty, German of Towa. It was a constant repetition of ——-—— Since then the California Fruit Political themes he had been pound- Growers' Exchange, which adven- mg at Germans since the war. F"-M cuTTING tured into advertising with that first “Get up, German workers; you're full page, has invested twenty-tive not whipped,” was the general idea. million dollars -in advertising, and | Hatred of Russia and the Jews ran TY 66’ TR ~adubled | through the 700-0dd pages. German cox‘xsumpuon or oranges. superiority was the keynote. Ralph Taylor, executive secre- H'“ds_w'" Roll |tary of the Agricultural Council The‘.book was an nutpoun-ng of of Calfornia, dug up the: foregoing | Hitler's - passlonate. love for the Considered Well Done W}]Cll AU(]](TI v ] IS Left Exhausted By LYDIA GRAY SHAW AP Feature Service Writer information today, along with such ::llr:(:):}aer:r?-i\ ;‘0;}:1';5’,:!1:3 Glt:*n;rr::? additional bits as: . aptis rom < A in Americs rsities g NEW YORK, March 31—At 30, mind the emotional reactions she geionifio fiolds. . Seatuoor winn. Helen Van Dongan, a slight, intense| wants to arouse in the audience. If s, . . . Sez 1inks 3 German regular army troops. Even Forty California farm ceopera- | qHREY T K0 (O, O tives have advertising campaigns yigme ot e the Nazi element is maybe one Dutch woman, is ace exponent of a a documentary picture pod, e AYRR S09 Bt 9 cent and an annoyance, he says ,but which means that the film is art- Isisted on preaching his bold plar this. year. They represent some 70,- ot g 8 5o Dikn in no sense dangerous fully cut, says Miss Van Dongan, fngerom for German domination of Cen- | 000 farmess, and sell about One y.) pyyone He had predicted that | hundred fifty million dollars’ worth heads -wowsld-#oll when he assumed of farm products a year. (Califor- absolute power. nia’s total farm production Was| iy, gy geemed 'so ludicrous. And worth about six hundred million § too eager to listen. German au- Advertising, Taylor said, kept de- Lotk waf s day must have e A0 mand for California oranges an:‘l sensed that, for Hitler was paroled "V art-—cutting film ifor documen- lemons on a rising trend through tary movies. She studied film and s i 3 ot ically exhausted. . N e o4 k 43 e Taylor paraphrased, “has iographers, news correspondents, | languages—and talks about film Human Terms Used i’,‘,‘(;:\::“u:':2;‘1”;‘;1(‘{ (}()»":x‘u»m\’ff}i.'I:{jl the man with the ad medical men, friends and enemies| CUting in them all. Shes vitally| She ran “New Earth” through the |y o0 1ot of ugs, whether we be high- > =5 all have tried to explain the hocus-| Oncrned with movies—and hasn't projector to show me what she 4 H : pocus that made Hitler the supreme | time for much else. Isln nt | e law in Germany., None has suc-| BOIR i a country which has no struction of the mamoth dike in [ the Zeider Zee from which Holland | . of the idea. became excited about films in 1926 gained square miles of new farm| ane Assens wne For instance, a psychologist says|¥hen the Dutch government banned land, | s Hitler has a mother love complex,|® Russian film, “Die Muiter.” Instead of emphasizing engineer- | brought on by his father's tyranny. = O‘" ]M)“l; Job < % e 3 % 33 » and his own early failures in art. elen wanted to know why a fi dike, it tells the story in human LOS ANGELES, March 31—It v ’ terms—stalwart, jovial Dutchmen y e . swerving purpose to dominate the| She Tead books on movie technique against the sea. i;)c\rv zix:{)l;thg;g:;;;‘e/ :‘“;:;[’L"E‘ Germanic pe‘;me as an effort to|and with 25 friends also concern-| Miss Van Dongan’s present job | 2 y . oA ' prove to mother Hitler's memory! ¢d over film suppression, she formed is on educational movies for the Pro- studio worker, she told SUPETior yna; per'son was the master of Ls|the Film Ligr—tilm league—to study Ju&grz lgms Mowell ?m'lh_~ ate| destiny. | movie-makink New York. Dull work after her ex- . Santee sued for separate| citing life? No. It's the first time, od. Was. a¥ the twin emotions of love and fear| the United States studying a new, she says, that she has had a chance | :ursr:fl;tél. ihce said ltnh;(l)t’ulcnl1?5 hedf in his followers, eventually merg- | Project, and watching what she con. o discover how far pictures can be ecame ated and | yng them into a frenay of devotion, |Siders her greatest film achieve- used as a means of education, some- | shot her in the head with a revolver. Life of Contradictions ment, “Spanish Earth” pack the | As a result, she declared, she Was| giy opher creqit everything to| movie houses. e partly paralyzed. She was represent- Try The Empire classifieds for ‘ | It is public knowledge that a ary film, It says “The loyalists are) results. ! | few of his intimate followers have . __ Schenck have the same tastes in]:cc:;‘d:fvel;ndewfuhc}:he m“: Oérfli’: some things. This brings a big laugh Roehm. was: ki I e 2 1‘ il | because everybody knows that Mr. . eSSy person. Who A_ NEW | wite. Then Mr. Jessel malkes other| Pt i e o . F R I j Z yarious remafks by way of introduc- thing but normal. On occasion he| T C 0 V E ing various people Who need no iN-|eertaingy hag shown himself brave, troduction, and at length—invar- . couea ang equipped with the| ] % SCHEDULE | iably—he gets around to Mr. Will H. Z Hitler'’s personal and public life | Mr. Hays starts in at the genesis g, 5 guccession of ctmllra(hcfinns. of the motion picture, briefly OUl-' ge remaing g hachelor while preach- | ‘llnes the course of human events‘ing that Germans should marry and |from Adam to the present. | produce more stalwart sons. In his By this time occasion is offered he has repuilt Germany on the | to observe the famous in the throes preachment that work is a glorious !ol listening to a speech. Over there adventure, a patriotic * duty. sit Frank Borzage and Rudy Val-| He professes a consuming pas-| lee, covertly exchanging (you SUs-|sion for the people, tells the world | her eyes closed, may be listening in- | with absolute authority. | tently but you suspect she’s catching| gitler emerged from Landsberg| 40 winks; Gloria Youngblood, With| fortress proud and resourceful and | Rudy, is looking darkly beautiful.| marched straight toward political| Dorothy Lamour is looking beauti-| power. Each year he and his fol-| | tiful. seats in the Reichstag, until, by At last the guest of honor has his| 1933, they had the balance of power. innings—and the game already has| Then they deadlocked the law- taken 13. If he js Eddie Cantor, he makers, and waited for the inevi-| arises humbly and says he owes it table crisis. where Mr.. Hayes ‘left off. | When it arrived, and the beloved After all this, of course, there is President von Hindenburg asked entertainment. < And. then — along Hitler -to become chancellor, the past midnight—the party’s over u.n->Nazi hour had struck. Hitler abol- til next time, 1!shed the Republic, made the Rolch-i Russian The doorman at t Savoy-Plaza is a former Czarist gen- eral, id to be the greatest living authority on Russian aristoer . . Another geheral is night watch- man at a match factory and an ad- miral is the elevator man. Probably the most diminutive group are the Dutch, the Holland Dutch, who are but 14,909 in num- ber and are experts, as you might guess, in tulip culture and garden- ing. Seabrook says the Dutch . the most admirably controlled | group in the states. They know ex- actly where every one of their coun- trymen lives, and his occupation. There are, for instance, only 24 Holl- anders in South Carolina; Arkansas Hitler ide through marching col- umns and proclaim himself leader of Germany and Austria, a unit of 75,000,000 people. “Success,” once said the only earthly judge wrong.” And Herr Adolf Hitler, leader of | the German people, has heen a suc- 50 far was making the heads Hitler, * right is or at cess. tighting for democracy.” And less it has a point of view, says Miss Van Dongan, it won't be any good as 1 documentary film 1e job of the film cutter is to arrange the pictures to prove one point or another. That's what Miss Van Dongan does. She goes out with the cameraman—and occ un- Heinies, dumb Swedes, dumb English or dumb Am- ericanese. You may not be convinced has 80; North Carolina has 201. . .| by reading Seabrook, but you can't As for the Poles, they are legion|help being amazed st the tremen= ionally takes some pictures herself and leaders in every phase of Am-| dously fine f to decide what viewpoint shot 4 ously {ine plece of reporting he has ¢ point should | opjeqp i the Germans and | jone dominate the She restle: T ominate the film, She wrestles| goanqgingyians Paderewski, Hof~ DUNE AUS with technical problems like - x 1 problems like cub-|mann stokowski, Rodzinski and OWNED “AND OPERATED ~B¥ ' W.i .GROSS born or low, wops nationa 1S are tng 15000 feet of film for “New wnonlvi v it Sanallldd Earth” to 1,000. She inserts contin- g these wrongski) are great Polish uity. Enough to make the film clear, . il : names. . New York in all not enough to distract from the| s go0” pojes story. She links up sound effects. | . o > The Germans hold high And all the while she keeps in ol AU hope has play Juneaw's Greatest Show Value TONIGHT IS THE BIG NIGHT LAST TIMES TONIGHT RANCIS in HOLIDAY” with Claude Rains—Ian Hunter For the Best in Entertainment It's The Coliseum is become Dayid Hearst, 22-year-old scn of Publisher William Randolph Hearst, is shewn with his bride, the former Hope Chandler, the beautiful night club entertainer, after their marriage in New York. The bride re- cently won the title of the “most beautiful girl in Paradise,” after the name of the night club where she appeared. R\ To help end it quicker, Arthur Mellick, merchant from rub thjoat and chest with | Sand Point, is a passenger on the Baranof this morning, going Out- side on a buying trip and a short vacation. ‘ FROM SAND POINT PROVED BY 2 GENERATIONS Announcing-- FOR THE BENEFIT OF MINERS LIVING AT FRITZ COVE: THE REAL SPOT to do your “FOOLIN’ 'ROUND” April 1st DAILY SERVICE Fritz Cove B Phone 108 Leave Juneau 8:30 A. M. 4:15 P. M. 5:156 P. M. 11:45 P. M. Service (_:ot’mhen’ceé Tomorrow Channel Bus Line ORCHESTRA !l be playing at the Glacier Tavern Where the CHICKEN DINNERS Never Let You Down—No Foolin’ yet millions of Germans were only dollars last year.) “The poet’s man with the hoe,” | pupic. Moscow and Hollywood. She sp meant. The film depicts the con- ceeded, yet all seem to catch a part film industry of its own, she first ing processes in the building of the wia''a DG EMOt that kifled fhe This interpreter sees Hitler's un- ouldn't present a point of view gressive Education Association in thers ar s/ Today Miss Van Dongan is | mantenance .and was, awarded $60|,, Others tell you Hitler arouses g oA 4. thing she’s always wanted to know. | Hitler’s genius as ist. | “Spanish Earth” is a document-| ed by Attorney George W. Perkins.| @SNU8 #e. 8 propagandist. | | P gt .. dared cal Jessel's wife was first Mr. Schenck’s all Hitlep by his first mame. | powers of genius. | Hays. & Some Listen early life, he preferred idleness, yet pect) wisecracks; Mrs. Borzage, With | they are his boss. Yet he rules them | ful. Llona Massey is looking beau- | lowers talked themselves into more| lall to loyal friends—and takes up The Hour Strikes 1

Other pages from this issue: