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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY JULY 14, 1938. | His Mother Slain, Father Held ‘Morgenthau, Eccles Fight It Out Over Pump-Priming Plan “LIVING ON LOVE" NOW AT CAPITOL e (Continued from Page One) The Show Place of Juneau Last Times Tonight 1 on ock exchange: were d >therwise I 1ly rate SO A be readily saleable. That practi- e : cally_eliminated lon-term loans | New R C Startling Episode from # to the local lumber company ot Strange New Romance Co- L Neaidon 3 o i : tounary, D | | “"Murder in Deep South : | Stars James Dunn anc | Lt T Taarli AT e e e’ f | ast limes lomgh B \(x kg Stk | Whitney Bourne 9 cles faction argues ha 4 | g | “They Won't Forget" i arner o b \ ) orget” is Warner i Wzlf‘-‘”“ m ustify a chan '“1 That natural affinities can not Brothers at its violent best. The i be kept apart by poverty, squal Coliseum’s new fil S YR e ! ) bk > v film is one of those : i .“< y n:k surroundings, outside interferenc smashing, brutal, faseinating melo- , X ) ,"“ for b or cven conditions which make for dramas that seem to have been ¥ C 1l Slow enmity is demonstrated in “Living taken straight off the front page 5 “‘ _on Love.” showing for the last time | It may have been suggested by such ; nd, the F uarantee off onjght at the Capitol, new RKA a news story, or a combination & L R i Pros- Radio_comedy drama of several. Mervyn LeRoy, director | § [ of bank runs, thus reducing| jymes Dunn and Whitney Bourn: and producer, has a stinging, un 3 | "" need for extremely liquid as-|.qq gs lovers in the film, overcome | forgettable picture of Ward Green ots : ¥y A % h of these obstacles in turn be- novel of murder, prejudice & i B s TR L se_obst t x urder, prejudice and mob 4 l o e I: S \‘r”.:‘h(:m‘ fore the picture reaches its hapoy hatred, “Murder in the Deep South | & ong-range credit pqli 1 Umes | oo cqusion The picture’s close, with Claude tr such as the present, bank | n : 4 . ity Pt ?‘? | el e nt ‘| The pair st as of a | Rains’ affable ironic comment, (' miners should encou d g basement apartment, one oc- |leaves an audience shaking and ? expansion of bank credit. ONlY 00| cupving it by day, the other by aroused. Here is a picture which & Soe. fiapproaching booms should credit| jjopt in an arrangement that stip- | like its principal character, can stir H laupiior e .1Au|L‘|l:1‘ 3 bank. | Intes that they are never to meet up some violent emotions itself. Tn 3 osioeY d o th, the soundness of banks)mpne ggreement, entered into this | addition to murder mystery, still FRO-RADIO Fcture D‘r’r«;cdfyléw tANDERS. | wi sustained best by reviving| j,stance for economic reasons, is | unsolved at the end of the story, ¢ Screen Floy by Frankin Coen i o one which would make enemies of “They Won't Forgel” offers the por- ¥ e e e i 1y (- | “They g s % 4 § OUR SHORT oz i e B f"',“; practically any two individuals who trait of a small town turned hyser- : y Sumrecrs mg-term i e approved | wore compelled to give up an exclu- ical by he mob appeal of an am- 4 ‘They are the talk of the Town || ViUt any rating and registering| give residence for a basement room [ bitious district attorney and a news- ' « and Dunn and Miss Bourne prove paper reporter Mr. LeRoy BB o R MR SRR NS : Roy, who e PREVIEW “1 wasn't e 'l' ':‘x’““ victory for|,, exception. | could easily rest upon the laurels 3ccles, who had to compromise on | criigg 3 i . p & 3y qh{ for Your LCIdY everal points "”“'T"' Wik .”"‘ ,""”‘ 'n.~ James Brown with Mrs. Thomas Lynch |won by “I Am a Fugitive,” “Pub- , | strangers on the outside and afte |lic Enemy,” “Anthony Adverse” Joan Woodbury, Franklin Pang- born, Solly Ward and others, who have important parts in the story. further complicate the lives of the lovers, but after the main difficulty has been hurdled, it is a compara- tively simple matter for the pair to straighten out the other angles. .- - COVER-DISH DINNER ACCLAIMED SUCCESS Last evening more than 50 per- sons assembled in the banquet room of the Methodist Church for a most successful covered dish dinner, MAUDE ADAMS IS T0 APPEAR INPRODUCTION Famous Actress to Make Debut in Movie Film During Year § a number of the young bachelors Adams, in life as legendary a figure of the town, were present for the of the theatre as Bernhardt and affair last evening. Following din- Duse in death, will be making her ner the guests played games, and first screen appearance this year, enjoyed community singing but behind it will lie years of inter- In charge of all arrangements for est in films as a dramatic medium. the occasion last evening was Mrs.| The slim girl who is still “Peter Lee Corkle, who was assisted by |Pan” in the eyes of an older gen- members of the Aid society, and the|eration is now a matronly woman Junior Guild. |of 65. She is alert and interested in the “new” and ready to under- take a personal role in the art that was yet unknown when she was born. For years Hollywood has offered ° ° her screen opportunties. but Pro- Whiskey treasure is waiting dier’ Divih 16 BeEE e tie first to get her signature on a con- act. Considering that Miss Adams was the elusive Garbo of her era a brilliant star before the footlights but g shadowy figure off stage—all Hollywood looks upon her capitula- tion to films as a triumph. Not Shy Whether her work in Hollywood will affect her status as the thea- tre’s No. 1 recluse was not determ- ined by her recent screen-testing visit. Workers reported her not the least shy, either before screen or still cameras, and said she was en- thusiastic over her “new adven- ture.” But of the many requested interviews, none materialized. - The actress, of course, was very bus with her tests, and left shortly for the east. It was as a technician, a side of her activities little known to the thousands who acclaimed her as the heroine of Barrie’s best known plays, that she first became inter- lested in films. Retiring completely \from the stage in 1917, two years after her producer Charles Froh- man died in the sinking of the Lusitania, Miss Adams was out of 1o for you in Hiram Walker’s PRIVATE CELLAR You've heard it said that some people just naturally get along better together? Of course! 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BASEBALL SIAMESE and -+ - i , v efallen hi 3 - they have fallen in love they ¢| TUnaware of the tragedy which has befallen him, James Brown, 13 | frid v rodne of rofiloking ‘coretie As Good as Married || Aania had 39 kilometers of| gpjo o forgive the tricks which they| months old, plays with a ball as he sits in the lap of a neighbor |, = "0 700 k,,l.,,i‘l ,':.‘,“d“ % -ailway up to 1930. ve played upon each other as lady at Cambridge, Md., where his father is in custody of police in A ot A O3 DL SR enemies during the working of the| connection with the death of the chili’s mother, FPolice sald that BEIEBSglotE I - They, Wan S ( i Fred Brown, 45-year-old farmer, had allegedly confessed to chok- | Forget.” He has woven character, | pact. | | humor, wry and sometimes biting, ing his wife, an expectant mother, and throwing her weighted body into the Nanticoke river. MURDER STORY NOW SHOWING AT COLISEUM into his film, without ruining production by obvious efforts at comedy relief. He is at least partly responsible for some excellent char- acterizations, not only those of such However, early in her retirement, experienced performers as Claude the suggestion of a friend, she|Rains, Allyn Joslyn and Otto Kru- at had asked the manager of a theatre ger, but of a long list of unknowns e | which include Gloria Dickson, Ed- to show her his film projector and | A g explain its workings, Her interest|Vard Norris, Lana Turner and Lin- turned to the possibilities of color |94 Perry. Even the small parts, Clif- films. When she learned that there |{0rd Soubier’s portrait of a worried barber, E. Allyn Warren's sinister was no artificial light of s\ll('irn'llL\M Bixt - 4 power to take colored pictures at|Mr: Buxton, Clinton Rosemond's| Negro janitor, are worth| the speed necesasry for movies, hl](’”“r”“(‘:: s e b took up the study of lighting. | Mot than this word o two of| Worked in Laboratory fices: | the the public eye until 1931, when she appeared briefly in Cleveland in “The Merchant of Venice .o sponsored by the Ladies’ Aid Soci- At the time she was convalescing | ety. By ROBBIN COONS from the illness that had led to PI-ANE DRIVE | Members of the Junior Guild, € retirement, and was desperately in N . Ladies’ Aid, their husbands, and| HOLLYWOOD, July 14—Maude need of some new interest not too | | distant from her own dramatic in Schenectady’s electrical labo- facilities for experi- | ratories, where | ygent were arranged for her. With ddr, Perley Gordon Nutting, she| worked on problems of ineandescent | lighting, and Dr. Willis Rodney | ‘Whitney, of the Research Laboratory, gave aid. Finally a new and pow- erful lamp, forerunner of the *“ink- | ies” used on sound stages today, | was developed. | Miss Adams' next film task was in collaboration with Robkert J.| Flaherty, the director who made | Nanook of the North.” They made | panjons took off from here yester- a short film, dealing with pottery,|day afternoon at 3:35 o'clock, Fafr- that is now in the Metropolitan |panks Time, remaining here only| Museum as an example of perfect || hour and 18 minutes. The fliers film lighting | cleared from the Customs for Ed- The actress, whose home is on|monton or Minneapolis. They had Long Island, gradually has lessened | sufficient gas to take them to either her retirement, although she never|one of the cities and maybe through returned to Broadway. Work in lit- | nonstop to New York. tle theatres, on the air, and -18‘ Weather ahead was reported to director of drama at Stephens Col-|pe most favorable. legs in Missouri brought her occas-| Shortly before the takeoff, Radio ionally into the headlines. Engineer Richard Stiddart ex- But as she prepares for Holly-|pressed doubt they would be able Lo wood the spotlight falls on her own |reach New York in one hop, com- declaration, written ten years age bining caution with the necessity “Life is still full of adventure.| of jettisoning their luggage. He said There is something exciting ln!lhey undoubtedly would land once challenging the years to come.” | enroute, probably at St. Paul, twin And in Challenging Hollywood city of Minneapolis. too, she might add now. Land at Fairbanks ————— Hughes returned to the Western You may confuse Bing Crosby’s Hemisphere on his record-breaking singing or Rudy Vallee’s with' that | round-the-world flight, landing ais of other crooners, but you can't|speedy monoplane at Fairbanks| mistake Johnny “Scat” Davis's. ‘Mter a 2,456-mile trip from Siberia. sl il | He arrived at 2:17 o'clock yesterday There are 15,188 restaurants in|afternoon 12 hours and 16 minutes Tokyo. |after taking off from Yakutsk and B g i refueled here for the final hops to Palestine has a population of New York, a distance of 3,380 miles. about one million persons. Crews rushed refueling operations ON FINAL LAP Total Elapsed Time Is Giv- en as 91 Hours and 16 Minutes (Continued from Page One) Juneau’s Greatest Show Value § LAST | TIMES | TONIGHT ——TONIGHT IS THE BIG NIGHT— COLISEUM OWNED AND OPERATED _#» = W.1.GROSS with CLAUDE RAINS - GLORIA DICKSON-EDWARD NORRIS Otto Kruger « Allyn Joslyn « Lana Turner A MERVYN LEROY PROD'N A First Nat'l Picture « Prasented by Warner Bros, You may for- give what this picture reveals, but you'li never forget what you've seen! [ R— — A LS NATURE'S SONGSTERS LATE PARAMOUNT NEWS and final grooming of the plane as | tle. soon as it touched the ground and| Hughes and his companions ate stopped. a hearty meal and all reported they Crosson Greets Them were in fine form The official landing time of| Leaving here after a brief stop, the plane will fly during the night in darkness. rTe U .o Stretching Tape EAST LANSING, Mich., July 14. —Trainer Jack Heppinstall figures if all the tape he uses on Michigan State athletes in a single year was Hughes and his party was made by Joe Crosson, noted flying ace and manager of the Pacific Alaska Air- ways. The plane approached from a northerly angle at 8,000 feet, circled | the field three times and then made | a perfect landing from the easterly | side of beautiful high fleecy clouds, It was a perfect day. Hughes and his | companions | emerged from the plane clad in| stretched out it would cover slight- light summer attire and leather|ly better than 12 miles. “Preven- shoes. on beats cure,” says Heppinstall. Hughes, bareheaded, was wearing | “That’s why we put all that stickum a sports shirt vest and was greeted | on 'em.” first by Joe Crosson and Deputy U. | e 8. Customs Officer George M. Tut- | “Alaska” by Lester D. Henderson ATTENTION! CONTRACTORS and GENERAL LABORERS Federal Labor Union No. 20940 the General Labor Unit of the American Federation of Labor has opened offices for your convenience. PHONE 441 321 SO. FRANKLIN OPEN 8 TO 5 CHARLES HARDY, Business Agent. BE GUIDED TO YOUR INDIVIDUAL BEAUTY Under the Personal Direction of MISS HAZEL WATERMAN Distinguished Beauty Stylist of Colonial Dames Hollywood Salon! FROM JULY 16 TO 23 Miss Waterman will conduct her UNIQUE BEAUTY FORUM EACH DAY AT Harry Race, Druggist This service is complimentary, but reservations are limited, so we sug- gest you make your appointment at once Telephone 25 EAT! DINE! and DANCE! Now In Effect DAILY SERVICE BY THE CHANNEL BUS LINE : TO THE GLACIER TAVERN Leave Juneau .. 8:00 P.M. 12; Leave Tavern .. 9:30 PM. Leave Juneau .. Leave Juneau .10:30 P.M. Leave Tavern Roundtrip—$1.50 SPECIAL CHICKEN DINNER—$1.00 Leave Tavern TWINS? No—ijust Pepper Martin of the Cardinals trying to beat a putout by Doggers First Baseman Dolph Camilli. And the camera angle does the rest.