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ATTRACTION AT CAPITOL SEEN Show Place ot Jumeau Last Times Tonight Joan Cr awlor d, Spencer Tracy Co-star in ‘Mannequin’ When Katharine Brush wrote “Mannequin,” which ‘picture ends tonight at the Capitol, it seems al- most as though she had dipped into i'!]u' biography of Joan Crawford her material. for She revealed the heart-throbs, tragedy and eventual rise of a poor, Ll b relsase. WAt Teom povery o release S| erty, ”MARCH OF TIME" and through courage and ability WHOSE SUBJECT finally won success, happiness and > dioe the man she loved. That, too, is "Men of Medicine | the story of Miss Crawford. 1938" Episodes in the new picture, which closely parallel Miss Craw- Has the endorsement ford’s own life, are the efforts of of the Jessie to escape from the devitaliz- AMERICAN MEDICAL ing surroundings of the tenement district, the perfect figure that ASSOCIATION U. S. PUBLIC HEALTH wins her a job as a chorus girl, her consuming ambition for self- SERVICE improvement and to make good on and the her own, and the meeting, in the U. S. ARMY AND NAVY picture, with Spencer Tracy with MEDICAL DEPARTMENTS whom she finds real romance. —_— As one of Hollywood's best- | | dressed stars, Miss Crawford in News Oi the DGY her latest picture wears the most " PREVIEW TONIGMT glamorous clothes Adrian has yet 1416 A "M | designed for her, twenty - eight P e gowns, suits and dresses, offering PENITENTIARY |an advance feminine fashion pre- with View. WALTER CONNOLLY | A moving, human drama cof ARKER | young people of today, their prob- lems, sorrows, hopes and tri- |- iumphs. “Mannequin” co-stars Miss | Crawford for the first time with Spencer Tracy. The picture also WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomei — And You’ll Jump Out of Bed Full of Vim and Vigor. _ Your liver should pour out two pints of | serves to introduce a new leading| man discovery in Alan Curtis, play- ing his first important screen role. Use of fingerprints for identifica- If th tion into your bowels daily ng freely, your food doesmbdigest: | opygific system was not suggested pated. Your | until 1823. Whole system is poisoned and you feel sour, B sunk and the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement do the canse. It takes those famous Carter Most earthquakes occur along Hl\ iver :’llh] to !&;t 1hi~9'“0{!fl1* of |lines of structural weakness in the ol mor Harkaless, Gentle, gel amas earth's strata, especially near lofty making bile flow freely. Look for the name | mountain ranges where there is C it Liv ’ills on the cke Carter's Littl Liver Pils on the re) pack= | yroq . jnequality between land sur- face and the nearby Hollywood § ight.r And Sounds 8y Robbin Coons HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Oct. 18.—One smart girl grows up: On the evening of December 4 there'll be a birthday party at Andre de Segurola’s house. The guest of honor, who is de Segu- rola’s star voice pupil, will be celebrating 16 years of life, the last three spent in glaring light that falls on a real movie celebrity. Deanna Durbin will wear her hair “up” she will not be escorted by a “boy friend.” of growing girls can breathe easily again. What Shirley Temple is to the nine-year-olds, Deanna is to the adolescent girls. What Deanna does on the screen—and in her private life too—is extremely important. If Deanna starts “dating”™ or acquires a “steady,” I'm sure it will be an advent as cataclysmic as the first occasion on which Shirley Temple gets wise to spinach. The mothers of America will deplore . .. AND write in. This is no idle gossip. The mothers of America already have written 'in, and they will do so again. To Deanna, to Deanna's mamma, to Joseph Pasternak, Deanna’s producer, letters rushed in perishing-the-thought that Deanna might be allowed a screen boy-friend in “That Certain Age.” the for the occasion—but So all the mammas Right now, on the threshold of the sweetest possible 16, De- anna is a young lady of quiet pose and assurance which makes a nALura.l shyness; she is given to deliberate, serious answers to some of your casual questions — and again, with a laugh that is half smile, half giggle she’ll chatter away for all of two minutes at a stretch. She did this about putting her hair “up” for the first time, and she repeated on the matter of the possible “boy- friend.” “Oh, I can’t,” she said. “There are so many people who object—and then there are SOME newspaper critics,” she added WHY NOT ENJOY A REALLY DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNER AT THE NEWER—-FINER PERCY’S with just the ghost of a pout, “who always look for a chance to write up things like that. I went with Jackie Cooper to the ‘Tom Sawyer' preview—my mother and father went with us—and the next day someone wrote that Jackie and L were seen together at!some cheap night club and how awful it was!” “But were you?” the prosecution demanded sternly. “Oh, NO-0-0-0-0!" Deanna’s blue eyes widened. “I've never been in a night club—exeept to sing when the studio used to send me. And oh, yes—I saw some in New York but that was be- cause Mr. Pasternak told me to. So I'd know what they were like, because in the picture I had to go to one.” “No, really I can't do anything—but I MANAGE,” she bright- ened. . “Manage?” “I mean I have a good time—at home, with friends, or just by myself I have a good time.” Deanna’s ultimate ambition is to sing in opera. She hasn't had time to study for it, however. Her next picture is “Three Smart Girls Grow Up.” One strik- ing evidence that Deanna is growing up is her fingernails. She doesn’t bite them any more. “Oh, I made a deal” she explained, “with Mr. Koster. Mr. Henry Koster, my director. I said I'd stop biting my nails if he stopped smoking cigarettes.” s ancient but the modern N'i-; sea bottom. | | Shh I’s an Elopment “But it's a secret you know,” said Bob Crosby, orchestra-leader brother of Crooner Bing Crosby, when he was contacted at Denver, Colo,, and asked if he was eloping with June Kuhn, 19, daughter of a Chicago surgeon. Above are Bob and June in Denver, enroute by plane to Portland, Ore., and later to Spokane, Wash,, Beb's home city. | They were later married in Chicago.—AP Photo. | | Judge Holzheimer said, “but a loi of folks in California doubt if it is | going to work on such a grand scale There's some strong support for it| though, and regardless of its merits | or demerits it wouldn’t surprise me | Olson, Downey Seenas Winners | | g in the least to see the California B H | voters approve the plan in Novem- | y noiziemer - | | While in Los Angeles, Judge Holz- theimer and his daughter went through a new broadeasting station in Hollywood which he declared was Party Issue Cali- a revelation. The Judge had an op- . ~ portunity to talk over the micro- fornia, Says Judge phone, and hear his own voice, but | e “shucks, I got mike fright and had Culbert L. Olson, California’s|trouble just mumbling a few word: Democratic candidate for Governor,|he recalled, “but Mary talked just will defeat Gov. Frank F. Merriam,|as glibly as you pleas Republican seeking re-election, and In San Francisco and Seattle he| it is probable that Sheridan Downey, | underwent special eye examinatior Democratic Senatorial nominee who|and in the former city paid a vi '$3O [.ivery Tlllll'.‘i(]fly‘. Not defeated William G. McAdoo in the ! to Treasure Island where next year's | primary, will be successful in the|World’s Fair will be held. He re- November election iported it a magnificent place. This is the opinion of District{ Business generally, the District | Attorney William A. Holzheimer, | Attorney said, appeared to be going { who returned on the North Sea this | along at normal clip. Movies and I morning after a month in Califor- | entertainment places are playing to |nia on private business. He was ac-|capacity crowds, trains, steamers, companied by his daughter, Mrs, ' airplanes and all modes of transpor- and l(‘ M. C. Gregory of California, who ex- | tation are doing a huge busin | pects to spend some time here with people appear to have money her spend and are spending it. “I heard little complaint .lhu\ll +business,” he said, “but there was !indication things were looking up. - — DEMARIS CIRCLE TO HOLD BAZAAR Tomorrow afiernoon the first | meeting, following the reorganiza tion of the Demaris Circle, will be held in the parlors of the Methodist | Church at 2 o'clock. | rs. Nina Cheney will preside at the business session, during which time plans for a bazaar, scheduled | for November 26, will be discussed. \ BOY FOR BROUNS Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Broun are the proud parents of a baby boy, weigh- ing 6 pounds, and born at St. Ann’s Hospital last Friday evening. The | | little fellow has been named Joseph Jay. | g | plan tions, every Thursday” figures in the California ele !Judge Holzheimer said, but from the best information he could get it isn't a party issue. Both parties lare more or less divided on it ;Dm\m-_\' seeking the Democratic Senatorial toga, is an out and out | advocate and campaigned on it i {the primary. Olson, on the other hand, doesn’t think the scheme will | work although he has never made | much of an issue of it. Merriam, of lcourse, is strongly against it, the | Judge reported, with the result that |it is a mighty hot issue in the Gold- |en Bear state. A vigorous campaign |is being put on by the opponents of the $30 weekly pension and among | the souvenirs the Judge brought home was some of the “scrip money” ‘Whlch is being used to discredit the idea. | “In some ways it seems feasible,” The FOOD in Your LIFE Is Determined By The LIFE in Your FOOD TONIGHT AT 8 HEAR | STANFORD KINGSLEY | CLAUNCH America’s Foremost Food Scientist, Psychologist and Health Educator He will explain an entirely new method of determining food values by the electrical energy or .life force the food—the only Simple and practical plan of FATING FOR HEALTH. @ DON'TMISS IT! YOUR FOOD CAN: Kill You or Save Your Life. Rebuild or Destroy Your Health. Reduce or Increase Your Weight. Enhance or Retard Your Efficiency. MASONIC TEMPLE BALLROOM—4tI: andSeward || Admission FREE Welcome to All "'My Old K(‘I;ll('k_\' Home™ Tonight only' at’ the Coliseum | Theatre, the Pioveers of Alaski will present their annual Alaska Da | show. The featur ‘My Old Kentueky Homé." stars lovely Hvelyn Venable who is supported by Grant Richards Clara Blandick and Bernadine Hayes. | It is a love story, telling of how | | Richards purpos | ! Capitalw Hasn’t Single of the cmbargo so Government | Spain can get American muntions to shoot at the other Spaniards | now shooting back with Roman bullets .“FEED" PLANNED FOR | boys who were members of the troop Tatbo AMSKA DAY. -suuwmvs AT COLISEUM SPO“S(H'(‘(] l)y Pi()ll!‘f‘l‘.\‘ (][ Alaska, Tonight Only 3 a little old lady patehes up @ broke omance, the love interest boix portrayed by Miss Venable and Mr. | Another feature of the filn is the world-famous Hall Johnson Choir singing “My Old Kentucky Home,” “Massa’s in the Cold, Cold Ground, “Old Black Joe” and other immor- tal spirituals. Proceeds from the picture will be used in the maintenance of a Pio-| neers’ plot in the Evergreen Ceme- tery, and for numerous charitable - Crisis ; Sad Very Sad (Gontinuea 1ium Page One) M SIT UP was—and is this coun- “our | lake” and that makes important anything which blows up on it, pecially between the Japar d Scads of Americans are war zone, together with nu- ships. When the gunboat was sunk by the Japanese thing to a high heat stirred to flame when other affairs grow shuggish Domiestic crises of real -value arise from time to time to displace ven imternational crises. Take the ousb;bill fight. It was a five months’ wonder. The reorganization fight was good, and even anti-lynching/ More recently the “purge” erisis was looked upon as something likely Inevitably natural try looks upon the Pacific as -a es- in the merous Panay it fanned the that can be “Slacks Appeal’—Comedy “Out of the Inkwell”—Carto Paramount Pictorial Late News Reel o wreck the Democratic party, or remake it, or start a new party Then came the simply imm Czechoslovak crisis. As it I there was nothing worthy to suc- ceed it. Farm prices controversi rarely blow up into real cri and it is despairing business to make anything out of a bye-elec- tion such as the one coming up. Anybody with a crisis in ftow MARYN Guss would be welcomed. - IS BRIDE OF | LEGION BOY SCOUTS WEDNESRA} EVENING H M A GTU N Starting the Scout season for ' | m embers of the Legion B Scoul . ot Ty o P()[‘Iuldl Rrsnlenl of Jun(‘au troop, the Legion scout committee r 12 Years Married is arranging a “feed” for the boys when they meet for their first gath- | Mon(]ay Morning ‘ ering of the fall at 7:30 tomorrow night in the Legion Dugout. All N. Gosss became the bride H. M. Acton at a quiet ceremony performed at Mary last year and other boys interested of Mr. are asked to be on hand to art | wedding | their activities under the direction the home of Mr. and Mrs. Felix of the new Scoutmaster, Jean Haw- Gray, in Douglas, by the United thorne. States Commissioner, Monday morn- Scout Commissioner David Wood ing. Jr., was reminding the Scout or- Mrs. Bernice Butler attended the | ganizations today that the Board of bride and Mr. A. Lintner was the Review will be held in the high groom’s best man school at 7:30 Thursday night. Following the ceremony, a wed- !ding breakfast Gaslineau Cafe. The newlyweds are residing tem- - was served at tlu-' Tuday s News Today.—Empire. porarily at the Hotel Juneau but “What Is ng- will soon take an apartment where |they will be at home to their| News I. Q.2 i | The bride has been a popular | By The AP Feature Service resident of Juneau for the past 12 years and is active in club affairs, | L especially in the Juneau Woman's and Business and Professional | Women's clubs. | | Mr. Acton, whose home was in | |Seattle, has been a resident of | | 2 for the past six years, prin- | |cipally at Wrangell. He is a well- | known machinist | 1 s o o RUMMAGE SALE By Lutheran Ladies’ Aid, Wednes- day, October 26, in Church Parlor: Startsrat 10 aum ady | Each question counts 20; each | NOTICE “TO CREDITO! part of a two-part question, 10. | In the Probate Court for Sitka A score of 60 is fair, 80 good. | | Precinct, Territory of Alaska, Di- 1. ldentlly this woman. How vision Number One, | did she get into the news dur- | |In the Matler of the Esfate of ing the recent war crisis? HANS ANDERSON, deceased The undersigned having been ap- 2. Name three of the colleges pointed administrator of the estate that play football under these names: (A) Wildcats, (B) Husk- | of Hans Anderson, deceased, all| ies (C) Gophers, (D) Panthers, | | ersons having claims against said (E) Longhorns. estate are required to present rame | 3. What speed record recent- | |\, (ne undersigned within six ly was set by Sir Maleolm | ... fiom the date hereof, at| Campbell? 4. The queen of what great nation is only 35 and is expect- ing a sixth child? 5. Name the nations of Eu- rope’s new “four-power diplo- his office in the Town of Juneau, Alaska. | Dated this 10th day of (n-lnhm'_i 1938, HENRY RODEN, | macy”. What er is conspicu- Administrator, estate of | | ously ‘lunfi'w Hans Anderson, deceased. ~HPirstpubtication; "OCt 1171938 T (Answers on Page Six) |Last publication, Nov, 1, 1938, “YOU'LI Added Attractions: AN ALASKA DAY PRESENTATION BY THE PIONEERS OF ALASKA All Adult Admissions—— | ] MARRY THE GIR Or None At Alll .A litile old lady patches up a bro- hL‘; i e n romance...and s two hearts eal as one! T A} 5] 1 E GRANT IGLOOLINO S Oc: Children 10c UNEAU mix for you. No unpleasant “baking pow der” taste, either! \ l'af CLARA LANDICK BERMNADENE HAYES Try- Schilling Baking Powder, made with pure cream of tartar! It forms smaller, more uniform bubbles in the “which means much better gesults L 4 e ey The “Swing” is South! Treasure Island, on San Francisco Bay, Is now receiving visitors, giving them a preview of 1939's great World's Fair. A trip to San Francisco, Del Monte, Santa Barbara, Los Angeles, or any other place in the sun that fits your fancy, involves a minimum of travel time and expense when you go via Southern Pacific. We provide low cost rail and Pullman fares, bargain dining car meals, 10c and 15¢ Tray Food Service, and the Follow the to California. This time, try a Southern Pacific train! Example roundtrip fares: safest, most comfortable way to * Sun” FROM SEATTLE Conch Tourist First Closs SAN FRANCISCO $26.50 $33.15 %41.95 LOS ANGELES .. 38.10 4620 59.35 Coach fares good in coaches, reclining ch. ist Pullmans, plus berth. First class, in St Southern Pacific write B. C. TAYLOR, . G. ALTON, Canadian Coach Tourist 43.60 5045 Tourist good in Tours 1 Pullmans, plus berth. For folders, reservations, additional informati Gen. Agt., 1405 Fourth Ave,, Seattle, Wn.; or Genasal Ageat, 619 Howe St Vancouver B.C.; General Passeuger Agent, 622 Pacific Building, Portland, Oregon. or J. A. ORMANDY, - FROM VANCOUVER First Class $32.00 $37.40 *46.45 63.95 S ——— o