The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 28, 1939, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1939. CRIME FILM EDWARD- G. ROBINSON = d Altar-Bound ' pport the Rotary Conferenc d Boost Juneau! eporte tar-boun : f (OM‘EDY ‘ SUNEAUS Juneau's Greatest Show Value st & . AT CAPITOL s | Eo(e]BRYAI}}|§ LAST TIMES HEATRE T I M E S E"D'"GAI (ollsiuMl : OWRLE A" OBERATED 2, . “, T o'“ l G‘l T ~ Ending, @dnight at tne Coliseym 3 SRR SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU TONIGHT ENDING NOW $ WABlight Case of M- || VLitle/Cuesar Goes High-hat On U — \ e \ or” in ‘Which Edward G. Robinson | WHAT A LAUGH RIOT! & g ~ . stars in his first comedy picture to| 1 dramatic {Edward G. Robinsen Sars it 3 EDWARD G. ROBINSON in 3 p In the story, Robinson plays a " L : in Drama Seen af 446t baron o iry dage. who. aros] A SLIGHT CASE OF MURDER ‘egitin brewer” when Repeal with ] I.O(al "leatre His rum-running, hi-jacking Jane Byran—Allen Ienk‘ma—f’ulh Donnelly m2 his PICTORIAL-—~CABIN KIDS—CARTOON—NEWS } “Little Caesar" lm; tossed aside % y.h" s> e w6 e his automatics, softet®d his leer to dossn'l, ran smpotiily wegIse P T S ———y, a scholar’s frown, abandoned his or, with unexpected comile jors! chesty agger. “Little Caesar” has pments ‘.hn picture ecom reformed harpy thrilling end | At the Capitol Theatre, he cries | . \ T BT "7 TR gm e |“I Am the Law,” and then sets out W v 5 Y . > { to prove it. L In effect, Edward G. Robinson is o ey [ ol oA, F) B b |back on the screen in an unusual, 3 [ ] G‘, '3 tg X b &7 4% 1 thrillingly dramatic tale of a one- v A 4 man fight against racket terror. Or- " tad | 2 + : ganized crime grips a huge city, the FLECTION OFFICIALS Allied Trades Local 943 will meet at Latest News Flashes and Seleci police and the district attorney are CHOSEN BY CITY COUNCIL % . N S e SRR o A powerless, and then a mild-man- With all members of the Doug Unmn Ha]l for elechon of ofilcers MIDNIGHT DBYE Bn ADWAY nered law professor is made a spec- g as Council present, a meeting 40k . PREVIEW il prosecutor, Suddenly turned into | Bette Davis, blonde screen beauty, is seen with George Brent, Hollywood | | t" 0 "t10 105t of the Bt o y an aggressive, double-fisted «dyna- | actor, in & recent photo. As soon as Bette receives final divorce decree ounctl, was held last night TuE\ DAY Ev “mG ST — mo, hammering relentlessly at his | from orchestra leader Harmon Nelson, she will wed Brent, according ) ; ; 2, o i Gg R(;mnsor}' e o‘ to his sister, Mrs, Kathleen Watson, Communications presented em- 2 N s, Ed 8 s law pro- | , o il e s 5 by braced notification from Rice and I 8 cl k i :‘s;:sorro:.:e? l;}‘mrl::lz\i\:wlm:dn;:n 40| oSty % Ahlers that the year's free service a o oc S TOS s characteriza- i r . for the oil burner installed by them y tions. in the school had expired; one from e e e e \LOCAL HALIBUT FLEET WILL = N , fhi5 lhr 38 Bedt ax & Ghlbge kel Al e Dot victiieC All carpenters cordially invited. DON'T FAIL TO SEE THE COMPLETE NEW LINE e ey TALep DATOAR pany of Portland, Ore., suggestinig OF MACHINES FOR EVERY TYPE OF BUSL We).\iAh‘mid?mg’u m:;vva):iuzl)?\tal:l;?x.: All SOONI I DUSTRY p T the passage of legislation authoriz- L F MORRIS NESS. OUR REPRESENTATIVE WILL BE IN s PRl s [ ing the issue of refunding ‘bonds, it o ' noon at home, he discovers his city i * JUNEAU ABOUT APRIL 11TH. is a hotbed of crime. Surprised being stated that a lower rate of Temporary Secretary Robinson splutters in protest before ]‘HOUS ANDS IN (IR(U[ AT'ON ‘““‘";;‘ o s fridebiguheds y a governor’s committee. A the may us ouvained. ' ’ THE NATIONAL CASH REGISTER C0. | [..00 "5 2bout to appoint a prosecus Tire Chfef Pusich had s report O. B. COHUN, Adent tor—a crime-crusher with extraor- on conditions :\F px‘cscn.t read. In dinary powers—Otto Kruger, who P L LAY & Pet, the report he said the Fire Depart- 1923 5th Ave. eattle, Wn. poses as a respectable business man,| The Juneau halibut fleet will go to glare; Margaieh By (‘;i"}" A"_‘“f ment was in the best conditton for | persuades Robinson to take the|sea Wwithin the next few days, 26| Hilire; Mary, Capt. Olaf ABS€;|equipment that it has ever been in, . ry | Thelma, Capt. Bernt Alstead; Viv= { | bost, thinking he will be a harmless |boats, representing a major industry | Thelma, Capt. Bernt Alstead; andl ha thatike the clty fathikss fob e e 3 | dupe. little considered in this town of |ian, Capt. Charles Larsen; SPencer,ly,.;u sopperation. - - Sezas From this swift start the story | mines and Gn\'.flrnux‘xn‘xlul. e : "‘,g{\‘l (:;y:un A‘f“l\‘&:,;;)"l‘l;‘lL“(E)l:e[fi]r?{.'- School Clerk H. L. Cochrane suh-‘ ¢ » e TROY & ambe o 8 A 2 never flags. Drama, comedy, ro- DSOpeKE ARt bl Rl o v '|mitted ‘a complete report showing | emm o : . . A COMPLETE MARINE ENGINE mance, sheer terror race by in a|Of the Juneau boats, and April 4?:::“ O:.m\x} {1‘?‘:5“ N(‘lj‘ll;‘l““&fi*:g& disbursements and distribution of | mfl" Beaufiful in Alaska CHBYSLE vivid slice of big-city life. Citizens, |for the remainder. T £ v .M,u;““,.., school funds from July 1, 1938, to| talex 4 hus sanwr gy RN 7 v SR ST O A YR police, racketeers, gam-| The past few weeks have, been busy § gy March 24, this year. The total of i " . - o P . Lk R enatring - - - 4 First Class Service OTHER AGENCIES: e Gl Bk PG blers, gunmen, hoodlums, molls —|days for halibuters, repairing old BERdks Tsausd’ 1o, date (Mathh oA ] F 9 s e i S e all through the fast-moving scenes. |gear, preparing new, and gencrally are $0,001.02; this against $14,- | le’ u‘ A Tfl.l! Atlas-Imperial Diesels ; s;[’f:: "":M:‘ Slaieiic an The feature is showing for the|making ready for a season of m"‘BENEF" DAN(E 08,00 of "ths Badvet. for the sritire ey ! . Paimer Engines | COMBACH QUIET final times fonight. BL:BCA, | year as approved by the Territory Shave, 85¢ * < LR ovd 3 b e ——— Last y The Empire printed a SEI‘ FOR VI("M and City, leaves $4,88898 yet al- Iohnsop Qutboards ECONOMY—LACK OF rough breakdown of what the hali- {ibio: for mnding. ‘ Haircut, 65¢———————— Entrance Thru Lobby and ot engines VIBRATION—CLEANNESS but industry spends in Juneau lvn[ Councilman Bonner stated that of ‘quality AND POWER. ! the necessaries coineident to actual | STRANGE MAlADY Uhe clty “Bereats’ were. in bedl bl 3 | IS BEING BOOS'I'ED fishing, | dition due to recent heavy rains. Eians 4 The breakdown shows that the i Projected mepats-dtsewers oyn Yowkir CHAS. G. WARNER CO0. 1. <X st e s10m0 e 3¢ 1Juneau Friends fo Lend|Font street during next month's » o WMo s ALASKA BY ADVER"S'“G bvx:'.ct'n‘ 5;_000 and bslni,oggrg.un. I‘! Low tide’ wiks iaiap daenitioned: il (us costs a fisherman about $750 a year | . . i ! Engineers and Machinists—Marine Hardware g on the average, to outfit for Hand n Carlng fOI’ “imh'm‘ of $1,700 from the bank H H son, and it costs him an i A s % Much Prominence Gained | v..o"".: v v o Mrs. Barreft e A rr el - New, Delicious Dishes |*Toiar uvestment im e net, or' s ot aumes sor e wesi!| 27, [lowiog * tteals. were ' i the season, gives one, by simple parvett, who is suffering from a | .o o2 PSS OVE - i ; & : H°|lyw°°d Slght: Afld So””d‘ Are AISO DeVIsed arithmetic, a figure approXimating pone disease which specialists at | ... i “;Wlm{ nb;m N:;;A ; i - “m‘ll a quarter of a million doliars. Bdiet: noveiiad A Sk G | TSNS AN S04 M. W q L # By Robbin Cooms AR bl Tatiin. BER wout i : fsaitle haye no n able to dlag=| ;. 0n; Judges, J. O. Kirkham, Mrs, v s ska's s Fishermens’ Pay nose, will be held here April 15, i i Cashen an . A. Johnson. “ : L 2ART R additional prominence in national| The fishermen thems: make & G tiohBied 6 3 1 d L. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March 28.—The big bad villain lives on a publications and in grocery stores|from $900 to $1200 a season With y JE Y ax Hall will be the voting hill It's a beautiful hill, and from the living room you can look during the past month as a result|pajibut prices at six or seven cent 0 2 g leader, was was decided. through the big window and take in miles and miles of haze- of cooperation with the canned sal- g pound, and unlike we in S B 0 penses for f:‘x‘s;fl‘: covered Southern California scener mon industry advertising campaign | many other industries of thé Norf! 4 liscussed by both the School bnd 2 P won't see the big hangar-like sound stages of Warner Brothers | |Peting grocery products, a report|factor, the ha s e Ste SENGAS R Vi T studios. And if you want to get away from it all (motion pictures) | fform th® industry advertising office | have homes here. iR taihere st Ty ekt WW/ A & T E D it’s just your own fault if you let the WB hangars spoil things. Readers of many important serv-| rhe Rev. John Cauble asked God" mined rd led by the recent Legislature I'm up here at Alan Dinehart’s investigating the private life of a villain. T'm sitting on a downy couch devastating a bowl of popcorn and listening to the profound philosophies on National Defense shared by the redoubtable Dinehart and his pretty young wife. It's soon apparent that, villain though he be, Dinehart isn't an Ism fancier. Neither is his wife—and I honestly don't believe the villain beat her into meek accord with his own views on Americanism. In fact, for a villain, the Dinehart fellow léts the little woman speak her pieces quite freely. Looking around the room all this time, I can't find any evi- dence that Alan Dinehart is other than a conventional movie vil- lain. There’s a nice grandfather’s clock in the corner, and a piano (they're both musical) and many shelves of books, and good paintings. There's a dog named Mr. Wu (or is it Poo?) and the picture is complete when young Mason Dinehart, a curly-haired bright little tyke, toddles in to meet the company, duly shakes o et e e et we’re modest ... but we still have to admit that we serve the finest plate luncheon in all Juneau — for only forty cenis — Percy’s hands, snitches a bit of popcorn, and toddles out again. Ye com- plete movie villain: he loves children, dogs, books, flowers, art, music and—of course—his wife. But Mrs. Dinehart (who's Mozelle Brittone on stage and screen) insists that Alan has one villainous trait he cannot down. It seems that once in a movie he played a villaih who wandered through stationery stores with sticky fingers. To this day (accuseth the villain’s wife) her good spouse ‘has not for- goften. Let him but get near a stationery store, and his fing'ers begin to itch. He walks past the counters and—well, it’s called a kleptomania in polite circles. Nothing serious, you understand. Just paper clips and rubber bands and similar trivia, and I'm sure he makes amends later. A little sheepishly The Red Shadow admits his crime. (I'm calling him The Red Shadow betause a villain ought to have a name.) He can't explain it, either. He says it’s not because he made that picture under von Sternberg or some other artistic director who made enough takes to instill the taking habit in his actor. He says it's just the way it is, and he’s sorry and all that. Villains do have griefs, however. Mozelle’s motheér, for in- stance, dreaded having her daughter marry that awful person. She couldn't figure how her little girl could be happy with a man who was so wicked on the screen. After the marriage, when the bridal couple visited the folks, Mozelle’s mamma still was timor- ous—until she met the villain and found he really didn't beat children. | , ' l . ' , ’ - e e T T T e banks must e ice magazines including Ladies Home Journal, McCalls, and others, have been told of the deliciousness of dishes prepared with canned sal- mon by such leading food manufac- turers as Knox Gelatine, and Min- ute Tapioca. Knox currently adver- tise a salmon gelatine mold salad. Minute Tapioca feature salmon cro- quettes, calling for canned salmon in combination with tapioca. In several hundred grocery stores, salesmen for Bisquick flour mix have placed displays of salmon with their product. Pictorial material fea- turing "a salmon rarebit aftracts shoppers’ eyes to the combination and helps to promote the use of Alaska packed salmon. + Especially valuable selling assis- tance has been given the salmon in- dustry by the Pet Milk Company, who distribute canned milk. A wide variety of colorful store posters and recipe holders featuring macaromni salmon loaf, creamed salmon in | toasted cheese nests, salmon and noodle rings, and salmon shortcakes have been placed in grocery stores | throughout the country by the Pet Milk Company. All of these dishes call for canned salmon, two other products, and canned milk. This company also has featured canned salmon recipes regularly on their twice weekly home economics radio program which is heard over sta- tions of the Columbia Broadcasting System in all parts of the United States. During the Lenten season, canned |salmon has come in for much at- facturers, and has also been widely featured on newspaper food and home makers pages as well as in grocery stores, the industry adver- tising office points out. e DOUG FAIRBANKS LOSESFIGHT ON | ~ TAX OF INCOME | WASHINGTON, March 28— | Douglas Fairbanks lost in the Su- | | preme Court his long fight with the | Government over $102,000 in income | taxes. | The Government collected the taxes covering three years’ earnings |in 1837, bui later reversed itself |and refunded the money to the |former movie actor. Later, the gov- jernment sued Fairbanks to compel | payment of the tax all over again. The high court ruled that Fair-| | tention from similar grocery manu- | | blessing last Sunday on the sturd: Norwegian halibut fishermen whose daily job is no bed of roses, but fickle fates of the sea. The Empire adds its prayer to that of the church and the families who will remain at home—God Speed, and Good Luck, all fishermen. Boats Listed The following boats will begin fishing April 1; Fern 11, Capt. John Lowell; Fremont, Capt. Olaf Win- ther; Avona, Capt. Martin Brandal; Arden, Capt. Olaf Larsen; Ford Capt. Ole Brensdal; Ina J., Capt Pete Oswald; Emma, Capt. Tom Ness; Hyperien, Capt. Oscar Oberg; Dixon, Emil Samuelson; Explorer |Capt. Magnus Hansen; Addington | Capt. Olaf Westby; Mabel, Capt Ole Jackson; Fane, Capt. Ole Jo- hansen; Curlew, Capt. George Keeney. The following boats will begin } fishing April 7, Fern, Capt. Chri Bjerkland; Louhelen, Capt. Knute a’ never ceasing battle against the a g to word rece The di- SpONSOY Retail Clerks Union, of which Barrett is a member, and by other citizens of Juneau. Tickets went on sale this week. | FLU OR SOMETHING | HITS SIGNAL CORPS The flu or something else has hit the staff of the Signal Corps, United states Army. Four men in the city office are off today and the re- mainder of the staff 1s doublihg up on shifts, Operators Akers, Crocken, McVey and Rodenbaugh are at their homes today under care of doctors or pri- vate nursing. D Todav’s News Tocsv.—¥mpire. e . WHAT THE STARS SA in the new McDonald observatory atop Mount Locke in the Big Bend, Texas. To be dedicated in May, the structure houses a 75- mirror. It was made possible through ton telescore with an 82-inch 2 $900,000 gift of the late W. J. M jointly by Texas university Y, sclentists will try to learn cDonald and will be operated nA Yerkes oby uld prove an exuwa burden for NOW is the time to turn your old washer in on a nice, néw, white, guaranieed model. Select either ‘ General Electrie Thor You can't afford fo.miss this deal: " LIBERAL ALLOWANCE - ' EASY PAYMENT PLAN ¢ town. oo PLITYGROVE RETURNS Alter W0 months’ vacauon in the States, Frank Pettygrove re- wurned home this morning on e Yukon, ready to resume his job at at A-J. With his mother. Mrs. Alice Kirby, Frank visited relatives in Seattle, and made a trip ‘to Ore- gon and inspected the Bonneville Dam. Mrs. Kirby, he said, would leave Seattle direct for Seldovia where her home 15, on the Cordova leav- ing today. e g Sam Opich was this morning ar- rested by City Marshal Schramm | for the alleged misdemeanor of fighting, according to complaint of | Anna “Anderson and was reposing | temporarily pending a hearing, in | the bastile at the Douglas City Hall. | ] Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. JUNEAU—L- ALASKA-=-DOUGLAS" ™ * WRAPPED! at drugstores and newsstands and The Empire office —mailed’ PREE if left at Empire or drugstore. Exira charge for return address— the complete story of Alaska in 1938 Told in pictures and the words of the men and women best-informed on things Alaskan @ wewlth of fucis ... A }1{»;17§ T2 Progress . . . . and +% 4 Development Fdition THE DAILY ALASKA EMPI

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