Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
s i e T ———————— — OLD FASHIONED BEEF STEW with lots of VEGETABLE for lunch tom w at the BARANOF Sheet [fetal Work Boat FTanlcs METAL WORKS SOUTH SEWARD ST. Telephone 703 Now — SHOES “THE BEST FOR THE LEAST” (5~ 1009 fine leather dress. oxfords in wing-tip and reptile desi by nationally-known malker. AL — THE SHOE DOCTOR CONNORSMOTOR COMPANY '[SALMON SALES | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE 5, The Show Place of Juneau DEANNA DURBIN SINGS IN FILM AT LOCAL SHOW | "That Ceria?fixge” Is Fea- ture at Capitol Theatre | “That Certain Age,” Deanna Dur- | now at the Capitol. The picture is the fourth to come from this remarkable { youngster who has made screen | history ever since she first ap- pearéd in “Three Smart Girls" some two years ago. | cCact in a supporting role in | “Three Smart Gi ' the produc- almon cargoes were sold on tion was hardly started before Uni- Juneau fish exchange today. versal studios realized they were in Halibut were brought in on the |possession of a wonder-child. 7.500 pounds, and the 31A- In musical richness, it contains pt. John Pademeister, selling (the same musical treat which was Both loads sold toisuch an integral part of the previ- | ous offerings. Three trollers, the 31B696, 1,500 Jimmy McHugh and Harold Ad- 5 |amson, who have written most of e R, ]f;‘::{‘)’d(""s‘(‘)‘,‘g""o":,_luemnmz~ original songs for the ¥ b S AR S ' |screen, penned three numbers for aska. Coast: Fisheries |the singing star. These are “My The p Nuisance, 16,000|Own,” '“Be a Good Scout” and pounds, Sadie, 7,000 pounds, L\nd‘”\'ou‘rr‘ as Pretty as a Picture. Tillacum, 11,000 pounds, sold to|And, in addition, Deanna sings two Engstrom ' |classical selections, “Les Filles De Salmon prices are still at 11 cents | Cadi: Delibes, for lar seven cents for me-|nod’s “Romeo and Juliet diums and five cents for whites. |from the opera. - -+ - “That Certain Age” presents De- anna as a 15-year-old-girl under- going her first pangs of school girl d Club will| romance when she falls romantically r regular meeti ach | in love with a man many years her ay night in the Elks Hall. adv. senior. The plot is more comedy ‘lhan any of the previous stories but it has the same heart-inter and stirring emotional qualit which have distinguished all her pictures. LEGION AUX. TO DISCUSS PLANS To discuss plans for entertaining the American Legion Auxiliary President who will visit here in the near future, members of the Le- gion Auxiliary in this city are re- quested to meet at 8 o'clock tomor- |row night in the Dugout. A report on the Poppy Day pro- ceeds will also be given it is also announced. - — EXTENSION CLUB WILL MEET TOMORROW NIGHT several the Two halibut loads and 00 pounds England for 625 and 4.20. and Gou- Walz,” by Leo NOTICE of SPECIAL SUMMER LOT at $2.95 ns—eolors brown, tan—built ankHis Formerly BIG VAN'S) |No. 2 wiil be held tomorrow night at the home of Mrs. Eunice Punch- ‘ es at 181 Main Stxeet, it was an- PHME 4" nounced today. The session will start at 8 o'clock and all members are invited to be present. e ——— HAIR-RAISING More and more home-owners are coming to realize that fire ig not the only hazard they have to worry about. Thet’s why so many are taking advantage of the “whole- sale” protection afforded by the Extended Coverage En- ment, which covers damage by windstorm, hail, ircraft, “wild" vehicles, riot and smoke. ou'll be amazed to learn how little it costs. ion, fallinc Office—New'York Life SHATTUCK AGENCY Telephone 249 JOHANNESBURG. — Descendants cf Huguenots (French Protestants) who settled in South Africa 250 years ago will wear “Huguenot | beards” during the anniversary cele- PROTECTION ‘ oy bt FOR A ‘1 LITTLE A LOT OF OLD FASHIONED BEEF STEW with lots of VEGETABLES for lunch tomorrow at the BARANOF Steaks.. P ARE JUICIER at the ROYAL CAFE they're cut from finest steers. v E THAT BINDS Hitler-influenced Hungary to the Nazi government in these Hungarian women, shown learning the stiff-arm salute favored by both dictator nations, Germany and Italy.r’ [ s | comfortagly at St. Ann’s Hospital : | | | jon the channel. Hit by a ball Sat- Imany in town today. A meeting of the Extension Club { (e | 'Rehearsal for Der Fuehrer bin’s latest starring production, is | singing| Miriam Verne, Pittsburgh dancer, and Eyvind Laholm, operatic_tenor frqm Chicago, are shown rehearsing for their roles in “The Merry ‘Widow,” operetta now showing in Munich. Adolf Hitler has attended the operetta six times and it was through his expressed desire that Mizs Verne was given the starring role. DOUGLAS TMPRATIRE NEWS | HITS YEARS HIGH OF 71 CAMPBELL INJURED Frank Campbell is suffering from a broken arm and minor injuries to his body which he sustained in a fall down a chute at the mine Sat- urday night. He is reported resting i ’Highway, Beaches Crowd- | ed by Picnickers Over | Sunny Weekend | Perfect summer weather over the BOB FEERO BREAKS ARM Hard luck overtook Bob Feero, |yeekend lured hundreds of Juneau- former Douglas young maz, Who |yes out of doors. Traffic was heavy came down from Snagway to rep- on the Glacier Highwa " E b ity 2 ghway Saturday resent that town in baseball games |anq Sunday and sunburned faces | urday night after staging a nice| Highest temperature of the week- home run, Bob must take a broken end, aceording to the U. S. Weather arm home with him. Bureau, was recorded at 3:30 o'- N AR Idock Saturday afternoon when the . T0O GO SOUTH | mercury reached 71 degrees, high- | Planning to leave this week for |es; point thus far in 1939. Yester- the south, are Mrs. Elroy Fleek and |qay's maximum at Juneau was 69 children for Portland where they degrees, will be for the next three months One mecea for scores of pic- Walter Savikko also expects 10| nickers and visitors yesterday was leave for a month's summer course. | \he Boy Scout camp at Eagle River. D i i R | Thirty-three boys are in camp and SECOND ROOF FIRE |several more are planning to go| The second roof blaze to get the |ou: this week. Fire Department out in the last three days, occurred yesterday af-| ternoon at the Laughlin residence. Outside of a few shingles being ————— Manufacturing an automobile so that the driver may sit on the right instead of the left requires altera- e Berlin is evidenced by the marching arill of EDWARD 6. ROBINSON IN THRILLING TRIUMPH AT COLISEUM THEATRE “The Amazing Doctor Clitter- house,” starring Edward G. Robin- son, and adapted from the Barre | Lyndon stage play which scored a| great hit both in New York and London, is now playing as the féa- ture attraction at the Coliseum Theatre. . The bizarre, exciting and highly amusing story centers absorbingly around Dr. Clitterhouse, Robinson’s greatest screen role. He is a highly respected neurological surgeon | whose interest in the mental and physical reactions of criminals at/ the moments when they are engaged in their illegal activities becomes an obsession—seemingly a scientific obsession. | He decides that the best way to| settle the questions in his mind is to use himself as his own guinea | pig, and he embarks on a career of | ruthless crime, for the purpose—so | he eventually explains—of studying | his own reactions and those of the| criminals with whom he is thrown | into contact. FIRST CLAIM MADE UNDER BOUNTY LAW, Haines Nafive Receives $120 for Trapping Six Young Wolves | | | First claim under the Territory's new wolf bounty law which went into effect today was made in per- son by Jack David, Haines Indian, who brought in pelts of six wolf | pups he trapped two weeks ago on Lincoln Island. i David said he shot the mother, but she limped away, the two- month-old pups remaining around the spot for the next week, during which he caught thém all in small traps. Following procedure outlined in the new law, Davif® applied at the Court of U. 8. Commissioner Felix Gray, signed an affidavit stating when and where he trapped the wolves, obtained the signature of a witness, Frank James, who said he believed David’s information to be true, obtained the Commission- er's signature and seal, took the pelts to the Alaska Game Commis- sion office for authentication by a wildlifer Agent and -then presented his claim_at the office of Terri- toyial Treasurer Oscar Olson whére burned no damage resulted as the firemen responded promptly. he was given a check for $120. - eee TROLLERS LEAVE | The Savikko brothers, Albert and | |Elmer, on one boat and Hjalmer and Robert on another, left this forencon for their summer's: work | at_trolling. b fidvamint o o< bl OUTING TRIP PLANNED Mrs. Arne Shudshift and |Kenneth and Melvin are prepa [to leave this week for a visit Tenakee Springs. sons | ATTENTiON MASONS There will be a stated communi- cation of Gastineaux Lodge No. 124, F. & AM, in the Masonic Temple. Tuesday, June 6, at 7:30 p.m. All members urged to attend. Visiting brethren welcome. By order of the | WM. y SAMUEL DEVON, Secretary. adv. - FOOR FIRE | A fire alarm called fire fighters { to Bill Shaw's residence at Sixth and | Kennedy Saturday evening to ex- | tinguish a roof blaze. | FPire Chief V. W. Mulvihill said damage was slight. | Y o S R | DR. STEVES, CHIROPODIST, gives quick relief to paining feet |Office, 10 Valentine Building. Phone | 648. ndv.l sored by Mrs. Yates' ;:c:)r.d hush: W. C. Yates, “under 35,” sits with; medical classes in Oklahoma City. her son, Bill Preston, eir careers are being . a dentist in Seminole, Juneau's Greatest Show Value NOw! AMAZING STORY OF HIS DOUBLE LIFE.. .. WILL GIVE YOU THE THRILL OF YEARS! EDW. G. ROBINSON in, “THE AMAZING DR. CLITTERHOUSE" with OR--HUMPHREY BOGART ——Himber Harmonies——Ncws COLISEUM OWNED, AND OPERATED 3, W.i TEE IRE TR ALSG: How to § Hollywood Sights And Sounds. > - HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 5. aro the people who work the sets. When an actor goes high-hat, it's the hairdressers and grips and prop-men and still mén who Know it first. When an actress bekaves like a regular guy. it's (hé same people who spread (he word., T self-centéred, the egotistical, the stuffed shirts don’t stand a chance with the folks who don't HAVE to sing thelr praiscs Clark Gable is a great guy, and everybody knows it—because those people never lose a chance to say so. So is Carole Lombard (who happens to be Mrs. Gable now) and the set-workei's shout it to the world. The other day I heard a still-man sing the joys of working with Louise, Campbell and Bing Crosby (on “Theé Star Maker") because both were so “nice” about having their pictures taken. It's true, as he said, that they're “easy to get along with.” But the amazing thing is that there should be players, as there are, who act as if they were conferring a favor when they're asked to “hold it for a still.” A movie star’s best press agen's Because the still-man, like everybody else on the set, is doing his job as best he can. His job is to take pictures good enough to print—pictures of the stars in particular, so that the paying publie will get the idea that those stars are people of importance and worth paying to see on the screen. v The “nice people” of the screen—including Miss Campbell and Crosby—would be “nice about it" regardiess, éven if they weren’ - e e we c¢an serve gou better NOW —our newly rebuilt kitchen and paniry enable us fo improve that service to our diners on which we have always prided ourselves. PERCY’S S TPPPINSIUAIG v 100 B smart enough to realize that cooperation (or call it good misnners) is an investment in success. The not-so-nice people? I know still-men about town, still taking picturés, who arén't too sorry about some of yesterday’s stars and their unemployment prob+ lems. . . . ¥ This Campbell girl—how'd I get side-tracked from her in the first place?—is a definite “comer” along the stellar highways. Beautiful, intelligent, ambitious, and a talented actress besides, she is not of the “fame overnight” schiool 6t stardom. But look for ber one day, perhaps after “The Star Maker,” to click sehsationally. If “Men and Wings” had lived up to éxpectdtions, slie’d have been a star by now. It was her first “A" picture and she was splendid in it. (She had done eight films before that, o1l “B's.” Interesting item: Her contract was up for rénewal during “Men with Wings.” Paramount's New York office wantéd fo sée & rough cut of that film beforé renewing—seéms nobody there had seen her on the scréen béfore!) For the record, she's a Chicagé girl who chose & stdgé career ovér teaching, which she had practiced (in the drama depart- ment) in college. She had picture offers dftér her first minor stage appearances, turned them down because they sll seémed based on the fact that she was “photogenic,” skipped her acting potentialities. She stayed on to prove that she could act—and insisted, when new film offers came, on a contract that would leave her free part of the time for the stage. Paramount ghve her one. 148 BLECTRIC RANGE 'I‘Hl-» SWING IS TO