The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 13, 1939, Page 3

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THEATRE 3 LAST TIMES TONIGHT AD DOUGH-RA- HAL ROACH presents F GOLS Y JEART Al «,_FRE "~ Shorts: PARIS ON PARADE TUPAPAOO FROG POND LATEST NEWS RIC MARCH Released thru United Artists VIRGINIA BRUCE " MIDNIGHT PREVIEW “SMASHING THE SPY RING” DOUGLAS T0 ENTERTAIN BALL TEAM | d | First Game of Season on Island Side Slated for Tonight The first ball game of the season will be played tonight on the Doug- field with the Islanders las ball meeting the Moose. ‘ Douglas, always a good sport town, has made elaborate preparations for a big time, and if the Moose expect to find any rooters for their team, they'll have to take along their wives. The game is called for 6:30 o'- clock. “Special Delivery” Kelly Blake, Moose backstop, will take the Moose squad to the island on one of his trucks. What Is Your News I. Q.? DOUGLAS NEWS P. A. PROJECTS ARE REINSTATED FOR DOUGLAS With just enough members to constitute a quorum, the City Coun- cil of Douglas met for the regular bi-monthly meeting last night. Of greatest importance was the news just received and given to the Council of the reinstatement at | washington, D. C., of the applica- |tion of the two P.W.A. projects ! for the town, one involving $2,980, for repairs_to the wharf, and the |other for street improvement {amounting to $8,160. These projects | will soon be permitted of accom- ! plishment, it is hoped by the city dads. | An offer of timbers from the| w. | has Y, JUNE 13, 1939. C.D.A.IstoInstall Here This Eveningi In the absence of Miss Isubull} Cashen, Grand Regent, Mrs. Mae| Godkins, Vice Grand Regent, will| preside during the meeting tonight of the Catholic Daughters of America, which will be held in the|ends tonight at the Coliseum The- Parish Hall. | e with John Payne as its featured Mrs. Walter Hellan will be install- | vocalist. Payne, the handsome, dark ing officer for the evening and Mr: | haired youth with a ¢ ssing voice | J. B. Herrington, installing monitor. | Who stepped into the role originally After the services the Rev. E, A [intended for Dick Powell, shares the McNamara and the Rev. W. G. Le|acting honors with Pat O'Brien and Vasseur will speak. Margaret Lindsay | > } Probably destined for biggest suc- lcess Honors Miss Bothwell tially.” His other solo numbers, also infectious tunes with toetickling | rhythms, are “Love is Where You Find It” and “Garden of the Moon.” Honoring Miss Beatrice Bothwell,| 1€ two other songs are of the Mys, Olaf Ewanson entertained last|NOVelty classification and. are sol evening at her West Ninth Street cleverly presented that for many | residence. with & sarprise birthday | PeOPle they will undoubtedly be thel dinher. l?w'( cnjoy'xll_}v]u features ‘?(] ((liw ;;1:]0~ Tall white tapers offset the huge duction. They are entitled “The birthday cake, with seventeen mnk‘(f"l,,n""“ff of the Whirling Der- candles, which formed a colorful|ViSh" and “The Lady on the Two- centerpiece for the table. Following | C°ht Stamp dinner guests attended the movie.| i Those attending the affair were Miss Elizabeth Tucker, Miss Luise Nielson, Miss Bonnie Erickson and Miss Borghild Havedahl. ROBERT GEYER ON |COLISEUM FILM IS SHOWING TONIGHT FOR LAST TIMES Five new songs, each of them re- garded as a sure-fire hit, are intro- duced in “Garden of the Moon,” the new Warner Bros. musical which Skagway, Alaska, June 7, will not be responsible for any debts contracted in my name ex- cept by myself personally. adv. HOWARD YETTER. D 1939. T TIMES L2 TGOV o L € OWNED _AND OPERATED @ e Fun Is Yours T LINDSAY Here's Just the Spot to Have that Fling and Swing Is Kin "GARDEN OF THE QLK with PAT O'BRIEN—JONN PAYNE-MARGAR JIMMY FIDLER E ALSO———Cartoon :-: Paragraphic :-: News- ;ALSO Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Cusen HOLLYWOOD, Cal,, June 13 the movie casting office. ] Every day is Mother’s Day in And mother—rather the lack of her— causes her share of headaches in this notorious studio center of migraine. Before going any farther, let's get this straight. There's no shortage of mothers around town, so don't all you little old ladies descend on Dan Kelley, but authority for much of what is to follow, with demands for a job. Dan won't like it if you do. Besides, he'd probably never speak to me again, and that would be catastrophic in my small sphere. The town is swarming with child actors and actresses, but on the screen their real mammas won't do. They need actress-mam- mas, preferably star-mammas. And there (says Dan Kelley) is a peak of trouble, A woman star doesn’t object to playing a mother role, provided it is a youthful mother role. And she doesn’'t mind playing an older mother role, provided—in the same picture—she can be THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDA | CAPITOL COMEDY 'NEUTRMITY LAWS | | IS NOW ENDING | OF U. 5. COME T0 O | THREE-DAY PLAY| FRONT ON REQUEST b il (Continuea from Page One) |"There Goes My Heart"| ‘™ ¥ iraini out was to ship them no money Co-stars Virginia Bruce |oue was to 1 The neutrality act, embodying | and Fredn( Mar(h that idea, was enacted. It has been modified steadily as it became less Roving the bargain basement ofiguiisractory to the administration Cyrus Butterfield's department store |, \q (o at least part of its sup- |for material, Bill Spencer, (Frederic |, ters. March) a newspaper reporter, in| now Hull has asked Congress to |the film “There Goes My Heart” | witoh back. End the arms em- |ending tonight at the Capitol The- a0 says he. His words only half |atre, is amazed to recognize JOAN|.ynsealed his strengthened belief | Butterfield, (Virginia Bruce) behind |¢yot the best way to stay out of |a counter. Pretending to believeipyropean wars was to prevent {her just another salesgirl, he takesinem And the best way to prevent her out to dinner but his hatred(inem just now is to let it be known of her turns to love and the pairiinat our supplies of arms and {are soon Imving a grand tims, rid-|yyunitions will be open to more ing the subways, eating hot COIM|,eqcefyl nations. American sup- and sweet potatoes at sidewalk|,ies tamed Germany in the World stands and winning contests at ice- | yr.. skating” rinks. And President Roosevelt Bill tears up the story about JOan. |, oyeq that in any event— When Joan's furiqus gr?ndramer “The effective maintenance of locates her through Patsy's Jealous|american neutrality depends today, | roommate, Bill spirits her away t0 |45 jn the past, on the wisdom and lonely " retreat known as Shady|getermination of whoever at the Island, where Joan learns to cook |moment occupy the offices of Presi- | his favorite dishes and the pair are gent and Secretary of State.” |idyllically happy. S Meanwhile, however, Bill's editor |has patched together the story Bill wrote about Joan and published it. Crushed by what looks like Bill's | duplicity, Joan welcomes her grand- | father and gratefully returns home |with him. However, after considerable man- euvering by Peggy and Pennypack- er, the misunderstanding is straigh- |tened out, the pair are brought to- |gether again, and happiness reigns. “There Goes My Heart” was spir- Chris Beats Law, Leases Potato Paich Chris Radmilovich was back in! court again today on the same old | charge, but he didn't go back to jail. | Jail would have been all right with him, he admitted, for he had emerg- | ed only May 2 after gaining 23 PRINCESS TONIGHT Robert Geyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Geyer of this city, will arrive in Juneau this evening on the Can- adian Pacfiic Princess Charlotte. Geyer has been spending the win- ter in Tacoma with his grandmother and also attendnig Lilcoln High School in that city. Try an Empire ad. fr— — % B D) AY TRY BAKED CHICKEN and NOODLES ala Gratin for Luncheon at the BARANOF - itedly directed by Norman Z. Mc- Nowell property just for bringing Joaperar. |Leod from a brilliant screen play pounds in weight while serving a them in, was made by the city's| attorney, Prank Foster and may ex- pedite some of the street work, par- ticularly on Lower Front Street, where rock is now being hauled to fill in and improve the road to that section. Application for a retail liquor li- cense from Joe Riedi was presented and favorably acted upon by the Council. Remainder of the evening's busi- ness consisted of reports on stre sewers, wharf and hydrant repai Clerk Tuckett reported water col- lections good now and a new order was made effective that his office hours now be from 10 to 12 every day, in addition to the 4 to 5 o'- clock afternoon hour on the day 4 term of seven months and 17 days by Eddie Moran and Jack Jevne. Efor trespassing. The stars will win scores of new | yctead of being sent back to fat- fans in this gaily romantic concoc- | ten yp, when hailed into U. S. Com- tion and they are given excellent | mjssioner Felix Gray's court today, support by a superb lineup of play- | Ghris closed a business deal. He ers, including, in addition to the |jeased for one year the property on aforementioned Patsy Kelly, Alan which he was trespassing, agreeing Mowbray and Nancy Carroll, Eu- |ty pay the owner, Trevor Davis, a gene Pallette, as Bill's excitable edi- | qollar. Davis agreed to take pay- tor, Arthur Lake as his demon ment in potatoes, which Chris has 1meraman, Claude Gillingwater planted on the land at Lemon Creck r 1 Btienne | which he was trespassing on yes- terday but which he occupies today under lease. The charge was dismissed. Asked by Deputy Marshal Walter Hellan where he had been keeping himself the seven times a deputy | drove out to Lemon Creek in at- y .- CHARLOTIE HAS GUAR INSULATION Gaaranteed in Waiting for the 2o of the Buitiding For HOME BUILDERS l | young. (Claudette Colbert in “Imitation of Life,” Barbara Stan- wyck in “Stella Dallas,” Irene Dunne in “Invitation to Happiness” all were ageing maters—but they had their fling at youth in the early reels.) The other day Kelley had a young star turn down the role of Jackie Cooper’s mother in “Bright Vietory” even though the same girl once played Deanna Durbin’s mother. Kelley didnt blame her, either. A girl could play Deanna’s parent a couple of years ago and still be “young.” To play strapping Jackie's mother i e et e e et i Whatever the Weather .. You'll be sure to find just what will “'hit the spot” on the Tuncheon and Dinner today—in the audience wind—would st Jjust after pay days. il 0 55 A PILE DRIVER BACK Returned to Douglas is the Cole pile driver and equipment outfit which has been in Wrangell Nar-| rows for work there, to begin re- pairing the City Dock at once. New | piling and capping are to be placed : | to strengthen the wharf. e e—— BALL GAME TONIGHT : Douglas plays the Moose tonight " |in the Gastineau Channel schedule. Each question counts 20; each |This is the first league game in part of a two-part question, 10. | Douglas this season. A score of 60 is fair, 80, good. 1. Identify this man, Why did { HEAlm Fow ~ STORE OPENS army officers meet him when he arrived in the U. S. after a 19-year stay abroad? 2. How did Queen Mother Mary hurt her left eye? | 3. Pederal jud g es’ salaries 0" JUNE 21 are exempt from income taxes. True or false? 3 4. In what international in- | oo ming her activity as propriet- m&m m"é‘l H::: "rem of Juneau’s only shop dealing Aramis invelved? | exclusively in the sale of health ¢ | foods, Mrs. B. M. Krafft announces 5. How were valuable astro- | . ‘nomical records destroyed at 'the opening of her new store in the Lick observatory in California? newly remodeled Krafft Building on | the corner of Second and Franklin, barcam ol i St | on Wednesday, June 21. | Mrs. Krafft has a liberal stock of E AS‘I’ERN S'I’ ARS | the nationally known health foods |and in her new lacation she offers, for interested patrons, a library of MEET TON'GHT | health literature gathered during the | years she has been occupied with her The last meeting before the sum-, profession. mer vacation for members of the| Entrance to the new shop is at Order of Eastern Star will be held!204 Franklin Street. The building tonight at the Scottish Rite Temple | is located on Second Street opposite starting at 8 o'clock. | the Alaska Electric Light and Power Mrs. Homer Nordling will preside Company. during the session in the absence - — of Miss Gladys Forrest, Worthy| The Book ALASKA, Revised and Matron. Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00. e L *11° ==2" "Schilling For the qualities that add zest and flavoe toeveryday meals, youwill like Schilling Pepper: Schilling Chili Powder brings you the genuine flavor of Mexican cooking, so greatly relished: The delicate flavor and fragrance of Schilling pure Vanilla makes desserts delicious; It will got bake out nor freeze out: 37 SPICES=19 EXTRACTS 31 PASSENGERS FOR THIS PORT Canadian Pacific steamer Prin- cess Charlotte, making the first voyage to Southeast Alaska on the 1939 schedule, and due in port at 6:30 o'clock has the following pas- | sengers for this port: | For Juneau—Dorothy Brightman, Arthur Connors, Norman Connors, Stewart Emery and wife, Anna | Trees, Kenneth Webster, Dorothy ‘Whittaker, James Wickersham and wife, Lonne Brown, Beryl Davis, Robert Geyer, Bunn Hagarty, Har- old Reed, George Troychak, Lester Chacey, George Bowers, Robert Good, Ophir Meilluer, Grover Ren- | ick, William Winn, Solomon Vandt, Frank M. Lavell, Dale Death. For Tulsequah—William Barnard, Andrew Barnard, Andrew McDonald, Laughlan McMillan, Neil McInish, Raymond Nelson, Dolphise St. Ger- main, Michael Skehor, Alexander Smith and wife, Frank Burns, George Edward Norris. 108 SERVICE NEEDS W OMEN HOUSEWORNERS Too Many Domestic Jobs fo Go Around, Plaint of TES Here Too many jobs to go around! That’s the trouble they're having at the Territorial Employment Service office here for one class of work- ers, women domestics. Not enough women are registered with the service to fill the jobs which | are available, Director Joseph T. Flakne said today. He urged that women wishing to do housework, | tempting to serve the warrant, Chris 'said he had been “around the corner.” Chris spent the winter in jail for trespassing on the Waynor tract. 'LAST RITES HELD THIS AFTERNOON FOR MRS. GODDARD Late rites for the late Mrs. Albert H. Goddard, pioneer Alaskan, were {held this afternoon in the chapel | of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. Scores of Juneau residents gath- ered for the services and many beau- tiful floral tributes were in evidence. The Rev. John A. Glasse delivered th eulogy and Mrs. Lola Mae Alex- ander sang “Rock of Ages” and “Nearer My God to Thee.” Inter- ment was in the Moose plot of iEvergreen Cemetery. Kathleen Carlson Is Juneau Bound | Youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wwilliam O. Carlson, Miss Kathleen Carlson, sailed from Seattle today | on the steamer Denali for Juneau where she will spend the summer | months. | Miss Carlson has just completed | her junior year at the University of | Idaho where she is majoring in pub- | lic school music. | — - | Of 300,967 farm families in North Carolina, 209,643 have home gar- dens, 47,686° of them year-around gardens. and REMODELERS ... When you build or remodel with Celotex these 10 vital points are covered in a written contract with you: 1. CELOTEX IS GUARANTEED to Maintain Insulating Efficiency for the Life of the Building. 2. CELOTEX IS to Provide 3. CELOTEX IS to Give La: 4. CELOTEX IS GUARANTEED Structural Strength. GUARANTEED sting Fuel Economy. GUARANTEED against Destruction by Termites. S. CELOTEX IS GUARANTEED ageinst Destruction by Dry Rot. 6. CELOTEX IS to ‘GUARANTEED be Water Repellant. 7. CELOTEX IS o Reduce 8. CELOTEX IS Fras 9. CELOTEX IS against Upon 10. CELOTEX IS to meet Dept. GUARANTEED Noise. GUARANTEED not to Settle Away from the mework, GUARANTEED of Insulation Efficiency ing o Plastering. GUARANTEED of Commeree Commercial - Standards. and U. S. Federal Specifications. 3 A Guarantee 1s Issued Only on Jobs Within the Unted States. Save fuel in winter—be more comfort- able in summer. Phone or stop in today. Let us help you. Th ere is no obligation. - COLUMBIA LUMBER (0. 587 — PHO Sl AN | either permanently or part time, or. | to take care of children, register with | the service at the Little Territorial Building. A large number of highly trained | women are registered for steno- graphic and office work, he said. HEALTH DEPARTMENT PICNIC HONORS TWO A picnic supper, attended by 20 | employees of the Department of | Health, last night honored Mr. and Mrs. George Pearson who are leav- ‘me tonight for the States, where he will continue his study of medi- | cine. Pearson has been Laboratory Technician for the department, for the past year. The picnic, held at Treadwell, wu’ featured by a baseball game in which Jesta Timmerman’s team beat Beat- rice Primavera’s fair and square, The Book ALASKA, Revised and | C | Enlarged, Now On Sale; $1.00, .E_ B I KENTUCKY “Remember 0ld Sunny Brook?” “ = OPR. 1939, NATIO! NAL DI GLD unrY Broo K STRAIGHT BOURBON WHIS W ho could ever Jorgetit!” There’s a rare, genial quality in Old Sunny Brook—a {riend- ly smoothness that makes it “cheerful as its name.” Why not buy a bottle — tonight? STILLERS PRODUCTS CORPORATION, NEW YORK CITY NES — 747 “CHEERFUL AS ITS NAME” | Vi i,u' Y KENTUCKY STRAIGHY BOURBON WHISKEY S | | W L R YOUR GUIDE TO along. “These girls old before th Kelley. “You can’t blame them for and ‘old age’ as long as possible. T cs pictyre when she was 14-—so she's been she's only 26, but imagine quite a f would say she’s much older. Deanna ! probably he ‘old’ to many of the public can’t blame a glamor girl for ducking a part middle-aged or near there.” Any time a film player steps out in a new role in a successful picture—mark that “successful”—the role is likely to stick. So Hollywood has its mother-players who are seldom anything else, Spring Byington got her niche in “The Jones Family” as Fay Holden got hers with the “Hardys.” Nella Walker, because she was Durbin's mother in “Three Smart Girls,” has become a much~ in-demand player for smart soclety mother roles. And there's Alice Brady. Alice, a dramatic actress on the stage, became a comedienne in pictures—and a mother in “Lady Tubbs.” From “Lady Tubbs” has sprung a long succession of Brady mammas: In “My Man Godfrey,” in “In Old Chicago,” in several others including her cur- rent “Young Mr. Lincoln.” These—and people like Dorothy Peterson—are solaces in the mother problem, Doorthy was maternal in her first film, “Mother’s Cry,” and the stamp stuck. Still a young woman, she is of the character actress division, with no hankering for glamor. And she'll walk in where glamor fears to tread—while casters cheer. * grow ing, 13, will No, you hat suggests she's @ The choice of wise home-owners throughout the West. JUNEAU-YOUNG HARDWARE C0 There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising

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