The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 30, 1939, Page 3

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THE DAILY AU\SKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JUNE 30, 1939 e COLISEUM OWNED AND < ODERATED h¥ (50085 "MEN WITH WINGS” TECHNICOLOR DRAMA | AS COLISEUM SHOW | OUR GREATER MOVIE SEASON QPENS SUNDAY, JULY 2ND, D‘“ly Crossiword Pussle with “THE COWBOY ANS THE LADY” Juneau's Greatest Solution of Yesterday’s Puzzle Value Juneau’s Greatest Show Value TONIGHT and SATURDAY ONLY srating the air, | e from The' fme Amerts m 1 noun- three ures in mount’s the air, the Coliseum Theatre Murray, Ray Milland Campbell play the dramatic as three heroes who help a progress from the “flying bi of the opening of the century the superairliners of the present | day. “Men ploneers of the torrent of aviation's a period of Three young caught in the h to triumph over decades, for the central fig- | “Men With Wings", Para- Technicolor cavalcade of | which will open tonight at| Fred Mac- and Louise leads PR "SMASHING INTO YOUR HEART vnth all. the force of a power dive! SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU STARTING TONIGHT DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM CHAPTER FIRST SHOWING FEATURING THE REVIVAL OF 'FRANK_ CAPRA ‘who produced “Nr. Deeds"| : A FINE HUMAN e —AND— PROGRAM ALIBI to BLIND 7:00 P.M. tells a the surging when the With Wings" against in 1903 in ro- 2 Scotch tree ime THEODORA GOES ‘WILD FLASH GORDON 8:01 P.M. 9:32 P.M. NEWS BLIND ALIBI THEODORA GOES GOES WILD . MICKEY MOUSE MATINEE 1 P. M. SATURDAY “BLIND ALIBI” “THEDORA GOES WILD” “FLASH GORDON” MELVYN [pouGLAs \Thomas Mitchell ‘Thurston Hall ) Rosalind Keith Spring Byington AColumbia Piciure ANOTHER EXCITING CHAPTER "“FLASH GORDON" CANDY iment tonight at the Capitol The- | atre, gay, impeccable entertainment, I'but above all is the revelation of Irene Dunne as a glamorous, cap- is fast, punctuated with rich direc- torial DOUBLE BILL IS touches by Richard Boles- lawski ATTRACTION AT CAPITOL SHOW lieved Miss Dunne commanded such | versatility but few dared believe shc could be so completely charm- Hng so deftly subtle as a light 'Livaung comedienne. Many be- "Theodora Goes Wild" Has, comedy artist. Return Engagement-Dix Stars in Second Hit For her first feature-length laugh | riot, Columbia production chiels | were shrewd in selecting a vehicle | which allows the star full rein in| displaying talents never before dis- | closed. *“Theodora Goes Wild” has There are many reasons why you | the flavor of *“It Happened One will find “Theodora Goes Wild,” It’s action Night” plus the delightful nonsense | which onens for a return engage- of “My Man Godfrey.” Until she writes several sophisti- cated nov:'s under a nom-de-plume for her own amusement which un- expectedly leap into the best-sell- | | ing class over night, Miss Dunne | is just a small town nobody whose |for a look at the woman-of-the- world author, her publishe to disclose her true identity. It is the happy-go-lucky illustrator of her books, played to a turn by Mel- vyn Douglas, who finally discovers her secret and realizes tat her ev- ery move is a pose. He follows | her to her home town and it is not long before they have fallen in s refuse night an tomorrow at the Capitol. | — ee— BACK TO MI ‘ M. McCallum, in the uuditmg‘ office of the Polaris-Taku mine, was registered at the Gastineau Hotel this morning after returning north on the Prince George from a trip south. He was to fly to the mine today. PUPILS SLATED Checkup erse, Family Doctors Starts Here Next Monday who have attended school in former years. Dr. Council urged that the exam- | ination of school children should be made at an early date in order to allow time for correction of physical defects and handicaps and | to assure complete recovery before school opens. L THE OLD FAVORITE RSP S & Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Cooms HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 30.—People and things: Sandy Henville. Sixteen months old now, and never a normal girlhood because she’s cast as a boy again. History repeats itself: Shirley Temple’s follow-up on success was “Baby Take a Bow.” Sandy's is “Sandy Takes a Bow.” Sandy’s papa, probably on the theory that a milk route never grows up, is still a cow-juice dis- tributor. . . . Joan Crawford. Still talking about trying Broadway in the fall. Her friends hope she doesn't—Broadway-in-the-fall is a brutal place for a film star to stick her neck out. . . . One friend’s suggestion: “Joan ought to take a long vacation. . . . Let her see what “The Women’ does for her—then take a long trip, get Holly- wood and movies out of her system !ol a while, come back and go to town the way she used to. love. When Miss Dunne openly shouts this fact to her neighbors, the illustrator disappears. Forced | to take matters into her own hands, the star deliberately follows him to Manhattan and, designing her approach from the pages of her Physical examination of all school | ADAMS IN TOWN children by the Public Health co“nn BEEF A. C. Adams, bookkeeper from | Nurse and medical examination the Astoria Puget Sound cannery|by family physicians will =start [ SAT?!‘QD%ME'?.THE at Excursion Inlet, came to town | Monday, Dr. W. W. Council, City yesterday on business and is at| Health Officer, anndunced today. ,{ B A n A “ o r the Gastineau Hotel | § % § Such examinations as part of the g i Produced and Directed by WILLIAM A. WELLMAN THIS IS WHY YOU SHOULD ASK YOURSELF WHY OUR SALES ARE INCREASING BY LEAPS AND Ragnoe e vz . BONNES STOCK IS MORE COMPLETE, OUR PRICES ARE LOWER. THAT 18 WHY! ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS SPECIAL SHOW AT THE REGULAR . MATINEE — Tomorrow — 1:00 P. M. LSO: CARTOON. llIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIINIIllIIII|III|II|IIH|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllpfilzlmlllllfllllll‘ll INCREASE Cesar Romero. He plays a magician in “Charlie Chan at Treasure Island.” Got the part after bona fide magic-man was tested, rejected—not because he wasn’t the type, but because his feats didn’t look genuine on the screen. Marguerite Trice. Pretty thing from Waco, Tex., signed to a screen contract from Little theatre work. Marguerite (due for a title change) actually made her debut in films months ago—in a newsreel where she modeled bathing suits. Underwater stuff, and nice too—if that WAS Marguerite I'm thinking of. . . . That oil well in “Bright Vietory” and that swimming pool on “Hollywood Cavalcade” (or “Falling Stars” or what-they-may- call-it.) They use water, colored, for the gusher, and they use Food Can Be More Thgn Food . . . Pleasant surroundings combined with courteous service and faste- ful preparation makes eating a delight “PERCY’S oil for the swimming pool, to give nicer reflections. This is Hol- lywood, where the real McCoy is just an old-time western star named Tim. Elsa Maxwell, debut, has a stand-in who weighs 103. Elsa herself? dred pounds—and proud of it!” Susan Miller. She’s featured in Earl Carroll's new dinner- plump little stock girl at RKO a couple of years ago; now she’s revue. (In the revue, silly, not the dinner.) Susan was a chubby, a streamlined glamor gal. . .. And going back into pictures. . . . Nigel Bruce. You'd never dream it, but his natural intimates call him Willie. Nigel's just a stagename, his own being William. He’s with Rathbone again in “Sherlock Holmes.” Norma Shearer. Caught her without an answer the other day. The question: “Are all women, Miss S, like those in ‘The Women'?” Said Miss S., who was tired maybe: “I don’t know. I really haven't thought about it. I really should. T ought to have answers for questions like that, shouldn’t I?” .. . Cora Sue Collins. An-old screen veteran at 12. ‘She’s in “Har- mony at Home” now, but in her time she has played childish editions of Loretta Young, Greta Garbo, Norma Shearer and Merle Oberon. 'Asked which of these queens she’d like to be when she grows up, Cora sue wasn't sure, but ventured, “It would be nice if T could have the best features of all of them.” Proving that diplomacy, in Hollywood, is not a matter of age. America's mighty uvnleudo of aviation! The thrilling saga of the glory riders of the sky who defy death as they go Brothers soared into the ) \etter | Bir above Kitty Hawk, North Caro- screaming down the air- mutual profit mistake | lina, to ‘the present round-the- lanes! From the first flights world flights and transatlantic air W B d service. Woven into the action of n pusher planes to "" the story are the great landmarks mighiywlnglmdnfln of aviation--Glenn Curtiss’ succe ful experiment ith seaplan: of tomorrow...its el Bleriot's flight across the Englist here, told in the blood- | Channel, the inauguration of the . g Lo y American airmail, the use of bomb- | % A el \ pounding drama of / - ers in the World War, Li | 4 R one American family dash from New York to P e | whose life is the 3 2 e inauguration of the Clippe i S P ' | 7 across the Pacif and, finally, oy 4 adventure-filled e 3 - Howard Hughes' record-breaking 5 F story of American 4 R F R bW ) The breathloss : ¢ B SV b % Territorial health pjgram ave || risk their fives in : TN made available without cost to all || the skywa, s 7 4 children planning to attend school and women who . in the Fal wait on the ground Vi, Before the medical examination {] 0" thelr retural 5 7 | by e family physician, parents A A 2 re requested to take their chil-| RGPE B a8 dren to the Juneau Public Health : | Center. Room 108, Territorial Build- | J ¥ | 15 fai § 2 " A | 7, {ing, between the hours of 1 and 4 2 v % B g ) V) ck on Monday, Tuesday and i \ ; . 2 24 A 7 riday afternoons for inspection ¢ » o awski. 55| by Miss Magnhild Oygard, Public % P 1 ahs wiltes” Sevdenl ssurist- | Health Nurse, who is assisting local : b ; d ated nov-'s . -de 3 physicians with the examinations i N r e | Following inspection by the 3 T ¢ h 4 5 e i i ~~| Nurse, children should be taken fo : i b 3 ing | own novels, participates in a ser le<‘ their family physicians for an an- B 3 | of adventures which finally bring ANNUAI. HEMTH nual checkup. Children who are % S g ¥ most notable achievement is play- | 'he Young man to his senses. ‘ |entering school for the first time 25850 £ ing the church organ. Despite the| Richard Dix is the star of * Blu\d‘ Exml“AIION OF )mu Fall are eligible for these free 4 . , | fact that the world is clamoring‘A“b" second picture showing to. examinations as well as children Py e, i The Grouhn Air Nflun Ever .Ten Times APeramevmPicurewi | GrOAtEr In TECHNICOLOR! FRED RAY LOUISE ANDY DEVINE CAM PBEI- LYNNE OVERMAN WALTER ABEL 4 POUNDS RAISINS 35¢ A REAL BUYI LARGE BOX CRACKERS THE TEA OI'" FLAVOR Orape== aAng ang )}T( ‘. 1‘“’“ o 3 S TR PO S T it | 87T g SR " DAILY DOUBLE Granulated Borax SOAP 29¢ Value . . . 40 Ounces YOU CAN BUY IT FOR 5 Pt. SWEET DILLS BABY SIZE for permix 6~ 25¢ 25" SOUID HEADS =~ CABBAGE "ASSORTED—1 LB. CODKIES KELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES 2 PACKAGES CIGABETTES 25c CELLO BAG SPLIT PEAS WHY YOU SHOULD! = s THRIFT 00: 0 PHONE 767 There is a difference in' the quality of tea! You'll never know tea at its best until you try Schilling. Compare its exquisite flavor and cleas- ness. Compare it for every- thing you want in a cup of tea. Insist on Schilling Tea! Party-giver extraordinary, making her film 5 CENTS WITH A CASH “Two hun- ORDER OF OTHER MER- CHANDISE—ANY AMOUNT e e ————— LARGE LIBBY'S PEACHES 2 for Only 33¢ m:sn\ smrmfi«r : Fresh Vegefables Every boat brings us FRESH VEGETABLES and FRUIT. SEE OUR DISPLAY! of the CO-OP. There are many reasons why. LOOK INTO IT! CONNORS MOTORCOMPANY

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