The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 6, 1939, Page 3

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STARTS TONIGHT .. these two fought against a world of law for the right to live in a world of {ove! ALAN BAXTER * STANLEY RIDGES A Columbia Pictures 2 K Directed by JOHN BRAHM +« +* 3 SHORTS ::5iiin vovens SHORTS HIS BEST FRIEND—NEWS BLACKOUT HIGH PRICES WESTINGHOUSE WASHERS $70.00 value $57.50 7 pounds capacity—White enamel tub. Vs-horsepower Westinghouse motor. Improved lynite turburlater. Compact safety wringer. Liberal Terms—Trade-in Allowance PARSONS ELECTRIC CO- 140 So. Seward PHONE 161 WHAT'S INSIDE? Fire never destroys a house without burning up what's inside of it. Fire insurance pro- tects the building. To protest your household possessions against loss or damage by fire, you need Residence Contents Insurance. It costs surprisingly little. ¢’ SHATTUCK AGENCY TELEPHONE 249 Office—New York Life AT YOU © b, O, M. & Oldest Bank in Alaska Commercial Savings Safe Deposit Banking by Mail Department The B. M. Behrends | Bank Juneau, Alaska = ] " V. Daily Crossword Puzzl BELOVED WHLL ROGERS |1 ETU y Crossword uzzle ; ! SEEN AGAIN IN RETURN || § opENS Tomfim ACROSS Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle % s.v-n-my <;¢ E ' \ 1. Tropical resin minat 1 bl - T aining: H s f’"v;;‘ggg:‘ oo} variant AT I \ o Bend X|E| 10 Ventilated Shrhe { . Make =] o vant ‘he € o s Rozers pVer speeches: Els] ™ b 8 The beloved Will Rogers never|{ = umorous 34 4 played a more warm-hearted anc » v 9 13, Kind of hum- i) LT Drohanks g e ik ‘,Maureefl 0 Su“wan Hen_‘ - g bird | 19. Sketched heart-warming role than the easy-|j . :E ilabllhe 21, Move away or going small-town newspaper editor ; [ : Tov on: collog. Life Be t 40,” the 20th Cen- 16, Give or put D S & ¢ of JAfe egins a A e 20th Ce \ ry Fonda, a‘ph eliamy back i B Cttee tury~Fox production which will open | } Are af(ap#d Theatre | Audinpee B y| 1. Dessert tonight at the Coliseurm Theatre. |4 21. Mongrel dog: 28, Barth: Scotch A boon to those movie-goers who| | 0. PO sed- 30. Heavy haul- have not seen it before, the film ' { “There, but for the grace of God, % e RIY Fole;gm;fi'_“c" | rought laughs 'to repeaters as well | go I” may be considered the true| 86 Puis foc lO|E| 3. Beara of Your reviewer thoroughly enjoyed| theme of Columbia’s newest film at| 26. Leaf of the [E[T b ngrb“:"{h for the second time the hilarious|} the Capitol tonight, with Maureen - g [E[S] 3 Something to situations -and ageless wit and wis- | { O’Sullivan, Henry Fonda and Ralph| 21. Analyzed be learned : xrica’s srite humor-| Y al s M dom of America’s favorite humor-|} Bellamy featured. True motion pic-| L e DOWN 39, Run 'away to st { ture entertainment in its sheerest | cal stand- “Hule, Brit- L Toothofa .\ WATD When Will shows that the years] ! R i 0 AR A ofn J g ¢ . More agree- sense, “Let Us Live" deftly weaves,| g5 peftaining to 48 s Bariol 2. Me Mo able: collog. after 40 are the best of a man’s life z romance, murder, injustice, tragic fi«::l!‘ny mo- -character i Ph;rk(“ 42. M:me"remrn- he supplies hilarious proof to the e~ . Parts of th o error, fear and hape in brilliant pecially mouth . 44. Serpentine theme of Walter B. Pitiin’s h”\!—'i fashion. . i1 sH‘Z;;“‘)‘:“?g s 13- y § Bopioe 46, ‘Bhorba¥ticle | selling book which suggested the | It is no exaggeration to say of strument - Sonsteliation He t in & news- screen play to Lamar Trotti 3 |“Let Us Live” that it possesses an| 38 fiaegered §. 6T i R, - Rogers is a doctor of romance as {idea to which everybody will re- " "'a sense of ‘well s public life money well, luekily for Rochelle Hudson 2 |spond. The story of ordinary people, | 4o prandeur 56 Ber = o § Shohe weody 0. - and Richard Cromwell whose love | suddenly becomes the focus Of a| 41 Scotch river law fiber 61, Coloring agent suspicious world, “Liet Us Live” has a helping hand. Things aré straight- 2 ened out-eventually, but Will stirs] Ito do with Brick Tennant, a taxi driver, and Mary Roberts, his sweet- heart. Fate plucks them from their obscurity to change their pitiful dreams ‘of modest happiness-to-be into a terror-stricken reality. | ‘The ‘boy and his friend are accused and convicted of ‘murder quit her desperate struggle to con- vince a Tostile World that her sweet- heart is innocent. DOUGLAS NEWS HIGH SCHOOL SCHEDULES ARE COMPLETED, POUGLAS The schedule of subjects for each instructor in the Douglas High School was announced’ this morfi- ing by Supt. Poole. He will teach ocommercial subjects and shop dnd coach athletics. Mr. ‘Oberg “will teach Junior High and ‘music ‘for the grades and high school. Miss ‘Warren will have world and United States history and a class in ‘home economics. Mr. Ladd’s subjects are general science, physics, business arithmetic and comiercial law. . HUDSONS HAVE BABY GIRL Jerry Hudson was wearing a happy look on his face this morn- ing over the arrival of a daugh- ter, born to the couple at St. Ann’s Hospital about midnight last night. The little tot is named Eliz- abeth Paige. Mrs. Hudson is re- ported doing nicely. e H POTTERS HERE | Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Potter and child have taken one of ‘the Kil- burn apartments, moving here from Juneau the first of the week. i S ee— { DF.D. MEETING Monthly meeting of the Douglas Volunteer Fire Department will be held tomorrow evening as usual |with an important session sched- Esther Guflufseh Elected to Head . o Legion Auxiliary New officers were elected by the | American Legion Auxiliary at last night’'s meeting in the Dugout. Esther Gullufsen was elected President, Hattie Peterman, first | port, 2nd Vice-President; Ethel An- | derson, Secretary-Treasurer; Selma | Vukovich, Sergeant-at-Arms; Helen | Bernhofer, Historian, and Gorden | Clithero, Chaplain. | ©On the Exeeutive Committee, Beth Nordling, Marion Hendrickson (and Edith Sheelor were elected. Mabel Lydick was named to |'head a cemmittee in charge of the Auxiliary’s rammage sale scheduled for September 27. .- B.P.O. ELKS Extraordinary meeting, 8 o'clock members wged :to-attend. adv. | B AM"W TOfnorrow NEWS BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE E DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 6, 1939, by the mistaken testimony of eye-witnesses and by circum- stantial evidence appalling in its KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Sept. 6. inerimination. “The girl refuses to | Vice-President; Katherine Daven- | tonight. Lunch, entertainment. A.llr a riot of fun in the_process ESEES AEE aan BEE EEN dNN B AREEREE o1 111] o4 3 up ! > CYANE OFFICER 10 JOINBYRD affair is in a bad way until he off ‘,,._" | | | The second Coast Guardsman from Alaska to be assigned to duty with the cutter Northland and the Ad 29 miral Byrd Antarctic sedition is R. H. Casper, Chief Machinist's WY Mate on the Cyane here | Jq 7 today from Coast Guard headquar- ters. H.H.///fl“..%fl... Fifteen years in the Coast Guar H. .“//// y | service, a resident of Seattle, C // / per has served on both Atlantic 7 % 7 5‘ and Pacific cutters before coming He was chosen on his record a a diesel engineer MEENESE 3 JEE JEN dEEEE A Mrs. Casper will sail south with % 5 VA% her husband, but will reside in Se- Edmm W - 4 1 from The other Coast Guardsm st Wi « oy e Alaska, who preceded C to BEAR ScAR(E o" WHERE ARE 'I’HEY. duties on the Antarctic cutter, is | % |Lieut. Glenn Rollins, from the | cutter Haida, at Juneau * BARANOF, FIND. | ASK INFORMATION g 4 MISSIONARY THROUGH Miss Ann Bannan, who has been 6 il quest, for mfnrmmion_ regarding E(l—,‘“-m-v Island as a missionary with Forest" Service: Enumerat- g o Rl cvsmson g oo i ofs Refurn—Report to | Be Compiled Here | ward H past 18 yes by Mrs. Cel Sutton, wife of the|ali Monday, bound for a absent man | vacation in the States. She expects Postmaster Wile has received a|to return to her post at St. Law- request for information concern-|rence Island after the expiration | ing Ed Dillon. This inquiry is|of that time Batenat. Esind hasitt asddrge s | SOUEHt by & sister af the man. She i bear population as Forest Service |15 Hattie J Dillon, residing in { DUNCAN s | officials anticipated before they be- | Canton, Missouri. She has not BACK; IN TODAY i | heard from her brother since 1890 | Duncan Robertson, son of Mr. gan to take a census of the island's browmies last week, Assistant Re- gional Forester Wellman Holbrook | Aska. | said today. or 1891 when he left home for Al-|and Mrs. R. E. Rabertson, is back |in Juneau after & summer's can- nery work. Robertson came in on the North Sea and will be here ———r———— Holbrook, in charge of the count S y riel efore returnin to s e frs o com. HELPS MOOSE CALE o ", B, W & pi ere week. e sal 1s sc! S S | boat saw seven bears in one 24-hour AF“R lo"G swm studying medicine. period. Most of the bear observed | o4y garison, who lives at the PRy e v i e | 4 7 VISIT were along Peril Strait, he said, the | ., end of Douglas Island, vouch-| JO:":::‘O‘;[ e anl ; an|es for the existence of moose on Douglas Island. enumerators also reporting abundanee of ‘deer and eagles on Baranof Island. A few days ago, Carlson reported All boats ‘participating in the|, )¢ swam the channel from count were in Juneau over the week- | poing galishury and was so played | ‘end. The Ranger X left Monday |y when it reached the Douglas morning for ‘its headquarters at|g,ore that Carlson had to carry the Ketchikan. ‘The Ranger V, Ranger | gpima) to the woods to prevent its IX and Forester are still in port. | growning in the incoming tde. visiting here, arriving on the Al- aska. He is a guest at .the Gas- | tineau. e B.P.O. ELK Extraordinary meeting, 8 o'clock ' tonight. Lunch, entertainment. All members urged to attend. adv. — e P NEW ‘TELEPHONE DIRECTORY To be issued Sept. 30 and forms close Sept. 15. For space, listings | and changes please call Juneau and Douglas Telephone Co., phone 420. b o " adv. Amazing New 1940 PHILCO FARM RADIO SPECIAL TREASURETTE #2.95 €8 ~ow ot but- ...u0 Aeries 10 wind chargs 8 ELIZABETH ARDEN ESSENTIALS ® Ardena ‘Cleansing Cream * Ardena Skin Lotion ® Ardena Velva Cream * ArdenaVelva Cream Mask * Ardena Cream Amoretta o-Ardena Specio! Astringen! *Poudre ¢il'vrion * Cameo Power 1| Weadertdlte g e— wonaerfu' o nove - flam mee at the prices | o ed cablinet: o forme Smart brown wo! PHILCO 1007 (Above) AN the featuzes of the 95T plus the added con- venlence of Pushe Butron tumding. $33.45 Battery Block $5.50 Extra PHILCO 95T Self-contained Bat- $21.45 W. P. JOHNSON TELEPHONE 17 211 SO. FRANKLIN ———————————— Race, Druggist STORES OF ALASKA | SUSNT ST TSN SO SUSEES: SIS SO A BRREE 2R S UUNEAU S :: ROSS OWNED AND _OPERATED By _ W.L 5RO Juneaw’s Greatesp-Show Value Just for the glorious, wuproarious, sunny fun of it! And the fun begins when ———ADDED ATTRACTIONS—— Floyd Gibbons—"In Your True Adventures” Comedy News HURRY! BERNE-EHLER CONCERT Tickets on sale at: Hotel Juneau Jones-Stevens Harri Machine Shop Alaska Music Supply Hollmann's Pharmacy Baranof Hotel STUDENT ADMISSIONS AT THE DOOR Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. 6.—People and things: If Margot Stevenson’s clothes were as loud .as her laugh, everybody on the Warner lot would be wearing dark glasses. . . . Fred Fredericks, the Factorman on wigs, is doing three for Raymond Massey to wear as “Abraham Lincoln in Illinols"—as & youth, as a rising politician, and as president. . . ..Says that Lin- coln’s hairline receded less than an inch in the 30 years. Which ought to prove that movie magnates, even with all the world on their shoulders, have no right to get bald. . . . s Maureen O'Hara, the new girl (“Jamaica Inn” and “Hunch- back of Notre Dame”) looks as fresh and unspoiled as that “Wild Irish Rose” of the song. If Ben Hecht really wrote that “Lady of the Tropics” thing, he must have done it tengue-in-cheek—and at those prices too. ... I wonder if anybody can tell whether Hedy Lamarr (in the same) is an actress or not. . . . Personally I think it would be & monopoly if she could act too. . .. She'll never need to, for this corner. . . . “My father,” says Robert Cummings, “was a fine man who spent his whole life telling me to tell the truth.” ... And Bob's whole success, on the stage first and then in Hollywood, was built on two nervy deceptions—first in passing himself off as an Eng- lish juvenile, next in claiming to be a Texan ‘to get a movie break. H This summer has been a record-breaker for numbers of would-be visitors to see how pictures are made. . . . Studios in con- sequence have clamped shut the doors so tightly that a visitor PERCY’S IS BETTER THAN EVER NOW — MORE MODERN MORE ATTRACTIVE — INSIDE AND OUT AND EVEN THE FOOD IS BET- TER T0O! must be somebody extra-special, gala, and de luxe even to keep inside the gates. . . . In a few years, however, the demand should drop off considerably. . . . With all these out-of-Hallywood “gala premieres’—Dodge City, San Francisco, Van Buren, Atk New Orleans, Dallas, Waukegan, Tll, and the others—the country 1s seeing stars. . .. And the big location trips around the map are showing the folks the rest of it. ... To name a few: “Abe Lincoln in Tllinois” at Eugene, Ore., “Northwest Passage” and “Drums Along the Mohawk” in Idaho, “Arizona” near Tucson,. . . This last, a Wesley Ruggles epic with Jean Arthur,.is really starting something, because Columbia is rehuilding the Tucsom of 1859, completely and permanently, and will present the . results to the state for a museum when the picture's finished. . . . Not a scene will be shot in Hollywood. . . . At this rate the tow.s will soon be merely a stopover for stars between. pictures. ... 1+ Rook at Dorothy Lamour already. ... That girl must spend a third of her time on location at Catalina Island, the best imitation of sarong-land in these parts. ... Accents are so important. . . . Lya Lys, who worked hard at losing hers, had to play a German in “Nazi Spy.” & Brepgh. girl in “The Retuzn of Dr. X,” and has another in “TheRighting 60th.” ... Dolly Haas, also shedding an accent, was playing an Austrian girl in “We Are Not Alone” until Jane Bryan, an American, took over the role (announced reason: Dolly’s iliness). .. . And ‘then there's Vivien Leigh, who after struggling and struggling to lose .that Southern accent so moted in British jpeople had 2o piek 1t up again for “Gone With the Wind!”

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