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L MOTION PICTURES ARE YOUR BEST 25,757 72 ooz sreozal ~ 4 SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU FHEATRE Last Times Tonight MIDNIGHT PREVIEW “LITTLE TOUGH GUYS IN SOCIETY” PSS L 41 L 4 Sweets for Evangeline Booth leneral Evangeline Booth, international head of the Salvation Army, teepts a sweet from a little girl during the reception for the high council the army at its youth center in London. The council, third in the army’s history, convened to elect a successor to General Booth- LAST R"Efsozflw( a oui Norlifemen Are . . Meeling Tonigh Norlitemen will gather at 6:30 o'~ clo this evening in the parlors of the Northern Light Presbyterian Church for the first dinner of the Fall son. Speaker for the oc ion will be Final rites for Lee C. Liston, who passed away last Saturday, were held this afternoon at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, the eulogy being spoken by the Rev. John L. Cauble. At the grave in Evergreen Cemetery, committal services were spoken by the Moose members and benediction | R. E. Robertson, who will discuss by the Rev. Cauble the “Slattery” report. Several mu- Pallbearers were Arthur Riendeau, | sical selections will be on the pro- Nels Lee, Harry Sams, Rod Darnell, | gram as well as community sing- Eske Eskeson and Fred Erickson. ing. - eee - ‘Try an Empire ad. R | Empire Want Ads Bring Results. DID YOU SAY . . . . . “MADE WITH FRESH BUTTER and REAL WHIPPING CREAM?” YES MAM . . . THAT’S WHAT WE SAID!? . and that’'s why Van Duyn Candies are so creamy rich and full of flavor. Gallons of thick whip- ping cream and fresh, sweet butter are used daily to make luscious Van Duyn Candies. Theyre made in small batches and rushed to us “Kettle Fresh” to assure you the utmost in candy goodness. Come in today and try a piece of bl I of Van Duyn GIFT BOXES FROM $1.50 TASTE EST: a box of Van Duyn Chocolates. If you don't agree they're the freshest, most delicious you have ever tasted . . . return the empty box and we’ll refund your money. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1939, |COLORED FILM WILL END AS CAPITOL SHOW ACRUSS Member of & nomadic people of Africa small explo- §. Lowest portion of a shaft tor civing drain water \""Sweefhearts” Has Final Showing This Evening + novs =i at Local Theatre ', W vover ery Wert before QGas of the alr sround grain Broadway ‘“show of Jeanette McDon- Eddy. co-stars of weethearts,” ending tonight at the Capitol Theatre, are right in o= 9|Z[o]0 o <0/@Pn Z/m| 0| Hl>n | within the show. ald and Ne Vessel pro- ald and Nelson e <rir|»Z|0|— Solution ot Yesterday's Puzzle their element and handle the com- § edy as skillfully as their singing as- signments. Held a session An unprecedented cast of comedy 3% BUKNOUN, o personalities surrounds them, with bing up Frank Morgan pre-eminent as the |39 Soapy-feciio® fluttery show producer, Ray Bolger | 41 Suppor for a 63. Killor wr::l: winning the limelight he deser R(\T“:“m‘h 54 B;\:rl‘xn:; oo as the show’s dancer, Florence Rice abusively Perry adding to a series of recent hits with her secretary role, Mischa Auer . One who coples ser- b5 Sour 656. Negative and Herman Bing the laugh riots they always are, as the battling vilely compeser and librettist, and Regi- ' // 7 41. Toward the sheltered side 48. Invoice of & ship's cargo 62. Crusted dishes willow nald Gardner as an ingenious Hol- lywood agent. | The plot, concerning the attempts of two fame-weary Broadway musi- | | cal comedy stars who are husband and wife in private life, to get the | upper hand over a conniving pro- | ! ducer, is replete with action and laug together with the original “show within a show,” which of- fers opportunity for the picture’ ‘l,luvlfllm song and dance numbers. - - HosPITAL NOTES | Mrs. K. N. Neill received a back injury when she fell last evening a her apartment in the Decker Aj ments, She is receiving medical c: at St. Ann’s Hospital Ed Hardland was a medical dis- | missal today at St. Ann's Hospital. B. H. Bertholl was dismissed to- | day from St. Ann’s Hospital where | | he had been receiving medical sup= ! ervision Gene Nelson was admitted to St Ann’s Hospital last night for medi- | cal care. 6 HALIBUTERS SELL, SEATILE 19 Ann’s medical entered St receiving L. V. Hospital | attention Leeper and is SEATTLE, Sept Phillip Garcia underwent | dor operation this morning Ann’s Hospital and today: Eclipse, 36,000 pounds, 12% and| 12 cents a pound; Trinity, 40,000 | pounds, 14% and 10 cents; Repub- lic, 40,000 pounds, 13% and 11% cents a pound; coma, 28,000 pounds, 11% and 11% cents; Wiz- ard, 40,000 pounds, 12% and 11 cents; Spray, 25000 pounds, 13% |and 13 cents Sable vessels are as follows: Ideal, 6,000 pounds, Jane, 2000 pounds, H H | both selling for 5% cents a pound Inlured In Fall straight; Flint, 12,000 pounds, 5% | cents straight; Antler, 14,000 pounds, | 5 cents a pound straight, - > COLUMBUS DAY DANCE 10 BE GIVEN OCT. 12 Columbus Day will be observed here by the Knights of Columbus! and the committee in charge of the| | dance to be given on that date is | now working full blast to make the a ma- at St. Admitted to the Government Hos- | pital from Sitka, Walter Gray is re- i ceiving medical care. | HIH S Mrs. Holzheimer | . Mrs. William A. Holzheimer was injured last evening when she fell| while entering the Hillcrest Apart- | ments. She was taken to St. Ann's Hos- pital where treatment was given for | a fracture of the right arm and a| sprain in the right foot. This after- noon she was resting comfortably. e ee— FALL DANCING CLASSES Now enrolling. Phone Dorothy Roff, Red 119, 315 Third St. S. adv. I Identify: ® (a) He's the son of a well-known “heavy” and the nephew of a better- known screen veteranwho blended come- dy, pathos and even villain portrayals into such sym- pathetic char- acterizations that he be- came a top ranking star. He started as a bit player in serials and got his first big break in* Only Angels Have Wings.” (b) His father was one of the great charac- ter actors of all times, a master of make - up who was an unfor- gettable mem- ber of the cast of “The Mira- cle Man.” He soon is to get ;:(i:nflll:st big opportunity as dumb, hulking Lennie in “Of Mice and What actress, after playing her first screen role in the English- 2- made “Jamaica Inn,” was brought to this country by Charles | Laughton to play the important lead in “The Hunchackyo! l’\luln: Dame”? (She'’s shown in the photograph.) 3 (‘:a) In what pilcture eoes one character spend most of story’s * time in an apple tree? (b) And ha ew {2 E y do apple trees move and |.alk‘.$ SR Tl Rew (8l clory 4 One nlngmber'of each of the following teams that made boxoffice ® or critical history in movies is supplied; name the other: (a) Charles I"‘arre]l and ; (b) Ginger Rogers and ‘ (c) John Bunny and ; (d) Penny Singleton and Name the actors who have helped to put the following home 5- towns on the popularity map: (a) Van Bi Ark.; ke- gan, 11L; (o) Olathe, Rans.; () Claremore. Okla. 11 (7 Wauke Count 20 points for each question correctly answered. A score of 60 is good, 80.is excellent, and 90 or above is colossal. Sold Excl‘u'sivel! b’g PERCY’S | (Answer on Page 6) 7. Obstruction DOWN tain L High moun- 2. Covering of ain anl- 3. Windflowers Speed contest 6. Those who sell from door to door: varlant E 4 AN N T | affair a big sucess | has charge of the arrangements jor Daily Crossword Puzzle 6. Poem 1. Part_workec with the foot 8. Watchmen 9. Part of the eye 10. Anchor 1L Writes 16. Facility 20. Guided 21. Send fortt 22. Portal 24. Son of Abraham 26. Sprucest 28. Pertaining to a colony on the Red Sea 29. Prong 6. Wise 33, Act of staylng away from business or duty 36. Salt 38 Body of South African warriors 40. Acld fruit 2. Engrossed 4. Lamb's pen name 44. Shift 46 Salamanders 19, Constellation 50 Mineral spring §1. Chiidren's 4 W e the annual event Carl - MARVIN-BOBB Marvin of Hoonah missioner M. E. Monagle. MICHAELS-STERN'S have brought to Ame tailored with the tailors o . . Rochester tailored refinements uits actudlly offer a quality gar “STERN Joe Thibodeau | and | countries which forced the The folloW= | y.o1ices Bobb of Juneau -vere mar-' Treaty on the Germans. | ing halibuters sold here yesterday yioq this afternoon by U. S. Com-| 'EXCITING TALE OF MOUNTED POLICE AS COLISEUM HIT An inspired picec of casting placed 1 Foran, big, red-headed outdoor the head of, the cast of the Technicolor “Heart North,” which ends tonight at the Coliseum Theatre on Friday. Of all the screen’s current heroes, Foran seems to be the one best suited to playing a Royal Canadian “mountie in this thrilling epic of the Great Northwest. His fellow mountie include Allen Jenkins, P Knowles, James Stepher many others, while the vi are capably filled by Jc Antheny Averill and Joe | Feminine interest )| olied by C . Dickson, Gale y old Janet Chapman ctor a i of i on, and uin reles 'ph King ar SURRENDER NEVER, SAYS NAZ] CHIEF ‘Chancellor Declares Reich Will Never Accept Ultimatums (Continued trom One; upon the death of Poland's Marshal Pilsudski. | Germany “Has Suffered” Germany’s First Soldier said he had sought to establish borders in the West and South and to make an agreement with Pilsulski which would have had as its purpose amicable relations between the Poles and Germans. “As long as Pilsudski lived, this was possible,” Hitler said, adding, he was “depressed” by the suffer- ing Nazis had endured at the hands of an inferior state “while Ger-| many was the superior state.” | Hitler told the world that nations ! doubting the word of German | statesmen should be critical of the Versailles “The Versailles peace offers,” he | said, “cast a doubt on the sanity for over 90 years ‘«an men fine suits skill of four generations of there are 22 hand in the coat aléne . . . ment with the, quality characteristics of clothing usually much higher priced. Truly a VALUE FIRST! MEN’S OWNED AND _ OPFRATED "HEART 0 in TECHNICOLOR 1 More Feared in Action—No Men More in Peace—Than Canada’s Mountie ALSO MUSICAL POPEYE-——NEWS ALSO of the men who made them, “Poland sought to make Poles out German inhabitants of that country!™ he cried, and asked shout- ingly: “What would England France, or America have done under such circumstances.” GROSS MISSTATEMENTS LONDON, Sept. 19, 1w British | Government official statement charges that Hitler's Danzig speech is “full of gross misstatements that usually fall from his iy and further asserted it convicted him before the world - o - FISH HAS NEW FIRE-FIGHTING DUKE OF SUTHERLAND GETS WRITEUP AT OTTAWA | The story about the Duke of | Sutherland joining the Juncau Volunteer Fire Department to figat a blaze while he was a visitor here recently has found print in an Ottawa newspaper. , The Duke wa being shown around the town by Stm MacKin- non, Naval Aide to the Governor, when the fire horn sounded. Mre- non, who is also Assistant Fire Chief, began to excuse himself, but the Duke insisted on going along to help fight the fire and he did. of R BUILDING PERMITS Hermle and Thibodeau have nstruct a warehouse addition to Says Brifain and France (i fome Grocery. ouiding at Don't Need Arms, But (30, Vivea" cromet i butider, 3. Do Need Planes . Marshall cbtained a permit for tallation of an ofl burner at 108 h Street at a cost of $250. v FRIED FRESH TUNA FISH and Drawn Butter | Baranof Tomorrow GREEN TOP CABS—PHONE 678 BUY GREEN TOP RIDE COUPON BOOKS: $6.25 in rides for $5.00 $3.00 in rides for $2.50 NEW YORK, Sept. 19 can Congressman Hamilton of New York, has returned from Furope with his own suggestion for handling the embargo question Fish suggested that the emb should be kept in effect but thal Great Britain and France should be permitted to buy airplanes in the United States. He explained: France don't need don't want them airplanes. Fish failed to suggest just how the planes could be exported under the present arms embargo which includes airplanes as munitions of var. Fish told of his meeting with Nazi Foreign Minister Von Ribben- trop and said that Von Ribbentroj had predicted that Germany would crush Poland in two weeks. Republi- Fish and and need “England our arms What they MEN, you'll appreciate the beautifully woven fabric the trim, long-wearing twee the colorful foreign mixtures, and the unusual Fall shades . . . See the New Yorker models and the Tiffany Worsteds, the new drapes, and the handsome three- button styles . ... by all means it's your opportunity to own the best at a price you can' eusily afford. SHoOP