The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 7, 1939, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, S \lURDAY 0('1 z Midnight Preview 1:15 A. M.—TONITE Matinee 2 P. M.—SUNDAY SUNDAY MONDAY B SETHEATRE B TUESDAY SHOW P:(f: :: :JNEAU a%fli' oHEARER liAIll.[ In Robert E. SHERWOOD'S Pulitzer Prize Sensation! AN M-G-M PICTURE ALSO ROBERT BENCHLEY War! War! War! IN OUR NEWS Hitler's Forces Invade Poland—Fights Back! —— “ADVENTURE IN SAHARA> “ROAD TO RENO>” e Andrews May LAST TIMES TONIGHT © GUDRUN LUND IS BRIDE OF was flower girl. Walter Lucas was best man and ushers were Howard Heimdahl and Harold Wikan Before the ceremony, Arne Lund, also a brother of the bride, sang, ‘Oh Promise Me,” and later, “Be- MR. L. NYGREN sieve e3¢ A" rnete i L o Young Charms.” The wedding was atteided by ap- proximately 150 guests and after HYDE PARK, N the ceremony a reception was held President Roosevelt in the Sons of Norway Hall. Y., Oct. 7. indicated, PETERSBURG, Aiaska—(Special Correspondence)—On Saturday night, September 23, at 8 o'clock, Miss Gudrun Lund and Mr. Leste; Nygren of Petersburg were united |ter of Mr. and Mrs. Peder Lund Administrator in the near future. | in marriage by the Rev. E. L. Tol- of Petersburg. She was graduated| The President said that he had! lefson at the Lutheran Church from the Pelersburg High School in nothing to say regarding reports It was a beautiful ceremony and | 1938 and was employed in the Post|that Andrews would take over the position of Alien Property N Lund made a pretty bride, | Office up to the present time. wearing a long taffeta dress with Mr. Nygren is the son of Mrs. dian. He indicated that he was un- a train and also a short veil of |Louis Jordenson of Seattle, and has able to comment on the matter . white net. Her bouquet was of white | been employed as buyer for the because his time had been mono- baby chrysanthemums. She was Marlyn Fish Company of Petersburg polized by the neutrality legisla- for the past three years. tion, The newlyweds will make home in the Coliseum Apartments. - given in marriage by her oldes brother, Philip, as her father was absent on a visit to Norway Miss Dolores Ramstead was brides- maid, who was dressed in a peach taffeta, little Shirley suu-kmhm;: - : R T e B e e i A it i their | by Col. Philip Fleming a |and Hour Administrator. - eee The Book ALASKA, Revised an Enlarged. Now On Sale; $1.00. > tional catch of Rolfe's high foul fly Quit His Job by kirk. inference, that Elmer Andrews might The bride is the youngest daugh- vacate his post as Wage and Hour Custo- It has been reported in Washing- | ton that Andrews will be succeeded as Wage 1939, I Daily Crossword Puzzle Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle 10, Demon of Arabic mythology . Mark of L C H (1) elig . 1L M ine omission . Looks after Shouting Ages 1 14 Exist 15. Aceomplish 16. Poem 1 Action at law Hamper or shackle Requirements 7. Note of the | 1‘n’kn meals o pay S 18 D . Turn to the 20 ) right Norma Shearer and Clark . ek Diece | 2. Bi % . Large sheet of G b| . N P d 2. Female Z floating ice | - viper Precipitous | bable in New Produc 1. oy M : Bivoted P N 28. Rude spring- € Segment of & fion at Capitol used in Rus- T One who runs sia E away to | 0. Water oraft marry Norma She: and Clark Gable L Dregs . Restrain are “Idiot's " Delight” 2. Froth 42 Horse of a cer~ DOWN through \ oo | 33 Tricky or tain gait 1. Hair ointment foar which opens at the Capitol Theatre ' 'mean: siang 44, Fortune 5 MeiStilumy - A PACRLIEN hdav X ree- T S 5. Disturbed by 45. Ci para etric lan 42. Cooking Sunday for a three-day run. In this {oat Of Abe ":-T.E;T.‘."M meayre et feature you see glamoreus Norma as |I-vrv:wh1ns 46. Distress signal 3. Boy 43. Take hl‘ull el Yol A sille danger 47. Type mea- 4 Biblical judge 46. Title of & the forgettable girl of a vaudeville 8. B i 5 Like Judg knight troup who had ambitions and be- . 23 ;laln»nv letter 6. lU\er fl lnaecu <68 et solfisgins olf instruc- sserts as fact 7. Interpret: are 6L came a phony countess, and Gable as tor: collog. 62. Young, cow chdle i Hasamation a “hoofer” with chorus girls. 40. Cancel 54. Poorer 8. Exist 53. b)lnbol for 4L Unit of work 65. Behind 9. Down: prefx iron Incidentally, in the unfolding of the story js the complete destruc- tion of a great city an air raid, Not a fanciful version of such a raid, the sequence of bombing scenes is technically perfect, according to Director Clarence Brown, a gradu- ate engineer and war-time flying ructor, who holds a transport license. bombing episode was not written into the script merely for the sensation it will create,” he said. “It is a definite part of the story. From official records of the terror and devastation caused by modetn aerial warfare, we have attempted | to give motion picture audiences a clear and vivid insight into what war from the sky means.” The raid is typical of those now taking place in the European war and brings reality right to one. - PLAY BY PLAY (Continued from Page One) third Gordon. Two runs, four hits, no errors, two left on bases. McCormick popped out to Weber walked. Frey grounded out to Gordon No runs, no hits, left on base. SEVENTH INNING reaching into the right field boxes to ~YANKS—Lloyd “Whitey” Moore stab the ball. Keller walked. Dj- now pitching for the Reds . Rolfe Maggioe smashed a home run over &rounded out to Myers. Kaller fan- the 385-foot mark in the center field ned, swinging, and the fans cheered wall, scoring Keller and putting the /Moore. DiMaggio grounded out to Yanks in front again. Dickey out, Moore. Frey to McCormick. | No runs, no hits, no errors, none Two runs one hit, no errors, none lef};‘g’gslfzmw flied out to Sel- £ T 0 oodman flied out to o ; kirk. McCormick singled to left REDS—Lombardi flied out to 8el- 14 yng thumbed his nose at the Craft flied out to DiMaggio. R 3 5 Yanks as he ran past their dugout. Berger flied out to Crosetti. % & : McCormick went to third and Lom- No runs, no hits, no errors, none { Had| P i iy bardi was safe at first when Hadley threw wildly past second base for FOURTH INNING an error trying to force MeCormick. YANKS — Selkirk walked. Myers Bordagaray ran for Lombardi Oraft took Gordon’s bounder and threw hit in to a double play, Rolfe to to Frey, forcing Selkirk at second Gordon to Dahlgren. THIRD INNING YANKS — Crosetti fouled out to Werber. Goodman made a sensa- no errors, two base. Gordon is safe at first on a No runs, one hit, one error, one field’s choice. Dahlgren fanned, left on base. swinging. Hadley forced Gordon, EIGHTH INNING Frey to Myers. YANKS—Hershberger now catch- No runs, no hits, no errors, none ing for Cincinnati. Dickey flied left on base. out to Craft in front of the right REDS — Myers singled to center. field bleachers. Selkirk flied out to Thompson sacrificed, Dickey to Berger. Gordon popped out to Wer- Gordon, Myers going to second. Wer- ber. ber out, Dahlgren to Hadley, Myers No runs, no hits, no errors, none going to third. Frey grounded out left on base. to Gordon, No runs, one hit, no errors one Crosetti. left on base. Crosetti. Rolfe. Myers grounded out to Moore grounded out to N ARN JEEEA dEN N JEE i T REDS—Berger grounded out to|' "ANGELS WITH DIRTY FACES” IS FEATURE C(OMING TO COLISEUM Hailed by critics who have wit- nessed early previews as one of the most powerful human dramas of all time, “Angels With Dirty Faces,” starring James Cagney, Pat O'Brien, the “Dead End” kids, Humphrey Bogart, George Bancroft and Ann Sheridan, has been scheduled by the Coliseum Theater as the hext fea- ture attraction and will open Sun- day. Film Daily, authoritative motion picture trade paper, says: “We offer it as our well-considered opin- fon that this story has never been topped in its theme-field for down- right excitement, close-knit driving punch, glamour of gangsterism con- frasted with the finer things in life building to a great emotional climax with the humanities triumphing.” Based on an original story by Row- land Lee, Warren Duff and Jt Wexley wrote the screen treatmer Michael Curtiz whose recent work has included such sensational suc- es as “The Adventures of Robin and “Four Daughters” di- the production Juneau’s Greatest Show Value PREVIEW TONIGHT 1:15 A. M. MATINEE SUNDAY 2:00 P. M. Sunday — Monday — Tuesday . 3 L ‘Nli AU S By | W.ILGROSS OWNED. AND__ ORERATED 218 HOPE of saving dirty-faced kids from growing up with dirty souls'. HATE of a world that never gave him a chance ... Sito go straight! starring this great cast JAMES CAGNEY - PAT O'BRIEN THE 'DEAD END'KIDS | ANN SHERIDAN GEO. BANCROFT HUMPHREY BOGART |2 s ed by WARNER BROS. ALS JIMMY DORSEY AND ORCHESTRA v N/ FOX MOVIETONEWS ALsn \L LAST TIMES TONIGHT George Raft ——— Dorothy Lamour ‘SPAWN OF THE NORTH® MODES of the MOMENT | by Adelaide X ryy = FIFTH INNING ~1.Group Gathers at No runs, no hits, no errors, none| | | Methodist Church Slayer Dies | ——— YANKS-—Crosetti grounded out to left on base. A good attendance marked last Mpyers. Rolfe singled to right. Kel- NINTH INNING night’s gathering of the Epworth ler got a second home run to right YANKS — Dahlgren flied out tn' League held in the social rooms of | field bleachers, scoring Rolfe. Di- ' Goodman. Hadley grounded out to n a ows the Methodist Church. | Maggio popped out to Werber. Dick- Moore. Crosetti fanned swinging. Games were played during the ey hit a home run fifteen rows up No runs, no hits, no errors, one evening and refreshments were serv- in the center field side right field left on base. ed. Hostesses for the affair were!pleacheds. Lefty Lee Grissom re- REDS — Werber grounded out to Miss Mina Jewell and Miss Hazel | placed Thompson on the Cincin- Gordon. Frey walked on four pitch- | Fields. | nati mound. Selkirk walked. Gor-'es. Goodman singled to right, Frey {don flied out to Berger. going to second. McCormick flied Three runs, three hits, no errors, out to Keller. The runners were one left on base. held on their sacks. Hershberger REDS—Goodman popped out to flied out to Keller. {Nineteen - Year -Old Boy Pays for Killing in Car Theft 2‘ Crosetti. MecCormick fouled out to No runs one hit, no errors, ‘Woi WALLA WALLA, Wadh,, Oct. 7 New Westinghouse “VICTOR" o s T TS O s At SR , _"LOOK-IN DOOR" and OVEN LIGHT (R Comngel ol Aclki. T COME IN—SEE THIS ELECTRIC RANGE lom'r T RHIRE sxn\n ce Jthm e L {Mlldl’ed Kealon W||| 4 car theft last November Sold on Easy Terms PARSONS ELECTRIC CO. YANKS—Dahlgren flied out to| Craft in deep center field, Hadley grounded out to Myers, Crosetti grounded out to Werber who made| Miss Mildred Keaton, former Ju- a barehand stab. | neau nurse, will be speaker tomor- ON THE AIRI By The Daily Alaska Be Vesper Speaker i l Stock Quom"’xons S et ¥ l 140 So. Seward Telephone 161 Empire and KINY 6 days every week at No runs, no hits, no errors, none | row at the 6 o'clock Vesper Service left on base. | of the Northern Light Presbyterian REDS—Berger hit a long fly over | Church. Her topic will concern her the left field wall but the umpires;experience in the interior as nurse NEW YORK, Oct. 7. — Closing quotation of Alaska Juneau mine stock at today’s short session is 67, American Can 111%, American Pow Ilruled it a foul by inches, thenlm the employe of the government|er and Light 5%, Anaconda 32%, 0lde t B - | 8:15 a.m. 12:30 p.m. Berger fanned, swinging. Myers | service. | Bethlehem Steel 87%, Common- S an [/ [] walked. Bongioyanni his batting| The young people’s choir, directed | wealth and Southern 1%, Curtiss 7:00 p.m. 9:45 p.m for Grisson and grounded out to|by George Schmidt, will sing well | i, Hadley, Myers going to second base ‘known hymns during the hour, and | International Harvester 63 3-4, Ken- Joyce Morris-Weston will preside at | necott 39%, New York Central 20%, | the organ. All citizens of Juneau|Northern Pacific 11, United States ! are extended an invitation to at-|Steel 74'%, Pound $4.02. Lend the servlce DOW, JONES AVERAGES | | The following are today's Dow, | dS|an r ay | Jones averages: industrials 149.60, rails 33.64, utilities 24.88. Juneau Paint Store Be Effeded by War uuuwoscs ucmnes | WASHINGTON, Oct. 7. — Thelsued by U. S. Commissioner Felix 5 P M zvmmfis | Washington Post says cditorially| Gray to Rex Gale Sunderland and . . lthst the war in Europe raises the Margaret Ruth White, both of Ju- Starting Monday, Octoher 9 question of the ultimate fate of the neau. During Winter Months Wright 6%, General Motors 53%, b Alaska Commercial Safe Deposit Savings Banking by Mail Department The B. M. Behrends Bank i MRS. NEILL BETTER Friends of Mrs. K. N. Neill will be | gold standard with repudiation p«m-; |sible in case of a prolonged con- | flict. l —r P interested to know that she is recup- PEKOVICH HERE | erating from her recent injury and | Sam Pekovich is in from his Al-'is able to be up each day now. Bhe; aska-Empire mine at the Hawk In-'is at her apartment in me Decker. let, and is stopping at the Baranorl e | Hotel, Empire classizieds pay. This is the way you may look any time. The hooded cape of dork green and white checked wool is lined in bright red to match the red wool waistcoast blouse which tops a dark green skirt. Checked bands mark the pockets of the blouse. (Costume assemblcd by Berg- dorf Goodman.)

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