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CAPITOL THEATRE ! ‘The Show Place of Junean® | © The Theatre with the BIG PICTURES! © NEWS that is NEWS! © FLOATING EASE LOGE CHAIRS that ,i ‘CTUALLY ROCK! i i | . Ia SMILING and COURTEOUS STAFF! T ONTY PLACE IN THE WHOLE WORLD WHERE TV/O WORDS MEAN SO MUCH IN ENTERTAINMENT! T BING CROSBY NOW SEEN IN | | ACROSS Dazly C rossword Puzzle Solution of Yesterday’'s Puzzie 23. Articles of TECHNICOLOR FILM | PLAYING NOW AT ‘ L on the summit apparel (Olm E HR! Prehistoric in- Spélia (APITOI. Ti Britain . Lift A ; { ot Bimeeed e pecullar Playing now at the Coliseiim The- | 14 Close 15, Wefilern state atre is the téchnicolor production, “Kentutky,” co-starring Loretta "East Side of Heaven'" at i keittuars Yourig and Richard Greene. 19. Fresh-water Go by The generations of Kentucky's glor- Local Theafre with | n xboe™ 22, aylnnln: toy fous past and glowing present is 23, Joan Blondell 3 S cone 25. Perforations 28. Precisel, Down to earth humanness com-| 29 Sheet of float- |bined with music so catchy that you 30. goerr;n just naturally hum it as you leave| 3t Eaif Fhvicany the theatre is a movie formula guar-| 33, Artl‘:lncl:l lan- anteed to please. 34, sln{lng volee And it more than pleases in Uni- 35. Cutl n%!mule- 63. Shoemaker's versal's new Bing Crosby-Joan Blon- | 35 symbel tor o apot dell picture, “East Side of Heaven,” selenium Misery 1€ N 39. Property of G now at the Capitol Theatre. Qg e Y Bing i5 a cruising troubador, 0. Medicinal . Pocketbooks orn 64. Stir up colors . Boun or to put it more plainly a singing | 41, Bxl sx_ taxi driver. Joan, his sweetheart, g Entreat Meanin, is a teléphone operator. Mischa 45. Self . Make h{-adwn] Auer is Bi“g'-‘l unergprlo_ved r°g‘“' a g?e:{cef;gnd tor- 6. Ko mate who has learned from reading dding DOWN the stars that he should not even i betltstand 00 on look for work until 1942. 51. Reglon 2. Golf term Pursue 3. Cereal seed ‘There is your background for the story. And all three players do a linked in the drama which is taken from John Taintor Foote's story, “The Look of Eagles.” Included in the cast are Walter Brennan, Douglas Dumbrille, Karen \ulu ll bridge 36. Prevails with- out restrain s A:.‘l;‘c‘,‘(“,m,, Morley and Moroni Olsen. alutes e Coverings of certain frultt . Talks glitly 4. Young sheep Open House af 4. apeles 50. Cognizant Ll 51 Noah's vessel b 5 52. Depression . ¢ Eeovatain vernor s from 8. atlorncein ’ . . Allowance for , 31670 Clock i 070Cloc . A eat to N o?v'x‘\g Gov. and' Mrs, Ernest Gruehing i Fiy will be hosts to the people of Ju- ™ chlm;se pa- neau from 3 to 7 o'clock today at 3. goda " B 18 o . Watch secretly | the Mansion. New and old friends terflic 63. h will' call during the open house tc 20. Clear proft 65. | |pay their respects to Alaska's new {Governor and his lady. COLISEUM GWNED AND OPERATED By W.(.GROSS THE KENTUCKY OF GREAT TRADITION . . . in all the splendor of Technicolor! ‘““KENTUCKY”’’ with Loretta YOUNG—Richard GREENE—Walter BRENNAN ALso A SONG PARAMOUNT ALSO IS BORN NEWS [cluded Mrs. Robert Hennmg! | virginia Dudley, Miss Mary Vander- I..ee , Miss Annabelle Simpson, Miss | Elizabeth Terhune and Miis Mary | Claire Hellenthal. | g 50 TR ARIZONA'S first newspaper, the Weekly Arizonian, was published visiting in Juneau during the holi- |in 1859, in Tubac, & little, town days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | 21 miles north of the Mexican B. D. Stewart, entertained a group border. of her friends yesterday morning Breakfast Given by Jeannette Stewar Miss Jeannette Stewart, Univer- | sity of Washington student who is L g TRANSPARENT paint that pre- with a 10 o'clock buffet-breakfast vents window-glass mmmq ison | sale at London stores air-raid preca\lmm equipment. at the family home on Calhoun Avenue. Those asked for the morning in- “\ NOW SHOWING wh MISCHA AUE" end Selected Short Subjects OF ELKS IS BIG AFFAIR T Flks' Ballroom was cxowd:d last night at the annual High Jinks | to bid the New Year welcome. | 12 started at 11 o'clock and | t hour the floor was well oc- cupied iributed and then shortly before | ight, noisemakers were passed | out Arthur Auams, Chairman of the | Dance Committee, says the crowd | was arge as on previous similar affairs of the kind and everybody had a good time from start to finish ich was at 2 o'clock this morn- ; when the last dance number by an Cox and his Orchestra was played. ROYAL CAFE | HIGHJINKS ENGAGEMENI OF ~ POPULAR COUPLE IS ANNOUNCED June Hamngton Barney Lind Will Take Their Vows Next Summer Announcement is made of the en- daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Harrington of Enumclaw, Washing- |ton, to Mr. Barney Lind, son of |Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Lind, also of Enumclaw. Miss Harrington came to this city about a year ago and since her ar-| rival has made many friends. She is an employee of the Baranof Beauty Salon. Mr. Lind is an emplyee of the Alaska Press since coming to Juneau over a year ago. No definite date has been set for the wedding which is expected to take place sometime during the summer months. ANDERSONS ARE HERE Oliver Anderson, of the Northern Commercial Company at Bethel, and Mrs. Anderson arrived on the Prin- cess Norah and will leave by PAA plane for the Interior. The Andersons have been South i for the past three months. | — e Try The Empire classifleds for | cesults. A General Electric CLEANER New GE VACUUM CLEANER $39.95 Regular $59.95 Value EFFICIENT—DURABLE—ECONOMICAL SEE THEM TODAY AT Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. G. E. CLEANERS Priced from $20.00 UP ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER COMPANY successful job of making you like You have known them for years— the girl down the block, the boy in that cheap fourth-floor room and that other likeable fellow who will| {go to no end of trouble to kvep |away from work [in any picture. But in “East Side |of Heaven” they are aided, and camera. “Sandy” is “deposited” with Crosby |by Irene Hervey, who takes this !means of keeping her baby from | { her wealthy and hard-fisted father- | in-law, portrayed by C. Aubrey Smith. That's when the fun really starts, fun such as you have rarely seen until you watch Bing, Joan and Mischa try to take care of the young- sber e SCOTTISH RITE ' RECEPTION FOR THIS AFTERNOON New Year's Day Event Be- ing Observed Between 2 and 5 o'Clock The Scottish Rite Masons are holding their 28th Annual New Year's Day reception in the Scottish Rite Temple between the hours of 2 and 5 o'clock this afternoon. ‘This will be a gathering of all Ma- by dancers, Favors were dis- | gagement of Miss June Harrington, |SOns of whatever degree residing on Gastineau Channel, together with members of the Eastern Star, Rain- |bow Girls and DeMolay boys. | The committee in charge are the Masters of the four Coordinate Scot- tish Rite Bodies, Messrs. N. L. Troast, V. L. Hoke, J. J. Fargher and L. E. | Hendrickson., A special program has been ar- ranged appropriate to the occasion with the usual refreshments, com- munity singing, etc. In addition to inviting the local members of the various organiza- tions connected with Masonry at Juneau and Douglas, the committee has extended a special invitation to| visiting members to attend and get acquainted. No individual invita- | tion will be needed. — .- — SENATOR BORAH PUTS ISSUE UP Foreign Policy Is Among| | Infer-Party Struggles- Opinions Divergent WASHINGTON, Jan. 1.—Among the inter-Party struggles of the Re- publicans to be watched during the coming miohths is the issue of foreign policy, now thrust intc the open by Senator Borah. The Idaho Senator, long famous as America’s leading isolationist, has called upon his party “to make clear its program for American relations with other countries—and especially in these warlike days. Republicans is: What policy shall - |we adopt? For, within the party two widely divergent there are schools. There is Senator Borah's position that the United States sbould adhere to forthright isolation. And there is a second group which follows the banner of American co- operation in the solution of world problems. Sendtor Borah has brought the issue into the open in a public letter to a backer of Thomas E. Dewey. For there is a movement in the Dewey camp in support of American participation in world affairs, to block aggression and to promote peace. Now, Senator Borah has called for a showdown, and the develop- ments are certain to be mwmm_:g, o e R MORE than 100 countries offer more or less protection for inven- tions, | them because you know thiem so well. | | This trio would be quite sufficient |very masterfully, by “Sandy,” the |cutest infant ever to face a movie | T0 REPUBLICANS : and unmistakable every phase” of | But, the perplexing question for | DOROTHY GREEN - IS MARRIED TO ROBERT HURLEY Lovely Home Rites Per- formed Here Satur- day Evening i Miss Dorothy Green, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Green of Jack Wade, Alaska, and Mr. Robert! Hurley, son of Mrs. Minnie Hur- ley of this city, repeated their mar- riage vows Saturday evening be-| fore a huge front window, at the Dixon Street home of Mrs. Anna: Webster, which was banked with greenery, white chrysanthemums and white narcissus for the cere-l mony. The Rev. John L. Cauble of Resurrection Lutheran Church performed the service in the pres- ence of members of both families. | | Wedding music was played by |Mr, Ernst Oberg, organist, and, ;Mr Ernest Ehler sang two selec-| tions before the ceremony whichl |included “Because” and }Mane. | Given in marriage by her grand- ifather, Mr. John Reck, the lovely | blonde bride chose an afternoon | gown of pale blue crepe with ber- ‘gundy accessories. She wore a bri- corsage of pink rose buds and \ wh)be narcissus showered with white | ribbon streamers. | Mrs. Lu Liston, sorority sister of the bride, was charming as ma- tron of honor in a black and whlte‘ ensemble. She wore a shoulder cor- | |sage of tallisman roses. Mr. Fred- |erick Barragar was best man for the groom. For her daughter's marriage Mrs. Green selécted a black frock, while Mrs. Hurley, mother of the groom, | wore a gown of rust color. Both | wore complementing corsages. Following the ceremony a recep- tion was held and during the eve- ning about 150 friends of the cou- | ple called to wish them happinéss. | The bride's table was céntered \with' a three-tier cake, topped by {a tiny bride and groom, and tall | white tapers and floral arrange-| ments offset the lovely scene. | The bride and groom both were | graduated from the Juneau High School in 1931. Mrs. Hurley at- | tended the University of Califor- nia and Washington State College | | where she is a member of the Al-| pha Delta Pi Sorority. For the| past few years she has been an| employee of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Mr. Hurley attended Santa | Clara University and later studied| at Washington State College. He| |is a member of the Lambda Chi| Alpha fraternity at Pullman. Dur-| /ing the past several years he has| been associated with' the Juneau| and Douglas Telephone Company. The newlyweds plan to make| their home in this city and are residing at the Reck Apartments. — .- SILK FIBER “is loaded” wlth‘ tin phosphate to give it the weight | it loses in processing, l/ll WE/dEEN/d uldln/nfl flllll/fllll/fllll [ colorful affair was held in the Gold III L | i | U liflfl ] HE/ 40 Celebrants Walch Fire | New Year's Merrymakers, Wafch Firemen Work in Rome ROME, Jan. 1.—Fire swept the Apostolic Chancellory in Rome early New Year's morning. It was the | second fire in the Chancellory with- in a week. The Apostolic Chancellory is one of the buildings belonging to the Holy See located outside Vatican City in Rome. Thousands of New Year's eve mer- ry-makers crowded to the scene to watch the efforts of firemen to bring the blaze under control. - >e> Ski Dinner Dance Is Colorful New Year's Eve Affair Noisemakers, paper hats and con- fetti featured last night's Juneau Ski Club dinner dance when mem- bers and their friends celebrated the coming of the “fortunate for- (ties” and bid goodbye to 1939. The Room of the Baranof Hotel and at- tended by approximately fifty couples. Music for the occasion was pro- vided by Klondy Dufresne and her |orchestra and arrangements for the evening were supervised by members of the club’s social committee, head- ed by Warren Eveland. e SEEMS LOGICAL — The TOPEKA, Kans, Jan. 1. | usual penalty for declining 0 tes- tify in eourt is a stretch in jail or a fine, But, recently, a non- talking witness who came into Judge Warren Shaw's court got away with it. He was a convict, “porrowed” from state prison. “You can't send a man to county jail for contempt when he comes from the peniténtiary,” ruled the judge. NEW PROBE HUNTINGTON BEACH, Cal, Jan. 1. — Possibility of obtaining ambergris from oil is being studied by the Chamber of Commerce. The immensely valuable sub- stance, which forms in whales and which is used in perfumery, has been discovered in petroleum from southern California wells but has not yet been commercial- ly extracted. — e, — JULIUS CAESAR is a special officer in residential district of Houston, > ) MAKE YOUR NEXT PACK There’s ‘ No G/m/‘ Mj/f/eg/ about Cigarette Tobaccos "THERE ARE FOUR TYPES of fobaccos found in the more popular cigarettes,namely...Bright, Maryland, Burley and Turkish. ALL THESE TOBACCOS except Furkish (whichis bought direct from the planters in Turkey and Greece) and Maryland (which is bought through sealed' bids under government supervision) are bought at publi¢ auction, just like any other auction where you might have bought in a table or a chair. L AT THE AUCTION SALE the tobacco is piled in baskets weighing from about 100 to 500 pounds and' each purchaser buys all of his tobaccos by competitive bidding for the particular piles he wants. THE CHESTERFIELD BUYERS buy the best of these mild ripe tobaccos for the Chesterfield Blend. And it is Chesterfield’s Combination. . .the right amounts of Burley and Bright . : . just enough Maryland. ; ; and just enough Turkish—that makes the big dlflerem between Chesterfield and other cigarettes. IT IS BECAUSE of this combination that Chesterfields are COOLER, have @ BETTER TASTE and are DEFINITELY MILDER. They are made of the world’s best cigarette tobaccos. You can’t buy a better cigarette, Copyright 1939, LicceTT & Myeas Tosacco Co. CHESTERFF!!D‘ AR