The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 13, 1940, Page 3

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% HE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU Last Times Tonight | - MIDNIGHT PREVIEW EXTEAN 3 | MARCHOFTIME Blondie Takes a Vacation | _—--J | YOUNGTRUCKER | Gel Ready For Income . i Refurns tncireciions Are Given on TRUCKING UNIT First Such Vehicle in Al-| aska — Detroit to Seame $23 ? How in H Alfred Ghezzi Jr., son of the| fow ic AVOId com Fairbanks Postmaster and popular | 10 ker on Interior highways, ar- o EffOfS rived on the steamer Alaska today after purchasing the first diesel we for the filing of income truck to be used on Alaska high- Y ns covering the calendar ways. 1539 began January 1 and ends The truck, one of the most mod- | midnizht of March 15, 1940. To ern types on the market, is Iv is of mutual benefit to equipped with a 3,000-gallon tank th rnment and the taxpayer. for hauling bulk oil. Ghezzi will this period are filed an- use the new vehicle in freighting r 1y inillions of individual income oyer ihe Richardson Highway this! 1 a large proportion of which report income subject to the latter contains a consid- e of errors, which if summer Purchasing Ghezzi drove worth of fuel i the truck at Detroit, it to Seattle on $23 uncorrceted by the audit would re- ~ Ghezzi was to fly to Fairbanks o the disadvantage of the tax- with PAA today. [ - are errors of computation ed on the face of the 1. which usually is accompanied I payment of more than the f tax due. her returns it is readily dis- that the taxpayer has failed advantage of the personal on, credit allowed for de- or deductions from gross which he is entitled. TROLLING BILL IS INTRODUCED FOR FISHERMEN Delegate Dimond Seeks to Change Weekly Clos- i ot 3k to tak To avoid these and other errors, the Bureau of Internal Revenue . oy reading of the Instruc- ed Period Laws tion: mpanying the forms for Hing the sERUA Secretay to Lewgate Dimond AC onal information, i!_needed, WASHINGTON, Feb. 5.—(Special | e cd at the office of a ¢ egpondence)—In line with the cliector of internal revenue, deputy .ontention of many fishermen that collector, or an internal revenue . weekly closed period set up by Bt T LR i law as a conservation measure, dur- A taxnayer who f\[?phf‘s ‘n_fl ey ing which all forms of commercial | enue officer for assistance in pre- & AL L B orke & hard. | return should take with pasy 3 ship on those engagéd in trolling not | B v of his prior year return. y, wountenance with the demands of Algo, a further aid in the prep- o, e vation as applied to other | aration of a correct income tax re- types of fishing, Delegate Dimond turn for the ,\'.\ar‘1939_ the bureau on January 29 introduced a bill in | has prepared a series of short news- o “Houcd (o ‘amci “the Alaska | paper articles, of which this is the first vising the salaried man, wa, . professional and busi- ss men—in fact, every class of in- idual taxpayer — of the require- ments and privileges under the in- come-tax law as interpreted under the latest regulations, rulings, and‘ d((‘l&illn\ fishery law so as to lift the pro- hibition on taking of salmon by hook and line, “either for personal use or for sale,” during the weekly closed periods where salmon fishing is otherwise permitted by law and regulations. Many trollers have advanced the argument that in the very nature of their operations they are com- pelled to individually observe full closed periods, considering the time they necessarily spend in taking their catch to port and icing up and obtaining supplies for their next few days’ operations, equivalent to, but in addition to that prescribed by law, and that in alsq having to observe the weekly period closed by law to fishing there results an inef- ficient and uneconomic condition from all of the trollers coming into the nearby ports at one time, putting an overload, condition on the facili- ties for service and supplies, as well as making many of the fishermen - ARREST GERMAN MEXICO CITY Feb 13.—Author- ities this morning arrested a German tourist. Hans Forsham, on espion- age charges. Police said they seized Forsham in the act of photographing a Swed- ish merchant ship at Tampico. The vessel was tied up at the government oil pier Officers said Forsham also was uspected of sabotaging the federal oil refinery at Tampico. - t in line for long periods of time while making their sales. purchases, and obtaining necessary boat service & W LS | work. .The testimony given on this subject before the Congressional Fisheries Committee in Alaska im- pressed .not only the Delegate but the several membkers of the com- mittee with the soundness and fair- ness of the proposal and Mr. Dimond believes that there is a good chance of enactment of the desired legisla- tion. Westinghouse ELECTRIC Ranges NOW ON DISPLAY! NEW SPEED-HEAT UNITS NEW 5-HEAT SWITCHES NEW LOWER PRICES DOUBLE ELEMENT OVEN LOOK-IN OVEN DOOR AND LIGHT Why Buy Last Year's Model? —SEE— Parsons Electric Compinh!m , HOLLISTER, Cal, Feb. 13.—Tor- pedoing of the British steamer Loch- avon wasn't such bad news to M. D. A. Freitas and Sons. The firm had four and a half tons of apricots aboard, and the insurance payments brought them the best price of the season. New 140 So. Seward $ BRINGS DIESEL | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB. 13, One-Word Sketch of Ingrid Bergman Is WALLACE BEERY FILM ENDS AT ""Sergeant mflden” Fea- tured in Hit af Local Playhouse n “Sergeant Madden,” which ends tonight at the Capitol Theatre, Wal- lace Beery, son of a Kansas City cop, has been perfectly cast as the genial, kindly, lovable, but two-fist- ed Sergeant Police Department. Sergeant Madden is a powerful character only Beery could create. replete with drama, comedy and ro- mance. Sergeant Madden's life is wrapped up in his son, Dennis, a hot-headed ycung bully who scoff's at his fa- ther’s idealism and loyalty to the force and to duty. The father tries to lead the boy in his own foot- | steps, giving him all the advantagzes of god advice and example. But when Dennis refuses to listen to reason Sergeant Madden not above lmng his fists. - CIVIC CENTER FOR KETCHIKAN INCORPORATED First City fo Have Recrea- tional Plant Similar to Juneau's as well as Juneau, is recreational center, ac- cording to an incorporation filed teday with Territorial Auditor Frank A. Boyle The Ketchikan Civic Center, Inc., was formed by R. V. Ellis, Dwight Cramer, Walter T. Stuart, Harry Cowan, Fred Van Gilder, W. R Bjorneby and Harry G. McCain Another Ketchikan corporation (urmed today is the Alaska Fruit land Produce Company, capitalized at $15,000. C. N. Belmont, Samuel {M. Savin and ie S. Gerstman are the incorporators. is Ketchikan to have a o] - -~ Boyle Is Speaker At Women's Demo Club Last Evening A large turnout attended last evening'’s meeting of the Democratic Women of Gastineau Channel held in Trinity Parish Hall. Presided over by Mrs. William A. Holzheimer, the session proved both interesting and educational. Guest speaker for the evening was Frank A. Boyle, whose subject for discus- | sion was “Precinct and Committee Oganization of the Democratic Par- ty in Alaska.” .- GROSS BACK W. D. Gross, theater man, turned on the Alaska today after a few weeks Outside on busmess D HARRI BACK Harri returned on Oscar the Alaska today after spending a few weeks in Seattle. Feminine Side of This Session y women members of the house s CAPITOL SHOW re- | 1940. . | 'Different”; She Fits Exacily an ldea Of Just What a Movie Star Is Nof Like “Smile, Miss Bergman.” and By of how one brutal young, oy oo oo ‘ urchin had struck her in the back | 08 young viking, who rode the AR Foatdre Strvice Writer and sald: “Aw, o you're gonna |Fifth Avenue bus tops for hours bs. o Garbo . And. two. mare QR end, rauged the ‘Worldls Pair NEW YORK, Feb. 13 Ingrid | had clambered into her car and alone with th ||{r;||1>|l\\'cxmes> and Bergman stepped off the boat here | one, a girl, had dropped r head lmmuav 'nx Hun”‘l:.rw %lxpi’}}id. m.: the other day, with her 15-months- nu( llw. lnv]) and ”Cnl'd_ y])lc:\ding “‘l‘“\‘ll,;‘d“u “jn \l:“l;"::j"s:};;"f -Al-‘-d :lr‘w old daughter slung over her arm for me “Just to sign my name Jaded wiseacres thiiied P in something that resembled a fur-| :!"\’f‘ ))"‘::'“;"Tf - ap. (icity hooey!” lined papoose bag, and took New .. - Whibh - bR Ee had aa T She Needs No Makeu; Yo much quicker than Joan of | theught they would be” and for- But the wiseacres have changed Arc (whom she'll porfray in mal dinners and entertainment Uheir tune since ”"‘“; Here -"“““ Hollywood-made movie) took Or-|atid interviews and when her boat f€W of the facts about Ingrid leans, hit quarantine some 20-odd pho-|Bersman: - A 2 Not since the orthern Lights' tographe saying: “Smile. M)~.~¥.‘L’““_ ayed 'flll"}‘r-fi{ the entire played on the equator has any- | Bergman’—“Just sit up here and :"’1(" I"’ ;“‘“““‘521«0 without a thing happened to Hollywood like cross your legs, Miss Bergman.” Osh? ;"‘“‘x ‘(h‘L'D-rm_ St tie Ingrid Bergman. As unspoiled as Tt's all quite confusing to the| %‘ 4 ¢ a fresh Swedish snowfall, as naive rangy, charming young lady “nn"'“’l to ! e that old gray tweed as a country lass approaching her played in Swedish pictures for six|Cc0at and ”“)Cl(’”)m“ she wore be- first smorgasbord, this 24-year- VeHrs and then was sneaked in|Cduse she felt that Plflymlzl the old, apple-cheeked Stockholm ma-|and out of Hollywood (David O,jrele of a poor girl did Lok £all for tron is in the unique position of Selzn: her producer, vowed he|?® change of smart costume in y scene. | being a Hollywood star (see “In- wouldn't repeat the publicity build-|® ‘lermgezzo’ Ay Love Story”) with- up errors that had been made in ‘5‘“‘ did change her hair-do be- out having the slightest concep- the cases of Sigrid Gurie, Anna|cause she “‘{“k: the one ;he “°h‘" tion of what the Hollywood furore Sten, and others) for the one role|Wers is more becoming than the is all about. opposite Leslic Howard without .sn‘:"”l;\ f:: \i:;‘];’)lebifh‘);cca“:‘dm:‘;lz“si'i Almost with tears in her eyes, much as a single introduction to| ' 3 3 (TOHEE iy she told of how she had refused the pr or public. | W ‘\{‘)‘"}' ”1“" "}“v"d"}fl B “"‘t‘d"“tw;‘ to sign autographs for a swarm ~In the summer, she spent “ix)u-"l,fll))v:‘(‘hvmmr :‘Xll:‘iOl:ll:l r‘;fi;’_‘ of pestiferous youngst .(hul.hml \\':-r'k”in rjlm\' <Y(?|k '[I'h‘t'rvlv W'l;l’t"m“ n‘muuzu‘xfi they insisted on & i gathered about her hotel entrance rumors then. Stories of a laugh- thuch of Tpetok. eyeshaton AB& " | powder (to reduce the natural | pink in her cheeks, so it wouldn’t Of Congrcss photograph darkly) and before she would leave the studio she | scrubbed her face with cold water and soap because “I wouldn't be caught on the street looking like | that! | | Born Well Off 1} { They'll be writing no rags-to- riches Cinderella yarns about In- grid. Her father, a Swedish por- | trait painter, died when she was 13, but his estate made it possible for her to continue at the Stock- holm Lyceum for Flickor (that's 452 the premt con- , who couldn’t n in Washington. The only sen- R G. McMillan of s Caroline 0'Day a - South Carolina.~ Others in the house are Repre- sentatives Caroline O'Day of New York, Jessie Sumner of Illinois, Mary Norton of New Jersey and Edith Rogers of Massachusetts. Mrs, McMillan . was elected to finish her husband’s unexpired: ternt:/ Swedish for girls and has nothing do with the movies), and spend four years at the Royal Dramatic Theater Academy. She played in Swedish pictures for six years,, made one in Berlin, | Three years ago, she married’ | Dr. Peter Lindstrom, young Stock-| physician, and thinks the that marriage and a career mix is silly. | She turned down two inter- views and an important invita- tion for the day following the one | we were there because “it’s the nurs day off and I can't leave i the bal She has never done anything to: keep her complexion and her fig- {ure but live out of doors, “like every one else in Sweden,” ski a| lot, swim a little and eschew all cosmetics i holm idea | don't “Garbc Is Wonderful” | She is amazed that American mothers don't nurse their babies and when she came over the first ume feared that she would be criticized because she had weaned Pia (the name is a combination of the first letters of her and her husband’s first names) at only six lznick doesn’t get “Joan of! under way by June and her husband can't come over by then | (he's on call for the army and things look very dark right now),’ |she may jost have to go home | without making the picture. | | She thinks Garbo is wondnrlu.l.' | | R l JUNEAUS Juneau's Greatest Show Value COI-I S E |.| m Last Times Tonight OWNED 'ANO OPERATED By “SUEZ’’ with | TYRONE POWER LORETTA YOUNG ANNABELLA CARTOON—NEWS ALSO ALSO 'DRAMA OF SUEI END TONIGHT AT So does every one else in Sweden. But Garbo has made it very diffi- cult for Ingrid Bergman because Ingrid Bergman has to watch her- elf every minute so she won't (ou“uM I"E‘]‘RE say: “I want to be alone” or I think I go home.” i - = When the savage black simoon roars in from the Sahara to pro- vide a climax of terrifying power for “Suez,” audiences at the Coli- feum theatre will witness a specta- cle and experience an emotion the s H screen has never been able to cap- IS| s I y ure before Twisting, torturing, destroying = the devil-wind of the desert is one of the production miracles of the spectacular story of Ferdinand de Ps and the building of the great Salvation Army Head Here During Afternoon En- \fl:;\1011,.'.]anismrl,:l-mme the jugular route Westward - D ATTENTION REBEKAHS Brig. Gen. John T. Gillingham in charge of the Salvation Army Regulae uisapng N isuiny o) in Alaska, arrived on the steamer & P Alaska this afternoon on his first EATRFRING. NALS visit here from his headquarters 2V Secretary. in Wrangell, He is accompanied by Mrs. Gillingham will remain WA E u 0 R in Juneau until her husband’s re- turn from an inspection visit to I-I n BIL Yakutat and Haines Adjutant Stanley Jackson, in Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out chirge of the Salvation Army in of Bed Full of Vim and Vigor. Juneau, will accompany Brig. Gen. Your liver should pour out two pints of Gillingham on the inspection trip | L bile inte your bowels duily. 1t this blle leaving aboard the Alaska It just decays in the bowels. ; silli yoir stomach, You get constipated. Mys, Gillingham will be Wel-| \vhole system is poisoned and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. comed at a special meeting tomor- A" mere bowel movement doesn't get at row afternoon at 1:30 o'clock, the session to be held in the Salva-| Little tion Army Hall on Willoughby and ' and u making bile flow freely. Look for the Carter's Little Liver Pills on the red age. Refuse anything else. Price: the public is invited - - Emphe Wani Ads Bring Resnlts. Hollywaod Sights And Sounds 8y Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Feb. 13—All the rumblings from this vicinity aren't earthquakes. Most of them are Grumbles. Maybe there's an actor who doesn't have one. Maybe there's an actor who doesn't give it out—but that's because at the mo- ment, he’s under the ether in a hospital or under the table in a club. Look at the Lamour girl in sarong, which is easy to do. othy no likee brown girl, Dottie wanna be white American girl like true. Dottie wanna kick off sarong and get in real clothes. Dottie wanna say bye-bye to Dottie’s trademark—the couple of yards of figured cloth that made Lamour toujours Lamour. Dottie happy now because, in “Dance With the Devil,” she's a dance- hall gal. She wears suits, coats, sweaters, skirts .even a galmour- gown or two. She wears hats. Dancing with the devil—or with Tyrone Power-—she’s dancing in real, everyday clothes. Turn your gaze on George Raft, who was always crying about the muggs he had to play. He hit the lens as 2 mugg, and muggs made Raft. So he leaves one studio to quit playing muggs, and goes to another and clicks double as a mugg. Listen to Alice Faye. Faye's the top song-plugger, but Faye wants drammy. She drammied in “Hollywood’s Cavalcade,” which was to the good. But Faye fans fought for fa-so-la-ti-do. So furiously they called her back, after “Little Old New York" Dor- was canned, to add a tune. Watch ZaSu Pitts’ hands, weaving through her plaint. scenes—I daughter ‘Drunk draw one in every picture. I don't know why. My watched me do one and she left, very quietly, hating Percey’s exclusively it . So do it. I don't drink, and I don't like to see women drink. . Why must T play drunk scenes?” Give her the answer, all -together now: “Because, ZaSu, your ‘drunks’ are convulsion-cre- ators . . .” Say “Beautiful Bob” to Taylor and he groans—if he doesn't try a quick punch. But all that kidding about “beauty” got a Taylor more public notice than a dozen flickers like “Lady of the Tropics”—and did him less harm. Did him good, in fact, be- cause he learned to take it grinning. If you want to get Richard Greene's goat, all you need to do is discuss Dimples. The Dimples, on the Greene pan, are as much a trade-mark as Chaplin's mustache, Hitler's ditto, or Stalin’s paunch. But Greene sees red when he sees dimples. Anybody got a good dimple-eradicator? ? ? And Ann Sheridan—and Oomph. Where would Annie be without that Oomph build-up? Where, for that matter, is Annie with it? Here’s where: she’s in a Louis Bromfield yarn called “And Tt All Came True.” and it's that chance she’s been needing to show what Oomph could do in the way of acting. Oomph, as far as Annie will allow, has put her on the spot. And she has something there.—something she's like to forget. Annie is one of the legitimate squawks. Another was Peter Lorre’s. Peter was a comedian abroad until he made a horror picture called “M.” He hit Hollywood as a bogeyman and the fright wig stuck. So he squawked himself into comedy again— in “I Was an Adventuress,” with Zorina and Von Stroheim. Bob Montgomery had one too. Bob wanted “out” of play-boy stuff into acting parts: “Night Must Fall” and “Earl of Chicago.” And Sonja Henie does her squawking to “stay in” her spec- ialty—which is skating. Her last film had only one skate nqu&we Sonja fights for more.

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