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THE CAPITOL HAS e T AT THE BIG PICTURES SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU Lasi Times Tonight Al iso welected Shorts and Latest News | nemw “Clouds Over Europe” G-Man Shows Cops How fioher education for policemen comes to Philadelphia. G-Man W. H. Jey helps Sergeant John Knecht class in the F. B. L. ANDER BEER STRIBUTED : mKE &00. anager, Traveling R -nrzcentatives Are npoinfed sy D] e ] kD wi Ue r McCash ar ate managers owery T th nnouncement Cach id that the ¢ oldest and I pulat ors on whole- ale liqu i malt beverages on st—and the fac mpany will be utilize of Rheinlander all and his associates t regard of the > pleased that they ska dealers the t they deserved,” cutives Brewery J. La nks, pany, Inc.. h an and and distributes through ge Cold Storage Com- horage. The company s are in the Central g in Seattle a manager for the distribut- apany is D. D. Dull, who will his traveling representativ Kenny Edwards and Milt Odom. Ed- wards will handle Southeast Alaska while Odem will cover the Terr tory southwest and westward. Har- ry Neell will have charge of the Ketchikan area, it was announced FORMER RESIDENT OF JUNEAU PASSES AWAY, SOUTHLAND ng corr rs. Mary L. Julian, 69, former resident of Juneau, died recently. after a brief illness, according tc advices received in the I 2 NEWS BROADCAST JOINT FEATURE SERVICE ON THE AIR! By The Daily Alaska Empire and KINY 6 days every week at 12:30 p.m. 9:45p.m 8:15 a.m. :00 p.m. show a class of Quaker City cops how to dicarm a man armed with & shotgun. Fifty students attended the first s post-graduate course. from the States, by local friends. Mrs. Julian during recent ars had been living with a daughter in Arlington, Wash. Another daugh- ter is Mrs. Cecil Trayier of White- horse Other surviv are three sisters, four grandchildren and several nephews and neice: F - < OVER SIXTY AT MOOSE WOMEN'S BENEFIT PARTY Following a regular business meeting last evening, members of the Women of the Moose spensored a card party at the 1.O.O.F. Hall as a benefit for the Finnish Relief Fund Seventeen tables were in during the evening and prizes were awarded for bridge, pinochle and whist. Winners in bridge were Mrs, Anna Bodding and Willlam Gaddi, highs; Mrs. John Newman and John New- man, lows. Honors for pinochle went to Mrs. Kay Hulk and Andy Johnson, highs; Mus. Inga Behrends and Ronny Sul- livan, lows. In whist, prizes were given to Mrs. Charlotte Kirchoffer and Rob- ert ht, highs; Mrs. Charles Swan and Geo Alfors, lows. Members of the entertainment committee for the evening were: Mrs. Odelia Light, Mrs. Bess Reader and Mrs. Blanche May Refreshments were arranged by Mrs. A. F. McKinnon, Mrs. Iva Her- manson, Mrs. Charlotte Kirchoffer and Mrs. Carol Campbell Others ass’sting during the even ing included Mrs. Omelia Peterson, Mrs. Elizabeth Bender, Mrs. Anna Rosenberg and Mrs. Phyllis Lesher. - JOHN LINDELL DIES EARLY THIS MORNING AT LOCAL HOSPITAL Jehn Lindell, Kennecott miner, passed away early this morning at St. Anns Hospital as the result of a stroke. Lindell arrived about 10 days ago ’ and was admitted to St. Ann’s Hos- pital where he was dismissed a few days later. About two days ago he re-entered the hospital for treat- ment The remains are at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary and funeral arrangéments will be made following word frem his widow at Butte, Mon- tana HYDER M D AN 1§ VISITING HERE Ed Provinse, Hyder business man who was associated with Juneau Young Hardware here several years age, is making his first visit to Ju- neau in a long time. Provinse is renewing acquaintanc- e and marveling at the progress Juneau has made. Hyder, he said, 'is still coming along as usual, with | work continuing on the Premier and | the Big Missouri THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, FEB. 22, 1940. Capitol Hit | Now in Final ~ ShowingHere Melvyn DoEqI;s Is Starred; in "Tell No Tales™ for Band Leade ' ;\ Last Times Tonight “Tell No Tales night at the Capitol Theater, is T arkable production in m 1y | picture is different. Drama dominates but it is all-embracing entertainment, running the gamut 6f emotion-stirring situations and | defying routine formula. It is a series of stories not unlike those that have come from the pen of the famous O. Henry, with all the | elements of life in great city moulded into one astounding ploc |In fact, it is five steries within a | story | Melvyn Douglas -is newspap | reporter into whose hands falls hundred dollar bill that is part of a sum of money paid for a ran- sem and murder. Douglas goes to work tracing the bill step his relentless pursuit bill's source leads him through every haunt and of the city’s teeming lif of death until, in a he brings the a a of the to and purlieu with the at his al batter- criminals to justice Never ispence al sto lagging in its breathless and intensity, the unu- y moves through constart changing scenes, from the nate home. of a Ithy society doctor a lavishly appointed = gambling house, the home of a prizefighter in the slums, b stage Broadw cafes, a girls' boarding schocl and a wedding sequence to a nerve- chattering railroad wreck — eee— - Welcometo Salvation Angy Head Brig. Gen. Gillingham and Wife Are Honored Here Last Night A dinner and welcome wa to Brig. Gen. John T. Gillingham, in ci of the Salvation Army in S st Alaska, and Mrs, Gil- lingha last evening in the Sal- vation ny Hall on Avenue. Covers were laid The dinner was served by men of the Salvation Arn given the: Al for 170. the wo- Corps play Miniature totem poles and potted | plants in Indian basketry predom- | inated in the table decorations. Adjutant Stanley Jackson, in charge of the local Salvation Army, was toastmaster and welcoming ad- | dresses were made by Mrs. Hamy, Stanley | Willard, James Jackson, Sutton and Mr. and Mrs. R. B. | Lesher. The honored guests made | very appropriate replies. Peter Dick gave a trombone solo during the evening and a chorus |from the Greek Orthodox Church |also gave selections. ' | & H [ which ends to- To classify it is (lifh(‘ul(.’flu“ Step by! Willoughby | | i | 1 B in Shaw’s Hollyw i home Nev., firm where ws of the marri didn’t know the twe were 3 Bert Lahr, Acti ader Artie Shaw and Lana Tur fter they were marriced at 4 ge to ineredolnus returned by shown cor friends, of whom ed. ress Elo tured with his bride, Broadway actress. By DILLON GRAHAM (Sperts Edibor, AP Feature Service) India Tribesmen fire from | Caves in Narrow | Mountain Defile | | NEW DELHI, India, Feb. 22— | Bloody combat broke out on the |troubled northwest frontier today |as British military forces moved |into that jagged land amid am- bushes and adventure to clean out marauding tribesmen and perhaps | meet again with their old elusive foe, Fakir Ipi. | “Our casualties were light,” re-| ported the British military. ‘“The Isecond of two columns encountered considerable opposition from tribes- men concealed in caves on eithe side of Tangai Valley.” | Aided by artillery and two com- |panies of Gurkha Rifles, the Brit- ish said they eventually seized the | caves. The campaign is linked with ru- mors of possible Soviet Russian in- | cursions through Afghanistan. 1 v | The game of bowls or bowling |was known to the English in the |13th century. SRR o, | puncher. NEW YORK, Feb. 22. — Arturo Godoy proved, to this corner’s sat- isfaction, that Joe Louis wouldn’t have lasted more than a round or two against Jack Dempsey. Louis showed, as he had earlier against Tony Galento, that he could not fathom the defense of a fight- er who fought out of a shifting crouch, Arturo of the Andes land- ed frequently against the cham- pion, particularly with a left hook But Arturo is a powerful body- Galento rocked Louis sev times. outpointed him and had him on the floor. But Tony forgot and peeped out. of his crouch. giving Joe the opening he wanted. Arturo stuck to his head-between-knes style and lasted 15 rounds Dempsey was a weaver and bob- ber as i Godoy, although not to such a cautious extreme. He was a t rific hitter with both hands and r|his left hook was perhaps his best weapon. He was faster and than Godoy. The Godoy vinced us that Louis would had a hard time hitting Jac that Dempsey would have had no trouble reaching chin and that, with the power in Jack's he would have knocked out Louis. Fight Was Close Louis deserved to retain his title but the fight semeed closer to U than it did to the referee and onc Adulteration of foed was pro- hibited in England as early as 1267, of the judges. Tommy Shortell, on official, voted for Godoy. On our score sheet, Louis barely skinnec through. He landed the harder harder punches but it seemed Lo ‘Well-known comedian of stage, radio and screen, Bert Lahr, is pic. the former The two eloped to Elkton, Mc mony. The marriage was the second for each GODOY'S DIPSY DOODLE ' FIGHTING PROVES JOE'S NOT A DANCING EXPERT Mildred Schroeder, 26-year-old for the cere better of most in-close scuffling who never learned the buck- ng, found the antics of the Godoy-Weill dance team just paffling. Joé is an accomplished per- former in the rat-tat-tat of the fox trot but the ballet and the waltz are no in his repertoire. The leaps of the ballet and the weaving, bob- bing glides of the waltz is execut- ed by these terpsichorean artists confused the dead-panned Brown boy. Louis likely didn’t know that Ar- turo of the Andes boasted 52 cups won in dancing conte: far south of the border, And perhaps he had forgotten that Godoy's manager, Al Weskit” Weill is known along Aba- ttoir Alley as the old “Waltz King f Yorkville." Joe was surprised and from the start but it wasn’i the 14th round that Godoy trutted his terpsichorean talent That round was fantastic swept from his corner with that Godoy had the of the bewildered until - . too | |SLEUTH MEETS MYSTERY | "IN COLISEUM PICTURE ENDING THIS EVENING Juneau's Greatest Show Value Last Times Tonight The 20th Century-Fox produc- - tion “Mr. Moto's Last y I'E] E!R LoRRE ill | starring Peter Lore \ ) & band ot plotte o| “Mr. Moto’s Last Warning™ B 0 oo thouh 8, oty with RICARDO CORTEZ--VIRGINIA FIELD | trophe near the Canal, satis- b fied that they have eliminated « R | of their plot e e —— ——— | " Moto, however, is ) easily disposed of, and close on | . k 3 < B R l fE.comat o the ringlendier, Bicars Mickey Plays Edison Role | do Cortez, who utilizes the novel < v | medium of a ventriloquist's dummy ¥ impart to mem- s of hi | With the aid of George Sanders and Cort veetheart = Virginia eld Moto learns Cortezs com plete plans wledge in 3 Moto is d tied ir 1d thrown ) the sea. H cap- tures the plotters, an his | mission to an ex clusion m Mr. Moto's Last Warning” | one of the most thrilling and te ning pictu in this pepul s, ! The last we tonight. | a ballet leap that Paul Haakon would have loved to borrow. He yped and jumped and sailed round the befuddled Joe, grim- macing and gesturing. Then:he bent low, with his gloves touching the canvas, and dared Louis to hit him, uch in the fashion of a tereador a bu Al ro climaxed h American way huge. slobbery Kis: cheek by plant- plump on { ive Questions Come Up | i The fight's aftermath had the {SRpEaR AR o o Mickey Rooney and Mrs. Hughes } ger the fighter who tered Hero of the new motion picture, “Young Tom Edison,” Juvenile \ / and hmeling and Galento Actor Mickey Rooney plays Edison in a real role at Port Huron, into helplessness? Mich., during the premiere of the picture. Mickey is selling apples on & train to Mrs. Alice Edison Hughes, widow of the inventor. As a boy Edison lived in Port Huron and did this same thing. |2 Did he just have a bad night, ‘:.\I&'h as every fighter has? 3 clever | | 3. Was it that he w B enough to solve Arturo's style of| seyirgl Jocation and those desitous| MeNAMARA BAEY I {Zishting? o e - |of joining his clas ¢ securing, The baby son of Mr. and Mrs. 4. Is'he great only against fight- o g lognerat information. . ahgug Jaties L Mcllamara, ed \-xfl\xl,u come to him and fight his| po = S Ty e him by today from St. Ann's Hospital and I : telephoning 323. He desires especi- |15 back at the family rseidence in : Did he refrain from shooting | o Fe 0 ents the Assembly Apartments. blows down at Arturo for fear of = % o ) Ao AP L breaking his hands and ruining a| Incidentally, until his studio Cais | scheduled four-fizht campaign this | developed into an established mu- STOMACH RrtiLiEF summer? sical center, he desires any kind OR MONEY BACK 1 doubt t Joe has slipped. Sure of & job, clerical or office work, | il figs 4 he had a bad night. Perhaps the | carpenter’s helper, or in a hotel. Adla Tablets help bring quick re- possibility of hurting his hands did -~ 2 lief from an acid stomach, pains be- | make Joe overly cautious and con- tween meals, indigestion and heart- | % R T | The ‘“mother lodges” of burn due to excess acidity. If no# | tent to wait for the opening that i Shriners and Elks are in 3 ey is ded. B | neverticatie Sk 1 EBlk your money i refunded. At all leud' York City | ing druggists—in Douglas by Guy’s is as good as and-up fight- | 1 believe that Joe he ever was against —adv. Drug Store. ers that he can hit, fellows who |gamble and throw gloves and leave | themselves open to Joe's deadly | counter-punching. He probably is | the greatest finisher the ring has Hollywood Siglx‘f: And Sounds seen, But Joe isn't smart in the |sense of facing an unexpected sit- By Robbin Coons. |uation and solving it quickly. The HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Feb, 2 Has Boy quit Meeting Girl? |chances are he never will be able | 100k at these: “The Fighting “The Grapes of Wrath,” |to handle a rival who always works from a crouch. Joe doesn’t take a punch too well. He is courageous. Hell take a lot of punishment, as he showed in the chmelling fight. But the who can confuse Louis with style, stun him with hard punch- les and then follow through with | terrific power will knock him out.* NEW MUSICAL " STUDIO TO BE OPENED HERE |Stanley ToII;f;n, Vioinist, Announces His Plans Being Made Juneau is to have a new musi-[ |cal studio, if plans now in thel | making are successfully carried out, | The studio will be for violinists and the instructor will be 24-year- | old Stanley Tollefsen, who came! |to Juneau from Seattle nearly a| | year .ago. | Tollefsen, who has helped out inj| | many benefits in Juneau since his | urrival here and played in church-f] es and orchestras, the first orches- | tra engagement being in the Gold Room of the Baranof Hotel short- ly after the hotel was opened, has | been studying and playing violin | since he was able to handle the instrument. For - ten years hef} studied under George Wille, in the Fisher Studio in Seattle and lat- ter studied with Peter Meremblom. He played in orchestras, radio, and symphony in Seattle. | Tollefsen plans to instruct be- | vinners, especially children, al-f | though adulls will also be given [} instruction. He has practically made {] | arragements ~for ~his - studio in a f} “The Woman from Hell," “The Feater” (hoy meets dog). In all of them boy (or girl) r iany things, but movie love isn't them. Even Bird” overlooked the chance to have Shi [ ng young lovers together, among in Blue they her favorite avocations tures. This latter (and p books liberties if include aforems and (in majority opinion at Hollywood has changed a bit since the oid days. In this way, too, as Anne Shirley, a movie veteran at 21, was pointing out on the of “Saturday’s Childrex Anne a child actress known as Dawn O'Day, and At Central Casting all of us had two photographs registered. One showed us dressed in nice clothes, clean and cuiled and smiling. This was meant to show that we could play rich one of n an equally strong Hollywood is taking with only slight of recent times Feights” nd in the ing them a \tisfacto Grapes” a least lea movies the adaptations well as “Wutherins Gone the Wind are Whe onec any set was AT Thi reception charming hostessess glve thoughtful guests who bring gifts of deiiclious Van Duyn Candies. Little s make you & guest. Try itl Percey’s exclusively VAW DUYM CHOCOLATE SHOPS children. Another pose had us in rags and tatters, a little grimy, looking witful and sad. This one usually had us fondling our little stray mutt or kitten. This was meant to indicate that we could play poor children.” The Hollywood gamut, cirea 1924! The ingratiating Anne is tearing out the Warner hearts—and contracts—with her performance in the new version of the Max- well Anderson play (Pulitzer prize-winner) opposite John Garfield. This is on the lot where Anne’s husband, John Payne, feund enough cause for dissatisfaction that he pulled up stakes—but then Warner's has ever been short on young girls who could act, and has ever been long on leading men and male stars. John has found greener fields at 20th, where he is the lead opposite Linda Darnell in “Star-Dust,” story of movie talent scouting Tyrone Power hasn't been getting around so much since he deserted the bachelor ranks. He's been pretty much of a home- body. He hasn't been keeping up with the Dance. And he’s starred in a picture called “Dance With the Devil.” ——— e IT'S TIME TO CHANGE YOUR THINNED - OUT When his script indicated that he would do a Conga with Dorothy the next day, Tyrone slept peacefully with a clear conscience. Anybody, he thought, could do that. Next day, at scene time, he stepped out on the floor and began giving his best rhumba—and then, sheepishly, he had to take time out to learn how the Conga is really done. Lamour rrrrrrrrrrerrrrrrererers)