The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 6, 1940, Page 3

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THk.DAILYALASKA EMPIRE WhD ESDAY, MARCH 6, 194& 3 “UBOATINE | [MODES of she MOMENT,|MALIE RS COLISEUM SPY THRILLER ‘ i 1l "7 COLISEUM THEATRE | Bebaertobe ok ON AT (APHOI- Easter Hats for I oung I(uhvs Britishers Flght Esplonage‘ 5 warr Juneau's Greatest Show Value Vs | % STARTS TONIGHT THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES STARTS TONIGHT THE l‘.ZuST TIMELY AND AUTHENTIC ORAMA OF Wallace Ford. tricia Ellis, Aline Bert Frchman rose to succ: MacMahe rol in H : : the featured I a SUDMARINE WARFARE AND INTERNATIONAL ESPIONAGE 1 in Drama of Ruthless “Mack Docr to Heaven.’ which was | E / filmed at. Astoria—within hailing £ | 1 hailing F 0/ . Torpedo Warfare Sisanc. of Broadway, Tt opens o E' X i } night at the Coliseum Theater ever the screen brought to Written, prodi and _directed g {flaming life the headlines of the| by William K. Howard, “Back Door a\ moment is is in Columbia's “U- to Heaven" can best be describ | Efinmcl— : l\fljlxlvh o;:vn:;vll:mum Au‘ as a picture which must be seen {the Capitol Theater. With rad \with the heart. The story is so hvr;mql\u:m‘iv (Hchdsm:l;nm sm;;.u close to life that moviegcers will e !tian Shaw features e new m find it far more credible than the . [has been hailed as a thrilling usual film story. Its central char- Wallace Ford - Pml‘ farama.of England’s battle against acter is a boy who asks nothing Stuart Erwin-Aline MacMahon |enemy spies and submarines, but a. chance life—and never Produced and Directed by Wikiam K. Roward Veidt is seen as an enemy sub- | gets it. Struggling to achieve re- A PARAMOUNT RELEASS . marine commander who puts to se: | spectability, he is hampered at under sealed orders, only to learn every turn by circumstance and his | - Y St @ s Hal Kemp and Orchestra !fl’\&! he is to proceed to a lonely |early environment. Two women— ALso g ek ALso island in the Orkneys, to the north Cpitogn Heps : 3 ; i the little girl who grows up to | H EXTRAI of Scotland, where he is to contact : S s : _ | JND she added this because she | jove him, and his school teacher EXTRAI LSBT REL ro a young schoolmistress and from| (JEORIA JEAN of the movies has | &2 .o51qit resist the red ribbon | —do their best to help him, with- b ek her obtain information of Brit- chosen four Easter bennets. | (g ..ners tied under the chin. |out success o " H 12~ ish naval movements. His meeting| Here's the favorite—an old-fash- | yoo a0 o6 dark blue straw and Wallace Ford js cast as this, boy. Cflllce‘.'.' i l.sl(‘a' uz with the girl and his subsequent| ioned navy blue straw bonnet oot atch the ties, | His adult companions—who do lit- LEE and BABE ———————— TOMMY and FRED adventures and misadventures are trimmed with French ‘lowers. tle to help him—are Stuart Er- ON THE STAGE AT 9:15 P. M., told in breath-taking fashion, ac-| x win and Bert Frohman. Patric 3 cording to report Ellis has her first big dramatic| e U"n!;c -.lnrzglf a)ndl \‘;wd drama of role as the girl in the life of .the| “U-Boat 29," which has its genesis| main character, while Aline Mac- DAVEY I" RA(E Fo \poll(v ( Ils CHORTS: in fact, are told in and around the Mahon lends her expert playing to Drecmseb Love ‘hy(\;‘[]\.[ak.ng].\‘ beautiful Orkneys. | | the role of the school teacher. ‘ 304N |15 vy ave o ' | T of lands is said to have been trans- ’ 2k | o the, Dy lated to the screen in compelling nsmm;l T shortaat e | fashion, a fact hardly to be doubt- When he was long overdue, Osbak- : Y e v e e [ ken and Fred Wolleson went in| COLUMBUS, O, March § For- | P !S SLAIN as a star on September 24, 1903, ;L! since “U-Boat 29.” was (ln(‘(‘tp(i‘ search of him. They investipatod mer. Governor Martin L. Davey when \she ened Fitch’s “Her | by Michael Powell, brilliant direc- o Ry " 3 ¥ ;>l\v"n] \,:') ’\ nl: B(llf[“x‘ln lN( \> The{tor of “The Edge of the World.”| U i, o ot MBS oF S o mlr.‘ llmt”‘ x“" 11':"1&»1“% O i e A PRAY'NG ])11‘" was brought to Broadway and | = Miss Hobson, is splendidly cast as w‘Wmd_\ Pass and, by the sheer night aa.n c“““" e I‘n‘"( )“ ‘_"'“'r Grand Jury has indicted three for- eritics were . ecstatic, about. her the young schoolmistress, and M| sort of luck found Osbakken's miss- | EFatic nomination for GOVErnor Of mer dining car waiters on charges crities were . eestatic, about her| the young schoolmistress : ing boat anchored inside Windy |Ohic of failing to pay Uncle Sam, more beauty. Ethel Barrymore, secing|Shaw is .seen as a British naval Pas 2 3 - f wity. ¥ R llesls T i i) ass. Davey was defeated by Myers|than a million dollars in incoma hor perform, ecalled ner the Venus | ) AL plioged) ', pay S The Sunbeam was found about a ;Cooper in 1928 but came back to| taxes. de Milo—with arms.” ;‘ ': "H!‘l.v .M"“\"N“I _\U"J_"l Mr. 100 yards from the entrance to the |defeat Clarence Brown in 1934 and The three negroes, all broLhe:.!. < v. the atie critics Veidt . represents. . Others in the Curicusly, the ul.\»nmll.fl eritics o ‘““‘ 4513 I, aees - e Bl i 1 bay and was still in good shape and | served two terms as Chief Ohio Exe- |are accused as kings of the policy her day seldom remarked. muc it )4 (:u‘ are & ay : f"'? fns;n Scot- | | would have stayed afloat for some cutive. He defeated at the 1938 | racket on Chicago's South Side. about b acting ability, but er ish (Ill‘lint"‘l. M(m.u.s Goring, as| | s 3 o time. The skiff which was with the | primary by Charles Sawyer of Cin- Federal Attorney William Camp- e offusive about her Iooks. Typ-|a submarine officer; June Duprez. | i d were cffusive about her, looks. Ty 4 cer; | I | OR a Weekend 1ide 1 the voRIt: OR Easter Saturday shopping boat when it sailed from Sitka was i cinnati. bell said investigators had learned ical of such reviews was one pub-|Athole Stewart, Helen Haye and | nat in the bay nor near the k T g | é i lished by a New York newspaper|Cyril Raymond g I try she chose “something casual she has a nert little pillhox s (h-‘t ‘:1[ X(x;nb l‘ci boat . ImuL the policy rackét. brought. in when she opemed as Phyllis in| Irving -Asher, who produced| in felt” beige in color, dipped of | made of felt in the new cadet blue | woyoc, nfm'm‘(‘.“‘[’]_(m: l‘:)okfl‘l‘”";(’)‘l‘_ DAVIS TO SITKA id;“"::"h;u-‘m‘:;‘gflge:l d‘-:)ysi':;" bets e “When We Were Twenty-One” in|“Clouds Over Europe,” functioned | brim and spiked with little brown | and trimmed with a fluff of red | O)on Martin Strand and his ;;m“. Representative James V., Davis| o AR 1900, After discussing the merits|in similar capacity for “U-Boat| feathers at the back feathers at the side. went out and brought back the eyi- | S&led, for Sitka on the Northland of the play, the critic said of Miss|20." The new film is based upon| dence that made it practically cer-last Dight on a short businesstrip.| Try The Empire classifieds for Elliott: a novel by J Slom Clouston. e tain that the missing man is no| . _ e “She surely is a daughter of the - 1 For $2)’()00 "Ew S"KA HOTEI_ longer alive Ia gods, tall, with a skin most di- 7 3 t | A | T i ENTER PIONEERS' HOME ous dark blue eyes, and the figure \ e g ‘ Charles_Alexander and Moses Ho"ywood Slgfi[; And Sounl: He wrote no words about how (ON'"NUES' HE FI E EREMQNIE Walker, both pioneer Alaskans, came St AnEAT HeE ale 7 | : to Sitka on the North Coast last By Robbin Coons. Py Shakespearean Roles i I ::‘;“\m‘: f}l{l“:“w\m residence at the HOLLYWOOD, Cal.,, March 6—Eddie Polo. Miss Ellictt played many Shakes- { < 5 b y Did you get the name? It used to be big. pearean_roles with. Augustin Daly i Deafh by DrOWfllng Be- m’? (’1‘ l\“‘"l‘;‘e’s Z;’) d‘:fijflf"[’(:‘ A‘;L::”;; It used to be a name that drew the kids—of all ages—into and in 1901 Broadway saw her as % | ¥ Do S the flicker houses in weekly homage, Eddie was the serial ki P s s 1889. He has mined and prospected e age,, B, Vs serial King. Pox}mom [11?( Me:)c};a;n of vlsr;- Defendant Fma"y Breaks lieved to Be Fate of fodis Weira Talion abiol el g How that hoy, could tear through a villain, ride a horse, leap ice.” One of her most famous hits s . . v L : ; | alker, W ” 'n i over a cliff, stop a buzz-saw, dive and swim—all Oown Way,” and when she took I " | At A ’ i i ) e | Territory in 1897 to follow the fish- “I still can,” says Eddie Polo today. “I could, I mean, if I e pXI(ixlyv:? :..o:‘\iti:x i ig?;.}gix:i Name MahOfley SITKA, Alaska, March 2—(Spec- ing industry in Southeast Al Rl e Sixeas0e: a aised her acting ial Correspondence)—Grand open- —_— TS oha e i B o i 4 asked to meet her. Trial of Ralph Mendez Cordero ing for the new Sitka Hotel was ZREayeate TATE, wliten Mol sliTo g o 48 POSH Thereafter she was a favorite|on a charge of assault with a dan-| held Saturday evening with many FEBRUARY WEATHER adventure hero's face and form. He's a bit heavier. His black with European royalty and when|gerous weapon continued before a Sitkans inspecting the rooms and During the month of February hair is shot with grey. And his eyes are sad, even when he X he retired after the Wwar to Dher|jury in District Court today store spaces. In the receiving line there were 12 clear days in Sitka, smiles Villa de L'Horizon on the Mt‘dlwb Introduction of testimony that were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tilson, three partly cloudy and 14 cloudy. He now wears a ship’s officer'’s uniform on a set for Deanna . mx)vu;\ shore at Q;xx;l)e.~b shekv!re- Cordero had lived under the alias Lieutenant-Commander and Mrs. J. Total precipitation for the month Durbin’s “It's a Date, It's his first film work in the six quently was visite y Kings,|of “Ralph C. Mahoney” provided C. Cronin, Mr. and Mrs. P. S. Ganty, was 2.68 inches and the pervailing months he has been bac . i y ; 8 Vs S o has ack in Hollywood, looking for work in a rinces, earld, dukes and miscel- se! i v = g s, 4 i v S rly. g i‘:“ml; ;ob'"mun :nd e a mild sensation wl?en the defen: f\\h. and Mrs. O. W Tupper, and wind was southeasterly. The lowest town where once his name was big. Joe Pasternak, the producer, le a dant was cross-questioned by Assis- Manager and Mrs. Russell Clithero, temperature was 11 degrees on Feb- hired him. Once Eddie worked for Pasternak from virtually every European coun-|tant U. S. Attorney George W.! Many bouquets of flowers, expres- ruary 27 and the highest 51 degrees ¥ i i or Pasternak in Eyope, when try Folta. sions of good will from well-wishers on February 6. | the producer was in charge of Universal's foreign films. 3 Windsors Guests After denying on the stand that of Sitka and Juneau, were placed T At one dinner party, July 1.[he was Mahoney or had used that in the lobby and store spaces. NEW POLICE AUTHORITIES It was 27 years ago that Eddie Polo, American-born of Ital- 1938, her guests were the Duke and|pname, and claiming that he did - George Eliasen and Sam Boyd are ian parents, left the circus for the movies. It was 20 years ago, Duchess of Windsor, ~Winston|pnot know how papers bearing Ma- : JOHN OLSON DROWNS : Acting Police Chief and assistant in making a picture called “Dangerous Hour,” that Eddie met one L{g‘“gfir and g;uddL?;g (;e;)]rgt; honey's name happened to be in ‘5"?‘“‘“! for John 01*‘;“- local fii‘h; Sitka while Police Chief Ray Mc- of the thousand and one dangerous hours of his career—and e Duke, as Edwar echoed | his suitcase, Cordero finally ad-| crman who was reported missing last Graw and Assistant Chief Tommy lost . " his grandfather's admiration for|mitted under Folta’s questioning ! week after an absence of nearly a woods are appearing as witnesses | s i " T jumped a horse off a cliff, and I missed,” he o i Miss Elliott and spent part of his{that he had registered at a_hotel month, ended Friday when evidence for the District Court in Juneau. ARy ¢ ," P Pl el sys. “They » : ? 1936 summer holidays at her villa|in Seattle under that name because was brought in by searchers that | picked me up in a basket, was several years before I .recovs Sheriff Henry Reid of Lake |ypen e was Edward VIIL jusi|-it's hard to get credit when you death by drowning was undoubtedly | ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED || ¢ T went to Europe, made plctures in Germany, worked in Charles, La., s7id a charge of mur- prior to the storm which caused|have a name like Cordero.” | Wit The engagement of Miss Louise der had been placed against Mrs. |his abdication when he announced| Claiming this _testimony was| Martin Strand, leading a party of Miley and Ralph Weeks, both mem- Claude Henry (top), a hitchhiker, | his intention to marry Mrs. Walis| prejudicial and irrelevant, Defense | seachers, found Olson’s boots, Pick, po."of the Sheldon Jackson School for the slaving of J. C. Calloway Simpson. Attorney Mildred = Hermann this Roy. Cullenbine and a spotlight on the beach not far ., ping staff, was announced at (lowe salesman, Sheriff Reid =~ When the World War broke out|morning sought, to have a mis- . A from where his boat was anchored ,"h. 4o given for the couple by Mr. said Calloway was shot as he knelt | Miss Elliott was one of the. first|tria] declared, but Judge George F., This isn't Joe Di Maggio or any near: Big Bay in the vieinity of \ ., 4 ype ¢ G. Stuart Thursday gl .n'g or his e, to enlist as a Red Cross nurse and|alexander denied the motion. ! of the other big league stars (vO{ldard Springs. Local authorities evening 1ast week. i lop S ____|did beroic relief work which won| Cordero is alleged to _have signing for $25,000, but Roy Cul- | believe that Olson went out to dig | a)) Sheldon Jackson School staff i her decorations from the British|staphed a seaman with a salad| letrllllz:ne. :gr{se: pfliiffighfi'fifii clams and that his skiff drifted oo oo Dresent at the party. ch“m:n;h;c::::g"-::nm“ land French governments. She|gpj i utility outfielder, away. g ! bought her own ambulance to take f;;’f,,ef u;-‘;(x;g‘h;ngg:: ;fixld t.he) Hipyock !on ?hlirool:(lfi/l:tDoIdtgser: L S Saean, locally ps o lr;l:s c}l)ite):‘;enn‘:)au':oe:r s ot 3’7:3"}3’:,“3?5321737~ to the front and later organized ggitract Tor/that ar ~ John,” because he formerly owned Van Duyn Candies. Little 9 | ¥ : | bonus for signing. Cullenbine was | e 3 : ks s 1a fleet of barges to carry relief to £ th dayers made freg hoats by the names of Hobo I and ICE I o -ucr.tlons_maku you & i - 2 one of the players | Hobo 11, sailed from Sitka the firs;| FPOLICE CHIEF IS FATHER "must come" guest. Try fu4 A E 'l | war sufferers along the Belgian Ione r a n agents by Judge Landis several Uof Tast ‘month on John Osbaken's, A seven-pound, eight-ounce baby % | canals. She was known along the weeks ago. | 7 y TRESH i |° et el Bl don) higfi ad .I. N M m in g ¥ 'boat, the Sunbteam, for a salmon *(’:‘;l‘ r“’”fl?‘;fl‘”fiflzfll“a g’ P"“fe y ” GXCIUSIVGIY | Al a jef al 8 cGraw in ” e miral of barges on the Belgian WO EW e berS _ S Bpresonrtys Edmonds, Washington. The baby has fl” £ | front.” 3 & been named John Franklin. 080! Is Dead} Soon atter the war she decded| yp ey A it 0 g With Honeymomwrs | VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS > :)1:"“_““3 tflfya‘ex;ongonl;?f?:u;g“' and Roscoe M. Laughlin. were init- | FIRST ON HOTEL REGISTER Pt reary, S i i y | a 5 ' - e 3 ] : 3 5 iated into Tgloo No. 6, Pioneers of - } Oo arles Petry, United States Bu Spain and England. T left Germany in 1933, when Hitler came. 4 . and she built her $350,000 villa on| ajacka at the meeting held last | reau of Fisheries Warden, was the e i itl American Stage Beauly, the “eote d'qaur” and rarely lefl | nigh at,the,0dd Fellows Hall | first name to appesr on the register ([ T Went o Vienna, then Filer eama Pars. - Again £ oty SEGES there agajn., Fite which swept the| pioneer women met at the same | of the new Sitka Hotel. Number he Nazi came to power, I had nol n politicaly reet. Former Glamorous Star, |vita oo April 1, 1953, did, $100.000| (ime ana made plans to sponsor @ |two was Gordon McDonald. “I must start over now. I can train down in short time so gk 3 damage before it was subdued by|carniyal the firg: part of April. \ I can do all my old stun I know I can do it, if I have the Makes Her Fmal Ex“ | sailors and marines from two Brii-| " pollowing the 'two meetings (he | ! CITY EXPENSES S ation, G n.alllww? sl:xfir anchored offshore. two groups spent the remainder of \ Approximate expenditures for the SRS (Continuea from Page One) | Miss Elliott. appeared in 8 few|ihe evening playing whist, Nine | city of Sitka during 1940 will be Remember Eddie Polo and Marie Walcamp in “Liberty”? motion pictures, 1916-17, including | tables were in_play with high hon- | 132,885, an increase of nearly 50 per Aarie ad B " . |“The FEternal Magdaleng” _and|ors going to ladies Mrs. Arnot Hen- | |cent over 1939, it was reported last el 1o depd oW, emgigher Eddie olo and Francis Pord and a there that she started stpdylr‘lgj ighting . Odds,” but she didn't|dricksan, first; Mrs, Charles Sey,| | week by Mayor Tom Tilson. Grace Cunard in “The Broken Coin”? Jack Holt was in it, too to become an agtress, chan;;mg her |ike p]‘umg m mm; seccnd; and Mrs. Madsen Streed, | | —Jack who kept on to stardom and retained it. Grace Cunard name to Maxine Elliott :_xL the S:z- consolation. ~ Prizes for men wer 1 | ILLEGAL SHOOTING lives in a little house in the valley, married to a western actor, gestion of her dramatic teacher awarded. to . John.. Torvinen, . first; James Gillan, Sitka fisherman, and Francis Ford is a busy character actor. BEddie Polo, the circus Her younger sister, followed this ex- DR SAvlo Jack Tangseti, d: d Robert was given a six months’ suspended 1ad, is °k any greyi d looki! s Tl ngsetn, second; an < X , is stock any greying and looking for a chance, ample ané hc[‘ca:lne g“suftvesfi Keeny, consolation. sentence last week in Commissioner’s tress as Gertriide Ellio m‘“ , Mrs. George Dull was in charge |Court when he pleaded guilty to i o Maxine's first stage appearance (o IE of the card ggames and Mesdames E. illegally shooting and taking a fur A"?“"" 4‘<~Iugf-e u? _m,e Aama sch.in. 8. 2. Sekall., ¥he was in a small role in “The Middle- [m“ i"SK Q. Jacobsen, Joe Green apd John |seal while hunting hair seal for to be Szoke Szakal in foreign fiims. Saoke—just call him BS B man” in November, 1890, and she| Langseth made up a committee | bounty purposes. is a stout fellow of pronounced comedy talents, famed on the made rapid progress while tour- & which served mn:esbmem.s Bureau of Fisheries Warden continental stage and screen before he left in a hurry. He is s ing in various plays. Her travels| _Dh Robert M. Saylor and fam- Charles Petry made the arrest and Hungarian, but he used to write pieces for German papers in the carried her to San Francisco in }ly R:;:i Ns“::f Irma P:rr wfll;eave presented the complaint to the old days, and some people didn't like those pieces. muf ;ud él;g;:she r:le'. gz:yr;:e- uo’:”mme:'W es on the Northland s lED |court. According 'lo Ux):éted States | He arrived not knowing a word of English, and picking up the ried Nat vin, actor. . Commissioner William Knight, the age i 5 g divorced in 1908. She never mar-| Dr. Saylor and Miss Parr have {2ase was ‘the fimtiaf 1t ki‘:fl sy language in six mon;h;fnough of it, at least, that he can learn ried aga completed their annual work for to come before the local Commis- || 2 Tol¢ b Enslish and Gelver b @ v of H i i 5 o “Even in Surope,” says the native o ungary, “I always 1 0(; Aduftrali:n ;:‘::d Aus- :}‘iskgnxge;:kfntg in?:b:rct{{):‘l:ssuln nobeWASHXNGTON' Marcht Gc;(lispt[ Three isn't a crowd on a honeymoon if the third member is “Brandy,” | sioners Court_‘ guil | played foreigners, speaking another language than my own.” |r:1V1:: n:md file“(llx;i:ede States in such | vey. a.nd administering B.G.G. vac- narrar:ksc o;;:( :t]::;;x?e%a: been g?-‘ Trisg RS Beetngd Dejenklyg to Jrs. HE fhanen fe former, Franoos th:nck;\l:fi: C;:e“l;-;l:;‘:dxgnognz -S Z’s su.dm' questionnaire contains one especially pertinent Dlays as “A Gilded Fool” “Nathan|cine which has proved useful in|dered transferred to the Presidio, Slaugh, socialite. daughter of Mr. Harry Harrison Slaugh, Executive | 5 oot 'of the animal he shot || answer—to the question: “What do you like most in Holly= Hale” and Clyde Fitch's “The Cow- combatting the disease. They will |San Francisco. Viee: P, resifent pf Santa Catalina Island Comparly. Handsome three- until he had recovered the skin, wo0d?” 3 boy and the Lady.” continue their work on Indian res- > — oo some are shown following a wedding at Catalina Island, Cal. Bride- e His answer: “Sunshine and freedom.” & Her name first went up in lights ervations jn the States, Try an Empire ad. 1 groom is a former University of California athlete, l Empire classifieds pay. b e

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