The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 11, 1940, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MAR. 11, 1940. ¢ 3 THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES PATRONS ENmY “Yes, He Robbed Me!” SHIRLEY TEMPLE — DELIGHTS ALL IN CAPITOL B\K AL H'Lg&‘:;'é:%m | COLISEUM SHow u's Greatest Show Value NOW!? 2 Shirley Ter s Technicolor production in THE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU Hodgson Burnett’'s great c The Little Princess tury-Fox hit which o day at the Coliseun s on ight and SHERLEY TEMPLE in “The Little Princess™ IN TECHNICOLOR with RICHARD GREENE—ANITA LOUISE Play Depid;l_mpa?ient Violinist Who Becomes 4 . he reveals all her charm and NEWS - ... OF Prizetighter rodinee, - whac 1 “weoty wer([. MBSO NEVS ALSO EMD‘"UNAL " T finest film by far also on e e e Unquestionably unique in treat- of the best pictures of our CONFUCT ment and in theme, Columbia’s All the laughter, tears, d PI- R . . AND Golden Boy.” opened yesterday and tenderness of this great story « I IS Honored by Chma the Capitol Theater to prove are presented on the screen and ROMANCE! Hollywood, when it wants to, St Artpideive st s been ' turn out definitely superior enter- | sembled to suppc 1e star. Head tainment. The new film, directed ot by “Rich Greet Ani by Rouben Mamoulian and star- ise, as the lover S T A N W Y c K r Bs h:\!id ‘fulumm;{ lel\dnlmw tw Tan Hunte Menjou anc yilliam Holden, is Arthur Treacher Sybil Adolphe MEN]OU based upon Clifford Odets’ roman- Jasen, Miles Mar a1z tic drama. This feature is on again Mae Jon William HOLDEN tonight and Tuesday “Golden Boy” tells of a young (i violinist atient and tir E S 3 5 ! toward the day w s Two men tied Lucille Roberts, 17, to a chair and rifled the house in which who rapidly fights his Way| ghe worked as a maid. They told her she was a fool when she asked, DU(K popUlAHON e to the top in the pri In his “Why don't you go straight?” Later in the day Joseph Mascarello, 28, Pags Nazi Planes- wift climb to pugilistic s om, a machinist, was picked up on a criminal assault charge, and here is is 60 pER HUN]‘ER Tank Defen: he ruthlessly tramples upon the Lucille in Brooklyn |»n|icclh(‘;lldqular‘icr:iul: y..d(.,\»nv,; him as one of the | ’ vz hopes of his music-loving father, pair who laughed at her advice. : - = es the eryings-out of his own Last Bird Would Be Shot If | vs-Miners of March ce. He becomes brutali . | . | { re¢ b ed 101 his new environment, it s 1ibet’s Boy Lama | poored and Told | License Holders Got ) Ly A h e for a disillusioned young wo- | . vils ™ he ceiling on lire understands the tremendous con- g-é fleor below him also, He tried sing within him—causes him Biolog ey 15 t h two buckets up the ring and return to s annual inventory of the on h but ther s of his family of North America and ne h nall Mamoulian's” di- results will not b fl it [ » he ran and call stage suceess be- published until spring, speculation | : e d e Ip which was on hand in | semes vibrang film material. “Gol- is already lively cc ng how | i of v Little, | jen Boy” is proof again that the the figures may inf s next sea coult'be do (ffairs of everyday people is a son’s hunting regulations, Col. Theodore Roosevelt (right), son of the former President, receives t e 1 The Hou oftice complate fertile source of excitement on the Dr. Ira N .Gabriclson, Chief of |the Grand Cordon Bleu of the Order of the Jade, from Dr. Hu Shih, & « destre the company’s store and|screen the U. S. Biological Survey, in a|Chinese ambassador to the United States. Chairman of the United Coun- s A 3 3 Sl g HT S Of the utmost importance in any recent et Mrs. C. N. Edge, | il for Civilian Relief in China, Roosevelt was honored for his work in s S ¢ i 4 nsideration of “Golden Boy" i Chairman of the Emergency Con-| that stricken country. Presentation was made in New York. x he performance turned in by new servation Committee, says | e 5 smer William Holden, making his There have notable and | Plans to Wed by Proxy mation. pichire debut 1 the- i R e s i Mis. Chamberlaifs Adcepts mportant title role popul n the last four years r's. P 9 Flawless performances by Bar- but these inc s have certainly | bara Stanwyck and Adolphe Men- not been so as to merit the | jou add charm and a certain exu- conclusion that there is now no| berance to the picture. Mr. Menjou horlage of birds. A shortage | < is superb as the eynical, harassed till exists will, in my opinion, | ight manager. Other splendid per- cenfinue until such time as wates fermers in important roles includ fowl are ently abund, e Joseph Calleia, L J. Cobb, Ed- 1ake reasonable use of the ar ward Brophy and Sam Levene wailable 1o them on the nesting | Wds, the flyways and th | Wheeling tried to enter the office to Sporting an over-size cigarette C1INE Ared o | q ave some gold and papers and was holder, Countess Merry Fahrney Upward ‘Trend | i wurned about the face, but not badly Cassini is pictured during an inter. ~ “Shooting regulations in recent | Dding. the exctianisnt. of Tl e Tude in her divoree suit in New Yord years have been responsible for Fred Kane, the underground fore- Here is the plump peasant boy of Supreme Court. The four times bringing about a gradual reduction nan, suddenly thought of 17 thou- | six, whose name is Lingerh Lamu. Married patent medicine heiresstolé of the shortage, and it is our| and dynamite caps that were stor- | tanchu, enthroned as the fourteenth ©Of seeing her count in a hotel room 1, oce for the future to recom- | d in the building and gave the | Dalai Lama, spiritual and temporal ~With a woman. dihe count alst pong such measures as we belie 5 AR e R ) of Tibet, at Lhasa. The boy ~ ¢hared Merry with misconduct. | o)™ oy tinue the upward trend They at once ran for shelter and | 18 “""t“"‘]"“(‘;‘f ’("‘“"t""‘l"’"lfl.‘ l’" oy of waterfowl populations until we 1ad just reached the cook-house| FMOMent the LAIFLeen:h La'a) Lama . can say, as we have not yet said building when a tremendous explo- :’I‘I“'.“{'W]z:’f‘ I,ll‘]; b f.mflf b "‘h‘fi Student Vanishes | waterfow shortage 1o o ger ion occurred which broke windows | pov'is 18 the country will be ruled 5 exists in adjoining houses and scattered by a regent. | The big factors in the comeback lebris all around. We understand| __ 2 of the waterfow] have been the ab- Juite a bit of gold was in the safe olition of balting and live decoys, >ut some of the last clean-up had | ® accidental bad weather for hunt- £ 10t been placed there as it had not lle De'eclor ing in several successive seasons seen cleaned from the black sand and moderation of drought condi- All papers, documents, plans of | tions in the breeding range. nine, etc., were lost. Jack Wheeling - But the entire estimated duck . | 2150 lost everything he owned in the Es‘a IS e ] population of the United States Is b | way of personal effects even to his [ 4 less than 60 ducks to each purchas-| Mrs. Neville Chamberlain, wife of the British prime minister, accepts Chevalier, who is now with the Canadian troops in | >yeglasses er of a migratory bird duck stamp,| refreshments from a Canadian soldier during a visit in Bloomlburyg . The couple hoped to marry by proxy, using short | o1y a vear azo the mine shaft . o than. six days’ bag-limit England, to the King George and Queen Elizabeth Victoria League Clul the vows, Parental disapproval caused a postpone- \ & s D T rI(a p ' e " chol B for Service Men from Overseas. And how do you like that for the namel were won over and the ceremony will be carried out, |Douse and all machinery of this in a 45-day season. If each hunter e alant company went up in smoke from a sheuld shoot the legal limit for — |faulty chimney, and it is surmised ek 48 | three days in a season, the water- > SR % =T B g pymemmeseee [ this fire might have been due to fowl would be reduced by 50 per- L/ x . the same cause. | CAPETOWN, South Africa, March | dcent : [ g o g [11—A ‘lie detector department” to RIS | | counter zi propag in the RETURNS TO ANCHORAGE ¢ | British sections of Af has bee Miss Mary Morrison returned to 3 | established by the Union Unity her home in Anchorage recently | ‘[und. a South African organization after spending three years traveling | |formed to fight Ger Wiaes ¥ outside, Mrs. Morrison, pioneer Al- | IN SYEARS\mmd ideological publicity can . R o sl | paign. | visited with her sister, Mrs. Ella | ‘Staffed by economists, histori- Jltred Habeock ‘P(-(vr\nn in Seattle and took sev- The GENERAL ELECTRIC | ¢ s o 5 i Sunfamp affords ultra-yiolec fConcia , ans and experts on international af- | Disappearance of Alfred Babeock, eral trips along the west coast. § | aliidaikte T2l Man & e | SPOKANE, Wash. Mar, 11--Be. |fairs, the anti-lies department was wealthy Harvard student, is be- B similar beneficial cflect to | cause it has carried only one pas-|designed to combat radiocasts from| lieved inspired by his desire to of- Npw TELEPHONE DIRECTORY the ultra-violet radiation in senger in the last five years and|Zeesen, powerful short-wave broad- fer his Sarocto I‘;;”;]“‘;E'hem he 1 he issued March 1 and forms the Simer #ia. | hauled freight amounting to only |casting station in Northern Ger-| WeS brought up. Babcock was a | . "\oien 1) For space, listings & ; | many, and other Nazi propaganda.| § udent of Buddhism and ancient ™ 1 ‘chanies Bl aan. # Tinka | $431.88 for the entire year of 1938, MaN il o | Indian customs. He was last scen and changes please u | the Spokane, Coeur d'Alene and | | in Cambridge, Mass., on Jan. 15, and I)filfglas Telephone Co., tele- | Palouse Railroad has filed appli- | CANNERY SOLD | | phone 420 adv, | cation with the interstate com-| Announcement was made recently | .. LSS —_— | merce commission to abandon its|in Cordova of l]iw sale of 'hz xmmv‘ Plannin onve t- six-mile branch from Coeur d'Alene | fish cannin,, plant of the Glacier g GOP C to Hayden Lake, in Idaho, | Sea Foods Company, owned by vention | The line, a subsidiary of the|the Lathrop interests, to J. W.| o 0 A3 S g o P ! | Great Northern, said in its appli- | Parks of the Pioneer Sea Foods Y v . | cation that $27,000 in track repairs| Company. Capt. A. E. Lathrop had would be necessary if it were com- | owned the propert; since 1935. s | pelled to operate the branch in| o R s | | 1940, | AT BARANOF | R USTPNN “ | L Bl A e | Bob Wakelin, wellknown traveling it ? S' d ' man, s at the Baranof Hotel. He ! Be Sure Your Baby Is Getting uaen came in from the Westward this { Enough Ulira-Violet f . morning on the Yukon. ! 1'! Gelhng - { From the time your baby is born, be ll d VETERAN TRAVELER [ ! sure she gets her daily sunbath— o ‘ roun Sam Shucklin, veteran traveling | ! Summer and Winter. The ultra- | — man, ls, SOPPRIE: Off- 94 the Baran- { violet in sunshine will help to grow MADISON, Wis, Mar. 11—James 0f He came in on the Yukon from | e e i | chos Tnivers Westward trip sturdy, stralaht bones. | 4 Cm‘\bv JT’- University of Wiscor # : months, when Summer sun is lack- | senior, will go to any lengths e | i E Sunlam | get an education. DUNLOP BACK { ing, it’s wise to l,ht a G- .uu amp. | " He estimates that by the time| Traveiing merchandise salesman { A General Electric Sunlamp is handy {'he is graduated in June he will have Herb Dunlop returned from a west- { —a short exposure, every day, is all | traveled 28,000 miles—more than the Wward trip on the Yukon and is at l you need. | distance around the earth's equa- the Gastineau Hotel. | Cvtrtrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrree) \tor—on his trips to and from class- X {es. ATTORN! | Crosby iives at Elroy, 80 miles| Clyde Ellis, Westward attorney, i T : }rrom he:e. and rides both ways daily | is a passenger southbound on the GENERAL d© ELECTRI( lon ‘the train, steamer Yukon for Seattle. | : * e bt e e SUNLAMPS BARNETT IN PIONEERS ATTENTION By 2 | Traveling man Joe Barnett is at| All members of Pioneers of Al- B Ll | ;the Gastineau. He came in on the aska are requested to attend the | Yukon to spend a few days in Ju-| funeral service of Brother Fred " ] - neau, Engel of Anchorage Igloo No. 15, ¥ ’ ALASKA chRlc le ) 53 FLIER’Ot’\U(—O_N Ts"‘;icefi Wllzl be h"mhmgfln’;’“' Exifiutivesff Plhi]adnlphin C(Imvengonkfla!lb;cannmnp ofthezrut hall M - i N YU (Tuesday) at 2 p.m., at the Charles as they make plans for handling the Republican national eonvention in AND Pownn co LASS EROM ORGENT INAiseping Eino wiin || Prank Kammer. Fairbanks fler, W. Carter Mortuary. June, when the GOP presidential candidate wil be named. Lett to right, . ’ of the Buenos Aires carnival, just as her fwin sister was named | |15 @ Southbound Yukon passenger CHARLES W. CARTER, | Charles M. Christman, director; Frank W. Brooks, engineer; and 0. K. PHONE 616 (.~ dast year. She wears the costume of a Spanish dancer. ~ / l""m‘ his wite. 2 A“‘d"' Secretary. ' Jamison, associate engineer, |

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