The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 12, 1940, Page 3

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THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘ QULIAN prDuCTioN WIAR PeRaERe T e e Sy e sy CLIPFORD OOUTS FASCIN c..uuuct ATING ERS C’n(»am‘a Picture ) DONALD DUCK ond NEWS OF THE DAY {f FRISON WITHOUT BARS s in and N‘AU | b wid® Hshipire, ON AL SKA business. WREDES STOP OVFR - 1own former eau today join the prominent Krafft, and |, Mr. and Mrs House, near { house guests of L. Bartlett. Mr. and Mrs. Wrede from a vacation in the S the Alaska today and will s in Ju until the next w bo: Mr. and P DISHAW TURN Contractor Alfred back on the Alaska today ym-n ia mu- ip to the States o1 ”"::~“v Defense G been in R. H. Wrede of Fairbanks Dishaw connec- furniture BETWEEN STEAMERS (1., 0. . 10 SCUSSED BY |° Mil- Mr's returned | be tates on top over westward S v came after busine uns’ s two wars sounded n nations following cenference of their forel nisters pro ment — .| Some day youll thank a GE gen did not fail to halt Sweden’s d tions. Shown abeve is part of its mod 1ewest {ype machine gun mounted o efense v equip- Sunlamp for your fine strong legs The GENERAL ELE CTRIC Sunlamp affords ultra-violec and in abundance similar benefi has a effect to the ultra-violet radiation in the Summer sun. Be Sure Your Baby Is Getfting Enough Ultra-Violet From the time your baby is born, be sure she gets her daily sunbath— Summer and Winter. The ultra- violet in sunshine will help to grow sturdy, straight bones. In these months, when Summer sun is ing, it's wise to use a G-E Sunlamp. A General Electric Sunlamp is handy a shorl exposure, every day, is all you need. GENERAL &3 SUNLAMPS ELECTRIC ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT AND POWER (0. PHONE 616 ‘William Holde THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MAR. 12, 1940. ‘STUDENT STARS ATCAPITOLNOW , Film Find, Was Also in College Plays Last Year 30y Columbia’s pictur In version A Stan- jou In Hold wyck de Lu’ S ¢ POINTED CRITICISM—F me {riendly in Chicago. Finger-waggling Dorothy Gish advice about the latter’s ac Many hearts ihrobbed to the Gish Girls in the silent movie days. wide. den A MKA BILLS productior is closing &Y ifiH(zRESSMEN Proposed Restriction of labor to Residents Only Denounced en ha he grateful, toe, t agnitud of the GTON, March Bills t abor employed fishing i ) residents, w 1 (.] o 6 tonight Mrs. enterta rnoon from ¢ ve Carter of Mr: leaving for her said this o'clock in honor diserimination arle. ortman who i tole m the h Sea in Sitk Wortman ha, ister George Sarvella TO ANCHORAGE Bacby of Seattle Woman Great Grandm Mrs. Guy Whitcomb, a great grandmother at 48, is shown in Seattle, Was Presho (I¢’t), herseif a grandmother at 32, and Mrs. who at 16 was the mother of a week-old son. MISSY, CAN YOU SPARE A BUCK?_No loans was Ma '.I'em,:_gmgn_u}l thi Y. Art Students League ball; not even to th \meric PTONE been the guest ed would ight, | Mc Presho’s daughter, Mrs, Fishermer Allied Workers of CIC { Seattle, which op- outside industry S€ restric of labor r J tee to ap- ring that a req regulations and gear Otis of the vler irmar a “travesty man befc tlty.” the Bureau olutior in all that are - ALLBEARERS AT ENGELS FUNERAL TODAY Fred Engels riua afternoon ¢ 2 o'clock other at 48 with her daughter, Mrs. Roy Gordon Mummey (right), ry llnyden, dressed 'as “Scrip at sntheflm’" lohert Smith. | the Territorial Department of Mines and then proceed to Nome. | Control Service. COLISEUM SHOW HAS REPLICA OF FAMOUS COACH Vic 20th replica of Queen h was needed y-Fox studios for a remple’s f Tect iction, “The Princess,” which is showing last tonight at the C It looked like ment, as Nno co: are made in Am A perusal thousands of studio’s property depa ever, revealed that an of Queen Victoria’s coach be found there. The coach 1 studi> fro for years exact Li for the seum a difficult imes assign- this type tment, how- replica was to d been brought London at use in “Cav the everal - e INJURED €(C YOUTH BACK FROM STATES Charles Morrison, CCC enrollee whe was injured in a smashup on the Glacier Highway fall. re iurned on the steamer Alaska from | ttle wherg he has been under medical care, - GOODKEWS BAY OPERATORS ON WAY T0 NORTH | and Mrs. F' Howard and Howard, owners of the Kow- | Kow Mining Company at Goodnews Bay, aré through passengers today on the steamer Alaska Don Keys, dra e the operation, accompanic north. Mr Guy operator for them — e - LIVENGOOD PLACERS col Juneau's Greatest Show Value o Ny B Last Times Tonighi SHIRLEY TEMPLE in “The Little Princess”’ IN TECHNICOLOR' with RICHARD GREENE—ANITA LOUISE ALSQ CARTOON NEWS ALSO n W.D.6ROSS. Eire Builds Up Her Navy A MANAGER THROUGHE r5 1t et Eie .00 s s o s e i Manager of Liven- Ine is returning to the Interior after a visit San | Francisco. He and his wife arrived on the steamer Alaska and left by PAA Electra for Fairbanks | - CALLOWS RETURN Callow, ot the Standard Oii accompanied by Mrs. Cal au aboard the and pleasure Charles Lewi good Placers, to H. V Company low, returned to Juneg Alaska after a business trip in the States. D MISS HALVORSEN R Miss Christine Halvors vorsen’s, who has been several ks, returned aboard the Alaska today. -e > - KAZEE TO WESTWARD Harry H, Kazee, U. Bureau of Mines Safety Instructor. returned today on the Alaska from Ketchikan and Wrangell and will continue on the steamer tonight to conduct classes at Cordova, Seward, Anchor- age and along the railroad belt. > WILLIAMS LEAVING District Engineer M. D. Williams of the Public Roads Administration is leaving on the steamer Alaska for a routine official visit to Seward. - - ASSAYER HERE Aben Shallit, Assayer in charge of south for | to Juneau | assay office at Nome, arrived from the States today on the steamer Alaska. He will spend a week here D FIRE CONTROL Frances Regan, who will be a clerical worker for the Alaska Fire is leaving for the Westward on the steamer Alaska She has been employed in the For- est Service Regional Office here be- coming acquainted with her new duties. - e LYNG TO RETURN Howard Lyng, Nome mining op- erator and member of the Legisla- ture, plans to leave Seattle March 30 to return to Alaska, according to word received here. A Kiss for Lulu Winner of two awards in the chi- huahua class in a New York pet show, Lulu accepts the admiration and kiss of little Shirley Ann Trox ter. Lulu is owned by Mrs. Anns levay, of the Bronx, who gave hei the jeweled collag, first of Eire’s “pocket navy” v\...shnps to be delivered, in Chelsea, England. The torpedo boats, described as “fiying swords,” have a speed of un & fifty knots, Hollywood Sights And Sounds. By Robbin Coons. HOLLYWOCOD, Cal, March 12—It's time that eminent scen- arist and plot-doctor, Mr. Pouty, got a little screen credit around here. Mr. Pouty s good a name for good now because he rhymes with Prouty, him in to work g Mr. Prouty (Jed) has been the papa of the Joneses in the movies. Mr. Prouty has been pouting. I doubt that the Prouty features have been covered with a genuine pout, but “pouting is Hellywood’s blanket term for an aetor’s expression of his dis- satisfaction with roles or pay. Mr. Prouty’s pout sprang from the question of pay. Maybe he figured that, with the Jones family growing as it has been through marriages and births, papa needed 2 bigger check to make ends meet. Mr. Prouty was beginning to make his desires known some time ago, and that is how Mr. Pouty, the scenarist, got 'in his work in time. The new Jones picture, which went before the cameras the other day, is entitled “On Their Own.” Mr. Pouty, ready for whatever, thoughtfully provided two scripts—in one of which Mr. Prouty (Jed) would play about his usual role, in the second of which Mr. Prouty would be conveniently hospitalized for the duration, leaving the family literally “on their own.” is a him as any, especially the latest actor to call® The second of the scripts was followed on the first day of shooting. Alice Armand, playing a nurse, reassured Mrs. Jones— outside the hosptial room of a Mr. Jones who wasn't there—that with rest and quiet Mr. Jones would be all right. A couple of days later, when Mr. Prouty had not yet re- ported for work was suspended from salary until such time, if ever, as he should reconsider. Scenarist Pouty had not yet played his trump card, which he reception charming hestessess give thoughtful guests who bring gifts of delicious Van Duyn Tandies. Little attentions make you & “"wust come" guest. Try it) “Uan VAN DUYN CHOCOLATE SHOPS Perey’s exclusively + Submission. he would be loath to do inasmuch as Mr. Prouty (Jed) is an institution in the Jones Family and would be sorely missed. Scenarist Pouty could, in a pinch, make Papa Jones' sojourn in the hospital the end of Papa Jones in the serie. Papa Jones's illness could aiways be his last. Scenarist Pouty had other jobs. He’s an all-around handy man about the studios. He shows up frequently, in star-studio crises, in the casting office. t was he who suipped the word out, during Bette Davis's late fuss with her bosses, that Bette's plum role in “All This, and Heaven Too" would be played by Miriam Hopkins. Mr. Pouty changed his mind when Bette changed hers. It was he who used to keep Tala Birell under contract at Metro. Tala was the girl who looked like Garbo. She was nice to have around, Mr. Pouty thought, during those bleak days when Garbo talked about going home to stay. Mr. Prouty isn't always the heel you might think him, serv- ing a he does to goad or whiplash the protesting actor into Mr. Pouty did Jeffrey Lynn a good turn. Mr. Pouty intended of course, merely to let Errol Flynn know the studio could get along without him, and Mr. Pouty used Jeff Lynn for the purpose—but “Four Dnughters put Jeff over. Sometimes, however, Mr, Pouty is a wash-out.. He pulled a dozen Cagney substitutes and Raft substitutes out of his bag af tricks, and both gentlemen are still doing business at their respective stands. Mr. Pouty’s worst setback came in his quest for a “second Val- entino” which began during one of the Great Lover’s studio quarrels. Then, and since Valentino's death, Mr. Pouty produced “seconds” but no Valentinos.

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