The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 15, 1940, Page 3

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THE DAILY. ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 1940. . \ s " | DuailyC [ Puzzl { THEREALGLORY”. = Duily Crossword Puzsle THE CAPITOI has the BIG PIC TURES and NEWS that is NEWS wul O.PEN SWDAY | ACROES Solutioh of Vésterday's Puzzle 3. Enslish letters 1. Argen con- 9. Common 8ol= flicts fer b.'"da" Nldmghl Prewew “ APHOL Blll & Shiv e ofticer -: g:i:l‘:i‘l"ngcl:"::. W.0.6ROSS TONIGHT—1:15 A, M, b e Junean's Greatest Show Value! Monday ; M i T : Matinee i e cdBEe Sund Mond 9 | 15 Persous with 21. Coue T d Y Tuesday suwpav_z 5. v, | Gary Cooper, Andrea ™ "ol T unday onday uesua . . 17, Anger emn assen ) . Lac 3 s ance Leeds, David Niven Star | 1§ {2, Prevue Tonight ® Matinee Sunday “‘“ 21 Part of a play Body of 5 In Feature 3 On (e uetin o Chureh 1:15 AM. 2:00 P.M. 4. Conjunctio . Wingli i Gorarmentea [’uel:‘o’\:; of w8 yoang Engrave with Gary Cooper, Andrea Leeds and 31 fose iister acl David Niven are the trio of staps| 3¢ First nauie of TR e | who head the top-notch cast of violinist »'l{::‘\:cr(!". | samuel Goldwyn's “Fhe Real| " barrier Glory,” the exciting and fast-mov- LI N s e L D";‘;:"I“K';“?gn“ ing adventure drama which will 5 treland . Victory 46. Assistant | have its local premiere at the| §) 8, Camugna to" 3 Devoured 1. 'GoHieY. R e | Capitol Theatre Sunday under the :;» 57 Fl»lmnlv‘n)\h vel 4} 5;.:::9:5"“‘“ auspices of United Artists. Cooper vm:’tih«'n(ring plays a strong, he-man role with 5 Senit 5o 08 ETOLRELGE @, 1L e e part of & | his usual fine flair for acting and i “r.uny'w\u:y'."x:vi" 59 l:y;:::y?"\” b i :\‘\m’hwg 53 Fi&;:’:‘l timing. Miss Leeds is excellent as | the romantic heroine, and Niven, | who has been climbing to stardom by leaps and bounds, turns in an {all-around stirring performance. A first-rate supporting cast, headed ! by Reginald Owen, Kay Johnson, | Vladimir Sokoloff and Russell| S G T ] out, // T AduEE N Real Glory” with plenty of ex- ATTRA®TIONS: citement and gun-play and with plenty of accent on the romancni A A HOAGY CARMICHAEL NEWS and adveriture in the seript. The big battle sequence, which provldml the film with a smash climax, was | directed with terrific suspense and LAST TIMES TONIGHT “UNION PACIFIC”? Joel McCrea—Barbara Stanwyck | 71 11 IIH%/% =I WITH FRED M'MURRAY she changes her mind gusto, s0 that it provides one of the most breath-taking screen bat- | 5 tles seen in a picture in many a daughter, Irene Dunne, insists on “The Real Glory” was directed ,/ // I But when she meets prizefighter YOU WILL SEE ON OUR SCREEN: [from a screenplay writfen by Jo MacMurtay The Test of the Amazing New Swerling,’ and it abounds in thrilis, Closing tonight is a return ene HELICOPTER— romance, action and color. Briefly 'N (OUSEUM DRAMA agement of “Union Pacific.” The aeroplane that is likely to the story revolves around the hero- - e Revolutionize Aerial Warfare! ism and daredeviltry of the Philip- For the first time since he ap R ek Jrsina o 2 s opelnige . pine Scouts who were left to police peared two years ago in the Para- | g ALSO: Walt Disney Cartoon the turbulent islands after the {mount newspaper drama Stock QUOTATIONS LAST TIMES TONIGHT American Army was evacuated at |ive,” with Fred MacMurray me- s o the end of the Spanish-American |dian Charlie Ruggles ple nother H War, The peace of thé islands was vEsSEl SlNKm straight, dramatic role. He appears npw YORK. June 15 Slonthe SII'ongel‘ Than neSIre and left in constant jeopardy because | | | with MacMurray again in “Invita- quotation of Alaska Juneau ihine the fiel Moro tribesmen retreated | tion to Happiness,” which open vmk at today's short ession of | dreadful religious warfare. Charlie is cast as Fr trainer 4 Anaconda 3/4, Bethlehem Tonight the double bill, “Strong- OF (REw RES(UED I'HIS MORN'"G and manager. Fred is an up-and-|giee] 79%, Commonwealth and N er Than Desire” and “Code of the coming fighter. But they need twr ithern 1, Curtiss Wright 8%, A ents at Sitka. e SEATTLE, June 15—The Coast| Eleven passengers went out on mo“”""’”?’v groomed for big fights.| ooy 29 3/4, New York Central 11, . % 2 ¥ H | Charlie finally decides to sell hall Northern Pacific 5%, United States ' I - > | Guard reports that a Coast Guard- | Northland early this morning when | 5 " b CT0 7 5 Ll BT ; - : n eamer ena I MRS. FICKEN TO JUNEAU {ment men saw enough of Alaska’s|er from Westport, at 4:10 o'ilock | that vessel came in from Sitka and | . = y‘ iy " Tl e Steel 54'4, Pound $3.65 Mrs. Arthur Ficken is returning mountains and glaciers to pro-!this morning, took off 10 of 23 disembarked 21 persons from the ;m;{w. i m“'\.\:\d“ “”{“ o \,‘ AR et b i MR ¢ SHG nounce it as “the most beautiful|men aboard the water-logged Historic City. e e s LA Be DOW, JC AVERAGES Mrs. H. 8. Sully returned last has been in Oregon and Washington airplane flight in the world.” schooner Claremont after sighting| Arrivals were Mr. and Mrs. W. P °% "|‘ 4% e gar . g, j] il‘ The following 8 Dow, evening on the Denali from a visit | for the past several weeks. H. William Bernhardt, of the PAA|gjgnal flares at 1:10 o'clock a.m.| Ziegler, Mrs. H. Dahl, Mrs, T, gralle- the hard way, but Charlle| ;0. averages s 12340, in the States. She was accom- e - BY R Traffic Department, expressed the|The Claremont was then three Rudolph, Mrs. J. McLain, Roy An- | Brevals ¢ S : rails 2497, utilities 20.18. panied by Miss Alyce Marian Sul Subscribe to The Daily Al ! the opinion that this route between ' miles off Willapa Harbor bar. tioquia, Mrs. G. Klaney, Mrs. L. | Ruggles sells his half ]‘m"““ »m o4 G who has been attending Griffin- | Empire—the paper with the largest Seattle and Alaska Will “some day| The cutter Redwing is also en- Darling, D. T. Robinson, M. Rich- an old "_“'nfl‘ Witliam' Colller Sr.| . Murplly Business College in Seat- | paid circulation, be the most popular flight in the|youte to the scene. ards, R. Antioquia, Mrs. R. Brown |Who is forever investing in all sorts ~ Subscribe to The Dally Alaska Surve HI h' Wlih Glan chtire Pan American system.” The tug Klihyan left Aberdeen and two children, Dr. and Mrs. C. C. | of wild-cat schemes. The dml comes l-jmpm- ~the paper with the largest M, SUrvey FHig Ieoin ‘o e ol e e St o | Dy o, 2, T o 1o e U o S B Hymg Boat Is Pro- | passengers, many Juneauites were|g oeclock this morning and s at- Sy i oo | shown through the clipper’s luxuri- | tempting to tow the stricken vessel arsen. Sailing to Seattle were Margaret. Chapp, Jacqueline Schmitz, Gerald- ine Curron. | ous accommodations, The craft has passenger accommodations for 32 to safety. The decks are awash and the nounced Success Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Cooms (Continued from Page One) }’::‘E;;g::hp:;;]n;;z c:l:pf;;:m;;:; filal‘cmon? s only kept- afloat by |, petersburg—R. Shirt, Irene | ‘ g he full cargo of lumber aboard. |gpirt, . Tanaka, L. Mallach, Mr. HOLLYWOOD, Cal., June 15.—It's a strange new sight for | and another for twelve. The Claremont began sinking Ohmér g Y Hollywood; famous artists at their easels in studios within movie [ A8¢d spectators back to Juneau,| Her four Pratt-Whitney enginesfafter striking the bar last night! o wrangell—William Nicholson, | | but several hundred whose cars|of 850 horsepower generate a total [and springing some of her plates. J Reed tnd the Rev, “LNBmfllfl i studios. Ever impressed by fame in other and related fields, the movies once were content with the “famous players” idea originally es- peused by Adolph Zukor, who built a movie company (now Par- amount) on that basis. Later Samuel Goldwyn, with no great success, inaugurated his “eminent authors” program only to learn the people who bought silent movies didn't care who wrote them as long as they were good and featured the equivalent of “famous players”—stars created by themselves. The really famous players of Zukor’s day, as it turned out, were not those he imported from the stage but the hitherto unknowns developed on the then flickering screens of the nickeldeons—Mary Pickford, Florence Lawrence, Charlie Chaplin, !lined the highway from the old put-out of 3.400 “horses,” driving |cannery to the Auk Bay store and|the ship at a top speed of 190 miles | straggled off into driveways, turn-| an hour and 150 miles an hour |outs and the Loop Triangle, waited | cruising speed. The wings span 118 | through the mosquifoes and frc-lrcec 2 inches and as halibut and | quent showers to see the final land- | salmon fishermen would say, “She’s |ing at 8:30 o'clock. 68 feet from stem to stern and | Survey Flight Only | looks like she’d be pretty geod in | Anderson, long faced over this|a sea.” | blow to months of publicity work,| Next Flight—Fares | declared, “We can't tell the public| Next Thursday, June 20, the first of Juneau how sorry we were that|scheduled mail flight will be in- the fact wasn't gotten over sooner | augurated, to be followed Monday. T R S1. Ann's Sisters Travel; Two Arrive Sister Mary Peter, for many years with St. Ann's Hospital, sailed for the south yesterday on the Princess Louise t6 make her home in Vie- toria. . 8She was accompanied by Sister | POST OFFICE MAN HERE 10 AID AIR MAIL COVER WORK A. L. Willoughby arrived in Ju- neau yesterday from Ketchikan #bodrd the Alasks Clipper to as- sist in cancellation of first flight covers with the Juneau Post Of- B isti t 3 3 2 |that we were to make the Skag-|June 24, with the first passenger Today's artistic invasion will not affect the screen directly. f 5 . pan fice. Walter Wanger has enlisted the artiststopflight men of the |27 flight, but such was the ori-|[ight. Fares between Juneau and|Ialy Befibiia enc Sster M| willoughby, trom Oskland, Cal, g i ol ! otatd mosds thE Sk ginal plan when he left Seattls.|Seattle will be $95, one way, and |Flofefick, both of whom Will at-| . e o guest at the Baranof Ho- American art world—to paint for exploitation purposes the pictur- ginal plan when we left Seattle.|$171 round trip. fefid simwmer sohool at the Seat- it e gl tle College. Arriving here on the Baranof for a short visit before going fo the esque characters of “The Long Voyage Home.” Their names: James Chapin, Georges Schreiber, George Bid- dle, Grant Wood, Thomas Benton, Robert Phillip, Luis' Quintanilla, This was merely a survey flight to| The clipper will leave Seattle on be executed without formalities and | Mondays and Thursdays, taking we little expected the marvelous|off at 10 am., arriving at Ketchi Seattle-Juneau air route inaugu- ration are dispensed with, Raphael Sayer, Ernest Fiene. While these artists daubed with paint, the cameras on a set were recording scenes for “Foreign Correspondent,” Wanger s which in fury of wind and water were reminiscent of “Hurricane.” PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT [ ] sTop at PERCY'S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Juneau is talkin about. TRY OUR !’OUI? TAIN, TOO! A transport air liner, adrift on “waves” created by cascading tons | |have made it possible for us | their loyalty and interest.” | countered rain and low ceiling near | Ketchikan and also at Juneau, but | officials of the line and Govern- reception we received at the bay.|kan at 3 p.m. remaining there a Even in my home state of Cali-|half hour, taking off at 3:30 for fornia is lifeblood, and everyone is|Juneau and arriving here at 5:10. booster, we couldin't have fornd The return flights to Seattle will such evidence of mass pride in the|be made on Tuesdays and Fri- achievement of progress. Alaskans|days. to| Passengers and créw left thelri bring this service to them and you hotel rooms early this morning can be sure that we appreciate|for Auk Bay and were expected to |get away for the return - trip to | Seattle ‘sometime during the day. Those aboard the clipper were as follows: Capt. 8, E. Robbins, Capt. Jerty Jones, Second Offiocer L. Bisbe¢, Third Officer, Muifay Stuart, Fourth Officer, Gene Mey- | pg ring, Engineering Officer, Jack Eagan, Radio Officer, Dave Wil- Iliams, Supérnumerary, O. J. John- son, Chief Steward, H. LaPorte, Second Steward, J. Anderson, Gen- eral Manager of PAA in ‘Alaska| Joe Crosson, Superintendent of .| Operations, J. H. Craine, sunenn-l tendent of Communications, R. J. Gleason, Supérinféndent of Mlln-‘ Flight North | The flight north from Seattle began in beautiful weather, en- East were Sister Mary Abigail, from the Nulato Indian School, and Sis- ter Mary Sidona, from Holy Cross. ¥ B INTERNAL REVENUE MEN VISIT SKAGWAY The Bureau of Internal Revenue office hiere will be closed next week duting the absence of Deputy Col- lector Wesley C. Overby and Inves- flgl‘or Miles Price, who left for M)‘ today on the steamer mmm AND WIFE RETURN HOME Archié Shiels, President of the Pa- cifi¢ American Fisheries, and Mrs. Shiels, left on the steamer Baranof for their home in South Bellingham IVER ANDERSON AND FAMILY HERE Iver Anderson, Supérintendent in charge of construction work at Sitka and Kodiak for the Siems Drake Puget Sound syndicate of contract- | ors, was a visitor in Juneau during | the stay of the steamer Denali. Anderson, with his wife and three children, are making the roundtrip | on the Dcmli to SIm;my and Sitka. MRS. L. H: MEVIGAR, SON RETURN 10 HOME | Mrs. L. H. Metzgar returned here | last evening on thé steamer Denali. | She was accompanied by her son Frank, who was graduated this year from Notre Dame. ->e COMPLETE Room Cleaning Outfit A Super-High Powered Cleaner with Dozens of Uses 500-Watt super high powered G-E HERE'S WHAT of water from chutes over the studio “tank,” was being buffeted by tenance, M. H. McDowell, Traffic|after & brief visit to Juneau. Mr. MRS. HELLENTHAL BACK Motor % YOU GET! the artificial fury. | Department representative, H, Wil- | Shiels intends to return in August, — . T‘l‘:“:z:' bag for larger filtering 1. Air-flo Cleaner The “passengers” clambered over the fuselage and wings, many liam Bernhard(, Public Relations,| Wheti he will continue on to the| Mrs. Simon Hellenthal returned © Use for cleaning rugs, bare floors, ; f‘,‘i‘::,:::nm of them to be swept overboard. Even on the sidelines, sprayed and | J. A. Anderson, Airport Engineer Wm“l" here last cvening on the steamer linoleum. 7 tubes blown along with Joel McCrea, Laraine Day, Herbért Marshall and Frank McKenzie, CAA ebservers A Denali. She spent a brief visit in ® For cleaning upholstery, draperies, 4. Rug Nozzle the rest, you eould appreciate why “doubles” were being used for [Bryan Jacobs, Thomas Lurry, Oli- | Todayluwswday M he Emmre e Smmfl P * For T«:'iar‘s?i'udiamu, books, clothes, :, {m:’:’;'{-ml the long shots. About the only solid, unshaken item on the set ver Rosto, Lt. Cmdr. George Has- £l SN | amps. For mattresses, bedding, automobile 7. Radiator Tool appeared to be the director, Alfred Hitchcock, who was well [ | fclmsn and Om@r. 8. 5. Morme «of ® For ot 8. Dusting_Brus s el etk b 3 e | the Navy, Col. Lothia Smith of the| ITS TIME TO | interiors. s+ D anc y ge g % Afmy, Lieut. €. T. McDidtmid, of| A G Y ® Spe ;J,uyu attachment for wax- 10. Glass : " |the Coast Guard, J. C. Smith of CH N E OUH ing floors ; Deodorizer David Butler has a fi r rts is f o Attachment for power demothing 1. s a finger in sports enterprises ranging from the U, S. Wéather Bureau, md' sy o 1 Demo(h “fl horse racing fo a “piece” of a local fighter, and he'll tell you why: “Once I had a check for $10,000 written out to buy a block of Santa Anita stock. Will Rogers told me the track would never go, and several ethers told me abeut a track going up in Culver city. Everybody said the Hollywood crowd would take in races at Culver City in preference to Pasadena—so I tore up my check. “The stock I would have bought then would be worth about $50,000 today. Since thén, I've bought everything. 100000 | { | | from Ketchikan, Bon Wright, of| | Ellis Air Trahsport and A. L, Wil-| | loughby of the Post Officé De-| partment. [ er from Westport, at 4:10 o'clock | —o— ‘ } Subscribe to The Daily Alaska| Empire—the paper with the largest paid circulation,” R Rt > Clark Gable md Vivien Leigh in “Gone with the Wind"” | SHOWING. AT CAPITOL | THEATRE—June 2§, 26, 27 HEAVIER | LUBRICANIS! | CONNORS MOTOR COMPANY (LUBRICATION e PP Pr PP PP rrirrirrrrrorrrrrrrrererererrerresr) PFULL OENERAL BLECTRIC GUARANTEE Alaska Eleectric Light & Power Co. PHONE 61§

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