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et Lrbear THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JULY 13, 1940. Dail ros.sword Puz"le v 140 Ab ' 5 ws i oar I i THE CAPITOL has the BIG PICTURES and NEWS that is NEWS % ¥ Sunday Midnight Preview || | E00. . o o Monday gk kil o e (e for STARTS TONIT » % 1 . Character | ST/ S (‘ E T dav THEATRE Matinee | e, : WeSUNY sHOwW PLACE OF JUNEAU SUNDAY—2 P. M. 13, Tisies " s & Starts 1:15 am 14. Pronoun I s or 3 . PTI e | Grown oy Matinee Sunday STARTING SUNDAY — JULY UTH g g 3o o MARCH OF TIME Very hard’va- kR e " o ¢ { quarta . 1 : 2 Sunday Matinee Admissions FEATURING 17, Topaz hum Canadian Pacific stemer Princess | | Preview Tonite ill be " ok S e eh(" CL) (& Guido's lowest Alice from the south, has the fol- will be the ame as those charged ‘anada at War i), g lowing passengers aboard for this for the evening shows. Deon’t Miss I1t—See the New R. C. A. F. g port: His most s Cora Judd, Miss A. E. Sargeant, | - panoa Edna Olson, Mrs. Hector McLean, importonf pic'urel 4= R‘C A Jipmnese [F. Crane and wife, Ralph Coffin, | H :°_ statesman | R. 2. Coughlin, Mrs. L, Popejoy and lis most « | 3 \VHO MADE AME 12 Entortatng T daughter hrilli f A S 9. Geay and ot thrilling performance! | i Minute’ part 3 Prjncely Hai- An immortal drama {: || . wili0 HO[DEN GOES ouT . comb. form of early Americal| | « rouuis ON COAST FLIGHT T response:to i piitarsaiil e it gfi'x‘uf’yr Setn wn‘“ 'I’wo ]‘oDAY ters . . . 20th Century-Fox now 3! [ o o de. fl gme\;::m W Form into 21 mm L presenits your favorite as the star of trasting 4 Llex 1 o) 2 o COE color 46. Three-toed ,DOWN act lox Holden flew oyt to the coast a great dramatic picture from the sloths § oo towethar 3T Acmite today with Jack Rason for Hoonah p § Solution of 47. Donkey * " “bodily, struc- o Solicge omolale ., s, McMilli He was to famous novel read by millions ! Vesterday's Puzzle 45 Article ture 3. Pertaining to Pt S 1 pcticle FE T B o Tiaiian bring in a full load on his return [TANDE] . Old form of vessel ’C ¥ Last night, John Amundsen flew ! Symbol for 6. Biblical char gy’ Hatig no stem | 1illman and her four-year-old son flr:uv: 3 Nnn‘-.’lc\\'!uh 40. Sloping letters who suf ' minor injuries in a fall . Bone of the person 4L Tinged with yebtarda lower leg 8. Landed prop- rose color ; -tday evening, Si s re. . Dry, as wine o moTtes i K:l;p‘"f\dhflld|nk \n.ll(m.x_. (w;\mg_ l‘unnmn, re- | Age . Exclamation 43, Act o turned here with Evelyn Swanson, | . Ch b Ch. ge 64, Make int o > A‘\z‘?“: : :f 4 ."J'*,,Inl‘,”.°ov':' b g;?‘.,.tn}g.;". 1. Smitzer, Walter Reck, Frank | ng . Cowardly i Short fo) Poulls and Bob Fogg from Sitka Judah 9. Native 1h- 1A ; mn'»' X B N b itant of. 5. Droop in'the® |ond Alex Holden brought in Hilda . Meaning Boston s inhiadl Runquist from Hoonah and John | g | Antson from Hawk Inlet [ FUNERAL SERVI(ES MoreFires | s 19 i AlL MAINTENANCE ARE SUNDAY FOR } CREW ARRIVES FROM WALTER SCOTT, JR. In Inferior TAKU, DOROTHY CREEK Last Rifes Will Be Heard af —~ | 1Zenndth Stevenson, Forest Bervice | X : CLAIRE 4 b 1:”"1‘“ “"i‘"" and brush fires ¥¢- |05 foreman, and a crew of two ] kil e . ived here ftoday on the launch | WAYNE TREVOR ' Northern Light Presby- e o S e, o o e ¢ Aaurice SHtith. |00 work in the Taku River, Dor- with 'erlan Chur(h | warden ih this section for the Al o Greek and Taku Harbor areas. kan Fire Control Service, for con- | o “) next m ()hv(») Inlet George SANDERS BKENDA JONCE Funeral sérvices for Walter P. tinued co-operation of miners, camp- | 2 r ers and sportsmen in fire |n' nnilm\ Direcrew uy Roy Del Brian DONLEVY s e, ol yune, et i e ry vk o | JAMESON SERVI(ES ALSO : ~ 4 o Qevening as the result of injuries "-;;:(Il:nl;::illi::,bxlllk» News-Miner of last HElD BY I_EG'ON bl ‘Eaitbor KOI.AND YOUNG'GLADYS GEORGE S H 0 R T S Strange As It May Seem J::Tud L:::xk“ .x‘f‘lllmylxlxl.‘ntl.m;.].‘,‘,{.y“:1 A railroad crew worked 95 man- Alw Kickin’ Katharine Aldridge - Russell Gleason Latest News of the Day George Zueco - Edward Norris - Honry, Kolkes “"BEWARE OF SPOOKS” hours extinguishing a fire at Berg, | 44 miles from Fairbanks. Fire Guard iElllll‘l Turner and Ted Hanson, fore- man of the Fairbanks CCC Camp, Musical Short Sweet Moments News Weeklie mine, will be held tomorrow after-| {noon at 2 o'clock from the North- |ern Light Presbyterian Church American Legion burial services were held today for F. T. Jameson, member of the crew of the steamer Consistently Offering Juneau's Greatest Show Value! LAST TONIGHT NEWS The Rev. John A. Glasse Will| jiuoveq the firefighting Appr .l,[Nmm Sea. Pallbearers were M. H, srgmna, ” W A £ . ¥ i g g. A g A i * wa g e TIMES IT'S ALL YOURS |deliver the eulogy. Vocal tributes | uafi e aeres were burned over be- | S16¢s, Dave Davenport, Bert Lybeck, e s 3 3 will be given by nest Ehler. M“"‘rurc the fire was quelled. The fire- John Clark, John Newman and (Ol“fllM p'('m ‘dmmfluo plcmr_es ,the. day, it Carol Beery Davis will be the or-| fighters reported the blaze was George Gullufsen. Interment was in | ibm\.su; a theme intense in emotional guni,st._ Interment will be in |lm‘m";,,‘| by dumping of a railroad | the Legion plot. | SIARS D'(K GREE“E ‘appvul and deals dix‘lngly with | Masonic Plot of Evergreen Ceme- | i | modern questions in a modern way. ashpan near inflammable growth. 'WAYNE-TREVOR There is no substitute for | tery. eBETaan T J1Eh Fatiatitas 1A | With absorbing realism, “Here I N | ::i}ctivsehp:llbe:\r?: will sxlm:lud:w ,“?::HI::“,“ Ii}l".:ll:lnlll||iI“N:’\‘),'j]:::l‘(;]l‘ L'I::' WRANGE“. SEI“ER | IN Dnl"e FEAIUR A,,; a Sl"mnger; "T: "3; 5:,,1}‘,’ :: | u; ichubert, Thomas Stewar! ited Smel Py | \n oy who reaches e ‘eshol Newspaper Advertising | TEAM PLAYS IN (S50, "o witams i, Stass smeting compars,| FINED FORFISHING | 0 omt o ory or| oo o o il ddeny o il 7 ! M James L. Gray Jr. and Hamy 1| fanfoad speeder for a spot. five miles Al Sm‘" MOUTH ,,,(,,,(.," nn- that's ‘,.,L of the beaten & xtmngeri in the ;’i‘:}:d };e h;.u .. SUNDAY DRA A bela il Grouin's Ranch 4. Mi R s o e T Honorary pallbearers will be 456, ‘| Duncan Robertson, Frank Metzgar, | between his = superficial fhreshold of his greatest opportun- | conflict Meanwhile, a third fire w re-| The seiner C(l”l'l ¢, Captain Clyde Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbia Coons. July 13.—Preducer Ben Hecht sat at his today and wondered what movie producers find to do with their time. He went even further than wondering. “The time'll come,” he said, propping his slippered feet on the desk and puffing at his cigar, “when there’ll be no more producers in the picture busines: When a little more bad luck HOLLYWOOD, Cal,, office desk comes to the business, they’ll be done away with. It won't be easy, since the producers will have to fire themselves, but it'll come, ', 5 Hecht, large and puckish and very good-humored about the whole thing, seemed to be doing fis best to look like a caricature of a producer, even to his blue sports shirt, his loudly striped socks, and the told felt hat he kept on his head. But his office didn't look busy. The walls weren't covered with production charts, and no secretaries and offie boys popped in with breathless messages. There wasn't even a book on the bookshelves. There was one phone, and it didn’t ring more than once. it should be remembered, has long had it in for producers in general. He is producing and directing his own story, “Before T Die,” and Doug Fairbanks, Jr. his star, associate producer. “As a producer,” Hecht said, “I've already given a story anhd a director, and that's all there is to it, Producer Hecht, is also myself Doug has even PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT sTorp at PERCY'S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Juneau is talking about. - TRY OUR FOUN- TAIN, TOO! less than I to do. Yesterday we had big doin’s. Had to choose a tootsie for a dance sequence. Doug rushed to the studio, and 1 joined him, and we chose one. Then we went home—nothing more to do: “Having worked at a writer under at least 20 producers, I think 90 per cent of them might as well be dropped in the Pacific Océan. Then we’d get pictures a lot better that cost half as much. As a writer I've always fought to keep the gonfalon of ihe writers at least somewhere in sight. If books were produced as movies are, the most important name on théin would be the printer’s. My hamminess demands more attention.” Hecht, whose previous producing has been done in New York where he put out “two good ones” (“The Scoundrel” and “Crime Withoyt Passion”) and “two bads ones” (“Once in a Blue Moon” and ‘Jeaw the Rich”) says working in Holyweod fs tougher on the egs—there are too many people around who know miore about pictwe-making than' he does. 5 /‘Before I Die” is the story of a group of people on a rainy night in New York City. Hecht is fond of rain, savs it makes people look run down at the heel and more intimate. The action of the film is concenttated within 10 hours and .most of the sets are decidedly non-colossal. "lllllllllll|IIIIIIIImfllllmlfllflflIIIIlIlIlIlIIIIllllllllllfllllllllllllllllllllmmll" Bruee Brown, Joseph McLean, Wil- liam Kiloh and Jack Fowler. Friends may view the remains| ‘Ithis evening between 7:30 and 10| o'clock ‘at the Charles W, Carter Mortuary. porfed by Pilog Bill Knox as sight- ed fiye miles above Harding Lake on the east side of hte Salcha River. The fire was believed to be covering an area of less than a half-mile square when sighted. Alaskan Fire Control Service staff men are in- vestigating the cause and damage. PLAN “FISHEROO” ke eeadhis g pintes J Allegheny Uprising’ Is at | Capitol - March_of j Time Featured The heroic story of an intrepid {band of frontiersmen who strug-| gled valiantly against the on-| The Tanana Valley Sportsmen’s . ’ slaughts of treacherous Indlxn]As.soclnuon is making arrangements| Subscribe to Tne Daily Alaska tribes, is contained in RKO Radio’s | for a gigantic “fisheroo” to be held Empire—the paper with the larges >+ spectacular epic, “Allegheny Upris-| at Summit Lake early next month. pald circulation, ing,” which opens Sunday at the| TRy e Capitol Theatre, starring Claire | Trevor and John Wayne. The story | has to do with the revolt of Penn- | sylvania colonj against His Ma- jesty’'s Army—a vital event in Am- erican history that prefaced the Revolution, “Canada at War,” latest March| of Time, also comes to the screen of the Capitol Theatre tomorrow. | In this timely issue, the March “of Time pictures the whole sLoryl of the national war effort of the| Canadian people today. The film shows the activities of each branch ;of the Dominion's military serv- iices—Army, Navy, and Air Force; | the organization of Canada’s rapid- | ly-expanding industries to meet the | {country’s war needs; and many other phases of Canadian partici- pation in the war, | Ending tonight is the double fea- | ture “Beware Spooks" and “It's All Yours” R 5E|Ieen McDermott | Is Honored Guest An 11:30 c’clock luncheon, a serles , of games and a matinee featured the | thirteenth birthday today of Miss {Eileen McDermott. The affait was given at the home of her parents,| Mr. and Mrs. F. E. McDermott in | | the Frances Apaftmerits, Her guests were Misses Dorls Jean | | | | | Norman, Contjie and Pat Davis, Gloria Gullufson, « Jean Tucker, Katherine Peterson and Doloras | Zinck. ‘Williams Family | Wil Take Cruise Mr. und Mrs Vi B Wulhml and- Mr. and Mrs, Chester Williams are leaving tomorrow on the gasboat Jerry for a week’s cruise to Warm Springs Bay and, that district. The couples plan to return here | 'a week from tomorrow. While on (their trip they plan .to do trout | fishing and seek bear pictures, ¥ Sheldon of Wl.mgc]l was charged this week by the Bureau of Fish- eries with fishing in a restr area in Whitewater Bay, On a plea of guilty, the hoat w:m fined $240. PR . R MRS. McLEAN RETURNING Mrs. Hector McLean who has been | ity in his first starring. role and a great supporting cast—such is 20th Century-Fox's. new drama wmmg Sunday to the Coliseum, “Here I Am a Stranger,” | Richard Dix and Brenda Joyce fea- |tured in a cast including Roland Young, Gladys George and others. Adapted under the supervision world of wealth and sham and a new world of things that are real, he is torn and hurt by life, until | he meets a girl as new to love as wm;‘ln- is himself. PESBRNES ™ 5T S Sa LA, ELI RADOVICH DIES Eli Radovich, 77, resident of the south for some weeks is a returning of Darryl F. Zanuck from the novel | Interior for almost two-score years, passenger aboard the Princess Alice.|read by millions, this film is des-|pnnc1pnlly at Manley Hot Springs, - Subscribe for The Empire. | tined to start a new motion picture cycle and is itself one of the most| At Sivils’ famous roadside restaurant in Houston, Texas there are 100 smiling girls who serve you and they will tell you that sands of coast-to-coast touris! Chesterfield is the cigarette that satisfies thous pleasure . FOR COOL MILD GOOD SMOKING CHESTERFIELD IS AT NOUR SERWCE'®) 5 ;dled recently in Fairbanks as the result of heart disease, sold just say "Chflm #'please” and you're on:your- way . to complete smoking + « always -at.your: service with the Right Combi- navion of the world’s -best aua- rette tobaccos. . Chesterfield’s blend aad the way they burn, make Chesterfield America’s Bufie.vt C'igarefte J