The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 27, 1940, Page 3

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SATURDAY, JULY 27, lhul\ Crossword Puzzle THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MOOSETO HAVE ONE BIG NIGHT August 3 30s 29th Anniver- sary - Ball Team as | Special Guests WS AND*THMELATEST NE Midnight Preview 1:15 A. M. Tonight nda; Preview Tonight 1:15 A. M. Matinee Sunday 2:00 P. M. = esfialready elling for a tmnger bottlei Moose Lodge ——_—— : 45 | £ 74 i o n ¢ ML A g N i i 1 1 s t e i Lloyd Douglas’s ? . o be invite par e i @ ERD] 535 Ow y ghtl " Cosmopolitan 3 . b 3 yi. on an " s : 2 Brag Star. Ave Novel Comes i : g ¢ PR A . : E BORZAGE'S GREATEST ACHIEVEMENT ¢ i ANO II[R \ r, L I P AY Baiol i ’ 1, ‘and several members of Paramount pr DEfiPUTED PASSAGE" with DOROTHY LAMOUR - AKIM TAMIROFF ‘u“N HWMRD * WILLIAM COLLIER, Sr. A FRANK BORZAGE Production + Directed by FRANK BORZAGE Based on the Novel by Lioyd C. Dougles who are were farewell. hour Miss two' selec- ainied at the Davis. played Order States, tainbow for th called .\tran;zc As It May Seem % WILLIAM x :C. AUBREY A L s ul,atest News of the Day h,n Man son 'PUULSEN SM.LTH ' 5,' s Bt izsg Sunday of the lun ifmann accom 1eon sang LAST TIMES TONIGHT HOLIDAY—TWO BRIGHT BOYS FIRST SHOW STARTS 7 P, M. Holiday Runs Only Once—Slarts 8:20 P. M. URIE % VIRGINIA HUTCHINSON “GREY ‘AM" Ann Lois Dav for the mmunity sing- 0'!‘ yp Mayeripitture Powell William ailed a and Myrn fair were members 1th Kun- Bar- long for the af committee h Tuck — " LAST TIMES TONIGHT “Everyhody’s Hobby" and “Danger Flight” popular “Mr. and N come to the Capitol Tt er, R Dori: and Hermann - ing" Sunday in “A Man,” third of the > - ..|IIIl"lI!IlIIIIHIIIIlIIIleIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllhlllIIIIIII!IllII'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII!iIIIh " Ho“ or Dinner” Is Held Young Republicans Pay Respects fo Bondy and Convention Delegates pire. Classifieds Pay to raise money for the "DISPUTED PASSAGE” | \uciicc chinese people. Berore BROUGHT T0 COLISEUM |2, o ove = ™ S(REEN TH|S SUNDAY amiroff learns of their intend- ed marriage and exclaims that his | protege’s career will be ruimed. At rank alongside the|® private appointment he tells Miss all medical stories, the|Lamour that her husband-to-he picture, “Disputed | Will never be great if he marries. Passage,” will be brought to the creen of the Coliseum Theatre| tonight in an exciting tale of the A man cannot follow two lives and be a genuine scientist. He must world of science. Based on the best- selling novel by Lloyd C. give himself to one or the other. Ending tonight is the film “Every- author of such movie hits as * | Maghificent Obsession” and “The | body’s Hobby.” Green Light” the picture «l«:m‘lortu E E more with a doctor’s attitude to- wards his practice than the practice itself | Akim Tamirott nas a trole he | can sink his powerful bicuspids in- | Dr. Jules B. LUILu& director of the experimental farm at Peters- burg, came in on the Baranof this to as a world-famous lwurnhlulr.tl publican delegates to the N T o i b % % | surgeon who scorns all things out- morning from Seward and left al- mopt immediately by plane for convention in Philadelphia is mysteriously slain on hi | side the realm of pure science,| Sitka. From there he will go to f\n.r ert 8 3 : : White, Mrs. Albert White oy i ‘ This trenchant viewpoint reacts| Petersburg and then come (o Ju- Nitional .lnm:u! estate, Nick r‘J ‘ Cemmittewoman; Henry Benson, | HggUan. ot I m | strongly upon the lives of John| counsel to the delegation; it 4 Howard, brilliant student at the‘ neau and make a trip to Haines and Skagway. A. Ras. €ven Nora's curiosity musen, Republican National Com- ter of her and.she ¢ medical college headed by Tami- itteeman, Charles McCarthy and 1d on Dorothy Lamour, an n girl brought up in China. While in the westward, Dr. Loftus visited Anchorage. e 2 Mrs. E. E. Rebertson. Sam Dukor was toastmaster and Howard meets Miss Lamour when he is called to operate on Subscribe for The Empire. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coont. July 27.—A column of Havana Congress HOLLYWOOD, Cal, names and a column of figures. Big names, big figures. Colossal figure: report’ of incomes—for 1938, this time. Louis B. Mayer made more than $600,000 and topped every- Claudette Colbert made more than woman. Shirley Temple still The annual federal Deserving hody else in the country. greatest of $400,000 and surpassed every other | new Paramount was making more than the President. It got talked about in Holywood, too, just as it did over your own dinner table — if you had a dinner table, and if you didn't Tl bet it got taiked about plenty. and Club The members of the Juneau : Douglas Young Republican e held a splendid session in the pro-sea Pk sl Room of the Baranof last night at by the b an “honor dinner.” AieRaig The affair was given in s o A. O. Bondy, of Fairbanks, e lican Divisional Committ ns are blasted when Col e Division, and the Re- i . 4 ] - the Fourth on Mackav AAARaRL o ; ‘ ; | In Hollywood you heard comments like these: Well, if that guy is worth $600,000 I'm cock-eyed — and I AM cockeyed. Hey, waiter”” “I don't begrudge Mayer's take. After all, keeps the plant going and did the organizing and does the main worrying.” “They oughta publish how much the movie people pay in taxes as long as theyre publishing what they make—and let the public know what they put out in charity, in helping relatives, in spreading employment.” “And what they put out for race horses, too, eh?” “Well, even race horses spread employment.” “It's the big money stars that get me. Theyre lucky—they just happen to be the way they are, and because they’re that way and are given the benefit of the best writers, the best directors, the best cameramen, and the work of a thousand people behind PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT he’s the boy who . bore 0 honor of % 1 illiam % ; ‘ ‘ Repub- inves Nic v Thir uing Man her dives baby re: besides entertainment features, from New Yo ot Sophie Harris in songs, accompanied and overseeing -a hilarious the nerves of her injured arm. by Mrs. A. M. Uggen, and also songs Party given fn honor of Ni o ‘leabhs. fhat: ahe Rissamknnide by the latter, the following made re- b» his ‘unurr\\m]rl :lh(‘ Ao of “ha pnxulls i marks during the dinner: deduces his way _ 3 R e il | Henry Benson, a report on the traps the criminal in typi Republican Territorial conventirn | Charles fashion held at Sitka July 18 and July 19.) Ending tonight is the Benson is Secretary of the Repub- | turc “Holic and lican Central Committee. Boy Steve Vukovich, candidate for the Territorial House, spoke on his can- didacy. Ed Garnick, Precinct Committee- | man, gave some amusing incident on his voyage to Sitka where he |attended the convention. | Howard D. Stabler, Divisional friend. to the MAY WE TOOT A few we ""We Guarantee Everything We Sell and Do.” - OF COURSE — INCLUDES * double fea- “Two Bright ago in this same space we said: sTopP at PERCY’'S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Juneau is talking about. TRY OUR FOUN- TAIN, TOO! - o - Carol Robertson Refurning Here 1 : ) Miss Carol Robertson, daughter of ¥ 3 Committeeman for the First Divis-| .0 iar. " po @ B Aartnh s k i 2 # |ion, highlighted the Sitka conven-| .. . . S sheahto waio tion ax?d announced he was man- L‘l““'"“” here on the steamer North | gooretary General lager of Vukovich’s campaign: e | Luis M. Zuberbuhler E. E. Engstrom, Chairman of the with his attractive wife ‘f]fig‘(‘;‘v’f&k?:‘;“::“.CI’)"‘)'I'I"’.‘;"(;" i the United States, opened Sunday, ‘Central Committee. |" Donald Lister, President | Young Republicans of Ala y | briefly on club organizations. ~—Women In The News Albert White gave the highlights of the Philadelphia convr»ntvm I A You Can Take Summer Two Ways |l P S e apeee l!qm: : {and the advancement of Juneau and | % ; / R : L T A ' is shot — perhaps permanently. There'll have to be some changes. |the hospitality of the Juneau peo- p LAZILY ¢ " Maybé one will eliminate producers, as Ben Hecht (hopefully) | ple. 1\‘{,. T .’c Turbuw suggests. Maybe the day of the high-priced star is over. She’ll | "There were about 40 in attendance | 3 take what she can get or they won't take her. Theyll use a at the “honor dinner.” 1 Camera Wm'th? newer favorite who won't cost'so much — if they can make the 2 R O - — i e newer one a favorite. 1 7 s E & have " over (R i [} Maybe (and this is what Walter Wanger foresees) there’ll FEllowsH'p IouR the boathouse, 3 just be fewer pictures, better prepared, no more double features, i men Woll, * HERE ON SATURDAY e GALE REFRIGERATORS That beautiful new refrigerator sold at unbelievably low prices and on terms that .xllqgv,gou to pay as you save, |RICE& AHLEBS CO. | | | i THIS them they're rolling in dough — and think they did it.” (This from a star-hater, or did you guess?) Well, they get big dough—but it doesn’t last. They're washed up in a few years ,and the government takes most of it as it comes in. They can have it — I'll take my desk.” “Whaddyamean, stars don’t work? Colbert put in a day’s work that would feaze a dime-store girl and nmke a truck-horse turn pale — when she works.” “Claudette says herself it won't be that way next time. hasn’t worked enough.” of the Pan-American Conference in Havana, Cuba, Argentine diplomat, is pictured in Havana The conference of the July 21. For the past several months Miss o Robertson has been attending school | in_Washington, D. C. Americas, including ot “PHORE 34 peE of the Third and Franklin She 5,|)ulll' Hollywood has talked about it, pro and con. There are a lot of pros-and a lof of cons. And the general feeling is that the golden days are going, going, gone. The foreign market | VB { Well, | | th that much to someone who to take it without usually for too and a Hollywéod that's paid on a strict percentage basis. That may "llllllllllIIIIII"IIIIIIHIIIIIHIIIIMIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII||IIIlllllllllllllllllll" way a producer, a star, a writer would get appxox:macely his true worth at the box-office. But if you think that's peanuts you've only to remmeber Mae West — who turned down a percentage deal on “She Done Him Wrong” and lived to regret it. Or Dustin Farnum, 'way back in the early days, who sneezed at a share in “The Squaw Man” which would have left him in clover the rest of his life. There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising « Next Saturday a Fellowship Tour is due here on the steamer Yukon. the Rev. David Wagzoner. | The Interdenominational Mission- ary Society, composed of women of | | all denominations in the city, will meet next Monday afternoon at 2 " lo'clock in the Methodist parsonage to arrange a program for the mem- bers of the tour party. —— - | | The Daily Alaska mpire guaran- The tour is under the direction of | head girl keep | tees the largest daily circulation of any Alaska rewspaper. i LABORIOUSLY Claire Ferrier, of the Que- bee Alpine club, Canada’s only mountain- climbing organ- ization, Mt. Baldy, in the Laurent 7 tackles ns, cool. T owledge. A Camera in- would quickly re- if your camera were or damaged or destroyed r cause. Doesn’t Phone for details. your k > or oth uch. SHATTUCK AGENCY Office—New York Life Telephone 249 BRI 60 v Tt 0

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