Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES "MIKADO' IS BIGFEA ]f'. STABTS Tfl'\lm!{ .J Red haired and fiery.., fresh hom Broa dway loolhglm ...she’l enoug to drive a college man to gold fish! with LANA TURNER RICHARD CARLSON ARTIE SHAW AND HIS SWING BAND! ANN RUTHERFORD M-G-M PICTURE M UP [ the Desert e SA 3?‘ ECISCAN 7wy @ FRTEN] = "y & SHORTS wonierer o “DANCING CC-ED” | SAN IS NOW ONSCREEN | ARRESTED UNDER AS CAPITOL I m,mum LAW Lana Turnei, Richard Carl- Brown Bear Skin Ship .._ae son Co-Starred in Out HHlegally-Ple Film Here Guilty by Proxy “Dancing Co-Ed,” which tonight at Capitol Theatre, i a parade of youth, romance, comedy d glamour, with Artie W ing the band. Featuring Lana Turner and Rich- ard Carlson with the Swing Z comedy with music is keycd Lo not onl ny u 1 eac open The law 1 Franc Ramb n r an Pacea f R e cin illegall an Passes Awa the from Al Ramb 1 but crand entertainment, for tho w nothing about jitterbug less. It is the ingenious story of tion picture agent who se wdeville (Lana Turner) lege as d then an- contost to b Mer nt " is one of many and . regu taxidermist a mo- nation, hoofe a plant nationwide ica's greatest dancin: her he send, a collegc Ann Rutherfor for her. Then up W o c nounce find Am ed. With bred secretary to, take her he follows them £haw's band for the col the little hoofer falls in love a college newspaper cditor (Ric ard Carlson) who has her napped on the night of the test when he learns who she is and why she is there. The result jpg. is that the secretary wins the dance L contest and likewise the chance to star in Hollyweod. But a commerciall ->o > EQUALIZATION BOARD MEETINGS COMTINUE ans con- rd will contir row at the City H begin o'cle ast night the Board hears protests and procecded th property list alphabeti ROMANTIC TAFFETA BACK | - o rvinsula is Left and center, Maw Lane; right, Marion Shockley Taffeta with its romantic rusumg is back again in the style picture. The season’s most popular in- novation is this silk in smart checks. At the left above Rosemary Lane models a resort' dress with a full, flared skirt in black and white. The blouse is white linen trimmed with lace. Center, Rose- bow of self material at either side, and the bias- cut skirt is stitched below the waist. The off-the- face chapeau is a turban of rough black straw with flaring veil. Marion Shockley, radio star, rvea!rsflat s!roe:hsuit in brown and white, the skirt n taffeta, with a white silk blouse, a mary is wearing an afternoon dress also in blac] modified version of the coachman’: qc 3 h:a:fiza:‘" o:; and white and checked. Tt is accented with tufts | the 1880 period, and brown doeskin wedges to of yellow_and red yam.3The neckline has a flat | mgtch the hat.; ’?E!B\ R Charle funer ecight width daily-Crossword Puszle Oarsmen . Diminishes Biblical garden Unit of work 1 158 point . Scarlet Armor for the head of 49. Genus of the fan vil- com- Inity. ¢8. Smal; table a war horse Photographic instruments . Kin¢ of dye . Mark of & wound . Not easily compre=- hended or defined Put new bot- toms on shoes . Force . Large stream Ghost Auction Sacred image . First book of the Bible: abbr. 7. Historical el hog Ancient Greek ort city 5. Tirice: prefix 6. Ancient Jew- ish_ascetio i ds for Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle },1 56. Shri It 58. One who 3 anoints Rut 8. F‘(purm\ennl workshop: collog. . Persia . Courtyard a house . Refined Wishes 19. Tall coarse [ stem ol asting bars 3. Answer 5 Dinner course . Distributed the cards A trite of Israel '(OUPLE MARRIED AT QUIET SERVICE HERE LAST NIGHT Cecilia Rowe Becomes Bride of Joseph Brewitt Catholic Church ne sel daugh- M which allays 30. pain Legion Auxiliary -lects Delegates re Last Night eve- Aux- n zion mvention to e cre next month delegates in- Florence Muteh, ! Davenport G. Ds h Davis, Doll Hag Lucile e Pe Ruth Ted Those elected as The reetory of the of the Nativity was the ected by Miss Cecilia Rowe ter Mr. and Mrs. E. R of South Prairie, Wash., for her mar- riage last evening to Mr. Joseph A4 Brewitt, son of Dr. and Mrs. J. A, Brewitt of Tacoma The wa 8 grclock Rev Vh A with sage the bride Mary cnly bhie v cor up rman and of Ve Marian Adna Helen Aile remeny by the e % ur colored dr ker suit iite sories and a cor- of gardenias was selected by her wedd md Mi Jane Blaser of attlh her attendant, wore a frock of na with matching accessories of pink rose i acce. and re and sweel P ViR iR, HAMPION, TWO &MPM‘?O“{S LERVE (5o 10 VISIT WESTWARD i Mr: Tacoma tant Di- Columbia rritorie everal U. S. (eller for th The apartment was b and Mr. present for Blc Blowe also Mr. Irving t mai, were arrived here "from terday on the steamer Mr, Brewitt came to this months ago and 1s B. M. Behrends Bank. weds have taken an the Hillerest - - STRANGER 1§ VISITOR; ON uth Hampton, A { the Division of Island Posse: artment of the Inte teamer Columbia tc on her first trip to Alaska Hampton was accompanied Bess Beach of Washington, Miss Estella Drapei, Sec Gov. Ernest Gruening, was enger on the Columbia R - newly at ft o xtend her 1 tary tc also a pa Hoszitar NoTES e ey | LOBIDIR Fred Lewis and rram mecicat care o st anns mos- | Wife Again Stop in Juneau Harbor The luxury . Stranger, owned by retired rancher Capt. Fred Lewis, arrived in Juneau this noon and is berthed at the City Dock. The Stranger, fitted out for ocean- ographic research, has been in Ju- neau on a number of occasions. Last July the vessel visited here enroute | pita wre today Govern- medical at Admitted for Marjorie Benson Hospital the ment rancis Marvin and her baby s dismissed from the Gov- hospital today. P Mrs son ernment | After receiving medical treatment, |H. McKinley was dismissed 003y {0 Bering Sea, from the Government Hospital. From Barrow, Capt. Lewis took - his eraft back to Honolulu and then | Lily Johns was discharged (o Central American waters. Since | Government, Hospital to- May, the craft has been in British | receiving medical care. Columbia and Southeast Alaska | - ~ waters. | Aboard the vessel are Captain and | Mrs. Lewis, and their friends, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Whittier, of Beverly | Mr, Whittier is in the oil business. The Stranger will probably sail | southward tomorrow, the Juneau trip just having been made to give Mrs from the lay after alaska Em- the largest to The Dauy paper with circulation ripe - the anteed pire the | CRUISE HERE DOUGLAS THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 7, 1940. BISHOP 1§ BACK WITH 'THE GOODS' Patrons of B. M. Behrends Promised Big Selec- tion of Merchandise “Juneau patrons will be pleased to learn that an oulstanding ticn of fall and winter merchandise ymen and children, has besides a fine furnishungs, including curtains, ete) re- hop, mang of Co, 1nc. al trom ms selec- for men, been selected, feiy home sheets, John Bi behrends ALY . L) arry o regu- ng t d on the Columbia over a month in Los nd trip this season despite the tact that rumoss of adveise the Los An tavorable,” and L gdue to these Juneau fter spendin, Angeles, h ¢ repurts many I 1 ther Tk 1elitic les market w very cendit.o buyei greater merchandise her stated U ns ing fu he he sortment, can pr purchased than inany Behrends in the in for paL Licluded in this will be many of he latest styles lnl men, women | 1d childeen’s wear,” he announced ifornia has lots of sunshine, 1 plad to be back in Juneau, neluded, Cs hut 1 he >ee Mrs. Henry Norman Lun(heon Honoree Mr Lo Henry Norman, who Monday on. the McKinley enroute | at Castle Rock,| informal luncheon o'clock this after-| For plans leave (camer Mount to visit relatives Washington, an was given at I noon Mrs. Russell Cook was hostess for the occasion at her apartment | in the Triangle and only a few|—— intimate friends of the honoree were | T~ invted | -+ - | « Miss Budwin Guest Department | ¥ a nuch | avings | PRISON REVOLT SEEN IN PICTURE PLAYING ON COLISEUM SCREEN A powerful drama of men with- out women is Monogram’s thrilling Mutiny in the Big House,” which opens tonight at the Coliseum Theatre. The story of a Jumeaw’s Crcatest Show Value! STAFTS TONIGHT “A MAN OF MERCY CHALLENCES MEN OF MURDIR! prison chaplain, dedicated to the men of every creed who work unsung and un- honored to rebuilt the lives of broken men, “Mutiny in the Big House" is actu based upon fact, | for it is a tribute to Father Pat- rick O'Neil, who risked his life to break up in Canon C Colorado State prison riot in 19 and was awarded the Carnegie Medal for heroism for this deed. “Mutiny in the’ Big House” deals with the every day lives of n behind bars, and describes the scr- ants of the ite who ab the on as well the convicts. Ti o entire story takes place in the pris- * | on, and there o women in the| % | cast. re e Bess Bums Here 2o To Visit Sister, Mrs. G. 6. Brown Miss Bess Burns of Corpus Christi, arrived on the Columbia for weeks visit with her aunt, G. Brown | Miss Burns is Assistant Mannger |of the Corpus Chri branch of Hartford Insurance Company. | - - Enfertain Today For Mrs. Dudley a compliment to Mrs. Mll(ll‘l’fl‘ . who is visiting here with ighter and son-in-law, x| and Mrs. Warren Eveland exas, | few | Mrs. G STARRING CUARLES BICKFORD BARTON_MacLANE ALSO ARTOON NEWS | CRESCENT QUIZ PROGRAM with THE ROYAL ALASKANS LHE STAGE—9:15 P, M. a lunch- con was given this afternoon hy Mrs. | | Minnie Hurley and Mrs. Roy Cm:x-! |gan at the former's residence on Dixon Street. Subscribe w0 The l)ullv Alaska There were eight guests asked Empire—the paper with the largest for the arfternoon, which was speut paic circulation. informally | ZENITH RADINS 3 1941 Models Now on Display REPAIRS and SERVICE 'ka»llNEAU HOTEL Ever; comfu. ¢ made for our guests Al Servce Lilormation Of Honor at Party Miss Theodora Budwin, school teacher who Mrs. Gar- Mrs Honoring a former Juneau s is visiting in this city, rett, W. Nostrand and Wyller were co-hostesses 1 ening with dessert and five table of bridge at the residence of Mrs. trand in the Alder Ter Apartments the evening R. E. Roberts Johnson, | During honors won by Mrs, and Mrs. Maurice ~ - o | SIIKAH FINED FOR KILLING DOE DEER second., | of kill-| out of | Pleading I‘Ill]IV to charges ing a doe and taking a de season, John F. Todd of Sitka was| |fined $75 on the first count and | 1$50 on the second by U. S. Com- missioner W. W. Knight this weck at Sitka. |the Sheldon Jackson School. Arrest was made by Douglas Swanson, Dep- uty Alaska Wlldllh' Ag(‘nt NEWS - JUNEAU RADIO SERVICE l | Phone 464 Bill Hixson PHONE 1C o1 2U ,.|IIIIIIIIIIIIImlIIHliIIIIIilllllllllllhllllll'l llInl.li;E_hllIIIlIIIII'Ihllllllllllllllh Chri: | HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Au football coaches over the counury soon begin (heir anmal 10-week headaches, to let them in on the intallible svetem of Coach Wil- liam Frawley. Good old Bill — game, and this is his usually include only one ga. e now Bill is coaching at Paci Wayne Morris, and the game - entitled “Touchdown.” Good old Bill's system varies fiom game to game, but it al- ways produces the same resuit® Victo; either by a touchdown or a field goal or a point after touchdown just as the final gun pops. There are various ways to achieve this end, bat the one that never fails is the last-minute nute from the hero's girl-friend in the stands, a note saying all is forgiven and she is his and not the city slicker’s, Once the suustitute races i, wearing this message, the game is in the bag. Frawley's never seen it fail. as the alumni mighl say — never lost a cighth year at it. IUs true hic seasons but the sy tem still woiks. Right Coast 71, his star ball-packer is I mean movie — is propheticaily Hal LeRoy, at the age ¢ meningitis. At seven he tock 1 ficiency of Negro children he on the streegs of Memphis, where his family had moved from his native Cincinnati. Today, a lean, tall, limber-lmbed youth he's one of the stage's top steppers Hollywood has him now for care for the town his last trip ouf, was o cripple from spinal iuncing, spuired by the pro- “Too Many Girls.” He didn't in 1937. He was signed for GROUND 1S BROKEN TH MORNING FOR GYMNA! "JM‘ A dozen men with pick and shovel | were on the job here this morning starting excavations for the new gymnasium foundations. Coveuns,‘ a total of 5100 square feet of ground space there will be plenty of diteh | digging necessary to provide foot- ings for support of the structure which will be of reinforced concrete. R CANNERY MAKE! IIIPMENT The Northland docked here 'his‘ moerning at 10 p'clock and luaded‘ 1031 cases of salmon from the Doug- | las cannery. | An important meeting of Douglas agles is scheduled for tome~ nw | the Wirittiers a look at Alaska's capital. | - >~ REMAINS OF MRS | ). E SMITH ARE ON STEAMER TAKU The remains Of Mrs. J. E. Smith, I known Juneau woman who pasced away Sunday night in a Se- | aitle hospital, are being shipped | for burial on the sl , due to arrive Saturday vening according to Robert Bon- ner, President of the Aerie. . meeting will be in the new hall starting at 8 o'elock. All members | are urged to be on hand - - - TO TENAKEE Four young women of Douglas, Mrs. Jack Warner with her two children, and Misses Elizabeth Fras- er and Impi Aalto expect to leave! on the Esiebeth this evening for m cuting at Tenakee Springs. Mis, Sam Nelson expects to leave cme time during the day by plane for a visit with her mather at Ten- | \lk'(_ angements for funeral services | not yet been made. - - | Uruguay capital punishment. Goes 1 have E N T—_vigorously a third term for PPO posed l‘Dl former Democratic Sen. James A. Reed (above) of Kan- sas City has assumed leadership of some anti-third termers. oP N op! to -~ e Subseripe to 'Whe Daily Alaska F —the paper with the larges anteed CIrculavioh, ‘(J | DOUGLASColiseun | TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY | L WAS A SPY — —l | r The deer was seized and given m; | | PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT sTOP at PERCY'S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunchee that al! Juneau is ‘alking about. TRY OUR FOUN- TAIN, TOO! “Start Cheering” and arrived to learn that nobody knew what his role would he, Al Rozell, the sympatlictic director, didn’t knew either — but thcy invented one. Hal chuckles as he tells one of chose goed Hollywood yarns on himself. “My first day,” he says, “nobedy told me where to go, so T found a stage with a sign over th: door that said ‘Le- Roy and Company' and I went in. They were shooting and T watched them work about an hour and i.en I asked somebody what I was supposed to do. Hi ' know, and I mentioned the sign and seid T was LeRcy. ALa then I tound-oul that the sign meant Mervyn LeRoy, ¢ dJirector, and there I was, a greenhorn, horning ia. ... They didn't let me forget it, you het!” - the producer who bails vnroducers is skimming along through his picture, “Before T Dic.” His record: four days anead of schedule the first weck; saven davs ahead the second week. He is author, director, and actor as well as producer. The acting was an afteri.oughl. Ee sought first Ernst Lubitsch, then "Alfred Hitchcock, tor the role of a itv tramp; when they were “unavailable” Hecht awarded the bif w nimself. He is a little worried however, about this smoothness and speed. He's afraid he should have had a Search. to give his production dignity. Every producer who is any shakes as a pro- ducer has a Search. He figures he ceald :'art a Search, maybe, for Something to Search For. 'lllllIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIlllllIIlllllmmI‘lIlIHIIII!IIIIIIIIHIIIIIlllIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIlII Ben Hecht,