The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 30, 1940, Page 2

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, AUG. 30, 1940. {Menton, now in prison [ ‘ | and cthers of loaning Manton $30,-| ¥ | U. S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE, WEATHER BUREAU © THE WEATHER OMPANIES ARE | Showers with d not much change temperature tonight and Satur- lowest temperature tonight about 50 degrees; moderate southeast receiver to the Skouras chain | Manton, serving a two year term for selling justice to defendents, | . o M o pleaded innocent Stumpers for the Willkie-McNary 1 g GRANDJURY 5 SO A Hokat 1n_the Blsthd RV béeh ah Charged with Conspiracy ™ Forecast for Southeast Aisska: showers over the mortn por- | nounced as approved by £ i f | tion, and rain over the south portion tonight and Saturday; not e MRS AMUNDSE | et muson and Margaret E, White of ERE to F|X Imefsm'e a"d For‘ much change in temperature; moderate south to ecasterly winds ex- _J ] B the Republican National Commit-| Twenty-four passengers arrived . . cept fresh over sounds and strai's and over Lynn Canal. ) Fox Theatre Owner Accus- | i All Occupants of (:nppled S th Fatieali’ o the WteMthel Mbrtn{ . CHIN Commerce Prices Forecast of winas along the coast of the Gulf of Alaska:r | i o BACK IN JUNEALJ 3 Those who will be officially’ Sea early this morning from Seat- _— Moderate to fresh southeasterly winds will prevail along the entire by ed of Bflblflg Circuit | Bomber Bail Qut stamped as GOP Presidential ticket tle and Southeast Alaska ports NEW YORK, Aug. 30—In what Gulf coast except winds are expected to become strong easterly Lo- "D ! ¢ talkers for the Alaska Republican| Arrivals were Mrs. J. A. Amund- Federal prosecutors fermed the most, night in the vicinity of Dixon Entrance. Court Judge S Aadaan Te MR o fo Safefy Party will be Frank Foster and|son, David Amundson, Janice important National Defense indiot- LOCAL DATA the North Sea this momning W ith| Sam Duker of Juneau, and George| Amundson, Mrs. C. E. Lochrie, Wi- ment yet to be returned, the spec- Time Barometer T1emp. Humidity Wind Velocity =~ Weather 3 s : her two n:hmhm after a visit n T Grigsby of Anchorage. nona Adams, James Solde, Tony'ial U. 8. Grand Jury indicted the 4:30 p.m yesterday 29.75 54 % E 12 Showery e NEW YORE 30. — George tle with her parents. KALAMA. Wash. Aug. 30—Al| 'Atforfiéys who have been ndwed|Délsarito, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Ddo-|General Electiie: Comipily ~&hd| 4:30 am. today ... 20.78 52 80 SE 10 Cloudy L Skouras, part ( B e e i - tlters who balled out of | to Tepresent the ‘Alaska party are|little, Alberta Carlson, Albert Carl-|Krupp Ccmpany Essen on tharges| Noon today 20.77 55 66 ESE 12 Cloudy o \ain of SRey motion pic- | fller, met s fumily at Pelershurz, |, = gined homber in| Joseph Stearns of Ketchikan, son, Mrs, A. Carlson, Pat Park- of conspiracy to (ix prices to re- RADIO REPORTS re theatres i the country, Was|having flown tuere yesterday with}, o wac here today were | Albert White, of Juneau hurst, Mrs. Mabel Newman, J. W. sirain interstate and foreign com- | TODAY - ndicted today by the Fe ‘H‘("'"““‘Bw Bllis |1 4 uninjured It is said these appointments are | Wheeler, Mrs. J. W. Wheeler, J. E. mercc cf hard metal composition, Max. tempt. Lowest 3:30am Precip. 3:30am. Ay, CL ospREing: Jo L Soeger - i e PR eisht men parachuted to|in commection with Hatch Act in-| Boyle, John Magquire, K. V. Stevens, tools and dies Station Jast 24 hours | temp. 24hours Weather ok U. B. Circult Court Judge Maitin Emprme ciassifieds bimg relld | uafety after the bomber's motor | vestigations in Alaska. J. M. Fulgencio, John Amundsen r et A Barrow 3 0 Cloudy - - f | — - - | Dorothy Larson, Harvey Scott, D. MRS. GODFREY ON Fairbanks | 0 Cloudy bomber, belonging to the|cois N. A, Davis and D. T, DeLons Bulos. TWO WEEKS’ VISIT Nome | 0 Cloudy Y ~ ' ' ' 8 enty-Third Bombardment|pivates H, Dullinger, T. H. Stidd Rk o Mrs. J. B. Godfrey sails today on | Dawson 07 Rain N , i ! ‘/ L 6o 0 queakel stafioned gh GRCCHOIL S ohoRh gines the steamer Notth Sea to visit her| Anchorage [ 06 Cloudy Fie “r cra (X-(.I 1‘:‘1“ deep llu\mv- Im- Stidd, the second man to jump son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and §ethol 12 Rain (3% the: Jams Brattche farm fen miles .ame down in the s as did Mrs. Hilding Haglund, at Sitka, and s‘l. Paul .05 Rain & north of here. Juntiey: dnd. Said 1t ok B sorne ""| Dutch Harbor o1 Cloudy JUNEAU LODGE NO. 700 | b Fimer e e 05 55t e L4 chanie, the first man to parachute . G P ershurg ksrm plans to be away about | cordova 07 Cloudy O from the falling ship, said: “The ‘ z two weeks. Juneau | A6 Cloudy LOYAL GBDER ur first we knew that anything was ON VISIT TO HAINE Faff Stdard, Temmployed™ T the - Sitka 03 Cloudy ' wreng was when the motors stopped”| Mrs. N. Lester Troast and children | °ffice of the Unemployment Com- TILLACUM IN Ketchikan 21 Rain He said the men were ordered to|l=f* on the Denali for a visit in Phrsintion (,1»|m‘mkvxun flew south | . ciimon packer Tillacum was| Prince Rupert 03 Rain N bail out. He jumped at 6,000 feet Haines on the Alaska Clipper this morning. | ;" \ou ™ oday with 20,000 pounds Prince George 0 Foaiy and aped with minor bruises —e,re - She plans to spend about a month | 5¢ ga1mon Seattle 0 Pt. Cldy Others reaching the ground safe- Subscripe to The Dolly aiaska Em- in the Seattle area on vacation - ~| Portland { 0 Clear - - - Iy were First Lieut. Jack Donohue, pire —the paper with the largest ———t—— i Ak san Francisco | 0 Cloudy invites all Brother Moose, Wives | i s ‘Tt uenry Ring. urantena irerstion i nnnns, R A NOTICE OF SALE ‘ A d¥ No. 4345 A. WEATHER SYNOPSIS of IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR The center of a widespread low pressure area was centered this and Women of the Moose to attend THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, morning near Bethel and a broad trough extended southeastward * & V[AKE ADVAN 1 “: N L) DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT| across the Gulf of Alaska. In this trough, at some distance from th Zgjh A i C 1 b 4 " {/ S JUNEAU. the coast of Washington, was centered another depression which ap- b e 2 nnlversary e e ra' BERT B. GRISWOLD, Plaintilf,| peared to be advancing northeastward towards British Columbia. Du - vs ALASKA WINDHAM GOLD| ing the last 24 hours light to moderate rains occurred in Southea fion on ¢ Ann“al s“pe l'-valll(_‘ Sp(‘elfll MiNING COMPANY, a corpora-| Alaska, in the Yukon Territory, and in the Britol Bay region, other- ‘ tion, LOUIS P. HARL and EM-| wise, cloudy weather prevailed over the rest of Alaska. It was fair — ME G. LENIHAN, as trustee| this morning over the southéern ha'f of the Juneau Seattle Airways. { for Louis P. Harl, Defendants. | Juneau, August 31 —Sunrise 5:53 am., sunset 8:02 p.m, FRIDAY—TONIGHT—Aug. 30 a $99.95 Value O | o R e b p . TERRITORY OF ALASKA, ss. | NOTICE ! FORONLY @ FIRST JUDICIAL DIVISION. W P Sc0| I 'I'O kit : 6. Notice is hereby given that in| ¥¥. F'. 3ids will be received for washing *+§ "'ng P- M‘ & A & pursuance fo that certain Jjudgment the outside of all windows of the A Bl New LDW‘P d and deersd niME and ‘enteral on VISIT IN BO'SE Grade and High School buildings f g rice August 24, 1940, and 0 that cer- | of the Juneau Publi wols, 1sids Pt will be opened at eleven am., Fri- 1 0.0.F. HALL Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coont By BARBARA STANWYCK Motion Picture Actress (A “talkie” to veeationing Robbin Coons) HOLLYWCOD, Cal., Aug. 29.—A director may win an Academy award, he may be praised by critics and his pictures may be box- office smashes, but to have an actor call him the perfect “actor’s director” is the highest compliment he can receive. For many of us, Frank Capra is the perfect actor’s director. What he asks from us is sincerity in our work and respect for our profession, and in return we regard an assignment from him as as trust. This isn't just fancy talk. We know that Capra works on his script for five or six months and that every character is developed to the best of his ability. Therefore, when he chooses an actor for the characterization, it's because of his confidence in the player's ability to portray that role. That old actor’s charge that directors “never understand me,” can't be brought against Capra. He never tries to instruct an actor on how to read his lines. There are some things Capra expects an experienced actor to do for himself, and this is one of them. Capra features with detailed care the bits of business that build and develop a character in a story. He prefers his actors to be “natural,” believing that the best actor is the one who doesn't appear to act at all. Then by gradual guidance he molds the actor into the characterization as he has visaul- ized it Occasionally Capra becomes enamoured of some bit of busi- ness that he is set on having performed in a certain way. His patience and good humor during rehearsals have endeared him to players. I know of no actor who was made to feel that PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT [ J STOP at PERCY’S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Junecau is talking about. TRY OUR FOUN- TAIN, TOO! Capra was: holding him responsible for fafling to catch the sense or feel of a scene. Capra has an understanding of actors that is uncanny. Play- ers are the tools with which he wol but he always is conscious that these tools are human bengs . He guides rather than directs. You never feel that he is ordering you, but rather that he is helping you to undersiand the scenes. His script is remarkably flexible, with very few stage diretcions or instructions. He prefers to work out tie shadings during shooting, and welcomes suggestions. Capra Is the least conspicuous person on the set. He's as con- siderate of the actor with one line (0 read as he is of the star. His ability to approach every new picture as though it were his first is remarkable. I can say one thing for Capra that I can't for a lot of other people. He never lets personal feeling influence his apprecia- tion of an actor’s merit. Our first meeting, some years ago, Was not the most propiticus, for 1 refused to do a test for him. The fact that I had made tests all over town and was now asked to make another made me furius and Capra was no doubt irritated by my attitude. “No test, ne work,” he said However, he did see a test Alexander Korda had directed, and he gave me the role in “Ladies of Leisure,” my first for him. Another divegtor might have permitted that resentment to rule out, but it didn't influence Capra’s decision. (Editor’s Note: Apprcpriately, Miss Stanwyck plays a columnist ! in Frank Capra’s “Meet John Doe.”) [ 8 P e EASY WASIIER with OVERSIZE TUB — LARGEST CAPACITY STURDY WRINGER — EXTRA SAFE LIFETIME LUBRICANT GEAR CASE SEALED-IN-OIL. MOTOR “ON” AND "OFF” SWITCH ING ACTION Cleaner, whiter clothes made pos- sible by a tub-through action that washes ALL the clothes ALL the time. EASY TERMS PARSONS ELECTRIC COC. 149 South Seward Street ~ LEADER .22s or SUPER SPEEDS EE that your fine 22 rifle gets the equally fine cartridges it needs to give you, shot after. shot, the shooting satisfaction that you - expect from it. Ask for and insist on Winchester , cartridges—world-famous with generations of . shooters. Winchester cartridges, both rim and center fire, have long held high repute for all- around proved accuracy, power and dependa- 7 bility. 'And with regular Winchester Leader /225 today, you get actually finer shooting than ; j ‘was possible with special match ammunition not " long ago. For extra speed and wallop—what it B takes in long-range shooting—Winchester Super { - Speeds give your rifle the limit! —at no increase Ve in price. For hunting, get them with hollow-point ~ bullets. And of course, both Leaders and Super / Speeds have the dependable, clean Winchester . Staynless priming—frees you from rust and / cleaning worries. Ask your dealer for genuine ~ Winchester 22s—and look for the trade mark / on the box. 7 BuyWinchester w R A COMPANY ¥ iy o guelEiE 29, l tain execution issued on August 29, 1940, by the District Court of the Territory of Alas at Juneau In that certain cause in said Court numbered and entitled, “No. 4345, A Bert B. Griswold, plaintiff, versus Alaska Windham |°ess Louise. Ciold Mining Company, a corpora- tion, Louis P. Harl and Emmett G Lenihan, as T Harl, defendants,” I shall sell at ten o’clock arn. ocn September 28, 1940, at the front door of the Fed- eral-Territorial Building in Juneau, Alaska, the following property: Those certain lode mining claims: No. 1 North End, No. 2 North End, No. 3 North End, No, 4 North End, No. 5 North End, No. 6 North End, No. 7 North End, No. 8 North Ore Body, No. 9 North Ore Body, No. 10 North End, Queen Ba- sin, Claim Mill, First Exten- sion of Mill Claim, Second Tun- nel Site Lode Claim and First Tunnel Site Lode Claim, all situate on or in Windham Bay; about two miles, more or less, in an easterly direction from the head of said Windham Bay, Juneau Precinct, Alaska; to- gether with the tenements, hereditaments and appurten- ances thereunto appertaining or belonging, as well as the tools, mill, blacksmith shop, crusher, concentrator, genera- U equipment and appliances thereon and belonging there- to; to the highest and best bidder for cash, for the purpose of satisfying the aforesaid judgment in favor of said defendant Emmett G. Leni- han, as trustee for said defendant Louis P. Harl, and against said cor- porate defendant Alaska Windham Gold Mining Company. Lated at Juneau, Alaska, August 1940. WILLIAM T. MAHONEY, United States Marshal. By WALTER G. HELLAN, Office Deputy. Published August 30, September 6-| | 13-20, 1940. adv. SAVINGS HERE ARE EARNING 4% Your Money Is ® . Available for with- drawal on request. ® Insured by U. S. Gevernment up to $5.000. Alaska Federal Savings & Loan Assn. of Junean Telephone 3 { | | | | about 4% described | Pared to 2 374 tons for each an- | thracite a, Division No. 1/ ajaska Juneau Gold Mining Com- .| 1daho, and will tee for Louis P.|about September 17. | W. P. Scott, Superinténdent of ‘the day, Aug. 30, 1940. Falls and clean ’ | ing materials will be supplied the owners if desired. All bids mus be in writing and successful bidder must carry satisfactory insurance to protect the owners. The owners reserve the right to reject any or all bids. Send all bids to | JUNFEAU PUBLIC SCHOOLS A. B. PHILLIPS Superintendent. pany’s mill, sailed for the south to- day on the Canadian Pacific Prin- He plans to viglt relatives in Boise, return to Juneau e e - Bitumirnious ¢oal miners produce tons a man-day com- adv worker, | Subserive for The Empire. VOTE FOR FRANK S. BARNES Republican Candidate for SENATOR General Election—September 10, 1940 “What'’s good for Alaska is good for you and me.” HEATING PLANTS DO NEED SERVICE! And the best time to have a complete overhaul is right now before winter gets here. Don't Wait Until They Shut Down!! They won't run forever without cleaning and oiling. Don’t expect the impossible from a pieee of machinery. We Have Time NOW to Give Proper Service!! RICE & AHLERS CO. Third and Franklin PHONE 34 “THE PRICE TAG IS NOT EVERYTHING” % PHONE 767 PHONE 767 318 MAIN THRIFT CO-OP - RETAILERS OF FAMOUS SHURFINE and TASTEWELL PRODUCTS 3——FREE DELIVERIES——3 Our Store Is as Close as Your Phone—SHOP EARLY “THE PRICE TAG IS NOT EVERYTHING” H USSR —_—-—-u—_— Put a Covic Diesel in Your Boat If You Want MORE ROOM IN YOUR ROAT More Miles for Your Money A Comfortable, Quiet Ride An Engine that Instantly Starts Assurance of Safe Trips Freedom from Fire Hazards A Broad Range of Smooth Speeds Low Operating and Maintenance Costs Reduced Insurance icates Smokeless, Odorless Exhaust Full Diesel Dependability An Engine that Can Be Easily Hand Cranked CHARLES 6. WARNER CO. GMC TRUCKS Compare Them With All Others! PRICE - APPEARANCE — ECONOMY DURABILITY CONNORS MOTOR CO.

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