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THE CAPITOL HAS THE BIG PICTURES Show Place of Juneau "EARL OF CHICAGQ' ENDING TONIGHT AS | . Compass point ii i Grow sleepy o Golf instructor Dutch city ST 12. Spot on a Conjunction playing card Instant 3 Old word for a trap or noose Fold over on Long journey ure Robert Montgomery Seen Nourishes ’ Elimination Plat | Mrs. J. E. Connor| e e v Going 'o Be Filed | “Goodbye, Mr. Chips” and “The | Citadel.” He has given the picture a flavor it might not otherwise have In honor of the birthday of Mrs. = | J. E. Connor, Mrs. Charles W. Car- y : ¢ The plat of U. S. Survey No. ter entertained yesterday afternoon|Nad. a study of England’s ancient | 1762, Juneau Townsite Elimination.|at her Glacier Highway residence. | ¥aditions and ceremonies that are the U. S. Land | sometimes highly amusing and as | in Ho"ywood's "Most © Wrath Hindu xod of 16, Disavow the dead ™ . f ' i8. Succession * 4L Bnl-}ilr.\rrinze: | 20. F inin ame collo \ Difterent’ Picture LN - » e iLle 41 Prehistorle i 2 Short Jacket stone imple- When a Chicago gangster be- 3. Dislikes in= o g ment R e comes an English Earl by inheri-| . ptensely 47 s teft out Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle | tance, it develops into one of the i pommy EC g0 ey G S P most unusual motion picture situ- i moving logs 62, metal chaie i lations ever filmed, and with Rober’ % Hadhe | S H 0 H T S MIDNIGHT PREVIEW : Montgemery departing frem his 7/ Z 7 . Gagus 6 the " - " { | customary genial playboy roles to /A a lene;_v bee . | P ar realis orfor v . Calamitout Latest News of the War GREEN HELL" | :vc « startinay reaistic portorm- C U [ 1] e | - oo s rsi s rr e ssmeemy | @NCE aS-the ganzster, “The Earl o /4 Herons ! E o - i e e ———- | Chicago,” ends tonight at the Cap- Yuan's gar- \M C n H itol ‘Theatre, merits the enthusiastic . Opening i Juneau Townsite rs. Carter Honors - [:simes orova s ‘mas veeebo ¢ \ This is the first American pic- . Lament: ar- chaic . New Zealand timber tree . Unclose . Subtle sarcasm . Frozen desserts 3. High respect . Worship . Tranquillity . Finished . Gives off fumea . Causing priva- y will be filed in Many lovely gifts were received |5 % Office at Anchorage October 1. by the honoree. often powerfully dramatic when a fl.‘. B ’ This plat is filed for the informa-| The guests were Mesdames Fred|Chicago gangster, Silky Kilmount, G . Small mine cars tion of the general public and 1s|Jcnas ortrude Laughlin, Miles | finds himself the Twelfth Earl of //%//%‘. ‘53:.;;’:%‘:"0. not a basis for disposal | Gedkins, Don W. Skuse, C. K. Tis- | Gorley 42 43 - mineral - dale, Lydia Webber, Charles Skuse| The film starts out as a straight 7 T Feather o W and L. Linehan. gangster picture, with some reveal-| n.....‘.-///fl.- . Game played } RUMMAGE SALE % Rl i e |ing “insides” in modemn liquor| |, L ’//4, s Wednesday. Sept. 11, at 10 am. | | rackets. Its most colorful moments [* ol v aln 4 | | 7 7 Salvat Army Hall. Anyone hav- If you have not voted, do *0 |come when Silky, whose greed 4 /'// 0"'(" c'R”..r'"' ‘ ing old clothing, furniture, please! now. Polls remain cpen until |takes him to England to collect his 46 Warmth phone Salvation Army, 254. adv. 7 o'clock tcnight. | inheritance, becomes a member of 48. Above: poetie 3 i 5, e 7 e ;me House of Lords. Later, after murdering his lawyer and pal, he is tried by his peers and convicted. This is a murder trial such as Hol- JuneauMan L ° ilywood never has pictured before ® BAKING I @ |and is among many of the sui- POWDER ) nng | takes. " : When your family or friends are set to enjoy Uh (1(;) | 3 v = RO " delicious waffles, assure enviable results with | RENO. Nev. Sept. 10.—A marriage i Schilling Baking Powder. It's dowble-acting— { | license has been issued to H. Whit- g '8 Y A made with pure cream of tartar—never leaves Chiilipg tield Jr., over 22, of Juneau, Alaska, V\Q that “baking powder taste.” For over half a GOING OVER BlG and Kathleen Vicks, over 21, of » century, Schilling has been relied upon for (§ S rratad successful baking and true economy! AI Doufius N AT San Frameisco.. ¢ — - oo —— Ao . - T | MONEYBACK — ) (.(n)l.ll T-l,-""‘v“ RES : ‘ To show our unbounded Roller skating is going over biz ° COLOMA, Cal. — The scene o !l:j\(l'{‘l‘i:ll‘hl?!kanAM OF at the Douglas Nat John Marshall's original discovery aking Powder, Paul Boeholt, who is m of gold in California is attracting r grocer will retu P » 5. 1A g%} & 2 3 3 Toney ¢ gur expense sad | | the sport, says last nighi so many tourists that a crew of S il lso oy for the la big turnout with many from Ju- 35 men is improving the site. Seats tter, flour, etc., you have - el g o ¢ tables a c 5 oS are h used, if you find say fault neau enjoying thi :nm table -1”‘“ camp stoves are ol ‘whatever with it. The Nat is operated each night being installed except Thursday and both youths - e - g and adults are finding rar. amuse- SHOWERS ARE COMING ment. Mr. and Mrs. R. Shower b - e S children are aboard the steamer If you have not voted, do so North Sea for Juncau now. Polle remain cpen until BAGEC S i Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Cooms y EDWARD CHODOROV Author and Producer (Writing for Vacationing Robbin Coons) YWOOD, Cal,, Sept. 10.—Like “Books that Changed Our certain motion pictures have extended immeasurably the horizons of my professional generation. Some of these long before we started to work in pictures. Some were foreign-made; a few were popular, others obscure failures. A picture like “Last Laugh” was a failure financially in the United States but its sum total influence must be incalculable. No professional who saw “Last Laugh” ever forgot it. Hollow echoes of its simplicity, dynamic continuity, realism and fantasy speak today in many a script and on many a set. S. S. Potemkin” opened still another vista. It must be the real foundation for today's documentary-dramatized films. It made other unforgettable contributions: The arbitrary and hair- raising editing of its sprawling scenes; the “naturalness” of its camera work — a quality which we now call newsreel photography; its unpretty human beings with their warts and moles and small- first or did them best, but the combination of so many eye-open- pox scars. I don't say that “Potemkin” did all or any of these ers in a magnificent film most certainly had an impact that | radically changed our minds about movie-making. | 7 o'clock tonight. | Emprre ciassifieds bimg results. Where French Trials Take Pla_ce 2 L “The Birth of a Nation” seems to have had little effect on A the present. (Sneers of derision here from old-line producers who tried for years to imitate “Birth”.) Perhaps we were too young to regard it as anything but a terrifynig spectacle. Curi- ously enough, Griffith's little-remembered “The. Whte Rose” France, where leaders ac- Here is the Palais De Justice at Riom, V. cused of responsibility for France's lack of preparation and entry into the war with Germany will be tried. It is believed the trial PERCY’S CAFE OPEN ALL NIGHT will be delayed by a long preliminary judicial investigation. Among e | those accused are Edouard Daladier, premier of Frauce when the i war began. sTOP at PERCY’S ANY TIME for Dinners or Light Lunches that all Juneau is talking about. TRY OUR FOUN- | TAIN, TOO! RN Rlch-Aga Khan War keriuwgec knocked a lot of uS for a loop. It starred the English actor, Ivor Norvello, and Mae Marsh, and featured most importantly some potent seed-planting scenes. The beauty of the lush South- ern landscapes, the seduction sequence, Miss Marsh’s terror at the knowledge of her imminnent motherhood seemed the last words on the subject then. They set up signposts which will be followed in that happy future when the fugitives from our obscene censorship, simple love-making and honest labor-pains, come home. It is literally impossible to exaggerate the importance of Lu- bitsch’s “The Marriage Circle.” It set a whole generation of po- tential artisans thinking along completely different lines. Our mental attitude toward the less grim aspects of sex could never | again be the same. The picture cinematically discovered love as a charming occupation. The arbitrary examples given here would cover, roughly, the larger theme divisions: Realistic drama, historic spectacle, senti- mental romance and sophisticated comedy. Other works that for one reason or another seem to have set in motion lasting internal ripples: “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari,” “All for a Woman” (the Jannings picture about the French Revo- lution), a Charlie Ray piece whose title I'm shaky about (was it e i | ‘ “The Girl I Loved"?), “Ten Days that Shook the World,” “Two b o i Hearts in Waltz Time,” “Poil de Carrot,” “Crime Without Pas- Stranded in Switzerland as a war refugce, the imm: sion,” and many others. But these gave us, to greater or lesser Khan, Indian ruler, is shown digesting tea and roll ' R degree, Revelatlon.” - newspaper in Ceneva. The Aga Khan is one of i le reading a L mien Many Booths Arranged af ~ Annual Fair Some New and Some Old Concessions Slated for Big Event It's a good fair coming up this week for the annual Southeastern Alaska exposition ig_the Fair Build- ing at 11th and E. Streets, fair of- ficials report. A long list of booth rentals was given out today with the Aerial Patts, their famous dog Bimbo, the nightly dancing, and the exhibits of local industries and talent, a “good time for all” is looked for. Concession booths are rented by | Mrs. Hildre, Candies and Novelt Mrs. Whitley, Hams and Bacons; | Daniel and Nance, Horse Races and Nevelties; Armand Duncan, Keno; Mrs. Hooker, Eating Booth and Ju- reau Fire Department, Oldsmobile Car. Among the exhibitors are Alaska Electric Light and Power Co., Krafft Cabinet Shop, Columbia Lumber Co., B. M. Behrends Co. Juneau | Health Center, Alaska Salmon Pack- | ers, Juneau Chamber of Commerce,' Juneau Dairies, Inc., and Green Torp‘ Cab. | On the opening afternoon Thurs- | day, all children will be admitted free of charge, courtesy of the Green | | Top Cab Cempan | — e — 'FEDERAL BUNDING INSPECTOR IN TOWN| | W. A. Brannon, Federal Building | Inspector from the Federal Works | Agency, arrived on the steamer Col- umbia from the Westward and today was inspecting mechanical equip- ment in the Federal Building here. |He will g oto Sitka on the North Sea and then south to look over Federal Buildings at Wrangell and Ketchikan. > THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 10, 1940. = | MUSICAL PICTURE ? AT COLISEUM WILL END THIS EVENING life, the picture is a dramatic and always moving tale of a young de- tor and actress who rise to fame in Herbert's operettas and whose happiness is made possible by their | lasting friendship with the great song-writer D - | The Daily Alaska mmpire guaran- tees the largest daily circulation of any Alaska rewspaper - - Try & classified ad in The Emplre tepographers and geologists is now making a complete survey at Yaku- at. Topographer Fitzgerald will leave teday or tomorrow for Fairbanks to complete Tnterior aerial photography work in the Kuskokwim - (f you have not voted, do so new. Polle remain open until o'cleck tenight. - Subscribe for The Embire. | Stubbornly refuse anything else. Price: Juneau's Greatest Show Value Last Times Tonight THE GREAT The spirit of the gay, romanii colorful cra when Victor Her 6 E 2 ,t " be t99 ruled tht show world and his melo- a( "r e' ' 2 dies were on cveryone's lips ha Ath . | been completely captured by the wi | first motion picture besed on ihe . S e e et n e ALLAN JONES MARY MARTIN ican compa The film, “The G > Ty @ St Victor Horbort” which ends w0 | A J, &§ @9 POPULAR SCIENCE A § € @ | night at the Coliseum Theatre, 1 NEWS— | & spectacular tribute to a man who & ==ssersrrocooaaan a5 S |has a place in every American PR S S OMSA T J0 W heart { : & Victor Herbert himself — who s ! z L knew how to pick many a star in { . H his day—could not have chosen a FOR ARMY HHD { DOUGLAS RINK | cast better suited to bring his story 1 EVERY NIGHT to the screen than the one - ! (Except Thursday) i mount presents in “The Great Vi Now UN ! ) 7:30 to 10:30 tor Herbert.” The performances i (Y rrrrrvrvvrrrrrrrrrrrrsd ‘l}‘l"“ JC""_, M,‘:”l,‘\w"j:f""i;l::f' \m Back from assisting in getting | Subscribe to ane Daily Alaska dret s SsH e ; ¢ us the immorta] Eologic survey work under ‘way at| Empire—the paper witz. the largex g “"' :m“"l" < Yakutat for the proposed Army | paid circulation. B D R oty JAndItE Sleld therel™ Qeralt st | ™7 o “"“;"";‘i“fi",‘“‘_ e gerald, U. S. Grologic Survey topo- el AR me in on the Columbia Broadwayites of ais day than with ‘ wAKE uP vouR |the story of the cOomposer's OWN 'mitgerald said a crew of fourteen 43 LIVER BILE— Without Calomel—And You'll Jump Out o: Bed in the Morving Rarin’ to Go The liver should pour out two pints of lquid bile into your bowels daily. 1f this bile is not flowing freely, your food may Tiot diest, Tt may just decay_in the bowels. Gns bloats up your stomach. You get consti- pated. You feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. It takes those good, effective Carter's Little Liver Pills to set these two pints of bile flowing freely to make you feel “up and up.” Amazing in making bile flow freely. Ask for Carter's Little Liver Pills by name. SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA -FAIR WEEK~- THURSDAY—FRIDAY THURSDAY -- FRIDAY. .. SATURDAY - If you have not voted, do so now. Polls remain open until 7 o'clock tonight. 4 1M.65¢ 0 2 g George Bros. Liquor Store Pr P SEPTEMBER 12 SEPTEMBER 13 SEPTEMBER 14 Amusement Concessions Southeastern Alaska Fair Building ni OLD MIDDLETON Kentucky Bourbon Whiske Y roof smooth and Mellow Try It Once and You Will Buy It Always 4 YEARS Pi.§ OLD 1.25 00O —SATURDAY Exhibits Agricultural Floral Home Cooking Home Canning Embroideries Tapestries Garments Infant Wear Art and Amateur Photography Educational Native Art Enfertainment The Aerial PATTS Their Famous Dog BIMBO Band Concerts WES BARRETT'S ORCHESTRA T e T 0.52.35 OO0 RO