The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 15, 1941, Page 3

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",HF CAPI W)' ”/\b THE BIG PICTURES ‘ SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU STARTS TONIGHT with FRANK MORGAN Billie Burke . John Shelton . Ann Rutherford Reginald Owen AN M-G-M PICTURE NEWEST MORGAN (OMEDY NOW ON CAPITOL SCREEN. "The Ghost@mes Home" Opens Tonight at local Theatre SHORTS Stranger Than Fiction Snapshots—Latest News SEC SIMPLIFIES " REGULATION O SMALL ISSUES Exemption from Registra- tion of Offerings Rais- ed to $100,000 Jllla(mn of the hange Cwmm - new Securities ar security issue: gate cfferi mpt The area in and after { (Picture London.) THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 15; 1941. EIN Jé(iENT ‘CITY" OF LONDON F"r'fi"c'fifis"fiv'u 20TH CENTURY "The Honeymoon s Over” Stars Stuart Erwin and Marjorie Weaver “The Honeymoon's Over,” open- ing tonight at the 20th Century Theatre, is a 20th Century-Fox comedy of domestic life It is chuckle-full of human inci- dents, hilarious accidents, amazing experiences and riotous adventures that happen to a couple of newly- weds two months’ married. When the groom realizes he can't make the income come in as fast as the outgo goes out, and the bride dis- covers a difference between ro- 1 in an office and love in a/} the fun begins. The bride’s 2 cute in shorts, but that | doecsn’t pay the bills and it takes |a bubble bath to melt their trou- | bles down to the vanishing point! | Stuart Erwin and Marjorie Wea er are featured as the young cou- "!5 'p!e, included are Patric Knowl Russell Hicks, Jack Carson, Hobart { Cavanaugh, June Gale and E. Clive | ‘ Stuart, an up-and-coming lay- out man in an advertising agency, marries one of the stenographers |and they move into a rose-covered tage. They are immediately wel- med by a group of fair-weather friends and the bills soon swamp poor Stuart, Late hours and worry slow up: Stu and his work suffers so that he loses a promised pro- motion, An accident spells disaster fer the couple but they manage to | | set things right in a manner us e ;hllnrlnu' as it is ingenious. “city” of London appeared with this damage | s mdde from the tower of St. Paul's Cathedral. |(he Daddy of ecivilization, 1 delayed by interruption of sending Caacilities in | Mother.” { namit SUMRALL GIVES @9 % o TALK ON WOMEN but the men think that woman is an appendix to man—a|™ I kind of after thought, But when you explain that the monkeys were created before man—and suggest | he might be just an after thought —it is a different proposition.” “A predominant characteristic of a false philosophy or religion is new r i an an; nt cf the SEC ~nn|~ lhA nmission’s ive emph from the di equirement of fraud pre: pointed to snend a’ heme town. The ap- (luh a )il'l wil ng and other small cor- Administration will be ad- Of - supervision xamination has been r«ll::\uu elling ployed f of the will now need only nearest Re: nal Of- notifying that Office tion to her with terature it plar of notification n } h information name cf the company, the n of the name of the sir route from Seatile to Nome, n || a brief summ sale at J. B, Burford & Co. adv | of the intended use of the proc | The issuer can give this notice either through an infromal letter of the use of a two-page form which will be ulm)hed on xlquesv, ~ N.G.DRILL e Juneau Unit of the Alaske| National Guard will hold the week- rill tomorrow night in the Ar- alled at 8 o'clock havz good ex- | f its inte - - NOTICE RMAIL showing EAT MORE Little girl, it's GOOD for you! 'HELP AN ALASKAN | Telephone 713 or write | The Alaska Territorial R Employment Service | for this qualified worker. | COOK-BAKER — | age 37. Experienced as baker in r | taurants, bakery shops. ete Also | f»hm: order, fry cook, and dinner | | cook. Call for ES 244 ! — e an, mar a 'i xi \/'J'] insist IUNEAU DAIRIES ICE CREAM it's the best on ‘The Lauy Alaska Emplre guaran- tees the largest daily circulation oil |any Alaska newspaper | 'How To Relieve Bronchitis Creomulsion relieves promptly be- cause it goes right to the s e trouble to help loosen a s germ laden phlegm, and aid nature to soothe and heal raw, tender, in- flamed bronchial mucous mem- branes. Tell your druggist to sell you a bottle of Creomulsion derstanding you must like the way it quickly allays the cough or you are to have your money back. CREOMULSION 1 for Coughs, Chest Colds, Bronchitis JUNEAU DAIRIES and DEALERS SLAVES, ORIENI the degradation of womanhood.” WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY GA. b’“[[lfl/fiy WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY CHOCK FULL OF HEARTY LAFFS! WORLD'S FAIR, JR. A Musical JEEPERS CREEPERS Cartoon GOOD SKATES Sport Life LATE NEWS LAST TIMES 'TONIGHT Dean C. E. Riee will deliver the eulogy. Interment will be in Ever- green Cemetery. ———————— GAME GUIDES 30UTH Louis and Gene Jacquot, big ROBERY COCKBURN FUNERAL FRIDAY Last rites for Robert Cockburn, pioneer of this section who passed Topight Mr. Sumrall at 7:45 o'- clock is speaking on “Black Magic Horrible Conditions Relat- or tne orient. Reat or Faiser” away Sunday evening at St. Ann's Hospital, will be held Priday after- noon at 1 o'clock from the Chapel game guides and hunters of Klaune, Y. T. are southbound on the Princess Norah for a two months’ vacation. ed by Speaker-Pagan System Denounced F. Sumrail iast night » to a capacily audience, stand- ldnge room -occupied, at. the Bethel | Assembly of God on Main Street. Juneauites were apparently to learn of the (the Orient,"” | Ject | Tears were many in the audience p8umrall deseribed the | treatment of which was his womanhood in Is tied in tree | and being de-, | voured by vultures in inland Asia slave girls lay dying with no one {to care for them in their last ! hours. Mr. Sumrall vigorously denounced | the pagan system of working girls, |in Japan whose parents were only ]m(l meagre sums. The speaker | said that when Christianity is “blacked out,” i the ofs trains, | tion. | Among Sumrall's sayings night were the following: oke poured from a ruined building dynamited by salvage workers last] clearing ‘up an area near St, Paulls Cathedral (background), after a smission . cf this radiephoto from interrupti of ~('nding facilities. | fire bomb raid on Londen. T Londen to New York was delayed b, Executed Naz1 Spnes Radlo Crossword Puzzle ian discoverer . Most extreme 44, Sufficient: et : atfude 47. Symbol for sliver . Sesame 60. Disencumber Baccalaureate degree . Decay . Pertaining to one’s birth 57, collemon of facts , treland . Foundution . Educational . Publie walk institutions Apparently 2. Quote ight 6 udluon to & Body of water I/Iflfl% prophet Old musical note Pnrulnln to he he i/ aunm 7/ II Y ///ild// I Wfllll IH//% IIH Wl ,/fi,,llfl%fl -l British milita: fficial i wireless transmit| Ty il Meier, aceused of erecting the amur atus in fields at night and sending secret military information to the Nazis, were caught shortly after lrnval in Lngland posing as refugees, They were exccuted o ' fll I’/’// ” | There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising = { | 774°[ | ‘Annual Reporfs Read eager night's “Woman, Slave in Eastern Star sub- Rite i | He said he slept in barns where ELE(IRAS Fl' the woman suffers Fairbanks this morning while the most. He said that in Russia' Douglas airliner was cancelled again e saw women greasing the wheels!on its scheduled flight to Seattle, gathering garbage and|weather bureau forecasts for the { doing the menial tasks of the Na- route south of here continuing un- favorable. |and Mrs. R. Mathews, Ralph Mize “God did not make woman to be.nnd Earl McGinty. 66. Crafty E ng m %n-il-, At 0. E S. Meeting Annual reports were read ‘at last meeting of the Order of held at the Scottish Temple. Folowing the short business ses- seen in the eyes of sion, with newly installed officers when Mr. presiding, refreshments were served. horribie Mrs. the of the social committee for the ev- distant lands. He said he saw baby ening. Alfred Zenger was in charge NORTH; LINER CANCELS ANEW | Two PAA Electras ilew north to | | | Passengers northbound; were Mr. Solution Of Yesterday's Puzzie DOWN 1. Measures by walki . Autumn Sour 2. lmprove 3 Heavy eord 5 eful Si‘.'}».a‘.‘.m.o FY P l Clt Wn Nevada &" imposed r- 16 Btivaa rrom » " captain: plan! 2. Obstraction . Record of family descent 41. Asiatie im 49. Fastening cords 51, Anoint 52. Swiss eity §4. Buckwheat 56. Charge for the use of a soaweed of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary. | Hollywood Sights And Sounds HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Jan, 15.—If Spencer Tracy has his way, the screen will get a new kind of “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.” This will be the third time the screen has handled Steven- son’s classic tale of the good and evil in man. When John Bar- rymore did it, in silence, Mr. Hyde was a terrifying fellow in appearance as well as deeds — a misshapen, foul, horrible monster to give you the willles, When PFredric March did it, in talkies, Mr. Hyde looked even more like the things that crawl around the ceiling and dance on the bed on a morning after. Tracy, at present looking kindly and ‘benign in “Men of Boys Town,” has a different idea: “I'd like to play it with no make-up at all.” If you know Tracy’s past career, you'll guess that this notion springs not entirely from a new artistic concept. In none of his films has he used make-up when he could avoid it. In “The Power and the Glory,” in “Edison the Man,” the wrinkles and white hair of old age were inevitable. Beyond that, the nearest he came to hiding behind grease-paint was in “Captains Courageous,” and even theer his “mgke-up” was merely the curling of his hair. However, all that aside, “I was reading the story again,” Tracy sald, “and I noticed that nowhere did ‘Stevenson point out that Hyde chlill‘( out- wardly in any startling fashion. There is the reference to change noted by Jekyll's friend, Dr. Lanyon, who saw he was different, but there is no implication that Hyde was physically deformed. PERCY’S CAFE sTflP mdfinfflk He changed in appearance, but men do change. Por l.nlhhw a fellow who goes on a prolonged bender doesn't look the .ml when he comes out. of it. It's all in his face, but that doesn't make him a monster.” Tracy laughed. “But Il make tests for makeup, and I'll probably wind up behind an ape’s head. What I'm worrying about, though, isn't Hyde. I can play that any way they want it. It's Jekil — howm I going to be that romantic Dr. Jekyn” Had Tracy wanted support for his anti-makéup ples, M could have found it on a nearby stage. There was Robert Mont- gomery, going through a scene with George Sanders for “Rage in Heaven,” from the James Hilton novel. The story puts Bob back into those chiller roles he so enjoys, his first since “The Earl of Chieago,” and like that one and “Night Must Fall” a study in weird psychology. Ingrid Berg- man is the girl. “Night Must Fall,” if you recall, was the tale of a baby- faced English lad who did sweet things for old ladies and had murder — cold-blooded. calculating and cruel — for a hobby. Its punch was in the contrast between the killer's appearance and his deds. If they had let the baby-face dissolve, as a pre- lude to each murder, into a nightmarish makeup, they’d have had an “effect,” but not. the excellent mavie they did have:, However, at this writing, the odds are aaginst Tracy. “Jekyll and Hyde” always has featured screaming horror, and who is Leo the Lion to roar radically?

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