The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 11, 1941, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, FEB..1I SR 28 R R Elfiem CENTURY | JO STEINBECK'S FAMOUS NOVEL NOW A PRIZE WINNING MOTION PICTURE STH CENTURY Last Time Tonight! T ; PREVIEW H A 0F NOW 1940's Best Picture LORETIA | MELVYN TONIGHT E & | O INDEFINITE RUN L YOUNG b DOUGLAS 3 Box Office Opens 12:45 HE stavep For S 6 hecak; y Starts 1:15 A. ; i AT Feature Stalts 180 .00 Honestly . . . Fearlessly . . . On the Screen . . . A Sure Academy Award Winner!!! | No Increase in Pricesl!! L) B T TS 0L RN Crossword Puzzle i ‘GRAPES OF WRATH'LIFE OF FULTON | gaccs, CENTURY SHORTS: MIDNIGHT PREVIEW—1:15 | TRAVELOGUE A M IRUNE C INCOMEDY WITH | .ooon . 20 ien WAL OPENS TOMORROW, PLAYED HEREBY | <t vie romigur a forest arestows | Al Tne Hos Bonnin” | MELVYN DOUGLAS| ™ 3% o 207H CENTURY SHOW |~ RICHARD GREENE| ' > "zt Nocktures 14. Casual observa = =] ' Fst D s e D Ade T S ; S 3 "Little 0ld New York" - He Stayed for Breakfast” & Ao Mihe i dlaie™ : John Steinbeck’s Novel o Alice Faye, Fred MacMur- | | L of the Ends Tonight at Cap- gu S & B Tegon Be Seen at Special ray Also Star in 20k Not profes- ifol Theatre T s Preview Tonight Century Show —— By inese meas- ik A | Loretta Young, who shot to a ”;"'”‘” 53. Lively dances | | | [new fame with her comedy role in| 37 Assemblage of o linu® 2hSrOss: A'great Hi NES ooma gUiot Hol. | JE (isterons town Gt the S 2—FEATURES—2 splonts 57. F lywood called “The Grapes of old days. when cows roamed Fifth i‘Culumlnn’s “The Doctor Takes a | Biblical king & . 4 y 3 | Wife,” and Melvyn Douglas, who | Fragment l?w DOWN xpand Wl'i.\lh The picture, based on John | Avenue and a bunn:fm or a lady “NIGHT WORK” and already possesses a distinguished - Badgeriike anl- 59. Unite again by 1. Increase in 5. ‘AdVersary Steinbe account of the Okie|-could win a man like Robert Ful-| pRY RITTER in “RIDERS record as one of Hollywood's most i CREphony 6. Bristle hegira from the Dust Bowl to Cali- | ton, are brought vividly to life on| . » . > . gifted farceurs, are the new com- - T ) e fornia, is an honest, eloquent and|the screen ‘in Darryl F. Zanuck's OF THE FRONTIER edy starring combination of Co- . Pertaining to ' g ~ Pox o fir: . lumbia’'s “He Stayed for Break- . = Z//'n-. A certain Great artistry has gone into fts| YOrk' the 20th Century-Fox film,| the first steamboat; Greene ls seen St G R B ,/% .. | (.COninet niing and greater courage, for this| Which closes tonight at the 20h s the dashing inventor himself; Cpitol Wheatre. Halsdds: one bt .%u. . screen tribute to the dispossesed not | Century Theatre, with Alice Faye, 44 plonde Brenda Joyce has the ) 1 9 challenging screen masterpiece. | production of “Little Old New the season’s most delightful love- gard eame only has dramatized the large theme [ Fred MacMurray, Richard Greene| 1o of the lovely girl who loved on-the-run latghtests, "Me Btayed . e nat L of Steinbeck’s novel in enduring vis- | and Brenda Joyce heading a splen- pim peiped him to attain his dream for Breaklast: as direqted by Ak - Snow runner ual terms—it has demonstated be- did cast. {in the face of ridicule, and who i . Rodent + ¢ 1 g r . o raSts exander Hall with a supporting cast . % © Pianacle of 1ce yond any question that the cinema| This robust, romantic drama casts| jpar pecame his wife. olith inchiientAlEa Mieiat: ol P8 Elacie? can take raw stuff of contemporary | Alice Faye in :m mnsll colorful £a 4 ge) ' 3 vl ' ative | role as the fiery belle of the water- gene Pallette and Una O'Connor. Manner living ‘and mold it to a provocative r0'¢ as 3 Try a classified ad 1 The Empire Set in a Paris backgound, the photoplay pattern | front who fell headlong for hand- 'new comedy hilariously describes | Undeveloped For once in a long, long time the | SOM€ Robert Fulton—and went the romance of a politically-consci- | . Pléce of tat- | fcreen has made electric contact ;"f‘*’".“.‘m- while the whale brawling ous cafe waiter and the estranged | wicred cloth | with the abiding varieties of exist- | Waterfront cheered her on il | wife of a pompous banker. Doug- - s 1% | ence in “The Grapes of Wrath” and | MAcMurray is seen as the burly| las, in the former role, is a fugi- B by shipbuilder engaged “" build |hr~‘ Send YOUR GARMENTS to tiys Tromm. thel Ihwifar havins taken GroRi By o DA SR | Clermont, after Fulton's model for| a pot-shot at the financier; Miss . | Y S'UMP | the result is a heart shaking and en- | The cast, headed by Henry Fonda | Young connives at his escape and, | . BV iy and Jane Darwell, is ably supported WAKE UP YOUR lin the end, takes a shot at the . Device for by actors that are particularly fine “ou'll enjoy the hell- | financier herself!» But between the B;‘rl'z‘flll,;"fmclfllh in the roles assigned them. v day season more in hectic beginning and the hilarious | neck Thisplomite 5 RIS T Plo- | '.IVER Bl lE— ‘ “;li:n,:d :l';;'ne::" ending of “He Stayed for Break- :g:""ll 'A‘r‘":!"'gc“ tures that will be chosen for the! ed the fast” there is said to be an im-| country Academy Award and Juneau aud- \Wlhn;:d(.‘nluml—A»dY.u'l”lleIfl"-’ ngle measurable quantity of great, good| Applications fences will have their first oppor- the Morring Rarin’ (e Go | £ ] . Sortly ; 9 | Jiver should pour out two pints of humor, of delightful, witty dia-| . Tennis stroks tunity to see this mighty drama at | bile into your bowels daily. If' this i e a preview at 1°15 am. tomorrow.| bile is not flowing freely, your food may | F.+% | |logue and of happily novel situa & e MOTTOW. | % digest. Tt may just decay in the bowels. g yhas 3 | tions. CLOTHES that are CLEANED OFTEN—Wear Longer! &h | The picture will continue its run at | o LiSeis up your stomueh. You get const: £ T, (HAR[ES GOI.DS]'HN the 20th Century Theatre for an ifi:;fif}',éfifii;fl sour, sunk and the wwhl} 5 | 4 indefinite period. WHERE THE BLUE BEGINS_powacrninesharisin | MFS, Thomas Haigh LEAVES ON BUYING | : DPTIPEET R ey b Rk e | B e hoach Bat o4 Malass, P O Byady Mover of ‘ TRIP IN INTERIOR Exemption Allowed COUPIE iurgest maid circuiation of any Al | Suiiomis setue sasiving . Erie: 5 Chicago, for her beach chat at Miami, Fla. On Trudy Meyer of | H ' | Larchmont, N. Y., is blue velveteen suit and mulii-colored scasf., onored I_aS' N{ghi | Marri : aska newspaper. J { Clarles Goldstein was a passenger | arried Durmg |this forenoon on the PAA Electra | bound for Nome on a fur buying trip. Taxable Year @ = — From Nome, Mr. Goldstein will fly | —— HO"YWOO‘ S’J“’ A”J S“n* | Mrs. Thomas Haigh was honored t0 Kotzebue and posts north of the | = mne credit for dependents as last evening with a bon voyage par- |¢ircle. On his return he will make'ge) as the personal exemption is By Rebbia Coome. |ty at the home of Mrs. A. E. Glover |StoPs along the Yukon River. MY.|yequired to be prorated where a on Fifth street, members of the Ju- | Goldstein will return to Juneau in|change of status occurs during HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Feb. 11.—Night life in Hollywood: |neau Woman’s Club being hostesses abOut two weeks. | the taxable year, and these credits| Officers in a Hollywood “prowl car” halted when they saw a | for the occasion. 505 Lkt o7 T el | are allowable not only for the pur- small group of people collected before a dimly lit house with drawn || Games were played, prizes goinz?]ouu Bkowu DIES pose of computing the normal tax blinds. Bursts of sound came from within — sudden, staccato | to Miss Katherine Cheney nad Mrs. but also the surtax. A fractional ses — and occasionally a weird shadow leaped across the shades. |A. M. Geyer. A' Howll‘l “ERE part of a month is to be disre- They rang the doorbell. The sounds and goings-on stopped, A cnmn)xr!ee, 'headed by Mrs. Bur- garded unless it amounts to more . % { A 4 ras Smith, assisted by Mrs. G. E. than half a month, in which case and the bell was answered. “Sorry,” said an officer, “but you're | gnight, Mrs. Tom Parke, Mrs. C. C.| John Brown, 69, passed away this | it is considered a month drawing quite a crowd out there. What's cooking inside?” Rulaford, Mrs. A. Blackerby, and morning at St. Ann's Hospital where | por example, a single man and a “Come in.” The door opened wide. “Come and segq — and Mrs. J. M. Clark, served a delicious | he had been a patient for the past single woman who were married on bring the crowd, if you like.” |lunch. The guest of honor was pre- |several days. July 20, 1940, and lived together The police and four of the mob filed in, were escorted to sented with a bon voyage gift of A native of Bohemia, Brown had | quring the remainder of the year | ivory by Mrs. Harold Knight, on be- |been caretaker at the Shrine of St.| would be entitled to a personal ex- half of the club, and each of the 36 Terese. emption of $1,766.67 in a joint re-! women present composed a valentine| The remains are at the Charles! i for the calendar year 1940, an almost bare room — otherwise distinguished by the presence of three flood lights which cast silhouettes on a canvas. i The host brought in chairs, seated the guests. Then he began | for her. | W. Carter Mortuary pending funeral {which amount is seven-twelfths of humming softly, went into an eccentric whirlwind dance, and Mrs. Haigh plans to leave on the ' arrangements. $800 for the husb;md while sir‘lgle all the while kept an eye on the shadows he was casting on the North Coast to make her home in — e iplus seven-twelfths of $800. for the‘ canvas. | Phoenix, Arizona. She has been ac-| HANSEN GOES THROUGH | wife while single, plus five-twelfths A short while later, the appreciated but somewhat bewild- || 'ive in club affairs for several years, “of $2000 for the period during cerd spectators, were seen to the door with thanks. They had having served as president, and| F.A. Hansen, of the Copper River up,oh they were married. i seen — as Ray Bolger, their host, explained — the first pre- leaves with the best wishes of the | and Northwestern Railroad, is a pas-| = 1¢ separate returns are filed, each = f host of friends in this cit; senger on the northbound teamer 4 fon? view of the shadow dance he will do with Anna Neagle in “Sunny.” | s = " |is entitled to a personal exemption 1 g | Yukon, bound for Cordova after a ;¢ sggggg which is seven-twelfths A sort of rough-cut performance, still in need of polishing, but | Try a classitied ad In The Empire ' trip Outside. o 2 e h ar p $800, s one-. £ unique at least in staging. T e e rereerereeeq twelfths of $2.000. ¢ If during the year 1940 the hu {band or the wife had the status of | the head of a family prior to their 2 g | marriage, he or she would be en-! E 7 | titled to his or her pro rata share ® § f Ida Lupino, back in the days when she was a mere Para- of the personal exemption of $2,000' | the perjod priof to their marriage SsTOP |instead of merely that allowed a! Above, Loren Maclver. Top, right, g2 single person. | “Moonlight,” owned by John Dewey, AT PERCY'S CAFE However, for the period of their, American | . Below, “The Breakiast, Dinner or Light ;marrmge any exemption to which Sh&ck” from the permanent collec- Lunches leither might be entitied as the tioh of the Museum of Modern Art. . ., % |head ‘of a family would be merged ' —_— ° 23‘(}?"‘10;{‘% Fsozgvblcg EMPIRE lin the Jjoint personal exemption for | The first woman—and one of © REFRESHMENTS | that period. The joint personal ex-| the very few American artists | emption allowable in the case of! 8o far to be honored by the in- ¥ ol | { um of Modern Pr]nhng {8 couple who were married and | f nm e York Clty with & ue mount ingenue and spoiling for a chance, took a starring role ‘,lmni together during the entire g Al Y ot P N £ , year may not exceed $2,000. ¥ 5 Loren ) I dls- in a studio stage production of a mystery melodrama. She 5B el cxceed 300 ] . Veli' xhibif Am’eflc‘n : 4 b S SR R i ‘ ] ; %ong | reaches the age of 18 years during| painter owuy;uegmme to no|tion outside New York, her work to presenting to be able now to report that even then she showed signs of the ~ i ’ : L G R T ; gulshed es :o' e & ide Now Xark, hep wark to Jome : ot she has since become., I'd like to, but in conscience I You g s o mhe %and foref ¥ m"mve lhasn mmflve mclty Ing! i an actress she ha is required to be prorate the | for xintings whicl her the las ; tisse 7 . chn't.. She s mo WOFSE Bt not pinch hetten Hhap, mosk i y ! same manner as the personal ex-! brought national attention g!v b odern IAfltt includaduheruiTI lmco,el:.o u;t‘;u'fim venture 2 5 5 2 Miss youngsters playing aged ladies. MONE’Y |emption. For example, should the! and acelaim. '!‘wen%flveo Bl exnibition called “New Hor. | strictly American : But it's interesting that shell take the Flora Robson role JiN child’s eighteenth birthday fall on’ Mvcr"; W&relflmoflflfl:gu:; Pt R aiean Aetr e | Iitroiad fo the w with in Lester Cowan’s production of “Ladies in Retirement” — a - ! June 80, the parent would be en-| MMdWhlfll opens on the last that time she has been repre-|a preface by the distinguished regular killer-diller of a role, exactly the kind Ida used to be T STANDS o reason that the titled to claim $200 credit for the| GoUR% Yopua ot the Arts Club| Sented there in nearly every im- Amegican critic and. e " G % hi | dependent child—that is, one-half : portant exhibition of contempor- | James- spoiling for, exactly the kind she has since proved she can do. Letterheads men a‘nd machines that print | S e Vs rule apoiid) of ‘Chicago, and from there will R axh iHeludthy: itsir “lg": : Envelopes a large daily newspaper are well | to other dependents where a change| trolf mm”l : m el::()ha?b.l'u osnlll;ltfillllm p Card equipped to do almost any kind {of status occurs during the taxable | and Po anmA;'t Sert Beithe Mulemm'wflto . LA ; year. | The twenty-five canvases are| g ‘Mucae Jou de Paume in : Fair as the possessor of the “standard” American voice. Since Forins of printing job. In addition to | | arawn from a recent oneman|paiic 1938; “Art In Our Time," | exhibition. Jd\{&fl( allowed the head of a family for Edgar Barrier, a Broadway actor now playing a wicked Nazi in “They Dare Not Love,” was chosen at the New York World’s which time, in Hollywood, he has played (in “Escape,” “Comrade this advantage, they are equip- show at the Pierre Matisse Gal-| 1939 Three canvases have been [of “Helen of b | X" ete) haract king American, “standard” or other- lery, New York City, from pri-{acquired at different times by |Maclver in his i etc.) no character speaking America: Ads ped to do the job more economic- Goshaw Now vate collections, and from the :hcg Museum of Modern Art.| Although this is the first wise. Museum of Modern Art's own| Miss Mac rmal | prehe; exhil ” Zanuck is interested in a “cavalcade of vaudeville” idea fos- Indexes ally. No matter what your print- nt collection. After a mmgml;.d;&;'un.;mwla:ou a \';)vom r;lv:nvol. ?A.lds:n ll:l‘"'l her tered by idea-man Charlie Friedman — to do for the variety Ledgers ing requirements, THE EMPIRE Hom e Boun d monl‘l';‘ :t-h g'hwmo. in wl‘:fi: n!flh; gery ne':y«:\ age oR“N et‘l:en::;t canvases have been exhibited show what “Hollywood Parade” did for the movies, what “Great | g 27 P can fulfill them quickly, inexpen- with-a memorial showing of the| Never ha been abroad, she American Broadcast” is to do for radio. 'osters q . pe) | works of the late Paut Klee, |nax worh, e B AR A R = Sy A g i et e o Bl ... uhy o 0k 1o B - |aska’s original fur farmers, is' canvases g Florida, wi.r:+ nany of the pie- G o T & aboard the Yukon, home bound to; tures in her «»:ond one-man L ' Shishmaref. i show were pa’ A, There is no substitute for 'he Daily Alaska Empire o i reuming fom ges-| _ Although this mar the firs| The” Plerre 1 tse Gallry i “5 vt Phone 374 ¢ G itiival |ering breeding foxes from his' fafm| Iver's ' capvases have I apened in N ber, 1940, has . o o N ewspaper Adver tisin { o the famous Fromme Brothers| rought together for presenta:|confined itsel: he past almost ¥ § iy ,qu ms in Wisconsin, o )

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