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The CAPITOL has the BIG Pictures and News that Is News NOW! et dmartv iyt s o il 0 el il we o Dmveiapdih Sean S IO TR <=as SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU NOW! PX new and joyous escapade with the Hardys in New York! DEBUTANTE, M-G-M Picture with STRANGE AS IT MAY SEEM SERVANT OF MANKIND SHORTS NEWS | Rite Temple, Gov. and Mrs. Ernest | Gruening entertained with a din Dinner Party at Governor's House i ‘' "G e lRepresemative and Mrs, Before the old fashioned dance saturday evening at the- Scotlish | : | INTESTINAL GAS PAINS “Adlerika quickly relieved me of gas pains in the intestines.” (C. B.-Ohio) ‘ ATTENTION EASTERN STAR Gas pains due to delayed bowel ac- | Stated meeting of Juneau chap tion relieved thru QUICK results ter No. 7, Tuesday, March 25, from ADLERIKA. Get it TODAY.| p.m. Special election and refresh Butler-Mauro Drug Co.—in Doug- ments. Stuar A. Egan, Major and Mrs. J. E. Gra ham, Estella Draer, Mi Mis: Pearce and William Redling. Al 2 g - Valeris HELEN WEBSTER, | ner party at the Governot's Bouse.| 3 New York glamour girl, he has vlerbert, | gutherford, and to Carvel chums| Stangroom, Representative Wiliiam| rqgen to New York with the fam- Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Harsehi,|poast or never hear the last of it.| THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1941. V‘MICKEY ROONEY MRS. BRADFORD Di"erem Glamour Gir's STARS IN HIT | SHOWING HERE "Andy Hardy Meets De-: butante” Plays at | Capitol Theatre } Against a glamorous Manhattan background, the Hardy Family has once again woven a tale of hilari- | ous comedy and poignant human drama in “Andy Hardy Mee Debutante,” now playing at the Capitol Theatre. | In this latest episode of Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer's saga of typi- cal American family, the Hardys| take a trip to New York where| Lewis Stone, as Judge Hardy, must| fight a dramatic battle against the | best legal brains in the metropolis {or see the Carvel orphanage, refuge} lof the little town’s parentless youngsters, be closed for lack of | funds. Meanwhile Mickey Rooney, as| | Andy, has enmeshed himself in a| t{situation from which he can see no| - | escape. Infatuated with pictures of | - | boasted his Ann' to sweetheart, t that he knows the debutante.| “lily, he must make good on his €| comedy highlights growing out of | his predicament include his being | thrown out of the debutante’s home | when he tries to present a self- ! written letter of introducton, and ~!a night club scene in which Mickey| unwittingly runs up a forty-dollar “ibill on an eight-doliar bankroll.| | Mickey plays the comedy scenes PASSES ON AT WRANGELL HOME 21y WY —= SRR Former Well Known Resi- dent of Juneau Dies After Long Iliness Mrs. Z. M. (Gertrude) Bradford, former wellknown resident of Ju- neau, who has been ill for several E passed on at her home in Wrangell on Sunday according to a brief radiogram received here by Mrs. M, O. Johnson, who is visiting her daughter Mrs, W. M White- head The Bradfords were married in Junean over 25 years ago and made their heme “here until Mr. Brad- ford, who was with the Standard 0il Company, was transferred to the company’s agency at Craig and then to Wrangell where he is the com- panys' agent now. Besides Mr. Bradford, there are two sons, Curtis, now with Standard Oil Company at Ketchikan, and El- liott, attending Washington Stote College at Pullman, One brother, Elliott Fremming, is at Hirst-Chich- agof, another brother John, former resident of Juneau, is in the Pac- ific Northwest, and another brother | Harvey Fremming is residing in| Calitornia. | Tentative plans, it is understood | are for funeral rites and interment in Juneau, Mr. Bradford bringiug the remains of his wife here aboard one of the stcamers due tomorrow, when announcement will be made. This afternoon, Dr. George F. Freeburger received a radiogram from Mr. Bradford stating he is bringing the remains of Mrs. Brad- ford to Juneau aboard the Colum- Are Found in Takes Brains for Success ZORINA IN FIRST DRAMATIC ROLE, CENTURY THEATRE Richard Greene Also Is Starred in "I Was an Adventuress” Washington Possessing sutficient beauty and | glamour to make her an interna- { tionally celebrated personality, Zor- ina startles one a little by the |denth and variety of her accom- plishments. | Having made her mark as one of J |the greatest ballet stars of all time, she proceeded to prove her- self a very deft comedienne as well ‘1\\ the New York stage hit, “I Mar- {ried An Angel.” Now, before the world has had a chance to recover| from its surprise, this breath-tak- | { ingly lovely young woman astonish-| | es us all over again by proving that she is also a dramatic actress of rare ability. | It is in “I Was An Adventuress,” the* 20th Century-Fox romantic| drama, now playing at the 20th Century Theatre, in which she is| starred by courtesy of Snmuel} Goldwyn, that Zorina displays this| latest accomplishment Cast opposite the handsome and popular Richard Greene, she turns |in a flawless performance in the| role of an exquisite enchantress who glides from one European Capi- tal to another, capitivating wealthy business men, while her accom- plices, played by Erich Von Stro-| heim and Peter Lorre, fleece them | of huge sums of money. Then into her life walks Greene, as the scion of a fabulously wealthy Parisian banking house, and love turns her | o s s 5 S S A ; - Where Better Big Picfures Play! M ENTURY TONIGHT L3 20th Contury-Fox Pleture and TUESDAY ZORINA oty o Samed Godere) T oty ! d RICHARD GREENE ERICH VON STROHEIM PETER LORRE $IG RUMANN FRITZ FELD LAST TIME TONIGHT “STANLEY and LIVINGSTON" las by Guy's Drug Store. —adv. | with a deft touch and has never | turned in a better performance as| 2 ‘ Andy Hardy. e BRILLHART WILL | CLOSE €CC CAMPS Sand 5. Remote | ‘ Symbol for J samarium . Assoclate of Joshua 38, Lio In warmth " First name of & tamous actress . Is penitent . Engineer who Mooclopt | " Also leaving on the Forestcr s |be Robert Meyers of the Wealber'lyy aMr and Mrs, Sandy Smith at = FROGEON | Bureau office, who is going to Eldred | ¢ os Y . Pampers | bk » s SAEEd | their home in Ganges, Canada, on install equipment I Y5 i 49. Male deer | Rock to M | | M it and Mrs. Smith were married , Boraghs who o Solution Of Saturday's Puzzle | y = ol Emeflain with \:1:11; at the Juneau Hotel last »um- Sunday Breakfast write Demon and left shortly afterward for |a honeymoon trailer trip through A Sunday morning breakfast was given by the W. A. Chipperfields at 1. Utilize Baitle | Canada. | Writing on an announcement card | their residence on West Ninth Street. Their guests were Mr, and Mrs. Roman house- |Mr. Smith “All three doing H. C. Redman, Mrs. Gertrude Nay- hold god well.” lor, Miss Jerry Waite, Gerdon Wild- | | . Bast Indian weight i | TOM STEWART HAS(OMP[ETED | guest, as coffee came in, to ask: fp aud Cleine B e {“Why doesn't Britain pay her war e R man she handed that task debt?” S'STER OF Ju“E‘u pRE-lAw woRK‘: e fainted. But he carried RES'DE"' 'S DEAD‘ | through, And the evening was en-| almost joyed by all. Even—as the hour Belle V. Coffin, sister of Mrs. 4 rew late—by Churchill. | Stewart has completed his pre-law g i 3 2] T energetic wo- | take a look-see and came back en- James Wickersham, passed away in | | - Daty il e fall, energetlc wo Kent, Washington, last Saturday work and has been graduated {fom gy o 10 who has recently come| thustastically saying, “They're such | sity ashington. back from Norway where she nice girls” In the First World War on the ability of one sailor Eddie to “grow” four inches, the morning after an illness of many " years. m’;_“;;‘;‘gj‘,";jes‘? D?rb:?f]h:",gl;‘f‘;iserved as the American Mini.sl,er,ihhc headed \vomen's. defense work, rich boy is a candidate for henpeckery no longer. Knocked Ruth Coffin, a daughter, taught|in Juneau, Stewart drove to Sun is the widow of banker J,;uanremdunt Wusp.ns request. | out in the ensuln'g riot (which builds in typical Lloyd style) he for several years in the Juneau | Valley where he is enjoying o vaca- Borden Ha;rlmanv ;xg(l the :!aughtvr! _She‘ was in Paris _when the Ver-‘ is revived at Dot's home where the usual bedlam is in progress; e RobIs: tion of two weeks in the popular Of 80 English shipping family. Both | sailles treaty was signed. And she(l pefore the evening is out he has joined Dot and Coffee Cup in e renort. |fortunes are now in remnants, but|Saw the signing. Then she came | g eye-opening, unbending evening at a dime-a-dance hall, and ENGINEER HERE After his vacation Stewart expects| Sh€ caiTies on in the grand mflfl-;i‘;’":e to T{::lhtt fl;‘r theh Ieusxuednf as estranged his finacee. E. H. Elwinof he U. S. Enginears | to return to Seattle to join the army | 1" B ] The picture’s problem now is to change the romantic status Office in Seattle, is spending sevcral for his one year period of servicc. | A True Salon e ot E it of the principals without making heels of any of them, and i(::y: (l;z“ i\;;ga:h:s ;:::lé)or; vacation ———— it is nicely solved. Coffee Cup, exuberant and irrepressible, bia and arrangements are being made for services at the Charles W. Carter Mortuary, the time io little game into a boomerang, . NOTICE TO THE PUBLIC I will not be on the ticket for MACHINISTS TO MEET councilman. There is no one to The Juneau organization of the |blame but myself. T want to thank I. A. Machinists, Local 514 will meet 5 all my friends who solicited me to tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the A. F.| make the race, but I do not choose of L. Hall. All members are urged (0 run at this time. to be present, adv. J. P. (TEX) LOVETT. Worthy Matron. MRS. J. BORDEN HARRIMAN Her dinners have set a routine; they pack a punch. ACROSS . That girl . East Indian welght . Mineral spring Summit . By one's self . Lubricate y Smiths Announce Birth Of Son March 9 31004, 1 priends in Juneau have received will| snncuncements of the birth of & son known as one of the best routes to the President’s ears. Even then she was a collector of people with ideas. And she shifted them so skillfully that when she phoned, | President Wilson usually saw the person she wanted him to see. Mrs, Harriman is impatient witn | people who call her handsome. But | that she is. Almost six feet tall. | Straight as a rod because her | father hired an army man to give | her exercises as a child. Her hair v | now is white, her eyes brilliant, her voice low. And her interest in life is intense and generous. She even has admirers, Twitted about them, she snorts, “Why, theyre friends.” But they do bring her flowers and make old- fashioned, chbuttly cpmpliments. Early Social Worker Daisy Harriman started out as one of New York’s rich young matrons. But it wasn’t long be- fore she was chin deep in work 0 get milk for the poor, care for the tubercular. Charles Evans Hughes, as New York’s Governor, put her on her first official committee— the hoard of a women’s reforma- tory. Mrs. Harriman went out to When Sigrid Arne went look- ing for the “glamour girls of Washington” she found a group of cufstanding women with glamour that’s different. They depend on brains instead of on youthful charm. Here is the first story. be announced later. i | | John Brillhart™ will leave tonight cn the Forester for Haines and | Klukwan, to close down CCC camps | in that area. He will return hete at | the end of the week with Horace! Blood,CCC foreman, and Mrs Hollywood Sights And Sounds S T F L SR— Resistance More sagaclous . Strive to equal or excel . Divisions of the earth’s surface . Ireland SIGRID ARNE AP Feature Service Writer HOLLYWOOD, Cal., March 24—“A GIRL, A GUY AND A GOB.” Screenplay by Frank Ryan and Bert Granet from story by Grover Jones. Dihected by Richard Wallace. Principals: George Muryhy, Lucille Ball, Edmond O'Brien, Henry Travers, Franklin Pangborn, George Cleveland, Kathleen Howard, Marguerite Chapman, Lloyd Corrigan. like a . Flat . . Incidents . Cask . Beverage . Ollstone . Kind of resin . Came back . Uttered with vocal sound . Prehistoric inhabitant of Great Britain . Opposits of aweather . Biblical praphet . Terminates 22. Division of & calyx . Old_French measure of length More rational Kind of lens Lies in ambush . Earllest known instrument of the viol class . Roamer . Pigeons of & certain WASHINGTON, Marc Harriman is this kind of person Some years back she had about 30 people in for Sunday night dinner to meet Winston Churchill Before her dinners she always plants. 4 conversational bomb some- | where so that the talk—which is | her reason for entertaining will merrily. | So prompted a male 58. Interprets: archale 59. Pigpen littla child 26. Pertaining to one's birth Units Peels Greek letter Pronoun FFF] - DOWN 1. Dish of meat and vege- 54 . Harold Lloyd sat on the sidelines, as producer, and does not once appear in this brought comedy. And yet his hand is clearly in evidence through scenes reminiscent of the bespectacled comic at his best. The girl is Dot (Ball), a secretary living with her slightly wacky family. The “guy” is Stephen Herrick (Q'Brien,, her so- cialite employer, engaged to a domineering beauty of his own set and a bewildered candidate for a hen-pecked future. The “gob” is Coffey Cup (Murphy), gresh from the fleet and all set to settle down with Dot, except that now and then he hears the siren call of tropical tunes and still cherishes a little black book with addresses in many ports. From the portentous noontime when Steve wanders over to a street crowd where Dot and Coffee Cup are collecting wagers According to word received by Mr, and Mrs, B. D, Stewart, Thomas B. variety . Stop . Throb ). Masculine name . Armed bodies of men with authority . Not fresh . Sign of additior . French river . Ornamental button % . Nimble ///fi . Dutch city For two decades — before she|ple together to thrash out the sub- ought to widen Murphy's fan following and O'Brien (once went to Norway—she was prob- | Jject. PERCY’S CAFE : ® Empire Classifieds Pay! 4 4 ably the only American woman| Then came the long, dry—for her | who ran a true salon. She invited —years of Republican rule. And in a group—never more than 324.‘thcn the Democrats back in, and to Sunday night suppers. The|President Roosevelt asking her to| guests were always topflight fig- | represent the country in Norway. ures in the current political fights.| She was asked about that appoint- Mrs, Harriman enforced two rules: ment when it was just a rumor, no one was ever to grow angry and she retorted in typical fashion: and no one was to repeat what ‘‘Certainly Tl take it. Who had heen said. Those who failed Wwouldn't?” never were invited back. ’I‘hm’e's" surprisingly little information on| the historic debates which have“wcklflns, and they with her. The gone on under her roof. Inauon read and chucked when She has a routine. No cocktails' Madame Minister at 67, learned to before dinner and no wine with it. ski. And when the invasion came But there is beer and whisky for| she was the first to get the news those who want it. The main| out. course is simple—a ebaked dish or Then for two weeks she dodged a casserole. bombs as she shuttled across the The guests stay at the table after| Swedish order with news to the coffee comes, and either Mrs. phone to the American minister Harriman or some prompted guest at Stockholm. He was worried starts the ball rolling with a hot about her, and during one phone question. | call asked, “How are you?” Neo Chips on Shoulder i Madame Minister came right| Mrs. Harriman, herself, “Never felt better in my perfect referee, And that’s the se- cret of her dinners. She, herseif,! is never the violent protagonist. Always wants to hear both sides. She's amusingly impatient with legalistic or heavily philosophic phrasing. Interrupts with, “Now go back. I don’t know what you're talking about.” Her home is a good setting—a comfortable, rambling place on a hill above the Potomac, The furni-| ture is a jumble of fine old pieces —many of them French. The ta- ble in her library is heavy with the month’s best magazines. And they're read. She starts her day, characteris- tically, with energy. It's 8:30 when | the maid brings coffee and a roil to her bed. By that time the madame is already half through the paper and on the phone, per-| ot oo 20 st S haps calling an important Senator| Mines in Minnesota produce to ask if he’s speaking that day. |about 62 percent of the nation’s In the Wilson days she was| iron. U-M-M-M THAT SALMON DISH LOOKS G00D! YES MA'M _ AND THAT ADVERTISING MEANS GREATER SECURITY FOR YOUR FAMILY She Skis at 67 She fell in love with the Nor- miscast as the romantic of “The Hunchback of Notre Dame") thrives in the new field, while Miss Ball makes a spirited heroine. Sequence reminiscent of early Lloyd thrill-stuff: the incident of the runaway grand piano. “IHE LADY EVE.” Written and directed by Preston Sturges from story by Monckton Hoffe. Principals: Barbara Stanwyck, Henry Fonda, Charles Coburn, Eugene Pallette, William Demarest, Eric Blore, Melville Cooper. o' back, life.” Just about that time, in Wash- ington, President Roosevelt inter- upted a cabinet meeting with a grin to ask, “Isn't Daisy doing a swell job?” - Special Election At Eastern Star A special election of vacated of- fices will be held at temorrow night’s Eastern Star meeting at the Scottish Rite Temple and all mem- bers are urged to attend The meet- ing is scheduled for 8 o'clock. A social will follow and Mrs. C. B. Hplland will be in charge of ar- rangements. o8 This third of Sturges’ directing jobs (“The Great McGinty,” “Christmas in July”) concerns the wealthy snake-fancier's ship- board romance with the card-sharp’s daughter. A trusting, awk- ward Galahad, he is disillusioned when her business connections are revealed. Later at home he falls hard again when, for re- venge, she appears as the Lady Eve of British nobility, spon- sored by a phony lord (Blore). Because she looks sp much like his late amour, he is sure they cannot be the same — or does that make sense? Light comedy with frequent excursions into slapstick, “The Lady Eve” exercises anew the Sturges gift for satirizing the human foible. 2 “FOOTSTEPS IN THE DARK.” Screeaplay by John Wex- ley and Lester Cole. Directed by Lloyd Bacon. Principala: Eroll Flynn, Brenda Marshall, Alan Hale, Ralph Bellamy, Lucille Watson, Lee Patrick, Allen Jenknis. BUILDING UPJTHE MARKET for Alaska’s No. 1 product is mighty important to all people in Alaska. And sgain this year, the Industry is out to sell America on Canned Salmon and keep it sold! Intensive advertising in ‘the States is teaching housewives the nutritive values and economy of Canned Salmon. Millions of magazine ads . . . recipes on thefood pages‘of méwspapers—are telling women how to serve more Canned Salmon in delicious new ways. The eooperation of grocers, too, has been enlisted to push Canned Salmon sales in their stores. All over the U. 8. the forces of advertising, publicity, and promotion are at work building a more stable market for Alaska’s major food product. A marketthat will mean protected prosperity for every Alaska family. Successful mystery comedy about a duoble-living socialite who writes fiction in secret — and gets' the chance to work op a murder. Fast-moving and funny, with Flynn wholly in com- mand of one of his rare modern roles and making a bid for new favor. .