The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 4, 1941, Page 3

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'WALLS THAT TALKY . voiond tell a strange, fan- d { THE CAPITOL HAS THE BBEG PICTUR API MATINEE “HOUSE OF SEVE GABLES” G-MEN” NEWS -CANDY FRIDAY—SATURDAY FIRST SHOW |- Starts 7:30P. M. LATEST NEWS | | | } SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU | MICKEY MOUSE Saturday, ! P. M. “DICK TRACY'S EN UN ONLY ONCE—STARTING AT 9:15 P. M. » we x ® Hislory ® Vacalioning ® Fishing ©® Defense 25¢ ALL NEWSSTANDS and THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE . Genus low Virginia wil- of the ES AND NEWS THAT IS NEWS N @ ¥ e e is in Juneau and will leave Sunday jaboard the Princess Norah for the THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1941. London Postywwoman - DOUBLE BILL IS AT CAPITOL FOR 2 NIGHTS "Black Friday;’ and ""The House of Seven Gables™ Are Two Features “The House of Seven Gables” and| “Black Friday” compose the two-' feature attraction at the Capitol Theatre for tonight and Saturday. The first feature is a screen dra- matization of Nathaniel Haw-| thorne’s famous novel, one of the great classics of American litera-| ture. [ In the garet Lind eon; Vincent Pyncheon, her George Sanders as his brot cruel and grasping Jaffrey Pynch- eon; Nan Grey as Phoebe Pynch- eon, and Dick Foran as Matthew Maule. Latest and most unusual horror picture of that famous pair Boris Karloff and Bela Lugosi is Uni-| featured roles are as Hepzibah P Price as Cliffo distant cousin versal's “Black Friday,” the other T ey 77 0 e . - | feature. AL AEERPATE Formal Dan(e for Karloff is a surgeon who per- Y]o[UBP|R[O[ANME WIE|S | forms a daring operation in which EBBIIVIRINISIRTIAIR | . he transplants part ,of the brain a8 W ) s|E[RIE|N/AIDJEMERISIE] | DeMOIayS Tonlghf |of a criminal into the brain of a Sy el T [N[K[VIM[UIRIDIER] | = bers and guests of | Mid College professor who then| 7y 6 Kind of two- 42 Invite D |C[O[YJMBIEIRIC {- Tonight members and guests Of iy~ 104 ynoonsciously into a life ‘gf| Fostoffice officlals in London have wheeled cart 44. Small lakes Al 5| | the Royal Arch Gunnison Chapter, | 23 A sanctioned the wearing of trous- Minimu soning herb ERAISICIOIN[GIEA|L ider 4 ' | ruthiess crime. | A f S nimum asoning Order of DeMolay will hold their ers for women mail carriers g peat By AN[TINAILIAT[EMIN]A[P ’ ; DRt U EC and urkish gov- xistence RIEEINITIERS L] MA annual invitational dance in the | here is one of the British post- 10 O ki S A ALIAISEEWOM|E[N] | Scottish Rite Temple. MRS, WHYTE GOES SOUTH | Women in her new garb. Women 3 . Bone S NG ALIA Dancing will begin at 9:30 o'clock | Y | are doing much of the work pre- i 55 Feminine name ;%, St IR R (AT [eD] | Yith Lillan Uggens orchesira.| Mrs. Georse Whyte, of the U. .| 710Usly alloted fo mien Defore ‘the 20. Like 61. Clearer Guests of the formal affair are | Treasury disbursing office in Ju- bokicd) 21! Unite by tusing 63, Arm supporting [CIOINIEREIVIAINIIRIE! | members of the DeMolay basketball | ey is o southbound passenger on ' PRSI e sk NNEN DOLE QO . : (peau is a sout! passe Snakelike fish . S s team. e Yuko P o State: consiucten” g8 Uikt WIEISITERSILIEDEINEE] ——e il g g w : | rincipally wj he her, s. e AAtDa L Solution of Yesterday's puzzte | MESTRELAT IS HERE, | F. Brown, at Bothe S o ) 4 00 Fetters | e - | & G s s~ i | SOUTH FOR VACATIOM uxs. rrepmurcer sovrn || Sights And Sounds 156 counselor 2. Germine & Commonplace 3. General fight | pau) Mestrezat from Bidred Rock FOR VISIT IN PORTLAND b Rilbidic women Lighthouse stationed in Lynn Canal, | Mrs. George F. Freeburger is a 'y Robbin Coons . Went swiftly passenger south on the Yukon for| — i Po HOLLYWOOD, Cal, April 4 —| and, Ore., where she will visit . Not so much { south. He will visit his daughter in | for a short time with her mother,| William Keighley, the movie di-| g0 TEhe sk | Salem, Oregon, for sometime and | Mr Crary, but principally to|rector, had his option lifted the S Moohanieal bar: | then go south to Texas. He will be attend the graduation of her|other day. He received formal noti- 3 Sutd)a&f”::'b- | on leave for six months before re- daug Doris Freeburger, at Reed | fication he would be welcome| . Scene of action ‘mming north, College {to continue as professor of course e g [ | 280bU (cinema direction) at the . Little child | University of Southern California. grow etati stral . Hold b . Shift . Sends 8. River: Hindu ¥ 1 Long r quit . Goddess of . Emotionally . Weep bitterly S. Tear apart the country . Kind of fur Y shed closes: poetlc board Repose Smooth | Siamese coins ing veg on | ack | ‘ g i out of Spanish queen | narrow | y idelber | Salary $5 an hour, or $10 per two- | hour lecture, once weekly. | Every Friday evening Keighley, Ino abeent-minded professor, takes | the classroom platform and tells| > 'a class of 20 to 30 students how lit's done. He has been doing 1t, | faithfuily, for one semester al- | ready. “I try to discuss movie-direct- | ing a: s, not as it is in theory,” | he sdys of his work “To give | them an idea of actual, practical | conditiens met in the studios.” | i e mean< | b " 7 Results? I doubt very much ST T that any student will step from Zilian ma- | # /AR T - 1 m into a directing job. i ODOM EDWARDS CO" AlaSka Dlsh’lhuiors Howse wx:ml:;lv ral of them h.:u‘c s 5 ———— e | been able to get jobs in studios. he Complete Story of Alaska! In Printed Word and Picture NOW ON SALE! @ Industries ~ Numerous to Mention! Mail It to Your Friends MAILED . . . and GIFT-WRAPPED! ON SALE AT » ® Hunting ® Mountaineering and Many Other Articles, Too The 1941 Daily Alaska PROGRESS EDITION That is, after a course in the cin- ema, of which the direction lec- tures are a part, a boy or girl | could be gualified to try for a job, just as a dramafic school student is qualified to try for acting. Even- tual success would depend, as al- ways, on the individual's equipment, emotional and otherwise, for direct- i ing.” | Social note: Genevieve Tobin (Mrs. Keighley), now a faculty wife, has received her first invi- tation to a faculty tea. Speaking of “actual, practical conditions,” Keighley could tell the boys and girls (and probably wil) of what rain, in quantity, can do |to a production schedule and a budget, | On his current “The Bride Came |C.OD.” Chick Chandler has two lines to say: “Where's the bride?” and “Where's the telephone?” Chandler had been on salary for three weeks, awaiting clearing weather, before the outdoor scene| requiring his presence could be shot. . A special type of airplane, rent-| ed, likewise had to stay on the payroll pending the return of sun- shine. Edmund O'Brien, who has just| taken Nancy Kelly to wife, is to| be in the comedy, “Father Takes| a Wife,” at RKO, where Nancy Kelly works in “Parachute Bat-) talion.” The popular Rose‘ Franken stories of “Claudia”—a magazine perennial, now staged— will be filmed by Seleznick. . . .| First story on the defense boom’s| effect on American life will be! “War Town,” with Dorothy La- mour and Brian Donlevy. | Walter Brennan, three-time Os- | car winner, won't take any Oscar for his negligible role in “Nice| Girl?” although he got his usual pleasant salary for doing it. He accepted the money without qualm of conscience—recalling, no doubt, the days when studios squawked at| paying him $5 a day. Brennan has plenty to do in Sergeant York.” Among his duties the village storekeeper is con- (Gary Cooper) that for the draft| “against the X vincing York ne must register whether or not it's 300k.” ————————— More than 27,000 miles of the nation's airways have been lighted and otherwise improved for night TWO FEATURES FOR WEEKEND, 201H CENTURY "Torpedo Raider” Thriller ~"Pride of Bluegrass” Is Second Film There are two distinet features to be shown at the 20th Century or ton and tomorrow. The first s “Torpedo Raider.” “Torpedo Raider” reminds one of ho rezent Montevideo battle in the scond World War when the Graf 3pee was bottled in the harbor by 3ritish s , even to the detail of he colorful sinking of the German hip. odo Raider” in Barry Mac- y and John Mills. Walter Forde , C. S. Forester wrote the preduction formerly was orn for Glory.” hero of “Pride of the the second feature, is lived. He is Elmer Gan- try, the blind horse. which can jump as surely and gracefully over steeplechase hurdles as any well- trained hunter with keenest eye- screen play by Vincent an correlates the life of its equne hero to the humans with whom it comes into contact. The ¢ of human actors is headed by two accomplished juvenile players, Kdith Fellows and James McCal- {lion, and it also includes Granville Bates, Aldrich Bowker and DeWoll Hopper. -+ o Sumrall Back in Juneau ‘World Travefilg Evange- list Has Made Extensive | Trip fo Interior Alaska * Lester Sumrall, world traveling evangelist, lecturer and author, has returned to Juneau affter making a circle tour through the interior of Alaska. His first stop was Fair- bank, where he conducted meetings in the Odd Fellows’ Hall. He also, lectured at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks High School and Pioneers of Alaska. For over three weeks Mr. Sumrall spoke on the “Who's in Town” radio feature. The traveler states that the Interiorites gave him a real “frontier” welcome. While in the Interior, Mr. Sumrall traveled about 2,000 miles by air, to see the more remote sections of the Territory. One of the trips was to Wiseman, some 90 miles above the Arctic Circle. There he spoke in the Pioneer's Hall. Everybody in | town attended the meeting but two, and they were found to be ill. Another plane journey of interest | was the one to Nome. He states that there are 125 miles of ice in Nome's front door of the Bering Sea. Out on the tundra he saw a large herd of reindeer. ’ | Sumrall says Anchorage is boom- | ( ing. A room to live in rents from | ot $40 to $60 a month. Lots that sold for a few dollars in late years have jumped to several hundreds dollnrs‘ with the boom. Over the radio this morning Mr. Sumrall said that he-was glad to be back in the friendly capital. Tonight in the Bethel Assembly of God, Mr. Sumrall will be speak- ing. Pastor Ralph Baker cordially invites the public ‘to this meeting. | (APY. LATHROP IS WORKING ON BUILDING PLANS Arrives Here on Rush Trip fo Inferior-Refurns fo Seaftle Thursday Capt. Austin E. Lathrop, Alaskan | capitalist, arrived in Junean last |pight' from Seattle on board the PAA Douglas DC-3 after a trip w\ Seattle where five architeccts are| drawing plans and specifications tor‘ his new building in Anchorage. Work on'the structure, which will include a 950-seat theatre, a radio station, apartments, bowling alleys | and a coffee shop, will start in May, | said Capt. Lathrop. Capt. Lathrop left Juneau this morning when the DC-3 flew out for Fairbanks. He will fly to the Healy coal mine today and said that ! he must be back in Seattle by next Thursday. K T e SR oy SONS OF NORWAY Reguldar meeting of Sons of Nor- |way, Saturday, April 5, at 8 pm., |in the TO.OF. Hall GERTIE OLSON, adv. # Secretary. sperations, B N ©Pire Classiflods Pay! - Subscribe w the Daily Alaska Empire—the paper with the larges, pald circulation, {mer night clerk at the Gastinean |ed on or before May 3rd, 1941, at SATURDAY EATURES—2 20;MILLIONDOLLAR GERMAN FlGHTINGéHIP IN FLAMES! [ | [l BIG PARADE ¥} SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE TURDAY——1:00 P. M. 2ecnss FEATURES sennn 2 CARTOONS CANDY. PRIZES ) NO. FRATU HIS FLYING HOOFS . .. PRIDE OF THE BLUEGRASS! " HIS FIGHTING HEART . . .. PRIDE OF THE NATION! His blazing speed a goal for horses . his flaming courage a goal for men! A new thrill! with the Racing Sensation of the Age GANTR THE BLIND HORSE Last Time Tonight "HERITAGE OF THE DESERT” ¥ THEATRE 7 A e . Wreckage of street cars in Washington ‘When two street cars collided at a downtown crossing in Washing= ton during a fog, the motorman of one was killed and eight other persons seriously injured. One car overturned. Firemen had to use torches to rescue the motorman who was dead before they reached him. cx Oud The $500,000 neo-classic Japa- nese Embassy in Washington is the Mrs' Kay Salls | newest of the cn;.mal city's for« Sou'h on Yukon ‘nlgn-awnf‘d sitfittmcs. | WHY SUFFER with your feet? Phone 646. Chiropodist Dr. Steves. (adv.) Mrs. C. V. Kay, wife of the for- Hotel, sailed for Seattle on the steamer Yukon yesterday. She will visit with her daughter, Mrs. Bob | Gordon, during the time that her husband is in Sitka where he will be employed soon by Siems Drake Puget Sound. NOTICE OF HEARING ON ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR THE TERRITORY OF ALASKA, DIVISION NUMBER ONE, AT JUNEAU. In the Matter of the Application of THEODORE ADOLPH OTTO HOLL for a Change of Name. NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN that all persons having objection to the granting by the above-entitled court to Theodore Adolph Otto Holl a change of name to Theodore A Harris may appear and show cause why the same should not be grant-| D 1 am, of said day, at which time | the above-entitled court a hearing | will be held upon the application of petitioner for such change of It's Swell! name. i W . 5 .14 It’s COLD and creamy 2 TTNES o able Ge s 2 F wmi::n?isvrm.{v‘u:x:;m(:rmu‘u- U & |{ ANDit tastes better than o < i : ,' ANYTHING I've had be- 4 | District Court, First Division, Ter- f 11t t REAL fruit ritory of Alaska, at Ketchikan, this | § (OXel &S00 <+ 3T 27th day of March, 1941, ! (SEAL) | E ROBERT. E. COUGHLIN, | Clerk of the District Court‘s ! JUNEAU | | Publication date, April 4, 1941, ndvlz 4

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