The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 2, 1941, Page 3

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'GONE WITH WIND' STIL PLAYING AS The CAPITOL has the BIG Pictures and News that Is News NOW! NOW 7:30B. M. ' Technicolor Movie Seen in Refurn Engagement at Local Theatre FULL LENGI W NOTMING CuT BUT THE PRICE Every motion picture critic has vision of some day encounter- ing a screen epic which is a picture so perfect that it be, latives, so outstandintg that it defies description, Such a picture w Wind,” currently howing vitol Theatre for @ limited engagement, The current howing ‘presents the picture in i‘s complete, full-length version—noth- ing ‘ew hut the price. | Most films have highlights on Gione at the which to concentrate ione with the Wind” has so many that a re- s mentally handcuffed. It is one sup . pme composite highli | the en picture, from the impr ive p! | last pictorially inspiring fade-out It is truly the greatest picture ever made and, since it follows s0 faith- fully Margaret Mitchell's story of the Old South that one is left wondering how it was ever achieved, it must follow that Miss | Mitchell’s story must be the Great American Novel. | Ihe whole world felt that Clark | Gable was the perfect Rhett But- |ler., He is, and gives his greatest | performan Technicolor even en- | hances his amazing personality. As| | for Vivien Leigh, she emerges as a star whose perfection as Scarlett| is almost beyond belief. Not only| le an overnight star but the test film discovery of this or other year. She and Gable ? a0y ke Scarlett and Rhett so real ““pat Stewart and Wayne Morris at cinema magic seems fo turn As soon as his divorce from Bubbles Schinasi becomes final, Screen | !Nt0 life itself. Actor Wayne Morris is expected to marry Pat Stewart, with whom It is difficult to coneeive of: he is dining, above. Morris is dressed for a part he plays in his |Olivia de Havilland ever giving a greater performance, so magnifi- next picture. Jessie Mackl_in and | Joe Bird Married | At Simple Service . OF HEA ON FINAL T OF E JUTRIX COMMISSIONER'S " FOR THE TERRITORY ALASKA, DIVISION NUM- } ONE. | » FELIX GRAY, Commission- and ex-officio Probate Judge, cent she as Melanie. Leslie How- ard always is great but he's never | been greater than as Ashley. There are perhaps several dozen other players on which one could well go into ecstasies, but space does not permit. ST Mrs. Eolad‘slein fo Visit Rlatives in el Juneau Precinct. At a simple wedding service held in the rectorv of the Church of the Nativity, Miss Jessie Macklin and the Matter of the Last Will Testament of CHARLES ED- In and WARD HARLAND, Deceased | Mr. B 'd were un L= NOTICE 1S HEREBY GIVEN|MF Joe Bird were united in mar Golden Gaie C“ that 1)1»1‘<»lhv:x Pursell Harland, ex-| o Rev. Father W. J. Le- y ceutrix of the estate of Charles saing HHe Bervive | ¥ Harland, deceased, £ has bride wore an afternoon dress | Mrs. I. Goldstein. accompanied by filed herein her Final Report of .oy, with accessories of white. |her son, Bobby, sailed on the Prin- the administration of the PSt{“?\H(' gorsage.was white, gardenias, cess Louise en route to San Fran- ol deceased, and that a hunné' Mary Wildes, her only at- | Cisco where she will spend several will be had upon the same, bef the undersigned, at Juneau, Alas at 10 o'clock a.m. on August 4th, 1941, at which time. and place all{” st 1o cerémony there was a d place ERNEST DANIELS T0 Iata, e amuect, aoi.ofie -cojesel RIS EUNICACH. (i NSNS0 HAVE EYES TREATED tions, in writing, to said Final Re-| s Bird returned yesterday on b port, and contest the same. |the Aleutian after a vacation of | Ernest Daniels, who was severely | GIVEN under my hand and the|severa] weeks spent in the States. [injured in an explosion two weeks cal of the Probate Court this 31st|For the last few years she has been |ago, left today on the Alaska ac-| of May, 1941, | surgical nurse at St. Ann’s Hospital. | *ompanied by Miss Minette, special | AL) | Mr. Bird is associated with the | nurse who will care for him en route | FELIX GRAY, | Hlarry Race Drug Store as pharma- | 0 Seattle where he will have his Commissioner and ex-offic- | ¢ist, 'yes treated by specialists weeks vi ting relativ tendant, wore navy with blue acces- sores, Mr. James McNaughton was best man, | io Probate Judge, Juneau The newly married couple will be —_——— Precinet, | at home to their friends at their| The longest chapter in the Bible Tirst publication, June 2, 1941.| Baranof Hotel apartment. is the 118th Psalm—176 verses. Last publication, June 23, 1941.| adv.| Subscribe for The Empire. Subscribe for The Empire. SHIRTMAKER FROCKS FAVORITES WITH CAREER GIRLS : Lett, polka, dot silk classic; epnter, fly front closing dress; righ, "!39 > i Shirtmaker frocks have long been favorites with the career girl beca 5 to what to wear at the office. They are well tailored, smart and practicat. gone in for style variations, with new necklines, variety in pocket treatments, fiy-front closings. ; THE DAILY ALASK CAPITOL FEATURE sars all super-{ sentation of the title, to the | : I v » TN | % A AcroSs (2 { [ % il { M 38 Dositive eleé- : tric poles of Judab Border Female sand- piper 1l island y | A EMPIRE, MONDAY, JUNE Puzzie! me=m | 33 = SEd - [ t t Al ) [T TS| © <Az 24 Solution Of Saturday's Puzzl . b story. the gent who | ¥ 4 o Cidar f e Pyt iaont b odh b d 2 EDITIONS OF LATE WORLD NEWS! ‘ 67, Peculiar DOWN figuratively “went down to the ] 65, Remainder Hus, | bottom of the sea,” has come Lo ——————— - e W - ——— b b Idolize life, and, as a politician of the| Fortune g sounter At liberty shadier sort, follows his counter- S s u Ks T ape part in his rise and fall in the iew CUR" HA" ( | Paramount picture, “The ( 1 .} B dng s Centry e woc| - BOY, 'ALLEN DEWNS LAST TIMES TONIGHT - sted’ so-and-so who, nfter being| Weighing 10 pounds wnd four SONJA HEINE in it stone | plucked from a breadline, wins | OURCes, baby boy was born at 4:1% erything Happens at Night” ' '-niulzv\ appen= | favo: wilth the bess of the city by <A‘ 1"}K“J »"‘-r‘r-n ‘\I‘lr .mu:(x{l‘x'x"“:‘l.. e— anue ‘tue of a good left hook and his|Ann’s Hospital tc Juneau Che o | i inine name | ¥ E R ke of Commerce President Curtis Shat- MOLYNEAUXS RETURN ES | tuck and Mrs. Shattuck, the former | j ¢, Molyneau, wife and daugh- Famous foot- MeGinty punches his way u',)‘L”“‘]\"wlu\lm-fim‘l ‘:I‘,,(. young fellow | ter, returned on the Baranof after .. Pleihe s | the . politizal ladder as second in|!'a3 beeh named Allen Dennis. @ brief visit to Lynn Canal points. | command ol the eity in the collec-, e ee .. | tien and division of political spoils. NOTICE i BACK FROM VACATON %% By He goes frem Alderman to Mayor,| Having closed the Juneau | Mis. Julla Terhune has returned b W higher | snd from Mayor to Governor of| Cabinet Shop, all bills due me to Juneau after a brief vacation trip frad! v Sholy o state. This latter post, hoW=| mgy be paid at my home or | to Ketchikan. 7 of the v does not materialize until he| p.. Box 6 ———— e ik family | arriss his secretary, an idea ad-| ady. Signed, OLAV EIKLAND. Try & Glasune: aa m {ne Kmpirs . money |vanced by his only superior as al—.. i Gl . A‘nl":.‘.tm I means of assuring the feminine| quvgli! Who Wrofe aBook A Year Affer He Was 25, Is (Continued from Page One) gyman who afterwards became the Rt. Rev. G. H. S. Walpole, bishop of Edinburgh. Lived in New York When he was eight he lived in E New York where his father was a | the | and i professor of theology. Then family returned to Britain Hugh was sent to King's School, Canterbury. To this, the oldest | school in England, claiming foun- } dation by St. Augustine in A. D. 596, he later gave his personal and ! collected manuscripts and books, together with a goodly sum for en- dowment, to found a literary mu-| seum, From King’s ScHool Walpolg went to Emmanuel College, Cambridge. Following his graduation, he preached for a short time at 2 Liverpool waterfront mission for seamen. His father wished him to continue in the church, but he soon| gave it up, becoming successively a| private tutor and a schoolmaster. Labored in Basement The urge to write, inherited from, Sir Horace Walpole, whose “Castle| of Otranto,” published in 1764,| started the romantic revival in English literature, quickly became' the dominant factor. He quit his schoolmastering job and, with only | 8150 in his pocket and the haif-| | finished manuseript of his first | novel, migrated to London. | Taking a basement room, which| cost the equivalent of $1 a week,' he started to break into the woiic| FOR PUBLICATION | . No. 412A IN THE DISTRICT COURT FOR “THE TERRITORY QF. ALASKA,| DIVISION, NUMBER. ONE.' AT, JUNEAU., . . | VERA PAIGE. BRUCE, Plaintift.! vs..ROLLA JAY BRUCF, Defen-| dant... SUMMONS Dead; Gave LecturesinU. 5. by | foreseeing the collapse of the czar-| " HUGH WALPOLE of letters, Work as a pari-time book | reviewer developed into a whole- time position at $750 a year. Soon| his first book, “The Wooden Horse” appeared. Five others followed be- fore the World War. Escapes from Russia When that conflici siaried Wal- pole was vacationing in Russia. He| joined the imperial Russian Red| Cross, saw two years of service and won the Georgian medal. Then,| ist regime, he escaped from the| country just before revolution| gripped it. | Despite his Red Cross duties, he found time to write “The Golden Scarecrow” in 1915 and “The Dark Forest,” based on his war experi- ences, and “Joseph Conrad” in{ 1916. His post-war works enjoyed a| popularity that never waned. They ! included the “Jeremy" books——“.!er-; emy,” “Jeremy and Hamlet” and TO THE ABOVE, NAMED DE-| FENDANT, ognt?mk f | In the name of the United States of, Amgriu.m yquehmw comn- manded to appear in. the above entitled court holden at Juneau in said Division apd Territory and | answer the complaint of plaintiff led 2 t you in the above en- ?‘fl‘afl “action, within thirty (30| days 1 the date of the service of this summons .and a copy of said complaint upon you, and if you ,!_nfl to s0 appear and answer. for want thereof the plaintiff will take judgment against you for the dissolution’ of .the bonds of matrimony now existing between plaintiff and defendant and will apply to the court for the relief demanded in said complaint a covy of which is served herewith and to which reference is hereby made. . The date of the arder for publi- cation ‘of this summons is the 10th day of May, 1941, The period of publication’ prescribed in said order is four ‘(4) weeks, The first publi- catfon of the same is the 12th day of May, 1941, and the last publi- cation’ of % same is the 2nd day 1941, of Jupe, and the time within which the' defendant is to appesr to answer. th , summons is thirly r the completion of ineau, Alaska, May 10, ‘Clerk of -the District Court Ternitory of Alaska, Divis- ion Number One. poika dotted silk crepe frock, left, is a classic. It has a hand-drawn linen collar and cu t\rz:twlln‘tnelu ‘In mee’pbeodiee are nmderlflu::f; and all-around pleats add'chic.’ The dress, t -front ‘closing all down length. - This bréast pockets an elastic belt mn@h Anne Gwynné, ;fim.....m ! spectator sports wear—a belge Rambler cloth col shirtmaker dress i By ‘JOMN' J. GILMORE, fl, "”, & First publication, May 12, 1941 Last W‘:“Lfin. June 2, 194! “Jeremy at Crale"—generally be- lieved to have been based on Wal- pole's experiences as a schoolboy. His historical studies at Cambridge were reflected in the “Herries” saga and several novels were writ- ten about life in a Cathedral city, | an insight gained from his father's tenure at Edinburgh, | One of the notabie works in this last classification was “The Cathe- dral,” which was published in 1922 and dramatized ten years later. Other books which were made over for the stage were “The Young Huntress,” “Portrait of a Man With Red Hair” and “The Old Ladies.” The plays met with vary- ing success, but Walpole had a lik- ing for things theatrical and in 1934 and 1936 was summoned to Hollywood as a consultant on films with English themes, He also did considerable lecturing in the United States, making half a dozen tours in the decade fol- lowing ‘the World War. Walpole created some kind of a record by the number of prefaces which he wrote for other authors’ tooks. The total was a mystery, for he himself said he had no idea how many he had turned out. He once claimed for himseif ‘thousands of enthusiasms, cease- less- eonversations, ignorance of facts and love of long walks.” He spant many years at his home near Keswick, in the heart of the Cum- berland Mountains in northwest England. A broad-shouldered, com- pactly built man, with dome-like forehead, receding gray hair and clear, humorous gray eyes, n sirede over the Cumberland slopes on jaunts which ran’ from 12 to 15 miles, regardless of the weather. A "GREAT McGINTY' Brian Dohle\;y_Plays Title ! I WHERE THE BETTER BIG PICTURES PLAY Ay bl‘ [[,”-”lq TONIGHT TUESDAY Meet “THE ‘Great McGinty' . YOU'LL NEVER FORGET HIM! IS ATTRACTION AT 20TH CENTURY Role in Feature Play- ing Here [ the mythical character | McGinty vote, which favors married men in| oflice, | “Steam-rollered” into office, and| that being married to his| secretary isn't bad at all, y decides to go straight at suggestion, which, in (h“‘ turns out to be a very, at least for McGinty They both land in still able to pull a * A Good-Neighbotly Chat long run, bad idea, his Boss. They're jail. few | strings, however, and finally find themselves on a “liner,” destina-| tion unknown. It happens that they stowed away on a banana boat and wind up in a South Am-’ erican republic sans everything but the clothes they stand in. “The Great McGinty” starts the beginning of the end on this note,| and much of the tense drama that permeated the film to this point, gives way to some hilarious comedy | situations. Earle Hunters Out On Vjc_alion Trip Earle Hunter; Cashier of the First Natipnal Bank, accompanied by Mrs. Hunter and their son, Earle, Jr., sailed on the Princess Louise for a month’s vacation in the States. The Hunters expect to spend most of | their time at Salem, Oregon, visit- | ing relatives. | | Mrs. James V. Forrestal, wife of the assistant secretary of navy, chats with Vice Admira) Julio Allard, chief of staff of the Chil oy ‘ot a New York dinner in honor of visiting Pan-American naval 3 The banquet was given by Rear Admiral Adolphus Andrews, i ¢the Third Naval District. it Vi . W/TH THE GOLFERS hesterfield Right from the tee-off, you'" like their COOLER, MILDER, BETTER TASTE : Smokers get every good quality they like in Chesterfield’s famous blend. This right combination of the best tobac- cos that grow in our own Southland and that we bring from far-off Turkey and Greece truly SATISFIES. Make your next puck Sl Chesterfield. . . you can’t SNEAD team-up with a better cigarette. Everybody who ORANTLAND RicE smokes them likes them. EVERYWHERE YOU GO P

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