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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 2, 1931. I = 34 COLISEUM Last Times Tonight ( {coma, Wash., where he was promi-’ nent in real estate and banking. | Alaska Steamship Man | During the rush to the Klondike ! . * s 0. | Bold fields in 1897 Mr. Wallace or- | Screen’s Greatest Lover Denies Report That He May Seek | |fnized the Washington and Ala ka Steamship Company. Later w Seclusion of Monastery, So Now Perhaps Cupid's Arrow !h;s brother he organized May, Overtake Confirmed Bachelor It oo which was consolidated with the T e bank of California in 1919. 7:30--2 S /5--0 s January 3, 1891, Mr. Wallace 7:30--2 Shows--9:30 married Mildred Fuller, daughter of Melville W. Fuller, late Chief Justice of the United St Mr. W e W a member of num- | ber of clubs at Tacoma, New York land Washington, as well as several | in Paris, including the Jockey Club, | with which he became affiliated while serving as United States | Ambassador to France. WISE-CRACKER CASHES IN ON HIS FRECKLES] ... .=..... Uack Oakie':SpArckled Face Skeets Gallagher ) Is Responsible for i His Ready Wit (e rSocial | . ; Novarro’s Love Romances OnlyonScreen ! ! ‘. Pre- Inventory | SALE FUR COATS, NECKPIECES g THROWS | INFACT EVERYTHING IN FUR GOODS AT | | 30% OFF | JACK OAKIE with | The boyhood of Jack Oakie, who e : < ToAMoN |is starring in “The Social Lion,"| ar { NAVARRO § | which shows at the Coliseum The- | MARCELINE atre for the last times tonight, [was marked with that harmlessi - plague which most youngsters have | 1 o |to suffer. He had freckles. Freckles (| e T RAMON 27 HIS ‘ ; e = { | PAMON BEFORE THE GRo’rTocfloquggE YOUNGER PROTHER. land a stub nose. And his hair = . e EDUARDO. (Zef%). H . e R |stood on end, strayed over his|forTerreremaese % |eyes and behaved in other unor- | thodox ways. of record was that of 1917 with a| Often there were taunts and jibes | 2 UITFLE _STORIES |tota1 of 095 inch. The greatest|about his - recklos. But whereas :. OF(S) 24 hour precipitation was 1.17 inch-| most other lads would squirm at es on the 17th-18th. The 1st was the raillery of grown-ups and more T B | | HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 2.—All the |misty-eyed movie fans who have waited with awful expectancy for | the day when Ramon Novarro will | say adieu to Hollywood and don the |menk’s cowl, can chcer up and { smile. COMPLETE NEW Were never so low as'now. Take advantage of ik the only day without precipitation, than likely run away, this kid stood talthough the amount on the 9th|his ground and “wise-cracked” | was too small to measure. Measur- right back at those who tried to able quantities fell on the other|tease him. His sharp retorts got to 20 days of the month. The totalipe even smarter than those which snowfall was 06 inch while the|were directed at him and his speck- average for the month is 28 inches. | jeq visage. There were about four inches on; His wise-cracking led him into the ground on the 1st- remaining|yaudeville and finally to cinema from the previous month. This dis-!heights of “The Social Lion.” appeared on the 4th and the great-| «we can't all be born handsome § |est depth on the ground thereafter|or rich,” says Oaie. “Neither can Sl. was 3 inch on'the 11th. , Ige all be born with freckles. I got| lppers | .. The meén relative humidity was|ilie freckles and T'm Estisted.” 89 per cent at 4 am., 89 per cent [N s at noon, and 90 per cent at 4 p.m.|“CASTLE” KOOM IS FILLED | The prevailing wind direction WITH OWNER'S PORTRAITS {was from the southeast and the }nwruuc hourly velocity 89 miles.| WASHINGTON, Jan. 2. — One | The maximum velocity was 34|room in the great house known as| {miles from the east on the 26th. | Henderson Castle is devoted entirely { There were no clear days, one|to paintings of the owner, Mrs. | partly cloudy day and 30 cloudy|John B. Henderson, long a social| | days. There were 3.3 hours of sun-|leader in the capital. { 1 this condition and buy furs at our TORY SALE According to ms own statement i that monastery yarn was spun into tapestry by a press agent who let his horses run wild over the track of imagination. Y Novarro's Ladies’ House PRE- VE home 1s ornamented | with ancient religious relics, altars , |and tall candles so that he may imagine himself to be in a holy latmosphere when the mood wills. — (He is a strange personality, a mix- ture of incongruities—the heart of TRIANGLE BUILDING an actor and the soul of a saint, ! Perhaps that is why many of | his friends regard him as a genius. ‘iAL any rate, he cannot be com- | pared with an ordinary movie actor. | Recently he has trz\d to shake PATSY OLEARY |down his “recluse” reputation by! ‘ S appearing at midnight part Patsy O'Leary has seen a lot of ~ -~ el $1,00, $1.50 and $2.50 per pair R I 00 S Bl e Wb |Where there is a frequent clinking [the world since she left COUNty|.pine ‘or less than two percent of| Mrs. Henderson still resides in A |of glass and the cocktail shaker|Cork, Ireland. i the possible amount. The lowest!the house which was built in the {make a rainbow on the ceiling Her Irish father and French|,..;ious record was four per cent|early nineties by the late Senator S 4LOUM’S mother went to Paris when “Pat” Doesn’t Like Whoopee @ in November and December, 1925. John B. Henderson. | But it is quite evident that Ra-|Was three months old, and there| “pi )¢ g0 occurred on the 1st,| ‘Another room contains works of | mon doesn't like whoopee. they lived eight years before com-|g., “ogin g0th and 31st, and dense | modern artists. In it is a wooden | He hasn't figured in any of the|ing to America. fog on the 8th and 31st. | mantle 18 feet high which was | When Patsy was 14 her family carved by Albert Pries, a mmheri r { Hollywood romances, despite the experienced technigue in love-mak-|moved from Tacoma, Wash., to | In the school of wood carving. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. . ing he displays on the screen { Hollywood—and two weeks e = working in Senn He came from Mexico about|she Gy g i ater | b ief = HUGH WALLACE thirteen years ago with his brother,|€dies. She has been featured in a | |Martiano Samiengos. They had a|fcore since. Between screen appear- | LI | e i all the way from Mexico City to| Of course she has red hair and Prominent Democrat and the border, as the country was then | freckles. in the rebellious throes of a politi-| e |cal upheaval. But they reached | Los Angeles with the chmmul':us‘ capital of $10. Missing meals was just a naturall HEAD ALL I-A ST -ee EN you remodel V' your house, be sure you use Sheetrock. It gives you the safety, privacy [ BaXEaN Pl Wl it ] > routine of the day, and they had | to bunk li)n the dixllgy rooming hous- F Oi‘:mcr Am}’)afissdog to | comfort that good walls must es run by garrulous proprietors. ranc s ea 3 sali ble . His first chance in pictures came e provxde i d’ dural i 1?§;d:;2e1:m}:‘e x;vnsos:l;ecneél} for (Gonbinud rods. Bhke Gb) <. & wallsthat take any decoration | the role st r Khay-, e S A reserve i g ppl e | gl {1016 in which Woodrow Wilson was | e d i lt.We n’“ d 4 “The Greatest Lover” {December Is Warm But Is etected president. ; you and instruct you fully. . Ramon was groomed for the title . 7 H During the Wilson administration | of “the greatest lover” in pictures | Without Even a Single |it was said that Mr. Wallace was| SHEETRO-CK 5 and his pictures were acclaimed Clear Day [closer to the president than any | THE FIREPROOF WALLBOARD everywhere. His progress was rapid other westerner and in a sense was | ;nd heR‘::cuImulated ;ni::e fortune. December weather in Jl;me':'x‘;m adviser of thct:reside?t on a(; Price $50.00 per 1000 sq. ft.” was Rex Ingram who had chang-|equalled the all-time recor or | fairs concerning e western part - . : ed the name of Saminegos to No-|mildness for the month and broke |of the country. | JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Inc. b varro, because the Mexican name|all existing records for clouds, it| Born at Lexington, Mo., Feb. 10,! Exclusive Dealer sounded too unromantic for public|was revealed today in the month-|1863, Mr. Wallace was educated in/ ears. ly weather summary issued by the|public and private schools there. Ramon thinks his greatest role|local United States Weather Bu~|He had resided since 1887 at Ta-| was that of the Prince in the movie |reau Station, R. C. Mize, Meteor- RPN ALy et I . spectacle, “Ben Hur.” ologist in Charge. | e This picture fanned his religiousi It was the fifth wettest month fervor to a big flame, and it was|of that name, the rainfall being then reported that he intended to|more than five inches above nor-! don the habiliments of a monk and;mal. Snowfall amounted to slightly 7 retire from public life for good more than one-half inch, and; His home in Beverly Hills has|lawns were green and hardy flow- lately become the gathering place ers blossomed. for many movie notables. He has Tied Record of 1907 a theatre “Intimo” built in his| The mean temperature was 39.0 home, and every now and then he|degrees, or 7.8 degrees above the ] P issues invitations to his friends.|normal. The warmest previous De- W \ \ o ¢ AN \ AN MMM They are treated to impromptu,|cember was that of 1907 with a musicales and dramas. He becomes|mean of 39.0 degrees. The coldest a veritable clown at these private|December of record was that of | ‘ ’ r ] '5'19]"2"’28{ miles and used 6218271]¢om, narqy flowers blooming at the | i hllons of gasgjine, | the close of the month. | ~ e |l i v 2w L JUNEAU MIDGET GOLF COURSE The Florence Shup ] {inches, or 5.7 inches above the| b . ? inormal. The wettést December of | , “Nalvelia” ‘Croquignale Perm- | | Lo Ritas that of 1028 with & to- | GOLDSTEIN BUILDING N\ W k\ \ \ \ '\_\ NN RN functions. But in public he is dif- fident and quietly aloof. His clown capers recently made the headlines when Elsie Janis wrenched her shoulder during a party given for Lawrence Tibbett. ‘Cupid usually runs after those confirmed bachelors, and now that everyone knows that Ramon isn't monastery-bound—who knows? . During the 'tirst half of this year | scheduled air transport planes flew anent Wave | BEAUTY SPECIALISTS Phone 427 for Appointment | e g 1917 with a mean of 14.6 degrees. The highest temperature was 50! degrees on the 6th and the lowest ' was 30 degrees on the 9th. Previ- {ous extremes were 60 degrees and =2 degrees, respectively. The great- lest daily range of temperature was 113 degrees on the 11th and the| léast was 2 degrees on the 1Ist. There were four days with mini- mum temperatures of freezing or| (below and maximum temperatures| were above freezing each day in the month. Grass was growing and |tal of 1443 inches. In 1901, 1912‘1 |ahd 1923 the total exceeded thir- teen inches. The driest December 1 Play Y our First Game of MIDGET GOLF No need to urge those who've played before. Get this pleasure habut!