The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 6, 1931, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMRIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 1931 Wonder Year for McPheérsons, ’' Entire Family Bowed to Cupid 6, 1931. " COLISEUM HAS | *HER MAN' FOR TS FEATIRE {Lots of Comedians Have/ Parts in Pathe Dram- | atic Photoplay | uuunummnunmuumwufiumm‘FlNVELY ETCHED | CAPITOL pyotopeay put | |““Passion Flow” Will Show | Tonight as Feature of New Program COLISEUM The Voice of the Screcen TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY WHO CARES FOR TOMORROW? LIFE—in the scarlet strects of Havana—where women get and men forget. “He was her man—but he done her wrong,” runs the old song, and around this theme revolves a vivid, realistic, colorful drama of the regeneration of a girl born “on the wrong side of the /ednesday Aimee Semple McPherson’s Marriage, Following Tfiosé_of Her Two Children " ~ and Her Mother, Is Fourth in Famous Evangelist’s Family in ; Less Than Twelve Months. ; They defied Society to marry, but then the husband falls under the soell of an exctic “Passion Flawer,” which will bagin 5 While dramatic artists predomi- lsiand, showing tonight at the Capitol | nate in the cast of “Her Man," ¢¢ 799 |theatre, is an adaptation of the | Pathe's picture of da IIER MAN widely-read Kathleen Norris novel, | Havana, which begins s . . y the screen version having been | the Coliseum theatre tonight with HEL TWELVETREES, MARJORIE RAMBEAU, RICARDO {made by Martin Flavin. William are more well known comedians in CORTEZ, PHILLIPS HOLMES, JAMES GLEASON |De Mille directed. | the picture playing supporting roles . gl ol B Fincly Etched Story than in any production hitherto SONG NUMBERS IN “HER MAN” | The story is a finely etched but | made by Pathe, Th t Two new songs, sung in ‘Her Man,” promise to achieve great popularity. One is “Far Far Awa a comady number written by George Green and Tay Garnett, and sung by Phillips Holmes. The other is “Somehow I Know,” also sung by Mr. Holmes. Also Added Are Shorts that Are Carelully, Sglested very simple one of married life. The situation is one that is constantly occurring and recurring. The end |is one too few persons have the { courage to take. Quartette of Stars | Charles Bickford, Kay Johnson, | cludes James Gleason | Sweet, who are feat | Summerville, Je: v | Edwards, Kewpie Morgan, Charlie { Dougherty and Bud Jamieson. All But One Featured = with | Kay Francis and Lewis Stone are ,“{’fh,”m C'V;‘Cfp Phads ;("":\"‘" friendly neutral and, more than 1 KAY FRANCIS | the quartette of particularly dis- | evey one: 4, thewe & s BEEN 4y other one man, he was cr-.}dlbed‘IN tinguished players who do splendid | elther featured or red In WO Gt having paved the way for fine | ] CHAS. (BIGEFORD {work in “Passion Flower.” reel comedies. A L KAY JOHNSON | oL N ( i 2o ... al adjustments that were signed in . LEWIS STONE | The supporting cast includes | The cast of “Her Man" includes june, 1929, by representatives of | c ZASU PITTS Zasu Pitts as an amusingly pessi- |Helen Twelvetrees, Marjorie Ram- the hijerarchy and Provisional Pres- | 7 A i mistic servant; Winter Hall, as a {beau, Ricardo Cor Phillips jdent Portes Gil, successor to Calles, | ; William De Mille | stern father; and four-year-old | Holmer, Mathew Bet anley Marriage of Anne s Production | Dickie Moore, as the offspring of a | Flelds, Thelma Todd, Mike Donlin,| Marriage of “the” ambassador’s | i A METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER | ¢hauffeur-society girl match. rB_l,\'lhe Daly a_nd Ruth Hiatt. The daughter, Anne, to Charles Lind- | ALL TALKING PICTURE picture was directed by Tay Gar- hergh on May 27, 1929, helped en- —_— NEWS HUMANETTES TODAY and YESTERDAY COMING— “Tailor Made Man” “TRADER HORN” LT L APPROVES SEVEN DAY GONFERENCE Veterans and Administra- tion Officials to Meet in Washington WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 6.— President Hoover has approved of plans for a seven-day conference of veterans and administration offic- ials here to secure economy and expedite and direct relief for wvet- erans of all wars. It was announced this afternoon that the conference will begin Monday, October 23. —_—— The first seal ever to be reported in gulf waters has taken up its habitation off Port Isabel, Tex. & MEN ARRESTED | < WITH LIQUOR ooty Sttt i - ARE RELEASED O wwice instructor, David Hutton, whom she had chosen for the role of: oh in her latest religious opera, | | §6 the fourth wedding in the noted evangelical family in 1931, The epidemic. of ma March with the wedding at Singapors of Roberta, Aimee’s daughtef, to the 23-yea liner President Wilson, on which tha McPhersons ma de a world tour, Next came the - i {Cache Found in Barn Near I Navy Secretary’s Estate Seized whicl marriage” mother, Mrs. Minnie ‘Ma” Kennedy, to the Rev. R. G. on, of New York.| r-old groom were wed at v member of The young scion of the McPhersons married Lorna Dee Smith, of Angelus Temple B School, in July, after several months’ engagement. This marriage is Aimee’s third venture into mat mony. Her first husband, Robert Semple, died in China, whence he had gone with his young wife to convert the heathen. The second spouse, Harold McPherson, of Providence, R. 1., divorced the evangelist ‘after she had refused to give up her preaching and bestow a little of her time on 4 -1 | | SCITUATE, Mass., Oct. 6.—Three bbb ot | Boston men who were arrested yes- ’tcrdny when a cache of 600 cases {of assorted liquor were found and Tt S AWKS SETS UNITED STATES it | NEW RECORD SENATORDWICHT MORROW PASSES Dies Suddenly at Home in New Jersey of Cere- bral Hemorrhage With that famous house he spe- cialized in international lrans, and also devoting attention to the increased European business followed the outbreak of the World War. In these activities he displayed not only keen commercial sagacity but also qualities of tact, sympa- thy and understanding that marked him as a leader in business di- plomacy. It {released on $2,500 bail each. The east shores near the Adams's estate have been used for previous ;landings of liquor, the police said. | The men arrested and freed on ,bail are Jacob Seigal, Harry and |Louis Gordon. Two other men !escaped at the time of the raid. BULBS BULBS We have our usual large supply of high quality bulbs of the very best varieties for Fall planting or foreing. > | =adv. NEW YORK, Oct. 6.—Capt. Frank Hawks set a new Chicago to New York flight record today of three hours and twenty mirutes, cutting his previous record Ly 26 minutes. — e —— { was President Coolidge's Mark Moss, Texas ranchman, has caught 40,000 buzzards in the | past 10 years by means of a spc»" (Contipued Iroin Fage One) JUNEAU FLORISTS. I cially designed trap. | R Gy 7t 4 u as a concilator that prompted him to appoint the banker in 1925 as chairman of the board which stud- ied the dispute over airplane de- R Ao Rolls, B Peerless Bakery -“Ask for Peerless” | fense between General Mitchell and high army officials. This board sifted the wheat from the chaff of the controversy, then made unanimous recommendations which within a year were made ef- fective by congress and put in | force as government policies. | Two years of continued business | success followed, then on Septem- !ber 30, 1927, the banker became ambassador to Mexico, first re- | signing his partnership in the | Morgan concern. , which Mr. Morrow took a leading part, did not become a five power pact instead of being limited to the United States, Great Britain and Japan. } In 1928 he was one of the Amer, ican delegates to the sixth Pan- American Congress, held in Ha- vana. | | Intellectual Heritage Mr. Morrow’s list of achievements in profesisonal life, business, di- plomacy and practical polilics sprang from an intellectual heri- tage, but a background of decided- ly moderate worldly possessions. His father, Prof. James E. Mor- row, was president of Marshall College at Huntington, W. Va, | when his second son was born there on Jan. 11, 1873. The mother | was Clara Johnson Morrow, reared | on an Ohio farm but known to her girlnood neighbors as “literary” because of the number of books she read and because she was a cham- pion speller. They named their |second son for Prof. William ‘eright Whitney of Yale, author of | a famous English grammar. The future diplomat finished his ordinary schooling at Allegheny, Pa., where his father had become a teacher in the high school. He | worked his way through Amherst College, winning the degree of bachelor of arts in 1895. ‘Then he turned to the study of law and after four years struggle with scang finances, graduated with an LLB. | degree from Columbia University in 1899. He got himself a job as law | clerk with the firm of Simpson, Thatcher and Bartlett in New York, persuading them that he was worth $60 a month to ‘start. Six . ears “REMEMBER .THE NAME” Every hour of the day a delicious tray of pastry, pan of rolls or muffins come from our even-baking ovens. Every piece is tasty, luscious, health- ful.” We know how to transform the staff of life into many tantalizing forms—tempting to eat and satis ing. uns, Eclairs, Cakes, Pies " Githe I8 that knowledge of Mr. Morrow's talents | nett. Dcals With Regeneration The story of “Her Man” deals jwith the regencration of a girl j “from the other side of tne island.” | Trained in vice, she is transformed |'when she meets a s man whose |bravery and generosity win love. her to emerge from a long period of | tumult marked by civil wars, the | overthrow of several administra- | ticns, wide-spread banditry, revo- | lutionary laws relating to pi ‘erty rights of foreigners and anti- religious propaganda. Outstanding jin the pending questions with the |United States was a controversy over oil rights on which 40,000 words of notes had been 2xchanged spending considerable time in Cuba | With Washington without tangible | result. No Confidence Ambassador Morrow found that ;canf;dmce between the two govern- ! ments was a decidedly minus qual- ity. So first he started to make the | Mexicans believe in the United States and his own country believe in its smaller southern neighbor. Discarding the useless system of !exchanging notes, the new diplo-~ mat adopted the method of direct, | | friendly conversation with respon- | sible officials as a means of seitling international problems. Groups -in | | disagreement’ on the oil questions William | Were brought face to face, the es- i sential similarities in their view- 1 points were stressed and after ‘much earnest study Mexico adopt- 'ed legislation confirming oil lands | concessions that was acceptable to | both sides. | Another big question, but with no | direct American government inter- est, arose when President Calles put into effect constitutional provisions upsetting the position of the (Roman Catholic church in Mexico. The whole subject was .outside the ambassador’s jurisdiction but | Mexico was then just beginning beth sides turned toward him as a hance the popular regard for Mr. Morrow and his family. The fact that the young people met when the famous aviator reached Mexico City cn the first of his good-will tours of Latin America, and that “Leendy” came back by air to Three Delegates from U.S. and Three from Can- ada to Confer VICTORIA, B. C. Oct. 6.—The make several visits with the Mor- |first meeting of the Internationsl row family, appealed to the love people. Successful Ambassador Mr. Morrow had an unusually successful regime as ambassador. When the time came for him to leave Mexico on September 17, 1930, a great crowd gathered to bid him Godspeed; President Ortiz Rubio and Genaro Estrada, foreign min- ister, issued public statements laud- ing his work in terms far above the usually stilted praises of offi- cialdom, and the government sent an official escort with him to the border. “Mr. Morrow has not left behind a single delicate problem of the many existing when he came,” said Benor Estrada. “The good inventions which ani- imated him in all his acts contrib- uted immensely to the betierment of international relations, which have reached the peak of cordial- ity,” was the tribute of the Mexi- can president. After a brief rest, Mr. Morrow plunged into the Senatorial'election campaign in New Jersey. He had been selected for the Republican nomination months before at a primary which saw him roll up a plurality of more than 400,000 votes over two opponents, the big victory being attributed mainly to his stand against continuation of the prohibition experiment in the United States. In that pronouncement he advo- cated repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. He also proposed that control of the Mquor business should be entrusted to the ‘individual states. The popular response to this ¥ "'nghway ‘Commission, consisting of for romance inherent in a Latin) | States and three from Canada, has three delegates from the United been set for next Friday in this city. Major Malcolm Elliott left Ju- [neau last week for Victoria, to at- tend the meeting. Hon. .George Black passed through Juneau lata last week for the south for at- tendance at the session and E. W. Sawyer is supposed to bs in Vie- toria now. platform had - immediate . repercus- sions in all parts of the country, and was so overwhelming that it aroused hopes abroad of an early return of America to the world's liquor market list. Mr. Morrow's clectlon in No- vember, 1930, entitled him to add the description “statesman” to the list of “lawyer, banker, diplomat,” ‘'which had epitomizeed his earlier vocations. It came by a majority of nearly 200,000 in a Democratic year and again focussed attent ‘on him. Talk 'of Nim ds’ probaj presidential timber, which had’ started after his primary success, was revived, but to all such sug- gestions he was cold. Besides the widow, Senator Mor- row is survived by four children, Blizabeth, Dwight, Jr, Constance and Mrs. Lindbergh. —— ATTENTION ELKS Elks Lodge meeting Wednesday night. . Initiation. 1 GEO. 1 1 Do —adyv. Acting Exalted Ruler. The DAY of GRAB-BAG Selection later he was a member of the firm |and nine years after that in 1914, | he transferred his allegiance to | finance and became a partner in |J. P. Morgan and Company. Shopping today is not a hurried grlb bag gamble in bringing home the bacon. Instead, it is a buyers’ market with the buying value of the dollar changing vir- tually every 24 hours. The thrifty housewife today shops in a market where prices are lower than in years—and the intelligent shopper saves steps and time by reading the merchant advertisements every day in the colunms of THE DAILY EMPIRE. It is the only wise, easy and economical way to shop. When you read the ads in THE DAILY EMPIRE you make your buying dollar bigger.

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