The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 20, 1931, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. 20 I93| CAPITOL FRIDAY SATURDAY JACK HOLT AILEEN PRINGLE Jecen Rebards Directed by FRED NEWMEVER Board “Subway Ex- press” for the thrill ride of your life! Also Short Subjects At o MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT—1 A. M. LILY DAMITA in “The Woman Between” CLus MEETING SATURDAY 1 P. M. SHARP Music Pictures Contests NOTICE Any member bringing a can of food stuff or fruit or po- tatoes or anything eatable that will keep till Thanks- giving will be admitted FREE. Th2 food will be turned over to Elks Lodge. WEAR YOUR BUTTON S TS S Catholic Bloc Being Formed to Fight New Acts Laws,Spunisl: Republic | (Continuea Irom Paxe One) least New lieve that it could capture at 100 of the 470 seats in the Chamber cof Deputics. That will be chosen as soon as the Con- stituent Assembly completes its work on the new constitution. The balloting may come late this month. Two Groups Merge The chief parties contemplating the merger include the powerful ‘Cathglic Basque-Navarre groupsof “Jaimistas” who are followers of the Carlist pretender cause, and the “integristas,” who want restor- ation of an absolute monarchy. These two have already been merged. There are also Herrera's “accion nacional,” the agrarians of Sala- manca and Valladolid and numer- ous smaller groups of Monarchists who refused to follow older party hegiras into Republican camps. These extreme Right Parties hold only 46 seats in the Constitutional Assembly and they are not occopy- ing them, having wfthdrawn in protest against the new laws can- celling state support of the church and prohibiting school teaching by members of religious orders. — e, - PRIZE WALTZ DANCTE Moose Legion ‘No. 25 will give a prize waltz dance Thanksgiving Day at Moose Hall. Save the date. —adv. ‘COMMITTEE. ————— GREGG SHORTHAND Taught by certified teacher. Class or private lessons. Day or even- ing. Phone 354. —adv. —— - Bring us your raw furs to be made up. Chas. Goldstein & Co. . W.P. Johnson FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT PRODUCTS MAYTAG WASHING MACHINES GENERAL MOTORS RADIOS Phone 17 Front Street Juneau B ) —_— HOTEL ZYNDA ELIVATOR SERVICR 8. ZYNDA, Prop. body | CAPITOL HAS | JACK HOLT N STRONG DRAMA ‘The Woman_Between' Will Be Shown at Midnight Matinee Tonight | “Subway Express,” starring Jack jHolt, will be shown again tonizht at the Capitol Theatre. “The Wn man Between,” with Lily Damita and Lester Vail in the leading roles, will headline the program to be given at the preview matinee at 1 o'clock tonight, and this program will be presented at the matinee and regular performances Sunday. In “Subway Express” Holt plays a close-lipped, dominating officer cf the law, who by persistent ques- tioning, unravels a baffling murder mystery and again the well {known Fred Kelsey acts as his foil in the role of the “dumb dick.” Large Supporting Cast The large cast of players in- cludes Aileen Pringle, Jason Ro- bards, Alan Roscoe, Ethel Wales, Sidney Bracy, Bertha Blackman and Max Asher. Fred Newmeyer directed. “The Woman Between” the questions: Have children the moral right to object to their father's remar- riage to a young woman? Should they substitute hate for love because they resent her love for their father? Love, Loyalty and Sacrifice | Repressed passions, love, loyalty and sacrifice mount in this dra- matic film story of a young mod- ‘1soe who, temporarily dazzled by | wealth and flattery, marries a busi- ness giant. Miss Damita, the modiste, dis- covers too late that she has been wedded to a life of intrigue, discord iand social ostricism. Worse still, she encounters the | bitter enmity of her husband’s | children until her step-son falls kdesperabely in love with her. | The supporting cast includes O. 'P. Heggle, Miriam Seegar, Anita Louise, Blanche Frederici and Ruth | Weston. | — RAILROAD DANCE Elks Hall Saturday night. your ticket by the yard. answers Buy adv. ACTRESS SECRETLY MARRIED Assoclated Press Phe.o Although It has been freely rumored, no one knew for sure that Gloria Swanson, film actress, and Michael Farmer, wealthy Irish sportsman, were married until recently. Mayor John Murray of Eims- ford, N. Y., settled the question by announcing he married the couple last August 16 at the home of Dudley Field Malone, lawyer. The actress and her new husband are shown above. HOLLYWOOD TOPIGS By ROBIN COONS HOLLYWOCOD, While ve film players of to have be: cruited from the ranks of studio stenographers, there is almost as much competition for posts at Hol- lywood typewriters as for places In front of the camera. Almost every girl who spends her summer vacation in Hollywooc running through three glamorous weeks that are a decided change from hometown routine, longs to settle down permanently in a job where she can be on the side” of movie activities. The girls would like to continue | As the accuracy of the hour-glass depends upon an even, continu- ous flow . .. a little at a time so the uniform flavor of Hills Bros. Coffee is produced | by Controlled Roasting—the patented process that roasts | evenly, continuously . . . a little at a time. Roasting. It's a process by Roasting coffee in small quantities, under exact heat-control, is the secret of a per- fect, unvarying flavor. Hills Bros. invented and patented the only process that permits this sort of roasting. It is called Controlled | their sightseeing indefinitely while ’teens, | ing a part of the Hollywood hub- | they work, catching glimpses of screen favorites through office- windows and at lunch, and becom- bub. Of course, if they succeed by, | freak of fortune, in landing a stu- “ine | dio job they soon learn that glam- our here as elsewhere is perishable, and that studio stenography is just shorthand and typewriting and hard work, no better paid than elsewhere. Success For Some Some of the girls ceek graphic positions here to break in- to acting, like Jane Keith, who played with Milton Sills in “The Sea Wolf.” On the other hand there was Fay Lanphier, a “Miss America” of some years ago, who made one film' ® : No can of Hills Bros. Coffee will ever “gostale.” The vacuum can keeps it FRESH ALWAYS! ontrolled Roasting revents variation, in flavor . . . which Hills Bros. Coffee passes through the roasters evenly, continuously—a /Jittle at a time. Every berry in the blend receives a perfect, unvarying roast. Naturally, then, every bracing cupful of Hills Bros. Coffee has the same marvelous flavor. And it is a flavor no other coffee has, because no other coffee is roasted this way. Hills Bros. Coffee is always fresh too. Air, which destroys the flavor of coffee, is removed and kept out of 2 Patented process roasts Hills Bros Coffee the same always Hills Bros.’ vacuum cans. won’t keep coffee fresh. always as fresh as when it comes from the roasters. The fragrant wisps of steam floating up from a cup of Hills Bros. forecast a coffee flavor you never dreamed of. Drink a cupful and see! by name, and look for the Arab trade-mark on the can. | HILLS BROS COFFEE steno- “A little at a time”—instead of in bulk—is the principle of Controlled Roasting FORMER KING - DECLARED TO BE AN OUTLAW | , plc iConstituent Assembly of | | i Spain Takes Formal Ac- tion on Alfonso MADRID, Spain, Nov. 20.—Al-| | fonso de Bourbon, the former ng\ | Alfonso, is declared an outlaw and | {has been banished by the Constit- uent Assembly. It has been de-| creed by the Revolutionary Gov- ernment that he is guilty of trea- json and any Spanish citizen has a |right to place him under arrest the minute he crosses the Spanish | boundary. fand to retu becor | worker. To the lassies who have serious iam‘aumns toward the more perma- | rent work of the studio, outside of lacting, there is always inspiration }in Dorothy Arzner and Agnes 'Ennd Leahy, director and scen- | & respectively, both of whom V‘begm as studio stenos. “Wh_\' Will Moved ‘Will Rogers used to live in Bev- jerly Hills, and the reason he moved | to his secluded ranch near the ccean thas been traced down. Seriously or {not, he says, it began when his | daughter Mary, coming into her decided she had to have a bathroom all her own. There wera | many bathrooms, but the room | Mary chose had none. “So,"” says Will, “we called in a “rclauve of Jesse James who said he was an architect, and told him we'd ldecided to remsdy this deplorable defect.” l A wall had to come out to make the addition, and then they decided ppeared from the screen, 1 a few months ago and , for a time, a studio office to add a sleeping porch, lengthen | jthe living room, enlarge the dining jroom and den. | “New decisions every day and Iripping and tearing went on until there was nothing left but the| kitchen. We thought the kitchen was all right, but standing there, all by itself ,it didn't look so good either, and I knocked that down myself!” (And they moved.) - e Old papers at The Empire. Ordinary, “air-tight” But Hills Bros. Coffee i: cans Ask for Hills Bros. Coffee inrazmm Sunday, /will be previewed at the |of a war betwean sheep r | reno. | Dietrich, beautiful cabaret {no man, 'SANTA FE TRAIL' TO SHOW LAST TIMES TONIGHT {'Ex-Flame’ Tomorrow and ‘Morocco’ at Midnight at Coliseum At the Coliseum . theatre, “The Santa Fe Trail,” with Richard Ar- len and Rosita Moreno in the lead- ing roles, will be shown for the last times tonight. “Ex-Flame,” hav- 'ing Neil Hamilton and Marion Nix on in the principal parts, will be the attraction tomorrow, the first presentation being at the afternoon matinee. “Morocco,” starring Gary Cooper and Marlene Dietrich and Adolphe Menjou, will featu and this program 1 o'clock matinee tonight. “The Santa Fe Trail” i cattlemen during the carly s of | the West just after the Civil War. | All Kinds cf Sheep White sheep, black sheep, 3500 of them, were gathered for the pro- | duction. Among them were many lambs. The script calls for Arlen to pick up and fondle one of them. | After this scene had been taken | several times, the lamb became so| attached to Arlen that it refused to go back to its mother. It followed ‘Arlen throughout ev-| ery scene, even rubbing against his boots as he made love to Miss Mo- | Triangle Love Drama “Ex-Flame” is a triangle love drama with scenes laid in England. A nobleman’s wife and child leave! him when she has occasion to b lieve that his affection for a sweet heart of his bachelor da been revived. The theme is rich in human interest. The child is a strong factor in the eventual ro- conciliation of the parents In “Morocco,” Cooper, private in ’the dare-devil Foreign Legion, whose business is fighting, whose pleas- ure is flirting, is attracted to Miss singer, and strikes up an acquaintance with her. a disillusioned being, believing in scorning all love. Never- theless, drawn together in spite of them- of Menjou, wealthy, socially prom- inent, who also loves the girl, of-| fers her love, wecalth and social po- sition. Cooper, seeeing what the| | girl would have to give up for him, | attempts to destroy her love and sh2, unwilling to hamper his free carcer, tries to fight his infatu- ation. Neither are successful. This surging romance is pictur- ed against the colorful life of North Africa, in Morocco, a city of weird masonry, of veiled women and swaggering Legionnaires. Here is the Foreign Legion, bronzed men, | | picturesquely uniformed, marching\ to the blare of gay trumpets, the | quick beat of drums. i < S ARCTIC ROOMS | Have been refurnished and redec-i orated and now offer clean, first-| class the day, week or month at mod-| erate rates. Store, Prop. accommodations. Rooms by | Inquire Arctic Cigar/ Front St., Steve Johnson,| —ady. — - —— “GOLDEN GLOW"” Christmas Cards, new Alaska photos with in-| dividual titles. S8ee Winter & Pond. ! Guaranteed SHEET METAL WORK PLUMBING GEO. ALFORS PHONE 564 NEW IDEAL SHOP I Alaska Novelties, Swedish Finnish Copperware, K.nlve- New shipment Finnish Knives | Store Hours: 8 to 11 am.; 4 to | | 10 p.m. Mary Hammer, Prop. PRE- Gros1 | s and| |of last She too, like Cooper, is| these two are \':cuvu:rl’ullyl |selves, and in spite of the efforts' D e e e e COlISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT RICHARD ARLEN "The Santa FeTrail OUR MIDNIGHT SHOW-—GARY COOPER and MARLENE DIETRICH in “MOROCCO” Watch for Our Unique Novelties SATURDAY MATINEE ONLY—Children under 8 years admitted FREE. Shew starts at 1:30 MR.S FAULKNER ROLLS 234; BLUEBIRDS GRAB, GAME CROWS LEADING | The Bluebirds are not quite so! blue as they were before the start night’s play on the Elks’ bowling alleys, opening game of their match with of the tournament. the next two games. Faulkner, captain of the s, ran up the highest score yet rolled in the tournament, 234 They dropped (which ties the high mark of the |men’s tournament. Her for the evening was 183. The Crows are still crowing at the top of the heap, with nine average i:tra)ght victories to their credit, as they liked the Robins three times in the second match. Dr. Coun- |cil had a lot to do with the re- |sult, as his average was 190. A postpened match betwzen the played at 9 o'clock Saturday night. it was announced by the bowling committee today. Schedule for tonight: Snowbirds . Owls at 7:15; Woodpeckers vs. Eagles at 9. Last night's scores: BLUEBIRDS Miss Taylor 85 103 Miss Monson ..... 147 141 106—294 105—393 121—43! for they won the| the Hawks for their first victory Sparrows and the Pelicans will be| Worth Robertson 155 Blomgren 166 | g Totals 703 OROWS Mrs. Peterman... 106 Mrs. Kearpey ... 119 Council 199 Andrews . 208 {M. Bavard 181 | ot Totals 813 RORBINS <Mrs Coughlin ... 96 92 | Mrs. Pullen 86 118 C. Sabin 144 143 |Duncan ..... . 182 185 N. Baval'd . 164 180 Totals ... 672 737 *—Average; did not bowl. —_————— NOTICE When down town piacing your grocery - order with George Broth- ers please remind them of the little account due me, and they will gladly give you a receipt. adv. D. B. FEMMER, Phone 114 124 806 129 158 204 %9 HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOL |Harding 151 159 Bringdale 169 153 ’M(‘Lca]f 202 165 143—465 148—515 754 623-2098 HAWKS Mrs. Faulkner 146 Mrs. Petrich 112 Totals 234—550 FREE — One SUGGESTIONS ee Ordway’s Studio 60c brush to each customer with one quart of QUICK-STEP PAINT— while they last Juneau Paint Store The Smallest Sheet Metal and Plumbing Shop CAN FIX UP EVERYTHING EXCEPT BROKEN HEARTS Not always the cheapest perhaps but first- class work always guaranteed TRY ME ONCE GEORGE South Front Street THANKSGIVIN Thanksgiving Dance Juneau’s Own Store ALFORS Telephone 564 "“TOMORROW’S STYLES TODAY” PARTY FROCKS > SPECIAL Shown in Chiffons and Satins Dress up for the “Elks’ Railroad Ball” and Extra Special Values, $11.95

Other pages from this issue: