The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 4, 1932, Page 3

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- THE DAILY ALASKA E\M’IRE, MONDAY, JAN. 4, 1932. CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT Friends and Lovers Adolphe Menjou—Lily Damita Alsc—“Mickey's Rebellion” ‘Comedy MIDNIGHT SHOW TONIGHT—1 A. M. “In Old Cheyenne” COMING “Great Meadow” — “Easiest Way” — “What a Man"— “Strangers May Kiss"—"Free Soul”—“Miracle Wor STRONG DRAMA T0 GIVE WAY T0 WESTERN PLAY Capitol to Show ‘Old Chey- { enne’ After ‘Friends and Enemies’ With “Friend and Lovers,” reat- uring Adolphe Manjou, Lily Da- mita, Laurence Olivier and Eric von Stroheim, showing for the last | times tonight at the Capitol thea- tre, “In Old Cheyenne,” with Rex Lease and Dorothy Gulliver in the \leadmg roles, will headline the new program at the regular perform- ances tomorrow night, and this program will be previewed at the matinee at 1 o'clock tonight. Dialogue and Action “Friends and Lovers” is embel- lished by a striking dialogue’ and vivid action and moves from Lon- don to Paris. It tells the story of a woman, loved by two men who are comrades in arms in the British Indian service, buf who find friendship greater than their loves. That, substantially, is the plot; but its development under the expert hands of Director Victor Schertzinger brings out many 20 THEY LOOK LIKE THEIR DADDY? EDMUND LOWE COMEDY WILL END TONIGHT ‘Road to ‘Paradlse Will Be Previewed Tonight ; at Coliseum | “Don't Bet On Women," featur-| {ing Edmund Lowe and Jeanette | MacDonald, will be shown for lhm /last times tonight at the rezulaxw performances at the C'»lw'um | “The Road to Paradise,’ ur- | |ing Loretta Young will be the sub- | Ject of the preview matinee at 1 yo'clock tonight. “Girls Demand Excitement,” with Virginia Cherrill in the leading role, will headline the new pro-i gram at the regular performances tomorrow night. { “Don’t Bet On Women” | In “Don't Bet On Women,” Lowe \gives a portrayal as a man who had been married once—and once he thought was enough. The way | {Miss MacDonald turned his head,' land the way Roland Young, as her/ ‘husband‘ interfered, provokes one | ,hearty laugh after another. The rest of the cast includes | {Una Merkel, J. M. Ketrigan and| | THOSE HONEYMOON SMILES | [RCTREANE Associated Press Photo adlo directioh Every state, Panama, Hawail and Alaska were represented at the conference and all of them were; greatly, benefitted by the contacts made and the discussion of plans prior to adoption, Mrs. Sheelor LTS COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONTGHT DON’Y BET- ON WOMEN | withe nnuui mfiu Jeanette Johnny Farrell, former national open golf champion, and his bride, | the former Catherine T. Hush of Old Greenwich, Conn., taking a finai smiling'look at the United States through the steamer’ finder as they sailed from s.n Pldro, Cal.,, for & honeymoon in Hawsi¥ PLANS FOR 1932 AUXILIARY WORK MIDNIGHT MATINER “Road to Paradise” WIRN I :J. W. RUSSELL RITES Ac.ociated Pross Photo Holens Mill said. OR "0“0 Dude Ranch As Setting The two sons of Charlie Chaplin sailed from New York for France | T‘fi: Rlo:;d To Paradise” is She left here a short time before SET “F To w “In Old Cheyenne,” here's the| Pecently. Here they are with their mother, Lita Grey Chaplin. Charles o fi|| the date set fqr opening the' oon- i Soes 1 emotional shadings. dranm replete with suspense, The ) servi neral ices for the late J. i , while the o 4 ! 3 p i you hear praise of Jackle Cooper |Euests play backgammon, WHES (e : {young woman's home for the pur- Mrs. Sheelor, | Department | visited in Ohio, Indiana, Minois U oo Steraont® B s for his performances in ‘Skippy’ |Yyoungsters are riding m 1gs when he hopped off for Florida. JEWELU PAY VISIT ipose of helping her cottederates | 4 and other States. “cu e in' the and ‘The Champ. But where will |the moonlight, leaving the crippled | Tom Gareghty and his family | rob it. Intertwined with the plot Presndent, Returns from —eto—— n R Light Presbyterisn « he be five years from now?” owner of the great enterprise sit-|\yho used to have five apartments| HERE ENROUTE SOUTH i5 an interesting 1ove story. National Meetin: v g This is a query addressed to me [ting impotently in his wheel chair \a; the Chateau Elysse, figure in the | To take up iheir residence at| Colloge for Background : g Rear Admiral Winslow by the pastor, Rev. O: @ Saundess. « by a New York motion picture fan. [as his vast herd of valuable horses jaiest merger. Tom and his wife | Ketchikan, Alaska Game Warden| “Girls Demand Excitement” is &| As the annusl conf r . ! Gha] P Naturally, I can't give the answer, |is being gradually and systematic-|now have a house in Hollywood. | Homer W. Jewell and Mrs. Jewell collegiate picture. The University | partment a;nnde:o‘: e;::us:cm[::' Passes AW i Boston oo W B- o g BOSTON, Mass;, Jan. 4.<Rear for who can predict the fate of a |ally stolen from under his eyes! |paughter Carmelita will take an- | were guests of local friends Satur- of Souther : s n California campus American’ Legi ary, child actor. Tt is possible, how- | Lease finally discoveres the mys-|other house.... When Clarence |day for a few hours. Both formerly formed the background of manyp‘;f ::1’;1 in' national he::qn:::rlx at FAULKNER dot OUTH Admiral Cameron MeRae Winsiow; 8 8pencer Chaplin, jr., is on the left and sldnay Earl Chaplin on the By HARRIS: setting: y RISON CARROLL ng vight. Chaplin, who Is divorced from their mother, is In Europe. i HOLLYWOOD,—“On every side| A dude ranch, where the older ever, to examine the records of [tery of the vanishing herd, and,|prown swooped down out of the |resided here. the sc 3 _ 3 enes. 'Indlana lis, 2 ] other youthful stars. W{:it isot mfhm ;mpmm:evv;h; :Ee skies at the Palm Springs Airport | Mr, Jewell has been stationed at| Besides Miss Cherril the cast in-|23-24, xr;’;&mm;mm‘;x? ;fi aged 76 years, died her laet -Satur- ON' BRIEF BUS! ™ . One who has ‘come back and |leader e horse Y |the other day, he discovered the | Anchorage for some time. He was cludes John Wayne and Marguerlte}the 1932 organization program, ac bk H L Fa oy & ulkher, made a name for herself is Madge |is. Miss Gulliver, a Utah girl, |tlephone line to the hotel wasout of | transferred recently to Ketchikan 'Churchill. il Evans. In the old days, Madge |who learned to ride before she|order. Since it was too far to walk, |and will cover the southern end of rected. acted in the World Film Co. Now |could read the alphabet, displays|cClarence hired a horse. He had to|the district for the Alaska Game she is under contract to Metro- |her equestrian skill ride up to the exclusive El Mirador | Commission. ‘Goldwyn-Mayer, and, if you please, dressed in a business suit and Seymour Felix di- cording to Mrs. Edith' F. Sheelor, | President of the' Department of | England’s first munioiphl: sheltéy steamér Vidtoma: for Ssattls lAlaska. She was sent by t}}e De- | for hikers has just been opened at legal' businéss: mwmn-_‘: partment to attend this meéting. | Abergravenny. two or three weeks. i SO ) Daily Empire Want Ads Pay. is one of the most charming lead- ing women on the screen. Ben Alexander is working again in juvenile roles (“All Quiet On the Western Front”) and “Are These Our Children?”) Anita Louise bridged the gap between child actress and ingenue. Jackie Coogan, with one more to do at Paramount, has accomplished the unusual feat of enjoying two vogues as a child performer. Mary Kornman, of Hal Roach’s “Our Gang,” is going to school, but works occasionally in the studios. Farina, a colleague, is in vaudeville. So are Jane and Kath- erine Lee, who used to work for Fox. Virginia Lee Corbin is mar- ried and, I believe, is in Europe now. A reference to the casting di- rectories discloses that Wesley Barry is still available, though you seldom hear of him in a picture. As for Baby Marie Osborne and bay Peggy Montgomery, they seem to have dropped out of sight completely. You may argue, and I am of the same mind, that Jackie Cooper isa much finer actor than any of these other child stars. Therefore, he may survive the awkward age and go right on to juvenile roles. In any event, the boy who played the “Champ's” Kid should not fade permanently from the screen hori- zon. It's Still Good Bert Wheeler's ramous gag was revived the other day by Robert Montgomery and had the actors rocking with laughter. It was a scene in “Courage.” Montgomery and Madge Evans were sitting in a drab little room, and he was confessing to being a failure. One by one they recited their tribulations. Suddenly, a Dght went. .over with a loud crash. “Yes,” sighed Montgomery, “and even the mice are after us.” Latest Gossip Edmund Goulding and his bride plan a belated honeymoon in March. They are renting a villa |in Southern France. ... Tallulah Bankhead has returned to Holly- wood. Even with all the worry about the salary cuts, the film people find time to be curious about her. . .. took Dr. William Branch with him Harry Bannister | wearing an overcoat. . .Ramon No- varro, flanked by his lawyers, in conferring with M. G. M., on his new contract. ... Chester Morris says he did not buy up his con- tract with Roland West. The United Artists Producers merely sublet him to Paramount for a series of pictures. Lily Substitutes Now that Fifi Dorsay has sep- ped out of the French version ol “One Hour With You,” Lily Da- mita has been signed to replace her. The part, played by Genevieve Tobin in the English version, was declared to be too suave for the impetuous Fifi. Chevalier, of course, is the star of the film, both in English and French. Sculptress Jean Wildenrath has an idea that will make money for her. She is doing miniature busts of the stars, which later will be reproduced in large numbers and sold to theatres for souvenirs. The images are only four inches in height. So far 20 have been com- pleted. According to the sculp- tresss, George Arliss has been her easiest subject to date and Ann Harding her most difficult. She “121 be fair with you.. LIKE the way yow put it up to us smokers 10 judge your cigaretse by ab= solusely real things like mildness and bes- tertaste. Sounds likegood common sensel”” IHERRIIIIE | spent two weeks on the tiny image of the Pathe star. In case you don't identify Miss Wildenrath, she and Sally James Farnham did that equestrian fig- ure of Simon Bolivar in Central Park, New York. HERE is A COAL with a Price that appéals to ‘every Coal consumer in Juneau INDIAN PRICES DELIVERED Fair enough! That’s all Chesterfield wanes: That’s all Chesterfield could ask for and does ask for==a srial. “Promises fill no sack.’’ After all, it’s what you get out of a smoke that counts. And what you get out of Chesterfield, or anything else for that matter, depends on what goes'in. Better #obaccos don’t grow than the tobaccos that go into Chesterfield. Ripe. Sweet. Aged and cured for two years under the watchfuf care of expert chemists. Better cigarette paper can’t be bought.. Faste- less. Odorless. Pare! Sanitary factories: Cleanliness i every step of the process. A purer cigarette than Chesterfield can’t be made. And the package! Absolitely movistures proof. Sealed tight—yet the simplést thing.in the world to opent. And attraetivie tof fook at. They’re milder—they taste better—they’re pure—They Satisfy! Did You Know That Charles (“Chic”) Sale was playing old man characters before he was old enough to shave? LUMP........ $14.50 NUP....... $15.50 Auto Industry Sees '32 as Much Rosier Hued Year (Continued rrom Page One) from raw materia]l sources to dis- tributor personnel, set for what- ever demands a returning public | confidence may make upon it. No Consolidations Significant of the financial soundness of the industry is the fact that all its important units came through last year without consolidation with other companies and that all were able to prevent the loss of ‘foreign markets by es- tablishing plants in Canada and Europe when tariff imposts made export business less profitable. | Improvements on the 1932 model cars include automatic starters that operate with a turning of the ig- nition switch, . automatic adjust- ment of shock absorbers, elimina- tion of gear shifting noises, and motor mounting on rubber cush- ions. We have higher priced coals but none at any price, that will give more satisfaction and economy than “INDIAN.” Stick to knewn coals that serve, satisfy and save. Pacfie Coast €oal Co. CALL DIRECT—4¥2 T LT T T T S ST O T T I B T D A AT R D T T ——— NOTICE TO WATER CONSUMERS In order to conserve the water supply during the present dry weather, all water will be shut off from the upper sections of town and on the tide flats between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m. until’ further notice. adv. JUNEAU WATER CO. —_————— ATTENTION The Juneau Women's Club will hold its monthly luncheon at Mrs. Hooker’'s COFFEE SHOPPE Tues- day, January 5. All members are WE ARE STARTING THE NEW YEAR RIGHT STORE CLOSED DAILY i AT 6:30 P. M. PO YOUR SHOPPING EARLY

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