The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 29, 1932, 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. TUESDAY, NOV. 29 |932 CAPITOL TUESDAY since “Sorrell & Sen” NO GREATER LOVE . ALL-STAR CAST, v Alexander Cart Beryl Mercer Betty Jane Grahom Dickie Moore Richard Bennett Hobart Bosworth 7 COMEDY WEDNESDAY The screen’s greatest contribution INTENSE DRANA PORTRAYED ON CAPITOL SCREEN “No Greater Love” and| “Jungle Mystery” Will | Be Shown Tonight = | | “No Greater Love,” intensely in- teresting drama, and thes tenth €pitode of ‘Junglée Mystery,” ex- he new program tonight at the Capitol - theatre. { In “No Greater Love” a deli- | |catessen proprietor — Cohen by name, and known to the emu-e neighborhood as “Uncle Sidney"— adopts a little erippled girl; Mil | |dred Fannigan. The child, who| has lived all of Her life in 4 drab' flat above Cohen’s ‘shop, is mnde an orphan by the sudden deat! her mother. ’ Cohen Cares For Her Before the authorities can plaee her in an orphanage, Cohen takes| her into his home back of the store, takes care of her and loves bher as his own child. There is planey of menace wuh' the authorities threatening to take‘ Mildred and finally succeeding. ‘There is plenty of pathos with| Uncle Sidney’s heart breaking be-! “JUNGLE MYSTERY” 10 CHINA NITE COMING — “Office Girl” — “Th Greeks Had a Word for Them “Arrcwsmith” — “Congress Dances” “Roar of thé Dragon” CHUCK DESH;;N LEARN TAP DANCING Chuck DeShen is here in per- son and will conduct classes starting Thursday. NOTICE—All those interest- ed in learning Tap Dancing will receive a ticket at box office. This ticket and 26c¢ is good for one lesson. Ask for YOUR ticket. For information or dates, call Gastineau Hotel or Capi- tol Theatre between 1 and § o’clock p. m. and during shows. SOME RECORD FOR BOWLER ST. LOUIS, Nov. 20.—John Flan- nagan, 20-year-old St. Louis bow: 278 for a tcial of 825. MRS. CAMERON IS GIVEN $40 AWARD, GEORGE BROTHERS Farlin F. Cameron was the | Mrs Jer, hung up an early season re- cord that bids fair to stand, with saccessive gaes of 300, 247 and| cause of his separation from the {little girl. There is plenty of comedy be-! tween little Mildred, Uncle Sidney,| and . their kind neighbors. Mrs. Burns and her grandson, Tommy. ! Appeal Is Great { There is a great appeal through ‘the fact that little Mildred is an 'ndent Irish Catholic while Uncle Sldnev is as ardently interested i n his own religion. He is a Jew, i yet the bridge between is never felt by either of them. | | The play is directed by Lew ;Sflller and written by Isadore |Bernstein and the cast includes | Alexander Carr as Uncle Sidney;, | Dickie Moore as Tommy Burns: Betty Jane Graham as Mildred |Flannigan; Richard Bennett as the |great doctor; Alec Francis as the (Catholic priest; Beryl Mercer as [Mrs. Bnrns; Martha Mattox as | the authority; Helen Jerome Eddy as the head of the institution; | Tom McQuire as the kWdly Irish policeman and Mischa Auer as the rabbi. | The tenth episode of “Jungle Mys- {tery” is replete with thrills. — e —— ' | | Old papers for sale at Empire. i |lciting serial photoplay will feature ' | H eart.s Are Made for Loving CLASS T0 BEGIN IN TAP DANCING Capllol Theatre Cooperates with C. De Shon Here from - Hollywood . | All persons interested in danc- | ing instruction may obtain les-| sons through the courtesy of the | Capitol theatre. C. De Shon, Hollywood dance | eacher and producer is now form- mg classes for adults, studemsh and children. Everyone attending the theatre‘ starting tonight, will be given a | ticket good for one tap dancing lesson upon additional payment of a small service charge. This offer is good only through; the Capitol theatre. Mr. De Shon urges all those in- terested to register at the Capi- tol theatre at their earliest oppor- tunity as classes will be limied. A business girls' class is form- ing and will be given instruction in the evening. | ROBERTSONS RETURN | FROM SEATTLE TRIP| R. E. Robertson, prominent at- | torney, and Mrs. Robertson, were | passengers on the steamship North- western, which arrived in Juneau today from Seattle. They were gone three weeks and spent all the time' in Seattle. Mr Robertson had . New Shipments of . . . Japanese Pajamas Also . .. . ous to list. Also . . .. Received! Hand embroidered, prisingly Jow prices. An entire shopful of new and lovely, gift artieles, too numer- recipient of the Forty dollar mer- ckandise award, given away for the past month’s contest .sponsored by George B¥Sthers, and Leader | Department Store. - —,———— The advertisements are your guide to efficient spending. BEWARE! Cold weather will soon be here. Let us protect your car against freezing and prepare it for winter. JUST TELEPHONE We will call for, and return your car at no extra cost. Service Rendered by Experts CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. A fine assortment of Sunday night frocks, afternoon and ‘ house froeks, skirts, blouses, | ete. Also .\ . Christmas bo cessories. ! Be sure and visit our new shoppe. feel you will be delighted with, it and our new stocks of merchandise. ,, Juneau frqck Shoppe (On Seward, two doors from Behrends') . Limited Credit Extended rich looking and Robes at sur- xes, seals and ac- g ) We GERMAN STAR IN PRiNBIPAL ROLE Ronmn«e wnth Gaiety Will I Be Next Show at Capi- | tol Theatre ance of a young girl who to be happy while seeking happiness = in life, “The (ultim Sure To Win Favor In the title role of the ever |emiling Susie, Renate Muller is in-| troduced to American film audienc- €s. With the charm, grice and (beauty for which she was famous lon the German stage, she is sure }to gain favor on the American | screen. { Taking the busy part of & bank clerk by comic beer-garden choir by night, Jack Hulber ity for providing laughs. {fast and crackks wise, but at all {times, advances the action of the story with the ideas he uses for' +his fun. Office Full of Typists An office-full of typists tapping out Sceres in featurea plays start- ing tenight in Juneau theatres hits in “The Office Girl” i “The e Girl,” RKO-Radio Picture be presented at 1 :("Llu&'k ymorrow night and shown regularly Thursday at the Capitol | vaeatre A 10 Off: G makes its first claim {%0 success because of its continu-| fous gaiety day and the leader of a! rhythmic accompaniment to | one of the three Viennese musical @ is one | Pluy Hookey to See Film Made |“Penrod and Sam" Soon i Will Be Presented at Coliseum Theatre An epidemic of les’ largest grammar ularly tomorrow at |in the résidential hea Location Near hoo! This Ipils. They left their lon, Wade Boteler, Helen garet Marquiz, Betty and the dog, ‘Cameo. | — . — N ] - hookey broke out recently in one of Los Ange- schools, only the motion picture makers of | Hollywood had the remedy for First National was filming mar the Coliseum | theatre, on a large vacant lot ri of the city “location” was withina few |blocks of the school and the at- wtmcn\m was too great for the pu- classes the dozens to watch the thrilling |process of motion picture making, Beau- the ‘final explanation. !dine, Nestor Aber, Billy Lord, Mar-llf“ comedy treatment is Graham, and is highly diverting. | James Robinson, Robert Dandridge | and by AT THE HOTELS 0FFIGE GIRL' HAS School Pupils GAY BUT WEIRD PLAY HEADLINES COLISEUM BILL “Strangers of the Evening” Has Unusual Twist in Mystery Plot the sz'mnl.l of a mur- proceeds from the my of one of the cha through the routine of f ually ster; ous demis acters, sequences of Leon Jann new clues and accusations to the - picture, “Penrod and Sam” which CcVitable solution and capture of the will be previewed at 1 o'clock to- Criminal morrow night and presented reg- angers of the Evening” which headlines the new program 0 be shown tonight at the Coli- seum theatre, has its murder, but there the similarity in formula In this picture the excitement centers about a man who is “sup- posed” to be murtered. Wheti' the fact is revealed that another man has actually been murdered, it Is and many of the truants begged too late to punish the crime be- |tc be given work as members of Cause.the murderer is dead. !Penrod’s gang. | Unusual Twist in Plot The east of “Penrod and Sam"| “Strangers of the Evening” has |ircludes Matt Moore, Dorothy Pet- the unusual twist in plot of a has the ‘.espomlbn_\fl;on, Zasu Pitts, Junior Cough- murder mystery in which no mem- He thinks 1an, Johnny Arthur, Charles Sel- ber of the cast is implicated in “different” fany Thayer's popular novel, “The | Ilustrious Corpse,” one of the best- llers of recent years. The treat- ment provided for the screen takes o ‘the sting out of the grewsome at- mosphere of the yarn, by giving are shown in the above illus- [of the innovations in the picture.| Gratinens 4 Y ! ¢ trations, At the top are Betty™ |The scene with the girl-flleq win.| s John Vowssles, Tenakee;|free telf fo an excellent cast of Jame Graham with her doll, |dows is another of the ofiginaljDonald Armour, Ketchikan; Mr. Alexander Care in' the cesiter | touches |and Mrs. G. C. Wood, N. A. M- | Littlefield and Pitts and Dickie Moore, as they ap- Morris Harvey plays the em- | Eachran, Seattle; K. B. Edwards,| BEspecially notable are Lucien pear in “No Greater Love” at the Capitol. At the boitom are Lucien Littlefield and Zasu ployment manager who tries to use, his position as an influence over| Susie to win her affection. Owen | | Juneau. Alaskan Joseph Bolen, Frank ! Nilson Nelson! Pitts, fun factors in “Strangers |Nares, enacting the bank director, of the Evening,” at the Coli- |comes into Susie’s life by a cir- | Victor Kussan, Chichagof. seum. | cuitous and unconventional social O i SRIAEL ——— | pathway. Thomas Tilson, Jr., PR TN S Y ter McDevitd, Juneau. business there. H i it During the sojourn in the Pugubl The Kiel and Elbe-Trave Canals, Sam Guyot, Sound metropolis, they enjoyed visits with- their son, Elliott Rcb- ertson, who is a Sophomore at the | University of Washington. in Germany are to be improved. AT R L S coming popular in Java. THE BATTLE OF HASTINGS—1066 A. D. “Nature in the Raw”’—as portrayed by J. Scott Williams . . . inspired 5 by the surging fury of the Norman hordes under William the Con- queror, in their merciless onslaught against the English in the Battle of Hastings, October 14, 1066. “Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”—and raw tobaccos have no place in cigarettes. Hirst Chichagof; N. A. McEachran end Miriam Seegar. Littlefield and Zasu Pitts—the for- | ’mer as a man who loses his mem- Bsoloff, ory and wanders about as a home- less vagabond and the latter as a lavey” who befriends him. Eugene Pallette as a police de- Bitka; Wal-'tective scores in several excellent' |scenes. The romantic roles are in| {the hands of Theodore von Eliz ‘nnd K. B. Edwards, traveling sales-'dridge has the part of Tommy, ! men, are back at their Juneau a green undertakers' assistant, Who Three-wheel automobiles are be- headquarters from business tripsto holds the key to the solutfon of | today from a business trip to Se- ' Alaska towns E buy the finest, the very finest tobaccos in all the world= but that does not explain why folks 'everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never overlook the truth ‘that *Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”<s0 these fine tobaccos, after proper aging and this baffling and funny mystery. No raw tobaccos in Luckies —that’s why they re so mild mellowing, are mild cigarettes. (1] COLISEUM TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY« | “PAL NITE” 2-(&-1 Mystery ani Mirth . . Horror and Hilarity! Presented by Tif- fany Productions with Zasu Pitts Luclen Littlefield from the book “The Ii- lustrious Corpse” by Tif- fany Thayer SELECTED SHORTS “BACK T0 COAL” In addition, | The photoplay is pased on Tif-| Harold Wal- benefit of that Lucky Strike pusi- fying process, described by the words—"It’s toasted”. why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such It's toasted” IS BRITISH CRY | LONDON, Nov. 29 — “Bdck to coal” is the war cry of the British coal industry in an attempt to | régain some of the business it has lost in recent years, chiefly to ofl Return of the British navy to coal to help a very sick basie in- dustry is their chief hope. This has been made the subject of con- siderable agitation and ‘although the navy has indicated no enthus- [tasm for the suggestion, Stanley Baldwin told a deputation that the possibility’ was “never absent from the minds of the admiralty.” An aggressive campaign against “foreign fuel substitutes” (which means oil) is to be pushed and the most modern coal-consuming appa- ratus made known to fuel users. —————— W. D. Gross, owner of the Coli- seum chain of motion picture the- \Mres in Southeast Alaska, returned } attle. then given the That’s

Other pages from this issue: