The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 11, 1933, Page 3

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'IHE DAILY ALASKA E‘VIPIRE WI:DNESDAY EDNESDAY, JAN. 11, 1933. . CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT Would YOU send YOUR brother to the Electric Chair? SEE ‘Unash r nasnamed with HELEN TWELVETREES Lewis Stone—Robert Young “CHINA NITE"—(Gravy Bewls) FANNIE HURST'S “BACK STREET” with Ircne Dunn—Joth Boles LUDWIG NELSON | JEWELER § Watch Re,airing Brunswick Agency FRONT STREET . ] l | 1 | I I | | McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL Nith the coal I It comes Irom our place. For our coal goes farther and gives a more even and satisfying heat. If your coal bir is running low, better have us send you a new supyply to prove our statement. Our draging service is always the best D. B. FEMVIER Phone 114 e CALL 14 FOR A Royal Blue Cab CITY RATES 25¢ and 35¢ ! ; BERGMANN DINING ROOM Beard by Week cr Month Meals for Trancients MRS. J. GRUNNING Preparations PINEMULSION—for persistent coughs CORAX ' TABLETS— |l to break colds NAVAP—inhalant for head colds VICKS’ NOSE DROPS | PAKIES—for throat irritation JUNEAU DRUG CO. SUBSTATION NO. 1 Phone 33:- - Free Delivery 2 i PREVIEW—1 A. M. TO\IGIITE‘ lwhere the need for more definite iof the districts by the district su- || perintendent who will accompany any one time. HOPEFUL NOTE. | i | ciation. of the gold standard. He F. & BOYLE, MISS MORRIS ARE MARRIED |Auditor - Elect and Former Nurse Surprise Friends by Marriage, Victoria Word has been received in Jus neau of the marriage of Miss Jane Morris and Auditor-Elect. Frank A. Boyle in Victoria, B. C,, week ago. After the ceremony the bride and groom left for Seattle where, it is understood, they are still visiting. Both Judge and Mrs. Boyle are very well known in Juneau and have a host of friends who will be interested in their marriage. Judge Boyle was United States Commis~ sioner and later practiced law here prior to his recent election to the office of Territorial Auditor and Mrs. Boyle wes formerly a nurse at St. Ann’s Hospital, where she had been since coming to Juneau in the summer of 1929. INDIAN OFFIGE CHIEFS DEPART FOR LONG TOUR Gordon, Troast and Dr. Fellows Start on Import- | ant Inspection Trip (Continued from Page One.) | i | Gulkana, Tetlin and Tanana Crossing enroute. From Fairbanks it will proceed to Nome with calls, varying from one and two hours, to overnight visits, -at Tanana, Kokrines, Ga- lena, Nulato, Koyukuk, Kaltag, | Unalakleet, Koyuk, Elim and White Mountain. After an overnight stop at Nome, they will hop off for Kotzebue ‘and return, stopping at Igloo, Tel- |ler, Shishmareff, Noatak, Noorvik, IShun"nak Selawik, Buckland, ‘Dke*mg and back to Nome. Taking | " joff a second time they will fly to; St. Michael, Stebbins, Kotlik | Mountain Village, Kotmuts, Rus- {sian Mission, Holy Cross, Anvik, Shageluk, Sleet mute, Kalskak, Tulikeak, and Akiak. From there they will proceed to | iTumlra. Choquaktold, Tagiara,| | Quillingok, Kipnuk, Sanatak, Kia- {1lik, Eek, Quainhagok, Goodnews | |Bay, Togiak, Kulukuk, Kananak,| Ugashik, Egegik, Savenuska, New- | ?hfllen, Nondalton, Illimna, Tyonek |and Anchorage. New School Plans If flying conditions permit, Mr. Gordon and his companions ex+ pect to visit several places in the Kuskokwim delta where schools Ihave not yet been established but work has -been indicatd. ‘The party will be joined in each it on the inspection, This is the most extensive: trip and most comprehensive study ever undertaken by «the bureau at IS SOUNDED BY BANKER OF N. Y. Economic System of U. S. Sound—Foreign* Cur- rencies Discussed NEW YORK, Jan. 11. — Charles ' Mitchell, Chairman of the National City Bank, sourided a moderately :hopeful note at the annual m=eting of the shareholders, expressing the | belief that the economic system of the United States is essentially | maintained. Gold Standard Best Mitchell stressed the present dis- location of foreign currencies anfl said this was due to their renun- | declared.. America should, consider | the entire’ financial problem in ‘a spirit of cooperation as it is of [ vital importance to progress and recovery. Staple relationship be- tween the dollar and foreign cur- rencies must be established; he said, thus relieving “our price structure from the most destructive of all kinds of competition, namely that of depreciating currencies of com- peting nnon’s." CAPIEOE #¥TOMORROW about a‘ land father. sound and that the integrity of|’ ‘the gold standard value should be ‘UNASHAMED'-AT GAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT Sensational Ema of City Life and Mystery Shown Again This Evening “Unashamed,” sensational drama of the modern age, in which mys- tery is dressed in the cloak of today's city life, marks. a mnew phase of the many-sidedness of Bayard Veiller, famous author of “The Trial of Mary Dugan” and “The Thirteenth Chair.” The new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer picture was written_ directly for the screen by the noted stage playwright, and showing for the last times tonight at the Capitol theatre, provides thrills that are all the more in- tense because of their. ultra-mod< ern aspect. The story deals with a woman who sacrifices honor for love— thén when her brother kills the man who has disgraced her, must choose between disgrace and her brother’s life, as only her story can save him. Cast Uniformly Good Helen Twelvetrees runs the complete gamut of emotions in a remarkable series of episodes as the girl in the case and. Robert Young and Monroe Owsley are ‘pitted as the brother and lover respectively. Jean Hersholt as the old German grocer gives a char- acter interpretation that isastound- ing, and Lewis Stone and John Miljan battle in court as the at- |torneys fighting over the brother’s |fate. Robert Warwick gives a dig- |nified and vigorous characteriza« tion as the girl's father, and Gert- rude Michael plays the sympathetic role of the brother’s fiancee. The big dramatic highlight i |the scene in the courtroom where the girl, desperate and remorseful; bares her past to the jury to save her brother from the noose. Harry Beaumont directed the production with deft skill, bringing out the many brilliant facets in the re- markable role. ————— ‘BACK STREET’ IS AT GAPITOL | ON THURSDAY Fannie ’Hurst"s Greatest Novel to Be Shown at Local Theatre Fannie Hutst's most absorbing story comes to the screen -tomors Tow, when Universal's picturiza- tion of “Back Street” will be shown at the Capitol theatre, with TIrene Dunne and John Boles in the leading roles. This powerful and fascinating love-drama follows the romance of a girl and a man, held together |, by a sincere love in spite of the fact that the man is a husband For twenty years, the attachment endures, ing in intensity, until a tragedy brings ' the mst extraordinry af- fair ~of 'its kind ever Dpicturized into sharp focus. Phroughout her:life, the woman has sacrificed everything else to the man she loved, while the man has maintained his position in the social world. and remained a re- spected. member. of the communs | ity in which. he lives. The: supporting cast includes June Clyde, George Meeker, Wil liam Bakewell, Aletta Duncan, Dor- ris Lloyd, Walter Catlett and other favorites, - The-pieture was direct- edy by’ 'Jdhn M. ‘Stahl ol i FIGHT STAGE Cancellation—;—Oil Conces- sion Resulting in Trouble MOSCOW, Jan. 11.—Russian dis- patches from Teheran, Persia, said two Persian warships have ‘moyed from Bushire to the Mohammera port on the River Karun, near the site of the Anglo-Persian Oil Com- pany concession. The British and Persian Govern- ments have been in a dispute for some time over Persia’s cancella- tion of the oil concession, o — The cost of prime mneccessities in Brazil, under control of the gov- ;|ernment’s price-fixing commission, has not risen, but prices of un- controlled commodities have start- ‘ed to soar, ever increas- | | She Is Starred in “Back Street” Irene: Dunne who comes to the Capitol: Theatre Thursday night in the ncw feature. RADIO ARTISTS ARE TO INVADE {MOVIES AGAIN Closer Attentlon Will Be Paid to Stories than First Time | | i i By ROBBIN COONS i HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Jan. 11.—+ It looks as if the screen's second. big invasion, of the territory of the | radio is on. 4 “ The imminent return of Rudy Valle to Holly- wood to appearin 1 feature picture s another step n the movie an- nexation of names made famous ovs er the air, The assembling | @of a galaxy radio stars in oné - feature, “The Bi| T RUDY VALLEE ~ Broadcast” proved profitable enough at the box-offic¢ to spur its producers to furthet attempts at cashing in on the per; sonalities behind the voices of the air, KATE SMITH AT WORK Some of the stars in that feature, such as Burns and Allen and Binj Crosby, periodically have appeare in screen shofts and continue tp do so. One of them, Kate Smith, is engaged on a second featurg and has another on the slate. Mack. Sennett’s most pretentious offering in years, the feature “Hyps notized,” stars Moran and Mack, those two black crows who rosg with their “Barly Bird." 4 Whether the present revived ins vestigation in other names is trace eable to a desire to retrieve they fans helieved lost to radio or is simply one of the straws at which producers are clutching in their efforts to present the novel in film fare, one thing is certain— much more attention is being giv- en to the stories used to exploit, the radio people. Rudy Vallee’s first picture, “The Vagabond Lover,” was disappoint= ing to many—including the. studio that made it—and so was “Check and Double Check” the Amos :mdI Andy film, “The Big Broadcast,”| Yoo, thrived on its variety of tal- ent rather than on its story strength. RUDY ONLY ONE OF STARS For Kate Smith’s new veh! Fannie Hurst, successful in screen writing, concocted the yarn, and |Rudy’s return to pictures will be made in. ‘“International House, a| film which apparently will not be| fabricated for the sole purpose of presenting the crooner, since Rndy is to be one of three stars in the cast, and the picture will have a| plots Boots Mallory, although her fir picture was “Walking Down Broad= way,” will be seen first in “Handle With Care,” in the role that Lita Gray Chaplin ‘would have plaved had Charlie. Chaplin not vetoed the idea of the sons’ m debut. cour DR. TORBET WILL START MISSION SERVICE TONIGHT Dr.’ Waiter Torbet, of San F cisco; will commence his preac mission at the Methodist Episc | Chureh tonight at 7 o'clock was announced today. 1 an= ng val | personality. skl ‘PMHY HUSBAND CLOSES TONIGHT AT COLISEUM Vivid Modern Drama of Matrimony Among Strong Pictures of Past Year “Party Husban powerful First National comedy-drama of modern { narriage in which Dorothy Mack- i aill makes one of her most bril- liant characterizations of a young iwife, will be shown at the Coli- seum theatre for the last time to- night. Though the play deals with ad- vanced « theories of mariage, the characters are made so living and !|human by the players in this fas- inating drama, and there is such truth in the dashes of comedy and in the tenderer scenes, that the total effect is a cross-section of modern life, well worth the {while of young and old married folks, and those who think of be- ing married folks, to behold. Geod Performances James Rennie gives a sincere | performance as Jay, the husband ‘who agrees with the young bride that marriage should not curb one’s activities to hamper one's He gets a job ar- ranging Laura, takes a position with a publishing house. Her theory gets a slight jolt when a too-modern maiden takes bibulous possession of Jay, but true to her creed, she lets it pass. Jay's theory goes to pieces when Laura is taken to a distant city by her employer and he follows on vengeance bent. This is but a hint of the story which never los- | es its breathless pace till the last fadeout. Others in the cast are, Dorothy Peterson, Joe Donahue, Helen Ware | Don Cook, Mary Doran, Barbara | Weeks Porcasi, and the inimitable Paul who is cast as a dille- tante artist ofamorous propensi- | ties. —— e (NATURALNESS IS KEYNOTE OF THE ‘6AY CABALLERD® George OBnen and Victor| McLaglen Lack Affecta- tion in First Work Naturalness has always marked the screen work of both George O'Brien and Victor McLaglen. Neither has ever been afflicted | with the germ of affectation, com- | monly known in Hollywood as the virus Hamletius. Complete lack of Shakespearean tendencies was evident throughout thelr work together in “The Gay Caballero,” Fox action drama which comes Thursday to the Colr seum theatre. 1In fact, kidding ‘was the order of the day between them as friends and with Alfred Werker, the director. “There is no use trying to get these fellows to rehearse a scene seriously, as actors” Werker re- marked early in the production. “You've just got to let them be Is Important In Glasses THAT’S why our se- lection of styles is so complete and up - to- date. Whatever your type, we can suit you. COME IN TODAY FOR A SIGHT TEST Those who have met Dr. T and remember his sermons i Presbyterian Church three 280 will bé glad of the opporti: ‘ot hearing this evangelistic preact er again. The services are open to all ¥ desire to hear the Gospel pre: /ing. No -offerings or collect will be taken at the services ——————— Advertisements are your pockei~ Dr. R. E. Southwell OPTOMETRIST | He knows his method works be- radio broad - casts and | Ohio. children in his time. CINCINNATI, Ohio, Jan.11.—The | way. to rear children, as expounded by 76-year-old Everett Reese, is to spare the bank account and. spc:l! the child. cause he. has reared 47, all of them foundlings, on his farm near Shan- | don, Ohio, in nearby Butler Coun- | ty. And most of them, he proudly reports, “came out fine. Bank accounts were. the only im- plements of praise or punishment| he used. The hank account worked | {both ways. Good behavior, chores weil- done | around the farm, good marks at| school brought a few dollars more| {to the account of the striving youngster, whether boy or girl. An act: of mischief, a streak of shirk-| ing of duties; or a bad report from the school ma’am down the road| {meant a few dollars debit to the| bank account. All in all, debits and credits came |out pretty evenly, Reese found. In after years, too, the bank account| was a pretty good measurmiz fi'.hk‘ The best way to bring up a child is to hurt him in his bank account when he is bad, says 76-year-old Everett Reese, of Shandon, Reese ought to know for he has been father to 47 adopted | Johnny. | the years went by. |Jail found a haven in the |Pad Whe Reared 47 Or phans Urges Spankmgs-—-On Purse when it came to telling whether Maggie was a better child than In the end each child had $150 or s0 when the time came to leave | the farm and go out into che world. Reese started his “child farm”| when he was supplying milk to the County Children's Home. . He be- came interested in some of the children, and offered to glve them a home. More and more came as Then the Jjuvenile court judge began to turn over to him some of the con- stable's captures; and even one -or: two apparently incorrigible ones who had been sent to the County Rees2 farm house, He never turned thema down. In 25 years he has reared 47 children. He did it all with: only: his sister off the mortgage, wouldn't wait.” and the lady |natural or find that' you have !ruined the charm of their per- | sonalities.” As a result of this understanding direction, “The Gay Caballero” is 'said to be one of the most hu- |out of Hollywood. drama of present-day conflict, in- trigue ‘and romance along the Mexican horder ands features two negro and Linda.. Watkins. S ee—— ATTENTION LEGIONNAIRES! | erican Legion meets .at Dugout Thursday night, 8:00 pm. All | Legionnaires urged to attend. | NOTICE In the Commissioner's Court for Juneau Precinct, Alaska, In Pro- |manly enacted stories yet to come It depicts the | lovely Fox stars, Conchita Monte- | Alford. John Bradford Post Am- ndv,‘ TO CREDITORS | My’ Beauty Hint LUPE VELEZ bate. In the Matter of the Estate of| Panny Caroline’ M. Davis, De-| ceased. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned were on the 2lst day of December, 1932, appointed Ex- ecutors of the above estate. All| persons having claims against said estate are required to presentthem with: ‘the proper vouchers within| six ‘months from' the date of this| notice, January 11, 1933, at the| office of A. W. Fox, Valentine Buildin, Juneau, Alaska. {January 11, 1933. TREVOR M. DAVIS, OCEDRIC M. DAVIS, ! Executors. | | First publication, Jan. 11, 1933. Last publication, Feb. 1, 1933. I love to spend lots of time in | making up my ecyelashes. I.use a long-handled eyebrow (| |brusn and apply the mascara to [} eaoh lash separately, curling them upward as I do. Making the mas~ cara dry in the upward curling shape emphasizes the length of the natural lashes. If one or two lashes stick to- | gether, separate them. carefully with a fine hairpin. Each lash should be free when the make-up is complete. Do these- things and you'll not want to use false eyelashes. e, ATTENTION, ELKS! January birthday party and big feed after regular meeting tonight. " —adv. COMMITTEE. 14nnual Fzshermen S Ball D e e T B L RO COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘PAL NITE” DORGTHY éKMH in PARTY HUSBAND PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 A. M. GEORGE O’'BRIEN in “THE GAY CABELLERO” to help him. He never. married.|| | He thought about it once, he said, | but then he was “tgo busy payirg TONIGHT AT Evergreen Gardens Largest and Most Beautiful Ballroom in. Alaska REAL MUSIC by Louis Anderson and the Rhythm ” Vendors Entire. Second Floor Goldstein Building Admission_$1.00 Moose Hdil Saturday N iglzt Mausic by Krane’s Accordion Orchestra Valentine Building Invitational Clearance Sale On All Coats,| Dresses and Millinery COATS -at $6.95 1 DRESS RACK $3.95 : each | SILK BLOUSES' $2.75 [ ClosingOut Adl Winter . Hats at 50c:each Always Fresh “Ask Your Grocer” }

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