The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 1, 1933, Page 3

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LAST TIMES TONIGHT The Strangest Adventure Ever Filmed Selected Shorts —*“China Nite"— PREVIEW—TONIGHT, 1 A. M. “ATTORNEY FOR THE DEFENSE” EDMUND LOWE ~ DEBONAIR HERO ; HOTEL ZYNDA Large Sample Rooms ELEVATOR SERVICE S. ZYNDA, Prop Daring, debonair | embiticus as the di rict who turns to defend criminals in-; attorney stead of prosecuting he finds he has sent \man to the chair, Edmund Lowe | interprets one of the most pow fully dramatic characters of his ;1011,2 and successful screen career | in “Attorney for the Defense,” a Your Chance To Get Yollr | Columbia picture, coming to the {Capitol theatre Thursday. | | Lowe's supporting cast in the | vELvET | pieture includes Evelyn Bre: ent, | pic Constance Cummings, Donald Dil- | (Less than cost) them, when | an innocent NOW Is laway, Dorothy Peterson and ‘Dmlgh: Frye. Irving Cummings} | directed. | | “Attorney for the Defense” will| jbe previewed at the Capitol to-| | night. | MILLENNIOM | Some with Jackets $7.50 10 $8.95 || N ] Also STREET DRESSES ‘ i In Crepes y [ | $4.95 - CORNER" NOW : | WOOLEN DRESSES NEW YORK, Feb. 1—A secu.‘lr industrial revolution, during which I $5.95 America’s present factory system H will be swept away, its great citie: i will disappear and there will i universal adoption of the six-hou i day and five-day weck, is pre L|~ JUNEAU Sample Shop ed by Edward A. Filene, \maltmy Boston merchant. He declared the revolution \\uuld’ be motivated by giant power, m: production and an application the profit system. In the America of the which he pictured, food, clothing| and shelter will become “relatively | as cheap as water”; good wages will promote international travel whic in turn will promote world peace future, \ FIRE ALARM CALLS stion -{and !tnrough a village |the ‘I6LOO’ DRAMA OF NORTHLAND | BIVES THRILLS Capitol PicE Tells - Stir- ring Story of Eskimo Life | —Has Eskimo Cast “Igloo” motion the ly is mnot only picture as was Arctic, but it is a nu- cciting drama as well. “Igloo, which opened at ~apitol Theatre last night the exception of the Mouse matinee Saturday, |seen for the last times gives an intimate view of exi co lived by the Eskimos o the Far North. The story deals with the mig of a wvillage of native search of as fine a ever made the and will ton the sterr in the picture reaches matic tensity, heightened by o on of dangerous and thrilling events. The storms which sweep a dra- earlier sequences ars ably bleak and chilling {make one real inde- Alaska—when one considers the contra: between the scenes - of } “Iglod” and those to which w2 ars| omed in Juneau. €d” by the director of the com- | DAN WILLIAMS Friends Pay Last Iribute toProminent | Mining Man 1 Mickay | be | the open sea and IoaJ.} a suc-| of the igloos in|t:avel subjects wnicn wore They | nique. e the vastness of | producer who spe: THE DAILY A /\9 /\ FMPIRE, W’,-f\I,SD/\\ HP. E ‘COCOARUT O T0 BE FILMED BY COREY FORD Production —\XZT] Be in Na- ture of Burlesque— Other Items ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Feb. 11— burlesque bf travel films by a cializes in such pictures will: be siven movie fans vhen Sol Lesse i |ilms “Cozeanu rights to he has from Cor- By A vhich sought y Ford There will, JANET GAYNOR several purport y touches of Hollywood { Amusing and worthy e be in- |cluded in such a burlesque are let ters Lesser showed me from a. enterprising concern in Africa HELD IN SOUTH .. {Mar | | [ 1 m ::,‘} g gniin a few warehouses will displace the| Alaskan friends cathered in ey | 1-6 Front, near Ferry Way. “miles and miles of retail stores;|attle January 25 to pay their last 1-8 Front, near Gross Apts. || the housing problem will be solved|(ribute to Daniel J. Williams, well-| i“: mh:- :?;rcé? Wmuhlrfi by mass production, and learning k"'o‘;" n;mmu "““’L‘_"“" }; "’L g;"“ i 9 g . will be promoted by making edu-|3¢ his home at the Hirst-Chi- i ;Zf ;mnm;u.;h?':" %tz‘fz‘u cation “fo attmntiv’; the ci)ldron chagof mine at Kimsham Cove,| Grocery. | just cannot stay away from school.”! Jl;“:;i‘a‘:a? G e *4 Cole's Bonney - Watson funeral parlors, 2-4 Front and ard. 'CH.ARLES WHn‘E TAKES and_ conducted ; by th? _Maso{nc 3-5 Front and Main. Service Bureau in association with 2-6 BSecond 3nd Main. 'OVER HAINES THEATRE | 1. Episcopal Church under the| ;:: ate‘::t:m.nd lll‘lln. S direction of the Rev. J. M. Mec-| 2.9 all, Charles White left on the steam- ! Lachlan of St. Mark’s Cathedral. *.3 Il{ome Boarding House jer Northwestern this morning for Honorary pallbearers were: Harry , 3-4 Qastineau and Rawn | Haines where he will take over|Simons, H. L. Faulkner, John W. H Way. |the operation of the Coliseum |Troy, Goon Dip, Eiler Hansen, ] :_—; m ::dd Gold. Theatre which he has rented from | Frank Metcalf, Louis A. Levan- i 3.8 th . and Goul'w“l |'W. D. Grqss. ; saler, Jerry O'Neil, Lew Kay, Wil ! 87 th and lllt.‘ Mr Whn_e is the son of Algc iam Freeburn, Anscel Eckmann and| I 3-8 Seventh and Gold. +White and is very well known. in|C. F. Lane. i 3-9 Pifth and Kennedy. Juneau where he has spent most Interment was in Lake View 1 4-1 Ninth, back of power |of his life. He has been operator | Cemetery, Seattle. i et i;btthfc Coliseum Theatre for the| His widow, Mrs. Frances Will- l 25t four years. iams, with her mother, Mrs. W. H. i Dm‘ Indian | . S po—— Roessel of Ketchikan, are in Seat- :.g mnfl': m Calboun. | TOM TILSON, JR. 'tle and will remain there for sev- { 4-6 ‘Tenth and C. OF SITKA IS HERE eral wecks before returning to 4-7 Twelfth, BPR. garage. |/ Alaska. | 48 Tweltdliand Willoughby. [l Tom Tilson, Jr, of Sitka, who B e S— 81 um"m" 3 \made the trip to Petersburg on|SAM SHUCKLIN IS jthe Admiral Evans, returned to T e e et — ———~ | Juneau on the steamer Northwest- —— {ern and will be here until Estebeth leaves tomorrow evening the OFF FOR WESTWARD Sam Shucklin, merchandise bro- ker, was a westward bound pas- enger on the steamer Northwest- ern when it left Juneau this morn- HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR when he will take passage for Sitka. mg MINK And other furs CHAS. GOLDSTEIN & CO. Juncau S — DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL coal If ii comes from our e who di Mary - AT RITES FOR JACK PICKFORD Many persons prominent In’ the film industry m in Ghnl:l‘& Cal., for funeral services for Jack Pickford, hmhn of Mary Pickf in Paris. Left to right: Gwynn Pickford, M ickford and Dwulu Fairbanks. (Assoclated Lottie Pickford, Press Phuo)_ Frdmetn a S ... |which, when not suppi g guide hero bre u;\ml of Che " lor motion picture cameras to tour- & s gm*["v sl ' |ists, volunteers to 2 to orde ‘r o {5 ST D3 lany needed footage on African wild Fskimo, who someway found his |y cast perils, dang 1dt {way to Hollywood, then returned| 5 ot i and even to stag > the North with the producers|,, Raians Adicies: + 3 e i {the com| deliverad to make this picture. Kyatuk is|, Hol ch per foot! Ithe Eskimo girl who was “discover- | 0" g SON N LW FO ANET pany in her native village and du“sowE""‘]\G W -FOR (A8 lope: Janet Gay. now in Honolulu !veloped into the heroine of the r a vacatio has an unusua The of the cast, a 2 ¢ g work under. the |S02ne for Janet, in her next pic - e 3% o Princess at Your QOrder. direction of Eu ing Scott, who must | N i Playing a princess, disguised as 'H\u had innumerable difficulties i i, = . a servant, Janet is peeking through s U oovercome in the making of th hol - 1 picture. : a keyhole n Henri C val- 2 e et pas and s her smart > - h 3 ikick. This is done the dainty :(‘u_\'nm'. too, to Ja who never > h\s even been slappad by Clark Gable or had James C throw a grapefruit in h Does it herald - a era of een slapstick? A TOUGH FLY scene number 700, take+l, | reported Dave For; mixer @n the “She Had to Say Yes” com-| pany, a noise de oped in the 1e-| THEY’RE ‘MILDER = THEY TASTE BETTER © 1933, LicceTT & MyERs Tonacco (Os luttered up with | s e e e e 1033 CINDERELLA PLAY COMING YARN TOLD IN | THIS MONTH ‘COMPROMISED" “Haunted House” Will Be'Rose Hobart and-Ben Lyon| Presented at Coliseum Starred in Coliseum Ramore ot HIGH SCHODL o by Students | Feature y. February 10 approac nes¥ The 'y of “Compromised,” ‘the d with it the High School play,¥irst National Picture featuring The Haunted House,” to be giv-/Ben Lyon and Rose Hobart, now en at the Coliseum theatre wing at the Coliseum, is @& [ s play was written by Owen mModern version of the immortal r famous plays by the CI a yarn. author are: The Dono Hobart, when the picture “Tee |OPENS, is slavey in a New Eng- own boarding house. Ben he star boarder there and “The Nervous Wreck,” The last was a- Pulitzer play. Owen Davis collabo- d ‘with ‘his son in ‘writing the amatization of Pearl Buck's fa—‘ book, “The now running ‘in New: York. “The Haunted House” is a my: hrills land mill L; on i Barbara Huiton, heiress to the ; he Woolworth millions, only smiled in | answer to questions about her ru- ¢ mored engagement to Prince Mdi- vania, (Associated Press Photo) ing @ humble job in the fac- ories to learn the business. The ifact that he in time marries the girl—is the basis for a story .ef omantic charm and tense drama. cording stem. Search disclosed | LIV play med with t ‘ ! oventually that a fly had workad from the rise of the curtain until! Miss Hobart and Ben Lyon are s into the mxk‘rcpf1al1 s, |the end of the last act. The tense|tWo favorites of the screen, both ) cause an mnd distu tement of the mystery is re-}of whom have won their way to v the ‘mike, the fly by many delightfully comic |high places in the film capitol. he main current w 1s | scenes. | Winnie Lightner Coming what it 3t it{ The cast of the «fama is: | “Manhattan Parade,” new Winnie vas shocke __|Ralph Merrill Jack Driscoll | Lightner Technicolor comedy, will with 180 w |Doris Ulrich Emily ‘Driscoll | be presented at the Colissum at enough to di Friend Desmond Duncan |l & m. tonight and will be the When t. |Helen Rocovich Helen Duncan : feature of the regular shows ¢ Ciyde B’)l\‘\n Ezra Ne: Thursday and Friday. Ed White | s e AR | Isobel Westle Men workers outnumbered wom- Morgan | en workers three to one in both Edward E\zanwlhf’ 1920, .and 1930 census in- the Thomas | United States. Dan Grozan | Film Producers in | Gorddn Trgsa Monopoly, Is Charge Hiding Haglund | Bill: Winn = NOTICE TO CREDITORS the Commissioner’s Court for Juneau Precinct, Alaska. In Pro-| - MiSS ‘ANN ROHWER lS CAMDEN, N. J., Feb. 1—~Warner Brothers' Pictures, Inc., and nine- teen other defendants were accuszd| In of conspiracy in restraint of trad bate. and "Cr‘u'!":lnn' in a suit filed by MET BY mlENDs WHEN In the Matter of the Estate of the Victoria Amusement Company ‘NORTHWESTERN DOCKS Fanny Caroline M. Davis, De- ors of theatres here and in ceased. ter and Pennshauken Town-{ ted by many members of | ’ the teaching staff of the Juneau |undersigned were on the 21st day defendants were alleged to|Public Schools, Miss Ann Rohwer | 0f December, 1932, appointed Ex- have maintained a monopoly of the | arrived here on the steamer ' ecutors -of the above estate. Alll feature pictures made in the coun-,Northwestern last evening. | persons having claims against said' ry. Miss Rohwer, whose home is in |estate are required to presentthem DA €cattle, was elected by the Juneau |With the proper vouchers within J. P. MORGAN LEAVES School Board to fill the vacancy |six months from the. date of this FPOR THE WESTWARD |occurring in the schools by ithe |notice, January 11, 1933, at the] it resignation of Miss Alice Erb; first | office of A. W. Fox, Valentine J. P. Morgan, Alaska represen- |grade teacher, who is going south |Buildin, Juneau, Alaska. tative for' Libby, McNeil and Lib- to be married this month. Miss | January 11, 1933. - took passage on the steamer |Rohwer is welcomed back to Ju-| TREVOR M. DAVIS, 'n this morning for a ncau by the many friends she| CEDRIC M. DAVIS, vip.to the Westward and Interior, o during the years 1926 to 1929 | Exegutors. - >0 — en she taught the third grade |First publication. Jan. 11, 1933. Call Yellow Cab, Phone 22. adv{in the Juneau schools {Last publication. Feb. 1, 1933. that way. of the tobagoo . paper it’s rolled erfield a milder, that satisfies. heste son of a millionaire. He is| Notice is hereby given that the| HEN yo COLISEUM-—Tohight Only ? PAL NITE—2-for-1 | Written by author of “Illfeit” | with Ben Lyon—Rose Hebart Preview Tumghb—l AT M. | “Manhattan Parade” Not only because we are cheaper but BETTER | RICE & AHLERS CO. ‘ Plunbing -Heating Sheet Metal “We tell you in adv _what Jjob will m J ¥ MAY HAYES | Modiste | 1 Bergmann Hotel | PHONE 120 ( | 1 | | Saloum’s Seward Btreet, mtar Seeond i | BT . e TR S McCAUL MOTOR | - I u .ask a smoker why that’s his brand~—he generally comes right gut fla;-fpotqg and says . . .*It’s because They're 'So we’re going to keep on doing everything we know:how: to. leeep tham Milder!” Thatswhywelookbrmd bflythe mildest and ripest tobaccos, we can get. That’s why we age them.in our warc- houses till they’re mellow and sweet. 1 We believe that even the shredding in, have a lot to do with the, ;vau-duwm, mild smaoke that people enjoy in Chesterfields. b You canbank on this. .. every method known to science is used to make Ghest- better- tasting cigarette Chesterfield Radio Program—Every night ex- cept Sunday, Celumbia coasst-to-coast Network.

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