The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, August 5, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, AU(,LbT 5, 1933 CHILDREN 10¢ COLISEUM TONIGHT | csoraE BANCROFT LADY-<GENT WITH WYNNE GIBSON' " CHARLES STARRETT ‘JAMES GLEASON Bancroft's Best Picture PLUS All New Sound! WESTERN ELECTRIC Latest Sound Installation! PLUS All New Prices! 0 *LocEs soe ADULTS PLUS “MA’S PRIDE AND jOY” A Hilarious Comedy “BOSCO’S DIZZY DATE” Comiec Cartoon “PARAMOUNT PICTORIAL” “LATEST NEWS EVENTS” WILL ROGERS SUNDAY Advertisements CAPITOL “STATE FAIR.” adv products before you. spread world BANCROFTSTARS WITH GIBSON IN ‘LADY AND GENT’ Paraniuit Pl Will Be Shown at Reopening of Coliseum Two “wise eggs” who wer2 too | wise . . . That in brief, is the story of !"Lady and Gent,” George Ban- croft’s latest star®ing picture which | opens at the Coliseum Theatre | sunday. Petite Wynne Gibson, latast Hol- | lywood “find,” who is soaring to stardom in her own right, plays opposite the virile Mr. Banerofi and Charles Starrett, James Glea- son, John Wayne and Joyce Comp- ton, have other leading roles. Bancroft and Miss Gibson are cast as a couple of Self-styled “big- timers” who dwell on the shady side of Broadway, battling merrily with each other and with any one else who crosses their path. The uneven tenor of their becomes even more uneven when Bancroft's best friend suddenly dies leaving a 12-year-old son alone sponsibilities to the lad are they sit down to consider. And they reach a conclusion that | produces results as whimsical as they are radical, “Lady and Gent” was written especially for Bancroft by Grover Jones and William Slavens Mc- Nutt. Stephen Roberts directed. Morgan Wallace, James Crane, William Halligan, Bill Butts, Frank McGlynn, Sr., Charles Grapewin and Frederick Wallacs appear in minor roles. BLACIER PRIEST| AANDADVENTURES ARE WRITTEN UP Insh Newspaper Gives Re- | view of “Mush, You E Malamiites™ | Among the papers of foreign countries which have given liberal publicity to the daring exploits and | Father | “The | scientific expeditions of ' Bernard Hubbard, 8. J., = ‘Glacler Priest,” is the Sunday In- | dependent ‘of Dublin, its issue of Sunday, June 4. 1933. Under the caption ‘Flymg Over e First Church of Christ, Scientist JUNEAU, ALASKA ANNOUNCES A FREE LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN CIENCE BY Peter V. Ross, C.S.B. Of San Francisco, California Meéinber of the Board of Lectureship of The Mothet Chuichi, the First Clurch of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. -SCOTTISH RITE TEMPLE Monday, August 7 8P. M. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED lives | in the world. Just what their re-| Ireland, in| 4| baptism, By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Aug. John Davx\ Lodns misst d the trae 3e)s vhen he took up pracme alnx er colioge. He did mot have 1B hang out his shing® and wait. But the movies have let him wait where the law didn't—and he ! thinks he is lucky at that. Scion of the Massachusetts Lodg- es, 6 feet 1 inch tall, Lodge is now playing his fourth role pictures, for which he gave what he terms a “qu business. This, however, was monetary sacrifice, it appears, asmuch as he insisted on a con- up no financially for his forsaken bu | ness. an established legal York, and at 27 was able to embark on his own pr e, Lodge scarce- ly needed to “hang out his shin- gle.” | Just By Chance In fact, as an actor he had to hang out no shingle, either. He | was invited to take a screen test when he came here last September partly for a rest, partly on busi- ness, mainly to accompany his wife, | Francesca Braggioti, actress and dancer, home to New York. After they got home, Paramount wired {him to come back and sign a con- tract. But he has had to wait. He had just a flash of a role, at his own request for Nis first screen appea ance in “The Woman Accus: Then came a larger assignment in “Murders in the Zoo,” and thirdly the villain role in “Under the Tonto Rim.” Now he has the part of John Brooke in “Little Women.” “And this,” he says, “is the first me I've worked since March. How- ever. they tell me, that I'm real- {1y lucky. I have one friend who is | under contract who hasn’t v\orknd ,m a year!” Return To Law? Well— ] Lodge still has no plans for r?~ ‘turmn' to law, although he ke@m ‘hlS office open in New York. “Irm! interested in this” he says, “and AI belleve in giving all one’s at- tention to the thing in hand Some | | day, no doubt, | haven't made any plans for it.” His enthusiasm for pictures, course, dates periences in old desire to | likes pictures dramatics, and an go on the stage. He so much that hé i§ quite willing: to have. his 3-ygar- old daughter, Lily, embark on the !career when she grows up. Lily already has had her camera having played a child's | bit in ‘“Little Women” with 1t fathr—]ust for fun, as he explnm |@ Sea of Fire,” .in its book review No Shingle Hung in Law or Films, But Never Missed It Anyway in good” law, in-! tract that would compensate him: Because he left Harvard to join. firm in New, Tl return, but I: of | back to Harvard ex-, John Lodge | i | Here's a young lawyer fight- ing what he hopes will be his ning “case” in the movies. He's Jchn Davis Ledge, signed by Hecllywcod almost before he | had embarked oen a budding private law practice in New York. He's had four roles so far. WILL ROGERS | - APPEARS HERE, CAPITOL SHOW, “State Falr Opens Sunday with Many Stars in Big Cast It may not be ever told, but a romance blo and flourished at Movietone ) recently between Hollywood's new est star and his red-haired leading sweetest story med lady. The party of the first part is Blue Boy, blue-blooded boar, who ‘has|since been elevated to star rat- g fof his excellent perfc in the Fox production Strong’s novel, “State Fair,” ing to the Capitol Theatre Sunday. com- Blue Boy was a ch _|into a regular N LOS ANGELE Aug. 5.—Appar- anishing Frontiers,” with John ently despairing of ever becoming s Brown and E yn Knapp is mother, Peggy, a canary, hanged | showing for the last times tonight. herself to death in her cage at the 8 Eager Hearts Who sought Life at the State Fair and found it! For, like Life, it/ began lustily . . . offered everything . and, too soon, was over. JANET WILL GAYNOR ROGERS LEW SALLY : AYRES EILERS FOSTER DRESSER VICTOR CRAVEN JORY nenry KING provucrion CAPITOL anged actor. He and developed show-off. Although Bluz Boy enjoys star rating in ate Fair” his lady friend must edited with bringing home the Denied Children, Canary Ends Its Life reened and para —_— e — home of Mrs. C. E. Chittick. The bird had sat on four nes STATE FAIR by Screen play by PHIL STONG F o x SONYA I;SVEN. / PICTURE PAUL GREEN Last Time Tonight---Vanishing Frontier {Tom L. Johnson's | Auto Still : |Chugs and Runs Starting Sunday MATINEE SUNDAY - TWO P. M. MIDNIGHT PREVIEW TONIGHT 1 A. M. CLEVELAND, Aug. 5—An &n- cient once given to leading parades and taking part in important affairs of a glorious past, |chug, puff and run. It is the famous automobile of Tom L. Johnson, automobile, built in 1900, still manages to famous mdyor ;,0f Cleveland, and the inspiration of liberals in this country in his Johnson used the automobilé to |dash from one political meeting to and t0 make fast trips from one conference to another. t is owned by Ira Hellman, who in a roundabout way from Johnson's bother. ARG ™ P S Correspondence and extension students of the University of Mis- l’f;ma'fi"ex:::da?u:;‘m"phl;g:?:flm}':; The object of his atfeotions re-|Nazi Eugenic Law of eggs since last January with- | | View of his recent book, “Mush,Joices in the old-fashioned name Effective January 1 ‘;I-"; )c‘::\;)‘“\ '31){;.gCLuu(nlc¥ saud | | You Malamutes,” says in part: $°-§ Esmeralda i 3 wv's lifeiess body was found per o | Esmerelda made her appearance | A ind susp i by the neck from | | Mush, Maiamutes on the “Btate Fair” set’ as an aft- BERLIN, Aug. —A mnew law a piecz siring attached to the |time. | “Father Hubbard has written a érthiotight. « T8, reftsed o behave‘d’ igned to purify the German | top of I The string had | | book about it, and the title, “M an JmT ospectiig ham might | @ by sterilization of the unfit been pul the bird out of a | | You Malamutes!” is so odd g expedted to in the full gk’”,e'and authorizing such an opera- |piece of c on the floor of tha |another, it seems to call for a word of e i_of the lights and with the cameras| UoR in reme cases or at an | cage and one end of it had been Pplanation. ¥ olicking, Will Rogers, who shares|Rdividual’s request will be made | woven into the wire fabric of the | | Part of the journey through Al- hono“'m the all-star production effective by the Nazi government cage. The bird had wrapped the received it |aska, 1,600 miles to be definite,! Loy g0 ot Gaynor, Lew A Sal- | Bext January 1, four-inch length of string around | was covered by sled. The father's ;o= gy, Norman Foster, Louise| ‘A special board will have con- |her neck and strangled herself. | team of dogs were the breed k"““"lDr“sso\' Frank Craveh and Vietor | frol powers for execution of the - >oo —— wm those icy regions as mala- % s ¢ =g . | measure, and three experts will 3 | mutes, and “Mush, You Mala- ;’:}Z]'mk'};’;:i,‘uczngf’;'fi; Bout| hear appeals s WILL ROGERS SUNDAY | mutes!” is a term used in ¢ 3 i 4 ’ i e S CAPITOL “STATE FAIR.” adv ing these dogs, much the sam |a jarvey wotlld cry ‘“‘Gee-up” 1o | his lagging horse. Father Hub- | bard loved his dog team, and Ishofies of Pete the Fighter, Snook- jum the Wolf, and the rest, ser | to round off an enthralling tal: o adventure. It Is In Book The book is published by | American Press, New York, and ! enriched with a profusion of vivid {dand beautiful photographs. Irish Ireaders who enjoy a graphic : ord of breathless daring, with « | share of sound scientific know! thrown in unobtrusively, should inquire for “Mush, You Malamu gef it. Enthralling in its truest sensc is the only words that convey a idea of the quality of the na tive as a whole. There are n ments, howéyer, when the wor too tame and feeble to describ emotional effect upon the | of these mnightmare adve | that hideous moment, for « | ple, when the ‘plane dippe | nose over the sea of fire, sucd| | down towards the exploding not respond to the pilot's to climb again to safety. W 1 action was needed then, . ¢ came like a flash ta the r Included :n the review is o column cut of Father Hu d saying mass in a voleanic 2 ary, with his three compan the congregation. ‘With the far-reaching circ ; of the Dublin Independent land, throughout Great Britain, British Commonwealth of @ and the additional publicity v be given through reproduct other papers of the British F Alaska will feceive an unp:e ed amount of advertising. Through the courtesy of 1 Murphy, a veteran resident neau, the interesting arti ' brought to-attention, ’ emote in the manner specified by at the Hbrary and see that thev, of hot gases, and the engine 1 gi TONIGHT” Canada and other units © el lifs on a ranch. “Blue Boy's just pinin' for com- pany,” he opined when the world's champion Hampshire refused to { Henry King, the director. Esmeralda was hurriedly sent for, | and from the moment of the ar- i rival of the recl-ha\red 1ady pig, souri number nearly 2,500. Greene, agricultural agent nty, Kentucky, trav- z uw i 196 miles on horseback in one month this year to visit mountain farmers, \ | e — WILL ROGERS SUNDAY 3— CAPITOL "STATE FAIR.” adv Free Delivery Lt 5 Juneau Cash Grocery CASH AND CARRY Corner Second and Seward Phone 58 FAMILY NIGHT 1 Capitol Beer P You supply the dan | and we supply the ! music LUNCHES | BEER 20 eents pint SPECIAL! Home Made Chili i ‘ THE BEST YET! AT THE ce arlors Phone

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