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

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY SEPT. 1, 1933. LAST TIME TODAY HIIMOR THRILLS PLENTIFUL IN 'WESTERN SHOW Plenty of Laughs in “Flam- ing Guns” Now Playing A BIG ToNny_JUNIOR at Coliseum Theatre L. 5—UNIT SHOW—5 __CRuth HALL Starh Saturday—-RI(‘HAh[\ BARTHELMESS in STARTS SATURDAY { ‘RICHARD BARTHELMESS in “Cabin in the Cotton” Juneau’s -Biggest Enter- tainment Value Adults 30c Children lOcCOlIStUM Adults 30c Children 10c Action, pictorial and feminine beauty, and a “different” western story are the outstanding features of Tom Mix’s latest picture, “Flam- ing Guns,” the Peter B. Kyne epic, which opened last night at the Coliseum Theatre. If you like the hard riding of Tom Mix, coupled with sensation- al marksmanship and hand-to-| hand fights—if you like spec: ular chases—if you like the mov- ing natural pageantry of the Mt.! Whitney country, and if like beau- | tiful brunstte leading women—you | will find them in “Flaming Guns” to that is that although he has This latest Mix vehicle, from the | returned to Ohio, and to the scions | TARKINGTON AND opening, where Tom appears as thereof, he still is not quite: the an ex-sargeant of infantry during same man who wrote “‘The Gresn|ths World War, to the end, is a BHMIELD HAvE Bay Tree,” “A Good Woman" and| whirlwind of action. ‘SO forth. | There is a spectacular stam- “The Farm” is a sort of history, | pede of cattle when Tom outwits| really. It describes the ongms‘bhe outlaws and captures them| CEICKED ABAIN single-handed. Later, there is a stampede of motorcycle policemen when they try to prevent Tom's| elopement. | Jack Cunningham has don2 an excellent job of adapting the | story of Peter B. Kyne and An‘ Rosson, the director, has brought | it to the sereen in a very com- mendable manner. One outstanding story is its humor. Tom gets most | of the laughs, with Miss Hall, | William Farnum, Clarence H. Wil- son and Georgé Hackathorne both sharing them. A western con- taining real humor is a pleasant change. ‘Duke Lee, as a villain- ous cowman, does a splendid job. and subsequent fluctuations of one | Pentland, Ohio, which many read- grs will identify with Mr. Brom-j NEW YORK Sept. 1-~The two | fiela's native Mansfield, Four! books from the week's grist like- generations of one family stalk| ly to get most attention, “he‘h"‘acrous Mr. Bromfield's canvas, be-| or not the future shows they de- | oinning with the Colonel \vho went | serve it, are Louis“Bromfield's “The | 1o the Western Reserva from f‘nrm" and. . Booth Tarkmgmns ‘ Maryland full of hope ‘ha‘h could Presenting Lily Mars. | help form a Utopia for him and “Presenting Lily Mars” is per- his. haps a little closer to the “old- e story ends with Johnny" time Tarkington” than some of NiS{ yeturn to Pentland and to later efforts. It is particularly| farm which last is in the hands of successful in recreating the Lms“ll foreigners. Yet all the Colonel's and sawdust atmosphere of the| gream was mot lost; Johnny at , theatre, ;and even more successful | jeast understood the dream. The| fin making credible the carcer Of|yeader will probably identify a “star.” IJohnny as Mr. Bromfield. featurs of the The reader feels the indefinable | Perhaps the nostalgic note is Don't miss “Flaming Guns.” something that carries Lily on,|real, perhaps not. Mr. Bromfield ™ R without too many stage Whlsper»'now lives in France, it should be came in contact. ~Her gift for | remembered, and from that dis- description is unusual, and she can) tance Ohio is not clearly visible. be brief. Most of her readers will § | feel she has done them a service.| from Mr. Tarkington. Lily is authentically of the the-| atre, and her career approachfls‘ closely those of a number of stars, | BATTLE WITH DEATH \ There are to be had also a very past and present. The child-like| One of the best books to come keen analysis of suicide and its| €lement is particularly well sug- out of the medical profession in causes by Dr. Louis L Dublin, gested as is the ruthlessness so| years is Corinne Johnson Kern's called “To Be or Not to Be"; an | often met on: the stage. Altogeth- "1 Do the Nursing.” ~Mrs. Kern occasionally amusing novel of the er, barring occasional moralizing,|in two or three pages, draws the hard-drinking set in Connecticut, the reader will probably féel en-| reader into the atmosphere and ‘Portrait of a Woman" by John deared ‘t0 both author and crfla-' activity of the battle with death Hyde Preston; an unusual mystery b & o ; itled “Mur b bya T:e Zyac:: S EL,Tfii" g?r“mx;idewvmmr:fileu styles. i The falling ‘doflar hds' hit' Ameri-| gugal 11 cents. A ger riu-mm-' production of “The BACK TO OHIO She makes one understand the' another of Dale Collins' stories of | “Chic without great cost” is thef cans in Austria right in the mid- | R is sold by the pound, ap- urtch‘:hé F:uce, aopenmz tonight | Mr. Bromfield has, his pub-| struggles, reticences and rewards adventure, this one hinging on a |essence of its construction, since itgidle of their budgets. | ples costing 22 cents and bananas a[N = apslcil Aheasto=€hd Tliiad, lisher insists; Teturned to the|of the nurse, and values very sim- ' bridge game, and offered in a box | 1S designed as a freshener of late} Travelers from the United States| 31, Bread is 10 cents a loaf, milk . _ 0 ONE B SoYWES seemed to fit | “manner”. of his"earliar successes| ply and withouf fine writing the that looks like a deck of cards. |Summer wardrobes, intended ORIV who arrivad early in July cut|a dime a quart, eggs 30 to 40 cents h",r et 0 Ol ortl < in “The Farm.” And the "answer | run of human with which sh" These among others. to fill the style gap until real fallf short their stay because of-the|a dozen and butter 40 cents a rc.x.ed, much to the surprise of ev—‘ 3 e By WEEROE e e ——-————— |fashions appear. dwindling purchasing power of the| pound eryone, to sing the song entifled: | A full length coat combined \\\mi national ourrency. of their home-| One result is that eggs poached . oxe Me Away," herseli—and did,| a frock, or a skirt and blouse is afland. T tallk afide setvel Of bodst: has with the same»hauntmg loveliness | taorits design fof the “economy® .Americans mamtaining - houses | bacome a populer dish with the Lo¢. characterizes everything, shs ensemble.” Bright scarfs and novel| hglds hers, including those in the | American housewife, does. Oritics everywhere have | trims, instead of costly furs and) dé'mmazm a3d consuiar services R ;l;‘f’;:”””i‘]’a *‘l‘)‘e”rx:”kl’;“‘“n:m""t‘ge‘ fabrics, are used as accents. | thdk deep twdathswand began o fi- 5. Das bee, i | R One model combines an olive| guring out a new approach to thae FAMOUS NAMES FOUND screen so long. “The Purchase Alph. . {green wool coat and skirt with a| preblem of “living cheaply abroad [N NOTRE DAME SQUAD Price,” marks ihe first thme shie| (USSR “”’“"gmw Fosd % {vetge crochet string blouse and a SThose who had been paying $100 bagtiever 'Aung . 4 piciute tured with his. bride, J.’.} fu::; 'th'e' way E make ¢ @ pert scarf of beige and green taf-a’ month rent in Austria schillings| goumy BEND, Ind, Sept, 1— PIl‘C‘ B TaszMo( 'g”hP.‘P'urchas.e Alice Flemming, on their return to_ \ {feta tied under the chin. Anoth ad their housing cost boo Thtes ‘GRbE farkow iy NOWw Grflc “;_’ Miss Stanwyck are| the capital after a romantic elom M jlflcy and tendet upites a gray Jadlap weol coat linad|iia $140, with no ¥ Dame football are among those of -,‘;‘,m: et 5‘"‘“”‘3”@ L 'niunt. le'e diamond star and ° |in"grey and green checked woof out of ‘the leases on tha, OB, hoBRbik. ‘favited 6 Ahk ARG W ol the screen, Lyle‘t;:‘:e}rs q;ped ;w‘?y unknown: to is tO ,cook it ev_enly .on -4th a high necked frock of the ff22 X a u-nnix}g on: R s II ’f,' }i/;lf“’)w”[;{“)r,‘lm[ David wxliv:?xdl‘x‘aer%:a"ud‘ ,hoth sides |'same checked wclc;: The . coats Frarcis Mike Layden of Da- i iy ‘-unx};cmcnl“‘;i?fle ____,. HETE 3 t“h‘""‘ Accompany: Kig aosiimes Bie v nport, Ia, halfback prospec Dawn ODay, Sniib| 4 o ok CHLERSE T R a brother of Elmer Layden, Gemntora Kemt. "/ Baby Names Steamer - igh necklines. fullback of the famous P 11 . ' The hip-lenath coat and frock of en”. of 1924 o w:nm.-m from I;(all) ‘l:VLovydlwlwierg A' Glasgow hmhm‘ z e he same wool fabric is another Frod Carisdo, of Mt. Vernon, adaptation of Arthur Stringer's| GLASGOW, Sept, lL—Ann Lith- P 2 imert design. One dressmaker Y. a fullback, is a cousin of Saturday Evening Post story, “The BOW: 21- months-old daughier cf Sir a g 4 . |<lows a deep beige wool frock de- rank Carjeds, quarterback of Mud Lark.” S Jams: and Lady Lithzomy chiise 3 i oF { lsign>d on a slender sithouette with : Knute Rogkng's last two toams, £ TR tencd a steamer hera 4 . % hign voll collar, warn with a hip} Mutton, 60 cents. 1920 and 1930, Her mother held Ler, bade hex: { cngth codt collared in beige shav- 5 Among the quarterback candi- Holid: vacations and leaves of S:ly ‘Hashledown',” and the baby / ed lamb. Ap’ther displays a d ensembics. Mo them are dates is Mel Harper of Wichita, absence among State employees managzed to a:ticulate the name a3 4 green wool frock With a match ~s'ened with slen skirts about Kas., son of Jesse Harper, who. to- €05t Kentucky $1,000,000 annually, the 9,000-ton cargo boat started jacket having ecpauinties of black frem the ground, hip- tored Rogkne in the laiter’s play- State Inspector and Examiner Nat|down the ways. ‘99 |Parsian lamb. length © mx.c" length ing days and returned to the ath- B, Stewell reports. Residents aver that any bright Veivet suits of burgundy red, jackets and peplum b lciic directorship in 1931 alter vyt Scotch baby could pronounce tha zme bown or black :make, other ecor-!faille or plald taffeta. Rockne's death, « Daily Empue Wam Ads Pay word. “4Wile 4 % Time?™ Yow wusin’t Torget TBat rale when you conk Jaads And Hills Bras au- forget it when They rousl m Coniralle Rm_lm‘-nfli” f «Amnxflm" i ths very, hieurt of Hilly Bros, Coffee! For Hills Bros. exclusive Controlled Roasting process not only roasts in small quantities (a little ot time)—but it applies the heat evenly, a little ot a time; The roast that results is remarkable for its ssouracy, Not a single berry receives too'much fior foo little Heaty m pound mafil:dlkfi absolute perfectionl ( ' Ordinary bulk-roasting pin’f be s m" Bid batches of coffeq nsldnn T Uw tuli Bros, "y.bzn-m.mdlooxlgfikmm oni the cag, o ,,4 TO TASTB RICHTY Rills GROUND, RIGHT B mmmmw«»mmz:w&? o~ e A B e Sl “F ('onomv ILuwmbl(’” Iléi;ls Fall It’s a Chu' Frcahcm‘r for Late Summer Wardrobes The trim ensemble of maBogany brown wool is for early September. wear, a Bruyere design with xcombims a hip-icngth Jacket untrimmed: by fur with a slender, ric, The: brown felt hat is one of the Iate summer cconomy in mind. high-necked frock of the same fab pew Fall models with the The collar is of white pique. four-point crewn. STARTS If she thrilled you in “Night Nurse” and “Illicit” wait until you see Barbara Stanwyck FLAME threough this terrid ro- of a night club torch singer. Beautiful! . . . seductive! She has everything—and uges it! . Lives violently— and loves passionately! “TONIGHT! mance Its the scorching story tem millicn fans demanded for the screen’s mest vibrant star. WARNER BROS.' NEW HIT! Also Selected Short Subjects CAPIT OL “WHERE THE BIG HITS PLAY” DISCOVER VOICE | IN FILMING OF f | TONIGHT'S SHOW Barbara Stanwyck Uncov- i ers New Talent in ‘The ; Purchase Price’ ‘ By RITA FERRIS (Associated Press Fachion Editor: PARIS, Sept. omy Ensemble’ the demands of both limited bud- gets and fashion is Paris’s newes! offering to ad = i . sy ] 3300 3 Nyt G ok 1—A new “Econ- designed to satisly vance September VIENNA, Austria, Aug. 31. Ham, 70, gents. v ¥ NN N NN ANV NN _————— NN NN N =SS S 7 s e\ 5 % A 4mencans in V ienna Jolted As Dollar’s Value Duindles We Outfit the Kiddies From From Head to Toe at EQB, YOLIR LQM/ ENI LEADER Department “'Store " | It is in line with Barbara Stan- wyck’s modesty that she never told | anyone she could sing. It never | occurred to her that anyone could | e interested in knowing. Director | William Wellman discovared it on- ly after he had tried to get sev-| eral singers to double for her in| * CE STORE.WHL BE OPEN £ATE ORROW NIGHT TO! GEORGE BROS:

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