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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, "IULSDAY SEPT. 19, 1933. THE DRAMA that made two continents gasp! Sharpen your wits, steel your nerves, before you see this great screen thriller from the play that made Broadway gasp!! A man commits the perfect ' erime . . . yow'll thrill as Fate spins the tangled web of his doom! with CHARLES LAUGHTON the New Miracle Actor MAUREEN O’SULLIVAN VERREE TEASDALE DOROTHY PETERSON var COLISEUM Juneaw's Biggest Entertainment Value IT'S TIME for tweeds again! When you see a'l thess grand colors and their new weaves, you'll just have to jump right into’ a suit and live in it. One model has a seven-eighths coat ‘that ‘will be waim_enough for all winter wear. Splendid values, every one! $19.50 : 1t Doesn’t Take Granted; So Hollywood’s 0.K. to Sally (Neill Now | i By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Sept. 19.— ]Sa::y O'Neill thinks it's the smart- est thing she ever did, leaving Hollywood for two years. Hollywood, she has concluded, is too much like one big family—a family that takes you for granted just because you are around. “A fellow may be a genius to the world, but to his family he’s just the kid brother,” says Sally, whose winsome Irish countenance has been off the screen two years. “I was that way in Hollywood. I knew everybody, everybody knew me. It was ‘Hello Sally!’ every- where. But it didn’t seem to oc- cur to anybody that I might be able to act, that maybe I had grown up since the days I used to play those sickening ‘cute Kid’ parts.” MORE THAN ENOUGH When Sally finished “The Brat” two years ago, she stayed at Fox under contract six months with- out making a film. It was then she decided she had had an over- dose of Hollywood, and would go out “into the world” and see for herself whether pictures were the end and all of living. “And I did,” she grins. “I went to New York, flew around over Europe, studied dramatics a little —and I found there were people in the world who had a great time without ever seeing a picture. Now I'm back, with my mind made up to get ahead in the movies, and it Seems to me it's a different Hol- lywood. I don’t feel as if I were being ‘taken for granted’ any miore.” ‘Sally, who couldn’t even get a joh when she left, who had a hard time getting work ‘until “The Brat” finally came to her rescue, already has made one film, “Ladies Must Love” a musical, and now has been signed by Charles R. Rogers for “We're Sitting Pretty.” It isn’'t a eomeback, she says— she dislikes the world. Incidental- ly, she detests “sob stories* about her. GOOD MEDICINE “I've had a few hard times” she says, “but I'm better off for them. They've helped me to .see where 'T'm going and to apprec- iate good fortune more. ' T'm real- ly the luckiest girl in pictures, be- catuge I got the bad breaks young enotigh to start all over with the new crop of actresses my own {agé,” with that experience behind '| me.” | Sally was 14 when she began in | pictures. She is 23 now, a year | ol@ér than her sister, Molly O'Day, {'who is also in pictures. " ——————— ’ NOW READ THIS To all the public of Juneau And to all the places they go One thing 1 will to you unfold 1t'is neither Silver or gold ‘But just honest -business strait ‘That 1 wish to relate fl1t's all about the Sflver Fox Where we artisticly trim your lox One thing we do with gentle grace We cut your hair to suit the face Our razors we kep sharp and clean And 'shave you smooth, fat or lean My able assistant Carl D. Ehling Mites well with ‘our new ceiling And ‘for Bobing'ladies’ hair Bdy, 'Oh Boy! he's surely there van is doing better so they say And feeling youriger every day Out baths now are very complete Wwiiter' hot enough to.peel your feet No matter how rich they dre i soil Our' heater now is fired with oil S0 pléase don't forget to stop At the Silver Fox Barber Shop So we'll stop making a fuss. ; J. D. Van Atta, Proprietor adv. Lommmane o o emend B. P. ©. ELKS w»’?}m _ALao Her for {looked at the “rushes” of the new | picture, lof a jof his carser. | | | ber usad ih any production since i | ment Deferred.” | |late news reel completes the pro= ; TR n Back in Hollywced now, after two years' absence from films, Sally O'Neill finds the place different now—and much better. Leav- ing there, she says, was the smartest thing she ever did, because | everybody was beginning to take her for granted. o {PATRICIA ANDREWS GIVES. LITTLE PAR Miss Patricia Andrews, daughter | of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Andrews, was four years old last Sunday and a party was given in honor | of the event to the following young- | sters: Mary Sperling, David Sper- lin, Carol Cochrane, Peggy Coch-' rane, Miles Godkins, Arlene God- | prefect {extra players, the greatest num=* | “No More Orehids” in which the DRAMATIG AND ' SPECTACULAR FILM TONIGHT ‘Sign of the Cross’ Cecil B.|* De Mille’s Triumph at Capitol—Last Time The first Cecil B. DeMille spec- | le-drama since the advent of| “The Sign of the Cross” ng tonight for the lasttime Capitol Theatre. He made the greatest spectacle | t pictures, the memorable n Commandments,” and enter- the Hollywood lists anew de termined to surpass even that achievement. When Mr. DeMille he seemed content. Fr:deric ‘March, as the heroic| of old Rome, sacrificing wealth, position, even life for love Christian martyr-maid, is said to have the most virile role Elissa Landi, Clau- o Colbert and Charles Laugh= ton havé the other principal roles. The story was adapted to the n from the famous play by n Barrett. Its principals are| supported by an ensemble of 7,500 the days of the silent drama. cted short subjects and a gram being presented tonight at | the Capitol THheatre. There will be & 1 o'clock preview tonight at the Capitol, showing charming Carole Lombard is star- ring. —_— | kins, Patsy Ann Balog, Doris Ba-. low Richard McCormick, Jimmie | McCormick, 'Jackie Sorri, Roberta Koski, Jimmie McCloskey, Eileen MacSpadden, Richard Wayend, Lee Sabin, and Phyllis Andrews. e ——— Near Birch Lake, Alaska, air- plane pilots found clouds of forest fire smoke at an altitude of 5,000 feet i THESE FIRMS HAVE SIQ MENTS WITH - PRESIDE COMPLIANCE WITH NR WAGES AND ADAMS, E. C. ALASKA LAUNDRY. ALASKA MEAT CO. ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT | POWER CO. | ALASKAN HOTEL. ; ARNOLD'S BOOTERY. ASSEMBLY CO. } AUTO FREIGHT CO. BAILEY'S CAFE. B. M. BEHRENDS CO., Inc. B. M. BEHRENDS BANK. BROWNIE'S BARBER SHOP. BURFORD, J. B. & CO. BULGER, J. A. BLOEDHORN'S. BETTY MAC BEAUTY SHOPPE. BURFORD'S CORNER. CAPITAL ELECTRIC CO. COLE'S TRANSFER. CARO, J. B. & CO. CAPITOL PUBLISHING CO. COLEMAN'S. CALIFQRNIA GROCERY. COLUMBIA LUMBER CO. CONCRETE PRODUCTS CO. CONNORS MOTOR CO. CASH GROCERY. DISHAW, ALFRED. EMPIRE PRINTING CO. FIRST, ,NATI,QNAL BANK. FLORENCE SHOP. FRYE-BRUHN CO. GOLDSTE!N CHAS wg GROCERY GAmNEAU HOTEL. DON'S. ICK'S. GOLDSTEIN, I. GEORGE BROTHERS. GEYER, A. M. GRIFFIN, EDWARD W. GRAVES, H. 8. HARRIS HARDWARE CO. HI-LINE S8YSTEM. HAYES SHOP. HALVORSEN'S. HARRI MACHINE SHOP. HELLER'S BARBER SHOP. IDEAL PAINT STORE IMPERIAL POOL HALL. JONES-STEVENS SHOP. JUNEAU OOMMERCIAL DOCK JUNEAU FLORISTS. JUNEAU LOGGING CO. JACK'S TRANSFER CO. JOHNSON, W. P. JUNEAU CASH GROCERY. 3 JUNEAU BAKERY. o .vau-Younc HARDWARE JUNEAU FROCK SHOPPE. JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP. JUNEAU-EMPIRE THEATRES, Inc. -m; Honor Roll compiled and 3 'EgOEMPLOYERS’ AGREE- EDGIN G EVELT TO REMENT KING HOURS. JUNEAU ICE CREAM PAR- LORS. “ JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Inc. JUNEAU MOTORS, Inc. JUNEAU PAINT STORE. KANN'S. . KAUFMANN'S CAFE. " KONNERUP'S. KRAUSE, G. E. LEADER DEPARTMENT STORE. LIGHT, ROBERT. McCAUL MOTORS CO. MANDARIN BALL ROOM. MENDENHALL DAIRY MODER, HELEN. NUGGET SHOP. NIFTY SHOPPE. NELSON, LUDWIG. NEW YORK EXCHANGE. NORTH TRANSFER CO. ORDWAY’S PHOTO SHOP. PIONEER BARBER SHOP. PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. PIONEER CAFE. PIGGLY WIGGLY ALASKA CO. PEERLESS BAKERY. RELIABLE TRANSFER CO. RICE AND AHLERS CO. SERVICE MOTORS. SNAP SHOP. SANITARY MEAT CO. 'SANITARY GROCERY. SAN PRANCISCO BAKERY SABIN'S. SHEPARD, H. R. & SONS. SHATTUCK, ALLEN, Inc. . SIMPRINS, GEO. M. SMITH ELECTRIC CO. SNOW WHITE LAUNDRY. STAR BAKERY. STANWORTH, STEVE & CO. STANDARD OIL CO. SWANSON BROS. TERRITORIAL BOARD OF ED- UCATION. THOMAS HARDWARE CO. UNION OIL Co. UNITED FOOD CO. U AND I CAFE. WARNER, CHAS. G. .WINTER AND POND. WOODMAN AND BERNTSEN. VENTIAN SHOP. _VAN ATTA, J. D. “WARIETY STORE. YURMAN, H. J. "ZYNDA HOTEL. furnishea us by the United States mrmembe*flhflmwuymemuy 5 Aot s ki ‘Laughton as the middle-cl { by Dorothy Peterson, who will be | week ahead of the filling, which is 'MURDER DRAMA OPENS TONIGHT AT COLISEUM Payment Deferred” Mys- tery with Startling Climax Has Splendid Cast filmization | of one of New York's outstanding stage hits, will head the program at the Coliseum Theatre tonight and tomorrow. Known as the mys- tery drama .with the mos climax ever devised, “Payment De- ferred” tells the story of a mur- deréer who escapes detection for his own crime only to be convict- ed later for a crime which he did not convict. | The significant feature of the| play, both in its London and New York productions, was the sensa- tional performance of Charles s Lon- | don bank clerk who is driven to murder his rich nephew to save himself and his family from a debtor’s prison. It is this same Charles Laughton who enacts the| murderer in the film version. Neil Hamilton and Maureen O'Sullivan, who were last seen to- | gether in “Tarzan, the Ape Man”| share romantic interest in “Pay- The difficult role | of the murderer’s wife is handled remgmbered for her excellent work opposite Walter Huston in “Beast of the City.” Verree Teasdale, who recently scored in “Skyscraper 'Souls” has the part of a black- mailing French milliner, and the role of the murdered nephew is played by Ray Milland. The cast also_includes Billy Bevans, Hal- liwell Hobbs and William Stack. Among the picture’s dramatic| highlights are the sceme in which | the bank clerk poisons his neph- ew; the tense moment when his wife discovers his secret; his con- stant ‘terror lest the body of his victim, buried in the garden, be| discovered; the suicide of his wife, and the bitterly ironic episode in which the authorities seize the bank clerk for a murder of which hé is innocent, but which he can- not explain without confessing his real crime. The screen adaptation of “Pay- ment Deferred” was written by] Ernest Vajda and Claudine West. The picture was directed by Lothar Mandes, SEWER WORK IN THE WILLOUGHBY SECTION "STARTED ON MONDAY Work on replacing the wood:n sewer connecting the lower Main Street sewer with that of the Wil- loughby Avenue section, with a new concrete sewer, which will be un- der the new fiil, was begun yes- terday, according to Mayor I Goldstein. The sewer work on the Willough- by Avenue section has to be done bafore the actual filling of the district is begun, so that the sew- er work will be kept about one to begin in about a week, Mayor Goldstein' said. | erumbs, % FINAL ‘SHOWING TONIGHT THE SIGN of the CROSS CECIL B. DE MILLE’S MIGHTY SPECTACLE MIDNIGHT PREVIEW TONIGHT CAROLE LOMBARD in NO MORE ORCHIDS - CAPITOL —~ Where the BI By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE : PASTRY FOR APPLE | PIE Menu For Dinner Broiled Hamburger Mashed Potatoes Corn on the Cob Bread Butter Head Lettuce French Dressing Chesse Pastry Apple Ple Coffee Broiled Hamburger, Serving 4 1 pound chopped beef round, pound chopped pork, ¥ teaspoon salt, % tea- spoon paprika, ' teaspoen celery | salt, 1 tablespoon finely chopped % | onion, 1 tablespoon chopped pars- ley, 1 egg or 2 yolks, Mix ingredients and press into pie pan. Broil 10 minutes, six inches below glowing flame. Place another pie pan on top the meat and turn out, uncooked side up, and broil 4 minutes. Carefully turn onto a platter. French Dressing 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon dry mustard, 1 teaspoon paprika, % teaspoon celery seed, 7% teaspoon chopped onion, 2 tablespoons sugar, ! with knife. cup of G Hits Flay ‘4 tablespoons vinegar, !: cup salad oil. ] MXx ingredients in narrow, deen bowl. With rotary beater, beat 2 | minutes. Chill. Beat well and serve poured over salads arranged on serving plates. The dressing will be kept a long time. if stored in ice box. . . Cheese Pastry 1% eups flour, % teaspoon salt, | % cup lard, 2 cup grated cheese, 3 tablespoons iced water. + Mix flour and salt. Cut in lard | Mixing with knife, {add cheese and water. Mix light- {1y. When stiff dough ferms shape linto a ball with hands, Break off 12-3 of it, roll out and fit. into pie pan. Add apples and coyer with remaining dough which has been reolled out until very thin. Press edges of dough together and make 4 slits in top. Bake 15 minutes in hot oven. Redice heat and bake 35 minutes in moderm oven, | Apples 8 cups sliced apples, 1 cup su- gar, 2 tablespoons. flour, 3 table- | spoons butter, 1 teaspeon elowes, |1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1, teaspoon | lemon juice, 2 tablespoons water. Mix ingredients and pour into pie crust. e B. B O ELKS , , Meeting Wednesday. Vote on 'amendment to by-laws. adv. —_——e—— ’ ! Classified aas pay. 1 INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Established 1898 f‘/}\fou ’re a crook— A t_hi,ef-—— A Murderer! et HE was found unconscious, his memory Jsl his mumbling of a name. Claimed el), her husband, he spent day after day in a near coma, d}en suddenly awakencd only to hear himself called a & oné, no identification y 3 WOan as Jimmy cpmmnl, 8 burglar, a killer—by a total stranger who said she was his wife. It is the opening situation of OUTRAGEOUS FORTUNE A Serial by Patricia Wentworth NOT a shred of the past was there te guide this man as he walked into the great adventure in which Caroline Leigh was destined to play a major role. It was for both of them a harrows ing experience, a cruel jest of fate; but from it s that bridged the chasm, and set lhem _on_the lifetime of happiness, a love | toward a This New Serial Is Now Appearing in the Daily Alaska Empire