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| | mav HELEN TWELVETREES EDWARD EVERETT HORTON' ADRIENNE AMES - BABY LEROY Directed by NORMAN TAUROG / a Quramount Qicture ! THEATRE fll.IEP. Last Time Tonight OSSPSR PREVIEW ! RICE TONIGHT—1:10 A. M. KATE SMITH Songbird of the South “HELLO EVERYBODY” D e S Premieres Must By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 14.—In this unreel parade: It costs the star who rides up to the theatre forecourt in a shiny limousine for a big premiere ex- actly $15 for the display. It is the rare actor nowadays who owns his own limousine, and the rental cost is considered reasonable for such an entrance. Speaking of premieres, Mae Wes! | viewed hers—and from all reports ! was one of the few front-rank stars who did—from a peephole in the lobby of the theatre. She had a $5 seat inside, but, being back- stage when the film started, didn’t’ want to crab her screen act with a personal appearance—which is an-| other way of saying she didn't want to step over people getting to her $5 worth. CUTTING ROOM RENTS Mary Brian left the opera per- formance the other night to make, a personal appearance at a local) theatre, and was back before the, end of the act. Must have been Jjust a niee how-do-you-do. There’s a new portrait of Fran-' chot Tone on the table in Joan Crawford's portable dressing room on the set—the same dressing room, or miniature bungalow, that Doug Tairbanks, Jr., once gave her as a present. The directorial legend that is Cecil B. DeMille seems to have found a fertile field in which to| grow. Word from Hawaii, where| DeMille is filming “Four Fright- cned People,” is that the natives delight in building legends about | the various movie troupes that go on location there. Get out into the OPEN this winter and' ‘enjoy the grand sport of skiiing. We are showing a large assortment of genuine North- land Skis in ash, maple and pine. Also SkiPoles and accessories Select yours now and be ready for the first snow. JUNEAU- YOUNG Hardware Co. Have Thrills; $15. Please, and So it Goes Qn spell, for instance, is An evil supposed to have been cast on King Vidor's “Bird of Paradise” company, this accounting for the incessant rain which hindered pro- duction. Cullen Ttate, C. B's assistant, worked in the same neighborhood with Dorothy Mackaill and the late Milton Sills for “His Captive Wom- an” some five years ago, and Tate | is learning what happened then— according to the native myths. ; “ABROAD” AT HOME | While Claudette Colbert is strug- gling through Hawaiian wilderness | of this film, incidentally, Norman Foster is “seeing Europe” from an oriental express on a sound stage. The “Seven Lives Were Changed” | company has been in action—and the story unfolds on the train or , station platforms entirely—several | weeks already, and Foster, planning |an Hawaiian vacation, is sure Clau- dette will be on her way back be- fore he can be free to sail. You get the idea, from his re- | marks, that he thinks location trips | —where Claudette is concerned— are an imposmon | MENUS | By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE | "ENTERTAINING THE CLUB Refreshments | Tuna Salad Cheesed Wafers Pickles " h Little Fudge Cakes, Chocolate Frosting Nut Drops Coffee Tuna Salad, Serving 12 3 cups tuna, 2 cups diced cel- ery, % cup chopped sweet pick- les, % cup chopped pimientos, % cup chopped green peppers, % tea- spoon salt, % teaspoon paprika, 2-3 cup salad dressing, % cup whipped cream. Pour boiling water over tuna. Drain and chill. Flake tuna with fork. Add the celery and season- ings. Chill. Mix dressing and cream. Add half tne dressing to tuna mixture. Serve on lettuce and top with remaining dressing. Garnish with stffed olives. Little Fudge Cakes (Three Doz2n) 2-3 cup butter, 1% cups sugar, 2 squares chocolate melted, 1 tea- spoon vanilla, % teaspoon salt, 4 eggs, 1 cup’ cold water, 2% cups flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, % teaspoon soda. Cream butter and sugar. Add rest of ingredients and beat 2 min- utes. Half fill paper cups. Ar- range 2 inches apart on baking sheets, bake 15 minutes in mod- erately slow oven. Cool cakes and cover with chocolate frosting. Serve in the paper cups. Chocolate Frosting 1 square chocolate, 3 tablespoons | cream, 2 tablesopons ' butter, % teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon vanilla, 2 cups sifted confectioner’s sugar. Mix chocolate, cream and butter, Heat slowly and stir constantly un- ey — J. W. SORRI i; | Woodworking Cabinet Making Small Jobs a Specialty Phone 349 85 Gastineau Ave. | “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” EXCLUSIVELY Jfinntzefis “Juneau’s Own Store” | spread on top the cakes. BABY LEROY IS HIT IN NEWEST | CHEVALIERFILM In ‘Bedtime Story” at Capi- tol, Gay Maurice Sings Lullabyes, Not of Love Here's “A Bedtime Story” ‘that, will keep you awake! It's Maurice Chevalier's latest Paramount picture by that name which will be shown at the Capi-| tol Theatre for the last times to-| night. A year-old baby shares hon- | ors with the gay Parisian star in a film that's dazzling entertain ment from its charming opening through its romantic close-up. | The child—"Monsicur Bab-ee” to| you—gurgles his way to your heart and Edward Everett Horton shares comedy honors with Crevalier, in the role of the valet. Helen Twelve- trees has the kissable role of the! baby's nurse, while such glamorous | femmes as Adrienne Ames and Ger- | trude Michael give Chevalier—and you—plenty of allurement. “Little Black Book” | Chevalier is the Vicomte Rene | back in Paris after a year's big- game hunting in Africa. He gets back a day before he's expected, opens his “little black book,” makes dates with all the dazzling dames for one last fling before bowinz| greetings to his fiancee. But, when he gets back home, ready to dress for his appointments, he finds a baby in his car abandoned—and, the baby looks like him. He' lighted, enchanted, thrilled—decides to keep the bbay, breaks his dates, superintend the warming of milk bottles. A few awkward hours and professional nurse. Helen Twelvetrees gets the job. She and the baby travel with Che- valier to the home of his fiancee next day. His masculine and their parents snub the vicomte. Then in one dramatic scene he learns that he prefers telling bed- time stories to the lovely American nurse and the baby. til melted. Add rest of ients. Beat one minute. Let stand: 5 minutes. Beat until creamy, The top» of the cakes can be sprinkled with chopped nuts or chocolate shot. These are very tender ligh cakes | and will keep moist for several | days if stored in a cake box. e Angoon Band to Play At Opening Game Of Casaba League . The Angoon Band, a 17- ® Dpiece organization, here at- e tending the Alaska Native e Brotherhood Convention, e will furnish music for the ® opening game of the Gas- e tineau Channel Basketball e League at the High School e tonight, it was announced e late today. e This band has given sev- e eral concerts since it arrived e in town. It has won merit- ® ed praise and made many e friends in the city. . . de- | | stays home to change diapers and he and his valet decide to hire a| rivals | snort with glee; his feminine friends | ingred- | As Inmates of Lvavenworth prison, Charles Ward (above) and H, H. Bigelow became friends. Ward now | has inherited *$1,000,000 from the estate of Bigelow, millionaire adver. tising executive who was drowned | recently, and has become president of the Bigelow firm. Press Phota) FARM STRIKE DWINDLING TO South Dakota Agricultur-| | ists Planning Demon- stration Saturday \ CHICAGO, Ill, Nov. 14, — The farm strike has now simmered to three midwest states with South for and they have designated next| Saturday as “Justice for Agricul-| ture Day.” Demonstrations will be staged as a protest against fur: ther degradation ol farming. | Southern Minnesota voted to support the so-called non-buying and non-selling move- | ment but advocated peaceful pick- | etine. Wisconsin farmers are divided \on whether to continue the strike | but picketing is continued. | Other states are quiet, | Towa. including iCasket Maker Calls ! : I Gang Coffins “Cheap” CHICAGO, Nov. 14. — Although i conceding that gangsters are good | customers, the Casket Manufactu lers’ Association let it be known that the gangsters represent quan- tity, not quality, business. “Enough of them die, all right,” said Thomas Quinlan of Cincinnati, speaking before the convention at Edgewater Beach Hotel, “but they are never buried in really expensive nlan said that he knew of no case where an expensive casket had been sold for a ganzste neral, explaining that they usually took boxes with flashy finishes that just looked expensive. ———ee—— — SHOP IN JUNEAU N CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 [ THANKSGIVING AWARD FULL COURSE CHICKEN DINNER FULL COURSE TURKEY DINNER Ask For Your Ticket! PROMPT DELIVERY (Associated | SMALL SECTION Dakota farmers announcing plans | continuation of the embargo: counties | Mg AHIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIil!lIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIlIIIIIllIllIIIIIIIlllllIIIlIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IlIllIII||IIII||||i|1IIIIII||||IImllIllllllllllllllllllIIIHIIHIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIllllllII|IllllllIIlllllIIIIflllllllllllllllllIIlIII|IIlIIII|IlllIIIIIlIlIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIHIIIII!IlllllIHIIlllllIIIIIHIII!IIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllI|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII . TIOKET SALE OF ‘SKIDDING' 1S GOING BIg Ticket sales for “Skidding,” com- edy drama to be presented by the au High School students on day night, November 17, at the eum Theatre, are increasing by and bounds, according to the dents and those in charge of the sales. Both the proximity of the date for the show and the stimulus of s contest in sales, contribute rapidity with which tickets going. The contest between ur classes of the high school ed yesterday, and will end on Thursday afternoon at 3:15 o'clock, it w announced by Everett Erick- son, director of the play. Terms of the contest provide that he two classes selling the great- est number of tickets are to be iven a party, probably a dance, by 7o classes selling the least— S0 it is easy to see why the stu- dents are aggressively going ahead with the eampaign. Rehearsal Sunday On Sunday afternoon the mem- bers of the cast assembled at the | Coliseum Theatre and went through their first rehearsal on the big |stage there, Mr. Erickson said. {Work on rehearsals is being accel- (erated during the week and the play is rapidly being whipped into pe for the opening night. Skidding” is a comedy drama ortraying a typical American fam- ily and in it are characters, so natural and familiar that they will eem to be members of the family living next door, or across the |street. The action takes place in | the living room of the Hardy fam- ily, where many situations which might happen in nearly any home {in Juneau occur. Humor and pathos are well balanced and lead up to an interesting climax. o TO RUN VALDEZ PAPER According to reports from | Westward, Alaska Egan will be employed on the Valdez Miner as | Editor. Charles Wilcox is slated to ibe Chief, Deputy to United States | Marshal Todd. the > LT “I.IFE IFE BEGINS" | IS DRAMATIC FILM OPENING Motherhood comes in for 7is share of glory in the Fir tional picturs, “Life Begins,” opens today at the Coliseum , | atre. | This play by Mary McDo | Axelson, which was adapted T | | | the screen by Earl Baldwin, i intimate study of life in a hos- pital maternity ward. In this re spect, it is perhaps the most dar- ing and original story that ha ever been attempted on the It carries its dramatic pun in one story but in the storic the several women who are fined to the ward. A condemr murderess, a pleasure loving a member of the “intelligen a young Italian woman, a chopathic case and several other varied characters each detail th life's stories as they are reflected through the happenings” in maternity ward. Doctors and nur: es, too, come in for their sh; of dramatic treatment, and whole is one vital picture hitherto unexploited theme. Due to the importance attached | to each character, a cast was care- fully chosen which combines some | of the finest performers of stage and screen. It contains Loretta| Young, Eric Linden, Aline Mac-| Mahon, Preston Foster, Glenda Far- | rell, Dorothy Peterson, Frank Me- Hugh, Gloria Shea, Elizabeth Pat- terson, Walter Walker, Reginald Mason, Gilbert Roland, Ruthelma| Stexens, Mary Phillips, Hale Ham- | ilton, Helena Phillips, Herbert Mundin, Dorothy Tree, Vi Osborne, Clara Blandick and Ter- rance Ray. | —e— | | of The aavertisemenis oring you news. of better things to have and easier ways to live. .;IIIIlIIllllIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIII 1 Can?yo_u bear the TRUTH about " with LORETTA YOUNG ERIC LINDEN ALINE MacMAHON Away’with make-believe. . This is an age of reality! The truth now!told ruthlessly— with the realism of stark drama. Comedy and tragedy, pain and trinmph grapple for life ‘or death in this startling story of the price that must be paid for love! STARTS Adults -30c Children 10c = TONIGHT AT PHONES 83 OR 85 THE SANITARY GROCERY “The Store That Pleasés™ @ Controlled, well-timed puneches get better results! Your Advertising Where greatest profit can be made from sales. Avoid waste scatteration. are greatest where your message is expected and delivered at a given time daily! Adverti ing results o The Daily Alaska Empire offers the highest concentration available in one unit for local advertising! I IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlImIllllfllmll|IIMIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllll A s A AR