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A T A R AT MR A AT S N5, =30 ' f % THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, SATURDAY, JAN. 27, 1934. BY MRS. “HOMEMADE" When' you friends party of them do their no m “wen” cacy. ing, jam; jelly or Starts RKO PATHE Picture ALEXANDER GEORGE BRIDGE PRIZ are ' having intimate at your afternoon bridge and if you know that many own housework, | ore desirable p can be| than some home-made deli- | Cooki cakes, salad dress-| confections can be given and the prize can be pub into immediate use at meal like this. the evening of the' winner. MEALS FOR A DAY Ready Buttered Toast Salmon Salad Sandwiches Fruit Cookies Baked Br: Four cups sliced apples; water; spoon e oottt it Breakfast Grapefruit Cooked Cereal Soft Cooked Egzs Coffee Luncheon Tea Pears Dinner Fish Baked Potatoes Escalloped Tomatod an Muffins Butter Celery Deep Dish Apple Pie Coffee Deep Dish Apple Pie one cup one cup sugar; one table- flour; one-eighth lC'h]).)Ju Norwegign-Swedish Dance | 0dd Fellows’ Hall TONIGHT Join ® COME! SWEDISH Soci ® A good time assured all Guests will l Cream, ye “BABY FACE IS FEATURE AT THE , GAPITOL SUNDAY Barbara Stz;;v‘yck Is Gor- geous Clad in Role of Gold-Digging Vamp Tonight strikes the tender human emo- tions ... in the dramotic heart- | Barbara Stanwyck in the War- ner Bros. picture “Baby Face,” the attraction on the screen at the Capitol Theatre tomorrow, is a warm, vibrant, gorgeousiy clad red- headed baby-faced gold-digger. In this production Barbara ap- pears in quite a different type of role to anything she has played recently. Gone are the drab clothes of “Ladies They Talk About,” “The Purchase Price” and “So Big.” Bar- bara bursts out in the gayest of butterfly ralment in her part as a successful gold digger de luxe. Barbara herself likes silks and satins best. They raise her spirits and give her a feeling of joyous- ness, she says, just as cottons and woolens depress her. And seeming- ly the public shares in her likes, for Warner Bros. announce that in the future she will appear in gayer JOEL McCREA PAUL LUKAS Directed by George Cukor from the ploy by Lucia Bronder. David O. Selznick, executive producer Asalr: one teaspoon cinnamon; one | tablespoon lemon juice; three table | spoons butter. Mix apples and water. Cover and | cook four minutes. Blend sugar,! | flour and salt, add to apple mi Iture and add remaining ingredi-|roles than in the past. | ents. In “Baby Face” Barbara is a | Crust i vamp extraordinary, bending twelve One cup flour; one-quarter t2a-|different men to her will and dis- spoon salt; one-third cup lard;|carding them as fast as they have two tablespoons cold water. | served her purpose in climbing to | Mix flour and salt, cut in lard|jyxury. Ruthlessly she flits from anth knife, slowly add water. When | jone love to another f dough forms, roll out thin, George Brent has the leading ange on top apples in butt ("“m:\sculme role while ofhers in a | pan. Make 4 slits in top, bake 25 | notable cast include Donald Cook, ‘m'nute= Arthm Hohl, John Wayne, Henry e ]Kolkcx and James Murray. J. M. ELMER VISITS HERE | The picture, taken from an orig- ENROUTE TO THE STATES inal story by Gene Markey and Kathryn Scola, who also adapted J. M. Elmer, president of the 4t to the screen, is said to be "‘lau Creek ‘Mining Company, and spicy and startling with intense prominent mining man of the dramatic moments. It was directed North, visited here while the|py Alfred E. Green. | steamer Northwestern was in port.) “Goodbye Again,” rollicking com- is enroute to Seattle on al edy starring Joan Blondell and business trip and expects to return; warren William, with a splendid in about 30 days. While here he supporting cast including Gene- called on Gov. John W. Troy vieve Tobin, Wallace Ford, Helen and conferred with Chief Engineer Chandler and Ruth Donnelly, will Tke P. Taylor of the Alaska Road again provide Capitol Theatre audi- Commission regarding road Work.|ences with fun and laughter to- bt TRty A5 night. DEVELOPMENT EDITION | The program tonight also in- of the DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE cludes a Vitaphone skit with Jack | will be on sale at all drug storci- \Dempsey, called “The Champ," and |1t will be wrapped for mailing and 3 news reel of late events. | postage paid for 25 cents per copy- l % T i Or, if you prefer, leave your ord ers with THE EMPIRE or kl?phonc‘ yeur orders to 374. MAIL SEVE! RAL TO YOUR FRIENDS | TACOMA, Wash., Jan. 27.—Uncle !Sam is going to collect that $2 a |gallon liguor tax not only from stores legitimately dispensing spir- its, but from speakeasies as well. Speakeasy proprietors, according to John C. Bowen, Federal Collec- tor of Internal Revenues, are re- | quired to file 'inventories on their stocks for tax purposes, and in it | they must ‘include all liquor smug- igléd in without benefit of customs |as well as the legal stuff they are | selling llegally. | Depriving the government of tax imoney is a lot more serious of- |fense than breaking prohibition (laws and most speakeasy men | know it. | After the inventories have been | filed, the government will send |along tax statements later. ——— —q! the NORWEGIAN- al Club. MRS. JENNIE BRUMBERG INJURED IN FALL ON ICE Mrs. Jennie Brumberg, of the Juneau Frock Shop, has been un- |able to bé around for the last several days as' the result of a Dancmg 9 P.M. Refreshments wrenched back received in a fall on LA g the ice on Front Street. Admission 75 cents b P e S S Lk Il S. A. BERG LEAVES FOR SEATTLE ON N'WESTERN 8. A. Berg, who is connected | with the Warrack Construction FINAL CLEARANCE WOMEN’S, MISSES’ Company here, left on the North- ‘westérn’ for ‘his home in Seattle to be with his wife, who ‘is % have a major operation. GOLASHES Shop in Juneau Clearance Price $1.49. b . Leader Department Store GEORGE BROS. My Beauty Hint FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHE]| Telephone 409 B. M. PARD & SON Behrends Bar Bldg. | BETYY BQYD For finger-nails that are brittle and break off easily, soak the fin- ger tips several times a week in ‘warm olive oil. When washing the hands add a bit of baking soda to the m o aoflm it. ;| Mrs. Lloyd), Una Joms that Ver) Select List of Leadmg Ladies to Appear wlth Harold Lloyd [ { By ROBBIN COONS | HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 27.—In 20 | years on the screen Harold Lloyd | has been sparing in distributing the job of leading lady in his films. The selection of blonde, drawling Una Merkel from Kentucky for his heroine in “The Cat’s Paw” marks only the seventh time in his ca- reer that a new feminine name has been added to the comedian’s production roster. Charles Chaplin has had ' fewer leading ladies than Lloyd, but Chaplin has made fewer films. Since Edna Purviance, the blonde beauty who appeared with him in a long succession of comedies, there have been only Georgia Hale, Mer- na Kennedy, and Virginia Cher- rill, with Paulette Goddard set for the picture soon to be produced. LLOYD LADIES Lloyd began with Bebe Dan-|| iels opposite him in practically ail his earlier films and 'there fol- lowed in order Mildred Davis (now | Jobyna Ralston rnow; Mrs. Richard Arlen), Anm’ Christy, | Barbara Kent, who appearéd in! two Lloyd pictures, and then Con-! star(l;e Cuflmmmas heroine of "MOV-‘FIRST SHRlNE CLUB DANCE OF SEASON TO When “The Cat's Paw" is re-| leased, probably not before autumn,| it will have been two years since the fans saw a new Harold Liloyd| picture. | Chief cf the signs of renewed| Always one of the most popular activity is the green and white events of the winfer social season, bungaloW that Lloyd is buflding on(the first of several Shrine Club his former lot, the old Metropoli- dances will be held this evening in| tan, now rechristened the General|the Scottish Rite Temple when | Service. Here he used to “makq[members of the club and many of up” in a cranny-like dressingroom. | their friends will dance to music At United Artists, where he had |furnished by Moyer's five-piece or- quarters for a time, he occupied | | chestra from 9:30 o'clock until half Mary Pickford’s bungalow. His new an hour after midnight. home is small, simple and etflclem The next Shrine Club dance is —but it placed Lloyd in the dwin- | | planned for February 22, accord-| dling ranks of “bungalow stars.” Hng to the committee in charge of the parties. The Shrine Club dane- |es are strictly invitational. A P S UNACNAERKEL LLOYD OLD-TIMERS But another sign of business is| the “old home week” atmosphere of | the lot. Unless you've been wiml Lloyd at least 10 years you're al-| most a stranger in the midst of | old-timers. Sam Taylor, directing, ! began with Harold as a gag-man 13 years ago. Walter Lundeen, his head cameraman, has photographed DAN McDONALD GOES OUT FOR BRIEF Dan McDonald, veteran mining man of the Iditarod district who tis now located at McGrath, vis- |ited at the Governor’s office to discuss conditions in his section of all Lloyd films in the last 17| s : “dresser,” has been in fthe com- |\ e pany 15 years. William MacDonald 3 and his assistant, King Vedder,| SR o technical directors, claim 134 The combined years of service of the group mount to a considerable to- tal. Practically a ‘“newcomer” is Har- ry Oliver, who has been art di- rector only six years, but long enough to get acquainted. Joan Crawford Is Remodeling Mansion HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 2’1.—Why. Hollywood ‘is asking, is Joan Craw- ford “femodeling '“her mansion' in Brentwood Heights? Seeking an answer, the film star having ‘hardly more '‘than ' smiles for questiohers, it ‘was recalled that her ' dfvorce' from'“‘Douglas ' Fair- banks, Jr.," becomes final on May 13. Miss Crawford, asked if there was any likelihodd of & romance with Fanchot Tone, her leading man, said time would tell. | ECR AP S | Juneau is in about the same latitude as Glasgow, Scotland, and Ketchikan .is a very little north of London, England. Not Because We Are Cheaper 'BUT BETTER RICE & AHLERS CO. PLUMBING HEATING SHEET METAL “We tell you in advance what Job FRESH Fruits and ¥ egetables ALWAYS CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY WINDOW CLEANING PHONE. 485 i T e s o——- INSURANLE Established 1898 Juneau, Alaska BE GIVEN TONIGHT VACATION | Daily Empire Want Ads Pay ! Allen Shattuck, Inc. 1 ILA BENNETT I GLAMOROUS IN ‘ROCKABYE' Lovely Constance Appears with Joel McCrea and Paul Lukas at Coliseum | In portraying the fascinating' temperamental character of Judy Carroll in “Rockable” Constance | Bennett has made a decided dra- mati¢c advance. This, coupled with the star's own glamorous personal- ity and histrionic talents, gives; promise that the RKO-Pathe pic- | ture apening tonight at the Coli-|{ |seum Theatre will be her most| [ powerful screen vehicle “Rockabye” tells of the stormy love career of an actress who is a bewitching combination of gam- | in and lady. The world that goes to the theatre to adore her in the ! modernistic @ramas that are her | metier has no inkling that she |came from the Gas House district and that her acting' is entirely a tribute to the talent of De Sola, her manager. After an exposure that brings| out some of her current indiscre- tions, Judy makes plans to appear | in a new play that she has set her { heart on. It is “Rockab; but its | author, Jake Pell, refuses to let, her play it. What does this af-| fected drawing room actress know of the heartaches of a madonna Of the streets? He gets his answer when he falls in love With her, but what can it | gain the tcaress to love the man who created a role so parallel to her own life? What sacrifices are demanded of a woman who has a| past that cannot be forgotten? This question is solved after a suspense- ful emotional turmoil. | “Rockabye” provides two leading | men for Miss Bennett, Joel Mc- Crea in the role of the playwright | and Paul Lukas as ‘her manager, | Il'loth devoted lovers. The part of | { “Snooks,” ' the actress's eccentric| | mother, is ideally suited to Jobyna Howland’s ‘talents. Others in the |cast are Clare Blandick, Hazel Jones and J. M. Kerrigan The story provides a background |of the theatre and is lavishly stag- ed and mounted, Constance Ben- i nett wearing a great array of be-| iwitchlngly beautiful clothes. | | George Cukor directed “Rocka- ‘bye,“ an adaptation of Lucia Bron- | {der's play by Jane Murfin and Kubec Glasmon. e CALL GEORGE ANDERSON Expert piano tuning, guaranteed service. Phone 143. —adv. (] T BERGMANN | | DINING ROOMS | | Table Board by Week or Month | 11 Transient Meals 50c | (| Mr. and Mrs. Mike Daniloff | PREVIEW TONIGHT 1:10 AM. STARTS SUNDAY Baby Face is about as “innocent” as Cleopatra and as “helpless”as i ! e it THE FRANK MAN-TO-MAN STORY OF A MAN-TO-MAN GIRL Roma snatched from the brearhless whirt of life today! A picture that gives yo everything —except theii right names! S‘mnmvcx 'BABY FACE’ and a calt Special ATTEND THE Selected \ MATINEE Short SUNDAY—2 P.M. Y Adults 25¢, Chitdren 10¢ Subjects h g LAST TIME TONIGHT! THE LAFF RIOT “GOODBYE AGAIN” with WARREN WILLIAM JOAN BLONDELL FAT Is a Prison! Let Swedish Massage release the real YOU! & So good for that tired feeling! PHONE 10, Gastineau Hotel for Appointment Mrs. J. M. Malila GRADUATE MASSEUSE Lunches — — s e " UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16_“ and AFTER THE DANCES TONIGHT Gapital Beer Parlors BEER Visit the BEER! 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