The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 14, 1934, Page 3

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TH E DAILY ALASKA EMPI ., WEDNESDAY, FEB. 14, 1934, CHATTERTON IS 'IN NEW ROLE AS “Cooch” Dancer and Carnival Girl | Ruth Chatterton comes to the | Capitol Theatre today in the most | astounding characterization she has ever portrayed on the reen—in the title role of the First National | picture “Lilly Turner.” ! As Lily Turner, the “Cooch” dan- cer and come-on girl for a carni- val clandestine love affairs than most actresses portray in a lifetime. She flits from one love to another with |a wild abandon inspired by cruel | mistreatment at the hands of her first lover. It is not until she final- {1y awakens to real love that ghosts of her many sweethearts rise up to haunt her. |7 e picture, based on the stage i success by Phillip Dunning and | George Abbott, reveals the life be- {hind the scenes of the players in |the twdry medicine tent shows and glamorous carnivals. Gone is stately Miss Chatterton, of the drawing room: In “Lilly | Turner” is Chatterton, cooch danc- |er who wiggles her hips and jig- | gles her chest muscles to fascinate |and lure the male; the poseur in | pink tights and flimsy, transparent | costumes, | Never, it is said, has she given | such a powerful characterization as |that of Lilly Turner, the girl who | flaunts her charms to devastate the heart of the male; whose life |is one of butterfly gaiety on the surface and bitter heartaches be- Tisce €8s in TURNER t] Ationg] I | real dramatic power. George Brent plays the leading masculine role ! opposite Miss Chatterton, the first | time the two have been teamed to- | gether since their marriage last |Fal. Others in the cast include | Frank McHugh, Ruth Donnelly and G | Guy Kibbe > | The direction was in the hands | of William A. Wellman who direct- led Miss Chatterton in “Frisco Jen- |n ——.,——— STOCKS RALLY A SENTIMENT v Jen ny > > 1 \ CAPITOL STARTS TONIGHT [T S A L AT THE HOT! .| — | ! Gastineau | 3 PA TCH : George Durner, Juneau; John Impmvemdec?t mGCOttlon F. Chamberlin; R. D. Baker, Se-| lso Adds to Genera FRESH FRUIT ||Siuc; Do fomous R Lo o , L and VEGETABLES Alaskan ! ood Irading loday Z «Where P et T, Paulson, Mendenhall; Ted| i [4 ‘Where . Producer o Carlson, Klukwan. | (Continued from Page One) 2 doors north of First Roy Cox, Juneau. pont, Chrysler and Bethlehem Steel National Banx e o were up fractions to one point. | 3 Alex Riddle of Tahoka, Tex., has Utilities and rails were narrow. ] " Charles F. Coloord of Oklahoma | five gold dollars more than 80 years &l g ui E City has been a member of the | ©ld. He uses two for cuff links and| _CLOSING FRICES TOMIY_ 4 chamber of commerce for 46 con- | the others for shirt studs. NEW YORK, Feb. 14—Closing secutive years, | = - — quotation of Alaska Juneau mine 7 a stock today is 22%, American Can 105%, American Power and Light 10%, Anaconda 16%, Armour B 2%, Bethlehem Steel 46%, Curtiss- Wright 4%, Fox Films 16%, Gen- eral Motors 39%, International Har- { vester 44%, Kennecott 22, Mont- Q a gomery-Ward 34, Ulen Company WHOLESALE 13, United Aircraft 23%, Standard Oil of California 40%, United States : i and Steel 57%. .- ' ey WOMEN OF MOOSE ] VISIT THE TO BE HOSTS AT | Pacific Coast | MASQUERADE BALL | Salmon Creek | Among the delightful social af- | Coal CO. fairs suggestive of Valentine’s Day, Roadhouse | : i a e adndae matl thin i ’ | evening ‘with ‘the Women of the ANT! | Phone 412 Moose as hosts. Both young and e | old have been preparing original, ' 1 comical or beatiful costumes for = — — many ‘days and tonight will see b RELIABILITY RELIABILITY RELIABILITY the Moose Hall transformed into ! ~ |a new, and different place, with ] ™ = harlequins, clowns, valentines, old- ’ 4 2 = | fashioned lords and ladies, dancing |5 Commercial Adjustment |2 | "5 5 Sening 5 § ‘N & {|g1amour to the occasion. e -] Attractive prizes await those 154 | i and Rating Bureau B 1 oo st tutary dsci most. sy 3 : i w || represent St. Valentine’s Day, are l 4 v / ice re the ‘most comical or unusual’ and Co-Operating with White Service Bureau T The merchant through a competent personnel makes money | iplendid music is to be c;ur:;?re: | only to lose it through credits. Two stimulants present [&1/°7 the T;;}E;?fm;re v o < | themselves: Either collect or abandon the stimulant . Ever E sl sitiiaaticers of the S5 B| increasing competition inhibits abandonment. It seems % - Z| that then credit rating and collécting must come into its | e, R o R 2| own. Bradstreet's report shows more fail on cash business |3 #| ¢han credit, and if ratings are given and collections placed |™||1ines from the Silver Fox Barbers and kept up, credit business will show 45 per cent in- To all within our harbors » crease over cash. We reduce bad debt losses and increase | ||A change we lately have made B tion turnover. 1 & |{In hopes of improving our trade Rf - E|lv. P. wiliams better known as | Many thoughtlessly look to a credit bureau for bad debt |2 ‘; “Red” ~ 2 protection only, losing track of getting collection turnover, E A very fine workman well-fed =| good or bad, which is just as important as sales turnover. |3 | Still ldoks the Bloom of youth : The best fisherman will change his bait when the fish e ;And far from being uncouth stop biting. After a merchan’t money is stolen via bank- | ady k the door. i ruptey he is ready to Ioc 00! t i . . . A user of no tobacco at all &| Commercial Adjustment and Rating Bureau E B ity 10 woek b sy 4l & < ® || Neither sips he wine or tea 2 Local People Employed—Locally Owned and Operated s el gl E ROOM 1, SHATTUCK BUILDING : Now occupies the first chair | V| JUNEAU, ALASKA 4 : FHENE 2% 2 IWe wish you to give us a trial 21 We'll give you at least a smile . | 1 RELIARRATY MEasEEITY J. D. VAN ATTA, Prop; adv. LILLY TURNER (Stately Star Plays Part of| she has in this picture more Congress Candidate Taken As Burglar | Dillworth E. Sumpter, candidate for representative to congress from Arizona at the last election, was | arrested in Winslow, Ariz, on a | charge of attempting to burglarize | a bank there. | Photo) MRS, C. N. CRONE IS WINNER OF | Mrs. C. N. Crone was winner| of the first prize, in the “10 Best" | Pictures Contest which has been | conducted by Manager Cliff Daigler | of the Capitol and Coliseam The- atres here. The first prize was a| season pass for one. Mrs. Hulda | Peterson, winner of the second | prize, was also awarded a season's pass, while Mrs. Sam Niemi, third prize winner and Mrs. Fred Orme, fourth prize winner, were each| given a month’s pass. C. N. Crone, who won the fifth| prize will be given the autographed | photographer of any motion picture star he. may select, and due to the fact that both Mr. and Mrs. Crone were prize winners, Manager Daigler has decided to award an additional prize of an autographed photograph of any selected star. Clarence | Converse, who was sixth, in the| contest, will receive this additional | prize. | In order of their popularity, the | names of the ten favorite motion pictures seen here within the year 1933, and the number of votes each’ received, are: ‘Forty-Second Street,' 1500; ‘Rasputin and the Empress, | 11320; ‘Cavalcade,’ 1260; ‘State Fair,'| 11180; ‘White Sister,’ 1080; ‘Grafid | Hotel,’ 900; ‘She Done Him Wrong,' 900; ‘Sign of the Cross,’ 820; ‘Smil- in’ Thru’ 800; ‘Prosperity,’ T780i! Others that came within the most | Arms’; 740 votes; 'Gabriel Over the White Hous 660; ‘Fugitive from a Chain Gang,’ 440; ‘So Big,’ 400; ‘Strange Interlude, 280; and ‘Frisco Jenny,” 280 Judges in charge of awarding the prizes were A. R. Erickson, head of the English and Dramatic Departments of the Juneau High School and R. W. Bender, General | Manager of the Empire Printing | Company. By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE CELERY SEED DRESSING | This salad dressing is a family favorite. The dressing blends well with fruit, vegetable or fish salads. It can also be used to marinate | fish cocktails, MEALS FOR A DAY Breakfast Grapefruit Ready Cooked Wheat Cereal Cream, Cliced Coffee Cake Coffee Luncheon Oyster Stew Crackers Pruit Cookies ' Canned Pears Tea Dinner Sliced Roast Beef Buttered Potatoes Creamed Peas l Bread Butter Prult Salad ‘Celery Seed Dressing Coffee 1 Spiced Coffee Cake Two pounds flour; four teaspoons’ baking powder; one-third teaspoon jas t PICTURE PRIZE; popular sixteen were ‘Farwell to7? ASTONISHING ~ SWINDLE IS FILM THEME “The Match King” BaseclY on Fraud of Financial Genius at Coliseum iful actresses are cast ims of a financial gen- ius ir rst National's most remark- able romance, “The Match King,” {which is playing at the Coliseum Theat They are Lili Damita lenda Farrell, Juliette Compton and Claire’ Dodd They are all held in mesmeric fascinatfon by the personal charm and magnetism of a colossal schem- er, a part played by Warren Wil- liam, and jare eventually sacrificed to his ambition. This remarkable story ‘is taken from the novel of Einar Thorvald- son. The story is so astounding that it outdoes the wildest fiction, and Four (Associated Press | would not be credited if the blaz-| |ing newspaper headlines hat had | suggested the story hadn't already established the authenticity of the | details. Warren a William’s role is that of a man absolutely unscrupulous and ruthless with women. He makes love first Rimself and then, by me strange hypnotic power, forc- es them to entangle men of politi- cal power for his own ends and to their ruin. In his ambition to con- trol the world, he does not hesitate to use women of every class, wom- en from the lower walks of life, beautiful actresses and society women, Others in an unusually strong cast include Harold Huber, Spen- cer Charters, John Wray, Murray Kinnell, Hardie Albright and Alan Hale. The story was adapted by Houston Branch and Sidney Suth- erland, and directed by Howard Bretherton. ORGANIZER OF TRUSTS, CHAS. R, FLINT, DIES (Continued from Page One) aid Mr. Flint, “b greed, and greed alone, is the reason for man wanting to swell his wad million after million.” Explaining why some men were able to accumulate vast fortunes while others were not, he said: “God has favored some men highly ‘which and has given them gifts they use to make mone; ASSOCIATED PRES: CHARLES R. FLINT The last business I started ran on an even keel for two or three years, but from a financial point of view it was not a success. “I invited a man I knew to be to take charge. He asked for $25- 000 a year salary and 2,000 shares. 1 agreéd. The business 'started to pay.” The next year he asked for $150,000 salary and a percentage. I agreed quickly. He was worth it.” Roosevelt No Czar “Certainly!” exclaimed Mr. Flint, when asked if that man had any- thing like the brains of a great musician, painter or writer. “He has great ‘talents and can make men do things as he wants them done. That is why Teddy Roosevelt was a greater man than the late Czar of Russia. The Czar knew as much as Teddy, but he couldn’t make men do things.” Mr. Flint was born at Thomas- fon, Me., January 24, 1850, the son of Benjamin and Sarah Tobey | Flint, He was descended from a family that settled at South Dan- salt; one-half cup sugar; four tab- lespoons fat; one egg; one cupy milk; one-third cup brown sugar; one-half cup currants; one tea- spoon cinnamon; one-quarter tea- spoon mace. Mix flour, baking powder, salt Iancl one-half cup sugar. Add fat by cutting it in with knife. Add egg {and milk, mixing lightly. Pour into greased shallow pan. Mix rest of f 1 Relates not his troubles or regrets ingredients and spread. on top mix- | Whose fingers don't smell like, ture. Bake 15 minutes in moderate| ogn industry when his services |oven. Cut in bars ‘and serve warm with butter. | Celery Seed Dressing One teaspoon salt; one teaspoon celery seed; one teaspoon dry mus- 1tard; one teaspoon paprika; one !lpoons sugar; four tablespoons vin- egar; one cup salad oil. Mix ingredients in shallow Vers, Mass., in 1642, In lafer gener- ns, family was closely asso- ations, the “lated with ship building and at me time was the largest owners of alling vessels in the United States. He was educated at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, from which "e was graduated in 1868. His first vife, whom he married in 1883, was Miss E: Kate Simmons, of Troy, N.'Y. She died in 1925. ecognized many times in Ameri- Beat two minutes. Ch 1. Beat and serve. This dressing will keep in- definitely if stored in cold place. To remove spots caused by cod With Van, the second, some pair; 'teaspoon onion juice; five table-|liver oil, rub the stain with lard, let stand for five minutes and then wash out with warm water and bowl.' soap suds. - 2 . o the best business man of his type | His genius as an organizer was| Were on his Sucker List WITH NOTHING MORE THAN A PENCIL A DESIRE FOR POWER THIS MAN MANIPULATED - THE >S OF OTHERS ONLY TO CRASH AND BRING DISASTER TO HIMSELF AND HUNDREDS OF OTHERS AND EAR { { | See WARREN WILLIAM in ‘ “THE MATCH KING” then I | eonsult a reliable investment | authority before choosing an ! i investment. LAST TIME TONIGHT | were sought in ' the organjzation and reorganization of big corpor- !mrnuons. Among fhose which he SUVIET GRAFT had a hand in planning were Tne | lAmerican Woolen Company, The GuEs DUWN IN | Sloss Sheffield Steel and Iron| BERINB STRAIT United States Rubber Company,| | Company, The American Chicle| | ‘Icebreaker Cheliuskin Is Company and The Computing Scales Company. | i Crushed by Ice Pack ~—One Life Lost i e SRR | MOSCOW, Feb. 14—The Soviet | WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.—Alaska|cepreqker Cheliuskin, held in the | Delegate Dimond said y"“"d“yimlemless grip of the ice in Ber- |that the President has approved yn, strait for nearly five months, ‘of' the Public _Works allotment Df‘has been crushed and the craft | $45,000 to continue exploratory and ' want down with the loss of one !archuuloglcal work on 8t. Lawrence yire wMoscow has been advised by Island during the next two vears i ..jocs under the direction of the Alaska ! President Approves Continuation of Work, St. Lawrence Island WARREN 4 A Story Based on an Actual Happening! AMITA | All other members of cTew jand the few passéngers in- cluding five women and a®ghild, | were landed safely on the ice with emergency supplies ‘and general | equipment, b The position of the group is giv- en as 155 miles off Northern Cape |and 144 miles off Cape Welland. “Fired” Director Is Back: Again on Payroll TRENTON, N. J, Feb. 14.—Ar- |mand T. Nichols, director of nu- | merous Atlantic City beauty pag- | eants, whose service was termed | useless by Governor Moore, is back on the state payroll again. This time, however, his salary as confi- | dential clerk to Secretary of State | Mathais is $3,700 annually, instead |of the $4200 when the governor |ordered him discharged. College. | et i American minnows introduced in' Istria province, Italy, have entirely “Ireed the area of malaria by eat- | ing mosquito larvae, ——,————— The average man exhales 200,000,~ 000 particles in a single breath. | —— Daily Empire Want Ads Pay | UNITED STATES Department of the Interior GENERAL LAND OFFICE District Land Office Anchorage, Alaska. | November 22, 1933. | Serial 07681 Notice is hereby given that Frank Reeder, entryman, together with his witnesses, Byron T. Benson, and | Clenna Frahklin ' McNutt, all of | Juneau, Alaska, has submitted final | proof on his homestead entry for al tract of land embraced in U. 8.| Survey No. 2079, Mendenhall Va#ey | Elimination, containing 87.76 acres, and it is now in the files of the U. S. Land Office, Anchorage, Al- aska, and if no protest is filed in | the local land office within the | period of publication or thirty days | thereafter, sald final proof will be accepted and final certificate is- sued. J. LINDLEY GREEN, Register. First publication, Jan. 10, 1084, Last publication, March 7, 1934, | Arrived on | ‘TELEPHONE 478 * ' FRUITS and VEGETABLES IN A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT CALIFORNIA GR.OCER? “Victoria” PROMPT “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” ° Phone 16 UNITED FOOD CO. - CASH GROCERS " We Deliver —p— Meats—Phone 16 “Juneau’s Own Store” ||

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