The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, April 5, 1934, Page 3

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- f | THEATRE LAST TIME TONIGHT PREVIEW TONIGHT 1:10 A. M. T VAPURE for Head Colds -~ Butler Mauro— Drug Co. “Express Money Orders Anytime” O ~ ITS Wise to Call 48 Juneau Transfer Co. when in need of MOVING or STORAGE Fuel 0il Coal Transfer In the BAG! Pack your clothes and linens in the laundry bag, send it to us, and yowll smile! That's what thrifty women do! Alaska ¥ JUNEAU | | RESTAURANT | Chas. Peterson “THE HOME OF GOOD | " | FOO! 5 —— | HLLINE SYSTEM | | amla—rmdn:;fluh , Plnnt‘;:'eet. opposite Harris | « Hardware Co. ! ! CASH AND CARRY MURDERMYSTERY| OPENS TONIGHT AT COLISEUM {Vivienne Osborne, Chesterj Morris Head Fine Cast in ‘Tomorrow at Seven’ A maniacal killer who slays for | the thrill of it warning his vic- tims with a jigsaw puzzle and then punctually dispatching them with a sharp instrument through the heart, is belatedly detected at the Coliseum Theatre in RKO-Radip ctures’ murder mystery, “Tomor- row at Seven,” in which Vivienne rne and Chester Morris, sup- ported by a capable cast, provides chill-inducing entertainment. The film succeeds in carrying the mystery right through to the as- tonishing climax without recourse to tricky creeping shadows, false clues or a hidden “heavy” to con- fuse the audience. An anonymous murderous fiend warns Drake, a wealthy merchant, to expect death | the following night. With his sec- retary Winters, his daughter, Mar- tha Winters; Neil Broderick, a crime novelist; two detectives and two pilots, Drake embarks on an air journey during the appointed hour to foil the killer. However, at .the set time, the murderer strikes, killing Winters. The plane is landed and the detectives herd the suspects, into a weird old man- sion in the Louisiana swamp lands. Ray Enright, who directed the film, paced the suspense excitingly | to a breath- taking rapid-fire fin- | ish which discloses the murderer, | but not before a fake coroner en- ters the scene and is found to be| in league with the novelist, a pl-‘\ lot is murdered and the girl kidnaped. Ralph Spence, who wrote the! sensational “The Gorilla,” embel- lished “Tomorrow at Seven” with| an abundance of tense dramatics | and absorbing action brilliantly | portrayed by the east. Che Morris and Vivienne Osborne splendid novelist and hero! ectively. Allen Jenkins and| Frank McHugh, as the two dnt(*:’-‘ tives, enact the convulsing com-| edy of the tale. Henry Stephenson | :uv Drake; Grant Mitchell as Win- | ters; Charles Middleton as the| coroner, Cornelius Keefe and the| other players are convincing in| their performances. i Elaborate staging and excellent | photography mark the production | | throughout. Jefferson Pictures Cor- | | poration” protuted “TOmorfow Seven” for RKO-Ra(l.m —_——— { - MENUS TODAY MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE| AN APRIL SUNDAY ar By Breakfast Orange Juice Egg Omelet Buttered Toast Dinner Fruit Cocktail Rib Roast of Pork Browned Sweet Potatoes Escalloped Tomatoes Bread Apple Jelly | Apricot Bavarian Cream Celery Coffee Supper | Pop Corn Fudge Apples Coffee Rib Reast of Pork 6 pound rib roast, % teaspoon paprika, 4 tablespoons flour, 1 cup water, 1 teaspoon salt. Fit roast into baking pan. Sprin- kle with salt and paprika. Roast 15 minutes in hot oven in uncov- ered pan. Lower heat, sprinkle with flour, add water and cover. Roast 3 hours, baste frequently and add more water if roast seems dry. During last 50 minutes of roast-| ing, peeled raw sweet potatoes may be added to roast. Escalloped Tomatoes 3 cups tomatoes, 2-3 cup cracker crumbs, % cup butter, 1 teaspoon salt, teaspoon pepper, % tea- spoon celery salt, 1 tablespoon of chopped onion, % teaspoon sugar. Mix ingredients and pour into buttered baking dish. Bake 25 minutes in moderate oven. Serve, in dish in which baked. Apricot Bavarian Cream, Serving 6 2 tablespoons granulated gela- tin, 4 tablespoons cold water, 1 cup milk, 2-3 cup sugar, 1'% cups of mashed apricots, 1 cup apricot juice, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, % teaspoon salt, 2 egg whites, beat- en, ' cup whipped cream. | Soak gelatin 5 minutes in water Add to milk which has been heat- ed in double boiler. Stir until dissolved. Add sugar and cool Let thicken a little, fold in re- maining ingredients and pour into a glass mold. Chill, unmold and serve with cream. —————————— Shop ir. juneau % Dizzy Spells Goodbye to dizzy spells! You'll never get giddy, nauseated, bloated, nor suffer any of the other familiar symptoms of stomach trouble after a hearty meal if youll take a tablespoonful of Dare’s Mentha Pep- sin afterwards. Money back any time it fails, says Butler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. |talent it has when THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1934. ~The Prize Fighter and Some of the Ladies Max BAER and JUNE KNIGHT SHIRVEY &F £ 1A BELLE- BEE STARR Long after Max Baer, leading contender for the w a boxer, he may be remembered as the great Ameri resulted in suits amounting to hundreds of thousands of dollars piling up against him. Following bis mar- | riage to Dorothy Dunbar, from whom he is now divorced, Max was sued by Olive Beck, of Livermore. Calif., for $150,000, charging the boxer broke his promise to wed her, another $150,000 for a similar rea Baer assaulted her. But M most colorful “romance” Mad at the Producers? Not rid’s heavyweight ¢ an Don Juan. Bee and Shirley La Belle. of New Y n, ax says he merely helped her when she was down and out. with June Knight, Broadway showgirl. had played the story to the limit, Miss Knight coyly told the world it wa Bu Rochelle, Because Hollywood Wanis Her Now; Is Happy ROCHELLE HUDPSON Rochelle Hudson at 18 seems to be nearing stardom, but despite her age it tock a long time. She she got no paris. better luck. Then the studio that She went to other studios, was a contract player at 13, but too, without much first signcd her—and didn’t give a role—put her under contract again, and means business this time, By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, April Why doesn't Hollywood use it has it? Why do studios keep youngsters under contract in idleness for months, let them go, and then suddenly start bidding wildly for the services of the same young- sters? The usual answ tives simply ove: what they have in their eagerness for what they haven't. One set of them, for 84 the | is that execu- instance, let Polly Walters go to New York after giving her nothing but minor bits he When Polly made a stage hit, the same studio officials joined others in trying to lure her back—at a much larger salary. b But there is another side of the question, the producers’ side — and little Rochelle Hudson, a case in point, see that, too. A contract Dl career apparent at 17, Rochelle strides that may lar goal. That *° was constantly urged seems to be materializing “present.” r at 13, her| all washed up”| at 18 is making| ead to the stel- ture” that she | to think about | into a | S | DOESN'T BLAME DIRECTORS | The diminutive brown - haired miss from Claremore, Okla., Will Rogers’ home town, recently com- pleted a dramatic role with Warner Baxter in “Too Many Women.” It was the sort of part that in other days she might have bcgged in vain to play “I could have played it, too, even | then,” she says with gonfidence, “But—no, I can't really blame them for not giving me thie chance. Put-, ting myself in a director’s place; I can see why he wouldn't risk a part on a mere child. I didn't see it that way then, of course—and it was discouraging when parts that I actually could have done were given to other girls.” NO PART IN SIX MONTHS She hegan under conlract to Fox, where one of her open sorrows was Get Your Block NOW W hile It Lasts PHONE 358 Juneau Lumber Mills Maxie’s romances, real and fancied, have * function hampionship, has been forgotten as rr, circus trapeze artiste. seeks ork. is asking $50,000, alleging that Baer’s biggest and | he newspapers of the nation ust a publicity stunt.” t afte [ that she couldn't persuade anyone| to take her picture. At 13, and an | “actress,” that hurt. She didn't| play a part, either, in the six| months, | | At R-K-O she had a little better | luck, but it didn’t last. She still got no pi and wa released. | Eventually she clicked in a film or | two at Warner Bros.,, and Fox used |her in two Will Rogers pictures—| she had not met the Claremore sage before—after which the studio| | where she began and couldn't get |.a picture taken put her under con- | tract, this time meaning business. o | . : i (Price Sees Roosevelt Giving Industry New Rule, Company Union - -<Continued Irow sage One) = ag ‘spokesman for em-| ployes. that the Federation was trying to| dictate to all labor, for its own | {purposes, and through Ilabor to capital as well. The President was asked to say whether the company unlon could ' gontinue in business, and in what mhanner. PLACE CONFIDENCE IN PRESIDENT | What he replied was, in effect, jthat any union was legal so lopg \as it represented the free choice of the workers; and that machin- | {ery would be created to guarantee | there was no coercion and no dis | erimination as between the various | kinds of unions. | It came down, in the end, to a | question of confidence whether the | promise of proper safeguards| could and would be fulfilled; and both sides put their confidence| | in Mr, Roosevelt’s word that it not | |only was possible, but would be done. | | So passed the first major labor| Yconflict under the N R A, and| unless the expectations of jub)-} lant administration officials fail, the issue of the company union| ‘l)qssed with it. ! NS LR lo e 0000 . AT THE HOTELS L #0000 es 000 Gastineau Mrs. J. C. Roehn, Chichagof. \ Zynda || 'Herbert Lee, Tenakee. | Alaskan | W. R. Carter, Sitka. - Lsrm IN HOSPITAL Jack Zavodsky entered St. Ann's Hospital' for medical care last ev- ening. ! —_— i Wood (mount and was directed by Harry | the pocket | your {will be strictly enforced The employers responded |* NANCY CARROLL HAS LEAD IN Edmund LOW’e IS Cl]al’ming{ Gentleman Crook in | “I Love that Man" *“I Love That Man is the glamorous title of the swiftly-pac- | ed drama of a womans' devotion | which opened last night in the Capitol The, e, featuring Edward Loweg, Nancy Carroll, Robert Arm- strong, Lew Cody, Warren Hymer and Da hy Bur, . It is Charles | Rogers’ latest production for Para- Joe Brown. Lowe emerges as the confidence man that ever play for slickest made a dollars and dames in a and love story. Nancy excellent as the woman who won't take “no” for an an- swer, tags alc with the two- timing Lowe because she loves him, and bides time for the wed- ding ceremony that's bound to come. Lowe is a con-man but Nancy has confidence in her own ability to turn the “no” into “yes” and ‘sticks by his side through the most amazing series of exploits against book of the ‘sucker Americans” that the screen has ever portrayed. Lowe does every- thing to make a dollar from sell- ing words to a dictionary, tea to a bootlegger, Canadian rye through the mails—and all the tried and| true confidence games that the ex- perts have been pulling on a gul-| lible public for yea and it shows | why “one is born every minute.” | Lowe does the best job he's done | since “The Cock-Eyed World” and despite the fact he's aiming at pocket-book, you'll be cheer- ing for him every minute of the time. But crime doesn't pay, even to this insolent orator who talks himself out of trouble, and, in the | ond, there’s a daring climax that whips the story to a conclusion right in pace with its exceptionally fast action. You'll adore Nanc Carroll as the girl who knows w she wants—and gets it. For wants the love of the most e ing character the screen has her 1t she yet portrayed—and you'll be right with her all the way. BON-FIRE PERMITS Persons desiring to burn rubbish within the ecity limits must first secure a permit from the Chief of the Fire - Depariment This law J. L GRAY, Chief of Fire Department. ARRIVED THIS MORNING! 1000 NARCISSI @® These flowers should be ordered early CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 hoe PLANE, 3 MEN LONG OVERDUE, Lockheed ():7Wa_v to An chorage Forced Down by Snow Near Katalla m Pr (Continued > One) to the request told of weather con- ditions in the Westward The message said: ‘‘No word received here of where- abouts of seaplane of Pilot Gr stis and part Been cl and thick weather this region two days. Anchorage planes all ground ed. Heavy fragments of ice floa ing this portic of Cook Inlet, making seaplane landi EXLIY ly hazardou this for yet 11 frozen, only [ landings fo: me. Aviators advise sea- should not come beyond for 12 being. TLieutenan: commander Signal Corps states he will make checkup im- mediately Alaska Radio stations search for news. Local fliers be- lieve probably sought safety some harbor because fogs. Will advise lakes suitabl some any developments.” ‘The plane, carrying Pilot Grops- tis, McMahon and J. C. Hickey, manager of the company, left here Monday morning but was forced to return within a half hour on ac- count of snow and cloudy weather. - > - MRS. WINIFRED GRIFFITH UNDERGOES OPERATION Mrs. Winifred Griffith under- went a major operation at St. Ann’s Hospital this morning. She is reported to be doing nicely. Mrs. Griffith teaches at the chil- dren’s home conducted by Minnie Fields at Lena Cove. ees JOHN GREEN UNDERGOES MAJOR OPERATION TODAY John Green, who was a candi- date for the City Council on an independent ticket in the recent municipal election, entered St. Ann's Hospital last night and un- derwent a major operation this afternoon. Daily Empire Want Ads Pay Jones-Stevens Shop LADIES'—CHILDREN'S READY-TO-WEAR Beward Street PROMPT DELIVERY || DU Hollywood Parlor Dyed or WE The Shoe Specialist @1n Sabin’s former location on Front Street [ Mitchall Directed by Ray Enright 2.— “LAST FRONTIER” YOUR OLD SHOE LOOK LIKE NEW! Factory Methods, of Course! SHOES Cleaned, Shined, Quickly Mail your old shoes . . . A complete showing of Freeman and Florsheim Shoes A HEATR GLAMOROUS F“.M;, SAFE CORDOVA starts Tonicar Jo— 5 MINUTES 'TILL DEATH! The mystery ¢ never his v the stroke -of .—“POPEYE THE SAILCR” (] —“BOY! OH BOY!” @ 5.—LATE NEWS EVENTS SEATS ANY TIME N E buy and sell stocks and bonds for individuals or institutions, acting upon author- lzation to buy and gell through any designated member of the New York Stock Exchange No Securities for Sale EFERENCES and evidence of satisfactory results furnished from our files upon request. STIRRAT & DIETCH 1411 Fourth Ave Bldg., SEATTLE [44% “Tomorraw’s Styles Today” 7 “Juneau’s Own Store” ' Daily Empire Want Ads Pay MADE TO repaired DO THE REST!

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