The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 26, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRI; SATURDAY, MAY 26, 1934. GAYNOR- BAXTER COLLEEN MOORE TEAM TOGETHER WAS FILMDOM'S INLATEST FII.M FIRST FLAPPER TONIGHT Preview Tonight 1:10 A. M. Matinee Sunday ZP. M Matinee Prices Adults 25¢ MAKING HiT IN FILMDOM WITHOUT DAD Katherine and Agnes De Mille Are Stepping Along, Hollywood By ROBBIN COONS { HOLLYWOOD, Cal, May 26— When the daughter of a De Mille undertakes a dramatic carcer she | does it “on her own” without hvlp] or hindrance from father. That holds, apparently, whether the daughter is Cecil B.s Kather- ine or William's Agnes. But both Katherine are now in pictures. Katherine, adopted daughter of the Cecil B. De Milles, began in pictures as an extra, just to see how she liked them. She found she did, very much, and soon was geetting good roles, including those in “Viva Villa” and “The Trumpet Blows"—not under her father's di- rection. She refused a role in “Cleopatra,” offered by an assist- ant of her father's, because she didnt want it said that her name or her father’s influence had furth- ered he screen career. She chose instead a part in Mae West's “It Ain’t No Sin.” and Agnes AGNES DE MILLE DANCES There récently arrived in Holly- wood, from London, Willlam De, Mille’s daughter, Agnes, whose ex- perience in starting her reer rather closely parallels her cousin’s. | Agnes is going to dance in uncle, C. B’s “Cleopatra.” Agnes, ,whose career is dancing rather than acting, got her first job from her father, but under scarcely flattering circumstances. She owed it to uncle C. B. “It was when my uncle® was making ‘The Ten Commandments,’ and he had hired all the dancers in Los Angeles,” she says. “My own father happened to be needing dancers for a picture he was mak- ing at the same time, and there was nothing else for him to do—I was about the only dancer my uncle wasn’t using on his set, so father hired me. ! FATHER DIDN'T APPROVE “He didn’t approve of my career, however. He wanted me to be a writer. Whatever I've accomplished I've done alone. Oh, yes, he's been won over now, of course.” In New York she had the ex- pervience of sitting two weeks out- e “Roxy's” office, waiting to see him. He knew her name, too. “When he finally came out,” she rclates, laughing, “he told me: ‘Oh, Ive been looking for you!'" 4 C. B. Cochran, the English pro-: ducer, admired Agnes’s work, em- | played her to stage dances for him, and even presented her in recital —the first dancer he had so hon- ored since La Argentina. [ Agnes’s first love still is dancing, although her dancing requires her to “act.” She is not interested in film acting, but would like some day to be a film dance director. . - eee MEMORIAL DAY DANCE A special Memorial Day Dance is planned for May 30 at the Man- | darin Ballroom, according to Wil- ‘bur Burford, manager. Jimmy Steele and his Revelers will furnish the || music. ONC THEY COME T W arner Janet Ga\/n"' a'\d i “Daddy Long Less" o6) romance of'e fiery. .83 fellow wit reen PIOY. by v BUr HARVEY WALTER My‘ Beauty Hmt GENEVA L MITCHELL I prerer this treaiment powder base: Moisten the nos slightly with warm water and gent- | ly massage it with one finger until t nearly dry—then apply powder. This is quite a delicate process, for if the skin is a bit to: moist there are splotches of pow-| der, and if too dry the powder comes off. But if successfully done, | the result is pleasing. ADVERSE FLYING WEATHERDELAYS WADE'S MISSION NRA Representative Will! Procéed to Cordova When Plane Can Go Hugh A. Wade, Deputy NRA Ad- ministrator for Alaska, who was not able to reach Cordova yester- day by plane, was still held here today by unfavorable flying weath- | “will winyou & h 8 ‘"’ an of 80 to any| the | £ AGAN O ENTHRALL YOU! n .who entertained YOU gain in this de\lg\'\tfu\ and abig strapping e in his eve. + Pw\zr rC”U\‘\" imp.. Id and & i STE CONNO L DIRECTED BY HARRY | MENUS ToDAY | By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE A MAY SUNDAY Breakfast Menu Grapefruit Waffles and Syrtip Broiled Bacon Coffee Dinner Menu Ham Loaf Creamed New Potatoes Buttered Beets Bread Butter Spring Relish Salad Pineapple Sherbet White Cake Coffee Supper Cream Cheese Sandwiches Chocolate Angel Food Cake Peach Sauce | Ham Loaf | Two cups chopped cooked ham; one cup soft bread crumi | tablespoon chopped parsley; ablespoon chopped celery; one ta- { blespoon chopped onion; one-fourth | teaspoon salt; one-fourth teaspoon | baprika; one egg or two yolks; one- { half cup milk; one tablespoon but- ter, melted. i Mix “ingredients and pour into buttered loaf pan. Bake forty min- utes in moderate oven. Unmold and | serve warm or cold. Creamed -New Potatoes Six cooked new potatoes; three tablespoons butter; three table- spoons flour; one-fourth teaspoon | salt; one-fourth teaspoon paprika; one and one-half cups milk; one | teaspoon chopped parsley. i Melt butter and add flour. Mix and add seasonings and milk and | cook until creamy sauce forms. Stir | constantly. Add potatoes and cook | ‘Lwo minutes. Serve and sprinkle ‘ with parsley. | Spring Relish Salad | Four pieces lettuce; twelve stalks | cooked asparagus; one-half cup “Paddy, the Next Best‘ Thing,” Opening Tomor- | row at Capitol Theatre . t Gaynor and Warner Bax-| | ter are to be seen in their newest, | film tomorrow when “Paddy, The | Next Best Thing,” the latest from the studios of Fox Films opens at The Power and the Glow Opening at Coliseum | Tomorrow Night Colleen Moore, who plays much coveted and highly dramatic role of “Sally” in “The Power and The Glory,” Fox film ope: morrow at the Coliseum the old comes back An favorite bigger than ever! ® as the orchestra tonight. | 2 er reported on the Gulf of Alaska. | diced celery; three tablespoons of He said he would go to the Prince | Pickle relish; two tablespoons chop- | William Sound fishing center just!Ped pimientos; one tablespoon of as soon as he could get a plane. | chopped onion; one-fourth teaspoon | He expressed -a willingness today | Salt; one-fourth teaspoon paprika; ! for Fox the novel bY Fre erudo Poa® Last Time Tonight— “KING FOR A NIGHT” LIFETIME PEN 'GOES TO MISS ELSIE SCHMITZ The annual award made to one lucky graduate of the Juneau High School by Butler Mauro Drug Co. went to Miss Elsie Schmitz, when the big clock stopped at her name at 18 minutes to 9 o'clock yester- day morning. The Sheaffer Lifetime Pen of- fered has been delivered to Miss Schmitz already and is now in use. > GERALD TURNER IS HOME FROM ST. ANN’S HOSPITAL Gerald Turner, who has been in St. Ann’s Hospital for several days receiving treatment for an injur; received while working, left the hospital yesterday. R W BIG NIGHT PLANNED Salmon Creek Roadhouse will feature Harold Knox and His Boys Acc: ing to Tony Reiss, the Glac. Highway is in good shape and he is prepared to take care of a record breaking crowd. Daily C ross- ACROSS 1. Leopard: archaic . French city . Portal Toward the . well known to one another, Solution of Yesterday's Puulc the screen's very first “I guess it was in 1922 Miss Moore, “that I de * and their success was!a screen flapper. I was on t that they were again as-|fi girls in the studios to to complement each other.| with my long tresses. There thirteenth characterization| much talk pro and con about “Paddy,” the madcap Irish|bob. Was bobbed hair really s Janet Gaynor something | Was it lady-like? { ab:olutely new. Paddy's greatest as “Flappers were just coming in for the same time her worst|a severe national roasting and bob- For she possesses the un-|bed hair was being associated in| faculty of enslaving the af-|everybody's mind with giddy little| those with whom she|girls who didn't know the dangers s into eontact.«It is an asset|of playing with fire. People said in| ause it smooths the rough spots|cutting my hair I was cutting my a lability because it makes throat. | T an utter stranger to discipline.| “But from the first I believed in | the flapper heart—and the flapper | strongest role to date. For | bob. I felt the flapper herself was | dition to her well-known wist- | happy, unaffected and romantical- | ss she is here required to dis-!ly in tune with the emotional hmxt‘ J 1anges of the day. They were jux[‘ a rogue—and she esistibly | girls scrambling to keep ahead of | charming. As the man who brings | the fast moving times. My jud;'- her down to earth and convinces!ment: has been vindicated.” her of his love, Warner Baxter is| “What about the bob?" she was said to be in his most popular ele- asked. ment. He is suave, handsome and| “I will repeat what I said at that he gentlest of lovers. | time—the bob will be with us in The cast that Fox Film has gath-|some form or other, for all time.” ered around its two stars is notable.! ‘“Some girls are letting it grow, It has Walter Connolly, star of the | it was suggested. Broadway stage, Harvey Stephens,| “Yes, but give the girls time and‘ Margaret Lindsay, Mary McCor-|they will take it to the barber.| Long bhair is too much trouble.| mic, Joseph M. Kerrigan, Fiske O'Hara, Claire McDowell, Merle| Women will never again tolerate | Tottenham, Roger Imhof, and Trev-{it. The hair dressers may demand | it; the fashion leaders may »u-‘, or Bland. “King for a Night” is being|tempt to revive it, but this natlonl ! shown for the last times tonight. |will remain bobbed.” i o MANY STRANGERS COME Old newspapets for sale af Em. pire Office. NORTH ON CANADIAN (P | PACIFIC - STEAMSHIP | ! apitol Theatre for an engage- | f three days. The two st een together in “Dadd; signed H was the nice? of ! life in ad fulr play re people bound for the Tele- graph Creek and Dease Lake coun- try to prospect during the coming on, and the Atlin country as well, were aboard the Princess Nor- ah than for many years according to officers aboard the steamer on its present voyage. Ordinarily, on the last trip in May, most of the people aboard the Canadian Pacific jSteamer are connected with the White Pass and Yukon Route or other seasonal industries and are , but on this voyage the steamer was crowd- ed with strange faces, the office declared. Practically every berth aboard the steamer was booked on | the northbound trip. b e I. R. Anderson, better known to his many friends as “Bud”, is back on the job at Sabin’s after an ill- ness f ten days, six of which were spent in St. Ann's Hospnal You Were Their Best Friend . would you know how to counsel with her wisely, sen- sibly in her hour of trouble? You may be called upon some day to discharge the duties of a man’s closest friend. Pre- pare now to perform those duties as eapable as you do your regular business. [ ] | The Charles W. Carter Mortuary PHONE 136-3 “The Last Service Is the word Puzzle . Sluggish 22, Public walk . Concise 0. Happening by chance or sheltered side Local repre- sentative 16. High cards . Trust Scrutinize without known cause . Nothing . Pay suit to Part Greatest Tribute” . Components of a forest . Glagial ridge . Eurepean country . Atmospheric disturbance . Utility - 24. Allow Repasts of gravelly drift. - Frothy soapy . Disfigure . Broods of . Courteous regard for anothier's . Unknown persons French river b Pencll of light Proper 9. s Semiprwcious pin ston . Related through the mother and a new star skyrockets to greater famel A drama so great, so power= ful, it required a new méthod to bring it to the screeh— NARRATAGE pONER SPENCER TRACY with COLLEEN MOORE RalphMorgan HelenVinson A Jesse L. Lasky Production / Pirected by WILLIAM K. HOWARD NOTE: Due to shipping conditions Rue fiight will be postponed until next Saturday Starts Sunday-- “BEAUTY FOR SALE” FINE Wines - Liquors - Beer CALIFORNIA GROCERY TELEPHONE 478 PROMPT DELIVERY Nettleton Shoes for Men 050000006 00006000« LEADER DEPT. ST George Brothers Exclusive Juneau Dealers Removal Notice Moccasins Lopsided 3. California ockfi!h' variant . Placid " warning ery . Object of Worship . Florida, “Juneau’s Own Beauty P:rlors” to act .as arbitrator between the striking fishermen and the packers if his services were acceptable to| all parties concerned. Wr. Wade was suggested yesterday by Gov. John W. Troy for that mlssion. The Copper River fishermen have been on strike several weeks. The | Governor was advised yesterday by the Cordova Chamber of Commerte that the situation was hopelessly deadlocked and asked to get the two sides together for arbitration. | , Following that, h¢ wired the fish-| ermen, packers and the Chamber of Commerce suggesting Mr. Wade who was then on an airplane bound for Cordova to investigate condi- tions. When it was found impossi- ble to reach its destination, the plane returned here late yesterday afternoon. Diily Empire Want Ads Pay “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” “Jineaw’s Own Store” d _ | proved in health. The remainder of | one-third cup French dressing. | Chill ingredients. Combine and serve, To remove ice cream stains from linens, soak in cold water and then ! wash out in warm water and soap | suds. WELL KNOWN STEWARD ON WHITE PASS AND YUKON * ROUTE BOAT GOES mSlDE P. D. MacMillan, Chief Steward on the Yukon River steamer Cas- ca, was aboard the Princess Norah | on his way Into the Interior for the season after spending the winter in the states. Mr. MacMillan, better known to his many friends as “Pete,” was seriously ill during the latter part |of the winter but is greatly img o | the Casca’s crew preceded him north on the last trip of the Prin- cess Norah, but Mr. MacMillan !remained south in order to com- \ pletely-recover before beginning the season’s work. - eee | JUNEAUITES IN SEATTLE | Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hill, of Ju- neau, are registered at the Clare- mont Apartment Hotel, in Seattle. ]Mr. Hill was for several years con- nected with the local radio staff (and has been transferred to the | Seattle office. county whose county seat is Miami . Potato: colloq. : pen coprt Lalr: 14 -qunlld city Exchnnn il : Baths Into view ¢ Grows ola g n Grows o 43. Pllljlke h‘llfl et N 44, '.l'llm ont 46. Garda'% ime en! 48. En hh 4. Awfy the’ mind to learning Ravenus 9. Cubic meter’ . Tuminant s Grlmmallcll . DibSolnte fellow . Clothe or invest Look after . Otherwise . Tall grass stems ’ 73 Not hard (F PP FT PP IP T duRm/ fl.lll// o IIIIH.II . l'uunder of Christian Science . Female sande Fool?lka part ase 3 Alternoon (uncllonl n; gltan slave . <ER B S amane AFE TP [P || 771 Vel 4%!!. w Hfll%flllfl 4 amaag # e TR T JEEEC JNEEECJEEE JduEEE ) N AMERICAN BEAUTY PARLORS @® Will open in their new location on Fromt Street opposite Ccurgf- Brothers, TUESDAY, MAY 29TH. @ A most modern shop will be operated and %pecnal low prices are offered on all lines of beauty work. ALSIE J. WILSON

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