The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 31, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1934. T OF MOVlE-LAND LAST mE AMBASSADOR TO Sop FRENCH BUTLER | | Veteran Actor Has Part in “Crime of Century” a Ctoliseum i 2067 {Comedian Enacts Role ofv A fascinating new star . A A and Baptiste in “My Weak 1 { LEW-AYRES ness” at Capitol handsome, tender...ot the peck | From French Ambassador to of his popularity French butler is the leap made b in Adrian Rosley, character actor, ng the gayest, giddiest, snappiestll | playing a role in B. G. DeS) s | musical romance by thelll musical production for Fox I"'Alm.“ Jean Hersholt, the harassed alien- ist in Paramount’s “The Crime of |the Century,” the murder-mystery- {drama coming tonight to the Coli- seum Theatre, began his profession- i greatest of all musical pro- {“My Weakness,” at the Capitol| al career by playing in repertoire ducers. Theatre. in practically every country in Eu- ¢ Rosley recently closed a road tour rope, including the Scandinavian. | - SM | in “Of Thee I Sing” in Wh Hersholt, born and educated in U < had the role of the French am-; Copenhagen, also received his early { bassador who added so many com-| stage training there, as the famous - plications to the amusing plot of] | Dagmar Theatre. He is one of the g with JEAN HERSHOLT » the Fxnlxt;.«x- Prize ‘produCUDn‘»flnd: rgal pioneers, having .;l))pt‘.u‘vd in 5 « WYNNEGIBSON * !;\qs 1‘(‘7[111:1_ at his dboniq“l}lfi;:‘r’l‘ ‘i);z;ur:: 1:;‘3!(:1)9:\;:;11'}; \(\n( bAu-k”x)n £ !« STUART ERWIN « home when he recelive a call Ir 1 o e le S Irst screen ap- P Hollywood to enact “Baptiste,” a| }pe:u-nnce in America in 1915 and g { « FRANCES DEE * French butler in DeSylva’s picture. | |has been consistently featured 4 B P SCHULBERG The actor had just bought a new since. Amongst his better-known ' Production. G Garamount Gicture performances were those in “Abie's Irish Rose,” “The Student Prince,” “The Case of Sergeant Grischa,” “‘Susan Lennox,” “Transatlantic” and “Grand Hotel.” Hersholt has | an excellent physique, being 5 feet | 11 inch tall and weighing 180 ¢ pounds. He has medium brown hair, 25(- FRANGE DEFERS T0 AMERICA ON CHINA POLICY (Continued rrom Page One) | car—a small one of popular make | —and was loathe to leave it behind. | So he picked up his friend, Tom | Wade, former race driver, and four | and a half days later they arrived 00d. i “Wade had driven across the | country many times,” Rosley said,| “and knew all the short cuts. He| also knows how to handle a car to get the best speed out of it} without straining. Consequently we | | travelled rapidly and made marve- | i GHOST CITY v STARTS TONIGHT 1lous time.” Lilian Harvey and Lew Ayres Share starring honors in “My ness,” and others in the ¢; I clude Charles Butterworth, Sid Sil- vers, Harry Langdon, Henry Trav-| ers, Irene Bentley, Dixie Frances, Irene Ware, Mary Howard, Bar- Obssud by bara Weeks, Susan Fleming, Mar- Dovid I celle Edwards, Jean Allen, Mar- Butler jorie King and Gladys Blake. e ATTEMPTS LIFE | BY EXPLOSIVES ALAMEDA, Ca:., May 31.—Aban-! doning the weird dynamite suicid PREV[EW TONIGHT ’u:hemc. Frank Bennett emerg “College Coach” | | | navy. | French interests would be hard hit if Nippon were to throw a pro- | ' tectorate over the vast area which for more than a century has been a commercial field for Europe. The French trade stake is far inferior to that of the United States, but| | her colonial possessions ~surpass | America’s. | i In addition, trade with China! | has been on the upgrade the last two years and business between, ¢ iiuiciis | France and Tndo-China amounted | ing. The frock and the cape |0 More than a million francs last | year. | | !and does not compare with Japan's | | | WE DO OUR PARY from his automobile and was im-| | mediately seized by the police, who had been trying all day to talk| him out of killing himself by set-| - ting off explosives in his auto by Hord's a trim cutfit destined to make any summcr afterncon e d a contraption held in his hand. | are striped, brcwn and yellow. The pert jacket is. sciid brown. With a brown- waned, broad-brimmed Financial troubles and a long it cffers a summer symphony of lines and e¢lc:c. It's modeled by Patricia Ellis, list of other troubles in the family | 4 BEER led him to decide to attempt o kill himself. Bennett told the police he was| @ All barbers are requested to meet at the Pioneer Barber Shop TONIGHT at 8 o’clock for the purpc Business Views Clash i Indo-China, France's colonial| pearl, lies at Japan's back door step while Tahiti and New Cale-| everything but a major Re best-looking rookie in the Na-{donia are within striking distance.| ing staff. tional League, despite the-fact he|France also has a concession in| » of form- an ex-soldier. " { . . . of Guaranteed i G L o PP and his pitchers have had less than a full year of mmu"‘ICmna proper, at Kwangchow. These | ing a permanent organization to func- TPrSn | 3 <o # nding our eagle-eyed league experience before entering| possessions are the government's . . Qua]mes. %‘r’fmg‘:lr;;:;’i:e FRARILS quess (of) the press for upw the big show. | first consideration when they have tion under the National RC(‘OV(’I‘y The assurance Lhat you are Pariatt. hadva Sl and “thred] of a month of campaign Dizzy Dean is still doing the|to deal with the island empire. Act. and the end is not buying the purest and BEST children. n family in the! Business interests, however, fight | 18{ pitching for the Dx 1 BEER is yours when you pat~ } | Residents in homes in a radius of fact it is say 'th" A’s ar>pig leagues, which is no surprise|€ach other over the Japanese ques- | ! | the real sensatipn of the Ame to anybody except the kid brother,|tion. One group of industries hopes | ronize this establishment! Rhinelander three blocks from the auto hur-| riedly left the district. ® Please Be There! !League so far and actually may paul . . . Add Ducky Medwick't0 Profit by business in Manchu-| | give the Yankees a run for the t of cleanup cloute: kuo, and therefore wants France | SR e R e s i D A WS S AT S S BT e — e - ¢ 1 Spanerer m ASe- | pennant. I say the Yankees becau give Chuck Klein, Mel | to remain on good terms with Nip- ":d Il"""I""I"""""II""III"""I"""' ! Right | js qistinctly the club for an > e AE W‘uuo;» pon. Another, fearful of being| Alt Heidelberg 1‘0“'L ‘fl"ll"k““é Bb‘\"L &1 ““‘”‘ and all of them to beat they | or anybody a battle for the lead in|Sdueezed out of the Orient by an matter to Memp! ill, as he cON- | want to halt another pro st RS | “Asia-for-Asiatics” poli Ils for . 2 d - alling | runs-batt this year policy, calls for . ON DRAUGHT ° templates the erratic and alling| runaway. | $E1a s FeRr. e s | pag ettlj acaroni or K J gandition of s Fee¥hle "Bl Young men by the name c O e | France's diplomacy is further, ihiss e Om- pitching b-l | carea, Marcum, Kline, Cain, M DR. J. W. EDMUNDS ; complicated by her European pol-| N ll 3 k 25 T’ M ners When Terry called : in the haffey and Benton, most of rist. chartered a boat for | 1Y Of Playing along with Russia in 00( Ps’ ¢ I) gs.’ >C 7 e ine {south, pitching looked to be the |sirangers to such altitude, 1avc|s weckn i lasine SONEAD | te face of the nazi menace. She| . CA PITAL |absolute least of his worries. The | been doing a succession of pitchin’|at 7:00 am S‘%T‘iJRI)AY AJL}NF finds it difficult to be friendly Re T tlo'l | regulars all appeared in good health | iricks under Mr. Mack’s tutel % iy q * | with Russia and Japan at the same [ J | i % Olark . was Ay {2nd, returning to Juneau about | . M oNEtan. Weson O 35| while the renowned Grove nurses|juno gth; will thereafter be a the | e % P l Beer Parl TS threatening et any moment to Ie-| his sore arm,, Walberg does odd(Gastineau Hotel until the sailing|, S0 [OF the time being, spokes- arlors 0 gain old-time skill | pitching jobs and Earnshaw g¢|of the first beat to ihe Wesiward, | CP %% the Japanese ~problem \ In rapid suceession, Clark’s come- | belted out of the Zox. 3ee Dr. AT oNeR R, | Must be straddled, ‘‘while Uncle| B BILL DOUGLAS back failed, Leroy Parmalee Was| go what pri ¢ SRE Fhamunds AT ONCE, BE-|sam keeps them in check.” S o . £ ANeEL Simimales. e o what price reputation and |F Y EVENING, his last | : 5 (lnd knocked out by an amm.nh‘( OPer-| past performance? Young Joe C lay before sailing. Telephone 10| | Prompt Ddlvery s ‘] | ations: and ‘Hal Sehumacher L“i“d.camua wins 10 games and loses NOW for this appointment. Room | - - i |fo show his sensational 1933 form.|for Jersey City in the Internation- |216, GASTINEAU HOTEL. adv. | Juneau Icc Cream | a oom ‘Ther grea{; Carl L!-Iuhbe-.l lal‘t;nv 1881 1angue 'last sdanon, pitching only i R i i { performed up to expectations S0{one ghutout all year. But he come i Notices a | Parlors ” l far but he can’t carry the load |,y to the n:njm' )l,eagues wh‘h hard- ;M'm,'fi Rarnion Notloow a8 Sl one ! Exclustve Dealers HORLUCK'S | Nufsed el [ 3 . with hard-| pire. office. [ | ' DANISH ICE OREAM | |1y enough mention for the boys to! o e R } | » | . Of all these sad developm -m/v Lu' tbe sure about spelling his name | ki jjthe world champions the saddest|ang starts standing the big fellows | - ° S the m?‘““‘y o 54*:"(;““‘}3_ “jon their heads, including a th: |hit & real winning stride. PIayers)ny shutout of the formidable Cleve- 3 1 say the trouble is that Hal's “sink-1anq ndians. J n Lu-mbe M lls I ! |er” has ot been sinking and that | | CENCY uneau T U b nc. | |he is just another batting praci o 1 A | | Sporting Salad | pitcher when this deceptive fea-J > e A 2 v e ey o St ket pesem . | e tion. However, Terry has confi-|Yankees look so much more f . dence that this young, earnest right midable than a year ago is that GAS [ ] 'I?INDO CLEAN NG NOW OPEN! hander will snap back into shut- |burly Red Ruffing, who won only OILS u . | jout form at any mc 3 {nine games in 1983, bung up five | Lds = by e | Hictories within the fist montn of GREASES G % PHONE 485 i e man who may enjoy | the current campaigning . . Don ar n ’ Sunda 'hcartie:;[ of all laughs at the crit- |Heffner, @ freshman second sacker, . i o l a o A e Ch, k ics this season is none other than;’didn’t get as much spring bally-| - w en the patriarch of Shibe Park, Connie [hoo as Red Rolfe, Yankee short- Juneau I Mack. |stop, but he has been playinz b UNITED FOOD Co You Were | Dinner | T am disclosing no secret when I:Ler and more useful baseball than otors a s L] : 4 i |say the elderly Mr. Mack resented the ex-Dartmouth ace . .. Cookie Their Best Friend I | the results of our poll placing the;anagetw. 19-year-old recruit sec ob . CASH GROCERS ... would you know how to | |A's well down the list, in sgvenmmnd baseman of the Pirates, is 4 roor MAIN . » 5 e St b ity st 1] AUK BAY INN place, and the implication his clublsensation so far and consider b Phone 16 We Deliver ~Meats—Phone 16 ¢ sibly in her hour of troyble? RRINGING UP FATHER Bv GEORGE McMANUS -GEE' 'LL BE SORRY: E ON-GIT THERES NO LUSE OF ME QCAD WHEN THEY S 83';4 09 F‘rf\:,\/g SITTIN' DOWN AROUND i You may be called upon some | day to discharge the duties | of a man’s closest friend. Pre- || pare now to perform those | With All the Trimmings! . WELL: THIS IS THE Regular Dinner $1.50 NEXT ROOM TO BE duties as capable as you do CLEaNED-SQ L Tien T i el AINT GOT ALL HERE-AS FLL ONLY . 5 ¥ | [ = DAY N - your regiiigs, fopingss i Extra portions will be 5 THE DEN AN TAKE ARGUND HERE- o ® | charged for Make your appointments NOW! The Charles W. 1 l Carter Mortuary [ ° PHONE 136-2 | “The Last Service Is the } See Ed Jahnke or the Channel Bus Line fishing gear furnished Construction Co. | Juneau Phone 487 i WARRACK i BOATS FOR RENT, with [ |

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