The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 22, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, NOV. 22, 1934, Final Showing Tonight JOSEPH M: SCHENCK HARDIN alllust CLIVE BROOK OTTO KRUGER TULLIO CARMINATI - DICKIE MOORE a DARRYL F. ZANUCK PROBUCTION ATOUS COUAT TV - Srvared e AT TS PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 A. M. JAMES .CAGNEY “Jimmy the Gent” SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU APITO THEATRE COMING—— WONDER BAR THEATRE 1A SOLITARY COPIMEMENT LL 1N MURDERERS ROW FAMOUS PRISONAGYmond THE GREAT RAYMOND Saturday—Sunday HAGLUND FUNERAL HELD TODAY FROM CARTER MORTUARY Last rites for Albin Haglund, 46-year-old veteran Alaska mining man who died Monday, were held from C. W. Carter's Mortuary at 2 o'clock this afteronon. Pallbearers were: Carl Ander- son, Olgat Anderson, Dave Carl- son, Lewis Drydahl, Oscar Jensen, and Olaf Bodding. Rev. John A. Glasse read the funeral service. Interment took place in the family plot in Ever- green Cemetery. Haglund, a victim of pneumonia is survived in Juneau only by a son, Hilding. Tne dead man also survived in New York state several relatives. SALTH TK| Famous Soap Lake Mineral Baths, Body Manipulation, Drugless Institute. —adv SHOP T CHAS. FARRELL, BETTE DAVIS ARE G ||| ROMANTIC LEADS New Racket_Disclosed in ‘The Big Shakedown’ at the Coliseum A new kind of racket, with a dif- ferent twist of the gangster menace is révealed in the latest First Na- tiohal " picture, “The Big Shake- down,” which comes to the Coll seum’ tonight. ‘The plot concerns the activities of a former band of liquor racks eers who turn to the cut rate drug|.pne Morning After” takes Youlup Main Street. The driver favored business when Repeal makes this | game unprofitable. Sam Engels and Niven Busch, who wrote the story, “Cut Rate,” upon which the picture is based, put plenty of thrills in it. There is also a de- lightful romance in the plot. Charles Farrell and Bette Davis are the lovers in the picture, pla ing together for the first time. Ricardo Cortez is the leader of the gangsters. His two loves are Glen- da Farrell and Renee Whitney. the first of whom he puts on the spot because she knows too much, after he has jilted her for the lat- ter. ‘There is a strong supporting cast of noted players, including Allen Jenkins, Phillip Faversham, Robert Emmett O'Connor, John Wray, George Pat Collins, Adrian Morris, Dewey Robinson, Ben Hendricks and George Cooper John Francis Dillon, one of the foremost directors in Hollywood, is said to have handled the cleverly, transferring {ue and suspense of the story onto the screen. The play was written by Niven Busch and Rian James. picture | realism | — HILARIOUS: 0 ‘The Morning After’ with Sally Ei'ers, Ben Lyons Is Delightful Comedy We‘ve all read at one time oOr another those thrilling Ruritanian |Spy dramas in which the hero falls into the clutches of the'sec- Iret service and escapes with the | heroine ' from the vety 'jaws of |death in the nick of ‘time. - At |the- Uptown - Theatre this = week, hilariously back to these realms. A brilliantly conceived ‘burlesque directed by 'Alan Dwan, ‘“The Morning After,” runs through the |gamut of all that is delightful and absurd in espionage stories, and consistently thrills and mys- | tifies filmgoers and amuses them greatly. Ben Lyon and Sally Eilers star in this Majestic program, and popular as these two. stars are they have seldom appeared to bet- ter advantage. They have appear- |ed together in a film but once | before and it has been left to the Majestic Company to discover .one of the most delightful teams the, screen has yet presented to us. Adapted by the director from an original story by Fred Thomp- son, “The Morning After” con- cerns a happy-go-lucky young Ameriran who is mistaken for a Eurcpean spy, and is dispatched to Paris on a delicate mission and whirled into the vortex iof Hetzelburgian Politics. Their ad- ventures nearly prove fatal both for themselves and filmgoers, the 54 MEN ARE PUT TO WORK ON FERA | PROJECTS IN CITY Fifty-four men were employed today to be put to work on FERA projects in the city to relieve those | formerly employed, who today com- | plete the 30 hours work allowed cach during a week. Crews are staggered on this relief work so that while a portion will complete their weekly 30-hour work today. others will not do so for eral days. The men were hired at FERA headquarters in the Governor's Of- fice and sent from there to the City Clerk’s office to report and be allotted to the various projects underway. You are aVital Link in the Grat Chain F Credit REIA TN < EDIT is like a chain of many links—made up of producers, manufacturers, retailers and profes- sional men—and you, the customer You are the vital link! For prompt payment on your part starts money around “the credit circle,” through thé retailer and professional man to the manufacturer, the producer and the worker—and whether your in- come is from labor or from stocks and bonds, it will come back to you. VOD VTR & w7, Youas But if you fail to meet your obligas tions promptly the credit chain is broken. If you delay payment of a bill for two, three or four months, 'you're taking the amount of that bill out of circulation, and, perhaps un- intentionally, retarding business re- covery. Let's pull together! Let’s use our credit—buy what we need—and, by paying promptly, give others a chance to earn what they need. Use your credit freely and pay all bills ¢+ by sthe 10th sunFace Alaska Credit Bureau S Valen(jn: B’qflding CHARLES WAY ‘COMING TO THE COLISEUM “SATURDAY ‘AND SUNDAY or promptly as agreed Phone 28 OR, Manager PLUMBERS and SHEET METAL WORKERS '~ BURLESQUE - | AT UPTOWN, Auto Crashes Doctor’s Windows; It’s Cold, Too Dr. G. A. Doelker, proprietor of the Drugless Health Institute, will sleep cold tonight i In fact, Dr. Doelker will be fortunate, indeed 'if he does not |have to take some of his own| “drugless medicine” for a bad cold. For, it seems, the whole front of his establishment at Front and Main Streets is gone. And when | we say gone, we mean gone with a | completeness that leaves little to stop that bone-chilling Taku wind from sweeping right into Dg/ Doelker's very living quarters. The cause? Just a crowded repd- ster automobile that couldn’t make up its mind whether to!'turn down |to Willoughby Avenue;or proceed | one direction. One of the pas- sengers voted ‘the other way. It 4 Wwas a tie. And Dr. Doelker's front Jwindows yielded, | Carpenters were busy today re- placing the broken glass and wood- en framework. Even though the car | smashed through a two -by - four | support, it was not damaged. Jerry Hudson, of Douglas, reported to Dr. Doelker that he would stand re- sponsible for all damages. No other names of occupants of the car, numbering at least three, were learned. majority of whom will be tickled to death with its snappy burlesque. Ben Lyon and Sally Eilers are in the main roles. 4 ' — Ll GREENAA MARRIES Charles Greenaa, owner and Man- aged of the Sanitary Market and for many years prominent in Pet- ersburg business activitiés, recently married Mrs. Hazel Kerman of ANN HARDING'S LOVELY VOICE IS ATTRACTION Outstanding Star Gives Splendid Performance 1 in ‘Gallant ‘Lady’ ! The “Harding Voice” eloquent with emotion and vibrant with| sincerity, is:the envy'of all enviers | in Hollywood, “and | the dramatist whose destiny gwardg:him the priv- | ilege of having ,Ani ‘Harding as- | signed to interpret his character on stage or screen considers him- self blessed of the gods. When Gilbert Emery, noted play- i wright and dramatic critic, and Douglas -Doty, wrote the story of “Gallant Lady,” they had one actress in mind and she was that one. This information was passed on to Joseph M. Schenck and Daryl F. Zanuck when the script was submitted for their approval, and | it was not until they had ascer- tained that her serviced would be available for this picture that they bought it for 20th Cenury. “Gallant Lady,” a United Artists | release, which is playing at the Capitol Theatre tells the story of| a girl whose lover loses his life| in- an attempt to fly the Atlantic, ignorant of the fact that she is; tw» bear his child. From that trag-| TONIGHT: AR edy, and the surrender of her son for adoption immediately after his birth she rises to business success. | Destiny brings these men into the | pattern of her life and at length} offers her the prvilege o fre-un- ion with her boy under penalty of silence regarding her true iden: tity. Miss Harding’s “Gallaant Lady," Ketchikan. | Local Union Number 1 The firms of Rice and Ahlers, Steve Stan- worth its under work. and George Alf workers and the NRA code Telephone 355, Labor Temple, and we will gladly furnish an estimate on work that you may wish done coming under our jurisdic- tion. Watch this space for ors are considered fair operating consistently for National Housing [ H | | [ | | | | | i a list of 100';’; Union Houses and we would appreciate your sup- port. Alaska Laborers’ Association | | | { —Most Efficient—S s Most Bedutiful ~E nNEw HAMILTON \ HEACH \ MODEL'C, turdiest t‘omtruction asiest ,‘tofl Use Attachments sold lep&i';tch Juice Extractor - - $3.00 Meat Grinder - - 3.25 Slicer-Shredder - - 3.75 Alaska Ele Power Unit - - - - $475 Coffee Grinder,- - 3.25 Potatd Peeler - - - 8.50 ol ctric Light and Power Co. JUNEAU—Phone 6 DOUGLAS—Phone 18 is appealing in every way, a girl! who has known both the bitterness of poverty and sorrow, and the sweetness of success. With both of these environments as a back- ground, the story provides full seope for her versatility. —— - . ® e 0es e oo e noeoe . HOSPITAL NOTES . e e 00 00000000 Mrs. J. Zauorff entered St. Anr’s Hospital for medical treatmen' .ast night. The condition DuPree, Douglas, an operation Tuesday, was repori- ed at St. Ann’s Hospital this morning as being “good. — e Daily Empire Want Ads Pay! IlIIImlllllIIIIIiiiiIifiiiiiliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘ Sally Eilers Ben Lyon “MORNING AFTER” STARTING TOMORROW The Greatest Human Interest Drama Since “WAY DOWN EAST” HELEN FOSTER of Mrs. Robert who underwent ; i | | : 1 i f | UPTOW lillllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIleBIIIIIIIIIlIlIIIIIII Home Owners " Building---Remodeling . Send for FRE? catalog wg can save you real money on all home remodeling or build- {ing needs. Our complete illustrated cata- log is full of informeation and prices — on a single item or . material for an entire home, or [ other construction work. | PFine Cabinet Work at lowest | cost—built to'your order or from stock sizes.” ; Write today f SASH - 0. B. WILLIAMS CO. 1953 First Ave: So., Seattle, Wash, FREE catalog. DOORS SEATS C H AR FARR tea he Shaked GLEN DOUBLE FEATURE BILL FEATURE NO. 1 . ... It Tears the Heart Out of the Chiselers! See the screen plant dynamite under the latest scheme to plunder-the pub- lic — and blow it galley west! LL oly grip The Big own DO CORTEZ RRELI ATLEN JENKINS E med forthe fiest time as scr rot National Picture with RICAG DA I 25c¢c MOOSE With ANY TIME DANCE MOOSE HALL Admis ion $1.00 Saturday Night November 24 Ladies Free @ Music by Eu;l Blinzler and his Orchestra 10 DIAMONDS BOTH RINGS Value thaf's indontly epporestl: vw_nnhl-lh.b-nq of these selected dicivonds 1o recilse their beovty. i

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