The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, December 19, 1934, Page 3

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SCENES OF GAY and fame. LAST TIME TONIGHT “Girl Without a Room” CHARLES FARRELL MARGARET CHURCHILL STARTS Tomorrow PREVIEW Tonight N MAD PARIS | b L |Light Hearted Artists Gam- bol Through ‘Girl With' | the Russian approaches. out a Room’ Coliseum | | able as ors especially, in as crazy a “shot” it brings A charming and notable picture is Charles R. Rogers' “Girl With- out a Room” which will be:seen tonight at the Coliseum. It is. a gay, Parisian romance with music — but it isn't to be classed as a musical comedy be- cause there is no chorus, and the ymusic is woven directly into the | story. ‘We have madcap artists and | models in a sincere human story wrapped in comedy. We have Charles Farrell, the - beart-beat in |many a feminine fan’s breast, for- | saking romance at times to show {us what a capable comedian he is. | Parrell enacts an American ar- | tist who goes to Paris to study and i adopts one of the “nut” schools of { art—one in which the artist paints | what he feels and not what he | sees. Charles enters a goofy paint- ‘ing in a contest and wins—but the prizes. JOSEPH M. SCHENCX praern . LORETTA YOUNG®G «dCARY GRANT "BORN 1O BE BAD A DARRYL F. ZANUCK Production Dinied by LOWELL SHERMAN Aueared iy UNITED. ARTISTS, 5 25° | It brings a new Marguerite. | the night. Her figure is worth seeing: B ANY | program tomorrow night. TIME 600 SEATS 25° CHRISTMAS EVE DANCE : : THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 19, 1934. - .. . o i e - : | painting 15 upside down! Bediam, | 4SRRI notoriety, mockery are his. But he | | 1 | discovers that it is a way to wealth | ROMANGE LA I D | . Charlie Ruggles was never fun-"% | |nter than in his portrayal as Far- rell’s pal. Ruggles is continually \n' jams of one sort or another. He runs away with the comedy hon- duel as ever was staged in which he is by a Russian and there- after has to play dead every time] ““Girl Without a Room,” is not- Marguerite | Churchill back to the screen after |an absence of a year and a half. We | remember her as a player of t00~ | sweet ingenue roles. Now - she is sophisticated woman of the wogld—the uneonventional model Wwho never knows where she will | sleep. And the clothes she wears {in most of the scenes wouldn't | keep a gnat warm on a frosty “Born to Be Bad,” with Loretta Young and Cary Grant will ~be | previewed at: the Coliseum Theatre tonight and shown on the regular At Moose Hall Christmas Eve. |Best of music and different door —adv. At Bl o s i o s KAY FRANCIS |§ s LOVELY STAR OF | [2oasmsr e 0CTOR HONCH | RN Al |Excellent Supporting Cast rings from the screen to the dépths of I i Powertill D¥ama your heart! The most dramatici— the at Capitol most. powerful ~ the most fodthright drama ever written ‘for foyr ggeat stars! TONIGHT “Doctor Monica,” story in which | both wife and the ‘‘other woman" try to sacrifice themselves to in- sure the happiness of the other, in which! Warney Bros. have scast three of ‘the seréen's outstanding stars, will open at the Oapitol Theatre tonight. i Kay Francis has the title role, but although she portrays the part of a physician, there are no haos- pital scenes or medical { Sequences ! The “other woman” is Jean Muir, and the husband, beloved by both, is played by Warren William. Ver- ree Teasdale has another stellar role, and other important members | of the cast include Phillip Reed, STARTS TONITE “ Fortune { ~ Emma Dunn, Herbert Bunston, L She wanted Bmdway Ann Shoemaker, Virginia Ham- to call her bad...to mond, Hale Hamilton and Virginia In the Sunny Pine. South THEATRE ¢« TOTAL RED CROSS HOGNAH PNEUMONIA } ROLL CALL AMOUNT | EPIDEMIC IS MILDER ‘ REACHES $1,233 THAN FIRST THOUGHT Good news was received on the | last mail boat from Hoonah by the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs when Miss Viola F. Franz, Government nurse, wrote that the pneumonia epidemic reported from | that place, was not as serious as | had been feared. No deaths from the disease were THE ANNUAL RICE AND AHLERS’ BIG FREE KIDDIE SHOW'! With the arrival of $31 from Chilkoot Barracks for the 1934 an- nual Red Cross Roll Call, all com- munities in the Juneau Chapter have reported, according to H. L. Redlingshafer, roll call chairman. k'l ‘The subscription from Chilkoot Barracks brings the total amount L subscribed in the Juneau Chapter, including this city and communi- | '¢Ported by Miss Franz, though ties previously reported in The al cases have been sent to Juneau for careyin the Government Empire, up to $1233, Mr. Redling- HRater Hospital, according to Dr. Vance Murray, Medical Director for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. —eeo——— - THEATRE NUGGET SHOP Special gift tables loaded with Astronomers say a person of av- choice articles at $1.00 and less. erage eyesight can see about 7,000 dv. stars. GOING NOW AT HALF PRICE A RARE OPPORTUNITY TO GET ONE OF THESE COATS AT SACRIFICE PRICES! . ONLY 15 COATS FOR SALE has. Goldstein ompany GOLDSTEIN BUILDING LEAN-UP 15 7w Coots increase her fame and The plot is taken from a fa- [ ! i her “1“’, . .. But ::::sng:o;i;g gl:r;.m:txxnd 1(:lomvs t;)1 a £ Pll Take Vanilla . ra c climax when s love ‘f‘?P‘d in and the wife arranges to give up her | | Gocfy Movies complicated matters. husband when she finds he is the | —0— Fox Film P father of. the other woman’s child, ¥ Late News but is thwarted by the girl. | Dealing - entirely with the soclal elect of New ¥York, the picture is set in the background of beautiful Long Island estates and in lux- urious apartments. William Keigh- ley directed ffom the screen play by Charles Kenyon, which was dramatized from an English screen adaptation of the Polish play by Laura Walker Mayer. JOAN BLONDELL HEADS CAST OF ‘SROADWAY BAD' Sweeping swiftly from gayety and glamor to strong emotional dra- ma, “Broadway Bad,” the Fox pic- ture which opened at the Uptown Theatre last night, skillfully com- K A Y BROADWAY BAD o BLONDE CORTEZ Ginger Rogers ¢ Adrienne Ames Victor Jory GEORGE VANDERBIL Big Adventure Film {“DEVIL’S PLAYGROUND” |Preview Tonight-—-1 A. M. A Uit JEANMUIR WARREN WILLIAM | YERREE L TEASDALE larner’ Bros.' 4-Star Sensation SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU APITOL THEATRE P ines all of the elements esenual‘monden is the masterful perform- o outstanding screen entertain- | ance of Ricerdo Cortez. As a Man- :mem. hattan playboy who after all is B Here is an intriguing human-in- | considerabl> of a man, Cortez nev- I | terest story beautifully Interpreted |er has appe:red (o befter advan- Ginger Rogers, peppery and rative; Adrienne Ames, an eye- 7 siren if ever therc was one; n Vincent, Vietor Jory and that winsome child actor, Rennie are others who win new s with their performances. remiainder of (he characteri- - § ions measure 1p to the high 1l is a revelation in standard set by the feetured play- & by a cast of finished performers ta ) je that all-important stamp | d to their work. Here are |u owed by tears, and eye reeded by emotional lso is music used as ' § employed on the enhance emotional and He ould n to ers. onthe ruins of her repu'w? NI 20 o5, A nts for happiness with | “LIGHTS O’ JUNEAU” apons at a woman’s| Until the sziling of the Alaska Called upon to portray |and the Princess Norah our special y known human emo- Christmas Gift framed pictures in 5 Blondell rises to real |wooden boxes and Christmas wrap- nich stamp her as one of |pings will be mailed post paid at s foremost emotional ac- our expense. A complete line of | Christmas gifts of exceptional value. nking next to that of Miss adv. WINTER AND POND CO. ---NOTICE--- There will be a SPECIAL MEETING of the stockholders of the ALASKA THEATRE CO. at THE UPTOWN on— ; THURSDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1934 AT 8 O’CLOCK P. M. ° There will be no regular show THURSDAY S $ COMING SATURDAY and SUNDAY | A Special Treat for Juneau Music Loverss! MR. BYRON MILLER—In Person Trumpet Soloist of Note Accompanied by MARJORY MILLER . . Music Supervisor, Ketchikan Schools -

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