The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, May 14, 1935, Page 3

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ADDED Hollywood Parade Super Snooper News PICTURE OlIS[UM (: THEATRE Starting Tonight U‘PfOWN FEATURE IS HILARIOUS COMEDY | M WITH ROMANCE, FUN| WICKERSHA “Once to Every Bachelor” is the . {intriguing title of the new offering | at the Uptown Theatre and with to Be Marion Nixon and Neil Hamilton | in the featured roles, it provides| | comedy-drama with romance, fun |and clever situations. Suggested by Eleanor Gates’ story, “Search for the Spring,” and directed by William Nigh, the film is one of the hits ‘of the season Honorary Degree Conferred on« Juneau Man by University An honorary degree of Doctor of! Laws will be conferred upon Judge James Wickersham, former Dele- pate to Congress, by the University : i 5urmg N e Commence.|and in addition is the kind of a ment Exercises this month, ac-|Picture that the children can take ccrding to an announcement ma ‘IH‘CH parents 10, without ‘any he today by President Charles E. Bun- | 'at0n: nell. The story concerns the predica-: Judge Wickersham ‘uneau |Ment of & gay playboy whose| on the Alask: the uni- | Wealthy aunt warns him that his |income will cease unless the scan- | dal that is constantly linked with % 30 his many G.er|niq name is stopped. A threatened activities, Judge Wickersham has giyorce suit, with his name as co- long been an ardent student and autn left for < respondent, makes him realize the crity cn Alaskan history, and o ,uity of the situation. Marriage | : ble 1i= | umulat a remarkable i HS the way out, he concludes and | 3 books, pamphlets and|y, eneying happenings are hilar- | original manuscripts and 1 doc- {1y to say the least. ments relative to early Alaskan i) IDFRNELE explorations and history. The Judge % H has also published a bibliography t0 Mist Harbor where they have of ' Alaska, cannery operations. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Davenport, of w York City, their daughter Jo-| anne, and Mr. Davenport’s sister,| —--— (devoted all her CANNERY OFFICIALS AND PARTY ARE ON WAY WEST ON ALASKA Mrs. Helene Bowman, of Beverley Hills, California, are making the| trip in the Bradford's party, and Mr. Davenport will continue to| Bristo]l Bay with them. He is inter- estod with Mr. Bradford in the Mist | Harbor cannery operations. Mr: Davenport, little Joanne, and Mrs Bowman are returning on the south-bound voyage of the Alaska.| While she is at the Westward, M:s. Bradford will look after the | four trading posts which she owns | in the Bristol Bay district. | Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Bradford ‘were in Juneau this morning while the steamer Alaska was in port on their way to Seward where they will join the floating cannery Santa Flavia, of the Lowe Trading Company, of which Mr. Bradford is manager. From Seward they will continue JUST RECEIVED! Fresh Fruits and Vegetables CALIFORNIA GROCERY Phone 478 Prompt Delivery Save Th May [ 4 i is Date! 16th The MINFIELD SCHOOL eclosing exercises will be held ‘during the evening of May '16th. The €han- nel Bus will make a special trip, leaving from the' Juneau Tce Cream Parlors at 6:30 p.m. Reund trip fare, $1.00. Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Dave Housel, Prop. ' Phone Single Q-2 rings. ¥ Dolores Costello’s Return to Sereen Seen Whether or Not Divorce Rumors True WORLD WARNED BY SECRETARY OF TREASURY Currency Policy of United States Is Stated- Summary Given IINGTON, May 14.—Speak- 1 0f zold and foreign trade. Treasury Morgenthau wddress Trom the T t w ed the world will not Dbe an ob- International eurrency and the United States to peg the dol- as- Morzenthau analysis 1ava samm own ncies we last, until Belgium joined.” Morgenthau said: “We unwilling stabilize. We urrency no more than can go either way." - WARNER BROTHERS | PICTURE HITS /ARE | TO BE SHOWN HERE X I Manager Brothers Pictures, while over the week-end, on to Alaska, conferred Manag Charles Beal, of the tol and Coliseum, relative to new Warner Brothers pictures booked for future show- are not ar-old romance of given Hellywoodites a ¢f what may happen, 4 peosibility the ses Cestello have Regardle a very g Jchn Barrymore and Do new cause for tongue-wagging. By ROBBIN COONS o ne t trip after she played in the ea Beast” 2 married, and from this film dated *'" her rise to fame. At the daughter of Ma Costello, early film mat- inee idol, she had begun in films as a child when she went with her| father to the old Vitagraph studies in Brooklyn. Growing up she had been a model, then gone on the| , but it was in films that she h his' leading lady = HCLLYWOOD, Cal, May 14— that they were| Whatever the outcome of the re- ports and counter-reports concern- ing a break in the John Barry- more household, the prospects for an early return of Mrs. Barrymore te the screen seem bright. Dolores C ello, who married Barrymore in 1928 and did not re- . tire from pictures until nearly time|, ..o . pae for their daughter, Dolores Ethel! " Mae, to arrive, enjoyed tremendous | No, ularity in the early days of = l:ll;)dc; y g e Warner's No. 1 feminine star. But|sp 7 baby, Miss| €T final film, “Hearts in Exile’~+ | Akisaaie G zivak of He-Rangiietas considers it her worst—was fin-|ja Costello gave up studio life and ;.4 perore the audible screen had|“Happiness tuie® 0. EhoRes- ed completely out of the lisp-{good and ;?‘: ?‘Tz’ye ‘v‘;‘:én"sh‘: C;‘;:e‘ b?c‘li stage. There were ‘“‘part-talk-|with was glad to return, but that e | Juth Bet-thie” i e had truly enjoyed those years of domecticity. The picture, “Expen- sive Women,” was one of the year's box-office failur and received no en Miss Costello, one of the screen’s real beauties, with her large blue eyes and light brown! of the outstanding hits of from the Warner studios Mr. Oxtoby, are “G ith an impressive cast by James Cagney; Al Jol- 1l Ruby Keeler, in “Go Into weet Adeline,” with Hugh Herbert, Ned E ng supporting St. Louis Kid,” with Cagney in the title role; Ahead,” said to be as as it sounds, and a players:® “Gold Diggers of 0 headed by Dick Powell; Fury,” with the inimita Muni; In C 1 Star came, she became |1yey ing bly by the time she returned foxjda Farrell, * ve Women,” but ept for|and Leo C the screen career .of |Lamps cf China,” with Pat O'Brien arren William, that picture did|and Josephine Hutchinson. . ; i "I 05 one any good. Mr. Oxtoby reports a decidsd up- hair, again became simply MIs.| g, ynen she returns, as Holly-|turn in the motion picture business John Barrymore. Came the second o4 thinks she will, Dolores Cos-|throughout the Nerthwest, and pre- child, John II, and no more Was | ey may be given a better oppor-|dicts that the coming season will heard of a screen career for DOlOres v,y ap Jeast, if they present her|bring forth by far the best motion until recently. with a good story, there will not|picture product in the history of Picture Talk be the handicap of technical im-|the business. About the time the first rumors perfections such as existed in the S g i g an estrangement were hltlinl{jp;”»]y talkies when she was an out OLD-TIMERS MEET GAIN Hollywood froem the east, where| tanding “star of mediocre filu i | Barrymore has been spending some! ey Woods and Jack Kin-‘ time after a film made in England, nalley, a couple of real sourdoughs Dolores was making a personal ap- according to th eAnchorage Times, nce at a Warner Bros. “anni- |met in Anchorage recently when Woods went to town by plane from M a. Weods and Kinnalley, , and “Ofl for the S e JOE GLEASON HrRE Joe Gleason, who has been em- ployed in the meat department of y party.” In the house UD {yo arctic Piggly Wiggly at Fair- the hill, Mrs. Barrymore had yangs grrive in Juneau aboard THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESPAY, MAY 14 B Charles B. Harjes and his bride, the former Betty Schuster, ex- changed these happy smiles in a New York night club shortly after their sudden marriage, a ceremony that caught society completely by surprise. (Associated Press Photo) LOW-DOWN ON FILM |‘THE LAST GENTLEMAN’ CAPITAL IS SHOWN |WITH GEORGE ARLISS IN COLISEUM FILM CLOSES AT CAPITOL Hailed down on ( us “the laughing world’s dizziest the Film production Nights in Hollywood” opens at the Gentleman,” George 20th Century picture, which at the Capitol The- atre tonight, differs from the usual Celiseum Theatre tonight. Written film in mere ways than one. by Jimmy Starr, the movie col “irst, it is a whimsical comedy cny's ace columnist and commen- ' revolving about crotchety old tator “365 Nights in Hollywood”|millionaire's sly efforts to pick a tells the story of a girl, a boy and werthy heir from his many rela- two adagio ice-men who turn the tives, and secondly, Mrs. Arliss does flicker city upside down. not appear in it. There is a good The picture laughs at reason for the latter, as the only the foibles and fancies role Mr. Arliss will permit his wife sereen great and their to play in his picture is that of heath. In particular it is his happily wedded wife—and Cabot hold its sides over Baur, the character played by Arliss movie schools which in the present film, is a widower. that center of “side Mrs. Arliss appeared with her of chalaratans. husband in “Disraeli,” “The House In the casi are Alice Faye, Jim-'of Rothschild ‘he Millionaire” my Dunn, Trank Mitchell, Jack and “The King's Vacation” but not Lurant, Grant Mitchell and others. in “Voltair “The Working Man,” - - “The C 2d Goddess” and several oth low- y latest closes a many of of the native said to phoney ish in and capital WORK STAR AT CRIPPLE .- DRIVERS' LICENSES READY Vehicle o licenses for the two-year period ending May 31, 1937, are now available at the office of the City Clerk. Fee, $1 Drivers must procure their new cards by June 1. Get them now and avoid the rush. — Harold Strandberg, in Anchorage recently from Cripple, reported that 14 men engaged at Flat for his company were hauling wood for the dragline and that the company ex- pected tc have 20 men at work as scon as operations start. Twenty- thres tons of freight had recently - been flown in several trips from Mc | GUCKER LEAVES Grath ‘to Cripple by Pilot Don| J. W. Gucker, mercnau ise h*~" Goocdman of the Star Air Service. 'cr, left Juneau for a business- trip > > : to Ketchikan, He took passage on SHOP IN JUNEAU FIRST! the Yukon GETS ALL THE DIRT i it o with EDNA MAE OLIVER JANET BEECH CHARLOTTE HENRY RALPH MORGAN ALSO Demitasse Review Comedy News | MiDNiGHT PREVIEW | DINE and DANCE [ | SABIN'S | Everything in Furnishings ! for Men D Rt | o g fo i [ WHAT IS IT THAT become a little plump, but when {p. yukon, studio executives saw her on this/ cccasion she was again the slim, ! stately beauty of her starring days.! ———— TERHUNE RETUR! H. W. Terhune, Executive Officer both famous old timers who were in Chatanika in 1901 before Fairbanks was discovered, were happy to meel S again, There was conversation about pic- of the Alaska Game Commission, tures, and while nothing definite is| arrived back at his headquarte awranged, Hollywood thinks lhe{‘hm’c today after an extended t name Dolores Costello will again be{to the states, Mr. Terhune seen in lights. about the middle of January and Miss Costello was a star “discov-|has spent ‘much: of his time in ered” by the fans—and by Barry-| Washington in _connection th more about the same time. It was game commission matters. >oo FRIZZEL TO RUPERT D, Frizzel, associatéd with his father in the wholesale meat busi- ness in Frince Rupert, B. C, s traveliing to that port from Ju- ineau on the Norah. w ’4 ‘Relics of ;t. S Sqili,ng s .fiiw grand old four-masted barks, practically the lact rclic: of the former gicry of American sailing ship days, are going to sail from Alameda, Gal, on San Francisco Bay, on their last voyage. Sold by the Alaska Packers’ Association to Japanese interests, the classic barks—the Star of Lapland, Star of Shetland, Star ¢f Zealand and Star of Holland—will be taken to Oraka, on the Itland Sea of Japan, to be broken up. At present they are berthed in the Alameda estuary. With work on get- ting her ready almc:t completed, the Star of Zealanl, under commafid“of Capt. Charles A. Watts, prob- ably will sail soon. She will earty a cargo of 5,000 tcns f corap ion, , The other vessels will follow at intervals of thtee weeks. The trip is expected to t ke abcut twe months in each case. Each ship will be manned by a crew of 30 men and officers. Capt. Watts is known as an able and courageous sailor and was in command of the Alaska Packers’ fleet for many m";,‘,!"‘ to right Aa the ‘photo are the Stars of Lapland, Shetland, Zealand and Heil:nd. i ? | i | s | | | FROM CEILING TO FLOOR The G-E ““Tidy”’ is anew and radically different all-’round servant for the busy housewife. It’s a midget in size, weighing only 415 pounds, but powerful in suction and cleaning efficiency. IT CLEANS ... ceiling to floor, the G-E “Tidy"’ gets all the quickly and effici iently. - IT BLOWS ... - ‘The soft rubber blower attachment provides a powerful blast of air for a variety of uses. IT DE-MOTHS... Y the Deodorizer attachment, the ‘“Tidy”’ repels moths from furniture, rugs and clothing or abolishes unpleasant odors from the house. Thé “Tidy’’ and your choice of one of General Electric’s new floor models will give you a com- plete cleaning service for your home. Let us give you a home demonstration today. " GENERAL { ELECTRIC CLEANERS SEE IT AT _ UPTOWN \TUESDAY WEDNESDAY | Hilarious Entertainment of the Laughter and Tears variety! Admission 25¢ Alaska Electric Light and Power Co. ~ Juneau Douglas

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