The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 8, 1935, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, NOV. DOUBLE TEATURE BITL | DCAEY MOORE 1S VICTIM OF DIVORCE MILL New Picture at Coliseum Shows Effect of Broken Marriages on Youth “Tomorrow's Youth,” a story of the divorce mills @nd their effect upon modern youth, opens tonight at the Coliseum Dickie Moore is seen as the boy who has his freedom curtailed at every move, who is forced to spend I of his time in the country w his mother, the other half in the city with his father. John Miljan is the father, Martha Sleeper the mother and Gloria Shea the somewhat vic- timized homebreaker An opportune accident that almost costs Dickie his life brings together his father and mother in one of those dramatic climaxes which furn- ish tears to movie-goers. On the same bill, Tim McCoy brings Spanish California’s one-time adventurous life to the screen in an exciting western, “The Revenge Rid- er,” which operates against back- ground of adobe and Placerita Can- yon CITY COUNCIL WILL CONVENE THIS EVENING Building C;a; Ordinance Will Be Introduced— Want Suggestions i Rfiob'en Atlen: + Billie Seward Directetd by ‘David Selman The first November session of the City Council, postponed last Friday night because illness among mem- bers resulting in lack of a quorum, will be tonight in the Council Cham- bers, with consideration of the Bui ing Code Ordinance foremost on the docket. The new ordinance will be intro- duced tonight by Councilman G. E. Krause, Any suggestions from the public are welcome, since the com- mittee is anxious that the code be satisfactory to everyone concerned befere it goes into effect. Also coming up for third and fi- nal reading are three ordinances— one regulating auction sales, anoth- er licensing public card rooms and a third licensing pinball games. Hog Missing 69 DBYS \,{,‘ "f’“}”"f"ds‘ bu‘l ready to eat: 3 . C. Jenkins missed the hog from Found in Straw Stack :i: 175-pound drove when he was threhing last July 17 and rightfully ed it was buried in the straw Hog: poting around in the uncovered him—alive and only 2 75 pounds. LEBO, Kans., Nov. 8.—A T that went into a 68 bask to his e — pire Wanr Ads Pay! NOTICE! After a year’s absence from business, we wish to announce to our old customers and to the general public that we have taken over the STAR BAKERY and will be open Tuesday, November 12 J. A. SOFOULIS, Proprietor i i 8, 1935. STUDIO SELECTS ITS BABY STARS FOR 1935 tripping over.each other’s feet! Ohe is a house detective “the other a polished student ‘of crime “when thiey meet in this With selection of Wampas baby stars at an end because of dissolving of the Wampas organization, the Paramount studios in Hollywood named these seven girls as its starlets. Standing, left to right: Marsha Hunt. Rosalind Keith, Bradna and Eleanor Whitney. Peggy Conklin Finds Film Romances It Her Own Real Honeymoon Peggy Conklin finds reason for complaint in that she has been married seven weeks and screen business has permitted only two weeks with her husband. By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Nov. 8—*The course of true love never did run smooth,"—and the movies do little enough to help it along. Contracts and production sched- ules snatch brides from their bride- grooms and rush them across the continent, to go to work in reel ro- mances that cannot wait for real ro- manges. That is what happened to Pegzy Conklin, anyway, and it happens all the time when movie players mairy men who work in the east. Of course it is to be assumed that when movie people marry they expect their hon- eymoons to be cut short. MARRIED SEVEN WEEKS Peggy was finishing up work on “One-Way Ticket" the other day, and even in the midst of the final scenes was making preparations to take a plane cast the next morning. “We've been married seven weeks today,” she said, “and I've seen my husband only two weeks in that time and then T'll be due back for anoth- er picture in two more weeks.” Her husband, James Thompson is a New York broker who she met and married while she was enjoying the lcng run with Leslie Howard in “The Petrified Forest” on Broad way. When the play becomes a picture Betty Davis will have the role Peg; enacted on the stage. But Peg {one of the more delightful regular commuters between Hollywood and Broadway, has a promising screen ‘future nevertheless. She is, in fact, a leading candidate for the feminine {lead opposite Gary Cooper in the next Frank Capra production. This | not under contract to Producer Wal- 'ter Wanger, who first used her in ,“The President Vanishes.” LIKES “HOME” BETTER | Peggy, chatting on the set that fi- !nal day of production on her second | film, revealed increasing interest in pictures. Aside from liking “home” {better and not liking Hollywood's more or less predictable climate, she likes pictures. “Home” is in New York. When she is in Hollywood she | lives with Constance Cummings, her {best friend, or with Constance’s mother. | would call her back even if she were! Betty Rhodes and Frances Farmer. Seated, left to right: Betty Burgess, Olympe (Associated Press Photo) “GREAT HOTEL MURDER” NOW 1S AT CAPITOL l'_lzlnu“d I,O;IVVC and ViL‘lOl’ . McLaglen Co-starred in | Hilarious Murder Plot Edmund Lowe and Victor Mc-Lag- popular team of easy-going buf- 1s who have co-s pd in elght | ures since their first spotlight in are co-featured | which werfere with len, pi “What Price Glory” in “The Great Hotel Murder, opens tonight at the Capitol The fellows portray two sleuths, one a polished writer of murder stor- ies who tries his amateur hand at solving real ones and the other a heavy-footed and hefty-trained ho- tel “dick” out to out-Sherlock Holmes. When a sinister murder occur | these friendly enemies, one all theory, the other entirely opposed to theor- ies, follow a hundred clues and fight over every clue. The setting is a de| luxe hotel. The key,to the mystery is beld in the delicate hands of a young and beautiful girl | Fine comedy alternates with tense emotion, the comedy coming out on top. In the supporting cast ase Rose- mary Ames, Mary Carlisle, Henry O'Neill, Henry Gordon, John Qualen, | MOVIE STAR IN ARIZON ‘CHETVEI-.IIS. BUYS SECOND HAND STORE Dodges Newsmen and Is| v o memicnact nas sota nis see- Nearly Hit by Whll’lll’lg ond hand store and repair shop on Peowell | Lower Seward Street to Chet Filis Plane ropellor | who has taken possession of the| {premises. McMichael will reside at| UNITED FOOD TO [ PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. 8—Kather- | his home on Gl ine Hepburn, movie star, narrowly Mendenhall Glacier. escaped death when she ran around| Chet Ellis, the new owner, has been a plane in order to escabe nNewspa- busy rearranging stock and getting | per reporters and stopped just short | his repair shop in readiness for new | of colliding with the whirling pro- phusiness. The repair shop will be! pallers, which would surely have de- | conducted along the lines of an “old- | its capitated her. Miss Hepburn is flying to New York | e will file saws, sharpen tools, fix | I in the company of Leland Hayward, | clocks, guns, electric equipment, cab- | ®. now thought to be her husband. The | inet, work, and articles of any sort|a% pair consistently dodged Newspaper |in need of repair. reporters. | ier Highway near FATE_ UNKIND. COLUMBIA, S, C.. Nov. §—~When | fate took a hand to rob Coach| Don Faurot, new University of Mis- souri football ceach, of a veteran| end, there were no half-way meas- ures about it. Among the reasons Evans Powell. the eiid, cannot play this fall are: An ankle injury suffered in ten- nis. 48 A knee injury suffered ‘in soft- ball. An infection which reduced his weight 15 pounds in a few weeks. Powell also is captain of the| Missouri basketball team and a base | ball and tennis player. —_—— e = - OLD NEWSPAPERS In large bundles for 25¢ per bundle | foc | a these chilly mornings. Get them| at THE EMPIRE'S office. es 00 s svsvooons . AT THE HOTELS . T e e e rrncee e Gastineau Frederick H. Magill, Jr.; R. H. Stock, ‘Petersburg; M. W. Souls, Bremerton, Wash.; Mrs. John W. White, Fairbanks; Miss Barbara | White, Fairbanks. | The United Food Company greets | fashioned tinker's shop,” Ellis said, | shower of food bargains unparalleled | store-wide mark-down Just the thing for starting fires|ing In announcing the anniversary, the | management urges patrons to market baffling adventure you'll 2 u laugh! Edmund Lowe Victor McLaglen Rosemary Ames Mary Catlisle Henry O'Neill C. Henry Gordon Produced by jobn Stone Directed by Eugene Fordc Story by Vincent Starrett 'E SEE SENORITA JOURNEY IN FLANDERS CHASING THE CHAMP NEWS Mickey Mouse Matinee SATURDAY—1:00 P- M. TIM McCOY “The Revenge Rider” ——ALSO—— Cartoon Journey in Flanders ¥ Chasing the Champ Comedy “ News FREE CANDY early as the store will follow the annual custom of closing on Armis- tice Day. CELEBRATE ; MARK DOWN IN PRICES| | - COUPLE CLUB WILL HOLD WORK SESSION Discarded toys, dohated yesterd: by Juneau homes, will be sorted and er. The United Food Company | repaired tonight in the Northern e occasion with the largest| Light Presbyterian Church parlors ost complete assortment of|by the Couple Club, which gathers odstuffs ever, Brown said, and a|there at 7 o'clock for a ‘work ses- in prices is|sion.” Repainted and rehabilitated, gesture of appreciation on grow-|these toys will be given to needy children at Christmas time. e eee SHOP IN JUNEAUT anniversary tomorrow with a| the market’s histo-y, according to R. Brown, energetic young man- g patronage. Nothing Is So Warm and So Beautiful asaNew Fur Coa And no furs can be found to equal the QUALITY and “I'm learning more about pictures” | Alaskan | she said, “but I know I have a lot| Nick Triehield, Sitka; W. M. Cook; | {to learn yet. It's disillusioning just Eliott Fremming; B. B. Williams, watching yourself on the screen. 1 Yakutat; Myrtle Williams, Yakutat. discover I have a habit of screwing Fred R. Johnson, Unalaska; 8. J. up my face when I talk and not Kelly, Ketchikan; M. W. Evans, laughing correctly for photographic Kimshan Cove; W. C. McMayburn, purposes. Things like that don't|Haines. matter on the stage, but I have to| Sugsoun watch them for pictures. Camera' The first mission in the islands of angles? No, I don’t worry about the South Pacific was established them—If I did, I'd give up the ghost by the London Missionary Society in .right away.” “Tnhm in 1797, STYLING of this season’s garments made by . . YURMAN

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