The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 19, 1935, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 19, '1935. M A U Rl 0 EIN [A4°New Sally O’Neil Returns 0 " tothe Screen for Third Try FcuAl-lglETsm. a Jw at Reaching Holl ywood Peak i : LAST TIMES TON:GHT [DON'T FAIL TO You Will Like It! 5 Last Chance to See Famous | French Idol in Musical | Comedy of Paris ight Juneau residents will have heir last opportunity to see Maurice | Znevalier, insouciant French mati- ace idol, in the gay “Folies Ber-| ere,” which plays for the last times! 1t the Capitol Theatre. | Farcical in the approved French | pattern, the plot gives Maurice every pportunity to exert his Continental rm, and Merie Oberon and Ann thern lend a feminine radiance to | pic- nd- OO S A 55 e proceedings which give t ure an exeiting quality trans: ng the routine of the situations. Several interesting dance sequenc- 28, ally on2 cal'ed Rhythm of he Rain, and another entitled w Hat, enable Maurice to hark k to his earlier successes.in Am- rican films. The Folies themselves provide some | of the best musical comedy of the | seas and there is not 7 t00 im- probable about > musi- | cal bits are injected ture., - SCHOOL PLAY NEXT (RIDAY S —— B the pie PREVIEW TONIGHT MARLENE DIETRICH i 1t is hopea tnat seven neauites will act as witne: seene of a cowardly mu: { The actual crime will t: at the Ci s at the | | in | “THE DEVIL IS A WOM ! | | i at 8:10 o'clock. T! | students, under the direct | Erickson, will give three br in the production Island,” by H. I. Youns. | Much time is being } the - sta; V duviied not the sawe old Sally is ‘modernistic in ciiod B Hollswood.. 5 Sally O’'Neil has retu slack and silver. Students in the 5 i dimmed and she became an on-again off-again attraction. HBR SECOND VISIT * Two years ago she returned to Hollywood {from personal appearanc- nd a trip abroad, and began to > a comeback. She thought then Hellywood has just taking me ranted—just a kid that's always und.” But still not much in roles me her way, and she left again. this talk of years makes Sally ind at least 42—but she is 25. “Sal- Trene and Mary” was made when she was 15. Te returned from more ‘“‘per- sonals” and stage experience in the east, Sally is no the same old Sally O'Neil. She is almost one of the She has a new voice ver than it used to be and mone precisely articulated. Tha is no accident. She been train- ing it. And her long black eyelash- her own, arg longer than 'ever. [ nenting on the new voice, ‘2s:ly suggest that there's a the phony s and meticulously ccr- it. Vocal training.is likely to > that to the nicest of young things frcm Bayonne, N. J £ a NO AUDIENCES FOR SALLY The new voice got its first work- out in the Columtbia picture, “Too Tough To Kill," opposite Victor Jory and other assorted males. Sally was the only girl in the picture She hopes she will keep on mak- 2 pictures now. She frankly does- t like the stage. An audience— hat boon so many stage actors say ¢ miss so desperately—gives Sally ills. She does not care how many ple watch her work on a sat b 's what T am used to, and I ne! get nervous in front of a cam- era, making a test or anything else. But audiences— | “I did four shows a day, and when T was finished I felt as if I'd done a thousand. They can have their mmdiences ve me a moy'z set any time,” she says. e e {WOMEN OF MOOSE | HOLDING CARD PARTY A card party, under the ausplces of the Women of the Moose, will be held at the home of Senior Regent Rodenberg next Monday afternoon and evening, it was announced to- uay. | The Entertainment Committee [ ¥ broad A" therein, |l ANNE SHIRLEY IN NEW FILM |“Chasing Yesterday” Is Sweet Interpretation of Anatole France Novel umph in the highly acclaimed pic- |ture, “Anne of Green G bles,” im- | personates a messenge love in Chasing Yesterday,” sweet and melodrama now playing at the Joliseum The: In the role of an imaginative and talented French orphan who lives the dominance of a hard- | hearted and unscrupulous guardian, Miss Shirley becomes the transform- e in the life of an elderly sa- nt whom s by ac nt of | po ce atle old pro- | fesso the girl away from guardian, is brought to task by handsome young student O, P. Heggie and Helen Westley, the Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert »f “Anne of Green Gabl support Anne in “Chasing Y y.” Heg: {7le plays the elderly professor and Miss Wesley is seen as his sharp- tongued but warm-hearted house- keeper. Trent Durkin carries the romantic lead. The film purports to \be derived from Anatole France's |nove! “The Crime of Sylvester Bon- | nard.” DUDE RANGH IS PLANNED NEAR JUNFAL Hunting Base on ['yee Salmon N. Lynch Callison, who was in- AT COLISEUM Anne Shirley, who scosed a tri-| devalops suspence and | the stern threat of the law, and then | triumphs with her engagement to a | Callison to Outfit Big Game | nigh schoel have painted and ca mined, printed and sewed, spent their time to make this production a } worthy one. RETURNS FROM TRIP OUTSIDE W. B. Heisel Climaxes| Mexico, whence and Mrs. Heisel motored to Vancouver. Only ten days ago they rested Holiday by Induction beneath the palm trees of Yum Arizona, but nevertheless both d .| and Mary,” ... she now'is almost one of the “glamor girls.” By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal., Nov. 19. Sometimes one picture makes a star, ometimes a single film will make two stars, but rarely does & ture make three Strictly speaking, “Sally, Irene a silent picture of ten a ade no stars. But the ' io mede the grade. Con- stance Bennett went away, returned for taXies, and not until then did he make her golden splash in the cinema pool. Joan Crawford stayed on, but it was four years later thag she became a star. ‘And the “Mary” of the film, Sally O'Neil, has just returned to Hollywood. After some titular asks that anyone wishing to attend| jured in an airplane crash at Mec- is reguested to make reservations| Dames Lake last summer, has almost with the following: Elizabeth Ben-|entirely recovered and will sail on der, Mrs. Robert Light, Mrs. Hilma|the Princess Norah tomorrow morn- ‘Torvinen and Hattie Peéterman, or |ing for Prince Rupert, where he will directly with Mrs. Rodenberg. outfit for 'a fur buying expedition The comusttee is working with|into the interior. Callison spent six the men's committee on a Christ- {weeks in a hospital at Whitehorse, mas program which they promise| and several weeks in St. Ann's Hos- will be bigger and better than ever.|pifal here after an operation, as a Four new members are scheduldd | result of the airplane crash Into High Order | clared the arrival home to be one of | ual in retrospect if for Deputy Collector of Customs W. B. % 7 6 v t arts son than that all of its Heisel was back at his desk in the | the best parts of the trip. n..“d S Federal Building today after a two- | gy m m I U Federal Bullding today arter ® oo ESINHINIHIINY i was climaxed by his induction as a = 33rd Degree Mason at the bienmial session of the Supreme Council of the Scottish Rite in Washington, | D.C. Heisel and his wife returned to Juneau yesterday afternoon aboard the steamer Princess Norah. The couple motored from Seattle | to Santa Fe, New Mexico, and later Heisel visited his relatives in Cin- cinnati. The customs official en- trained from there to Washington last month, where the highest Ma- sonic order was conferred upon him at the convention. In the national capital he visited with Delegate Anthony J. Dimond; Harry F. Morton, formerly an at+ torney at Anchorage and Deputy Marshal in Juneau, and now chief counsel for the Alcohol Tax Unit of the Department of Treasury, and A. L. Lundell, formerly head of the Federal Land Office a Anchorage, and now an official of the Income ‘Tax Office of the Treasury. The men all wishes to be remem- bered to friends in ‘the Territory, according to Heisel, and envied him his trip back. After several days in Washington, the Juneau man returned to New years of continued success, her stgr aTIPio Thanksgiving Hostesses Hamilton Beach Food Mixer with 2 Bowls 1191.5 ATTACHM ETS And you do, you'll take our tip! Thanksgiving! L L e e variety that’s available will put even baker to shame! and Fruit Pies; cakes galore, and in town! | Cofies Grinder *Can be used only with Power Unit which is $4.78 Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. Juneau——Douglas Fruit Pigs Peerless Bakery dothework . . . While YO U Collect the COMPLIMENTS! Want to make this Thanksgiving dinner the best ever? Want to save time and money doing it? If Even Grandma will ‘admit ‘that Peerless ‘haking tastes like the best of homebaked goods . . . and the Pumpkin Pies and Mince Pies make your mouth water just to look at! reasonably priced, too, and we’ll deliver anywhere Peerless Baker ASK YOUR GROCER FOR PEERLESS BREAD mnnmnnmmmnmmmmniln|m||||u|||uul||uuumlul||muuu|||muum|||u|u||m||uuu|m|||m||u||||||u|||m||uu|mm!ululun|m|mi‘mn to be initiated at the mext regular meeting of the Women of the Moose. T T Let youll ENJOY the best home- puddings that They’re OO A ] From Prince Rupert Callison in- tends to proceed by train to Edmon- ton and Dawson Creek. From the latter point he will set out with a team of horses and two dog teams, carrying four or five tons of tobacco, !tea, and trade goods, on the 300- {mile journey north to Fort Nelson. Dude Ranch Next spring he expects to go to Hazelton, where he will purchase about 30 horses which will be driven overland to Telegraph Creek and down the Taku to the mouth of the Tyee Salmon, where a “dude ranch” and big-game hunting base will be established. Callison has formed a | partnership with Capt. William | Btrong, and the two men expect to serve as guides for big game hunt- ers next summer, traveling by river ! 74 1 ; SCREEN | | | i ANNE BANDITS AND BALLADS JAPANESE LANTERN NEWS LAND'S® INDERELLA . IN A ROMANCE VEET AS A BREATH OF SPRING! SHIRLEY HELEN WESTERLY O.P. HEGGIE OLIJEU —_— { | | | tion will operate under the name of the “C & 8, Taku River Big Game Guides.” Digposes of Claims Callison, who was interested in the development of some mining claims at McDames Lake last sum- | mer at the time of the airp.ane accident, has sold an option on his claims to a group of A. J. emploroes, and expeets Lo sell his ranch at ¥ort St. John. Capt. Strong may accompany Cal- lison on his fur buying trip to Fort Nelson in the winter. “The big game hunters have been going through Wrangell and up the Stikine River,” Callison said, “and we may as well have that business here.” ISR TSR, DELGARD ROUND TRIPPEK Pete Delgard, for many years a resident of Juneau, left on the North Sea for a round-trip to the States, his first trip south for several years. -, Special Delivery to Douglas Daily 2:30 P. M. Telephone 442 adv. ibom and pack train. The combina- | CRANGE SCORES TRADE TREATY WITH CANADA Demand Administration Repudiate Compact— Warns of Dangers SACRAMENTO, Cal, Nov. 19.— Debates on the policies of the Na- tional Grange next year, now in full swing, are paced by the plainly- spoken demand that the Adminlstra~ tion repudiate the newly signed trade treaty with Canada. The Grange warned that the com- pact would prove injurious rather than beneficial and said it would campaign for repeal of the Recipro- cal Tariff Act as soon as Congress meets, unless various, trade treaties are annulled. Pll be in town soon, folks. Every day until Christmas Day you’ll find my messages about gifts and where they can be bought in the

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