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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11 1936 - Fem————p | E GN IS Bob Ells Flies GEORGE HUEY TONIGHT THEATRE! Her secret was sacred and cost her years of Happiness! Otto KRUGER MARIAN MARSH LIONEL ATWILL LLOYD NOLAN A Columbia Picture —ALSO— Tuned Out As It Seems Strange Pathe News and gallant cavalry MOVIE WITH “BIG PUNCH" NOW NEEDED Production _WII Succeed with Public—Several Films Ring Bell HOLLYWOOD, Cal. Nov A movie that can sustain a punch” for a reel or more has better than an average LflJnCl‘ of hitting the public and Get It" and “The the Lig rigade” are among the new seaso amples. Climax of the film woven ar Tennyson's poem is the pounding tops fo ct anything the offer to date. Music Helps Punch In “Come and Ferber's story of a lumber the late 19th century, there occasion for cavalry charges, spectacle is served none the in scenes sl millions of feet frozen northern . to the hungry paper state. Gigantic ‘Wisconsin piles fallen hurtle and slither down hillsides to the wild river pyramids of timber from still frozen e groaning, mad of banks to stampede, Coming! N Armistice Dance TONIGHT! Benefit Boys' Drum and Bugle Corps AT ELKS’ HALL YOU ARE EXPECTED! WINDOW CLEANING PHONE 48¢ advance of clock valley uence n confusion 1y had to Get It,” Ei king <I is no owing the floating of timber from tr camps mills down- trees thawing below, are dynamited ©htation. | ant logs go racing down the water SEEN IN WELLS | Through Fog, Over, KORDA PIGTURE Down; Finds Buoy ? | jRuth Chanerton Seen aSwWanacl\ Relates Exper- ] Woman Fighting for Right | iences of Recent Flight ! to Love at Coliseum to Ketchikan | J. B. Warrack, who returned to uneau from Ketchikan last Sun-| day, claims for Bob Ellis, with whom Mr. Warrack flew to Ketchikan, via Come,” Alexander Korda’s spects wvg. a feat of ;nr‘ navigation that ular production of H. G. Wells|i 3lmost the parallel of that mas- {amazing foreecast of the future! LY !.1“,” SHApAE e |which begins a two day engage- ited to iment at the Capitol Theatre today. | This is cnly one of the astonish- |ing features of the life in the 21st 1Cvnlux depicted by Mr. We {after our present civilization ha |been destroyed by war. Others |great underground cities, window Here is the t less glass houses, flooded with arti- |Ellis, as Mr. Warrack recounts ficial sunlight and conditioned air,| “After leaving Juneau glass furniture, and wrist-radios,] Waco biplane, we had rea worn as we wecr wrist watches, and | Fanshaw. when we 1 | mitting person-to-persen broad- fog. Ellis immediat climbe asts. : e above it, wh Raymond Massey, Ralph Rich- ¢ : was the mount on, Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Pearle icking up out of tk Margaretta Scott and Pa-| “Ellis put the plane o rd head a cast of 20,000 holding that cou we flew for in this mammoth production. |ty two and one-half minutes, w Two women—one worldly, one|out once being able e W {still living in her dreams! Four|pelow us. Eilis then cut the engin men—a ty an idealist, a play-|and dropped the plane down into | boy and a lover! rsonali- | the fog, which ) thic e could | ties clash in Columk romantic not even see the ship’s flc drama, “I ich| “When it seemed to me opens tonight at the Coliseum The-|must surely have dr {enough to have hit the wate; Ruth Chatterton returns to play|the altimeter had s owed 2 the part of Celia Whittaker, in this|several seconds, Bob levelled off story of a gallant lady who defied|and made perfectly smooth, vel- tragedy of dishonor. Fleeing vety lang thout being able prison of her memories for one grasp at happine fights for a chance to live and love today tomorrow—and to banish forever her yesterday: A great love story demanded a A “space gun” 250 feet talled than | the Empire State buildin ooting human beings to the moon in 2036, i {a thrilling feature of “Thing: of mp accuracy nce might be consider greater. perfc un- we ks to was that pped low and for to plane had stopped ta Bob climbed out on the fl a paddle, and, after padding a few strokes ahead, bezan to fum- ble around in the water with the at cast, Otto Krager, Lioncl paddle. Or the third or fourtk ill, Marian Marsh, Lloyd Nolan!try he hit something, which 'nd Robert Allen were assigned to|he pulled it in, turned out he leading roles in support of the the mooring buoy, at Crais star, Miss Chatterton We would sco Ellis - MEETS TONIGHT ed to revive classic dar Juneau’s Literary ery Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'- in the Council Cha T f City Hall Miss Anna Col¢- who is head of the > | this year, leads the dicussion. Tt club is takir a “tour of the world” and tonight the Balkan States ¢ to be visited. Irs. L. P. Dawes will review Mar- aret Mitchell's bock “Gone W e Wind.” Scme of the other a tire members expeeted to be pres- 1l are: “Mrs. F. A. Metecalf, Mrs. rnest Parsons and Mrs. Charles| G. Warner. ing with as to be illseye” danc- ndon Club meets ev- he » chutes to dive into the stream, one after another like cattle bound for aughter. It is all shown in rapid tempo, to a musical accompaniment | that aids immeasurably in drama- tizing what might be part of a travelog but for its mode of pres- In “The Charge of the Light nq Brizade” the big punch—the charge and its dramatic music—ecomes at {the end of the picture. In “Come and Get It” the similar punch, the timber - floating sequence, comes close to the beginning. Perhaps the only comment necessary on the film istelf is that after this be- ginning it does not lag, but carries on dramatically to another kind of climax in human emotions . Break for Three Edward Arnold plays Barney Glasgow, the lumberjack who mar- ried the boss’ daughter to get money and power, all he really wanted, when he actally loved the dance-hall girl played by PFrances Farmer. Later, Barney is all-pow- erful, but when he meets the girl's daughter (Miss Farmer again) he tries to recapture his romantic| !youth. But Barney has a son (Joel McCrea)—~and the battle is fouf,nl jout to its inevitable end. | The picture gives these three Jtheir best roles to date, :pothghv_s rWalLer Brennan as Swan Bostrom, | ‘.md offers an attractive newcomer |in Andrea Leeds, local college girl who makes good in her first pic- 'ture. Mary Nash, Mady Christians, and Frank Shields, the tennis man, and others in convincing portraits. { Edna Ferber'’s story is changed | |somewhat and only partially util- ized for the screen play. The pic- |ture carries credit for two director !Howard Hawks, who disagreed with Producer Samuel Goldwyn during mlmmg and William Wyler, who ‘!lnwhcd the job. Really there were mree however: the third is Richard | | Rosson, who did the logging se- | quences. — e | Inventor Gets Even ‘ AROMAS, Cal.—Eight years ago a piston flew out of an old auto- mobile engine and struck Eldee Goodwin on the head. Now he has applied for a patent on a rotary gasoline engine that con- tains' no pistons. He hopes it will supplant the present motors in au- 1 01936, UGGETT & MRS TOBACCO CO tomobiles. A di ¢ we when | @ FOUND DEAD Pxom ser of WX\(‘H\:\II Dl(‘ in Cabin—Was in Good Health to End FAIRBANKS, atch Alaska, Nov. 11.—| to the News-Miner from Wiseman says George W.| Huey, aged 82, pioneer, was found dead in his cabin, cause unknown, as he had been in good health | until the end. Interment will be next Sunday under the auspices of the Pioneer Igloo No. 8, of which he was a member. He was also a member of the Tahana Masonic/ lLOd,-\ FIND METHOD T0 KEEP MILK, FAESH STATE NK‘\\ ?I(‘-(‘C?"S A”n()llnc(’d ‘0 l)li’\'(‘nl Soll\'lllg m Short Time BAUMAN Stajj Writer) KARL R. d Press HINGTON, Nov. 11.—Discov- \ process for keeping milk long period-is announced ultural Department. u of Da Industr of 1€ ting milk 8 call- An announcement by the Bureau d the new process will afford a practical means of providing quality milk for use on board ships and in distant places where a supply of fresh milk is unobtainable veral years of e e Bureau concent or one-tl frozen with- Ordin- emul- thawed original periment- found that by milk re-half original size it can be out injuring its propertie arily milk is frozen the C destroyed and the shert of the rid wher . pares frozen milk,” the Bureau WE'LL ALL LIVE may for rmitted to thaw and enough is a original a very accey favorably GLASS HOUSES L8 T WOULD TAKE YOU A CENTURY ( TO LIVE IT!...IT'LL TAKE YOU AN ETERNITY TO FORGET IT! HGWELLS - ¢ Vitaphone Casino Fox Movietone IN IN 2036 be shipped long dis-| wholc held for weeks until cessed by the consumer, when| With milk quoted in some tropical and sub-tropical countries at around | 20 cents a quart, the Bureau ex- | pressed the belief there was an ex- cellent opportunity to sell concen- trated frozen milk, particulary in milk from which it was pro- nd dded to bring it back to volume. The result is table product that com- with the fresh TONIGHT SHOW ELACE OF, JUNEAU ™ Puerto Rico, the Republic of Pan« ama, or the Canal Zone. “The people of these countries could be supplied not ehly with a | higher grade of market milk than they now have, but it would be de- livered to them at an attractive saving,” the Bureau said. You Enow that a cigarette can be mild; that is, when you smoke it it’s not harsh or irritating. You know that a cigarette can have a pleasing taste and aroma. When you smoke a cigarette and that it has the right combination of mild- ness, good taste, and aroma, it just seems to satisfy you.. . gives you what you want. I smoke Chesterfield all the time, and they give me no end of pleasure.