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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, SEPT. 28, | 937. “Camille” s |deal Show for | Garpu, Taylor |Brilliant Cast Supports Twol Stars in Feature at Capitol Theatre CAPITOL ow Place of Juneau LAST TIMES TONIGHT Wi LIONEL BARRYMORE ELIZABETH ALLEN 4 The coupling of Greta Garbo and Robert Taylor for “Camille” proves| to have been a stroke of screen' genius. Produced by Mayer and Georg and a brilliant cast in support,| the Dumas love story is ideal vehicle for the two most glar stars of the modern screen. picture closes its engagement Capitol tonight. | The distinctive direction which| {Cukor demonstrated in his recent| work on “Romeo and Juliet” i been equalled in “Camille.” Added | o this, the characterization of! w11 vWOOD, Cal. Sept. 28. — Marguerite affords Garbo the most ;Inlunl))(‘ report on the love life of perfect role of her striking car a boy s . Mickey Rooney: and Taylor, as Armand, the lover,|” A¢" 15 Mickey's affairs Is superb. heart already are numerous. Some % |of the girl friends are film young club, have been working on the ship : sters, like himself, but just as mar with mechanics of the Alaska Air|are not. Strangely enough, Transport. They hope to have the are all alike in one respect: none job finished within two weeks. |of the girls is more than five feet g0 iph T | tall. ATTENTION | The reason? Well, Mickey him- CREINA self is five feet two, and he can't Regular meeting of Juneau Lodge bear to be seen with a girl taller BP.OE. No. 420 for Wednesday than himself. He has almost de- night has been cancelled—M. H. spaired of growing any taller, and Sides, Secrotary; ady. it irks him. For a time he used to oo | measure himself every day against ATTENTION O. a black chalk mark in the shower. Al {But the only way he could move the mark up was to stand on tip- Then he began affecting a mil- y haircut that bristles in front. It r s him look an inch taller. The fact that it also makes him look as if he'd just escaped from reform school is beside the point. Courting at School To be a Rooney “date” a girl must dance as well as be short. A Rooney “date” invariably means a high school or country club dance His $10 a week allowance, out of which he buys his clothes, allows him about one date a week. His “gang” still considers too much dating sissy, but one a week is all right if you treat it in the offhand, man-of-the-world fashion. You may even be seen at an occasional pre miere with a young lady, because s the accepted thing, but othe e you've got to go easy on tl love stuff and prove you can take it or leave it. That's the code. | The schoolroom at Metro is somewhat limited matchmaker, for there two girls in the school M ey's age. The Garland, 14, and Bet/ Judy used to be e sl 3 Metro-Goldwyn- C ting an IS IT ROMANCE? at at a premiere or dance together. steps of their studio schoolhouse. Hurling—Late News PREVIEW TONIGHT THE MARINES’ By ROBERT COONS of the FLYING CLUB STILL WORKING ON PLANE WRECKED IN SPRING Club hly eaplane ELKS astineau Flying working fever get the eronca the. air. All summer ittle ship has 1 a bared skeleton in the shops of the A Air Transpogé following a sorrowful day last spring when a club member crash- ed the ship. One float has been repaired, one . repairs made to engine ha back in the No. 7 p.m wing rejuvenate the fuselage, and the had a complete overhaul. W Lund, Mark Storms, Scott Ford, and Bob ley, members of the ady. Meeting Tuesday Business Juneau evening, only. LILLIAN G Chapler 8 o'clock e. WATSON, Secretary. as a juvenile are only anywhere are Judy Jaynes, 16. P it % < }('(lw : THOLEPRO that romance seems to have vered somewhat. In fact, it was Mickey who escorted Judy to the premiere of his “Captain Courag- eous.” But he took Betty Jayn to the premiere of “The Firefly. {Now that Mickey and Judy have |been teamed in a new picture | (“Thoroughbreds Don’t Cry”) furth- er developments are breathlessly awaited. | Business Comes First | Mickey, of course, is a very busy young man, and it's a wonder he !has any time for girls at all.-There are his song-writing, his orchestra, ! his bowling team and whatnot, and {now that autumn approaching {the girls with designs on the | Rooney heart are warned to make the most of their time now. In a | few weeks he'll be giving them up ‘emirely Football practice gets un- |der way any time now and with {the Rooney “Blue Devils” getting into training, there’ll be no women {on the Rooney schedule until New Year's. ?OU‘R be thrilled by your own loveliness when you wear these exquisifely sheer, flawlessly clear new stockings. Famed Holeproof ‘quality—Doubly Certified by Good Housekeeping and the Better Fab- rics Testing Bureau. New shades keyed to the new costume colors. $1.00 and $1.35 ARTHUR FICKEN ON WAY SOUTH TO BE JUNIOR AT U. OF W. Arthur Ficken, son of Mr. and! Mrs. A. J. Ficken, sailed for the| south aboard the Princess Louise to enter his junior year at the University of Washington. Mr. Ficken, a major in Forestry, Ias spent the summer here in con- nection with Forest Service work. He will not return to Juneau next | summer since he will attend a national camp to continue studies of forestry. The FAMILY SHOE Store “Juneau’s Oldest Exclusive Shoe Store” Seward Street Lou Hudson, Manager Fresh Fruit and Vegetables HOME GRCWN RADISHES, ONIONS and FRESH LOCAL EGGS DAILY California Grocery THE PURE FOODS STORE Telephone 478 Prompt Delivery e ROAD PLANNED TO AID MINING FIND, CHICKAMIN GLACIER Approval of plans for building a road from the end of the Texas Creek Highway near Hyder to the mining property of L. C. Thornton at Chickamain glacier was given today by the Territorial Road Com- mission. It is expected the cater- pillar road about three miles in length will be built next spring. Thornton, tunneling under the Chickamain glacier ice, has found gold reported to run as high as $81,000 per ton. Extensive operations on the property are anticipated for the spring. P Phone 411 CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. Lode and placer location notices for sale at The Empire Office. Mickey Rooney, 16, and Judy Garland, 14, show up ence in a while they | | Tersely Told by A: ! FIRST CHOICE ‘!movie star (manly Robert Taylor), |his surrender to autograph hunt- One Date a Week I's Limit For Mickey and Hi: Here they are eating lunch on the ‘He Wins $50.300, GARY, Ind., Sep 28.—Rudolph DS, FACTS~<FOIGL , Coliseum Thealre | — =~ opeR Gary Cooper, Jean Arthui A ar in Pioneer Picture f ’,EAN - 4 b 'Cecil B. DeMilles 'The PLAINSMAN // i Last Times Tonight IN SEPTEMBER, THIS YEAR, WHEN ALASKA CELEBRATES ITS 59t SALMON PACK, IT WILL ALs0 CELEBRATE PASSING THE ONE BILLION DOLLAR MARK, VALUE OF THE SALMON PACK SINCE THE INCEPTION OF THE INDUSTRY. ians f ) Cheyenne In River Cecil Over 2,0 the Tonguc put to work the battle The B X S MON N/ 47 CANNERIES & <) sl THE VALUE OF THE PACK OF ALASKA CANNED SALMON HAS MORE THAN DOUBLED THE VALUE OF THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF GOLD PRODUCED BY ALASKA _ <5 MINES IN THE PAST 59 YEARS. (AW nigt Theatre. at the € Indians eum were used to 1 e of G 1 Cav n I t place in the story. taken at Little Big sev- wer 1 1 the ision of leral Cheyenne braves who took part| the battle | n Arthur plays the role of “Ca-| la Jan in The ’hb!l\.\l!l:l“."‘ opposite Gary Cooper, who recreates| I\\lxm Bill” Hickok, noted plains=| "““f‘»" ‘“'3" | A Color Cl man who fell in love with the hard- ( g fighting frontier beauty when fie| _Late Fox Movietonews {was sent into the West by the gov- lernment to find out who was selling| Ivifles to the Indians in violation of N in * CLEANS. ONE FISH PER SECOND R s | “IRON CHINK™ GIANT FisH FILIPINO BOUND OVER Danck won $50,300 m a golf tour- nament here but h net profit| was only nine new golf balls | | The $50, yas re money, | won in competi- | tors in Garys $1,000,000 golf tour-| nament.” 1 Taking a tip from the headlines given St. Paul's $5,000 open and| Chicago’s $10,000 open, Herb Wal- ter, pro at the Gleason Park course, conceived the *$1,000,000 tour ment.” He gave each player $1 000 in stage money at the start. They were to get it on their games or shots by other players and the fellow finishing with the most mon- ey won the tournament | There were such bets £1,000 |for the first eagle, $100 or the fi {ball holed out on each hole and, in addition, the foursomes made up forfeits whereby players who drove onto the wrong fairway had to pay the others $100 each. A lost ball cost a player $200 and he also had {to pay $100 to each man who helped {him hunt for it Most of the broke. NEW YORK HAD BUSY SUMMER; TWAS EXCITINE | ' Just Few of Highlights 1S players wound up $ | { ciated Press Writer ‘ | By GEORGE TUCKER | NEW YORK, Sept. 28.—The sum- | {mer of 1937 has moved quietly on the bourne from which no summer |ever returns, and since the mem- | lory of man is sometimes short, it |might be well to say at once that, |far from being dull in New York, | iLlns summer produced in headline | entertainment— The big champagne party for women in Col. Jeremiah Beall’s |Park Avenue apartment and two| casualties when one guest socked another with a ginger ale mruu‘ and was socked in return with champagne bottle, vintage 1906, empty. The hair-on-the-chest, to-sleep-with-a-manly-fist battle between Slugger Ernest Hem ingway and Slugger Max Eastman, or the Enjoyment of Laughing a Bull in the Afternoon. | | | | | a | rock-me- | literary | | | | | The annual cruise of Father Di- | vine's angels up the Hudson to the Heavenly Kingdom near Kingston with nothing for the inner man but fried chicken and corn on th‘ cob, and for spiritual uplift one Harlem's best swing bands. Also the defection of Faithful Mary, the stabbing affair in the main king- dom of Harlem’s little brown mes- siah, the arrest of Father Divine in the coal bin of one of his Co: necticut heavens, and the subse- quent celebration when he was| freed by a New York court. The brawl on the sidewalk out- side the night club, or who ed the free-for-all that landed Adcla Rogers St. John and her pals in the pie wagon. The episode of the handsome ers and the cute trick of the press | agent who planted two of them, young, feminine, and good looking, under his bed on the Normandie Just before he sailed. The return of Honey Johnson to these shores without David, last of the Marrying Mdivanis, her nial of a romance with the Geor- gian prince, and the famous line of Jesse Livermore, Jr., friend and traveling companion: “I could mar- ry her myself in a minute—if I wanted to.” The determination of Tor Manville’s fourth mate to go to R for a divorce if Tommy would s a settlement for a quarter of million dollars. The artist who, becoming with the vapid conversations of his bored A SALMON CANNED i ALASKA S USED AROUND THE GLOBE. A FAMILIAR STAPLE IN AMERICA, | IT IS A RARE DELICACY ELSEWNERE. FAMous GOURMETS OF HISTORY J SALMON WAS THE FAVORITE FISH OF SCOTTISH CHIEFTAINS ~ BACK IN THE DAYS WHEN THE CLANS GATHERED FOR BATTLE. THE FISH WAS THEN PLENTIFUL IN RIVERS OF SCOTLAND. |a government order, oo YELLOW BELLANCA ! CLEANER WHICH CLEANS FISH AT THE SAME RATE AS TWENTY EXPERIENCED CHINESE WORKMEN. IN PETERSBURG CASE Flores, Filipino, accused of assaulting Dave Phillips, Indian, with an axe at Petersburg hag LANDS IN CHANNEL ON WAY TO lNSlDE been bound over to the Grand Jury, i according to Assistant District At Bellanca ) torney George W. Folia who ree Skyrocket seaplane dropped into)gurned to Juneau on the North Sea Juneau'’s harbor this morning ab after going to rg in con= 7:30 o'clock from Seattle, and hop-Inection with the case. At the heare ped off two hours later for Fair-|ing .in Petersburg, it was alleged, | bank The ship is being flown by |polta reported that Phillips had Lon Brennan for ank Pollack of [tried to break into Flores' apart- the Pollack Air Service at Weeks ment and finally pushed the door Field the Golden Heart city. [in. As he did so, Flores is alleged Gene Meyring, former Juneaulto have hit the Indian over the | aviator, flew the craft through here 'head with an axe and thrown him recently on his way to Seattle \\l“l}uu( in the street, where, it was C. 1. Paulsen, owner of the plane charged, he hit him several times then, and wealthy mining man who {more. spent the summer investigating | - the south aboard the'yhining property around lfimlj.mka,‘FlRST LlGHT FROST with her daughter ploying Gene Meyring as chauf- not be able to make feur pilot. Ownership of the plang| APPEARS IN JUNEAU cheduled trip now until has now been transferred to Pol-| Ith ban is lifted lack at Fairbanks. | The first frost of the year ap+ Mrs oum will take Eleanor 0~ with Lon Brewnan when he peared in Juneau last night, @ce san Francisco for an eye examina- wmys, Brennan, Mrs. Viola Hall, Miss|cording to the Weather Bureat: oon as children are allowed | polores Hall, Miss Della Hall, and!The frost was a light one and was And, finally, the from out|to leave Juneau. Jack Hall. E. Hubbard, a mechanic,|not general over the city, however, of town who began throwing pret- | > formerly at Boeing Field, Seattle,|The first frost last year appeared zels when she had one too many, | ION S5COUTS lalso accompanied Brennan, and willlon September 30. and that other gal denying | - be employed by Pollack. | Like on September 30, last year, i Tony | | | | | | A trim little yellow F S e i Ly |ELEANOR SALOUM TO Satures of hix giests-so unniatter-| | SAIL SOUTH AFTER BAN IS ENDED HERE ing that one of the pests threat- | ened to punch him until it h«'(.un\"l AT known that the artist was also an | expert amateur The editor of Saloum, who was to Mrs. J. F. have left for thwestern will pugilist of a small mid-west- ern weekly newspaper who visited New York and fet along flock homing pigeon that any tories which might de velop could be hurried back to hi typesetter-in-waiting ANOr, a the of 50 news « I tion a lady ATT who. the There wi was .| American L had twenty m-;mw notice. odas, that’s| fr the depths of psycho- - > - the temperature last night in Ju« pathic rd that Sheffield plate cles a neau was 38 degrees above zero. explained: “I just ilver coating on a copper In| B AP thirty seotch and imost other plated ware the base| Empire classifieds for all.” Jused i 1 the fur adv. n be - zion no meetings of Troop until have base. he crazy Try The recults. SEHRIPEaR Empire classifieds o o AR %éfl @ yews— FIRST CHOICE ABOVE ALL MOTOR OILS IN THE PACIFIC WEST A NEW