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THE SHOW PLACE OF JUNEAU l/STfN : Just l'e('&use I can call e THEY'RE FIRST m,'g;orw ( Metro- Goldwyn- Mayer Picture EXTRA MARCH OF The News Behind the News APITOL] "tIet' d on ’t Your“Pg, PY Hup, AND WypiE HAT T, with REGINALD OWEN Produced by John W. Considine, Jr. TIME SPOOKY HOOKY LATE Our Short Subjects ST NEWS A( Are the Talk of the Town! Sona Pr LAST TIM “FIND THE WITNESS" N. TUES Midm’ghl. Preview Tonight Matinee Sunday 2P . W 1 m youy n, yYou opel'ty I »” FOR T th H HR"—LS?) TONIGHT and “CONFLICT” Last Episode 'E DRUMMOND FIRST SHOW STARTS 7:05 P. M. JEAN HARLOW AT CAPITOL - WITH TAYLOR |'Personal Property’ Begins Three-Day Showing Tomorrow Taylor at the Capital starring in Robert are seen tomorrow, Property day run in Juneau. Taylor appears in the amusing role of a family black is reduced to service as a deputy bailiff, assigned to guard the chattel of a charming woman whose debts have gotten beyond her. Miss Har- low is the lady in question, of course, and it becomes a pleasure for the deputy to stand watch in| her home. He even serves as butler on an occasion of social emergency and vislting ladies are all eyes for the handsome them. It is a foregoing conclusion that this mirthful couple fall in love, but in the interval they encounter many adventures that keep the au-| dience laughing steadily JUNIOR €. C, HEARS TALK Members, Recently on Visits to States, Give Their Highlights Bob Phillips, Malcolm Faulkner and John Bavard spoke on their recent trip in the States at the Jun- for Chamber of Commerce lunch- eon held yesterday in the high school “We ‘went swimming at about e ery place we could except at Soi V- D Lake in Washington,” stated Phil- | lips, who spoke first. sheep who servant who admits, Young Writer Learns FEven = and Jean Harlow Theatre “Personal whi¢h will play a three This is the 1ast or four articles in which Brian Bell, Jr., son of the western division manager of sociated Press, tells what saw and heard in Hollywood. By BRIAN BELL, JR. HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Oct. 30. — One of my ambitions was realized on my visit to Hollywood when I had lunch at the swanky Cafe de Paris, the famous restaurant on |the Twentieth Century-Fox lot. The |main dish of the meal was roast |duck, and the chef served me him- :.\('H from a silver container. The restaurant is called the Cafe |de Paris, but the walls are covered |with paintings showing street i\r-on.vfi and bulldings in cities all lover the world. I was told that visitors from these foreign cities have at once recognized their home cenes. A glass cage near our table was !filled with flags of almost every |country I had heard of and some !T had not known before I See Fred Allen Many of the actors came in wear- ling their makeup, as they were to Must Eul. | | \ | BRIAN MEETS SHIRLEY TEMPLE AND HER STAND-IN, MARY L BLACK LEGION' COMES SUNDAY T0 COLISEUM ‘Humphrey Bogart Plays { Lead in Dramatic | Feature | | { The films write a page of cur- |rent history in “Black Legion,” a' thrilling melodrama produced by Warner Bros, which will open at the Coliseum Theatre on Hallowe'en night, tomorrow. | The main character in the screen !play is a young workingman de- iuded into the belief that it is a ‘mm to take the law into his own { hands. | | Because the job which he thought |he deserved was given to a foreign- er, he feels that he has been cheat-| ed of his rights as an American citi- | “I was interested to learn ‘that Teturn to the sets as soon as they!,.. the huge Morman Temple in Salt Lake City doesn’t hav nail in it, but wooden pegs instead,” remarked Faulkner, second speaker. “Our Biggest problem was trying to find auto camps,” said Bavard. Noted places of interest that were visited include Mt. Rainier tional Park, Glacier National Park, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon and Mt. Wilson Observdtory. was also pointed out that swimming was enjoyed in various places in Washington, Montana, Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, California and Ore- gon. Guests at the luncheon were Billie Wood, Bobby Vernon and|known book being made into a pic-|players are Robert Satre. Jack Newmarker, chairman, Simpson MacKinnon, and Harry Sperling were named to serve on the sled détby committee. BUb Phillips, chairman, Jim Wil- cox, and George Walmsley were named to serve on a special Armis- tice program committee. | A sports club committee was also finished their funch. It was queex {to see American cowboys laugh- ing and chatting with soldiers and policemen wearing strange foreign {uniforms. Many stars were in the festau- [rant. T saw Fred Allep, the funny Na- man, but did not have a chance to| |speak to him. |1 did meet Jeah Hershdlt. I face was covered with whisker: 'He had long hair and was dressed in the garb of a mountaineer. He was not a “hillbilly,” but wa: {ing the grandfather %of Heidi, the {little Swiss heroine of the well- ture. Shirley Temple plays Heidi, And Ride on a ‘Dolly’ | After lunch I went to the set |where Heidi was beng made and |met Shirley Temple. I saw one of the scenes in Heidi made. After |the scene was finished Shirvley drank soda pop. Some of the people on the set tried to find a bottle for |me, but it was all gone pl‘\\Al By so doing, he spoils a beautiful romance, utterly destroys the hap- piness of his neighbors, and in the ‘(’lul kills his own best friend. The {part is played by Humphrey Bogart, who was the outstanding bandit in “Petrified Forest.” As a picture of an actual phase of Ame 's complicated social |struggle, “Black Legion” is said to It|would not have known him, for his|pe unusually interesting and pos- sessed of greater dramatic force than any previous movie “from the headlines.” Dick Foran, Erin O’Brien-Moore, |Helen Flint, Ann Sheridan, Jos- eph Sawyer and other well known among the principals.| 'MILLARDS LEAVING | ON EXTENDED TRIP 1 EAST NEXT WEEK i e For the first time since he came | lto Alaska 34 years ago, D. F. Millard | |of the Alaska Road Commission | 4 Great Britain is helping China in"m England, but according to official | the present “war” and warned Lhatirepons. in all British possessions. Anglo-Japanese diplomatic relations| Unofficially the Government ight be broken off if such actions | takes the position that as there is named, being composed of John| Shirley, her stand-in, Mary Lou,lis going back to his old home in Bavard, chairman, Rodney Nordling,|0d I had a ride on a “dolly.” AlChippewa Falls, Wis., to visit his |and Fred Sorri. |dolly is a platform on wheels used mother, other relatives and old Edward Wood received the pnz("“’ move cameras. Mary Lou’s fa-|friends. for the best current event on Italy,|ther pushed us first and had a hard] Mith Mrs. Millard, he expects to land Jim Wilcox was awarded the|time. He found later he had been|sail on the Alaska the first of best joke prize. ipushing with the brake on. Others the week, and at Seattle the well- The bombardment began after Rear Admiral Tadao Honda issued 4 demand on the “lost battalion™ to surrender or die. GHAPEI AREA (e o § | This stana 1s made ia a resolution passed by the Couricil of One Hun- dred on the current situation in | China. ———— Great Britain of being the main b e driving force in the convocation of Annihilatlon of Brave De-|ine Nine power Conference to be fenders Prevented {held in Brussels, apparently to start | ther declared “the Japanese cannot |allow the British to continue un- (Continued from Pdge One) | molested in the present improper R . | doings. arising among the Japanese, ac- cording to local Japanese sources. | It is believed here that Hongkong is | the main source of the Chinese mu- {m: The Council’s resolution accuses . {intervention and the resolution fur- Final Hour | Anti-British feeling is nitions. CHARGE AGAINST BRITISH e TOKYO, Oct. 30.—An unofficial| 1 ONDON, Oct, 30— The fedlin group of Japanese in official high|,oninct Japan is growing, & "0,,15 position made charges today that s Not Forgetting HAPPY steadily | Ino war declared against China, the British can defend their nationals |and support China with just as | much respect as the Japanese have |in invading China and mowing de- fenseless down and also continuing |in real war, even if not declared. Great Britain, it is unofficially |said, has suffered many “insults” from the Japanese, an Ambassador |was wounded in an unwarranted |airplane raid, many British soldiers have been killed or wounded and | British property has been destroyed |or damaged. The Cabinet, it is said, will meet |early Monday, possibly Sunday, to |review the entire situation and also | discuss the resolution of the “Coun- cil of One Hundred.” ——————— Mae West quit vaudeville in 1922 "to play a farce she had z:o—:;u-l thored. Raymond Reaber, Harry Sperling, {Bob Phillips, George Walmsley, Jack |Newmarker, Malcolm Faulkner ‘Jim Wilcox received perfect sc on the written current event quiz e Safety of Airfield Depends on Length WASHINGTON, Oct. 30. — Air fields should be 5w, reet long at sea level to provide safe landing for large transport planes, says the Bu- reau of Air Commerce. At higher altitudes, where the air is thinner, fields should be lon- ger. Landing avenues should be 150 feet wide and should be paved or made of hard sod, according to the prevailing weather. — e Try Top Notch Luncii—35c. res adv. and| s/this was an unpleasant reminder I until around the first of the year. |took a hand and the director gave known Juneau couple will be join- {us a final shove. |ed by their daughter, Bess, for the 1 met Shirley’s schoolteacher, and trip east. They expect to be gone |had to return’ to school from Whlch‘ Mr. Millard has his mother, two I had been excused for a few days brothers and a sister in Chippewa to get these Hollywood stories. Falls, and a brother in Minneopolis, So, back to school. |all of whom he expects, to visit. Dr. Tnetia 3t king Asoemte su- HALLOWE’EN PARTY GIVEN LAST NIGHT, EPWORTH LEAGUE |pervisor of Elementary Education Decorations in orange and black/ with the Bureau of Indian Affairs, returned last night on the Dart \from routine inspection work in| Kake, | —————— formed a Hallowe’en motif for the Epworth League party, given last Ie\/enlng at the Methodist Church, with Lenore Anderson and Willetta Kendall in charge of decorations, MAJOR GEIB HERE Major George A. Geib, supervising and Bud Nance and Vivian Gruber in charge of games. engineer for construction of the new Refreshments were served by Lola Federal building in Ketchikan, is in| Juneau inspecting the repairs to the Federal and Territorial build-‘ ing here, NEW YEAR! with GREETING CARDS NOW IS THE TIME—and as always the EMPIRE PRINTING COMPANY has a large assortment, including the finest lines of Holiday Greeting Cards—your olc favorites—as well as the newest. An Empire represen- tative will be pleased to call on you—MAKE YOUR SELECTION EARLY! Just Telephone 374 or call at the DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE Office. -C SUNDAY OLISEU and MO N D A« SUNDAY IS—"THE BIG NIGHT” PREVUE TONIGHT 1:15 A. M. MATINEE SUNDAY 2:00 P. M. BIGOTS...MAD WITH HATRED! THE INSIDE STORY OF AMERICA’S GREATEST Humphrey BOGART ICK FORAN ANN, SHERIDAN DICKIE JONES A Warner Bros, First Nationa) Picture Short Features You Will Enjoy “MUSICAL OPERATION” *a % “THE VILLAGE SMITHY” b . MOVIETONEWS FOX LAST TIMES TONIGHT 2 DELUXE F TURES——2 “Living Dangerously” AND N “Secret 22 Valle 2—LATE PARAMOUNT NEWSREELS—2 La Paugh and Viola Converse. Present for the evening were Ju- dith Alstead, Lenore Anderson, Thais Bayers, Viola Converse, Els- peth Douglas, Vivian Gruber, Wil- letta Kendall, Margit Lindstrom, Lola La Paugh, Pauline Mestrezat, Edythe Marshall, Minnie Rogers, Dorothy White, Gloria White, Betty Wilms, 8. J. Greiner, Harlan King, Earl Miller, J. P. Mestrezat, Bud Nance, Charles White, Bill Wood Sam Zarek, Maria Lund, and Gene Rhode. RS Y TREASURE HUN] PARTY IS GIVEN BY MISS WORLEY Miss Virginia Worley, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. F. Worley, was hostess at a treasure-hunt Hallo- we'en party, last evening, assembling twelve guests at the Worley resi- dence in the Fifth Avenue Apart- ments. Enjoying a hunt which took them to many far corners of the apart- ment building, the guests ended the | with success when Althea | Rands and Josephine Campbell cap- | search tured the prizes. Following the treasure hunt, Hallowe'en games were played and Mrs. Harold Foss became the center of interest as a fortune teller. Guests of the evening were Miss 'Florcnce Monsell, Miss Betty Wil- |cox, Miss Josephine Campbell, Miss Sue Stewart, Miss Althea Rands, Miss Mary Stewart, Miss Ethel Fu- kuyama, Miss Isabelle Dobson, Miss |Barbara Hermann, Miss Frances Paul, Miss Ruth Allen, and Miss Mary Ann Skinner. - ee— TWO GIRLS ARE HOSTESSES AT EVENING PARTY At a Hallowe'en party, last eve- ning, Zaida Carlson and Kathleen McAlister were co-hostesses to a group of fourteen guests, entertain- ing at the Carlson apartment on Seventh Street. The affair was marked by tradi- tional Hallowe'en zames and a scav- anger hunt. Bright Hallowe'en dec-~ orations formed an attractive set- ting. Invited to be present for the oc- casion were Patricia Gullufsen, Isa- bel Parsons, Dorothy Fors, Dorothy Larson, Doris McEachran, Sylvia Davis, Marjorie Snell, Lila Sinclair, Cecelia Thibodeau, Lenore Kauf- mann, Bernice Mead, Beryl Mar- shall, Jerdith Winthers, Laura Jean | Clithero and Frances Paul. PRALRALS o 52 B A total of 138230 persons were in jail in this country on January 1, 1935. The most prisoners any one state had was 10,748 in Illinois. N ——