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= A 1 SHOW PLACE OF Apra—l: NEAU -t T HEATRED...y TONIGHT CHARLES JEAN BOYER ARTHUR “HISTORY IS MADE AT NIGHT” with LEO CARRILLO and COLIN CLIVE ALSO PICTURES OF THE AMERICAN LEGION 19-HOUR PARADE IN NEW YORK CITY Nev Cartoon Comedy NEW YORK 1S REAL HOME TO CALIFORNIAN slightest resemblance to Ireland, ex: cept for its very Irish policemern but he supposed that it was be cause New York had become as sen timer to him as his own hom in Ireland T'll confess that I love the beaut, and climate of my real home, Cs fornia, but like almost all out-of- towners who come here the mean- ing of “home in the heart” come: to mean New York. From the day when I played experimental dra- mas in the tiny theaters of Green- | wich Village to the nights I came up |to Broadway to play in “Street Star of Stage, Screen, and Radio Tells All About Her Homesickness By ERIN O'BRIEN-MOORE (The star of stage, screen and radie. Currently the immortal Nana in the film, he Life of Emile Zela,” kno: off a col- umn for George Tucker.) me for New York that gradually |was making it really mean home. Three years ago I lert Broadway nd went back to my native Cali- |fornia, believing that there meant home to me. I stayed on and on one picture role after the other, but always there was that definile homesickness to hear the rumble and feel the speed of New York After I had finished my roles in “Black Legion” and “The Plough that you a a New Yorker and be-'and the Stars,” I hurried back to come almost overwhelmingly home-|B: diway and was almost imme- sick for its tall buildings, hurr ; diately catapulted ba to Holly- crowds and noisy streets. It needed wood to play Nana in ie Life of only my recent stay of t years Emile Zola,” and er that making pictures in Hollywood, finished I had a quick call back to barely a stone’s throw from the Chicago for a radio program with house where I was born in Los An- Rudy Vallee. Now I am again in geles, to convince me that the word New York to do a play “home” now means New York to As we sped uptown through the me. winding streets of Greenwich Vil When you come here very lage, I looked over to the young, and you grow up with New | P ncetown Playhouse, where I York like that, there is a strong |first appeared in New York, settled attachment that grows between :back contentedly amid the noise you and the city that nothing seems and confusion and sighed, peace- able to break. | fully, “Home, again.” * ! D Sean O'Casey, the Irish MARTHA SOCIETY wright, once told me that he liked Bazaar Friday, November 19. New York because it so much | -oe like Ireland. Then, reconsidering, he | ws Today.—Emplre. To the av- ' NEW YORK, Nov. 6. crage New Yorker, who usually is someone born in Minneapolis or Fort Worth or Seattle, it is only when you go away for a time from this town of Broadway and Green- wich Village that you ly realize was Today’s Ne admitted that New York hasn’t the| Scene” there grew an affection in| { tiny | CAPITOL HAS POPULAR FILM - NOW FEATURED | Jean Arthur, Charles Boyer | in "History Is Made ‘ at Night Boyer moonlight made! Which is by way of announcing that you can look forward to seeing dark-eyed Charles Boyer and blonde Jean Arthur, filmdom’s newest and most exciting love team, romancing in Walter Wanger's “History Made at Night,” which plays again tonight at the Capitol Theatre. This sparkling romance from the pens of Hollywood’s madcap riting team, Gene Towne and am Baker, casts Boyer and {Jean as Europe’s most dashing head |waiter and a gorgeous American |mannequin who meet in Paris un- er very romantic circumstances and fall in love at first sight. The ensuing romance takes them cross the Atlantic and back |aboard a crack transatlantic luxury |liner and moves against a back- und of lavish modern settings, including the smarter resaurants of New York and Paris, and winds up in a surprise climax that prom- ises to be the talk of the town Leo Carillo and Colin Clive are featured in “History is Made at Night' and Frank Borzage directed | for release through United Ar- tists. Others prominent in the cast re Ivan Lebedeff, George, Meeker, Lucian Prival and Georges Rena- vent. > CLARK COMING BACK ON PLANE PILOTED | BY SHELDON SIMMONS, { W. K. Clark, of the advertising staff of the Empire, who has been vacationing in Seattle for several weeks, is ing north aboard the A Air Transport plane piloted by Sheldon Simmons. | Clark intended to come north board his own pleasure gasboat but Ihas abandoned the plan. Simmons went south several days with passengers for € plane {trip is planned early thi z SR AGENT THROUGH J. V. Lydick, Assistant P: Agent for the Alaska Steamship |company at Cordova is a through passenger on the steamer Yukon for Seattle. the Paris history is meets girl at and romantic is g0 The week. - ! RUMMAGE SALE | | At Lutheran Church parlors Wed- |nesday, Nov. 10, from 10 am. to 4 {p.m. Kindly phone Red 360 or 226 ‘n you have any donations. adv. | AS A FAID-UF SUSSCEBER TO THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE ,Oliver Sarnisto is invited to present this coupon at the box office of the CAPITOL THEATRE AND RECEIVE TWO FREE TICKETS TO SEE HISTORY IS MADE AT NIGHT Your Name May Appear—WATCH THIS SPACE |before ALASKA “COVERS” at the UGGET SHOP | John H. Newman, Juneau plnlu-‘ telist, has prepared an especially |attractive, and typically A en- | |velope and card for use in connec- | "tion’ with the use of the New Alaska | Stamp and they are now available |at the Nugget Shop. | The envelope bears a picture of | |the signing of the treaty for the |purchase of Alaska in the upper| left hand corner and accompanying ilhe envelope is a card with a pic- ture of the Alaska flag in colors, |and information regarding the ac- | quisition of the Territory from Rus- | sia. | The new stamp goes on sale No- | vember 12. It isn’t too early to get| |your envelopes for mailing now. |You can get your supply at the | Nugget Shop, or you can leave | the names and addresses of those | to whom you would like to send‘ “First Day Covers” and they wm‘ be sent for you—bearing the new Alaska stamp. ndvA‘ I i | _Ithe " ikies held Daily Sports Cartoon HIS MOTTO i— "SIXTY MINUTES IN EVERY GAME AND SIXTY PERCENT OF ALL. THE TACKLES. AVD HE LIVES UR VANDERSBILT CAPTAIN IS ONE OF THE A BULL'S =HE HAS NOT MADE A BAD PASS MNALL HIS VARSITY \ \ LYY careEr. N\ o8 All Risiita Resorved by followed through the loud speaker | announcements. Smulker carried the ball, stop- |ped by Hinkle,” the tinny voice in- LUCKY T GET < | | “Walker has the ball, going around Nn SGDBE TIE end. Hinkle stopped him “Hinkle broke through th tim and threw Knott for a yard loss Fifty-five Thousand Witnes Great Classic with | | | Thats the way it went—through- U. Wash. lout the third and fourth quarters “Are those Hinkle boys brothers? asked one sports writer “Quintuplet swered another be doing all that.” It of course, just Ex-|Carl Columbus Hinkle. il’'s a cinct No two me me BERKELEY, Cal, Nov the supposed invincibility| California Golden Bears in|keen mind, a ru reatest game of the on, |a qualities of leaders! University of Wa ston Hus-|sho ablish himself as one of e Bears scoreless | the nding centers in the U. before 55,000 people before he completes his varsity | urday afternoon. | career. | The Husky troops were hard-| A man who plays hard regard-| pushed to defend themselves in the |less of the score, he will be remem tirst half, but in the second half ficred as one of the greatest cap- | they came back with a rush that tains in ‘Vanderbilt history. left the Golden Bears lu to come | -ee out with a 0-0 tie on the scoreboard | at the end of the fouth quarter. In the last 25 seconds of play the final gun, Al Cruv Husky fullback, attempted a place- kick from the 28 yard line, but missed. | Blessed with footk ] admir- p, Hinkle to a at-| 8. tie | | RESTLTS_Ne The following are final scores of | principal football games played last| lSnburduy afternoon: Kansas 13; Nebraska 13, tie. Minnesota 35; Iowa 10. Stanford 7; Southern California 6. University of Washington 0; Cali- fornia 0. | e | i | Washington State 6; Oregon 10. | Washington State Freshmen 0; Three years ago Vanderbilt’s Carl|University of Washington Freshmen Hinkle earned a starting berth at)|i3 center. Ever since he has been bril- liant. In two seasons he played eight full games without relief. He never has missed a minute on ac-| count of injuries. | In 1935, when Vanderbilt was play-| ing Temple University in Philadel- phia, and Hinkle was a sophomore, | he staged a performance few ex-| pected him to equal. | It was a night game. Thousands| Army 7; Harvard 6. of umbrella-covered fans sat in a| Illinois 6; Northwestern 0. steady rain. Water poured down the p Pittsburgh 21; Notre Dame 6. press box windows. Play had to be| Navy 13; Columbia 6. | Brown 0; Yale 19. | Alabama 9; Tulane 6. | Gonzaga 0; Montana 23. | Willamette 0; Oregon State 20. Duquesne 0; Carnegie Tech 6. Chicago 12; Michigan 13. Purdue 3; Fordham 21, Dartmouth 33; Princeton 9 . Penn State 7; Penn 0. Michigan State 13; Temple 0. | i | | | | | | | !y converted for |ton State s FOOTBALL | 4 The Associated Press o INDIANS STEP OVER TROJANS LOS ANGELES, Cal, Nov. 8. Stanford edged out the favored Southern California football squad last Saturday in a 7-6 win A pass from Indian Pullback Jim Groves to Halfback Pete Fay iccounted for the winning marker in third period. Bill Luckett the extra points. Trojan touchdown was made second period when Quar-| Ambrose Schindler plunged e, Thic in the terback over the Stanford s > > o Oregon Wing Over Washington Statt_a PORTLAND, Ore, Nov. 8. Oregon smeared a late Washing- oring threat Saturday >cond conference game | | to win their ¢ Oregon piled up a ten point lead the third quarter. Washington State pushed their touchdown over in the final period and in a desperate thrust, reached| the Oregon six-yard line two min-| utes before the game ended. by COLISEUM NOW PLAYING Jane Withers “CAN THIS BE DIXIE?” with SLIM SUMMERVILLE ALSO POPEYE in “Im in the Army NEWSBOY NOCTURNE Paramount Pictorial Latest Fox Movietonews f | Juneau Lumber Mills, Inc.® T S OO R T S 7 A HOTEL GASTINEAU Every Effort Made for the Comtiort of Guests! GASTINEAU CAFE in connection AIR SERVICE INFORMATION NOTHING BUT THE BEST BEER 088 0 1 HEMRICH’S Both 27 and 34. We deliver. Insist On It! Our carrier ha irate Order it from your compartments. No clogged nearest dealer. burners from our vil. Also Hay, Grain, Fresh Dressed Chickens, General Transferring. D B FEMMER AT FEMMER'S DOCK L] o Day Phone 114—Night Phone 419, C. R. (Rex) Chittick There is no substitute for Newspaper Advertising " ® 3 0 i Remember “FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Telephone 409 B. M. Behrends Bank Blda. [f your “Daily Alaska Empire” has not been delivered By 6:00 P. M. PHONE 226 A copy will be sent you IMMED- IATELY by SPECIAL CARRIER. (Do not call after 7:15 P. M.) WINDOW CLEANIVT PHONE 4885 CANDID CAMERA_VISITS BACKSTAGE ot vt S GRSl S o e G S RS S These excellent and unusual camera studies were taken backstage at New York's Radio City Music Hall, the world’s largest theater. ) e AT WORLDSS LARGES aking up in 2N P ————————— It iS pere that the famous Rockettes, noted for fheir precision dancing and intricate routines, perform. Rehearsals are conducted before a long mirror to allow the girls to study their steps. Forty seamstresses are employed in making the 400 costumes required for each show. The Stage occupies a full city block in width and accommodates the most pretentious routines and largest of theatrical mechanical equipment,