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_White. I THEATRE LAST TIMES TONIGHT RALPH BELLAMY A Columha ictnte ALEXANDER D'ARCY CECIL CUNNINGHAM G ARV, S See Dur Snort Subjects I'hey Are the Talk ot the Town MIDNIGHT PREVIEW “I MET MY LOVE AGAIN" JULES GARFIELD IS STAGE ACTOR, NOTMOVIESTAR : He Talk Just What He Wants to Say and Let'er Go at That By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOUD, Aug. 30 Jules Garfield—now John—will never be a movie star. He will never be He have a Beverly shacl wimming rich Hill and never with a four butlers. His adio. the screen in it has a alre be since it saw him on Four Daughters,” i new star. The bally- 3ut John will tar. He won't be says the play’s the thing, and very few acting names should go above its title Hollywood, for three years, been offering him good money come out and it some time, keeps. He's taking less money the Kkind of contract he wants notice he can go back to time He doesn't He a mission ure hoo's never let himself loosed movie He has to see for for On stage any want to be rich. in life ha. John Garfield is 26. He is shorter than the average movie actor but _well proportioned. His hair is black, skin is olive, his teeth flash ¢. His manner and speech are cultured. He talks seriously of Greut as he sees them—just as if ed it finest of universities. In a sense, he did. on Ne York’s lower wa problem ct menace, a Dead kid. He says he’s sure could have been a gangster if it hadn't been for An- gelo Patri, the d psychologist. Patri impressed him through kindness where others had failed with for Patri suggested the theatre as his vocation—and Gar- ficld was 1 actor from that time on. In the Patri school, later in “high school, he studied and prac- all at the He was born east side. He a community he iced dramatics. He financed him- self through the Heckscher Foun- dation on the $6 a week he made papers $5 weekly loan from Patri. ried spear for Eva Le- Fritz Leiber and many took him off for a cros: country hitch-hike to see America. He weorked in California fruit orchards, in Nebraska wheat fields. nchot Tone left the rebellious Theatre for Hollywood six nihs before Garfield joined it only play outside the Group Garfield bas done since was Wonderful Time.” He ruined the play. selli plus a others. He Group me The hat Having hinks Hollywood Gar- for with Like others of the Group, field learned to eat scantily he e of putting on plays ides “My chief purpose,” he says, “is to bhecome constantly a better actor But at the same time I want to do all T can for the advancement of liberal ideas. I was told Hollywood would be deadly dull--I find more excitifg talk here than in New York He democracy speaks organizations pro- anti-fascism thusiasm. And of pictures like and “They Won't Forget” “Blockadc E the kind he wants to be in, the kind the screen is coming to. He is sure of that The public—forsaking its old idea that great wealth is the ideal is settling down to live, to.read, to think. It will demand thought from the screen will tire of boy- meets-girl stuff.’ Such talk—from an actor! Nothing can keep me from speaking. my mind om the things I believe in,” he says. “If money's the club, it won’t work because I don't care about it. T can leave any Zola ! time.” is sin- star. And the lad, believe me, cere. He'll never be a movie He talks too much. .- MINK, FOX KILLED The high waters of last year killed all fox and mink, drowning the young, and the result was the poorest year on record was the re- port made recently at Fairbanks by Paul Keating, trapper from Shage- Iu ~ with en- | THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1938. ‘AWFUL TRUTH' ENDS HERE AT CAPITOL SHOW Irene Dunne, Cary Grant FOl‘l“ Colnedy' >[‘Ca"] fO]' Hit Seen Tonight Columbia’s romantic - comedy “The Awful Truth,” starring Ireng Dunne and Cary Grant, with Ralph Bellamy nder D'Arcy, Cecil Cunn and Robert Allen ir I ends tonight at the Capi- atre. Also in a prominent role is Skippy, the “Thin Man" wire- hair pup, masquerading as Mr. Smith. The final Dunne Awful Truth” tells of the tiff between “Mrs.” Irene and “M Cary Grant which leads to the divorce courts. There, in what is said to be the most hilarious courtroom scene ever filmed, they battle for the custody of Mr. Smith with Irene the victor; Cary, however, wins the court’s per- mission to visit the dog once a month Love, it seems, has no respect for divorce decrees, for the mo- ment Cary announces his intention to re-marry, Miss Dunne sets out to win her man again by methods hilarious though perhaps not cricket The film’s sequence set at which a tendered to announce C. engagement, Irene worms he into being invited by posing as his er. Scandalous is the word for what happens after that. Leo McCarey, who won memor- able fame for his “Ruggles of Red Gap, directed “The Awful Truth” from Vina Delmar’s adaptation of Arthur Richman’s famous stage play. highlight is the fin in a ol ok gt Frg-Cent Bll | Costs City 41 | Cents to Handle ; DENVER, Aug. 30.—It took six weeks to do but the City of Denver has finally closed a 5-cent deal When Ci Auditor William H. McNichols paid out the nickel he estimated that it cost the city 47 cents in bookkeeping operations. The 5-cent purchase passed un- der the scrutiny of eighteen city employees and caused thirty-one bookkeeping operations before the bill was paid. The transaction started when the driver of a city-owned vehicle de- cided the car needed a new spring in the door lock, a 5-cent article, and requisitioned it. It ended when McNichols, six weeks later, wrote e the 5-cent voucher in payment HELD INSAN John J. DeLay, 64, oldtime resi- | dent of the north, was recently adjudged insane at Fairbanks and ordered committed to Morningside.' o }t IS I ll()il’ili;l;llity t]:c;,t Makes Something individual in campus clothes is this frock of brown and white shepherd’s checked wool tepped by a waistcoat whose trimly buttoned front is of brown corduroy. The callot is corduroy, toe, By ADELAIDE KERR AP Fashion Editor | College girls! Do you want a few credits in chic? Then be a little “different.” | Wear a gold rope necklace with your sweater instead of that string of pearls that half the country’s| college girls select. Discard that | long-suffering peasant kerchief tied | under your chin for a bright cap squashed over your curls. Mix your | colors with a sure, but daring hand And see what a dirndl can do for you. | | As to the more serious side, | campus clothes this year are, as al- | ways, casual. Skirts and sweaters | | still get the largest vote at eastern | schools, The skirts, of mixture, | monotone or plaid wools, may be pleated or plain, while the sweaters | are nearly always crew-necked. | | There’s a chance for individuality | in contrasting the colors of the two | and adding a tweed Jjacket, wool| socks and a long wool scarf to har- | monize, Reversible coats are practical | | for campus wear. This year's edi- | tions are generally squared mod- | els made of tweed or camel’s hair on one side and gabardine on the other, | The off - the - campus wardrobe | generally includes another coat of | black, brown, dark green or wine- | colored wool, cut on a fitted sil- houette and simply furred with | some such pelt as beaver, mink or nutria. | Dresses should include one sim- ple wool frock and several dark crepe ones to be worn with spark- ling clips or a “clunky” glittering necklace to weekend teas and]| dances. One simply tailored suit, whose fitted jacket has a rather high throat line, is almost a “must” for the college girl, since it can be | worn for traveling and weekend | jaunts. | Evening frocks, which complete | her wardrobe, have wide swishing | skirts this year. They come in| white, black, green, russet and ble | satins, taffetas, chiffons and vel vets and are often topped by jackets to match, | ‘clock, Avenue, become mos, Juneau Gold Mining Con cense issued yest Commissioner form the ceremony of relatives and immedia of the couple lowing a recept for all their friends live ner Third and I SOFT ers have challen ¥or Campus Chic Nudist. Nymph- of “Ecstasy” Now Toast of Filmdom ’S]’REET FILM TONIGHT l Cavorting on the beachl Scoring an immediate and outstanding success iln her first American film, Hedy Lamarr, exotic Viennese beauty, promises to become the No. 1 glamor girl of Hollywood and threatens to displace Marlene Dietrich as leading screen siren. Hedy first gained fame as the nudist nymph in the for- eign-made film, “Ecstasy”, which was banned from - - M S —— - =t three games to be played evenings on the ball park a DOUGLAS jiitess have A. follow Cochrane; v series of already been umpire- umpire, Arne in-chief base 1 of West Side platers i Waller Andrews, captain Grant, first base; r; Andrews, catcher; base; Balog, second Niemi, center fielder; J fielder; Warner, right shortstop; T. R. McCormick, BRIDE OF MR. DEMOS Next Saturday at her home on St Mrs. Hilda Runquist the bride of Mr. Alex veteran miner at ti evening at will out- will head the for chosen, it couple to afternoor Felix Gray John L. Cauble in the the D SHOWER SET aret The Rev BRIDAL IS FOR Pearce this evening with wme for Miss Hilja Reinik- soon to become a bride - - GOE' ARRIVING TONIGHT will be Mis ho: 1 immediate Mar n and oper will b For the present the in the Runquis woving to Mr. Demos stree ——ae BALL CONTE IN OFFING, DOUGLAS coup! house ot MRS, companied by her two children and Billy, Mrs. A. E rrive home this evening Princess Charlotte. Coming with Mrs. Goetz also is Douglas, ed the South Side' year-old son of Gerald Hudson, to on > soft ball play- six- Here Are Suggestions Here is a classic suit for the college girl—a cardigan jacket and skirt of gray tweed {lecked with cherry and white and worn with a sweater knit of cherry-splashed gray woel to match, | Niemi, | Goetz the United States because of its daring sequences, She is divorced from her wealthy Austrian tycoon and has been in Hollywood only about a year, yet is the toast of the film colony. tained Josef Von Sternberg, the man who built up Dietrich, to direct Hedy, and plans an extensive publicity campaign. make his home here with his p ents. T ing with his g Wash. ett AT THE HOTELS i - e Doro M: Bragoe, Smith tin Mr. ¢ Mrs. F Ketchikan Wilson, Dick 8 Martin L. Nels Ci augura SEE RELVINATOR A n 5 falls naturally member Italian, of a and E0 _AND - OPERATED U VNli,A U s O‘D By W.1, 38085 est Show Value! IMES TONIGAT ¢oLl 1197 9 stern the on La Tony C: ;ang of boy to the Chuck Brennan Of course and screenland s law, hs Kathleen Burke ha owns Brennan their licem: Connor, officer of heiress which families William M-G-M has re- and been liv in Ever- ‘he little fellow ha wdparen M .o ek T ing friends Colo.; Lewiston, Wash Juneau Dow, Boise, Idaho; Dr. Evelyn Butler; Sitka; Mr. and Mrs Rogue River, Oregon. New Alaskan and Mrs. Wickstrom R. J. Hanson; M and A. G Frank Worth Mr. and Richard, Dorothy | . Evelyn Porter; wartz; K. T. Martin, Seattle; Ganger, Seattle; Joe Smith; Mrs. L. Nelson e Leaving Nancy , Skagway school. on in the ette tax were in- ted in 1868. stamps original s W. T. AN the who the have Nigh tory Charlotte, time relatives on Anderson will ther Robert the direct by Daniel Ross is returning 14‘”]"}”] this evening on the Prin- following a s | months’ sojourn in the States, dur- which and Lincoln Idaho, she Neb.; >ee DERSONS END VISIT HERE the The Andersons have been visiting | Capital two months, as house guests of Mr, and Mrs. Russel Cook. | City most f 1s this rt the abodt ed fi Row screenplay wa Brown and Scott Darlin MRS. DANIEL ROSS HERE THIS EVENING in Montana; and steamer Colum- bia this morning, Mr., and Mrs. W, return to home at Silver Lake, Wash., where Mr. Anderson is principal for My ¢ TINC netropoli role of gane rre. another f 1y po- Fnme Q A of an tenement. ir Galway P s . ¥ AU om 1 1 B Ab d the 1iling for the are two men fr sta Bob Laney, broadcaste ter Rolfe, vaci n and bo tle but the Juncau the latler " ber. the stenmer souti tec an, are to three visited with| Tod in Denver, Spokane, It just decays in the bowe their of the Little L bite flo and up™, the past| J We've tried and tested them all! Kelvinator’s our choice...the refrig- erator were proud to sell... the refrigerator you'll be proud to owni ZEAVGE KELVINATOR alone has the new “POLAR POWER” Sealed Unit that sets a new low for operating costs— yet has encugh reserve for FIVE refrigerators. KELVINATOR is never-failing . . . will give you all the cold you'll ever need .-equal to1,050 poundsof ice aweek! 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