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FILM NOW AT CAPITOL WILL END TONIGHT “You're Only Young Once” Features Lewis Stone in Role as Father Lewis Stone, always master cf character analysis in a screen por- trayal, again reaches the heart in his latest role as head of a typical American family in “You're Only Young Once,” which ends tonight at | the Capitol Theatre. | Cecilia Parker and Mickey Rooney | handle the romance end of the | new comedy drama. Others in the | cast are Fay Holden, Frank Craven, Ann Rutherford, Eleanor Lynn, Ted Pearson, Sara Haden, Charles Ju- dels and Selmer Jackson “You're Only Young Once” is the graphic and humorous story of any smalltown American family Away on vacation, with its tend- ency to throw off the restraints imposed by familiarity and find a Our Short Subjects Are the Talk of the Town! ;M”)NR;HT I’REV]E\VV new meaning in life. . | Stone, as Judge Hardy, head “ARSENE LUPIN | i v ” SETURNS" la family of five, enacts the role of {a man beloved in his community. Understanding, tolerant and wise, Mlss HUSSEY he watches over his home, protect- {finds the proper method of saving {her from a serious mistake without shower at the residence of Mrs. |Pled, the father again comes to the George Gullufsen, in the Davis | FeScue. |ing bridge, with Mrs. Oscar Oberg winning the honors. Guests present,included Mrs. Oscar Olson, Mrs. Bud Anderson, Mrs. Roland Lindquist. Mrs. Chris pailey, Mrs. Molly MacSpadden, | Mrs. Albert Carlson, Mrs. A. Dun- | can, Mrs. Aline Russell, Mrs. Oscar | Oberg, Mrs. Hans Berg, Mrs. P. J Hussey and Miss Pat Gullufsen. e — There are about 100 geysers and 300 non-cruptive hot springs Yellowstone National park. ing his children from the ugliness ’Jll‘m scandal of the outside world. |volved with a married man, he Miss Patricia Hussey, whose mar- | hurting her and without resorting riage to Clifford Berg will be an to disciplinary measures. When his last evening with a miscellaneous | Wealthy girl who is also unprinci- Apartments The manner in which Judge The evening was spent in play | Hardy straightens out his famil g was g ay- How to Ease | ever has lived in an average Ameri- 1. o‘_ |can town will recognize the atmos- FIRST-massage throat, 5 chest, and back with Vicks | i"Ve,w VI relieves the distress. THEN — to make its long-continued layer of VapoRub on the chest and cover with a warmed cloth. keeps working—loosens phlegm—e: muscular soreness or tightness—clears S \JICKS ing the worst of VapoRus i When the daughter becomes in- event of the near future, was feted | SO also finds himself tangled with e D —_ |mistakes is characteristic. Wh phere and even, perhaps, a number ERY s 5 ‘VapoRub at bedtime. This action last even longer, spread a thick LONG AFTER sleep comes, VapoRub fig;mg;;ggfes coughing-relieves the cold is over. Hollywood Sights And Sounds By Robbin Coons Peace, its wonderful. It’s going to keep on making HOTLLYWOOD, Cal., Oct. 25. Hollywood is breathing again. pictures. Even big pictures. 4 3 If things had turned out differently at Munich, they'd have turned out sourly in Hollywood. Other industries—steel, food- stuffs, materials—might have enjoyed a temporary boom in the holocaust, but the movies would have taken a tailspin. They'd have had to stick to their knitting only in a minorly colossal way. They'd have had to make little pictures for sale to domestic audiences only. They couldn’t have expected foreigners to leave their bombproof shelters to ogle a screen. There would have been no helping the “colossals” already made. “Marie Antoinette” wouldn't have had her expected boost from Europe. (“But well get it all back from Europe,” was the stock Metro answer to “Marie’'s” big budget.) “Gunga Din,” calculated to cash in heavily through the Brit- ish Empire, would have gone out with two strikes against it. “If I Were King,” made for international appeal, would have taken a cut of at least one-third in anticipated revenues. “Men With Wings,” high-budgeted, would have turned pale, under its technicolor, just like producers all over Hollywood during the war jitters. During that scare many a “big one” was taken off the ready- to-shoot list and put back on the shelf. Frank Lloyd had planned “Ruler of the Seas,” a story of a big shipping family, but he substituted “Big Steel” as his next. “The Light That Failed” has been on and off the schedule WHY NOT ENJOY A REALLY DELICIOUS SUNDAY DINNER AT THE NEWER—FINER PERCY'’S for several years. During the war talk it was off again—cost too much for the American market to bear alone, Peace—it's on again. “Beau Geste,” “The Irish Sweepstakes,” “Knights of the Roundtable”—British appeal subjects that couldn’t have been undertaken but for Munich. They're all definitely on now. “Hotel Imperial,” so-called jinx picture because of its history, %5 on again with Isa Miranda, the Italian star who didn't make “Zaza.” Marlene Dietrich started for “Hotel Imperial,” walked out of the lobby. Margaret Sullavan was to take over, broke her arm. Isa was next—but if Italy had gone with Hitler on a bombing party, Isa would have been out. Garbo and Dietrich, whose pictures generally rely on the for- eign markets fo show their best returns, might have been missing stars in a war season, or at least have been seen in less costly vehicles. Garbo probably wouldn't have had her “Madame Curie” but she'll have it now. Peace, it’s' wonderful. Hollywood has been idling along all summer, waiting for this and waiting for that; the government’s trust-busting suit and internal dissensions in the industry have put a gnmp into the usually ambitious schedules. Now, it’s a matter of getting pic- tures out to meet release dates and give the theatres something to show. With peace, the showings will be much, much better, uf | - Sommers Low THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, OCT. 25, 1938. Ex-Gobs Rout Ex-Doughboys ~ OnNavy Night Alford John Bradford Post Dugout Is Scene of Mighty Conflict With “Admiral” “Vice-Admiral” 3ert Lybeck and | George Gullufsen presiding in full regalia—flat hat and C. P. O. cap—Navy Night was featured at the regular meeting of Alford John Bradford Post, Amer- ican Legion, in the Dugout last| night It was a great night for the ex- |Gobs and ex-Marines as they clear- | led the decks for action and out- lawed the “you can't stand there | soldier” ex-doughboys and refused |to even let them be heard as the great record of the Navy and its personnel was unfolded for their benefit. Capt. John M. Clark, who was on the bridge of a transport in the North Atlantic during the war, gave jan appropriate address on the Navy's activity during the war and |since, and even the ex-Doughboys found out, after twenty long year: why “you can’t stand there, soldier.’ Salty “Vice-Admiral” Gullufsen |gave an “enlightening” picture of | how the Navy lads had to go over and “show the Army how to shoot thé big guns during the conflict” and although this met with con- siderable demands to be heard by the Army, a vote taken on a “sit- |ting vote of thanks to the Nav. for being God’s gift to the Armj |was carried unanimously with the ! | ance of votes cast by four |P John Adams, U. S. |Grant, Theodore Roosevelt and | | Franklin Delano Roosevelt the Army votes, of course, not being counted in view of the fact that it was Navy Night In order to reciprocate for ‘the great service” the ex-Gobs had been in “firing the big guns over- seas,” the ex-Doughboys made the coffee and helped serve the sand- wiches and cake the former sailors had provided—an “Armistice” being declared until “Army Night” rolls around when, it is reported, the lex-Gobs are going into hiding. Pulling a mean oar for the Navy with Lybeck, Clark and Gullufsen, | were Al Zenger, Leo Jewett, Al Johnstone and Lew Williams. - e Bidder on City Sewer Project Juneau Firm Makes Offer |’ of $40,735—Engineer’s | Estimate Only $31,200 The R. J. Sommers Construction Company of Juneau was low bidder on the Juneau sewer project when bids were opened at 5 o'clock y f |cil. The Sommers bid was $40,- | |735.05. | | The other bidder was Wright and |Stock of Seattle at $41,851. | | The Council delayed action until today in view of the fact that the| |lowest bid was about $9,000 above ithe city’s estimate of $31,200 and| | was above the PWA engineer’s esti- | mate of $38,000. Mayor Harry I. Lucas said he expected to get the | | Council together again this after- |noon to consider the matter. Two plans are being considerrd! by the Council, both of which would | ;includc awarding the contract to |Sommers. Some of the scwer work | could be eliminated to get within | the city’s available money, or somc} of the PWA grant money available | for other projects could be diverted | to the sewer projects, thus cut- ting down on the city’s PWA pav- ing project. Work on one of the projects must be gotten underway by November 4 in order to qualify for the PWA’ grant and loan. The sewer project calls for con- struction from lower Franklin along the waterfront and out through the | | Willoughby Avenue district. i MISS APLAND, MISS " PARROTT HOSTESSES | Miss Mildred Apland and Miss terday afternoon by the City Coun- ‘r' Helen Parrott entertained last eve- | ning in the banquet room of Percy | Cafe with dessert and eight tables | of bridge. | A Hallowe'en motif was carried | | out in decorations for the evening. | 'WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— Without Calomel — And You'll Jump Out of Bed Full of Vim and Vigor. | Your liver should pour out two pints of | liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile isnot flowing freely, your food doesn'tdigeat. It just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up | your stomach. You get constipated. Your | Whole system is poisoned and you tecl sour, | sunk and the world looks purk. A mere bowel movement doesn’t get at the euuse, It takes those famous Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two pints of | | bile flowing freely and make you feel “ap and up”’. Harmiess, gentle, yet amazing in making bile flow freely. Look for the nume Carter’s Little Liver Pills on the red pack- age. Refuse anything else. Price: 25¢. Ruth Etting Quizzed | nger Ruth Etting is shown as she was questioned and sheoting of Myrl Aiderman, her bridegreom of a few months, by her s . Stephens (left) fermer hushand and standing just outside the hospital room constantly at her hushand’s bhedside.- Dollars Can Hurdle Legal Bar to Europe Fiscal Agents Claim (Continued trom Page One) several times as much might ran te I of the amount now invested in thi foreign investment to about nine billion dollar Actual dollar credits in can banks and other “quick owned by foreigners used at once if I American term” credits of the total into goods more So far, this pending money scared here from here for investment san happen A big order f placed by an English firm for steel clothes, tires, or airplanes. The American firm is told only part will be paid in cash, the i one, two, or three year notes. The American manufacturer wants the job. Unless he is able to arran the credit the English purchaser demands, he loses the contract. So, asks his bank if it will buy the notes or lend him money on them so his capital will not be tied up. f the fo n company - offering the buying is a substantial firm such as the big British armament firm of Vickers, the bank may readily buy the notes and expect to rediscount them (get cash for them) at the Federal Reserve banks. And thus a big line of borrowing could be launched. m money forei count here amonrnt Am cred- an be wish “Long two-third; convertec yreigners to buy upplie forming would be involves merely aready here, either or sent look what abroad. But aood is to b PROFITS CHANGE VIEWS The extent to which such prac- tices now are followed is unknowr here. Probably it isn't large. If it grew to real proportions, likely enough the courts would be asked to rule whether such business business man: * Falls by Detect well concerning the Harry Martin Snyder, They are where Miss Etting AP Photo. has been the was it lation of Johnsoh the spirit of But if the busine: at the 1 profitabl I ful how wt de- uld stand in the way. Tre- would be put upon barrier en- provit cisi pressure already the en revise t, but to repeal that argument credits can help trade revival. tirel the Ami an in ican ternational > oo Rotary Governor Coming North in Next Few Weeks| Plans Being Made for Dis-| trict Conference to l’{(‘ld }{PI'P ill Mr’l_V Marshall E. Cornett of Klamath Ore tary, will e in Juneau late in| November or early in December in| cennection with Rots District | Conference to be held here next May, according to a communication of the Club today at its noon lur ecn at Percy’s Cafe from Gov rnor Cornett The District Rotary leader said in his letter that tentative sailing date of the delegates to the Con- ference to be held here is next May 5. Between 1000 and 1500 dele-| gates are expected and the local club already has its arrangements underway for their entertainment. Featured on the entertainment program today were Mrs, Lillian zen, well known Juneau comedienne, and little Misses Margaret Giana- cos and Jacqueline Schmitz, Mrs ict Governor of Ro- |in Uggen, a favorite of the Rotarians, was and Margaret and Jacqueline’ won adv. U N E LISEUM OWNED AND _OPERATED Wt SHOW PLAYING Mrs, J. Metormick Jrare) HERE DEPICTS Host COLLEGE LIFE . ... in Movie at Coliseum . ! i This Evening ondi ess Last Night Juneaw’s Greatest Show Value Last Times Tonight WOTTA LIFE! WOTTA RIOT! WATTA LAFFAPALOOZA! THE RITZ BROTHERS in iemghp it “LIFE BEGINS ton i sar. Ko catow, | IN COMUEGE” Ruel Joan l\ai?s:-l!"l")nhy Martin Gloria ::sfhmrl Also Peeping Penguins torial—Movietonews Stcial o Foloy is mempers *kah Lod; to ocrmick enter- the Rebekah ing at her West hoe were played movie-making is a 1 the Rilz pearance on comedy-mad in College serion Brother the set.! stars I'wentiet cal come Tony Mar iart and a tremer ending The 10 daffy o mu Joan Davi 1 and Gloria ¢ cast cum n Vire . during n of the picture M Wi n 1win, M he Arn't Gather were i B th happened said Ha ee the newcdmer my tood you around. boy The Ritz Brother and bagan dance bewildered Baldwin, F. Zanuck, Twentieth preduction chief, had pear in “Life Begin Baldwin took the uredly, after which duced to Fred Stone ton, Ed. Thorgersen > Dunbar, Jed Pront Marjorie Weaver Nugent with whom he pear in the supporting cast They're supposed to be Baldwin commentad later, in no position to argue Karl Tunbe 1 to wall tion at } ir handsome! La Walla, Wash icers will hand ng the joined around whom D Century 1ed to in Coll fun ge he i meef to ing the regular night 2, each indiv that anot! The mer Odd F wsked d-nat e Nat Pendle- Marsh Maurice and J. C. to ap- India D s offering Joan & Iver will be made — NEED CLOTHING? You'll find it Here— FOR LESS DRESS . SHOES L $2.95 New Stock—Good Leather WRIGHT’S 1009, Wool Black Underwear UNION MADE Only $4.75 a suit HARRY’S ——THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP 217-S. Franklin Lias P and I'm vet d Don Ettlinger reen play from a series by Darrell Ware. The routines for the Ritz Brothers were devised by Sam Pok- rass, Sid Kuller and Ray and the dances were staged by Nick Castle and Geneva Sawyer Song hits by Lew Pollack Sidney D. Mitchell include “Why Talk About Love?”, “Big Chief Swing It,” “The Rhumba Goes Col- ‘Our Team Is On The nd “Fair Lombardy. s Tobias, Al Lewis and Mur- PR | HATS-$2.50 Sue." All Popular Styles speciality Golden and warm sented song. H. C. Noonan, Ketchikan Rc an, was a Visitor today and two new members were initiated—Fred Ax- ford of the Top Notch staurant ind Bert McDawell of Bert’s Cash Grocery LABONTE ARRIVES HERE TO OPERATE CLEANING PLANT Among appla for the ably pre- . rif (Opposite Erw in Juneau Alaska from me LaBonte, of the opera- | Dry Cleaning the aboard the the tion of the Triplex plant, being opened for business here tomorrow by Sam Shabaldak Mr. LaBonie has had twenty four year of experience in the| cleaning business, most of the time Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, For the past several years he has worked in the larger plants in Seat tle, among them: The Pantorium Sure Way and Harrison Dye Works Mr, Shabaldak announced today that installations and tests have been completed and that his new plant is ready for operation to- morrow. He has engaged Curly Weyand as driver of the delivery ~—ATTENTION — Mass Meeting of Al A.-J. Employees WEDNESDAY—OCTOBER 26—11 AM. UNION HALL The purpose of this meeting is to discuss the recent Wages and Hours adjustment. - “Effendi” is Turkish respect equivalent to the Mg title of English DUD ATTENTION Q.ES. Regular meeting of Juneau Ch ter, Tuesday, 8 p.m. Special prog and refreshments. LILLIAN G. WATSON, Secretary JUNEAU MINE AND MILL WORKERS UNION—Local 203 it'’s time right now to be thinking about sending them to your friends . ... WE HAVE ALREADY THOUGHT OF THEM for you and have a varied selection of cards for your choice at . . .. Phone s The Empir he Odd Fellows also tomorrow business I, in charge of which Hooker, will be used for making which is to aid in the music fund' ALASKANA, by Marie Drake; 50c.