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B2 B THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, JULY 14, 1931. THEATRES DAZZLLE corisEum | |8 SWIFT ACTION ROAMERS COME = IS ENACTED IN “T0 COLISEUM IN CAPITOL TUESDAY——and WEDNESDAY THE HE-MAN DRAMA OF THE Sam Wood ture from an well-known nov 3 Wetjen, went after atmesphere, ma the scenes aboard fou for the film. Ot the pic- screen attraction. Latest Vitaphone and Movietone Equipped of Geo “Th Are Li wa Me Tha comec y R 7:30 STARTS TONIGHT 9:30 a human PIESRREIIZTLEN] IF he looks at other girls YEAR! CAPITOL Barroom brawls, st cues at sea, poundir ocky coastlin er The rescues at t e laid in various | to China, an | beautifu acular res- | JOHN GILBERT with WALLACE BEERY ; (better even than in “The Big House” 9 | with WALLACE BEERY i 20 JIM TULLY, LEILA HYAMS, POLLY § MORAN GILBERT AND BEERY—What a pair of carefree, fighting sailormen to win your heart! The rough humor, the grand ro- mance of the seas in the year’s dramatic smash ! WAl /fora - sailor “BLOOD and THUNDER” MewqGoldwyn-Mayer ALL TALKING rcrurs Comedy WATCH FOR—— “REDUCING,” “AVENGER,” “DANCE FOOLS DANCE,” “LAST PARADE,” “BEHIND OF- FICE DOORS,” “LOVER COME BACK” HOLLYWOOD TOPICS By ROBBIN COONS HCLLYWOOD, Cal, July Hollywoo now and ther past mirrored as for the making of pictures of sweet- | ness and light, now boasts the re- | putation of a staid community the chief industry is pro- No Slump Here 14— | where |ducing crime and so-called ‘real- |istic” pictures. | The film capital's reputation in | the past actually was fastened upon it through indignant attacks upon certain colorful individuals in the jcolony. The behavior of these per- sons was said by some to be a |common Hollywood practice. Lately the screen has gone |through an era of sensational real- {ism, with stories of wickedness, im- {morality and crime prominent. But |they are enacted by players who }‘arc the acme of staid respectability, ) Good Bad Girls i Norma Shearer, a devoted wife ;a;xd mother, portrays daringly un- mcral “modern” heroines, and Bar- {bara Stanwyck, happily married to {Frank Pay, scores her biggest hit in a picture appropriately titl Pretty Mary Lange, one of the!“!lhci P ppropriately ed “glorified” of this year’s edition | ’ | of the Follies, can teatify that high | Marlene Dietrich has played noth- | arches, strong foot and leg muscles ing but demi-mondaine roles thus| are a few of the reasons why sha | far, but she wasn't happy in Holly- | won a place in Ziegfeld’s great iwaod until she could bring her baby | pageant of pulshritude. ary, 'girl to live with her. e ey s thasunen. | lkna Harding's ~ heroines have | who observed National Foot Com. |Peen, for the most part, i i i fort Week, | ventional, but her home life with | Harry Bannister is a true Holly- | | wood legend of domestic content- ment. | And now Bebe Daniels, after star- |ring in “My Past” and portraying a woman crock in “The Maltese Fal- ;can"‘ has retired from the screen | SWEA TERS i:empcrarily to present Ben Lyonf | 1an heir. | Does It Pay ! Hollywcod has gone respectable | $2 95 .in & big way. The old stories about L4 | wild film parties, secret sins, amor- ous intrigues, are practically gone. Occasionally some minor out- break occurs, like a fist fight at a| ‘M@yralr or_Embasy party, but they- | |'re pretty tame compared to the old days. The best Hollywood has to offer inow in the way of sensations is its divorces, always interesting but seldom scandalous because handled | |so discreetly. Neither Estelle Tay- | {lor and Jack Dempsey, nor Nan:y; “Carro]l and Jack Kirkland, the la- test, are going in for witness stand !recriminations. . And every town| | has its divorces. | There are those who maintain |that Hollywood has whitewashed |itself too completely, that the lack A clearance of A1l Sweaters Sleeveless and with Sleeves Most All Shades and Sizes cerie palls of fog, fo' castle banter- | ing, shore frolics and an interest- g romance g! v for a Sail- buoy were staged with at of the United S Guard, two steamer: and a pa being used scenes took ship, on eatre, a back ground of swift ac n, comedy and drama. John Gilbert plays the lead in the new Metro-Goldwyn Mayer production, and Wallace Beery is seen in the chief character role, that of “Tripod,” roug ck freight- er seaman, whose rivalry with Gil- bert in the matter of sweethearts results in free-for-all fights and other diverting occurrences. Polly Moran and James Tully have prominent parts. loaded and unloade of these scenes, with a fev tions, were filmed at r fog, the chilled night w ing in from seaward, meetir the harb with the warm C. nia desert a: Liverpool moisture effe Particularly di cording in the fog effect on the densi mosphere on sound sometimes pr duced echoes that distorted The casi also inciuaes Leila Hy- ams in the feminine lead, and Do is Lloyd =s iwo of the “sweet-|logue and sound effects beyond hearts.” | recording possibilities. Convidlor youn | dia={ ”JMZI Vaudeville acts, a comedy sketch i a motion pictdre make up the gram that will be given tonight um the: on the sed of Hi s compose th “End of Perfect Day” comedy sketch, “End of Day” is presented with all of the company in the Men Are Like That,” a clev | comedy with Hal Skelly and Doris | |Hill in the leading ro PERSON TONIGHT = e Disillusioned by married are composed of a |still of them however, vantage Doris Hill is the h The Webber the remain closed for Amy who puts in spite of s of her fam Love Never loves him. He and saves the day ne. Morgan F , e in the cast g e b NOTICE Beauty Clara | ! life, she | himself | into many hilariously funny situa- tions and her family, protect the girl y, Helene Davidson, TO PATRONS Parlors, MacKinnon Apartments, about ———.r-——— g on’t Rasp Your Throa With Harsh Irritants ““Reach for a LUCKY instead”’ Consider the Garden of Eden. When that old serpent put Eve up to the idea of handing Adam an apple, he may have been doing them botha good turn —for where would we be today, ladies and gentlemen, without ourAdam’sApple.ifwe didn’t haveour Adam’s Apple, we couldn’t sing, we couldn’t even speak. For your Adam’s Apple is your Larynx =—your voice box = it contains your vocal chords. So = Consider your Adam’s Apple. Be care- ful in your choice of cigarettes. Re- member — the serpent in the smokers’ " Garden of Eden =harsh irritants are present in all raw tobaccos. Don’t rasp your throat with harsh irritants. ReachforaLUCKY instead.Remember, LUCKY STRIKE is the only cigarette in America that through its exclusive “'TOASTING”’ Process expels certain harshirritants presentin all raw tobac- cos. These expelled irritants are sold ?o manufacturers of chemical com- pounds. They are not present in your LUCKY STRIKE. And so we say, ““Con~- sider your Adam’s Apple.” TUNE IN- The Lucky Strike Dance Orches- |of first rate scandal has hurt the | box-office. | But the lines still form for the 4 e, ‘, One of the new honorary colonels on the staff of Gov. W. H. Murray |of Oklahoma is R. M. McClintock, “,"Mia newspaper correspondent. tra, every Tues day, Thursday and Saturday evening over - N.B.C.networks, s et ELSINORE, CAL. Faw- | & in will one week. —adv. “It’s toasted” Including the use of Ultra Violet Rays Sunshine Mellows — Heat Purifies Your Throat Proteciion - agdinst irritation - against cough s, is the| O papers at the Embplre office IF he argues with a cop IF you want a good laugh Remember- “Men Are Like That” with Hal Skelly and Doris Hill ADDED ATTRACTION Twice Nightly—Tuesday and Wednesday . “WILLIS THE ROAMER” Versatile Vodvil Supreme in order to|s has to gep him out |5 When real trouble comes, | , he turns his nerve to ad- Also Our Regular Shorts WATCH FOR OUR SUPER SHOW— f Thursday and Friday RO King Zog Has Nest Egg EXCURSION TO s Zog s et e LEAVE SEATTLE | o mm e o ONNEXT FRIDAY University Commercial Club Coming on Dor- othy Alexander 2 ANANSS T A ARA RS AL EGH LA R I AN SNEOPES AR SR BANANES LR BANERANINT BARSASRENNNANANINONSRRAT also part of the code to burn' down the killer's house: It is possible to stop the endless chain by buying off a murdered man’s family, but only if the rela- tives are willing to take the blood | payment. This custom has grown, however, until there now exists a fixed schedule of customary prices. King Proves Bravery King Zog himself is a marked' man of these feuds, more than 80 having been declared against him i | | | | On' leaving Seattle next Friday, the steamship Dorothy Alexander l'of the Pacific Steamship Comp:myv,b will have aboard the Third Good |D2C8use people blamed on him | Fellowship Excursion of the Uni- |9eaths that resulted from the clan versity Commercial Club of the | "8IS, riots and insurrections, and Puget Sound metropolis, The ves- | OUgh which he fought his way |sel will be 10 days on the cruise, |/© Power. He hds escaped assas- being scheduled to return to her Sination five times. starting port July 26. Northbound | But the feudists seldom get an she will call at Victoria, Ketehikan, OPen chance at him and certainly Sitka and Skagway. Suuchbound.‘l:“um have small opportunity to she will visit Juneaw, Taku Gla- |PUrn down his palace here. A cier, Wrangell, Ketchikan and |Pody-guard of 350 weil paid fight- !Prince Rupert. Her sojourn herc | 'S Keeps the monarch's foes at a will be from 7 am. until 1 pm, distance. ‘Wednesday, July 22. | Zog's closest shave came early Third to Alaska this year in Vienna when a pair The approaching voyage will be of Albanians shot at him as he the third to Alaska for the Uni- |©merged from the opera. An aide- versity Commercial Club, which is | 46-Camp jumped in front of Zog an organization of business and |30d recelved a fatal wound and professional men and women of | Another alde was wounded in grap- the University of Washington dis- |PINg With the assailants, trict of Seattle. The two pre-| The king is cool-headed and is vious cruises were in 1927 and’ fv"k“‘er:g:g":}u 1ns?:em;u years u&gfl 1929. ! banian cab- On the coming voyage, the Doro- ’lnet, a man shot at him in a cotri- thy Alexander will carry a large ;2’; j‘\’lrmpte}:ie rol:“g::mem b“fl;i;f orchestra. assassin, e Evening Entertainments bed the revolver, beat him up and Dances, theatrical entertainments, | furned a badly battered would-be mock trials and masquerades will | Killer over to the police. be arranged for the diversion of | ” passengers, when the vessel is at| Another Democratic =~ ' Congressman Is Dead sea at night. An attractive folder, exploiting the trip and issued by the Uni- versity Commercial Club has been | ATLANTA, Ga, July 14.—Repre- received by Brice Howard, Juneau |Séntative Charles Gordon Edwards, agent of the Pacific Steamship |93, Democrat, from the First Geor- Company. Some activities of the &la Congressional District, dropped travelers aboard ship afe made the |dead in the office of Congressman subject of ‘a humorous cartoon, Robert Ramspreck. This restores the Republican majority 'in the Seventh-second 'Congress to two. Edwards is the seventh’ member of FORMER JUNEAU GIRL c IS BACK FOR VISIT| Devener to ale- Suneessons win ne elected before Congress meets the Mr. and Mrs. Walter T. Molloy, | first Monday in next December. and daughter Bellrole, of Salem,| Edwards was elected to Congress regon, arrived in Juneau on the in 1906 and every two years there- Prince Henry Sunday evening. Mrs. | after including 1930. Molloy was formerly Miss Irens Euans, who, as a young girl, lived in Juneau and attended the Public Schools here. She will be rem- embered by many of the old-time: |ADLER RETURNS FROM OFFICIAL TRIP EAST Mr. Molloy is owner of bakeries | TR in various cities in Oregon and| Enroute to his home at Fair- Washington. He expects to return |banks after an extended trip to the south on the southbound trip of | States, Dave Adler, Alaska member the Aueutian, but Mrs. Molloy and [¢’ the American Legioh’s Natiohal daughter will spend the summer |Committee, visited local Legion of- in Juneau visiting old friends. At |ficers here today. He continued present, the Molloys are visiting [t0 Seward on the steamer Aleu- Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Benson, on the | tian. Glacier Highway. Mr, Adler attended a meeting of AR T | the National Committee in Indian- TENAKEE MAN IS ILL (apolis, then made a trip east, visit- ing Washington and other cities, He also took in the Elks National Convention at Seattle recently. # ———.———— ¢ For fallen arches or aching feet see DR. FENTON, GORDSTEIN BUILDING. U (adv.) Fred (Sharkey) Jensen of Tena- kee is a patient in St. Ann's hos- pital. He is receiving medical treatment. e e — PERPICH IN HOSPITAL Joseph Perpich, of Juneau, enter- ed St. Ann's hospital last evening for medical treatment. SPECIALIZEW KADPIO SERVICE Pert Whitfield, Phone 373. adv