The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, July 31, 1931, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JULY 31, 1931. e REN|JCING” AT HISTORIC SITKA CAPITOL TEEMS WITH COMEDY .Marie Dressler and Polly/| Moran Star in Beauty Shop Play | A comedy of errors in a beauty shop, “Reducing,” now at the Capi- tol Theatre, permits Marie Dressler and Polly Moran to have fun with | the over-weight game. “Reducing” finds “Pauline Ro-| chay,” wealthy beauty parlor own- | | er, enacted by Polly Moran, invit- ing her sister, Marie Truffles, play- {ed by Marie Dressler, to bring her whole family for a New York visit.| Amusing Train Scene { The fun starts the minute Marie CASTS SPELL ON GONGRESSMAN Representative Smith Is| Enthusiastic Friend of Alaska (Continued from Page One) days for letters from the States is a disadvantage that is archalc in view of late aerial development, and this terrible fault should be remedied by the federal government at once. Would Help Business “Establishment of air mail serv- ice in the North will help business not only in this Territory but also in the States. “I believe ‘Congress should be ;“"‘bs 3‘1’°“"d,“r P\:\‘;l:y::d“;‘u‘zi‘;:]\"“”“‘ generous than it has been in er mail-carrie: ) ) 5 e T Ty AR, St | - WINALRER R, NS Page, sons, the latter the cute mascot of the American Legion Paris Convention. Laughs Grow Heartier Laughs continue to mount when Marie goes into her siser’s beauty parlor. These guffaws are drawn together in a ‘compact story of love episodes between two interest- ing young couples—Anita Page and Willima Bakewell, Sally Eilers and William (Buster) Collier, Jr. “Chuck” Riesner directed the pic- | ture. d her two mischievou: e | any s jous . | Reports received in Juneau are Billy Naylor and Jay Ward,! POSH {to the effect that floods on thel Richardson Highway prevented the | Congressional party that visited the | Interior from returning to the Coast by that route. In consequence% the lawmakers came back from| | Fairbanks as they went there, over| | the Alaska Railroad. Those mem- !bers of the party that are traveling | by steamship will return here as/ | scheduled on the Aleutian Monday, | lbut those who are voyaging on the ! {cutter Tahoe may arrive in this| | city Sunday, a day ahead of sched- | Love Causes Furo: | | Associated Press Photo Katsuko Suzuki, 23, California co-ed, won her guardian’s approval for her engagement to her white suitor, Warner Angeli of Gold Hill, Dre. and a student in Berkeley. HOLLYWOOD NEWS | e | | “Tomorrow’s Styles Toda;” NEWS | “Strange As It Seems” OUR SPECIAL | “HAMMER and TONGS” FEATURE ‘ ule. ——————— More than 40,000 Mexicans, 39,000 of them repatriates, re-entered their homeland from the United June, 1930, to June, 1931. it e et e CAPS See Our New Line of i By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD—The young man {who gave such a startling realis- tic portrayal of an ape in the title 'role of “Ingagi"” is an artist by ! States through Laredo, Tex. from 'persuasion and vocation rather |than a simian impersonator. | Charles Gemora is his name, jand he paints and models well. | Among other actors of whom he has made busts is John Barry- | more, and some of this statues have {appeared on the screen as prop- erties. He personally made the suit he wore as “Ingagi"—a role which, to FOR MATERIAL = ‘FAST LIFE' TO FOR LECTURES ~ END TONIGHT' Mrs. R. Harrington lo‘ufinlurious Affair” Will Be Take 1,000 Sull and | Shown Tomorrow Motion Pictures at Coliseum | ot To collect material for lectures is| With the Roamers on the the purpose of a visit that Mrs. and with “Fast Life” on Rebie Harrington of Adams, Mass,, 'screen showing for the last {s making to Alaska. She is in)tonight at the Coliseum theatre, | Juneau for several days, having ar- |“A Notorious Affair” will be the rived from Seward early this w attraction for the afternoon mati- She came north on her present nee and the evening performances trip late in May. She has trav- tomorrow night | eled over the Alaska Rallroad and| The Roamers, a theatrical troupe, | the Richardson Highway and has touring Southeast Alaska towns in been in Fairbanks and other In- the yahet Phroso, are under the terior towns.as well as to the vari- direction of Harry C. Willis. The| ous coast cities to the Westward. |players include good singers and| Mrs. Harrington has taken more | clever dancers and appear to ad- the times | “Fast Life” features Loretta the | Young, Douglas Fairbanks, Jr., and ‘ChPSI(’I' Morris It Pictuics Tell Story story of whoopee-making “pictures tell a story better than Mmarriage and a mysterious tragedy words,” she said. “ I like to ill-|In the “younger set.” ustrate my lectures profusely with ! A Notorious Alfair still and motion pictures. | “A Notorious Affair” is the stor- “This is not my first visit to!led struggle of a woman married Alaska. T came North eight years|to a genius 4o “hold her man” ago, thet T incorporated In a sewes of | PAtricia, & high-spirited English four lectures. 'The material gam.‘an-l_ xpnn-wd to Paul Gherardi, a bred on my previous trip enpha- | Violinist, played by Basil Rathbone. Sized the scenic grandeurs of this' P& s fight to Mmake her hus- wonderful land. On my present Pand successful, then trip I am directing attention her subsequen to keep his| $hiefly to the life ‘and customs of |10Valty convincingly shown in| ihe Thaiani Ithis picture . | Rathbone Has Strong Role | P | Charmed by Scenery She is ably supported by Basil “Of course, like all visitors 0| Rathbone, who plays the role of Alaska, T am charmed by the beau- |Gherardi, a man who is strong tiful scenery, so varied in kind and {enough to conquer the world, but 50 enfiless in eant: My own {Who needs help in conquering him- home is in the Berkshire Hill region igejf He has his moments of of Massachusetts, renowned for al-/great sacrifice, of petty weakness, luring landscapes, and only natural of natural egoism and of genuine grandeurs such as Alaska possesses | gye, in abundance can challénge my un-| gay Francis, Montagu Love, and qualified admiration.” | Kenneth Thompson are others of | She will increase this number to| 1,000 before she returns to States. is L SR S S COLISEUM THE VOICE OF THE SCREEN LAST TIMES TONIGHT Doug Fairbanks, Jr., and Loretta Young in FAST LIFE A Story of Modern Day Youth ADDED TO THIS 1S Harry C. Willis and His Roamers than 600 still and motion pictures, |vantage in dramatic presentations. | is a powerful | secret | Versatile Dance and Song Artists Note—The Roamers will play Douglas Saturday Evening Only COMING—SATURDAY QNLY BILLIE DOVE in ‘THE NOTORIOUS AFFAIR” | | and then collected material Billie Dove stars in the role of| with BA 1L IL\’I‘IIBONE Also Chapter 4 of “The Spell of the Circus” PUSISIO SIS ST S SIS TSI NIETE SO S 886w e nmitted tarium, and Jim Lacey, sentenced E to Morningside Sani- | peeee to three months in the local Fed- eral jail on an Alaska Bone Dry Law conviction. | Mr. Schnabel will return to Sitka next week on the steamer Admiral Rogers SHOES Regular Values St AT THE HOTELS 5.00 to $10.00 Gastineau Mrs: Harrington lectures princi-|the cast who do outstanding work.| Mr. and Mrs. pally in schools, churches and clubs. | Miss Francis is the “other wom. Twin Falls, Tdah Addison N. A. McEach- NOW Smith, COMING SOON e o nt aing move. thin an |She expects to'spend fwo or three an,” who wanis Gherardi becauss |ran, Clifton Pease, Carl Olsen, G. $3.00, $4.00, $5.00 HOSIERY Values you have never seen before “Last Parade” “Those 3 French Girls” “Dance Fools Dance” The newest mid-season shades All Sizes PRICED $1.00 Exclusive Agency HELENA RUBENSTEIN’S BEAUTY PREPARATIONS “Juneaw’s Own_Store” KNAPP FELTS and STETSONS at $3.50 and the Ambassador at $2.50 that can’t be beat SABIN’S Everything in Furnishings for Men » Tel. 25 We Deliver PANTORIUM CLEANERS “We Call For and Deliver” LAST YOU CAN SPECIAL DANCE HALL SATURDAY DAY BUY $12.75 to $14.75 DRESSES TWO FOR $8.90 OR $5.00 EACH THE LAST TIME THIS SEASON WE OFFER SUCH VALUES COLEMAN’S HOLLY WOOD SHOP ; s . SATURDAY " Corner 4th and Franklin THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Sts. Phone 136-2 S B e [——— Music by Earle Hunter’s Phone "TAXI SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT Stand Opposite Chamber of Commerce Booth Serenaders PHONES 83 OR 85 artistic -delineation of the charac- ter. | Tito Schipa, _brother, Carlo: Ricardo Cortez's Stanley, is an as the tenor, has a in pictures, and younger brother, ant direetor. Hint to Golfers Howard - Hughes has solved his golf problem in thorough movie fashion. Not at all complacent about his scores, the young pro- ducer had a slow-motion camera trail him over the links, recording every stroke. By studying the films he has corrected errors and now shots-in the seventies. Most of us, unfor- tunately, must be content to watch how Bobby Jones does it — cor- rectly. Pola Negri, who for the first {time is facing the micrephone, has a signature as illegible as it is huge. 4 Heavy strokes that might have been made with a brush cover sev- eral square inches. And when she autographs a portrait, sometimes the inscription and signature trail along the margins of three sides. Even ghosts must be given sex appeal nowadays. A theatre bill- board adverfises, “Dracula, the Vamping Thriller.” Just a Stepping Stone Current reports that Mary Pick- ford and Douglas Fairbanks plan eventually to devote their movie ef- forts to producting and -directing pictures in which they do not ap- pear strengthen the evidencs that acting is often a prelude to a career at the megaphone. Douglas MacLean, formerly a comedy star, is now a director- producer, and Richard Dix, Douglas GLOVER’S Pyjamas Unusual Fitting Qualities! Unbeatable Values! SEE THEM! H. S. Graves The Clothing Man “The Store That Pleases” weeks in Southeast Alaska. \8u Love is Patricia’s father. Fairbanks, Jr,, Ricardo Cortez and | Norman Foster have ambitious|small part Jeanings toward the making of pic- tures. Lowell Sherman already x:;‘ established s actor-director. |SCHNABEL ARRIVES An exception, although he would ‘WITH 2 IN CHARGEJ not have it so, is Irving Pichel, who used to stage plays, and has i been acting in pictures only as a| With custody, | Bldeline to directorial schooling. But| William fie has succeeded so conspicuously | States before the camera in several pic-|here Thursday on the steamer tures that stardom may not be|Queen. He had in his charge Joe far off { Campbell, adjudged insane and two prisoners in Schnabel, Deputy Do not tear Cellophane. Look for the conve- nient flap at the top and back of package. % tearing tin foil, slip first finger of each hand under Revenue stamp and break it. THE moment you open the new Camel Humidor Pack you begin to note the advantages of this new, scientific and sanitary method of wrapping Camel cigarettes. At once you are greeted with the delightful aroma that comes from choicest Turkish and mellowest Virginia tobaccos in prime condition. Your sense of touch also detects the freshness of Camels, for unlike moisture-robbed cigarettes Camels are pliable to the fingers. 3 But the real difference comes when you light a Camel and inha'e its cool, fragrant smoke. Cigarettes brought to you so | he is a genius and famous. Monta- ’“1'“1‘1““- eattle; ‘\N('\V York City; Anscel E. BEek- Kenneth Thompson has a rather {mann, Gordon | Wrangell. United | & Marshal at Sitka, arrived |F. Schnable, Foster M. Mills, Sitka; Elliott Fremming, 2 Simply [ift this flap and you will break the specially devised H thes 258t pediage Totk Humidor Pack. CAMELS J. Davidson, Dougl. Telegraph Creek; Charles Fairbanks; Milo Bulatorvich, Cor- | dova. | Ms. Old rapers at The Emprre. M. Molsberger, Graham, Seaplane Arnold’s Bootery Opposite Britt’s Pharmacy | Alaskan | ; W. Travis, | Williams, | Zynda | Medie Richards, Winnifred| Doolan, Los Angeles; wmmmi Junesu, - \ly " age us shown and with your thumbs push it part way out air-seal. 1 e af 3 Close package. It guards Camels from J::-t and germs and provides - sanitary protection. perfectly conditioned deserve to be kept that way in your ket. The simplest way to insure this is to open the Camel umidor Pack as shown above. That will keep intact the mildness and freshness that is makin, smokers everywhere say: “Now I'd walk two miles for a Camj because they’re twice as good.” If you haven’t tried Camels in the new Humidor Pack, switch over for just one day. Then go back tomorrow, if you can. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, U.S.A. @ Don’t remove the moisture-proof Cellophane from your package of Camels after you open it. The Humidor Pack is protection against sweat, dust and germs. It delivers fresh Camels and keeps them right Just lift che FLAP to open THE HUMIDOR PACK THE SANITARY GROCERY until the last one has been smoked.

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