The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 2, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1933. Marion CAPITOL D THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY and ROBERT MONTGOMERY in the true story of a chorus girl— directed by Edmund GOULDING with this great cast: BILLIE DOVE, JIMMY DURANTE, JAMES GLEASON, ZASU PITTS COOPER in FAMILY” COMING—JACKIE “DIVORCE IN THE H night, {the first time. | Edmund HERE’S LITTLE CHARLEY RUGGLES —_— Arline Judge of the films, Mrs. Wesley Ruggles in private life, is shown with hér baby, Charles Wesley Ruggles, who doesn’t know yet that he comes from a line of stage ancestors., (Associated Press Photo) SAYS WOMEN | ARE CHANGING, MEN ARE NOT Fannie Hurst Is Now Pre- dicting Rank of Equal- ity Soon ( By JOHN SELBY NEW YORK March 2—Men have| remained on the same level the last fifty years, thinks Fannie Hurst. All the changes have come to women. ! Miss Hurst talked at length about: women, with all the assur-| ance that perfect grooming gives a woman. She was curled luxur-| jously in the cormer of a velvet| divan which in its turn occupied a| corner of the two-story living room)} of her huge apartment. All around were the trophies of |Yace of men, or any of that rot. an illustrious and profitable career; Why should it? And it won't dyna- in letters — vast carved chairs,|Mite the American home. Why jeweled boxes, above her head the|should it? dimly glorious paint of a priceless| «The gadget age freed woman; old triptych. Yet, said Miss Hurst an intelligent woman in an ordi- through the smoke of an especiauy;m house can do the work and blended cigarette: thave most of the day left over. “I've never talked with a suc-‘why should she spend it waiting cessful business woman who thoughtifor her man to come home? the game worth while. o “The trouble is with the wom-{ “Ill go further, and say most en,” continued Miss Hurst, whose|Wwomen are rotten mothers anyway. latest novel, “Limitation of Life,”| Motherhood is not something you deals with a business woman. “They‘are born into; it’s a study. A wom- are still sex-conscious, and that;an with a gift for something; for being! sp, the men are made sex-|decoration, ski-jumping, sewer en- consciolis to0. But there is no stop-, gineering, ‘whatnot, can surely hire ping this rebirth of women, how-|better care for her children than ever, painful ‘it may be. she can give them herself.” “It will end in perfect equality. NS s vt t s And it won't result in a weaker| Classified ads pay. FANNIE HURST - “BLONDIE" GIVES FOLLIES ROLE T MARION DAVIES Sparkling Entertainment Is Promised in Tonight Pic- ture at Capitol Theatre An unusual excellence of cast, plot, direction and production is always promised in a Marion Da-< vies-Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ' picture, for she is a fayorite star'of the |organization and hér company is {lavish in its treatment of Mer. “Blondie of the Follies,” which opens at the Capitol Theatre to- should be no exception to the rule. Surely the cast is un- usually fine, Robert Montgom- ery plays opposite Miss Davies for Jimmy Durante, who has become as popular in the movies as he was on the stage, BNlie Dove, usually a star in her own tight, ZaSu Pitts and James Gleason are included in the sup- porting cast. If they can't make an entertaining picture, one asks, who can? Written For Star The story was written for Miss Davies by Frances Marion, whose rank as a scenario writer is high, and the picture was directed by Goulding who made “Grand Hotel.” The thrill of being in the Fol- lies should be nothing new to Mar- lon Davies, for she was one of Mr. Ziegfeld's glorified girls herself— and so, for that matter, was Billie And Jimmy Durante and Clyde Cook were star comedians in Ziegfeld shows. Which should allow “Blondie of the Follies” to add the virtue of authenticity to those virtues already proclaimed. Interesting Story The story ‘tells of the rise of Marion and Billie from the tene- ments of New York to Park Ave- nue and its luxury, by way of the Follies route. There are heart- aches, jealousies, successes that thrill and lots of brisk dialogue and grand comedy promised in “Blondie of the Follies” for every- thing that goes into good picturs entertainment has been combined to make this Marion Davies fea- ture the answer to the film fan's prayer. Dove. ———.——— Lame Ducks Can’t Take All Blame in Congress (Continued mrom Tage One.) of the real impediments to action which are buried in the underlying structura of Congressional proced- ure. Here is a body of men dealing with issues and with sums of mon- ey which would stagger the self- confidence of the Board of Direc- tors of the largest private corpora- tion in the world; and yet bound down by red tape which no eca- pable board of directors would tolerate. One of the subjects just now oc- cupying the attenlion of members is legislation to permit capitol of- ficial to move into adjoining cor- ridors certain marble statues sit- | {uated by law in overcrowded stat- uary hall. It seems almost past belief that such matters should be lefi in the lap of & Congress burdened as this one is with problems or trans- cendent national and interantional import. AS FOR REMEDIES One suggestion is that the mem- bership of Congress—it is now .531 —be reduced to 300 or 200, or even less, so that responsibility on the big question of public policy could be concentrated, and lesser deci- sions parceled out to suborin- ate officials. Another is that the two-year term of house membeérs be doubled, 50 that Congressmén will not be forever under a (real or supposed) urgency to think only of politics and re-glections. An agitation has arisén to re- repeal the amendment for popu- lar election ©of Senators, in the hope that the old system of elec- tion by the State Legislatures will Testore to the Senate the prestige it once enjoyed. Altogethér, the question of what to do about Congress is as inter- esting and .complex—and as far from solutiofi—a§" any among the tangle of problems produced by the past three yeafs of trial, —— Classified ads pay. BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPARK PLUG tion in Congress takes no account “Blondieof the Follies” Here Robert Montgemery and Marion Davies appear tonight at the Capitcl in a sparkling entertainment. Here they are shown in a dramatic scene. It is a story of a gocd girl who was bad—and a bad girl who was good. iights! Camera! Let Us Film the Hollywood Drama events—Photograph mental reac- tions, optimism, despair, stoicism—) By ROBBIN COONS HOLLWOOD; Cal, March 2— The master scenario of Hollywood at the moment in Hollywood itself. A gigantic industry at the cross- roads of fortune is strong drama, AT THE BALL Turn the lenses on the Mayfair | ball, revelry of the stars, in er- in the the whole tense with emotion ac- tion suspense, the separate and multiple scenes brimming with hu- man interest major and minor |mine and orchids—Take harassed executive poring far into the night over manuscripts books, cost sheets, production charfs— fAnd they say well take it next!™ tragiedies and comedies. Eavesdrop on gossip, malice, slan- The plot? Weave your own— der, but catch those generous words and guess the ending. The scenes? and big-hearted deeds too — Hear Turn your mental cameras andwindjamming futile panaceas for microphones in any direction andithe industry, exchanged over cof- they will catch fragments to bejfee, tea, cocktails, highballs—Rec- woven into the dramatic tapestry—|ord laughter, sobs choked back, fragments relevant and irrelevant, whines ceaseless hubbub and tur- for crisis or no crisis Hollywood | moil— and its parade go on. Whirl your| The fade-out? Let's make it cameras rapidly (“pan swiftly” is|symbolic, a paramount view of dis- the term) from scene to scene fortant hills shining with snow. Get kaledoscopic impressions. . .. . ..|it? The dramatis personae, the Cameras turning? Let's go. ... |props may change. The setting A casting office teeming with ex-endures. ... tras—“No nothing today. Sorry.” —“Yes a bit for you, Tom. To- morrow morning, Stage 9, nine o'- clock"—Hunger in #hat girl's eyes, a smile on her lips— ;:” Gas Bloating Does eating even the simplest food make your stomach and bow- els fill up with gas until you think you're going to suffocate? Then just try this before you eat: “Merger? Not on your life. Why, Take a tablespoonful of artificial I know the inside—". Groups talié-{digestive juice such as you are sup- ing—Wisecrack— veiled anxlety — Posed to have in your stomach nat- Buzz, buzz, buzz of talk—Blonds, urally (druggists call it “Mentha pretty blonds, ugly blonds, blonds.| Pepsin”) and you'll have no more Pan swiftly—The Boulevard—A | trouble. No gas. No pain. No levender limousine skims by, and bloating. No distress of any kind. an aged beaten actor from another| Money back, says Butler Mauro day plods on foot— Drug Co.,, any time that Dare's Flash now to trade paper head- Mentha Pepsin fails to give relief. lines in bewildering succession —| —adv. “Bankers in Conference” “Unit SRR e Production on Rise” — "Se]znick? OFFICIAL Syster: Bridge Quits Radio”—"“Sam Katz Returns”| Butler Mauro Drug Co. —(Catch with your camera, if you| can, the feel of events piling upon | THE SCENE SHIFTS Pan swiftly — tne commissary4 noisy, chattering — “Receivership} BOOKS. —adv. Classified ads pay. LISTED ON KIDNAP ROLL Mary Brian (upper left), Sally O'Neil and Edmund Lowe were among {llm*in(n” @ were believed marked for abduction by Luella Pearl Hammer and Frank Howard, ex:<conwict, who are under indict- ment in Los Angeles for the kidnaping of Mrs. Mary B. Skeele, a pro« fessor’s wife. The names of 22 film folk weére found in the effects of _the two held in the Skeele case. (Associated Press Photos) : =4 B ks == BUT WATCHES EVERY ACTION {Arkansas Woman Senator Has Not Started Her “Shouting” Yet By HERBERT PLUMMER WASHINGTON, March 2—Last summer when the only woman in the United States Senaté—the soft- spoken, black- considerable terest in Wash- ington: “You may see/S me yet,” she said| in discussing her| campaign, “flail-] ing my armsi around and MRS HATTIE CARAWAY shouting.” That there was a lot of that sort of thing done in her campaign what with Huey Long and his bandwagons touring Arkansas in her behalf is certain. At any rate, in view of the col- orful campaign that résulted in her being sent back to the Senate, and her statement about “flail- ing” and “shouting,” many observ- ers watehed upon her return to see whether any change could be detected in “the liftle woman from Arkansas.” NOT MUCH CHANGED Now with the 72nd Congress in the ‘“home stretch,” it is about agrééd that tao all outward ap- pearances there hasn't beem much change. She has yet to inject herself in- to debate preferring to remain si- lent in her seat and lstén In the discharge of her other duties it is much the same. Those who watched her in hedrings be- fore the Senate committee on the proposed farm relief bill noted that she sat by quietly, intently, listening to the testimony of var- ious witnesses. But it is when she is away from the Senate and aes they say ‘“on the hill” talking “off the record” that she reveals herself as she really is. SPEAKS HER MIND Then she speaks her mind free- ly. She delights in telling anee- dotes about her recent and turbu- lent campaign. She even recités little poems illustrating some of her experiences in that drive with Huey Long that resulted in mak- ing her the first woman ever electéd for a full term to the Sen- ate. Those’ who have been in on some of these informal conversations say that it's a vastly different woman from the one who sits daily on the Senate floor, still looking perhaps a bit bewildered and hesitant to jump in the fray. Perhaps, after all, shell never bring herhelf to the point of “flailing” her arms and “shout- ing” on the Senate floor. Perhaps she remembers the promiseé she once made to her constituents: “I may not talk like a states- mdn but I hope to convince you that I vete like one.” R To Stop A Cough ’ That Hangs On Toke a teaspoonful of Bronchu- line Emulsion. Never mind the taste nor the smell—it’s not half as bad as you think it is going to be. If your cough hasn't stopped; take another dose in three or four hours. ‘Two doses is usually enough to kill the most stubborn, hang-on cough. A bottle surely does it or you get your money back. course if you want a sweet; sugary sedative Bronchuline Emul- siont i3 not the cough medicine for you. Bronchuline contains no habit- forming drugs of any kind. But it certainly kills-a cough! No doubt about it. Or Harry Race and all other good druggists guar- antee to give your money back. i More F or Your i COLEMAN’S BILLE DE BECK _ ey KEEPS QUIET [MARIAN MARSH \m BECOMES STAR IN "UNDER 18°§ Interesting Cast Appears in Cinderella - Story at Coliseum “Under Eighteen” feature picture starring tonight at the Coliseim, presents Marian Marsh in the ap< pealing role of a child of poor parents, who' strives with the un- tutored eagerness of youth to win 2 place among the idle rich, whom she sees daily at the modiste shop where she earns her meagre liv- ing. In the interesting cast with Miss | |Marsh are Warren William, Regis Toomey, Anita Page, Joyce Comp- ton and Norman Foster, Miss Marsh has been leading woman for John Barrymore, BEd- ward G. Roblison and Willilem PICTURE OF MRS. DIMOND APPEARS IN SEATTLE PAPER 4 two-column photograph of Mrs. Anthony J. Dimond, wifé of the Delegate to Congress-Hlect from Alaska; appeared in the roto< gravure section of the last Seattle Sunday Times. The caption stat- ed that she had visited in Seattle recently on her way from her home g ‘cla.ldez, Alaska, to Washington, ——————— MR. AND MRS. FRANK SWARTZ LOCATE IN FRANCES APTS. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Swarts, Who recently feturned from the South where they were married a short time ago, have taken a suite at the Frances Apartments, ——————————— WOMEN OF MOOSE Regular meeting tonight at 7:30. Card party to follow. KATE E. JARMAN, —adv. Recorder. It’s a Long Time Since - Jolin Had Rheumatism Happy Now—No More ldle Dsys— || His Wife Joyfully Asserts. As long ds you have an excess of ufic acid and other circulating poisons in the joints, blood and tissues you are going to have rheu- mati¢ pains, aches, twinges and Joint swellings—you can't help but have them. So start today with this swift. safé, popular prescription to gét rid of annoying rheumatic troubles Just ask Butler Mauro Drug Co, Juneau Drug Co. or any druggist for one 85 cent bottle of Allenru— a sensible scientific formula free from opiates or nerve deadening drugs—it dtives out pain and agony in 48 howts—or money back. Excess uric acid polson starts to leavé body in 24 Mours—the samé guarantee holds ,good for Sciatics, Neuritis and LumBago from the same cause—why nof start to well’ today. i s ~COLISEUM NOW PLAYING Under eighteen, the " know the ways of the world. MARIAN MARSH in UNDER 18 with | WARREN - WILLIAM Anita Page-~Regis. Toomey BT SO e A OO Ambrosia Cosmetics 1o Infroduce Ambrosia Powder 1 Box Powder 1 Bottle Pore-deep Skin Clednser L Jar Skin Creasn All for $1.50 JUNEAU DRUG CO. SUBSTATION NO. 1 Phoné 89 Frev Deftvery SRR S : ' BATISFYING COALHEAT that's easy oh your pocketbook . Pum COKING FURNACE COAL with INDIAN COAL Money-back gusrasitee of satisfaction. 3 PHONE 412 Picific Caait Coal Co: HORLUCK’S PALM BEACH BHck and DANISH Jee Oreasn ALL FLAVORS Juneatd Iceé Cream BEAUTY SHOP —adv. | | INSURE YOUR HOME | Your Furnishings in 2 SAFE. COMPANIES H. J. EBE AT LOWEE RATES " oid First. MAY HAYE Modiste GLASSES 50c, 75¢, §1.00 HIS HEART'S PERFECT, MR. GOOGLE.. CAN'T SLEEP-? THAT'S BAD FOR A RASSLER-- 1 BETTER GET THE DOC OVER RIGHT AWAY -~ I CAN'T SLEEP, MR. GOOGLE THAT RADIO MESSAGE YOU RECEIVED LAST WEEK HAS AROUSED MY CURIOSITY -- OKAY-? THEN LET HIM READ THIS-. INSURANCE Allen Shattuck, Ine. ! Established 1898

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