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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1933, CAPITOL FRIDAY—SATURD, N Bl [d W“yflm STARTING SUNDAY JACKIE COOPER in “DIVORCE IN THE FAMILY” A e e be g FUR GARMENTS | Made to Order Remodeled, Repaired, Cleaned | H. J. YURMAN | The Furrier Pile— Sufferers Can You Answer These Questions? Do you know why external rem- edies do not give quick and perma- P ,'that story Frances Marion, whol nent relief? Why cutting does not remove the cause? Do you know the cause of Piles is internal? That there is congestion of blood in the lower bowel—the veins flab- by, the parts almost dead? Do you know that there harmless internal remedy for itch- ing, bleeding or protruding piles discovered by Dr. Leonhardt and known as HEM-ROID sold by all druggists that's guaranteed? HEM-ROID banishes piles by re- moving the cause. It stimulates the circulation in the lower bowel— drives out the thick impure blood, heals and restores the affected parts. HEM-ROID tablets have an al- most unbelievable record of suc- cess right in this city. So why waste time on external remedies or worry about an operation when Juneau Drug Co. invites every Pile suffered to try HEM-ROID with guarantee of money-back if it does not end their Piles no matter how stubborn the case? —adv. is a There’s big news for you in the advertising columns. OIL ( CAPITOL SHOWS Robert Montgomery, Jim- my Durante, Billie Dove, Zasu Pitts Play Roles “Blondie of the Follies,” the Metro - Goldwyn - Mayer picture at the Capitol Theatre is another ex- ample of what this producing firm can do in the way of com- bining excellent story with superb | acting and direction. Marion Davies and Robert Mont- gomery prove their competence to| head a cast which includes such players as Billie Dove, Jimmy Du-; rante, James Gleason, ZaSu Pitts, Sidney Toler and Douglass Dum- brille. Clever Direction Helps Edmund Goulding follows his triumph in “Grand Hotel” by an- other superlative example of di- rection. His was no mean task, covering a range of action which included glimses of New York tene- {ment life, backstage episodes in the Follies, gay Broadway parties in night clubs, luxurious apart- ments and on board a yacht. His attention to detail and his know- ledge of comedy as well as dra- matic values have, in this case, had an unusually happy result. The picture tells the story of the adventures of a pair of working|{ girls who graduate to popularity and luxury in the Broadway show world. It is the story of their departure from the poverty of their tenement environment, their (Associated Press Photos) ASSASSINS LEAVE BLOODY TRAIL AROUND THE WORLD SWATTING OF i Gol LITTLE BALL ALL THE RAGE f Is Booming in Mexico —$200,000 Course Is Laid Out MEXICO CITY, March 3.—The Mexican revolution, long active in the development of athletics for the improvement of the middle and lower classes, now has gone 'in for golf in a big way. | The roster of officers of a new $200,000 golf project at Cuerna- vaca, the week-end retreat for Mexico City residents for the past | 400 years, is a roster of the cur- | { | rent revolutionary leaders. The name of Giuseppe Zangara (center), whose bullets aimed at President-elect Roosevelt wounded five persons, has been added to the list of assassins who in recent years have written red pages into the world’s history. In France last May, Paul Gorguloff (upper left), Russian doctor, shot and Killed Presi- dent Paul Doumer, About a year ago in Tokyo Goro Hishinuma (lower left) killed Baron Takuma Dan, somstimes called -Japan's Rockefeller. In 1928 bullets fired by Jose de Leon Toral (upper right) removed Gen. Alvaro Obregon from Mexico’s public life. Assassins’ shots rang out again in Mexico in 1930 when Daniel Flores (Jower right) shot and wounded Ortiz Rubio, who at the time was president of Mexico, sojourn in luxury, and their re- 1turn home. But in the telling ofI composed . it, and’ Anita Loos, who wrote the dialogue, have impart- ed strong drama and moments of high humor. The picture abounds in fine entertainment. ENGAGEMENT OF AL LUNDSTROM MADE | IN LA GRANDE, ORE‘ The engagement of Miss Mildred Hoyt, daughter of Mrs. L. M. Hoyt, |} of La Grande, Oregon, to Al Lund- strom, of Juneau, was recently an- nounced in La Grande. The wed-| ding is to take place in that city in the early summer, according to the Evening Observer, of La Grande. { The engagement was announced |7’ {in a unique manner at a bridge![” # dinner given by Miss Hoyt and her | Soam crawrors knew it all the sister, Mrs. Avis Perris. Richard | time; that when Ferris, dressed as an Alaskan min-|J0an Crawford signs a check, or er, distributed little gilt packess|George Arliss takes pen in hand with cards, inside ammouncing the [0 address the King of France it engagement. isn’t necessarily Joan’s or Arliss’ The bride-to-be, with her sister, | Writing you see nor Miss Myrtle Hoyt, and severai hands. To Order” By RUBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Cal, March 3.— The things one does find out in this town! Who would have “khought it —that | those samples of stellar handwrit- ing you frequent- ly see on the| screen in what| are known tech-| nically as “in-| serts” aren’t sam- | i [ples of stellar| §handwriting at| 2 lanl | Or maybe you ' even their Star Handwriting “Made for Movie Stars rector,—whose suits the character, It is more difficult when hand must be seen writing. such cases someone resembles the star’s and whose writing suits the character is found to serve. penmanship the In NOBODY'S THE WISER The deception is undiscernable on the screen. In the case of some stars the fan may be grate- ful for the innocent movie trick- ery. George Arliss’ hand, for in- stance, is not one to be read easily and quickly from a distance. Miss Chatterton’s is more legis ble, and Kay Francis writes a néat backhand, but one seldom suitable to the characters she plays. M-G-M ACTOR FINDS ROMANCE IN ALASKA whose hand | BREWSTER MADE FIELD SUPT, OF REINDEER WORK District Range Manager Is Appointed to Succeed Mozee—Goes to States pointed Field Superintendent of B. B. Mozee, resigned, and conferr- ed today with. Gov. Parks while the steamer Northwestern was in port. He was appointed a week {ago by Secretary Wilbur and or- dered to report to Washington for a conference. Mr. Mozee, veteran of the old Office of Education personnel, has been in charge of the field forces of the Reindeer Service since it was organized several years ago. He made his headquarters at Nome. - General Plutarco Elias Calles, |former president and chief of the Mexican revolution, is president {and sponsor of the club which ad- joins his home in Cuernavaca. Aroused by his enthusiasm and support of the project, the Cuerna- naca club was organized at a poli- tical meeting in the Calles home fin late January and more than $50,000 stock was pledged at the initial meeting. The following Monday more than one hundred men with teams went to work clearing the course and excavating for the clubhouse, which faces the Laredo-Mexico City-Ac- apulco international highway. President Abelardo Rodriguez, an ardent golfer, who learned to play at Agua Caliente Club in Lower California, is vice-president of the new club. Officials All Big Shots General Manuel Perez Trevino, president of the National Revolu- |tionary party, is the club commis- |Sloner, Jose Manuel Casauranc, the Foreign Minister is Secretary and Alberto J. Paul, Secretary of |the Tederal Treasury Department, iis the club freasurer. The board of directors includes General Joaquin Amaro, director of the military school; Secretary of Communications Miguel M. Ac- |osta; and General Pedro VU, Al- Imada, sub-Secretary of War. It was said General Calles hopes to produce a Mexican internationl Lyman S. Brewster has been ap-;golf champion within the next few |friends for some weeks in Kent years. Mexico has never com- the Alaska Reindeer Service vice manded -international attention in|ett will go to Salt Lake City, golf, although there are a dozen |golf clubs in Mexico, chiefly pat- ronized by foreign residents. Makes Rapid Progress Rapid progress of Mexican play- ers in recent years, however, is indicated, by the score of 282 which YOUTHFUL STAR| cousseon 4 “Under Eighteen,” which opened at the Coliseum last night, pre Coliseum last night, presented Ma-~ rian Marsh in her first star role. Marian's porfrayal of the wist- PROVES HERSELF; -2 Better Than She ‘Was In' “Five ANITA PAGE Coliseum Feature |ful, wilful and tantelizingly lovely |g high school boy, Frank Reiber (for love and luxury, her struggle!ing to get paid for. the job, jto help an older sister out of am quite amazing in one so young. cavger. He caught on as an in- Compton and Norman Foster. Tn 1931 hé volunteered to go be- try club, turnéd in the low score,[the job for good. General Joaquin Amaro former |Was' régardéd as one of the smart- | Cuernavaca, under the O#alles-|season with Deétroit. 3,000 feet lower in altitude, it has) & W g Preview 1 AM. “PRESTIGE” IN “UNDER 18" Star Final” in . .t “UNDER EIGHTEEN” Marian Marsh and Fine E EN i!, RBGIS TOOMEY climber in “Under Eighteen,” more ysed to shag flies 4t Navin Field, than fulfills the promise of her|nome of the Tigers, for nothing to support a widowed mother, her| Reijper, purchased the Tigers pathetic attempt to storm the|from ‘Begumént, Te: hud {unfortunate marriage, her tender pncofiraged !battles with her workingman lover shag Thes at M;‘n::mg;,b: ‘Warren Willlam is her leading ldér with ®vansville of the jman and other roles are taken by Threé-Eye Téague in 1930 and hind the bat ome day whem the guez golf cup.” Mario Mereado, two - regular - Evansville - catchers and was followed by 17 playe He was sold to Beaumont and in !who cracked 300 for the 72 holes.(1932 led Texas League catchers Secretary of War, and father of|ést handlers of “pitchers in that Rodriguez impetus, is the busiest| Reiber is 23 years old and weéighs city in Mexico today. Located on-}172 pounds. . His height is 5:08%. |attained a building boom of large propottions. { ————— MRS. C. M. TUCKETT }{! SPECIAL Ambrosia: Cosmetics to Introduce Ambrosia . Poivder 1 Box Powder 1 Bottle Pore-deep “ Ski Cleanser Jar Skin Cream " AU for $1.50 MARIAN MARSH I P WARREN WILLIAM Cast Do Good Work in DETROIT, Mich. March 3.—As earlier roles. Her vague longings|put practice. This Jear, he's go- | strongholds of the rich, her efforts —are all handled with an artistry | jecided an @ préfessional baseball ’Regls Toomey, Anita Page, Joyce Made good. a caddy at thé Mexico City coun-|were injured, and stuck right on 1t was interesting to note thatlin batting with a 315 average and polo in Miéxico, finished with 297.fcffchif. Té reésulft was a try-out ly 45 miles from Mexico City, but y Mrs. C. W. Tuckett, whose hus- band is with the Coliseum chain of theatres in Southeast Alaska, |with headquarters in Juneau, took | passage this morning on thé North- western for the south, for én éx- itended visit. After visiting relatives and jand on Vashon Island Mrs. Tuck- |Utah where she will visit with Mr. Tuckett’s home for some time. e Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Striegel, of Valdez, are parents of an éighti pound and 13 ounce baby boy born at the Seward General Hospital won *the recent golf tournamenton February 12. The boy's name- e here for the “Abelardo L. Redri-John Elgin. . JUNEAU . DRUGCO. friends visited Juneau and other Alaskan ports last summer. Miss Hoyt and ‘Mr. Lundstrom mét when he was engaged in the fruit com- mission business in La Grande. Mr. Lundstrom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Lundstrom, and brother of Mrs. F. A. Clark, Mrs. E. Sweeney, Mrs. Sinclair Brown, It's the “insert department” that ihandlcs these details. In every ipicture there are from 10 to 30 inserts, newspaper headlines, or telegrams, or magazine advertise- ments, or letters, or checks, or {anything of the sort. SUITING CHARACTER A romance as interesting as any {that is shown upon the screen was consummated when Ray Wise, lead- ing man for the “Eskimo” being filmed at Nome and Teller by the M-G-M motion picture company met and became engaged to a pretty halfbreed girl ten days after He was relieved from that posi-l‘ ! Ic‘l tion by Secretary Wilbur recently | and transferred to Bethel as Su—’ perintendent of Schools. He re- signed and is expected to return to the States. Mr. Brewster, an experienced animal husbandry man, was sent| SUBBTATION NO. 1 Mhistis ¥ Fres Delivery meeting her in Nome. The werl-‘Lo #0e Do (A6 Suniner ”Rm“; Burners for Ranges Circulating Heaters Heating Stoves Small Heating Plants See one of these $25.00 burners under actual working conditions at ALSTROM’S NEWS STAND Rice & Ahlers Co. “We teli you in advance what job will cost” . INSURE. YOUR HOME Your Furnishings in SAFE COMPANIES H. J. EBERHART AT LOWER RATES Ola First National Bank Building—Upstairs and Miss Irene Lundstrom, all of | There’s no special reason why Juneau. He was born in Douglas|the stars couldn’t do their own and raised and educated in Ju-|Writing, except that it isn’t neces- neau. He is employed at the Alas- |[Sary. No reason, that is, provided ka-Juneau Mining Company. (the star can write plainly and leg- e, — |ibly. That is an obvious conclus- {ion. Too obvious, because, accord- \ing to the “insert department,” it's DANIEL KEELER OF FAIRBANKS ARRIVES |all wrong. HERE ON NORTHWESTEIIN; It's because handwriting is sup- {posed to show character, and a Daniel- Keeler, old time pioneer,|star’s natural chirography doesn’t miner and prospector, arrived ofl'ofl,en suit the character he por- the Northwestern from Fairbanks. trays on the screen. So the “in- Mr. Keeler vgu.lwl' ve on the next|sert department” finds someone— trip of the EStebétt for Sitka where |it may be & prop boy, an electric- he will enter the Pioneers’ Home.)ian, a script girl, or even the di- T —— Hi-Line Specials! FOR CASH Fresh Hens, each . . . 50¢ Beef Roast, lb 15 1-2¢ STEERS Pork Roast, 1b. . .13 1-2¢ Onions, Carrots, 10 lbs. 25¢ Lemons,doz. . . . . . 20c ding took place a shore time after- ward and Mrs. Wise is preceding her husband south on the North- western. Mr. Wise, who is also part Es- kimo, will meet his bride in Holly- wood, according to information ob- tained while theesteamer was in port. Studious Beauty to do special work for Secretary Wilbur. He is said to be an ex- perienced stockman and to have had much work in dealing with range and grazing problems. Wales’ Bodyguard Retires LONDON, March 3—With the pensioning of William Palmer, de- tective inspector, the’ Prince of Wales lost the personal bodyguard Wwho ' watched over him whenever he traveled abroad since 1925. Manager of the Nome district, and | Group 1 New Silk Dre on Sale sses Sizes 14 to 40 Values to: $7.50 Sizes 14 to'4'4 Values to $10.50 GLASSES -Eggs,élndoz. i sk e Buiter,41bs. . . . . . 95¢ | | { .ine Grocery (Across from Juneau Bottling Works) EP! 39 } ! charming | General Hospital on his left ! vDisprovinz the o]" adage that | beauty and brains do mnot go to- | gether, we offér this glimpse r;‘f Miss Doro ) hionde and beautiful, ofugm Paula, Right on top of winninz 8 and popularity contest, y P! to prove that she has brains as well as pulchri- tude, for she hown as she set forth from Los Angeles for Ne York and Col University. James Wilcox, who underwe ¢ a successful operation at the Seward ot some time ago, has been dismissed from the hospital and is able (0 walk once more, Group 2 339 A [ Group 3 | $1.50 Sizes 14 to 44 Values to $14.75 Values That Will Please You COLEMAN 50¢, 7S¢, $1.00 i Butler Mauro i I