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B THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WE STARTS TONIGHT ONEPe CAPITOL Here’s an Action Packed Picture that Fits Him Like a Boxing Glove GNE HARD TO HANDLE, A Warner Bros.” vt MARY BRIAN « RUTH DONNELL « GLAIRE DODD Talk of “Labor Party” | Finds Administration | Watchful, Says Price| ' (Conumued Irox.« rage One) 1 payments so that considsring “or-| dinary expenditures” alone, the| budget appeared $100,000,000 to the good. The money spent on the emer- gzney recovery program will be a subject of mounting discussion, | because this sort of spending hard ly has began, The farm administration has paid out only about $100,000,000 mostly to cotton and hog produc- ers. Public works actually has disbursed even less although it has allotted on paper upward ofi $2,000,000,000. The Reconstruction | corporation, once the biggest spend- er, is passing out of the budget| picture because it is receiving in repaid loans almost as much as it is putting out. | Treasury bookkeeping is so som- | plicated that politicians are able! to draw all sorfs of conflicting conclusions—and doubtless will as the 1934 campaign approaches. PATRONAGE PERSISTENT PLEAS ARE Underground pressure for Dem- | | ocratic* patronage is growing every day. As weeks go by with many fat appointments still unmade, members of Congress are wonder- ing whether the patronage lever isn’'t being reserved to ease admin- istration legislation ‘through at the January session. The strange part about it is | that, although Postmaster General Farley continues to smile and take t on the chin, in his ostensible role of “patronage dispenser,” the real decisions are being made by the White House, itself. s — John P. Daniel, Kentucky department of mines, has recommended that wagon mines employing less than six men be brought under the state law regu- lating safety. - Daily Emprre Want Ads Pay SAID.MRS. < ' STEPHEN ! EARL Me CANN- *STEVE S/ THE MOST ¢ FORGETFUL £ MAN S @A ne. YET, 'THEIFASTEST T FOR COAL HE ADID NEGLECT TO “CALL-" UNTIL. I Te WAS "QUITE ONE-YES AL/ / JUNEAU ALASKA The Gasboat “ACE” CAPTAIN AL WEATHERS, IS AVAILABLE FOR CHARTER TO HUNTING PARTIES . . Anywhere—Anytime ~ FOR INFORMATION: A 1R chief of the| JAMES CAGNEY DICTATORSHIP IS AT CAPITOL; IS NOT SCH TONIGHT'S BILL ~ SAYS ODUFFY Appears in “Hard to Business—like_P_olitics Is Handle”—Mary Brian in | Goal of Irish Blue Leading Feminine Role Shirt Leader (Continued from Page One) | i I A story that compines quflim‘i humor, rare satire, uproariously! funny situations, snappy dialogue|eer he was already known among and delightful romance, wushown‘;the Nationalists. by Warner Bros, as the starring! -As district surveyor in his na- vehiclz in which James OCagney|tive Monaghan he was & useful makes his return bow on the/man in the voluntzers, Soon he screen, alter an absence of several| was an invaluable one. The An- months. | glo-Irish conflict found him in It is a takeoff on thé flambuoy-{the thick of the struggle. In 1921- ant, pompeous and over-confident 22 he was chief of staff of the publicity promoter, entitled “Hard,Irish Republican Army, To Handle,” which is scheduled| A leader on the hills t0 be shown on the screen at the|was a leader when the jail doors | Capitol tonight. | closed behind him. He helped to | The story was written by Hous-|smash the British prison system ton Branch, one of the pioneer in Ireland. press agents of ths movies, who! Elected a deputy he followed should know what Hhe is mlkingi Collins in accepting the trzaty es- about. Mr. Branch is also a for- | tablishing the Irish Free State. mer. newspaper man, and the first| He saw many of his best friends motion picture editor of the St.|take the opposite view but his Paul Pioneer Press. | convictions were unshaken. He both former newspaper men,. who! best for Ireland. have dubbed in publicity, enhanc-; The resultant civil war saw him ed the humor of the story whh! in the south of Ireland as a Lieu- snappy dialogue and unique situa-itenant General in the National tions which should stir everyone's| Army. Organizers were needed to risibilities. Cagney, as the press:lick raw material into shape and agent, puts over every sort of he was made Inspector-General. pPromotion scheme from dance mar-l'l‘hen he was transferred to take a fine well-disciplined unarmed po- |Tice force. In this he was in what he considered his real work, the ! puilding up of a police force of which the country could be proud. The greatest wrench in General O'Duffy’s life was when President for reasons which he Mary Brian has the leading feminine role as Jimmy's sweet- heart, who jilts him when he is a success and marries him when he gets into trouble. Others in the‘ cast include Allen Jenkins, Ruth; | Donnelly, Claire Dodd, Gavin Gor-, don, Emma Dunn, Robert McWade, | deValera, John Sheehan and Maft McHugh. | considered adequate, removed him The picture was directed by Mer-| from his post as Commissioner. vyn LeRoy. No charge was made against O'- | Duffy. Dismirsal Caused Sensation |Youth, Beware! et 2 political sensation which was still Movie” Extras being discussed when news came M . {that he had been offered and agc- K’ "ke $8 n Week ‘cepted the leadership of the Army Comrades’ Association. This body, | el 5 . %1 interests of former ;jmembers of fim-struck youth of the nationine National Army. had been giv- K il .Ope;p e i ind lune and on 3 political complexion as a re- B O se Liiop Sl oL+ 18" aetiyitles (dyeing the e i hen it had set | active extras listed by the Con- lg{en;afra.l electmnar\glain oif gosflrevfl |cord Casting Bureau as on]y;p:ty u;e:;n‘;: i £ 38.]22 a weesk from January 1 to5 O'Duffy renamed .it “the Na- [Juy L 108, ¢ was made fn|liomsl Guard” and declared it to s > 3 0o > (have no associations of any kind O e g oy | with existing political organizations Picturg Aris ‘and Sclenoes for. thal Do 8 K AT B it . : | circumstances warranted the or- consideration of officials of the ganization would appeal to the National Recovery Administration.| te. The committee declared there| gro préoeeded to organize is mow an “overabundance of un-! . phers upon a semismilitary derfild rme}:‘ and women” in the| . gressing them in blue shirts, (iR 0L A28 - aEIAS. and ultimately proved so embar- | jassing to the government that | A dozen of the measures 6y President deValera took the dras- acted by the 1933 Montana State tic step of banning the entire Legislature were attacked in ac-|organization. | tions reaching the State Supreme ! R . s P Daily Empire Wint Ads Pay the AT CAPITAL BALL ROOM—Come and let your mind rest . . . you will spark faster on your problems the day'after. Mr. Knox’at the Piano Lunchés$, Sandwichés, Te¢' Cream, ; Coffee and Beer ° PLEASE REMEMBER — Scandinavian-Am- erican dance every Tuesday—Come and have a good time. DON'T FORGET Alaska Day DANCE TONIGHT—ELKS’ HALL Auspices Pioneers of Alaska SEE Us Before qnd After CAPITA ettt K1 oy he still| Wilson Mizner and Robert Lord ! said he did what he thought was | athons, treasure hunts, cold cream|charge of the newly formed civie| and grapefruit campaigns to build- | guards. ing up a one horse college into a| At the close of the civil war,; tremendous - institution. | despite many difficulties, he had ba-, DAY, OCT. 18, 1933. ” Esther Is No Clingihé Vine Now; Film Comeback Is Goal | i | ht appropriately be titled Ei cipation of a Clinging V. | When separation from her hus-| b, :band and manager, George Wel | was announced seme time @go, | ther plnnged at once into fu | plans for what she hopes will be { “the first real comeback Holly- | wood ever has seen.” | “The separation” she says, dis- missing that subject, “would h‘u‘t'[ | come anyway, and it has nothing | ito do with my determination to| Ihave a new career in pictures. Mr. { Webb and I climbed far together, But now | |and I don't regret if. His dismissal provided a minor | I want to go out alone, and make ‘ seven non - federal constru:lioni .‘my way absolutely on my own.” i(‘LlNGlNG VINE HEROINE In silent pictures the blond ac-| tress played many a ‘“clinging| vine” heroine, and looking back- ward Esther sprofesses to see a parallel there to her real life role.| “Always before,” she says, “I| listened *too much, never thought | for myself. I never went on a set| without worrying about my hair, my make-up, how I was to do the | scene. 1 wanted to please every- body, and I listened to every- body.” | Confidence gained through re- cent experiences in vaudeville with | the constant necessity of meeting em:rgencies before audiences help- | {ed to instill self-reliance, she ex- plains. SHE'S. CONFIDENT NOW “On the picture I've just fin- ished I thought only about action, | and I think I've learn:d a lot about that. It didn't matter if my hair were out of place, if the| make-up had melled from my chin. T knew I was going to play each sceme. 1 have confidence | in myself now, and nothing on this eafth will hold me hack” | This, uttered "earnestly to the| atcompaniment of flashing biue‘ eyes, doesn’t sound like the mild| Esthér Hollywood used to know, 50 | perhaps there really is a ‘“new| Esther Ralston.” “I don't care for money,’ ther declares, “or for diamonds lor a big house with a pool—Tve had all those, and all I want now is to werk.” zs- | | 58,317 men months of quick em-' | And already she has had offers enough te gratify that desire. Prices Never Before e Arthur Kukkonen Closing Out! WATCHES JEWELRY 14 karat Diamond Rings $ 45 1-2 karat Diamond ngs $1 00 NEW YORK JEWELRY | STORE “DARK_HORSE" ATGOLISEUM, - LAST SHOWING {Wairen Wil_l;f—n, Featured . Star, Has Good Record s Bette Davis Supports Elevation of handsome and Warren William, First r now playing in “The one of the first po- the last is only so great his lafest um for to stardom moments, in make him one of the few dramatic movie stars who be- jgan their careers in the A, E. F. , after the armistice, join- show troupe and, af- the war zone, returned a full fledged actor. s an outstanding, leading I man on Broadway with Mary Bo- land, Billie Burke and other fa- [ | mous women of the stage, when { | he was airfplaned to Hollywood ! . BB [ | sus one year ago, by w STHER RALSTON | Bros-First National, The first real comeback Hollywood ever has ceen is what Eether Since then he has wrought ha- “ Ralten has set a3 her geal. A star of the silents, she says she is | voc with the hearts of feminine going to rely on hersel now rather (han others, Here she is as | Movie fans = His work in “The ahe oodsts WAIsG :Dm'k Horse” is hailed by metro- } 5 S flulmx(xl (‘x;;nt;s . as deven bgrc:\tcr S han the best he's done befora. By ROBBIN COONS | | Wiliam is featursd with Bette HOLLYWOOD, Oet. 13.—Esther and Guy Kibbee. Others Ralston'’s movie comeback or in this picture of a polifical eir- icus are Frank McHugh, Vivienne Osborne, Sam Hardy, Robert War- wick, Harry Holman and Burtop Churchill, ALLOTED FOR PUBLIC WORKS Gives; mer resident of Hyder, who left the ERERN ™2 L AWAY AT SITKA PASS| Administration ca- | Na-| of the present year,| 3 HILARITY IS HERE Take a trip- around the of pol- rip-roaring, “cackeyed werld” itics in this cide-splilting story of a candidatc who was too dumb to be crosked and his manager who was fcc smart to be henes!! ' Ok DARK HORSE WARREN WILLIAM (The Mcuthpiece, himsclf) BETTE DAVIS—GUY KIBBEE | VIVIENNE OSBORNE A First Natienal and Vitaphone Hit - COLISEUM LAST TIME TONIGHT ORI SUMMONS i No. 3516-A In the District Court for the Ter- i ritory of Alaska, Division Num- | ber One, at Juneau. MARY F. GORDON, Plaintiff, vs. | HERBERT GORDON, Defendant. | The President of the United States 1 of America, to the above-named Defendant, Greeting: : Portland Cana V! . . : \ - % pear in the District Court for the in 23 States {died at Sitka. Before going tol 2 - WSVdar he Had resldeds ME aine i Territory of Alaska, First Division. TN N 1| Palrbanks and’ other’ Dot L o Jnwty. GRFE afte B S WABHINGTON, Ot 18— They, o " ! publication of this summons, name- Public Works Administration today 1l B0 lly, within thirty days after the allotted over $10,000,000 for sixty-! ANOTHER MARMOT GOLD FIN! projects in twenty-three state: which officials said would provid El ployment. The State of Washington re- ceived a total of more than $300,- breught in fine looking samples, 000 for roads, school buildings the second free gold strike made in and paving. that section during the present PR S LSS + |season and is further convincing PETERSBURG OPERATOR evidence of the gold production | FOUND DEAD IN ROOM district. (Petersburg Press) I et : DR. R. E. SOUTHWELL TO Harry W. McLaughlin, Operator- in-Charge of the local wireless | station, died here Tuesday, October 10 of an acute dilatation of the heart. He was found dead in his| room above the Wheeler Drug Company about 11 a.m. | Mr. McLaughlin was born June 29, 1890, in Houtzdale, Pennsylvania and was 43 years of age at the time of his death. He was enlisted in the First Signal Company oft| the U. S. Army, having worked in the Signal Corps in the Territory for 12 years and in the town of Petersburg for one year, He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Sylvia McLaughlin of Seattle, & brother, who lives in Pennsylvania and also his mother, Mrs. Anna McLaughlin who is now residing in Erie, Pennsylvania. His body will be shipped south to Seattle where burial will take place. To spend a week in the interests of his Dr. last evening. L e e J. B. CARO MAKES SHORT short business trip to Skagway. Yukon tomorrow. ——————— L. F. HEBERT MAKES TRIP TO WEST ON THE ALASKA i L. F. Hebert, Schwabacher Hardware Company representative, left for Seward on the steamer Alaska, “ The inside unit Heard of in Alaska! v ERING of - the LARGE FEED make it easy te or coal. Watland has made a discov- lery of free gold bearing quartz in| the Marmot River district and has says the Hyder Herald. This was| possibilities of the Portland Canal | | SPEND WEEK IN SKAGWAY in Skagway practice, | R. E. Southwell left on the Alaska for the Lynn Canal port| BUSIWESS TRIP TO SKAGWAY | J. B. Caro, of Caro and Com- | pany, left on the Alaska for a. CIRCULATOR HEATERS | red hot is placed at:a safe distance from the enameled shell. This pre- vents DISCOLORING OR BLIST- heater is properly '18th day of October, 1933, in ease this summons is published, or with- ’m forty days after the date of its service upon you personally, and answer the complaint of the above- named plaintiff on file in the said court in the above-entitled action. The said plaintiff in said action demands the following relief, to- | with: a decree of Givorce upon the ground of non-support and deser- tion. And in the event you fail te so lappear and answer, the plaintiff | will take judgment against you for want thereof, and will apply to (the court for the relief demanded 'in her complaint ahd as herein- above stated. WITNESS, The Honorable George F. Alexander, Judge of said Court, and the Seal of said Court here- {unto affixed, on this 27th day of September, 1933. ROBERT E. COUGHLIN, (Seal) , Clerk. Date of order of publication, Sep- .| tember 27, 1933. He will return to Juneau on the First publication, Sept. 27, 1933. |Last publication, Oct. 18, 1933. T which {s usually enamel when the fired. EXTRA DOORS which fire up with wood Lower Front Street ITHOMAS HARDWARE Ce T | UNITED FOOD CO. J ' CASH GROCERS ’ 16 We Deliver = Meats—Phone 16 Free Delivery OF (T WN ) ¥ Juneau Cash Grocer ' CASH AND CARRY °© - - Corner Second and Seward