The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 15, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MARCH 15, 1934. () A\\ [ (@ ‘MASTERPIEGE []F];Ring Out, You Movie Cash - v Comes One ing Newlyweds o BARRYMORE W’Z l‘& LAST TIME TONIGHT Registers; No Film Starr STAGE PLEASES JUNEAU CROWDS =" ‘Reunion: in Vienna' with|The recognized box office value | SARI MARITZA IS GAY YOUNG - DUEEN IN FILM ‘Monte ‘Carlo Madness” } My Beauty Hintv | of wedding bells has set producers | piana WYNYARD THEATRE VIENNA —ALSO— PHIL HARRIS in o Thi: Is Harris” John Barrymore, Diana Wynyard Is at Capitol Hollywood has certainly done right by Robert E. Sherwood's “Re- union in Vienna," which is the attraction at the Capitol Theatre. With John Barrymore starred and Diana Wynyard leading the supporting cast, coupled with Sid- | ney Franklin's superb = direction, the filmization of the Broadway hit achieves the happiest of re- sults. Pictorially it ‘has a fluid beauty that enhances it vastly and adds a glamorous background for the brilliant Sherwood dialogue Barrymore is at his best as the Barrymorish Hapsburg and offers | as engaging a portrayal as he has | accomplished in his career. | A Sympathetic Portrayal | The picture will crown Miss Wynyard, we believe, with the mantle of stardom. She regotiates her role of the love-hungry Vien- nese ‘wife with a genuine pathy that smooths over whatever wantonness might have been sug- gested in the dialogue. She is Preview Tonight JAMES CAGNEY “Picture Snatcher” 'Y ACQUIRING the home first you'li find it easier to obtain the other things you so much desire. These sample items and prices will give you an idea of how eco- nomically you can fill your building needs now. Pive-cros: mxéfeéin . . . ... Door, 2 ft. 6in. x 6 fe. 6 with glass Prench Doors, 15 lights, 3 2. 8 mxéft.8in . . . . .. Garage Doors, 4 ft. x 7 ft. 6 in, -Hp-uld.mfl"hflldanl Sash, 20 x 25 in. (outside meas- ure), 4 lights of glase . . . . Windows, 34 x 3 ia glase measure, 3 Mghts . . . . . Windew Frames, complets withpalleys . . . . . « « Besh Prames (ne pulleyw) . Semd for free {ilustrated cataleg 0.B.WILLIAMS CO. Sash and Doors 1933 First Ave. do., Seattle Daily Empire Want Ads Pay beautifully photographed and her performance fits nicely alongside ! Barrymore's own excellent por- | trayal. Naturally, Merro-Goldwyn-May- ler's gorgeous mountings of | play adds lustre and glamour to the film. Particularly striking are | the settings and costuming. Muich | credit must go to Franklin for his | careful translation of the Sher- wood piece and for the delicate handling of situations obviously Here’s Quick Relief From Bad Coughs Stops Hacking INSTANTLY | % dose of Bronchuline Emul- wwomms sion gives unmistakeable relief—no matter how your cough has hung on. Two doses may stop entirely. Half a bottle certainly [Close to censorable frowns, will, or you can have your money| In the supporting cast are such back. Harry Race and all other|Well known stage people as Henty good druggists guarantee it. adv. | Travers as Father 'Krug, Eduardo e " — | Clannelli as Poffey and the two i PUBLIC NOTICE | mustcians, with accordion and vio- In the District Court for the Ter-;lm' who stirred Elena into & mood | ritory of Alaska, Division Num-|of surrender with amorous melo- ber One, at Ketchikan. | dies. Frank Morgan plays the In the Matter of the Regular April, | part of Anton with fine repression 1934 Term of the District Court|ang gifted characterization, May the Territory of Alaska, Di-| Robson is a perfect choice for the n Number One, at Juneau. role of the cigar-smoking Frau ice # hereby given. that PUr-|rycher, and Una Merkel adds hi- suant to an Order of the CO‘”':‘ldriLy to the film by her amusing dated February 26, 1934, a Regular | Term of the United States DIStEICt | glarming dreams.. Qthers it for the Temitory of Alaska,|plendid cast are Bodil Rosing, dision Number One, will be held Bela - Lublov, Morris Nussbaum, court "°“ml “i the Court-lney, Walker and Herbert Evans. at Juneau, gAlaska, be.,mmuhl Color and Spectacle the 2nd day of April, A. D} : v 5 5 The play remains intact on the 34, at e r r ) - 11934, at the hour of 11 o'clock in AN Gk oAl r ! sereen | ‘mlwxx’;‘h;q’;q:rv;:;mabp I have | feW ddded touches here and there, i | notably in the opening scenes, hereunto set my hand and cause| ** . Sty the seal of the said court to ho""h‘_“l‘ . :;"fri:m'{h:fp;]xmfls \affixed on this 26th day of Feb- f:;?n oo Empewrgfigm ey u . 1934 , TS‘;:AL’A gOBERT E. COUGHLIN, | Prelude, as it were, to the body of | Clerk of U. S. Distriet Court, | Sherwood's piece. This adds spec- st publication, March 1, 1934, |tacle and color to the film and t publication, March 22, 1934. K;ii“’;;scm-;zzniz t:gtsggf;‘flr:du;? Orgz;xlized sportsmen of Califor-|tion. Sherwood, we are ‘told, nia have launched a campaign to| worked on these slight alterations trap crows and black-billed mag- | himself and the perfect adaptation to protect game and song|is credited to Ernest Vajda and Claudine West., Why hack, hack, hack yourself to pieces? One in the n Fi | birds, sym-| the| portrayal of Eise, the girl with the| to work on a co-starring film for | Charles Boyer, the PFrench star,| and his bride, the English Pat| Paterson. The other recent newlyweds| ® have shown no inclination to ap- | N pear together in pictures. There| was an effort made to secure Joel McCrea from R-K-O to appear op- | posite Frances Dee in ‘Coming-| Out Party,” but Joel could not bc{ borrowed, and since then both McCreas have expressed defmite] opposition to acting together. | Fans doubtless would have liked to see Gary Cooper in a picture with Sandra Shaw, but they were | i first to quell rumors that such,a{ film was contemplated. HOLLYWOOD—AT LAST! 5 Edna Best, who has worked with her husband, Herbert ‘Marshall, on the stage in America and on stage and screen in England, at last, is making her first Hollywood film— but not with Marshall. It was three years ago that the | incident occurred, but Hollywood | still remembers Miss Best as the | girl who “walked out” on:a Jack with her husband rather than stay | in Hollywood away from him. | This time she had come to jam' Marshall in Hollywood and was/ presented the feminine lead in) “The Key” when she arrived. Two | days later she was on the set— ready for the big adventure of mo- tion pictures. BEFORE SHE KNEW IT Always before, she indicated, she had had time to think about it and invariably would become phnics stricken. This time she was being fittted for wardrobs before she| knew she had signed. Well, ul-; most— As reports multiply concerning Francis X. Bushman's marriage plans, one who was an exhibitor at the time recalls what happened when the former film star and his first wife, Mrs. Josephine Bush- man, were divorced and Bushman was married next day to Beverly Bayne, his co-star. He says that after the Bushman- Bayne romance became real he re-| ceived hundreds of letters protest-| |ing the showing of their films, al- though the week before they had been; the screen’s most popular | team. { B DRUGGIST ARRIVES | FOR SMITH'S STORE | TO BE OPENED SOON H. A. Ferguson, druggist of Seat-l |tle, arrived on the Yukon yesterday opened in the Wright Building on Front Street. There also arrived on the same steamer thirteen cases, of fixtures and more than three ~pthis . week. |to be associated with Guy L. Smithy, in his new drug Store soon to bel}, | - | officer, § i lic | Gilbert picture, preferring to he‘_ "PAT PATERSON - ‘Wedding bells have box office value — and so Pat Paterson’s studio is at work on a picture co-starring her with Charles Boyer almost before the pres- ents are unpacked. times that many cases of mer- chandise. Work of getting the fix- tures installed and stock placed will go forward as rapidly as possible and Mr, Smith expects to be ready to open his store in about a week. Mr, Ferguson is a pharmacist of excellent reputation, having been connected for several years with the Jamison Drug Company, one of the largest chains in Seattle. Upon the closing of the present school term in Seattle, Mr. Fergu- son plans to have his wife and two children join him to make their home in Juneau. IBRERTRS 1L T RALPH MIDGET LEAVES TO TAKE POSITION AT BREMERTON NAVY YARD To accept a position in the Bremerton Navy Yard, Ralph Mid- get left Juneau on the Princess Norah for the Puget Sound port He has been employed at the Alaska Juneau Gold Min- ing Company for the last several years. Mrs. Midget, now employed at the Alaska Laundry, will leave to join her husband, on the south- bound sailing of the steamer Yukon, - The Forests of Canada rank sec- ond only to agriculture in their contribution to the natien’s pro- duction, reportsthe Bureau of Do- minion Statistics. | Opening at Coliseum Is Delightful Musical In “Monte Carlo Madness,” the First Division-UFA production at the Coliseum Theatre tonight, Erich Pommer has produced something out of the ordinary, a picture with seenic and architectural beauty, of catching melody and a cast that foretells box-office lines: Monte Carlo suggests mysterious- ly keautiful landscapes, the life of the .rich and idle, luxury and gambling. It suggests excitement, sensation, lilting melody, gorgeous surroundings. The story is something out of the ordinary and entirely new, a sauey story of sailors, their cap- tain and their queen. The gqueen subtly plans to punish a disobedient the captain, but instead sinks lovingly into the arms of the man, a dare-devil who had threat- ened to blow up Monte Carlo unless his men’s pay, lost by him at the gaming tables, was returned. Werner R. Heyman has com- posed several musical hits the pub- is raving about Indeed the music has deepened the success of the picture, creating that gay mood so characteristic of Monte Cralo. The cast a remarkable one. Sari Maritza, brought to this coun- try a few months ago by Para- mount, plays the role of a gay young queen. The New York re- views laud her fine work. Hans Albers is one of the great actors of the day and Charles Redgie has earned a reputation that he more than lives up to. The re- mainder of the cast is excellent. The director, :ans Schwartz, is one of the leading megaphone wielders in Germany. Hans Muel- ler and Franz Schulz have worked hand in hand in creating the manuseript which sparks. E— o S S MRS. FLOYD BETTS RETURNS FROM 5 MONTH TRIP SOUTH Mrs. Floyd Betts, whose Hus- band is Cadastral Engineer with the United States Bureau of Pub-| lic Survey, feturned to Juneau on the steamer Yukon, after spending’ the last five months visiting rel- atives and travelling in ‘the South- west and Western States. Mrs. Betts spent the greater (part of the time she was away Arizona, and enjoyed motor trips into Old México and New Mex- ico. On the way home she stoppad for some iime in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Portland stay in the south Mrs. Betts was fortunate In eticountering perfect weather, she said. —— .- | Daily kmpite Wsnt Ads Pay “Juneau’s Own Store’ ’ I HE WHEEL OF TIME has now turned up a New Deal in yeather. - Spring is here. A néw spring, with new fashions, new fabries and a new silhodette to make you brighter, gayer, more charming than ever. We have given without stint of time and ability to make this our gréatest Spring Open- ing. ‘This announcement is proof of our sue- cess, helpful watchword. Remember, too, that Buy Now is a Doors open at 9 tothGrrow morning and it will bé otir pleasure to see you sometime diiring the day. i . ® I you could not attend our first day open- ing we sincerely hope to see your tomorrow. Thank You. visiting relatives in Springerville, | iand Seattle, visiting both friends! and relations, Duriig her entire| | NELLA WALKER | When the hair begins to gray it | is doubly important to have it per- | fectly groomed. | Once a week I have my hair shampooned and waved, and each |night before retiring the waves | should be gently pressed into place | with a fine net to keep them in| { order. | e {RELATIVES OF FRANK | GISCH WISH TO GET IN TOUCH WITH HIM | Information regarding Frank | Gisch, possibly spelled Gish, 34 | ¥ears old and six feet tall, has been requested of Chief of Police C. J Davis, by relatives of the missing man in St. Paul, Minnesota. Mr. Gisch was last heard of on |May 15, 1923 at which time he was honorably discharged from the U. S. Army, Fort MecDowell, Cali- fornia, after serving as a private in the 66th Service Squadron air service, according to the letter re- fceived. He is a good motor me- jchanic and is said to have two flags and an eagle tattooed on his {left arm. Anyone possessing information regarding Mr. Gisch is requested to communicate with Chief Davis. | BILL NIEDERHAUSER “GOES HOLLYWOOD” ON VACATION | Bill Niederhauser, Assistant Chief of the Juneau Fire Depart-| ment, returned on the Yukon from ! a vacation trip to cities on the' | Pacific Coast, on which he spent | considerable time in Southern Cal- | ifornia, i | While he was in Los Angeles, Mr. ! i Niederhauser was the guest of the 'Los Angeles Fire Department of-| ficers, who enterteained him roy- | ally and showed him everything.' Though he is glad to be back in Juneau, Bill thinks Hollywood is a pret_ty good place to visit once {in a while, 1 - | BERNARD BOYLE ENTERS ST. ANN'S HOSPITAL' Bernard Boyle, employee of ihc‘ | Alaska Juneau Gold Mining Com- | pany, entered St. Ann's Hospital vesterday to receive treatment for a severe cold. " OORGHAT R VS H. S. GRA ] “The Ctothing Man” I | Home of Hart, Schatfner and ] | | Marx Clothing | | VES TRIP TO COAST CITIES ~ "MONTE CARLO MADNESS with . SARI ARITZA Spicy adventures of a Queen hunting love, A U.FA Picture AN ERIC POMMER Pproduction. _ A FIRST DIVISION RELEASE aid T FRONTIER” How One Woman Lost 20 Pounds of Fat “THE LAS Lost Her Prominent Hips, Double Chin, Sluggishness Gained ¥nysicai Vigor— A Shapely Figure If you're fat—firét remove the cause, Take one half teaspoonful of KRUSCHEN SALTS in a glass of hot water every morning — in 3 weeks get on the scales and note how many pounds of fat Jeave vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin is clearer— you feel younger in body—KRU- SCHEN will give any fat person a Joyous surprise. Get an 85c bottle of KRUSCHEN SALTS from Butler Mauro Drug Co., Juneau Drug Co. or any lead- ing druggists anywhere in America (lasts 4 weeks). If this first bottle doesn’t convince you this is the easiest, safest and surest way to lose fat — your money gladly re- turned. —adv. “Tomorrow’s Styles

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