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CAPITOL | F \ DOUBLE WITH WILLIAM HENRY STEPHENSON Liliand Bond L Coming—— Mary Pickford in “Secrets” R N T T T TP TR TN G M N R TR HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES AND W R PERFORM UAL CLEANING TASKS othing novel about soap housework d perform ready-made SOAP more satisfactorily thar cleanse Cle ng brushes, for example, may be washed freguently in soap and water. Dingy-looking velour powder puffs, after a thorough washing, make excellent polishing cloths for knives. Hot water ar plenty of scapsuds will clear breadbox, but it must be com- pletely dry before the bread is re- placed. FOODS CONTAINING IRON If the doctor prescribes iron in your diet, youll find it in thesc foods: lettuce, spinach, roast beef, milk, oatmeal, rice, prunes, eggs, celery, cabbage, turnips, ap-| ples and cereals. | more CLEANING DOOR OCKERS A\ Brass door knockers, exposed to | the weather, will stay bright and! For YOUTH! HEALTH! BEAUTY! YOU NEED A - SWEDISH J. M. MALILA GRADUATE Phone 10 Hours 9 to 5—Evenings by appointment TONI Southeast Alaska Declamatory Contest 8 O’CLOCK ® Grade School Auditorium Adults 50¢ ardinglE= in'Her Supreme Triumph ... s 0UBLE HARNESS TO! = D IGHT 1711 S TALE OF GOLDHONEYMOON Film at Capitol Theatre | Has Surprising Climax, "Interesting Scenes outside ferooms indicated on, but Ann H m Powell knew d the old-shoe- “Double’ Harness,” ure in wh they he ‘Capitol Theatre i opinions on m 1 the honeymoon cold l\varzm it up and then cools it of the HARNESS | again—until the rise conclusion pWELL { of their marital problems. Discovering that he was into marriage, Powell revolts returns to his mistress. Roma: and in “Double ucile Browne | the clim: n Cromwell directed “Double ," with a cast which in- Henry Stephenson, L Bond, Reginald Owen and G Meeker. Jane Murfin wroie the screenpl from Ed d Poor Montgomery's successfu. age play - OFF FOR WESTWARD J. F. Cham] merchand | broker of K , who has in June the p: few da left on » f the we rd j - ‘mml o | shiny if they are rubbed ' with | paraffin before being polished | | TRIMMING DD CALORIES Browned marshmallows, meringue, ! ice cream, whipped cream or grated c e may add flavor to pumpkin pie—but they also add calories. > oo EARLY SETTLER FOUND DEAD IN TROLLING BOAT — | Archie Teal, believed to have been | about 74 years old, was found dead in the cabin of his trolling boat | T1095 at Ketchikan. Heart trouble is given as the cause of his death. Teal was a member of the earl- iest group of halibut fishermen in Alaska, going to Ketchikan from Nova Scotia more than 25 years ago. Prior to that time he was engaged in cod fishing in the Bering sea, out of Puget sound ports. He had been inactive in| deep sea fishing for the past eight years, although he maintained his membership in the fishermen’s | union until two years ago. ——,——— NEW STETSON HATS See the new Stetscn Hats at the Leader Department Store. —adv, - Daily Empirc Tsant Ads Pay MASSAGE TASSEUSE Gastineau Hotel GHT! TONIGHT Children 25¢ THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; WEDNESDAY, MARCH 21, 1934. e e = + S Douglas Fairbanks, sr., and Mary Pickford have practically patched up their differences and are near a reconciliation. .t has been learned from reliable sources in London. Mary, who filed a divorce suit against Doug in Los Angeles several weeks ago, refused to discuss the reports that the two had been talking thinks over by transatlantic telephone. No attempt has been made to publish the summons, it was learned in Los Angeles. (Associated Press Photos) Desperado Scampers from “Escape-Proof” Jail by Using Wooden Pistol;Seizes Hostages, S i s This Associated Press picture shows the scene at the Lake county jail at Crown Poiat, Ind,, as men organized into posses to pursue John Dillinger, killed-desperado who broke jail there, Sheriff Lillian Holley (left) of Lake County, Ind, said she would shoot John Dillinger, who escaped from her jail, on sight as the hunt for him was pressed. Ernest Blunk (center), deputy sheriff, and Edwin Saager (right), garage mechanic, were forced to accompany the flecing desperado. Saager was forced to drive the car and both were released by Dillinger in Illingis. (Associated Press Photos) Closeup ot John Dillinger (left) shows the nation’s most sbught criminal in a defiant mood, Right: front view of the Crown Point, Ind., jail where he es caped. The sheriff’s living quarters are in froat, with cell blocks in background. (Associated Press Photos ) . REPORTED PATCHING THINGS UP. - NOTED SCREEN ACTOR FAVORS LESS DIALOG Leslie Howard Declares Film, State Art Should Be Widely Separated By ROBIN COONS [ HOLLYWOOD, Cal, March 21.—| Coming from a stage actor whese success in films admittedly was made possible by the microphone, Leslie Howard's views on dialog in films are unselfish, if not startling The English star, who was a candidate for the academy award for, acting this year, had just fin- ished a scene opposite Bette Davis for “Of Human Bondage” As | movie scenes go,' it was a fairly long one, yet if you didn't watch the players you might not have {been aware that a sceme Was in progress. » It was that sileni, with just two or three lines of clipped ‘dinlog, LET CAMERA TALK The film, adapted from Somer- yset Maugham's well-known novel, appeals to Howard, he said, for | this very scarcity of talk as well as for its qualities as a story. And vet Leslie Howard's greatest film | successes have been in photo- graphed stage plays—‘The Animal | Kingdom” and “Berkeley Square” § outstandingly. ~ An enthusiastic camera student | —he is scarcely ever without his own little black box and he has a huge collection of lens studies— Howard's idea is that the movies should swing away from the stage, and let the camera tell its stories in the main. His own interest photog- raphy long since has embraced the motion picture, and even now he is considering the filming of a sort of miniature ‘'movie—for his own amusement—in which panto- mime would predominate if not serve as the only medium of ex- pression. In other words, the talkie star would like to make a i.s:lmL picture! in “‘P:\INTER AND WRITER” | “The screen will never be a real literary medium,” he said, “because it should deal in pictures more [than in words. I think the ideal | film-maker should be a combina- tion of painter and writer.” | For the benefit of those who have read “Of Human Bondage” | and may be concerned over its film | treatment, it should be reporte | that the ever discriminating How- ‘:u'd is most sanguine. He especial- ACTORS SHE‘D Bt MAKE-BELIEVE 1a4 TEAR FOR BEER ¥ | LAST THEATRE TIME TONIGHT Dry Era in Movies Comes' Just as Prohibition Be- gins to Ship m U. S. Buddy Rogers Marian Nixon Frank Mergon | Joseph Cawthorn The death of real beer was Srete Wt recently sounded at Fox Movietone N City. Just at the moment it be- % Es"' o comes legal elsewhere it became il-| B F legal there. No more beer! A band played “Ach du Liever Au-| gusine,” two bartenders who an hour before had been dishing up !.hij rlflfl t:m(m‘ foldredn]l!\fli:' ;\pian:', Kissing and and wiped tears fro eir and foam from their mustaches.| Joft tho fighu: A mournful crowd looked on as, ing to thelr cases and barrels of beer, steins, Lo b % and free lunch were loaded on Lo: A FOX PICTURE a truck. “No more beer,” sighed Buddy! Rogers. “Gosh, I could have used! a stein or two for lunch.” But— It really isn't as bad as it sounds,l for the passing of beer at the Fox| studio was only in a movie—a| “LUXURY LINER” wcene i tne Fox picture -mest ot | MIMNIMHHIAREIRRRARREACE Enemies,” depicting the advent of!( = prohibition. But there is one con- ¢ — solation. The intervening fourteen years pass in a matter of hours, and the company drinks beer again as_its return is visualized for the screen. “Best of Enemies” is feature at the Coliseum. ENEMIES They did the TOMORROW now the ) ly likes the fact that it is being made as a psychological study of| the youthful hero's mind, expressed so largely in pantomime and its meanings readable between the! lines—the amazingly few lines—of speech. | It won't be the complete book, | of course. “It's one of the screen’s limita-| tions,” he observes, “that it is physically impossible to present a' whole novel in an hour’s running time.” VISIT THE Salmon Creek Roadhouse ANTON RIESS SOMETHING NEW! KIDDIES’ UMBRELLAS—$1.49 “Three Little Pigs” “Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf’ LEADER DEPT. STORE George Bros. Store Open Evenings