The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, June 7, 1934, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY jUNE 7 1934 COLIJEUM “| STARTS TONIGHT SHE'S ON THE LOOSE AGAIN! Madame Rack- ereer is Back . . . With a Hey- § onny - Nonny 7 and a Hot-Cha- 7} Chal Her Fun. niest Show! . . . % A Lady by Birth | a Racketeer atHeartl . . . . }ll LADY'S! “ PROFESSIO " MSON SIPWORTH ROLAND YOUNG SARI MARITZA Time =EoEr 25¢ AND BUCK JONES “Gordon of Ghost City” | HOW ONE WOMAN LOST 20 LBS. OF FAT| Lost Her Prominent Hips, Double Chin, Sluggishness Gained Physical Vigor— A Shapely Figure. If youre fat—first remove lheIZl cause! Take one half teaspoonful of Kruschen Salts in a glass of hot water in the morning—in 3 weeks get on the scales and note many pounds of fat have vanished. Notice also that you have gained in energy—your skin you feel younger schen will give any fat person a Jjoyous surprise. But be sure it's Kruschen—your health comes first—and SAFETY first is the Kruschen promise. Get a bottle of Kruschen Salts from Butler Mauro Drug Co., Ju- neau Drug Co. or any leading drug- | gist anywhere in America (lasts 4 weeks) and the cost is but little. If this first bottle doesn't convince you this is the easiest, SAFEST and surest way to lose fat—your money gladly returned. —adyv, T | ALWAYS |I 1 ' ‘3 the' latest at | COLEMAN’S " PIONEER CAFE Bl— how | is clearer— |33 in body—Kru- | YNOBLE TITLES ENTER BOOTLES, CAME IN SHOW {Alison - Skipworth. Opens Tonight at Coliseum in ‘A Lady's Profession’ The story of a pair of penniiess titled Britons who attempt to Te- ‘ccup their fortunes by opening a speakeasy in New York is “A Lady's Profession,” comedy which opens at the Coliseum Theatre to- | night. Allison Skipworth, of ‘‘Ma- | dame Racketeer” fame, plays the leading role, with Ronald Young, bemustached comedian, and Sari Maritza, golden-haired Hollywood- | ite, sharing featured honors with {her. Also in the cast are Kent Taylor, Roscoe Karns and Warren Hymer. Miss Skipwort: :; cast as an English noblewoman entirely igno- rant of the financial facts of life. Young, as her brother, is equally | undeducated, but Miss Maritza, Young's daughter and Miss Skip- | worth’s niece, at least has ideas on the subject. When they finally discover that the family fortune has shrunk to a leon zero, they decide to go to America to recoup. Young is sent on first, and when Miss Skipworth and Miss Maritza arrive on Amer- ican shores, they find him running an unprofitable speakeasy. Not ot all certain of how or why it's donz, Miss Skxpwon.h sets about pumng | the enterprise on its feet. Her ma- Jor. problem is her battle with a liquor syndicate, which terrified at the thought of impending repeal, and the consequent unemployment wave amongst bootleggers is fore- ing all its customers to take more liquor than they can use. D MISS MATILDA HOLST PLEDGED TO HONOR SOCIETY AT COLLEGE{ Miss Matilda Holst, daughter of Mr. and Mis. Martin Holst, of Ju-| neau, has been pledged to Alpha Lambda Delta, Freshman honorary society, at the Oregon State Ag- ricultural College at Corvallis, ac- cording to word received here by R. S. Raven, City Superintendent of Schools, from Mrs. K. W. Jame- son, Dean of Women at the Col- lege. Admission to this society is based solely on scholarship and aims to promote an interest in scholarship from the beginning of the student’s college career, Mrs. Jameson wrote. Out of a possible grade average of 3.00, Miss Holst had earngd 2.39. Miss Holst is a graduate of the| Juneau High School in the class of 1931, of which she was one of the honor students, Mr. Raven gaid. In the letter to Mr. Raven, Mrs, Jameson wrote, ‘“‘May I congratu- late you upon this splendid achieve- ment and express the hope that she will continue her excellent, record.” s | o ATTENTION ViKiNG CLUB Business meeting Saturday, June 9, at 8 pm. in Odd Fellows’ Hall. Entertainment, refreshments and dance will follow meem\g —adv. ACROSS 1. Woolly surface of cloth 4. Hawallan god- “~, dess sup- Da;l y Cross-word Puzzle 8. Mark left by a wound . Japanese sash 13. .Poln( wheu leaves the ranch Jjog_the memory 3 Lomz stick . Banished from | the country . Ages . Son of one's . Kind of ruit . Imitated | . Carry on, as husband or wife by a former marriage Thick black . Bohave . Compass point Knack Entwined: variant , Roman patriot . Chemical element . Bry and barren . Perceives Untruth 28. Scotch river State in Brazil . Be profitable 31, Lethargic state . Self Concealed | | | | | o Activator Spin Basket Drain Pump Oiless Motor Large Castors $124.00 Model 3G m m O M4 [m[tZ|C|m| min > w[mn>0 Jewelry . Petty rortlon Anlcla of | apparel . Join the colors . Eat away Kind of spice Saucy (" the sum f poison . Tropical Afri- can tree . Tennysonian character | . Colored \ . Eccentrlc ros plece parrot Inclines the 1 device . Analyzed . gram u\unF matically * AL Kmd of Sold on Cenvenient Terms Alaska Electric Light & Power Co. . JUNEAU—Phone 6 8 Ib. Capacity Damp-Dri?s Fast Washing No Oiling DOUGLAS—Phone 18 | cast are Glenda Farrell, . Short note to | . Article of . | . Go in | . Kind of arrow | IflIIIIIIIIIflIIIIIIIIIIIIIIflIIIIflH"IIIlltlflllmflllMIIIIIImllll!lfllllllllmIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllilllIIIIIIIIiIllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII]IIII KAY ERANGIS COMBS MR VAMP STYLE Laoes ‘Back to Earlier Hair- dress to Appear More - Business-Like ‘ For the first time in seven pic- | tures, in “Mary Stevens, M.D.,” closing tomight at the Capitol Theatre, Kay Francis wears her hair the way she wore it when she fizst entered pictures. That whs.in “Gentlemen of the Press,” in which Kay’s ravem tresses were combed sizaight back from her face, with the famous “widow's peak” in full view. Strangely enough, with that Hair comb, Kay was rated as a most sedugtive vamp. Now, in “Mary Stevens, M.D.” she does it the same way to appear business like. Between the two pictures, she has worn her hair parted in the mid- dle, and waved softly backwards into a series of graded curls, studio makeup artists having decided that was more suitable for the romantic leads she has been playing. In “Mary Stevens, M.D,” Kay's latest Warner Bros. picture, in which she has the role as a wo- man doctor, she has Lyle Talbot for leading man, while others in the ‘Thelma Todd, Harold Hunter and Chris-| tian Rub. ! The plot of “Mary Stevens, M. D.,” carries a glowing romance as well as stirring drama. It is based on the novel by Virginia Kellogg and adapted to the screen by Rjan James, Lloyd Bacon directed. * I —————— German Town Recalls ¢ ‘ Teutonic Tree Wonhp SCHOENINGEN, Germany, J n(‘ 7.—Pagan customs will be revived, in this Brunswick town by the erc tion of stone pillars and large tfec trunks, called Jirmin columns.” ¢ Ancient places of worship ofit- side of this town, which is onejof | the oldest in Brunswick, will fbe | restored according to true Teuton- | ic pattern, “to give our generation | an idea of how our forebears livéd.” Men sprang from trees, accord- ing to the ancient Teutonic “ifec worshippers,” their customs Te- | sembling China’s ancestral call. § | e 4 ey 5 Dog licenses for 1934 are now due and payable. Fees for fe dogs is $4.00; for male dogs, $: | Every dog must have a license. A. W. HENNING, City Clerk. DOG LICENSES DUE —adv. This is. an_architect's drawing of the proposed palace or seat of government of the soviets, to be the world’s tallest structure. been accepted by the central executive commi It has ee of the USSR, and construction is scheduled to begin this spring. A symbolistic figure is to acorn the top. MRS. J. L. BRIGHTMAN IS LEAVING ON ESTEBETH FOR SITKA THIS EVENING Mrs. J. L. Brightman, of Sitka, who has been in Juneau for several days, expects to return to her home m Sitka on the motorship Este- beth leaving here this evening. She has been staying at the Zynda Hu"l while in Juneau. ELWOOD McCLAIN SUFFERS DISLOCATED SHOULDER Elwood McClain, cashier of the st National Bank, is wearing a | ng today and suffering with a dislocated shoulder as the result of a slip while helping H. R. Van- | derLeest get his car out of sand at Point Louise last ev -~ BOY BREAKS WERAST the Dean Allen, nine-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Allen, fell from a tree at their home in the Casey-Shattuck Addition, yesterday morning and suffered a broken right wrist. The injured member was set by Dr. -+ High School six seniors. They are Glenora Waters, Carol Ferguson, Cherie Sorset, Lloyd Goodrich and Robert Jackson. ‘Wrangell graduated W. J. B. McAuliffe. recently (Associated Press Photo) Money Found, Not Claimed, Is Put To Good Use It not everyone, finding , whe would not spend s or her own personal purpose: No so with J. Simpson, old- timer of Gastineau Channel, who lives out on the Glacier Highway. Last July, Mr. Sithpson found six $5 bills in the Juneau Post Office Icbby. He advertised the “find” for threc days in The Empire, Apparently no one had lost the money, so finders keepers. But Mr. Simpson did not spend the $30. He kept it until several @ gc when he read in The Empire that funds were short for the Boy Scouts. He hunted up Dr. Robert Simpson and gave him $10 for the Scout fund, tc be used fer the annual cncampment ,and then gave another §10 to Mrs. John A. Glasse te be used towards ex- penses for the present annual encampment of the Girl Scouts. Not so bad. -oo Mining Locatvion Notices at Em- pire office. TS CHAIRMAN.OF . 6.0, P, READY - TO GET BUSY Fletcher Approves of Plat- form Issued by Na- tional Committee CHICAGO, Ill., June 7.—New Re- publican National Committee Chair- | jman Henry P. Fletcher, of Penn- I sylvania, elected yesterday, greeted |the grinning Executive Committee, {rolled up his sleeves and then blew {the lid off of the 193¢ campaign. Chairman Fletcher had for his immediate attention the amplifica- ti of the statement of the prin- ciples issued by the National Com- mittee. He said he heartily sub- cribed to the statement and furth- r said: “T am ready to go to work nce.” The tement of the National Committee, which was practically platform, condemned wmany of policies of the Democrats and a plea for individual in- instead of regulated busi- ive man Fletcher told the mem- the National @ommittee, the coun must “put on the! brakes. We have got to bring reali: on to the pedple of what is going to happen to them unles: the brakes are put on.’ Fletche further declared that under the platform announced yes- terd: ‘we can win the fall elec- | tions and every other election.” H HOOVER'S VIEWS | CHICAGO, June 7 Former | President Herbert Hoover has sent a wire to the Republican National | Committee praising the new pro- | rgram adopted and urging the lead- ers to give due representation to youths, OFFICE IS MOVED Mrs. J. M. Malila, Swedish mas-~ seuse, has moved her offices from the Gastineau Hotel to the Gas- tineau Apartments, just next to the | hotel on Front and Frankin, Streets. T FIN ‘Watch and Jewelry Repairing ' | at very reasonable rates i . PAUL BLOEDHORN ' i | FRONT STREET [ [ ! MODERN, I | BEAUTY SHOP | | 403 Goldstein Bldg. Phone 357 | ] Avrice CLARK ” dinner and ceremonies marking the actual start of the construction of the DOUGLAS ISLAND BRIDGE ON THE DOUGIAS ISLAND SIDE OF GASTINEAU CHANNEL FRIDAY EVENING, JUNE 8 Special Ferry Accommodations Have Been Arranged! PROGRAM STARTS AT STARTS. FRIDAY ICEBERG THE IMPOSSIBLE COMES - TO THE SCREEN—In o starkly realistic dreme of daring and adventure and of self-sacrificing love—actually photo- graphed Iin Greenland’s Arctic wastesl PREVIEW TONIGHT LI0AM d ' WAKE_UP. YOUR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL And You'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go o8 you fesl sour and eunk and the world o il e ":l"u'u.nd“: Aones ¢ , oil, laxative or gam and sxpect them to make you suddealy __m weet and buoyant and full of For they can't o it. They only move the Sowéla dnd & mare moveciast dies's Ex¥'sS ‘The reason for M Domels dally, your down-and-ou liver. Tt Ihou.ld uu treely, bile into your thick, bad ;ute .nd our bnnh -u:kém:. ‘breaks ouun"u > ;fi | | Skt you foo S ang ot Eane el 3| ystom is polsoned. le takes tihose LIVER pounds inds ot Ble flowin “up and up.” T{vg ntain hnnnle- entle vegetable extracta, when it comes to making the bile flow freely. Bt don't ask for liver plls. Ask fogCartar's Eittle Liver Pilla. Look for the nameCarter's tle Lives Pila on the red lsbel. - gllllmlllillmllllllIlllllilllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIIllIIIIlIIIlIIIIIIIImlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIl IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIII“IIIIIIIIIllIIIIIlIlIIIIIIHIIIIWE And" Do We Celebrate ? @A very cordial invitation is extended to the people of Juneau by the Douglas Chamber of Commerce to attend the ? » . * > 4 I mmmmmmmmmnmmmmflummmmmmmmun © 7:00 P. M. $1.00 PER PLATE Phone Mike Pusich, Douglas, or Guy Smith’s L] Drug Store, Juneau, for reservations

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