The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 22, 1931, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

'IHE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY OCT. 22, 1931 : 3N § FRIDAY TURDAY * * * * | | | “F;&Ril‘\( TO YOU THE GREATEST I’I(I'l‘li'rllil;‘. \;\I)I-‘. ‘A]H_l Screen@ Spa]rkfle '\ . A ACT,ON! Actually Taken in Africa BELIEVE IT OR[FAIR WARNING' o 0 T/ S devil riding, straight NOT. ZEBRAS CAN IS HEADLINER |33/ i, 115104 OUTFIGHT LIONS, AT COLISEUM S g =4 { { Sdray R < Y ) citing Western novel, {“Trader Horn” at Capitol George O'Brien Has Lead-| §! 5 Y _ ] “The Untamed,” gives Depicts Thrilling ing Role in Play i you romancé with a thrill. African Events with Thrills Are you one of those who be-| Few pictures of recent produc- lieve that the ostrich hides his)tion embrace more ecntertaining head with the idea that he’s hiding ' value than “Fair Warning,” Fox | fron an enemy? Or that the lion'movictone melodrama, which be- is really the king of beasts? gins shcewing tonight at the Coli- | They're both myths, like a good‘seum theatre. A Show s of the jungle. ‘The ‘George O'Brien, who portrays the trich doesn't do anything so stu- | leading male role, has never been |pid—and as for the lion—well, a!seen and heard to better advan- A good-sized zebra can Xkick the!tage and he has a new leading Everyone The Greatest of H uman daylights out of him and put him |Woman in Louise Huntington, who % o sl to flight easily. is as charming as she is talented. ‘These are just a couple of odd Role of Untamed Youth Adventures m C"v"l"za- facts that audlences see with their| O'Brien enacts the role of an own eyes and hear with their own [untamed youth who fights his tiOn’S Last Sfl’vflg(’ Ijears in “Trader Horn,” Metro-|way to romance, and when it Goldwyn-Mayer's sensational drama | comes he is afraid of it. of Africa, which opens tonight at]| The story is unusual, but never- . Frontler |the Capiiol theatre thel rbing, and, is replete with thrills, suspense and exclte- Louise Huntington, Mitchell Harris Hundreds of Trucks ment. r i ; ¢ | Tt was filmed h};;‘;?n? orflthle :\i/i; A good cast supports the prin- - S AT ; | gest picture expeditions thal ! gl P o n Q r Impossible to give in words an idea of the kL Am“_a g s r g A :Z: fl;;; l(_“gm“;”%r:;‘t ’V‘Fldgzlfil‘ : OUR SHORT VARIETI thrills never before shown on the screen, with it a sound recording apPara- | standing e i ol Pathe New the strange and beautiful romance, the Bz, RS pexe . many, WiEge- In Directed by Werker | E | 3 Is l‘ k I' % that _25.000-mue trip, in which a| qpe picture was directed by Al- » g5k ; . Fish, Fowl and Fun jungle marvels that make this a picture {Sfifarl ot We;al h‘:(“_drefl Bndt-‘ fred L. Werker, who produced “Last Y \ sl without an cqual! ‘S'V““Ivam‘y of trucks and autos|or the Duanes.” The story in orig- £ . The 13th Prisoner | were included, inal form was “The Untamed,” of 5 e PR The cameramen crept up on 101 | which Max Brand was the author. Vs b French Kisses irected by W. S. VAN DYKE d . crocodiles, Ernest L. Pascal is credited with | other denizens of the jungles, and |40 adaptation and dialogue. actually placed microphones %0 | «pair Warning” i ict that catch their voices, It was often a e e | charged, and was dropped only a| 4 ‘ Historian—E. M. Polley. | few feet from the camera. Another | fiimed from authentic occurrences, Service Officer—Alfred Zenger. time a technician was setting a|As Were the animal thrills. Hun- | Sergeant-at-Arms—J. Thibodeau. microphone in a tree at night, |dreds of crocodiles, hippo, rhino ALLEGED KlLLER UFFIG ERS A N D Post Executive Committeeman— when a leopard investigated and |and in fact, every beast found in Robert S. Raven. |the technician was saved only by |Africa, even to the great wild ele- Department Executive Commit- | the prompt shooting of W. S. Van |Phants, contribute thrills to the \:eeman—Hamer G Nordnng | Dyke, the director. picture, which was more than two| The si i traveled through the ‘N;;“ ";df;f a?::::?iin on the new Jud Tunkins says pollteness may ! densest jungles, native laborers cut- | A% & < g = £ ‘be misunderstood. He said ‘“how- ara s the fourth chapter of o ting Toads ahead of them for the{Profram 15 the fourh CRe O |Cave-like Recesses of Bev- ka] War Veterans to!dy-do” to a stranger and a police- | autos, sound truck, camera truck . T i i 2 l = l GI C J ()} B - l’ld f {man thought he must be some kind and other apparatus. Camps were | " T St erly and Glen Lenter rserve Birthday of iof a smooth villain lookin' for a pitched in the very midst of the ! Being Combed | Civil War Soldier ! vietim.—Washington Star. | | wilderness. Hundreds of havdships | TAKING ouT wlFE R i l B L | were undergone, despite every pre- (Continued from Page One) | g ; < age O Flection of officers is the prin- ; (‘“lllon(. g ; -"JST BORED HIM g — cipal business on the program for | ¢ PO Lo e LT ynrunk; causs the baggage agent to tonight's meeting in the Dugout of | arry Carey plays Trader Horn,| LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 23—, g epicious, the Juneau Post of the American' | : ) : |Nina is played Edwina Booth |It seems that the idea of taking| 2y LA Slaroily, eéconanty ini S Pl )RSES | YOU Wlll Se(’ ( . | and Peru by Duncan Renaldo in|merely his wif2 to shows and night | S ot o ekl slpuiienonl i A \ : ;Lhe mighty transcription of Aloy-|clubs did not greatly inspire Ray 7 ? o - ence of Dr. J. N. Carver, the city‘s' ; g . | WRANGELL, Alaska, Oct. 22 ot @ sius Horn's famous book. The trek J. Rosenblat, Los Angeleficflflxc‘lcosrzn A Hon hose pio- only veteran of the Civil War, Dr. Pin Seal, Calf and ture was found in one of the Carver will be 86 years old tomor- 3 containing the bodies of YW and at the Legion meeting this Novelty Leather {took the safari into the Uganda, |T'rancisco business man | into Tanganyika, the Beigian Con- !ing to her story in Superior Cour o on f p g " trunks * g0, the headwaters of the Nile, and | he told her to get a divorce and| e e an Aunes cvening fellcitations and good wish- —a beautiful white girl ruling a nation of savage blacks. . | the deadly “sleeping sickness” coun- {then he would show her around , Latest Styles . . e | % i : Leroy, has been identified here as €5 Will be extended to the old ~ales Y N ] rs > try about Lake Albert. She got the divorce, but did not "V ) g iy ” . o grase wild animals in jungle battles to the i P e ik mdm[g e har sho on.|a close friend of Miss Leroy. Miss Soldier by his younger comrades in death. | wad “Suju" or maglh hysteria, and | pected to accept any revived at-|Hart Was a nurse here when Miss arms. o | o black, brown, tan ) other detalls of jungle life were !tention Rosenbalt might bestow. Leroy was superintendent of the § R and nav —the capture by the fierce Isorgi o onil e s hosptial. ‘This was from October, freshments will be serv { y 11929 to February, 1930. Miss Hart| Nominations for the various of-' . . o i ! l) |is now in a hospital at Forks, fices were made at a meeting early | —the escape from a thousand perils to ] - Dally CrOSS'word uzZIe | Washington. |this month, but the time for nam- $2 95 to ! el . [ 4 | Le: o es will not expire until’ . g the reward o e. | Miss Leroy told friends here she Ing candidates w 3 B f lov ACROSS ‘Bolution of Yesterday's Puzziv : ll\ml:l:‘!“ was divorced and had an adopted Just before the clection wonight. | : J g I Pe{n'f'?i.'l‘h"’ 7. A“‘,w,l,l.a“ son living in Portland. H List of Candidates [ $9 50 i | & Portion gl o | Nominations up to the present . [0, Recreation Exchange FORMER HUSBAND TALKS im-‘- | ! Pertalning to PORTLAND, Oregon, Oct. 22— | Commander—Ralph Martin, Roy- i . thefuncton | william Mason, automobile dealer, |81 Shepard, LeRoy Vestal | Q . American | revealed today that he is Miss Le- | s:fim |VXC<‘—Cum mander—Royal | wooden folnt black enake roy's first husband. The marriage | epard v Falbesie O ampshire |took place here in 1925 while she ' e -Oupiandse . 9. e ~ |20, More doleful . Stain again was training in a Portland hospital Walmsley, John MoGor AL‘o(}f(Jlmpt?r 5—*“LONE DEF l‘,l\l)hR Walk in water Domalne . to become a nurse. They were| Adjutani—Claud Helgesen. A TR A malo sheep Lethargic state |unable to keep the marriage a " y ~ r e 928 R A > TO THE LENGTH OF THIS PROGRAM, FIRST SHOW [l fetere e . , . WILL START AT 7:20 SHARP [15: Sapiikie ot i : Californin secured on the grounds of incom- 135, ’:’l"’“fl' nrm-l:«n.h patability and she returned to the Zlous . Drinkin T e e— . T e e b . American lake | hospital. el 3 111, Manufactured " . Back part Mason said he saw his divorced Republican rally. Ihave started the World War and |12, Intended 60. Change posl= 4. Ego 43. Basehall team |wife when she came down from i The three spoke along pretty|put Germany in debt to the Al- {3 R?FJ.{'.'mw Iine Hen 5. Delightful t :g ‘ri?i!:‘;'m'.""“ Juneau, Alaska, to take Miss Sam- N much the same lines. But for di- |lies and the Allies in debt to the|i. Desser 82: Joelipey. saslora §1. Comfort uslson to Arizona. | rectness, Mrs. Gann appears to|United States?” :5' Operatioye :; 2"’ ::"‘h,:f"m 1. fl,,D's:fi:‘, 5 “?’."n‘,,.'",'u'm —————-— Allen ShattuCk Inc. o BY TAND | have left Fess and Lucas complete-| No short cuts for Mrs. Gann.|' ' aphr. 30, Sovall wila ox " gloves: var. B8, Lists T A i 2 {ly in the shade. She believes in going straight to |50. Mascullne of Celebes 2. Measure of 58, sunered seed | A i » the point. T Gareeter s Fiiface . Yaina Established 1898 J Alask i i : e 3. Grant the use stablishe. uneau, i y | She Speaks Plainly Mrs. Gann, however, has some | S0 e ot e IR e : ' L id b § By HERBERT PLUMMER ‘What the two meu more or less|Very good reasons for wanting to |5 " ".."“.‘,,3',::',';, & Fenluve iales- 01 - gnsnxts L RGE REw Ann : ; WASHINGTON — To Mrs. Ed- hinted af Mrs. Gann expressed See another Republican victory in s B el = - e { ward E. Gann, at least, apparently baldly. Thus she opined: 12:2« She ha,s almost as much at 1 Y T A I s S this game called politics is as ctory of the Republicans in stake as any one. ; y ' ! ? diiple 9% 1t can be and should {098 séved America from a period I _brother Charlds. runs with| (TG0, Op 13@”:%‘;’\‘;’“’3“:"5‘ 7 INC ' ! N be treated in the most direci of hard times compared with which President Hoover in 1032 and the et iovards to ihe Bide or| . 0 CING {7 fashion. | the depression through which we |ticket is defeated, then Mrs. Gann | [/ William B, Kleinschmidt, [ 1 . The sister of Vice-President Cur- are passing would have seemed |will lose everything for which she | Eight years aj l; Grace and Viviah ! . 3 G0l Siie of the offigial hiostess- | Dke riotous. livig.” | has battled so strenuously—social | {z K}cimch)m'di zf;o“ sixteen and sev- | | T’le NL’!U Bab Wh'/rldrv » es of a Republican Administration, Lucas, voicing the same idea, ex- | prestige and all. Gotad Yestioitrdly ot Sesnkert 3 v has been doing a little “stumping” | pressed it this way: - | On the other hand, if Curtis de- Bt alilg, el And, discri |4 i » of her own recently. And the| “Unless the Republican Party| cides to run for the Senate, it will o Sl k. T tenk e I L W sh § way she goes right to the bottom immediately assumed its full re-!be as bad for her. Her favorite pew ‘thir home anti he hem.nw 4 mem- z a er H of things, donbtless excites the envy | sponsibility as the dominant party |in the Vice-President's section of | ber of the household, and to please ' $ of some of her more cautiousbroth- a Democratic Administration will |the Senate gallery must be relin. | his daughters Kleinschmidt ob-! The greatest washer value compressed into ers of the faith. likely demonstrate what hard times | quished. She will be merely the | tained employment for Hof in the| o . Mrs. Gann spoke before & wom- | really are.” [sister of the junior Senator from | Waidbonila Whire' fio' wis: Sl the smallest possible space. Weighs only 32 * en’s Republican club in Pittsburgh | Senator Fess said that he be-|Kansas. tendent. d b ked i trunk i recently. On the same day, in|lieved in President Hoover the| T R TR Just before he died suddenly last RISy Lo e A Y 2 Yerps e Springfield, Mass, those two Re-|country had a “safe pilot” But| The first protean act ever seen June, Hot: dkited [ sturdily built and does the work. Let us dem- | 3 Charles Schacht z publican stalwarts—Senator Fess Mrs. Gann, in coming to the de-|in America was at the Park Thea- |and Albert Matson, employees 01; . I ffici £ h M of Ohio, Chairman of the Repub- fense of the President, put it: tre, New York, Mareh 2, 1930, given the warehouse, and told them that | onstrate the efficiency of the new Baby lican National Committee, and Rob- “Has it ever occurred to you by an actor named Spiller, who s BRI WL % | Whirldry Washe! 3 4 | he had an estate of about $15,000. rldry asher. N » ert Lucas, Executive Director of that, if Mr. Hoover is responsible was seen in “Eight to One) in| He said he wished each of the : the COmmitt_ee——we:e.iddresslnz a_for t?i depression,_lhen he must | which he assumed ex}ht rh?rfczs | Kleinschmidt daughters to have | § i T T YT s ;S s RS $3,500 and the remainder to go to : o . their father ! C l El p C . P aan ! apuat Ltectric Lo. - PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases oupid is nagleotlng' et widoms | h in England, according to govern- | 1 4 THE SANITARY GROCERY T e et | g cogglgey | 1920 one of every eight brides was ({ g 2 2 : i a widow, whie today the proportion § N0 Job Too Small” Radio Tubes Tested Free 4 e e S AR SR is one fo every. iniiteen, e e R i

Other pages from this issue: