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'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