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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. 26, 193], . CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT SHERMAN . MAE MURRAY KAREN —in— “LAUGHING GRAVY” MIDNIGHT SHOW 1A M “THE COSTELLO CASE” To 'the Ladies— Watch our screen for an important announcement. It will interest you! FOSHAY TRIAL JURY INQUIRY 1S COMING UP Although Jurors Were Locked Up, Visitors Were Permitted MINNEAPOLIS, Minn,, Oct. 26.— An ihquiry into the way the Fo- shay trial jury ‘was handled is plan- ned by the Federal Government. The jury was locked up during the trial, but Special Government Progecutor Horowitz said he learn- ed that Mrs. Genevieve Clark, the woman juror, had been visited once a week by her husband. He said it was also reported other members of the jury had been per- mitted visitors without propsr au- thorization. The jury in the case disagreed after deliberating over seven days and was discharged. A retrial has been 'set for nmext January of the case against W. B. Foshay and six assogiates charged with alleged misuse of the mail following col- lapse of the various Foshay enter- prises. —_————— ,. AT THE HOTELS r———a Gastineau John Russell, H. Larsen, Robert Poloff, Juneau; A. A.-Lane, D. Hill, Tulsequah. Alaskan Harold Tipton, Funter; John Price, Thane; Ed Carlson, A. Eg- gers, Taku River. ———— Buy that fur coat now. Goldstein & Co. ———————— Quarts ana piacer location no- tices at The Empire. Chas. —adv. NEW SHIPMENT TRENCH COATS $5.00 ~Every young fel- low in town wants one iI. S. Graves The Clothing Man TO SHOW LAST TIMES TONIGHT “Costello Case™ to Be at Midnight Matinee and Tuesday at Capitol “High Stakes,” with Lowell Sher- man and Mae Murfay, as the fea- tured headliner, and “Laughing Gravy,” starring Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, as the added attrac- tion, will be shown for the last times tonight at the Capitol the- ater. “The Costello Case” with Tom Moore and Lola Lane in the lead- ing roles, will top the new pro- gram tomorrow night, and this program will be previewed at the matinee at 1 o'clock tonight. In “High Stakes” Miss Murray wears some stunning costumes. “Dressing to kill,” she said, “is dou- ble-edged.” Purpose With Men “‘Dressing to kill' men,” she de- clared, “means dressing to paralyze their resistance, bowl them over, attract them, bring them to your feet. “But, ‘dressing *~ kill' women Is a higher and difficult art. It is cal- culated to slay by sheer awe, those catty criticisms women are inclined to make about the garments of their rivals. The gown must be such a triumph that none dares breathe a word against it. When you have them imitating instead of criticis- ing, then you really have ‘dressed to kill'.” Laughing Gravy 'Ls ‘Dog In “Laughing Gravy,” the land- lord of the house in which Laurel and Hardy are boarding discovers the boys have a dog—which is against the rules of the house. Be- tween the dog, “Laughing Gravy,” and a frail bed which breaks at the most inopportune moments, the landlord is driven to distraction and finally orders the boys out in- fif- teen minutes. Just as he is escorting them out of the house, an 'officer of the law makes his appearance and quarantines the house for two months—no one must leave. His ~eason is small-pox. The landlord claims this is too much for him, so he disappears into another -room and the sound of shots is heard. Scnsaticnal Vivid Drama “The Costello Case” is a sensa- tional, vivid drama concerning a baffling underworld crime which is solved through the persistence of a shrewd patrolman. 3 Besides Moore and Miss Lane, the cast includes Russell Hardie, Ros- coe Karns' and Willlam Davidson. Walter Lang directed the talkile, which is based on a story by F. McGrew Willis. “Politely Fired Girl Wins $1,000 LOS ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 26.— For a boot from behind—or maybe it was for being “politely fired,” the jury did not designate which—Miss Hazel F. Caler received a verdict of $1,000 damages against Leon Kutner, Hollywood hotel manager. The case was tried before a jury in Superior Judge Douglas Ed- Four OcéanicBir_.ds of-a F eaIM Four of a kind—not in poker, but in aviation—are these oceanic birds of a feather drawn up for in- spection at North Beach airport, Long Island. Every | in one of the aerial quartet distinguished itself by winging across the Atlantic, thus {ladnx itself fn the enviable Hall of Fame occupied by many notable predecessors. The planes, from to right, are: | famows German Dornier fiying boat, DO-: ‘LONELY WIVES' WILL GIVE WAY TO¥ILLUSION Coliseum to Give Midnight Matinee Tonight of Tuesday’s Program COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT With “Lonely Wives” showing for the last times tonight at the Coli- seum theatre, “Illusion” will be the hcadline altraction .on the new program tomorrow night. “Illusion™ will be previewed at the matinee at 1 o'clock a.m. tonight. In “Lonely Wives,” the four lead- ing roles are filled with favorites who made no changes in their| Otto Hillig’s Liberty, fn which he flew to Denmark | °Fi8inal nomenclature. | with Holgar Holiris; Post and ‘Gatty’s Winnie Mae, Indeed, two leading members of which they flew around the world in 8% days; |the cast, Edward Everett Horton the Cape Cod, in which Boardman and Polando flew to Istanbul, Turkey, to set'a new long-distance |rare practice of using both first mark; and, in the background, last but not least, the | and middle names given them by and Patsy Ruth Miller, follow the with their respective parents. Laura La! gppwARD EVERETT HORTON mond's court, Miss Caler charged|nounced by Dr. Charles G. Abbot, TWO BIG PROBLEMS she had an argument with Kutner, | Secretary of the Smithsonian In- by whom she was employed, and stitution, which controls the Mu- that he booted her out of his of-seum. The space is needed for fice. Kutner denied” this and said |laboratories and exhibits. he “fust:politely fired: her.! ! The increasing thousands of vis- — itors each year wander through cor- SOLVED BY CHICKENS FOND DU LAC, Wis., Oct. 26— by Arthur Train. —— e A chicken roost on wheels has Plante and Esther Ralston content | themselves with one Christian name and the paternal cognomen. | “Illusion” Is Good Story | “Tllusion" is based on the novel Esther 'Ralston Laura La Plante Palsy Ruth Miller 0 SHORT SUBJECTS Charles (Buddy) Rogers is a U s 'Nalionn‘l Muuum Lo ridors already packed to capacity . D Fwith everything from skeletons of to Be Doubled in Size|siant dinosaurs to gowns worn by \wives of the Presidents of the WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct. 26— |United States. Plans to double the size of the PR Untted States National Museim at| Old papers for sale at The Em- a cost of $6,500,000 have been an- | pire office. solved . two .problems for John|YOung magiclan who has learned DON'T FORGET—MID- Achter, Fond du Lac farmer. his stage tricks through an early He mounted his chicken roost on up-bringing in the ecircus. Nancy a wagon and drove It into a Sudan | C&rroll is the girl who was raised grass patch which grasshoppers|in the same environment and who were destroying, The chickens say- |15 his partner in their successful NIGHT MATINEE TONIGHT NANCY CARROLL ed the grass by dining on the!Stage act. She is in love with him. | ‘hoppers, and saved much of the|But Buddy, expense of feeding them. and suave appearance, gets him-| through his charm and CHARLES (BUDDY) ROGERS in (ou purchase shoes, fruit and candy. You call for cigarettes. 175 Zite ths 2 wamvon GO'TO BUY A PAIR OF SHOES, you examine the leather, the way the shoes are made, their shape. You try them to see if they fit—if they satisfy you. Why not follow the same method in purchasing your cigarettes? You want cigarettes that are made from the very best tobacco—mild, ripe, sweet. You want them made right. You want them free from harsh- ness and bite and “pinches.” In other words, you want cigarettes that satisfy you. WHEN YOU GO TO BUY FRUIT—oranges, grapefruit, apples—you want ripe fruit, fruit that has matured before being taken from the tree; fruit that has been handled right and packed right; fruit that’s the same throughout—not green on one side and ripe on the other. Why not. apply the:same test in purchasing your cigarettes? You want cigarettes made from tobaccos handled right by the farmer—ripened, sweetened in the sun and cured right. You want cigarettes that taste the same, day in and day out. You want them pleasing in taste—mild and satisfying. WHEN YOU BUY CANDY, you want to know, above all things, that it is pure. Is it real candy or are there a lot of other things mixed in with it? And you want it fresh. You want it freshly made and you want it so packed as to reach you just as it was when it was made. Why not apply the same test when you buy your cigarettes?: You want a: cigarette that’s-pure; for purity counts in cigarettes just as it does in candy. © 1931, LiceETT & MYERs Topacco Co, Then again, you want a cigarette that’s just as fresh as when it was made. Now, if you apply to cigarettes all the tests that you apply in buying shoes and fruit and candy you will purchase CHESTERFIELD like millions of other smokers. First, because tobacco men will tell you that in Tur- key, Kentucky, Georgia, the Carolinas, Virginia, and Maryland, only.the mildest, ripest tobacco is bought for CHESTERFIELD—tobacco cured by the sun’s pure rays, by the farmers’ slow-burning ovens, and finally by great high-pressure steam drying ma- chines. In the tobacco regions where they grow to- bacco and know tobacco, CHESTERFIELD is usually the leading seller. Second, because the carefully selected CHESTERFIELD tobacco leaves are.blended and cross-blended. This exclusive CHESTERFIELD blending method is not just mixing together different tobaccos—it is- mixing them in such a way as to bring out the finer qualities of each. It’s like producing a new and better type of tebacco—tobacco with greater mildness, more smoothness, much better taste. Third, because the cigarette paper is selected with the same care. CHESTERFIELD paper is the purest, the best that money can buy. Then the cigarettes are made and packed by machinery in clean, sanitary factories. And the moisture-proof, attractive package —free from heavy inks or inky odor—comes to you just as if you passed the factory in the morning and took your CHESTERFIELDs from the machine. Good . . . they’ve got to be good. 'self invited to the parties and| fetes of gay Park Avenue society.| He falls for a wealthy heiress, play- | ed by June Collyer. Meanwhile Nancy becomes disconsolate, and in the same meanwhile June learns| the true story of Buddy's back-"' ground. She tells Buddy she can never marry him. He goes to a theatre where Nan- cy is playing the old act with a new partner. Climax Is Thrilling The thrilling climax to the act ‘comes. Four rifles blaze at Nancy. Their lead bullets for which' she was supposed to -have substituted harmless graphite ones by a sleight of hand trick, zing through the air toward their human target. Nancy is struck. She collapses. Well, for the rest of it see it yourself. It is real entertainment. There is fast and interesting dia- log, there are a number of second- ary character-impersonations by a I'capable supporting cast, there are threz memorable songs introduced in a logical manner—and there are Nancy and Buddy, personable and glamorous sweethearts of the screen. “]1LLUSION” IN SEATTLE The Hotel Roosevelt At 7th and Pine Moderate Weekly and Monthly Rates Courtesy and Service Coffee Shop in Connection | Wisconsin‘s Dairies Produce Much Income WESTERN HOTELS, MADISON, Wis., Oct. 26—More Supervision of than 50 per cent of Wisconsin's farm income is derived from the dairy herd. The industry has shar- ed largely with tobaceo, fruit, po- tato, wool and livestock coopera- tives in the Farm Board's direct loan of $1,690,664 in the last two, years, of which $251,812.27 has been repald. Inc. >— v . % || PLAY BILLIARDS —at— BURFORD’S ——.—— OLIVE OIL CLOGS MARKET SANFINO DO DOURO, Portugflll —Olive trees in this picturesque region. are breaking down under the welght of a bumper crop, but @ unsold stocks have made the heavy yield a drug on the market. Old papers at Tne Empite COATS for Girls at HALF PRICE Regular $6.50 to $14.50 Sale Price, $3.25 to $7.25