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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY, FEB. 11, ON RUNAROUND' s .Ausns FINEST %rtau nment Life on Broadway . . . Re- freshing . . . Brisk . . . Just the Right Note of Laughter and Heartbreak THE “Runaround” Mary Brian Johnny Hines Marie Prevost Joseph Cawthorn Geoffrey Kerr SHORT SUBJECTS Friday—SILVER NITE WATCH FOR “Front Page” TOMORROW— BUCK JONES in “MEN WITHOUT LAW” and Silver Nite Penetration— Not Evaporation Quink Dries 31% Quicker On Paper Than Ordinary Ink The great trouble with fountain pen inks in the past has been that | they did mot dry quickly enough. To get the quick flow necessary for fountain pen use most inks have been too watery. Then some manufacturers went too far the other way. They placed on the market a quick drying ink but it had two common faults, one being that it ‘dried too quickly oh the pen point,—proper perhaps on the paper, but when it dried .on the, point it gummed and did not per- mit a steady even flow. In fact the pen became clogged and would not function. All realized that the ideal would be an ink that was free flow- ing. and that had the proper con- sistency and drying qualties. After 1021 formulas, three years work and an investment of $68,- 000.00 Parker made the discovery. Quink dries ideally but in a very | different manner. It dries by pene- | tration and not by eyaporation, Since the ink cannot penetrate Lhe gold pen point it cannot gum on the point but remains free and fluid ready at all times for instant use. ‘When it reaches the paper if pene- trates rapidly rancly necessitating the use of a blotter. Quink dries on paper 31% quicker than ordi- nary inks. It penetrates but does not evaporate. The problem was solved. Yet that one advantage is but one of the many our custom- ers will find in the new Quink by Parker. Fifteen cents for trial bottle at | THE NUGGET SHOP adv. FOR LAST TIMES “Men Without Law” Star- ring Buck Jones, Will Start Tomorrow With.“Runaround,” having Geof- frey Kerr, Mary Brian, Johnny Hines and Marie Prevost in the cast, showing for the last times tonight at the Capital Theatre, | “Men 'Without: Law,” starring Buck Jones, will be the headline attrac- tion tomorrow night. In “Runaround” somebody had to be the bride in a mock wed- { more men made up the balance of the bridal party. No Women At Wedding No women were present. It was a funny wedding. The whys and wherefores are what make the comedy interesting. In “Men Without Law,” the ac- tion starts in France during the late war. Buck Healy rescues his “buddy,” Manuel Del Rey, during a heavy barrage. They become even greater pals. Manuel, however, dies before the Armistice is signed, and Buck returns to his home in Gun- sight, Arizona, alone. Captured By Desperado Having in his possession a letter from the parent, Senor Del Rey, in which the latter invites Buck on a visit to the Del Rey ranch, Buck is about to present it when he falls into the hands of a local desperado named Murdock. ‘How Buck outwits this rascal, defeats him in terrific hand-to-hand com- bat and eventually wins Senor Del Rey's pretty daughter provide thrilling entertainment. DEATH SHOULD GIVE BREAK TO PRESS Should a man die in time to get a good break in ‘the morning papers? Several of the reporters lin “The Front Page,” which will begin at the Capitol theatre Sun- |day, think so. Others, not. so cal- {lous, may have other opinions, but in any event one of the thrills of “The Front Page” occurs when a man’s neck is at stake. Adolphe Menjou reveals himself las the hard-boiled but suave man- | aging ‘editor. | Eaward Everett Horton plays the {role of the nervous, antisepitc re- porter of a highbrow Chicago pa- per, who has the biggest story in {town in his desk, but misses out |on it because he thinks more of | throat-sprays and nostrums than he does of pure news. — e CARD PARTY The Women of Mooseheart Le- |gion, Juneau chapter number 449 { BOWLERS LE AVE FOR KETCHIKAN FRIDAY NIGHT |Elks Sendmg Men's and| {Women’s Teams to Play First City Primed for their annual fray! with the Ketchikan Elks, two bowling teams, representing the Juneau Lodge of EIks sail for Ket- |chikan on the motorship Norzh-‘ land tomorrow night. On the men’s team will be J. E. Barragar, Frank Metcalf, M,artm‘ Lavenik, Fred Henning and M. J. Bavard. The women's quintet will ner, Mrs. Martin Lavenik, Mrsvl Hector McLean, Mrs. Oliver Olson | and Mrs. M. J. Bavard. | Each team will play five matches. The exact schedule will not be known until after the arrival of the bowlers in Keterikan, but it | is planned to have them return to Juneau on the Norco, scheduled to sail from Ketchkan next Thurs- day night. Juneau has sent several men’s teams to the First City, but this is the first time that the local lodge has sent a woman's squad South. Tonight's Schedule The Shrimps play the Sockeyes| in the first match tonight. The other contest will be beétween the Crabs and Clams. There will be only one match; rolled Friday night, between the| Chums and Cohoes. . The sched- uled second match, between the Clams and Lobsters, has been post- I poned on account of the Fire- men's dance. MASQUE BALL GIVEN SATURDAY NIGHT BY MOOSEHEART WOMEN The big event for next Saturday night, Februray 13, is the Masque | Ball sponsored by the Women of | Mooseheart Legion. There is every | indication it will attract a large! crowd. The Committee in charge of this event has made special plans with | the orchestra for a string quar- tette and promises the dancing public some real snappy music. The prizes for the various cos- | tumes speak for themselves and | are for the most appropriate, best sustained and most comical. The Masque Ball will be given in A. B. Hall to accommodate the | speclal | expected large crowd and decorations are being provided. $130 000 Earned by Pons Since March | will hold a card party at the Moose | Hall February 11th, (Thursday) &t |8 pm. sharp. Good prizes. Both ,budge and whist played. Admission 35 cents. adv. . ! | NU-LIFE METHOD ! NO NEED TO BE BALD Complete Scalp Examination 89 Front Street, Room 101 YE SANDWICHE SHOPPE Open 10 am. Till Midnight ESTER ERBLAND GEORGIA RUDOLPH | 1 | | \ NEW YORK, Feb. 11.—Lily Pons, soprano of the Metropolitan ‘Opera | Company, has earned $130,000 since March 8, she said in the Supreme Court in an examination before the trial in a $315,000 suit brought | against her by her former mana- gers, Mr. and Mrs. Glovanni Zena- tello, who_charge breach of con- tract. The singer was questioned by David Neuberger, attorney for Mr. and Mrs, Zenatello. The ex- amination was held behind closed ‘doors. | B S ‘Travel ot the natfonal parks and | monuments in 1931 broke all rec- ords with a combined total of 3,544,856 visitors. T Juneau Frock Shop “Exclusive But Not Expensive” Coats Dresses . Hats Lingerie Hosiery and Costume Jewelry t.74 i ALL NEW SPRING MODELS' Saloum’s Old Store Near Gastineau*Hot'el “ -, ¢ \row and he expects to resume his{ | picture, Mrs. Smith ?MLAGLEN AND Passes Away | e oteaine LOWE GOMEDY Remains ofEclor's Wife| to Be Shipped to Fair- banks by Plane ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Feb. 11— The wife of Dr. R. E. Smith, Office | of Indian Affairs, in the hospital at Kotaebue, has passzd away Bnd‘[ the body is to be taken to Fair- |banks and then shipped - to. the States for interment. The cause of | death is not stated. Pllot Frank Darbandt arrived at Kotzebue yesterday from Point Bar- Coliseum Has *‘Wings of Adventure” at 1 A. M. Preview and Tomorrow men Of All Nations,” with a notable cast headed by Victor McLaglen, Edmund Lowe, E] B {del i Greta Nissen, will shown the last times tonight the Coliseum theatre. “Wings Of Adventurs,” st Rex Lease and Armida, will h he new program tomor- row night, and - this . program will Wo at flight to Anchorage today. He will ding. Hines was elected and seven be composed of Mrs. H. L. Faulk- |bring Mrs. Smith's body out from |be previewed at the 1 o'clock mati-| | Kotzebue. |nee tonight. Rex Parrott will play selections 1 the organ at all performances. \ Women Of All Nations In “Women Of All Nations,” one B {of the most hilarious scenes calls BY LEOPARD McLaglen as “Flagg” to in- du: i Nis: Motion Picture Actress‘ Rescued by Actor and Director ssen. the heart’s Laglen and Lowe, who again por- rays “Quirt.” During the feline conversation | Greta paints a’ cat’s whiskers on | Vic's upper lip with her lipstick. { When the scene was HOLLYWOOD, Calif.,, Feb, 11.— Vic fo to remove ‘the whiskers Barbara Weeks, motion picture act- g down for luncheon. ress engaged in filming a jungle C and Brendel, dining near- was attacked late yester- by, took one look at him, called day by a leopard being used in a v and had a saucer of mlm the set and was painfully injured, pla his plate. She was saved by another actor Wings Of Adventure {and the director who drove the ‘Wings Of Adventure,” ‘Ar- animal away. {mida, the charming little Mexican B e a nlays the part of Maria, Undeliverable letters received v\ln is being forced by her Uncle |during 1931 in the dead-letter of- int stasteful marriage to La fices decreased 12.02 per cent com- Pa 2, @ bandit with Mexican | pared with last year. presidential ambitions. About 55 per cent of the money The fiery little Maria rébels and, found in “dead” letters in 1931 was in her attack on her bandit suitor restored to its rightful owmers, and her uncle, she uses both Eng- at ced In T'S just what you'd expect. People who enjoy the good things of life...are con- stantly looking for suunlhmg better to eat and drink. .. and smoke, Something that’s out of the ordinary. In cigarettes this betfer taste can come only from finer ingredients. Chesterfields are more satisfying to the cultivated palate... because there’s never any attempt to skimp on Turkish leaf. These more expensive...more richly fla- vored Turkish tobaccos are added with a generous hand...and ‘choosey’ people... everywhere...like the result. In fact Chesterfield's new way of mine |as docile a ENDS TONIGHT in a little cat talk with Miss | \desire of Mc-‘ finished | the way they 1932. sh and Spanish to v But, Armida is not all when Dave Kent, an aviator dashin portrayed Lea: mises to save T anyone ath. pitfire and Amreican v Rex she i can be. Mechanic Is Funny his mechanic, Skeets mith, my fellow as Clyde Cook port him, have made a forced airplane landing beyond the | border and have been captured im- | mediat: by the leaders of La Panthera’s band. Aside from sa {ing Maria from La Panthera and !finally falling in love with her, Kent and Skeets meet all s adventures — primarily { bandit viewpoint! They escape being shot as robbers and they get chased for miles by La Panthera, but Kent has looked into | the sparkling eyes of Maria — and | anything is worth daring to save| her. Beside Lease, Armida and Cook, | the cast includes Fred Malate |Nick de Ruiz and Eddie Boland. [EAST LYNNE’ COMES | TO COLISEUM SUNDAY “East Lynne” will be showing at the Coliseum theatre Sunday. This is one of the greatest melodramas lin the history of the American {stage. Tt triumphed in original| |production and achieved repeated | successes in numerous revivals, Be- fore the era of motion pictures, stage road shows were the theatrical attraction, *Bast Lynne” was almost an annual of- fering that never failed to attract crowded house: The sk version of the famous | ‘pl‘n has been provided with a |notable cast. Included in it are| | Ann Harding, Conrad Nagel, Clive {Brock, Cecilia Loftus and O. P. | Heggie. Kent | when chief i i, LET FLOWERS | Be YOUR VALENTINE |adv. Juneau Florists, Phone 311 | | The proportion of male teachers THEY'RE PURE COLISEUM LAST TIMES TONIGHT ‘WOMEN of ALLNA TIONS’ TAKE YOUR NEIGHBORS ADVICE AND SEE IT THEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY LEASE, ARMIDA and CLYDE COOK ‘WINGS of ADVENTURFE’ Matinee Saturday at REX X Do or die adventures of a daredevil aviator who lost his heart flying high “Wings of Adventure” Midnight Preview Tonight “EAST LYNNE” STARTS SUNDAY 0Old Papers for sale at Empire Office "Choosey Rople like TASTE.. gling tobacco flavors and aromas is really equivalent to creating an entirely new kind of tobacco...one that combines the best qualities of Turkish and fine Domestic leaf. Perhaps you've noticed that the paper in Chesterfields is whiter...purer. Thousands of dollars were spént on research to petfect this paper. It burns without any taste or odor of its own. A detail, of course. But it adds immeasurably to your enjoyment. Smoke Chesterficlds whenever you like... They're mild and pure. They’ll never tire you as an oversweetened cigarette might easily do. Day in...day out...Chestetfields taste right. Light up and see for yourself. They satisfy! @ Listen in...Hear the Chesterfield Radio Program. Nat Shilkret's brilliant orchestra and Alex Gray, popular baritone. Every night, except Sunday... Columbia Broadcasting System ... 10:30 E. S. T,