The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 25, 1932, Page 3

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THE DAILY AIASKA HVlPIRE' THURSDAY FEB 25 1932 SR o Theatres G[\ange Tfielr Bllls Tomg[\tCOL[SEUM e TOMORROW A RUNAWAY TRAIN! CRASHING STEEL! DESPERATE RAILROADING! 5 AND A RUNAWAY WIFE. ,Ausxu FinesT © rtau\mel\t ONLY Sitmng Drama DOmmaites S@feen Plays BATTLE WAGED | IN ROCKING CAR GF LOGUM“TWE Eno;i:&jo Good Laugh! “Other Men's Wives” Is B N HIM and ‘Daybreak’ Be- Feature for Pal Night Me’s o gins Tomorrow : : at Coliseum Theatre l ums 43 ol “Mother’s Million's,” eatur R 1 L o | Desperate hand-to-hand fighting ;. May Rcbson, Frances Dade an i ¥ 4 3 5 inside the rocking cab of a great Gruhron Classic Comes Soon On account of so many persistent requests that we run this vieture again we will comply and run for One i*_‘f’O_NLY! G A P ITU |. HAS B MAY ROBSON IN | STRONG DRAMA |‘Mother's L IF YOU WERE IN LOVE \VlTH YOUR BEST FRIENDY \VIFE 7 WOULD YOU BE MAN What This Country Needs Is a Darned Millions” Tonight Lawrence will be shown to- locomotive constitutes one of the night only at the Capitol theatre 3 thrilling scenes in Warner Bros.| TOMORROW “Daybreak,” with Ramon Novarro ew romance of the railroads, | P g b and Helen Chandler in the leading g ¢ her Men's Women,” which opens | " g That's The Problem of roles, will headline the new bill} ¥ Shy 3 1 A 5 N o tonight at the Coliseum theatre. RAMON NOV ARRO in “DAYBREAK” tomorrow night. { 4 - 4 This was a scene which tried the \ m 4 'S “Mother’s Millions was | at the Capitol week, and YOUR PAL Is. | OUR GUEST ‘ PAL energies of Grant Withers and Regis Toomey, the fighters, and the |ingenuity of the director and tech- e 10 - iy & ¥ night is in response to nur |nical crew to the last degree. All SHEARER and LIONEL BARRYMORE in |requests not only from 3 i ¥ |of them worked under unusual dif- 3 LN %% ¢ g who were unable to 4 d the " - _:@‘ | ficulties but the spectacular and “A FREE SOUL” with CLARK GABLE |previous performances but also| e . |convincing scene was worth the| forbin heeons bt hats o Whether you are a football fan | | etfort ] .Iucn before and who wish to see it °F Dot, you will get a real thrill lags from eing “The S it of Notre | m again. s . .3 y { the locomotive had to be under full L - s e o s : rer's Millions” gives Dame,” the Universal picture which IERa: et 1 z ot ferent slant on life by present will be shown in the near future | . g S % 34‘ 5 'm{:dm‘xfdr;?g &Tfiflufe"fiffi |a story of the romantic and & Mo Uapitel Aheatio. Deyirses : L lers the crew were literally at les of folks With too of the, gridiron sport will undoubt- y of the reunawa ine i . g » e ray engine. edly be filled with wild-eyed en et Hetd W Hoaaave | “Daybreak” 1is sparkii Sonn- , Lodyisui, SRt aotshs - from, & A Naturally trainmen were held in tinental romance. and o Contineit. fought game, for this picture is real | inent 20 e S oy football with real football players. rve behind the cameras to take | 81, ivesior (I NeNL s pevcier of Faris Abcve is a locker room scene from ounand 41 apg UG Wi, WIong ot |was chosen to film 1, in order th “Saldt of N o > train developed too much speed the “Spirit of Notre Dame.” Below - |its rare savor should be of the late’ Konikits or went too far along the chartered Dates for the Nome dog race] C. H. Holmes and Walter Jones, |intact. Reol s Notre l;n'v Toot: abandoned trackage. classics have been announced by ident engineers for the Alaska tUurT - the Nome Kennel Club. The Bor-|Railroad with headquarters at An- 5 & den Cup race .will be run March |chorage have arrived in Sew: t » e s t h s v other than t 15, and the All-Alaska Cnampon- to make a preliminary survey of |y ser and adv lovar o ter actor, Jean Her- ship Race March 29 and 30. Prizes ! a site for the construction of rail- [turer in 10\0 The ok During the filming of the scenes And then SUNDAY the two GREAT STARS — NORMA [ g of the photoplay ag: Two Admissions for NITE the Price of One TONITE. ng did go wrong and wers and Toomey fought all one | ir speeding locomotive as he camera flat-car trailing|mairbanks was pulling clothes from | 3 he All-Alaska event are $1,000|road coal bunkers in Seward desires, Laura, is inte i { y Another featured role, that of the i B p i B ine and recording the bat-|a laundry bag @ kutton flew off | 1 first, $250 second, $100 third. — |Helen Chandler, the well relentless general, is played by e g ome of ihe gamments and struok THI E EN'NG D Bl 4 e e her in the eye, cuiting a small| g Madeline Douhit, daughter of‘ tage actress who scored in “Out- C. Aubrey Smith, who recently Of 80 radio receiving In|nrs. Ida Denison, and graduate of (Ward Bound” and “Dr scored in the role of “The A ) i d ity lights one-sixth of the |noiece from the iris. She is receiving | . . Nome, 55 have regisiered With the | the eldovia._grammar e e A e cise. PaSheloh PRETEE™ —f i mes in Indiana treatment in a darkened room in|Forty-five Natives from city clerk in accordance with an|g, tandi upil the hospital at Fairbanks. 4 y e ] ordinance recently enacted. The udm’.)m:\/[?\dl?ilxp slzlmol s the : Klukwan Will ang anc license is $1 annually. The penalty | Seldovia Herald, by reason that| - = = v Cook, 79, one of the rien-| Dance at Elks’ Hall for not registering is $5. Radi0|she i5 in the highest division and | R = =—=——= in Fairbanks in its s owners have subscribed a fund 0| with the high mark of all the| 7 a9 ,“W died there penniless| . LTne songs, dances and panio- buy a trouble detector machine. !students numbering 600. { recently. | mimes of the Chilkats will prove | of unusual interest to white per- “ L | pe s. The entertainment will be The measles epidemic at Tanana Fur is returning to the Ruby dis- | = [t TH il Satch to tate - ‘ > : o ) ) . i Z 4 \ conditions are returning to normal, . i il m."‘?,f;,’:,'ac s - ceeds the entire caich of last year.| i . % 3 \ J 4 \ N d Rev. Father J. F. McElmeel y in or ;;;nl nné they 1\'-")“ be g 5 |Muskrats are increasing. A ‘ ) w4 $ sl e \ X ho recently arrived af Fairbanks. . e Pty £y i Rumors that the lack of dog feed > 2 5 1% tip Dbl sédhensd stter having: been pable, pei at m, in the Nome area, would IMETS. Chimes of church bells in Bethle- hem, Palestine, were heard over the radio Christmas day at Elm, near Nome. losed for almost eight weeks. The = : S ,! Mrs. Lottie Thompson, mother Numbers on the program will be B e o Hiim ag|0f Attorney Arthur Thompson of relig conferenc i recently celebrated her delegates from various villages Anchorage recently celebrated hs both near and distant, would re- quire feed for their animals, is de- | nounced as “false, untrue, un-| grounded and without authority, by the Elim Village Council. She has lived in Alaska 32 years. {medical work in Kotzebue, died i 5 At “Frontier Night, which fvas| there recently. put on at Nome by the Nome| Aerie of Eagles, use was made of | John Flannigan, bridge worker | the actual fixtures, ])Maphelnalm}ag Cantwell for the Alaska Rail-| and gambling devices that in the rcad froze both hands while work- hurrah days of the camp served|ing on the night shift. An air- the Gold Belt, Eagle, Northern, plane was sumoned to Cantwell Hunter and Second Class saloons from Anchorage and he was taken and gambling houses. {to the hospital in Anchorage. He {could not make the trip by rail Officers recently elected by 1gloo |vecause of heayy snow blockades No. 1, Pioneers of Alaska, at'on the railroad. Nome are Nels Swanberg, presi-| dent; Harry Lomen, first vice-pre: Chester G. Kartak, who froze | ident; Thomas Gaffney, second'his feet at Lake Spenard, near| vice president; Thomas D. Jensen, | Anchorage, had to undergo surgi- historian; Jack ~ White, chaplain,ica] operations for the amputation Jack Starr, secretary; A. Polel, of his left foot just above the ankle treasurer; Bill MeKenna, sergeant- and of his big toe on the right at-arms; Harold Stokes, Inside foot, guard; A. Bahlke, librarian. H The auxilary eleoted: Mrs. Char- | A les W, Lewis, president; Mrs, A, | In an automobile, equipped witn McLain, vice president; Mrs. ROA‘SIUS and @ heating apparatus, B. Hagen, secretary; Mrs. Mary|Stanley R. Morgan drove from Polet, treasurer; Mrs. T. Lehmann, Point Barrow along the Arctic historian; Mrs. H. Lomen, chap-coast to Flaxman Island, a dis- lain; Mrs. Thomas D. Jensen, mar- | tance of about 250 miles and back chal; Mrs. P. Bloomberg, inside|to Barrow. He encountered con- guard. |siderable bad weather. The round < itrip required 12 days. Along the Resolutions adoped by the Nome route 300 Eskimos were seen and Chamber of Commerce protesting the automobile, the first they ‘had against the proposal to consolidate viewed caused great excitement the Second and Fourth judicial among them. Mountain sheep, divisions have been endorsed by the |caribou, bear and large lake following Nome organizations: City trout were seen. Council, Pioneers of Alaska, Nativa | Brotherhood, Republican and Demo-' Otto Edvordsen, wood chopper cratic Clubs, Arctic Brotherhood in a camp a few miles out of Fort and Nome Bar Association. Yukon, was killed when a tree he a—g had felled struck him. More than 100 fathers and sons attended the ‘Father and Son’ banquet at Seward. Charles LeClair, 64, died at Fair- banks after an illness of a month. From the bottom of Seward harbor, the motoorship Bavaria Oscar Darling, Fox Movietone was brought to the surface and ]s:;nd egmirk'l Mo WTS o 121351;3 then drawn upon the beach, where sl pg. molion, pickites, the water was bailed out_of her, AR Miss Vh'guua Heghis, geugh- in Seward harbor in consequence were married in the Statfes. 'I'h"y of heavy ice formed on her by 4 waves. and blizzard winds, summeer HOpaned T COLISEUM | While hauling a 20 horsepower SUNDAY and MONDAY |boiler with a “Thirty” caterpiller |tractor across the Goldstream VIC‘II‘OI.«, |bridge on the Happy—Goldstream |road near Fairbanks, the span glmmsd broke precipitating the machines |and George Parker and Peter Swanson' 15 feet to the ground. The men escaped injury. | When the thermometer drops to 140 below zero, the public library at Fairbanks does not open, as the rooms cannot be kept warm when the temperature is that cold, ninetieth birthday anniversary. | Mrs. R. E. Smith, wife of the| doctor in charge of government | D i Copr., 1032, The Americaa Tobacco Co. = I A TINY LITTLE FOX Sidney Fox is just a fraction of an inch under five feet and weighs all of ninety-four pounds. In her first mo'om pitcher, Sidney occu- pied the star's dressing room. She clicked immediately in UNIVERSAL'S “Strictly Dishonor- able” and slays 'em in“MURDERS IN THE RUE MORGUE.” Sidney has smoked LUCKIES three years. She's not only been kind to her throat, but also kind to the makers of LUCKY STRIKE in do- nating that friendly statement, R RO AR TUNEIN ON LUCKY STRIKE-60 modernminutesithi gossip of today becomes the news of tomorrow, every T “I'ye smoked LUCKIES for three yéars “Pve smoked LUCKIES for three years. I've tried almost every other brand and found that LUCKIES are truly the only cigarettes that do not hurt my throat. Talking pictures make it even more important for an actress to keep her throat in perfect condition. And l think the new Cellophane tab is slick.” “Tt’s toasted Your !hr at Protection=against irritation — against cough And Mclsu.vrmf c-llcpbfi. Keeps that “Toasted” Flavor !vor Fn‘ idemic did not extend down the Yukon River and health conditions in the vicinity of Kaltag and Nu- lato were described as good. Many moose Wt seen by Game Warden Oddie Hallson on his flight to Fairbanks from McGrath, where he makes his headquarters. Large bands of caribou were sighted on the lakes toward McKin! There were no signs of wolves, Not mach fur has been caught on the upper Kuskokwim, but on the lower river trappers had been more successful. Fox and mink are especially plenti- {ful there. In the upper country ptarmigan, _spruce hens, willow grouse and rabbits are coming back. STAR OF ‘DISHONORED’ HAS SIX UNIFORMS Victor McLaglen, the screen star, seems to be built to fit uniforms, both physically and professionally. Nearly every one of his outstand- | ing screen successes has been made while wearing a military uniform of one kind or another: “What | Price. Glory,” “The Cock Eyed | World.” Now, co-starred with screendom’s | newest feminine sensation, Mar- | lene Dietrich, in Josef von Stern- | berg’s “Dishonored,” which will be | |shown 4t the Coliseum theatre | Sunday, MecLaglen has an oppor- | tunity to display six different miii- | tary outfits in one picture. explained to the audience by one of he Chilkats of an American cal- 2 education. The program fol- Iu\h 1. Exhibit of old relics explain- ed. 2. Chilkat tribal dance. 3. Tsimpsean dance. First White’s Appearance 4. Act portraying first white man seen by Indians in the Chil- kat country. 5. Peace dance. 6. Act illustrating nmz mmseen and fired by Chilkats. 7. Medicine Man dance, display- ing Medicine Man’s idol and witch totem, rare antiquities, which will be fully explained by a Native in= ter as to their use. in, treating the sick and ‘n making prophecies. . 8. Story of the woodworm, il- lustrated and explained. 9. Haida dance. | curtain, 8 P.M. Admission—$1.00, Children 25 and 50 cents. adv. . COLISEUM SUNDAY and MONDAY [ B wernu N lAG Ell | FIRST AID CONTEST A First Aid Contest for Aliska Juneau Employees is being held in A. B. Hall, Thurs- day, February 25, at 8 P. M. Owing to thie limited space available for spectators admission to this Contest will be for employees and their families only. world’sfinestdance orchestrasand \'Vahchmchau. whose iy, Thursdayand Saturday evening over N. B.C. networks. (RO PLYMOUTH THRIFT MODELS at Sensationally Low Prices Plymouth Thrift Sedan—$495— Two Door Plymouth Thrift Sedan—!m- Four Door

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