The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, March 1, 1932, Page 3

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- FW? afl»iTEN‘ 3 /_,Amn_is FINEST < ertainment 2 TUESDAY WEDNESDAY “I DIDN'T TRY TO BUY YOU! IT'S. A LIE!” Poor little rich girl! But all her father's milliens could not buy love for her! AV ES in her finest talkie— A Mewa oty Mayer nerusr From the great American novel by FANNIE HURST with LESLIE HOWARD Richard Bennett Irene Rich Kent Douglasi . Mary Duncan A MARION DAVIS PRODUCTION Selected Shorts R —COMING— “Fannie Fooley Herself” “Caught Plastered” “Spirit of Notre Dame” RN FATHER OF JUNEAU WOMAN PASSES AWAY THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1932. T — CAPITOL STARS MISS DAVIES IN 'FIVE AND TEN' [Modern, Hilarious, Intense-| | Begins Tonight Skyscrapers, banqutes, bachelor apartments, moonlight ming airplanes, charity bazaars, vate trains, steamships and even Fif | leidoscopic backgrounds for “Five and Ten,” Marion [Davies' new picture, which will open tonight {at the Capitol theatre. | Modarn, daring, hilarious and yet inten dramatic, the Hurst novel offers Miss Davies something entirely new by way of characterization. ly Dramatic Play = | trysts, ) th Avenue buses supply the ka-! metro - Goldwyn - Mayer sLarring' Fannue | | | | As Jennifer,| daughter of the five-and-ten-cent- | |in any previbus role. Her excur- an outstanding achievement. Lavish Backgrounds Robert Z Leanard directed the | picturization of the Hurst narra- | tive with an eye for pictorial value, placing the story in lavish settings and providing a swift pace for the |tempo that reachés a climax in the ‘suicide of the young brother to save his mother from an indis- cretion. The story is strongly laden with romantic appeals. Les] Howard plays opposite Miss Davies Richard Bennett and Irene Rich {play the parent roles and Kent | Douglass, as the brother, rounds lout the Rarick family, of which | Jennifer is prime factor. Jennifer, setting her cap to win the young | society architect, chooses the wrong weapon with which to combat her {rival. | Uses Father’s Money | By employing her father's money in the fight her motives are mis- understood and she loses. There is later complications, however, {which bring them together, al- { though under rather compromising circumstances. | Included in the supporting cast are Mary Duncan, Lee Beranger, | Arthur Houseman, George Irving, | Halliwell Hobbes, Charles Giblyn, { Henry Armetta and Ruth Selwyn YIDDIES BRING DOWN HOUSE IN SPLENDIDSHOW |Mother Goose Characters Come to Life in Show by Kindergarien | | | Characters from Mother Goose store magnate, she is different than | {sion into the realm of drama is| - Theatres to Present New Attractions 1onig Artist’s Idea of “Spirit of Notre Dame” e WARNER BAXIER C(;):\mn AWARD TONIGHT AT JOAN BENNETT © - “Doctors” Wives” Will Be- | gin Showing Tonight at Coliseum TONIGHT and T TOMORROW 9:30 | a pictorial drama appeals to the emotions and evoke human interest as well, “Doc w ,” Fox presentatio: f mari- A LARRE A 9! B R N it WARHER BAXTER | medical fraternity, begins showing JOLN BENMNETT tonight at the Col 1m theratre. > Br the story revolves around VKTOR VARCOM! | the ork’s most | CECILIA LOCTUS | su on with an | Story by Henry andSylviaLeifera.8 Directed by FRANK BORZACE assistant x earch labora- | | tory. Her fathe had been a doc- | tor, from whom she had inherited an idealistic respect for men of | | medicin \ If the doctor is har some and th. paticnt is | months of m tal hap- | enters the drama in the form of suspicions and dc ':?h\; n the young bride’s heart which I f H |are suddenly corroborated in her| pretty, which il li.ger mind, when she inadvertently dis-| |covers what she thinks is an af- | fair between her husband and one {of his charming patients. Without explanation to her inno- husband, she ation | f another doctor, her life-long . friend. = This, finds, is not what she Under an assumed name > takes up nursing. | | How this transforms her previous | ions of her husband and his lon jer—her iflness ? re 18208 or hor Remantic medicine Capitol Theatre. All-Alaska News In a letter to the Wrangell Sen-|Since the departure of Dr. H. A. tinel, Joel Wing says he is doing winter devolopment work on the Wing mining properties on Quartz Post in the Cx tish Columbia. 1l s $18 per 100 $2 100 pounds; tea, E 1 per pound, and ev s2 in about the same portion. The McDames Indis catching very few fur bearers. | The Wrangell Volunteer Fire De- Fepruary 20, gave iis cond annual masquerade of the At rangell Cold Storage Company's stockholders, N. Nussbaumer, L. M the annual meeling | Campbell, Leo McCormack, L. A. |Olsen and C. P. Kirtland were chosen directors. The company's |plant has a storage capacity of 1180,000 pounds. Some of the stock- holders think it should be increased Mrs. Frank Reeder has received | (hymes stepped from the pages of \to 500,000 pounds. the sad news of the death of her |that book of childhood last Friday father, George O, Hall, aged 8(|evening wh n one of the most en- | Three salmon trolling boats w<-e years, at Henry, Tllinois, last Satur- { joyable programs of Yhe year was cy i s swampsd at anchor by stormy day night, as the result of heart | presented by the kindergarten PU- weather off Wrangell Tsland, and trouble. Mr. Hall visited his daughter in Juneau about three years ago and remained here seven months. Dur- ing his time in Juneau, Mr. Hall made a host of friends. b, — Sl SN e If you want the lat- est in the » DRUG LINE See Us First Juneau Drug . Co. j | 't Substitute “There Is No for QUALITY” ipils of the Public Schools under | the direction of their teacher, Miss | Blanche Turner. | Before a crowd that filled the | s2hool auditorium to capacity, the well - beloved figures in Mother | Goose lived their parts true to life, and earned the enthusiastic ap- ! plause that greeted their well- | trained efforts. Little Miss Muffet and the Spid- ler, Jack and Jill, Little Bo Peep crying for her lost sheep who came home wagging their talls, Mistress |Mary, a Paris doll, Pages, soldiers | of wood, the gardener and garden | with its Tlowers, the leaves, singers and other folks and things were {on the stage. The rythm band and | the chorus wer distinctive factors in an entertainment that, so far as the audience was concerned, was composed ‘of headline features. MID-WINTER CONCERT PROVES BIG SUCCES At the High School Mid-Winter Concert given i the school audi- | torium Sunday afternoon a capacity audience was in attendance. Vir- tually every number on the pro- gram of delightful vocal and in- strumental selections evoked an en- core. The concert was the most suc- cessful in the history of the school. EE ‘DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLORS RUTH. HAYES ‘Telephone 498 - REGISTRATION OF VOTERS Registration Book for Registra- 5, 1932, will be opened Tuesday, March 1, 1932, and remain open until Saturday evening, March 26, ‘Geo. M. Sivpkins Co. 1932. American citizenship, twenty-one years of age, bona fide resident Territory of Alaska for one year, mediately preceding said date of election are the qualifications re- z H. R. SHEPARD, City Clerk. First publication, Feb. 17, 1932. Iwc publication, March 25, 1932. tion of Voters, General Municipal' Election to be held Tuesday, April| and the Town of Juneau, Alaska,| i Several ribs of Michael Burming-| Master Alan Doyle celebrated his ham, a teamster employed by the fourth birthday yesterday at the 'were home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. continuously for six months im-| the crews had to camp on the (island. All three boats had to be |recaulked and two of them re- planked. A - | Darby (Choquetta, formerly a Wrangell fisherman, is a member of the crew of the 147-foot pleasure { yacht, Samona, T, owned by Wil- (lits J. Hole of Los Angeles. The craft is cruising on the Amazon River now. Choquetta in a let- ter written at Para, Brazl, to a friend in ‘'Wrangell, says the yacht racket as compared with the fish dodge is just one grand sweet song. | P. €. MoCormack, prominent ' Wrangell businessman, became-seri- (ously ill on a steamship while re- yturning home from Seattle. His | physician, Dr. Turner of Wrangell, | cummoned Dr. Beeson of Ketchikan {by airplane for consultation. Mr. McCormack is rapidly recovering !nnd expects to be in good heplth scon. | Depression in silver metal reflects itself in mining statistics in Hyder. In 1931, claims recorded totalled 36 as compared with 66 in 1930; affi- davits of assessment work, 114 against 179; mining deeds and other (forms of mining conveyance, 50 per cent less, Vital statistics give Ino occasion for alarm. Births ih 11931 were 3 as compared with |none in. 1930; deaths 2 in 1931, one more than 1930; and marriages 7, as against 6. The crime wave was Iheld to the same mark in both Commissioner’s Court. prEE tide flats. SNOW. | Premier Mining Company, broken by a kick from a horse. , | The | years—10 cases in the United Bta,tesl Under the weis’h;t :{mmfl‘;’- ;;1; Rev. Paul Mather, Indian Episco- ' Reid Building, one early pal clergyman, and Mrs. Mather. structures at Hyder, fell to the; The Harry Hogan shack ' {opposite tne Reid Building, also ALAN DOYLE HAS tumbled over as the result of heavy | Dr. J. W. Vosburgh from Abots-' ford, B. C., has arrived at Stewart, win Stewart, Dolores Black, Edwin B. C, to practice his profession. Heisel, I‘)ounhy Lund, Melvin Da* Whillnas several weeks ago Stewart has been without a physician. Some logzing operations are in progress in the Petersburg district. Sawyer-Reynolds Company i< out piling on at the south end ows and Mi are taking out piling at Totem Bay taking Einar Olsen, who in 1930 at Ju- neau and in 1931 at Sitka, repre- sented the Marlyn Fish Company, this year the Petersburg repre- tative of the Halibut Fis! men's Cooperative Company is buying fish in Petersbur season for nis company. Herring fishing in the inside wa- ters of Southeast Alaska excep! for food and bait purposes is opposed in resolutions adopted by the Ke chikan Chamber of Commenr: which thereby taking a against the use of herring inside waters in oil and meal r duction plants. Substitution of the migratory fowl regulations of 1930 for those of 1931 is also advocated by the Ketchikan Chamber. and this Igloo No. 30, Pioneers of Alaska will soon be instituted at Craig. Tt will be the first Igloo of the Pio- ncers on Prince of Wales Island Marble quarries at Tokeen, near Ketchikan, will be reopened next summer by the WVermont Marble Company of Tacoma. Bunkhouses are being put in repair. The quar- ries were worked for several years and then closed down. Having bought the equipment of the Home Hand Laundry at Ketch- kan, E. W. Quist and Ross Joyner will start a Jlaundry under the name of the Superior Laundry there. Mr. Quist lived at Nome before going to Ketchikan in 1919. Mr. Joyner Rved in Anchorage sev- eral years. j While enroute from Ketchikan to Seattle, the schooner Port Tongass was destroyed by’ fire. The loss oc- curred near San Juan Island, and H. C. Timmerman, owner and Capt. J. Barrington, who were aboard, escapzd in a skiff to the shore and then were given transportation to Friday Harbor, Wash. Mr. Timmer- man had sold the craft, valued at $8.000, partly insured, and was taking her south to deliver. The flames started from an unknown ‘William Peele, 19-year-old son o:‘ Mr. and Mrs. James Peele of Ka- saan, died in Hydaburg. Recent deaths at Ketchikan are jthose of Walter W .Manley and of {Victor Mather, 24 years old, son of BIRTHDAY PARTY Doyle, in the Cliff apartments, by giving a party. Those at the event were: Marilyn Jewett, Ed- Dedicated to the late Knute Rockne, who is regarded by many football enthusiasts greatest coach, the screen’s gridiron classic, “The Spirit of Notre Dame,” will be shcwn soon at the |dramatic climax of the picture. =obert Hamilton, I The young recipient of many charming gifts. | rnoon of play was followed dences her finished artist refreshments of ice ¥ and his strength, forms the| . . ; with ~ real kick, “Dr. e Pen- ‘ Warner Baxver, as ning,” the scurgeon, has in this SEASSRR I o SR T EE S5 - and Jackie | T ubtedly added another at- host was the e o Hs ga of ‘SKIPPY” IS COMING tt evi- | in the stic girl rzen portraits. Joan Benr role of the id AR LS ies him. > “other man” in the Victor ‘Varconi adds ‘,ersm:lzil;lO]d Papers for sale at Emoire Offie cult cream and | © pink and| A | tur |to in supporting cast i bl i Copr., 1932, The Americin Tobacco Co. “LUCKIES are certainly kind to my throat” “No harsh irritants for Lupe. I'm a LUCKY fan. There’s no question about it—LUCKIES are certainly kind to my throat. And hurrah for that improved Cellophane wrapper of yours—it really opens with- out a tug-o’-war—thanks to that tab.” W\%/ “It’s toasted” YourThroat Protection—against irritation - against cough And Moisture-Proof Cellophane Keeps that “Toasted” Flavor Ever Fresh HOT TAMALE! Lupe landed in Hollywood with one lone dollar and no part fo play . . . But now she has nine fur coats, 15 canaries, the world's loudest lounging pajemas, and dozens of men ga-ga about her ... We hope you liked her in the M-G-M PICTURE, “THE CUBAN LOVE SONG,” as much as we did. Lupe's been a LUCKY fan for two years . . . Thers was no —what is politely called ““finan- cial consideration” for her state- ment. Gracias, Lupe! TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE—60 modern minutes with the world’s finest dance orchestras and Walter Winchell, whose gossip of today becomes the news of tomorrow, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B. C. networks. S S S B AN ASHAS

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