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ry e THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE THURSDAY APRIL 28, 1932 CAPITOL FRIDAY SATURDAY THURSDAY ALL-TALKING DRAMA NITE LIFE A COlUMBlA Picture "fll((h with BARBARA STANWYCK LOWELL SHERMAN Ralph Graves—Marie Prevost George Fawcett—Nance O'Neil DON’T MISS IT! —and— SPECIAL SELECTED SHORTS— “Trail of the Swordfish” Including T NAVY PLANES roay | RESUME FLIGHT Voile Frocks |} T0 WESTWARD ; 1 Amphibian ' Aircraft Will mghe i neden bl Renew Their Fuel Sup- plies at Yakutat materials 'in smart house frocks. PRICED $2.50 to $4.75 ALL SIZES 14 to 44 Destined for Yakutat, the Unite- |ed States Navy amphibian planes !Seward and Unalaska took flight |from Juneau at 7 o'clock this (morning., They were expected to {reach their destination beforz nogn. | At Yakutat they will renew fyel :upphes from the Navy's mine bweeper Gannet, which was sched- ‘uled to be there today and which ]carries fuel and plane spares. o | Prom Yakutat, the aircraft will proceed to Seward. Generally speak- ing they will make their headquart- |ers there during the summer while |they work at surveying and pic- ,ture-mapping the districts in the neighborhoods of Chignik Bay, | Shelikof Strait and the north ishore of Kodiak Island for the, | Coast Geodetic Survey. ;PROF R. 5. RAVEN IS | HOSPITAL PATIENT =4 Lomh, - Juneaw’s Own Store L. €. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS J. B. Burford & Co. Prof. R. S. Raven, Superintend- ou:doormpwombywhedl;mu of Public Schools, is 8 pa~ customers” | |tient dn St. Ann's Hespital. He ® ' has a severe cold. He hopes to |be able to resume his duties at his office i the High School Luilding early next week. ——————— BROWN AND WHITE ¢ ‘WORN BY BARQUISE - e e LUMBER Any Size i | PARIS, April 28—Brown and i i white is the color scheme around Any Time {awinch the Marguise de, Portago is buiiding her spring wardrobe. | Her ocoal is 3 slim design with 2 skirt of brown crepesse and full slerves and bodice of brown ecrepe jdoited in white. i ‘The frock which she wears with JUNEAU LUMBER MILLS, Ine. it is a clingong one piece design of brown erepe studded with white r»olka dots. Her accompanying cha- pear is a little brown sailor. e — SI’AIN HITS FAKE ANTIQUES MADRD, April 28.—The price o: : E Ifake antiqgue furniture were hard DONALBM BEAUTY PARLORS \hit when the government, trying to ®UTH HAYES ., genuine art at home, forbade = {=ale or “exportation of antiques 'SHOP N JUNEAU | without spectal permissioh. 'LEISURE LADIES' HEADLINES NEW CAPITOL BILL Play of Love and Romance Has Barbara Stanwyck | as Feminine Star ! A strong story, capable direction and a sple cast feature ‘La- dies of Leisure,” Columbia all-| talkking film of New York nLght life which begins showing tonight | at the Capitol theatre. | Briefly, the plot concerns the | efforts of Jerry Strong, an aflAst‘ to awaken the spiritual side of | Kay, a gold-digger he has engaged as a model. Jerry's friends be-! lieve that he is wasting his time| —particulanly Bill Standish, worldly type, Who finds Kay at-| tractive, but has no allusions about ' reforming her. Things Brought to Climax Things are brought to a climax when Jerry's father calls at the artist's apartment one morning and finds Kay there. Believing the |worst, Strong, Sr. insults the girl, |thereby precipitating Jerry into a| proposal of marriage. How Mus. Strong, Jerry's moth- er, eventually persuades Key to break with Jerry by appealing to the girl's sincere love for the ar- tist, and how Kay, in her pathetic dilemma, tries to go back to her| old life but finds she cannot, sup- ply the rest of the action for this intensely appealing and dramatic picture. End Proves Happy | Through a near tragedy is the [result of Mrs. Strong’s interfer- people—the climax of the story is a happy one. Barbara Stanwych gives an in- tensely human perfonmance in the role of Kay, as does Ralph Graves in the vole of Jerry. A (finished & MON. & THUR. BoswelL SISTERS 6:305.m.P.T. # ence in the lives of the two young |s Chesterfield Radio Program SHILKRET'S QRCHESTRA eyery night but Sunday NORMAN BROKENSHIRE, Announcer CONIMBIA NETWORK hesterfield Screen Offers Peppy Romance Pretty G:rls Lure btroug W(’n JOHN GILBERT STARS IN PLAY GOMING SOON “Phantom of Pm‘i\ views Friday Night and Shows Sunday lover, Goldwyn-May “Ladies of Leisure,” which begins |8 showing = tenight at the Capitol | Theatre, is a gay and jazy screen remance. In the center of the above !illustration are depicted Ralph Graves and Barbara Stanwyck in play. At ; rquis du death of to escape the law unm he rquis in or hand of th can prove his inn: hideous 1 ud or one of the scenes of the the upper right is seen Lowell Sherman (in character role. At the lower right are Marie Prevost at left and Miss Stamwyck at right in an interesting scene. to him Get Double Robertson had in finding t eould ‘dou~ baaring and e such ti the pized when hoes as the would not piece of epped into his piece of work is conlwibuted by | Vi Sherman, as the worldly | R Bill Standish. A delicious bit of Lowell PI‘C- Not | ROSS COLLINS REAL *POISON’ ) f “poison” to Uncle Sam’s fight- ing men on land. Collins is not chairman ‘of the | Military. Atfairs committee, bt e holds @ decidedly strategie posi- tion. He is chairman of the sub- committee of the Appropuiations Tfl ARMY MEN Committee which controls the anmy purse strings, He has his own ideas about the army and how it should be .run, and up until now no general MISS]Sblpplan O 1t 5p.oken | eomeg ciee s Toon st 1o ke {him think differently. Against So Many Men " | ot in Arms on Land alry abolished. becwuse he consid- —_ lers #t a useless ornament. Loud [By HERBERT PLUMMER) ihwe been the complainis and WASHINGTON, April 28! — It is |many the alls to his sentiment, sometimes very easy for the men |but all have been sless . . ir. Congr charged with running Uncle Sam’s army Wants Less Officers . and navy to be Another part of the army 4&bat dconverted into|irks him 1S military training of what is knov,.,“smdanm in sehools and colleges. around Washing- | He has campaigned against it. ton as “big army” | One of the big reasons that the “big navy” ad- |@&rmy regards him &S “poison” is vocates, that he is at presept ‘attempting Long and close |tv reduce the number of officers. contact with the |He wants t6. fop off about 4,000 many generals | Of the Mt of 13,000—vetire them and admirals has |frOm aotive duty. He thinks it is its effect on some |EXiravigance td keep so many of- Admirals in par- |Ticers ‘and ‘has no patience with ticular get the |the @Ymy's thedry, put a skeleton credit for swing-|0f & larger force is being main- ing a lot of ‘'em |tained. ) around to ithéir pr - ROSS. COLLINS way of thinking, The story is fold that two of the men who have had a lot to do with the palicy of the navy, were to Tickle Public Taste given their jobs because they eame R o from states far inland and would|, ST LOUIS; Agsil : 28 —Sxploit |ing “things that are new” with the for that reason be able to turn ol a deaf ear to enthusiastic propos-|™ L Pons ok o 5 als. The so-called “Dig navy” group » has things pretty much their way | al the present. 'Winson of Georgia, Inventions Exposition n:arguis. Hundreds of tests were : |made before the final selection of |CM8irman of the House Committee! .y gosiety of Wfiu comedy is contributed by the Den Keith, a player with the|oD Naval Affairs, and Hale of|yiy noi fts annus) cons vacious Marie Prevost. Others in t ! and precise manner of John BE IN MOVIES the cast are g Fawocett Nance O'Neil, Johnnie Walker ai ughout the major portion Juliette Compton. o ! drama Gilbert pl it IR Red-Headed Actress Signs ot st SOVIETS BOGST MUSIC Contract with Fox he theatre and who MOSCCW, April 25.—The Soviel ond 5-year plan includes music contemplating production of 1,000,- 000 gramophones with 50,000,000 records, instruments by in family. tual but the girl is pressed to the marquis her family. marguis mur her father he may get the fortune and Studios HOLLYWOOD, Cal, April 28— Clara Bow yesterday signed a con- | Tt tract with the Fox Studios. She th \-111 go back to the movies and her rst ture will be “Th 3 60000 pianos and 40 chord 1938. TUES. & FRL. WED. & SAT. ALex RUTH Gray ETTING 6X5.abl. 6pmP.T. The Cigarette that TASTE The Cigarette that’s MILDER ve with af The love is Maine, who holds down the same job in the Senate. are firm believ- ers in a big navy. Beth have! fought relentlessly this season to authorize the buillding of the navy to the quota strength permitted {by the London naval treaty. HUNGARIAN PIGS GET WINE TOKAJ, Hungary~Unable to xnd {a market for their famous wine, growers hg.re-bo it to pigs. 1t was a' gesture pair until it was noticed that &e There's an outspoken Mississip-|barrels cast before swine gave the {pian in the House by the name of !animals increased appetites, caus- Ross Collins, who ds nothing shortling them to fatten more qnuuy The Army’s Foe But the army is not so fortu- nate— THERE'S SOMETHING DIFFERENT about the flavor of CHESTERFIELDS — something about the bleading and Mndn‘a( fine tobac- cos— Ihat!et-sloyon,;v;xym THERE'S SOMETHING DIFFBBBNT -boux their mildness, too. It is the mildness that comes from the ripest, sweetest, mellowest Turkish and Domestic tobaceos. There isno biuamuu in tbem » » » D@ harshness. THERE'S SOMETHING DIFFERENT .about the taste. It is that good, pleasing taste that comes from the right kind of tobagee, cured in the right ‘way—cured for two years or more. It means to make CHESTERFIELDMW“ dollars are tied up in wbamold—bfllt’l m it. THERE’S SOMETHING DIFFERENT tbQut CHESTERFIELDS — THEY’RE MILD AND YET THEY SATISFY! 14 9w S BETTER 5 Smm—— f % o