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GAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT The one picture you must see! with Lois Moran—Charles Bickford SELECTED SHORTS CHINA NITE PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 AM. ‘THE GIRL FROM RIO’ Featuring LEO CARRILLO SOCCER GAME T0 BE PLAYED ON THURSDAY|: » ityh - Local Squad Takes on Boys| from German Cruiser at B. B. Park | Beaudine, a stick- ; |the cooperation o { William J. Brady g | former THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 25, 1932 Both Theatres to Have Previews 1 A. M. “MEN INLIFE® 3 Girls Lost’ Has as Many T0 SHOW LAST Kuuls of Hair TIMES TONICHT Fox Romance Wil B Shown Last Times To- Veteran _]udge Directs I ‘ night at Coliseum Court Room Scene in Capitol Play Brown, red and blonde hair form | ffective contrast in the hirsute In Columbia’s “Men in Her Life,” nents of “3 Girls L at the Capitol theatre, a | Fox romance showing at the murder trial is one of the dra-‘\m,m theatre for the last matic highlights of the plot and | ght, with Loretta Young, Director William @ mpton and Joan Marsh e-role trio. Coii- time: Joyee as the ler for detail, im mediately soughi leading lady of the offering, with Miss Compton's flaming locks and Miss Marsh’s ash-blonde wave lend- ing distinction to their parts. While the latter’s role of a gold-digger is well matched by her hair, “the ind gentlemen prefer,” Miss Co s a veteran jurist, Judge of| the Californiag Supreme Court. & ‘Whenever a stu- dio intends to film a courtroom ne of any de- Lo Moran on, Judge Brady is immed in to pass upon the |t of the scene. ! Haired and Dignifisd ) ole in this stirring tale of ro- a gray-haired, dignified e and adventure in a hig city. retired jurist, Mving in Southern v Cody enacts the part of the California for his health. He pre- dcbonair villain. Ao Ad\'l(‘ 1119 mud 05 as an ————————— portrayal of a girl with con- le temper, so that Lanfield's selection rls” is consistent coloring. cf his Judge Brody's vast knowledge of legal customs, gained through observation all over the world, was t called into play by a director nd as a personal favor. Others Followed Suit QOther directors soon heard of Everything is all lined up for the soccer game tomorrow night | at 6:15 o'clock at the baseball | park between the bunch from the | German cruiser Karlsruhe and the | pick-up team of Juneau. The Juneau team is composcdv of seven naticnalities and hetorr\ the squad goes on the field to- morrow night, others may be ad»} ded. The locals have been practic- | ing every nigh{ and will give the cruiser team a hard tussle for honors. | he public is invited to witness | lat 8 pm. {come. ;7udv. the scrimmage. R CHICKEN DINNER 1HURSDAY At Mrs. Hooker's Coffee Shoppe from 5:30 to 7—special, 85c. lar dinner, 65c. Farm Board decides to seil half of its cotton holdings. “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Outsize Hosiery for WOMEN Just received a complete assortment in both sizes and colors in the best grade service weight. Price $1.65 pair DONALDINE BEAUTY PARLOKS Telephone 496 RUTH HAYES | WHY “Because we do it better” RICE & AHLERS CO. Plumbing Heating Sheet Metal “We tell you in advance what job will cost” Regu- | Brud\ s willingness to aid in film- ing pictures that required legal knowledge and he has been in great demand since then. Lois Moran, Charles Bickford, {Victor Varconi and Donald Dill way head the cast in “Men in F Life.” . Condon Awaits Reply| for Return of Ran- som Money Paid | HOPEWELL, N. J, May 25— é |The State today laid plans to rush ithe trial of John Hughes Curtis |for a hoaxing in the Lindbergh kidnap c The case wlil be call- Grand Jury tomo ed be TOW. ol. Charles A. Lindbergh ATTENTION LEGIONNAIRES The regular meeting of the Al- ford John Bradford Post No. 4 of the American Legion will be held | at the Dugout Thursday, y 26, |may testify. Visiting comrades wel-| Meanwhile Dr. John F. Condon ADJUTANT, |hoped for a reply to his made yesterday to “John” turn the ransom money him in a Bronx cemetery. e the to re- B T paid Daily Emplre Want Ads Pay Good to Know- ; What was the world’s first prac- tical invention? Question Answer: Fire produced by man. AND— “BARGAIN HEATING” was made popular by coal users who . . start their fires with lNDIAN COAL, then bank it with CARBONADO Coking Furnace Coal. YOU try it! Moneyback guarantee of satisfaction with every load. Call Us Direct—PHONE 412 Pacifie Coast Coal Co. 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WP Outias Giom White: Thomas Hardware Co. _ COLISEUM PLAY the | ¢ | Miss Young is the brown-haired roseate crown also justifies| Director | even to an Wayne plays his third lead- | T0 BE RUSHED appeal | to d STARS IN GOMING COMES NEXT TG Dolores Del Rio Previews| | AM.—Seen Reg- ularly Tomorrow |“Daddy Lo_r;Legs" Pre-| | views Tonight and then Shows' Regularly 1 of the Rio,” which will be pre ed at 1 o'clock tonight am 3 5 3 shown regularly tomotrow night at nam 111 be previewed at 1 o'clock tonight and shown the Capitol theatre, stars Doiores “Daddy Long Legs,” the Fox ing film version of Jean Web- er med play, of the same | warly tomor- D€l Rio as the girl forced by cir- row night at the |cumstances to dance and sing Coliseum theatre, |a rio cafe in Mexico just a The = co-stars, |yne porder from the United States Janet Gaynor and Warner Baxter, In support of Miss L appear together for the first time, of | and promise m‘w‘nn set new popular- | ' ity records due to inspired portray- the super-egotist, Don Jose, “the bes' damn caballero in all Mexico”; Norma Foster, who plays the character of Johnny Po! ell, a suave, cool-headed Ameri Daddy Long | " :;\:nb‘mr: Lu_cll]g Gle:.\sm.\ : | m"} in a|tor of the commiission girls; Stan | o |ley Fields, a gambling house R1lph Ince, a ruffiar is | .fdp]:\flllllfl fashion | the romance of a little orphan girl father — “whose was merely a telephone book, and whose moth- er a tombstone"— with her wealthy benefactor who, won by her pluck and independence sends her to col- lege. Una Merkel as Miss Gaynor's room-mate is de- lightful, and oth- admirable performances are giv- Gill- Wil- Warner Baxter ler len by John Arledge, Claude ingwater, Sr., and Kathlyn liams. ‘Alfred Santell directed. Mr, Baxter, whose portrayal of the character “Daddy Long Legs,” enhhances his histronic fame, was 1 in Columbus, Chio, on March 18 Educated in public schools )s he yearned for a stage car- eer. He finally got a ch: a vaudeville act, but his induced him to quit it, and be- come an insurance agent in Phila He saved his money and ted in a garage, in Tusla, Ok- and lost every cent he joined a stock company | s Texas. He played ju T for two years, Laf ame leading man and even-| landed con Broadway in role of “Lombardi, Among his recent are “In Old “Thru Different Ey of the Rio Grande Wherever you buy Chesterfields, you get them just as fresh as if you came by our factory door I Arizona,” “Romance he ‘Arizona JOE DEXTER FRETS FOR OPEN SPACES OF ALASKAN HOME| (Seattle Times, May 14) After testing the sweets of civil-| ization in a month’s visit, his first trip “outside” in thirty-six years, Joe Dexter is rushing back to Al- aska, his lonely trading post at Golovin, his native wife and fam- ily, and the rigors of the North- land. Dexter is in Seattle after return- ng from the East where he visited | relatives. And he can hardly wait for steamer day to start his voyage | {north. Modern Busiress Man But if you're picturing him as the traditional “sourdough” of fic- tion, you'll be agreeably surprised to see him as a small, clean-shaven | business-man type, in well-cut gray |suit, English oxfords and a wrist | wateh. And he uses an airplane !for his Golovin-Nome business trips. The only touch of the Northland is a nugget pin in his ¢ravat. | Dexter has decided views on the | educational problem of the natives. “What the natives need,” he as- | serts, “are more hospitals and less schools. More practical training and | jless impractical training. “When they arc graduated, the boys know how to run a lathe, but what they need to know is how to build a kyak to earn their livings land to travel. The girls can take | dictation in shorthand, but that |sort of training doesn’t help them |when they get out of school, go home and need a new parka or a |pair of mukluks, What do they | do? Well, they send to a mail order house in the States for their cloth- ing. “Alaska needs development but when Senator Peanuts or Congress- man Walnuts come north, all they | see is Southeast Alaska—which has| the best of everything, while| farther north the Indian is threat- ened with extinction unless the Government can provide less bhook- | learning and more medical atten- | | tion.” 1 ————— Ralph ‘A. Treffers was granted | {a master's license for steam ves- sels this week by the U. 8. Steam- boat Inspector's office. ‘ Mr. Treffers was formerly mate | on the Margnita and returned to Juneau recently from Cordova where he has been in the light- house service for the past two {vears. @ 1932 Licoerr & Myers Tosacco Co, JANET GAYNOR“GIRL OF RI0": CAPITOL SCREEN Leo Carrillo, who portrays the vm" g men- | €’ hm Murphy, a dance Frank Campeau, a Broadway Favorite Kitty Kelly, ‘hmrw pla The: sett elaborate cree vising Broadway the most e rple P fair example. The all of one stage. be constructed at th Drinking, Gambling, Dancing It combines a bar with a ling room, a dance ha | tainers’ room, a pati nificent quarter-ac ‘tammg several th ! plants. |. The film is from th {ican success, “The Doy by Willard Ma It ed to the n by Meehan. set eeuy 1dio. was a Eliza e MRS L. WERNICKE GOES TO SCHOOL CLOSINGS Livingston Wernecke, whose ndent pany ;] the on the steamship Princess ;Nm"h. southbound. ~She |tend the commencement ex: |at the schools of her son, who is the Unive of Washington and of her Jdauehter, . @ Anna Wri in Tacoma. e —— Daily Empire Want Ads Fay Mrs. | hust 1 Tre {yo, who }inary @ LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO €O wx“‘\w\‘p/\\ 7\ » right. " /CAPT, DUQUESNE NOW BELIEVED "UNDER ARREST Dm)y Impllualea Man in| whose identity is withheld hll)'h | he t of Staff of the M with Death of Lord Kitchener NEW YORK, May 25—A man but who be Capt. Pri been arrest intimating responsible for Chief | who | is learned may Duquesne, He had a is in some way he death of Lord Kitchener, British Army, lost his life in the North Sea dur- ng the World War when the H.|( S. Hampshire sank | The man is held in connection | the burning of a vessel in| which several lives were lost. l d. " Steel Homzs Planned i te House Unemployed C OGNE, Germany COLISEUM LAST PAL NITE with TIMES TONIGHT Leretta Young and John Wayme MIDNITE PREVIEW TONITE “DADDY LONG LEGS” able for cultivating vegetables for home consumption. The houses are one-story struc- May 25— |tures with walls and roofs of steal Steel houses have been developed sheets. A lining for the inside walls [ u “I like ’em.” At the request of the National! sovernment as dwellings for the nemployed. Plans are under consideration to| them on garden plots near| ties where unused land is ¢ lc: composed of bricks anic ash, cement, and | stone. PRl L i i e made of lime= Values of 240 lisited stocks shrank 1- ‘sz 534657948 in April ne smoker tells another: —it’s a natural thing to do! ” “The taste and aroma are just “It’s a milder cigarette.” It’s one smoker telling another that introduces more and more smokers every day to that smooth distinctive Chesterfield blend. These smokers know what they like and they know where to get it! eslerli eld