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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, MAY 26, 1932. “VOLLEX AND b\«l-\SH“ Tennis “CALL A C()I"—Comed_y Capltol i Directed by DOLORES AND CARILLO IN FIERY DRAMA ALONG THE RIVER ',HOF ROMANCE THURSDAY FRIDAY “GIRL OF RID" FEATURED ON Colorful Play Replete with Thrills “The Dove” will fly gracefully into town tonight—not with the successful Willard Mack stage su . ’, cess, now titled “Girl of the Ri F"".'»w'"'rd Mack’s Great 1\\'111 open at the Capitol theatre. Stage Hit “The Dove” as Pre- Produced by REKD-Radio Pic- tures, the story follows closely the sented by David Belasco . . . {plot of the Mack play as it was |presented in almost every city and with Richard Bennett and the late Holbrock Blinn. Has Thrills Galore The screen version is a melo- drama, but adorned with a flow of adventurous action and in re- lief, beautifully composed romantic moods in the best manner of the director, Herbert Brenon. Miss Del Rio is the star of the »u&" Pl n "hILVER ]\ITE"’ LO’\II‘\T(,—“Modem Age,” “Squaw Man,” “3 Wise Girls” GENE EWARTIS | AWARDED PAINT JUBATMANSIUN | picture in more than a nominal cense, She makes the portrait of the cafe entertianer a dramatic canvas of conflicting moods. At one time subdued and afraid, when the emergency occurs, she is a —_— xorce[ul defender of her man The pompous braggart, Don Jose Maria Lopez y Tostado, is played by that masterful delineator, Leo Carillo who, like Miss Del Rio. lis a direct descendant of a long h:xe of Spanish Dona. Supporting Casv Excellent Carrillo’s pontrayal is as effec- tive on the screen as was Ben- nett’s and Blinn’s on hte stage. The romantic role opposite Mis: ‘Lasca of Rio Grande,” Bids $675 for Wo\k-fTwo Slashes Their Throats a51D51 Rlo ia Taged gl N o Lower Bids Are Re- jected by Architect 50 to $1,330 were received this week for painting the exterior of [ed three small girls as they were | on their way to school this morn- ALASKA NEws the Governor's Mansion, it was made known mday by N. Lester Tro Archit who anounced | the contraot has been awarded to '‘Gene Ewart, local painter, for $675. Two bids. lower than tha fig-| ure were received but both were | | were cut. nearby river. rejected because of fairlure to comply with requirements, Mr. Troadt said. C. Hegg bid $550 and A. C. Paddock $600. The bidders, it was said, were interested on bceth tenders which was contrary ® to instructions. The award price is regarded as unusually low. All woodwork, in- cluding the roof, all metal of the house and all of the fences at the mansion are required to be painted. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE— WITHOUT CALOMEL And You’ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin’ to Go [? and gunk and the world lmh",wk-.‘mfirtlnllo'nlntof-lm s, o ,Jaxative candy or chewing um and expect them to make ¥ ou suddenly dmy-ntml_}‘mdmuuhha e 't do it. y move u';‘;'.""i S ere Tasyomment GOt Eot o8 . out two id Lje futo your s aaty. 11 this bilc is rot fowing freely, your decaye in,_ the bowels. diguew, 1 fust decaye 1o, tio boweis thick, taste e d your. breath ie- fouls flnd!;dhmhwllu lemis.es. Your head ‘ aches and you leel down and out. Your whale eyntem is poisoned. 1t takes those gcod, nld CARTEB'S LITTLE LIVER ‘1 get these two g unds of bd. flowiny lredy ':?d make taey |William Sound, the lower lake areas bids, ranging from as low | | gave his name as Jake Gordon, | |including scores of children, They Are on Way to Others who gave splendid perform- |Ince and Frank Chapman. CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 26—A | = - maniac, branishing a knife, attack- ing. The maniac killed one of the girls, Rose Marie Parker, aged 8| Some person removed a beaver years, and perhaps fatally m)uxed”mm its stream and turned n.‘ | Lena Desnail, aged 12, and Elmn.llooe in ‘Anchorage where it roamed Mackm aged 8 years. 1vhe streets until captured by Game The throats of the thrée girls|Warden O'Connor and released ina The police captured the man who A who is about 40 years of age. Thirty colonists are expected to Patrolman Charles Mischem heard | come {rom the States this summer the screams of the children and|to take up farming land along overtook Gordon as he fled. the line of the Alaska Railroad. The attack was committed in|according to M. D. Snodgrass, of view of scores of pedestrians and |the colonization depantment oOf the motorists on their way to work, |railroad. Without warning, Gordon pound- | Unimak Island’s interior areas ed the first girl, plunged his knife |have never been explored, Indlans across her throat and then attack- |of the Island have told Father ed the others. Bernard R. Hubbard, “padre of the - e —— snows,” who went there to in- . vestigate the Shishaldin volcano. Kidnaped Cow Returned |Tne interior of the isiand, the f‘u. Groceries Ransnm Indians declare is of rough and | ‘mountainous character and abounds MENARD, Tex., May 26—Kid-|in brown bear and caribou. naping for ransom has made its \appearance in livestock circles in Fire from an unknown cause { Texas. destroyed the Beaver Creek Dred- A prize cow belonging to George |ging Company's dredge on Nome Stangel, bank cashier, was taken|Creek in the Nome district. The from her pen recently. Stangel re- |dredge was worth $200,000. It was ceived a note telling him to place‘insured for $150,000. $10 worth of groceries in the ceme- tery, whereupon he would be told At Seward a Mother-and-dau- the whereabouts of the animal. ghter banquet was held May 11 At a given spot he found a note directing him to the cow, which he; Work will begin immediately on retrieved. the Mike (Conley placer ground ———e——— at Sunrise, near Seward. A hyd- From the aerial base just estab- |raplic outfit is being moved to |lished at Seward, the Alaskan Air- |Sunmise from California Creek, a ways will serve Kodiak, Prince of Kenal Peninsula and other places to the Westward, It will continue fo serve the Kuskokwim and Yukon districts from the An-| chorage base. ANOTHER NEW SHIPMENT OF | BALL-BAND RUBBER BOOTS and PACS LOOK FOR THE RED BALL THE NEW Hupmobile The Mark of Quality . 8 SABIN’S Eveiything in Furnishings for Men IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor COLISEUM Thursd ay—Friday—Saturday " GAPITOL'S BILL| DOLORES DEI. RIO %Dolores Del Rio Stars in|| LEO CARRILLO NORMAN FOSTER symbolic olive branch of Biblical| H E R B E R T {lore, but with the magnificent |} Dolores Del Rio cast in a role|§ 3 {more brilliant than any in B R E N o N ;“Olm‘u it The screen dramatization of the Dolores Del Rio is portrayed here in her character role in “The Girl from Rio,” which be- gins showing tonight at the Capitol Theatre. large town in the United States|Sam Simmons and George ROSS. worth of gold dust that was cached on Bear Creek in| \small tots in the John Grier home. Through an unexpected stroke of o |fate she wins the admiration and }fl’i(‘:'“mp of Baxter who plays |the title role, and he without re- vealing his identity to her adopts her and sends her to college. From 1914 by Ole Os .s(‘l; he told the Seward Gatew is still there, that point on the romance devel- |ops rapidly until it reaches its climax, a most unexpected one to Onsen’s ty is also cached in the DLty SR Miss Gaynor. same stream. Onsen and his fellow from Nome Siberia. After mining there for a i their provisions were con- ficated and they were driven out by the Russians. desiring to lift the treasure, Onsen, is at Seward, toplay, which is the screen ver- sion of Jean Webster's famous stage play of the same name. TO any persol chi planting at the tomb of the “Un-|intendent of the Sunny Point can-| known Soldei tery near Washington, D. C., in|[Alaska Pacific Salmon Corpom«‘ Mrs. M. O. Johnson has been el-|the next scholastic year is $10,200, honor of the “Mother of the Un-|tion, which is controlled by Skin- | known Soldier” in Arlington Ceme- | ner and Eddy of Seattle. Civic _Club; {plied some soil that had been sent ¥ \Irom Alaska. George H. Barnes, 66, former |cording Secretary and Treasurer, be increased by one teacher. Mason, Correspcndmgi ‘William Wilson, coal mine fore- man at Jonesville nerth of Anchor- accidentally was killed when a gun he was cleaning discharged. passengers were carried by an Alaskan Airways | piloted by Harry |fic was between McGrath, and Fairbanks and virtually all of consisted of carrying officials and witnesses from MoeGrath and Bethel to Fairbanks to attend the term of the United Sfates district ter, and it is extremely well done. | |City Marshal at Petersburg. S h l C % d jances are Stanley Fields, Edna | cnool—{apture |Murphy, Lucille Gleason, Ralph | Without Question of Doubt One of the Finest GOt Her lwan c 0 L I S E UM HA81 Pictures vof ll[”'l'i.l.nvs ! WITH GAYNOR ‘Daddy Long Legs' Blends Laughter and Tears in Fine Story Lauzhs and tears, the chief re- i of any drama, are per- lended in the new Fox pro- Daddy Long Legs” which night at the Coliseum the- th Janet Gaylor and War- r in the principal roles. 1y gives these two popular unlimited opportunities Directed by 1e display of their charm and s and it offers the season’s Alfred Santell to Gaynor and Baxter fans. 5 Gaynor is seen as a little g orphan, who mothers the From the play by Jean Webster av Alfred Santell directed the pho- /,,4%/ . and McGrath 325 miles from Fair- | Was taken to Tacoma, Wash., for will take {banks. interment. A widow survives, ‘therv for Clea Miss Margaret Carter of Ket-|: S. G. Bartholomew has been suc- |Sides kan participated in the tree-|ceeded by W. N. Williams as Supe in Arlington Ceme- |Dery at Ketchikan, operated by the | AR |Mayor of Wrangell and for 44 and M John Jensen has been appo'mte’i[of e AR L e i Wrangell two years ago. Ole Christianseri 47, steward on i . INHALING haslong been an “untouchable” ...a subject taboo in the tobacco trade... “sacred cow”! Why? . . . Because in every tobncco leaf— even-the firiest, the mildest— nature hides certain impurities which, when not removed, are unkind to delicate mem- branes! And since, knowingly or unknowingly, we all inhale some part of the smoke from our cigarette—Lucky Strike developed that great scientific process which removes certain im- years a resident of Wrangell, died |Secretary. where he had lived after leqvmgr Skippered by Capt. Sid Barring- ton of the Barrington Transporta- Highway. The Forest Service has mnn Company, the new river boat been the lighthouse tender Cedar, died| . gng Mrs, Frank Rayner, who |Hazel B, No. in_the hospital at Ketchikan after . an illness of seven weeks. The body Here goes the last “sacred cow” in cigarette advertising! pieTUne JANET GAYNOR WARNER BAXTER Una Merkel over Suko Island near River. She replaces the old Hazel fox raising from Brothers. tocking | fur-bearing animals, also will stock |ches wide. | Walter Island. the | B. No. 2, which was destroyed by The Rayners, be- |fire last winter. The new craft Sukoi Island with is 100 feet long and 25 feet, 6 in- | Petersburg’s school budget for ected President of the Wrangell an increase of about $1,000 over the Mrs. H. R. Coulter, | current years' budget. The-teach- Vice-President; Mrs. Bjorge, Re- | ing staff at the high school will Zimovia Highway is the name ;wanta-d by the Wrangell Chamber of Commerce for Shoemaker Bay asked to make the change. 2 has arrived in|The highway extends along Zim- conducted a bakery in Petersburg, W)'A:u;c!l for service on the Stmmo |ovia Bay. O YOU INHALE? purities. Luckies created that process. Only Luckies have it! Do you inhale? Remember—mote than 20,000 physicians, after Luckies had been furnished: them for tests, basing their opinions. on’ M smabmg experience, stated that Luckies are less u’ntatmg to the throat than other cigarettes. “It’s toas Your Throat Protection 0. K. AMERICA TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE—GO0 modern minutes with the world’s finest dance ochestras, and. famous Lucky Strike news features, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B. C. nesworks,