The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 7, 1932, Page 3

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THE DAILY GAPITOL <Olymp1c Games, LAST Tlms TONJGHT TORMENTIN G HORRORS you'LL LOVE! FEATIIREB WITH 7 “BENIND MASK" |Athletic * Events and Mys- tery Play End Tonight at Capitol Theatre Virtually in the nature of' an | added attraction to “Behind the | Mask,” which will conclude ‘its run !tonight at the Capital theatre, is the third of the series of pictures depicting events at the recent 'Olympic Games at Los Angeles. | In “Behind the Mask,” story of mystery and horror, an interesting nmechanical deyice plays an im- portant part'in vr.félding the plot. Means of Communication This instrument keeps members of a dope ring in communication with their powerful but unknown leader. They work for him loyally Wwithout realizing who he is, be- cause they are aware it means death to cross him. Trey submit to him a series of messages on their activities. The reports are telephonic com- i munications, The informant dials la number, which is transmitted to a telephone with an automatic receiving device, that operates by means of a wax record. Metallic Arm Is Released The dialing on the other phone releases a slender metallic arm which sets a wax record whirling. | The message is recorded in this manner. Several times during the course of the nicture, this device is shown receiving reports, but |Tever with any person present. | Participants in this thriller in- ]l clude Jack Holt, Boris Karloff, 1Con=tanoe Cummings, Edward Van \E:Ioan ‘Willard Robertson, Claude iKing and Bertha Mann. | John Francis Dillon directed. ! Olympic Game Pictures | Olympic Game competitions are pictured with penfect realism. The i 1 Chif- great international contests are pec Welght and lf | seen by theatre patrons more clear- fon.” A full run of |1, in many instances, than stad- sizes ‘ium spectators ¢ould see them, { for the camera ten were as close 95¢ to {to all events as the judges. $2.00 i Censtance Cuctinings A Columbia Ficlure d Selected Shorts Nc. 3—OLYMPIC GAMES —CHINA NITE— PREVIEW—1 A. M. TONIGHT &fl’i A CRIME TO MISS ™ S U Edna 'Auy OLIVER ° A T ES mnn ..m.mmn m-nuv “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Hosiery Offering the new fall shades in both Serv- —————— ALASKA NEWS ! “Followng the dosmg by the Brit- ish Columbia :Government of its ‘reher camp at Stewart, B. C., rep- i resentatives of the unemployed ask- led the Stewart City Council for help. Twenty-five men were sald to be without food. As an emer- gency actipn, the Council appro- |priated $25 to furnish 50 hours istreet work at 50 cents an hour. Thirty - five residents or Cordova made the annual excursion over the Copper River.and Northwestern Railroad to Kennecott. It was scheduled to be a three-day outing but was cut to two days because of damage done. to the Lakinaw bridge by high water. The fare for the round trip was $10. | | ' SHEAFFER.- MADE FOUNTAIN PENS and PENCILS Ovid M. McMillan, member of the teaching staff of the 'Fairbanks High School, where he is athletic |cogch, Tecently left Dawson in a (small boat for the mouth ‘of the \Tanana. There he' will take # steamboat to Fairl s. Mr. Mc- Mfllan last Jupe left Fairbanks, | walking over the Richardson High- iway to the coast. He spent two |weeks in Juneau in July. Frem Junéan, he went to Skagway, them;e v As low as $1.00 BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS ANY TIME Phone 134 Free Delivery t.o Dawson. Captain Green, master of the Kuskokwim River steamer Tana, 1operating between McGrath and Bethel, bullt a 130-fopt barge this Summer and & hig dance was held to ealehrne its hunnung 41 Canada’s: mvu ited smm ,'B o} T HAAS Famous €andies The Cash Bazaar ‘Open’ E{zeuivigs skeem vis- dn,yl Veggtahles axfl rajsed by beys and 'girls u&u 18 years of age formed the displays at jan exhibition held at Paizhanks. Prizes were awarded by the Tanana Valley Fair Auochtlm VA | Al Ravidey, ko pibmder, died at Dawson. Lc.émiuoomA ' &mw;co mby-thflul] M?’l:"m nrd. uw?e By the Finnish Club of Anchore j@ge work has been started on ‘the m‘nmnuon will use for danclnz "BARNEY GOOGLE AND SPABK PLUG CONGRA BARNE Y/ GONNA nerv;-ungllng scene, in 4 &Lfle Ma the last times tonight at'the Capitol Theatre. WBDNESD\Y SEPT. 7, 1932, olt, at Tig a 4 s‘“ w‘;lch‘m SEPTEMBERBORN ELKS T0 STAGE PARTY TONIGHT Twenty t}xree Members of Local Lodge Have Natal 3 Days This ‘Month 1 Twenty-three members of Juneau | Lodge No. 420, B. P. 'O. Elks, whose birthdays occur during the current month are listed as hosts at tonight’s meeting of that or- ganization, the “party” to occur immediately after the business, session " is concluded. The Elks' baseball club, winner | of the 1932 City League cham- | pionship for the second successive| year under the leadership of Wal- " ter Andrews, will be guests of the| lodge at the social meeting which' is expected to get under way about 8:30 p. m. | The Bills whose birthday anni- versaries occur m September are: Gudmund Jensen, T. J. Stroebe,! H. J. Suratt, A. Sharkey, C. W. Wiitanen, Willia:a Franks, Wallis| George, J. L. Griy, George Kohl- hepp, E. E. Loumis, George Mes— serschmidt, Gus Messerschm.ldt\ A. F. McKinnon, James Morrison, | J. E. Pegues, Dr. W. J. Pigg, Dan Russell, T. J. Seldy, J. J. Stocker, A. Van Mavern, Billy Wakeham, Dr. H. C: DeVi ghne, and J. A. Hellfln[hal WILL SUCGEED 6, 0. GARFIELD SEATTLE, * Sept. 7—1 L. Me- Govern has been named Manager of the Alaska Department of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce suc- ceeding Charles.. D. Garfield, who has resigned. Reports that the Alaska Depart- ment ‘will ‘be eliminated by the Chamber are denied by E. W. Al- len, Chairman eof the chambeu Alaska Committee. and other forms of recreation. The structure will be 28 by 40 feet Oscar Ernest Quistberg, employed by the -Alaska Road Commission at Chitina, 2 Herron, alsp of Chitina, were mar- ried at Fairbanks. They will make | their home at Chitina. Jahn ‘Andrew Smuker and Louise Elizabeth” Thompson were married at Dawson. Becoming ill in the afternopn, Miss Fourney, nurse in the Govern- ment’s Indian hospital at Kanak- anak, -in the Bristol Bay district, (Med the next morning. lnunhent at szkmnl. and Miss Celia Esther|’ ] W che % lnim Geotse..«v 4 resident of Ancharage several years, died of hegrt t\‘oubk ig" m¢ hflmlw there. MAYQRS 1N GOLE TOURNEY KANSAS COITY, Sept. 7.—Bach yeir Mayor Bryoe) R. Smithvand mmmmmnox Kdnsas. City '3 ction of a building that the|cutives' title. Both w@i Ma erection a building ab | VLG ¥ ~—adv. in 80 or ‘theseabouts, = 7 'sm.w'f“ S E AUGUST EXPORT SHIPMENTS ARE WORTH §11,330469 Last Morth's Qutbotne Commerce Surpasses All Earlier Months Alaska's outborne . commerce for August grossed. '$11,380,169, accord- ing to the monthly commerce state- ment issued today by John C. Mc-! Bride, Collector of Customs.. It was the largest month of the cur- rent year. Canned salmon shipments made up the bulk of the business, aggre- | gating $9,519,774, and a total weight of 102,695,459 pounds. 'RKO-Radio Pictires’ Myste ry and Comedy Lead [LADIES OF JURY' REVEALS MANY COURT SECRETS - Comedy Pt ili To- night and Shows To- morrow.at Capitol How much ‘or how - little does the evideénce .in a murder trial influence the jurv? ‘What methods are used in. the jury room to ‘nersuade’ Jurors : to change their verdicts? ‘Who is responsible “leaks?” Fow do jurors react toward each other: after having: been locked up together for several days? ‘Vital Questions Amnswered for. or vindicative women who shoot -their -husbands? ‘Who makes the -most reliable Juror, man or weman? Those and meny ather ' vital ouestions ‘are answered in & gra- phic and entertaining manner in “ZMM of the Jury,” a far-e-drama stunng Edna May - Oltysr, which will be! previewed at 1 ¢'clock i and shown regularly bomm-mv nignt at the Capitol theatre. ‘The film reveals ‘the "« ‘law-down" mate deteils at" balloting, the of one jurgr toward another, meth- 0ds used to chanze “positive” op- inigns and. so forth. Jill Bdmond, Robert ¥cWade,| ‘Alan Roscoe and Morgan Calloway are other motables featured in the cast. Jury { i Is the average juror sympathetic | toward Dbeautiful| on jury room procedire, the inti-| heckling, haggling frritable reaction | F llms 'BRAT’ CAUSES COMMOTION IN AUTHOR'S HOME Laughable Produclmn Will Be Shown at Coli- seum Tonight Plenty af things are likely w happen when you start with matches in & powder factory —or ‘when you Introduce a hard- Side' among wealthy society pebd- ple. TFhis latter supplies the explosive ef! to “The Brat" Fox Films' screen version of Maude Fulton's play, which will be pre- |sented tonight at ithe Coliseum theatre. Night Court Cq‘pflt The young lady’s introdyetion when a wealthy suthor, attending |2 night colft sessibn for “material” brings omé ‘of the "culprits home witb him to study her pnmm.ve reactions.. 'The redctions come, farnd rather unekvectedly. She cham- Iplons. the - family Wblack' sheep, drives . away ‘the author's girk | friends, defies the entire family land all. in a :manner that gives laughs to spectators. stiuation | Sally ONell Stars Sally O'Neil has the title role. The supporting cast includes Frank; Albertson, ‘Allan Dinehart, Wwilliamy | Colligr Sr., Virginia Cherrill, June Collyr, Farrell Macdonald, Mary ’Fmbes. Albert Gran and unrgs.r- et Mana. John Ford directed. Gold was the second in value with $055359. Herring was third, 12,891,370 pounds having a declared value of $159,080. The list. of shipments and, yalues follows: | Animals Curios Fish: Fresh and frozen (ex- cept shell-fish)— Halibut Salmon Canned fish)— Salmon Cured or preserved (ex- cept shell-fish)— Cod : Herring Salmon Shell-fish— Clams Crabs .. Other fish products— Meal Oil All fish and flsh Products ... Furs and fur-skins— Seal skins Blue fox Stlver or black fox White ' fox (except shell- Manufactured furs Oil: .whale Ore, matte, an regulus—- Copper: Stone; including msrbls ; Trophies, specimens, etc... Al ofiher mlcles . Total vnluo ‘of - products of Alaska ... $10,182,203 Products of the United States . yeturnhed 186,665 Total v-;llu of {orelgn 3 To&a.\ value of ahlmmnu of merchandise . Gold ... 3 Silver .. 955,380 Grand total ... ATTENTION LEGI( Important mtlu of Alford John Bradford Post Amierican Legion Thursday night. lvar, member urged: to mu-l. 5, B MARTI, 410,369,041 14,960 of? 4 playing | boiled young lady from the East|: COLISEUM TONIGHT and THURSDAY CLOWN! this madcap Bowery imp aucleq and a fall out of high hnts anything till you see _ Alley l)mehart William C She' had' 'a wink and a way with her— who takes a tumble into You haven’t seen STURDEVANTTD SHIL THURSDAY FOR THE S08TH Afteér' a'two-day visit* here meet-| ing local officials and business men, Lieut. Col."€. L. Sturdevant, Dis-| trict’ Engineer, . 8. Board: of! Engineers ‘and head of the BSeattle Rivers' and Harbors District of which Alaska is a part, will Jeaye tomorrow morning’ ol the United' ;| States Bureau! of Fisheries patrol ship Widgeon, Capt. Clyde Delf. He tiwill - be aceum,pumed by Engiheer |- James G. Truitt of His" field stars.| Sitkd, thence to Port Alexander, Petefsburg, Wrangell Nartows, || Wratgell, Dry on the west |coast of Prince of Wales Island, Ketohikan and a?ydqr. He will in- spegt existing Riyers l.nd Harbors projects and sev tare pend- ing under recom& ;fit Con- gressiohal nppro@ 8 his fisst wp, = rlbog/‘f He hfl“ Wmnchuum Tp;f the Sealtle distrit for the He {5 inf in’ year. ltegegted havigatién improvenient vgehflt trip s for "tne” nt studying locAT ‘'conditions ‘and méeting ~lotal’ ‘people: He ' visited € s for west as Seward where ‘two Pprojécts are lodated- and- discussed § Ioiins Jesieh 4t Comigrs witn Gol. Sturdevant will' go ‘1irst tot: Ol PADErs, for amle..at, Kmpire seaiezj in;Wc‘(lflM like your coffee. | e wluch anumpage the most ,wearable fashions just now. . In wvelvets, sxlks, woolens, rough and crinkly crepes, in all the leading fall shades with 3}]},!{1"@5 pewfln‘esis_ and economy. 46 i a el Mo\!emtely Priced Sizés from 14 to 44 'M(M-e'a Eoooil EANE C e ) Rooms with bath as low as $1.50 per day. Special weekly and monthly rases GLEN C. BARTLETT, Manager ., CALIFORNIA WEBY F resh Fruits -nxi‘u-‘- ¥

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