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CAPITOL AFRAID Look out for the SUNDAY—MONDAY Sunday Matinee 2 p. m. Cerfainly not— They LOVE it! silken huntress who thrives on the dangers of city jungles! And yet, they’re mere- ly pretty decoys, who lure men on to de- struction in these mod- ern jungles in the big cities of America! Here is a challenge to the brave men of this ccuntry—to fight that vice ring to the death! A picture to grip your soul! ‘Gsmopolitan Production with WALTER HUSTON JEAN HARLOW WALLACE FORD JEAN HERSHOLT Selected Short Subjects LAST TIMES TONIGHT TOM MIX in “MY PAL THE KING” MATINEE TONIGHT—1, A. M. A;m:noes. Place in shallow pan. Add 4 inch of water. Bake 25 min- ‘ubes in moderate oven. | Fresh Vegetable Salad 1 cup sliced cucumbers, 1 cup \grenn beans, % cup chopped onions ‘2 tablespoons chopped green pep- perpers, % cup diced celery, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon paprika. Mix and chill ingredients. Serve yon lettuce and top with French dressing or mayonnaise. Orange Cup Cakes (8) (Egg yolks only) 4 tablespoons butter, % cup su- By MRS. ALEXANDER GEORGE BAKED STUFFED TOMATOES (Using Leftovers) A Dinner Menu Baked Stuffed Tomatoes Baked Potatoes \ { \ Bizcuit _ Plum Jelly Egu. 4 egg yolks, 4 tablespoons oF- Fresh Vegetable Salad |ange juice, 1 ‘tablespoon grated or- Orange Cup Cakes, Frosted |ange rind,, 1 teaspoon lemon ex- Coffee |tract, 1 cup pastry flour, 1% tea- spoons baking powder, % teaspoon Baked Stuffed Tomatces salt, 6 large firm tomatoes, 2-3 cup| Cream the butter and sugar. Add chopped cooked meat, 1 cup bread |rest of ingredients and beat 3 crumbs, 1 tablespoon chopped on-minutes. Half fill greased muffin ions. 1 teaspoon chopped parsley, pans and bake 20 minutes in slow 2 tablespoons chopped green pep—:cven Cool and frost. pers, 4 tablespoons butter, % cup | Orange Frosting mik. 2 tablespoons orange juice, 1 egg Wash tomatoes. Cut out blos-|yolk, % teaspoon salt, % teaspoon som ends and remove part of pulp.|lemon extract, 1 cup sifted con- Mix rest of ingredients. Stuff to-|fectioner’s sugar, 1 tablespoon but- | ter. Mix ingredients and beat 2 min- | utes. ‘Chocolate Cake Coffee ‘Greamty, Mint, Candies | TRAINED HANDS - Put yourself in a position to com- mand mére money . . , get that better job you have been wanting. You''can do ‘all ‘these things ‘if your hands are business-trained. Enroll in our school now and take advantage of the low rates we. are offering for a complete secretarial course, Drop in. . There is no' obligation; § { JUNEAU BUSINESS COLLEGE Goldstein Building » Let stand 2 minutes. Beat 4 TflM MIX LIKES T0 MAKE THINGS 0UT OF SILVER “My Pal; the King” Will End Its Run Tonight at Capltol Theatre Tom Mix; w’ho will appear in “My Pal the King,” for the last times fonight at the OCapitol thea- tre, is @an acccmplished silversmith, He spends a great share of his “between-scenes” time fashioning vases and whatnots in the precious metal. Designer of Monogram The “TM" Monogram that ap- pears on all of his cars, saddles, blankets and show wagons is Mix’s own design and make and is much in evidence in “My Pal, the King.” Jim Thorpe, who is one of the greatest football stars who ever lived and one of the most powerful all-around athletes the world has ever known, enacts the role of an Indian in the Tom Mix ;play. Part Comes Easy The part comes easy for Jim|' who is a full-blooded redskin. Mickey Rooney, Paul Hurst, Noel Francis, Stuart Holmes and Finis Barton are also in the film. JUNEAU ' CATHOLIC LADIES PLANNING FALL ACTIVITIES The following active workers re- sponded to the call of Mrs. A. M. Geyer, president of the Altar So- ciety of the Catholic Church of the Nativity, and attended the regular monthly meeting in the Parish assembly hall yesterday af- ternoon: . Mrs. Guy McNaughton, Mrs. F. S. Fellows, Mrs. J. Kerr McAllister, Mrs. D. Dull, Mrs. L. H. Metzgar, Mrs. G. H. Walmsley, Mrs. H. R. VanderLeest, Mrs. M, D. Berry, Mrs, Harley J. Turner, Mrs. Albert Forrest, Mrs. 8. Guyot, Mrs. G. M. Simpkins, Mrs. D. Dull was hostess. Reports on the progress of the hope chest committee were made by Mrs. S. Guyot, chairman. Final disposition: of the chest will be made October 13. The committee in charge of the display of the chest at the Southeast Alaska Fair reported _ that it was generously supported by the public. Plans were outlined for a series of card socials in the Parish As- sembly Hall during the fall and winter months, and October ¢ was the date selected for the first so- cial. Mrs. Geyer urged the mem- bérs to attend the general parish meeting next Tuesday evening at the Assembly hall and to cndeavor to have a full attendance of mem- bers of the soclety. The question of a bazaar and other activities dor the fall. and winter will be discussed - at that time. ——.— — ———— e N« e AT THE. HOTELS well and frost cakes. .. . BRIDGE CLUB. ke o e REFRESHMENTS Gastinean Crab Salad A. L. Paddock, Thomas Olson, Cream Cheese Sandwches C. C. Boatman, Seattle; Mrs. T. J. Stroebe, Dupont; J. V. Hickley, M. V, Sasseen, Ketchikan; N. Uus- baumer, Wrangell;” C. W, GColds- budgh, Hyder; C. R. Wright, Ab- erdeen; Bishop Peter T, Rowe, L. M. Carrigan, Martin Olsen, A, F. Richard Anderson, Ju- Alaskan J. B. Glaver, D. A. Buchanan, Robert K. West, Haines. Old papers ror sale at Empire ! ngm:hjw ‘: ‘Florence Holmquist, Phone 427 LIGGETTS GRAPE JUICE Full Pint 25¢ BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO,. . EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS Phone 134 Free Delivery :teotlve and Jean Hazlow as. a R "fl ABROAD LEAVES t WIFE AT HOME Ambacsador Bill” Wlll Show Last Times To- night at Coliseum “Ambassader Bill," starring Will Will be shown for the last tonight at the Coh'seumi x In the play, Rogers the !diplomat is not accompanied by | | & wife, leaving him free to become ulvxsox w the Queen, plnymmn‘ thful king and a poker| mong the other members In real life, Rogers is a devoted | ' husband and an. indulgent, father, | He has three children, Will, Jr., Mary and James, the oldest being Will, Jr, who recently celebrated his eighteenth uirthday. The only {thing Rogers has ever denied his |family is a telephone. He refuses (to_have one in the home for ob- “vlous reasons. Politics and Love In “Ambassador Bill,” Rogers enacts the hilarious role of an |\American ambassador embroiled in | ‘Lhc politics and royal loves of a glamorous mythical Ringdom in #ithe Balkans, Between dodging rev- clutions and stumbling over the more jagged points of etiquett; 1he teaches the boy king basebal “land stars a Boy Scout troop. Miss Churchill is Queen The stately Marguertie Churchill plays a, leading role, that of the || Queen-Regent, while other favor- f|ites in the cast are Greta Nissen, Tad Alexander, Gustav von Sef- fritz, Ray Milland, Arnold Korff {and Ernest Wood. Regal friendships and intri- gues help to make entertaining i 1A | | | I !|the novel of the same name, by | | Dashiel Hammetr, SUNDAY and MONDAY COLISEUM WHO?——WHAT?. IS THE MALTESE FALCON? | Matinee ql"lday atzp M headed by Ricardo Cortez, Robm. c UL I SEU M HAs Elliott, Dudley Digges and Una | Merkel. | Other well known pl s in the B E B E D A N I E L s production are Otto Matiesen, Wal- Leong, Dwight rye, Thelma Todd and J. Ferrell MacDonald. Roy Del Ruth drected from the s‘,rml prepared by Maude Fulton, rown Holmes and Lucien Hub- IN PLAY SUNDAY ‘bard “Maltese ]'alcon' Is Mys-| oS Rt tery Melodrama with JSIX ARE ARRESTED Lots of Action BY FEDERAL AGENTS IN KETCHIKAN RAID| Six persons were arrested in Ket- | chikan yesterday in several raids | by Federal Deputy Marshals and Prohibition Agents, aceording to advices received today by United States 2farshal Albert White. A | large quantity of bottled beer was reported to have been seized. “The Maltese Faicon,” melodrama with Bebe Danie the starring role, will feature the new program tomorrow at the Col- |iseum theatre. | The story is an adaptation of ex-Pinkerton de- tective, whose stories have become bes 5 n the last few years, | Tony Jellich was taken in a As suggested by the title, Miss | raid on Star House and much beer Daniels plays an entire new |was confiscated. Charles Tuengel type of role as a member of one |and Mrs. Hodgkinsih were arrested of the weirdest crime rings in |with beer in their possession and modern fiction. A venturesome |the latter paid a fine of $50 for actress in an adventurous role. |violation of the Alaska bone dry the comedies showing at Ju- neau theatres. At the top, Tom Mix, American cowboy, and Mickey Rconey, ycuthful ruler of a Eurepean country, are de- picted in “My Pal, the King” at the Capitol Theatre. At the bottom is a scene portraying Will Rogers as he appears as a United States diplomat to a° European monarchy in “Ambas- | sador Bill” at the Coliseum Theatre. CAPITOL BILLS: ‘BEAST OF CITY' FOR TOMORROW, Walter Huston, Wallace Ford and Jean Harlow Featured in Cast . How far do police go with the| third degree? Does the underworld really’ rule politics in big cifies? Are the officials cf the law hon-| estly trying to do their duty? | These are some questions.' to which staitling and enlightening answers are given in “The Beast| of the City,” sensational drama of police agtivities and city life, which will headline the new, pro- gram tomorrow at the Capitol theatre. The ‘pioture, based largely' on| police records, is an expose of the ohstacles that lie in the way of honest law - enforcement. Underworld Political Actiyity It reveals the “inside” of under-| world political activity and. depicts in vivid detail the intimate Hvesl | The picture was directed by Sam |'Taylor. I 1 | as well as the perils and problems of the poli Charles m-wbm directed the pic- {ure The story, an original for, the screen, was written by 'W. R, Burs nett. A largs cast is headed by Wal- ter Huston in the role of the police | chief who 1is pitted against. the ‘machinations of the underworld. Ford and Jean - Harlow Wallace Ford as‘the young de- gangster “moll” {urnish "the zo- mantice background “and an im-{ portant role is played by Jean l‘iz-sholt as the leader of the gang- The cast also incl\xdes Dorvthy Peterson, Tully Marshall, - John Miljan, Emmett Corrigan, Warner Richmond, Sandy Roth and J. Car- rol Naish. A sensational police battle, de- talls of a police radlo alagrm sys: tem in full operation, a dramatic colirt trial and other wvivid spec- tacles v;id with the intimate ro- mance ar engrossing drama of | the production. ! ————— NOTICE , After - date, Sept. 22, 1932, lhe‘ Hoonah Logging Co. will not be responsible for any bills contracted; by Oscar Weston as he had sold his interest jn sal ‘company. HOONAH modnlo COMPANY, | By AL SKAFLESTAD. ady. —_———— CARD PARTY THURSDAY Given by Women of Moose, sec-| ond of series, Sept. 29. —md\w1 THEY’RE MILDER THEY TASTE BETTER An excellent supporting cast is | Law. seen in The Mntc Falcon,’ | syot‘ and Jean Pablo were LAST TIMES TONIGHT FREE CANDY BARS TO THE KIDDIES Bill = He'll Split Your Sides with Laughter! arrested in a chop suey place and | several hundred bottles of beer | were scized. Axel Cruze was ar- rested on a Bone Dry Law charge |and fined $35. Albert Johnson, arrested some= time ago and charged with vio- lating the National Prohibition Act, entered a plea of guilty when the charge was changed to an Alaske-Bone Dry Law status. He was sentenced to serve five momhs in jail. e v ARG MRS. CARO RETUnNS FROM LONG VISIT IN THE SOUTH Mrs. J. B. Caro, who spent ths | Spring’ and Summer months visit= ing in California, returned home yesterday on thé motorship N’orth- land. i oolc at hat al)y 10 OU would be astonished too, if you could see this machine that turns out 750 Chesterficlds a minute. . .and every one as near perfect as cigarettes can be made. But please bear this in mind. It is That’ swbywe keep telling you about the tobaccos used in Chesterfields. They’re fine, mild, and pure tobaceos. We tell you about ageing and curing the tobaccos...about blending and cross-blending them . ..because they p 44 ® M) what happens before the tobacco goes are things that count. into this machine that matters most. Qlc&lerfields are milder. They taste Rolling and packaging are important, ter, Prove it for younelf...Juc but not nearly as important as the "y ¥ P“k‘g" selection, blending and treatment of Chesterfield Radio Program—Everynightess #' the tobacco. cept Sunday, Columbia coast-to-coast Network, -