The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, October 25, 1932, Page 3

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CAPITOL TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY 'XCITING AS AN DIRECTED 8 J. WALTER RUBEN Jungle Mys- tery No. 5 COMEDY £ a China Nite RKO' RADIQ —COMING SOON— “Radio Patrol”—“Tarzan”—“Are You Listehing”—*“A ' House Divided”—“Cock of the Air” | “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” JUST RECEIVED Smart Accessories m Gloves and Purses £ AT Lo Juneau’s Own Store IDGET LUNCH *OPEN DAILY 'UNTIT MIDNIGHT Merchant Lunch—4C cenis JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the BIG VALUE! Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency ! 1"LUDWIG NELSON | JEWELER * - - | | prepare it for winter. » : ¥ Rk we will call for, your car at no extra cost. st eage o SO CONNORS MOTOF 0., Ine. o BEWARE! Cold. weather will soon be here. Let us” protect your car - &gdinst ‘freceifig ‘and and return *‘Radi;—i’—,atroi”fi Takes Auditors' To Crime Dens THRILL DRAMA FEATURED WITH STRONG SERIAL “Roadhouse Murder'’ and Jungle Mystery at, Capitol Tonight Police Drama Previews Tomorrow Night and Shows™ Thursday “Radio Fatrol,” which will be previewad at 1 o'clock - tomorrow | right and shown regularly Thurs- day at the Cauitol theatre, takes suditors on ‘@ mocturnal “Readhouse Murder,” thrilling drama;- and - the sixth episode of “Jangle Mystery,” - stirring' gerial phctoplay, will feature the mnew program tonight : at - the Capitol: ¥ theatre. £ | tour | shrough the underworld's districts of '‘a great city where cruising 1a- { |dio directed police cars ferret out the denizens of criminal haunts in “Roadhouse 4 lively, if dangerous fashion, Murder” opens§ Plenty of Thrills with ‘a newspaper § | . Robert Armstrong and Russell background from & Hopton, riding in a key-position dio car throughout the action of “Radio Patrol,” find thrills aplenty in their screen excursions, as the story involves- them both in a ser- ies of desperate situations, climaxed by a midnight massacre in the ‘heart, ‘played” by Wl 3 dtockyards, where in the face of Dorothy Jordan, Dorothy Jordan BLONDES CROWD OUT BRUNETTES IN ‘600D SPORT' Play with Gold Digger Theme Begins To- night at Coliseum Six blondes and one brunette have the principal feminine roles I “Good Spont,” which will be presented ;fonight at the Coliseum theatre. This preponder- ferred” variety is intentional, B ance: of the “pre-| , TUESDAY, OCT. 25, 1932. Baby Role Irks Patricia Ellis; Grown-Up Film Parts Her Goal | COL . |4 3 e ———— JUM—T'uesday-Wednesday PAL NITE—2-for-1—-BRING YOUR PAL —“GOOD SPORT”— Linda Watkins—John Boles—Greta Nissen Minna Gombell—Hedda Hopper )l ! | | acting — when Warner Bros. gave! | her a screen test | the screen 'to date—but the !Lhat went with her screen test to | Hollywood said, i | great future for her, as she is very, | | very MISS l owner | Shoppe, She has had only a few bits on note | “We look for a remarkable.” | e BRUMBERG GOES SCUTH; IS TO ENTER | SCHOOL OF PHARMACY) Brumberg, former of the Juneau Beauty, left last night on the Miss Sylvia Director Ken- neth MacKenna | Alaska for Portland, Oregon. Miss; | Brumberg will enter the North Pa- cific School of Pharmacy, in Port- il-.md to complete a pharmaceutical choosing his play- ers for their par- ticular -suitability to . their roles, re- gardless of their hirsute coloring, danger, “rookie cops” come through in a big way. Other Feature Roles Lila' Lee, June ‘Clyde, Onslow ‘Stevens and ‘Andy Devine enact the “other feature roles. Edward Cahin’ directed. ———————— LILA LEE STARS IN ACTION PLAY *Woman H—u_r;;y" Will Be on a series of amazing adventures. While riding in a lonely, wooded streétch of country, the young lov- ers are caught in a terrific thun- derstorm. g Seek | Refpge -in Roadhouse They seek refuge in a desolate- | 3ppearing . roadhouse - and -are -ad- mitted by a sinister-looking por- ter. Inside the house of shadows they witness strange -happenings which culminate in a double mur- der. The reported gets involved in the crime, but eventually every- thing turns out happily. ‘The sixth episode of “Jungle Mystery” is entifled “Daylight Presented Thursday Doom,’’ 1In it Zangu, the jungle mystery, ‘again saves the at Coliseum day, and Kirk is hauled back up by Fred and Kazimoto. Krotsky, one of Shillo's henchmen, captures Morgan. Barbara Gives Alarm Barbara gives the alarm and, Kirk, Fred and the friendly na- tives attack. Krotsky is taken prisoner. | Coutlass, found to be a |traitor and . banished ffom the Morgan camp, returns that night 4c free Krotsky, but Kirk, Fred end the natives overtake the two men who have joined Shillov's; gearching party at the top of a kigh cliff. * In the jungle, Barbara is set upon by a maddened lion. i Kirk and Krotsky fall over the cliff and the crocodiles ¢lose in on the sttuggling mefi. MAY GARRY SEGRET T0 HER GRAVE Real Cause: of: Tragedy in| Seattle May Never Be Revealed SEATTLE, Oct. 25.—The . auth- orities . expressed fear today that Mary Nash may. die and keep them from learning- further details of the fatal shooting of Col. William A. Inglis and :the wounding of Miss Nash in their apartment last Sat- | urday night . VON H]N‘_DLNB“HG ;She said the Republican leader had been drinking and was des-| pondent.: She “claims he shot her; once “in the abdomen and once in the knee, and then sent a bull- ¢t into his head,. a sujcide. She claimed -they -were married and_hld.n‘qt just been living- fo- gether, as.firsk stated,.for. .the past . three years. She was Col. Inglis’ :;;z;:hw i smmtev-rn‘xssian Stenographer. St 4 . BALDNESS Two short ‘words that tell .our whole stoxy ! Two" Short words that mean the difference between ‘61d"age and “Woman Hungry,” which will be previewed tomorrow night and shoyn Thursday at the Coliseum theatre, is a picture of the Fasf as well as the West, as the hero- ine, portrayed by Lila Lee, is a Boston girl who tires of the hum- | drum of society, and decides to g0 West in search of adventure. That she finds more than she bar- gains for, goes without question. Natural colors are used through- out, and many of the sequences are laid in the Navajo country of Arizona, in the midst of brilliantly oclored scenes with snow-capped mountains as a background. Miss Lee is supported. by Sidney Blackmer, Fred Kohler, Raymond Hatton, Kenneth' Thompson, Olive | Tell, J. Farrell MacDonald, Tom Dugan and Blanche Frederick. 1 BABY CLINIC HAS BEEN POSTPONED| X | The baby clinic sponsored by the, American Legion Auxiliary and scheduled for next Friday after- noon at the Dugout, has been in-| definitely postponed. This ann-| ouncement was made today by the; committee “hawing: the -affair in, charge. A future date for a clinic iy e will be announcq} }Jnten LEIPZIG, Oct. 25—The Supreme| Court has sustained President von Hindenburg’s. removal of ‘the Prus- slan Government from office on July 20 and the temporary appoint- ment of : Chancellor von Papen as Commissioner' ‘of "Prussta with | nouement. youthful “appearafice — to you! Is your ‘%flt ‘.t:lgnning at {he temples — on the crown of your head ? Complete bald- ness mak; come quickly unless you# act, mow » . . Free Examination Hgje no regrets. Don’t wait until you. are bald and - then wish fora good head of hair. ' Hair positively growh. Come in toqu.' irvael w-Life Method ROOM 6 i Valentine-Building Thus it happens ‘that Hedda Hop- per, who plays the heroine’s - mother, is the sole repre- sentative of the brunette school in the - group, with the leading lady, Linda Watkins, Greta Nissen, Mina Go mbell, Claire Maynard, Betty = Franeisco, and Eleanor Hung — all supporting John Boles the blonde side of the question. | Lln§z w{"‘" John Boles has the masculine lead opposite Miss Watkins, «With Alan Dinehart - s the - other male part. “Good' Sport” tells the story of a young wife who suddenly discov- ‘ers that her husband has transfer- hed his affections to a gold-dig- | | ging woman. Instead of divorcing being trained for stardom. But she| him she’sets. out To find out what | charms this woman used in win- ning him away from her and her discoveries ‘lead to a startling de- lday I die, I suppose. But I've had|York theatre—not child’s play, but 1 atricia Ellis is only 17 and she may look young, but she’s an experienced actress and she wants people to consider her grown-up, something they don’t seem to do now. ‘She wants to do comedy and character parts in the movies if she can get people to quit thinking of her as a youngster. course. \hold its regular meeting Wednes-! . {day at 8 pm. | nvited. ’ —adv. ATTENTION REBEKAHS! Perseverance Lodge No. 2-A will Visiting members' | EDITH SHEELOR, Noble Grand. ALPHONSINE CARTER, Secretary. Prink Callison Is head football coach at the University of O (Associated Press Photo) = = = HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Oct. 25.—‘more acting experience than mosL1 Patricia Ellis is getting good and girls my age, and it seems a little tired of being “taken for a baby.” silly to still be considered a young- The 17-year-old daughter of Al-|ster. exander Leftwich, New York musi-| ‘a1 ygpow exactly what I want to| cal show producer, Palricla has|gq-yn pictures, but when I start had acting experience that OVer- | talking to pe;)ple about it they shadows. that of most of the screen‘ch“ck me under the chin and say| novices nuw under contracts to thefis‘“e. Pat—some day.’ ‘I wish to studios do comedy. A great deal of com-| She understudied all her father's|edy. I'd do barrel rolls, falls, clown- | leading wor in the last few|ing—anythine. Then I'd like to do| years, assisted him with nghting‘characters. -Old women, ragged woe | and costuming and knows stage| men, bad women, great women, production too. | good women. - There's only-one type | She is slim, blond and blue-eyed, | of role I'm not partisularly anxious and attractive enough and capable|to play.” enough actress to be on the pre-| “And what is that?” | ferred list of those at her studio,| “Ingenues,” she sighs. | Which, of course, are exactly the | says her worst misfortune is: that{ roles she will be called:upon-to:do, she still is “taken for a baby.” ‘ Patricia began dancing as a child, | “I can't help my face,” she says.| sings and knows English and Ger-| “IP1l look five years old until the| man. She was playing in'a New . . . the mildest cigarette you ever smoked everywhere regard Lucky Strike the mildest cigarette. The fact is, . I - have no place in cigarettes They are not present-in Luckies ],5. buy the finest, the very finest tpbagcos, in all the world —but that does not explain why folks never overlook the truth that *“Nature “If @ man write @ better book, preach a better sermon, or make a better mum«tra) than his neighbor, tho be build his bouse in'the woods, the wirld will make a beaten path Does not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike? & WHO INVENTED TWIN BEDS i =t Thomas Sheraton-—world 9 Englirk cyytmm- o century. disd verty, :::mrpydo!;nl. ot ? m famous twlmn v : to nu::.your ’h‘e. CARBON. ! coking furnace coal to - well your . fire. _Money bitk guarantee. $15.25 Delivered PHONE 412 Pacific Coast ( WITH CLIVE IN INDIA . “Nature in the Raw”—ds portrayed by the noted artist, Karl Godsiin . - if spived by the fierce and brilliant assaule by Clive and a handful of fojlowers, out- numbered ‘20 to ‘1 by savage ‘hordes of bloodthirsty natives at the Battle of Plassey—the birth of the British Indian mpire—ds described in the famous ook, { Wik Clive in Tadia.” raw tobaccos t in the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proizcr agit{g and mellowing, are then given' the benefit of that Lucky Strike purifying process, described by the words— “It’s toasted”. That's why folks in every city, town and hamlet say that Luckies are such: mild cigarettes: > as 66 v . e L 1 bis door.”” —RALPH WALDO EMERSON.

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