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see the love husband faced death of the SHOWING AT CAPITOL T L S firndamafinn TO THE WOMEN OF JUNEAU' You know ‘YOUR “love story.© You should story of Sue—a wife whose But see it for yourself! RADIO PATROL ¢ ] while she The prl\;afe hves ONIGHT and SATURDAY - CAPITOL TONIGHT and SATURDAY . . & . The Inside Story of the POLICE: Told in a terrifially thrilling UNIVERSAL PICTURE, with Robert Armstrong, Lila Lee, June Clyde, and others. NOTICE There will be only one show tonight STARTING AT 7:15 Immediately after the show at 9:05 William Paul ‘ WILL SPEAK Free Admission AFTER 9 o'clock ‘ No More Piles How to End Painful Piles Without Salves or Cutting It takes only one bottle of Dr. S. Leonhardt's prescription — J. HEM-ROID to prove how easy it is to end itching, bleeding or pro-! trding piles. This internal remedy | acts quickly even in old, stubborn, cases. HEM-ROID succeeds because | it heals and restores the affected, parts and drives out the thick im- | pure blood in the lower bowel—the! cause of piles. Only an internal medicine can do this, that's why! salves and suppositories fail. Juneau | Drug Co. and druggists everywhere sell HEM-ROID Tablets with guar-' antee of meney back if they do not end al} Pile misery. i. Merchant Lunch—4C cenis JUNEAU SAMPLE SHOP The Li Store with the i \\ BIG VALUES f [ 1 1"LUDWIG NELS i Watch, Repairing | "PRONT STRRET BEWARE! @6l tweakher o us* pr soon be here, Let your car against freesing and prepare it for Awinter. JUST nurnon We will call lor. and refurn yourcarl&flne“umlt.‘ Service Rendered by Experts CONNORS MOTOR CO., Inc. - | stalwart soldier of 30 belonging to| # | |the American Expedionary Force, VETERAN DIES AT TENAKEE QF GAS INHALED IN WAR John Smnh slf}ad;é&.?nght to uneau urial Here Friday Fourteen years ggo in a front line trench. in Flanders John Smith, was a casualty of an eénemy gas attack. < He néver: recovered from the poisonous’fumies. Last Sunday| at his fox farm home on a lttlej island in Freshwater Bay near Tenakee he died of their effects. Tomorrow he will be laid at rest in the American Legion Plot in}'’ Evergreen Cemeétery in this city. Died Mixing Fox Feed Mr. Smith’ last Sunday mornirg left his dwelling for the fox pens to feed the animals. When he did not return to the house within a reasonable time, Mrs. Smith looked for him. - He ' waé found dead, having passed away while mixlng| the food for the fur bearers. The body was taken to Tenakee, and from there was brought to this city yesterday.on the gasboat Eagle. The remains were accompanied by Mrs. Under Auspices of Legion The funeral rites at 2 o'clock tomorrow will be held in the chapel of the Charles W. Carter Mortuary under auspices of the Juneau Post of the American Le- ion. Mr. Smith was born in Petaluma, | Calif., 44 years ago. His immediate | | surviving relatives are the widow, land a brother, who lives in Cali-| fornia. —el 50c Ploneer Taxi, Phone 443. adv4' L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS | J. B. Burford & Co. wmwmwwuy custamers” Saloum’s Seward Street, near Second | potice Smith and by Ed. Snyder,| { prominent merchant of Tenakee. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, OCT. 27, 193 2 \Theatres Will Present New Attwmctzonvsfl GAPITflL HAS | SHOW TONEHT, “RADIO PATROL" i % I Interesting. Drama Reveals| Warfare of Police Against Crime Adventurous , night excursions and dangerous clashes with crime and the undefworld encountered by | police radiv car officers come w{ | | the: screen of the Capitol thea | tonight in “Radio Patrol,” Therc {awill be only one show- tonight, the | first, from 7116 t0°9:05.° After the first show, admission to the thea- tre will be free for the rest of | the évening for the political ad- | dress ‘of 'W. L. Paul. While' World Sleeps “Radio Patrol” the first time the story of these night riders who hunt down criminals - while “the world sléeps. . . . or listens to their sig- nals low down on the dial. It is a story of the miost recemt devel- épment of police systems, employ- |, {ng the radio to corner the under- world menaces who lurk in the night of a big efty. Lila Lee has the role of the girl who wins the hearts of the rival night riders. Robert Armstrong and Russell Hepron share madle lead honors. in tolés which give them both ‘an op- portunity to exhibit to the fullest thefr unusual Screén talents. Friday night, the Capitol thea- tre has been leased for ‘the' politi- | cal address of Judge Wickersham. “Radio Patrol” will bé presented again’ Saturday. W0 smfis, INTAG WAR COFTTTYILLE, Kag, Ogh 21— Delivery cars, comercial vehicles ifi- Opfteyville and South Corfeyvll\e Okla.,, two miles south of here, still are com- pelled to carry both Kansas and| Oklahoma license plates as a result of the “tag war” between the two States. Efforts to reach a reciprocity agreement have falled, and numer- ous arrests and fimes have followed “trespassing” by drivers who lack- ed tags. ?0ld Record Is Found; Shows County Seceded WINCHESTER, Ténn,, Oct. 27.— An “ordinances of seceston,” document ~thought last ‘When the home of Col. Peter Turmey was burned during the Civil War, re- cently was found among official records of ‘Fyanklin ‘County. The document proves an oft - repened story that Pri nilin Ccmnty seceded from thé :Stdte of Tennesséé and joined the Confederacy before Ten- | nessee had done 50. WHY CHANGE? Dont change hors;s in the mw;ddle of us" the $tréant” Choose your pnbll(; servapts og tke rgc- ords they have made. are what count! VOTE REPUBLIC . STRA] Records, not promises, THE N TICKET GHT .. VEMBER 8 For Delegate to Congttess—— . JAMES WICKERSHAM FocA arney G otk RUSTeARD For Auditop— -+ 1 CASH GOLE : For Commissioner of Education— W. K. KELLER 1 E. E. WANN For Senator— J. E, JOHNSON, Kewlukall For Representatives (vote for four)— - N. SCRUBY, Wrangell [R5 i ot Rnwmm mmronm First (Paud Advcmmmm)“ will present for | | trucks * ang. other | VP i | 1 Companwnable Bvautws Here. are views of June Clyde, left, and Lila Lee as they appear in “Radio. Patrol” which will be presented at the cnly motion pic- ture chow to be given tonight at the Capitol Theatre, RADIO STUDIO |ALICE WHITE IN PUT ON SCREEN. MYSTERY ROLE “Are You Lxstenmg, with|“Murder at Mldmgh! William Haines, at Be Presented at Coli- Capitol Sunday seum on Saturday to Alice White, diminutive screen star, will be seen in a dramatic in the Tiffany murder mys- ma, to be presented at the Coliseum Saturday only. N doesn't mean that the fair In “Are You Listening?” which will be presented at the Capitol theatre Sunday, the “inside” of a great broadcasting station in op- cration, details of ‘the strange oC-, cupations of artists heard over mhe air, they joys and SOTrrows, are‘ has gone in for heavy emot- woven into a powerful drama. ,im. a vietim of a persecuting vil- ‘Willlam Haines is seen playing iain who, by the merest of chance, the role of a radié continuity holds the mortgage (first second writer whose existence ismade mis- jand pxob:bly third) on the old. erable by a neurotic, henpecxing homestead. wifé, who refuses to give him a‘ Neither is she sent into the night divorce 50 that he can marry the by an irate parent just because girl he ‘really loves. she was seen walking in the woods This domestic impasse eventual-|with a handsome scion of a fam- ly results in =& bitter quarrel in ily against whom there is @ long which the wife is a.ccxdenmauylstandim feud. killed. Haines is forced to flee the Alice is cast as Millie Seripps, olice and he issubsequently caught ‘maid in the home of the wealthy through ‘the very channels of the Kenncdys, where a series of baf- radio by which he had hoped to fling murders places the entire achieve “a successful career. | household under suspicion. Underlying the plot are the dl-, And the releniiess police author- verse romances of three small- ities do not spare Alice either in town sisters who find emploqum; their determination to get at the| in New York Jroot ot the mys'ery P e Pt ST R | al J No e tobccos in Lu MINES OPENED (FOR BENEFIT | ~ OF PHOTOPLAY “Woman Hungry" Will Be Presented Tonight at Coliseum * which will { sum theatre led for a salt mine, which was being. onx d by Lila Lee and Kenneth | mson, brother and sister out he west from New England. Tt also called for @ gold mine and | tournist hotel.' So Clarence Badger | {took his company on location to! |Lone Pine, California—and there ! was the salt and soda mine, and there was the gold claim. The soda works was very active, | but the gold claim had been aban- doned | | Put It In Order i First National technicians soon ! put it into running order again, and even constructed a mill wheel, ! a dam and ‘a sluice-box. gion of Lone Pine is dotted with! dry lake beds, some of which have been thiere for ages, while others| have been more recently created through the fact thet the Los An- geles acqueduct, furnishing the city with wdc, ma.ches two hundred and fifty milds across desert and mountains and has drained Owens lake and' & number of smaller lakes which formerly existed in this region. | Deposits Are Immense The result was that immense de-{ posits of salt and soda, as well as other chemicals, including borax, were left. The famous “20 Mule Team- Borax" caravans from Death Valley used to miake this region their headquarters. “Woman Hungry” is a powerml love drama, where conservative New England meets the violence of western love. Lila Lee and Sidney Blackmer play the leading roles. ———-——— | MASQUERADE BALL SATUEDAY_‘ Hallowe’en party by Women of1 Moose at Moose Hall. Prizes. Muslc\ by Sercnnders —adv. \ ‘The re-"_ R She makes a mad bargain with an outlaw — stakes; herself against his . aim—and loses! LILA LEE, Sidnev Bfickmer. Fred Kohler,. Rayq Hatton, J. Farrel MacDonald,: Kenineth ’!hom&ofiy Tom Dugan, Olive Telk Filmed Entirely in Gorgeous Technicolor ——SELECTED, SHORTS——— F Not buy your signs from--established JUNEAU Firms? REMEMBER When buying NEON signs SERVICE is an important factor. anything "’ goes wrong with your sign you get free service. We giV: you l-year guarantee plus FREE SERVICE BUY AT HOME LISTON . PAULSON SIGN SHOP. " SIGN SERVICE Sketches and Estimates. Free RIDE 'EM, COW “Natureinthe Raw” ’—flw in the famous rodeo ; ing g!y‘:‘:eflcpurcin thie July taken ut the SMH&S tthawh E()q,.u. —~that’s why they're 8o mfid W’E t buy the finest, the very. fineét ‘ obaccos in all the world— but that does net explain why folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest cigarette. The fact is, we never v truth that *“Nature in the Raw is Seldom Mild”—so: these fine mellowing, ate thesi gwm ch benefit of that Lucky Strike. puri- fying process, described by the words—"It’s ‘todstéd”. That's why folks in every ¢ity, thwn and hamlet 'say that Lugkics are such mild cigarettes. - Its masted"‘f the tobaccos, after proper aging and