The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 16, 1932, Page 3

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THE- DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE WEDNhSDAY NOV. 16, 1932. CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT ' yf THRILL MAD! N ‘u She is an example of 'every gifl who has - too much— A warning to | every girl who wants too | much freedom | Dorothy Mackaill Humphrey Bogart TAlso—SLIM SUMMERVILLE in “PEEKING IN PEKING” —SILVER NITE— ADDED ATTRACTION THE HARMONY BOYS Accordicn Players STARTING TOMORROW ROBERT MONTGOMERY in “BUT THE FLESH IS WEAK” My Beauty Hint | thrilling and romantic rescue. PHYLLIS FRASER Giving the hair and scalp a fre- quent vacation from hats is a good beauty aid, T find. Whenever T am not out in the sunlight I re- move whatever head covering I have on. I also find that giving my hair a short sun bath daily helps to keep ! it healthy and brilliant. Another | Lint to remember is the importance i of sterilizing brushes, combs and hairpins frequently. ——.————— 50c Pioneer Taxi ¥none 443. adv. e ——— Old papers for sale at the Emplre Smith Electric Co. SEWARD STREET EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” Just Received WOOLEN MITTENS ‘| pet “goldfish’ and alligators in New WE HAVE IT | at the Right Priecc | Harris ‘Hardware: Co. Lower Front ‘Street Famous CW The Cash. Bazaar Open Evenings - | —a LUDWIG NELSON | JEWELER ’ nmm; Smrns Roff |l Vl DANCING il ‘TELEPHORE 8451 I 7] L | [ | trip—has not waned with the repe- | her work. They give her the all- |vate darkroom facilities available] -|s0 she converts her hotel bathroom 'LOVE AFFAIR' TO BE SHOWN LAST i TIMES TONIGHT * Jungle Mystery Episode| and “‘Harmony Boys” Are at Capitol “Love Affair,” starring Dorothy of the serial, “Jungle Myster: are screen attractions at the Cap the last times tonigh. The “Har- mony Boys,” Harry J. Krane ‘and Albert Peterson, will appear on the stage of the popular playhouse in accordion selections again tonight. In “Love Affair,” Jim Leonard, ambitious aviator, enacted by Hem- ley Bogart, and Carol Owen, beau- tiful heiress, played by Miss Mack- afll, fall in love with each other and have an affair. Refuses to Marry Although he asks her to marry hiim the morning after their mad- ly romantic night, she refuses. She Joves him, but feels that he will get further ahead without her— sheé has side-tracked his ambitions. He promises to make good for her sake. ‘When Bruce Hardy, her finan- cial advisor, enacted by Hale Ham- ilton, tells her that he has been supporting her since her father’s death more than a year ago, and |dgain asks her to marry him, she accepts. Plans Last Solo Flight However, she finds she cannot go through with it. Feeling that she |has lost Jim forever and that her| life is futile and empty, she plans {to make her first solor flight her| |“last” one, but is prevented by the arrival of Jim, who effects a | 'The eighth episode of “Jungle Mystery” is entitled “Trapped by the Enemy.” It is full of thrills 2nd reaches a climax when a bridge jover a caldron of boiling water collapses with the hero, heroine, jand their friends upon it. The “Harmony Boys” are a splen- did added attraction. Their ‘ac- cordion playing is of exceptional merit. 1 — et TURNS TRICK, | FOREIGN LAND| ships to Get Photos, ‘ Soviet Oil Fields MOSCOW; Nov. 16.—Leaving her goldfish and alligators behind in ;her New York studio, Margaret Bourke-White has shouldered her cameras and come again to Soviet Russia in the pursuit of her art. | The slim, vivacious young brunet | who worked her way through col- |lege by cashing in on her camera | hobby, then developed that hobby |until she became one of America’s leading industrial photographers, is |on her third visit 40 Russia. To “Shoot” Oil Fields “I'm going to do the oil fields this time,” she said, “and then if | T have time when I come back to Moscow I'll shoot some stuff on ydren and motherhood — hospitals, clinics, schools and that sort of thing.” Miss : Bourke ~ White's efithusiasm for all”form of Hfé and activity here—an enthusiasm which moved her to write a book about her first tition of her visits. | Eschewing all things political, she { believes that the human drama en- {'acted here, as mjrfrored in the faces and figures of people and in the machines and smokestacks of fac- tories, is the best possible subject for her camera. One regret marréd “theanticipad tion ©f the new adventures ahead of her; not'the least of which is the hardship 6f ‘a journey’of sevs eral’ days on a Russiah’train.’ Shé had _to leave her neéwly acquirad York." There they rémain in hef studio’ on the sixty-first floor of one of ‘Marthattan’s skyscrapers. * Russia “Likes Her Work When Miss Bourke-White comes to Russia she is treated as a dis* tinguished guest by Government leaders, who are great admirers of | important documients which smoothe ‘the way for her travels and admit her to many places from which she | otherwise ‘would be barred. But even she is not immune to the Soviet regulation prohibiting the transportation of undeveloped photographic films and plates out of the country. There are no pris into a darkroom and develops her negatives in the bath-tub in ordet tlnt they may, be submitted to the | Mackaill, and the eighth episode itol theatre that wil be shown for) j§ U. §. Girl Braves Hard-i {what is being done here for chil-| " '\ Triangle Is Sometimes Funny i | | | { Here is one of the delightfilfly amusing scenes in “But Lhe Ficsh Is Weak,” which will be shown regularly Thursday at the Capitol Theatre. From left to right, the performers are Edward Everett Horton, Nora Gregor and Robert Montgomery. Announcement Is Made of Major Awards at Catholic Bazaar Held i-lere Last W eek|x Major awards in connection with ifested in the bazaar this. year by the Catholic Bazaar, which was! held in Parish Hall last week, were ‘Ay and the public generally was made public today. gratifying. Saturday. night, The sun bonnet was awarded to|last of the three nights of the Mrs. H.'J. Turner, the seal muff|bazaar, the attendance passed all to " Edward Metzgar, the cedar|expectation. 3 chest, to 8. Hellenehtal, the fireless | : codker ‘to Mrs. Frank Reeder, the | '*“The bazaar was.a success,” electric floor.lamp to Mrs. F. But- (he¢ said. '“I am thankful to ‘the ler, the electric train to Master |committee members who ' worked Robert Thibodeau, and the electric long ‘and diligently to insure'the clock to William Franks. success of the enterprise 'and to Rev. Willlam 'G. LaVasseur, SJ, [the merchants and the public gen- pastor of the Church of the Nativ- [erally for their hearty co-oper- |} ity, declared that the interest man- {ation.” —— |Conversational ClmmgA ; Dictionary Is Planned < Western Beauty BONN, Germany, Nov.-16.—Bro- fessor Erich Schmidt, of Bonn Uni- versity, ‘Is on his way to Peiping to write a ‘dictionary ‘on Modern | Conversational Chinese into Gers, | man. Professor Sehmidt is one of the | ten a Life of ‘Confucius and ml'ny‘ ‘other works on Chinese culture. L s i o g {Big Untaxed Families Show Increase in Italy ROME, Nov. 16. — Some 29,000 families in Italy are exempt from {all taxation because each contains eight “children or more. | The amount thus remitted “in Ithe Government effort to encour- jage' a growing population is an- nually $285,000. i | Four years ago only 17,600 fam- \mes had this tax' exemption. {Parrots. Invented. Kiss, ( Says Zoo Investigator | - SYDNEY, Australia, Nov. is.— Kissing started with the birds, says | an official of the Taronga Park Zoo who has been studying the‘ habits of parrots. 1 He points especially to the giant macaws, the males of which feed | their mates from their beaks until the eggs are hatched. “These are not the sort of ‘kisses | We see on the screen,” said the, investigator, “but it was from soms such actions that humans of the early days got their ideas of the kiss.” PRy ¢ feamcanns Soa amaned Building continues at a high level in Shanghai, China. \ | Vivian Keefer, who was born ln‘ Spokane and now hails from Los Angeles, was the only western ?lrl to win a role in this year's Vanitl on Broadway. (Associated Press Photo) Czecho - Slovakia has made an agreement ‘with Greece involving most-favored-nation treatment. e ———— There’s big news for you in the; advertising columns, If the F IRE GONG ngs For YOUR HOME Will there be enough insurance to pay the loss? Our rates on dwellings and furnishings are so low you cannot afford to be without ade- quate protection. We represent only old liné stock companies of the highest rating, fully licensed and authorized to write insurance in Alaska. FOR YOUR RATE PHONE 253 or call in at our offlce in '.he Goldstein Building i ‘The advertisements are printed for your convenience. They inform ‘and save your time, énergy and Juneau Insurance Ap gency JOHN H. GAFFNEY Maluger .| bouse. K ; clpml wl’th a delightful love story, in “—But f; ] 10-Goldwyn uomgumv shown regularly at the Capitol ¥ork stage success, stage and film player, an important role in this picture. ; Max Seather Thatcher, famous London | stage star, play the orincipal fem- | and others brilliant ¢&st. 4 foremost sinologists. - He has mw*’ ; Love, Adventure Music And Mvstery Feature Theatre lels‘ 'FI.ESH IS WEAK® Covet Plunder =~ " ”AUN|TES COMEDY lay with Elable Cast Will Come to Capitol Next Thursday e gathering places of the hig woven into lilting ro- nd comedy intermingled the Flesh is Weak"”, Met- ayer’s new Robert starring picture to atre Thursday. . The picture, based on Ivor No- llo’s famous London and New “The Truth €,” shows Montgomery as a ebonair and aristocratic London fortune hunter—who tries to mar- Ty comes along with whom he falls in love. for money uilT another girl Trials and Tribulations ¢+ Comical e maze of whimsically in which there Jack Conway directed the pro- members of the parish particular-|duction trials and tribulations Tun high, and Montgomery romps “hrough Gomic adventures, i85 also a dramatic heart-interest story. WITH ROMANCE a London pluy-} society in the British | The cast is notable, and of spe- | the |Clal interest in that it brings back w the screen Nils Asther, mous Swedish screen actor. Horton Is In Cast Edward Everett Horton, also plavs Nora Gregor, Reinbardt stage star with in Vienna, nine roles. C. Aubrey Smith, Frederick Kerr of note are Rockliffe Fellowes and Peggy Shanncn are partners in a neat hi-jacking scheme in “Hotel Continental,” Tiffany Produc- ticns' mystery love drama, which will be shown for the last times tonight at the Coli- seum Theatre. the fa-| | talented | and | in the NOTABLE CAST SELECTED FOR . COLISEUM PLAY Hotel Contmen(al Wlll Be Presented Last Times Tonight Tiffany Productlons assembled a capable cast for their mystery dra- ma of “Hotel Comtinental,” which L | will be shown for the last times tonight at the Coliseum theatre Pegzy Shannon has the stellar | role. Theodore handsome, von Eltz, suave and Well hnown Actors In the supporting cast, Tiffany Productions seleoted such ~ well known actors as Alan Mowbray, celebrated English aotor, J. Farrell MacDonald, Rockliffe Fellowes, Henry B. Walthall, Bert Roach and Ethel Clayton—all excellent additions to any cast Seek Hidden Spoils The story is the work of F. Hugh Herbtrt and Paul Perez, with con- tinuity by Warren B. Duff. It deals with the return of the ex- convict to the scene of his hidden | “spoils” and the attempts of a |gang of crooks to get it from him. | The action takes place in a fa-| mous old metropolitan hotel on the | night before it is to be wrecked. Christy Cabanne directed. 'THESE TWO THINGS | STOP STOMACH GAS | Take a tablespoonful of Dare's | Mentha Pepin before you eat, and | lie down flat after your meals if you want to end the torture of | gas, heartburn, fullness, and other stomach discomfort. Money back any time it fails, says Butler Mauro Drug Co. —adv. has thé leading mascu-! line role oppositeé Miss Shannon. | PREVIEW TONIGHT—1 A. M. “STEPPING SISTERS” ‘SISTERS TEEM - WITH HMMTY i Dresser Has Part in | Play Coming to:Golis seum Thursday Hilarity, tempered by romance, is the dominant note of “Stepping Sisters” the Fox picture, coming o the Coliseum theatre Tiiursday. In the cast are such well known comedienines and comedlans as | Louise Dresser, Jobyna Howland, Minna Gombell, William Collier, |Sr, Ferdinand Hunier, Stanley Smith and Barbara Weeks. A number of song hits and a novelty singing and dancing turn |are introduced during the unfold- ing of the plot. One of the musi- cal numbers is’“BBok; Heré Oomes |a Rainbow,” composed by James Hanley. S ee—— NOTICE | Gold Street ana “Ninth Street |have been set aside for coasting and red lights installed ' to wam motorists. Parents will’ pléase in- | struct children tq . confine - their coasting to these streets, and auto- mobile drivers are asked to ‘keep off as much as possible. The co- operation of everybody ur(ently re- quested. G. A. GETCHELL, Chief of Follce. (SIS U — & Old papers tor swe a3 “7e Empe. Office. il g s bali 50¢ Pioneer “Taxi; Phon Mfl. adv. —adv. You know how it is. If a cigarette,is mild—that is, net harsh or bitter, but smokes cool and smoqth—then yon like it and don’t worry about how many or how often you smoke. And if it tastes right—that is, not oversweet, not flat— then you enjoy it all the more. The right kind of ripe, sweet Domestic and w 0 bacco. .. the right ageing and blending. .. make Chesterficlds milder, better-tasting . . . They Satisfy!

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