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New Shows Given At Theatres Tonight[ Beauty Vies Willf B:(wgr_v ‘PEN AND SAM' Vg 3 IS FEATURED ON | ~ COLISEUM BILL pEn\'oD 'Play Based on Tarkington's A"d ’a Story Begins Show- ing Tonight BOOTH TARKINGTON'S immortal classic of youth! You'll laugh at its joys! You'll ery over its trag- edies ! THURSDAY -FRIDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY COLISEUM e-live your big moments of yester- year Laugh at your youthful pranks! Cry over your broken- hearted romances! You'll come away with memories to be cherished for- 1‘\'(‘l'r CAPITOL PUTS | ON ‘OFFICE GIRL’ | with LEON JANNEY JUNIOR COGHLAN Matt Moore Dorothy Peterson Zasu Pitts is merely for amuse- DIRF SDAY » 0 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, DEC. 1, 1932. e - v»—_—_———;—”:_—_*m—_ | . . Impudent, Tuneful and Fast! New Effects ... Tunes ... Dances Renate Muller Has Star Tuneful Play Gay, witty and tuneful, “The “Penrod and Sam,” amusing mo- in the star role, is the headline | | Tarkington's famous story, features attzaction on the new program the new program that will be pre- Capitol theatre. theatre, Briefly the story of “The Office n Janney plays the part of little typist who, with a smile on the role of Sam. More than a MULLER er face, romance in her heart score of young folks are in the Romance head, seis “out to makg her way £ 5 : i | Robert Dandridge ana James JACK HULBERT i § oovorid . Bie qEAiRe ARG 3 | Robinson, colored boys, succeed ad- wrath of the amorous employment fl i members of the secret club which OWEN NARES manager, and is made to work i | meets in the packing box shack| New, Handsoma Heart Breaker Renate Muller and Bob Steele [1 v Handsome Young 4 | A handsome young map who in picture. Miss Muller is the _P_t-’l‘a.fled_l‘-adyl 1(;“'{"; i 3 o s 53 . e Py |reality is the managing. director fascinating star of “Fhe Office Marjorie, the pig-tailed lady love | . . Directed by Victor Saville s g " e T I S B l L l W l l AL DR Direcied by Wife” at the Capitol tonight. |0 Peniod and Sam, is poriraved| § QUM I8 Dutil to Lene 111 Selected Shert Subjects for a humble clerk, helps her fin- g ul e S e ish her work and begins to woo 3 g of “The Trail's End” at the |done does Pen's bossy sister Mar-| COMING SOON K | Ccliscum Saturday. enrget. i h W P 4 L offers her comfort, wealth, and po- | —— T - = ! “Arrowsmith”—“W arade” — “Letty /nton”— i iage. She slaps party where Sam and Pen come | Arroren s . Y aanion ort b g gt p ‘C L% G‘, A S to blows, over Marjorie, is played| What is conceded to be the most Ranges of Hills o el £ AL and plans to go back to her home.| orsawr tves waY Pcrets |by tiny Betty Graham. Nestor.j novel town in California was erect- | Surrounding the town are rang- NOTICE!—Get your tickets for the dancing lessons. Then he realizes quite suddenly ' ¥ .36 g y Actlvltles;h,fly Rodney, the diminutive bully,|Trail's End,” the western drama Within an easy drive is the Mo- , p. m. for adults at the Elks’ Ball Room. the ending has a startling and or- | |and Georgie, the goody-gody boy. |featuring Bob Steele, which will be jave desert, convenient for ‘spénes WL i Pretty Blonde Typist | The shouting and the tumult die thiti way. He refuses to play the|the beloved pet of the hero. ML FoORR Blturdey” oy at °hej]“k"_5_p“’°°““ Red Rock Canyom, Miss Muller is the pretty, blonde —the captains and the All-Ameri- | game as Wall Street plays it. He| Coliseum theatre. | petrified forests, historie. Vasquez » inee idol, is the bank director.| But after college—then what? |on his own terms. M{g;g“‘;‘:”;;;‘(};? f::; ‘"; g:;f<pllx'poses, the city compri-es four |thrillers, and many other varied Jack Hulbert has a riotously fun-| As star of Roland West's screen| Walton Green, former leader of % h A blocks of buildings of early west- |tYPes of western scenic background , Morris Harwy has the role of /novel, “Corsair,” which will be pre- enforcement, has shown | bas, JoRnDY Arthur, Oharles Sel-ling nalls, stores, etci, front a dighliue oy, bs R |an employment manager with an viewed Friday night and shown A £ {street fringed with hitching racks| In “Near the Trail’s End™ Stee | reyed upon b irates. i for embraceable figures. theatre, Chester Morris is called ‘p % . hie: scurries home from school after be- includes Marion Shockley, Jay * Moty M iy 2 | santiesir | | M i ith G ie, tk The ‘“city” built by Trem |Henry Roquemore and rer to a party of ‘men and women | ment. © ffice-full of typists tap- often said that most All-American| When the Wall Street magnate|MAroric passes wiv eorgie, the | . Alg Was bu y g e : | oEo-=aN. RS0 M. U i e Vap . {goody-goody boy and Penrod and|Carr, producer of the series of | McQuarrie. It was directed by Wal- » C., was brought to an end before| Uniform airplane fare of 20 cents|mic and highly original accompani- |salesmen. Morris is no exception. [leg syndicate discharges him as a |Sam hury to service of dessert by a dynamite |a mile per person, with a minimum |ment to one of the three Vein-| Poverty or Marriage {Bond solesman, Morris turns pirate | Shack - where the In-and-In-Club has the stellar roles. Generally Robert Quigley. the house, shattered the windows, |effect by the Pacific Alaska Air- = | ith . the cholce betwest” povertylFeake. |10 get even. in the limits of the studio but FOOD SALE SATURDAY ’ wrecked the brick chimney and|ways, which has bases at Anchor- ! it | | Georsie Trcuncea by Pen |these lack the atmosphere of ma- | The Episcopal Guild is having =4 ruined other parts of the dwelling. |age, Fairbanks and Nome. In in-|TAP DANCING CLASSES |ter. orris is confronted with |who léads one life in high soc)eLy’_ i 3 | Mr. Carr's city is puilt in Plac- | Light Company show room; ‘ea footprints in fresh snow from the of 50 per cent on the old rates. ARTED {“Corsair” refuses to play the game |a hew one for Morris. into the club, though fearful rites‘erville Canyon, an hour's drive ffom | served; . damaged house to the home of|Several of the planes have replamdlsT T BY DCSHON: o 5 | ‘0!’ initiating are inflicted. Hollywood, in Mint Canyon. l'artices for sale. —adv. be a rejected suitor of the hostess, | winter. | Instruction in tap dancing was| who also is an Italian, and found started this afternocon in the ball | has been held for trial before the"or the Episcopal Church at An-|De Shon, who is co-operating with | | i ot e Romance With a Song In Iis Heart fle Comedy . .. Drama . . Role in Gay, Witty and | Office Girl,” with Renate Mu]lex’i tion picture play based on Booth that begins showing tonight at the sented ‘tonight at the Coliseum Girl” concerns the romance of a Penrod and Coglan Junior enacts Ravishing Star of Song and and ideas in her pretty blonde | K ~an | tion in a large bank, incurs the i as’ Ehel P o First King of Comedy 8 o |mirably as Herman and Verman, Tate. |on the vacant lot. | MORRIS HARVEY 11 Fan are shown in the accompanying o ¥ |lof the bank, but whom she takes Steele is the ccurageous hero (DY Margaret Marquis; Helen Beau- ‘ P 57 0 L X ker. She learns his identity. He W est C()lor to Trall S End “Corsair”"—"“The Greeks Had a Word for Them'— Baby Renusdale, who gives the pRAT R RIS i “Okay America”—"Final Edition” his face, flees from his apartihent 4+ Aber and Billy Lord play respect- ¢d for the production of “Near the es of hills, covered with sage brush, Classes beginning today at 3:30 and 7 ||that he loves this gorl—and—well, Of Rum.Runnln g iginal . slant.. i Cameo, the dog, triumphs as Duke, |Previewed at 1 o'clock Friday night requiring such a background. ‘Dry typist. Owen Nares, London mat- can gridiron kings depart. | wants '$1,000,000, but he wants it Growi-Tie o Oast Constructea sviciy for picture |Rocks, location for many western All-AIaSka News e jadaptation of the Walton Green ¢ service Qiision of Pro- | ofy Peterson as his mother; Zasuler, architecture. Saloons, gamb- |are within easy distance of the pic- » 1 3 in his book how rum runners are 4 o 3 b rted b which |eye for pretty girls and a yearning regularly Sunday at the Capitol The story pegins as Penrod i, true cow-puncher manner. | will be supported by a cast ’ “There is one especially effective|upon to face the proble. It is| Morris Turns Pirate . |8 kept in to find Sam waiting. City Built by Trem Carr Morely, Hopper Atchley, Bi Jenks, irierids at her -home in Stewart, B. | i thei: hi -gh_‘fombau heroes end up as bond | Who is secretly financing a boot- | | iy e R ; the packing box |wesfern features in which Steele lace Fox from an original story by ' explosion, which, occurring under |charge of $20, has been put into|pese musical hits of the show. | Many All-Americans are faced |@nd Preys on rum fleets for rc-|m™ —to plan ways and means cuch locatforls are constructed with- ————— and marrying a millionajre's daugh- | 'This story or a 1ootball hero | 4 it o & Georgie is trounced by Pen, who | tural' surroundings. food sale Saturday at the Electric Nobody was hurt. Guests traced | stances, the new rate is a reduction |that choice, too. But the hero of |and another on the high seas, is 1° afterward compelled to take him | aprons and other useful | Joseph Messaraba, Italian, said to|their wheels with skiis for the i " v 2 his wet boots in his dwelling. He| Rev. W. R. Macpherson, pastor |toom of the Elks' building by C.! provincial court at Prince Rupert. | chorage, will leave there soon to|the Capitol theatre in the ma:-! 1 “accept a pastorate in Oregon. Mrs. | ter. f i RAGE UNBRIDLED Two gold bricks recently were received by the First National Bank | at Ketchikan from mines in that!| area. One of the bricks, valued| al $3,000, was from the Sea Level| mine on Thorne Arm. This mine has been workzsd for the past year or more by a force of men em- ployed by Henry Tweit. The other brick, worth $500, was one of the regular monthly shipments from the Gold Standard property on Helm Bay and was mined by Carl Helm, Anton Wilson, Ed ~Johnson,| John Folozwarzny and Isaac John- son. Rocks, stumps, soil and water came down a bluff on the roof of | Mrs. Elsie Robinson’s Water Street in Ketchikan. The| yoof was damaged and water, leak- | ing through, ruined some of the stock. | Witndrawal of Canaca and Great | Britain from the fur seal treaty with the United States is urged by the Northern British Columbia Fishermen’s Association, which re- cently met at Prince Rupert, B. C The Canadian fishermen charge that protected seals destroy fish. The Association also urged that Canada impose on United States iresh salmon the same tariff duty that the United States imposes on Canadian fresh salmon. Completion of the Thomas Basin breakwater at Ketchikan, is sched- uled for next spring by the Fed- eral Rivers - and Harbors Board, according to a telegram ‘sent by Col. €. L. Sturdevant of the Board, from Seattle to Mayor J. H. Davies of Ketchikan. The work will in- volve an expenditure of $10,000. For the job of plowing snow this winter in Petersburg, rrank Bara- riter was the lowest bidder, $1.50 an hour, and the council awarded him the wark. Income taxes were paid in 1931 by 270 residents of Ketchikan, be- ing 7 per cent of the town’s popu- | lation. | Organization of a women’s auxil- jary to the Ketchikan Athletic Club is in progress. The group in charge of the"movement. has as its cfficers Mrs. A. Gunderson, chair- man; Mrs. William ‘Wikstrom, vice- chairman, and Mrs. E. . Morrisey, secretary-treasurer. Dr. E. J. Wheeler, dentist, has opened offices in [Petersburg. One hundred members. of the Ancient Order of Ice Worms, An- chorage Chapter No. 1. initiated Avistor Willlam D. Knox. The or- store on| |Macpherson and the children are |now in the States. The Episcopal mission at Anchorage will be closed | during the winter but, is expected to be re-opened in the spring. On petition of 250 residents of | Anchorage, the City Council has ordered that investigation be made ol causes of interference with radio reception with a view of eliminat- ing them. One hundred and fifty colla¥s was appropriated to de- fray the cost of investigation. | Twelve mills is Tne tax levy at Anchorage for the forthcoming year. The rate is the same as for the present year. Appreciation of the radio service | given Anchorage by the Signal Corps was expressed in a resolution | adopted by the City Council. Anchorage’s 9 o'clock curfew law must be observed by children, ac- cording to a warning issued by the Chief of ®Police. Classes for adults and children | will be held in the Elks’ ballroom | every afternoon except Saturday | and Sunday, beginning at 3:30/ o'clock. | Classes for adults exclusively will be held in the ball room at 7! c'clock ‘evennigs, but Mr. DeShon has not yet decided on what par-| ticular evenings the classes will' o held. [ e You can never win the heavy-| weight title by doing lightweight stunts, ———eto | TOYS, GIFTS, HOLizAY GOODS' We have the largest stock of‘; TOYS, GIFTS and holiday gooCs| in town. Please look over our steck and prices before buying.| Credit extended to reliable custom- | ers. Open evenings. I —adv. CASH BAZAAR. | ————————— | Go window shopping in your easy | chair. Read the advertisements. | | i | Ownership and management of the Seward Bakery and Lunch Room have been taken over by Joseph Janey and William Gussie, oldi-time caterers in Westward Al- aska. To reach the ore body in the Kempt mine on Craigie Creek in the Williow Creek district north of Anchorage, a tummel is being driven' by the Gold Top Mining Company, which has taken over the Kempt property. John Robert Brown and Donna Richfield weré married at Peters- burg. i Mrs. Arabella Zellweger, T1, resi- dent of Kefchikan since 1924, died there at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Herbert Knox. Gudolf Wikan, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Wikan, died a§ Petersburg after a protracted ill- ness. Recent deaths 47 Anchorage are those of Henry (Harry) Jones, 83} who ‘had lived in the Territory 30 years and who was a charter mem+ ber of the Fairbanks Igloo of the Pioneers of Alaska; Joseph Walton; resident of Alaska 20 years and farmer in the Matanuska Valley 16 years, of paralysis, and Mrs| David Skarstad of apoplexy. RAINBOW. GIRLS i Important business meeting l"rl? day at 7:30 P. M. —adv ———r i Make Millions Think—and Buy} ! of millwork. All wood is well undwncd. carefully selected, | and everything you order is always up-to specifications. | One-panel Doars, 2. /.y o cinz6fsin . .92.40 Five Cross-panel Doors, 2 ft. 6in. x 6 ft. sha. . rosc ek Front includ- ing glass, as lowas . 3,40 Selreu; n.:oc ), with zed wire, as e o7 21 278 These are .just a few items from our large illustrated catalog-—a real guide and help in home-building. S for {ronr copy today. It’s OBWgLANS T 1933 First Ave. So; Seattle “Nature in the Raw”—as por- trayed by thefamous animal paint- er, Paul Bransom...inspired bythe fierce battle between wild mustang stallions on the western ranges. . . fighting to the death with flashing teeth and slashing hoofs. *Nature in theRaw is SeldomMild”—and raw tobacces have no place in cigarettes. No raw tobaccos in Luckies —that’s why they’re so mxld ‘W’E buy the finest, the very and mellowing, finest tobaccos in all the world—but that does not explain why!folks everywhere regard Lucky Strike as the mildest ciga- rette. The fact is, we never over- look the truth that*“Nature in the . Raw is Seldom Mild”—so these fine tobaccos, after proper aging ] mild cigarettes. : “It’s toasted 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 Luckics are such