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THE DAILY ALASKA E.MPIRL WE[)NESDAY _JAN. 4 1933 " CAPITOL LAST TIMES TONIGHT TCM MIX in ‘Rlder of Death Vallrey CO'MING SOON “Washington Macquerade” “Fcm Brown of Culver” “Red-Headed Woma “Back Street”—"Igico ] Smith Electric Co. | Gastineau Building \ EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL KOLSTER RADIOS Electrical Appliances, Repairs | CAPITAL ELECTRIC 1 | [ CALL 14 FOR A Royal Blue Cab CITY RATES 25¢ and 35¢ INDEPENDENTLY OPERATED Not Connected With Any Other Cab Company B P e { | LUDWIG NELSON JEWELER Watch Repairing Brunswick Agency FRONT ETREET ADVERTISE YOUR WANTS in the WANT ADS ‘in_the * - EMPIRE . | L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS ‘J. B. Burford & Co. | “Our doorstep worn by satisfied | & customers” » GET Anti-Freeze For Your Car NOW JUNEAU MOTORS BALD? CONSULT NU-LIFE METHOD Valentine Building { Room 6 I H | | L] the male lead, Lewis Stone, Ieua ‘ried, were presented with an ¢l- ectric waffle iron. MOV ) 00 TUM MIX SAVES | ; BEAUTYFROM CRUEL VILLAINS 1“Rider of Et;;lh Valley” Shows Last Times To- night at Capitol | “The Rider of Death Valley,” | istarring Tom Mix and featuring | Lois Wilson, Fred Kohler and For- | rest Stanley, will be presented for | the last times tonight at the Cap- | Inol theatre. | In the play, Mix is the herioc| | | rescuer of a beautiful girl whom | |circumstances have sent into a| | treacherous desert with equally | | treacherous ¢ompanions — all in lsearch of a fortune in gold. Girl and Villains Miss Wilson is the girl andl : # | Kohler and Stanley enact the vil-| i * B !lains of the engaging story. Tony, ; | | famous horse, is very much in evi- | | dence in the play. i _I y /i Tony 22 Years Old i 7 | Tony doesn’t look his 22 years, {but he is as much a veteran of ‘the screen as any player in t}v“ \wst except Mix himself. In one |or two years more, Tony will re- | tire in fayor of Tony, Jr, his son. | PLATINUM HAIR = i ALTERS ITS HUE THRILLS CROWD {Capitol Bills “Red Headed‘ |NTU ‘24 HUURS, Woman” with Jean | Harlow Soon [Mystery Play Will Headline| Program Tomorrow at Coliseum | Enjoying a bus man’s holiday by going to the movies, Norma; | Shearer, lovely screen star, is shown as she expressed appreciation of a | wise crack from Gary Cooper, also a shining light of the films. Photo| was made as the popular stars at- tended the nremiere of a picture in “Red Headed Woman” comes to| the screen with Jean Harlow, her famous platinum -blonde hair| changed to a flaming red, in the| «24 Hours,” title role. | sented tomorrow Adapted by Anita from | Coliseum theatre, Katherine Brush’s mnovel the |big city's same name, the photoplay, to be|to the proper relations of hus- which will be pre- night at Loos reveals how a of seen in the near future at the| |bands, wives and lovers, when one cup custard and jelly sandwiches.|000 if he took his money o Am- G M. Reinert historian; ‘Capitol theatre is a study in, sel-| |of their number is wrongly at- fishness, in the havoc a woman | Lached to a popular member of can bring on herself and those the set. around her by making her per-| Clive Brook, Kay Francis, Mir- -sopal desires her’ only law and iam Hopkins and Regis Toomey goal. In bringing the mnovel to have the principal roles. the screen Miss Loos, as adapter,| In one of the scenes of the play, saw fit to end the story in her|Miss Francis with the tempera- peculiar comedy strain and the |ture hovering around 90 degrees |film gains in entertainment value|at Paramount Hollywood Studios, tl\rough this sacrifice of gnm‘wu required to light the logs of | reality. |a fireplace and warm her hands | Besides Miss Harlow, the cast|/as she destroyed bundles of love |includes Chester Morris, who has | letters. |Hyams, Una Merkel, Henry St.e- phenson, May Robson, Charles‘PhlhpP”le |Boyer and Harvey Clark. \Iudependen('e U LUNCHEON 15 GIvEN (U7 1@ Hurley. FOR BRIDAL COUPLEE Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Payne wer:n‘ entertained at a luncheon today! in the Goldstein building by the| faculty and members of the Jun- eau Business College. The guests| , of honor, who were recently mar-" WASHINGTON, Jan. 4. — President Hooveh has referred the Philippine Independence bill to Secretary of War Hurley for a report. There are siropg indications of an impending veto. iy More than one-fifth of the total population of England and Vales |llve in Greater London. A Paper They Read for “Ad”-Vaniage LOVE FINDS WAY T0 HAPPINESS IN COLISEUM PLAY *“Beloved I;J)elor" Will Be Presented for Last Times Tonight In “The Beloved Bachelor,” star- ring Paul Lukas, which will be shown for the last times tonight at the Coliseum theatre, an intri- guing love story is dominant, Lukas has an attractive role. As a sculptor, who is slowly carv- ing a name for himself in the world of art, he lives quietly in a studio building with two artist- cronies, Charles Ruggles and Har- {old Minjir. In Love With Actress Lukas is in love with a beautiful young actress, Vivienne Oshorne. But she becomes unjustly suspic- lous of his relations with a wo- man who had been his model, and their romance is shattered. Later | the model dies, leaving a six-year- old daughter. Lukas, out of kind- ness, adopts the tot, and rears her |in his own home. Ward Becomes Infatuated When the ward, played by Dor- othy Jordan, attains young wom- anhood, she develops an intense love for Lukas, but cannot bring herself to tell him of this feel- ing. Finally, however, romance finds | its way to happiness. Dashes of comedy are furnish- ed by Ruggles, Marjorie Gateson and Minjir. =TT eer—r— Here’s Way to Vary School Lunch Menus| WASHINGTON. gan. 4. — For mothers who are puzzling over the | the basket lunch for the school child, | the department of agriculture sug- | social set is awakened 8eSts the following combinations: | lar- Lettuce and celery sandwiches, Hard-boiled eggs, baking powder In Money Mix-Up 1 @S0 | All-Alaska News William Zharoff, 18, who was born and went to school in Val- ! deg, accidently killed himself hunt ing on Valdez Gla In taking off one of , he | charged his shotgun, inflicting fatal wound in the abdomen was found dead, lying face down- ward, by a searching party |included his two brothers B Dbereaved parents, Mr. and | Zharoff live at Valdez. dis- a tha Th Helped by a sk a new Pilgrim Fa plane of the Pacific Alaska ways, piloted by Harry Blunt, the flight from Anchorage to Fairbanks in two hours, a new’ time record for the trip between the two places. Air- s Although airplanes have landed i, 1g9g, at Dawson at odd times every since the beginning of flying in the North, the Klondike Camp for the first time now possesses a good i landing and taking Off </ field. It ‘M‘“y Nolan, screen and |55 go9 ifsce:“ f:CkS;):d (“:';.hw?;;‘ stage actress, is shown as she left . 2 W N New York police headquarters fol- It was constructed by the Yukon lowing her release on bail after she Consolidated Gold Corporation. had been arrested on a charge of signing a worthless check. Miss | Nolan emphatically denied the charge. asserting that the check in Beautifu With about 300 mallard ducks being n often in Resurrection qaestion was a note given in pay- B.ay in .mnt of Seward these \\'mv_ fient of her hotel bill in Minne. er days, fthe Sewhrd Gateway upolis, Minn., it being understood |convinced that the Alaskan malI— that she would make it good ob ard in not a migratory fowl and reaching New York that it ratory bird act. biscuits, celery or radishes, and maple sugar sandwiches. During the Christmas holidays, | Bottle of milk, thin corn bread the Alaska Railroad granted an and butter, dates, apple. excursion rate of one fare and a Ralsin or fitit bréad with clieese, third for a round trip between orange, maple sugar, baken bean MY two points on ‘the line. and lettuce sandwichés, apple sauce and sweet chocol — e More than 300 books have boe received by the Dawson public l library from the Times Book Club| g " Italy’s Millionaires Aren’ t ,of London. Members ROME—TItaly has 15000 million- 1 pioneers of Alaska at Ketchi- aires, a semi-official census has yan have elected Mrs. H. P. Han- disclosed, but the calculations are sen, president; Dr. B. P. Dickinson, | based upon lire, worth concurrently firsi - vyice president; Mrs. F. J. only a little under 20 to the dol- Hunt, second vice president; Mrs. Hence the owner of 1,000000 wiljjam Wikstrom, secretary; M lire would have approximately $50,- Hanford Henn! 1g, treasurer; Mrs. k Mrs. C M of the Auxliliary of | erica. T, sargeant-at-arms; M. Hoo' made | | D He | Art Patron, Clarence J. Woof- Secretary, W. T. Pinkerton; Treasurer, Mrs, Susan N \1c- Conductress, Mrs. Nellie T ison; Associate Conductress Mrs. Leona L. Marsh. Ca F osior the Elmer fered face X[ boat mpbell of Valdez suf- ful burns about the ms when a gasoline blew the cabin off his Viking n Callahan, 78, who in the Klondike was found Sam pated stampede dead on the his cabin on Loncsome Creek, a tributary of Inno- ko River. His body was frozen, but he is believed to have died of heart disease. The discovery was made by three Indians, who lived four miles away and who had gone to the Callahan cabin to see how the aged man was getting along., The death was reported to United States Commissioner Christian Bol- gen of Ophir, who held an in- floor of {quest should not come under .. - the provisions of the federal mig-| life's |son at Vancouver, | Grieved at the death of her husband and despondent over the in poor investments of her savings, Mrs. Edith Buck- holtz, widow of Harry Buckholtz, formerly of Skagway and Dawson, committed suicide by drinking poi- B. C. 65, Enberg Stunsen, and old- | timer in the North, died at Seward. He went there from Unga, where I he had been engaged in the fish- ing business, for medical treatment an internal malady, with which ‘he had been afflicted about a year. | D. J. Fisher, 67, Alaska Rail- road worker, died after an illness of several months at Seward. ‘ic had been a Seward resident mam years. — e e During the year 1932, industrial 1 the United States increased by ended April, electric customers | ( | | | | | ) PAUL dan, borne. Play by Edw. H. Peple. Tenight—1 £ “24 Hours” BACHELOR LUKAS, and Dorothy Charlie Ruggles, Vivienne o partici- 4 - Jor- PROMISES You've made resolu- tions . .. promises to yourself — the trip outside, the college education for your children. These are readily realized when a systematic program of savings is employed. First National Bank Of Juneau Classified ads pay. TheTobacco Crop may be thi 1S YG&I' but that can’t affect Chesterfield —why? Production of tobaccos usable for cigarettes or " roll your own.” U. 8. crop (average, 5 years, 1927-31) U. 8. crop (Govt. estimate, 1932) Estimated shortage, 1932 crop . The manufacturer of good ciga- rettes does not depend on any one year's crop. Heknows that tokeep up the quality of his brand, he has to carry on hand at all large stock of the right kinds of tobacco from several years’ crops. The domestic tobaccos are kept in large hogsheads, each ing about 1000 pounds, and arc allowed to age for two full years ~in other words, nature’s of curing the tobaccos. Something like ageing wine. 1,091,265,750 Ibs. 339,664,750 lbs. make sure that its products are uniform and are as good as can be made. To do this requires a great deal of money—for example, there is invested in the domestic and Turk- ish tobaccos for Chesterfield Ciga- rettes over $75,000,000. Smokers can be assured, regard- less of the crop conditions, that Chesterfield will be absolutely uni- form—the same yesterday, today, at all times. The cigarette that’s milder—the cigarette that tastes better! times a contain- method Liggett & Myers has about four and a half miles of warehouses used for sioring leaf tobacco, to f | I | McCAUL MOTOR COMPANY I Rejuvenol * THE EMPIRE is a fixed feature in the home life of neatly every family in this community. They read it for education, entertainment, news—and profit—such profit as comes through reading the advertising . . . shopping intelligently, economieally, advantage- ously. NATURE’S REMEDY BUTLER MAURO DRUG CO. EXPRESS MONEY ORDERS ANY TIME Daily Alaska Empire esterfic:l' Co, s ) © 1933, LicoeTr & MyzRs Tosacco Wf/ 527;7/;_ Peo'Ple know it