The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 29, 1931, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY SEPT 29, I93| Whai Wus the Strange Lure of Dracula? ,é Women lefttheir mes for him . . . turned in fury on their loved ones after one hypnotic kiss . . . gave their life’s blood that Dracula might livel The mysterious master of Carfax Abbey —more terrify- ing than death—yet so fascin- ating that no one could resist im . .. no one but a world- famous scientist who captured his secretl TOD BROWNING'S' Greatest Production Produced by Carl Laemmle, Jr. With Bela Lugosi i D Manne Dv tght Frye, Edward Van Sloan, Herbert Bunston, FrancesDade Charles Gerrard. Presented by Carl Loemmle Greai To The Last Gasp! “BLONDES PREFER BONDS”—Comedy —SPECIAL NOTICE-- We do not ask any one to stay away from this show. BUT WE DO NOT RECOMMEND this for children! GROWN U PS, come prepared for the biggest thrill you ever experienced. Ask those who have seen it! NEW COHENS (Geo. Sidney, Vera Gordon) and KELLYS: (Chas. Murray, Kate Price) “IN AFRICA” THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS THE GASTINEAU Our Services to You Begin and End at the Gang Plank of Every Passenger-Carrying Boat PLANS ACTION AGAINST SEC. OF TREASURY || Texas Democrat Says He ! Wil Institute Im- “The Last Service Is the Greatest Tribute” Phone 136-2 peachment Corner 4th and Franklin Sts. THE CHAS. W. CARTER MORTUARY ] WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 20.— Representative Wright Paiman, Democrat of Texas, said he would {institute impeachment against Secretary of Treasurer Mellon as | soon as the new Congress convened |in December. | The Texan intends to base his | proceedings and charges that the |tions’of his office by maintaining interest in private business. Representative Patman said he = | would show Secretary Mellon is a = |large stockholder in Koppers Cor- = |poration, erecting a $200,000,000 ARG LT T T Popular Coa iron and steel plant in the Ural {Mountains for the Soviet. He also complains that the Secretary is a stockholder in the Aluminum Cor- | poration. Representative Patman said he would also disclose a number of LT {has spent two weeks hunting in the Healy River district with Col |O. F. Ohlson, General Manager of the Alaska Railroad, is a passenger south on the Alaska. Mr. Stevens also visited Fairbanks with Col ©Ohlson. CALL US DIRECT— PHONE 412 § ADMIRALTY ISLAND §14.25 £|mans M_‘”_“ e -_% PACIFIC COAST NUT ... 12.50 ‘RMll-‘lRU?{% &H;lpf'll'e]li] 2 £ INDIAN LUMP NUT .....cooeeeeeen 11.50 S DIAMOND BRIQUETS ja00, Bl S po i 4 i — e — B. P. 0. ELKS JUNEAU LODGE NO. 420 ‘There will be a BALLOT on can- didates Wednesday, Sept. 30th. M. H. SIDES, Secretary. — e —— MINING MAN SOUTHBOUND mining engineer —adv. llllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllll!l!llilllll LT § PACIFIC COAST COAL CO. LT L T LU LT LT O. D. Rohl who has been making an investi- \gauon of properties in the Kusko- Old Papers for sale at Emplre Oflxce.kwm. 12 & iseriger south on the PHONES 83 OR 85 “The Store That Pleases” <THE SANITARY GROCERY HEADLINE PLACE 1 MOVE LOCATIONS “DRACULA" HAS ON CAPITOL BILL Mystery Play Is Provided with Settings in Ac- cord with Mood “Dracula,” Universal's strange | grama of human vampires, will be- gin showing tonight at the Capi- tol theatre. The theme was first made the subject of a stage play more than three years ago. Since the picture is filled with uncanny mystery, the entire setting | accords with the mood of the story, and there are remarkable ‘“shots” of fog-enshrouded mountain pass- es, with wolves howling in the darkness; a terrible storm at sea; and a mysterious, crumbling cas- tle where much of the action oc- curs. Subject Is Startling . It is a startling subject for -a screen story, but it is done with artistry and convincing -dnpt and it conveys the impressign |8t actual reality. It exercises a power- ful effect on the emotions. The dramatization, which Was adapted from the famous novel by | Bram Stoker, traces the devastat-| ing activities of Count Dracula, a vampire who has been “dead” for 500 years, but who has the power to return from the grave between sunset and sunrise, wreaking his terrible influence on a group of people in whose fate the specta- tor becomes breathlessly concerned. Tihe cast includes three piayers who were séen in the original stage | production, in the persons of Bela Lugosi, Edward Van Sloan and | Herbert Bunston—while other im- portant roles are played by Helen Chandler, David Manners, Dwight Frye, Frances Dade and Charles Gerrard. The screen production * ‘Dracula,” was directed by Tod Browning. BUSINESS PLACES Markoe's Studio, which untifre- cently occupied a storeroom in the Hellenthal Building, is now in the quarters formerly used by the late Emory Valentine for his jewel- ry store in the Valentine Block, corner of Front and Seward Street. Bill's Shoe Repair Shop has mov- ed from the building immediately north of the Valentine Building on Seward Street to the room former- ly occupied by Arnold’s Bootery in the Valcntme Bundlng y 17 heatres Put on New Play S Famous Mysfi:ery l[s Seen With Comedly ;;ov Bonfil S uL g g(el.zts Tl;m o8 of \‘GRUMPY" WITH nterest the Lindbergns Saw | When Crossmg Northern Ala .«»‘Imw C IvsflAl.;' G’l?LAISU EI:]E‘ and Filipinos go to Alas | ployment in the fisher rs. Li i do intensive farming. T Irs. Li h have learn- | i;dol; ‘:hmi.“drfizi e Nome, where the Lindberg . B e | splendidly entertained by pad- The old Yukon steamer, Sarah, |iNg banker, has a summer popu-| wood-burning stern-wheeler, bearing lation of one thousand to twelve| a large party of tourists, a few hundred, which dwindles to a few | hundred when the Victoria, crowd- years ago, once strand_ed in the ed to the guards, steam \mr;\“un the leading role, is the headline at- | muddy waters approaching Norton ek Ry | traction on the new bill at the| ts final voyage of the season to Sound, and compelled to spend the 'S il Y91 Coliseum theatre tonight | daylight night waiting for the tide, | Seattle. The port is closed in win- { Rekimos—men and women—rowed | ¥ and _me inhabitants drowse W;:e:(_:l;ogg]ye:mfg: ?;l\ar}_:e;?fi_i out in their Kyacks and Omyacks | 2Way the interval until the peamsip s enough in their human appeal and gave the delayed travelers a | 88ain loaded to the guards, Y to be successful in such widely | novel evening's entertainment, sing- ‘“'?‘5 Sy Wb In the l‘m"scattered countries as Australia, ing weird chants in native tongue |SPFiR8: i |New Zealand, The United States, and dancing furiously on the lower VCanam England and Scotland, deck to the fantastic beating of | But “Grumpy” is one of thatl their tom toms. Dimes and quarters KING AnvlsEs type of real successes with re:\l‘ human attractiveness. This grand showered upon them by amused on- old comedy-thriller started its great lcokers above were almost un-no- | ticed, but, when it was hinted a BRIT PHEM'ER | Odyssey of triumphs in Scotland in [1915. TU c RR | layed Role 1300 Tim few hair pins were heart’s desire of the feminine members of the en- laye es tertainers, and they were hastily | Mr. Maude, the famous English stage favorite, had been searching for a play to complete his reper- Prime Mlnlster Goes to}. Palace for Import- ant Conference (Continued from Page One) not to with Humorous Lines and Situations “Grumpy,” with Cyril Maude in| ——ar— contributed by the ladies of the| ‘Lmre for an American tour. H° audience, there was great jubila-| tion. They seized them with alacrity and greedily called for more. Arti- | chose the new comed y-thriller,| “Grumpy,” and “tried it out” in| | Glasgow later taking it to New| cles of adornment were prized far above the coin of the realm. | | York, and eventually to the other The famous aviators were a bit| countries. 1 i | He played in the title role of| late to see the Midnight Sun in LONDON, Sept. 20.—Prime Min-| R b the fulness of its glory. June and'jster Ramsay MacDonald called to- July furnish the best view when|qay at Buckingham Palace to seek the dazzling orb. that shymbers not |ipq King's views on whether Par- nor sleeps, dips beneath the hori-|jiament should be dissolved and a zon for a moment or two only. general election called. But, they were favored in the Hud-|" 14 js pelieved the King told the son Bay region with a magnifeent | premier to carry on the National display of Northern Lights, the Au-| Government at any cost during the rora Borealis. A sight of these present financial crisis. dancing shadows, a shimmering riot | of color, on that far northern sky, is worth going miles to see. g PASSENGERS 75 e T, SEATTLE, Sepz. 29,—Motorship |Norco sailed for Juneau and way- ports at 9 o'clock last night with 14 first class passengers and no steerage. Passengers booked for Juneau are Earl Bennett and wife, J. C. Powell and wife, James McClusky, Henry O'Shein, E. E. Mannula, | Mrs. Susie May and daughter. e - On his sixty-eighth birthday an-| niversary he started work on the talking version of the play for Paramount. STEAMSHIP OFFICIAL MAKES BRIEF VISIT H. C. Cantelow, General Manager of the Alaska Steamship Company, with headquarters in Seattle, is a passenger on the steamship Alaska, which called at Juneau last night enroute from Seward to Seattle. Mr. Cantelow conferred here with Willis E. Nowell, resident agent of the steamship company. Mr. Cantelow made official visits to ports to the Westward and also went to Fairbanks. He is accom- panied by Mrs. Cantelow. -, - DEPUTY MARSHAL HERE FOR COMING COURT TERM In settled America and Europe, life has been reduced to much of a dead level sameness and a mod- ernized Orient is not markedly dif- ferent. Tourists stop at hotels, or- nately modeled after those to which they are accustomed and are of-| fered sterotyped bills of fare. The Lindberghs, once back in civiliza- tion, are reminded in Tokyo, Hongkong and Manila (if they go there), of Paris, New York and Washington by the excellent hotel accommodations accorded them. The charm of the Northland, the last of American frontiers, is that it ex- hibits a wholly different phase of existence. Kamchatka, across the Bering Sea, is still in its primi- tive state. Truck farming of virgin soil along the coasts has made scant hcadway Japanese, Chmese United States Deputy Marshals | W. H. Caswell, Ketchikan, and George Jones, Hoonah, arrived here today from their respective stations to attend the approaching Fall To aid the State's copper indus- |term of the United States District try, Arizona's 1932 automobile license [ Court which will be_convened here | ‘plales are to be made of copper. chober 1 SEXTETTE from Style Center These new little hats that tip over the cyes—the most startling change in fashlonq since the first long skirts. That’s the opinion from Style-Centre. Gone are the “baby bon- nets” with that wide-eyed look — today’s hats are the last word in smart sophl‘m- cation, The picturesque modes of the nine- teenth century and its great lady—Eugenie —the current interest in things French Colonial—these are the influences now at work—interpreted tu perfection in these ‘Fall Hats. HOLLYWOOD STYLE SHOP COLISEUM TONIGHT AND TOMORROW leamous Comedy Is Replete|| raugh at Grumpy—but yown laugh. 'lth him, ‘too! ALSO SELECTED SHORTS “TOM SAWYER” GRLIMPY CYRIL MAUDE - G Goramount Pictsy The younger gen- eration can't put anything over on Grumpy — he’s a wise old owl who enjoys the repu- tation of the world's greatest grouch. He sees, knows and dm plenty! With Phillips Holmes and Paul Lukas Here Thursday— e S Showing a large as- sortment of coat mod- els in a full range of colors, patterns and sizes. “Juneau’s Own Store” “We Call For and Deliver” On account of sickness will be closed for a short time. CAPITAL CLEANERS Sweaters’ Real Values PANATORIUM CLEANERS PHONE 3535 NEW REMINGTON Typewriters Expert Service Department When Your Machines “Buck” H. I LUCAS Office Equipment cm/ . Remington Rand Alaska ; Noiseless Office Supplies Stationery School Supplies CALL 50 Well's Be [There! . . Behrends Bank Bldg., i

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