Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
P (o CAPITOL TUESDAY-—WEDNESDAY EVERY SENSATION KNOWN TO not even see t trary, nd you you will find it in “FRANKENSTEIN" A FRIENDLY WARNING If you have a weak heart and can- ck, we advise you NOT to production. If, on the con- intense, ‘excitement or like an unusual thrill, FIANKEIISTEIN ~THE MAN WHO MADE A MONSTER And he lived in misery and died in shame...a fiend or friend or monster?...or a soulless wretch with mechanical brain? ...hunted by a thousand men.., the only thizg he feared was fire! $ 2 man-made monster with the strength of a dozen men, he made no concession to life orlove! A WNIVERSAL SUPER ATTRACTION D() )()l; DARE SEE IT? MAN EXCEPT THE LOVE OF WOMAN! PEC IAL No one admitted NOTICE! (lm ing last we] NO CHILDRE NOTE! By request from the any one under 16 years to ev 'xs PRICES! producers we will not admit ening performances. We will | show this picture at the matinee on Saturday afternoon | if no ‘objections are raised by parents. _ |are a new sl No. HGR, golf and. Balance® pencil, No. HTSC SHEAFFERS ... .for Effortless Writing Perfc-t balance is built intc! SHEAFFIR'S pens and pencils | That is why they handle so com fortably. And these advantages ar¢ guaranteed for life if you use 2 S PENS: nnc:u ntsx SETS:! su% WA SHEATFER FEN COMPANY « FORT MADISON, IOWA, U.3.4 Reg. U, & Pat, OF. ELECTRICAL. REPAIR WORK NO JOB TOO SMALL Capital Electric Co. (o e ER LIFETIME®. i VENTURA BURNS AND SINKS OFF CARLSON CREEK Capt. George Baggen and Two Others Escape Without Injury { Fire destroyed gasboat Ven- \tura early yesterday afternoon when Ishe ‘was in Gastineau Channel off Carlson Creek on her way from Annex Creek 'to Juneau. The burned hulk sankand the craft |Is a total loss. Those aboard at the time, Capt. George Baggen, skipper and owner; his son Louis Baggen and another man, put off in a skiff from the blazing vessel jand reached shore without injury. They were taken to Annex Creek, |and later were brought to this city. The Ventura was valued at $3,000. She was insured for $2,500 with a company represented by Allen Shattuck, Inc. Fire Followed Explosion When the fire started,in the ,engine room of the vessel Capt. Baggen and the two others aboard iof her were in the pilot house. A cracked cylinder is supposed to have caused an explosion which immediately was followed by tha flames. Those on the craft attempted to extinguish the blaze with .fire extinguishers. The flames were observed from Annex Creek and a small boat iequipped with an outhoard motor put out from there for the scene \of the blaze. The craft took Capt. {Baggen and his two companions |from the shore near Carlson Creek ito Annex Creek. There, Capt. Baggen telephoned to Capt. Tom |Smith of the Yakobi of Juneau |and Capt. Smith with the Yakobi went to Annex Creek and brought the shipwrecked frio to this city. Skiff and Motor Lost ! Nothing was. saved from the {Ventura. Among the property loss e WINNING NUMBERS ON TABLE- RUNNER I R B 65 Seeomd: ... ol 82 Third ............. P 123 Owners of these tickets please see Seena Paul at Gastineau Grocery Weird Legend To Go On Screen Tonight FRA NKENSTEI?N'{ HEADLINES NEW BILL AT CAPITOL Thrilling fP—l_a—y—_ has Boris| Karloff and Mae . Clark in Cast No one can dispute this state- ment. Strange as it seems, if anybody can, Carl Laemmle, Jr., 1 will be very much obliged to him.| So will James Whale and so will| {Boris Karloff. : And here's the statement. No) |artist ‘ever had the nerve to draw! a likeness of the monster that Dr. Frankenstein created and that | everyone in the world, for the last! hundred years, Kknows, destroyed him. Innumerable tditions of Mrs. Mary Woolstoncroft Shelley’s story of “Frankenstein,” have been pub- ‘hed, and it has appeared in ev- y language. No Illustration Found But Universal City were cudgelling when the make-up people| at their brains to find out what the| m er would look like, ithey |couldn’t . find a single illustration in any library, manuscript vault, art gallery or any other place!| whatsoever which would help them. All that Mrs. Shelley, in her book |did to help was to say, over and over again, dreadful, so horrifying, so repell- ant .that the monster never could icome into any personal relations |with humankind. Kcep Karloff Bottled Up This was a staggering job, but P\"ncn the make-up men had Karl- joff’s classic and highly intellectual {face made over to production department was so con- cerned about it that they bottled Karloff up in a room in a closed stage so that nobody could see what the make-up looked like un- s displayed in the theatre. r, Dr. Frankenstein’s mon- jster can be seen at the Capitol theatre tonight when this Univer- sal production of “Frankenstein” goes on the screen. Incidentally, the lack of an il- lustrated edition of “Frahkenstein has now been repaired. Crosset & Dunlap are issuing a thoroughly | iflustrated edition of this hundred- year-old classic. iff and an outboard |motor that were left her. Theé Ventura was 465 feet long. 11 feet wide and 34 feet deep. She was 13 gross and 11 net tons. Her engine could develop 45 horse- powsr. She was built at Everett in 1908. The vessel's home port was Ju- neau. She was used as a charter that the face was so| suit them, thef aboard of | craft by her owner. PREL RS o SN NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the Commissioner’s Court for the Territory of Alaska, Division Number One. Before CHAS. SEY, Commissioner and ex-Officio Probate Judge, Juneau Precinct. In the Matter of the Estate of WILLIAM E. BRITT, deceased. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, That the undersigned was, on the 2nd day of May, 1032, appointed administrator w. w. a. of the es- tate of the above named William E. Britt, deceased. All persons hav- ing claims against said estate are requested to present them, 'with proper vouchers attached, to the undeérsigned, at 424 Goldstein Build- ing, Juneau, Alaska, within six (6) months from the date of this no- tice DATED at Juneau, Alaska, May 2nd, 1932. H. L. FAULKNER, Administrator w. w. First publication, May 3, 1932. Last publication, May 24, 1932. a. Daily Empire f¥ant Ads Pay. I THE NEW Hupmobile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! JAMES CARLSON Juneau Distributor In the above thrilling scene of suspense in “Frankenstein,” which begins showing tonight at the Capi- tol Theatre, Colin Clive, as Dr. Frankenstein, is seen at the left |and his life-created monster is at the right. Below are John Boles, as | Victor, the friend of Dr. Franken- stein, and Mae Clarke, as Eliza- beth, the fiancee of Dr. Frank- enstein. {MRS. ROFF COMING BACK TO JUNEAU AFTER OPERATION Mrs. W. W. Roff, who underwent a serious operation at the Coffey Clinic in Portland, Oregon, is re- turning to her Juneau home aboard the motorship Nonthland which tailed from ‘Seattle last night. Mrs. Reff is accompanied by her two children and also her mother, Mrs, Charles Stearns. —o ATTENTION AUTO DRIVERS The City of Douglas car drivers’ licenses for the year 1932 are now {due and payable to the City Clerk. Everyone that drives a car must tget a license before June 1, or the City ‘Marshal will take action to collect same according to the city ordinance. FELIX GRAY, —adv. city Clerk!" Scene From " FRANKENSTEIN" t SEAL HUNT SAG THAT COST LIVES IS COMING 1“Viking,” Tale of New- foundland Perils, to | Be Seen Thursday Many su\an:— cought oul as ba ol , but it have been is b m l\"dri?k Frissell, youthful who lozt his life to; lof his party while ming the { nal scenes of his picture near H | Island, off the n {foundland to bring the first all-talking romantic drama of the Labrador seal hunters. The result has been | TOPNFSS FUNERAL orthern Light v Church. be in Evergreen Cemetery. T |Today less than a dozen steam SET FOR T TOMORROW the late Knute one of the most unusual produs tions ever filmed It has been|s \titled “The Viking,” after the ship {Viking around which the story wa: written and which was destromn ‘)n the tragic explosion which mq; |50 many lives. will Be Fohcwn Thursday | i | “The Viking” will be present |at the Capitcl theatre Thursday lmvhb | Varlck P , was the son of a a graduate of | rength and dar- feet seven inch ed the wild Lab- wealthy old ing—he was tall. He had v : jand loved it. | The old Newrammdland sealing Iticet once mumiered 350 cratt, with mbal crews of 12,000 “swilers” and 'a net receipt of over $1,000,000. s with about a thousand men in $200,000 worth of skins The furs of the North seal are not used for 3 mud fat. v‘A tlantic |garments. ] Thrill of Hunt Remains But the thrill of the hunt, the meance of the ice, the challenge to men’s hardihood and daring r main. And it was this thrill, this menace, this challenge that so fired the imagination of young Frissell in this city that he determined to make a mo- will be con- tion ¢ ire of it all. And he must C. Saunders, do it uickly, before it passed into A motion picture enthus- tudent of the drama in , he resolved that his pic- avoided by other agaretteé’ VER since Lucky Strike created that special process for purifying fine tobacco and told the full facts about cigarette smoking — the industry bas been in an uproar. For Lucky Strike has dared to mention things that were considered You may have noticed a striking avoidance generally of the word “inhale" advertising. Why? Goodness only knows! For everybody inhales — knowingly or unknow- ingly! Every smoker breathes in some part of the smoke he or she draws out of a cigarette. That's why it’s all-important to be certain “taboo” 'in the cigarette TUNE IN ON LUCKY STRIKE— 60 modern minutes with the weeld's finest dance srchesteas, ond . famous Lucky Strike mews features, every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday evening over N. B. C.nttworks. IMPORTS SHOW SLIGHT CHANGE, NEW SITUATION Tarif} Commission Reports to Congress—High Duty Sought on' Pulpwood WASHINGTON, May 17.~There 1as been relatively little difference changes in the value of imports into the United States between |countries on the Gold Standard) and those off, was the report made to Congress yesterday by the Tariff Commission. The report was received as the use Way and Means closed the day hearings on the Ha\xlev 1 to adjust tariff rates to com- ate for depreciated currencies. Urge High Duty Pulpwood and lumber spokesmien had urged passage of a high duty. The Tarriff Commission reponted that from October to February |imports from six leading countnies the Gold Stndard declined 28 per cent while there was only |J a 23 per cent decline from coun- ries retaining the Gold Standard. Asks For Support r Schall asked for sup- of the bill for a higher import stating that will be ours or those of Sweden |or Norway,”™ Walter Wentworth, of the Maine ‘Mu\uhcture'rs and J. J. Underwood, of the Seattle Chamber of Com- merec, said Cdnadian firms were abandonment of the Gold Standard. ————— DYKE OWNS DIKE MINE REDDING, Cai. — William H, Dyke thas been granted a patent by the Federal government for the “Big Dyke Mine,” near here. The Big Dyke mine is a dike lode—a great body of lowgrade ore at or near the surface. ———.—— Old papers for sale at BEmpire Office. ture should show not merely the $350,000- YACHT. GOES T0 KODIAK ON BEAR HUNT Stranger_\fill Be Back Here After Her Trip to Barrow forenoon from Juneay. On Kodiak Tsland Capt. ¥, B, Lewis, iéh =ik LTI E§§§§§§ take to do some hi neighborhood. Specimens {o be ‘While in the' North, is collecting living specimens land and sea life for zoological gar- : : E? § mumm:mmh‘gt live fish. Lmevminelbondme 4 . Parks ard H. ve officér of . the Came Commission, -were Teth\me. rador counfry on several occasions, | greatly aided by Great Britain's|guests of Capt. Lewis b difner. Samuel Swenning, Alasks guide, who joined the wessel \atr Ketohi- nnmmm%w Fleming on & hunt s e ANGOON INDIAN GETS 6-MONTHS JAIL TERM George Mason, Angoon ° Indian, was brought there Monday . from Tenakee by Deputy United Btates Marshal to serve gut a six months' jail sentenice. Mason * in cigarette seal hunt—he wanted. to portray |was convidted of essaulting his also the natural nobility of the |wife. hardy people, the self-sacrifice, He was tried in the United fears and prayers of the wives|States Commissioners Ooust at Tenakée and sentenced %o six months in jl.fl and to m 8 fine M $300. 1 gl | and swethearts left behind as . well as the bravery of the men who went “to the ice.”? . Why is this wtal question so much - 3y that your cigdrecte smioke is pure -adéletmu- to be sure you don’t inbale certain inyuin.. ! Do you inhaté? Lucky Strike bas dared to raise this vital question—for it gives you the protecuon you want, ., ceuq& im- purities concealed in even the finest, inflck tobacco leaves are removed By Luckies' famous purifying process. Luckies created that process. Only Luckies have it! 4 "It toasted" 0. K. AMERICA trade.