The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 17, 1933, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPII F\/IPIRE TUESDAY JAN. 17, 1933. 3 1 Most women thinkit ... Some women say it... ALL women are pretty . sure The Story of o Second-String Husband With LEO CARRILLO VIVIENNE OSBORNE UNA MERKEL JOSEPH CAWTHORN Sclected Shert Subjects —CHINA NITE— CAPITOL y—Wednesday G THURSDAY. S “BRING 'EM BACK ALIVE” ; Produced by Jefferson Pictwres Corpy —CO. FRANK BUCK’ MANY THRILLS IN *BRING 'EM BACK ALIV wn Tomorrow’s Styles Yol | pecial Clea PEACHSKIN RAINCOATS at $2.75 Values to $8.95 rance on All | Buck's Jungle Experiences Coming to Capitol How waould u ke te hungry, man-eating tiger to the death with a twenty: foot bone-crushing python? How would you like to see this pool to slake his thirst and come face to face with the jaws of a sixteen-foot crocodile just waiting for tiger meat? How would you like to meanest of jungle beasts, black panther, tackle the most ferocious man-eating How would you like to see what happens when the crocodile gets himself wrapped in the coils of a twenty-five foot python? How would you lone white man in the heart of | the tropic jungle entrap this snake | with his bare hands, and alive? These are some of the Ll)rill: in the Van Bearen Corporation's eature film “Bring Alive” the authentic camera ord of Frank Buck’s of the same name which to the Capitol theatr There is no love i built up drama in this rele by Radio Pictures, ed by Clyde E. Elliot Junear’s Own Store ADVERTISE rec- comes Authennc Plclu\esofFrank\ Lili, it see a battle same embattled tiger step into a| like t osee a| 'Em Back \ NIGHT LIFE “Men Are Q‘l Fools What Cabaret Singer Said of Musician Husband “Men Are Such Fools,” the RKO Radio Picture coming tonight and Wednesday to the Capitol Theatre with Leo Carillo, Vivienne Os- borne, Una Merkel and Joseph Cawthorne featured, is the ' story of a man who wrapped his dreams around a woman and neauy for- ed his own soul. Tony Mello was a musician with big an jons to compose and di- I great orchestra. he had big ambitions. Her golden voice he himself had train- and one day her singing and ty would grace grand opera. loved Lilli—loved her y Tony land trusted her and she was wor- | |thy of neither! Lilli was ambitious only for jew- els, clothes, admiration, excitement. She married Tony because it meant | |a way of getting from Vienna to " merica—to San Francisco. When |Joe Darrow offered her a job sing- ung in his night club she manag- jed that. Men are such fools about t‘s women they love! soon appeared, did not need Tony's help to get ahead, but |Tony's dreams burst like a bubble. {Second fiddle in a ja |far removed from | opera! In a terrible rags of jealousy {over Darrow’s affections to WLilli, |Tony commits a deed that chang- es the entire course of his life and, in surroundings strangely incongruous to inspirations of ibeauty, he composes great music. | The genius that Lilli had nearly killed comes to life behind the bars of a prison! i Written especially for talents and charming personality of Leo Carrillo, “Men Are Such |Fools” also provides good roles for |in addition to the featured cast, | Tom Moore, Earl Foxe, Paul Hurst, | Albert Conti and others, William Nigh directed. the great ' Beware the Cough or Cold that Hangs On | Perm:em coughs and colds lead to serious trouble. You can stop them now famous book | with Creomulsion, an emulsified creosote that is pleasant to take. Creomulsion isa new medical discovery with two-fold ac- tion; it soothes and heals the inflamed membranes and inhibits germ growth. Of all known dru nized by high med authorities as one but there | of the greatest healing agencies for per- is such cxcltement as no Holly- | sistent coughs and colds and other forms wood brain-child could ever -give. d tiger charges right a nauve village and then into camouflaged trap. There's the 2 DON'T BE TOO LIBERAL Nith the cosl If it comes from our ©Of his place. For our coal goes farther and Alive” gives a more even and satisfylng scenes, heat. 17 your coal bir is running low, better have us send you & new supply to prove our statement. Our draging service is always the best and we specialize in Feed. Jjockeys life. See “Bring for the other shown in this picture. e ——— GO WINdow suopplng in your easy chair. Read the advertisements. NOTED TRIO. D. B. l'EMMhR Phone 114 al heart-action when the | into | a| of throat troubles, Creomulsion contains, ments which soothe and heal the infected | membranes and stop the irritationand in- | flammation, while xf | the stomach, is absorbed into the blood, ng moment when Frank Buck attacks the seat of the trouble and checks the trapped man-eater in- to the home-made cage at the risk | 'Em Back | thrilling | other forms of respiratory diseases, and the growth of the germs. Creomulsion is guaranteed satisfactory in the treatment of persistent coughs and colds, bronchial asthma, bronchitis and | is excellent for building up the system after colds or flu. Money refurided if any | coughorcold, no matter of howlongstand- ing, is not relieved after mlun;;accordmg } todirections, Agkyouxdru dv.) lN NEW PLAY For Lili,| z hotcha was | ymponies and | creosote is recog- | in addition to creosote, other healing ele- | creosote goes on to | {ing in the Kantishna Flats, Game|the divide. O T T | LOV ER.\‘ FACE VILLAIN F GAY VIENNA IS SHOWN TONIGHT Is| “PANAMA FLO” e i‘ Helen Twelvetrees, Robert’ Armstrong and Charles Bickford in | tengé scene in fcature at Coliseum Theatre. Una Merkel and Leo Carrill in a scene. from “Men Are. Such Foels,” cpening at Capitol Theatye tonight. Henry Thoday, prominent resi- dent of Seward, died there Decem- ber 27. Mr, Thoday was operated upon for hernia.at the Seward Hospital and had recovered suf- ficiently to return to his home to |complete his convalesence, when he suffered a relapse that resulted in {his death. ‘ The Christmas season ai Sew- played betwean the boys and | {girls of the Anchorage High School \nnd the Seward teams, |or more of Anchorage young pso-f |ple made the trip to Seward for |the cage series. The first {in the boys’ series was declared |by the Seward Gaeway to b2 on {of the most exciting the town had ever seen, as the local with a score of 21-20 in tavor of Anchorage, in the last three min- tcry over the visitors, Ponies also won the The Anchorage girls straight victories over ard girls team. won two the Sew- Miss Louise Slater of Seward, who has been spending the pas few months with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B, Slater, returned South recently and will resume |her studies at the . University of | California, where she is in her | Senior year. Carl Anderson, well known old- |timer of Seward, died December 128 after a long illness. Mr. An- |derson was born in Feella, Swe- den, on March 27, 1875. Marty Skinner, young man about Seward and a big game hunter of prominence, raports the Sew- lard Gateway, with his hunting partner, Duke Martin of Ossining, have each knocked over a moc in Moose Pass. The hunters lay claim to lowering the world’s re ord for leveling the glant ani as well as the Territorial rec ;Ior size and number of points. d Herds ‘of caribou, Warden Sam O. White told Fairbanks News-Miner ' upon return to Fairbarks December A score | game | 2 |turface when he wariors, | utes battled away to a 24-21 vic-| Seward’s | second game. | ——— e —— | All-Alaska News following "an illness of many months. Mr. Fisher was born in Libertyville, I1l, and came North about fifteen years ago. Pilot Frank Pollack, of Fair- banks, traveled 18,000 feet into the air on the night of December 28, in what was probably the most difficult altitude flight he has yet made for the U. S.° Weather Bu- ard was enlivened by a basketballreau, accordnlig to the Fairbanks into a stale of exhaustion, and News-Miner. A ground fog impair- ed his take-off and landing and he had no moonlight to make the geing easier above the fogz. He !found it one degree warmer, 18,- {000 feet in the air than the 51 below temperature at the left. was at 3,000 feet. fdegrees {est, zero, Cyrus W, Fieming, well known to his end recently in the States in a tragic manner, his passing cing the result of a fall down ‘sLairs at his home in Seattle, ac- |corliing to news received by the | Anchorage Times. Mr. and Mrs, lFlemlng lived at Matanuska for |some time prior to the departure for the States. Mrs. Fleming was in charge of the Territorial 8chool there. | Thirty-two years in Fnlrhmks without a trip outside adds im- {portance to the journey F. H. Sharp is undertaking - this winter, Mr. Sharp left Fairbanks late in December with plans to visit a Los Angeles before returning north in two months. Dr. J.'J. Jensen, a popular resident of Seldovia, died | there November 20, according to a lsv,:yry in ‘he Anchorage Times. Dr. |Jensen was born in Copenhazen 112 years ago and.came to Alaska in 1897 intending to invade the .| Yukon gold areas. His plan was | Irustrated by an optbreak of spin- |al meningitds soon after he reached |Skagway and plunging .into the Lifull of intense, The warm-| former resident of the North, came | brother in Idaho and an uncle in! Oregon and friends as far south as| for 14 years | COLISEUM Tuesday Wednesday Thursday | INTENSE DRAMA 'OPENS TONIGHT “Panama Flo” Is Story of Romance, Intrigue with | Tropical Background | Unexcelled at portraying emo- tional roles of tense dramatic cal- \iber, Helen Twelvetrees scores her 'greate triumph in “Panama Flo” I ner latest RKO~Pathe starring pro- {duction which: will open . at | Coliseum Theatre tonight 1 A story of romance and intrigue, dramatic situations, | |“Panama Flo” undoubtedly takes !its place as one of the most ab- sorbing and interesting of the sea- | son’s melodramas. | taged against a background of {Panama and South America, it is| $4| 500 Worth of Gems, the tale of a New York show girl,, | | Police Are Informed | STUI.EN JF.WEI.S ARE RETURNED T0 MOVIE STAR the| | stranded by a perfidious sweet- ‘l ! heart, who is tricked into accom- panying an unscrupulous oil “wild- V “ca!tcr" into the jungle as his Betty Compson, movie star, told {housckeeper. When the sweetheart|the police yesterday that { |attempts to rob the oil man, how-, worth of jewelry, she said had been | lever, she shoots her lover, The!stclen from her on the night of| |outcome of this strange triangle |January 5, was returned last Fri-' is one which prov a thrilling | day. jclimax and allows the star some; She obtained the gems by pre-| {of the finest dramatic moments|senting a baggage claim check at scen on the screen in yea ja depot from which she received) | In addition to Miss Twelveire traveling bag containing the outsianding perfor stones, | Armstrong and Charles | The police are still investigating | in two powerful roles, contribute the case. They previously ex-' ‘ygzrik;ng portrayals, fprcssed the belief the robbery was Other members of the cast in-|the work of a gang which preys oni clude Paul Hurst, Maude Eburne,|the movie colony, stealing jewelry Reina Velez—sister of Lupe, and and later returning it for about Marjorie Peterson. 120 percent of the value. Ralph Murphy has done a splen- | he actress declined to did bit of direction on “P#nama |whether-che paid any money for Flo,” the story of which was ta-|the return of the stones. ken from the original by Garrctt prY e Fort. LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan 17—1 {any relatives. According to the Anchorage Times, he worked for the Alaska Railroad at various |times and mined and prospected :mp by airplane to OCircle, and plead guilty upon his return to “PAL NITE”—2-for-1 BRING YOUR PALS—2-for-1 [Betty Compson Gets Back SMith- CO rona tion—you'll find a Smith-Corona use- fuland convenient. T -‘,gf i “Neatly typeliwork helps to get better marks. Smith- Corona * always types neatly with speed to spare. A NEW KIND OF TYPEWRITER. And it costs no more than an-ordinary portable —$65 with tabulatar and combination » carrying cade and personal traveling bag. Easy monthly payments if desired. New FOLDER FREE / Stop in our store or send for free folder. We will quote our trade:in allowance ac- cording fo serial number. -..&w J. B. BURFORD & CO. “Our ‘door step iz worn by: satisfied customers” his home to enjoying ‘the exper-|considerably in the Talkeetna ience—his first trip in the air. | section. | | | | The body of Manuel C. Gill was | !found Dedember 27 about three| miles from the river from the up- per end of Richardson Canyon, thtant 1!;. Bruce., The case was not| according to the Fairbanks News- | contested. Miner. He apparently wandered there aimlessly and had fallen Wilfred Bruce was granted a divorce in Fairbanks recently from ‘Text books, pupils’ and teachers’ decks, typewriters and blackboards | to replace those destroyed by Iuo have been received recently at Falrbanks. Pupils of the first six igrades will receive their books | without paying for them, but the | | Junior-Senior high school pupils, |will pay for some of their books which will be furnished -at cost and may be sold back to the schodl lal the end of the year. frozen to death. Gill had been missing since the previous week. He had followed -the telephone | line from a cabin at Birch Lake where he had been wintering, and then had cut across to the river for some reason. He was a veter- an of Fairbanks and for many years had been employed by the 1F-llrbanks Telephone Company. Jozeph King, an old-time resl-| Lack of snow in the Kotzebue dent of the Northland who had region has made jhe fur catch made his home at Talkeetna for this winter almost negligible, the a number of years, died there De- Very Rev. Francis Menager, su- cember 19. It was not until two perior general of the northarn Al- days lgter, however, that the pass- 'aska Catholic missions told the ing of the old-timer became known, | Fairbanks News- Miner recently. Friends calling to ascertain the Father Menager, who made the reason for the smokeless chimney trip from Kotezebue to Fairbanks and failure of Mr. King to make by plane said that there is prac- STAMPS! News for Collectors The Associated Press, through its world-wide reporting facili- tles, will bring you the latest information on stamp issues, collectors’ items and other news for philatelists in a NEW feature THE WORLD OF STAMPS ‘WATCH FOR IT TOMORROW The Empire | his usual appearance at his neigh- tically no snow along the north- | bors’ home, discovered the lifeless western coast-and that until there bady on the floor, where he had is, trappers will take few pelts. apparently fallen following a Prevnmng low prices and the stroke. Mr. King came to Alaskashortage mean that the Lrappers‘ from West Virginia and was 62 are going to be hard put to lt to! {vears old. Nothing is known of make a living. * J NEW JERSEY’S MISS WINNING SMILE ' | g » o y Mary Dulje of Newark received a check - far 500 be: of this smile. Judges in a national contest sald she had the prettiest smile in the United States. S8he was chosen from 65000 convesgants. Mres, Franklin D, Roosevelt made the Presentation of a scroll and check. (Associated Press Photo) | USSEMMRBNN JUNEAU, SAMPLE SHOP The Little Store with the INSURE YOUR HOME Your Furnishings in SAFE COMPANIES AT LOWER RATES H. J. EBERHART Old First National Bank Building—Upstairs number!, | thousands of anfmals, are win work ‘of ‘administering to the sick, | |hé missed his chance of crossing | He lived in Skagway | |during the early days and after a| trip or two outside, returned north ,jand in 1918 went from Anchorage " CAPITAL ELECTRIC | KOLSTER RADIOS | ik <~ g 2oy oAy | "FUR GARMENTS Made to' Order 4 Remodeud Repaired, Cleaned H.'T. YURMAN . i® after an'airplane trip to that ¢ v‘ {trict. He sighted the tracks | |one band of wolves apd of sev traveling alone—not enough to |dicate "any great menace to |caribou. Pur, he . reported, | scarce throughout the district -|to Seldovia. There he will be re- | imembered for his unselfish mc-; 1|es during the flu epidemie of ms-' 11920. Besides 'his medical work, Dr. Jensen practiced law in the Commissioner’s Court and became front page news in many hotly fought " cases. Judge L. K. Pratt, attorney of | Fairbanks, recently made the round‘ the was //? Alfred Lunt (left), Lynn Fontanne m Nos! Coward are to appear together in Mr. Coward’s new comedy, “Dasign for Living.” . For 11 years the three have been planning to act together in a play. (Asso- ciated Press Photo) D. J. Pisher, aged 67, resident of | |Seward for ‘many years, died t on the morning. of December L. C. SMITH and CORONA TYPEWRITERS J B. Burford & Co. ! Mvwnbym BRINGING UP FATHER WHERES THIS NEW ssmETARY THAT MAGGIE HIRED FER ME HE'S LATE. THIS'LL BEA cooo EXCUSE TO FIRE HIM BEFORE | HIRE Him- SERIES 222 By GEORGE McMANUS M MR- TONNAGE ~YOUR WIFE SAID YOU NEEDED A SMART MAN TO BE YOUR SECRETARY- THE NEW Hupmobile 8 IN TRUTH A CAR FOR A NEW AGE! LLTELL YOU IF YOU DON'T TELL HER - RIGHT BEFORE YOUR EYES- SHE SENT ME HERE AND SAID YOU WOULD TELL ME WHAT | AM TS DO WELL- FIRST- WE MUST ROUND OUT A PLAN OF BUSINESS- PEERLESS BREAD Always; Good— Al\'u);s Fresh “Ask Y?u'r Grocer” JAMES CARLSON Jv:leuu Distributor

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