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Rl . HELAAT i B A AN NG I AT TR 18 THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE; THURSDAY, JAN. 25, I934 i LAST TIME THEATRE TONIGHT THE MYSTERY OF THE Mu ALL GORGEOUS TEC HNICD OR - with LIONEL ATWILI. FAY WRAY GLENDA FARRELL FRANK McHUGH PREVIEW TONIGHT—1:10 A. M. | Y"E ! with WILLIAM MAE WEST’S SISTER IS MARRIED WARREN and JOAN BLONDELL Beverly West, actress-sister of Mae West, and her manager, Vladi- mir Baikoff, were married in Chicago. Beverly and her first husband, Count Serge Treshir, were divorced in 1927. (Associated Press Photo) an alien enemy, but after the returned here for a few ADJUDGED INSANE AND vears. Ee died in the East while on his way to visit his old home COMM[TTED To ASYLUM in Gumum (bou’ ten yeaxs ago. MRS. SCHWARTZENBERG ™ = Mrs. Bertha Scawartzenberg, resi- | nyayOR I. GOLDSTEIN WILL dent of Southeast Alaska for the LEAVE ON NORTHWESTERN past thirty-four years, the last| on SHORT TRIP TO SEATTLE twenty of which were spent in Douglas, was this morning commit- i i i ted to Morningside Sanitariur by | Mayor 1. Goldstein will leave Ju- i i 4 oq | Neau on the steamer Northwestern ;Lai:ycéfiln:&io:firf,_ ;f \‘;\?ffcf for Seattle where he will enter the Mrs. Schwartzenberg, who is a Virginia Mason Clinic for a check- widow, first came to Junmeau in| UP and examination. Mayor Gold- 1900 with her husband, who was|Stein spent a week going through a brewer. About 1907 Mr. and Mrs. | the Vifginia Mason clinic a year Schwartzenberg moved to Skagway, | 880 and he expects the coming ex- | where they ran a small brewery.| @mination to-require about the After living there for about five|Same length of time. years they located in Douglas,| He Will return to Juneau as soon where she has since resided. as possible. Her husband, Willlam Schwartz- enberg, was interned during the| Shep in Juneau THRILLS, CHILLS | AND LAUGHS IN CAPITOL FILM ‘Mystery of Wax Museum’ Stars Lionel Atwill, Fay ! Wray, Glenda Farrell | Seldom before has such an ef« | fective melange of' thrills, chills, | laughs and air of mystery been of- | fered to the entertainment-seeking | public, as is to be found in “The | Mystery of the Wax Museum,” by | Warner Brothers, which opened au- | spiciously at the Capitol Theatre last evening. Among the weird, fantastic stor- | | ies of crime and mystery, this pie- ture takes first rank and its value is heightened by the photography. Opening with a swift but sensa- tional prologue in London, where | a Russian sculptor has begun to attract attention through his ex- traordinary skill in modeling of wax figures, the story jumps to| New York, of today. A series of mysterious crimes and still more mysterious disappear- | ances of well-known people has begun to arouse the police and !in the heart of the metropolis, Igor, | the sculptor, is quietly but steadily | creating a nmew group of wax stat- | newspapers. Meanwhile, in his shop, | ues with which to people the new|_ Holdup in *“Terror Trail” (he Coliseitn Theatre. " TOM MIX COMES T0 COLISEUM IN “TERROR TRAIL” |Popular Western Star | Opens Tonight in Fast | Moving Story of Plains STARTS TONIGHT Tom Mix, dean of all Western | stars, comes tonight to the Coll- | seum Theatre In “Terror Trail,” his latest Universal feature. The whole story is contained in the remark of the stunning heroine, | played by Naomi Judge, when she | | says: “Send one man to clean up ihis |county? They need fifty!" | The screen fairly sizzles when Tom Mix and his DANUBE STATES AT VARIANCE ON LEAGUE REFORM Split Camed by Proposals Made by Premier Mus- solini of Italy (ConL’nued rom x-agv. One) -—| But Tom does manage to do it| |alone, and win the heroine’s hand |to boot. Jack Cunningham has | ‘wnnen a logical, fast-moving treat- ‘ment of Grant Taylor's magazine mary Armand Schaefer's divection | ndds to the convincing quality of Lhe entire vehicle and Universal has {spared no expense'in supplying a | splendid ‘supporting cast and beau- mm backgrounds = of ~mountain scenery and western pains. The story has interest aplenty. While there is a quirtet of famous | | screen heavies—Francis McDohald, : Bob Kortman, John St. Polis and {tions in the Ohannel cage cireuit )| prank Brownlee, who acquit them- I'School gym when the DeMolay|gelves fiendishly, as usual—the in- {will tangle tonight in the Highljtitable comic, Raymond Hatton, new pony, TONY, JR., get going in this tremendously exciting Western_ melodrama. There's action every ‘minute in an “away- from-the-formula’ Western plot_that will hold you spelibound! DeMo]ay Plays Douglas| Firemen—George Bros. With Naomi Judge, Raymond Hatten,’ and Firemen Meet 2 oneld Arthur Rankin, - Francis MeD 3 Story by Grant Taylor. Directed by A:mand Schaefer. Presented by Carl A UNIVERSAL PICTURE. Four of the strongest aggrega-| t he intends to n city. wax museum th open in an Am Courteously, and just as cateful- It would not be fair to devulge|ly. Boris praised “peace, under- more details of this powerful dra- |Standing, and good relations,” with- | quint and the Tsland Piremen meet virtually stars in his rols of Lucky in the curtainraiser, and the Ju- neau Firemen play George Broth- ers, first half champs, in the night- cap. Dawson, the gambler who'll bet on anything. His drinking and shoot- ing scene is one of the funniest ever seen in a western film. ‘m_]. in which people disappear from under the very eyes of the police, and a daring woman newspaper re- out, quo. { Tituleccu Speaks Out In Kosice M. Titulescu said in a however, endorsing the status porter acting on a hunch sets out to solve the mystery, single-handed. Aptly balanced against the myster- | the uproariously funny scenes be- | hard-boiled managing editor. Glen- da Farrell and Frank McHugh car- | fashion. Litnel Atwell gives a subtle and | fascinating performance 4as the | Russian sculptor that ranks with the finest things he has done in s career while Fay Wray, Al- Vincent, Gavin Gordon, Ar- thur Edmund Oarewe and others contribute able support to the cen- | tral figures and the dramatic val- ues of the Story. MRS. EDWIN SUTTON CONFINED TO HOME Mrs. Edwin Sutton is confined to her home on Nelson Avenue with a painfully broken right 'wrist ‘as; the result of ‘a fall near Sixth eevning while on her way to }the Eastern Stars. It will be about a month before she will be able to use the injured arm, according to her physician, |" Mrs. Sutton bravely walked from {the scene of the accident to the | hospital' and after the armr had been set, returned on foot to her home on the hill, ‘whi¢ch cannot | be reached by motor. —_— e PETERSBURG COMMERCIAL The Petersburg Commereial Club | has' re-elécted Edrl N Ohmier as Chairman for the present year, A. B. Holt was named secretary. The | Executive committee, re-elected, is | composed of Pred Nelson, T. S. Elsemore, Robert M. Allen, L. T. Swanson and Mr. Ohmer. CarNaRvON a2 ENTRANCE 20 TUTANKHAMENS ToMB. The mysterious death of Dr. Arthur E. P. B. Weigall, nnud author and E; series of misfortunes that overtook many who were connected with the opened the tomb of King Tutankhamen, at Luxor, Egypt, more than a decade a| savant’s death is proof that the curse, placed by the ancient Phataoh i d%on. died mysteriously. Soon after Carter was stricken, but recovered. g:;n;rvgns bmtlleram}l:nviv. dlleg at fisa ut recovere olonel Audrey e nection with the nobldmn Felt “Curse” of Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Howaro CARTER While excavation work on the tomb was still in progress, Lord Carnarvon, financial backer of the e: of 29, and Lady Carnarvon was afflicted wif rt, Carnarvon’s balf brother died and many others w mdnm«d flmuh the strange lpell‘ " TorD CARNARVO. tologist, in London, recalls the ward Carter Expedition whieh on defices of i ot is e WOl Then, The Hon. Reginald Wi @ Whoss cont | WITH BROKEN ARM and Kennedy Streets last Tuesday | \speech “Inasmuch as there has beén s fous elements of the picture, are | much lying about this subject.prx:_n dope to win. 1 | al tween the girl reporter and her|claim, in my name and also in the ‘but once in the"regular T ‘half, | one can hold it against us if 1 | name of Dr. Revision | means war. Benes: i ry off these situations in masterful I don't want war, but for that the playoff. Tonight they hope to very reason 1 don‘t want revision.” Within 24 hours Hungary's reply, | to this was on all the news wires. Sald Premier Julius Goemboes: “If we wanted war we would not talk revision. Revision is the| | most peaceful method of obmlning justice for Hungary.” Austria’s official gazette pub« lished a declaration by Kurt Schus- {to the “new central Europe,, des- tined to arise after the dictatorial - e,e— — | | E. E. NINNIS RETURNS NORTH ON VIC 4 RIA E. E. Ninnis, member of the Ju- neau Motor Company staff, turned Tuesday on the Victoria | from a short trip to the States. | Mrs, Ninnis, who accompanied him south, remained in Tacoma W¥here |she will visit Mr. for the next two months. RHEUMATISM (,rlpples Him No More Off té6 work goes Father—mother {py and no wonder. Three weeks ago he was nearly a cripple—the piercing rheumatic pains almost drove him mad—then came a bottle of ALLENRU — a | present from a neighbor. In 2 days the agony left—almost like magic —no wonder gloom changed to joy in that modest home. | Within 24 hours after you begi |to take ALLENRU for rheumatic pains, backache, neuritis or lum=~ bago the excess uric acid starts to. leave your body—in 48 hours the terrible agony is gone—that's why Butler Mauro Drug Co. and leading druggists everywhere sell it for rheumatism, lumbago, sciatica and neuritis. Your first bottle — costs 85c— must give results or money AT ANY TIME—break- fast, lunch or dinner— youll find at this Res- taurant a great variety of tasty 'dishes. You'll like - our ' special busi- ness men’s lunch. BAILEY’S BEER—If Desired chnigg, minister of justice, referring’ ! peace treaties have been overcome.” re- | Ninnis® family | laughs with joy—the kids are hap- | The Islanders, if they show the | same form against DeMolay they | did against the local smoke eaters (last Monday, will furnish strong ‘competitlnn for their opponents to- | | night, and might even upset the Arthur Rankin does an excellent Jjob as the weakling brother of the heroine, who finally manages to throw off the yoke imposed by the gang, and to go straight. Too| much cannot be said for Naomi Judge, the pretty girl who, raised on the Dakota plains, knows ex- ectly how a western girl should act. Tony, Junior, Tom's new mount, is a dead-ringer for Tony, and does a great job. Don Clark, the cameraman, has done an excellent job of capturing fascinating background, and in making the picture beautiful. | ———- and “The Last Frontier” FREE KIDDIES FREE Every child attending the Coliseum Friday Night between 7 and 8 o’clock will be ad- mitted FREE— Be there early and see the start of “THE LAST FRONTIER” The local Firemen were beaten {and then by George Brothers. They {lost two galmes out of three ‘in at least partially even the score. | ———e—— | WARNING TO MOTORISTS | | Automobtle licenses for 1934 are now due and payable. Fees—Ter- rlt.orlal $10.00; City, $500. Cars without 1934 license plates will be tagged after February 1 and owners penalized for operating cars with- out a proper license. | A. W. HENNING, DEWEY BAKER RETURNS FROM VACATION TRIP UNITED FOOD CO. CASH GROCERS Dewey Baker, who went south for a vacation several weeks ago, returned to Juneau on the steamer l—adv. City Olerk. |Victoria Tuesday. Mr. Baker is i i s { baker with the Juneau Bakery Phone 16 We Deliver Meats—Phone 16 i SMp ln Jnnuu here. pon) \ i i X T o | i Is a Month of Bargains The man (or perhaps it was a woman!) who invented the towel had a great idea. And an equally great benefactor was the man (or more likely woman) who conceived the scheme of making towels as colorfully attractive as they are bathingly serviceable. Along about this time of the year, towels also have their plan of moyipfi fmn: pargain counters to thrifty closets. Linen, handkerchiefs apd blapkets also beckon the eye wad prices soothe the pocketbook. January is a glorious month for bar- gains! The advertisements in your newspaper are important news of the shopping world and they tell an interesting story of quality and price—of things that are new. Did you ever pause to consider how much time and ex- pense these advertisements saye you? You make your own decisions in your own home. You figure the cost to a penny. Then, with the help of these daily messages of economy in your newspaper, you go forth on an adventure of buying and return with exactly what you intended to get.