The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, September 19, 1927, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY SEPT. 19, I927 H('T()R) APIL(‘E FOR HLM RIVALS .4I|IlIIIIIIHII|IIIIIIIII|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIlllllIIlllllllllllllllllllmmllllflllllln. 7:30 ———— TONIGHT 9;25 ‘\Vnh(‘ tleIM s ‘. ‘.Mlt. ians of this c H | displaced by for | Tne union seeks such coms Ition of the contract labor law as {wi'l hold mu ns from abroel to be “labo and not artisis; cannot, under tn2 , bo imported on pronrses of! nt. that union mu PICKETT ¢ ars lmhr,'. PALACE PATHE NEWS “A BANKRUFT HONE \ MOON” Last 2 Times Tonight | PALS FIRST on has put bhefire the t of labor a brief in the an orch a brought to United States from France tt 2 Carlion hatel compan Washingion, American mu the union ave wera red to mike reo for wlerawskl, Kreislep. lh‘h'mz wva aro artists,” Webor! 13e they are engags in e achievemant and caa not be replaced. But to oxalt to| th> plane individuals who | form banda or orchestras to com | Fox Comcdy That Me:ns Laughs asgm: the by ! ot A BEALLY Bld PICTURE WITH BIG UAST IS— 'COMPROMISE diz them Sel g } and gront TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY “The SUE CARROLL" J ' LEFT! SALLYE EILERS JOLLYWOOD, Cal., Sept. 19--! and made of practical use in de- with tans of .Bridge of Sighs” | DOROTHY MACEAILL \_ CREIGHTON HALE RICHARD TUCKER pete thousands of other equal skill i ‘llni:u MULTIPLY Aix SPEED BY SIX SINCE 1913 CALSHOT AIR STATION, Eng- land, Sept. 19.- -The advance in wr eed since 1913, when the Schneider held. seems incredible when it is parsons of absurd | Sallve Eilers and Sue Carroll | doesn’t seem to have hurt eithes of them. They were chums on the Fox lot half a year ago—bo.a fof them extra girls hoping for | the “big break” that would brinx them screen recognition. It ceemed hardly possible tha: (both could have their desire, For | when a part came along that) Cup race was firstiejiner girl might have won, both ' grate. jof them obviously couldn’t have | Six months of competition betwecn | velopment of the country. Min- nesota had not entered the Union at that time, but when it became a State, titles were patented to it for the land by the Govern- ment. The conditions under which the law provided for the original granty, however, stipulated that land reserved by the Government should mnot be conveyed to any A difference of apinion arose as to whether the land in IRENE RICH CliveBrook LouiseFazenda Pauline Garon WHIRE YOU s&L AHTERTAINMENT (N COMPORT The Biggest and Most Remarkable Tornado Ever Filmed This Is a Week of ] i u " I u ] £l ] = = F ® H 2 ) " |8 El ] i} = i F o - = H ] H -1 = -] E H T TR PP T TP PR TR BT FEET TR RS BT LA S AL i o recalled that the winning French P ane only reached a speed of ' 44.7 mile8 an hour. England ecaptured in 1914 wita a Raymond McKee CUMING THURSDAY it. Sallve lost out. The part went|question had actually been re- Big Pictures to Sue, and although it was a'gerved for the Chippewas. Much |small thing, she did so well in|jand in northern Minnesota had it that Douglas MacLean picked heen designated for the Indians, ALEC B. FRANCIS RALPH LEWIS From the story by the trophy! spred of COMING WEDNESDAY 55.3 CHAS. K. HARRIS . Attractions At Theatres R et COMFIOMIGE" OPENS AT COLISEUM TONIGHT\ most remarkabls !m'nndo 3 filmed in a motion picture sroduction forms the climax ot um;uumlse,' the Warner Bros. sic of the Screen, starrinz Rich which is opening at the Coliseum. % Of _course, the company could pot catch a wild tornado in its] air and drag it to the village| here it was to do its destructive work, so they made their own to prder Twelve powerful ajrplane mo- Q12 were used to gencrate the ornado in “Compromise.” “he small village of about five hundred {nhabitants was built up- n a hill so that the wind ma- chines ‘Bad “tHe® greatdst poasible burply of alr behind them. They el firmly anchored to the jsvound, amd when all the great »llors were put in motion apd lly attained their greatest A great vortex of dust, tree branches, shingles. and miscellaneous what- rose above the village. T. Lowe, Jr., adapted Jay zer's dramatic story of an ideal- ¢ woman who refused to com- ppomise with life, and the br:l- ng supporting cast includes Clive Bropk, Pauline Garon; Louise Fa endu, ‘Frank Butler, Winter Hall iqaymond McKee, Helen Dunb-r, izyun Cowan and Muriel Frances rens to- highit 013, BALS FIRST" AT PALACE ' LAST TIMES TONIGHT | ) "Hxiwvin Carewe used good screen judgment ‘when he cast Lloyl Hughey snd Dolores del Rip in the; leading roles of his latest dirgt National production, “Pals §t.” The pieture opened ye: grday-at the Palaea 1t would be hard to find two Jlother players as nearly suited for he! parts they plgy in this ex- cellpuni metion picture. Lloyd liughed as “Danny” Rowland, a “hobo” forger, gives ope of the iindst portrayals he has yet offer- i 1o the screen. . Alee Francis minie Blair, " outcast an who finally (lgovers the straight apd sarrow, is first rate, and George Coope: (nird_of the. pals, as a peeuda It jan- copmt, carviea off all the com «dy’ honors. Dhe story s rich in love iny terést, the sets are beautitul, and ihet divection is faultless. ETE PR L, TR OUTSIDERY AT COLISEUM WEBNESDAY | e} M.’mu« Pitschmann nmmuee‘; ek e produsion, “4..“.‘:.7: ; o ..m.""'ma,“"’” exndon, -5 aply. )I-ue llmlflfl“lfl.&‘l‘fl Grace Vanderbilt, who eloped wnth Henry Gassaway Davis, 3rd, has won the forgwcnes: of her parents, "Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius ‘Vanderbilt who are prepanng to welcome the young coupie back | home. EUROPEAN JAZZ INV ASION LOOMS, THREATENG JOBS, MUSICIANS & | NEW YORK, Sept. Tellegen are Walter Pidgeon, RoY | grew ang Atwill, Charles Lane, Joan Stand-| mus ing and others well known (3|gutes want to be classified theatre-goers. | as artists, but as “laborers dn !the field of music.” .[.DRIDGE 5; sldHS;rifr‘ The definition is formulatad by | SAY 19.—A hur- tuaiy-eigiut thousand union ans of the United Joo N. Weber, president of the ' PALACE TOMORROW |} 4 ocican Federation of Musicians, ! {and upon its recognition by the foderal department of labor pends the suce of efforts by the musicians’ union to turn back an invading throng of jazz play’ ers from European countries. The first invasion of jazz moved Photographically speaking, the. production of “The Bridge of' Sighs,” coming tomorrow for a two. days run, at the Palace, said to® equal anything yet shovn on the screen. In addition to John Mescal, the cameraman, if from America to Europe. Dance has Director Phil Rosen, who bands and orchestras, made reached fame while a cameraman® largely of college boy with his work in “The Miracle Man”; the other is William Me- Gann, who has photographed many prominent stars. { with the western style of popular 4 This “Classic of the Screen” is music made famous |by Charles K. Harris, the noted Whitman and Ger songwriter whose song3 have been| Now the tide sung in every household on ftwo|eign musigiars have lsarned tue continents, Dorothy Mackaill h trick of ‘wringing hot melodi:s the featured role, supported by from muted cornets, = stuitering Creighton Hale, Alec B. Francis, saxophones “and syncopating vio- Richard Tucker, Ralph Lewis, |lin And some omployers of mu and others, sicians, according to Weber, are The story concerns Billy Cralz | resorting to the cheap labor poo's the reckless, spendthrift som of of Europe to find musicians, just the President Craig Steamshio.as American industriss went to Company, who steals a large sum Europe for cheap Jabor in days of money at his father's office, | prior to immigration restriction in order to-pay a gambling debt! The jazz players imported fr-m the trusted employe is sent mllurupa for employment in Ame jail for the offence, and the fa Ilcnn night clubs, hotels and re. ther, who knows his son as the|taurant orchestras are entering real culprit, bundles him off to,the United Stated under an ex gea, Billy finally finds himself,] emption in the immigration law Innd returns home, prepared to for “professional artists,” and England and Germany soon after the war and acquainted Europe shwin. turned. For- de | up t streame.! | from the United States to France, | by Berlia, | miles an horr, while the meet in 1919 at Bourn Xngland, resulted in no awar In 1920 Ttaly wen with 102,56 miles, and it repeated the vietory | in 1921 with a gpead of 117.4 m les. Great Britain tronhy in 1922 146.5 miles, next recaptured the with a speed of but lost it again in 1523 to the U ed States when rtenant D. Rittonhouse made 177.38 miles an hour at Cowes, England, in his Curtly D12 bi- plane. In 1925, |race was held at Baltimore, Lieu- !tenant J. H. Doolittle retainad the trophy for the United States (with a speed of 232 miles an {hour in his Curtiss racer. | ltaly won back the award in 11926 when Major Mario de Ber- nardi made 246.49 miles an hour in his Macchi-Fiat at Hampton Roads, Virginia. The Schneider Maritime Avia- tien Cup was presented in 1912 im the Aero Club of France by . sacques Schneider, a French -pml%umn and aviator, with a iview to devcloping high speed ‘geaplanes. It .8 a magnificent phy of gold, silver and bronze valued at about $5,000. The country ‘winning the cup required to schedule and hold [the race on the following year. "I‘he neider Cup course is a triangular course of 188.86 nau- tical miles. —————— FRENCH DAUGHTERS GO TO FARM SCHOOL PARIS, Sept. 19.—Sixty farm- ' dauvghters in TFrance are studying the business of farm- ting i the only sp tural sechool established Government in Brittany. Several .agricultural schools for boys exist, however, bes!des a number of experimental farms. The girls are taught garden- ing, dairying, the care of pcoultry and pigs. They are trained in | domestic economy by operating the dcermitory and the din:ng rooy I Each girl is required to bring Ito the school her own garden (hut and a pair of sabots, or wooden shoes. by the 1 Use Advertisiog always pays. the columns cf The Empire. +surrender himself and pay the piper. Minneapolis ’Sgeln to Land 1928 G.O.P. Meet MINNEAPOLIS, Sapt. 19.— Emnhnslz(nz its equipment with new $3,000.000 auditorium munx 12,000 person, Minneap- oljs is taking steps to invite the ublicag party to hold its next Bational convention here. National headquarters of the Lincoln clubs, a political group with units - in virtually every! large city, is leading in the movement. ' It is aserted that| tx northwest long has been eli-i le for the honor, but bas been h;ndlclmml lack of a eity with adequate convention' facili- ties and hotel accomodations. Minneapolis has expanded its botels und St. Paul, its ter city, is prepared to handle any overflow. TOHmd\’alnfim JUAN-LBB—P(N’S France, Sept. " —Rudolph Valentino ia “hap- Py and contented” in. the lNl’lt‘ cecording to wlmunluu outh, | when the next; :lal agricul-{ her for his lcading woman. But when Sue, with the Mac- Lean picture finished, tried (or the lead in Mack Sennett’s forth- coming feature romanticizing tho Irise of a bathing-beauty to film {fame, who should be her chiaf| rival for the part but a little extia | girl named Sallye Eilers? And{ i thy Chicagoan. Her real name is, ! Evelyn Keefer. Sallye is another i(ne of those Hollywaod high school girls who seem to taka| naturally to celluloid. | this time Sallye walked with the contract. Sue is the daughter away of a wcni-] INDIANS miiY PROFIT | | FROM DRAINED SWAMP WASHINGTON, Sept. 19.—The jquestion of the equity of the; | Chippewa Indians in thousands | lof acres of reclaimed swamp land in Northern Minnesota, claimed !, by the Government on behalf of| the Indians, is among the ques-! jtions that may confront Congrees‘ when «it convenes. More than $80,000,000 has| Meen spent hy State and local authorities to reclaim the land, and they are making a vigorous fight against relinquishing it. Should the Department of Jus- {tice win suits brought in behalf jof the Chippewas, the State, would b» required to return the' value of the lands to the treas- ury for their benmefit. The Jus-| tice Department regards it as desirable to have Congress rather, than the courts decide the con-' troversy. One of the original cases brought by the Federal Gm‘-f jernment was decided adversely by the Supreme Court last year, The cloud on the ownership of the land came about as the result of the Swamp Land Grant, act’ of 1850, in which Congress jconveyed lands to the States on condition that they be reclulmed but not all of it was segregated into reservations. D Indians Adopt Autos For Berry Harvesting MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota Indians, hard put by pale face momnopoly to earn a living, have taken a tip from the white man in harvesting their share of the fruits of the land. Using collegiate flivvers in- stead of the usual scrawny horse, and outboard motors instead slow-moving birch bark canoes, they are penetrating parts of Sept. i the north country to gather the vich Dblueberry harvest that fis unknown or inaccessible to the | whites. The red men and their squaws are earning as high as $10 a day from the unusually large crop of berries this year. In the lake gountry, they attach a motor to a canoe, pack squaws, children (and pajls in the bottom and start at daybreak each day for the herry fields. 'Britain Burns Up All WarM Over LIVERPOOL, Eng., Sapt. 19. —The “King's Pipe"” bas just had the biggest smoke of its career. The “King's Pipe” s a building near the Stanley To- bacco warehouge here, in which damaged and unwanted tobacce is burned in the presence of a Customs officer. The “King's Pipe” has just consumed 10,000,000 -cigarettes, which would probably have been issued or sold to the troops if the World War had continued. They had been stored in the warehouse singe the end of the war, and it was decided that they should be destroyed. aey ko 1.—Whips cream in 2 to 3 min- 19— of| “THE OUTSIDER” RIN‘TIN TIN CANTERBURY in NIGHT ZHE'S A BEAUTY AMONG BEAUTIES Kitchen will do these things for ONE CENT 4.—~Chops meat and leftovers— “CL&SH OF THE WOVLES” e utes. Cold water jacket used when needed, Whips, at proper speed, any liquid of “thin conaistency. 2.—Mixes and beats mayon- naise. Beats eggs and icings —mashes potatoes, Mixes dough for bread, rolls, cook- ieg, and, at low speed— “folds in.” 3,—Slices potatoes and other vegetables, apples and firm {;uiu. With ice plate, chips Pirfanm the _hardest Kitchen Tadu per hour QUICKER EASIER BETTER All the above, and many more things, are done by Kite d, at 8 mere snap of the switch, One hour's use a day, In the average family, at a cost of one cent pays the entire ¢ it of this modern ectrical lng 's board —and the hardest tasks of pre- aring your three meals have n doge. " nuts, raisins, dates, figs, dry bread and cuelt:l;‘: for wmbln; High bowl pro- tects fingers. 5.—Sieves and *trains fruit for butters, sauccs and whips— vegetables —sonps—purees and sauces—rice potatoes. 6.—Ice Cream. Freezer attache ment, firmly is turned at hvm ing fine texture. Automstio indicator tells when cream is ready. \ Makes Food taste Better andmreNum ALASKA ELECTRIC LIGHT & POWER CQ

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