The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, February 13, 1928, Page 3

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& nn‘tnr TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY A clean comedy drame—a pic- tuic with a langh in every secnc—~Come and see. ADDED ATTRACTION—Pupils of Dorothy _ Stearns Roff in Novelty Valentine Dance Numbers ROSA DANNER BETTY LEE DUNN LENORE ANDERSON JEAN ANDERSON LINEA JOHANNSON EDITH YOUNG LAST 2 TIMES TONIGHT “SUBWAY SADIE” WITH JACK MULHALL, DOROTHY MACKAILL and CHARLEY MURRAY WITH MUSIC PLAYED FOR PICTURES AS IT SHOULD BE PLAYED | e “ “EVE'S LEAVES” AT | | PALACE TOMORROW —a Attractions At Theatres William Boyd, Cecil B. de Mille's popular protege, was chosen as Leatrice Joy's new leading man, « |and he appears opposite this win- some ‘star in ‘“Eve's Leaves,’ %3] which comes to the Palace theatre Tuesday. This followed his re- turn to en City after his, mar riage gvmmmr Fair, Cecil B. de” Mflle's chdrming leading wo- man, ‘T"SUBWAV SADIE” SCORES | BIG HIT AT PALACE | Nt W An ultrassmart - fashion show, unusual | scenes in Negw Yori's i g subway, @ night club scene that| TYPic ally American in for sheer brilliance has mnhiumv with light-brown hair, Boy I)‘;en B(-qualed a sweet and simple Makes a splendid foil for the dar! story well told, haired Leatrice, and the two pro- 11 directed and 11 ted and v;':':h:lg:\* that ‘de- lvuu- an entertaining combination. well ac serve unstinted praise are lho‘nfl)‘l‘fl rise to leading parts was virst Na.|Made under the careful Mm?."d",'fte:‘eta“:::“,'e" h”:n, V| of Mr. De Mille, who coached him o witich opened vesterday at|3s an;“extra” through several pic- ts:a ;;nlnvzn and is on for the last|tures. giving him an occasional LG e At ‘m“'flx-l'lvnl'“»‘r:mvo:" which has China Dorothy Mackaill, Jack Mulhall ive's Leaves, h has ns 1 Chatles Murray are featured,)fOT & setting, was written by Bl nd First National could not haye|mer Harris and directed by Paul i Sloane. The story, it is said, a d layers. | ¥ i “u:]eel;e;r?lf;el;m ucla;, YET™ | fords both Miss Joy and Mr. Boyd ’""meb s Sadie” is a story about| With ample opportunities for the Wy k. working gitl who|display of their artistry. Miss :ne::‘xh'subway guard. They fall'JOY i8 seen as a tomboy daughter in love with each other. But the of a schooner captain with a ro- J J ind. Mr. Boyd course of true love never <|x;~ lu;‘::“”;‘;]‘; :‘;"“ n‘;‘ nm‘r‘irl:h A win s mgu (I igtasop: o : ;,(lurlls out to be a regular he-man Sltos x saied ot il B8 when fate throws him and th» gets her cherished opportunity td go to Patis as buyer for her stor2 appoar- tutelage | girl he loves into the clutches of The marriage that had been pla: ned is indefinitely postponed, and the subway guard is henrmmken_. But he is injured in an aeci- dent on the dgy-Sadie is to sail. a Chinese bandit chief, played by Walter Long. Robert Edeson and Arthur Hoyt have strong parts in the produc- tion, and the cast as a whole is And Sadie comes to him. So they said to be exceptionally clever. get married after all. After this comes the surprise of the picture. This we will not tell you. This is a brilliant picture. Doro- |3 thy Mackaill was never better. s)o i8 convincing. Jack Mulhall "agts t rt-of a subway guard|a m'rnd well. Charles “Mur- ray 18 _;l.nyi amusing. "I “IF MARRIAGE FAILS” i AT COLISEUM TUESDAY | A cafg_scene in which the d.- ners an&‘nncer! 4t the fashion- able restaurant . “Venecia” enter and leave the place by means of actual® gendolas propelled along little canals,” and in which the o %| dance floor is a street in Venics. | “THE ‘PLENND c'"“" |'| surrounded by the lapping of wa- | NOW SHOWING, COLISEUM | |ter at the foot of the great marble p— %2l teps, is ome of the npec:rcul::r eatures of “If Marriage Fafls,” The twa okt NN et tn :}l:dner Sullivan's second produs- Sl < YasbiodDiutes EpE 8 ‘h.e. tion. Interpreted by an exception- cast of “The Splendid Crime.” )" .y which includes such excel- Wilikmede Jitig'y ;e wast Fuey lent thesplans as Jacqueline Lod ddunt - proXuUSCoR siastivg. PUEY, gan, Belle Bennett, Cissie Fitzger- Lanfell, AL least, they, were Wlud Jean Hersholt, Donald Mac, victors voted in a nation-wide contest. They are Florence Vandiver, a brunette beauty from Spartanburg, South Carolina, and "May Bette-| ridge, a ‘golden haired girl whose ‘home 1s in Los Angeles. Miss Vandiver, one of the most| noted beauties. of the South, and Miss dge, winner of num- tude contests, wera *a magazine beauty con- - and-as & reward were given parts in Mr. de Mille's picture. Each showed excellent ability, the producer-director said. ! The- featured players in “The M ‘Crime,”. which js an or-! :mu _.comedy. drama by de uflh. luludo Nell Hn‘lb! ton, Anne and Anthon v Jowit m Clark wrote the MWh‘man Donald and Clive Brook, and ai- rected in such a way that the fine Italian hand of John Ince is clear- 1y discernible, “It Marriage Fails,” which comes to the Coliseum Theatre for its first showing here on Tuesday, is one of the most interesting - and daring pictures which has been released in a long time; ;The shams and foibles of the social world as well as the truth and genuineness of the litt} volatile, lovable Italian girl wio is the leading character, ar? etched with a clearness and ea- | tertaining quality that makes the ) production remarkable. ¥ el » i ALL TRADES ul% your ood jobs. Phone 473, John Holler, Prop. —® . - Finger Waving . specialty last time tomight at the Colisewm.the Fern Beauty Parlors. —adv. THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE MONDAY, FEB. 13, 192, (OLORS 1O COMFORT Ii BODY RI:'I*‘I\."I.IIIJ’\'I'.H 1T11\ ACTIY h RIDING PRICES iTURE TAND 1928 MOD [iL llere are svine of the m New York automobile show. which were heretoid HOME EDUCATION “THE CHILD’S FIRST SCHOOL IS THE FAMILY"—Froebel. Issued by the National 8 West 40 Street, New York City. These articles are appearing weekly in our columns. NABS KANSAS BAD GLENDALE, Ca!, Teb. i3—Twol convicted slayers, caped ' from the Kansas State prison at Lan- | sing, are back in custody ‘because | they made the mistake of choo ing an old-time Minnesota she for a victim in a California d store robbery. Dan MeGrath and Neil e e e eeeeeeeeeeeeed | (0t away from the Kansas prison “0, see how it is snowing! Mo- ) mingling of what we had told her!by crawling nearly a mile through ther, tell me a story about littls|with several surprising touches of ‘a boiler room sewer partly filled Mr. Ground Squirrel who lives in|her own, which I am bound 'to with hot water. the mountains and hides away!call original. Characters familiar| The night Sheriff L. J. lots and lots of nuts for the,time|in other stories were brought .in |Redwood Falls, Minn., ved when snow comes,” began Angela, | also, notably “Gray Hagle” and southern California for a visit, aged four, looking out of the “Old Coy-ote” pronounced de- he went into a deugstore to buy nursery windows at ,the falling | liciously by the young narrator a paper and found himself facing | | flakes amid whose maze the greai | with the original Spanish accent.|the guns of two bandits. Being | pine trees of our glorious West | The introduction of these charac- unarmed, he obeyed their com- lifted dark boughs to the sullen |ters was a departure from the va |mands to clevate his hands. sky. “Tell me about the little|rious forms in which our grouid| “I'll certainly know those fel- Ground Squirrel family and the|squirrel folk had yet appeaibd. |luwn it I ever see them again,” he | babies with stripes’ down their | Angela’s romance made a .mui?ar ORI St i aTeht T gt WA backs and their dear little cheeks|“hit” with her family and from!the while he hoped that the boys| full of pinon nuts,” wheedled An-|that time on we often called upon|back home wouldn't gela to whom the story of the lit-|her to be the story teller. | humiliation. tle ground squirrels, as well as| Within the last two years 1| 7The Minnesotan one of the! stories of m other animals have noticed a decided improve-|hundreds of thousands who | abounding in our locality had been | ment in her language as she lets the Tournament of Roses pageant | told and retold from her baby- her imagination wander into thesc at Pasadena, and in the sea of|so hood.. when her brown eyes had!delightful fields. Frequent ques-|iaces he spotted one of the fwo |y grown wide at the “Doings of|tions regarding her story as she | zunmen who had made him Doctor Jack Rabbit,” compiled for |tells it help her continually and |gtraighten out vertically. But the her special benefit, up to the time |awaken new ideas. § of humanity swept hi of which I write when the demand [ Th2 plan, happened upon as 1 pway from his prey and he loui| for stories about animals | have told you, has certainly prov-|ine chance to make a capt also had become almost continu- ous. — Kindergarten Association, w M | m e Smith | No, You Tell Me a Story By. NORA TREW hi Klise of | in | o learn of his | SNy ol ! g1 other ed worth while. For two weeks the offi vl S Sl o A lm:l come west “to rest” continues MILLER ARRIVES HERE 1 s quiet searc One mun George Miller, mine resci® man with the U. S. Bureau of | Mines, recently appointed to Al- aska, arrived in Juneau on the steamer Admiral Rogers. He ex- pects to, leave tomorrow on the steamer Yukon for Anchorage and will work chiefly in The Al- aska Railroad belt. Mr. Miller comes from Pittg-' burgh and succeeds R. G. Thorn-, burg. While*at Seattle enroute north he met and conferred with B. D. Stewart, chief of the Bu-! If 1 expected a profest, 1 was|'eau of Mines operations in Lht Territory. mistaken. The joy of creative | power seized the child. She was S s e to make the story herself. Her FOX RANCHER HERE | eyes shone. All the abundant ma- ] terial she had at her tongue's end | J. P, Ibach, fox rancher from Lemesurier Island, arrived here regarding the life and habits of the’ dear little animals so beloved [on the Margnita, accompanied by his wife. He brought approxi-i to her baby heart she wove into a little narrative about Mamma and |mately $10,000 worth of blue fox Daddy Ground Squirrel and Billy [pelts with him and will ship Blinkers, their son, favorite char |these south on an early steamer. o acters in our household tales. { The story was a curious inter-’Qld papers for sale at The Empire. ! “0, Angeia,” T protested, same old tale! [I've told least three times today; have something different.” “But I like the tiny brown ground squirrels,” insisted the child, “the cunning babies that live under the rocks.” “Listen, Angela,” I said, “let’s play a new game. Come, sit here on Mother's lap where you can see the snovilakes and the big pine trees and the dark mountains over there where the tiny ground | squirrels hide, and you tell me a story.” “that it at do let's ~ VARIETY WILL HEREAFTER FRISCO CAFE " JAHODA and POOLOS, Props. ORDERS TAKEN FOR HOT TAMALES ‘AND . CHILI CON CARNE MADE FRESH FOR EVERY ORDER ‘ " All Our Meals Cooked in’ odan on 118 chassié; All of the men all ! said, the, drug store at Glendale. | Redwood ‘sured gooc steamer be Ix<u.hl were on 5Centst00ne NOTHING IN OUR STORE OVER ONE DOLLAR Wonderful Bargains in 3, 10 and 25¢ Goods ‘Notions — Drys dea'—’roya——l\'ovelfiei—- Stationery—Art Goads—Curios—Household * " Goods—Toilet' Articles—Candy at Mail S OF AUTO MAKERS lower right: Essex Supore cars are remarked for only seen in high-p 1 MINNESOTA SHERIFF ON VACATION MEN IN CALIFORNIA Park he the dance the police. The irrounded and three ere arrested. Two of them were cGrath and Smith. They 1l itted that they were fugitives om the Kansas prison, polics and confessed the robbery of of and the e cean on saw one floor, as the sheriff from Minn,, resumed ‘Whereupon Falls, s vacation. AR T S O MGRE THAN $6,800 PAID NORTHWESTERN LOSSES BY AGENTS More than $6,800 have been aid by national insurance com- panies Akroy; au. agents to cal merchants Who shipped in- from Seattle on the Northwestern on Decem- r 11 of last year Because the steamer had an isually large shipment of from the south it was me time before the insurance a8 straightened. All losses paid merchandise shipments, good amount going to local ocery stor: building mei: | “"Illll"llllllillllllIllllllllllllflllflllmllIIIIIIIIIIIHHIII!IIIHHllllfllllllllllll 7:30 Hnl«[ fml To vour hearts Bebe Daniels Is swre To steal them Wiil: her new Captivating Comedy-L'rama “The Splendid Crime” William de Mille's Paramount Picture “UP AND WOOING” Fighting Heart Comedy i 3 FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ALWAYS IN SEASON And many times out of season, we offer you the finest Fruits and Vegetables that are ‘raised. Before anything else this store is run to please you. 4 We pride ourselves on eur cuper, excellent Delivery elvre, CALIFORNIA GROCERY PHONE 478 “Best. in, Everything” & THE HOTEL OF ALASKAN HOTELS ° THE GASTINEAU OUR SERVICES TO YOU BEGIN AND END AT THE GARG PLANK OF EVERY rusmlm-ommo )OAI' o oo ALASKA MEAT 4.9, Wholesale and: Retail Butcners: PHONE 39 A Painless Permanent Wave The New Frederic’s Vita-Tonic Compould Is the Answer AT TERRELL’S—$15.00 the Har- returning was Claude on , who was accompanied by his [ ANNOUNCING OUR NEW. POLICY BROWN’S STORE BE KNOWN ‘AS NS Dollar ~ Order House PM Our Windows ' Get Your House meg JUNEAU PAINT STORE House of Quality and !cou-y Seatde Fruit & Produce Co. o fAstmasliti, - () Strictly Fresh E ggs ‘Selects—per dozen Mediums-— dozen Potatoes, 30 pounds 3 Alaska Rutabngns, 4 pounds ... Parsnips, 3 pounds : Turnips, 8 pounds ... . California Bunch Carrots ....... WA A Solid Head Lettace .. ... ) Brussel Sprouts, 30c per 1b., 2 .. Fancy Rhubarb, per pound ... .New Potatoés, per pound . Florida Grapefruit, 2 for Flonda Grapefruit, extra large, 3 !or.... : Pears, | per dozen l Oranges—per doz. ........ ._50¢, 60c, 70c, 80e Hubbard Squash—Green Peppers—Egg’\ Plant — Parsley——Spmacb—Cnbba‘p—— Dm;—-Rmsins—F igs—Apricots— Cucumbers { Fresh Shipment of BUTTER and W HAMS and BACON —— e

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