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" PICKETT' PALACE TONIGHT” NE W’b M.-G-M First National Pictures, Inc., presents “An Affair of the one day be able to win her affec- tion, The exotic Myrna Loy seen with Blue as the in “Across the Pacific,” part of the woman heart of a fellow voyage to Southern for the sake of carrying out a vow of vengeance which < she and brother have sworn against him Blue plays the part of Wyncote, son of a defaulting bhank president, who dies, leaving the penalty of his misdeeds as his only heritage to his son. Among the previously native girl plays the who wins the passenger on a seas blows out his brains. Stefani Ellis) and Maria (Myrna Loy) Follies” with Lewis Stone, Billie Dove and Lloyd Hughes and M.-G.-M. Comedy “THE LIGHTER THAT FAILED” This Great Show for 40 Cents COMING TUESDAY ‘PAT O’'MALLEY in “THE ROSE OF KILDARE” Attractions At Theatres [ SIS BT SN | CHORUS GIRL TALE LIKED AT PALACE “An Affair or tne Follies,” First National picture presented at the Palace Theatre last night i3 a most enjpyable sort of cinema entertainment, It combines an intensely inter- esting screen story with splendid acting and. an unusual array of beautiful girls. Lewis Stone, Bil- lie Dove and Lloyd Hughes are featured in the picture, while Ar- thut Stone, Arthur Hoyt and Bert- ram Marburgh contribute excel- lent supporting roles. The story from which the play was adapted, a “best story of the Yyedr” entry, written by Dixie Wil- son under the title of “Here Y'Are Brother,” ‘treats seyeéral _colorful phages of New York City dite with a warmly human reallsm seldom equalled on the screen. More. over it has a “punch” and spark. ling comedy to offset touches of pathos. 3 [ e P PRI WNRELT PP YL | COMEDY SHOWING AT THE COLISEUM | - i . “What Happened To Father,” a ‘Warner Bros, production based on the Mary Roberts Rinehart story, is the hilarious account of what took place on a certain evening, when staid hen-pecked profegsor Bradberry attended a Dback-stage party at a Broadway musical show. It is at the Coliseum for the last times tonight. On the. quiet the old boy has been writing plays under the name of Canfield. . Canfield cannot be. located on this feverish night, and the Professor, besides woozy ad- ventures with wine, woman and song, is accused of having mur- dered him. The cast includes ngar Oland who is featured, Flobelle Fair. banks, Willlam Demarest, Vers Lewis, John Miljan, Hugh Allan, Cathleen Calhoun and Jean Lef. lerly “What. Happened to Fath- r” I8 a play, for the whole family —. heart-warming, kindly, rough. and -tumble farge, and Warner Qland’s characterization is the best of his great career. He, of course, is “Father.” 7 iROSE OF KILDARE" I x’, PALACE TOMORROW | e Roge of Kildare,” is sald m be. cummed tull of drama, pa- qhds, romance and comedy. The, snperlative, cost headed by Helene hadwick ‘in’ the title role and Pat ()'M)ll«y and Henry B. w.unau ineludes - Lee Norln. Edwip J, Brady, Ena Gregory and Carroll Nyu. It is a’ ;toq.y‘ of Qn lrlph colleen with a_golden voice, The scene -~ changes, yp# Ireland to Kimberly ip South Africa, wpate M Nu- nan, the |uyer of Bma youth, has_strayed i, sepreh of fortune, There fate carries her, but she tinds that Ahhoub he wrote a wng to her years before and prom. iged to return, he has forgotten, ‘for he hn married’ another. ; The passage of years finds that history repeats itself. |children of the suicidc {avenge his death. | Young Wyncote is |tim on whom their | wreaked. - This the thrilling story - PLOT AGAINST NEW KING 206U BELGRADE, Oc¢t.1.—The news- paper Politika said today it h learned from Durazzo, ‘\llmnm, that eleven conspirators against King Zogu were summari ed in the masiet place zo on Sunday swear to the only vie- hatred can be the starter of at Duraz- This was done with the new king's order within | 24 hours after the discovery of} l | a plot and which 200 of being implicated imprisoned. declared. suspeceted are already Martial law has been SUMMONS FOR PUBLICATION No. 1162 KA In the District Court for the Dis- trict of Alaska, ber One, at Ketchikan. Pauline - Buckner, Plaintiff. James E. Buckner, Defendant, The President of the United| States of America to the Above ' Named Defendant, Greeting: You are hereby pear in the District Court for the Territory of Alaska, First Divis- ion, at Ketchikan, Alaska, witirin thirty (30) days after the last publication of this summons, namely, withip thirty (30) days after the 22nd day of October, 1928, in case this summons is published, or within forty {(40) days after the date of its Brl‘vlu- upon you in case this summons is served upon you personally, above named plaintiff on the said court in titled action. Said - plaintiff in said action demands the following relief: a dissolution c¢f the bonds of matri mony heretofore and now existing between plaintiff and defendant. And in the event you fail to so appear and answer the plaintiff will take judgment against you for want thereof and will apply to the court for, the relief de- file in the above-en- inbefore stated. Witness, the Honorable E. Coke Hill, Judge of said Court and the Seal of said Court hereunto af- ber, 1928 (Seal of District Court) JOHN H. DUNN, By Katherine L. Clerk. Kehoe, Deputy. Date of Order for Service by Publication, Sept 5, 1028, First Publication, Qet. 1, 1928, Last Publication, Oct. 22, 1928. A. H. ZIEGLER, Attorney for Plaintiff. 2 l PRINCES & . When the summer pleasures of the Canadian Rockies at Banff and Lake Louise are over, the trags-continenta) e John | Division Num- s | required. to ap-1 and answer the complaint of the| manded in her complaint as here-| fixed on the 27th day of Septem-| ATHLEEN T1 IE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, OCT. MACMILLAN RETURNS FROM NORTH AFTER 14 MONTHS EXPLORATION | her| ruined depositors is Joseph Blanco! (Sydney de Gray), who in a frenzy | (Paul | hang- ! | t | New scicntific facts that will be studied in schoolrooms a. few years hence are, being brought bnck by the Rawson-MecMillan-Field expedition after 14.months in Labrador and Bafflin Land. | Lieut. Comm. Donald B. MacMillan (right) is leader. In the party were Dr. threc vessels used. neth Rawron (lower inset), o | WISCASSETT, Me. Oct The Rawson-Maciliilan-Field pedition has sailed back to eivili |ization with the results of 14 months of study and adventure in the fastnesses of northern Lab rador, Rarly September! brought expedition’s little flotilla bacl Ithe tranquil waters of the She !scot River and to Wis |whence the explorers and scien {tists sailed in Jume, 1927. Near- ‘ly 30 men make up the personnel jof the party. Its Isisted of the schooner the fishing schooner |the motorboat Seeko. | Facts hitherto unknown, sub- jects hitherto only partly under- |stood, lore long hidden from the {ken of white men, are being {brought back to be added to civ- ilization’'s vast store of knowl- {edge. Meterology, &eology, bot- any, zoology and anthropology ! have been in the making during the past 14%months Lieut. Comm. Donald B. M IMillan is the leader of the ex- pediticn —his eleventh voyage in 19 years of Arctic exploration. With him were six scientists of the Field Muscum in Chicago, for which specimens were gaithered | With MacMill also was Ken- {neth Rawson, young son of Fred- |erick Rawson, Chicago Dbanker, who financed the expedition | Radio waves already have car- ‘ried to the world some knowledge |cf what the expedition accom- plished. Dr. Duncan Streng, an- | thropelogist, who undertook to live among the Mascopie Indians, |has ‘learned much of the history land . daily life of these litte- known northlanders ‘ Sites of old Eskimo Ihave been uncovered ex asset vessels Jowdoin, and con~ Radlo ¥ villages uing left of the finmcla.l backer. Zed Tunit race . have | d. Who these forgot- were no one as yet ibly, says MacMil- was confused, with || it is indicat- ed inite( 'e€) @ abra- latter are of H by the heen st lul folk ten know lan I Poss this race who. 1 MacMil ) asserts, not Fsk'mo ion has been western coast Vegetation, of the whcle encompassed in the survey been studied and specimens served. Much Information tradictory to that given by best authorities has been gath- ered As the explorers by snowmobile equipped with runners—Eskimos and Indians were amazed. Every- | where the vehicle went it created | censagion, and the wondering na- tives gathered found o eximing jevery part of the thachine. | The honie cf the @&pedition, at’ Bowdoin, Harbor, Pield Bay, was the me of Bskimos and Indians for miles around. = During the long arctic night the nati |came to bask in the glow of elec-| tric lights, to watch the magic of erta:nty Explora jalong the Land animal life |n|~1|u-<l of Baf- bird and regic have pre con- inland ear fared enterta.nmeni ward cn radlo waves from the | United States. Visitors came to the MacMillan headquarters daily Night after night they listened to broadeasts from, New York Boston, Chicago and dozens of other places. All that these natives know of | modern . inventions—radio, ¢ tric lights, movies, motorboat mator car and, airplanes been brough to them in sive MacMillan -expeditions and vorne north- Teeing Up at Vancouve: and Victoria All Year courses of rare excellence and any Y/CTORIA Gowe Ciu8 visitor may secure playing priviieges at the “Hotel Vancouver” or the “Empress;” at Vigtoria. - The scenery at Vancouver and Vic- torla 1s wonderful, ‘and the ealmon fishing and other fishing is so good that It intrigues the most pessimistic fisherman, provided he tries out the possibilities of Vancouver Island. ng. |one is lnfl-hnum to. Califorja east-bound tween Vancouver, Victoria and Seattie is one of the most spectacularly in teresting voyages in North America These steamers make the summer tri| to Alaska, but in the late fall anc winter gre § connecting link bBtweer Canada and the United States. Dur ing the winter. Vapcouver and Vic- toria are well worth a visit, providing ] through Canads 0 i | United 8tate:. Duncan Strong, (mpper inset), the jj motion pictures, to listen to music | The schconer Bowdoin (left) is cne of the! anthropologist, and Ken- VATICAN PAPER DISCUSSES U. S. PRES.CAMPAIGN Utmost Reserve Being Maintained, Catholic Side ROME, Oct. 1.~Cognizancs the religious sapect of the Ame can Presidential campaign is tak- len for the first time by the Ob- se re Romano, newspaper, which ithe annonncements. An editorial said: “Qun the Cath- side the utmest raserve ghas been maintained Fanaties would not accept explanations and. those cting in bad faith would have no {need of them.” ’ The newspaper said wlhrnu» of the Church has been |proot *of absolute impartiality of IW Church - which prociaimed --~r.m"- regard to political long they do not harm religious interests.” | The editorial in the |added: “American legisl and practical poliey have renderad pos- sible a free expansion of the Cath- life in the United tes in a |way to awaken admiration, {might say even envy, in |countries, . The two eminent men ‘contending for the Presidency have | made absolutely .correct declara- tions on the religious matter.” — e An optimist is a poor ys that the as uIi‘ | | | faol who |thinks now a. wife doesn't have |to stop, to: fix her hair, doesn’t have clothes that need to be but. |toned - up and. doesn’t even have to stop to put on stockings, she’ll ‘he able to get breakfast on time. —_—————— |LET Almqupst. Press Your Suid We call and deliver. Piona. 528. Is! of {0 Vatican uses for public newspaper one other 1928. 6OV, SMITH'S * LIQUOR SPEECH MAKES BIG HIT Democratic Nominee's At- tack on Prohibition Re- ceived Enthusiastically (Continuen rrom Paze One ) [1oon, ‘“‘dispised of the | American peoplc | He stirred a cheers when he ected, to enforce the law, and wi greeted with another nois: tumult when he declared that a President he would regard it as his duty to recommend to Con- gress both the modifieation of the Volstead Act and the Pro- hibition amendment Laughter and applause greeted the nominee as he remarked that right by rousing round of promised, if el- in 1919 and 1920 millions of Americans. believed that hard liguor could be banished from the country “by an amendment to the Constitution and passing laws."” Not a Question of Liquor or No Liquor The Governor added, “this fs 'not a |liquor, question of liquor or no Prohibition or anti-Pro- ‘hllnlmn The question before the merican people today is, ‘what the best thing to do about it in the interest of the country.'" No Enforcement Gov, Smith wound up his firat stumping tour herc by assalling |the Republicans for the way they had been enforcing Prohibition, declaring that they had permit- [ted patronage considerations to| :h.n.u- them, and corruption crept linto the law enforcement He insisted that millions Americans are not agreed with |Mr. Hoover in his declaration that Prohibition is a noble ex- periment, and asserted that Pro hibition itself meant nothing to the Republican Party Light Liquor Best Remedy “I am perfectly satisfied that ane, reasonable and scientific ( tion of intoxicating liquor in the Volstead Act would do more than any other one thing to take out of this country the {hard lquor that can be fcund in every village, hamlet, town and ity in the United States,” shont- |ed Gov. Smith to the cheers of | his auditors. Ganeiand Likes Prohibition Gales of laughter were provok- ed when the nominge observed that “ganglabie $itp Protty Htap of« the earth, éntirely satisfied with Prohibition, in love with the Volstead Act, because their presence upon the statute books thas opened the gateway of oppor- tunity.” Boo Mrs. Willebrandt At one juncture Gov. Smith mentioned . Mrs, Willebrandt name, and booing dould he heard throughout the ' hall that was jammed beyond its seating capacs ity of 8,000, His first mention of the Volstead Act also brought booing, and there were groans when he related that a waiter in the Senate restaurant in Washington lost his job “because of carelessness’ after dropping a bottle of Iiquor on .the floor e also {of n Rosy chceks wsed of good healtk; now they simply mear. e cash register at the drug store has been ringing up some more profitable sales e There ,are times when it looks if Dame Fashion was trying to make it as easy for a woman to change. her' clothes as Dame Nature has tvr her to change her mind. to e a sign |- \ | by || There is much imitation vnnin. on the market. Watch for it. It has a loud and flashy tdste. Go“ cooks démand the delicate, W'e flavor of pure vanilla - -sdd“ OOH! GEE WHIZ LIbjA TAST TIMES EE— TONIGHT “What Heppened'to Father” with Warner Olaud and All Star Cast Prices—10-20-40-Loges ,,,V,AT_ e COLISEUM TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY MONTE BLUE in “Bitter Apples” AND HO¥V 50 cents e A Scatter Rugs with Prussels center and braided rug finish in o] colors Special, $1.45 et e e e 12 pounds T package TONY SIMIN (‘ROCERY SUGAR CORN FLAKES 7 packages POST TOASTIE 50 pound SACK FLOUR , __PHONE Yo msems umhruhwrb The Brazen H uwiec' Althiough we brag a lot about eur urvpoe and eourtesy, we wish to wargl you s our fruit is getting fresher alt the time. Our apples, especially, m wiy out -of control. Please do mot be shocked if they smile at you and wink—for they look a’lmost bright enough to tak,— alld too pretty to eat. CALIFORNIA aRocEfiY PHORE 478 Free defivery three times “fl’