The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 23, 1929, Page 3

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REST RN & THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, \VEDNESDAY, JAN. 23, 1929. o e Wi 7. 4 " { o R e HEVRECRERRECEGECRRTLRRREEDORREOY s e Elmishet ling the high T 5 - i+ “wii| WAMPUS AWARDS COVETED HONORS OF 329 TO THIRTEEN BABY STARS [ rineers P - 5 - and, as a boy, he sail such a mild se says his memory does not recall ason jammer ed just such a ship Sweden.| s g g 1 The maximum (day) tempera- ® Hanson comes from a 1 line o s i 4 ¥ J lture at Dawson Christmas Day d ( farers, and his: brother is to ; ) " P | was 12 above zero. The mini-| ¥ da ycaptain of a large ¥ X ¥ : e 1 ! Ll 'nmm (night) temperature was 6 g R % Hanson’s sea adventure was 3 . .2 : 3 {below zerc. The day following L ¢Captain Salvati Cosmopoli- | : < _ . 3 1 . | Christmas the maximum was 15 - —- - Pabove | D AST TIMES TONIGHT 1 new T nd tha labove and the minimum | - i of th men who 3 TONIGHT Last 2 Times out of Nova Scotia to batile t { FAMCUS WCMAN DIES ED.CY fi F o | This feature is at the Pa AT AGE OF 101 YEARS P n A Thursday. | - L] 1 ‘A i It is a vivid tale of a divinity | Mrs. Martha Mclnnes, mother s8I fod student w king to the sea, a of ' W. W. B. Mcinnes, former | Governor cf Yukon Territory and | later Judge of the County Caurt 'at Vancouver, died recently at | New Westminster, aged 101 yea She was the widow of 1‘1)12 Thomas R. Mclnnes, one time |Lieutenant - Governor of British | Columbia but wrec his soul before |twist of fate works him | Most of the picture was he higa seas in 2 John 8. Robertson dir 2 sailing | | Paulinet Starke, Marceiina ). Tawe! Sam deGras . «t A/l-at- , Way to The I the Metro-Go! {illmed studios. € Suj € “the first A’ UNDERWORLD DRAMA | (nics ne Sof t-cook OF THE victure in which only two womc BARBARY CORST'" | 1phate: it it “Tué Biatie Bheatey . a'Thousand ¢ withe to be s yn at the Colizeum MAE BUSCH ™ oo o kit g AND duetic ) Dove, leading TOM O'BRIEN |indy, ana e Plgth, RedEL) DIRECTED BY the heroine RAWILLIAM NEILL | The fact that cnly two feminine | appear is accounted for by N i the nature of the story which is THURSDAY jomantic in the extreme. “The Black Pirate” is a rip-roaring tal Oceans St the sea, reflecting the spirit o Seventeenth Century piracy, in consequence is dominated men. But the adventure of pid fire love affai 'EGGS You boil only a few eggs at a time 50 you can take all instantly from the water when done. Like- wise Hills Bros. roast their coffee a few pounds at a time by 'a con- tinuous process. Every berry is roasted evenly and a matchless flavor is assured. No other coffee can taste like Hills Bros. because F none is roasted the same way. Comlng HILLS BROS Thursday COFFEE “Black o iyl Pirates” SERVICE” star is a r forin i ngged ba al hundred pieturesque pl-| aid to present her ver The Western Association of Motion Picture Advertisers l\és chosen these film ingenues as the most likely to achieve cinem; fame | future. (1) Helen Twelvetrees, (2) Doris Dawson, (3) Sally Blane, (4) Jean Arthur, (5) Anita Page, (6) Ethlyne Clair, (7) : nunn, (8) Caryl Lincoln, (9) Helen Foster, (10) Mona Rico, (11) Betty Boyd, (12) Loretta Young, (13) Doris Hill. ' Chicago Taking Rank as World Money Mart 3588 oom PARK SERVICE; Al % L e ‘ This year's noliday season will P “YOUA ;1}4/1571\'/1 LA;]NDRY iN ILL-HEALTH g0 down in histor; s one of the jor [Director Resigns —Horace| mild ather conditions ever known ia the Yukon, srding sen interpretation. [the mercury stood in the vicinity of 50 degrees below zero, and few | people ventured out and the mer- timers say 'y hav er seemn to the Dawson News. Last year Dry Cleaning and Pressing ed Successor At Theatrcs SR | ke g In New Building on Shattack Way s Jord has beer s at the | R % . 8 : : : 1 is y o g ; [atfice of Gov. Georze A. Parks,| B o ot e fatoosehide, who 45 one of ‘the or- “'HE LAUNDRY DOES IT BEST” hat Stephen T. , becau —— — as tendered his resig- ector of the National| 4 : to Roy 0. West, Sec- Lest anyone think that Chicago jretary of the Int In accept- has a monopoly on underworld|ing the resignation of Mr. Mather, drpmas, along comes Gotham Pro-|{Secretary West expressed his deep ductions with “San Francisco|regret and referred to the intensely Nights,” now at the Palace Thea patriotic and unselfish work that and offers a reallyintelligent s Mr. Mather had rend the Na- with thefmajor parts of it tion since he came to the Depart-| the famous old “Barbary Coast”|ment of the Interior in January, and the characters all denizens|1915. of the ‘metropolis of the Western| Mr. Mather is a member of the underworld—and yet does not in-{ Mayflower Descendents, the Sons dulge «in ‘an orgy of crime or in-lof the American Revolution, the diseriminate bloodshed. Sigma Chi Fraternity, American With Percy Marmont as th2 star|Chemical So , and several oth- a refined, intelligent impersona-|er organizations. His clubs include ; L E v o tion is looked for—and given.|the Cosmos, National Press, of| W& B o - - - ; % 1 ‘When you add to this a really re-| Washington; University, Chicago| £ i NN < . 4 ; ’ » | markable performance by MaelAthletic, and Flossmoor Country, The phenomenal grewth of its banks and its stock exchange is placing Chicago in a prominent| Busch asothe dance hall girl who|Chicago; Down ‘Town and Chem-|pesiticn among the werld’s meney markets. La Salle Street (lower right) is the center of the city’s longs for somethifg better than|ists, New. York. fingncial activities. R: Arthur Wood (upper right) is President of the Stock Exchange, an interior ! » her life and a perfect “wow” of| In 1926 he was awarded the gold | yiew of which is shown ‘at the left. a - characterization by Tom' O%!medal of the National Insiitute of st olbailiis Brien as a tough, but good-hearted |Social Sciences for his services to|eral summers thereafier, boil bouncer in a honky tonk cabaret.|the Nation in the development and|while in high school and college, thé spectator has something to|administration of the nationalfhe continued th s laborer s T#SAN FRANCISCO NIGHTS" ||Of illness, h AND MT. ETNA AT PALACE | |Nation as D! I 7 R, M. GRAN: i ated Press Staff Writer) jand north by a great wholesale 1 by i | CHICAGO, Jan, 23-—Proph-is|and commission market, {the pivotal point of the nation’s remember for quite a while. parks throughout the country. The|and in other ca about lum-|} who foredoomed Chicago to ob- The news reel shows Mt. Etna versity of Califorflia from|ber camps and sawmills, and occa- ty as a .noney mart have 191’:’:&)5 on the su.nlh 547 in tecent eruption and this in itself | which he graduated in 1887, eon-|siohally in mines It was while sed their guesse: ere. was no hint of greatness; ' in. the street of 1852, when one| rred upon him in 1924 the hon-|in the logging business, when he| La Salle Street—grain cap ; 1 y degree of Doctor of Laws,|saw trees so ruthlessly destroyed, public utility center and the home [0f Chicago's early 1 3 o ld’s hen by Seth Paine, an ad-} - i g 578 lief in {he neces.|Of one of the world!s fastest(ened t he was the recipient of several |that his strong belief in the neces growing financlal exchanges. . has|vocate of spiritualism is «:a good featyre nearly hall ajf reel in length. The lava is seen|ora pouring down acros the fertile|an nks was nlrvi » fields for miles wide and the|other honorary degrees ~[sity for the conversation of ma. STOWINE fnancial exehaness R e e ban tefror of the panic stricken popu- Horace M. Albright was appoint-|tural resources took deep root. i 11 with: Wall Street | Paine and his friends thored: 4t (5 latiion is vividly registered on the|ed Director of the National Park University Graduate l“yi“ffi’,‘)‘;‘“q:?"‘ all Street B ki the onads of | [““BKIMNER'S BIG IDEA" | lau Dirootor of the Service ana{ing &pecialited n history, politigap{ReTous maturity began to appear Ml e ! | « i A @l along the street a dozen years azo| Perhaps this counscl was not| | IS NOW AT COLISEUM | = .. Iserved in that capacity during the|science, and law and he popalarly Of Food. cleaw |llmess of Mr. Mather. Prior to|took a post graduate cou fast-moving comedy is evidenced|that he had been Superintendent of |at the U ¥ by the warm Teception acorded the| Yellowstone National Park andfollowed by FBO production, “Skinner's Big|Field Agsistant Director of the Na-|at Georgcto terwards! iin” 1ho erection of the Contin-80umd, for the bank failed—but € I MWicntal and’ Commereial Bank, ihe|Peérhaps the failure was due to) ity of (‘““i”r"l“'[Federal Reserve skyscraper and|thesrigid tenets Paine prescribed.| COUrséSitne monumental Illinois Mer-|HIS" banking - rules included th A cliants Bank Buflding. All clusi-jfollowing: He went to| ington. Because of his familylered .about the ancient boaz ASSOCIATED PRESS SPORTS EDITOR' v in Was » 1dea,” which opened last night. at |tional Park Serv e s i oSSR IRESY to (1o one to ot ), £ the Colisenm. The mame of ‘Skin.| Washington in 1913, to work in the | background and “early expericnces”trade, the magnet that'had drawn debts. o 2 . ner is already well known to the | Pepartment of the Interior. He |mining law ‘iulcr.esna,d him and hc“uwm to La Salle Street. Not I gk “We loan to no one T- f‘“’ in —— it R fi 1Y a il 1 public through the stories by Hen- became Assistant Attorney in t_he specialized in []H“,. {ago the stock exchange signalized 5!’{mrder of anythin vhich has E past five—years brou'ght the most remtfl(able”fipmgres@' i ry Irving Dodge and their screen Department dealing mainly with| Mr. and Mrs. Albright were class-{a phenomenal awakening by m 4 life. - i 4 park matter: When | mates in college at Berkeley and'ing . into the “new' State Bank{ We loan nothing on 1 have{building. . iitate—believing that real in the history of sports .= Dempsey . Tunney .". Rickard’ portrayals by Bryant Washburn, national ; 4 who plays the title role in the lat- Mr. Mather became A<s‘i~ta.n! to| were m_urrml in 1915. Th 4 g wd $ e 3 1‘5 ; = e gy ; ‘;i’filfil’f"ififfl; i A lt!);el)f:l:.e(:lr};ail:lg:‘;‘:rigluf Nation- ;B.um(“};,gl‘::;z,f ahgl;t; ;\:Lru)m. Kiedfl SRS 18 Cibewing: ot 119 EEEAZIOE;EIM s and w0l ‘ (Tilden .. Cochet .‘j.‘WIlls .. Lenglen . mflgt"h‘ . Jones . Collett'{i fioiines fevm the M e e Gtontc 1 R 20 B MONT o, Mibrne 34 & imbaber of ?fi{l’«“fi!‘f{é’xfé'.ff..e’if_“;",fl"“fii\l"J\’: " faan wotins 10w in ¢+ Hagen .. Farrell .. . and many other personalities in great' ‘ help and get new blood. Instead |are today in effect, sociation, the: American B U 1008 con -) m’l‘n:lai;t was in 18 day, in' 7 - - [3 o Is Western Man of Mammologists, American Bison |tuted a record. | i y » S Cag fe B Ty T . ‘fi 2 e Mr. Albright was born in the|Sotiety, and the Izaak Walton| The: dingy, famous old | 1B dEanE10 of o dozen blocks) /(Alan J. Gould covered virtually all.these .%.". Now, in-sum-]! the old fossils. A charming love mark, . the Chica 1 jcentering « L Sa Street, : i o Tankue i e 4 . go. Board of{centering about La rect, | 7 interast between Martha Sleeper little mining town of Bishop, Inyo|League of America, being a pa 3 _ e UFaika i S £ | & i . R e o5 2 st e s Trojar Tt thtough the |County, Calir, on. Jan. §; 1880, Toyo | president of the Yellowstonefjizade, bulasie: e passtn oni IEHeRURICER Coposits CF bt L0 {marizing the significance of the period in ten articles for. this'| Coimty is unique in that it contains | Chapter and past first viee presi-p = F=00 7 o o g 1000,0 0¥, " ' i g 7wl 2 & £ ’ 3 e horas, whase first dirccto. | the highest ana lowest points of|dent of the Wyoming Division ot ¥hite 1::“:};»:; sdifice, sfenll Wanareasot brokcrs ntmn} | 'paper, he is bringing back the thrills; © © ! @ ral assignment this is, deserves a the United States proper,—Mt.[th Ln‘:‘gue, He is also an .h)n»;m Salle Streef 4 Lo e tabics 2 in the pite] b SR k great qeal of vredit for-his handl- Whitney, 14,496 ' feet above seaorary life member of .the National B inety-thrde i Venre - ngo ChiBRREARRUREATH ¢ Trad ’””.“””.7; ‘!WW f i e o€ Sheg Mtory, Matc Taylor ;evlel. M EDedth VRlley, 276 h'?; (,n.{jari'}'])k]:n 3:“:‘":’,‘“':] b xh; 81- cago's firet bank set the y1000 bushels of wheat alone are B A 1-7—- " “»‘a“’:_na.e__.i‘6_-\» ¢ YVS . vote the continuity. ae ow the level of the sea. 1Tt s Rk ne ’a 2 O'r[ ihn“’!‘ “r’x taking rooms in a La Salle otitraded yearly. | 3 i et ;4 region of mountains and deserts, honorary memher of the ~Tralllyuqging, but it was the building| The Stock Exchange alreads SEA FEATURE IS AT [ |dust over the range trom Yosemite|Riders of the Canadian Rockiesloe (ho Board of Trade in 153 |KNOWNH s the gretest kot J o oo PAEATEIGY THURSDAY | e Sfi“"“’g““’“" Parks, whose :“‘ z"lz“ffl‘ h“’ r"‘;’ "‘“"”" “1"“ that set® the forces of tyitrading in public utility securi-| [ Y ; e ' -~ ; v mountains Mr. Albright explored |Crockett Club—Colorel Roosevell’s qefinitely working in the s tties, is beginning to ime an! fmrs gans?’:;lemt‘rofmi;‘cead]g as a boy. When he was 13 years|old club of game hunters and con-ifayer, 5 2 alf of importance, with its 2 o p a:r:‘;’ f“u:e L:n the. screen, has| L. 28 1o ‘went.to work for his|servationists—the Cosmos Club Ofj Today the banks are strarcsi-|BEFicefit growth in transactions g ;onnd that it bas - put Mm’hsc’k grandfather, who had moved to|Washington, the Rot jeally located in an area flaniedjand 1,500 per cent aticd in 4 B i Tk e At Northern California and engaged | Masonic Order, gnd the Phi Delialon the east by, the world's ¢ 'M"!‘!n_l!!flhw S alsios . -ringthR y MR 26 ; in the lumber business.” For sev-| Pl legal Tratermity. jest retail cemter; on the west!last year, v ki

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