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PALACE RENEE ADOREE and CONRAD NAGEL in “HEAVEN ( EARTH” A Delightful Frenchy M-G-M NEWS and COMEDY | | “BE MY WIFE” Mae Pauly’s Orchestra gives Concert from 7 to 7:15 and plays for both shows -40 Lo"b\ 50 u‘n(\ Adm. 10-25. G THURSDAY The Big Comedy Production of the Year “VAMPIN VENUS” Featuring CHARLIE MURRAY and LOUISE FAZE l ! BIG ]‘l‘ ATURE TONIGHT 7:15 and 9:20 Attractions At Theaires | IN TALKIE AT COL n new | last most | stage | Man,” Theatregoers acclaimed a star at the Coliseum night when Fannic Eric famous comedienne of e her film debut in sereen ihe “My a special talkie production by \Vu-‘ ner Bros. For Miss Brice, garded principally as a portrayer of eomedy parts, reveals a dramatic talent that is as powerful as it was | unsuspected, and discloses the star as a player of unusual emotional heretofore re- depth. In the main, however, “My Man” gives to the famous Fannic | an expansive opportunity to | play her delicious comedy, and she | takes advantage of it to the fullest extent. “My- Man” is a tenderly appeal- ing story with much of mirth and a tear or two—and ‘through its! changing moods Fannie moves with an abandon and charm which is peculiarly her own. She is seen first as an East Side factory work- er, mother to her grown sister and her little brother, entertainer-ex- traordinary to all the girls in the shop, whom she delights with antics | at each noon hour. A man whom Fannie first sees at his work as a rauscle-ceveloper demonstrator in a drug store window, is later helped to a better job by her and when he finally asks her hand in mar- riage, life seems rosy. The sister, however, is planning to get him, and on the eve of Fannie’s wed- ding, she finds the two in each other’s arms. How she succeeds in spite of the bitterness of this disappoin‘ ment—winning hapniness and a name in Broadway lighte— are but incidents in a play of dra- matic power and great beauty. = | GOOD FEATURE IS | SHOWING, LALACE 2 2 Dainty, pretty and -clever Ilttle Renee Adoree is featured with Con- rad Nagel, popular movie star, in the production now at the Palace, for the last two times tonight. This prodaction is “Heaven' on' Earth,” and 18’ one of the bright spots in silent drama. It is & clever stors, | by ‘a elever cast, embracing com- edy, just a little pathos, night life in Paris; gay, free gypsy life, and just o Mttle war to bring a happy ending. :There is a daring break into the Geérman lines by a squad of Frenchmen ' who - rescue a girl| Jjust’as sghe is lined up before a fir- ing squad with: two.commands al- ready given—load and aim—but the “fire” is mever uttered and that| brings a dainty story to a quick finale. There is a good comedy and in- teresting weekly .and Mae Pauly’s orchestra plays a concert and for both shows. | CHARLIE MURKAY AT i | PALACE TOMORROW | e “"When Irish meets Greek, talk politics. The old saying is reversed, at least in First National's new come- dy special, “Vamping Venus,” in which Charlie Murray and Louise Fazenda are featured, which comes to the Palace tomorrow. Murray plays an Irish politician who -is- knocked unconscious in a New York caberet brawl and wakes up in ancient Greece. He finds that the political tricks of/today. work -with the gods and goddesses of that time, and soon Lecomes. dictator of the land. ‘The story offers Murray plenty they . |tional conventions *|and furious of cod ——— { (/STRALIANS EYE BYRD’S ANTA SYDNEY, ports that Commander Richard E. Byrd has found minerals in the Antarctic have brought regrets to many Australians that their gov- ernment did not explore the wind- swept icy wastes more diligently. Australia, July 10—Re- THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, CR()()\ BLUES FINDS IN | RCTIC WASTE No man in Australia is better qualified to express an opinion on this subject than Sir Edgeworth David, who besides being a world famous geologist, has had personal | experiences in the Antarctic re-| gions. From observations he made WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1929. TONIGHT 7:30—9 TERRITORY NOT BAD. SAYSLYLE Prohibition Chief Says Al- aska Is on Par with Re- mainder of Country 1 L0 IHIHIIIIIIII|IIHIHII||IIIIIIIIIIIIII!lIIIHIIIIIIHIIIHHHIIIIIIIII.'!. Before he left New Zealand for|when he was in that area, he con- < the Bay of Whales, Communder |cluded that a huge Antarctic coal- Prohibition conditions in Alaska Byrd was quoted as saying that he | field, yielding coal of similar qual-| are not materially f"”f’"‘"' than | did not intend to claim any of the |ity to the best Australian product,| clsewhere in the United States, 1h land he might discover for the|exists and extends for at least & | the opinion of Roy Lyle, 1 United ‘States. thousand mile§ under the Antarc-| tion Administrator for ‘the | The inference drawn here, now |tic snows. Copper pyrites and| vestern District, comprise that Commander Byrd has claimed [ molybdenite have also been found,| Oregorl and Washington. He | Antarctic areas for his government, |and Professor David deduces the | he found eve ng, 1'-““‘:"““5' is that he thinks they are of real{presence of gold | In fair shape in those Fatioe | nl( tho’ Te x'l{;)r_\' no] had Qs g during the past month. ¥ i 2 : | IMELDA MONTAGNE Mr. Lyle and Mrs. Lyle and In- TOM TAGGART’S SON MAY FOLLOW ; Ispector 'Leonard Regan passed = D, | SAN FRANCistxs, July 10.—|through Juneau last night on the FATHER /h FIGURE IV 10,”‘,(“‘ ('u.«?nm: blues .ato the }micm- steamer Yukon enroute to Seat- L ohone is Imelda Montagne's chief |tle where the district headquarters L S R iuh ;-mm now, but she taked a| arc located er Taggart—Thomas D., son of the |late Tom—is under consideration | for a prominent place in Democrat- | ic state politics, ruled by his father for so many years. Gossip ¥ it that the younger | Taggart is slated to succeed Charles A. Greathouse of Indianapolis as the Indiana member of the Demo- u'ari(‘ national committee. Great- | house, it is said, is eager to re- linquish 'the post. Taggart, according to close friends is far more interested in politics than generally believed. For many years he was his father’s confidant in things political, and it was to him the late Samuel M. Ralston in 1924 sent word that he wished s name withdrawn from further o] eration by the national con- vention as a presidential candidate. Taggart has -attended many na- and was a dele- gate to the Houston meeting. He is 40 years old and was gradu- ated from Yale in 1909, Sheffield Scientific school. His hobby has {been fine hor and he has a |string of runners. Amyvale was en- t 1 in this year's Kentucky derby Volomite, 2:06 trotter, will race for hand in other activities around the udios here Montagne takes small paris adio plays when called upon, 6r ixlm may play the violin or accom- { pany | involving aerial activity. |oplane Fort Worth, will work in 'THOMAS D. TAGGART |th(\ aero sales department of a S Texas oil company. In ‘this posi- tion most of his traveling will: be b7 air. James Kelly, Robbins’ co-pilot, {has become an instructor in a.fly-; i chool. Until a year ago Kel- worked on a ranch, later study- flying and managing an air- big stakes in the grand circuit. This horse won the futurity at Lexing-| Taggart has man- | aged his fath hotel property at| French Lick, where many of the nation’s great political figures gath- Jer annually. | port |of chance for hilarious comedy, I\r' is ably assisted in this by Louise , who is his na; g wife York and Circe, the en- . in the days of Greece. Beautiful backgrounds, dancing | maidens and spectacular sets give |this comedy a setting that is rich and unusual, and the fun is fast e TALLEY PROTEGE KANSAS CITY, July 10.—A sea-| {son of free musical. study under New York’s music masters awaits |red-haired Iona Mull, the first girl ever to win the Marion scholarship. ‘Talley Like Miss Talley, the 19-year-old singer is a soprano. She won the award in competition with 32 youthful singers from Missouri, Kansas and Oklahoma. Miss Mull, whose home is in Great Bend, Kas., took her first piano lesson at six, and has studied voice three years. Two years ago she was soprano winner of an all- Kansas high school competition. She 'studied in Chicago and Kan- sas City conservatories. No financial limit is placed on the scholarship. It includes les- sons in voice, languages, piano, stage deportment and related sub- {jects, as well as. living . expenses while in New York. Boys won the tri-state competition the first three years Miss Talley offered the re-I ward. We mawzc ang awer all kinds of fur garments. -Goldstein's 'Em- porium, = Sickly Boy, 7, Gains 15 Lbs—Father Happy “My boy, 7, would not eat. I gave him Vinol and the way he eats and plays now makes me happy. —P. F. Andres. Vinol liver peptone, iron, et The very FIRST bottle often adds several pounds weight to thin children or adults. Nervous, eas- ily tired, anemic people are sur- prised how Vinol gives new pep, sound sleep and a BIG appetite. ‘Tastes delicious. Butler-Mauro Drug Co. » | and ~ GOVERNORSHIP Twelve Motors Operate Glganilc German Plane| FRIEDR I(‘HSH‘\FY\I The largest flying plane in the world—a 12 motor Dornier hydro- | {plane “Do. X"—has taken form in |the hangar of the Dornier Swiss iplant at Altenheim on the south- |ern shore of Lake Constance. 1 With a wing spread of 164 feet i {its ship shaped body built to| weather the most tempestuous ocean | |waves and a motor energy of 6,000 | | horsepover, the plane eclipses any existing ilving machine and is ex- pected to bvcome a serious competi- tor to the “raf Zeppelin.” Its 12 air-cv.ed Siemens Jupiter motors, arranged in tandem forma- ! tion on the upper surface of the| wings, six in front and six behind. | insure a speed of 118 miles an} hour at a flying radius of 1.860; miles while carrying 50 passengers | and 20 tons of freight, 1cprvsenl-‘ ing a total of 45 tons. | The crew comprises a captain, | two pilots, two wireless operators, | one navigation officer, two me- chanics and two stewards. July 10.—| WILLIAM E. NARPER OXFORD, Ohio, July 10—Wm Emerson Harper, Miami uni rsilyl senior, will tell you who is to be Ohio’s governor in 1938. . > > “I am,” he would reply. ,Mlné P“ m Wa]es Harper has begun a nine- \ear’ 4 campaign for the office and has studied subjects he considers neces- sary to a governor. One hundred of his friends have received copies of a personal plat- {Men Are Trapped in BLAENAHON, Wales, July 10— Four men were killed and several seriously injured by an explosion in the 'Milaraen mine pit. Four (men are ‘still in’'the pit from which | i o A tryis & 1 form. | During the intervening ttioate them. Tt 18 feareq tns(years they are intended to spréad i i g W SR ®his qualifications, and when' the {death list will reach eight as there is little hope of saving the others from the poisonous gas fumcs. el aspirants go to the political in 1938 Harper’s “100 club” will« rect his campaign. The student's platform gives g‘ slogan as “H” for Honesty, Harpér and Happiness” and adds that he lis a descendant of the “fighting patriots—the Harpers ‘of history.” Harper is a republican. 1 | If you cam 30 tarough a woman'’s | house from garret to cellar with- |out finding a speck of dust you can .bet neither she nor her husbhand ;get much: fun out of life. | NEW I:VTERNATIONAL BANK INSPIRES VARIED FORECASTS IN WALL' §TREET | NEW YORK, July 10.—One emi-|sist in the commercialization and fncm Ameriean - banking authority | mobilization of certain pertions of sees in the proposed bank for inter- |the annuities. | Reg L. Robbins, pilot of the men-| (RICE QUALIE | the national settiements a long step to- iward fulfilment of the old dream jof an economic United States of “It shall be located in a financial center hereafter to be designated. In selecting the country of incorpo- Enforcement in Alaska, and | conditions under it, are about on a par with the rest of the country. There are some spots not as good as others and, of course, there is room for improvement in all parts \\'i“ make you r }down the Yukon River via Daw- I gon, they visited Eagle, Circle, Fort Yukon, Rampart, Tanana and small Nenana, the Fairbanks district and communities on the Tanana River, |spent a week end in Nome, flying there from Fairbanks. They re- ‘turne(l over The Alaska Railroad !to Seward and thence here. - eee Thirty Are Reported Killed in Landslide ! TOKYO, Japan, July 10.—Thirty ‘deaths are reported from Kago- shima Prefecture when a landslide l(l\um;' the night precipitated tk entire fishing village into the se The landslide is excessive rains. Confirmation the exact details are lacking. D FIES AS - TRAPPER,CAPTURING iilllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllilIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllflllllllllflllllll " 3 > of WASHINGTON, July 10.—Th tious young reporter and later as a MARMOT BY HIMSELF i1awyer, today is™ graced by | Rl presence on the bench where George B. Rice, big game hunter may remain -for the of local renown and head of Rice active life, & Ahlers of this city, has now' The bench of the United State: won his spurs a trapper. Not Court of Customs and Patent Ap just the ordinary kind at that, of the select variety who takes 'em Lenroot has alive and sells 'em on the hoof, or turbulent activity of political Wash: should it be claw? ington, in which he figured promi. Rice, - after exterminating bears and wolverines that infested States Senator from Wisconsin, his neighborhood in the Seater Only through Tract, took out a trapping license. took into captivity, a live marmot. The Alaska Game Commission, on however, plant them on Prince of Wales Is- judiciary. land, bought George’s live trophy,, Probably few members of th license fee and a nest egg with approval of their former colleague: Mr, Lenroot who was one of Presi local realestate. YOU'L PRICES—10¢, quiet of courtroom life which first knew Irvine Lenroot as an ambi- his he rest of his but peals is the haven to which Mr. retreated from the the nently for several years as United the favor of two presidents and the persistence of Thus week he snared, or otherwise his friends in overriding the opposi- tion to his accession to the bench, was Mr. Lenroot finally lookout for these animals to able to don the robes of the Federal paying him $7.50, thus giving him Senate in recent years have found {full reimbursemgnt for his trapper’s more difficulty in obtaining the which to start a fund to buy more to an executive appointment than GUNDITIUNS |N ‘ghlIIlIIIIIlI!IIIIIlIIIIIIIlII|IIIIIlll"IIllllIIIIIIlIIIIlIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIHIIIJ IIIIIIHIIIIIIIIlIlHIIllllllllllHIIIIIHHIIIHHIIIIIIQ COLISEUM ANOTHER BIG ALL VITAPHONE L SAY IT'S THE BE! FANNIE BRICE in ‘My Man’ She Won the Hearts of Millions, But Couldn’t Hold the Love of Her M A tense drama so tender it will make you ery! another singer. She is glso imp oar with laughter! So powerful it’s sure to a member of a harmony trio gs|0f the Territory the same as Kidll Vou! well as a soloist. throughout the nation,” Mr. Lyle thrill you! ‘ e RS RO e i A H have been delighted with my N ol % . . . |Rebbins, Kelly 'l'ake [ Visit At tHe SReE KRBV 1ng Now you can see the internationally famous i | Flymg Jobs in Texas self, Mrs. Lyle and Mr. Regan. It musical comedy and dramatic star who has [is my intention to return for a b e i DD s h Bl ¢ g FORT WORTH, Tex, July 10..|longer visit in the not distant fu- won fame in Zicgfeld's and Belasco’s greatest {The world's champion endurance,ture,” he added. hits. Don’t miss this picture. "Hm-.-. whose - two-man feat : dis-| Since leaving here several weeks {placed the Question Mark’s record, (g0, Mr. Lyle and his party have R R A = ki - s | | have lost 1o time in accepting jobs | Visited many points. Traveling “A NIGHT AT COFFEE DAN’S”—A Vitaphou —William Demerest featured as Master of Ceremonices of Vaudeville Stars in Singing, M gy 1 MOVIETONE NEWS See and Hear Thomas A. 20¢, 75¢, Loges satd to be duo 0 LENROOT’S RISE TO JUDICIARY COMES AFTER TURBULENT CAREER| e dent Coolidge’s leaders in the Sen- ate. Ironically, the men who stub- achievement of his ambition were the so called “Independents” from the farm belt who years ago were his close allies. They failed in s‘me end, but only after a bitter - | fight against their political enemy |and former friend. The former :Senator from Wis- - (consin is the latest man of several - | prominent figures of the Coolidge regime to seek the bench. In be- coming a Federal Judge under a life appointment, Mr. Lenroot defi- nitely returns to his first love— the law. As a boy in northern Wisconsin, Irvine Lenroot nursed an ambition to be a lawyer and many years later carried it to fruitation by | e |dint of earnest application to dry tomes in law offices. His first contact with the courts 5 (was as the recorder of testimony, and he continued as the reporter T ONE YET lusical and Dancing Aects. Edison at work and at home bornly fought to thwart him in the ] 3% TONIGHT 7:30—9:25 PROGRAM m! human it offers you a group $1.00 mmflfillllIIIlIlIIflImfllIIIImNIIIIIHIIHIMIHIIHIHIIHIIHIIIH!IllIIIllllllllllllIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIImli!limmflflIIImlIlIIIHIIHIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIlIIIlIIHIIII!HIIIMIIIIIHI IIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIiIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlllIIllllIIIIIIllIIllIIIlIlII_I_!III_IIIIIHIHIIIIIIHIHD court for some admitted to the Politics intrigued him. He was | attracted by the maguztism of Rob- |ert M. LaFolictte, who was preach- ing a liberal political doctrine and | fathering progressive legislation and then the House of Representatives called Lenroot, and in 1919, he be- | came the junior Senator from Wis- | consin, as the colleague of La Fol- | lette. How Lenroot broke with La Fol- |lette and joined the opposition to his former chief, and later directed the successful fight for Ameriean adherence to the World Court, is a matter of history. Defeated for re-election in 1926 by the late Senator La Follette's ally, John J. Blaine, Lenroot re- tired to private life, resuming the | practice of law in Washington. In his legal capacity he aided the |campaign of President Hoover. | As he was about to retire, Presi- dent Coolidge named Mr. Lenreot to the beneh, but opponents blocked action on the nomination. Il was renewed by Mr. Hoqver and con- firmed despite the opposition of the -lin the Douglas county superior —adv, ! A {the inevitable question: where will He gained 15 pounds.”| is a delicious compound | —adv. lrunds and chall supervise and as- Europe. ration due consideration: shall pe iven to obtaining powers suffi- ciently broad to enable it to per- form its functions with requisite Hfreedom and suitable immunities from taxation.” This description has been inter- preted here to mean that repara- tions might become a comparative- {1y minor consideration in the fu- iture career of the bank. | Banking opinion, with some ex- ceptions, favors the new institution as outlined by the experts commit- itee. Comment usually leads to ]this super-bank and possible capital jof world finance be located? Two paragraphs in annex I, part XII, of the experts’ report are re- ceiving special attention, They | The non-political and strictly in- read: - |ternational character eof the dir*- “The purpose of the bank is to|torate, together with the fact that provide additional facilities for thc'paxurxpatlon in the bank’s shares | international - movement of funds|will be open to all countries whase and to afford a ready 1nxtrument“currcncy is on a gold basis, points| or promoting international finan- |toward its gradval evolution into a cial relations. In connection with |“Bank of Europe” or world bank. |the German reparation annulties’ It.is foreseen that the institution iit shall perform as trustee for theqwul give Europe a central bank ‘to creditor countries the entire work protect its gold supply from being of external administration of this drawn across the Atlantic and to plan, shall act as the agency for encourage the same degree of fi- the receipt and distribution of [nancial unity in Europe as already. exists in the United States. »” L " Adt;liss‘ion. $1.00 Monday - Tilééda'y . July 15 - 16 JUNEAU ELKS SHOW progressive leader, Senator George W. Norris, and others. Curtain 8:15