The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, November 26, 1929, Page 3

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TI:IE DfXILY ALASKA EMPIRE, TUESDAY, NOV. 26, 1929. “Always the First With the Best Always” COLISEUM Morton Downey ENTIRE CHANGE TONIGHT ENTIRE CHANGE TONIGHT PALACE PETER B. KYNE’S A LOVE SONG IN PICTURES NEWS ODDITY WILLIAM BOYD and ELINOR FAIR A Rip-Snortin’, Hard- Fightin’, Fast-Shootin’ Western picture story —a photoplay that will give you a genuine thrill. 10-20-50 cents “TO0 MUCH SLEEP” YOU'LL ALL LOVE HIM Peppy Comedy Loges 60 cents COMING SOON Jazz Singer Starting Thanksgiving—ANNIE LAURIE ‘You would not try to broil a AFTER THE SHOW Try one of our DELICIOUS SANDWICHES A Dish of Smith’s Ice Cream or a Hot or Cold Drink Juneau Ice Cream Parlors NEXT TO PIGGLY WIGGLY No sidized Press! . | | AN ANCIENT PREJUDICE [HAS BEEN REMOVED AMERICAN INTELLIGENCE assures the freedom of the press— Public opinion has been freed from the tyranny which denied it the right to pass judgment on public questions. e {Gish will open at the Palace on| I { Thanksgiving Day. It is a story} woven around the historic Camp- | Bur if you cut it in slices you can broi! each perfectly. Simi- larly, Hills Bros. roast only a few*pounds of coffee at a time —never in bulk. This continu- ousprocess—Controlled Roast- | ing —produces a flavor no | other coffec has because it | [ roasts every berry evenly and controls the flavor. Attractions At Theatres rier and Brandon Hurst are the ac- | 3_ |tors supporting Miss Gish. ‘The b |bell and MacDonald Clans of Scoi- | lland. Norman Kerry, David Tor- | |rence, Patricia Avery, Hobart Bos- | | worth, Creighton Hale, Frank Cur- | {Scot has achieved notbale distinc- tion on all the roads of life’s high- No small part has the Scots- ALL TALKIE, SINGING | OPENS AT COLISEUM | %%V 3 B e gyl ROAT played in the arts and sciences | B Morton Downey, Broadway’s most | and literature and on the field of | B famous tenor, sings several of his honor as :zell t,;s ‘L“ ”:2 ‘;‘;“(S}o‘:; HILLS BROS B popular songs in the Pathe all-|Bovernment or the temples e - dialogue picture proguction, “Mo- Nor does histrion’s temple lack its g CO FFEE ther's Boy,” which will be on view Qquota of great artists. v K at the Coliseum theatre four daysi’ B N AT H T e iot. | beginning tonight. The theme son2 gy o5 THANKSGIVING DINNER ? Easity opensd with | which he sings with splendid ef-| " \yis aglund’s Bergmann Hotel | ofn sy fect at the bedside of his S“F'fDmmg Room will serve a Thanks- ot posedly dying mother is “I'll al-{giying Dinner with all the trim-| ways Be Mother's Boy,” ahd "here'mings for $1.25 — TURKEY OF were few dry eyes among the|cOURSE. watchers during the filming: of thc“ Make your reservations NOW by scene at the Pathe sound studio in|telephoning the Bergmann Hotel New York. jor advise Mrs. Haglund in THE Another popular song rendered by |DINING ROOM. TURKEY, TRIM- Mr. Downey in the fashionable MIN'S AND ALL YOU CAN EAT/ cabaret scene in the picture, is —$1.25. —adv. “The World Is Yours and Mlnefl‘;i — e In his love scene with Helen Chand- | F ler, who plays opposite him, he| , !Mm:is':' Ctfi:sl:swondeflul‘ “Tomorrow’s Syles Today” Showing the Latest 3 b and Sappiest Mod- » 4 4 22 2 L0 Paldce tonight. sings with fine expression, “There’ll Petersburg Crabs arrived today. " | 4 Be You and I. | GEORGE BROTHERS. Other airs in the production are: “I'm Funny That Way,” and “Good | Little Bad Little You.” These are sung by Mildred Hunt, a noted radio singer, in the cabaret scene. The story of “Mother’s Boy” deals with cabaret and tenement life in New York. It is packed with dfama, action, thrills and laughs. | Ar. Downey is a delicatessen store clerk who attains his ambition after ‘_nduring many setbacks, of becom- | ing the most famous of Broadway ! tenors. The cast comprises mnny\ well known stage players, chief| among them besides those mention- | ed are, Barbara Bennett, John T., Doyle, Osgood Perkins, John T. Doyle, Lorin Raker, Jennie Mosko- | Witz and Jacob Frank. ! 1 KYNE'S STORY AT T | PALACE TONIGHT || &—1, ‘To establish a reccrd in m@mnl ‘ and to retain it for more dyed-in-the-wool villains. And with it &ll he has never been given an opportunity to become regenerated. Ever since “The Birth of a Na-| fong's latest villainy occurs inj “Jim, the Conqueror” which fea- tutes Wiliam Boyd and Elinor’ Fait and which is on view at the ‘Thomas day. have roles in.this Peter B.’ Kyne story which *orn B. Séitz ] GisH AT Y| PALACE THURSDAY | | “Annle Larie” featuring Lillian —adv. | els in and Mareelle Cor- |’ JUNEAU CABINET {' and DETAIL MILL- | WORK CO. ‘ Front Street, next to Warner Machine Shop CABINET and MILLWORK GENERAL CARPENTER} : WORK GLASS REPLACED AUTOS Estimates Furnished Upon | Request | Raincoats Popularly Priced % Juneaw’s Own Store: o ——3 " BY DOUGLAS P.T. A" Island Natatorium WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27 Prizes—Seven of ’Em The door prize—“A Turkey”; 2 for Best Sustained; 2 for Best Dressed; and 2 for : Most Comical KING’S FOXY FOUR MUSIC Admission 50 cents Late Ferry Leaves for Juneau After Dance Balcony, 25 cents é¢ ) o °s9) toasting did it”"— Gone is that ancient prejudice against cigarettes—Progress has been made. We removed the prejudice against cigarettes when we removed harmful corrosive ACRIDS (pungent irri- tants) from the tobaccgs. ‘ EARS ago, when cigarettes were made without the aid of modern science, there originated that ancient prejudice against all cigarettes. That criticism is no longer justified. LUCKY STRIKE, the finest cigarette you ever smoked, made of the choicest tobacco, properly aged and skillfully blended—“It’s Toasted.” “TOASTING,” the most modern ste in cigarette manufacture, removes from LUCKY STRIKE harmful irritants which are pres- ent in cij; s manufactured in the old-fashioned way. Everyone knows that heat purifies, and so “TOASTING”— LUCKY STRIKE'’S extra secret process—removes harmful cor- rosive ACRIDS (pungent irritants) from LUCKIES which in the old-fashioned manufacture of cigarettes cause throat irritation and coughing. Thus “TOASTING” has destroyed that ancient preju- dice against cigarette smoking by men and by women. “It’s toasted” No Throat Jrritation-No Cough. TUNE IN—The Lucky Strike Dance © 1929, The n Tebacco Co.. Mirs. M every Saturday night, over a “It’s Toasted”—the phrase that describes the v extra “toasting” process applied in the manu- facture of Lucky Strike Cigarettes. The finest tobaccos—the Cream of the Crop—are scien=- tifically subjected to penetrating heat at mini- mum, 260°—maximum, 300°, Fahrenheit. Tha exact, expert regulation of such high tempera- tures removes impurities. More than a slogan, “It’s Toasted” is recognized by millions as the | most modern step in cigaretts manufacture. coast-to-coast network of the N. B. C. -y

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