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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, MONDAY, JAN. 13, 1930. IHIII“IIIIIlIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllI!IIIIIIIIIH|III|I| MUS IC T H AT CRF AT DALTON and PITSHMANN A Splendid Cast A Splendid Production Stand For il - Splendid Entertainment dse LT T TP L T T L T T T T LTI 3 £ fUNIVERSAL’S A HARRY POLLARD PRODUCTION SINGING AND TALKING TRIUMPH Ziegfeld stars singing Zieg- feld hits—Helen Morgan, JulesBledsoe, AuntJemima, Ziegfeld Plantation Singers. Carl Laemmle’s brill unl Universal cast headed Laura La Plante, Jolep{ Schildkraut, Otis Harlan, Alma Ruiun-, Emily Fitzroy, Jane La Verne. ‘Whatacast! Whata picture! 10—25—75 cents, Loges | S e %lllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIllllllIIIIHIIIIIIIIllIIIl!IlIIlII|||IIIHIIIlIIIIlIIIhIl!l lrn; $1.00 ! Att_ractions I At Theatres Pt volid & “THE RAINBOW MAN” NOW AT COLISEUM | [ = | ! “The Rainbow Man” is an all- talking and singing screen romance. mentlfully supplied with instrument thusic which contains not one note ©f “blues” or “vo-deo-do.” &ned at the Coliseum last night. But the fact that it defies the| great American jazz tradition is not alone-the reason-for recommending “The Rainbow Man.” It is first of all a real, human story, simple, but true and plausible. In the second plac¥ it contains acting of a high calibrevin the hands of every one in the cast. Eddie Dowling is a small-time minstrel man who adopts the little boy, Frankie Darro, after his fathe: George Hayes, is victim of vodvi accident. Marian Nixon is the daughter of a small-town hotel pro- prietor. She falls in love with Dowling while his troupe is playing her town. The plot goes forward through sunshine and tears and comedy seasoned with episode drama, until finally the lovers are joined in 2 toucHing scene wherein the rainbow ;, of their comes shining through. The melodies of the productio “Rainbow Man,” “Smile Little Pal and “Sleepy Valley,” are of a pleas- ing quality, reminiscent of “Hon- swmoon Lane” and “Log Cabin of Dreams.” ere is a sound-film romance which thoroughly justifies the “talk- {es” romance £ | “YHE SHOW BOAT” “NOW AT PALACE a2 & Accompanied by the gay, spirited notes of a calliope and the melod ous minors of negro singers, “Show Boat,” a super-talking picture made from the famous Edna Ferber novel 1ast night steamed into the Palace Theatre. An enthusiastic audience reeted its coming—an audiencs Ehrmad by the beauty of its story, the gripping qualities of its drama, . by its glndaux ‘music and singing and by the general entertainment qualities of the production. Tt 's| without doubt one of the finest pictures ever made. Carl Laemmle, head of Universal may well call this a super pieture. It is magnificent in its sweep, in| its settings, in its characterigations and in the tuneful interpolations that make it great entertainment for the ear as well as for the ey2. In faet it really is a mammoth | combination ef stage and screen. The andience gets the full benefic of a big screen show plus & big stage musical show. By special ar-; rangement with Florenz Ziegfeld,| who produced “Show Boal” as 2 musical extravaganza, Universal in- cludes, in the talking picture ver- sion of the story, many of the hi lights and popular music of the Ziegfeld version, with songs and choruses sung charmingly by the Ziegfeld stars themselves. zlegfeld in a personal movietone appearanc introduces ‘the interpolated num- bers. Laemmle, in movietone, in- troduces the picture. ~ Laura La- Plante is the featured star. It op- | " FAMOUS STAGE STAR IS | IN ALL-TALKING MOVIE “Ruth Chatterton, one leading stage stars in Americs, her voice in a motion picture ]l‘xe first time in her carcer rec when she filmed one of the pr'm | pal roles in “The Doctor's Saci Paramount’s all-talking | n of Sir James M. Barn y, “Half an Hour.” “The Doctor’s Secret” to the Coliseum theatre Tue {and besides Miss Chatterton, H. Warner, Robert Edeson, John Loder Wilfred Noy, Ethel Wales and Nanci i Price are featured. e By RUBb1Y COONS HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 13.—Sparks | at random from the grinding mov- ie wheels: Jack Oakie, young com- | edian who in the last year has| attracted more than most boys his age deserve, is slated for stardom early next epring . And Mary Brian, slow but sure in her rise in silent mov- ies, rumored about to receive reward for her talkie is same under Beery, contract hody discovered (het Guy Oliver resembles General Grant, so the character actor is icading the union forces in a new civil war talkie. . Charlie Mur- ray, back from vaudeville, is screen- talking now! . . . R-K-O has enseged ‘2 Spanish professo its t be seen and héard in a Frer version of “The Big Pond." . .. Dots and Dashes Trouble over salary is said -to have caused Evelyn Brent's depar- ture from the studio which recent- ly made her a star. ... She wasted no time in signing with another studio, however. . . . Coincidentally, her ex-husband, Bernie Fineman, formerly an ex- ecutive with Paramount, is return- | ing to the studio about the same |time Miss Brent is deserting it. . He’s to work in the East. ‘A new fad of stars is to have ‘to give to friends instead of photo- | graphs. . . . Norma Shearer's next is “The High Road,” stage play.... With two German war pictures in the filming here, clipped heads ‘and German uniforms are conspic- juous on the boulevards. “The | |Case of Sergeant Grlscha" hnmt a isingle war scene, but the boys in |“All Quiet on the Western Front" have been rolling in mud and slush jon the “battlefields” . and re- takes make the laundering of uni- |forms a considerable item on the budget. . . . “Romance,” stage success, will be audifilmed with' Greta Garbo as the foreign actress, . . . Another story made- to-order for- an accent, as was “Anna Christie.” .. . . Pathetic talkie figure: the actor + pictured “playing” & muted grand piano, hands supposedly hidden from view, but reflected in the pol- | lished piano-top — resting on the ,keys. . . . It happened. . . . LT TR HIIIIIIIIIIIIIllII|IIIll|IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHII!IIII IIIHIIHI" plasber plaques made of their fa/ces‘\ the Doris Keanc| By C. E. BUTTERFIELD Radio Editor (Associated Prees Feature Service) NEW YORK, Jan. 13.—Music that a mood rather than music t5 a mood—such is the ex- pressed hope of Vincent Lopez, pio- neer radio orchestra leader. The moods of music are a pet ¢t with Lopez, who has been radio audiences this is “Lo- pez speaking™ since the early days of WJZ in 1922. In almost any con- on he enters, the talk ulti- .A(vc treatment of tone presenta- ately swings around to the scien- According to Lopez, music has done much toward keeping the city iweller and others leading hectic lives from bursting mentally. ch radio, he points undergoing its Its tunes, the most strenu- not excep he fee have brought many a day of cal to a pleasing climax. out, the human mechanism what might be termed the through “vibra- ther. Science has made a study of the offect of music on animate and in- wnimate objec he explained. ‘Certain notes sct up vibrations in foreign objects, as can be tested by olacing a thin metal object near a Probably there fon in the That may be the reason some are pleased with jazz and others like only symphonies. “It is my hope to be able to play, let us say, scientific music., By study, it could be determin: J Just what type is best suited to bring a ng of ease and relaxation. Go- a little further, some day it be posible to listen to certain ea why ‘culnr condition l‘:c d(\ys t"sks do- X Ray Catches Human Stomach Emotmg | 1 | \ ‘ | ‘ | | | | | i { | Dr. T. Wingate Todd of Western Reserve University how the stomach is affected by emotion. favorable notices | the center is a comfortable stomach, and at lower T 3t is one that is nervous. | CLEVELAND, Jan. 11. — For a leng time tue numan stomach has greatest | If music can have that effect on | *ory effect,” Lopez would go fur-| he will realize his o ‘rad:o programs built to fit the pe- has a background of been known as a bad actor, which | talks back and speaks out of turn rally. 0 scientists at W ty here with the auzht him emot best Hollywood tradition, registe: dismays and happiness. Nearly 300 healthy siudents, in various stages of excnemem were mined in this study ‘by Prof. T. Wingate Todd and Wilhelmine fuenzel. Among other important traits they discovered reactions an- ‘czpous to facial expressions. “When a student first submits to an examination he usually has a sensation,” Miss Kuenzel relates. “The lower part of the stomach reflécts this feeling and {has sunk, in some instances, until it presents a picture of an elong- | ated tube with the lower end rest- | |ing upon the very rim of the pel- |vis. But at the next examination |the student is braver and the |stomach appears to have risen. “If we happen to know that the |student is dreading an examination |in one of his classes, or fears some other future event, the stomach again will present this sunken le- thargic appearance.” It requires three or four examina- |tions before the stomach reacts inormally. The stomach also reflects in 2 manner the temperament of a per- |son examined. | “In a person whose reactions are quick, who moves and speaks rap- |idly, the stomach also is more ac- tive. than a stomach in a person | who is stodgy and talks and moves slowly,” she said. But, Miss Kuenzel points out, all foods in the stomach are at least suspended in fluid swallowed or gas- tric juice. Buttermilk will make even a lethargic stomach kick into action Milk seems to soothe it, for the response is quite gentle. After & drink of water the stomach is quite vigorous. A hot water bottle on the abdo- |men will make the stomach more |vigorous and an ice pack will dc the same but the effect is much more temporary. Miss Kuenzel suggests that hot | | | Vincent Lopez ES MOODS 1S NOW HOPE OF RADIO ORCHESTR 4 PIONEER pioneer orciestra leader, believes that ultimately ambition to present music “scientifically.” | BOLDSTEIN BACK FROM LONG TOUR Always tl:e First With Tonight Charles Goldsteln, well i business man of Juneau, returned| on the steamer Queen, after an| 1absence of more than three months in which he toured the Esstern States in company with Mrs. Gold- stein and his daughter Marie. The Goldsteins left Juneau Octo- ber 12 and started East from Seat- tle in their i They trav-! eled via the Lincoln Highway |through Washington, Idaho and Utah, ping over in Salt Lake City to visit friends In Denver, the G on Mr. and Mrs, James Parks, par- ents of Gov. George A. Parks, of |Alaska. He also met J. P. Walker, | | formrely of the Juneau Land Of-| |fice, who is now in the Land Of-| fice at Denver In Detroit and I'Goldstein visited known \ rlm‘ Isteins called a Qaramount ALL-TALKING Qicture Cleveland, Mr. several of the itomobile plants and was d by the efficient methbdds manufacturing cars on a In New , the met overnor engaged in an in New York now engineering project City. The return trip to the West Coast made by stear from New via Havar Juba and the ma Canal San Francisco, Mrs. Goldstein and her aughter will remain until spring visiting frienc d relations. “Soutk b a looks better to than it ever did,” Mr. Gold- “I heard talk of Taku n New York, again in San Praneisco and Scattle. I also heard MNI. | me tein said velop, and thus remove mental de- sturdy body v him through the lo ed of the modern or (right) | der to carry on the good work stim- ulating stomach activity. The c late peppermint has the same e at least in students. Probably this is the reason wh: \ fans have found the n of peppermint to a stom- chic medicine of real service. The hot water bottle, so com- fortinz to a “pain in the tummy” acts as a regulator of stomach movement and restores a tranquil activity to an overwrought organ. coffee follows the ice cream in or- CO')duLN°A< | he would not say but his study has even years of (led him to hope he at least can llf{ hc(o"c the microphone and ‘mn‘(e a start some d Y. has taken At lower I:ft is the stomach of a person who is frighiened, in |enough about the pulp mill project |to know that it is an assured fact, on both |although I am not at liberty to | reveal the source of mrormatlon" FORDS ANNOUNCE | EXPANSION PLAN, DETROIT, Mich,, Jan. 13—The | Ford Motor Company has placed a $30,000,000 o. k. on its 1930 expan- | sion program. In a statement expressing confi-| dence in the continuance of good | business, Edsel Ford, President, an- Inounced the company would spend | $20,000,000 for new buildings in| }[he next twelve months and $10,- 1000,000 for new plant equipment | on the Pacific and Atlantic coasts. | The total will not include ex- {penditures for factories in foreign | | countries, he said. The huge expansion program was | announced the day after the public | was informed production of new {Ford body models had begun and followed a wage increase for all| employees announced a month ago. | Expansion of plants on the AL-“»or lantic nnfil Pacific oasts is in line|pq. .year-old University with the “Ford policy of developing | cajifornia co-ed and and utilizing water transportation | Long Beach, Cal. | wherever feasible and econmical,” it was stated. e The expansion program was seen |Practice is in Seattle, {as a move to justify in increased |ter, Mrs. Fred Willia gl oo | returns the $20,000,000 annually re- |land. quired by the increased wages de-| SRl VA x-ray photographs showing|cided upon as answer to Presi-| 'Alleged Bandit Shot dent Hoovdr's suggestion that in-| dustry boom prosperity during the | i coming year. INCREASE The branch of Ford Motor Com-' SAN JOSE, C\l Jm 13 —Cordes pany in Omaha reopened January|Henry Ahlers, aged 21 years, said a longer period before visibla audi- ences. He is heard weekly the NBC and CBS chains. Whether he ever will have the opportunity to try out his theoricg Assoclated Press Photo | Richard Dix, screen actor, is re. ' ted engaged to Maxine Giass, of Southern resident of and his sis of Pori GERMAN LISTENERS BERLIN—The r fans in Ger American-like rapidity. T B instar 500.000 1 aud o adi: % ot reaig the new minimum w ng \n!h “ At age scale " of [sponsible for several h visible ch postoffice officials. A night airmail servic: has been naugurated between Croydon air- port, London, and Le Bourget, in PaPris. 80 which are was ‘rec- A SMILE LIKE HER FATHER’S The Tex Rickard smile lives again In his baby daughter, Maxine wn at Miaml Beach, Fla., with her mother. exas Rickard, who s ommended to the Wil n Cooper. ucation, who ted from an exten vorthwast pos 1 needs work . Cooper sald. by the number ‘of Pilipmos and T ported each year des- pite the efficiency of the natives. Of special importance to the fu- |ture development of the natives is n of tuberculosis. Combina- “Afraid of stomach on soup for 5 mon Adlerika and now I ea without any gas. p‘o}ed he recommended, and he-althrconnur and sanitation emphasized. Where| Adlerlka relieves stomach gas in i twelve people live ‘in one room,|TEN minutes! Acts on BOTH up- he said, the disease is. likely to|per and lower bowel, removing old develop, and when once started |poisonous waste you never knew “there is a strong probability of |was there. Don't fool with medicine its transmission to others.” which cleans only PART of bowels, | Dr. Cooper urged modification of [but let Adlerika give stomach and |white and native schools. bowels a REAL cleaning end get “Wherever the contract between |rid of all gas! Butler-Mauro Drug |the two races can be increased the |Co, in Douglas by Guy's Drug result will be to the advantage of“‘LbrP dv. all Alaska in creating mutual| understanding,” he explained. | A plan, now being worked out, | tor developing the reindeer m(at‘ |industry through establishing stock- | IN PRINTING |vards and: refrigerating plants, he | b | |said, would offer great opportuni- | when you warmnt i_t" l |ties for advancement of the na-| Try us out with your next job [} | tives, besides greatly increasing | their wealth, 7 | ———— | VANDEWALL RETURNS | TO STATION ON NORAH | | | | | WE CAN GIVE YOU what you wan? W.P. Johnson | | Deputy Collector F. E. Vandewall FRIGIDAIRE—DEI [of the U. 8. Oustoms at Skagway, e " [returned to his station on the Pri 4 LI(.H'[‘ PRODUCTS— \.c Notah, after a month’s leave | MAYTAG WASHING of absence during which he visited | MACHINES—DAY- relatives and friends in the States.| FAN RADIOS Mr. Vandewall spent the Christ- l {mas nolidays with his son, Fran- | Phone 1 ) Front Street L Assoclated Press Photo cts, who s & student at Pullman | College, Wash. He also visited | Vandewall, his brother, whose Juneau the Best Always Tcnight DOW ll NG ¥ H B WARNE ’nosm‘t u)t,soun “Tomorrow’s Stylee ll‘mhl)'.: 03 ROMILLA HOSIERY is so flattering — so satisfys And Killed by Victim " ing — in its length, in its beauty of texture, in its charmingly proportioned 2 with 1,000 men working under by the police to be the bandit re- heel design, in its wearas bility! Offered in a fascine ating range of Frenchs inspired shades. STORE N and Address hu‘e clusive Agency FLORSHEIM SHOES H.S. GRAVES The Clothing Man You get fesults from