The Daily Alaska empire Newspaper, January 31, 1930, Page 3

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THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, FRIDAY, JAN. 31, 1930, PALACE Dalton & Pltshmann Every Show A De Luxe Performance over RCA Photophone lGHT-lflst Times “The Charlatan” THRILING MYSTERY STORY Part Talkie Sound News and Sound Cartoon Laurel and Hardy Comedy 10-25-50—Loges 60c¢ COMING RAMON NAVARRO in FORBIDDEN HOURS d EI’ISOal;lE 2 OF ACE OF SCOTLAND YARD ; Attractions ! At Theatres e MYSTERY TALKIE AT PALACE LAST TIMES The lure of the supernatu manifests itself in a striking man- ner in Universal's new talking pic- ture, “The Charlatan,” which is at th Palace Theatre for the last times tonight. Holmes Herbert and Margaret Livingston, who play two of the leading roles in the production have been perfectly cast. The former as a charlatan magician through forces of ciréumstances, has a part re- quiring subtle handiing, but he has injected into 5 beautiful old carved that has been handed her family for many generations. The new picture is a romance of modern court life in Europe, with |Novarro in the role of a young king torn between his love of a sweetheart and the common people and the state necessity for his marriage to the princess of a neigh- {boring land. The cast includes Rny | D'Arcy, Edward Connelly, Dorothy | Cumming, Alberta Vaughn, Shirle; |O'Hara, Jacquelin Gadsdon, Mau- |rice Cannon, Marcelle Corday and | many others of note. gold bracelet down through NE STOLEN NIGHT” ) COMING, COL | o An English fort in the Sudan, |sandy wastes of the desert stretch- ing away in the moonlight, lines of ! | sleeping soldiers in the barracks— |midnight. A soldier, fully dressed slips stealthily out of one of the| buildings, climbs over the wall sur- rounding the fort, drops to the ground and runs—a deserter, flee- |ing the regiment and thus taking {the blame for the crime of his dis- honest brother who remains at his | post. | 'These events form the opening scenes of “One Stolen Night,” \new Warner Brothers production | (which tells a colorful story of an) {itinerant vaudeville troupe in a (little Algerian town, fronting on the Mediterranean and straggling | loff into the blazing sands of the | great African desert, In this pie-| turesque setting, with its swarthy people of many races, is told a New Bid for Hea Vittorio Campolo Giant Argentine heavyweight, as he ! arrivedin New York from South America on the S. 8. Voltaire, prepared to brave the ‘wintry.blasts ot one of New York’s mildest Winters, | inanew bid for the world’s heavyweight crown. The Gargantuan pugilist from the sunny southlands towers at 6 ft. 61 ins., and weighs 220 pounds. (International Newsreel) vyweight Crown l stirring narrative of hate and jeal- | ousy, and of true love. | The cast appearing in “One Stol-! jen Night” includes Betty Bronson, | |Wm. Collier, Jr., Mitchell Lewis, Charles Hill Mailes, Rose Dione,! Harry Todd, Otto Lederer, Jack {Santora, 'Nina Quartero, Angelo| | Rossitto and Harry Schultz. The| 'smry is by D. D. Calhoun. E. T |Lowe, Jr.,, prepared the scenario! {and Scott R. Dunlap directed. “One Stolen Night” comes to the Coli-; seum Sunday. | — - ——— ! “JACK THE TAILOR" Is in St. Ann's Hospital but his | Shearer, a.\ny: on the job. adv. |nalling |the past mild winter, Berger, 5 {shop is open and in charge of Tom carrying mail from Seward to An-| chorage and intermediate points on BSpecials at Mal.rrys FLOUR SHORTAGE REPORTED, KENAI Capt. Belger to Take FIVC‘ Tons There on First Trip Up Cook Inlet ‘ SEWARD, Alaska, Jan. 31.—Sig- the arrival of spring and Capt. Heinie of the motorship Discoverer, ka Inlet, announces he will leave | | a Seward February 5 for Kenai, | fishing village isolated on the coast and with no outlet in winter ex- cept by dogteam. Kenai is reported to be short of |flour and Berger will take five 'tons on his trip. S e HOSPITAL NOTES Hilding Haglund entered St. Ann's | hospital yesterday afternoon to be treated for a severe attack of in- fluenza® Mrs. Fannie Kukkola has entered the hospital for medical treatment. B Five oClock Dinner —adv Try the r i | FREH it a sympathy | which only an experienced and ver- | satile actor could obtain. Rocklif!e‘ Tellowes, another does excellent work. Margaret Livingston acquits her- self with her usual cleverness. This | actress who is noted for her intelli- gence of portrayal, has brought; the full measure of her brilliance to the screen in “The Charlatan.” Incidentally too, a blonde wig, worn | for the occasion, adds much to her | beauty. The fourth of the fea- tured group, Fred Mackaye, is youngster of much promise. principal, “THE RACKET” AT | COLISEUM, TONIGHT | £ ooy A Thomas Meighan, {iimdom's pon- ular Irish star, is presented in the most logical and picturesque role of this screen: career in “The Rac- ket,” thrilling underworld melo- drama which opens tonight at the Coliseum theatre for a two-day engagement. Meighan has drawn what is known in film circles as a “natural” in his role of Captain McQuigg, hard-boiled metropolitan police captain. “The Racket” is a thrilling tale of gang warfare, political corruption and bootlegging. The stage-play, written by Bartlett Cormack, for- mer newspaperman, played to packed Broadway houses for several months. The story is based on first hand knowledge of crook-con- trolled conditions in a modern met- ropolitan center, and Cormack went to Hollywood to write the screen treatment of the stage presenta- tion. The brilliant cast which has been assembled around Meighan in his new picture, is especially praise- worthy. The supporting cast is headed by Marie Prevost, a screen Juminary of no dim proportions, and | Louis Wolheim. Others included in the supporting cast are: Lee| Moran, veteran screen comedian, | John Darrow, who essays the role| of the cub reporter, and has been hailed as a screen “find;” Skeets Gallagher, who won his laurels on Broadway before embarking on a screen career among others. L2 - RAMON NOVARRO IS AT PALACE SATURDAY *"When an actress wears real heir- | looms in motion pictures she usual- ly has to supply her own. That's one thing the average “prop shop” can't supply. Which explains the remarkable | old gold bracelet Alberta Vaughn wears in her role in Ramon No- varro’s new Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer starring vehicle, “Forbidden Hours,” which comes to the Pa]zoe Theatre Saturday only. Miss Vaughn as Nina, a lady in waiting in'a royal court, wears a | also | 4 QUALITY YOoU WOULD INSIST UPON IF YOU KNEW ALL THE FACTS Facg No. 16. Tea, just like coffee, should be sealed in vacuum to preserve its flavor. The flavor of each resides in certain volatile oils that evaporate—in coffee very quickly, in tea slowly but surely. Unfortunately, it is many months before tea can reach you—frequentlya year.You have never tasted the fragrant flavor of truly fresh tea (unless it was Schilling Tea). | Facts No. 17, 18. Both a tea leaf and a coffec bean must be | toasted to drive off the moisture, which helps to rob it of flavor. Good coffee is packed in vacuum immediately after | roasting. Tea is toasted at the tea gardens, then sealed in large chests lined with lead. When it arrives in America it is repacked in ordinary tins or even card board boxes. And that’s where the damage is done! But this is how Schilling does it. As the tea is poured from the lead-lined chests, it is toasted again, and while still hot ( just like your coffee) it is sealed in vacuum. Schilling Tea comes to you as fresh and fragrant as it left the Orient— the only tea that is Tea | | | | | | i bones, |'houses for cannery : supplies SCHOOLS WILL GIVE CONCERT Ten Numbers to Be Played Sunday in Grammar School Auditorium will bz rendered department of the Juneau Schools at 2:30 o'clock next Sunday afternoon when a special concert will be given in the gram- mar school auditorium. Musical groups which will parti- cipate the affair include the Senior boys’ glee club. little s sextette, Jun- ior orchestra, girls’ glee club, boy quartctte 41\1 Juneau High School {band. There will also be a flute- clarinet duet, by Alice Merritt and William Herriman, and a clarinet Timan. sonnel of the groups fol- f RS by music Senior orchestra: violins, Mary Schramen, Lillian Peterson, Ed- ward Mize, Dunean Robertson. Es- ther Jackson, Albert Rhodes, Elea- nor Gruber, Mary VanderLeest; |cello, Gene Carlson; flute, Merritt; clarinet, man; xophone, Oscar Osborne; | trom! Tom Redlingshafer; pi. ano, Frances Harland; drums, E ‘Weschenfelder. Boys’ Glee Club: Karl Olavi Kukkolo, Bennie Messer, Gor- don Ingman, Elmer Powell, Powers, Tom Redlingshafer, liam Sarvela, Billy Sparks, |Stewart, Elmer Swanson, John Hel- lenthal, Glen Reeder. Boys' Sextette: Hilding Haglund, P:mi Hansen, Duncan Robertson, Walter Lundgren, Wayne Olson, |Horace Deets. Ji Orchestra: violins, Eleanor Gruber, Hilding Haglund, Chode |Paul, Theodore Heyder, Karl Al- |stead, Thelmo Bodding, Shirley Dal- |tcn Marie Bussinger; cello, Gene Carls saxopones, Latimer Gray, Kenneth Keller; clarinets, Barbara Winn, Harold Si n; trumpet, George Whyte; trombones, Redlingshafer, Roy drums, Arthur ano, Helen Torkelson, Girls'’ Glee Club: Dorothy Bakke, Jean Faulkner, Al- pha Furuness, Phyllis Friend, Renee rin, Multidla Holst, Verna Hur- | Muriel Jarman, Ellen Mize. |Xenia Paul, Edna Riendeau, Mar- \Lnre‘ Robinson, Maizie Rodge ‘M ry VanderLeest, Hildred Whitle; 'I‘h(‘lmxt Bodding, Mary Simpkins, Jean Simpkins, Helen Rocov Boys' Quartette: mer Swanson, Bennie Messer, | Stewart. Jlmmu High School Band: clari- Hi man, Barbara Harold Sisson flute, Alice tt; saxophones, Oscar Os- borne. Latimer Gray, Kenneth Kel- ler; trumpet, George Whyte; trom- Tom Redlingshafer, Lorea Sisson, Roy Jackson; drums, E. Weschenfelder. — e - TERMINAL FOR ALASKASALMON Wil- or Ficken; pi- John houses Let by Seattle Port Commission SEATTLE, Jan. 31—The Seattle Port Commission has let a con- tract for the construction of four 90 by 420 foot warehouses at Smith Cove for a salmon terminal. The total price for the four warehouses is $171,600. The warehouses will be used by Alaskan salmon canneries and com- panies, also as assembling ware- storage of canned salmon from Alaska. - eee Company, left on the Admiral Rog- {ers for Ketchikan, “Tomorrow’s Styles Today” completely protected from the tea garden to you. Try atin!If youdo not declare it the most fragrant tea that ever entered your home, ‘phone your grocer. He has been instructed *o return your money without question. You keep the tea. SCHILLING ¢ TEAd The only Tea that is Sealed Hot in Vacuum: The only Truly FRESH Tea you can buy! House Dresses A Nice Assortment in All Sizes at $2.25 ‘at a dinner given by the Ma “Juneau’s Own Store” Alice William Herrl- Alstead, Edward John Tom | Jackson, Loren | Amy Bates, | Billy Sparks, El- S It's Some ".\ 1C /\[ s T lUE!lI!ii!H!riliII!IIlllilifilll!IIIHillllll!llllllllil"llll COLISEUM SHOW S il :15-9:30 TONIGHT and SATURDAY !lIIIIIIIII!!IIIIIIIIIIIIIII|IIHHIHIHIIIIIIIIHIIImllmIIIIIH!MIIIIIIIIII|IIIIllllmlllllmlll||||llIIII HOWARD R.HUGHES pnesents THOMAS MEEGHAN wThe Racket” spopuceo sy THE CADDO COMPANY a Qaramernt Qicture AND OF COUR! Another One of Those 100 Per [ Cent All Talking Comedy “HAUNTED” or Who Killed the Cat PATHE SOUND 1 NEWS PATHE AUDIO RL\ IEW ‘ D(.)N"l' FORGET SUNDAY————The Vitaphone T “ON OLEN NIGHT” flIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIllIIIHIIIHHIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIIIlIlIIlIIIlIIiI|II|IIiIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIHIIIHHIII ot Rhath laead | GRUNDY PAID T, W HIS RESPEBTS 2 i o % 1 (on the A(ln\lh\l Rofl(’rb to buy new | b & mqmpme*u for his plant. Mrs, Mal- NPT LT b 5 . ccim . and daughter Margaret ac- €es 2 . Testin oy le.m Senator |company him. They will return Gave Before Inaugura- u]king Picture— g e TR TR 0 O {was well parents general patronized, not of students but by the public as ‘wéll and the event tonight, according to all dis- cussion heard, will witness seores of couples on the floor, D only by north in March, B, SRR tion Given Comm. J. L. Cavanaugn, local broker, Contract for Four Ware- | and | H. B. Crewson, of A. Schillings | 3 B 3 [took passage on the Admiral Rog- WASHINGTON, Jan, 31.—Testi- (i an. SL—Testl|o o for Ketchikas. {mony that Joseph R. Grundy, Sen- r from Pennsylvania satd to | o iT()MORR()W National Asso ion of Wool Man- is the LAST DAY ‘\'I.xclurcx" to Hoover's in- of our "mgunmcm‘ \mr Hoover “never ran for even the office of dog catcher |nnd does not know anything at all 7 1 t SALE from experience as to what legis- lation means,” was given to the - I-2 and 1-3 Senate Lobby Committee to CGrundy “in a gspeech exp: concern because of Hoove The Clothing Man {of know on legislative pro- cedure because his mind runs on )many other subjeets than econ- fomic subjects,” was submitted to ithc committee, oo 1S ON TONIGHT i 4 K The dance | o neau Parent will be given tonight in the High School gymnasium, ing im- mediately after the baskatball game. The floor will be in splendid con- lition for this event by which the | Association hopes to raise suffi- clent funds for the purchase of a ponsored by t Teacher selation t year the P.-T. A. gave & lance in the Gym. and the affair |} brr e aes. For the first time in fie history’ | of the Old Royal Colony and State of Rhode Island women addressed a session of the State Senate from, x}w rostrum. = Mrs. William H.! Vanderbilt (above), the former‘ Miss Anne Colby, of Llewllyn; Park, N. J., bride of W. H. Van-| derbilt, with Mrs, Paul Fntszman.' of Ncwport. were the speakers. (International Newsreel) | ANNOUNCING i A Very Material Reduction in Fire Insurance Rates e Effective on all New and Renewed Business - written on and after November 1, 1929, Service and the principle that what is good for you is good for us have been our watch- words since 1898, MARTHA SOCIETY DINNER IS PRONOUNCED SUCCESS Two hundred guests were se Scciety of the Presbyterian Church |last evening from 5 o'clock to 7 The basement of the church was beautifully decorated for the occ: sion and a profusion of fi brightened the tables. ’ The committee in charge of the |affair wish to thank Mrs. G. E Krause for her piano recital. and also extend thanks to H. B. Crew-| son, representing the House of| Bchillings, for his donation of cof- fee for the dinner, Allen Shattuck, Inc. INSURANCE—Every Kind i

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